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                  <text>Friday, March 12, 1993

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

56 years after nightmare
date, couple marries

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items a round and square dance on Saturappear two days before an event day from 8-11 :30 p.m. at .the old
and the day or that event. Jtems legion hall in Middleport. Music
must be received weD In advance will be by CJ and lhe Country Gento assure publication iu the cal· tlemen. Children are welcome with
adult supervision. Bring snacks for
eadar.
the Sll!ICk table.
FRIDAY
. RIPLEY, W.VA. - The Liberty
. HARRISONVILLE · Sign-up
Mounraineers will perform Friday for the Harrisonville Youlh League
at Skaleland in Ripley., W. Va
will be Saturday from 10 a.m. to
noon at Harrisonville Elemenlllry .
.LONG BOTIOM - Faith Full A youth league meeting will be
Gospel Church in Long Bottom held at 6 p.m. at the Scipio Fire
will hold a special hymn sing on Department.
Friday at 7 p.m . featuring The Dai·
ley Family Singers, Harmony Boys
RUTLAND - The Rutland
and other. locai singing wiD be fea- Youth League will hold its second
tured. Pastor Steve Reed invites the sign-up Saturday from 1-3:30 p.m.
public. Fellowship will follow.
at the Rutland Civic Center. Anyone not participating last year must
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup· provide a copy of their birth certifipers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 cate. Registration fee is $10 per
Ladies Auxiliary
sponsor a child, not to exceed $25 per family.
round and square dance on Friday
RUTLAND - There will be a
from 8-11 :30 p.m. Music will be by
True Country Ramblers. Public dance at the Rutland American
Legion !:!all Saturday from 8 p.m.
invited.
to midnight. Music will be a by
MIDDLEPORT - A gospel sing Pure Country Band. Public invited.
will be held Friday at 7 p.m. at lhc
RACINE - The Racine Youth
Believers Fellowship Ministry on
Route 7, one mile from lhe Gallia· League will hold sign-up for the
Meigs County line. Pastor Mar- 1993 ball season on Saturday from
garet Robinson invites the public.
9 a.m. to noon and Monday from 68 p.m. Final sign-up will be March
SATURDAY
20 from 9 a.m. to noon. Sign-up
t.IIDDLEPORT - The Middle- will be held at the Southern kinderport Youth League will hold sign- •. garten building. Registration fee
up for the 1993 ball season Satur- will be $10 for softball players, $15
day from 9 a.m. to noon. Sign-up for baseball players, not to exceed
will be held at the Middleport $25 per family. Anyone who did
Council chambers. Anyone who not participate in lhe Racine Youth
did not participate last season will League previously will need a.copy
need a copy of their birth certifi- • of their birth certificate. ·
cate. Registration fee is $10 per
child, not to exceed $25 per family.
GALLIPOLIS - The Galli a
Twirlers Western Square Dance
MARIETIA- The Washington Club will hold a dance Saturday
County Saddle Horse Advisory from 8-11 p.m. at the C.H. McKenCommtttee will hold its lhird annu- zie Agriculture Building in Galal auction of new and used tack on lipolis (across from Holzer HospiSaturday at6 p.m. at lhe junior fair tal). Bill Gene Evans will be the
building at the Washington County ealler.
Fair Grounds in Marietta. Call423LOTTRIDGE · Country Music
7636 for furtller information.
Night will be held atlhe Lottridge
MIDDLEPORT - There will be Community Center on Saturday
a country western dance at Middle- from 7 p.m. to midnight. All bands
. port Elementary on Saturday from are welcome. Refreshments will be
8-11 p.m. sponsored by the Mid- available.
dleport Arts Council. Admission is
$5 a couple or $3 per person .
SUNDAY
Refreshments will be Sold.
POMEROY - Colin Christensen
will speak at Hillside Baptist
FAfRPLAIN, W.VA. - The Lib- Church on Sunday. Sunday school
erty Mountaineers will perform begins at 10 a.m. with morning
Saturday at the Jackson County worship at II a.m. Evening serJamboree in Fairplain, W.Va.
vices are at 6 p.m. Christensen will
speak about his previous missionBURLINGHAM - There will be ary work in Mexico, the Phillippine
community public dinner on Sat- Islands and his future work in Hunutday at the Burlingham Modem gary. Rev. James R. Acree Sr.
Woodman Hall at 6:30 p.m. The invites the public.
camp will furnish spagheui, meat- '
balls, salad, french bread, coffee
MIDDLEPORT - Rev. John
and pop. Bring a covered dish. A Haley wiU be preaching 81the Midmeeting will follow at 7:30 p.m. dleport Community .Church on
regarding information on a fire Sunday 81 7 p.m. There wiU also be
dep;lrllTient for Bedford Township. special singers. Everyone welcome:
Representatives 'from the Scipio
SYRACUSE - "Born Again
Fire Department will be guest
Believers"
will sing at the Asbury
speakers.
United Methodist Church in SyraMILLFIELD - There wiiJ. be a cuse on Sunday at II a.m.
round and square dance Saturday
POMEROY - Beginners country
from 8· 11 p.m. at the Russell
line
dancing classes will begin
Building in Millfield. Music will be
Sunday at Pomeroy Village HaU
by Ramblin Counlry.
•
from 2-4 p.m. Donation of $2 for
MIDDLEPORT - There will be the class. Call 992-7853 or 9492455 for information.

will

a

Public Notice
RESOLUTION
206.83
BE IT RESOLVED, by lhe
Council of the Village of
Pomeroy, all membera:
That the Villoge .of
Pomeroy hereby eupporta

th• Revitalizallon Program
lor the Village of Middleport.
Thio program would be
beneficial
lo
all
communities Involved.
PASSED: Feb. I, 1993
Bruce J. Reed, Mayor
Larry Wehrung, Pruldent
.Kolhy Hyoell,

Clerkllreuurer
• (3) B, 12, 2tc

Public Notice
RESOLUTION
NO. 202.83
A RESOLUTlON
ACCEPTING
RESTORATION
GUilELINES AND
DECLARING AN
EMERGENCY
BE IT RESOLVED BY
THE VILLAGE COUNCIL
OF POIEROY, OHIO AS
FOLLOWS:
SECTION ONE: The Vii·
loge hereby occepto the
• tully detailed In a document
on file In the office of the
Mayor. •
SECTION TWO:
Thio

A"olution ia .an emergency

-11ry for 1M immediate
prMervllllon of the public

Vlllllgll Councol
· ATTEST: Kathy Hyaelt,
· Clerk of tha CouncN
ApPI'oved thlo 11t day of

. FabMry, 1119:1.
Jlruce J. Read, Moyor
' (3) I, 12, 2lc

.,

I.

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Science Writer
BOSTON - Scientists have
tracked down a defective gene that
may cause nearly a third of all
human brain tumors, opening 'the
way fot new strategies to.stop these
cancers.
The genetic error causes neurofibromatosiS type 2 - or NF2 a disease that is passed through
·families. However, researchers
believe that defects in the same
gene also frequently cause b~ain
.tumors that occur sporadically
rather than being inherited.
About 15,600 Americans are
diagnosed with brain tumors each
year, ·and 11,500 die from them.
Doctors from Massachusetts General Hospital, who discovered· the
gene, said Thursday it may be
implicated in nearly one-third of
these cases.
• "This is an enormously exciting
discovery," commented Dr. Nancy
Ratner of the University of Cincinnati. "We hope that discovering
the defect that underlies NF2 will
help us understand enough of the
biology 10 treat tljis disease.•'

The defective gene appears to
trigger two slow-growing forms of
brain tumors - acoustic neuromas,
which often lead to deafness, and
meningiomas, which are cancer of
the membrane sur,ounding the
brain.
The gene was isolated by a team
led.by Dr. James F. Gusella. They
reported their findings in lhe latest
issue of the journal Cell.
Among the implications of the
discovery:
.
-It could enable doctors to ·
learn whether members of families
where NF2 is common have inherited the bad gene themselves. t
-It could give scientists new
targets for designing drugs or 'geneth·erapy techniques to treat the
brain tumors. The only current
therapy is to remove the tumors
surgically.

Pro gram scheduled
A group of 40 'students from the
Toledo area will present a drug
program at Southern High School
on March 26 from I: 15-2:15 p.m.
The pt~~gram is open to the public.

Last stand for Custer
at elementary school ·
DETROIT (AP)- Gen. George
Armstrong .Custer has had his last
stand at an elementary school.
The Detroit Board of Educatio!l
voted Tuesday tO change the name
of George Custer Elementary
School to Thurgood Marshall Elementary Sc(Jool after the late
Supreme Court justice.
''Historians now consider
Custer vain and an incompetent
military officer," said Jor-dan
Rossen, who auended lhe school in
the 1940s and spent years fighting
to get rid of the name.
..
"Looking forward to Thurgood
Marshall is like looking forward to
Michael Jordan. He's a superstar,"
said Thomas Williams, a sixthgrader at the school.
Custer spent part of his childhood in Monroe. He became a
Civil War general and Indian fighter and died in the 1876 Battle or
Little Bighorn after underestimating the number of Sioux and
Cheyenne Indians he was attacking.

bou ought to, according to H&amp;R
lock, the income tax preparation
service. If the IRS sends a notice to
you at your old address. the notice
IS considered valid. Any delays
caused by mail being forwarded rna~
mean that you miss important IR
deadlines.
It is wise to keep IRS informed
of your address changes in advance
of filing your next tax return. This
way you reduce the possibility of
missing important correspondence.
You may use Form 8822 to notify
the IRS of your new mailing.addresS'.
The form asks lor your social security number, name. your old address
and your new address. In addition,
he form provides space to indicate
~pat type of tax return you file. Form
822 should be sent to the IRS
~~rvice center for your old address.
If you want to be extra safe, mail
our change of address via certified
mail, return receipt requested.

618 E. Main
Pomeroy

Theatre planned
The senior class of Southern
High School will present the dinner
theatre, "Made in the U.S.A.," on
April 10 at 6 p.m. at the high
school.
Tickets will be available starting
next week and the cost is $4 for
adults and $2 for students/children.
The variety show themed presentation will feature selections
from the Big Band era, songs of tHe '
Silver Screen, as well as pop, coun•
try and jazz tunes.
The public is encouraged to
attend the event and support the
mu:Pcal program at Southern Local
which is under the direction of
Melissa Stewart.

MAbl

1\ lH?AI

IJif I l Ill NCI

'

STOCK# 1041

LOADED

1993 DYNASTY·

RACINE - There will be a
turkey and ham dinner at Southern
High School on Sunday at II a.m.
sponsored by the Racine PTO.
Menu includes turkey or ham,
mashed potatoes, homemade noodles. green beans, slaw, roll,
desserts and drinks. Price is $4 for
adults and $3 for children under 12.
Carry-out available.

TO CELEBRATE BIRTH·
DAY - Hattie Gertrude Nolan
will celebrate ber 95tb birthday
on Monday, March 15. She and
her husband, David A. Nolan, are
tbe parents or four sons, David
and Loren Nolan and the late Lee
and Calvin Nolan; one daughter,
tbe late Faye Lamm; 25 grandchildren, 46 great-grandchildren
and four gr.eat-great·grandchil·
dren. Cards may be 1ent to
Gertrude Nolan, care or Garry
Lamm, 253 Fairview Rd., BidweD, 45614.

1993 FIFTH AVENUE

·NOW$14,995
STOCK# 10013

Tax Levy On House Trailers
All owners of house trailers having a shus In
the State of Ohio and subject to the tax as
provided above MIJST register such trailer
w~h the County Audhar an or prior to the date
the tax is due and payable.

RESPONSIBIUTY
OF HOUSE
TRAILER
OWNER-

a

Upon the transfer of ownership of house
lraHer the certnlcate • • • 811 to such trailer
shall expire, and the original e~wnar shall
Immediately remove such certlicate from the
trailer.

TRANSFER-

Every operator of a house trailer caurt or parte
or every owner of property used for such
purpose when there Is no operator shall keep,
a register of all houae trailers which mllke use
. of the caurt, park, or prcperty.

OPERATOR OF
A HOUSE
TRAILER
COURT-

HOWARD .E. FUll,
MEIGS COUITY IIIASURER

'·

1993
ACCLAIM
.
.

Now·sa 950

A Multimedia Inc. -•papar

}Worst snowstorm in years strikes area
By staff and~ reports ·
GAll.IPOLIS- A late wmtcr storm dumved more
than 16 inches of snow in the Meigs..Qalt!a-Mason
:County area over a 14-llour period Saturday; paralyz:inglll:8rly allac:ti.vities in the region.
Lcical authorities were urging all non-emergency
vehicles to slay off the roads Saturday as snow drifts .
. reached three feet or more. The Gallia County Slieriffs Department declared a snow emergency at 11
a.m. Satunlay and reported count)', road$ were irnpas. sible and treacherous.
It is the worst winter storm to strike this area since
· the famous 1977 and 1978 blizzards.
Several mOtorists found it difficult to gel out of

.
.·

their parking lots and those who did had to travel at a
snail's pace, or wound up in a ditch. Salt trucks and
graders were out in force, but the strong winds and
freezing temperatores appeared to be winning ciut
late Saturday.
:
Concerts, band contests, the district final basketball g!lflles at OhiQ University in Athens, and .mii!IY
church activities have been canceled. The d1stnct
tournament was rescheduled for this evening, but it is.
liltely those games will not be played. Snow was still
falling up to .2 inches an hour 814 p.m. Saturday.•'
Weight of the heavy- snow cauSed the roof on one
of the boat docks to collapse at the Gallipolis Boat

Club Saturday afternoon.
.
Around Ohio
.
A storm that dumped up to 2 inches of snow an
hour in southeastern Ohio Saturday closed roads,
postponed sporting even is and caused transportation
delays throughout the state.
The State Highway Patrol said no fatal injuries
were reported, despite winds of more than 40 mph in
eastern Ohio and snow of at least 15 inches in the
southeast
A bliizard warning was in erfe.ct for the eastern
two-thirds of Ohio through Satutday night. A less
severe winter weather advisory was in effect for the
western one-third of Ohio through the evening.

Light snow fell over parts of northweslelll Ohio,
where I to 3 ~hes of snow was expected by SliDday.
·
By mid-afternoon, Ironton in southeastern Ohio
reported 15 inches of snow. Forecasters said th~
could be 16 to 30 inches by Sunday morning.
·•
•
Roads in Lawrence CouniY in southern Ohio were
. closed to all but emergency traffic.
·.
''They can't get a handle on it to get the roads
clear," said John Smith, a traoper at the patrOI'.s
Ironton post. •'They're out there working, but they
plow it and the winds cover it right bli:k up.' '
He said drifts were several feet deep.

Sites proposed for ne·w regional airport~..

New stacks
.
· at Gavin are
taking shape Locales in Bidwell, Rodney areas would allow for expansion
CHESHIRE • Construction
c rews have begun placing Concrete .
,Jor the first of two new 830-foot·
'·tall concrete sracks that are being
built at Ohio Power Company's
General James M. Gavin Plant at
: Cheshire.
The new stacks are a rnajor ele·menl in the insrallation offlue gas
· desulfurization systems (scrubbers)
' at Gavin' Plant, according to Jim
, Howard, project manager for the
AEP Service Corporation. Ohio
· Power is one of seven operating
; ·~panics in lhe AEP System.
"Installing six scrubber absorber
·vessels with each of the ~wo 1,3()().
megawatt units at Gavin Plant
requires that each unit has its own
exhaust stack," Howard said. "As a
resultj the two new stacks are being
~ built to replace the existing 1,1()().
foot stack that presents serves both
.·Unit I and Unit2."
. .
Placement of concrete for 'the
' Unit I Slade begin on· March 8, and
~~ bejng done in a "continuous
· slip," .24 hours a day, five days a
: week. Howard said the ~~w staclc is
• progtllllinl upward at the rate of
about 1 folll~.I\Qur. . . - ·• ·

GALLIPOLIS - An 18-month
airpprt ~ite ' evalpation study has
ll&gt;eated. two possible sites for an
new Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport
which wouli! be capable of meeting
·the future aviation needs for the
&amp;rea, a spokesman for the GalliaMeigs Regional Airport Authority
annopnced recently.
The preferred site is located in

Rodney south of and ·parallel to . include a 5,46o;foot runway wilh a
U,S. 35. The airport authorit(s precision approach to one eild.
• s~cond choice is ·lot:aled between
four eXJstin!l public and private
Btdwell and Porter west ofilndpar' · · airports in Metg~ Couno/·and the
allel to Sq~te Route 160.
regional airport m Galba County
According to a report from lhe · were considered for the. site. All
authority, the current airport with but the regional airport failed to
its 4,000-foot runway would be meet the criteria, the report said,
inadequate to serve futore business due to site constr•ints which
aircraft reQuirements, which . impacted development potential..
'

.

FIGHTING A LOSING BATTLE- Betty
Plymale and ber llve·year-oJ4 lfUdson, Aaron
Thompson, team up on the snow Saturday
morning to dear a sidewalk on Stc:ond Aveaae
In GaDipolla. No amoant of ~mwork, llowever,
'

'

.

wu a match for tbe winter storm - the snow.
was falUn&amp; almost .. fllllt as they could shoveiiL
By·4 ·p.m. Gallla County bad around 16 inches
of IIIIOW, drilll lnduded. (Times-Sentiuel pboto
by Kevin PlnaoD)

;:wind-driven drifts are making it
difficult for road crews to keep the
~highways clear.
· .

.

Meigs receives $679,379 )j
for Issue 2 program~
:j

SURVEYING THE DAMAGE ·The ftre at
Meigs Hllh School Friday started In this old
restroom, more recently uteJ1 81 a storage area,
on the upper 'eve! or the building. Here board

M' •

I .

memben, l'rclm tile lefl. Larry Rupe, Jolla Hood,
Roger Abbott, Randy Humpllre,a and lob Bar·
ton join S~pL Jam11 CIU'plllw to look over the
damage. (Photo by Cha..- Hoelllch).

•tt b

.. E=~~~~:e~~~~!::~ . e1gs c assrooms WI
~:!~~~~~~~=~~ready

.e

for students Monday

').3) when he lost control, sli~ten of
·
.
·
POMEROY - Cleanup from Fri- which struck the building Friday
eenter and struck a northbound
Oallia County I..oeal Sehoot .Dis- clay's file at Meip High SChool is mamina and then ·toOk the board
; tilct sehool bUJ driven by Brenda taking place this · weekend and member&amp; 10 the upper level to '\&gt;lew
:K. Sanden, ,39, 1026 Second Ave., claurooma will be ready for SIJI· the darnap-a bt;lmed out storaae
prown City.
.
dents on Monday, Supt. JIUIICS Car- room, walls stamed with black
; Hurlow was cited for driving penter told Moip Local Board of watec markings, damaged eeiling
~rt of cuter. The report. did not . Ed.ucatlon members It 1 special tile 111111 Uaht fiaturea in the halb,
what caused liim to lose , meeting at the hiah sehool Friday .bliltered paint on doors, damqed
:eonuo . ·
evening.
loclan, 1111111001 covered desks and
:. · CoatiaHd on A·l
· .
Carpenter reported on the fire equipment
•
\

GALLIPOLIS - John L. have two sons and five daughters:
Schlater, senior vice president/portMcDade pointed out, "The
folio manager of the Ohio Co~pa­ chamber is most fortunate to have a
ny, and president/The Cardmal gentleman with the fJilancial
Group of Funds, will be the fea- rience and competence of
tured speaker at the 56th annual Schlater as the featured speelmr
dinner meeting of the Gallia Coun- our annual meeting. when 110
ty Chamber of Commerce, at 7 . attention and concern il"flx:q...S'
p.m., Thursday, April IS.
our nation's
economy~~
~ 'The event wiD .be held in the -spe.cificall
y' tJie,.
fiJIIIICial.
James A; Rhodes C&lt;Jmmunit{ stu- G~ ~OIJ!liY ~.the .
deilt center'ill' tile il'niversity of Rio area. . . ·1
.
•
Grande, Rio Grande.
Tickets for the meeting, are
Acco~ding to Ronald G. available al the ch;in!ber office.
McDade, chamber president,
Reservations .must be made no
Schlater' was named president of later than April 9, Individuals may
the Cardinal Group of Funds, the call the chamber off~ee, 446-0596,
mutual funds group that is man- for additional information.
aged br the Ohio Company, in January o this year. He continues also
in his position at senior vice president/portfolio manager of the Ohio
Company.
·
A chartered financial analyst ,.
since '1983, Schlater is a graduate
of St. Joseph's College, holding a
Bachelor of Science and Finance.
He has done post graduate sJudies
at the Graduate School.of Business
at the University of Dayton and the
National Trust School at Northwestern University.
He is a member and past president of.lhe Financial Analyst Society of Columbus and has 17 years
experience in portfolio management. He has been with the Ohio
Company for eight years .. ·
·
Before joining the Ohto Company, he was senior portfolio manager of·Trustlnvesunents at the Huntington National Bank.
Schlater and his wife Debbie,

•==

··travel only if absolutely necessary,
.. as the rapidly-falling snow and

•peciCl

Meigs County were evaluated,
including the :ruppers Pl~ins ~nd
Big Bend areas, the surround•ng
topof'BJ!'IY iftlpacted the ability \0
obtain clear approaches to the runway tnds of the airport," the n:pQn
.
said
Ave possible sites were locarect
west of Gallipolis during this stage
of the study. The sites were subjected to a screening process that
ranked each site in term of their
ability to meet eight evaluation criteria ' which included incompatible
.
land uses in the runway protecUon
zones, power lines, topography,
and road relocations and closures.
Contlniled on A·3

Gallia County Chamber
banquet to be held AprillS'..

Four injured
· in accident

;;. · Four people received minor
:.'injuries in a two-vehicle accident
~Friday afternoon, the patrol report'
·ed.
Driver Lori A. HuU, 190 Maple
Drive, Ga!Iipolis, and her passenjlec, Amy L. Hull, 6, same address,
were treated at the scene by Gallia
County Erpergency Medical Ser• 'yice, as were the other driver,
;Penny L. Burleson, 41, 194 Hoover
~Road, l!idwell, and her pAssenger,
• Sarah E. Burleson, same address.
~ According to the accident
report, Burleson was southbound
~~on State Route ·160 when she
• turned left at the intersection of
~'Rodney Pike (County Road 3~) and
c..collided in tile intersection with
. Hull's vehicle, which was westi1ound on Rodney Pilce.
• · No citations were issued. Both
··vehicles sustained moderate, dis. 11blin- damage. Hull's vehicle
•tematned at the scene and
l'!urleson's vehicle was towed.
· · No injuries were reported in an
accident Friday afternoon involv-

The regional airport was also
evenlually ruled out because urban
encroachment )eft no room for
e~pansion and because the site is
located below the 100-year flood
plain.
The FAA will not fund airport
improvements at sites located within the 100-year flood plain, the
spokesman said.
Potential undeveloped sites
capable of .s~rting the prototype
airport facthnes were then mvesu-

kated
. a num ber or·
·
"Whtle
sites 1n

.Placil)g concn;te .roqhe·l.Jtlit 2
•stack m May. The pro.JCCt team has
a goal ol ·c01npletlng tfle Unit 1
stack shell in May and the Unit 2
stack shall .In July.
, Each of the new Gavin stacks .
. has an outside diamew of 62 feet
·at the base and '54 feet a1 the top.
The thickness of the stack shell
•measures 27 inches at the base.
Concrete for lhe foundaljon of lhe
Continued on A-3

' dents.
The patrol is urging motorisU to

LOADED WITH ALL THE EXTRASI

14 Sec:llon 141 Pog•

Mlddleport-Pomeroy.......Galltpolls-Polnt Pleasant, March 14,1993

. GALLIPOLIS - Tbe Gallia;'Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol was buckling down for a
long winter weekend Saturday
morning, but as of 8 a.m. had not
. reported any weather-related acci-

NOW$11,865

BURLINGHAM - The Burlingsponsor a family together program
on Sunday at 2 p.m. at the hall. Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Sanders, Gallipolis, will be putting on the program. All are welcome. Juniors
will serve refreshments.

•
:tm:es-

•:-:cllll•till.;uojL~w{wiiJ ~arl!'

ham Junior Modem Woodmen wiU

Revitallzolion Progr-.
Pnoed thlo tot day ol
Preeldanl of PomerOY.

Scientists find gene that.
causes brain tumors

TaxNews

STOCK#2034

gr•nl for • Downtown

February, 1119:1.
Larry Wehrung,

BEE WINNERS - Nancy Whaley, right, seventh grade, dliU&amp;bter or Mary and Delmar Whaley, Middleport, was the wiuner or
the ·spelling bee at Meigs Junior tllgh School. Adam Thomas, son ·
or Debbie Jenkins, Pomeroy, and Tim Thomas, was the runner-up.

REEDS VILLE · Eastern Athletic Boosters will have an emergency
meeting Sunday at·2 p.m. in the
high school cafeteria. All parents
and friends urged to auend.

pe•c•, halllth, Nlety •d
weHora .,d lor the further
purpoae of complying with
. -l.lln Umlla anloiled In the
• Vlll11g11'1 application for a

.

POMEROY - Colin Christensen, missionary, will speak at
Hillside Baptist Church on Sunday
at II a.m. and 6 p.m. Public invited.

R••tor•tlon Guldelinea,
which GuidellnH are more

.

at the start of the year. He introCOLUMBIA, Pa. (AP) . David Gentzler made a pretty bad duced himself a few weeks later to
impression lhe pight he crashed his the woman liviflg down the haU.
Mrs. Gentzler, 71, who is blind
car into a light pole while trying to
and
bedridden, said she immediatekiss his dale and drive at the same.
ly
recognized
the voice.
time. ·
.
·.
~1
guess
this
is the way it was
"I had both hands on her
instead of the steering wheel," he supposed to be;" she said.
After reminiscing about their
said.
·
His date, Bernice Neff, broke nightmare of a date, they began a
her glasses . His car - a 1925 whirlwind romance that ended in a
·
Maxwell he bought only two days proposal last week. ·
The
ceremony
was
a
simple
one,
e:artier for $30 - was demolished.
with
cake
and
punch
.
for
the
resiThey parted ways that night, 56
dents and a romantic dinner for the
years ago.
·
But wben they met again earlier newly)VedS, topped off with some
this year in a nursing home, they bubbly - ginger ale.
remembered each other. They
rekindled tbeir romance. On
Wednesday, they were married
They can laugh now about their
blind date i!ll937.
"I did get two kisses." Gent·
zler, 75, recalled triumphantly.
hy H&amp;R Block
Soon afterwanl the young
woman 's family moved . Years
MOVING?
passed.· She married, had children,
LET THE IRS KNOW, TOO
was widowed.· In 1988, she moved
to Heatherbank nursing horne in
When you move. you notify a
this southeastern Pennsylvania
wide variety of people and organizatown.
lions
about your change of address.
Gentzler, who is confined to a
Do
you
include the IRS? If you don't, •
wheelchair, arrjved at Heatherbank

He repclk1ed to the bolrd that the
insllliJICe adjaiiOr hid been there
and that the clelnup work woukl
Jakc_placeoverlhe-.•d end. While
repairS, 10111e Jllintinuncheplii:Cment of the eamna ille cannot be
completed lnlrriedllltlly, the clallrooms should bo eleaned up.and
ready for atudeata Monday, the
Colltlll... Oli A·l
•

By CHARLENE HOEFLlCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
MIDDLEPORT- Issue 2 funds
totaling $679,379 were awarded for
Meigs County projects at last
week's 111eeting of the District 18
Executive Commiuee, Ohio Public
Works Commission, held in Marietta.
Meigs County's committee
members, Fred Hoffman, who rep·
resents Middleport, the hirgest
community in the county, and B9b
Eason who was appo,inted by the
Meigs County Co'!'mission':rs ,
attended the comm1ttee meetmg
where Round 7 allocations of Issue
2 funds were made to the·lO Southeastern Counties in District 18.'
Hoffman reported that of'¢e
total funds awarded for Meigs
Coumy projects, $500,000 went to
the Meigs County Highway
Department for resurfacing roads,
$41,912 was awart!ed to ~sbury
Township for pavmg Bwley Run
Road $62,467 was given to Middlep~rt Village for resurfacing
work· and $75,000 was granted to
the Tuppe~ Plains Sewer/Waste
Water DtstneL
All of thG projects funded with
the exception of the Tuppers Plains
one require some local funds, Hoff·
man reported. ·
Figures provided by the COn:'·
mittee members show that thts
year's fund~ng brings the total of

1

Issue 2 monies allocated for pro:
jccts in Meigs County to over $3
million. This year's allocations are
the highest in the program which is
now in its seventh year. ,
Meigs County Hlahway Funds
Eason, who is Meigs County's
engineer, said that the $500,000
which the county received along
wilh a II percent loclll match will
go toward hot mix paving of a
number of Meigs County Roads.
Since the County Highway
Department did not receive any
funds in the Round 6 awards last
year, the application this year
included road work estimated to
cost $870,000. Since thai amount
was not received by the hif.iway
department, the engineer satd that
his department will now scale
down the project and decide what
roads are to be paved. Only those
roads which were included in the
Round 7 funding application will
be considered however. In other
words the selection of roads to be
paved ,will come from those listed
m the application, the engineer
said.
Tuppen Plains SeWIIIIe Pro.J«t
Sue ·Maison, who serves on ~·
Tuppers Plains Sewer/Waste Wm:r
District, sees the $75,000 in IJsue 2
grant monies as the funding which
will allow the district to move forward.
COIItlDMCI OD A·l
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. . . . . . . . ... ...

•

... OHIO Weather
.-· · Sunday, March 14
•• ; Accu-Wealher• fom:ast for

•
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\

Accu-Wealher•

•

~

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i

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fo~t

cooditions and high temperatures

Paf':OI Cited two people early Saturday morning for driving under
the mfluence.
Cited were Eric A. Autenrieth, 22. Rio Grande, and Ella R. Lam·
bert, 38, 514 Com Road, Vinton.

IMansfield Irr• I•

•••
'

Man arrested for domestic violence ,·

' .

IND.

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briefs----.

GAL!-IPOLIS - The GaUia-Meigs Post or the State Highway

OHIO

• ••••
••

••

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A3

two.'cited for D.U.I•

PA: ·

IToledol1ao I

~

r----o~Tri-County

Sunday, March 14

•
•

Local

March 14, 1993

WEST VIRGINIA Weather

. GALLIPOLIS - Melvin E. Cordell, 35, 137 Miday, Bidwell,

~as arrested Saturday morning by Gallipolis police for domestic

••'

v1olence.

•I Columbus!1 go I

•

Man jailed on court order

(1- •

~y

She said that this puts the district in a position llO obtain funds
ti:om the Ohio Water Development
Authority to be used for preliminary and final design engineering.
It also satisf~es a directive from the
FmHA (Farmers Home Administration) to pursue other funding

sources.

"Now we can go back to the
FmHA and ask .for more money,"
said Maison. She predicted that a
system will be in opelatioo within
IWO years.
'
Total cost of the proposed
lagoon system, according to Maison', is $2.1 million. The se:wer system would serve 211 units, including residences, churches, and businesses.
Tu~ Plains has been under
a buildmg ban since 1972 due 10
the sewage _Problems of the community. Maison says she sees lhe
sewage system as Tuppers Plains
ticket to growdi.
John Lentes; project attorney,
explained that the funds designated
"credit enhancement" wiD be uSed
to pay·interest on monies which the
district borrows on the project. ~
·said that what it actually does is
free up some money to use for consUltants and engineering.
He stressed the importance of
getting grants and low-interest
· loans to make the system affordable for the residents. He said that
the district is hopeful thai the rates

..

: : NATlONAL SUMMARY:
,J Apowrfut., ;;:wllolm will ooNinut lit IIMUI on the Northlaltomonoow, with hM...y anow, higt'l witdl
• .nt blizzard conditio,.. in p..ta of nofthem Nn York 111141 .-,d nol'thlm New England. Flurriu will•rup:

:; dowMnd ullt'lt GrNI ~ Md along thri Appllachiana. Shawe,. will ailed pMa ol thl Northwtist,

:: l!!"'~II&gt;O~re!!O~of:.:l""::..:!""'~""~oil~bO==doy!:..- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - '

,·

~: Coalition

•'
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COLUMBUS • As American

t· .Dn its 830-foot scrubbers at its

: ~avin plant in Chelhirc, a coalition
: : of indusuial electric users filed its
:· second lawsuit opposing the pro•: ject, according to Malch 13 issue
~; of the Colllmi:!IU Di!pa!ch.
:. . An appeal filed Thursday with
r: the Ohio Supreme Court by the
:: Industrial Energy Consumers con'· tends that the $815 million airt; cleaning scrubbers are not a "cost:• effecti~ strategy."
·:: The industrial group filed anoth•: er appeal with the Supreme Coun
:• last week, contending AEP and its
t: affiliate, Ohio Power, are costing
•: consumers millions of dollars by
:- using more expensive, high-sulfur
•: Ohio coal. AEP discarded the idea
:; of using low-sulfur, out-of-state
:. coal. said the article.
:: The Industrial Energy Con ·: sumers' It-member coalition
;. includes BP Oil, General Motors
r: and Anheuser-Busch. Industry offi=~~Is say the scrubber plan will cost

their respective companies millidns
The scrubber plan is expected to
increase overall electtic rates by six
percent between 1995 and 2000, .
continued the article.
Both lawsuits appeal a decision
in November by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio. The commission ruled that AEP's plan to build
scrubbers and bum Oh10 coal is the .
best, "least-cost" method of mceting new acid-rain requirements in
the federal Clean Air Act, according 10 the article.
The scrubber plan is expected to
save the jobs of abOut 800 miners
at the AEP-affiliated coal mines in
Meigs County.
AEP said Friday that construelion crews had begun pouring concrete for the first two 830 -foot
cooling stacks at the Gavin Plant.
The scrubber ' system, when
completed in the fall of 1995, is
prediCted to remove 95 percent of
the sulfur-dioxide emissions from
the plant.

::?DO
A-1
.•;r · ur.••• - - Continued
= =rrom=
=-----

;:;: Both vehicles sustained moder-

.;Tite damage and were driven from

:-·the scene. ·
;:
A Gallipolis woman was ciled
~ for failure to maintain an asswed
• clear distance ahead early Saturday
: morning following a two-vehicle
: accident.

:'+ ....---~'-------,

.••••
•

·'
•

Pu,bli•hcd e~~c:h Su.nday, 826 Third A'le ..
Ohio, by the Ohio. VAlley
Publi1hlng CompanyiMultimcdtA 1 Inc.
Second .cl1111 poe;tager,id •t. C•fl1po1i11,

•

Ohio -46631 . Enlllrt

:

maiHn1 mA&amp;t.f:t' At Pomeroy, Ohio, Poat

.,;

Of'fiet..

,;

~

"'

'."•...
.~:

.'•.,·,
.

1

I

(USPS 525-800)
Q 11111ipolia,

~!

lf':Cond

c1RIUI

Member: The AI&amp;M.OciaLed Pn!M, and the

Oh1o Newapilpcr fuNsociation , NRtional
Adlverti•i na: Repre•enlativo, BranhAm
New•p•per Sal t~;, 733 Third Avr.nur.,
New York, New York 10017.

·~

::.

AI

.•

·sUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCKIPTION llATU
By Cnrif!lr or Motnr Route

':; ·Pn• w................................................. !IO&lt;
·;~ Pne Yc.~r......8i'N'G'LE'OOPY''"'"'"''546' 80
'·
PRICE
•: • Sund.ay................ .. ........... .............76 Ctlni.B
•.. ;

,..

f

No 1\lbleriptiona by mail pr.:rmiltt1d in
',.t ilru• whue mot.or cRrricT ar.TVicr. ill
~; avait.ble.
·~ The Sunday 1'imei·Scntinl'!;l will not be
,.• rspunaible (or 111dvanoo p~~yme n lll mado
~ · to CJtni en.
(.
MAIL 8UBSCBIPTION8
:•

Sunday 01\l)'

~:

One Year...........................................$1~J· 84

•

Six Monthf1 ...................... 1................ V.ilr •nd Swnct.y
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS ,

•'..•1
•

• ',.l ,

t:

·

79

IMide Cn•nty

ta w.............................................*21.84
l• · 26 w.u ............................... :..........S-43.16

f:

62 Weebb~'();l;'j;h'C~~~·t;;·"l84.76

~~ ~ ::::

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: : :::::::: ' : ::::::::J!~::g

6:i w.. ~ro .......................................... $88.40
.I

Accprdin[to the repon, Beth N.
Salisl!ury, I , 63 Cedarwood Lane,
Gallipolis, and Christopher B.
Tackett, 19, 592 Skidmore Road,
Bidwell, were northbound on State
Route 160 when Tackett stopped
fro traffic and was struck from
behind by Salisbury.
No injuries were reported. Both
vehicles sustained light damage
and were towed from the scene.
The patrol also investigated
three deer-vehicle accidents
between Thursday ev,ening and Friday night No inJuries were reponed and v_ehicle damage was hsted
as light to moderate.
Involved were: Mary A. Dishman, 34, 1811 Chestnut Street,
Gallipolis; Coral L. Saltsman, 50,
Pearl Street, Racine, and John H.
Mitchell , SO, 40965 Township
Road 245, Coolville.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

can be kept considerably below
$30amonth,
Maison and Lentes were.accompanied to Marietta for the District
18 executive committee !Reeling by
Greg Otey, URS Consultilnts of
Columbus, the community engineering rmn. .
•
Middleport's Project'
All of North Second Avenue
from the norlhern corporation limits through the business district to
Mill Street along with a section of
Mill Street wiU be resurfaced with
the grant money, said Middlepon
Mayor Hoffman.
·'
Added to the $62,467 in Issue 2
monies will be $7,721 in local
funds for the total project cost of
$70,.188. Hoffman said that the
existing pavement will be ~o~
and then resurfaced with· 2 1/2
inches of as_phaiL The project takes
on special Significance now ill view
of planned revitalization. of the
downtown area, according to the
mayor.
·Salisbury Township Grant
Bailey Run Road wiD be pa~
with the Issue 2 grant monies
awarded to Salisbury Township. To
do the work the grant of $41,912
will be added to a loan of $50,000
and local funds of $11,360, it was
!;ported.
The counties in District 18 are
Athens, Belmont, Hoclcing, Meigs,
Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum ,
Noble, Perry, and Washington.

BLIZZARD OF '93 - Downtown Gallipolis beume a ghOst
town Saturday as the city and surroundln1 counties received more
than 10 inches or snow overnight. Strona winds ll!b·lreezlna temperatures made matters worse. Above, Bobby H~ sweeps off,
snow In front or Haskins-Tanner Clothiers, but it appears to be a
losing uuse.

Meigs classrooms... ContinuedrromA-1
superintendent kid.
Carpenter said that Hackett's
Roofing had checked the roof and
there appears to be no damage. The
roof will be checked again next
week just to be ~ure. he said.
The superintendent and Fenton
Taylor, high school principal, who
aitendcd the meeting, commended
IRe staff for assisting in vacating
the building.
"Everybody kept their .head and
their cool," said Carpenter, and
" that' s probably why we didn't
have any injuries."
Taylor said that several of the
teachers volunteered to come in on
Saturday and help with the cleanup.
The administrators were also
complimentary of the way the
Pomeroy, Middleport, and Syracuse Fire Departments handled lhe
situation and expressed their appreciation to lhe ftremcn.
Fony firefighters responded to
the fire, according to a Pomeroy
Fire Depanment report
Eight pumpers and two laddet
trucks responded to the scene. Also
responding were two rescue trucks
and two squads of the Meigs Coun·
ty Emergency Medical Service.
According 10 the fire department
report, approximately 858 people
were in the building at the time of

IN

NOWHERE TO RUN R
SHOW TIMES
FRI., SAT., SUN. 7:30. 11:30
MON. THRU THURS.
ONE EVENING lliOW 7:30
ADMISSION SUO

441-0123

-....
,
_
__
___
_
... -446 4524

... -RI"

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

FALLING OOWN

....
L:•rf)~r bw111 C '
~

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.•

Picking Up The Pieces And Learning To Move On
Date:
!'hur8day, March 25
Time:
6:30- 8:00p.m .
Place:
Mason County Library
Speaker: Merritt Moore, M.A.
·These free lectures are provided as a comn1unity service. Seating is limited.
Please call67S-3389 or 1-800-992-9106 for reservations.

POMEROY • Thanks to the
efforts of Meigs and Gallia County
: : residents and officials what could
~ : hayc: been an unpteasaritcxperience
; • Fridly night for a bus loa4 of Fair1: land High School band students
instead became an exercise in
' cooperation.
·
· ·,
, ' According to a report from
~ . Meigs County Sheriff James M.
: . Soulsby, lhe students were stranded
•' : near Meigs High Sc~ool due to bus
~ . problems.
• · Deputies radioed Meigs Local
School bus mechanics for ass istance. Meanwhile, buses of the
· Gallipolis City School District
~ : stopped by and transported the
!: FRS students to McDonald's in
: · Pomeroy.
, · Soulsby made arrangements
: with Meigs Local Schools Superiotendent James Carpenter to open .

.
i

,:
:·

•Direct Deposlt·of Refund Check

SoutboCentral Oblo
Windy ud un!CIIOnablh cold

Lynn

lrsnow SOpeiCCiiiL

•

"

2415 Jackson Avenue, Point Pleasant, WV 25S50

.'

t:
l·

EztHded becalt:

MCIDdaJ tUwlll Wednud•J:
Monday, fair. lilahi from the
I:mid 201 to tho low 301. Lows
f :hotween 5 an~ 15. Tucaday, a
; :chance of rain or snow. HIJba
l : bet~ 35 and 45. Lowa In the
• :20s. Wodncllda&gt;:. a c~ of n....
! ,ri~ HIJhl fnHD the mid :3011 to the .
~! low~ Lowa ill tbe_201.
·

'

'

For complete, professional individual and
business tax preparation assistance c~ll

!:~~:!o::n•~gr~t2u;.r~~~nc~~~
':

·

Unit I stack was placed last
November 20 while concrete for
the foundation of the Unit 2 stack
was placed on January 7.
"When the stack shall is completed. the area can be turned over
to Babcock &amp; Wilcox to begin the
installation of the scrubber
abso(ber vessels," Howard said.
"The vessels will form a 180degree arc around each stack, and
because they're so tightly coupled,
the stack shell must be completed
before.. crews .can begin working on
lhem.
The scrubber absorber vessels
are presently being fabricated at a
Babcock &amp; Wilcox facility at MI. ,
Vernon, Indiana, and will be
shipped by barge to the Gavin site
in May.
The scrubber system being
installed at Gavin is designed to
remove 95 percent of the plant's
sulfur dioxide emissions . Toe
absorber vessels are where a lime
slurry will chemically remove the
sulfur dioxide before it can be
released into the air.
Retrofiuing the plant with
scrubbers is ~e cornerstone of th.c
AEP System s stra~2v for comohance with the stricter sulfur-dioxide-emissio~ lill_litations imposed
under the actd ram control program
in the Clean Air ~et ~~dments
of 1990. 111e Pubhc Uuhues Commission of Ohio formaUy appro~

~EI~ctron~c Filing Avail••••

f:Weather

' J

NeW...· Continued rrom A-1

the Meigs High School building
should .~ place be needed to house
the studimts.. However. MeDonaid ' s reported they' would make
arran•ements for ~e restaurant to
re~atn open unul another bus
amved from ProctorvtUe.
. ~echanics · arrived and soon discovered that, due to a faulty fuel
gauge, the bus was out of fuel.
Through the ~ssistance of Mei's
County Engtneer Bob Ea~on s
DejJanment fuel was obtained ana
the·bus got ~nderway.
The Fllirland band director and
cha~nes were most appn;cialive '.
for the assistance, Soulsby report- '
· .

E~

Angell

Certifl~ Public Accm~.ntant
736 Second Ave.
'

Gelllpolia, Ohio 4H31

(614) 446 8677
01*' 'i-5 W.ekdaye, Evenings and Seturday by
..,polntment.

I,
I .

)

"Sel'flin6 the patient and phy1ician for:
011er 30 yean."
:;

TAKING SHAPE • Construction crews have begun placing
concrete ror the tirst Qf two new 830-root-tall concrete stacks tliat
are being built at Ohio Power Company's General James M.
Gavin Plant at Cheshire. (T-S photo by Jim Freeman)
'

ed.

' ;..

Medical Shopp~

:, :.An exercise in coo,neration
y

;i
r

Coping With Divorce

·

••

r

·~

Brenda G. Henson - 614 44•3044
Vicky Lawwlll- 614-446-9471 or 2~9518

1":
Editor's D(!te: Names, ages and addressesare printed as they
•''••1 -appear
on_;,
o~lal
repdrts.
· _
' _ ___.
-_ _
__
_ _ _ _ _ _•_ _ _ _

1,

some time."

FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACI': ' '

GALLIPOLIS • Residents in the Gallipolis area who haven't
responded 10 t11e Community Housing Improvement Strategy sur·
vey can expect a lcnock on their door, according to officials.
City representatives. will be going.· door-to-door March 15-16
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.ll). to speak with residents who haven 'I completed the survey.
The survey is conducted to qualify the city of Gallipolis for
ful!ll'C funding. .
·
.

1

proJio.

AT GALLIA COUNTY JUNIOR FAIRGROUNDS

CHIS survey continues

,.,.
••

The. authority spokesman s•id
he did not lcnow how long il woilld
be before actual ground breaki)lg
could take place. ·
·
••
"This is not an overnight
sition," he said. "This wiTt take

Jmt West or Gallipolis on St. RL 351.lroa l'loJD HolZer Medk:ol Center~

CHESTER • Dick Fick, Chester, reponed to the Meigs County
Sherifrs Department lhat someone busted the windshield and a mir·
ror on the passenger side of his 1967 International truck.

:·••

I1

SAT., APRIL 3, 1993-10 a.m.- 6 p.m.
SUN., APRIL 4, 1993 ;.. 12:94) p.m. - 5 p.m. !l

Vandalism probed

·~
'•

sru'd.

Fourth Annual Art$ &amp; Crafts Show
-~
hi
Sponsored by Rodney Pike Chun:b orGod ·Ladles'Minlstrles , ,

' 'REEDSVILLE· Meigs County Sheriff James M, SouJsby reports
that Friday morning around 6:45 CarlL. Barringer, Reedsville, was
eastbound on State Route 248 and struck and killed a deer that
jumped into the path of his 1985 Ford pickup truck.
· Damage to the right-(fllnt of the truck was listed as moderate.

,.."•.•

Learn How To
Best Parent You Can Be,
. Be The
'
· Even In Difficult Times
Date:
Wednesday, March 17
Time:
6:30 - 8:00 p.m.
Place:
Mason County Library
Speaker: ·David Clay, M.A., L.P.C.

'

{&lt;

I;

,.

Present

'

·',, peer-vehicle accident reported
'

,.••

Insight Outpatient Services
··· and
New Hope Christian Counseling Center
Effective Parenting Skills

.•
:;

review of the preferred site. The
findings of the study will then be
compiled into a summary re~rt
wh_ich will be place o~ · public
rev1ew for 30 days, at which lime a
public hearing will held to receive
comments on the study. The
authority spokesman said the ~­
ing should take place sometime•in
late April or early May.
:
The results of lhe public ~g
will be recorded in the summl!ry
d&lt;icument, which wiD be submit~
to the FAA and ODOT for revi~w
and possible acceptance, the repon

BIG TWO-DAY CRAFT SHOW

"·· POMEROY • Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical.
M-Strviee responded to three calls for assistance Friday. .
.
~
At l :S~ p.m., the Rutland squad W.:nt to Holly Road for Teresa
Kopevinsicy·wfib ~ transp&lt;ll'fed to O'l!leness·Mernorial Hospital
in Athens. ,
,
AI 4!04 p.m., Pomeroy squads went to East Main Street for •
two-~hicle ·accidenL Jeanene and; Rick Lunsford w~re transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At4:10 p.m .. the Middleport squad
was called in to assis.l and transported Denise Holman to VMH.

:·'•,.,.

SPECIAL RAllS FOR HANDICAPPED GROUPS

••

EMS responds to two calls

·~

RENTAL SHOES •••••••••••••••• 75C

ArteiThMtre
426 2nd Ave., Golllpollo, Oh.
CoD "6-AATI for more Info.

.-

'·•

(MUST IE PRE·ARUIGED)

.

POMEROY· Donald A. Young, New Haven, W.Va., was cited
to the Meigs County Court of a peuy theft charge following an
alleged shoplifting at the Big Wheel. He is scheduled Ill appear in
Meigs County Colin next Wednesday.

'·'·

Bowl3 Games for 13.75

This preliminary screening
resulted in the recommendation of
the Porter site in Bidweii-Poner
and the Watson site in Rodney,
which were then subjected to a set
of six additional screening criteria,
such as aeronautical charac~ri&lt;lir.&lt;
.environmental compatibility,
expansion potential and implementauon feasibility.
This second evaluation resulted
in the recommendation of the Watson site as the preferred area for
development.
Ninety percent of the study was
funded by a gram from the Federal
Aviation Administration, the
spokesman said. The remaining
costs were divided among Mei's
and Gallia counties and the OhiO
Depanment of Transportation.
The final phase of the evaluation
will be an environmental

Man cited on theft charge

.••

GROUP RATES
. AVAILABLE

"l•teraciiOI" resc..d•led
Friday, l.U 2, 8 P.M.
Morna •d 60h.111y Heoklno

,

.,I'

Wednesday and Thursday After 9:00 P.M.
'1.25 per game

Sat., M•. 20, 8:00 P~M.

'

SiteS... _::C:.:on=ti=nu=ed:..:lr::.;om:=.::A:..:·l::__ _ _ _ _ _...._

.t GALLIPOLIS - More than $1,000 worth of pans and equipllnenl were stolen from an electric company's pole truck, the Gallipolis Police Department reported.
' -·Phil Miller of Buckeye Rural Electric, 143 Second Ave., Gal·
•· lipolis, told police someone stole ·the items from a side companmeot
on the lhlck•between ~h 5 and 8. The complaint was filed with
the, GPo
Friday.
·
I
.

L'

Tuesday Night After 9:00 P.M.
11.75 per game
Tuesday and Thursday -1:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M.

America• Poplll• Musk

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:~
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Bowl3 Gamea for '3.75

·

POMEROY - Three people were treated for injuries following a
two-vehicle accident on East Main Saeet in Pomeroy around 4 p.m.
Friday,
According to a·repon from the Pomeroy Police DepariiTlent,
. Denise L. Holman, 33, address unreported, was westbound when,
· fdr reasons unknown, she lost control of her 1986 Chevrolet Cavalier which went left of center, striking a 1990 Che'%1et S-10 driven ·
by Jeanene Lunsford, 28, of Shade.
' L:uiiSford' s vehicle then struck a large piece of cement, police
reported.
.
·, Holman, Lunsford •..an,d Lunsfor~'s passenger, Rick Lunsf~r:d.
were transported by umts of the Metgs County Emergency MediCal
Service to Ve~rans Memorial Hospital where they were treated and
released.
·: Damage to both vehicles was listed as disabling. No citations
were issued.
.
.·
· · No injuries were reported following a one-car accident on East
Main Street under the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge in Pomeroy around
7:30p.m.
According to a police repon, Stepl{en M. See, 16, Pomeroy, was
traveling at a high rate of speed and lost control of his 1979 Ford
which went over an embanlcmenL
' Damage to the vehicle was listed as light. See was cited for failure to control.

'·
Ite'f!IS stolen from truck

.t~.·,

Monday and Wednesday - Noon to 5:00 P.M.
'1.25 per game
.
Monday Night After 9:00 P.M.

TAPESTRY

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JUNIORS •id SENIORS••••11.50 per,....
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BOWLING PRICES

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the _fire: 700 high school students,
55 teachers and staff members and
108 eighth grade students visiting
the school.
The state fire marshal's office is
investigating the blaze. No cause
has been determined, Carpenter
said.

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.
JEAN-CLAUDE VAN OAMME

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:s

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f: Electric Power started consuuction a year in increased electric rates.

Three injured in accident

Meigs receives... .......:..co:..::;nt=inu::..ed::..fr....:.;.om_,A_,·1:...___

•

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

files ~econd suit
k )against scrubber project ·

GALLIPOLIS - Joseph A. Bevan, 40, 377 Mam Road, Crown
City, was arrested Friday morning on a court order from the court of
..common pleas for failure to appear.

SMART SIGN • Residents of Mason County were being
warned by officials to "stop" and decide 1r going out Into S.tur•
day's blizzard was worth the risk. This lone walker braved tbe
storm yesterday morning in downtown Point Pleasant. The snowstorm, already declared the worst or the decade, Is ·expected to
dump more than a foot of snow in the area.

VA .

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AEP's acid rain compliance plan
on November 25,1992.
Completion of the Unit I and
Unit 2 scrubber systems are sched·
uled for September 95, and
November 1, 1995, respectively.
According to Howard, some 800 to
900 contractor employees will be
on site at the peak of construction
activity.
American Electric Power's
seven operating companies serve ?·
million residents of Ohio, Indiana,
Kentucky, Michigan, Virginia,
West Virginia and TenneSsee. Ohio
Power provides electric service in
53 of Ohio's 88 counties.

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Ohio/W.Va.
Regents get update on efficiency drive
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A
progress report to the Ohio Board
of Regents shows action has been
proposed or taken on more than 85
jlj:n:ent of suggestions from a comrpittee trying ~make higher educa11pn mon: e!I'ICICnL
How.ard Gauthier, special assistant to Reaents' Chancellor Elaine
·Hairston, briefed the board Friday
'Qn steps taken to link universities
t.iore effectively, respond bettet to
~tewide priorities and give the
ie)gents a stronger coordinating
""le
;.'
,. ,;The IS. sues you are a••-·'"ng
uw...,..
oflie highly complex and will affect
~he culture and behavior of our
r:~e assisted colleges and universi-

ties," Gauthier said,
"These changes must take place
in a reasonable time frame that
allows for consultation, cooperal
tion and adal'tation," he said.
"You are takmg very important
steps down a path to significant
reform."
In other action Friday • the
n:gents:
-Approved 7-1, with one
abstention, a 25-year joint use
agreement between Wright State
University and the U.S. Air and
Trade Show. A state construction
budget ~assed ,·n December gave
Wright tate $4 million to buy and
improve the air show exhibition
hall at Dayton lntemational Air-

port.

· -Authorized the Univenity (If
Findlay to offer a. master's ofbusiness ad!ninisD'8tion degree.
-Transferred $25,000 to Cuyahoga Community COllege for a program wjth Cleveland public
schools to help increase student
academic success. ·
Gauthier said ·the regents staff
made considerable progress over
the last three months in evaluating
~nd imflementing recommendalions o an efficiency committee
created at the request of Gov.
G
, eorge Voinovich.
Gauthier said the budget bill
pending in the House would tie pan
of rhe state aid to two-year campus-

es in 1995-1997 to their records in
.meeting nine standards of service.
The bill also proposes a IO._percent statewide increase in lime
~t by full-time faculty on teachmg undergraduate students.
·:currently, your staff is preparing material to distribute to state
assisted colleges aild universities
on national benchmarks for the
allocation .of faculty time in teaching," Gaurhier said.
The regents' staff will start talks .
with colleges and ·universities by
July 1, 1994, on ways
· to eliminate
OV!:rlaps in service. The staff also is ·
aying to develop ways of identifying duplicative programs at the
grailuate level.

i'Republican candidates
trade
accusations
seat_,
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•••• CINCINNATI (AP)- Republi.

•qo candidate Jay Bucbert says he

:;nu bad whichever GOP nominee
'wins Tuesday's special consressiena! primary.
But Buchert 8!1'1 GOdPedopponent
Rob Porunan su 11 tra
accusa·
lions Friday.
, Seven Republicans and five
Democmts seek the congressional
seat that Republican Willis GradiiOn quit in January. The special
election is May 4.
~ Buchen said that Portman, who
·~rked on Gradison's congressionfa1 staff in the 1970s, knew in
:advance that Gradison was going to
• resign from Congress.
Buchert said Portman, a lawyer
in the Bush White House, had substantial money backing lined up
before Gradison announced his res• ignation. He said he also had
! received Gradison's endorsement
! and $500 campaign conuibution.
"This is nothing more than a
back·room deal: two career insider
politicians trying to trade offa con-

·fat:neraJ

t

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.,.....:~--•
o--....,~

airtnn .. the

tax

payers With an $800000 biD to

fOi . ..

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pay
,out, Buchen said • a news con·
.ereCnoeur·t· Ste'
'p
.
mer, a C?rtman C8JI!~;~ti~k!:a:!isemd Buchert s
, .11•
d' h.
t . ·
s a 1as ·ml~.ute, 1. ast· 1 ~
~.esperate charge.. S~emer SBI~.
You can tell who 5 gomg down m
flames by who holds the last news
cQJI{~ce to blast the other opponenL
.
.
. Portman said this week he has
ratsed $500,000 fro"! 1,5~ contnb~~ors. Buche~ sa1d.Fr!day he
ha~ mcreased h1s famtly s. ca.mP!ltgn loan to $250,000, bnngmg
his total to at least $350,000. ·
In the pas~ ~wo weeks, ~uchert
reP.Orted rece~vmg $15,000 !II contnbullons to supplement hts own
money.
.
Portman put $55.000 '?f hiS o-:m
m'?ne.y •!!to the campatgn while
bnng.mg m at least $38,000 from
contnbutors.
Former Rep. Bob McEwen,

. Ohio .briefs-___,

:Children removed from home
1

ROSSFORD - Nine children were removed from their roach, infested home in this Toledo suburb, authoritiC~~ said.
Juvenile Court Judge Raben Pollex said he put the children in
. foster care because of the filthy conditions. The children, ranging in .
I· age from an infant to 15 years. were removed by Wood County
; authorities Friday.
.
;
The faniily wasn't identified by police because children were
· involved.
· Police said the house was a mess, with thick cobwebs in every
: room, ttash littering the floor, backed up toilets and sinks and cockroaches all over the house. _
.
,
The children were taken out of ihe home in SeP.tember 1991 for
::
1-: similar reasons. They were returned after the family. with the help
;: of social service agencies, improved living conditions.
•;
The father works full time and the house is located in a nice
:~ neighborhood, according to Jerry Eversman, a court officer.
"Eventually you have to say, 'This just isn't working,' and you
have to pull the children out,'' Pollex said. "We have ttied every
, thing in terms or services."
;
The children could be returned to their home if conditions
improve.

I Officers released from hospital
TOLEDO -. One of two police offiCers. wounded in a shooting
while on a bank robbery investigation has been released from the
hospital.
Officer William ·E. Boardman Jr., 33, who was shot in the chest
and arm, was released from Toledo Hospital on Friday.
The other officer, Harry Marquis, 41. was released last week
from St Vincent Medical Center.
A suspect remained in seriqus condition Friday at St. Vincent.
He has not been charged, police said.
Marquis and Boardman were shot last week while working as
plainclothes officers in a bank robbery investigation. They were
watching a bank when they saw a man malehing the description of a
robbery suspect, police said,
The shootin~s occurred after the officers stopped the man on the
stree~ police srud.

Mishap closes airport
TOLEDO- A mishap involving a Burlinetoo..Air Express CBr$0
plane lemporarily closed the main runwa1 at Toledo Express Alr-

whose fund-raising effort was ·
smaller than Portman's or
Buchert's, matched Portman's
$38,000 from individuals and.got
$12,000 from special-interest political action cothmmFitedtees,alacE'cord!ng
1ecuon
to repOrts to e
er
Commission.
Anti-abortion candidate Ken
Callis and Anderson Township
trustee Bob Dorsey each reported
receiving a single St,ooo conuibulion.
Portman returned the $500 conuibution to Gradisoo's campaign
this week and urged Gradison to

help pay the $800,000 cost of the
special elections in the five-county
southwestern Ohio distticL
Gradison, who had begun his
lOth term, resigned to become ·.
president of the Health Insurance
Association of America, a Washington-based lobbying group. His
aide, Margaret Totten, said Gradison was traveling Friday and was
unavailable for comment
McEwen spokesman Gene Wise
also criticized Portman's involvement with Gradison. Wise caUed it
"a case of one lobbyist buying
another."

OCC says it will oppose i·
Cincinnati Bell rate.hike
CJNCINN,o\TI (AP) _ The
Ohio Office of the Consumers'
Counsel said it probably will
oppose Cincinnati Bell Telephone
Co.'s plan to raise basic telephone
rates 11.6 percent
·
"We are clearly, definitely not
accepting-the notion that Cincinnati
Bell needs an increase," said
David Bergmann, an occ lawyer.
Cincinnati Bell notified th~Pub.lie Utilities Commission of Ohio
F 'd
'II k
1h t ·
on
· n ay
a It WI
as resito
increase
the monthly
cost of
dential phone service from $14.94
to $16.67 by February 1995. The
company said it wiD file its request

Cincinnati Bell President Raymond Clark said the company has
ttied to avoid a price increased and
has cut its work ,fori:e by 21 percent, from 4,370 to 3.484 employ- ·
ees, since 1985.
"But there comes a time when
you just can't tighten the belt any·
more," Clark said.
Bergmann said Cincinnati Bell
doesn't need the increase because
the rate of return it was authorized
to receive in 1985 is higher than
rates of return PUCO has permitted
recently because interest costs were
higher back then:
.
·
"Without seeing the data ... we
can't say for sure, but I can't imagine that, using an up-to-date rate of
return, the rates would need to be
company to ask for a rate increase increased at all;" he said. "In fact,
· they might need to be decreased."
un der an . alternative ·reg~lation
plan, the utility said. The PUCO
Bell said it would use
adopted the plan in January 10 theCincinnati
money it gains to lower rates it
· streamline the rate-approval pro- charges long distance companies
using its network. The addttional
c~he proposed rate increase, revenue
also would help pay for the
which the company said would laying of fiber optics and improveraise $16 million, would be the firSt ments to the telecommunicationssince.1985.
1
program. :
Cincinnati Bell also will ask to technol~-in-education
Cincmnali Bell has 831,000
be allo~e;d to autom.atically raise telephone lines in southern Ohio,
rates w1thin 60 days if it earns less northern Kentucky and two coun-.
than its proposed 11.89 pen:ent rate ties in Indiana. About two-thirds of
of return from the.increase.
· those lines are in Ohio.
'

:e~:~·~rfst~~j~~~~n~~~

'

Weapons trial set for Dillon
CLEVELAND (AP) :_ A Stark ishable by up to five years and
County man facing ttia1 next month $250,000 in fmes.
in the slayings of two'ouldoorsmen
He had pleaded guilty in July to •
is scheduled to be ttied on unrelat- possession of a gun silencer withed weapons charges March 25.
out a serial number and could face
The trial date on weapons 10 years in prison and a $250.000
charges for Thomas Lee Dillon, 42, fine.
'
of Magnolia, was· set Friday by
Authorities continue to investiU.S. District Court Judge John gate Dillon in the deaths of outManos.
doorsmen in Tuscarawas, Belmont
Dillon also is a suspect in the anll Muskingum counties. The
shooting deaths of three other out- other victims are Jamie Paxton, 21,
doorsmen in eastern Ohio, prosecu· of Bannock; Donald Welling, 35,
tors have said. No charges have or Sttasburg, and Kevin Loring, 30,
been filed in those slayings.
of Duxbury, Mass.
Assistant U.S. Attorney MaO!yn
All five victims were killed
Babula and Dillon's attorney, while hunting, jogging or fishing
Roger Synenberg, discussed a plea alone.
bargain on the weapons charges
Thursday but no agreement was
reached.
•
Ms. Bobula said a plea bargain
"continues to be a possibility, as it
would be in any other case." She
had flTSt mentioned a possible plea
,bargain in !he case Feb. 17.
Synenberg, of Cleveland, could
not be reached for comment. He
did not return messages left at his
office Thursday afternoon.
. Dillon has pleaded innocent to
aggravated murder in the deaths of
of
Gary
Bradley,
44,
Williamstown, W.Va., and Claude
Hawkins, 49, of Mansfield. Trial in
those deaths is scheduled April 13
in Caldwell in Noble County.
Bradley was shot while fiShing
alone April 5 in Noble County.
Hawkins wai; shot March 14 while
fishing alone in Coshocton County.
Dillon, a former Canton water .
worker, is being held in the Lake
County jail in Painesville on $1
million cash bond. He was arrested
Nov. 27 on the weapons charges.
In the case before Manos, Dillon
has pleaded innocent to two counts
of receiving firearms while under
indictment and two counts of possession of a fuearm by a felon.
Each receiving firearms charlle
is punishable by up to 10 years 10
prison and $250,000 in fines. Each
firearm possession charge is pun-

Live in one state,
work in another?

~ HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) 'Eolice ftled theft charges against
1ve people after detectives found
ore than 1,000 missing library
:books at two ho113eS.
l Anthony R. Simmons. 19, of
~milton, was charged Thursday
,..ith theft and receiving stolen
~roperty. said Delective Dan Pratt

~~otFour
youths,":ere
whose
names were
released,
charged
with

j By The Associated Press
,, ·The State Highway Patrol says
~tleast two people have been killed
/)his weekend in Ohio traffic.
·, The patrol counts weekend traf).~c deaths from 6 p.m. Friday to
. idnight Sunday.
,. The dead:
.
.
;FRIDAY NIGHT
: CANTON - Abbey Knowles,
,13, hometown not listed, when a
~ar and the truck in which she was
It passenger collided on Ohio 43 in
'Stark County.
'f NAPOLEON - Juvencio R.
~uceda. 20, of Adrian, Mich., in a·
tt,.o-car accident on U,S. 6 in
Heniy County.

j'

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l•r4on • . . 1~... 1o k' ptliM 1, . . . .,

FARLEY'S FISH FARM

.'

c

•

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ABOARD
THE
USS
;THEODORE ROOSEVELT (AP)
- Addressing his troops for the
.Iirst time as commander in chief,
President Clinton praised the military as "rhe muscle, the sinew and
the soul ofour sttength."
In a speech to crew members of
the aircraft carrier USS Theodore
·Roosevelt and in a later address
·,broadcast worldwide by the Armed

National Abonion Federation said week as uswil because that is what
she knew of no other resignations, Dr. Gunn would have wanted,"
adding that most people 'in the · said Ladies Center director Linda
abortion-rights movement would Taggart.
carry on.
Women's Medical Services also
• "While it's clear pe!Jple are plans to reopen Monda&gt;', said Lisa
' frightened, they· were fpghtened Mullins, assistant admmistrator of
before this,'' said B~Radfotd. Family Plannipg of Fon :Walton
Gunn, 47, of Eufaula, Ala., was Beach · in Mary Esther, which is
shot in the back three times at affiliated with the Pensacola clinic.
point-blank range as he got out of .
She ·said several women had
his car behind the Pe11sacola abortions at the Mary Esther clinic
Women's Medical Services clinic · Friday.
while an anti-abortion demonstraThe protesters were affiliated
lion was going on in front of the with the anti-abonion group Resbuilding, police said.
··
cue America.
Griffin, 31, a Pensacola chemi"If they have a doctor, we will
cal plant worker, is being held demonstrate,'' Burt said.
without bond at the Escambia
Rescue America leader Don
County Jail on an open count of Treshman of Houston said he was
murder.
horrified by the ldlling but not surWomen seeking abortions Fri- prised that violence had touched
day were referred to clinics in the the abortion movement Gunn was
nearby town of Mary Esther, in the rust U.S. doctor killed during
Tallahassee and in the Alabama an anti-abortion protest
cities of Mobile and Montgomery.
In New York, Planned ParentVolunteers were available at The hood said Friday it was creating a
Ladies Center in Pensacola to drive multimillion- dollar defense fund to
patients to the other clinics.
protect its staff and the people who
"We are going to be open next use its clinics.

Forces Radio Network, Clinton
repeatedly stressed his respect for
membllrfoflbe military.
Clinton, whose draft status and
lack of military service during the
Viemam War became a campaign
issue. told the carrier crewmen
there was "no greater honor" than
being their commander in chief.
"Our armed forces are more
than.the backbone of our security,''
jJ

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still at some of the you pay·no closing
Th apply for a
lowest levels in . costs- ¥uding home equity loan,
years. And your m- attorneys fees and stop by the nearest
terestpaytrentsare appraisal~ Bank One.
tax deductible in plus the cost of the . Or, ifyou prefer,

· OFFICER TESTIFIES - Los Angeles police officer D•nlel
GOIIZIIIes, lloldln&amp; a pollee wa!kle-tlllkle,
IS he testlflea Ia a. I
Los Angeles federal courtroom Friday during the trial of foar fel- 1
low officers on c.ltarJ!tS that they violated Rodney King's dvll
rights. Sketch by Dav1d Rose. (AJ')
.
(!

story suggestion?
Call the

he said.
Despite his glowing praise,
Clinton s remarks drew only polite,
unenthusiastic applause from the
ranks. The president's relations
with the military. have been
strained from the start over proposed bud~et cuts and his decision,
temporanly on hold, to permit
homosexuals to serve in the armed

l
,'
~

. There's never
been a better time
togeta~One..
Home EquityLoan:

'•

week to claim custody of his children under an emergency order.
The state was awarded temporary custody of the other 18 children.
Karen Eells, regional director of
the state's Child Protective.Service,
would not say if Mrs. Schroeder
would be allowed to see her children. The FBI also would not com- ·
menL
In other developments, Swensen
said Koresh suffers pain and
headaches from a bullet wound to
his side. The wound is not considered life-threatening.
Despite claims Thursday from a
12-year-old girl who has left the
cult and told a TV program that
members were prepared to commit
suicide, "They say that they're not
- they have no intention of that,''
Swensen said.
·

:Clinton addresses troops aboard Roosevelt
I

•

I

also have left the compound. Koresh claims there are 89 adults and 17
children still inside.
The four children lived with
Mrs. Schroeder and her husband,
Michael, at the compound outside
Waco, according to court documents. Three of the children were
from her previous marriage to Air
Force SgL William Mabb, :while a
3-year-old boy was from her marriage to Michael Schroeder.
Schroeder, 29, was killed Feb. 28
and his body was found in a wooded area 350 yards behind the compound, the FBI said, At least one
other sect member and four.federal
agents also were killed.
Mabb, who is stationed at
EUsworth Air Force base in South
Dakota, came from Guam this

'

PENSACOLA, Fla . (AP) Women seeking abortions were
directed to other cities Friday, and
.a ·prosecutor said he expected to
seek .the death penalty against a
·M f,•CCII•otl:yof Jc!lliDt a doctor
&lt;!iiii!JI!IIIiaptl"'lbbrtioo protest ·
·The city's .two clinics where
abortions are perfonlted hive been
closed since Wednesday's shooting
of Dr.• David Gunn. He was the
only doctor to perform abortions at
the clinics. With oilier physicians
volunteering their serv1ces to fill
~ the void, the clinics expected to
reopen next week.
Anti-abortion protesters also
. · said they would be back when the
. clinics reopen.
, State Attorney Cur!is Golden
~ said he expected a gra,nd jury
•would indict Michael F. Griffin on
a charge of first,degree murder,
possibly ·as early as next week. If
so, Golden said, he would seek rhe
death penalty, his policy in premeditated murder cases.
, Two doctors at a clinic in Melresigned Th·ursday because
of the killing. But the executive
. directOr of the Washingtoncbased

,bourne

•;;::~::::-::::~==~=:::::FISH FOR POND SrGCKING

1·100.247·2615

WACO, Texas (AP) -Two they wanted to leave the comBranch Davidian cult members, pound.
including a woman whose husband
Earlier in the day, FBI special
was ldlled in a shootout with feder- . agent Dick Swensen said cult
al agents, left the sect's heavily members had said "it wasn't time"
armed compoupd Friday. They to release Gyarfas, 19; Kevin
were the first cult members to leave Whitecliff, 32; and Brad Branch,
in a week.
·
34.
Kathy Schroeder, 34. left after ' Mrs. Schroeder and Gyarfas
telling authorities she. wanted to see were the first people to leave the
I her children. Her four children complex since March 5.
.
: were released last week in the days
Cult leader David Koresh talked
; following the Feb. 28 gun battles with negotiators for a little more
• between cult members and federal than an hour Thursday night, his
I agents,
first session since Tuesday,
' More than seven hours later, a Swensen said.
()nan believed to be Oliver Gyarfas, · Swensen said negotiators were
;:.n Australian citizen, left, authori· told .Mrs. Schroeder wanred "to·be
.Jles:said.
reunited with her childten.''
:~. Gyanas is
of three men who
Mrs. Schroeder's children were
:'have been saying for two days that !IIIIOng 21 youths released in inter·
ill
··
· vals last week. Two elderly women

~

.

Mlr.WM ORDER 25 ASH
WE FURNIBH YOUR HALIIJNQ CONTAINERS
TO PLACBAlfOIIDiRCAU'ID81oa&amp;AIIOftoaCAU.:

Woman wanting rto see children leaves compound

•

·Hours: 9:0()..6:00 Monday-Friday, Saturday 9:00..5:00

Lot.tery numbers

DELIVERY WILL BE: Tueact.y, March 18
POMEROY -R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY
12:15-1:16 p.m., Phone 614-1182·2164
Wednesday, March 17
,
BIDWELL- BIDWELL CASH FEED STORE
4:00.5:00 p.m., Phone 614 388 11888
Thuradlty, March 18
GAWPOLIS- RIVER CITY FARM SUPPLY
7:45-8:46 a.m., Phone 814 448 2086

·.Waco standoff continues

.f·Following.shooting, Pensacola women News Hotline
Have.a hot news tip
ldirected
elsewhere
for
abortions
·
or
'

618 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OH. ~5769
992-6674

CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were three tickets sold naming all
five n·umbers drawn in Friday
night's Buckeye 5 drawing, and
each winning ticket is worth
$100,000, the Ohio Lottery said.
.The tickets were sold in North
Jackson, Ravema and Lancaster.
. Here are Friday night's Ohio
Lottery selectiilns:
Buckeye 5
6-9-13-25-27
juvenile delinquency by receiving
(six,. nine, thirteen, twenty-five,
stolen property, he said.
twenty-seven)
Simmons allegedly failed to
return to Lane Public Library Pick 3 Numbers
6-6-2
$420.83 in materials checked out in
(six, six, two)
January. He's also accused of
Pick
4 Numbers
accepting more than $300 in stolen
9-9-1-8
books and reselling them, Pratt
(nine, nine, one, eight)
said.

!rwo killed in Wre&lt;:kS

Sunday Times·Sentinel/A5 .

~y LINDA DEUTSCH
look at King, who was in a car with -really ha~y about it or really sad
King testified earlier this week
AP Special Correspoodent
Wind.
about it,' Gonzalez said. "He was he ~as &lt;~?ubled over in the patrol
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
PoweU and Wind are on b'ial in stating what occurred."
car m pam, but Gonzalez said he
paliceman accused of beating Rod- federal court along with Officer . After being questioned further saw nothing like lhat
r'CY King told "a war story" in the Th~ore Briseno and SgL Stacey by Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven
Witnesses before Gonzalez
'squad room while a wounded King Koon on charges of violating Clymer, the witness said, "I think a identified hospital records showing
waited in a patrol car for transfer to King's civil rights in the 1991 beat- more ~ accurate term would be it took more than two hours for
.a hospital, a policeman testified ing, which was videotaped by a telling a war story."
Powell and Wind to drive King
bystander. The officers are white;
:friday.
After 30 to 40 minutes of talk, from Pacifica Hospital to Los
. But Officer Daniel Gonzalez King is black.
Gonzalez·continued, he approached Angeles County-USC Medical
backed off supponing prosecutors' . The officerS' acquittals on state Powell and asked if he ·could look Center, a drive which an FBI agent
contention that Officers Laurence charges of assault and brutality at the suspect
testified should take 30 minutes. .
Powell and Timothy Wind touched off deadly riots in Los
He then went to the parking lot
Powell's lawyer, Michael Stone,
"showed" the beaten King to their . Angeles last year.
and saw Wind in the car writing a suggested in questioning that Pow..c\)Deagues, delaying medical treatGonzalez testified he was in the repon by flashlight while King sat ell had to complete paperwork
inenL
·
squad room writing a report when beside him.
'
before taking the prisoner to the
.And Gonzalez insisted it was he Powell came in, leaned against a
He said he turned his flashlight hospital. But Gonzalez said he
- not Powell - who suggested desk and began talking to seven or on King's face and saw some didn't see Powell dQing anything
· going to the parking lot early in the eig~t otl)er officers in the room.
swelling on King's face but "it except" telling war stories."
''He wasn't bragging. He wasn't didn't look n:3J bad at the time."
morning of March 3, 1991, and

one

po'foo plane on Friday got stuck in the mud Just off the east end of
the runway after it landed, said Jim McCue, auport director. .
. Officials said the plane was taxiing down the runway after landing when the pilot acc:idenLally missed a tumorr and crashed it into a
field.
It took about three hours to move the plane from the muddy
field. The main runway was closed for several hows Friday.
Burlington said the plane, which was carrying 87,000 pounds,
was not damaged.
•

:Police charge S with theft

Nation/World
Officer told war story while King
awaited treatment, policeman,testifies
March 14, 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A4

March 14, 1993

I

�\

.r...March 14, 1993

Commentary

Mmdll4. 1993

.:.r:=::::::::::========it
r '

•'The way the rest of the world P. Burke, a former official with the
plays the game, there •is no level National Security Age_ncy and now
playing field. Being ahead of the the head of a consulung firm that
curve. knowinJt what they're after . advises clients how to-counter eco·
·
·nomic espionage, wants to preserve
the status quo. "The government
has always done macro-economic
intelligence for government customers. But when it comes to gathering tactical commercial intelligenee for U.S. companies, I strongly di~.''
.·
lind what they have to do· to get it,
Several ar!!uments s~d in the
thai's the only security you can way of CIA mvolvement in ecobank on these days."
.
nomic espionage, not the least of
Some Washington policy·mak· which is ethics. "The privare sector
ers believe economic intelligence is does not want illegally obtained
the perfect tasl\ for the CIA, which clandestine intelligence because it
is currently groping for a post-Cold puts the company in legal jeopWar mission. Sen. Dennis ardy," says Jan Herring, a 20-year
DeConcini, D-Ariz., the new chair- CIA veteran who designed the
man of the Senate Intelligence business intelligence program for
Committee, recently told an inter· Motorola Corp. "How many u.s.
viewer !hat information intercepted _companies are going to act on illeby the CIA should be passed on to gaily obtained ioformation?"
U.S. companies in some siwations . The CIA would also run tile risk
if it would provide a competitive of jeopardizing its secret sources
edge . "You'd be a fool if you and methods. Then there is the
dido 't," he said . He has since question of distributing ihe inforretreated from that comment.
mation fairly, when some economBut former intelligence officials ic secrets could be useful to severa1
now working in the private sector different industries. Private sector
want the CIA to stay out of the experts rear this information would
industrial espionage racket Gerald ran prey ·to the same JIOlitical pres-

WASHINGTON - As the
debate qges over the future role of
the U.S. imelligence community,
• m ....,c
one thing is clear: In the 1990s.
ttenchcoats are out and pinstripes
are
in.
m c..t sc., i'wltl'O)', Qblo
That seems to be just about the
(614) ,,..1:2156
only thing intelijgence analysts can
ROillRJ' L WINGil'IT
agree on these days. With the Sovi• '¥1
et Union gone from the map, the
cutting edge of American intelligence operations will be on the ·
economic - not the military or
•
political- front
But !hat still leaves one burning
A MEMBER af 1k "'""""'"' ~ess, mel lht' Americ111
Ncca:papca P ' [ ' s.A ..,._
'
question: Should U.S. intelligence
agencies merely focus on defend.,.
J.611EIS OF OI'INIJN _,. a '
'Jhoy should be 1qs lhan
ing American companies from for·
300 -....niL AD IIIIas 'j .,lllliilin&amp; IIIII IIlllS! be aiped with
eign spies, or should they be help......., ....,.,.. ..t
,_iJIIed !etten will be
ing to collect economic secrets
publisbed. . : be iioo pod ~ adiolnsaing issues, not
from
foreign corporations? At his
pea• :Of
confirmation
hearings, new CIA
·'
-Director James Woolsey called it
the "hottest current topic in intelligence policy."
r : cong~ess
Henry T. Clements believes we
should focus on the former. His
company, Technology Security
I·
'~
.
.
Planning Inc .. is one of the few
:-"
ByWALTEitlt..MEARS
.
U.S. firms that train companies
;;;
AP &amp; W C.;
Ie•t
how to monitor the strategies of
~ wASHINGTON - Iadie last riteS fm doomed military bases, foreign competitors and avoid hav....Congless .a die While Bou!le spreM1 die fllllne.
ing their own trade secrets stolen.
-.#'t
1bc ,sy.a:au is ...... eiled . .... di ..... political revivaL;; once the "We're getting qeamed," he says.
"' 'base-c:losiD« nsu~'~ty list is Sllll, as il will be this summer, there's no
jcbu&amp;in&amp; it. COipc:ss ca oaJy
it up or down, and the drive for

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

..

.

= ..,.-.,

..

immune to
·t pressure, but not cries of paip

.
'•

•diwiCUIS

~II'

••ttl

•• ~

"*

'•~plrtw a~

thing,•
~::: So tile
p1 . . ..S denw•k for dlange began in advance, at
~"!dleCapitol..t ia-..Sc:ilia; widllml:sat risk, arguing the case and
•b nating die aewrd.
.
·~ ne •' ur _,. BUt fonz • 1 w:• IJul em; the effort can offer politit•1cal shei'N wbr:n sllUldoWas bit home base. costing jobs and battering
~!•t.fSiness So do die ._.;•oiling Huuse ..S Senate votes, IJid even that
~can Ill: avoided. CliJn&amp;n::ss c:a simply aa:.e pl die closing list by doing

laiJbtma.

--Area deaths--

Sunday Timcs-Sentinel/A6

Gilbert Beegle

Military espionage is out, economic in

ADI:w' ' • ol
·-

sure$ llia1 govern the distribution ,of
congressional pork-barrel spend·
· ing.
To know exactly what to loqk
for abroad. experts believe the Cit\
would have to have a domest.~c
database to work from. Not only
would .the intelligence ~ommunity
find few U.S; fums lJ'USUng Jli!Oujh
to provide them their lalcst t.e&lt;;hn9.:
· logical advances, but the Cl~.t~lf
is ba!lned from ~estic actmues.
F~n~lly, there IS the threat of
n:taliation. Although Clements says
h1s com~y use_s only legal meahs
to gather_mtelhg.ence on fore•!!n
corp~rauons, h1s ef.forts ~~ve
someumes been met w1th hosulir.y.
"In tJ~e past )(eBT, we've had ~
hosule buyout offers from the
Japanese. They wan~ to buy )ls
and close tts down. V.:~ ve ~so got
people that f(!llow us, he said.
Where the CIA could P!ay, a
!~rger ~ole, says .Burke, ts )n
defenstve (economic) ioformauon
~athering" ~gains! "il!fgaii?E
tmproper fore•~ threats: Public
statem~nts by P~erre Marion~ a f~
mer d~rector of the Frenc~ mtelll·
gence agency, the DGSE, illustrate
why.
·
.
~on · has ~ot only ~nutted to
spymg on fore•gn busmess competitors but has laid out specific
examples of how it is done. On Ofle
occasion, he said that the DOSE
compiled a dossier of. secret bid
proposals froin American .and Sovi·
et companies competing with a
French corporation for a $1 billion
contract to sell fighter pla)les to
India. The DOSE then provided·
details of the bids to the French
company, which came' in handy
when the company presented its
own. The French company got the
contract.
T)!ough our chief economic
competitors like Germany and
Japan have been in the economic
espionage business for years, some
believe an even bigger threat looms
in the forriler Soviet Union. Former
KGB agent Stanislav Levchenko
last year told the House Judiciliry.
Committee that since tho new
republics lack resources for expen·
sive research and development,
"they will steal the proprietary
secrets of foreign companies. ••
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers ror United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
•
J

t~
· - -a ca of 1be ...._
•:... ofpolilic!J "•...r.
Pre w• ·aw""'· too- an m· hen'led
~pmellll: diDie ID lcaie ia piKe will ...e final base-closing selections
for bim to SCIIIlto Ouugaess Klll w• • .
Tile Wbil: 1:1om1e l!asllcca
•i••c !lis passive role. "The presi·
dent docsn'tl!ave a11J1biic 10 do witb dill .alii July I," press secretary
Dee Dee Myas said WoE ?sy...
that point doesn't have a
wbolebfL-..••IIkKIIIII•• ;s·,w••
T11ie p• •
at die P
g •. wflicb put together the list of about
30 a .U • If ' . • was. M
Stu. .y Les Aspin was at the Capitol
oo_tuaclay • ilcllllals rn.. fcawa aJDI.Ie5Siona1 col~ trying
. toa¥0id•h•• wsia-llleirsa.:s.r.-ricts.
He pnwiwd reviews. up
'aa:ualbout lbe ~ impact of .
bese cJo..Wcs. ... was ail? ID lline lllllk 1110 commitments to change. His
frnallist i s - f'iiday.
.
It ps 10 die ri&amp;h- +-• Base Cbwe' llld Realignment Commis·
5ion. a bijwliw a-1 ift" • 7 by PI • • •• Bush. Clinton c~d have
chosen a new ~WM~iniCJe, .,.•cblll: bad liule time for it smce the
dtadli..ewasonlt fivedlysl&amp;ru- c-DonBcsides. be"$ bcllllr oil p»&gt;irira?ly wid; a Republican· led panel han.dlillg diem-win jab of
*« ._ 10 be shulilown.
.
~ The Scmll: CUIIIinnl:d die,.
· · • •• nobe;sa week ago, just as the
: clamor- wull of 11 • 1••
w d«sinp was D1ing. James Courter,
•
~ the dllilma aad a ba:a RrpnNian alllp"WMn from New Jersey,
.' ' . ~
said .., ...... i+iJMI will ~a lidor in judging which· bases to· shut
: dowD, ... •i?ialy valtt!ea.a liaL
- (Part 2 Results or investigation, back when he upbraided MeCum- went throu~h the fence and ov~r tis Reed, who later pracUCCII 18\V in
•
Couna's • •
· · • l!as llllil J - I to decide whether to alter the Manb 1'-25)
ber for ~me remarks he ~ad made Buckeye H11l, thence on Kerr .s Columbus. He~ that if _Pd.br
wFlaShlights and lanterns picked about hun and ~ocked _Jun down. Run road that runs to the fatr
Jim were wandering about, a v1cUm
l'nMqm lilt,
or ii*ilc bal:s. ID .._prior rounds of base closings9 ·tbe PHwe•lias
t
up the trail of three men leading The other occas1on was Just a week ~~nds.
. ..
of amnesia resulting from the
;., · The tQIIIIIIissiml's finll repo;tiD........, is dlle by July I, He has until from the Nuby barn toward the
From there the tracks JOJ~ed
vicious attack in the Nuby houile.
:July l51D SCIIIl il• 111 Ouugacss. Ill t*e elfea after 45 days unless both slate dump. Just beyond the bam
W.
thoseofsomeothernarrowerpnn~
someone would have reported hav·
.. houses VOle 10 Rja:t it.
were
tangled
traces
of
tramping
.
!f~ade
by
at
least
one
woman.
Sher
ing seen him in view of all the pubf
___ ..
Solhaesa• VPJf'll
••lOgo~~ .
.
.
feet, indicating that the struggle previously over remarks 1im 1ff R1ce lost the '!leks of three men
licity given the case in the newspa·
0ongress awldo t briu&amp; iadf 111 clol1e a -Jill lllilitary mstalip.llon for
between Jim and his captors must reported to have macte concerning adt IJideednearby .ratheilroa~ trac~tl· so ~
pers.
f"
f
, .ll ~ bef'*edle , ..,., .•.;. .. was Dial in 1988. Since then, nearly SO have been resumed at this spot. Teresa Hicks and Archie Clark, ec1
to VISit
mm~ se ernen
"It's a me case o suspiCIOn,
major ~lues l!ave IIcea cacbed sa. down, lhougb so far only two have From there on tracks identified as Bryant's stepson. At that time, Mrs. at Forest Run where hved the two boys," Prosecutor Reed !Old ~e
been oomp'rr'y clnrl
Jim's tluou'-h another pair of his Nuby drove Shorty Bryant from white boys who had the blackjack officers. We have the mouve, SIBAspin WMICd OJoctc:ss iD a - We:dlada) tl!at • 'there· are .goin.g shoes, descnbed sudden curves, as her home at the point of a pistol.
.at Bryant s home.
nificant evidence, but not a single
! to have 111 be DR, • fcwa"' lmc dosinp than he recommends m thiS though the man was staggering.
"Sheriff Rice 'next turned atten"Outside of the home of John witness who has seen a blaw
; round, as milialy 111 Lcaad fitn:q,- mlul:ed. Clinton seeks to cut Then the tracks swept to the left lion to Archie Clark. He had been _ He~ric~ in Forest Run the posse struck; nor a witness who has seen
~ S122 billion froiD dt:f&lt;w I•• ts ewer die not five years.
toward the Vulcan coal mines on working as a barber in Columbus agam picked up the tracks of the his lifeless body. We must find tllat
~
The PI siA " is 1rJi1c ID Ase die c:conomic impact with a four-year ,Thomas Fork.
until three months before, when he two men who had escorted Jim body.
·•
zdefense 0011o-SIIion pia ID assislirillhis and areas affected by defense "Officers took plaster caSIS. of returned
Spurred by this edict, officers
10 the Bryant home on McCumber from the Nuby place. .
: indusuy c.••• has wdl m baec:losillp..
the footprints of Jim's captors and Wyllys Hill. His version of the Jim's tracks were not with them. and the volunteer searchers worked
•
CongteSS IIIJIIIqlrialal SU l!i!tim b defense conversion efforts; the
determined to fonow them further argunient with McCumber was Sheriff Rice sem into Pomeroy for feverishly. They dragged ponds
: Clinton plan wuuld UliC lbll..S scelllllie.
.
at daybreak. It was obvious that the about the same as !hat of his stepfa· a warrant to search the Hedrick and creeks, inspected the dis-~d
• ·a ut at die same lime, D
..-as from 1wo states w1th target· kidnappers had taken advantage of ther, except that he added he had house, and Deputy S~eriff Art wells and cisterns, peered into
; ·ed ·bases. Califcnia ..S 0• •• ••. attue !bat base.closings would more the noise of the Bryant birthday shaken hands with him after the T~y came out to serve 1t .
additional mine shafts and inspeet; than offset liiiJ boost riley wuld pill from Clinton's earlier proposals fo~ party to make their capture, so fight, since which time they had
Officers aroused Hedric~ and ed every freshly turned bit of liaJW.
~ jobs and public worlrs '!""'"«.,Slimalate the ecllllOmy.
.
.
Sheriff Rice began to question the been good friends.
Rhoades, who were asleep m the
On March 25, a couple of valAs for t1le polilic$ or it., Willie Brown, speaker of the Cahforn•a Bryants, the Nubys and all the
Both men denied being attracted house. Both were younl! men of unteer workers lifled a quantity 'of
~ Assembly, said lbe sa&amp; could bealkaal so advmely "that Californians party guests still on the premises.
10 Teresa Hicks and each said he about 30 years. They ~nulled they dead leaves out of a cistern on die
~ would not forga it. siiOit- or lriBB; III:IID."
"The significance attached at the had not left the Bry~t house at any had been out bummmg around unoccupied Arnold place at Five
.,. No dates, but loll&amp; !eilll aJUid be rak11to mean 1_?96.
Bryant house to Jerry Nuby's tele· time during tbe birthday ·party.
Monday night, but denied having Points, almost five miles over lhe
phone call for his wife at a time
"Believing that perhaps Jim _been qear the Bryant and Nuby hiUsfrom Wyllys Hill.
EDll'OR'S NOTE- Waller R.. Mnn; vice president and colum- when the merry-makers had no McCumber had been struck with a places on Wyllys H~l..They did not
With the first armful of leaw:s
•nist ror Tile As-=illlalf'less, lias report~ on Washington and information that McCumber was blackjack, offiCers inquired of each deny they had VISited Shorty the workers brought up a packllge
:nati•al palilirs far . n lba 31 ,_-s,
missing, astounded Rice.
guest whether he owned one or had Bryant on Sunday, but contradicted of Mail Pouch chewing tobacco,
•
"Archie Clark, 32, son of Mrs. seen anyone at the party have one. A~chie Clark's story about the apparently dropped very recenlly
Bryant, bact told his aunt Lydia to Archie Clark recalled having seen blackjack.
by someone. The shouts of the two
wait and he would "light her over" one at the Bryant house in posses·
"During the subsequent days men brought a score of other vblwith a lantern. Miss Hicks jumped sion of Richard Rhoades and John that week, officers searched aban- unteers from the surrounding hills,
up and said she would go too. But Hedrick, two white youths who had doned mine shafts about Pomeroy and soon there were ·a dozen m~n
Mrs. Nuby waited for no one. She called on Shony Bryant the previ- on the theory that McCumber scooping out leaves. They were
rushed out of the house. When her · ous. day, Sunday. The boys had · might have been killed and the working against time, as the M~h
scieams started, Mrs. Bryant want- started away from the house with- body hidden in one of them. When s~n was hanging low in the s~t­
ed to go to her sister. She dashed out the weapon, and Rhoades had Sunday came, every minister in Ftnally.. one of .the men, suspended
out to the porch with her husband come running back after it. 'It was Meigs County cooperated by ask- m the ctstern w1th his heels held by
right behind her. 'You come back kind of funny,'said Clark. Irwas ,ing his flock to join in the .
· co-wor~ers, ·gave a signal that
'
in the hOuse,' Shony was quoted as heavy on one end and wasta~ search for Jim McCumber. The caused hun to be hauled rapidly 'to
I'
calling to his wife. 'You know you down attheotherend whereahttle search inaugurated that day for the surface. .
''
can't stand to·go over there.' When place was wrapped. When I handed Rev. McCumber's brother covered
"There are two shoes stickiil'g
Bryant reentered his house, James it to him, Rhoades volunteered the every foot of ground within a straight up in the air, and they're on
M. Lewis, a guest, was frantically information that it was Hedrick's radius of five miles of Wyllys Hill. legs," he stammered, Methodical1r
trying to get the sheriff's office on and he was just keeping it for him.' It continued throu$hout the week, and with extreme care, tli~
the telephooe.
"It seemed that neither Hedrick the mystery havmg seized the searchers lowered a rope and
"Shortly Bryant ordered him to nor Rhoades had auended the birth- . fancy of the citizens and Inspired jerked the body of a man to the SUr·
hang UJ.l the receiver, Lewis said, day party, although the latter had themtotirelessefforts."
face. He had been thrown in, hclld
· remarking that he didn't want to been invited. Sheriff Rice. stored
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune down, and the cold water had pte·
get mixed up in tile affair. Lewis · away this information for what it . reported on Wednesday, March 24, served the body in perfect 'shaJ*complied witli the request, remark- might be worth, and returned 10 1926:
.
The Gallipolis Daily TribuJl·~
ing, 'Well, it's your telephone.' Pomeroy 10 snatch a few hours
"~n incident of th_e ~h was reported on March 26, 1926, .. ~
This information, together with tips sleep oofore resuming the search the d1scovery of a sun m. Charter the head was crushed and ~
'I
that both Bryant and his stepson, for Jim McCumber."
Oak Hollow. !he. sull was in a nightgown."
•'.
Archie Clark! we~e 'mighty swc:et ,
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune . destroyed by Shet!!f Rtcc and Mar·
"It was Jim McCumber."
·.1
I
on Teresa H1cks, caused Shenff reported the following: Tuesday, shall Dina Roush.
vinced
In Ood we trust.
I
Rice to put Shorty Bryant on the I March 16 1926:
~everyone was con
·Carry on
•·
grill. A possible motive had been
"Blood stains round on March d!&amp;t Jm~ wu dead. The theory of
(Continued next week) .,
supplied,
as
Rice
had
been
told
!hat
15
1926
convinced
authorities
that·
kidnappin1
for
1'11110111
wu.
untenEditor's
note Long-thftle
'
I
both men were jealous of Jim .Ji.i. McCumber had been mur· ~ =tiiC ~~andand:e~money Attoraey Fred W. Crow II~
McCumber because he lived ar the dered
·tece1 • ..,
es, as contributor or a weekly colu:~·
same place the girl did.
.
''At sun·up Tuesday a pone far as- ~.Ill=~ 00 '1"C for The Suncllly Tlmn-Sentln
"Early in Rice's conversation . took up the trail of Jim McCumber who .would be tntelelled tn pay111g Relden wlsbhll to apjllaud, c ~
with Bryant, he admitted that he and his two complniona from the . for hi$ ~~~.
. ldze or comment on any·qb.Jeo
had done no "'llrk for four or five barn. Snow had fallen only for 1
ShentT ~ce !Jlked·the case oyer (exeept reli1lon or politln) -1,_
years other than manufacture couple houn, and 1 1lipll freeze almost dati~V.:•tb the proaecuung eacour11ed to write to
moonshine whiskey. Shorty also subsequently had preserved the · attorney of eags County, D. Cuf· Crow, In &amp;:8re ofthlllntw~P8!,*';"
confirmed rum011 that he had had tracks. ~he" f.oUowed them to
Thought for Today: "We must not Willie life In clevillnl means I •·
trouble with Jim McCumber twice. the slate dump in front of J. S. bet!« to plan leas and do men." .._William Bllcry Channfn ~~
The first-time. was some months F.i.,hP.Ihr.rvt~r'~ hnnlll\ wh-. lhi!v r1~''""""" f1'7tln.·10A.,.,
.
g,
!?

w••

_.-at

r

1

. .

Jim McCumber murder

=

I

•i• .._..u...,. mutb..

I

Fred

"

•

..

,.;·

.. -

Crow

1

1

••ait

I

Berry's Wo1ld

I

I

M,..

1

•

I

•

(

•'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH--Polnt Pleasant, WV

FAIRBORN • Gilben Beegle, 72, Fairborn, died Friday, March 12,
1993, at,his residence f~llowing an extended illness.
.
:., . Born June 1, 1921, m Dorcas, he was retired from Wright-Patterson
1 ~ Force Base where he wodced for 28 years as an aircraft machinist.
He was a U.S. Army Air Corps veteran of World .War II and was a
. member of the Air Force Reserve. In addition, he was lifetime member of
'; ~c American Legion post 526 and a fonner Mason at the Michael L.
• 1Fmnell Lodge 711 F&amp;AM, he was also a member of the Fairborn United
: !'&lt;fethodist p.urch.
~~- He is survived by his wife of 47 1(2 years, Virginia Beegle; two sons
:,~ tmd daughters-in-law,. Cedric and Margaret Beegle and Ted and Emily
··,Beegle, all of Fairborn; three daughters and sons·in-law, Connie and
, ..C~ief Petty Officer Ronald Parks of Oak Harbor, Wash ., Jenny and
R1chard Myers of Springfield and Carol Beegle and John Burge of Day, \00· and 11 grandchildren.
.
.
~:. Other survivors include a brother and sister-in-law, Burton and Thelma
" of Carlisle, and a sister in law, Carmaleta Williams of Missouri.
~ , Graveside services will be held I p.m. Monday at Fairfield Cemetery
·with tbe Rev. Orville Cruea officiating .
_.,, ' Friends may call Sunday from 1-4 p.in. at the Burcham Funeral Home
' in Fairborn.
-'

z.Hazel Claytor
.,. · QALUPOLIS • F~eral Service for Hazel

Marie Claitor will be held 3

• ,P· m. Sunday at the. F1rst Churclt of God on Garfreld Avenue. Services

; were scheduled Satwday, but were postponed due to die snowstorm.
' ~ PaUbearers will be Marvin Baird, Larry Drummond, Ed Voss, Noah D.
~~-~.Grover Long and Mark Sheward, .
' ·
; Funeral arranJCments are by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wether- 'llolt Chapel, Gall1polis.
'

Gov~rnor,

COLUMI! US, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich will try
again Monday to explain an educalion reform j)&amp;Ckage that members
of both parues in the Legislature
have criticized and possibly misun·
derstcod.
·.
Voinovich and Instruction
Superintendent Ted Sanders will
hold a news conference for what

sena. tor wants early Ohz·o
.
· . .pn"mar·v
.

ers two weeks ago.
·
At that time, they hailed the
pacltage as a triumph based 01;1 collab.orati ve effqrts of key study.
~ups th.at will make Ohio a leader
10 educanon.
But after hearings got under way
in the House Finance Committee,
many lawmakers said it was prolifcrated with goals but lacked details
that Sanders said were intended all
along to be worked out later.
• 'The goals are intended to
alee
m sure "fe have a genera1 direc·
lion ... the real slUff is in the model
curriculum," Sanders said last
week.
He reacled after Finance Chair·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The state's presidential primary
should be held earlier liull May to
give Ohio a greater role in choosing party nominees, Sen•te Presi·
dent Stanley Aronoff said
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, said he is
working with_ Secretary of Slate
Bob Taft on a bill that would pro·
vide for the state's primary in presidential election years to be held
the same day as the election in illi·
ROtS.
illinois and Michigan both held
primaries March 17 last year. The
Ohio primary, originally scheduled
for May 5, was delayed until June
by a battle over new state )egis Ia-

.

clearance. for blocked convey

live districts.
· in 12 years of Republican !MiminisAronoff said Ohio too often is .trationa because it's all over by lbe
out of the ball game by the time its time it gets to Ohio,'' he said
primary occurs._
. . ,·
Aronoff will introduce 1 bill
"I think you see 11 agam, even seeking what would amount to a
in the Clintoo administration, there regional primary. The measure is
are very few Ohioans in very high expected to be ready by the Clld of
positions. That was the same case the month.

most of his life, was in Florida
working .on his third album. His
earlier albums are "Dancing with
the Devil" and "Family and
Friends."
Alex was the oldest of five Taylor children. James, Livingston and
Kate are musicians witli recorded
albums; Hugh is the flfC chief for
Gay Head, Mass. Their parents are
Dr. Isaac Taylor, or Boston and
Gertrude, of Chilmark.
Alex· Taylor also is survived by
his wife, Brent, 46, of West Tis· ·
bury, Mass. and son, James, his
uncle's namesake and the subject
of James Taylor's 1970 song
"Sweet Baby James.:·

James W. Wall,ace

.

DES MOINES, Iowa- James

W. Wallace, the last surviving
founder of seed indlistry giant Pioneer Hi-Bred International Inc.,
died Thursday of a stroke. He was
97. -

Wang Zhen

.

BElliNG -Chinese Vice Pres·
ident Wang Zhen, an outspoken
.Marxist hard-liner and one of the
last veterans of the·Red,Army's
famous Long March, died Friday.
·Hewas85 .
His death was not expected ·to
hav,e a significant impact _on Chinese politics. He had already been .
sidelined for many, months because .
of illness, unofficially reported as
throat cancer, and was not expected
to stay on as vice president after h~
five-year term ended late th1s
month.
Wang was among a small group
of elderly comrades who regarded
themselves as guardians of the
Marxist principles for which they
fought half a century ago. They
maintained constant pressure on
senior leader Deng Xiaoping to
limit his economic reforms and
overtures to the West.

TOUCH OF SPRING • A touch or spring took place In sevenl
locations at Veterans Memorial Hospitlll last week when "Good
Eg' Trees" were put into place by the hospitlll's volun!Hr orpnizalton, the Women's Auxiliary. Jeanette Lawrence, left, and Betty
Sayre, are·pictured placing pastel, flocked Easter eggs on a white
tree In the hospital cafeteria. Other ''Good Egg Trees" are loc:ated
in the lobby and in the Skilled Nursing Facility. Reslcle•ts are
asked to participate In the rund raising project by payiag $5 each
to place e~gs on the trees honoring their ravorite "good eus".
Each egg IS marked with the name or the honoree and eggs are
given to honorees as souvenirs following Easter. Those wisbina to
take part may send their money and names or honorees to tbe
Women's Auxiliary, VMH,llS East Memorial Drive, Pome.-oy.

S.A.F.E.
SPECIAUZED AlTERNAnVE FAMILY ENVIRONMENTS ·
RECRUinNG HOMES IN GAWA COUNTY
Welcome Into Your Ufe A Qlld Wlto Needs Y•
Support, Ntrllrance, Guldaace aad

Elc•rag••••·

BIIKRUPRY

m

614-221-.0888
.J;.. L. W1 CENNAMO
AnORNEY AT lAW
8 East Broad street,
Sulte900
Columbul, Ohio
1·800 886 OLAW
(UOO 886 05~) ·.

II A S.A.F.I. nl,ll PIRD'
As aS.A.F.E. foster pan1f J01 C. nclivt 1p to $1240 ,_
111011• for eadt foster dtlclll yow ....

FOR INFORMATION CALL TOLL FREE 1-801).331-9INIII
Youth DeviiOpment CorporatiOn of Amlrlcli
. A MULTJ-SERVICE PROVIDER

Rich Lear11ing· ForEnviron•a•a•t
PanaU.
Childna .
a TheCa

Early deadline

Roaer M. Synenberg of Clev!l1·1,1nd, the attorney for 1'hol!w Dil·
' ~on. 42, of Magnolia, said Friday
'1-'Iie would ask that an April 13 trial
;,~D~lldelayed.h
. h'1s JO
. b Iast
'
1 on, w o quu
· ~month .m plans to say he is unable
· to pay for llllllllmey, faces aggra1 vated murder charges in tbe deaths
,j)_.l "ring of two fishermen, one
•P,Ch lR Noble and Qlshocton coun1 t'

'

•· . SynenbetJ. said he would -seek

~ becOme Dillon's coun-appoinled
~y.

·'· Dillon is accused of killing
Claude Hawldns of Mansfteld on
.,Man:b l4ln Colhocllll County and
,-,Oary Bradley of Williamstown,
~.VL, on April S In Noble County, . Both men \VCI'C shot while fuh·
. llone.
.
mg
.
.
.
.
Authorities conunue to mvesupte Dillon in .the deaths of out·
doorrmetlln 1\Jicarlwaa, Belmont
·~lid MuatiniUIII counties. The
vicdma were J110ie Puton,
, of Bannock; Donald Welling,
, of StDabuiJ.-IIICI Kevin Loring,
' of Dwtllllly. M.a.
,;,, All five mea w~ ldlled while
JtpnliJII, J9ailll or filhina alone.

r:

·Service; cancelled
~ POMJIROY - Services at St.

.ltDim anci-8L Paul Luthelan Chllllih·

a have been c:ancelod for today.

,,

J

Deaths elsewhere

U. N. commander seeks Serb

;;:.,erenae.

GALLlPOLIS -Saturday's
blizzard and tbe hazanlotts condi·
tions it created on the highways
. made it ilecessary for the employees of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. to produce the Sunday Times·
Sentinel several hours earlier than
usual. '

But most of the complainu c:oncerned a goal that would defme
what every st~,dent sho.uk!,know,
be able to do and ~ like when
they gradlll!lC from~ scbool. .
Rep. Michael Wue, R.Cillarin
Falls, ~all~ the goals ud outcomes. _nothing more than~­
ed pohucal c'!rr~tness. Lets go
back to the basics.

:~~~~~1a~m:e~r:~e~~

~

... t:ieS. .

man Patrick Sweeney, D-Cleve· posedly would Jli?5SC:lS when they
land and others complained that graduate from hiJh school.
.
they' saw what Sweeney called . These ranged ~ an !IPJlRICIB·
fluff.
u~n. of communuy semces, ,the
The biggest criticism .Came as a ab~ty to funcuon as a ~ble
result of the use of terms like family mem~r. ~Iedg~ ~f the
"learner goals" and "learner out· role of P:Btenung, . ~g and
comes" _ a list of three dozen devel&lt;;&gt;pmg creative, skill~ •. under·
attributes that Ohio students sup· standing cultural d1verstues and
many others.

they said will be a further diSCUS·

FARGO, I:I.D. - Agnes GeeIan, a teacher, author and politician
· · MIDDLEPORT- Visitation hours for and the funeral of John who was the first woman elected
•' JCrawsczyn Sr. will be' moved ahead one day, according to Fisher Funeral mayor and state senator in North
·' Home.
Dakota, died Wednesday at age 96.
.
•• .' Friends may call the funeral home today from 7 to 9 p.m., and the serGeelan was elected mayor Of
~q \.ice win be Monday at 2 p.m: at Heath United Methodist
Church.
·
Enderlin
in.1946, moving ~n to the
.
state Senate four years later. She
ran unsuccessfully. for Congress in
1948 and 1956.
She became an author at age 80,
~·
.
when she published "The Dakota
"', MIDDLEPORT • Dorothy L. McGuffin, 68, Middleport, died Fnd~y, Maverick," a biography of U.S.
" March 12, 1993, at residence of her son in Bellaire after an extended 1ll· Sen. Bill Langer, in 1976. She went
;~ ness.
.'
on to write the novels, "The Minis·
.;• : Born in Mi!klleport, Mareh 2, 1925, she was the daughter of the late ter's Daughters" in 1982 and a
Claude and Bessie Swisher Ashley. She was retired from Warner Insur- sequel, "Pine Cove Revisited' ' in ,
-t·ilnce in Pomeroy and attended the Church of Christ.
·
1985.
•·'· She is survived by: two sons and daughters-in-law, Harry M. and Bar,. 'bar&amp; McGuffin of Moundsville, W.Va., and Steven L. and Debra McGuf·
:;fin of Bellaire; a dau~hter and son-in-law, Debm and Kevin Simmons of Paul Johnson
NORTHFIELD, Minn. -Paul
... Huntington, W.Va.; three grandchildren. Tabitha and Heather McGuffin
C. Johnson, a columnist, humor
r,.ofMoundsville and Harry Benjamin McGuffin of Bellaire.
writer and longtime editor of the
~•.• Also surviving are a s1ster and brother-in-law, Beuy and William Snow
Prairie
Farmer magilzine in Chica·
.-,pfShade.
,
go
died
of a stroke Sunday, He was
~ She was preceded in death by her husband, Harry McGuffin, ,in 1973.
88.
~ .,. ServiceS will be 11 a.m. Tuesday at Fisher Funeral Home in Middle·
_~ port with the Rev. Ja,mes Kec:see officiating. Burial will follow in the · · Johnson was editor of four Minnesota newspapers in .the 1930s
:...oravel HiU Cemetery mCheshue.
·
before joinin~ the office of agricul·
- Friends may call Monday from 12-3 and 7-9 p.m.
ture publicauons at the University
of Mmnesola in 1940.
-5-J '-\
In 1947, he was named editor of
Prairie Farmer magazine in Chicago , where he remained· for 22
years. He wrote a humor column,
"John Turnipseed,'' two collections of which were published.
:.· .SARAJEVO, Jlosnia..Herzegov- lon also was seeking to obtain a
In 1970 he returned to North,jpa (AP) - The U.N. commander halt in the Serb offensive on Sre- field to write the "Cy Sorghum"
;:iJI Bosnia was pressing Serbs to brenica and irtitiate an evacuation column for the Northfield News.
.,,now a U.N. convoy to deliver ot an estimated 170 seriously
He is survived by his wife, son,
.•{ood to the desperate Muslim wounded people in the city.
daughter, sister, five grandchildren
He said Morillon' s plan nee! and two great-grandchildren.
enclave where he was holed up
dellarture
from Srebrertica on Fri·
-!overnight, officials said Satun!ay.
--· c U.N. spokesman Maj. Pepe Gal· day afternoon was blocked for sev- Parke Levy
_
!egos said Gen. Philippe Morillon eral hours by "a large group of
LOS ANGELES- Parke Levy,
~"''Cnt the night in Srebi"enica in
refugees," who got in the way of who created the TV series
;,.eastern Bosnia after he was his vehicle.
"December Bride" and wrote and
-&lt;detained by residents who feared
· "The mood of the people was directed for the hit radio show
.~IIley woold be attacked by Serbs peaceful but very emotional," Gal·
"My Friend Irma," died Monday
,,once the peacekeeping chief left
!egos said. "The refugees were at age 84 .
·
.t · Gallegos said thegeneral would expressing their belief that they
Levy
worked
in
the
Golden
Age
J~linuc cffons to get the go-ahead will be shelled when Gen. Morillon of radio, writing for "The Joe Pen·
for relief trucks stalled in Zvomilt leaves.''
ner Show" and working with such
, ,to enter the city.
·
He said the crowd dispersed people as Ed Wynn, Ed Gardner,
, , In Paris, a Foreign Ministry before nightfall, and Morillon
Pearl and "The Old Maestro"
~~kesman later said the French elecled to stay overnight in .the city, Jack
Ben
Bernie.
·.:Beneral and his party of about 20 where hunger and disease are rife.
Levy's character Irma, a full , were "blocked by fighting.'' Juditli
Gallegos said he had been figured, empty-headed woman,
':ltumin, a spokeswoman for the informed that the re{ugees' protest
--.~.N. Hi•h Commissioner for was "well-orchestrated, not spon- debuted in radio's "My Friend
·Kefugeenn Belgrade, said IQCals taneous," but he had no details on Irma" .in 1947 with Marie Wilson
in tbe title role.
;·;.nd refugees were, holding him how that assessment was reached.
A TV version of the show ran
~ 1 llack until the aid convoy arrives.
Simon Marden, a World Health for two years and the 1949 film
:,·, The conflicting reports could Organization doctor who recently
version introduced to movie audi.;.~immediately be clarified.
was in Srebrenica, said 2,000 peo- ences Dean Martin and Jerry
' ' Gallc:gos said earlier that Moril· ple in the_to~ had died of hunger, Lewis.
8lld disease, and lhat tuhercu- ·
Levy created the character Uly
;:.yvants trial postponed cold
losis, jaundice and scabies were Ruskin from "December Bride' ' in
.,. AKRO:N, Ohio (AP) - An rife.
the image of his own mother-in.• ;; .,11uomey representing a man
law, making her a woman who
.(\'&lt;barged with slaying two outdoorsinspired love rather ~an confljct in
:ii!ICD in eastern Ohio wants the trial
her married daughter s home.
, tp be delayed so he can prepare a

LDorothy L. McGuffin

Sunday Times Sentlne~7

schools chief to elaborate on reforms

Agnes Geelan

::John Krawsczyn Sr.

1

PROG!t•.M. • Our experienced teschen and instrua01&gt; ...
a developmerllally appropriate curriculum to enhance eoch
child's learning environmenl. Our program provides oppar·
runiti&lt;s !Or. saciatiZ21ion. indoor play, ouodoor play, and

Alex Taylor
SANFORD, -Fla. - . Alex Taylor, a recording artist whose sib·
lings included musicians James,
Livingston and Kate Taylor, died
of a heart attack Friday. He was 47.
Taylor, a folk and rock musician
who lived on Martha's Vineyard

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D•
FAVIT·Y PRACTICE
.
PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

••iiilit7

ac~ss

to computer~ for pre.tehoolers.

SUPI!IlVISJON - The children ""' supefviled by -n:d
teachers and uaiaanr. teachers ar all times. Our ch.lld/1111'

ratko is as follows; lnf..., six....Uofag&lt;: 10 l8mon&lt;bs t,6.
Toddle11 18'· 36 months 1,7. Poachool children 3, ~and 5
yeara old J,ll.
HOVIS OF OFI!IA110N - The O&gt;ild Developmen&lt; Cen&lt;a
is open when Jlil? GlllOde Community College is open.
During holidays and JChool l:ftak&gt; the facill;y is cioo&lt;d
Nonnal hours of operation are: Monday lhrough Friday, 7:30
a.m. - 5,00 p.m.

CHILP

MEALS t\M) 5NAatS - Our food is catered by Mcrrilod1
Hoopilalily G""'P· The oenter ..,...,_, three nulrDonally
boianc&lt;d meat. and IWQ tnaeb a day.

Dally ruition is $15.00 for infilnll, 1wio for
preachooll0ddle11. P~rence it si"mttochildn:n who need
full....,. aavic:a. Some children may be eli&amp;iiJie b ru...,
...~ow~ce lhrough the _Depollment of Humon Ser.tiota,
Children'• Olvloilln.
TIJI110N •

.CENTER
.... ···--

• • • t=
CIIIIMDs n a

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
(POINT PLEASAm' ME:DICAL CENTER)

uac·u

eo.e.

coli..--""

HOY TO .ui'LY-ADIIIIIIION ·Simply
cliild Development Cemer mel roque« an"""""'- bm.
Apply for admiaoion u IOa'l u ~tHe. lolly ...............
1101 priorily. To aee our facny flnt-bond
and lllllot on

coli

o.pj&gt;oLIIUlUII.

2151111: JEFPBRSON AVENUE
P()INT PLEASANT
(304) 675-1675 .
~'
I •

Cilll . . . . . .

1-312-730l(CIIIID)
.. J-61.1" " ' '

v
\

�OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Thirty-~ine

fined_in Judge

POMEROY • Tinny-moe peo· overload, $200 plus costs: Dudley
pie were. fined last week in the w, Meadows, Pomeroy, speed, $21
Mei_gs Cou~ty C'?urt of Judge plus costS; Cynthia Faulk,
Patrick O'Bnen wbtle three others Pomeroy, .seatbelt violation, $25
forfeited bond.
.
plus costs; Davids. Edmonds, Rut·
Fined were: Todd Wilham· land, speed, $26 plus costs;
Hysell Pomeroy, seatbelt violation, Thomas B. Stobart, Racine, seat$20 plus costs; Tammy Ouman, belt violation, $15 plus coSIS;
Pomeroy, seatbelt violation, $25 Thomas. B. Stoban II, Racine, seat·
plus costs; Charles P. Linney, New belt violation, $25 plus costs;
Albany, Ind., speed, $26 plus costs; Danya L. Gheen, Middleport, seat"
William M. Carswell, Pomeroy, belt violation, SIS plus costs; Kenspeed, $21 plus costs; David L. neth E. Mc~ullough Jr., Pomeroy,
Nance, Woodstock, safety viola- seatbelt viola.tion, $15 plus costs:
tion, $15 plus costs; Betty Lou Tosha L. ·Landaker, Pomeroy, seatMercer, Cheshire, seatbelt viola- belt violation, $25 plus costs; Lori
tion, $15 plus costs; Olivia A. Warden, Racine, expired registraZivney, Gallipolis, speed, $25 plus ·lion, $10.plus eosts;
costs; Kenneth R. Blevins, South
John Stumbo, Pomeroy, disorPoin~ speed, $20 plus costs; Thur- derly while intoxicated, $100 fine
man L. Dempsey, Cleveland, , suspended to $25, one year probaspeed, $23 plus costs; Kaien S. lion; Orville Hill, Pomeroy, domesByer, Middlepon, speed, $24 J.llus tic violence. $300 fine suspended
costs; Robert H. Smith, Racnie, to $50 plus costs, 30 days jail susseatbelt violation, $25 plus costs;
pended to three days, two years
R1chard S. Waugh, Crown City,

U.S. News includes RG
.
.

.
COURT IN TIUS BUILDING • ne top ftoor
or the balldlu at 53·55 .Court Street, Gallipolis, beld a horseshoe
court In tbe I~Os wben Frank Eachus or Gallipolis was state
champ. Tbe buUding then was known as tbe Armory because It
housed a National Guard unit.

.
In 1910s Gallipolis,

Horseshoes was serious sport
By Jim Sands
Special Correspondent

' pitching
In the 1910s horseshoe
became quite
popular in Gallipolis. The out·
door coun was
located in back of
what is today the
Masonic Building
and the il)door
coun was located
on the third floor
of the armory on Coun Sueet.
In the latter, setting pegs were put
upinshallowboxesfilledwithrmely
groiDid and dampened tanbark. The
pegs were set at 46 lfl feet apan
usually, though for some matches
the distance might be anywhere from
25 to 45 feet.
The height of the stake varied
from 2 inches to 12 inches and was
mostly sttaight up and down. Another significant difference was in
the shape of the shoe (less open then
than now).

.
'

••

·

The sclring also went through
some changes in the decade as some
"o1dtimers" still counted ringers as
five points even though by 1913
ringers were worth only three.
Horseshoes were brought to
America by the British soldier- who
a~ brought the game of quoits,
h was played with a circular .
ofmetal.
.
uringtheAmericanRevoiution,
tile American soldier adopted horsesf¥&gt;es over quoits with the Iauer
aJnost,passing out of existence.
~· Gallipolis "champion' pitcher"
dping the 1910s was Frank Eachus
Who ran a barber shop on Coun
SireeL He was equally well known
in the Old French City for his guitar
playing. Eachus even became the
Ohio State champion horseshoe
pitcher in 1916.
In the winter of 1916,Eachus was
biUed in a much p\lbticized match
with then-Ohio champion Charles
Cox at the Gallipotis Armory. The
match consisted of the best of 11
games with each game going to 21.
· Eachus won ·21-6, 23-16, 22-7,
2\-9,22-17,and 21-7. He lost Game
51&gt;y a 21-20 score. Even though
Eachus won easily, he only threw
atiout 10 percent ringers.
In fact, he averaged only three
ringers per game while Cox threw
only eight ringers in seven games.
By contrast most good horseshoe
pitchers today throw 65-90 percent
ringers.
Also today a game consists of 25
innings (50 throws each person rather
than a game to 21).

During the Ohio State Fair the
Columbus Citizen newspaper bepn
sponsoring the Ohio championship
of horseshoe pitching in 191S, Cox
won that year,
In 1916 Frank Eachus swept
through the tourruunent undefeated.
Eachus won $100 ingoldandadia· .
mond-studded gold metal. Ris win
that year was so impressive that
newspapers across the country
printed Eachus' tips for successful
horseshoe pitching:
'
"HorseshQil pitching is a lifelong
game. It takes years of practice and
real study, You can'tlearn it in a
day. To pitch succesSfully, you must
take plenty of time and a good long
swing. Use the whole body-not just
the ann. Hold the shoe flat with the
caulks down. Have .the fQrermger
just back of the caulk and the next
two fingers near the toe. Never use a
shoe lighttr than tWO pounds as a ·
light.shoe can go wild. Throw the .
shoe so it tights close 1o the ground,
not so that it drOps on the peg, hut so
it will circle the peg near the bot·
torn."'

. .\

'~

in listing of America's
top colleges; uniYersities

RIO GRANDE - For the first
time, the University of Rio Grande
is included ·in U.S. News &amp; World
Report's 1993 exclusive rankings
of th.e best colle~es in the country.
Rio Grande JOins 58 other institutions of higher learning in Ohio
and more than 1,370 ·schools
around the nation in the annual sur·
vey.
America'.s Best Colleges -· the.
sixth-such special edition produced
by U.S. News- based its listings
on questionnaires distributed to
national universities and liberal arts
colleges, regional institutions and
specialized schools. The rankings
are determined by a combination 'of
the school's academic repu!lltion
with data on students, facult~ and
resources. i
Vital statistics on Rio Grande
appearing in the annual covers such
areas as the student body, academic
majors and degrees, faculty, admissions, graduate school patterns,
tuition, board and other expenses,
and financial aid. For example, in
keeping with the university's reputation as a teacher's trainin~ college, the survey revealed that education is the most popular major on
campus, accounting for 35 percent
of the students enrolled. Additionally. Rio Grancie has 1i6 full-time
and 48 part-time faculty, with 81
percent of tliem possessing doctoral
degrees.
·
· Such information is useful in
helping students decide from · a

Since the Columbus Citizen did
nol sponsor a state tournament in
1917 or 1918, Eachus remained the
Ohio State champion for those years
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) as well.
Dale Butland, a longtime aide to
Hewasrmallysupplantedin 1919. Sen. John Glenn, has withdrawn
On June 5, 1919 Eachus played the
his name from consideration as the
United States champion Fred Brust · new chairman of the Ohio Demoin Gallipolis behind the Gallipolis cratic Pany.
Sen. Harry Meshel of
Theatre.
Brust, who later began a com- Youngstown, who has been
pany to manufacture horseshoes, endorsed by most of Ohio's top
won easily. The Gallipolis BuUetin Democrats, clear! y has the votes to
win, Butland said Friday. Hutland
wrote:
·
said
he is bowing out to preserve
"Some spectators declared that
pany
unity.
Brust's pitching excelled anything
The
Ohio Democratic Executive
of the kind ever seen here before."
Committee
is expected 10 meet this
After Brust beat Eachus 11
month
to
elect a successor to
sttaight games, he then took on other Eugene Branstool,
who renone:dlv
skiUed Gallip6litan pitchers, Ever- is line for an
in the
ett Mayes and Raymond Danner. In
one game Mayes threw 5 Straight u.s.
ringers only to have all of them
LEGAL NOTICE
topped by ringers from Brust.
The Public Utilities Commis· ·on of
Ohio dominated the early days of
Ohio has set lor publlic hearing
national horseshoe competition that
Case No. 93-01-EL·EFC, to review '
began about 1909. Of the first 19
the fuel procurement practices
titles, I I were won by 6 different
and policies of Ohio · Power
Ohioaas(Brust and Charlie Davis of
Columbus,Charles Bobbilt of
Company, lhe operation of its
Lancaster,George May and Harold
Electric Fuel C'omponent, and .
Falor of Akron and Blair Nonarnalcer
related mailers. This hearing is
of Cleveland).
scheduled to begin at the
In addition. the two most popular
Commission offices at 10:00 a.m.
horseshoes (Ohio and Gordon) were
on March ·16, 1993.
both manufactured in Ohio. ·
All interested parties will be given
an opportunity to be heard .
James Sands is a special correFurther information may be
spondent or the Sunda1 Times-Senobtained by contacting the
tioel. His address Is: 65 Willow
Commission at 180 East Broad
Drive, Springboro OH 4506~
Street , Columbus . Ohio
43266-0573.

March

~X:IIytheft,$100pluscosts,10days

Jail suspen~ed. one .year proballon;
Scou, Hamson, Bidwell, failure 10
c~urol, $25 plus costs: Norman R.
~umphreys III, Pomeroy, seatbelt
viol.allon, $25 plus costs; .Pau! E.
Klem, Pomeroy, seatbelt vlolallon,
$25 plus costs;
Jerome K. Howard, Pomeroy,
no operator's license, 30 days jail
suspended to three if valid opera:
tor's license shown within 60 days,
$100 plus costs, one year proba·
lion: Sharon Farley, Rutland, seatbelt violation, $15 8lus costs, no
operator's license, 3 days jail sus.pended if valid operator's license
shown in ,60 days; $100 plus C!&gt;StS,
one year probation; Davtd L. Carnahan, Reedsville, failure to repon
an accident, $75 plus costs, fictitaus registration, $10 plus costs;
:&gt;Villiam Priddy, Middleport, driv- .
mg under the influenee, $450 tllus
costs, 30 days jail suspended to 10,
operator's .license suspended for
?ne year, one year probation, drivmg 11nder suspenston, three days
jail suspen'ded if valid operator's
license shown' in 60 days ' $75 "IllS
...

Butland withdraws
from race
Butland's witHdrawal left

costs, ficntous 11gs, SIO pillS costs;
MaJ:k R~bum, Rutland, seat-·
belt vtolauon, ~15 pl.us costs:
Hobart L; Cu.ndtff, Mtddleport,
seatbelt VI!!la~on, ~25 plus ~ts:
~d ~auchild, fmlure 10 ~y .
registration, $10 p~us co~ts; Clif.
for~ J?be, ~eedsv!lle, dtsorderly
. whi!e mtoxica~. $20 pillS costs:
Cl\ris10pher Davts, Ractne, ~­
'!II· $21 plus costs; sealbelt vtola·
!Ion, $~ plus cos~: poatglas Jenk-

March 14, 1993

Ohio's only full-time saddle
·~aker sets _up shop in Chester
.

ms, ~ddleport, ~~ng under~­

.., CHESTER - Custom saddie
111a!cing • a lost an in most of the
cpuntry -is alive and well in
Chester
at the Shade River Saddle
.'
••'

pen_Sion, 10 days ~811 suspended .tf
vahd operator • license shown tn
60 da~. $1~ plus ~· ~ year~
probation; Michael Pi~rce. Middlepon, no operator's .b~ense, $1SO
plus C?SIS, ~days J&amp;JI SUSJ?Mde4
to 10 ~~ vahd operator's licen~·:
s.hown m 60 day~ ~e year proba, .
uon, seat belt vtolauon, $25 plus."
costs; Carolyn McKinney;,;
Pomeroy, assaulL, three days jail;
susp~n.ded, $1.00 plus costs:-:
resttatm~'ordertssued
. •
Forfelllllg bonds were: .PaY Ling,
Lee, &lt;;olul!lbus, speed, $60, seat.;.,
belt vtolation, $43; Jerry Cl~~di .
Pomeroy, overload, $260; :Wtl~C
Barber, Long Bottom, sealbelt vt~,
lation, $40.
·::...
\

Vaughn Bassett Cherry 6 pc. Bedroom Suite
Broyhill 2 pc. Living Room Suite
King Hickory 2 Pc. Living Room .Suite
Redining Loveseat wI console
Oak Gun.Cabinet wI alarm
lolltop Desk
Catnapper Chaise Recliner
Daybed w/brass accents
Magnavox AM/FM Cassette Boom Box

Section B

¥\long the River

Q'B~ien's.court . ,

probliiion, restnunmg order ISSued;
Roy .Buchanan, Tuppers Plains,

multitude of college choices,
according to the U.S. News editors
who compiled !he survey and offer
other information .in America's
Best Colleges. Since its first issue, ·
the survey has come to be consid·
ered the only source of comparative information on the nation's top
universities and collegeS.
"We're really.'excited about this.
It's defmitely helpful in our recruiting efforts," said Mark F. Abell,
Rio Grande's executive director of
Admissions, Records and Financial
Aid. "This will no doubt help
spread the word about the quality
of educational programs we have at
Rio Grande. We have often been
accused of being the best•kept
~ret in Ohio, so this is one way to
shaie the secret with other areas of
the country."
Abell said Rio Grande's inclusion in the listing comes at a good
time as his office endeavors to
attract students from beyond Ohio.
Due to recruiting trips and advenising in other media, the Office of
Admissions has received information requests from more than 600
prospective students in such target
states as West Virginia, Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
'.'1 think. \"hen r,qu IMls: ·~l.th~
national recognition .'afforded to us
by a magazine like U.S. News, it's
a plus," he said.
'
Last fall, Rio .Grande ex peri- •
enced· its largest-ever enrollment .
with 2,160 students.

1993

••
'

This Is a list of P,rlzes for the upcoming Rutland
Furniture Savln'-0-Jhe-Green Lucky Number
Give-Away. Be sure 'to check this newspaper
Tuesday, March 16th for your copy of our green
and white flyer with your lucky number on ll
Just bring your flyer to Rutland Furniture between 9 A.M. Wednesday, March 17th through
Saturday, March 20th and compare your lucky
number to our list. Match the numbers and you
win! No purchase necessary.

Shop.
· Coast Leather Guild and the InterDavid Games. of.Aifred who nation~! Federation of Leather
makes the custom saddles, says he Guilds.
is the only full-time s&amp;ddiemalcer in
Games became a saddle maker
Ohio. He is a member or the North after he suffered an induslrial accident and as pan of his rehabilitation learned the trade of leather
working. He attended a saddle
school and later became an instruc· ·
tor at that school. He has also
taught at Hocking CoUege. Games
stated he has studied under noted
Hollywood !esther inists including
Bob Brown who ·created several
items for John Wayne.
Games begins with a custom
ordered wooderi uee base which he
covers with rawhide and builds up
from· the custOmers specifications.
The bases come with a five-year
guarantee. He says most ·people
have a good idea about what they
want but that even with that it takes
about two hoi!I'S to fill out a custom
saddle order. The majority of the
saddles that he makes are western
but Games said he also can make
an English saddle.
The benefit of a custom saddle
is that it will fit not only the rider
but the horse as well because absolutely everything on the saddle is
done by hand, including the silver .
stitching and tooling.
Games says a fairly plain saddle
takes about 42·2.5 hours to complete. A highly decora!Cd saddle,
however, takes approxtmately an
additiona145 hours.
The price of a custom made sad·
die, 8C(:Oiding to Games, varies of
course, depending on the degree of .
decoration, but the base price is
$1 ;300. Games has a variety of pat·
terns to choose from when creating
a custom made saddle.
. Games says all of the leather
used on his saddles is domestic and
has been Willed with the ban: of an
oak tree - unlike leather on other
saddles which he says is llnned
with human waste.
.
In addition to saddles, Games
can also make bridles and halters as
well as repairing any horse related

COIMPILE1:ED CUSTOM SAPDLE - Pie·
tured here with one or bls completed custom
saddles, David Games takes great pride In the
finished project. He builds the saddles rrom tbe

custom· ordered tree to ftnely detailed leathr ·
work and silver stitching. As mucb as 100 houn
or work goes into a highly decorated sad~le.
\

DETAILING • Cardul detalllng In le"lther
work and silver stitching make a custom made
saddle a lost art. That alj is, however, alive and
well at the Shade River Saddle Shop in Chester.

David Gam·es, owner, is 'pictured here as be ·~
details a piece or leather to be placed on one of "·
• those custom saddles.

tack.

Games is very knowl¢&amp;eabte in
.
,,
_ the craft of saddle miking and he
, A LOST ART • Da~ Games Is pictured here as lte works to - possesses what he·calls won the
•
lllcldle. :ne art of cutom Iiddle malda1 ill 011e 1' • most comple~ libraries on leather
working in the ate~. He would even
tlu:ouali· rthablllliltloa artlces after he surIICtldenL He has studied the craft ullder noted
someday like to write a book on
leather artists.
saddle making.

RUTLAND
FuRNITURE

·'

. 742-2211 1-800-837-8217
3% mi. off Rt. 7 on SR 124
Rutland, Ohio

Meshel with only one other
announced. rival, Sam Barone, the
pany's executive director for the
past two years.

} ob'sDaughters history recalled; pageant, open house fanned ·:
-~ MIDDLEPORT • The Intema-

tiona! Order of Job's Daughters is
organization for young women
. ween the ages of 11 and 20 who
ve a Masonic relationship. This
fr.teans that they must be a daugh·~r. granddaughter great-grandaughter, niece, pdniece, cousin
1ft second cousin, step.sister, sttp,iJster-in-law, half sister, adopted
4aughters, or any relation of a
~ in good s110ding within his
lOdge. The only Bethel. of Job's '
Dauljhters within this Masonic DislficttS located in Middleport.
• 1 The organization was founded
Rationally in 1920 by Ethel T.
'fleadmiclt.
t ~ob's Daug_hters originated in
Meigs County mPomeroy on Sept.
U, 1959. In the beginmng, there
.J..ere so m~ny active members that
d\any of the youns women in the .
qrganizalion were never able to
~old an office by the time they
re forced to leave the organiza·
' n because of t6e age requireent. However, over the years,
~ng women have received ~Y
Jilore opportunities for extra~urric'Ular activities such as bastelball,
sllftball. cheerleading and many
~ore. Some of the organizations
l!llve taken preference over Job's

t

'
one
auxu

I '

'

•••

'

~

I ,

. Thirty years ago, a
second television was
considered a luxury;
today it's a necessiry.
And today, many busy
families find a second
phone line a necessity, ·
too - for all the tiines ·
you need to use the
phone but can't because
one line is tied up. By
your spouse. Your kids.
Your compurer·modem.
Your fax.
Ca)l ALLTEL at
349-8551 for all the
details. (When you can
finally get everyone else
off your phone.)

MEIGS COUNTY
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
963 Gen. Hartinger Parkway
Middleport,. Ohio 45760
oGenerel Pr.ctlce
-Emphllele on Headllche,
Neck &amp; Back Pain
oSpor11 lnjuriH/Car Ac:cldantl
oMoetl neurancee Al:&lt;~eptacl

'

'

f '

Daughters,Hherefore membership
lias decreased.
A few years ago, Middleport
Bethel No. ~2 was in extreme danger of folding. There were orily
!hree active members and few
interested adults to maintain an
active organization. Slowly over
the past three' years, Job's Dau,hten has begun to JT?W in Metgs
County. Currently, Middleport has
IS active members in their Bethel
and is continuing to grow enthusiastically. These young ladies are
from Pomeroy, Middleport,
Chester, Syracuse, New Haven,
Mason, Point Pleasant ' and
Cheshire.
.Along with a growing_ ~ethel,
Mulilleport has been pantctpabfig
in many activities including aaveling to Oilier. Job's Daughters
Bethels in Marietta and Belpre,
traveling to De MOLA Y installations in Athens, and membership
drive teas' at the Masonic Temple in
Middleport.
In the month of April. some of
the members of Job's Daughters
will travel to Canton to participate
in the annual Miss Ohio Job's
Daughters Pageant Muy Sreil\ and
Beth Clark will serve as delegate
and alternate, respectively. If cho-

sen as the Ohio Miss Job's Daullh·
ter, Stein wiU traveliO Kansas Ctty.
Mo., to com~ in the 'Mjss Inter·
national Job s Daushters Pagean~
Manr. locql sponsors have made tt
posstble for the Stein and Cl~ ~
travel to Canton 10 compete m thts
competition.
.
On March 28, the Job's Daughters will be h!llding an ~n !Jouse
at the MaSOtnc Temple 1n Mtddle·
pan to promote Job's Daughters as
well as to honor their Masonic beritage. Anyone interested in becoming a member of Job's Daughters is
welcome to attend. Meetings of the
bethel are held on the second and
fourth Monday of each month. No
Masonic relationship is required to
attend this open house. All Masonic organizations are also invited as
the members will perform a small
ceremony in their honor. All past
honored queens mlliority members
and the genua~' public are encouraged to auend.
Members include Kim Mattox,
l'lonoRd queen; Bcch Clut, aenior
princess; Stacy Stewan, junior
princess; Jessica Johnson, auide;
LeiLani Fowler, .marshal; Trisha
Warrr«, chaplain; Julie Harris, first
messenger; Mary Stein, second
messenger; Dawn Shlitz, third mes-

La~nce,

senger; Melody
fourth
messeng~ Jennifer CorneOus, fifth
messenger; Jessica Chevalier,
recorder; Angie Wolfe, senior custodian; Helen Rice, junior custodian: and Jenpifer Carson, inner
guard.
Members of the Bethel
Guardian Council include: Greta
Riffle, bethe! guardian; Dorset
·Thomas, assoc11te bethel guardian;
Ann Mattox, suardian secretary;
Kathy Johnson, guardian treasurer;
Patsy Warner, guardian dil'fetress
of music; Merri Amsbary, directress of epochs; Kirk Chevalier,
promoter of fraternal relations: Jill
Lipsc.omb, promoter of sociabitity;
and Jim Warner, promoter of
finance.
Middleport Bethel No. 62 also
has the honor of having an orrteer
in the. Grand Bethel. Beth Clark is
the I 992-93 Grand Bethel
ReC:order. Middleport also bas an
adult grand officer this year as
well. Dorsel_Tho!"~s. associate ,
bethel guardtan, IS the 1992-93
Grand Junior Custodian.

,

''
''
•

••
(

''
•'

•

••
•

Dr. N. P. Kim• I Dr. N. W. Robinoon

'

992-2168
Mon.-\'Ved.·Frl

=-~---·"·'·'··'·

9:00 •. m.-6:00 p.m.
Tuee. 9;00 a.m.-5:00

...

,, INSTALLATION ; Pictured ........ ol 111t1t11 No. 62 wllo were illltalled durltla 1
"
.
...JiaJa..,.,., I

~·- -

J

\I
. • :f'

'

,.

SQUARE AND COMPASS • M•llen ol tilt
IDterutlaaal Order Dl Joll'a D........ llletllel

••lit

een..

•

No. 62, are plctared here u tlltJ
tile
•-'c ableta 1'1 lite ....... atld 111e c.p•

their

~

\

·-lc

llerttqe. Tllll willie
perronaed duriDI tile II'"P'• opea .._. •
Mardi ~at tile Middleport Muatile T•....

ill .._.

••
••

....· ~

�..... ,
,Page 82-Sunday Times Sentinel

-~ -·

-~·.

-

&lt;

...

T

0

0 ....

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---· .... ...... _.....

~·· ····

......

,Pomeroy Middleport-GallipoliS,

·- -·

the ~rican Medical AsSociation,

'·

THOMAS WAUGH and CHARITY DELLARCO

~

Dellacro-Waugh

~

GALLIPOLIS • Brenda J. Hoi- . ate- of Gallia Academy .Higll
School. .She atiends the Univmity
of Rio Grande, majoring in
£ riage of her daughter, Chanty . Humanities .and is employed by
Marie Dellarco, to Thomas Carr Kmart, Gallipolis.
• Waugh, son of Bob and Donna
Mr. Waugh is a 1987 graduate
~ wau11 h of Gallipolis.
of Kyger Creek Hi=hool and is
;
Miss Dellarco is a 1991 gradu- employed by CD!
'on.
:
A fall wedding is p
.·
~ ley, Gallipolis. announces the
~ engagemeDI and approaching m!lf·

t

.•..·

Drummond-Holder
School and is employed as assistant

&lt;

t
} GALLIPOLIS • Connie Jo
;: Drummond,,daughter of Darryl and
~ Brenda Drummond, both of Gal~ lipolis, and Michael W. Holder II,
~- nephew of l.,onnie and Dianna
Boggs or Gallipolis, announce their
~ engagement ind approaching mar-

t

} riage.
~
Miss Drummond is a 1991 grad-

•r uate of Gallia Academy High

..•

In the service

•

•

POMEROY • Navy construe• tionman recruit Rodney C. Butcher,
son of ROdney .R. Butcher of Route
: 4, Pomeroy, recently completed
• basic training at Recruit Training
:· Command, San Diego, Calif.
:.... During the cycle, recruits are
;Uught general military subjects
~esigned to prepare them for fur~r academic and on-~-job li'ain~
ng in one of the Navy s 85 occupa. nal fields.
Studies include seamanship,
~lose-order driU, naval history and
!first aid.
He is a 1992 graduate of Fairland High School of Proctorville.
1.

t

r
•'
.r-

.

• PATRIOT Marine Pfc. Mark A.
~r. son of. Marilyn L. Haner of
•6203 Star Route 775, Patriot,
.recently completed the School of
:Infantry. ·
• During the cowse at the School
:Or Infantry. Marine Corps Base,
:Camp Lejeune, N.C. students
)'eceive classroom instruction and
l!J·articipate in field exercises
~nvolving infantry tactics, c~nstruc­
'tion and camouflage of f1ghung
fOSitions, and the usc of mines,
;demolitions and intra-company
:J:ommunications equipmenL
• The 1988 graduate of Gallia
~cade my High School, joined the
lMarine Coips in April, 1992.
I Wife, Hollie, is the daughter of
~ohn P. and Janet R. Davis, Patriot.

'

·-

:. PATRIOT. Marine Pfc. TimoJ. Wisniewski, a 1988 graduate
llf Southwestern High School of
t'atriot, recently completed the
f-uiOIIIotive Organizational Main~nance Course.
:. During the course at Marine
l:orps Service Support Schools,
)Iarine Corps Base, Camp Lejeune,
f'I.C., students are taught the _teCh·
~ic al knowledge and funcuonal
Is needed to efficiently perform
lions, diagnostic tests, adjust' services and repairs to tactiotor transport equipment
~·nder garrison or field operating
~y

~lions.

-

He joined the Marine Corps in
j\pril, 1992.
.

:

~ POMEROY • Lackland Air

~ore e.Base, San Antonio-Airman
~teven

M. Martin has graduated

arne omitted
GALLIPOLIS • The name of
wu unint . ly omitted from the list of
allia Academy High School stuthat were recently honored by
Gallipolis City Schools Acaic Boosters Club.
Saunders was among the 66
i&amp;h school students who have
ed a 3.S or above grade point
~ in the school year 1992-93.
The list of students wu provid10 the Tribune by the school:

"e:;~Saunders, senior,

j
(

manager of Dairy Queen.
Mr. Holder is a.J992 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School. He
is currently serving in the U.S.
Marine Corps, Camp L.eJeune,
N.C.
._
The ceremony will be held April
10 at Holiday Inn at 1:30 p.m. A
reception will follow.

who said the l~st findings in the
armual survey of U.S. health habits
.are "terribly disturbing."
Taylor said the survey shows
Americans retreating from the bel·
.ter eating habits that seemed to
have been taking hold in the 1980s.
. Instead, people an: eating more
of the bad things, such as excessive
fat 11nd salt, and fewer of the
healthy things, such as vegetables
and foods rich in fiber.
··
Am~ng those surveyed, 53 per.
cent Slid they aq: the recommended
amounts of fibrous foods and ve11·
etables, compared ~ 59 percent 1n
1983. Fat was avo1ded by 51 pe_rcent, compared to 55 percent m
1983, and excess salt was avoided
by 46 percent, comp;ued to 53 percent i~ 1983.
Fo_od sales records support the
survey fmdinp, Taylor said. Sales
of low fat and low calorie products
· have: slumped, while ~ •&lt;!lume
has increased for foods h1gh m fat
and salt content, he said
Also, Taylor· said there was a
slis!:'tdrop in the nu':ftber of people
gettmg regu_lar extn;ISC:
.
All of this, he wd, IS leadmg to
an overweight America.
·
The survey found 66 percent of

robbers.

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those questioned were overweight,
compared to 58 percent in I983.
Only 17 percent were within the
recommended weight range, compared to 23 percent of 1983,1Jld I7
percent were. underweight, compared to 18 percent a decade earlicr.
"For thQ dociDrS in the country,
this report is terribly disturbing,"
said Todd. "It means Americans
are not willing to accept responsiliility for-their own well being."
There was good news in the survey. American health behaviors
improved in areas enforced by
.laws, said Taylor. Fewer people
admit to drinking and driving, and
more say they ale u~ing seat belts
and had installed home smoke
detectors.
Since the survey was fir5tlalcen,
car seat belt use has increased by
51 percent, rising from 19 percent
in I983 to 70 pen:entlasl year. Use
of home smoke detectors has
increased from 67 percent in I983
to 90 percent last year, the survey
found. People who.nevcr drink and
drive has increased from 68 to 83
percent, according to the survey
Cigarette smoking continued its
downward irend, the survey
showed, with only 24 percent of
those questioned saying that they
smoked down six percent since
1983. '
Alcohol use also was down.
Forty percent of those surveyed
said they fii:Ver drank, compared to
34 percent in I983.
The survey been taken armually
since I98_3 by Harris and is funded
by Buter lnlernational, a manufacturer of health care products. The
1992 reslilts are based on telephone
surveys of .1,251 Americans, said
Taylor. The margin of error for the
survey was plus or minus three
points, he said.
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Community Calendar Items
RACINE • R11cine Village
two days before 1111 e,-ent Council will meet in recessed sesand the day or that evenL Items , sion Monday 11. 7 p.m. ll Star Mill
must be receivtd well In lldvance Park.
·
to assure publication In the cal·
·
RACiNE • The Racine You \
endar.
League will hold sign-up for diC
SUNDAY
1993 ball season on Monday from
POMEROY • Colin Christensen · 6-8 p.m. Final sign-up will be
will speak 'at Hillside Baptist March 20 from 9 a.m. to .•1oon.
Church on Sunday. Sunday school Sign-up will be held ·II. the South·
begins ·at 10 a.m. with !IIOrning em kindergarten building. R.:glslraworship at 11 a.m .. Evening ser- tion fee will he $10 for ilo4ball
vices are at6 p.m: Christensen will. players, SIS for baseball players,
speak about his previous mission- not to exceed $2S, per family. Anyary work in Mexico, the Phillippine one who did .not participate .in the
Islands and his future work in Hun- Racine Youth League prevtously
11ary. Rev . James R. Acree Sr. will need a copy of their birth cermvites the public.
tificate.
ap~r

BIG HUG ' Flip Wlison hu1s Tim Kiley, . ..
director of ;
''flit Flip Wilson Sh.,... Friday night 11 The Museum of TelevJ. . ·
slon and Radio's annu11I televlilol! festival In Los A!lgeles. 'The
museum honored Wilson's show which ran from 1970 to 1974. (AP .
photo)

Clark, Hou_ck among Who's Who ·
· RIO GRANDE • Tom Clark of
Gallipolis, an accounting major at
the University of Rio-Grande and
Rio Grande Community College,
and Alicia Houck of Crown City,
an elementary education major at
the University of Rio Grande and
Rio Gnnde Community College,
have been naR)ed to the 1993 ~. tion•of Who's .Who Among Stu·
dents in American Universities IJid
Colleges.
A campus nominating commit·
ICC and editors of the annual direc·

"We got into a philosophical
dcbaie about why we are the ki_nd
of people we are in terms'of VIO·
lence. We had no answers," ~unda
said Friday. "I don't ~ow 1f the
bill will do anyth!ng. It JU~ may be
our nature. I don 1 know 1f we can
create enough laws to change
tllaL"
bill has yet. to
by The
the Senate.
. be taken up
. .
Opponents say 1t1s too vague m
defining a "war toy" and doesn't
address the real causes of v1olence.
"This bill does not distinguish
between the kind of aggress.JOn
we're talking about, s~~t cn':"e
aggression, and the kmd of vJOlence sometime~ necessary m d!e
military," s.a•d Rep. Dav1d
Stegmaier.

But now, stores selling fake
guns,
combat
and
other "war
toys"videogam.es
may be forced
to
from Air Force basic training here.
post
warnings
that
such
pla~ings
During the six weeks of training mcrease "anger and violence" in
the ainnan studied Air Force mis- children
sion, organization and customs IJid
Op~nents condemn as vague
received special·training in human
and
misguided a bill to require the
relations.
warnings,
has been ~sed
In addition, airmen who com- by the statewhich
House.
,
plete basic training earn credits
The
bill
would
require
stores
toward an associate degree through place signs on shelves stating: to
the Community College of the Air
"WARNING.
THINK
Foo:e.
He"is the son of Richard E. and BEFORE YOU BUY. THIS IS A
TOY. PLAYING WITH iT
Gwendolr.n K. Martin of 30674 WAR
INCREASES
ANGER AND VIOMurray Hill Road, Middlepon.
POMEROY • There will be a
LENCE IN CHILDREN. IS THIS
The airman is a I99I graduate WHAT YOU REALLY WANT public dinner at the Meigs County
of Meigs High School, Pomeroy.
Senior Citizens Center on.Thursday
FOR YOUR CHILD?"
Retailers caught without the with serving from 5-6:30 p.m. Cost
POMEROY • Navy Construc- sign would be fined $100.
of the dinner will be $4 per person
tionman Recruit Rodney C. ButchIts sponsor, Rep. Roben Bunda, with the menu of baked steak,
er, son of Rodney R. Butcher of said he was concerned that chi~ mashed potatoes and gravy, cole
Route 4, Pomeroy. recently com- who play with toy weapons, war- slaw, green beans, roll, choice of
pleted basic training at Recruit themed computer games and simi- pie and beverage. Following the
Train in~ Command, San Die,o. ·
lar toys become more aggressive. dinner, music will be played by
Dunng tile cycle, recru1ts are The bill supports nonviolence and The Classics. A free will offering·
taught general military subjects focuses attention on the inRuences will be taken for the musicians.
designed to prepare them for fur·
The public is invited to attend.
children are exposed to, he said.
ther academic and on-the-job training in one of the Navy's 85 oCcupational fields.
Studies include seamanship,
PIANIST &amp;.EVANGEUST
close-prder drill, naval hisuxy and
fu:st aid.
OF COWMBUS, OHIO
He is a 1992 graduate of FairWILL MINISTER AT
land Hil!h SChool of Proctorville.
11:00 A.M.
&amp; &amp; 7:00P.M.MARCH 14,1993
.
.

tory have i~cluded CI.ark's ~arne
based on h1s ~eadem•~ achJeve·
m~nt •. communny. serviCe, l~d!:r·
sh1p m e~tracurncu,lar actlvJiles
and po~b.al for C'!flbnued success.
Both JOIR an ehte group &lt;If, students .sel~ct~d from .more than
~.4~ msbtubons of h•gh~~ Iearn·
mg m all. 50 states, the D1str10! of
Co!umb•a and several fore1gn .
natKllls.
.
.•
Outs~1ng stu~ents have ~
honored m the duectory SIRCy
1934.

MR. and MRS. LEE (TONYA) SINCLAIR
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TRAIN FOR

EMPLOYMENT

Plantz ~Sinclair
Paving, Henderson, w.va.
. The bride was given in marriage .
by her parents. Matron of honor
was Tarnmy )&gt;atterson, Point Pl~­
ant, friend of the bride. Flower gul
was Brianna ·Plantz, daughter of the

: GALLIPOLIS • Tpnya S. Plantz
became the bride of Lee E. Sinclair
,!luring a Feb. 27 wedding ceremony At the Rutland Church of' God,
'., with
. Pastor John Corcoran officiilt• mg.
: The bride is the !14dghter or JQC
• and Shifley Plantz of Kanauga. She
; is a 1985 giaduate ofGallia Acade: my High SchoQI.
·
·. ·
• . The groom· is .the son of Jamce
; or Pi)meroy and Da'id 'of Golum~ bus . .He is employed by Myers

ENROLL NOW!
Classes begin April 5th ·
Call the Ad.u~ EdUc:ation Canter '
Tri-County Yoc11ian11 School1-81l0«17~ ' '
~~ Technician
.

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~ Trial.date postponed until

ofood fo1anagemenl
&amp; Catering
•Secretarial

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COVINGTON, Ky. (AP)- A
~ederal judge has postpon'ed the
'": trial of a former Cincinnati televi;:;sion weathefrnan indicted charged
~ ..with conspiring to bum two homes
~ ~e owned in northem Kentucky. .
t :; Richard A. "Eri~" Warren had
- ~ &lt;been . itheduled_for triai ·Apriii2
.. ; ·.. ! 'liefore U.S. DistriCt Judge Willi&amp;m
~lsman. But at a meeting with
· llawyen Thursday, the judge post·
~e&lt;! the trial until Oct. 4 to give
:aefense lawyeri more time to pre;
~- _
&gt; Warren, 48, pleaded innocent
l ast month to an 11-count federal
~ndictment alleging that he panici·
pted in schemes to bum down the
t wo homes and defntid the State
farm and Chubb insurance compa- ·
'flies. The indictment charges him

REG. $14.95

Berber Carpets

MICHAEL VANCE

For Family Rooms,
Kitchens, Baths, etc

AT LIVING WORD MINISTRIES

October

S66I,OOO home in Crescent Springs
RACINE ··. There will be a
on April 30, I990, and another that turkey and ham dinner at Southern
destroyed a $450,000 home in High School on Sunday at 1I a.m,
Boone County's Boone Air Estates sponsored by the Racine PTO .
developmen~on March 8, I987.
Menu includes turkey or ham,
Warren collected insurance mashed potatoes, homemade noomOI!Cy for both rues, according to . dies, grei:n beans, slaw, roll,
theindicunentr \
-. · _ ·- . - . desserts and drink!, Price is $4 for
· Warren was aweatherman m the adults and $3 fcir.children under I2.
mid-19&amp;0s at WKRC-1V. He also Carry-out available. ·
was a weatherman at WCPO-TV in
Cincinnati for three years ending in
MONDAY
.
I990. ·.
CHESTER -The Chester BaseHe now li~s IJid works in Jack- · ball Association wiU meet Monday
sonville, 'Fla. He said he prod~ at7:30 p.m. at Chester Elementary.
videos for the legal profession. . · All interested parents are invited.
The U.S . Bureau of Alcohol, ·
•
Tobaeco and Firearms woiked with
RAC!Mi - The Big Bend FartJ:I
'Crescent Springs and Boone Coon- Antique Club will meet Monday at
ty police to investigate the c~.
7:30p.m. at Southern High School.

'

POMEROY • F.O.E. Ladies
Auxiliary No. 2171 will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m.

Rl1, Box 44
M•on, WV25260

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POMEROY • The Belles ancl
Beaus Western Style SqUIR Dlnce
Club will sponsor an open dace 11.
lhe senior citizens· center in
Pomeroy on Satunlay fro 8-11 p.m.
Roger Steele will be the caller.
Refreshments wiD be

SYRACUSE • The Third
Wednesday H!IRemakeri Club will
meet Wednesday at I0:30 a.m. at
the Syracuse Municipal Building.
Cindy" Oliveri Will speak on "How
You Feel About Yourself." Easter
eggs will be made. Bring a·Styrofoam .egg, material, scissors and a
dull paring knife.

Swiss cui wed&lt;lng bendt .,.
able in 14K or 1BK gold.

avllil-

20°/o to 30% OH .·

POMEROY • The Middleport
Literary Club will meet at 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the Meigs County .
Public Library in Pomeroy with
MrS. Roy Holter as hostess. Mrs.
James·Diehl will review "Alice and
Edith" by Dorothy c~ Wilson.
F&lt;ir roll call, tell of "The woman
behind the man."

On a_ll Wecl4lng a.ds

Tawney Jewelers
422 Second Ave.

CLINT BLACK·
&amp; DOLLY PARTON
In Concert Together At ·

TUESDAY
POMEROY· The Meigs Coun· •.
ty Shepherd's Club will hold its
ftrst meeting TqeSday at 7 p.m. at
the Meigs CountY Public Library in
Pomeroy. Anyone taking sheep to
the fair should contact Buddy and
Sally Ervin at 949-2136 or Tom
imd Judy A~s
at98S-4443. ..
.

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POMEROY· The armual birth·
day celebration of the American
Legion will be held by Drew Web,
ster Post No. 39, Pomeroy, al the
·

Teachers to llleet
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun·
ty Retired Teachers will meet at
Trinity Church in Pomeroy on
March 20 at noon. Note the change
of time. Call992-3887 for reserva·
lions.

j

Travel to Pigeon Forge, in the heart of the Smoky.
Mountains, to see Clint Black and Dolly Parton,:
, twa of America's hottest country performers, in concert,.
at th.e opening ceremony for Dollywood! Don't miss itI .

April 23-26~ 1993 ,
Escorted ·by Brenda Roush
'·

_/&lt;11/)

"T ,

GALLIPOL,IS

360 Second

'·

Call or stoo bv todayt
446-0699

0

1-800-462-5255
HOLZER H.EALTH HOT·LINE

TAKE. CARE OF YOUR FAMILY!
MON.·FRI. 8:00·5:00
All Insurances and Ohio &amp; West Yir1inia
Medical Cards, Plus ~hio &amp; West Yir1inia
Workman's (ompensation.
.
.
.

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Featuri•l~

a•rlca• Greeti1g Cards, Russell
Stover Caady 11d Feato• Glass.
.

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SALE

Main and First Streets
(First building behind Twin-Towers)
Point Pleasant, WV.

QUALITY CARE IN YOUR HOME
The effective and efficient Home Health ServiCe of Veterans
Memorial Hospital provides. y6u with quality health care in
the comfort of your own home.
The Service functions well under today's philosophy of
permitting people to remain in their own homes for as long as
possible. Our Home Health Service has grown from 5,149
home visits in 1982 to 29,540 visits in 1992. '.
Referrals tor this service may be made by physicians,
hospitals·, family memb~rs, friends and agenci~s. If you feel a
need for this Home Health Service call us at 992-3231 or

992-21~
VelerMt Momorllll Hospital

\:"-;/

Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive
· Pomeroy
992·2104
,.

.

WE HAVE JUST RE
.OUR WAREHOUSE I A
SELECTION FOR EVERY
.. ROOM IN STOCKI

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•Illness or Injury •Physician Referral
•Health Care E\fents •Support Groups

~ spec:Jany..tralned R. N..ls on.d.l(ty _to:answ.er. Y:oJJx ci~~OIIs ~
health care &amp; lntorm you about available sei'vices. • •
llllll-10 pm 7 days a week.

·

:Jv{p,J(jS CJ31R!)!Prt &amp;
· '1YEC09(Jlt[J!J{{j
992-81'73 ·
MON.·SAT. 8:3o-5:00
.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

.,.
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ANSWERS YOU ·NEED••.
AS ClOSE AS . YOUR PH9NEI
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. HOLZEQ. .MEDICM_~tNTER
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Specilll Good I hN Aprl1

THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN TRAVEL.

special meetmg at the township
building on Rock Springs Road on
Monday ll;7 p.m.

304-773-5771

At_.._ ·ouR FA_ MILY
-.1 PHA~MACY

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WEDNESDAY
COOLVILLE • There will be a
hunters safety course on Wedne.s·
day, Friday, March 24 and 26 at the
Coolville Lions Club Building
from 6:30-9:30 p.m . Call Bob
Pullins, 667-3831, Ed Rood, 667·
6348 or Ed Wigal at 667.fJ657 for
information.

ROCK SPRINGS • The Salis·

.

..-

Dance planned ·

senior citizens center on· Tuesday.
Dinner wiU ·be served al 6:30 p.m,
All m¢mbers and their spouses or
friends are urged to auend. .

bury Township Trustees will hold a

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•

:: GALLIPOLIS • The Return
lbnathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
gf the Ameri.can Revolution, will
ebserve the chapter's 85th anniveriiry with a hincheon at the Holiday
fnn in Gallipolis on March 20 at
12:30 p.m. There will be a receivll!g line at noon for !Jh10 Regent,
OSDAR~ Mrs._Ralph R Bush, Jr.
· !:Reach Out "and Touch" will be the
ropic of Mrs. Bush's presentation.
J'merican History Month Essay
ilnd Good Citizenship Awards will
lie made and student winners rec-

0

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Sunday Times Sentinel Page B3

ed.

~

with conspiracy
commit arson,
:tngage
in illegal10interstate
com- ·•·
Jllerce, and bank, mail and wire .
.fraud.
·
:: The indictment involves a fire
!llat caqsed $80,000 damage to a

DAR. to meet

MIDDLEPORT • Rev. John . POMEROY ·The Meigs Athlet·
Haley will be preaching at the Mid- ic Boosters will meet Monday at
dleport Community Church on 7:30 p.m. at Meigs High School.
Sun&lt;laY-at7 p.m ..There will also be The winter sports l!anquet will be
specjal
., smgers. Everyone welcome. Tljursday at6:30 p.m. Bring a vegetable and dessert di•h. Meat,
SYRACUSE • "Born Again drinks and. tOlls· will be furnished
Believers• will sing ~I the Asbury by the booste~.
United Methodist CMrch ill Syra·
'
cuse on Sunday at 11 a.m.
CHESTER • Chester touncil
No. 323, Daughters of America,
POMEROY - Beginners country will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. Quar·
line d.ancing classes will begin terly birthdays will be observed.
Sunday at Pomeroy Village Hall Potluck refreshments will be
from 2-4 p.m. Donation of $2 for served. Practice for the spring nlly
the class. Call 992-7853 or 949- on. April 3 at Logan will be held.
245s.for infofr1Jation.
, District f3 pfl!ctice at J.,ogan will
be held March 28 at I p.m. All
POMEROY • Colin Chris- -members Ire urged til attend. Dis. tense~J, mission!Jry, will·speak at ,· trictl31odge members have.Easter
HiUside 'Baptist Church· on SundaY· candy available. Order from any
at 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. Public invit- member.
·

'
REEDSVILLE • Eastern Athlet·
ic Boosters will have an emergency
meeting Sunday at 2 p.m. in the
high school cafeteria. All parents
bride.
and friends urged to attend.
Best man was Teny Myers, Gal.
lipolis, friend of the grpom.
BURLINGHAM -·The BurlinJ.· '
Music was provided by Mrs . . ham Junior Modem Woodmen will
Corcoran. A ~ption followed i~ sponsor.a.family together program
the chulth fellowship hall.
· . on Sunday at 2 p.m. at the hall. Mr.
The couple resides in Gallipolis. and .Mrs. Kenneth Sanders, G.allipolis, will be putting on the prograin. All are welcome. Juri10rs
will serve refreshments.

•

.O.ta Pf'l!C8S&amp;ing

Public dinner

In 1789, The Old South Meeting .
House in Boston was built by Joshua
Blanchard, who later built Faneuil
Hall in the same city.

~

Meigs County calendar of events

Hawaii lawmakers considering
_warning·Iabels on 'war toys'
By BEN DiPIETRO
Associated Press Writer
HONOLULU- Once upon a
time, lOy pistols held a place of
honor in childrens' games essential equipment for playing
cowboys and Indians or cops and

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt

Americans following
less healthy life styles
By PAUL RECEJ
AP Sclnce Writer
WASHINGTON- America's
health habits have taken a turn for
the worse since the 1980s, with
fewer peaple following good diets,
gettillg exercise and k(leping slim, a
Harris survey shows.
"Quite likely the healthy
lifestyles or the past decade were
just a passing fad, like hula
hoops," Humphrey Taylor, pn:sident of Louis Harris and Associates, told a news cOnference Thursday.
.
He was joine.d by Dr. Todd
• Davis, executive vice president of

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�Pomeroy-Middleport-GaiiiP,OIIs, OH....Polnt Pleasant, wv

OH~olnt Pleaeant, WV

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-851

Travel plan.ner now available ]

•

THE C£!

COLUMBl!S .• Governor
George V. Vomov1ch ;mnounced
recently that the new 1993
Oh~oPass Travel PI~ nne! !s. now
avallable from the Oh10 D1v1SIOft of
T~~el Dfd Tourism. .
We re already gettmg calls at
1-800-BUCKEYE anticipating the
release _o f this year's OhioPass,"
said Vomovich. "And we're hapPY
~be able 10 release this pubhcalion now, so travelers can begin

plll!lning their ~pring and summer
Oh1o getaways.
The Division of Travel and
l_'ourism's primary uavel publica110n, the 1993 Oh10Pass Travel ·
Pl~~;n~er .is a four-color guide to
Oh1o s d1verse uavel attractions. It
featur~s more _than 140 pages. of
~~el mfo~auon , feature s10ne~,
hsong5, reg1onal maps, and !Jeauoful p_hotographs. Each Oh10P~ss
also mcludes a coupon book, w11h

p . 1 . h
.
eop e Ill t e news

ANNIVERSARY • EUitllt and EUzabetb BarriDgtr Carpe~ter
will ~ek,brate their 65!JI wecfdlag aaalversary DB Wednesday, St.
Patrick s Day, at tbe1r home oa Carpenter ltoad Ia Portland
45770.
•

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so· YEARS - Clareace aDd Gladys Weddle Wul be celellratial •.•

tbeir 50th weddiDIIDDIVtraar,- 011 March l2. The couple Wl8 mirried Ia East LiverpooL
,.

Celebration held
POMEROY - G~ts attending
the recent surprise anniversary cel~lntion of Paul and Janet Simpson·
1n observance of the 25th anmvcrsary were: Jane Simpson, Ronnie,
Kelley, Andy and Michael
Haw~s. Sean Riffle, Carolyn and
Oav1d Darst, Roger .and Diane
Coats, Amy Harrison, Jeanie and
Ml:.Md MRS. WARREN (CONNIE) CONNOLLY
Erica Robie, Greg and Dinah Stewart, Dixie and Paul McDaniel Vicki
Caoer. Sandy and Richard Butcher,
Robert, Barb, Todd, Jody and
r LONG BOTIOM - Warren IIIII (AJDy) Morris, SL Louis, Mo. and
COaale ()wn!lly ta:allly c:dcbrat- Krislina, ll heme.
.
Adam Smith, Leo Zwilling, George
Horak, Helen and Joyce Davis
cd tMir 25111 MddiD&amp; IIUiivaSII)'
The couple received gifts and
Don and Frankie Hunnel, SherrY
widl 1 Dlhaial at die Lone B01- canis from many or their friends
Smith, Nancy Kearns. ·
10111 Uniicd McdiodistChun:b.
aud family. Their daughters surHe 'is tho 1011 of MrL Erma Con- priJed lhcm with a video tape of
Attendint from out-of-town
were: Ruth ewis, Bellfontaine;
nolly and lhe Ia W".W.. Connol- pic1Dn:s shown wilh special backRose Dennison, Pittsburgh, Pa.;
ly, Recdsville. She is the daaghter ground m•ic. starting with the dat·
Orrie
and Nina Simpson, Monaca,
or Alii Dill aad lhe - Ellswmh iDg years and going through the
Pa.;
Jerry,
Joyce and Kacy Cooper,
IIQ&amp; 25 yean or marria&amp;eDill, Reedsville.
.Mr. and Mn. Connolly were
CaR punch, coffee and snacks
New Brighton·, Pa.; Ronnie and
married J111. 20, 1968 at lhe Nease were sc'tvcd by Janet ·Connolly
Karen Horn, McArthur; Kenny,
Settlement Church by the Rev. Mary Cowdery Judy Hall and
Susie, Mike and Deena Roush,
RObert smitb.-'Thc:y arelhe parcors Freda Laddns. '
George, Karen, Brett and Dawn
of two daughters, Mrs. Kevin
Roush, all of Columbus. ·
Sending gifts were Harper and
Phylis Simpson, Millie and Lloyd
Rowles, Monsenior Donald E.
MR. and MRS. PAUL (JANET) SIMPSON
ATLANTA (AP) -'The: self- IJI(lllliscd to come 10 Atlanta in the
Horak, Harold and ~ Roush,
proclaimed king or pop, Michael l'utme 10 Jn'8rd participants in the
Elizabelh Davi's, Medina Tucker,
Jackslon, is teaming up with a for- immilnizalion progtlllll. •
Margaret Rose, T11rri Fife, Becky'
mer president to help immunize.
McFarland, Betty Donaven, Misiy
POMEROY
Paul
and
Janet
She
is
·
1
d
•
lhouslmds of preschool cbiklrm iD
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Clint Si_mpson were honored recently Pharmacy fnm~i~ at ~uth s Butcher, Vickie Damron and Lora
Alllnta.
Eastwood, Mel Gibson, Whoopi
a surprise .celebration . in formerly employi:d
elhwas Roach ..
Jackson appeared via satellilC Golclbag and many olher stars on w1th
o~rvance
of
lhelf
251h
wedding
Ohib
Coal
Company
ou
em
Friday from Los Angeles when for- Hollywood's A-list w.ere in Las
anruversary.
The
event,
held
at
the
A
lhree-tier
cake.mad
b
C
mer President Carter 11nnounecd . Veps lhis weelc, not 10 gamble, but
E~~;gles Club, was given by their olyn Darst, as well as om:r ~30IIIC 10,000 Atlanta Project vdun- to schmooze with movie theater
children
on Feb. 21.
menrs were · ed th
tea'S planned to visit 200,000 fami- ownas.
The couple was married Feb.
'
serv to e guests.
lies whole c:hildml may IICc:d vacEastwood, whose movie
1968 atlhe Sacred Heart Rec10cinations lhe weekend of Aprill7. "Unforgiven" has received nine 24,
ry
in
by Father John
t8.
•
.
Oscar nominations, was named TerellPomeroy
. They are the parents or
• Carter founded the Atlanta Pro- diRaor or lhe year Thursday at lhe three daughters:
POMEROY - The POmeroy Fire
Mrs. Jeff (Valerie)
Ject10 auact povaty-relalcd pub- National Association of Theater Nottingham, Long
barbecue, ·
Department
Bouom; Joanie scheduled forchicken
~ms in the inner city. Jackson Owners-ShoWest convention.
Sunday
Simpson, Racine; and Teresa postponed until March 21.has been ·
Simpson, at home.
..

'
. COiN CLUB OmCERS - Pldured are om. ee-:s or the OH KAN Coin Club, Middleport.
:The 31st annual eoln show will be presented

You never know.
But; you can always
be sure.

-.

Coin collectors gear up for
·.$ l_st annual show in Kanauga

'

, GALLIPOL~S - Coin collectors open at 9. a.m. continuing till 4:30
of al.l ages, COl'! dealers, a_nd.tl!e .. p.~. Plenty ~f easy parking is
public from Oh1~, West V1~gm1a ava1lable. Th1.s sh.ow 1s t~e only
and Kentucky w1ll have theu day one scheduled m th1s area th1s year.
Ill! ~h 21 when· upwards '!f a
Edward Burkett, show chairFJ1illion doUars·worth o_r rare COinS, man. reports that 15 coin dealers
~per cun~ncy, p~10us mef:B~S from three states have reserved
B;ild related 1tems will be .on exh1b1- table display space, and have a vast
llOn, or for sale or~ m lhe ban· assortment of coins and other matequet room~or the Holiday Inn in rial for sa_lc or trading purpose.
~ Karia'!P- .
~~~ wal) offer free appraisals
O&lt;;C8SIOII IS lhe 31st annual and WIU acceptm lfll!les. old pockspnng COI!I show hosted ~y the OH et wau:hes and ~er 1tems made of
KAN Com C)ub of Middleport. gold, Silver or platinum.
1}le even.t, held regardless _oft~
Exhibits will feature ~oins and
weather, •15 open ro lhe public w11h paper currency of the Untied States
no admission charge. Activities usued during the' past 200 years.

Wedding .anniversary observed

--Names in the news

Couple celebrates 25 years .
.!l:s

Barbecue postponed

:ne

).OGAN
MC)NUMENT
COMPANY INC.

.

po::~~~"=N':.:ce
JAMES A. BUSH, Mer-

..'

' RIO GRANDE • Rio Grande
Community College through lhe
Olfice of Continuing Education
~II be offerinl!
craft class in
c-;oss stitch. Th1s course will be
htld. on Mondays, March 22 and
29, from 6:30-9 p.m. in Anniversary Hall, room 102. Instructing .
this Claft class is Helen ArmSII'OIIg
: of Jackslon.
·
While creating this old time
English sampler, participants will .
learn the bullion stitch, twisted
chain, double herringbone, threaded backstitch~ double suai~t cross
stiiCh, basic cross and basic backstiiCh. AU mllaials are provided.
For funher information and .egistration contact the Office of Con· tinuing Education, University of
Rio Grande, Rio Grande, Ohio
45674 or call614-245-5353 exten·
sion 325 or 1011-free in Ohio at I·
8D0-282-720I .
P'alntlag sweatshirts
A course of painting sweaiShirts
will be held on ThurSdays, March
18 and .25, from 6:30-9 p.m . in
Anniversary Hall, room 102.
Instructing lhe class is Helen Arm·

PHONE1112~

VINTON, otiO
DISPLAY YARD

a

STAlE AT. 110

JAMES A. BUSH, Mgt-.
iP HONUIIIIN

WALLPAPER OUTLET

&amp; JEWELRY INVENTORY CLEARANCE!

INGELS ·

strong from Jackson.
'
.
A summer scene will bC created
using liquid sequins and acrylic.
paints. Colorpomt paint stjfching is
a brand new colorfUl way 10 create
qualily, personalized designs on
clothing, home decor and gifts.
You arc asked 10 bring a swearshirt .
SO percent cotton, 50 percent
polyester, washed with ~P _fabric ·
softener. ~er col~ shift 1s preferred, ff,lr th1s des1~n. All other
!"atenals are furms~ed by the
mstructor.
'
OSHA rexuladons
A one day workshop on OSHA
regulations will be held on
Wednesday, March 31 from 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m. in the College of Business, room 103: Deadline for regisuation is March 26.
This workshop focuses on the
responsibilities of the employer
under the Oeeupational Safety and
Heallh Act of 1970. Other topics 10
be discussed are general industry
standard, provisions outlined in
other OSHA codes. accident and
iqjury reporting requirements,

Vi'ctim's family says man
who confessed to slaying
shouldn't be -able to go free
..
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''

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SAVE 20%, 38%, EVEN 50% DURING OUR CLEAUNCE SALE
OF ALL 1992 DISCONTINUED MERCHANDISE!
BARGAIN HUNTERS DELIGHT
LIVING ROOM
DINING ROOM
BEDROOM

2·way Recl11r
$119
: Etel dCln* Secf1 d
$911
SVLiacbrwfeHI
$191
a.••• Sell Sb ., II . ,. . . . ._$499
3 Pc. lhilt a- 5ehe
$491
: .Adill .... Willi at 1•1 er-5299
: .Aclill,_ &lt;Wse ldnr
$399
•

S Pt. WIICICI Dilelte
---·S199
7Seat WOld Dl~ette......... ---$349
Dra,.leaf, 2cllalrs------5188

SPRING-AIR BEDDING

DEN/FAMILY ROOM
~~----~177.00

IWOI HOME APPLIUCES
lelviietar 15 CL ft. frtsl fret--5469
Westl zl!••se H.D. Wasller """" -5366
Westi gllaase H.D. DrJer--$288
SPKIAl PAll PIKI
, $S99
Westitzl!••se U.C. Dlshrasller-S289
West' •••se 7 w. ft. F1111er-S288
Westillhlll Gas ... Elec. .... _$298
COIIDITIONEAS

IPf(ICl PUR(HASE
llfTOVIRS

MATCHED~

MIS·
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BRAIIO IIAME
&lt;LOSf·OUTI

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Of BEOOitiG MUSI GO

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FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY
_,._ Olt.
. 1·111 426-5511 "992·2635
11M.

• flail- ....,.........
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Waad Bookcase B11k Beds---S244
W~lte &amp; Brass DayHds--&lt;-plet• $188·
Bookcase Waterllecl.---&lt;-ple" $244
We~b 5 Pc. AltWood leclruat-$888

6 Pc. Master Benll ............-$599
Twill Hemlaanls

INVENTORY

$29.95

.

ELECTRONICS

cr

Zellit~ 1 l)lag.R. .te
-"5299
Zellit~ 25• Stel'lfi/R••t• C11nole"5499
Zellt~ 25. C.be StlriO/RtiiOII-5469
Zt•lt~ 3r Direct Vlew---SU49

•••artx4 .... va
-$249
Ma•uex F• Size c-c.n.r
· $749
Realstk 120 Watt Sttno w/CD-$749

10 BIG

DAYS
SALE ENDS 3-21-93

'

•WAVERLY

DES1GNER

'

PAPERS

·FABRIC
BACKED

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Miss Taylor, who has appeaiecl
in 54 movies, hasn't been in a feature film for 13 years,
The violet-eyed star sat between
husband Larry Fortensky and
sinJ!er Michael Jackson as she was
pra1sed by former co-stars including Roddy McDowall ("Lassie
Come Home"); Dennis Hopper
("Giant"); Angela Lansbury
("National Velvet"); Michael
York ("Taming of the Shrew");
and Michael Caine (''X, Y and

Gold/Sliver

·

Last week, Hamilton County ·
Common Pleas Judge J. Howard
Sundermann Jr. ruled Stanley was
incompetent to stand trial for the
April 1990 stabbing death or Thel- .
rna Beck, 73, or Cincinnati.
Assistant Prosecutor Susim
Laker said the two ·rulings are not
at odds. ·
•
· "They·'re fr9m two different
courts and two different criteria,"
~s. Laker said Fnday.
'

Llllayatte Mllll • G.lllpolle

-House Contents for
-Weddings
-Family Reunions · Homeowners Insurance
-Graduations
- .School Events
'
• Smm, Super 8, 16mm, Slides Pictures .
Transfer
to VHS Tape.
Also mass produce VHS tape to VHS Tape
Call for More Information . '
614-446-6939-614-446--7390

BERKUNEI!l

MARCH .11
BSBMONTH
Berkline and Bas"etball

STEAK DINNER-6:30 PM
DANCE-8:30 PM-MIDNIGHT
TICKETS: $30 Couple; $15 Single
Tickets available at the
C:hamber Office.

·'j,

....-·

RESERVATIONS MUST BE IN BY
·• MARCHl9, 1993

.. ..

. . ~x::- ... ......

Others AI

Guest Speaker
Congressman Ted $trlckland

$349&amp;$399
Our beat recllnera, by
Berkllne. Jhree top atylea,
at boHom dollar prtc..r

HAIR CLUB
Receive 5 haircuts or
shamp&lt;?O &amp; set at regular
· price and receive 6th Q_ne

, .

. GOLD &amp; DIAMOND

WlkM&amp;WIIIt

• F~e Delivery
• Full Service Dept.
• Laqe Seleetioa

Meigs Carpet &amp; .
tJJecorating Center
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

H2-1173

OPEN I:IN:OO MON•.IsAT.
'
(

·,

SPE~IAJ.S
Splrel ~·

;'

.FREE •

'

•'

.J

•

Men a

·

· Pli ma

$44.95

$29.95

· $8.00
Kr.

Cor6in &amp; Snytfer !furniture Company

women•a cuts

&amp;Under)

165

CAROL

OWNIJI.CIIIIIATDII

mut1

. mut1

OWNED a OPERATED BY CAROL ICING-

WENDY
IT'fl.IIT.fMIL 'liCit.

OF7HAIU

-,

Seoond Avenue

G.lllpoNe,Ohlo 4Sia1
614-441-1171

IWIIIm.T

. ::IC
•

...

•·"

.i

•

Your Complete Video Taping Servlpe

Annual
Dinner and Dance

10 SESSIONS '25

•
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aclress.''

White/Navy

.1/t'deo T,alf~p.r

MEIGS COUNTY
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

AC, TANNING ROOM &amp; STEREO

. *3.~A PERSON

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
-. Elizabeth Taylor said it took
winning a lifetime achievement
award to remind her she was a
movie star.
"When I first heard about the
award, I went ..into a state or
shock," she told the star-filled
audience Thursday atlhe American
Film Institute. "It's been so long
since I thought about myself as an

COMFORT FLEX

.THE SHOE CAFE .

Witll Matc~ilg
l'lrse

FOURTH ANNUAL

5 BEDS AVAILABLE.

•
•

s EI L B Y.

record keeping, employer rights
and responsibilities during an
OSHA inspection and how supervi·sors can conduct a plant audit 10
ensure compliance. If a current Zee'~).
copy is needed it can be purchased
The ceremony was taped for
at an additional cost
broadcast on ABC-TV later this
Instructing this workshop is spring.
Michael Edelbroet and David
Long of Freeman Environmental
NEW YORK (AP) - Designer
Corporation, Findlay.
Nicole Miller, playwright Wendy
, For registration and· tuition Wasserstein 'and restaurateur Sylvia
information on these classes, con- Woods got to judge the battle of
tact the Office of Continuing Edu- the y'eastie boys at a ·ben.efit bake
cation, Uni~rsity of Rio Grande, off.
·
PO Box 878 Rio Grande Ohio
"We chose the cutest guys,"
45674 or.call.614-245-5353'exten· Alexandra Penney, edi10r in chief
sian 325 or 10ll·free in Ohio at 1 • of Self magazine, said Thursday as
800-282-7201
··She introduced six of the counoy's
·

WELCOME TANNERS

.(

linch to 10
Inch BOrders

(

CHICAGO (AP) - Mother . top male bakers: George Burnett,
Teiesa and lhe Dalai Lama plan to · of Bozeman, Mont.; Noel Comess
join hundreds or other religious of Tom Cat Qakery in New York;
leaders lhis summer atlhe Pilrlia- Scott Gilbert of Atlanta's Buckmentor lhe World's Religions.
head Bread Co.; Daniel Leader of
The week-long conference aims Bread Alone in Boi~eville, N.Y.;
to affirm lhe eom111on clements or Hans Rockenwagner of Rocken- .
different faiths in order to reduce wagner in Santa Monica, Calif.;
intolerance.
and Steve Sullivan of Acme Bread
About 5,000 people are expect· Co. in Berkeley, Calif. ·
ed to attend this year's galhering,
The women were perfectly conwhich begins in Chicago on Aug. .tent to stay out of the kitchen.
28, lhe Rev. David Ramage, chairman of the event, said Thursday.
The Dalai Lama, the exiled
Tibetan Buddhist leader and Nobel
· ~ Prize laure.ate, was expected
to g1ve lhe closing address, Ramage said.
Mother Teresa, also a peace
prize laurealC, was scheduled to
lead a closed session on future
CASINO
cooperative efforts· among the
world's religions, be said.

SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1993
'ROYAL OAK RESORT ,

he's not'competent, he should not
be out on lhe streers where he.can

commit crimes.•'

ho~-;

user-rriendty publication ;
presenrs Ohio in five easy-to-fol- ".
low geographical regions, offering ~
interesting insights on the unique '
character of each. Feature s10nes !
on the Amish, theme parks, home- '
town museums, S!-31C parks, historic :
Sites, transportauon-related atb'ac· •
lions and zoos are included.
·:
Produced throu$h a public-pri- ""
vale partners!lip w11h Ohio Maga- 1;
zine, OhioPass and lhe OhioPass;i
Coupon Book are available free by·;;:
calling I-BOO-BUCKEYE,
;..,;

$249

Ze1!0 VCR Re-.tt

DISCOtiTIIIUfO
FlOOR SAMPLES

CINCINNATI (AP) -· A deaf,
retarded man who conftssed io a
murder shOuld not.havc been freed
from jail, the viciim's daughter
~id.
" .
Fred Stanley, 19, of tincinnati,
was released inro his mother's custody Thursday after a probate coun
referee decided flot 10 coml'!it him .
to a meallliDstitution.
'
"I don't think he shoulil be out
on the street," Joan Dunigan, the
· oldest of Ms. Beck's four children,
sal!l Friday. "I lhink he should be
locked up somewhere, because if

.VINYLS, c.ll &amp;&lt;-ry·

Twill MisNtdl · · -S69 ea. pc.
f•l Mislllltdl ............. __,_$89 ea. pc.
ALL IEDDING SAL£ PRICEDII .

ITEM IN OUR

•PRE-PASTED

Hourly door ·prizes or U.S. dollars
wit~ be given to the public. Souvenlf.wooden mckels and free coin
publications will be given. A grand .
prize of U.S. gold.coin and paper
currency will awarded at4:30 p.m.
Any individual is encouraged 10
exhibit material at the show .
Locked security cases will be provided. All exhibits will be noncompetitive.
Current officers are Dave
Edwards, president: Ed Burkett,
direc10r· John Furst vice-president·
Etta Jo Furst, sec~tary; and Ruby
Vaughan treasurer.
'

.Courses
offered
at
U
..
Rio
Grande
'

' MEIGS COUNTY

.

· March 11 from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. From, 1-r,
are: Ruby Vaughan, Etta Jo Furst, John Furst,
Dave Edwards and-Ed Burkett.

moie than $3,000 worth of dis.::;,
counts at travel auractioas across
lhe state.
"Last year we had a record numher of requests for OhioPau 11 1800-BUCKEYE. Ohio'a loll-free
10urism hot line," said Stale Travel '
Director George Zimmermann.:
"This year we anticipalC an even ~
greater demand for OhioPass from ·
bothin-suue lll!d regional uavelers,
as v1sitors co.ntinue the trend or
spending their leisure time closer to

•

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_,_ .,

,..., .... . , •

~-

..

• •·~ *r'"&gt;,.

-·-- ~

.... - ...... . ,., •.• _

__ _ _ , , _ _ ..,., ___ _.... • - ·•

.-

~ - -~ - .._ ,..,.

_

-

~ -· -• -~

..... ..

--- · -·~ · · -·- -•

...,.._- : - - - '"' •-

..

••- ••""---.

. ....: .... . . ..... .

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nmea

wv

OH Point

Pomeroy-Middl,port--Galllpolla, OH Point Pl••nt. wv

Sentinel

First. Lady hears medical tales of woe
ByCH~OPHERCONNELL

Beat J)j the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich

'·

Whadda bummer!
March I was the 56th wedding
anni\oersary or Dores and Mildred
AmoldorPomeroy.
However, the day was a bit sad
for family member$. ~ildned ~as
a patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital for two weeks suffering
from pneumonia l\t the time and
Dores was taken from the Holzer
Medical Center to the Cabell·Hunt·
ington Hospital in Huntington,· W.
Va., where he was confined to the
intensive care unit.
However, things~ looking up
a bit. Both Dares and Miklled ~
In their ho!"e and~ recuper·
!lling. Needles$ to say, cards from
friends would certainly pep them
up about now , The address is
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. ·

Snow visits Klondike Derby

bat"

NEW HAYEN, W.V-. - Fony-five Cub Scouts and Webelos
and 42 Boy Scouts braved the cold and snow to participate in the
KIOIIdilce Derby Feb. 13 111 the Racine Locks and Dam.
Scouts were treated to a tour of the facilities and also competed
in a sled race and events which tested Scout skiDs such as fii'St aid
and pioneering.
•

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Pack 205 holds Blut!'and Gold
PATRIOT. In honor of Old Gloty Month, Cub Scout,s of Pack
205 of Patriot performed skits paying tribute the American flag at
their !llue and Gold Banquet Feb. 22 at Salem Baptist Church.
Following a potluck dinner for the Scouts, their parents and
guests, Pastor Kenneth Sanders, the evening's main spea!cer, spoke
of the symbolism and importance of the colors used m the Ameri·
can and ChriStian flags.
·
Cubmaster Connie McCormick, with assistance from each den
leader, recognized each Scout for his achievements during an
awards presentation. She also recognized the following leaders with
certificates for their involvement in the Scouting program: Jim
Skidmore, Christine Williams, Cabby .Gill, Penny Massie and Mary
Spurlock.
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Eagles; volunteers recognized .

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· BARBOURSVILLE, W.Va.- Thirty-five new Eagles Scouts
and three key volunteers who have earned the coveted Silver Beaver
award were recognized by the Tri·State Area Council February 16
at the Gateway Holiday Inn in Barboursville, W.Va.
The recognition of 35 Eagle Scouts is a 25-year record for the
Tri-State Area Council Boy Scouts, Scout Executive Bill Fish said.
The Eagle Scout award is the highest honor that may be present· ed to a Boy 'Scout. These boys •are among only two percent of all
registered Seouts in our area.
·
Local Eagle Scouts honored were: James D. Stephens, Troop
259, Henderson, W.Va; Danit:l A. Lawrence, Troop 235, Long BOt·
tom; Michael D. Mattox, Troop 266, West Columbia, W.Va.;
·Robert A. Magnussen, Joshua BIIICksmith, and Kyle Clark, Troop
200, Gallipolis.
.
The local Silver Beaver recipient was Rohcn G. 'l"orkinlin or
Middleport. He has served as assistant scoutmaster, scouunaster,
cubmaster, and committee member since 1980. Since 1990 he has
been scoutmaster or Troop 240, sponsored by Eli Legion Post 467,
Rutland. Workman is Chief Cherntst at Philip Sporn Power PlanL

.' ·Food drive held ·
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GALLIPOLIS - Scouta in the Tri-State Area Council conduct·
ed their annual food dri~ beginning Febnwy, 20 as OYer 3,000
Scouts participated in Scoulina for Food's national good IUQI.
· On Feb. 20, area Scouta haniled out more than 30,000_empty
bags, donated by Foodland Stores.
The Scouts collected donations Feb. 27. According to representa·
lives of the Tri-State Area Council, anyone who did not receive a
bag can still donate by dropping off donations at .their local food

bank.

.

The BSA has collected a combined tot81 of over 500 million cans
; of food nationally since 1988. In its last food drive, the Tri-State
' Area Council colleeted over 25,000 cans.

Scout show March 20
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Scout.().Rama '93 will be held
· 9 am. to 3 p.m. March 20 il the National Guard Armory in Point
Pleasant, w.Va. Scouts and Scouters from Mason, Gallia and Meigs
counties will offer demonstrations of Scout skills w~ll as other
entertainment The show is also the dis1rict's si(lgle 'pcatest recruit·
ing day of the year. Interested boys and their parcms may explore
the world or Scouting and, if interested, sign up to join the organiza.. lion. Admission is free . .

as

Three MGM packs top sellers
.
GALLIPOLIS - The three top popcorn selling Scout units in
,, the Tri-State Area Council were all Cub Scout Packs f.rom the
, MOM District The top sellers were Pack 204 of Gallipolis, Pack
262 of Point Pleasant and Pack 205 qf I'IID'iOt. · ·

(Scouting news runs the second Sunday of tach month a!ld
reports Scoutin~ activities of the previous month and Uf?COmmg
eve111s. Articles Jor submission must be tiU'M.d ill to the TnbUM by
the Monday before the run dart .)
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Four' members or the Big Bend
Cloggers were in Pigeon Forge,
Tenn., last Friday and Saturday to
attend a clog~ing seminar. 'IJ!ey
arc Rae G'w1azdowsky, Vivian
May, Terri Carsey and Kay King.
There were numerous seminar sesSions and the local group was kept
pretty busy with them. However,
they did get time for a brief jaunt
into nearby Gatlinburg.
.

t

Paul and Niesel Gerard are
home and they're bean;Jing.
Paul has been confined to Riyer·
side Methodist Hospital for some
58 days undetJoing m!Cnsive tneal·
ment and Niese! has been at his
side practically every moment.
The reason they're beaming?· They
have good news from the hospital.
Paul's illness is in remission and
they were allowed to come to their
Middleport home for three weeks.
Unfortunatt:ly, Paul has another 30
days or b'lia1ment coming up at the
Columbus hospital' followm~ the
shan vacation, but the GeraniS are
being very positive about the
ruture.
·
Incidentally, they haVe the highest praise for the treatment, care
anil compassion provided by the
staff at the Columbus ho~pital.
And, they are especially apprecia·
live of the support you showed
them during the flfSI ordeal. They
received over 200 cards of encour.·

· GALLIPOLIS · ·The following

'

·~ =
· .·

· What's this?
The Middleport Arts Council
has a ncwsleucr, these days?
It appears so and it also appears
thai the group is becoming
extremely active. The newsletter
points out that the council Is offer·
mg ballroom dance lessons, both
intermediate and advanced, as well
as classes in Texas style dancing
which is enjoying a wave or popu·
larity.
. For budding artists, the couneii
is offering a w.aten:olor art class by
naiionall!)&gt;Vllrd winning watercolor
artist Lee Fritch and Tai Chi Classes are also in the latest council
offerings under the direction or
Eric Chambers, well known for his
work as a martial arts practitioner
and lecturer.
·
And last but noi·least, as well
as pretty timely, is a ceramic yard
ra)lbit class to be conducted by
Judy Dixon. Information on any or ·
the classes can be secured by call·
ing 992-2675 or 992· 7733. It's
· great to SC&lt;!&lt; the council swinging
into so much action.
·

on

MERCERVILLE • Gail Smith,
Outreach worker for the Senior Cit.
izens Center, will be taking ·appli·
cations for teh home Energy Assis·
tance Program and the Golden
Buckeye Card from 10 a.m. to 2
p,.m. Wednesday at Mercerville
Convenie~ Store..
· HEAP, a federal ~rogram, is ·
designed to assist low-mcome fam"
ilies meet the rising costs of home
tteating Bl)d a household may quali·
fy for the assistance if the total
household incop!e falls within the
income guidelines. _
·

·
·

, For example, one penon cannot ·
·cxceea$1'0',215. (for each addilion~
al member, add $3,570). l..pplica·
lions must bring proof of incom~.
their most recent heating bill and
Social Security number of evert· ·
one in the househOld.
·
To qualify for a Golden Bucki
eye Card, a person must be 60 •.
years of age or older and bring •
proof of age. Persons 18 years of ·
age or older may qualify if they are
completely and totally disable and
they must·bring proof of age and
disability
'

6,

BIDWELL PORTER
ELEMENTARY vs..
W.T.C.R. in
BASKnBALL
""RCH 16, 7:30
AT THE SCHOOL

11'11111 .

. . l1l SlOC!!
'14 II

';g!!:,Y11llfW-.n)
~ I .. -IIIII,
. _ u~~.t-1
llr, lUIS ,_ DIIIIIA 18.'
.

rna,

HOLIDAY POOLS, INC. ·

2973 Piedmont Road-Huntington, WV
PIIJIA11: ........718 . . ...fll. I:JI.I.. ., Ill. I:JO·Z.

W,E SHIP U.P.S. DAILY
~

~

"

.

· ·. ~

·· ~·
~

If you are planning a wedding,
then you should come see us at
Haskins-Tanner.
You will have over 190 styles of
tu~edos to choose from. We have a
large selection of the latest styles
and complimentary accessories for
this special occasion.

w.s.

AHortlaW. Prica1

:
· Sunday, March 14
• EUREKA _ Tim McCoy will
s~ng at Edna Chapel Church on
Run Road near Eureka at 6
):!m

teens

C.OUJTollllwe
1-560-53114

- .. _,

. ..

~~- ~.,......
.

.

.

.

'

.,

.

~·-

&gt;Air..__
•Trtpeal

oOe&amp;omy

.e.ck Br-

oJahiiMDciJinge

oStethoecopee ·

\fj~~...

-·

f 'I r

Jr80041M777

.

IT. I'ETEII'I EPIICOPAL CHI!RCK

541 Second AYIIU
TUI: 7:00p.m.
Wed: 9:30 l.m. I

Davidlcn.

'

JACUOII COUITY YMCA

275 Potlsmaulh St.
Man: 7:00p.m.

ANIIIIIIMnt.ta

laM Wlllllll......~,..­
-WitclltrswiDIIIupo
~fOr yaolllld your f•loW ·

..~ Coil tor lilllnto

und riding his Harley Davidson
llld wearing hia leather club vest, ·
dl the newspaper that he did not
WIIIIIQ disclo, his old name. ·

; GALLIPOLIS • Gallia C~~nty
Gentral Health District ~dv1sory
Council meeting, 7 p.m., 1n court·
house bllsemenL

: LOGAN • Narcotics Anony · ·
1110111 Courage 10 Change Group
meeting, 6:30 p.m . at t~e 111
Cbun:h or Christ. 935 E. Main SL

I

-

KANAUGA • Kanauaa Aru
¢rime Wau:h monthly mMtlna.
I

]900

-.

VINTON- V1!lton Fnendsh1p
Gru:den Club ~eeung, I p.m. at the
home ofBeatnee Bush.

available in
•BLACK
•BLACK PATENT
•NAVY
•WHITE
•RED
•ORANGE ·
•LEMON
•GREEN 1

•

•SOFT GOLD

'
"

•CHAMPAGNE
5112 .• 10 COMPARE AT 30.00

•

'

·SMITHVILLE

FLAT ·
same features as our midland pump

'

I

. •BLACK
•NAVY
•CHAMPAGNE

•COPPER
•POWDER

•ROSE
•WHITE

•For treat...t
respiratory pralllems

1900
5 112·10
COMPARE AT 30.00

"alsO available in a spectator style.

WHITE/RED
WHITE/BLACK
WHITE/NAVY '

(AsfhiiCI, lr01dllfls)

.

, ATHBNS -Narcotics ,-.nony·
inous Walk of Life Group=·
' p.m. 11 United Campus
•
IJuemenl.

inlormlllar, .

;

Tu~y, Mar~h 16

CONCENTRATORS

~112 .

10

1900

elatiiS.tyllcls

~

•lkfl•y/Ostollf s.,••••

\

etlo.,u.IW.
·&lt; - &amp;Cntdtes
ee. 1111••• 01a1n

•I1111111Kt On'

1

Proienlll
(M••rw• &amp; Mete IIIII

......

iW Ius ·

•24 .... ~lfll

1

=.K~

5hoPPe lr IC.

'

Harley Davidscn, whO was pic·

,,

7:30p.m., at Holiday Inn.
- . ,

•
Monday, March 15
' GALLIPOLIS • American Can·
cer Society Support Group meet·
l,ng, 2 p.m., at Nel" Life Lu\'Jeran
Church, SR 160. ·For more mfor·
liuttion call446-3S38, 446-4895, or
+46-8657.

; GALLIPOLIS • Narcotics
AnonJIIIO!!S Just FO( Today G~p
irieeuna. 7 p.m., at Grace Unued
Methodist Church.

JACKIOII

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•

• \I~

. '"· - ·~~~ L... : ...... ·_-.:

GALUPOUI

·,..:..

.

..

Ftn II N('l•l.

CALLTOUFMI

24 ~ Emetgency Bervlce • F- D1Nv•~ • R•phllary
Thefup181 on ltlllf • We Do the Pip •11111rll•lh llc1ra
lh llluld • 'No1lwra Contp. • Illicit
Home Owned ..

441-0411

MIDLAND PUMP

:' EUREKA l Christ United
~eihodist'Church will have Lenten
services at )0:30 a.m. followed by
ashan elrama presentation at 7 p.m.
Pastor · Mike Smith welcomes
everyone.

- --

'

•WhMk:hlllra
ofwdlng Pumpe ·

338 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio ·

; POINT 'PLEASANT · NarcOtics
Anonymous Tri County Gr?up
meeting, 7:30 p.m., at 6I I V1and
Street •.

'

,

oChuu &amp; Dilpere
.._.rnbe_l
oOuoderm ·
•TENS Unlta
'

:Pl('E9{C:HSQW'4!l('E
HOfJvi'E 'E!Jvf'Bt£LLIS1-f%.'£9{TS

CHESHIRE - Rtver Valley
Band Boosters Club to meet at ,
GALLIPOLIS • Operafion
f .
River Valley High School, 6 p.m.
Liftoff meeting, 7:30 p.m. at
Columbus Southern Power office.
.
' CENTENARY • Stapleton Fam·
ily will be preaching and the Rev.
GALLIPOLIS -. Amenc~n
GALLIPOLIS • Choose to Lose
Jack Holley· will be preaching at LegiOn Auxihary Umt 27 regu ar Diet Club open house at 9 a.m. at
Centenary United Christian Church meeting, 7:30 p.m., P?Slt ~o'!le, Grace United Methodist Chun:h.
at 7 p.m. .
McCormick Road. Spec13 e ecuon
•
for omce of secretary;
.
; GALLIPOLIS -The 74th Amer·
•
• - POINT PLEASANT • Narcotics
ican Legion binhday dinner at 2
GALLIPOLIS · Lafayeue White Anonymous Clean &amp;. Free ~rou11
p.m. 'at Post Hi1. Legion, auxiliary Shrine, meeting, 7:30p.m. Al\nual meeting, 8:30p.m. at 804 Main SL
and SAL members invited. Bring a reports and election of officers.
Episcopal Church.

c'lessert .

..f-lNJ\J;,
oP.u.nt Lift•
.OOwne

Stop in to see our great selection of
wallpaper books, wonderful fabrics for
draperies and upholstery, and Wunda Weave
Carpet.

pallia County calendar of even~s .

Qulllltr hr.. qlwear at

,fO~t . ·

-Hoepltalllede

30% OH Siorewlde!

quality flex sole, padded Insole pump, made on a
combination last, In all th• spring colors you want.

year are Bill Bell, Amanda Benson, Melissa
Blackburn; Teresa Bowman, John Cart, qina
· Fox Jason Johnson, Kathy Mayse, Teresa Oller,
SteJe Parker, Magan Patton, ,Will Sexton, Tara
Shf11herd, Angie Tackett, Darrell Tilley, and
Tom White .. Advisors ror the group are James
McCarley and Christine Williams. Pictured are
(I to r) Kathy -~ayse, Amanda Benson,,Will Sex·
ton, Tara Shepherd, Gina Fox and Angie Tack· .
ett.
· '·

ADOPT·A·HIGHWAY ·The sixteen mem·
ben or the Buckeye Hills Carrer Center Chap·
ter or the National Honor Society have chosea to
participate in the Ohio Department or Traus· ·
•portation's "Adopt-a-Highway" program. The
; group has adopted a two-mile stretch or the new
35 four lane near the exit to the ,vocational
•school. Two clean-up sessions are bemg ~hed·
~ ulecl before the end·or the school year. NatiOnal
:Honor Society members for the 1992·93 school

' yQu meet
Snack Attacks ... Dance It Dff.. :The Dining Out Wh"lii. ,.Just"a lew of our newest tuldes that help
everyday cpallenges with ease, In a binder that's the perfect cany-aiOng size. #

son.

Save

LAYAWAY' NOW FOR EAS

.Su$rlll~~i ..aw nuiterlala, recljlas, .... Eat ~Ell Lil11
options. All ..., to UM 1., your ow.n "Little BlaCk Binder':

· OSLO, Norway (AP} - Harley
Davidsen loves his Harley David·

:frencli Square :J{onre t£m6e{{isliments

l'.~

Our new Weight Watchers meetings are like going 10 your own persdllal pep-rally! '¥&lt;(1U leader has
lost welghl and kePI it off, and will share sucoess stories, recipes and new menu Ideas wit1110u.

-· . "'

listened to Hightower's story and elderly in Tampa, told of once·
scores of.Oibcrs, and confessed: "I prosperous seniors wb!) live on
don.'t know that it is possible to sat· barely $10 a day after medical
isfy every need that was heard biDs.
today."
"The refrigerators were empt)'
Juliet Duhan, who runs two low- and the medicine cabinets were
income hou sing projects for the full," she said .

Spaghetti dinner

Hlgh-enero meetings that . . fun and filled with

ffarley Davidsen
toves his motorcycle

•

•

EE

15·19 at the Gallia County Senior
Citizen's Center, 220 Jackson Pike.
Monday, March 15
10 a.m .• Walking
cupTuesday • Bake fish fillets ,
10:45 a.m. ·Armchair travel
whipped potatoes, peas/carrots,
11:30 a.m. • Blood pressure
bread, butterscotch pudding.
I p.m. · Chorus
Wednesday
.
· ·T.uesday, March 16
Cheeseburger/bun, fries, broccoli,
10 a.m.• Walking
.
lime jcllo/ftuit, chocplate,chip mint
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. ·Quilting ·
ice cn:am.
10:30 a.m. • STOP/Exercise
Thursday . · Ham and beans,
11 a.m .• Lenten service
boiled egg, Kale/vinegar, corn ·
12:30 a.m... Matinee
bn:ad, pears.
. .
I p.m. '. Auditor's' officer, Bob
Friday • Creamed chicken over
Drain, "How Your Propeny Value$ . biscuit, peas/carrots, three bean
~Determined"
salad, biscuitS, bananas in orange ·
Wednesday, March 17
"· juice.
.
9 a.m. to 3 p.m .• VITA
Malee reservations by calling
10 a.m.• Walking
446-7000 before 9 a.m. on the day
I 0 a.m. to noon • Crochet circle · you wish 10 auend.
.10 a.m. to 3 p.m. • Adult Day
Care
'
I p.m. • RSVP volunteer tea
Thursday, March 18
10 a.m.· WaUci11g
IO a.m. to 3 p.m.· Quilting
10:45 a.m.· Bible study
•
11:30 a.!Jl.• Blood pressure
1:30 p.m.· Board of trustees
Friday, March 1.9
. 10 a.m. · Walking
10 a.m: to noon· an class

;M_. ..

. . GALLIPOLIS. The Holzer .Hill, w~_ given a,spc:cial_plaque in plaquededicati~honormgthefl_lur
Mlldical Center Volunteer Chap- reco~m?tln. of h1s semce to the
vol_un~r c~lains. w~o luive di~
tains Association receillly elected assot18Uon m 1991·92. Rev. Russ
while_m,acuve.semce m the hosJl!·
officers for 1993-94 dUring their has recently moved fro~ the area ~I m1_nts'!Y s1nec the program. s
ua1 meetin
and now serves a church m Picker· . mcepooh m 1970. The plaque will
ann
g.. Chairpe
R
ington.
be permanently placed in the hospi·
Elected were.
. rson~ ~v.
Other volunteer . chaplains tal chapel with the names and dates
James ~ of the Fll!lt B~r receiving special recogniti~n f';&gt;r or death engraved on it.
Cbun:h m Middleport; VICC
• their first fifty hours of semce m
Honored were: Rev. David
person Rev. Thomas Glen the association included: Rev. Jack Toon, OcL 19, 1981; Rev. Robert
McClung from the Pomer&lt;!Y L
. 8
R · s
R F ller . McGee, Jan. 19, 1983; Rev.
~hurd ~r the Nazarene. ~n R~/.f~~m:S\.. ~=~s. 'n,uRev; Charles w. Luckeydoo, April
Pomeroy; Secretary Rev. Patrtcl8 •. Ricky L. Lawwill, Rev. Dennis L.
1988; and Re·v. Charles Carter,
~Krug from .~ Masonflack·
1
F anlt p S 'th
d Aug. IS, 1991.
s.on. Lutheran Mtnlstry of New r:!.e~~ T~~- mt ' an
The Holzer Medical Center ValMIDDLEPORT • Rejoicing Life .
Haven, W.Va.; T~Rev. yerR,ev. Clay was honored for 150 unteer Chaplains Association is
non BaJx:ock of ~~:te Hope U?1ted hours of service.
.
comprised of 46 clergy from seven Christian School will sponsor a
MethodiSt
• 300 hours o f counu·es m
' Ohio and two counties spaghetti dinner March 21 from
fl m
t w. ellston,
t 1 and
Recognize d .or
l
R Church
C
ergy epres n auve-a. arge service were Rev . Melvin J. in West Virginia representing 12 noon to 3 p.m. The dinner will be
Re.v. Sa~ (Sally) C~ay from tl!e
· '
L h
denominations. Any persons inter· held in the school lunchroom. DinQh~ U!~~ted MethodiSt Church m Franklin and Rev· W• ut er ested in obtaining more inform a· ncr includes spagl!ctti, salad,
QaDtpohs. .
Tracy.
c' ·
d lion about the Association should dessert, roll and butter and drink.
•., Past chatrperson . the Rev·
Rev. Fred M. Me alhster an
coniact Reverend Arthur C. Lund, · Cost is $3.50 for adults and $2 for
Charles Russ, formerly pa~tor of Rev· Marvin L. Sallee were bon- Director or Chaplaincy Services, at children under 12. Take-out orders
are available. Call 992-6249. A
the Church of the Nazarene IR Oak ~~rue:~ program was a (614)446-5053.
silent. aUction will be held for an
"around the worldn quilt.

.

Applications to be taken

l ·lp.m . • crarrctass
Menus consist 9f:
.
Monday: Spaghetti, green
beans, garden salac!, rye bread, froit

'· are IICtivities ilnd menus for Milrch

•

•

'f

. TOP SALESMAN • B!:JIB Estep of. Boy Scout T_i'oop 222,
Porter, shows
the liJ.sMtcl blcyc:le be received ror MDlDJ th'
.POIIl popCOru Ia ~ Trl-$'tale Area COunciL Estep1 ,_o _tlllld .~
uults, bas beea the top uleauu Ia the diArk:t two yean ID.• row'·
The bicycle Wll5 doDIJed by Harb Department Store, Huntiuaton,
W.Va.

surer Rev. Vet'11011 Babcock; Cbalrpe..- Rev.
James Sedclott;Vke Cbalrpenou Rev. Thomas
Glen McCtuna iud Cieray Repr~utatlve·at·
larae Rev. Sara (SaOy) Clay.
.

Chaplains association elects offic_ers

.

.

Center posts week's events

Concert rescheduled .

So much, in fact; that the 28·
year-old legaUy took the name or
the famous motorcycle as his own,
although he had to accept a slight
spellin&amp; change, the Dagbladet
newspaper reported Friday.
"A lot of people thinlc I'm kid·
ding," the bearded biker told lhc
Oslo newspaper. "But it's right
here in black-and-white on my
driver's license."
He said he started out joking
about it with fellow members of the
Viking Motorcycle Club, in the
southerli town or Skien.
Then he got the required forms
and lesally changed his name, a
proceas that took three days.
The only hitch was that Nor·
way'• strict name laws prevented
111m from spelling Davidson with
Ill "aon" because that is consid·
mel a Swedish name. Instead he
uled the Norwegian spelling,

~y~;

;: ELECTED OFFICERS • Holler Medical
•'Center Volunteer Cbapiaius• A•soclatioll Execu·
; •tive Committee olf'ICtJ1'retently elecled were, (1; :r), Secretary Rev. Patricia Bonds·~rua; Trta·

interesting. When seeking their
financial support pledges ' public
television stabons haul out the old
music, the big bands and the older
established stars and that formula
apparently does the Irick. Food for
thought? Do keep smiling.

i, GALLIPOLIS • The jazz group,
Interaction, scheduled to performed
il the Ariel Theatre, Saturday,
Marcli 13, has been rescheduled for
t-pril2. AU tickets will be honored.

'

agement durin&amp; their stay in
Columlius. You'll never know
what the "display of suppon meant
to them. Thank you.
.
'
Local members of the Middle·
pan High School Class Of 19!13 are
getting together these da'ys to plan
activities 'for their 401h reunion to
be held on May 29. A special class ·
reunion is planned at the Middle·
port Fire Station during the arter·
noon lind then in the evening the
class will join other alumni ·members at the r~sent Meigs Junior
Jligh ~choo for more festivities.
By the way, only one member of
the class is missing. She is Donna
Roush Prcstqn. · Anyone having her
address is .as.king to contact Bob

"-elated Preas Writer
TAMPA. Fla.- Frances Hish·
tower grew up in a family too
proud to ask for help. But she sat
on a stage before Hillary Rodham
. Clinton and laid bare her struggle.
to keep her ailing parents and
retarded ()2-year·.old brother ·
togelher in the family 's old home.
"I'm not a hypothetical situation," the Tallahassee woman told
a hliShed audience at a forum Fric!ay on reforming the health care
sySiem.
"My mother has Alzheimer's"
disease, she said. At 85, she " can·
. not walk. .:. She has a colostomy.
· She's incontinent She can't feed or
bathe herself. She can hardly talk
and she has difficulty swallowing
medicine."
Hightower and a younger brother have mortgaged both their
homes and their parents' .to pay for
around-the-clock attendants , but
the money will run out in a few
months and her P.I!J'ents' pensions
make them inelig.ble for Medicaid.
"I don't know what we're going
to do.... I'm still proud, but I'm
·asking for help,' she told the
crowd at the forum. "I want to find
a solution that will not only make
life easier for my parents ... but fix
it before I get there."
Mts. Clinton, who is leadin$ a
crash effort to produce maJor
health reform legislation by May,.

.

'

1480 JACKSON PIKE • GAWPOUS, OtiiO
"J ...J.

........ a

·.

J

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4 &lt;16-220f1

OPEN DAILY 9-6

SUNDAYS 1-6 '

.

�March 14, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pl. . .nt, WV .

Page B8 Sunday Times Sentinel

B MATT WOLF

~ Preas Writer

INK PEN England _ The
sehizophrenk the seductress the
IJIOipenllll

MidMIIIerll house~ife:

Now, wek:ome another "face" of
J081111C Woodward, comill~~: to tele·
vision in "Foreign Afflirs"f' -!he
AD~Je.

'She's a lovely character"
Woodwllid was sa)'ln$ of her role
as Virginia "Vmme" Miner,
speaking between lakes one sunny
afternoon on location 1\t·a stately
home in the west fDIUilry. ''There's
something very wry about Vinnie
and very shar!l."
·'
Based on Alison Lurie's Pulitzer
Prize-winning novel ''Foreign
Affairs" casts Woodw~ as a reti, _ cen1, v~ly snobbish college pro·. ,, ~ • fessor who sirikes up an unexpect·
1
ed liaison wilh an American while
.,
on salibatical in ·London
Brian Dennehy plays.Oiuck, the
Oklahoman engmeer who pierces
'
Vinnie's contempt to win her affection and something approaching ·
love.
Eric Stoltz ("Mask' .' ), Ian
Richardson and Stephanie
Nursing and· Rehabilitation Center. Here,
Beacham co-star in the film, pre·
miering at 8 p.m. EST Wednesday
Lowen, left, blows out the candles. (TimeS'SeD·
tine! photo by Jim Freeman)
on Turner Network Television.
Between takes last summer,
WoOdward bus.ied herself with

BLOWING OUT CANDLES - Bill Lowen
and Elsie Young, at right, celebrated their lOOtb
and lOlnd birthdays, respectively, at a double
'blrtbday party held Thursday at the Pomeroy

Lowen,,Young top century mark;

birthday celebration held at center
POMEROY • It was a tyl?ical ·
double birthday party complete
wilh friends, family and, of course,
p)enty of birthday cake and gifts.
Not so typical, however were
the ages of the birthday ~Y and
girl, ~()()and 102, respectively.
B11l Lowen and Elsie Young
celebrated lheir birthdays Thursday
afternoon at lhc Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center where
lheY live.

I

Lowen was born in Covington,
Va., March 26, 1893. When he was
12, he ran off with the Rin~ling
Bros. Barnum and Bailey C1rcus
where he drove lhe horses.
After his stint with the circus,
Lowen worked for the village of
Pomeroy and helped bu1ld the
Pomeroy-Mason Bri~ge. In a taped .
mterv1ew, Lowen sa1d he plans to
see the new Pome~oy-Mason
Bridge, if one is constiucted.
·

needlepoint and chatted aboutlhis ~ecessuy 10. keep people's auen·
role, her distinguished career ·uon. I~ rnovtes, ~ can h9pe peaandherambivalenceabOutTV. . pie w11l pay au,enuon.ln TV, you
She described "Foreign Just can't guarantee that; you have
Affairs" as the tale of "on.e of tomakesureyou've~them ." .
those dedicaled Amenca~
As .a .result, s~e ss1d, a cerllln
Ansloplliles wl)o have lhis glon- ~plexlly 1s SI!C~ficed.
. .
fled image of Britain and how thai
In a way 11 s too bad IbiS IS
is tempered by .reality. In the end; !Jeing ~ for TV, which I'm sure
Vinnie has to accept thai not all IS heresy, because so many of the
~mericans not on her social an~ inuinsi~ va~ue5 of the ~k which
mtell!;Ciuallevel are ugly Amen· are all ~leflor re!IIIY,~ t be done
cans.
.
. .
on
she,sa1d, whereas you
In Chuck, Woodward conbnued, .could m film.
Vinni_e finds her "total o~site, . "This ,Vi~n.ie has all the out·
seemmgly, whom she begiRS to hoes of V1m1e 10 lhe book, bul she
appreciate. S!le can fade into being · .lacks some ..of lhe internal difficul· \
a pseudo-English person, whereas ties. She's not as complicated, or
in no way could Chuck .ever fade you don't see she is. In my head
inro the wallpaper."
she is, but I'm not sure that comes
But on this parlicular day, fhc th~gh ." . .
63-year-old acu:e~s was soundmg
. L1ke Vmnu1, Woodw.ard ~as
~tiCJeVISIOD as a medlll!"·
h11h standards. The Gecrgia n&amp;UVe
' It s tougher 10 do work hke chooses her work carefully, often
this for TV," said Woodward, in crinjunction with her huSband ot
''because )ou have that funny · 3S years, Paul Newman. . •

By RUSTY MILLER
. C.OLUMBUS, Ohio (AP).Ja~rue Matthews, averaging 10.8
pomts a· game, came off the bench
to score a career-hi&amp;h 31 as Ball
~tate beat Westan Michigan 79-64
Saturday to win the Mid-Anierican
.Conference toumamen1 champi'onship.
Ball State (26· 7), the regular·
'season co-champion, ·will be mak·
'ing its third NCAA tournament
appearance in the last five years.
· Steve Payne added 18 points
·an~ Jeermal Sylvester had 14
'pomts for lhe Cardinals, who won
.t!leir fourlh game in a row aild II th
.'jn their last 12.
·
·: Fifty.one of Ball Stale's 79

'T':'.

warr

.·; DAYTON (AP) - Here are lhe
: S,esul~ from lhe S61h •!ate
.:;wrestlm!! tournament at Wr1gh1
:i!ltate Umvenity's Ervin J. Nutter
·~ter
·
.:::
TeUI rtllllts ·
DlvlsloD I
:. : 1.Stl&gt;w Walsh Jesuit (88.5); 2~orain Southview (71); 3-Lake·
·~wood SL Edwand (62.5); 4-Cieve·
:,:land St. Ignatius (47); 5-Massillon
; l"erry (46); 6-Uiliontown Lake'
~ (37); 7-Maple Hei,hts (33.5); 8·
• Tol. Stan (32); 9-Fairfield (31); IQ.
; Lebanon (30); 11-Mayfield (27);
~t2-North Canton Hoover (25.S);
: 13-Cin. St. Xavier (23); 14-Col.
;Marion Franklin, Milford (20); 16';;Lodi Cloverleaf (19.5); 17-Akron
: Springfield, Cin. Moeller, Tol. SL
: Jpho's (19).
· ··
DMslon 0
:!: ! ·Ravenna, St. Paris Graham
:{~4.5); 3-MentOr Lake Cath. (51);
· ~Bellevue (50.5); 5-Ciyde (40); 6:Martins Ferry (36.5); 7-Canfield
:l2~); 8-Uhrichsville Claymont
·{27); 9-Fairview Park Fauview
: (26); IQ.Mantua Crestwood (25.5);
:1;1-Lisbon Beaver (24.5); 12-Bell·
brook (24); 13-0imsted Falls
(22.5); 14-New Lexington (22); 15Vermilion (21.5); 16-Kenton (21);
oi7-BeUefonlaine Benjamin Logan,
Conneaut. Newaik Licking Valley,
J?aulding, Salem, Shelby(.20).
DI:rlsloa lll .· . .
: 1·Akron' Coventry (74.5); 2·
'$anduskJ St. Mary's Cent. Cath.,
(64); 3-TllOmpSOD Ledgemont (45);
4.-Wellsville (41.5); S·Columbia

that WiS so broadly misunderstood.
When I said, "All that is required of
a~ is that sbe be Ibm," 1 W8S
telerrin&amp; to the basic mechanics of
. intii'C:oUrle. A man must be in a swe

JAMES BURRIS

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Gown Fathlont."
We Feature Top Lines As
Seen In "Seventeen" and
"Your Prom" Magazines! ·.

..

RIO GRANDE - T~e transi· Lincoln High School, Snyder was what I have to say and know I'm
lion from being a basketball player looking to complete her fmal year there for them."
to a coach- especially within a · at Rio Grande when Smalley
"ll's rough," Bamitz said of lhe
year of one career ending and approached her with the assistanl's switch during a lllCCIIt visit to Rio
another beginning -can be diffi- job. Bamitz, who played for Small· Graride. "I miss playing, bul it's a
·cult, but according to two former ey's varsity girls team a1 Warren lillie easier to come home and
University of Rio Grande Red- Local High School prior to her watch a game. To watch a tape of
women players, the change has its graduation in 1988, had been one of our old games- that's a
own rewards.
employed briefly by John l;lanc:Oclr. different slory. That's harder."
Kate Snyder and Ann Bamitz, Insurance Services in· Parkersburg, . The shift from competing to
co-captains of Rio Grande's 1991- W.Va., when she enrolled at Mar· teaehing the game was more diffi·
92 women's team, both somewhat shall and accepted Evans' offer to . cull given lbc records the two left
unexpecledly found themselves join her staff.
behind them. Barnitz, the 1991
thrust into tile roles of assistant
'I miss playing'
Mid.Ohio Conference Player or the
coaches after their four-year eligi·
For Snyder, daughter of Bob· Year, is also the lhird highest scor·
bility limits expired. .
and Beverly Snyder of Gahanna, er in the history of Rio Grande
Snyder, a physical educalion the past season's experience was women's basketball (1,571 career
major, was a~sistant to first-year invaluable for her fu1ure plans to points) and one of its top reboundRio Grande Coach Dave Smalley coach, although she admitted she ~with a career total oC 825. Soyfor the Redwomen's just-complet· missed lhe excitement of being on der, twice voted the learn's most
ed season, while Barnitz, who lhe floor in lbe thick of lhings.
improved player dur)ng her career,
received her bachelor's degree in
"Honestly, t' qo, • she said. netted conference and Disirict 22
bUsiness last spring, is on the "There have-been tift1.es when I've honors for her work as a starting
coaching staff of Marshall Univer- sat on 'lhe bench and been on lhe forward. She had 811 career points
sity' s Lady Herd stewarded by edge of my seat, wanting to get out at Rio Grande.
Smalley's sister-in-Jaw, Sarah there again. But lbe transition was
BamiiZ. the daughter of Gary
Evans.
·
easier than I expected, because I Bamitz and Ann Alloway, both of
A 1988 graduate of Gahanna learned thai the players listen to lhe Belpre area, said at limes dur·
ing her Marshall experience she
'
had to hold down an impulse to
"open up the playen' headi and
throw all of your Jrnowledge inside
"Bul you Jearn to leach the..;
· how to fix things" she added "I
got a lot of hindsight on what ilur
coaches at Rio Grande lried to do.·
'Exeellealjob'
Bamiu and Snyder were both

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The board .that riDI! lhe cily parks
system has decided not to shoo1
deer in an QveipOpulated park, at
Jeut IDIIiiJuJy.
The Metro Puts Boand or Commiaioocn decided 'nlesday to COD·
linue studying tbe siluation at
Sbuon Woods Metro Park. on lhe
city's nord sr lide.
Most fawa1 are born during
May and J-. Sboodng deer could
leave oe~ns unable to
re.d ....
Mollo Parlca director Roaer
lfablleiJ llllcl ho did not know how

We •GJUJNinleell"

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e.._. ••em~

dllt llllld I'*
;

recruited by Cheryl Fielitz and
played &amp;heir freshman season under
her before Fielilz accepted the
coaching position at Queens Col·
lege in South Carolina, where ex·
Redwomen guard Betsy Bersdoll
recently shauered the NCAA
record for women's lbree-point
. shooting. For lheir remaining tlltCe
seasons, they were coached by
Doug Foote, now head men's
coach at Marietta CoUege.
At present, Barnitz is seeking
her master's in business adminis·
tration at Marshall. Snyder hopes to
continue as Smalley's assistant for
another year and lhen look at grad·
uate school.
·
. "I enjoy coachin'-.and I don.'t
m1nd lhe long hours, Snyder Slid
of lbe experience~ ~~ich includ;ed
such off-court acUVIUes as obtam·
ing. s.ame tapes and compiling
stausucs.
As a result, Snullley, named this
year's Disirict 22 Division I and
t.!OC Coach .of lbe YCfU. credited
Snyder's ass1sUince wuh the success of Rio Grande's 26-5 season,
the best in the program's history.
"I have been very pleased wilh
my support slaff, and Kate has
done an excellent job," he said. "I
know that without Kate's assistance, some of the other major
aspects of lhe job, such as recruiting, would have suffered. There
were a number of times when I had

Park board decides to consider
Milwaukee plan for moving deer

"Torm SafU/acriort-

11

..

Antal, Copley, 3:58.
275 pounds: Joey Bar!ow, Col.
pt:Sales, dec. Matt DalgleJ_Sh, Med·
rna Buckeye, 5·3 (01); N1ck Rot!J.
North Ben~ Tay!or, dec. Dustm
Arledge, Cuclevlile Logan Elm,
10-0.
Divisiou m
103 pounds: Emil Payawal, Sid·
ney Lehman, dec . Jim Kessen,
Lima CenL Cath., 5-3; Keith Marion, Wellington, pinned Josh Grime,
Archbold, 2:02.
112 pounds: Keilh Mescan,
. Columb1a Stalion Columbia, dec.
Josh Davlin, Sandusky SL Mary's
Cent. Calh., 16·8: Brian Zeid,
Beachwood. dec. Ben F~ttm, Bed·
fonJ Chane!, (OT by criteria).
119 pounds: Brian Roskov.ich,
Bridgeport, dec. Jason Fillipovich,
Bellaine SLJohn Cent., 15-3; John
Tc;&gt;mpkins, Moaadore, dec. Jtob
Dilger, Norwalk St. Paul, 1·5 (OT).
12S pounds: Jason Hubley,
Genoa Area, dec. Roger Merrill,
Mansfield St. Peter, 15-4; Steve
Walker, Akron Manchester, tech.
rail. Jason Forward, Archbold, 202.
130 pounds: Chad Silverstein,
Beachwood, dec. Chad Hider, West
Salem Northwestern, 5-1; Mike
Ford, Delta, dec. Scott Buckley,
Belmont Union I..Ocal, 6-4.
13S pounds: Geoff Lewis, Ashlaiid Mapleton, dec. Joilathan Win··
klec, Hannibal River, 6-4; Jeremy
Davis.~ St VinCent·SL Mary,
dec. Ben Schmcnk, Sandusky SL
Mary'sCenLCIIb.,S-6.

•

WEATHERING THE STORM- NASCAR driver Alan Kul.wlcld ruDI for cover wblle branna a 35-miJe.per-bour wlDd ID tile
middle of the IIIOWIIonn Saturday at the Atlanta Motor Sp 11 Jway
ia Hamptoa, Ga. Sb:-lacb snow and winds 1111811ng up to SO miles
per boor in parts of Georala canceled the Sliclc SO Buscll GraDd
Natl011al race. (AP)
140 pouads: Paul Roesch, Sui- Carroll, j!inned Don Stemen Van
dusky St Mary's Cent, Cllh., dec. WertLincolnview, 3:53,
'
·
Shane Worley, Huron, 11·3; Ryan
171 pounds: Jason T$1e, Bloom•
Slack, Shadyside, dec. Jason Hin· dale Ebnwood, dec. Michael BelkIde, Sparta Highland, 7.0.
nap, Akron Coventry, ,8-6; Tony
145 pounds: AI Fuentes, Uberty Fuduric, Middlefield Cardinal, dec.
Center, dec. Jeremy Howard, Sum- Steve Daugherty, Jamestown
mit Station Licking Heights, S-4; Greenview, 7-3.
Joe Caprella, Lima Centr. Cath.,
189 pounds: Daniel Crockeu,
dec. Jamie DOdson, West Salem Fremont St. Joseph, dec. Scou
Northwesetcm, 3-1 (OT).
·
Stewart, Akron St. Vincent·St:
152 pounds : Ben Wolford, Mary, 13-8; Scolt Bauer, Milan
Delta, dec. Pete Durley, Lima Edison, dec. Steve Bodie, Summit
Centr. Cath., 13-6; Steve Davis, Station Licking Heights, 8-2.
Akron Coventry, dec. Dan :kress,
275 pounds: Bryan Young
Columbia Station Cohmbia, 8-2.
Reading, pinned Brian Sponseuez'
- 160 pounds: Daryl Baird, Akron Akron Manchester, 2; 19· Neti
Coventry, dec ~ Brandon Emerson, Thierry, Liberty Center pinned
Apple Creek Waynedale, 5-2; Scott Viers, Genoa Area, 4~41.
Chance Van Gundy, Carroll Bloom

Ex-Redwomen leaders swap playing skills for coaching careers

-ITYLICIIr

•Alyce Designs •Nadine'
•Loralie Originals
•J. Reynolds •Flirtations
•San Martin
•Memory Lane

Station Columbia (39)· 6-Streets· Anthony Wayne, 1~5 .
boro, Waterford (30.5); 8-Newmt
130 l'ounds:. Jason .Walker,
Catholic, Wellington 00); 10-Ash- Wesl MillOn Milton-UniOn, dec.
laiid Mapleton (27); 11-Bellaine SL David Grubach, Oe. Villa AngelaJohn, Summit Station Licking SLJosepll, 8-6 (01); Mike Andres,
Heights (~5); 13-Peninsula . Clyde, dec. Mike .Moore, Canal
Woodridge (23); 14·SI!llivan Blick Fulton Northwea, 12-9. . .
River (22.5); IS-Louisville St.
135 pound: Dennis Balogh,
Thomas Aquinas, North Jackson Broadview Heights Brecksville,
Jackson-Milton, West Liberty· dec: Brian .Whitlach, D_over, 3-1;
Salem (22); 18-Cin. Academy of Chris Martinez, Port Clinton, dec.
Phys. Ed., Gahanna Col. Academy Londunn Luna, Norwalk. 8-6.
(21); 20-Barnesville, Metamora
140 pounds: Justin Napier,
Evergreen, Northwood (20); 23- Hillsboro, pinned Troy Mershon,
Delta (19); 24-Col. Rendy, Lima S~ring. Shaw~ee.• 0:40; Jack
· Cent Calli., Plain City Jonathan Gilman, SL Clairsville, dec. Jason
Alder(J8).
Lutz,.Minerva, 3-2.
Division D
145 pounds: Mike S1evcnson,
1()3 pounds: Steve Zeller, · Lima Bath! dec. Brian BC?gner,
Aliance Marlington, dec. Josh Wou5!Ct Tnway, 4.&amp;, DenDi;~ Or!·
Wobser, Sandusky Perkins, 8-4; C~n~1eld; dec: !ohn S1von.
Jim TamboreUo, Col. DeSales, dec. F81rV1ew Part:F~w. 6-0.
Joe Creech West Milton MiltonIS2pounds:LonnieWood,New
Union, 3·1. '
·
Lexing.lon, dec. Shawn. Feehan,
112 pounds: Michael Phil· Fostona, 7-4; Jeff Abel,
abaum, Canal Fulton Northwest, Ubr;ichsviJie Oaymont, dec. Jim
dec. Brian Baughman, Coshocton, Atkins, Olmsaed Falls, 5·2.
8-3; Mike Reynolds, Port Clinton,
1.60 P.Ounds: Kuru Peters,
dec Mike Ollom Vincent Warren
Uhrichsville Claymont. dec. Aaron
3.0.
'
' Riley, Alliance Mulington, 5-I;
i 19 pounds: Dana Marder, Tim Hill, Be!hei-Tate. dec. Gary
Twinsburg Chamberlin, dec. Chad Mcran, Oiqrin Falll ~. 6-1.
Bowersock Lisbon Beaver 7-2·
171 ponnds: TraVIS Bryant, SL
Scoll Detr~y. Oak Harbor: dec: Paris~. dec. Chris Snider,
David Wayt, Beloit Wesl Branch, Steubenville, 9-6; Matt Gran!,
3·1 (OT).
BeUewe, dec. Marc Pedmo, Medi·
' 125 pounds: Kevin Wriglit, • na B~ye, 7-5 (OT):
.
Louisville, dec. Jeff Fashippaur, !
189 pounds: ,Kevm Campl!eU.
Richfield Revere, 7-0; Niclc Hu~bard, dec: Jeffery F1sher,
Spencer, Richmond Edison Soulb, Alliance Mll!llngt!'n, 5.· 1; Mall
dec: Rob Heckman.'Wbitehouse Barnell, Gallon, pmned George

'

r··········•r··········•r••••lll•••••l
5 =~M :: $19 95 ::M :: $24 95 ::,..:
: $14'
Ml 2U
1'

Western, which came in ShoOt·
ing jusl under 40 percent from
three-point range, hit 6 of 10 in lhe
half, a big reason it led 19·10 afJer
a three-poinier by Mike Mosely at
the II :32 mark. The Broncos, how·
ever, missed their rmai seven threepoint a~pts in lhe game.
Bul then. the Cardinals came
back to build a 43-33 lead on a 142 run capped by a four-poinl play
and 1wo more free throws by
MaUhews. Western scored tlie last
five points of the half to draw to
43-38.
Payne had 14 points and eight
rebounds for Ball Stale, wilh
Mallbews added 13 points and four
assists in the first 20 minutes.

·:F our teams leading in semifinal actjon

Ann
Landers

KIPLING

points came from its
Matthews seemed to make the
Leon McGee scored 21 for · big shot whenever lbe Cardinals
Western Michigan (17-12), which neededooe.
was making its flfSI irip to a MAC
Mter Western pulled to 45-42
tournamenl final. Ben Handlogten early in the second hillf, Maahews
added 13.
scored Ball State's next 14 points
The victory marlced the sevenlb tO carry it to a 59-46 lead by the
year in a row.that the confaence's 14:25 lllllrk..
top seed has won the tournamenL
Wben Weslern closed to 65-60
. Matthews, a former player at in the closing minutes, Matthews
Alaska-Anchorage and Vincennes flipped in a one-handed runner
Junior College, was the conference wilb 2:08 remaining. Bill Gillis
leader in assists durill8 the reRUiar . scored on a dunk at the I :27 mark
season. ·His previous career high to make it 69-60, and the lead
was 22. But he hit 8 of 16 shots never fell below nine po
. ints again.
from the field, including 4 of 6
Ball Stale led 43-38 at the half
three-pointers, and added 11 on 1 after trailing by as many as nine
free throws. He also had five points and leadin~ by as many as
assists and six st.eal~.
10 durin&amp; the openmg 20 minutes.

In 56th state wrestling tournament,

\Rockport\

Rodcporl~ You sbould be in oor shoos~

.

:Ball State hands
WMU
79-64
loss
beOCh.

.Lowen's .secret for longevity?
Drinking plenty of beer..
Young was born 1n Athens
County on March 17, 1891! w~re
she has spent almost her entue bfe.
Bolh Lowen and Young enjoy
talcing part in religious acliviiies at
PNRC.
.
Deco~uons at th~ PB!lY were
reprodiiCUODS of. old R~glmg Bros.
Bam.um and Ball.ey CirCus posters
provided by the CirCUS.

.should children be pJacod in the
basket of I shopping CIIL They
should ride only in the ·cllild's sea,
suapped in with a safety belL If your
supermarket baa nOt equipped its
CIIIS Willi aafcty bellS, JH- ask
ANN~~
the stDre rnanqc:r 10 do 111111. once.
u, bcl:aiiiC of your warnina. Anll,
even one child's life is lm!d, I say,
God bless you. -NEW YORK
of arousal iii .order 10 perf1um
DEAR SUPERMARKBT MA!II·
sexuany, bUt a Wllllllll nei!d only be AO~: If; by the lime this leiter
there. Now do you set it, folka?
appears in print, you have not .
Dear Ana 1.-pdel"': Please warn equipped yo..- CIIIS with belts b
your feeders that shopping CIIIS can cbildml, you'd beaer get moving.
be dan~ to children.
Hell halh no fury like IIIII of a
In I99IJ hOIPital emergency mother who wants p!CIIeelion fer her
rooms ·~ 21,030 injuries 10 · child.
yw~pttn cllllcd by fallq ou1 of
Dear ADD I .-'MI"a: rm talcin&amp;
shopp~ caru. Last summer, a
this opponunity 10 say something
3-year
bOy died u a result of about tests and X-rays taken at
such a fall. The child W.. sianding clinics and !lospitals. People
in the ... , Whea the art c:ame 10 shouldn~ assume lhat everything is
a IIDCiden .SIDp. he lost hil bllanCe, OK just beciuse 1hey haven'l
tumbled backwud and fell out, ·received a report. There's a chance ·
hilling his head. He died from abrain that the report may have been liled ·
injury.
without the plllient being notified. - .
Nem-, llildcr -'Y Cin:IIIIISIIIIces,
Last year, my husblnl wu told ·
by
a residenl physician Ill. a hiahly
Completes training respected
teaChing hospital !hat he
VINTON • Navy Seaman would be called
if anything "OUI of
Recruil James L. Burris, son of
the
llldinll}'"
showed
up. He heard
James L. and Brenda Y. Burris of
JIOihin&amp;
and
usumed
that
ew:rythinl
7945 Bull Run Road, Vinton,
was
OK.
Last
week,
he
had his
recently completed basic training at
Recruit Training Command, Great annual checkup, and his doctor
asked, "Why didn't you call to fllld
Lakes, Ill.
During the cycle, recruits are out about the changes in your cells?"
taught general military ~ubjects The answer was, of e:oune. "I didn't
designed to prepare them for fur· know about iL"
thcr academic and on-the-job trainPlease tell your radl:n to hound
ing in.oiie of lhe Navy's 85 occu· clinics and docllln unlil they ICt lhe
pational fields,
·
results of their - . Tltis i.r YiltJI. ·Studies include seamanship, .ANGRY IN GRAND RAPIDS
close-order drill, naval history and
DEAR ANGRY: You are ablofust aid.
lutely ri&amp;hl. Thanks fer mniqding
He is a 1992 graduate of Buck· my readels that lhey 1111111 always
eye Hills Career Center, Rio call to get the iesults whenever teStS
Grande and Nonh Gallia High have been taken.
School.

Section C

March 14,1993

Jn MAC championship game,

.Reader upset with Ann's answer
: Dear AM Landen: I got quile a
.iQit rrom your final semence regan~.
illl a couple's !lellual activity when
pnc .-mer is no longtr interesled.
: Your IIIISWCl was sensible enough
alii you said, • All that is requiml
of I WOIIIIIl is tNt she be Ibm."
SIRiy you -~serious. That may
!!!: 1niC in the early years, but as
lime marches on, a lot more is
required of the woman.
Quile possibly you have never
been involved in sexual congress
with a man who is ne.Jy over the
hill. Most women would like to get
a liule pleasure out of lhe activity.
But if your correspondent happens
to Jove the old guy and wants to
help him to get up that hill one more
time, she certainly is going to ha~
to 1M forth a Jot more effort than
sbe did 25 years ago. ;_ A COOP·
ERATIVE PARTICIPANT IN
JESUP, GA.
DEAR JESUP: It's been a long
time since I have made a statement

~imts- ~entistel

Sports

An anglophilie Joanne Woodward
in 'Foreign Affairs'; airs ~arch 17

. ~~! .

f'111 .1D Mllwau·

kee. The. alliance, which dropped a
lawsuit 10 slOp lhe shooting of the
deer, said no Milwaukee deer died
while beins tripped and moved.
The melbod involves catching
the animals in wooden traps and
keeping them in darkness whil~
beinf moved. The darkness has a
calm1n1 effect on the deer.
The Humane Socioly of the
United States bu also uked the
bolniiO consider movinJ the deer.
Hubbell said lho Olllo Division
of Wildlife permit tho board
obtained does not allow deer
rea10wal,and there • no lljlpioved
relealite1 for lhom.
'l1le ]lilt 1Y11e111 W&amp;DII 10 bo I
tell lito lor • doer birth COIIbUI pro;.
lfll!l !hat collop I'IIIIIChora uo
developing. The proaram would
malatafa tile li&amp;o Of die herd, Dot
'-IL
I

•

to leave the practices in her care, closeness in age to lhem.
"That's important because lheni:but in ev~ case she handled her
are times when the players don'l
duties·wen.
·
The Redwomen finished top- . want to go to lhe coach and be
seeded in District 22's Division I accused of being brown-nosers.
and won the championship of the That's where the assistant coach
comes in and can listen to their
Mid-Ohio Conference.
Also in her rust year as a head concerns, but also be aware of lhe
coach·, Marshall's Evans found responsibilities of coaching. DealBamitz's experience a key to lhe ing wilh lhe players has been one
success oflhe Lady Herd's season. of lhe ressons things have gone so ·
"Ann is a very bright young smoothly for us this season," she
lady who played under a very good added.
Marshall ended its regular seacoach and has been able to transfer
what she learned into a good job of son March 4 at 14-12 and partici- -·
coaching our team," Evans said. paled in last week's the Southern: .
"She's very organized and relates Conference Tournament at Johnson
well to the girls because of her City, Tenn.

Three-state survey of Ohio
River fishermen to continue
By JOHN WISSE
Division of Wildlire
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Beginning next month, a survey
wiD resume of sport anglers on lhe
Ohio River between the Gallipolis
Dam 10 the Markland Dam in lndi'ana.
The survey is heing conducted
by the Ohio Division of Wildlife in
cooperation wilh lbe Ohio Division
of Watercraft, the West Virginia
· Department of Natural Resources
and lhe Kemucky Department or
Fish and Wildlife Resources.
The major part of lhe four-year
study to determine lhe status of lhe
Ohto River recreational fiShing is
being funded by the Ohio Division
of Wildlil'e lhrough the Federal Aid
in Sport Fish Restoration program.
The Ohio River Recreational
Use Survey began in 1991 with
administrative planning and was
followed in 1992 wilh ansler inter·
views and aerial coats.
The IUfVey was condUCICd along
lhe stretch of the Ohio River
between lbe Pennsylvania border
near East U'o'llpoollll lhe G~eenup
Dam near Portsmouth. Interviews
and aerial surveys wUI occur from
dusk to dawn on randomly xlocled
daya this year from April S lhrough
Nov, 22.
In 1994, lbe final year or the
IlDdy, resulll will b} analyzed and
hljJUits pepared. '
"We 1re conducting this siUdy
10 determine the .-us of the Ohio
River sport fiShery which will help
us better manage lhe Ohio River

'

fish populations. ... The results of '
this survey will enhance resource
proteCtion and development on the .
Ohio River," said Randy Miller,'an
assislant fish managemen1 and.
research administrator for !lie Ohio
Division of Wildlife.
Creel clerks will interview Ohio
River anglers to determine the
amount of time they fish, what they
are fishing for and what species
and sizes of fish lhey catch. Aerial
surveys will be used to count the
number of anglers,
While much attenlion has centered around lhe Great Lakes, litUe ·,
information is available on lhe sta-·. •
tus of sport fishing along lhe Ohio :
River.
·.
"We all recognize the Ohio'··
River is a popular and important ·
source of recreational liSe. Our survey will seck some basic inf01111!1- ·• •
lion about fishing and the opinions ; ·
and desires of Ohio River anglers," .··
MiUer said.
·•·

GARS-Court House ,
game reset for tonight ·,:
ATHENS - The Gallipolis·
WuhinJIOII Coun House Division
II district tournamoat butetblll
game scheduled Saturday night at
the Convocalion Center at Ohio
University was pos!pi:ijut becaule
or the mowaaUL
It bu been llb&amp;-Nilil!tb,i(j
. 1Y flllllcJ·
uled for 7
11111
S p.m. Allllnl'ftlae ,._ :

JIJIL,'V"fM ....
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llan:h 14, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

March 14, 1983

Gallipolis P&amp;R All-Sta-r Tournament

In MAC semifinals,

Wed. 8:30
Onlanance Red LosertoD (3
-

By RUSTY MILLER
The 13 points was a tournament
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) record for fewest points in one half.
Ball State coach Dick Hunsaker
Besides lhe 3:19 drought to stan
stated the obvious: "At lhe Mid- lhe game, Miami also hit one field
American Conference level,lhere's goal in lhe lasl9:22 of the half.
only one silver slipper."
The Redskins lhen made 1 of
Ball State and Western Michi· !heir fim II shots in the second
gan will see whom it fits today half. At that point, they were
when they play at Danelle Hall for behind 35-17 and had made 5 shots
lhe MAC tournament title and an !n 321ries for 16 percent. They fin·
automatic berth in lhe NCAA lour- 1shed 16 for 57 for 28 percent
nament.
"Defensively, we were able 10
Both used a quick stlrt - Ball control it," said Western Michigan
State went out 8-0 and Western coach Bob Donewald. "You never
Michigan led 10-0 - on !heir way anticipale a team shooting as poorto victories Friday in the semifi· ly as the)' did."
nals.
Jamie Mahaffey scored 12
~- Cardinals used !heir power- points _and Scott Belyeu had II for
fulmsade game to hold off Toledo Maama (20 8), which shared lhe
72-64, while Western Michigan reg~lar-season co-championship
played solid defense but got a lot of wilh Ball State.
help f!'om. a horri~le .shooti~g night
Miami coach Joby Wright wore
by Maama of Ohao m rolhng to a a knee brace under a warmup suit.
61--48 upset..
He .lOre a te~don in his right knee
Sean W1ghtman and Leon dunng Miama 's 63--50 viciOry over
McGee each scored 16 points and Bowling Green in lhe first round
Darrick Brooks had ~4 for third- . Thursday and will undergo surgery
seeded Western Machagan (17-11), Monday at Christ Hospital in
but it was second-seeded Miami's Cincinnati.
lack of offense lhat made lhe head- . Thai didn't match the pain of
lines.
watching his team at lhe outset.
Brooks hit two three-119inters
"We came out in lhe first half
and added another basket during of lhis game clearly not ready to
the 10-0 stlrt and Miami never got play," Wright said.
closer !han four pomts agam. .
In the day's first game, Ball
~he .Bronc_os, who are mak.mg State (25-7) again relied on its
theu fust ·tnp to an MAC IItle inside muscle 10 advance.
ga_me! l~d 25-13 at the half as
Payne had six points in lhe 8-0
M1am1 hat 4 of 21 shots_ fro~ lhe start ~nd finished with 18 points
floor for 19 percent. Maama also and mne rebounds while Jeennal
had II turnovers and 12 fouls in Sylvester added 14 PointS.
lhe first half.
''We got off to a great emotional start,'' Hunsaker said.

Tues. 6:30

!.oaer to a

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Fairland

!.oatr to I

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T11es. 5! 30
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Now Ioney ...- .... 3S 2S · .513
6..5
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Ofmda .., ..,,,... 29 29 .:500 11.3
MMii·-·······-······.25 33 .431 IS.S

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SALE PRICE $5995
PER MONTH $129

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JndiWI ,.... ,..,.,w,.,,..29 31

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12.5

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tlsfoh ...................26

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LA. l..akers .....••..... l2
LA. CUppon ......... 30
CoWen SUle .......... 25
Sacramento ........... .l9

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They played Saturday
Denver 1l Phii.ddphUi, 7:)0 p.m.
a...E'VELAND \'1. WuhinJIOil II 811-

limon,HOpm.

S..lllootlotiomi, 7:30p.m.

lndll•• Now Yotk, 8:30p.m.
ULlh It Houtton, 1:30 p.m.
~nd It

San Anl.onio,l :lOp.m.
,New Jcne,. at Phocnill. 9:30p.m.
O.llalat Sammeneo. 10:30 p.m.

Today's pmes

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31
33
32
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s,_..ss,PI......,..so

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Iowa St. 69, Oklahoma 5S
Kanua 12, c...... 6S
"-a St. 47, Nebrub 4S
Miawri 11, Otlahcm.a St. 62

111a Skr c...r......

s.o.anna1o

FlntrouiWI

New MWco !K.17,UCirriM76
UC S.... Buban S7, Pacif&gt;e U. S4

UNLV 104, Ullh SL16
CratMid .... Conl'#

s-mna1o

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Cincinnali 71, DoPoW 69

Mttro AlhltUc Coni'~

nntroundl
N.C. Clwloaa 61, Scuhem Miu. 60
Va. Ccmmonwahh 79, Saulh Florida
72
.
V' ' ia Toefl 64, Tulane 53
"tfw.Ama-kan Conrer-.

Saallluk
Boll S.. 72. Toledo 64

_.......

W. Michipn61, Miami ,Ohio41

M~.~~~~c~r~
Xnia,Ohio67 , ~e41

Southultern Confernce
Q•arttrfhllll

1 73 261 239

2611
21 6
29 6
32 II

73 260 2SI
72:145 7&gt;40
70 770 7&gt;42
61 260 210

Houllllft 84, Tew A4M 61
T._..II,Rice76
TOUJ Christian 72., Soulht:rn Mah. 71
Wedtr• AthltUcConrennce
SemiRull
New Maico61, llrilfoam y...,IS9

Cage standings
OP

mo
1180
1301
1164
1246

1339
1250
1470
1056
1268
1431

Tlie Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
The Dally Sentinel, lhe Point
P/tiJJIJnt Register and lhe SundayTimLs-Sentinel value the conlribu·
tions their readers make to the
sports sections of lhese papers,.and
these contributions wiD continue 10
be published. .
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed. The
deadline for phoiOs and related articles for baskelball and orher. winter
sports is the last day of the NBA
Finals.
Likewise, lhe deadline for submissions of local baseball- and
softball-related pho10s and related
articles, from T·ball to lhe majors,
as well as olher spring and summer
sports, is lhe day of lhe last game
of lhe World Series. The deadline
for photos and related articles for
foolball and orher fall sports is lhe
SaiUrday before lhe Super Bowl.
These deadlines have been instituted 10 give readers plenty of time
to get !heir photos back from the
phoiOgraphy- studio of choice and
10 give the slaffs the opponunity 10
publish these sports photos and
articles during lhe appropriate season for lhat sport.

. '

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SALE PRICE $3995
PER MONTH $140

,
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Wheelernburg ....IO II 1421 1383
Jackson ................9 '.12 1379 1418
Fairland ...............7 14 1366 1317
Ponsmoulh ..........7 16 1484 1616
Logan ..................5 16 1119 1401
Warren Loca1......3 18 1175 1493
x-Still in 10urney
Friday's results:
Division m
District finals at OU
Belpre 65 North Adams 48
Chesapeake 62 Oak Hill 54
Saturday's results:
Division I
District finals at OU
New Philadelphia vs. Chilli- ·
cothe, p.m.,ppnd
·
Division IV
District finals at OU
Lynchburg Clay vs. Portsliloulh
Clay, ppnd
Division II
District finals at OU .
Miami Trace vs. Alhens, ppnd,
reset 5 p.m. Sunday.
Gallipolis vs. Washing10n CH,
ppnd, reset 7 p.m. Sunday

75 FORD E-150
Vlln, ve. •Uioinnc.

Co(lve~n

CNIM, tilt,

42 22 6 90 216 :rn

a·&amp;o.on ........... :16 14 7 79 26S 215

•

SALE PRICE $1995

88PLYMOUTH
Voyager LE, V6, aUiomalic,
running boards.
.
SALE PRICE $7995

PER MONTH $181

I

.

88RANGER
Custom,

V6,

automatic,

air,

cruise.

SALE PRICE $6995
PER MONTH $155

84 CHEVY C-10

64,000 miles, VB, aulomatic, air.

SALE PRICE $4495

•

4X4, V8, alltomallc, air.
SALE PRICE $6995

Fullyloaded,y~

tq

See Herb Smith or Vernon Harvey
135 PINE STREET

llCitla'

181

1 points ia a ftrst-rouad win over

SALE PRICE $1811
PER
$181

r

Delrol•~-

!

Denic:t.'' llicl Larry 5 kes. "I

'

SLI.ouio ........... 31 30 I 1023'123:5

"I wasiiJill&amp; 10 111y in front ol

I· - ' t ljl'aid II fGBI• ~I
I tncw 1111 bad Oilier Ilia PrS wbo

y - Bar ....... 21 42 5 41 21M 2SI

S•11MDI•·v-.....
ll 22 9 I! 290 219
c.ap, ............ 34 24 ao 11 '161m

I could- Ia llld wak 181 him.''
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, llinc points 181 ]..of-14 ••ina
; · Alu Watkin• led tbe Dates
I widlllpnil
ID tile IKOIId lillie, Elkias
Ntablf+'d E~&amp;·• ocr-

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perbmarJ:e in a sbdlllliilaed fashin 'lb! Sl!llar FUnd avaiiBhle tJurugh ·SI!llar Flnl shinesoo its own !I' l!ei'Y!Bas the anria Wll(lelellli~e invlliSt.v Bank allows )W tD im'fAit III'JQIIB live diftiormt invesbnenl lll8lketo.
nmt~ Eide-wa)\ it's anairdable way IDinwet- just$1,00lc:an~
witlwt the OOnDt ri ~ and IIDiitairt live dihtt fiuD.
)W started. AM, if)W pll'dlase the funds fir )WI' IRA dirertl)l )W woo\ be
This unijue five.pinl ndual fund .&amp;1 aGIIYilllien~ CDe-detisim anetlm diiiJI!d the anrwal ooW-pdui rust111y ill! that 1101t IRAaanmts ~
ri diversili:atm, Its pll1ijio is equally divided amq lllids, lmJs, . 1b m.lwti!D'e abwt 'lb! Slellsr Flnl (I' anyrithedherqualityJmkts
.inli!malimsiiiiCII'ities, 11!81 Blllate IBlll'itie8 and IIID!Y lll8lbt securilies,
in the sw !lank Jnll!sbtelt P«1im, can()'~ by )WI'nei@hlxliml sw
with eqeieml (1! 5 • ,y ~ eldJ ritlee live areas.
Bank&lt;&amp;etola)( Wbm itiXm!&amp;li&gt;(JIISiiat)WI'&amp;namal ~ St.vam~
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J.UC GJ....... icJded 12 points
: roa- Xavier.
:
While Hawtias lll:ppcd up on
: offense, Gilleal used 1 ,quartet pf

-cruiu, n.w ti,.1.

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• "Wben we played Duquesne
: bcf~. I elida 't shoot very well
• lbcn citlict. I bew they wouldll't
~ -~g_~diug me very close

PE;R MONTH $173

See Puzzle on Page D-2

Norrll Dl•..._
W L T Pia. CFGA

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I

'"I didn't shoot lhe ball very
: well yesten~ay;• ~ said of
• bis· 1-for-4 effort apiDSl Loyola.

87 FORD BRONcO II

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
·

I

(6

I

Bulfolo.............. 33 26 I 74 217 243
llanlord ''"'"'"" 20 •l .. 44 226 ](I)
Ott.awa .............. 9 S6 4 n 167 327

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.

INDIANAPOUS (AP) . But he said it was no problem
XavierofObioplayed wid! pi3Sion Friday nighL '·
·
and E~lle played with pain,
''Once I got in the flow of lhe
and the efforts put both ICallls in game and began to sweal, I didn't
~ die Midwqlcm Co!Jegiw Confer- · feel iut ill," he said. . '·
'"'"'
enc:o:
flllaniameat
championship
.
Elkilllmide'four
.of
five
'tJuu.
~
.
'· pme..
pomt attempts, including a crucial
,
No, 22 Xavier aot 14 points one down the stretch to hold off
• apiece from Miclud Hawtins and sixth-seeded Butler (11·17). The
~ Briln Grant and eli111inated cold· Bulldogs trailed by I 0 points .on
" sbootia&amp;. fifth-seeded Duquesne • five occasions in lhe second half
but made il tight in the fi~~&amp;l sec: 67-41 Friday niglll. ·
,
In the sec:ond game, Andy onds.
·,
: Eltins came llld: from a shoulder
After Butler forward Danny
;. injury suffcnd die pri:Yious night Allen picked off an inbounds pass
anchc:oaed a pme-bigh 22 points ud drilled a three-pointer to cut
a "sccuud-so:cded Evllllsville held the 11181'J!in to 64·62 wilh 2:59 ui
olfsixdt-sccilcd Butlc:r74--71.
p!ay, Elkins answered wilh his OWl)
..
Xavier coach Pete Gillen bad uey.
.
·· lanlmted his Ma'Stetfers' il1ability
Butler closed to wilhin ·one
;· 10 put away cighth-sc cllc:d Loyola point twice wilh less lhan two min·
' of Illinois without a SUVCJ(e in lhe Utes 10 play, but Evansville (22--6)
made seven of eight free lhrows in
1 lint mund.
•
There wa no such complaint . the ftnal1:38.
. ;· Friday nigbt,IS Xavier (23-4)
"Ifeelweplayedourbestgame
1
stcidily pulled away from a nine- 10n1ght," said Butler coach Barry
poinlliilltimelcad.
Collier. "We just played a dam
GJUt'!!_jiiiDper wilb 6:47 left good basketball team."
mide it a 20-point nqin 1151-31
"I thought our kids showed a lot
and allowed Gillen 10 empty his - of poise cfown the stretch," said
bench.
Evansville coach Jim Crews. "But" Today we bad the killer ler played like I knew lhey woulcl.
instinct." he said. "I think this was' They were very tough. I lhought it
die 'l int lime al{ year."
would be lhe kind of game it was."
Neilber club sbot well .
The win was Evansville's sixlh
Duquesne (13-15) buried itself wilh straight over Butler spanning three
:· 23.8_pe=nt shooting in die fmt ~ anddleir 141h in lheii' last
• hal{,_when die Dulces made only 15 meetings.
,. fiveof21 ·111C111pcs. Fer the game· . Parrish Casebier added 17
; they shQtjtiSI2S pm:ent.
points for Evansville, with Hup·
~
But Xavier wasn't much bcuer, mann and Scou Shreffler netting II
} hilli!lg ~ jtiSia 41.3 JICI"Dt clip. each.
r. EYllll Brian Grant. lbc MCC Player
Jennaine Guice topped Butler
;: oflbcYearandlbcnation'sleading wilh 20 points, 13 in the second
• field p i shogler 11 .683. hit only half, whi~ John Taylor contributed
• six of IS lllaltpiS.
15.
Hawtins .bowever mD: nve of
, se"Val lboa, including three of fo.-

. Conversion Van ,

Sports deadlines posted

Soulhwal Conf'ermn:
Flnt roulld
Baylorl3, TuuTcd! 74

WALES CONFERENCE
n n

Seoon llaU 13,--........ 69
St. John 's76, &amp;.on Colleto S6

Yandabill76, All~a 59

\IlL

N.Y. R"''on ....
loncy .......
N:Y. II)ondon...
l'!lilodolphio .....

Q - . ...

Prow idea 73, Ccnneaic:ut SS

"""""" 6S. """"" 60
Kc:ntudr: 1 101. Tcmcuee 40
LSU 19, Miului' "10

S.ale at Odlndo, 1:30 p.m.

Wuhinpwa ......

lla t.t C.rerence

EvaniV\lle 74, Bllllcr 11

0\ica&amp;;..~t. no;on
LA. '
a Mimaou. 3:30p.m.
L.A. Lakc:o at Allala. 7 p.m.

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N"""ea..tina 1112, M•oylond 66
Vqinia 61, WIke Fora~. S7

ftla Will C•fem'lft

New Yoa 109,
91
Allltu 110, Orlando 9'2
O.ica" 123, Clwloac 101
Phocrna 116. O.Uu 91
LA. CUppon 111. MimaGU 93

•
•

Q..-urftna~

0omaon 17, Florida SL 1S
o-a;. Tom (IJ, Duke 66

8ode SL (IJ, W.... So. 63

Milwaukee ll!i, 8011.01'1 I09
LA. LlkcniOI, Phi!Molphil 95

..'

MILWAUKEE BREWERS "- Soa1
ltuay Felder, oulfiolder, and Bobb)'
Hupe., calehu, to lheir miftor. Jeaaue
camp for t'OUiilfUMitl.t. Annouaccd \hat
Lury SoanfOIII, pUcher, ldlcamp.•

II&amp; ~ COIII'«eMe

13

Frktay's scores

'~

Tournaments

I

22 Xavier hands
Duquesne 67-4lloss

...

(Ailgames) '
Team
W L
P
x-Chesapeake ....23 0 1596
x·Washington ..20 2 1503
Soulhern ........... .l7 5 1566
x-Gallipolis ....... l6 6 1402
Marieua ............. l5 6 1586
Point Pleasant....l5 7 1394
x-Aihens ............ l4 8 1255
RiverValley ...... 13 9 1491
Greenfield ......... l2 9 1162
Vin10n Cou ~ .. 11 10 1354
Meigs ......::........IO 12 1479

Point PIAHnt • li75-7170 ,:

~- No.

BIISeball

I

( 'ollege haskdhall

KIPLING:
SHOE CO.

In MCC tourney finals,

-.~.oo

N.Y. lllllld.:n, 5 :10

v.._..-atCalpry,I:IOp.m.
2
95

'Ciw!oa0................32 21
Allaala ...................JO 31

p.m.

11

SL l..aailat Mimeaou,l:lO p.m.

MldwwtDI-

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r.,..t.,.w~2:top.m.

.771

Ta•
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HOUIIIon ..••- .•....- ...]9
Sin ............:!7
Uulo ............ ..........3S
Domer...,..........- ..2S

•

Philadolphiu•llmlcri.1:40pm.

Loa"-"' "Buff~o, :ZOIOp.m.

43

WESTERN CONFERENCE

I

Today"s pmes
~" liAimonlai, 3'10 P..,_
....... s.nJ-.4:40p.m.

••

'I

Louw.l:40 p.m.

21

Klwaull.ec .............2A 37

.,

NewJemeyatc.a,.a.r. 8:JO p.m.

~at St.

.3]'

Cenlral
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_...42DkiJioa
19 .619
c:l..l!\'l!l.VI.......40 21 .656

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cruil8, new,....

Quebec: ll MonlrNJ, 8:10p.m.

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A solid ~I ghank. Oil and w.ttcr 1
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fri 6:30

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(111 ' Winner

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Sat 10:00(8

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IL ____ _

Sat. 3:00 (9

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3.

~at N.Y. l•!andal, 5:1Op.m.
N.Y. Ranau• a1 Wa1hin1ton, 7:40

I

I

'

Scot'choard

I
I
I

1

I••

II

IIinner

&lt;

•

After Toledo got as close as 54·
50 with 7:06 left, Sylvester and
Payne each scored two points ruld
the Rockels never got closer lhiln
$ix again.
.
·•
Ball State will be making its
fourth appearance in lhe tournament championship game in lhe
last five years.
·:
. Sa,n Brown led_ the Rockets
walh 25 pomts. He hat 6 of 9 thrqes
point shots, tying the conferenl:e
!OW"'ament mart for ~-pointers
Jll a game.
·
:·

5

'.

ELBOWS DEFENDER With Tennessee's Lang Wist·
man on his hlp, Kentucky
front-liner Jamal Mashburn
(Jeh) finds himself having to
. elbow his opponent durin&amp; Friday night's Sotitheatern ·Coa·
fe~ce nnt-round .tournament
pme In Lexington, Ky., where
the Wildcats rocked the Volun·
teen 101-40. (AP)

.

.Ball State beats Toledo 72-64;
~
Western Michigan bucks Miami ~

(Fiftii-IJ'B(Ie dl,lsion)

Rilp 1. ev

Sunday nmes-sentlnel~age C3

I

=:=:: ,_ .........._.".,.....,·• ....,,..

11111 . _ . . . . . . . . . .,..,..,._. • • . . . , . . -

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••
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.E:'.age C4 Sunday Times sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Gallipolis P&amp;R All-Star Tournament
Suns

(Sixth·Rrade division)

Mon. 6:30
Loser to A (2
Mason

,,

•

...

1----~

_.:.~--'wed 6:30

'

Ripley Purple Loser to G (.' 9r-----,

"

Mon 7:30
Loser to C (3
Harrisonville

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.• ;

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Mason Hawks
Tues 7:30
Loser
toD (5

~ tl an d
· ,on 5:30
L&lt;ier to B (1
•

Wed 7 : 3(
Lo•er to r (10 1---......1

~ipolis

.
:·...
•.

Satl 2:00 ,
Loser to H (13 1--:--------,

Shade
Mon8:30
Loser 10 E (4 1---...J
Ripley Gold .

•
••

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•'

Sunday 4:00

·..-~

Laser to I
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la,fers' Bracket

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Tb. 7:30(7
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Loser lt

~bevers
wins gold in 60-meter dash
•••

It World Indoor Championships
F.:

11y lUCHARD KEIL
~~TORONTO (AP) - When the
•ltlmess of a drug scandal fell. on
k and field again, Gail Devers
an explosive start to grab back
o ~one's attention at.the World
oor Championships.
Devers burst from the blocks in
60-meter dash Friday, grabbing
early lead over Russian rival
na Privalova that would last
tlf\il she hit the finish line and capl)i(ed the gold.
•:! Her victory, and an equally stirtiing triumph by Canada's Bruny
Siriin in the men's 60, overshad·
djted the latest drug problem to
~mirch the spon.
·
.~ A source close to the InternatiOnal Amateur Athletic Federation
dll The Associated Press that Rus~·s Lyudmila Narozhilenko, the
Wjrld indoor record holder in the
liQ:·meter hurdles, tested positive
f'4r a banned substance after a meet
ilcFrance on Feb. 13.
:-'Russian officials would only say
t~t Narozhilcnko had withdrawn
f!Jim the competition.
:•:As that news swirled around the
S"'Dome, Devers settled into the
I)!Qcks, with Privalova two lanes
~ay. When the gun sounded, the
l·j92 Olympic 100-mcter gold
~ist sprung to the lead, grab·
bmg a one-meter advantage on the
rit}d by the 20-meter mark. Then,
P.iCvalova edged closer, and the two
+even at30 meters.
· ~But Devers put in a litUe surge,
~!ding a one-meter lead over the
R1issian aver the next 10 meters.
~two ran step for step the rest of
~ way, one meter proving to be
t~ difference between gold and
si(ver, with Devers running an
/Wnerican-record 6.95 seconds. Privllova ran 6.97.
'J"In this moment, Gail is more
• ng than me," said Privalova,
holds the indoor record in the
at 6·.92. ''It was a good race for

l

champion. That's my main goalI _want~ prove you c~ be a·chll!"·
pton wtthout drugs, ~atd Surm,
who 1~ ~rom .start to fi_rush.
Sunn s wmnmg time of 6.50
equal~d the meet recor~ set by
Am,encan Lee McRae ·~ 19.87.
Sun.n also.ran the same ttme m a
semtfinal heaL
. .
. Friday's opening day of compelitton !llSo marked the return of
Butch Reynolds, the 400-meter
runner who has been battling the

Pickerington edges Logan 56-52
.to make Division I final four list

'•

•
'

onds of the game.
By Tbe Associated Press
con sec uti ve regional champi· ·
Jen Swinehart hit one of two onshir.
Top-ranked Pickerington won
. .
its girls high school regional cham· free throws to end the Eagles'
Jil DeFossetiedthegameat51·,
pio.nship, but Hamilton Badin , hopes of forcing overtime. Lori 51 with two free throws with 27 :,
which finisheQ a10p the Division II · Blanchard made both ends of a seconds left in regulation play.· :
poll, won't be making it to the state one-and-one·situation with 12 set· Urbana missed two chances to wm •
- onds left to give the Generals a 36- before the overtime
tournament.
'
331ead.
Bridget Andrews scored 14
as Steph Wearly missed a foul ,
points and Renee Robare added 12 · Swinehart and Blanchard each shot and a 16-rooter by Ostendorf ;
to lead Pickering10n (25.0) to a ~6· had eight points to lead Wooster. bounced orr the rim.
:
. 52 victory over Logan on Friday Cenllill·Hower was led by Daisha
Avon Lake's Me$an Chawan-· ,
night in a rematch of last year's Patterson, also with eigbt points.
sky scored a game-htgh 24 points '
Milford was led by Charlee to ~e the Shoregals into overtime ,
state title game, which Pickering·
Thomas and Adrienne Burton with ag11nst Bath &lt;23·3).
ton also won.
:·
In other Division I regional 14 points apiece.
Emili McCluer, who led Bath"
Amy Scalcucci scored 20 points with 21 points, sank a three-point ~
finals, Eastlake North edged
Garfield Heights Trinity 64-63, and Mandy Hester 16 for Sycamore shot from 30 feet out at tile end of.•'
Wooster downed Akron Central· (22-4), which Jed only once, at 12· the third period to give the WildHower 37-33, and Milford topped 9 in the flJ'St quarter.
cats their fustlead at 40-38.
:.
Cincinnati Sycamore 51-46.
Urbana's Beth Ostendorf hit a 5·
Amy Kneiss's basket arter an ~ '
Pickerington will play Eastlake foot jumper with 20 seconds left in assist from Chawansky. gave Avon '
Nonh (24-2) and Wooster (24· 1) overtime to beat Badin (25·1) and Lake the lead for .good with I :08!'
w.ill meet Milford (23-2) in the give the Hillclimbers their second remaining in overtime.
-''
division .semifinals Friday.
Entering the Division n semifi•
nals were defending chJimpion
.,
Urbana, which went to overtime
before defeating Badin 56-55;
' Avon Lake, which got byt Lima
Bath 58·56, also in ovenime; and
Orrville, which eliminated Cleveland Villa Angela-St. Joseph 58-42.
l
Avon Lake (23·2) will take its
Do you feel you are paying roo inuch for
•
first trip to the semifinals to face
your prescriptions? Then you should be
Urbana (24-2). Orrville (18-8) will
shopping with us. With the cost of medica·
play the winner of today's game
lions constantly on the rise, we feelllls
our responslbllity to offer our
between West Holmes (22-2) and
customers even; •dvantage posslb:e.
Dover (20-4). ....
•
You see, we've matte it a P9int to know
Tez Kraft scoi'ed 18 points for
when.genertc equivalents are available.
Logan .(22·3) and Melissa COoper
Then, working hallcl·in·hancl with your ·
added 14.
.
doctor, we flli your prescription, exacllv
Logan scored seven straight
as·orderfld, \llld vnu •ave in the process.
points to pull to within 54-52,
~w Pr81criptlon Prices
capped by a three-pointer by Coop·
er with 47 seconds remaining. The
ofree Perking (VIdeo Touch Lot)
Tigers turned the ball over, but
ofelt &amp; Friendly Service
Kraft was called for a double drib.Store Ch1rge Accounts
ble, forcing the Chieftains to foul
Robare. She made two free throws
•Free Delivery to Home or Work
to close the scoring with 12 sec(Cheshlnt, Bradbury,
onds left.
• . Mlddlepon, Pomeroy, Mason,
Eastlake North's Kim Preto hit
Minersville, Rutland, Syracuse) .
two free throws with 39 seconds
remaining as the Ranglli'S ovefcame
WITHOUI PUITING
a 7,point deficit against Garfield
Heights Trinity (23·3).
A LJD ON V4LUE/
The Trojans, who were trying to
..
earn its fourth regional title in the
last five seasons, was led by
Na'Sheema Hillmon's game-high
29 points.
.
H2·"69 ·
Wooster survived a scare from
Secancl
......,..,. ow.
Centrai-Hower (22·2) before secur·
ing the victory in the last three sec-

. Prescription Shop

•

March 14,1993

-Indoor" track athletes return with honors as All-Americans
RIO GRANDE - The Univer·
sity of Rio Grande's Renee Peck
picked up her seventh All-Ameri·
can ranking and was joined in
recyiving the honor by teammate
Bonnie Evans after the pair com·
pleted competition in the NAIA
Indoor Track Nationals March 5-6
111 Kansas City, Mo.

r.- 1ow 'II,
1112 FORD tiiDIDIRBIBD

McKinley's McDaniels unhappy with MAC
·schools, others, for ignoring his gridders
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - The
combination of one of the nation's
most highly recognizable names in
high school athletics and a 9-1 reg·
ular-season campaign wasn't
enough to land a Division I schol·
arship for any Canton McKinley
football player.
,.
And veteran McKinley coach
Thorn McDaniels has not been
·happy about what h.e called an
oversight by college recruiters particularly those in the Mid:Amer·
ican Confer~ce.
" Ne all are ~own in the dumps
today, but it's the schools ...,.. and
the MAC schools in particular who ignored the five players we
have who are potential Division I
players who will be missing out in
the future," McDaniels said.
McDaniels' major disappoint·
ment was t1i'e lack of attention
giveit to' all-Ohio linebacker Jeremy Kirkpatrick. But he also
thought defensive end Tremaine
Mc~lroy, tackle Ryan Dragomire,
..tight end Paul Popko and quarter·
back Joe Pukansky were over· ·
looked in the annual recruiting .
blitz.
.
"We understand that recruiting
is an inexact science," McDaniels
said. "There are a lot or kids who
signed who never will play a down
of college football. And there are
kids whO didn't sign who will be
walk-ons in college and end up
playing in the NFL."
There are, however, a couple of
controllable· factors of recruiting
that McDaniels believes need to be
improved.
"They (recruiters and college
coaches) simply aren't evaluating
high school players as thorou~hly
as they used to," McDaniels satd.
"They are relying; 100 much on
referrals and aren't watching film
or talking as much to high school
coaches as they did in the past. It's
cheaper and takes less time, but it
also ISO 't as effectiYe.
t~

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Pool hours

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Home athletic events ·
, Wednesday - Baseball vs.
.W.va. Stare, l p.m. (doubleheader)

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~ RIO GRANDE - This week's
~tivities schedule for I,.yne Center
ts as follows: .
·
•
Gymnasium hours
;: Today- 1-3 and 5·7 p.m.,
open n:creation
.
.: Monday - 5-7 p.m., college
jccreation
;; Tu~sdll,l' - 5-7 p.m., college
•n:cre&amp;bon
. ·
., Wedaesday - 5·7 p.m., col·
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;: Thursday- closed
Friday -. closed
~ Saturday - closed
~l Sunday, March 14- closed

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takes to run those 1cinck ol races."
All three are expected 10 pattici·
pale in Rio Grande's spring tnd
season, with Pcclt and EYalll providing the bulwarlc of the Redwomen program.
Peck and Evans have boosted
the number of All·American bon·
ors received by Rio Grande' s running athletes over the yean 10 24 "not too shabby," Willey jotccl.

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reduction in the number of scholarships each Division I college is
allowed as another reason
recruiters are looking at size as the
most important factor in recruiting
a player.
"The schools just aren' t as willin!! to take a chance on a kid who
mtght be just a little smaller," said
McDaniels, "even though he may
more than make up for wharever he
lacks in size with desire. They just
want the guys who fit their size

years ago, Willey said he was especially impressed with the trio's per·
formance because of the level of
competition they fa ced from
around the country.
"What people don 't realize is
what it takes to be an All-American." he said. "The competition ·
includes some outstanding per:
formers, and I don't thinrkkJl\:f~
are aware of the type o( 11

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"They simply are given a name
with height, weight and 40-yard
dash time. The biggest problem
then: relative 10 us is that most high
school schools fudge a little on
those numbers to give their kids an
edge.
"We don't believe in falsifying
infonnation and we don't want to
have to do iL But we're being put
in a position of disadvantage ~y
being honest and the people being
hint the most are our young kids."
McDaniels also pointed to a

Grande t.raclc mentor Bob Willey
remarked "They definitely ran on
guts, I' II,tell you that.
'
"The performances were just
lenific, and I really felt they l'll6e to
the oeeasion because they -had to
reach into themselves to ,run the .
races they did," he added.
Rio Grande has had runners
qualify for the nationals since the
indoor program was initialed a few .

•

., ~

1993 Dodge Caravan

Peck, a senior from Baltimore, a junior from Kingston, was sixth
Ohio, has previously won All- in the three-mile at 17:42.81. Chad
American status in indoor and out· Benson , a /·unior from Glenford,
side track, and in ctoss country. was the on y male runner for Rio
The top six to compete in events at Grailde to qualify for the nationals
the national competition were des- and was seventh in the mile at
ignated All-Americans.
4:19.73.
Peck was third in the two-mile
"I felt they did a tremendous job
in 10:49.16 and also finished sev- considering theyld all been sick or
enth in the mile at 5:14.15. Evans, hurt at the time ," veteran Rio

~~C'enler· slate · ·. .'

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cass·., P. win. &amp; locks, P. seat, rear
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13,000 miles, extraclean, ti• &amp; cruise.
WAS
51

Sunday Times-Sentinel Pagl!' CS

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

••

~

IAAF over a two-year drug suspen·
sion that kept h!in out of interna·
tional compelltton from 1990
through \992.
.
Reynolds ran the fastest ume of
the day .- a 46.37- and looked
smooth doing it
•' I felt very good, and I'm look·
ing forward to Saturday and Sun·
day," Reynolds said. "I've had a
lot of obstacles. in my life the last
three years. I've missed this."

'

:•Devers, meanwhile, got some
13jt-minute inspiration in a note
tJi4t her coach, the mercurial Bobby
I&lt;Jrsee, handed her just momen ts
be(ore her race.
~ 'He said something like 'It's
' y the first time you become a
c mpion, but it's harder to
r at,"' Devers said. "He's the
of coach who wants to see you
h your potential ... I'm happy~
lucky. so he finds ways to get
er my skin and keep me .
g."
n the men's race, Surin capt
honor for Canada, fame for
h
If, and, perhaps most impor·
uitJy, gave Canadian track fans
thing to talk about besides the
d araced Ben Johnson, who
ived a lifetime ban from the
last week for testing positive
d time for illegal drugs.
'It's too bad that people believe
..re have to t.ake drugs to be a

•-

In Ohio H.S. girls' regional final games,

.High_Prescription Costs

I
I
I

••

March 14, 1993'

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasent, WV

Page-C6-Sunday Tlmes Sentinel

March 14, 1993

iRecruiting effort intensifies for RG's rising soccer team
~

Monisscy's program is sponsor- letes are brought 10 Rio Grande's · · da.
campus. During the weekend, !he
A key 10 his efforts will be the
m which prospective student-alb- potential recruits tour the campus completiop of the L.yne Ce nter
·
and facilities, meet members of the annex and its niullipurpose gym,
team and compete in intrasquad which allows for increased indoor
soccer matches m Lyne Center. . recreation and relieves scheduling
"We have three such weekends pressure on the original gym. The
scheduled and our most recent one anneX is scheduled for completion
atlhe end of Jaduary was probably this spring and is expected to be
the most talented group of operational by the end of the curprospects we' ve seen from th e rent school year. .
Ohio and West Virginia area."
"So many people might not real·
Morrissey said. "In lhe past we've ize that this new facility is going 10
had two recruitment weekends per ope.n up new doors for athletics,"
year, but in the future we hope 10 Morrissey said. "I couldn't be more
have more. Our program will excited about the prospects for lhe
expand 10 an all-year schedule 10 future."
include indoor and spring seasons,"·
Morrissey said he hopes to oarry.
Morrissey, who has led the Red- a maximum roster of 25 for the fall
men program since 1989, is a.coun- season which means he must bring
selo~ il_l Rio Gra~de's Office ·o f in a10ia1 of 12 freshmen 10 the proAdm•ss•ons. He wd the weekends gram. It's important not only to
very good approac~. because !Juilding the program, he said, but
lt lllVes me an opponumty to see . m helping to mcrease enri&gt;llmenL
what kind of talent they have, and
The Redmen were 8-1J.in 1992
it gives them a feel for the campus
and lhe personnel."
Among the 20 prospects present
for the last recruitment session,
nine wen: from the Cincinnati
two from .Dayton, two from West
Virginia, and one each from Jackson and Chillicothe. Morrissey said .
he's continuing to expand his
search beyond the tri-state area and
introduce the potential recruits to the campus
overseas, which has been ·successand the soccer program, head coach Scott Mor·
ful in auracting student-athletes
rissey said.
from Jamaica, England and Cana-

RIO GRANDE - With one of its recr uitment procedures •
its more successful seasons behind al!hou h Coach Scou Morrissey
: it, the Universi ty of Rio Grande . said he~s just scratched the surface
~; soccer team has been intensifying of possibilities.
;&lt;
•
•)
:;

t:
l.

::
· -;;
•:
:.
~:
~

•
~:
"

and hosted their fi rs t-ever Disuict
22 playoff contest last November,
an indication of the marked
improvement in lhe program in the
four seasons Morrissey has 1~.
An inducement 10 recruitment
for the serious soccer player, he
said, is Rio Grande's incn:asingly
competitive schedule. The 1993
season will see the Redmen play 20
games, including meetinas with
such NCAA Division Ill schools as
Marieua, Onetbein and the University oflndianapolis.
·
"If we're going to lmpro~.· ~e
have 10 play the best compcuuon,
he said. "Our proaram has become
wel)·respected and I feel we have a
good schedule for this fall."
The Redmen will also host the
fJ_CSt tou~ment in the proJWI\'s
history dunng the second weekend.
of. September under the sponscjrsh•P of Lanzera, a new soccer specialty )ine.
·

~ng several recruitment weekends

are :·a

®SECURJJY

area,

GETIING FIRED UP - Potential recruits
and members or the Universliy or Rio Grande
soccer team conducted an indoor contest during
The weekends
help
a recent recruiting weekend.
'
.

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Czech Republic beat Spain's Fran· ~RMOZA, Spain (AP) cisco Roig 6-4, 6-4 to reach the
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~.', By MICHELLE LOCKE
·;; , · ANTIOCH, Calif. (AP) - In
~..the cool gray of a foggy ~inter day, .
. ; theh haltered old boat sklms . ac~ss
I e Sacramento R1ver •. s11pp1~g
:. JbrQugh silent sloughs hned wnh
regiments of bulrushes.
~ The purse seiner drifts to a like"" Jy spot and a specially designed
'" fi shmg net goes rattling over the
., side, smacking in10 lhe water with
.._ a splash. Four pairs of hands pull
.., !&gt;n the finely woven mesh: eight
• eyes 5can its muddy fol~ for the .
:Jranslucent liody of the uny delta
. smelL
·
A tail flickers in lhe pale-green
': llel. For a moment there is hope.
' But the wriggling shadow turns out
:; ·to be a rainbow trotit. It's tossed
·' back iniO the chilly water.
::
''A big zero, •' declares a disap:: poin~ed Tina Swanson, post-doc10r'• al boologist and sometime smelt
·: hunter. ·
'
::
It's a lot of fuss over a fish
:1' whose chief claim 10 fame used 10
'i be that it smells like cucumbeJS.
·1
But with a federal designation
,, as a threatened species·- and Cali·
:: Cornia farmers promising 10 battle
1 the water use changes that could
:· mean - the humble delta smelt is
•: swimming in deep political waters
;, these days.
"This is the spoiled owl of the
. ::

'

Sacramento-S~n loaqllill J)rlg •• F'~ ud Guat: Cilmmission,

says Swanson.
Smelt sup)lOrters say ~ full
hstaastebeebengatnn .dpm:mllrDUble
p•' og --~-die
.
u. . u~ _ .
out of •ts breeding ·~ _• die
delta to farm s and cones m die
south.
.
" The b i_olog~ts.:say dW ~
del~ smelt IS ·an ~ 'tO es
wh1ch ~cans •thal tf l s m liCiliiJio;.
the. enure ecosystem when: ~~
r~s1des IS m lr~uble ;as -a_ II ~
hke the canary m !the mal~
satdalMD1k~ Sherw
R ~ of lbe Sicmt
Leg
e.ense u.....
But water users say nm~r;
lhe flow from die ·delta Glllld,..
them.
_
. " Can we sustain the job loss m order to carry out SOllie II-'
experiment for this lllliiuloW!.. Slid
J~n Peltier of the ~ Valley
Project Water Assoai"K'A, a....,
of 80 urban and agrioullliral a»1rae10rs.
. The March . listing mlbe smlt
as a threatened ~ C:IIJ!'C I 111.
w·~df·~a~er .th~U .S. F•sh1 ~
1 • e ervu:e trst pup" _
ing, based on 'SUIVeys :Sbowq Ill:
population had declined 90 pota::lll
In 20 years.
_ _
On the state .JJ:vel, the Calif.._
Fish and Game l)epaiiiMam•
mended threatened SIIIIDl- :rem
'· ago, but the decidin.g boW. lhe

re~t£4 lUI rcc~mmendation

-.

_

•

.

,

.,_,5:.._:'......•!£..~~~e1511~t thlhe
.. e

,_. . _ ~.....,.. -~

..., fisll m die~ basut.
Mt
cs - a1n31J bein&amp; taken
10 pu&amp;cl w •
~ salmon: two
oda" tiME af s.dl;. tile klngfin
_ . ... ;., ..1. ll&amp;'&lt;c 11eco proposed
fur p•• •i!•
li's . . dear cuaJy wllal mea~ 111:_talca ro ens~ the
-!I ~ s.Yawal. ~t addil•ona•
- · • • • • 1 . 1 J:E expectaC _
·'

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1992 TEMPO
OR TOPAZ

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sail-.
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NOT STIIPPED"

BiokJ&amp;isls sa:r 11111~ pumps
..... - &amp;aft' =iDitw oE ICR feet
af lim ~ m. Ill: ~~Jot•i. ~~::
a-~ r
g ;
.
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"J_Itc _.ott.:~ man~ of
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1992
THUNDERBIRD

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faoflk¥• h•Lsr.ourdl ..i..als 01' litrdilmods lake prece-

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Geauga County catfish qualifies as record catch
!! ' AKRON Ohio (AP) - A chanOutdoor Writers of Ohio, ..toidt
Tile
2 JL
c:d 31 inch't nel catfish ;;.u~ht last Aug. 15 in conducts the state"s reoord-rull es _.A "pd 11..96 pounds. It
,, LaDue ReservOir in Geauga Coon- progratn, also has dechn:d dal a was • c'M last Feb. 29 iD ~f

341 Secuad An.
GaU!pO!k, Oblo
Pb- 446-4l!IG
Home 4-46-4518

1989 FORD RANGER Ill

environmental concerns
~:outweigh jobs when proposed?' ..

!!

CAROLLSNOWDEN .

ALSO ONION SETS &amp; FERTILIZER
IN STOCK!
SEED POTATOES WILL ARIUVE SOON!

·~:;Should

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neighbor service, see your nearby
State Farm agent today.

OUR NEW SUPPLY OF BULK
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:: Pella smelt issue raises question,

'1
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March 14, 1993

Home Ofllce: Bloomington, Illinois

:: 1y has been certified as a state
:• record and accorded world -record
.; line class recognition by the Inter·: national Game Fish AssoCiation.
';
The fish was taken by Gus
:• Gronowski of Panna while he was
;: trolling a Hot 'N Tot on a spinning
I
with eight-pou_nd test monofil1a',·. · rod
menl The fish we 1ghed 37 pounds,
,; 10.4 ounces, and measured 41 1{1.
:;
'•
'
::
•
;1

19-pound, 12-ounoe Qinbow'" ' taken from. Lake Ern"e ....
u' Wi...Frisky of Northfield w.as a Dale
record. The fish measured 36 114
inches.
Frisky caught the fi:sh Qr
Cleveland while usiog ;a W:alleyc
Cheater and night crawlor Clll .._.
,.,, _
17 and broke the year-o1cl nlOO!d of
19pounds, 6ounoes.
The writers also ccaific:d r inches.
'
fro
other records.• includin• a -'dThe previous record, taken m
"'
Ferguson Reservoi.r. had been 30 record saugeye and a •sm•DIPI
hd
d ·
1 1 bass tbal broke •the state's be •
pounds and a stoo sonce u y standing fish record.
1987.
I

1 opa

1992 TAURUS
OR SABLE

IIJ' Ba-d F'mefruc o

.,,..,

'111: 01rio 111111 wotld.
71 i+' • 10 pwl!Mfs·, 4 ·
• ·~ W b!za 111:111 bJ ·Billie
Lee.. om af llotillcnllal~. who
;.,:"~~- n . I &amp;9'. in

I --

A/C, roiDI flower

RXIIld -

"LOADED"

E.ad J. T _ __.1eL-l'"
of Lima· is the
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aew stare •-u-... u.c:r m t e

,_
llllsc&amp;fP:t- His lish,
all:a rn. L * &amp;ie Jag_ May 9,,
•e.asared 22 Sill iad•es. and!
A - 1 1 7.74.,
k , . . . JeCORt
3
ltad stood siacc Jaae 17, 194!1,
-- •
2.f
1/2. iad cs ud weipia&amp; 1 1!2
I

•

mr.

"IOJDID"

.l :WVDNR announces meeting
~- ... . _ * Mad
a:tes··f1
.or feedback
game hlwS- --~
/ 1.....::0: a:,3.~o}
'
'
...
5
.. .,_,..

on

.

CHARLESTON, W.Va.- The
~West yirgi~ia _Division of Na11,1111I
:-.Resources w11l hold I 6 pub 1oc
~:meetings in March to give SJ?Or!S;.. men, landowners and other onter-ested parties a voice in establishing .
4 994.-95 l;tunting and trapping regu=lations and 1994 fishing regula- ~ons according to Ed Hamrick,
=t:oNR'direciOr.

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Ta" l Title ..... Not Inc!~ - All Rebldel to Dealer
AllpiiJ.-IIIUblaatlo blnk IPP~I.

'

.II

v

shT:::::ETre:~:~ ~at

ihe first of March marked the
eginning or' the weekly trout
i'IOcldngs for manr West VirJinia
~rs. Informauon on streams
ked may be obtained by conf:your .J993 Fishing Regula' brochure or calling 558-3399
a recorded messaae of streams
the previous day.
·

308 EAST MAIN - POMEROY

.

roo~wisburg - .Grcenbria a-

ly c;::;ro~
B'"""..._ ans urg- ~-..
ty CIJ!Ulhouse
.
Parkersburg - W:ood Couaty
J~dicial Annex •(2nd
Ciold.room)
•
Marob 25
Moorefield - Ha~dy County
Courthouse
Twin Falls- Twill F.llk , ,....
Logan - Logan &lt;Jounty Q.thouse (Coun #!,, lbird Flool)
Ripley - Jaclcson Couty
Courthouse ·
Individuals or clubs intcre!B:d ill
submitting written 'COnllllCilts may
obtain a copy of the Oivtsioa"s
1994-95 recommendatiODS .aad
reply fqJm£ from 'D NR distrit:t
officer located in Faimtont., .Raaney, French C•eek, •M ¥AnJto..-.
Point Pleasant and l'lub::t!lboJ:c; or
the DNR Operations Cent« ia
Ellcins.
Forms for submitting pu'btie ftiCommendations also IIUIJ be
obtained by writing ·the Di..WO. of
Natural Resources, Wildlife
Resources Section, 1900 "'---a
Boulevard, East, State Capitol
Complex, Building .3, Clwlcsloa.
W.Va. 25305. All written .-ca.mendations must be recciwcd by
Aprii 16.

.Floor

(*'14

IIJd
last May·. 9·
~

a ·•· 1 .54 1M t
.-..: 5 , . l..alrcl.a Sa AD. The
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11(1. i+ 1 ..ra 111 4 , s, doe
filii lll:iil8 llba rn. Ollio l'nwcr
p
- • ..._
Aad RdlalJ_..ofCiialckln•
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West Virginia
-- .!Shin.g .report

:;;· · CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The
&gt;!01&gt; ollowing is this week's fishing
tcpon. as submiued by the West
,.Yirginia Division of Natural
'Resources.
. •1. Northern panhandle and
('lorth Central- Fishing opponuf&lt;aities are not as good as usual
:.11ecause of high waters. Major
~livers such as Tygart, West Fork
nd Ohio are high and muddy.
maller streams are high and
ilky. Tygart Lake tailwaters are
igh with eight gates open. Elk
~iver oemains high and muddy. As
i!Jows recede fishing should be
!&gt;-lood for ll'Outand walleye.
;:, Eastern panhandle - Most
~s' are too high 10 provide lhe
\isual good fishing available in .this
rea. 'l'he South Branch River,
while still somewhat high, is proucing some good smalllnouth bass
~when fiShed tight along the shon:llne. As the cold spell leaves, fish• gat Sleepy Creek Lake for north·
111 pike and trodhy-sized large·
outh basS shoul p1ck up .
: Anglers should exercise caution
when fishing during high water
Conditions. A life jacket or flotation

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NOW ONLY

5.7 litre V8, leather, colllp8Ct dl8c player &amp; case.

$

~

1993 Olds Oera Value Edition

"'" 1993 Cadillac Fleetwood
SAVE

Silverado trim, tilt, cruise, loaded.

$179Down $179PerMo.

SAVE

$13,999°0

•'

Leather seating, pedded vinyl ;oof.

0

...r.• 1993 Chevy Ext. Cab 414 Pickup

NOW ONLY

•'" 1993 (adillac Sedan Deville

DoWII
'179 Per Mo.

tt• 1993 Chevy S·l 0 Blazer 414

•-lng, crul...

Leather IMtlng, V.a.

1 179

$

.,.

Auto., atareo wlc110o., olr, puloe wl...,., tilt whMI, P.

llt111993 Cadillac Selan DevHie

1993 Chevy S-1 0 Pickup

wlcauette, eliding rear window, P. eteering.

V6, auto., air, ate reo, air bag.

WE HAVE ON THE SPOT,
LOW RATE FINANCING
FOR QUAUFIED BUYERS.

'

SAVE

V-6, 5 epd. trana., Tahoe equip., air, stereo

. "'" · 1993 Achieva SSedan

va, leather Interior, loaded.
SAVE $5,000°0

NOW ONLY 19,894

1992 CHEVROLET CORSICA SEDAN

$7999

1993 Chevy Caprice Classic LS

Sod.on, V-8, oulo., oil poww, oter• wh:aoo., twilight
oonUnel, cruioe, ride I hondllng ouo_.lon.

5

Auto., elr, atereo

·

NOWOIUY$1 5,473

NOW ONLY 11

$8999

ing will beg in a! 7 p._in. . .
f
; The fol 1owmg 1s ~ 11stmg o
• 'llleeting dates and locauons:
·,
March 22
• · Charlesl\111 - ~n~wha, County
~ Courthouse (Commossooner s
·
Courtroom)
.
::· : Middlebourne - Tyler County
,. • Courthouse
""'· Summersville - Summersville ·
'Jr. High School
•
March 23
Elkins - National Guard
;Annory
io(,. Glen Dale - John Marshall
..-, High School
"'·'
·

,.r.•V-6, auto.,
1993 Chevy L•ina Euro Sedan
otwoo wiCMallle,titt, P. w--. &amp; locka,

Per Mo.

tt• 1992 GEO Storm Sport Coupe
~lr,

t,.f -~ fz~~~i~r~~d~:~-

Hunting10n - Cabell C..,
Ccourthous)e (Judge Ferp-·s
ounroo~
_
. Glenvtlle - ·Glenville Ramabon Center
.
Beckley - Nauond Niae
Health &amp; Safety Acadcm.f
. .
Mardi 24.
·Faumont - Mar•oa c-aty
Courthouse (Div•sion I e-n-

1993 AEROSTAR
.WAGON

SAVE·A·LOT

cs
aely

SEE RICK TOLLIVER, TOM MILSTEAD,
GUY SAYRE oa TIGER SAYRE

i-80~·964·3673~

•,

�)

•

Page-cs-sunday nmes Senilnel

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

..

March

Farm/Uusiness

7-UP
PRODU

·. STORE HOURS
·Monday thru Sunday
· 8 AM-10 PM

2 LITER

POMEROY, OH.

o more financial names .bite the dusf;

aonu

'•
By STD'AN
FATSIS
AP B a - Writer
) NEW YORK- WileR have )'IIU gone Mr. Har. ris. Mr. Bacbe, Mr. Reyaolds? And you, Miss
~·Mr. Huaon. Mr. Drexel?
·
,• To lbe peat Wall Sueea graveyard, soon to be
llildliat: more daJ a bisb iCII cwiosity in a business
dpt me es lime i1 ~. not aenmDons·
·
:· 11ne r.mm.r fiiiiiiCial names have billeD
~dust il RJCelll weeks - two alone in Friday' s $1
~ IDCIIQ or Shuuui Lelunan Brodicrs Inc. and
Sinilb Barney, Harris UJJiiam a: Co.
. In m:eat years, Wall Street firms have been
!f!*aed, lltm ovu, blnbuiJled IJld Olhtzwise com,
tiiaeil in IMijllti ede•iltd fasliioll. That means repeat·
ellly diawiag .-.her lnnch on an abeady aowded

ARGO
PEAS

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., MAR. 14 THRU MAR.; 20, 1993

1701.

~-• "I .-110 blow 1111 lhc names on lhc bact of my

3 Sl
USDA

•

BEEF .

Chuck Steaks...................LB.
USDA CHOICE, ~ONELESS BEEF · B~nOM.

Round Steak...~.~...............La.

KITCHEN PRIDE

Sliced ·aacon. . . . . 6 LB. Box
.k.
·
·
SJ3
h
C 1c en Breasts........LB. ·
US~ A CHOICE ·BONELESS B~EF .

I

\

•

'

.

Bologna.:.........................La.

· ·

$2 49

Wien

DEL MONTE
SQUEEZE

CATSUP
28 oz•.

SIGN AGREEMENT - Bill Booae, lert,

Mame of~ l'weul H-a Ia VID·
'ifo• nd Gallipolis, nd Boa B~ae! !l&amp;ht,

, WILKESVIUJi - Cbuct Wood medical corps for the U.S. Anny, Coal and lhe support we get from
. aiid John Monell were boaored as a Slalion chief for the Southeast- the top down. .
rec:eady 11 tbe Sec:oad Annual em Ohio Emergency .Medical Ser"You sometimes present materi•te *I&amp;~ die Ohio Slife Couacil vices, as captaiq of the Wellston aJs and wonder if any of it is stickor die lloliiitS SafCIJ Association Fire Department and as a state ing," he continues. "Then you
bc;1dia WC111binpwi .
~iliC_!Jency Medical Technici8n come upon something like what
•· Wood, a sec:rioa supervisor- (EMT) iiiSil'UCtor.
·
happened tp John (Morrell) and it
t4iaiaJ u Soelliem Oliio Coal · Wbilc continuing. his volunreer makes it all worthwhile."
Cflapuy's ),(cia• Divisioa, walt u a II!ICUe ~uad member in
"Once it happened, it was just
· ~a ~ctie •lui To Safety Olk Hill, Wood. jouled the Meigs like in lhe classroom," recalls Mor&lt;*$acr from the Oliio DqiMbia:i1t Divilioa in 1975 u a genelai inside rell, referring to his life-savinjl
at._. ill • I t • Ili¥ilka of laborer. He_movod to the ~ely ~ -acli0111. "It's :amazi,ng, bow fast 11
6ca. De natil- J1i
Ho dopartmenl It Southern ' bliio . c&lt;iii1es to you_" ·
·
..... "'ill • ......n of "'-••'- Coal's fanner Meigs No. I mine in
-Morrell says his sisJCr, Arlene,
!'tCOIL••••Ii!•IDIII:IIhb el safe- 1977 IS 111 environmenral techni- who is con'fined to a wheelchair
.,_. "dsiilllie..tplace.•
cian. Wood .was law proii1CIIed to and cannot speak, began having
"' Monell, • sec:cioa IIII)ICrYisclr- safety assistant and SCIVed as brief- - problems midway through a family
oiltby at Soutbem Ohio Coal'' iligofflcerofthe Meigs No. I mille meal. John immediately-got behiild
Jiki[Js No. 2 miae, rccei ved 1 rescue squad.
her, lifled bcr from lhe chair and
Hillmcs Safely Associalion awmd
He tnnsferred to section super- applied the Heimlich.
Savilg A Lik."
visor-uaining at lhe Meigs Division .
"Chuck gives you a good idea
•ldst July, while attending a offiCe in 1984. In his position, he is on bow 10 perfmn simple life-sav. faililv diiiiiCt, Monell saved his responsible for the training and ing techniques." claims the Athens, ·
siaes's life by • the Heimlich re&amp;rlining of all EMTs at Soudiem Ohio, resident, who is a nine-year
m-ver.
lCimed the Ohio Coal, as well as the annual veteran at Meigs. "If I wouldn't
w 'laiople daria&amp; a niDiLc class at safety training for !ill Meigs Divi- ha~ had the training, I wouldn't
tb~ MeirJS Division. lronie~lly , sion employees.
have tnown whal to do.~.
W'ood was tlic ioSlniCtor or the
"We are serious about safety,"
Later, during another visit with
c!Us.
ays Wood, a WcliSUlii resident. "A his sister, MOrren sa)'S she poinled
·An 18-yar-..a oflhe Meigs lor of it comes from the
to 1euen which spelled out, "You
DiYisioo. Wood liB sened in the
•

'l!r

-M~::f.

Tillage tips

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE

.

Seed Potatoes. . .so Lb. Bag
BR~UGHToN;s

2 Yo.Mdk. . . . . . . . . . . . .GAL.

KRAFT PARKA!

.

Margarlnf)~. . . . . . . La.

2
$1
Pineapple. . . ... . . .2o oz.

LIBERTY ·

FLAVORITE CRINK~E CUT

$759

SJ89

3 SJ

·

French Fr1es. . .sLB. BAG

$259

r.---.,.- -1:ouPo~e-----li r---- -"' PAGE
---------~r;:--~

1-------.11•----cOUrvn- ---....
---z-~w-----------~
1 -----c:tuNN--1
CLOROX BL~ACH. !::! PAPER TOWELS
DOMINO SUGAR !1 STARKISt TUNA
69
GAL ~:~~
~~liS :::·

79(

3/$1

Ill

Good Only AI Powell'l Super Valu
Offer Good Mar. 141hru Ml(. 20, 1993 ·

$1

Good Only At Powell'• Super Valu
Offer Good Mar. 14 thru Mar. 20, 1993
Limit 1 Per Cuatomer

• 11'

• GALLIPOLIS - Tillage practices a.e in oansilinn on 99 million
aeres or hig.ly erodible land
(HEL)- Tbal's liow many 1crcs
~ UDC form of -M=e manatement to meet conservation
ftlds. 1'1iele proiJalJiy wiD be iliOill,
1i IOIIIC r..mcrs CIJll for increased
c4nserv•tion lilllg6 practices. If
'YOu're IIDODJ gowers making
cbanaes that will keep you

28.5 oz.

SJ79

: filr

j

GROUND
BEEF .

...

ledcnl c.m JX0Pli111S,

•

dilitely following barvesL Stocks
tepd 10 weather and break into
~ wlien disted in the spring.
•, l. No-lill when possible. In coniOiiD - Joba Morren, ItA and Cbuek Wood dlsr.tay
~ ao-till, residue remaining
liWII'ds
lliey
rtftlved l'nnn t1it OU) State CouncU of lbe Ho mes
fl'llm tbe previous crop couats · Safety Aaodadoti.
.
~:yaW llllfacc cover pl.
3. Talce 1 systems 1pproacli.
'ria can iaOIICliCC residue cover
IliaD)' ways.- by slowin&amp; down,
nimi111 eqwpi I I lliQie 111111-.
cliaapj(RD twilled shanks to
sl(aight {'Oiall. Bat one change ~Stocks
intlabon,anu ""'"ufullevels ofcash
in many sectors of lhe economy.
tequae odias. If )'IIU change C
led by Sian Evans
Energy slllCks tradilianally have
cbUcl plow fmlil 4 twisted
' ln~tSIDIUitcanlinuinglbaean:h
b 10 suai&amp;bt points, you 'II
auracled invCIIOn who are looking
for yield, IJld lhe
Jlll!•lll~y liaw: 10 modify )'Qiil' fiCld
for yield-aild with good reason.
hantis
not
getting
As a group, energy stocks provide a
· -· 100, or it Wllft'l handle
die hipcr level of residue next aay easier. &lt;Mrcumnt yield of about 4.3 pen:ent,
aD lovell of inlersecond only to electric utilities
*;5:-MadllS, ibe GalJja SWO&gt; est riles have
(which yield 4.6 percent) IJld well
willlold a
lillian witli die
above the IVCiaJe yield of 2.8 per_,., M-diild a*Jw. Tbe demon- IUIIinecs' in 1
cent for the lllllket as a whole (IS
st•Uoa wUI be beld u tbc .Rob downlnndinreI1IOIIUied by Slliidlrd .t Poor's 500
c:at
and
tti ·c Plmi aa Bllllt ltidp Road.
yieldl.
1111
longIndex).
The energy JI'OUP'I CIIII'MI
'fa lociiJoa II allout one mile
..
u.s.
'l'leaury
bonds
t
l
y
yield
a1Jo
Is much hiJher than lhc
IKiilli • Sill&amp; Roate 160 of tbcci'Hnl
10
their
lowell
levels
Iince
rebll1l JIVIIlable rrom short lenn
Stite tto.le 3j IIIII 160 juaaiotl.
WiiiCb CCII' liJIII. Tbc dcmilnsua- ~ IIICiions bepn ill the Jaie
maney-mlirket inSlnlments such as
liala will be Ina 2 10 4 p. m. In 7
one-year certlfiC81CS of deposit
'
inlercsl 181CS clelrly
~of ilw:len r t • ''""· the dale
wil be " utiiiO Mlith 22 from 2 n IUbjoct 10 ftuc!UidOIII, we do
10jl p.m. albe _lnnM . .
1101 dlillk lhat diey lie likly 10 ~
Stu Evau II lllllaclal COli·
'f U- inl; (M Cia l'tSiloo a ••ee 8 Nit upwlldawch any time
IDJ!MI-Cil, no-till planliiJ or IDOL Elements in that QU!Ipok in·
laitaDtwil' Merrill Ltaeli ID lbtlr ,
GaiUpolllallkt.He eaalle reached
~call die Glllia dude llie llllldll• ,.ce ·of' the
at446-ll76.
..
0 IJ
-~IICIDi!Ohiit m:ovtl)', low leve~ of

••
9

Ciaciaaati Dlvlsioa. The plaque. preseated by
Collins is for tbe dealership's participatioa Ia ,.,
lielpiog make the Ford Siiles Divisloa number ~
oae 1ad the certificate presealed by Stacey is tor
top-rated customer satisfactioo in sales and - - ••
vice. (Times-Scallael photo by Kevla PinS()II)
••

.

••
·~

"l

Fm·HA announces open period for ;l
housing preservation grant program J
gible homeowners for a broad
rariJe of repair and rehabiliration
acuvities to remove health and
safety hazards or to make major
repairs necessary to improve the
'general living environment of the
occupant(s).
FmHA will receive preapplicalions through May 17, 1993. This
period will be the only time dwing
the current fiSCal year that FmHA
accepts preapplications. Prcapplications must be received or postmarked on or before the May 17
date. Entities wishing to obrain fur-

~.

ther infonnation or an application ••
package should contact the District ~~
Office located at Marictra Ohio :
telephone (614) 373-7113.
' :~
All interested organizatj011s or ·
public agencies must publish in a :
local paper by May 1, 1993, their ~
Statement of Activities. Such pub- . ;
licatiun must srate that the' com- ••
ment peri~ is to be lS days.
The notice of Farmers Home •
Administration's Housing Preser- :
vation Grant for Fiscal Year 1993 •:
was published in the Federal Regis- • '
ter, February 16.
·

.,+,
••

Weekly observations

GROUND
CHUCK

'"*'

-llil.

I0 LB. PACKAGE

Ai'd.oagli

well'a Super V1lu
Mer. 14 thru Mlr. 20, 11183
LlmH 2 Per Cultomer
!

ot:
,.

Money Ideas

· lO LB. PACKAGE

2. $16.50L SJ690
1..

z

new association which is "a 'natural with offices in Chillicoche, Cir-•
partnership", citing the growing cleville, Lancaster, Logan ,~­
requests for memorialization at a Pameroy and Wellston .
time of both at-need counseling
Jay and Joe Moore have =nlly,;
and pre-need counseling. He fur- completed special training al the'!·
ther noted the two businesses enjoy logan Monument Company Head- •
a long and successful heritage of quaners and are proud 10 offer this :
reliable service.
new memorialization se(vice to lhe :
The McCoy-Moore Funeral area. The monument display can be
Homes have been in continuous seen on Main Street, Vinton. For ·
operation since the late 1_800s, The additional infonnation regarding"
Logan Monument. Co., since 1890, memorialization, call 388-8321 or•;·
and _is presently Southeastern 446-0852.
:·
Ohto s largest monument company
,

RECOGNITION- Jobn E. Saag, center,
own~r/general maoager of Turnpike of GalUpolis, 195 Upper River R011d, rtftives recognition
from Erick L. Collias, left, field repraenlalive
of tbe Ford Motor Company's Cinc:lmuill Dlvl-sloa, ud Craig Stacey, right, 200e manager tor
tbe Ford Motor Company's Parts and Service .

GALLIPOLIS - The Farmers
Home Admini.st.ralio_n,(FmHA)
annoUnces that 11 ts soliCibDg competitive applications und·er its
Housing Preservation Grant (HPG) ·
Program. This announcement is to .
provide public agencies, private
nonP.J:ofit or~anizations and other
eligtble entiues notice of lhe application period and the opponunity
10 &amp;{lillY for the program. Ohio has
recetved $665,000.00 for lhe HPG
Program.
Grant funds may be used to
provide financial assistance 10 eli-

are li(Js 10 Jtmcmbcr.
' I. Measure residue levels on
.f.tJds dill are used brow crops in
.,aaJ ••
w: yean. Com and
t/llell produce 11101e residue than
· . ., !I IS. It iubo less libly 10 be
~ed by walbel' and tillage.
CimR · Le isbeuerdicked imme-

~

Offer

.

~

DOUBLE
EESE P........

.

~

Wood, Mo"ell receive safety awards

DEL MONTE
SPAGHEnl
SAUCE
26.5 oz.

Saus

•.

.

releaseS housmg starts data. More data foUows: con- •.
sumer prices and industrial production on Wcdaes- '•
day, and jobless claims and merchandise trade on :
•
·
Thursday.
•
TICKER:
:.
Changing Leiters from GM to VW
I . Ignacio Lopez de Arrionua, who shook up Gta- •
eral Motors Corp. purchasing practices and saved •
lhe automaker millions, left for .a top executive post . ,
at Volkswagen AG in Germany. ... A fanner mid· ::•
level manager with AT&amp;T, C. Roben Dudgeon of •
New Jersey; was fined more than $260.000 for lnid· ··
ing on inside information about AT&amp;T's merger with : .
. NCR Corp. and its acquisition of Teradatl Corp. ...
Staadard &amp; Poor's Corp. downgraded the debt
American Airllaes, United Airlines and.
-·
Della Air Lines to junk swus:
.:

Lopa's.J: elldeat, are llliolni bere Iller McCoyMoore aaeral Jloma ap-eed to repraeat the
Lopa MOIIUDIHt Complny In the VlatoD aad.
Galllpollurea.
.
.
.

';Lepa'slllla auqer, Joe Moore aad Jay

LUNCH MEAT

·1

The reason: ConsOlidation' since the 1970s has
transformed. a somewhat genteel association ol family-run businesses into an industry dominaled by big
corporations.
Today's finns either are owned by the shareholding pubhc ·- Merrill Lynch &amp; Co.. Salomon Inc. and
Morgan Stanley &amp; Co., for j nsrance .,... or have a
deep-pocketed corporate pareni - · Primerica (Smith
Barney Shearson), General Electric Co. (Kidder,
Peabody . &amp; Co.) and Prudential Insurance Co. of
America (Prudential Securities Inc.) •
COMING Up:
Numbers, Numbers, Numbers
Monday: Automakers announce early March
sales, and banker Roben Altman is scheduled to go
on trial in lhe Bank of Credit and Commerce lnremational case. On Tuesday, the Commerce Depanment
•

GALLIPOLIS - The McCoy·
t&gt;1ooreFuneral Homes, Inc. in Vinton and Gallipolis will be the new
representative for The Logan Mooumen1 Company, Logan, Ohio, in
lhe Vinton and GaUipo)is area, sueceeding Jim and Kim Bush.
Jim Bush will continue to represent The Logan Monument Co.
as the sales manager of the
Pomeroy office.
Dan Boone president of The
Logan Monument Company, ·
expressed he was pleased with the

ARMOUR
TREET

MOUNTAINEER l·LB. ROLL or

Good Only AI Powell'a Super Valu
Offer Good Mar. 14 thru Mar. 20, 1993
limit 1 Per Cualorner

1926. "I find now lhete are names alllhe time that
aren't farililiar to me."
·
In one Of die biggest Wall Street mergen ever,
Primerica Corp.. lhe puent of Smith Barney, bought
Shearson from its puent, American EX)nss Co.
The new megafmn will be called Smith Barney
Shearson, which ~ ·t exaclly roll off lbe tongue,
panicularly when one views it as a combination of
erstwhile rivals. Almost li~e naming a fum Hatfield
t&gt;1cCoy &amp; Co.
But mergers have been pan of Wall S~~eet almost
since traders swapped slocks under a buttonwood
tree 201 years ago. In today's induslry, it's almost
t inevirable Hatf'~eld and McCoy will team up at some
point.

I

SUPERIOR'S FRANKIE
\

hand," said John Herzog, chainn•i of Herzog Heine
.t oeduld, fpundcd by his Callier as Herzog .t Co. in

Localfqneral home new representative)
for The Logan Monument Company I

$349

1
·
s, 39

Rump Roasts........-18.
ECKRICH

$ 99

$ 179

Section D
•

298 SECOND ST.

.

1rimts ... ~entinel

..

'

a

0.

•

~

MYSTERY PARM- Tlill 7~~=
. farm, ftaturtcl lly tile Mtlll Soli aad
CDiiltl'ntkill Diltrlct, 11 located -nrare Ia
MtiJI Couaty. Individuals wlslilaa to partldpate 1D tbe weekly contat may do 10 byptMIDI
the f1rm'1 OWIItr. Jut ••II, or drop olr your
auess to the Dallt Seatlael, 111 Coart St.,
Pomeroy, Olilo, 4576!1, or die Galllpalll Dally
Trlliuae, UJ Tblrd Ave., Galllpolla, Olilo,
45631, aad you may wla 1 $5 priH from the

Ohio Valley· l'liblllliiDI Co. LeliYe JO!ir, u - .
iiddrell ud teltpboae . . .her wllli ,._ card
or letter. No teltpb01t ea!ll willie
AI
· conltllt entries diould lit taraed In- paper ofllce by 4 p.m. each Wedlitlday, ,Ia Clle
of 1 tie, the wlaaer will Itt cboaea
lciltei'J.
Next week, a GaJDa Couaty fara '11'1 !lie ,.._
tured by tbe Galllli Soil Mid Water CODienatloa

acc:e&amp;td

IlL

D~

•: ·
,
, •••
:':

' ••

•.;
:
~

I

�•

'''·
r

March 1 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

' March 1~, 1993

Workers shocked by proposed
shutdown of military center

NEW BODY SHOP • Larry's Body Shop is
now open ror busln~ss. The shop is located at
2046 Addison Pike, Gallipolis, approximately
two miles from State Route 7 in Addison. 'The
shop features computerized estimates, quality
work, nber glass work, complete repair and

rennishing, frame stralghten&lt;ing, ·and custom
sandblasting. The shop building is 40' X 165'
and is owned by Larry Whobrey Sr. and Rick
Whobrey. It is maaaged by Harold Smith. Other
employees include Mark Tillis and Jason Whobrey.

Nqtives .bury remains shipped
in crate from
Cincin"'ati
.
.

By ROSANNE PAGANO
AJiociated Press Writer
~ ANCHORAGE ; Alaska
Mummified remains or an Alaska
Native woman arid child were
returned to Point Hope where
elders gathered for a graveside service and hymn-singing in lnupiaq.
Elise Patkotak. spokeswoman .
for lhe North Slope Borough, said
Friday the remains arrived at Barrow on Wednesday in a sealed
crate, sent air freight from Cincinnati. Burial was Thursday.
.. Point Hope on the Chukchi Sea
is 325 miles southwest of Barrow
ind among the oldest settlements in
North America.
- ,Remains· were in possession of
· an Ohio family whose ancestor
'pparently removed them ·from a
cave at Cape Lisburne around the

tum of the Century and placed them
in a traveling "peep show." :
. Elders in the Point Hope community were upset to learn bodies
had been removed and disPlayed.
Literature promoting the
mwnmy di'splay claimed lltey were
900 years old. But the Cincinnati
Museum of Natural History, whieh
aided in the repatriation, said Friday that had not been verified; The
mummies apparently were pre-.
served .naturally as ihey froze and
dehydrated.
Patkolak•. among 50 people who
anended the Episcopal church service at Pointliope. said the village
had been waiting.
"There was a sense or relief,"
she said. "I think the community
felt that this was one more unhappy
chapter we can now close.' '

JACKSON CO. LIVESTOCK MARKET
Ripley, WV
Man:b4,1993
. SLAUGHTER STEERS:
SUildanl
·SLAUGHTER HEIFERS:
. Good a: Cboic:e
SLAUGHTER COWS:
Commercial
Utility
. Canner a: Cutter
-Bulls over 1.000 lb.
VEAL:
Choice a: Prime
. 226-265 lb.
HOGS:
190-240
240-260
Boars
~ Pigs (by head)
40-60lb
YEARLING STEERS:
. Good &amp;: choice
,600-700
700.1: up
·Feeder Bulls
YEARLING HEIFERS:
' Choice &amp;: good
600-750
STEER CALVES:
' Good &amp; choice
•30().4()()
~500

' 500-600
, BULL CALVES:
Good .1: choice
~500

500-600
HElPER CALVES:
Good &amp;: choice
30().4()() .

4()().500 .
Cows &amp; Calves (by head)
Cows (by head)
BABY CALVES (by head):
' Beef
Dairv

fAl.()().{j3.00
6J.()().{j5.00
48.()().54~00

44.00-49.00
38.0044.75
54.00-66.00
80.()().85.00
80.()().95.00
38.00-43.00
40.00-42.00
30.()().32.50
16.()().25.00
20.00-40.00
8().()().97.50
68.()()..79.00
62.()().74.00
55.00-64.00

(

Remains were buried in a sixfoot grave, excavated in snow and
permafrost with heavy equipment.
C. Wesley Cowan, archaeology
CUI1jtOr at the Cincinnati museum,
said he was contacll:d in December
by a local family who wanted to
relllm lhe mummified remains. ·
Cowan said the repatriation was
a limited loss 1!1 archaeology since
their origin was uncenain.
"We didn't have any idea where
they were from, other than that
th&lt;
ey were from Alaska. We had
ACROSS
only the word of one person now dead - who could have found
1 Destitute
!hem anywoore," Cowan said.
7 Deface
Federal law governing repatria10 Scottish river
tion of Native and Indian artifacts
13 Thinly
covers items in public collections
scattered
but does not compel return of relics
19 Foot lever
in private holdings.
&lt;
20 Mountain on
Cowan said returning the mumCrete
mies was ''the right thing to do."
21 ·'-FlY Away"
"After they had been touring
22 Harbingers
around and stored the way they
24 Eagle's nest
were, it was time to take. care of
25 Sodium symbol
.. &lt;lhese lhings," he said.
27 Hypothetical
·Patkotak said photographs of the
force
crate's contents had been received
28 Early morn
but there was no effort to ungeal
29 "-Law"
30
Retinue
the box to verify remains were
31
Principal
there.
32Minor
Villagers were dismayed !here
34
Electrified
was no casket.
·. particle
Patkotak said the crate was
36 Obstructs
interpreted as a lack of respect.
38 Within: comb.
Cowan said the museum would
form
have ,complied with wishes for a
39 Fruit drink
casket but he said it had not been
40 Running
discussed.

so:

'·

not that bad because .I've still got
my job," he said.
The electronics center. which
was established in 1962, is located
at Gentile Station, a 165-acre complex or buildings lhat houses other
military agencies such lhe Defense
Fina~e Accounting Service and
the Defense ContraCt Audit Agency.
Those agencies, which employ
about 700 workers, are tenants at
Gentile . .Garrett said that if DESC
is closed, he assumes lhe other tenants would have to relocate.
Rep. Tony Hall, D-Ohio, whose
district includes DESC, said the
announcement caught him by surprise.
"EconomiCal!¥• certainly it will
hun,'.' he said.
Hall said he will fight the proposa1 if the Pentagon can't justify
· ll &lt;
:
''They're going to have to prove
to me that this is in lhe best interests of the nation, the. national
&lt;lefense and the deficit;''lfall said.
DESC has an annual payroll of
S84 million, with the other tenants
pushing it over SIOO million a year.
Kettering, a suburb of Dayton,
receives $1.4 million a year in
income taxes from D~C WO!Icers.
phout 4 percen1 or its budget.
"Obviously, it's goinf 10 have a
vel); signifiCant impact,' said City
Manager Steve Husemann. ''Our
first effort is to resist the closure
and try to stop iL"
Also targeted for closure is the
Dayton office of the Defense lnfor-

Winter
weather
blasts
United
·
S
tates
.
•

•

mation Technology Service Organization. The data-processing center employs 99 workers, all of them
civilian.
Maj. Tom I,.aRock, a Department of Defense spokesman in
Washington, said the center may be
consolidated with,similar centerS to
form a larger organization that
could be located in Dayton.
Aspin also recommended movin~ the 178th Fighter Group of the
Au National Guard from Springfield-Beckley Airport in Springfield to Wrigl!l-Pauerson Air Fo!te
Base in Dayton.
·
The !78th employs 300 fulitime and 1,000 p8:rt-time workers.
Springfield offic1als say the unit is
critical to airport operations
because it provides 24-hour-a-daystaffing, air traffic control and runway maintenance.

Labor Party claims
victory in election

.'

.

SYDNEY, Australia (AP) Prime Minister Paul Keating
claimed viaory for his Labor Piny
government today in 8 hard-(ought
national election.
· With about three-fourths of the
vote counted, 'analysts predicted
that the government would retain
power by maintaining or incrllBSing
1\S seven:seat majority in the House
over lhe opposition Liberal-National coalition. The vote breakdown
was not immediately available.

.

"

·'

they abaildon their vehicle on Interstate 20 west
fll Atlanta Saturday after it slid orr tbe highway
during a m~Yor blizzard. (AP) , ·

.Republicans: Politics
drove selection of
bases to be closed

41 Adorned
44 Danson 10
46 Rooky hill
47- Mans
48 Harvest goddess
49 Blunder .,

50 One, no malter
whiCh
51 Female ruff
53 Concerning
54 Marinaro of

"Sisters"
55
57
59
60
61
62

Tidings
CastorPigpen
Alight
Spielberg 10
Cylindrical .
64 "The - of St.
Mary"
66- citizen
68 Pallor
70 Regions
72 Contend
73 l!lallorm
.74 Guido's high

nole
77 HeariQg organ
78 Having a notched
edge
60 Gratifies
82 Males

83 Cool&lt; lllowly
85- floss
86Seesaw
87 "Body88 Succor
900bserve
91 Spread for drying
92 Tolal
93 Ca~e mix ·
96 Depression
99 II lllcldy
101 Alntatones

..

neighbOr
104 Frozen water
105 Dine
107 AI pr_,l
108 Pedal digit
109 Sailor: colloq.
110 Vast age
111 Army off.
112 Baker's products
114 Dlaturbancea
116 Wise person
117 Stewart of musk:
118 Therefore
120 Tropical fruit
122 HY'Oil
123 Prlell's
,...tments
124 Equally
125 Exist
127 Sun god
129 Specks
131 Raills
133 Hebrew month
134 Father
- 138 Chsldean City
137 Spigot
139Veaeel
140 "The Burning ·- "
141 Stalemate
· 142 Bone
143 Hurry
145 Crimson
147 Quality of
being unused··
151 Armed conflk:l
152 Those ;,oldlng
office
153 Twirled
155 Dry. as wine
157 Uh
158 M~mful
159 Mine ..,;n
160Near
181 Football's
Slmpsoo
163 George185 Scolf
187 Yea: Sp.
'

168 Teutonic deity
169 A right-hand
plge
·171 Handle
172 Performed
173 VIlli organ
175 Food prdgrim
176 Gra,...tone
177 "The Wonder - "
178 - Slaughter

..

· DOWN
1 Feared
2 uncamy .
3 Fruit~ lutlle
4 Poem
5 Negative prefix
6 Lairs .
71ngelaiD ·
8 Full
9 Wlrelell set
10 Roa or Riggs
11 "Nightmare"
Street
' 12 Spanish article
13 Pretense
14 Hebrew tetter
15 Mr. Carney
16 Steak order
11 Incline
18Newapaper
executives
19 Mexican dish
23 Nighttime noises
26 Alalltant
29 .. _Bola"
32 Replied
• 33 Danllh tltand
35 Word of cholca
36 Negate
37 "-In the
Mirror"
40 Muelcal dl'lmU
42 Babfl bed
~3 Mlkll lllc:e
·45 Neg.otea
48 lrldlvlduat
52 Old name lor
Tokyo
56 Cubic meters
58 Smooth
· 59 Slumbered
60 Rented
~2 Men8CIIa
63Mertted
65 !loman 51
68 Decl8reo .
67~1omlnd

68 RornM bronze
, 89 FOIIOWI Frt.

..

71 Glossy fabriC
73 Colonize
75 Meadow
76 Emmet
79 Tantalum symbol
81 Behold!
84 Intellect
87 Center
89 Profound
92 Certain
93 Tom Hanks ftlm
94 High card
95 .Foray
97 Neither
98T-

1

•'
•'

•''

•

•
•
•
••'

..'.
~

.-

eo Estrnce

1001-ln
· Aegean Sea
101 From - to riches
102 Game at card8
103 Flnllh
106 Alhlel~ group
109 Flaps
113 Halt
115 .F aroe Islands

' .·""~ ·t=i··........,

'• ' .

~,..,.~!&lt;; .

SUNSHINE STATE - .Kim and Jake
Driscoll enjoy an early mornin1 snow fi&amp;bt in
Pensacola, Fla., Satarday a.a temperatures

~lrtwlnd

116 Winter vehicle
119 MorMI
121 Kind of collar
123 Matures
124 Lincoln nickname
125 cOllege treasurer
126 Buret forth
128 Swias river
130 Without end
132 " - of Malice"
133 ..:. conditioner
134 Cogitates
135 Declare
136 Footlike part
141 Youngster .
144
tetter
146 Amounll owed
146 Squander
149 Nickel symbol
150 Compolltlon
151 Sela and Rachel
152 Malden loved '
by zeus
154 Ma111orandum
156 Rudely concise
156 PrQIIMI
159 Hold on property
1821ota
164 Female ruff
166 Airline Info
167'Haggar2 herOine
170 Roman 101
.
174 O'Toole 10

dropped below freezing in ihe Florida panban·
die and brought unusual SD4!W fall. (AP)

a.-

By JOHN NOtAN
Alloclated Preu Writer
CINCINNATI
While
Democrats go against the odds for
the congressional seat Republican
Willis Grtldison held for 18 years, a
GOP official says the changing
mood of 'IOten is a warning not to
take an election for granted,
"After the presidential election
last year, I'd nivu say 'neVer' to
anytllinjt," said Gteg Vehr, executive dUCciCI o( the Himilton Coun·
ty Republican Party. "But it would
be a major shock if Republicans
were not able to hold onto that

•

y

•

•

ing such a politically aippled candidate that it would breathe some
life into the Democrats' campaigns," R~thenberg said. "But
ll's an uphill battle. This is a
Republican dislrict.••
One of the most recognizable
n~~J~~eS among the Republicans is
former U.S. Rep. Bob McEwen,
who was ousted ~m his 6th District seat last Navember during liis
12th year as a congressman. The
6th District is adjacent to the 2nd
DistricL
Las~ year, McEwen had to
answer to criticism involving his
166 overdrafts on lhe House bank.
This year, McEwen has had to fend
off allegalions that his congressionat office was used for catnpaign
purposes. in violation of ethics

The Hamilton County GOP
refused to let Loman request its
endorsement, ultimately given to
Portman.
.
.
TheotherRepubhcancandidates
are Garland Crawford, • ·Loveland
'· teal estate appraiser; and Bob
Dorsey. an Anderson Township
trustee.

.

.

The Democrats have little name
recognitiOn. But tliey say they are
Washington outsiders who would
bring a fresh approach to Conpess~
Sharonville lawyer Lee Hombergerwll!llhei~.L..Democrat"'

money raised, with
I $15,000.
seat." '
Some of lhe Democrats said thex
Seven Republicans and five
expecll:d 10 spend less than $1.000.
Democrats are on the ballot in
In contrast, Republican I.
Tuesday's special primary in
Buchen, McEwen and Portma~
Ohio's 2nd District. The district
together. .reporte~ more tharj
consists of part of Hamilton Coun- .ruJes.
$800,000 m campa1gn lllll';JCY b~
ty and Cincinnati as well as rural
McEwen has avoided aiticizing late February. Portman estuna~
Warren, Brown, Clermont and his oppouents and instead latJICWI last week that his ~ had grown
Adams counties.
.
President Clinton as a big spender to IIIQIC than $500,000 from 1.500:
The~~ i&gt;einoerai to win·areg- and taxer.
·
•~ contributors.
.. .
·:
utar election in the district was
Former Bush White House
Horn~rger cn11c1zed Portm!!!ll
Joseph Dixon in 1936.. He was lawyer.-itob Portman and home for accepUng more than the Sl,~
ousted in 1938.
,
builder Jay Buchen have been hit- allowable limit _from l4 contri~-,
· "Anything can happen in a spe- ling each other hard in campaign 10!'8·.Portman Slid he .•s compl)'l!'g
cial election," said county Demo- commercials. Neither has held w1th a Federal Elecuon Comm1s-'
cratic Chainnan Thomas Luken. In elected office before.
sion requirement to either g~v~
March 1974, he won a special elecPortman's ads .said he was lhe . !Jack the amount ove~ $1,000 With~
tion to fill the unexpired term of only candidate who would not CUI· ID .M days or spend II on the eatn·:
Williall! Keating, a Republican. Social Security benefits. Buchen ~~~~ for ~ May ~ general elec-:
Luken tllen lost in November to said he woilld not cut those bene- uon if he Wins lhe Jllm&amp;ry.
•
Gradison.
fits either.
Democratic candidate Thomas
Gradison was re-elecled to nine
Buchert accused Portman of Chandler, a Cincinnati hospital•
consecutive terms, including last representing foreign interests while technician ~ho lost to Gradiso~ ·
November. He resigned Jan. 31 to.• working in the mid-1980s at the last .Year. sa1d Portman would be:
become a lobbyist "for the bealth Washington . law firm Patton, beholden to Cincinnati billionairo
insurance industry.
Boggs &amp;: Blow. Portman said he Carl Lindner. Lindner, his family;
His resignation set up special did no work for foreign govern- hoard members and employees of
primary and general elections to ftll ments at the fum. ·
his companies have given Port
the Jemainder of his two-year term.
. Anolhel Republican, anti-ahorman's eatn~ at least $33,750. 1
Th~ Democrats might need the
lion advocate Ken Callis, ran tetePorunan said Lindner has giveq
help of Republican infijlhtin$ to · vision ads that showed aborted money to many candidates.
win in lhe May 4 general electiOn, fetuses and a woman screaming
The other Democrats are Ra~
said Stuan Rothenberg. editor and aflllr a nightmare in which a child's Mitchell, business broker froDI
publisher of Rothenberg Political voice said: "Mommy, please don't Miami Township in Montgomery
Report. The non-pnsan Washing- kill me."
County; Ralph Applqate, Colum;
ton newsletter follows House and
Another GOP candidate. Van bus, bUsiness agent for an llchi~
Loman, was a Ku Klux Klan grand and Robert D. McDilda Sr., Cincin;
Se~ :f:tsiolely dependent dragon
until he left the group in nati, advertising salesman and 1986
on the Republican primary bein&amp; so 1985 to run for the Cincinnati City U.S. Senate candidate in his native
divisive, ~ fractured and produc- Council. He was defeated.
Alabama.
:

Search begins for perpetrators
of massive bomb·wave
.··
ARCTIC CAPITOL ...... A be fll truc:b with
snowplows r.usb anow acrou the Memorial
Bridge head ng trom Washington lato ArllnJI·

BOMBAY,India (AP)- Police
have detained a suspect in the waw
of bombings that killed more than
300 people in Bombay; a senior
otfJCcr said S811lrday.
The su~t was carryinJ two
~· wd P: Chalaavony, the
city s second-ranking police officer.
· ton,Va., as snow fell in the Wuhington area Sat· .,
He said police w~ IICirthing
urdily. the major storm battered the area
for other suspects in Friday's dev·
astating blasts, liut he refused to
snarling roads and closing museums. (AP)
say how many. He aiJo declined to
dip=Jor other delaila of tbe identlov

_&gt;Groups ~ay U.N. aid h;urting Somal.i farmers

•

ADDIS ABABA, Ethi~ (AP)
- Somalis and relief officials sail!
Friday that U.N. food aid to Somalia is' flooding the market and driving farmers out of business. ·
H9lbrook Arthur, head of the
U.N. Wo~ld Food Program in
Somalia, said the situation needed
studyi"3 and that he would be willing to.buy from the farmers:
, "We need 10 linow wltere there
:; are swplUI. crops and 'whether the
. .-,cc local . . .~~-~~
-_-;:'thorn : 19.· ~noThir il'estlnatlon, ~
· Anh• said.
,
The diacussion came on the IOC·
--ond dar of a conference· to coro. plete 1 $166 million plan to rebuild
a nation shattered by civil war and
famine.
The U.N .-drafted proposal
would allot all of the 1110ney Ibis
. ·year. Most ofit would go to Pro·
. ..

..

.
:·
'

I

·:

.'
•

orr tbe roads Saturday ai saciw drifts relldled
three feet or more. Tile Gallla 'County Slllrlfr'a
Department declared 1 saow emer~e: at 11
a.m. Saturday ud reported county
were
lmpi&amp;Sible lad lreac:ber0111.

Winning Democrat will face
uphill ·battle in·Congressional race
'

.

See Answer to Puzzle on Page C-2 ·

PILING .UP· AI fll3 p.m. Satarday, SDOW
measuring approximately 1&lt;1 incbes)ad piled ujt,
in downtown GallipOI!a. l'llotci allcm wu tHen
on 800 bloclr. fll'l'lllrd Awa~. Loalutllorldes
were urging al --emerJieDCJ velldles tu stay

lol';,~~kl

SUNDA¥ PUZZLER

By DONNA CASSATA
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Republicans are accusing Defense Secretary Les Aspin and the Clinton
65.()()..75.00
administration or playing politics
61.()().. 70.00. . with base closings by sparing some ·
facilities to benefit congressional
Democrats.
85.()()..97 .00
90.()().108.00
The Defense Department on Friday
released Aspin's list, which
80.()()..97.50
80.()()..88.00
recommends closing '31 installations and reducing operations at
134 others. Among the hardest hit
80.()()..87.50
an: California, South Carolina and
78.()().86.00
Florida.
65.()()..78.50
"lJnreasonable, unjustified and
•
()().88.00
outrageous," was the reaction or
75.()()..86.00
Sen. Strom Thurmond of South
70.()(). 79.00
Carolina, who had invoked seniciri4 75.00-875.00
ty to become ranking Republican
300.()()..785.00
on the Armed Services Committee
to look out for his state's military
90.()()..205.00
interests.
South Carolina would lose
30.00-150.00
8,332 military jobs and 9,111 civilian jobs if the list goes into effect.
Among the bases targeted are the
Charleston Naval Shipyard and the
city's naval hospital and slation. :
"It could bring economic devastation to the area," said Thurmond's colleague, Sen. Ernest F.
banks on 'me agency's problem list Hollings, D,S.C.
Nationwide, the closings and
declined dramatically over the past
realignments will cut 57,000 civilyear, from 1,016to 787.
Hove said the agency's projee- ian and 24,000 military jobs from
tion for 120 failures this year lhe Pentagon's parroll over the sixwould be reduced in light ofTues· year implementabon period, Aspin
said.
day's report.
California would lose 16,560
Banks used their earnings last
military
and 15,187 civilian jobs,
year ro build up !heir capital cush·
but
the
news could have been
ions against losses. The cushion
worse
for
the state. The military
stood at 7.52 percent of assets at.
services
reportedly
had recomthe end or 1992, compared with
mended
McClellan
Air
Force Base,
6.15 percent a year earlier. It was
the highest capital ratio in 27 yean. the Long Beach Naval Shipyard
· Tuesday's ligures undersc01e a and the Presidio, an Army post in
·
point that President Clinton has Monterey, for shutdown.
been making - that bilnk tendlng
Those facilities were not on the
has been falling off even thouah list, however, and Republicans
bank profits have been rising. Busi- cried rout.
ness and industrial loans feU 4 per·~It is obvious that changes were
cent over lhe year, consumetloans made to lhe list of baSes in Califorfell 1.6 percent while at the same nia, which supported President
time investments and securities Clinton in the recent election, and
jumped 10.7 percent.
which has two Democratic senaClinton plans on Wednesday 10 tors," Thurmond said. "This sugannounce a package of regulatory, Jests !hat politics played some part
changes designed to spur bank m a decision which should be total·
lending, particularly to small busi- ly separate from any whisper ·of
nesses.
partisanship." ·
.

FDIC says banks earn
record profits in 1992
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nation's commercial banks earned
a record $32.2 billion last year, the
government said Tuesday.
The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp said the country's 11,461
commercial banks earned $8.2 billion in the fourth quarter, pushing
profits for the full yw well past
lhe old record of $24.8 billion, set
in 1988.
Last year, banks earned $17.9
biUion.
.
The earnings were largely the
product of favorable interest rate
conditions for blnb - a wide gap
between the rates they pay to
depositors and ra~ banks earn on
loans and other investments.
Tuesday's report prompted
FDIC offiCials to all but declare the
banking industry's aisis over.
· "These developments mean that
it becomes more and more unlikely
lhe public will have to pick up the
bill for bank failures," said
Andrew C. Hove Jr., acting FDIC
chairman.
The number of commercial

By JAMES HANNAH
·
Assoc:iated Press Writer
KETil!RING _ Workers at lhe
Defense Electronics Supply Center
say !hey were blindsided by a Penlagon proposal to close the center,
leaving some pondering their
futures and others Just plain numb.
"I don't lhink 11's really hit. It's
not sinking in," said Melinda
Miller, an inventory manager at
DESC.
"Everybody's
kind
of
shocked," added June Wilhite, also
an inventory manager. "We just
have to wait and see what's decided. Somelhing could chal!ge." .
DESC, which buys and supplies
electronic spare parts such as transistors to all branches of the mili· ~, employs $lui 2,100 workers.
lt 1s among U.S. military installalions Defense Secret.an' Les Aspin
proposed closing in a list released
Friday.
Marine Brig. Gen. Larry Garren,
DESC commander, said the center
must be closed wilhin six years if
Aspin's recommendation is adopted. '
"Everybody was surprised this
morning, obviously, when we fOt
the word," he said. "But they ve
taken it in stride.''
Most of the workers woulcl be
given 'lhe option of transferring to
the Defense Consuuction Supply
Center in Columbus, he said.
Tim Randolph, an, item manager
at DESC, said he would move to
Columbus to&lt;keep his job.
.
'.'It's sinking in. th!'t it's .really

'
Sunday Tlmes Sentlnei--Page--43

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

•I

......

~

·~

-:-·

... ,., ..

"--:'"

,

•.

..
h

":'

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. . . . . ~ ...

jects aimed at helping Somalis feed
Somali factions were told
themselves, find jobs and
their Thursday that failu~e to make
children l!ack to school. .
progress toward formmg ~~ least
But Somali ~esentatives and local governments ·and ending v1~
some private relief organizations lence could jeopardize aid and
said continued massive shipments prompt some tehef groups to pull
of food aid are unden:utting farm- out
.
.
ers, discoungina"them from proThe United States 1s leadmg ~n
ducing and prolon11ing Somalia'a international effortrthat be$an m
dependence on foretgn help.
December to secure Somalia and
· :· 'T.he poor farmer who has a p~tect fOO!I for. lhe starving. _The
to ·plow his far;m Clllnot,t~t Yn.1te&lt;! NI!'JODS 1s to take over the
.~ ~ IAl cover hiS co.#~· . IS operauon m May.
.
·will kill hi!Jt," A~ ~m1 of the
On Friday! three Belg1an solSomali Democratic Alliance told · diers were k1lled and twQ were
the conference.
wounded when a jeep hit a land
The thJ;eo-day oonfere!'CC Wraps mine west of the .som~l~ pon J?f
up S811lrday when the Untied States Klsmayu, the BelgUIII m1htary sa1d
and other donor nations announce in Brussels.
their aid pledges. Officials are
That brought the !Ieath toll
tying fundina to the success of among Bela ian soldiers to four
peace talks that ~sin Monday in since they took Qver command of
the Ethloplin capital. ·
the allied opention In Kismayu
from U.S.~ late~ week.

send

uactor

......"_f··..--·· •.·.-, ........ . .. ---.
' ... '·:

·-·~ ...........

~

'

......\. ,' "'..-· ---··

...

·~.

~of,tbe man ~ · tOday wcptU,
1101e ~ loolted "like a foreigner."

No one clalmocl l'CipOIIIibility
for the atllek, which lt:llled more

than 300 people and wounded
about 1,100, according to news
qencies. The possible motiv~ an;
.niiJnerous in a country that has witnessed ethnic, religious and nation- ·
alist violence in 46 years of inde-

--- ~ ···

clashes that rocked Bombay for:
nine days in January, but .no inci-:
dents were reported over9ight:
There was no evidence to liillc the
attackS to religious rioting .

pendence.

.Prime Minister P.V. Namsimha
Rao, after touring the devastated
city center. pledged that India
would traclt down lhe killers.
''Whether the trail leads to
p,laces within the country or outstele, the government is prepared,
leidy - defamined to follow it,"
he liild • a news c:anfaence today.
Oflieials feacl the bomb wave
'tould reignite the Hindu-Muslim

Dem()nstratjon planned Monday
By CONNIE WJfiTE
Gallla Cou•t; sa.co
• OAUJPOLIS ·.The Oallii Soil
and Water Conservation District
. _has a. line or &lt;equlpmenJ that can
.. belp y0q ma1111e residue on not
!JII)y your II!&amp;!!.IY ~ lllld but
on ocher land u ~1.
· ·
Our newell piece or equipment
is a !ohn Deere Di*-cbl~el plow.
The plow has 3" twilled shanb.
Also al'ailable. are two Tye ao-till
drills. O:~e is a16 112' dllft and the
other is a 10' drill•
On Mareh IS the Gallll SWCD
wiU hold a demopsiJation With the
·new dlsk-chi9el plow. The demon,stratlon will be1held at the Rob
'

..
...

Massie Famt on B~ck Ridge Road.
The location is about one mile
north on State Route 160 of the
State Route 35 and 100 junction.
W~h. for sips. The .demonstra·
tion wtll be from 2 to 4 p. m. In
cue.of ilielement weather. the date
wiD lie triOVCCI iii.Maiai 22 from 2
p. m. until • p. at the same
lOCation. IntereSted individuals may
want to call the office to verify
:f:~l.~.not the domons!r&amp;tion

m.

Por more infonnllion on tesidue
manaaement, no-till planting or
CD111erV11ion till
call the GaiUa
County SCSJSW"g) office 11 4-46-.
8617.
'

,,

'

Public Notice
NOtiCE TO CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO

. . . .I.

DEMAliiEHTOf
TIWII!'OATA110N

Colul'nbue, 01110
ColllriDI .....

~=~T
.......
prap••• ". ..
received ot tile otllo8 of lie

of tho Ohio
Deportmenl ol T -

,!

Dlreotar

'

porlotlon, Columlluo, Olllo1
until 10:00 A.ll., Ohio

,,

St•nd8rd Time, Tultdlf,
Tu•dor,lllonhM,1-.tor
•~nr~•
'ln:

......

lillllo C:.Unty, Olllo fer "
Improving Rootlo 111d
Foelllll-. lleaoolft CNek ~
Courity ,.... no tfllWro ,... ·

~~.~':# ~....

Jl

aot for
c-lllotl011 of IIIIo - "
aholf Ill • 1t1 1ort1t In 11a
"Tho dolo

bidding............

.. '

Plona Md lpealllcllllona
oreonllalnlheD J 1t 1111
of Tr•~ M1n 8ftll 111e
~=:. D1ntot Dqutr
~~~iii WRAY,
DlrwlorofTe&amp;£rl I I
lURCH 1~ 1'1, t~

. .

,J.

•1.
••
,;,

'

�,.

l . ,. •

.

..

.. ( ..

..

)

..

.

...

·.

.

'

•

f'egl 04

wv

Sunday Times-Sentinel

GiveaWay

4

11

Help wanted

11

Help Wantlld ··

21

March 14,1993

Buiii'WII
Oppol1unlty

31 Hamel for Sale
Jt

,.__, _.toAuotrollon

C:.':..,

':"~
· ,::,~ 011"':::
-4 ••droDM t'IDullrt on p~~wed

.........

-.. oily..............

.
_
- · 22.'11
..
,~~~~~. -11-2111.

-

.._ &amp;niomi*Y -

on

17.1-. Ill\. 'With lw'JI!OIIIna Pool _ . . . And
13

PubiC Notice

=.-,..~...'!'!'

• S.Nobvry Townohlp will 6
Lost &amp; Found
hold a Special Mooting =::-...,.;.::--:--:---,.

Mondlly, U..oll 15, 1M3 11 7 LOST port daa. -n,
P.M. at tho Townahlp .._.to HofDoa. l i l t Building on Rockaprlngo ~.........,; 011 fll, "·31M -

'l-'o Pomeroy, Ohio.

(•) 14, 1tc

7

Yard Sale
Rt•ol Estate

........... Recenttr R.m:

~· Prico: SM,IOO, 114-

Announcements

1--"

AllrOII'_a_lllng In

Tllll To

ltD NIW3piiMir IIU)IId to
the FOCIOIII Fair Housing Act

l!ouro iOayfll

- .-

ol1968 .wlildi -

lolutllul OlrfiHI 1-tclo.-"
Ell.11-v...
· Uniolw
h." Pw
..
Co.llln.
(10:11--

~

llltogal

to ..,..... ·anr prelerenco,

baled on race, cotor, r&amp;llgk»n,
MK l~mlllol11lhil or IIIIIOMI
o~n. or lhjlnlen:lon to

Glvuway

-Ina_,,-

Wlnled

To

luy:

wliclils In vloliitlon ot'tho

LlrrJ Llvolr.IIWII-11303.

this IIOWIPIP*
are ...,...,.. on an.equal.

otJIIOOUnltr """"·

Cal
-

Employment Serv1ces

.... S,rocueo .,... dopt,
llall

..

--

.. ..WHoo.,u.t,

brtnll F-81 Home ond

ii ..,.

lrlendo

and

'-lg..-.on who •pr...ed
iholr oymp..,y lhrouglr

*'•

prlyoro, ..........
. , . and loocl and
llnyono oleo wo moy hove

iorvc-f.

would II ke · to
ihank everyone for

{oocl, . flowers, and
.

Help Wanted

ON 45133;

"POSTAL JOBS"

with to expr811

pur elncere thanks to
••
our
relatives,
frlenda and neighbors
tor all their klndneu
and sympathy during
the lllnoas and duth
~f our beloved Harold
F. HilL Special thinks
lo tltl Gallla County
'Sheriff
Department
lnd VFW Poet 4484,
Rev.
WIUard
Blankenship; hla wife
and daughter Becky.
Al10 thllnka to all his
friends who acted as
P.llbearer'L
The
flimlly would also Ukl
to thank the Pleaunt
Valley Hoepltal, ICU
jlepartment, and all
fila Doctors for e~re
jlurlng hla lllneu.
Alta, Sieve, Cindy,

Dennis, Tiffany,
Stephanie.

, We

would

I,

toro,

Clottui, llolntananco. For
An AlllillcatiOfl And Eam ,,..
formatiOn, Colt 141e.731...nl

Ell. 1'1432. I A.ll. To I P.M.
Da,O.

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

"AVON' ALL AREAS! Shiro ,....r 2
limo wnh uo. You'H tovo tho
compiny. · - - ·
1 Lodtoo Who -lei Uloe
Sou Avon Cal 11+441-3!!11.

To

AVON I304-tlii-MZI.
All - · I Shl~oy
SpoaN,
Ortvoro: Sovotol Doll~
Drtvon NMdocl For l:lght C.O.D.
Muot Hno Own Aulo, K -

Ana Ext......, - · Cull Paid

Dour. ApJ&gt;III

1n Poroon At: 410
SocOnd A..,.,., suno 102,
Rut Eotata.

Baker, and all friends
and family who
oHered food, fiq.WBlll
and condole'-nces
during the death of
Bub. Your
thoughfutness Is
greatly appreciated.

I am home now and
would like to tha1nk I
the
all
Therapists,
Doctors
In
Center
Hospital
their care
after
accltliant In Janual'lf·l
also to
and
the
prayers,
I nc•wers and cards. ,
Ida Mae Thompson
212 Shaver Road
OH45620

like to thank
~VERYONE for contributions,
gifts, cards and prayers, especial·
·1y the VFW Post of Tuppers
Plains for the shower, due to the
•oss of our home to fire.
·
Gratefully and Sincerely,
Rufus &amp; Beulah Clint!
&amp; Lltt.le Chris

ILOVE MY
OLD IAJ)Y

'f

r

In Memory ,.

In Loving Memory of
LOWELL A. GREENE,
""'o departed this life
r"
March 16, 1978 ·and
WEALTHA GREENE,
h depa ad hi I
w o
rt I ife
Merch 10, 1!180.
Who gave ustha bast
of their llv•.
Who cherlahecfv our

aecreta, our aorrows, our atrlle,
Who taught us to
love,
Who taught us to
pray,
Our Parente In
Heaven
God bleaa them
today.
Loved and sadly
mllaed by ~ughere,
Naomi Wilcoxon &amp;
Irene Shaffer and
famlllu.

. . . Apple -

..

~--Jr. ~-·
~ 7-

ACRE MIICILS:

iiili ..~-':.'"'to~
lind;

"::;=.r•
...
. .

and ·ltllto.
- · 1414-ns.

.1541;At
Coli lor

Real Estate

.wanted

f!l'

IIQt, ......

Good

I

... 121.15;__ _ "Zii.Solo

Public Sale
&amp; .A uction

=

Or 4 Mil• 0u1 141

Plu.

Sat. March 20, 1993

Loc:ated on St. Rt. 1241n Portland,
Ohio. Consignments will be taken
from noon Ill 8 p.m. on Fri. March 19
and Sat. til 11 a.m.
Farm Machinery &amp; Misc. Items. .
Dan Smith ~ Auctioneer 157-68-1344
John Sm!th • Apprlentlce 15518

GE•wi*IUIIIIChlnoSM0. 304I'ItHIII.

.Postlve 10

RefrashmltntB
"Not rooponoib .. lor ocolclonto or lose ol Propolly"

Rentals

Public Sale.
&amp; Al,lctlon

RMII: 3 llodroom - . I lin.
Hotzw -pltal, 2 lllloo From
·Contonory. 1200 Dapaott, t210
Allll. 114'2Sio~.
· · .

'J

'"

""'- tar Rent- 2
Raol,. ...... 114 -

n

or'ltlt

111 droom~

Mobile Homes

.......... tM-251 · Z
bedroom .
..,.,..,.,

. .....

l'arna B4ufpment
.C o...,,..meat Auetfon

PiPING

SHROUD
INFIRM
FACING
PHONOGRAPH

For Con.tftnaaats '

614-US•SISZ
Will Nalw eo....,..mat
1

~·-ldryor. AIC, 1200. - h
Ptuo utllhlll, m 1"- 304-47S'•

18111.

SCRAM-LETS
ENOUGH
ZIRCON

Satiarda)t Aprfl :J, I":J

forRe.n t
14110 2 ar, t milo - h of
Eurolta, on II. Al.7. No poto,

.

:Porch,
1 BodCaoport,
Prlvlle, Lol, I I l l - ,
211 .S . Hed Approved, IM-JII.

da~

6!4·245•5!53

r. atr1 saw mon., .,.....

7, 1M ;~81 1227.

CAlL TODAY

446·4367

.SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS COLLEGE

:.c':.:?'li.N..w=::t

1
·

Thurs., March 18, 1993
at7:00 P.M.

At Boggs AIICtlotl H01se, Rt. 35, Galipobs
Wagnerware, old wooden boxes, Foil edge
kettle, skillets, dutch 0\len, washboard, 1 long
tail Cl!&amp;e knife, oak school desk, oak dresser
w~h mirror, oak lib rary table, 4 matching oak
chairs, oak table, oak walt phone, 1 large oak
desk, 1 large Billing oak desk, 1 wooden dou·
'ble tub - oak, wash. machine, 1 case XX·Iarge,
display cabinet, old picture, old hand tools,
1940 J .. C. Higgins spring fronl end Dazie BB
gun, Lionel train set, Polaroid camera - 1958,
cig. lighters - his, hers, coins, plus much, much
more.
Terms: Caoh or Check with Proper I.D.
Auctioneer, David Bo~;gs
Uc. 4596
Llcen1od end Bonded In State of Ohio
Phone 614-446-nso
Not Reaponslble for Accident• or
Lo18 of Property. ,
We Are Now Booking Sale1.

SATURDAY,
MARCH 20, 1993 • 10:00 A.M.
. LOCATED AT THE YOUTH CENTER ON
CAMDEN AVENUE IN POINT PLEASANT, WV
Outstanclng early grain painted corner cabinet raiiod plnllt
Penn. style 811 original, cuotom curley maple lllrtle top tabla,
early tih lop wolnut candle stand, walnut gate leg dnlp INI
Wile. cheny cheat, game l!lble, comb back chlir, 4 Hlly
ladder back clieirl, camelback 110fa and 2 nialdllng Mar1ha
Walhlhgtoruidecliaira, lantyoak side board,mah. w olwy.
2 ma!Qhlng Victori111 c:helts with calVed puis, 6 tin pie sales,
mal1. dnlp leaf table, oartrWndeor high chair, ook bade,preoa ·
back rocker, Iron and brass baby bed, early meat and tlour
chest, 1 I 2 dra- night stands, IOUild oak table 8lld 6 c:law
lt. chairs, !Pinning Wlieel, ook princes&amp; dresser, oak claw 1t.
buffet, pine hutr:h table. 2 pc. .n deco ~ving 10001 suitll, oak
kitchen cabinet, Bltdeye maple wa1h 1tancklreaser comb.,
child's drop lront secretary, Oriental comer shaH, 2 Yic:torian
oak claw ft. chairt, and more !urn'-'re. 1atge selee1ion o1
anliqueglasaw... aeveralpieceaofAmericanFosiOriacooklti
jars,cande&amp;lickundelc., R. S. Pruuia Moi&amp;118nplate,hond
painted bowl&amp;, Flo Blue pieces plal1er, 3pllilel, bunetdiahand
5 butter ·~ats, Depression glass, Homer laugljn Villinia
Aoll8, beliutilul Germany bowl, stemware, Spongewwe booM
and pie plate, Mickey MoOse divided baby cbh, Fenton, hena
on nes1, 3 HeiSey footed tumblers, compode, hanging chandelier, Wanwarv bowl with apple, pitcher,and beM pot..., lid, ;
aock&amp;. Culfier I lvea print 18&amp;4 signed Hudeon Fivw
steamboat, piclllres. star quilt. old string holder, Glllpclis,
Ohio peper memorabilia, Waterbury weight clock and othert,
old oil famps, and ora.
AUCTIONEER'S NO'Il:: A VERY lARGE AUCTION •
PARTIAL LISTING· PLAN TO SPEND THE DAY/

AUCl"fON CONJK7CRJJ

.RICK
. P'IISOI AUCTIOI CO.
LUNCH
MASON, WV
· 773-5785

• While attending a family reunion I
overheard pranny talking about a not
so popular niece. "She's the perfect
picture of herA alher," granny said,
"and a perfect PHONOGRAPH of her
mother!"

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
TERMS: CASH OA CHECK WITH I.D. OUT OF STATE BIJ'fERS MUST
HAVE ACURRENT BANKLETTEROF CREDIT. NO EXCEI'tiONSI
Nol ~ tor IIO'Iddtnll Of' loll al PfQPilrtr

•

Vir91nla*-h TSigood--a..- ........ - " " ' - ...... SigoodSolo-.

U&lt;onood .... LATE A~AIYAI. •

-

.. ONo, -

SoC.2-

. I
_,
~------~------~·

OAK SHADED LOT - Clooo to town location.
Roomy bi~evol homo. Family 100111 alerted in
lower level (not much to finish), 3 bedtOOms,
kitchen, living room. Priced to soli at

CITY BOY, COUNTRY GIRLI - Horo'a a
house Jhat will satisfy both. Within llflllking
distanco to downtown, thil home'a location lo
great: While at the oeme time It's loc:atod in 1
quiet location backed up by acl8s ond ac111s ol
woodland. largo 4 bedroom homo with over
2100 ~ft., 2Y. baths, living room, dining room,
oat·in kilchon and family 100m. Screened in
perch. largo
8lld abcM giOUnd pool. 2 car
build.jn ga .. Good otor8ga. $91,000.

,.C:lio

for Rent

............
fumiiMd, ........,.

oot-ln kitchen,
coiling and brick
IJ)(IIII , Loada of
windows take lui !c!v~~·g. ol tho 460 fl. of
loko frontage. HUGE full wolk out baooment
doubles living space if IIIIOdod. 2 cor garogo
plus garage door ontranco to baoemont
workshop. Mainlenanca free exterior allows
you leiS!IIB ~ma to watch the gMM gla08fuUy
slide in and out ol the lake or go altar that
lunker baos in the lake. 52 loot lleatod dock
with atrium doors off master suite, as well as
family 100m. also onhancos the great lake front
locat100. $152,000. Serious buyers onlyl ,

tr=-••

· pi&amp;MCII

room
ICiioGt
ln
......
lonl 1¥11181111
ot. ~ On · ADta. 141 or
call he.JD.mt EON.

Wanted

RAUTlFUL APARTIIEIITS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT .IACKSON

MIDDLiePOfiT • BLT (Beller Look Twice) al this 2
· story home silting on a large corner lot. Look at the
axtraa thlt ~ has to olfe( a new 2 car detached
garage, LannoK pulse furnace with new air
condklonlng un~. new siding and roof. h has a large
living room, 3 bedrooms, 1 baths, equipped kijchen
w~h new oak cabinets.
NOW $63,000

EITA'!E.!... 11341 Jackoon PIH

.._,_Walkto .......
mo\ile. can IM 441 211L EOH.

. . .h · - 11-porL Ohio.

1 -

.............. utllhloo
'

pilei, 304-112-:IMI.

=·.,.,3-

Brookllclo Aport-..., 1 lod· StOve
Rol!'lgonitor,
.-.Up. 114-

IOCMII,

FVorl Oaan, -

I lath,
Paid, In Pot·

ter ANLI144• I ODD.

OrociOUI hllil- 1 and 2 bod-

WANTED

, _ .,..,_ .. VlUooo
Mil

Manor

Experienced Meat Cutter
Meat Manager Opportunity

~fU•If'llil

-""*":.."'.::rr
•J.
...

F.-.
-~ Ill llpl.l14 441 0:110.
Holth 4111
;art. OAio. 2

. . . Call

....-.--

•

h._.n Lia.,_ 1111. dep I

'

,,

..

5'

Happy Ada

·' ·Happy
·· Birthday
Knren S.
•

·•

•
••

;March 13!
itin'( it niffty
; to lie fifty?

t

RACINE ·ROOM TO BREATHE with 8.5 acr• wilh a
1978 12•X 86 mobile home. Propeny lndudn TPC waltr
8lld 2 uptlc tanka llld older hOme. ASKING $D,GGD

Werry

•

I
.
NEW uanNO. Wolle Pen Rd.
..no wilh
l
mobile home with 2 bediooma, appllancoa, lron.:.::'J,
•
o1ao Included barn, ahed, oppro1. 10 ocreo ti
,5
!
35+

We're hiring. And, if'you'rc ahigb sdiool
graduate, we 'll train you in a grea1 Air

1175

ocrtl Plll\ll8 with balance· timber. Some old fencing.
ASKING 131,100
•
NEW LilTING· Pomer.,Y- Older hcnio wllh 3 loll. 3
butoilllll, belli, home In need of ...... ASKING...

Force job. In addition to 1raining Uld a
good paycheck, the Air Fon:e will help
you pay for college. Also, we have atwoyear degree prosram 8lld aplan 10 provide
money for school even after your Air Force
lour is over.

I

=·

UIIOI!ffi\.Y NEEDED... LIInNGI HOIIEiil ~-~
FARMS, LOn. UlliNOI NEEDED FROM A · OP
COUNTYI F YOU WANT TO I ELL QIYE
A
TODAYI
. Ill

AIM HIGH

HI!NRY E. CLEL.AND..............................II2..1t1
TRACY IRINAGER.""'' ...''''"''''''''''''..-14•2411

KATHY CL!LAND........."-···· ..............-.1124111 · "

!• .

room, kitchen with dining arM, utility room

locatad in a great neighborhood on an
oversized lot graat lor kids.
$43, 500,

Very wei kopl. ..,II built IPiit 1a..1brick home
in good neighborhood. Features include 3

bedrooms, 1112 baths, Wving room, larnily room
and nice oat-in kitchen. Partial basement,
covered patio, nice yard, malntiHlance lree,

_gar.•go. Priced to son at $79,900.

HYSELL RUN ROAD ··Need a home out of town? A
nice 3 bedroom home with woodburner, 'and lots of
kKchan cabinets.
PRICED AT $29,900
p0MI!ROY • Old Union Ave. • Two big lots with a
.-.le over 113 acre. Altha end olthe road sb a t 983
Clayton double wide with 3 bed100ma, 2 baths, lamlly
room, dining room, and a new front porch. Kitchen is
equipped, including 11 new dishwasher. Has central
air, and a water softener. All in good oonditlon.
:
$34,000

NOWONLY$21,900 .

•

MDDLEPOAT..flowelt StrHt· 2 one ICre lots located
In a nice neighborhood whh chy water and sewaga
available. Could bo used bor your dream home. Buy
on~ lot for $7,000 or Buy both lor only $12,000.

:
:,

IAENOA ~EFFERI ........................................... II24011

DOTTIE TURNER, Brokw ;.L ......;................... - -

iieavensl
.
Tim's 371

•

•

..
.,.••

'

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I I

"z

DARLINE ITEWART.........................................
1311
lANDY BUTCHER ......... - ............- .................. .071
...RYL WALTERS. Choohlro ...................- ... M7.o421
JERRY IPR~NO ....................;.,•.,;..... (:IIl4) 112-34tl
OmcE ·-·..- -··- - · ..·····-··-···..........- ........... 112·~

at ontv

Nllll

AVE LOTS FOR SALE - Located on Rt. 35
and old Rl. 35, this property is private and
conven~anl. Pnces start at $6,900. Call for
mora 1nformatton. ·
1223

, CHEST~R • Texas Road • There's more to ilthat a
drive by: won't 1all·lnside the house there are 3
· bedrooms, 2 baths, a sauna, lamily room, fireplace,
skylight, and Mexican clay lila in the kitchen. Outside
· is a Gazebo bar. inground pool, and privacy lance
which would be great for entertaining guest.
·
PRICED AT $79,000

.

Price~

OWNER LEAVING AREA,
AN
OFFER!! - Homes like thio
come on lhe
, market. Tum olthe c:entu'Y homo lllah&lt;rin~ 4· 5
large bedrooms, huge liv•ng room and dtning
room, nice kitchen, remodeled bath. 1 car
attaclied garage with mud room, large uHiity
room. Nice largo lotln quiet community only 19
miles lrom town. Now !or the old·Hma price tag
of only $38,000. ,
1612

SYRACUSE • L-i&gt;oking lor a starter or retirement
home then you need to see this house. It has two
good slzod bedroos, large living room, 1 112 baths,
huge main bath done In bfack and rod ma~ie with
sunken tup, step saver klchen with dining room, nfumace wrth central air, vinyl siding and garage sitting
on a llat'100-71 lo1 and a nice neighborhood.
$35,900

.

t

..
TRULY AFFORDABLE - Crisp, clean 3
bedroom, 1 bath ranch with vinyl aiding and
replacement windows. This home has a ono
car attac:hod garilgco and a lumeco thet is len
than a year old. This price is $49,500.
1502
DO YOU WANT IT ALL BUT CAN'T
AFFORD IT AU.? - This homo is !or you. 4
bedrooms, t bath, large living room, lamily

LANGSVILLE • How would you tika a 52 acrelarm?
Wall hare ~ is approx. 45 to 50 acres fenced . With
about 10 acres tillable. Also sitting on it is a two
bedroom home with a fireplace, and two car garage.
Has wall water that has never gone dry. Even has a
little limber acres.
JUST $49,000

123.900

;

•
..
'''------------~~· ·
OfFICE............... _ ........._,.,..............- •..ftZ.I2il

RUTLAND • A corner business • Opened 3 years
ago, but Is doing a thriving business. Everything you
need to opera1a a video rental, soft serve ice cream,
hot dogs, etc. The business tomes with the building,
approK. 2,300 current · vidaos, .VCRs,. Nintando
games, 2 ice cream machines, and much mora. lock,
stock, and barrel.
ONLY $115,000

MDDLEPORT·This spa¢ious 3 bedroom home Is jull
what the lamily needs. tt also has a large living room,
nice alze kitchen w~h acute little nook. Has new roof,
new wiring. and even has a new helll pump. WAS

I

IIDDLEPORT· Nioa t 112 oklry .home 34 buhoma, , : ·
FANG hell. paved 111'111, larga !font 111tt1ng potdl,
•
opoctllCUiar riWf vlilwl ASKING t31,100 .
•
~

'Howfaryougolsuptoyou. lfyouare t7
10 27 years old, visit your Air Force recruiter or c.all t-800-423-USAF.

RAaNE • F.amlty Needed lonhis 1 112 story, 3 to 4
bedroom home with 4 porches, 112 basement, dining
room, family room, and a small cutbuildlng. Good
sized lot. WAS $28,50'0.
$26,500

'

''

·. -

Apartment

Zbilrm.~-

. '

ar

OFFICE 99~~2886

Coh
lor lnlonnotlon. INiaaklor.

Middleport, OH

~

~~

epacioua room•

ntE-RIICE

'

SPECIAL AUCTION

·c~

ANTIQUE
AUCTION

Wh)o ,..,. ·,.... can lr:=====R=aa:::I::::E:::stat:::t:::Ge:::n::t:::ra:I====::J
.,r;m
1 1113 141111 -·•• llllh II

•

These JDbs•

·

~AY DRIVE - A FAMILY NEtCHJORHOODI
- We o"er this homo with an oxcoNonl floor
plan - zoned areas for clnlng, ontal1!lining:
leisure time and slooping. Among tholaatures.
5 bedtOOmo, 2112 baths, largo lamlly room,
equipped kitchen, living 100111 and diNng.area,
and outside occommodaliona for Just kickng
back ond 181uing. City Schools. $89,500. 1400

· Auetlonen

• ~iahed. 2 w ·IIMMII., tor ,...
Counlry- PIIIL -t.rf

Sentlnei-Page-05

~~==~==~~~~~~

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

··• and Co/J,.

~•;"

Times

of auction

Marlin WedenaQer,

1337.

•

uwe Tr•l• Peopl• for

Sunday

home in
offera a

Positions Available are with
an Equal Opportunity
Employer. .
Send resume to Box 103
C/0 Gallipolis ·oaily Tribune
825 Third Ave. Gallipolis

Means I'm not qualified for a job. Taka a
red pen and circle all the jobs in the classified section pertaining to accounting,
secretary, managerial, computer, medical
office, date entry and word processing.

wv ·

ANSW-=RS TO

''

11

on Unmln

No' ~ on R.....a.own;
Nolhlng E- Pn ned.

205 North Secottd Ave.
In Loving Memory of
Dorothy Veith
who pa81ed awfiY 11
years ago March 16
Remembrance
Is a goldan chain
Death tries to braak
all In vain.
To have, to lova and
than to part,
Is the greatest
sorrow of ones
heart.
The years may wipe .
out many things,
but this they wipe
out never.
The mamory of
those happy days,
When we were all
together.
Sacjly nilnod by
huoband, John,
DMighler, Dorothy
Leach'&amp; family,
oon Carl Veith
llamlly.

':!'_"-!/! ~-

S2tt; t..:n~. ot..dar
U;BoiOwSU.ori~P'-"

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

Cash

"

:-h-::12:-cw-pot~M0-.-Iit1Z..,;,.,vinJI
_ _SIO_ Ariel Clio"" 1215 Or 01o.t1S
Wook; Colloo And End With
Sole... • oorpot In otoc:i. ...,: Doora 11" Bol~WHh I
lohon earpoto.l14-441olil44.

wv. ~~=--_!;===;:.=;::=::=:._
8

IEnlwtalmiOnl C..O.'o 11141 Or
SI.IZ WookL8c cI I"'•• Stalt·

_ :

· 'Ucense I 599.
Cash or check w/positive ID.
863-8895, 428-7245,
· · Building 1428514.

.

I1U1 IHr To - · Pluo
- H I. Pootal COnlon, Sor·

-

=o•edlcitlom
.... !YOIOill
-.olvlolon.

·~

"lllko Big Bucko" Work At
-ilu
RuOh S.A.s.E. 110 To
D&amp;A , _ Bo111, Hltoboro,

91

)~We

-

Patri'k Blosser Au,tioneer. :

tells
extended
during the illness
Jnd death of my
Duaband,
.Ernest
. . ker. A special 1 card 01 Thanks
ilank
you
to
•
. The family of
Ewings
Funeral
Willis "Bub" Joseph
Home, Rev. Kenny
wish to extend a
Baker, and the staff
special thank you to
Mt. Carmel West
Ewings Funeral
l!loapltal.
Home, !'lacina
•
Phyllis Baker
American Legion,
;
&amp;Family IIPo,•t fi02, Rev. Kenny I

~======~

......

·Very IJ •ticple &amp; Co.dible ·
Auctfol at Blossers Auctiol House ·
on Old St. M•ys Pike, Pnershurg,
W.Va. Sun, March 14, at 12:30.
WI have builclng fuR of oci, ·
walnutr mahoganey &amp; mclple
furniture, &amp; p~lve furnitwe.
. of alassware &amp; coiHtibles.
Consignments welco•.

Call--

11

-...... __

• ...._ or noldontlol 2 ..,..
2M • IlL 2 ~ bot·

-

T-'"--

w.~

a&lt;M~IHCIIII

Wined To Buy: Pci&gt;Up Campar, In Oood Concltfon, Ptoo•

:: whh 1o o,.P,..o tholr
i'lncore appreciation · to

N.c
a on
. -··

lnlormed tliel 111-lnga

Junk Autoo

With Qr Without -

8

. . . . old, • .., _ ... dOg, -

The family of
Mae Hubbard

=-

&gt;

C&lt;inlonary :;.:
:JIIIc:.::.Z4:.:.34;.,:a:.:,illi.:.:.lor:::..:ll::::!k::;:L:.__
I

law. OUr 101CiorS on ......,

Wlnled otlind~ tlmbor, top
NconHCI polcl, Jr• aotlmotH,
-.so55or-ftl.')al.

......

I

Houleilolcf

.

PUANCES

oocrntco, 1" 3 Mll7tl .......
for Sale
- WMh 5 year WI"""'Y· If&gt;.·
=.::-=-:--:-~"'='....,...,~ oluoloo clollvory, ootup otopo1113 Richard
. - .141'1110 3 Bod- aiMI ..lrtl1111, $115mo. Coli ·114'- '

knowtrVY """""
aaventsemeru tor reaJ atilt

IIMna -lind . . homo""
oior GOldin Rot- loogto mtx,

,.

Aloo trollw · All hook._
Call • ._ 2:00 p.m., :1104·7'13-

11 1111.- Lond Wllef
. llloc Avo-, OoOrgoo Cr'ook
114,000 Finn. 114-146-

lil44.
W'RA FURNITURE AND MJ.

32 Mobile Homes

...,.. any ..en prelerenco,
lmllatton or di!ICIImlnllton." ·

...

llartl.. ai$12Gimo. OoiUa Holot..
114 • • • •·
.
81 oping _ . . wtth - . g.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

.

114 Ut 4421 OR 114-446-3151

R - - - ·- o r - h. 5I

=rn
:",u..; "=:t.;E::

="'...!'J"=".,_]•

1hls n e - will not

:

·
, I Spood, MOO
,'
114-fll.-.
1171 , _ . , Homlf, '
WHh -..r;.rr.tor,.
St..., t1,100. 114- 'I'
.
1112 1Zilo F - '
Oaa Hoot I Ro,. Rohlgarator, Excoltont Cond(,
tlon, Phono: e - 3 T Or'
114-24""11 Allor 3:30,
~

Goodl

Doao I . _ . . All eo- • Vlnrt on-·...,.
Callicl: 115-IQ. lohon
C.opoto, Rl7 N. 114-146-

r.!etChJndiSe

Rooms

· -··
oOnio, Z Bathe,;
•-....
' CA, 114-245-11713. . . ::---:-c::and hojpllal.
h
' _ , hiouoa lacroo, tonood·ln, 3 IR mobllo · ·
- bul .· 114.f02·71h lor homo build-on, 4 outbullcllnP.'
w/utl'8 trailer hook-up, 2 elr 1
V.,. liwMblo ' ono OIOIJ ;I
mUoo North
room., 2 Ar c•~, l..ai .- _ , ... ,.....
,...p, oontril olr, rOfflto!l!tor, Looking For A Deal? Conatdor A
ot..., SR 143. Pomo,..,, Dtllo. ProoOWilod liobill - · Lo9•
AI&gt;Dooloed
tts,ooo, uldng Boloolfon Low !IO!'If Dailii(•
ti(,OOO, 1~.
Fno lot~ And Doll¥aty. ,.....
IIIN710.
'•

-EN? CALL OUR GIRLS

0!115·

I

:= _.·

·FOil
ADVICE!!
Eit. 1120,
SUI Per lin. 111111
8o 11 Vn. Uniotar Co. 102.QI.

•·

...

of daMU, tolal llectrlc, new ,_
vii!Yt otdlng
fl19l&lt;wlor
rongo 1fllll,
••• ~~:.!"~
on

OU'ISIII CAin FIGURE CUT

..

Fumllhed

:::;:...:.:.:.:~...,.--,--,---,....,- aoowed pon:h, khchon
~ llodiOOm ranch OIYio, 110f1110 bk!a'- uodwpwio11...
llfgl kitchen, ltvlng raom, 1018 lllit new, 304~m-24M.
., · 7 ~

3 AnnOuncements

-·

mo.

- -·~
lloalty. 114414-11171, 114-3141
121
, _ ..,.·..,.--_,..,---,--,Nlco 3 Bod,..., Hom'!. 1 Clr At· 1aa F - llobllo Homlf,,"
hlcllod Garito, z ""' Unol· 141- 2 B1d
1 •~•
tMhld Qerege. CA. Small Oar'"''- · ..
roont~,
-'"••
don s-o,- C1oao To Gavin !Joe. - t, U. .rpaomlng. Aft'!'·
' ;.
Planl &amp; Rlvar V•llor H.S. 114- I P.ll. ll14-141o3044.
11'1''1114.
1117 ShultZ 141'111, CIA, ....'
~ Vonor ArM, Ook Ortvo, .....,.. 3 bodr-, 2 lui'
3 llodroorno 1 112 Bathl,
tub~ oxtr... ~:
OerPort, At;, GH Hut, Full

NOTICE

Lloe 24

PI-

..co:..,;,: -,

Acne 1111. Aloo Available. For

Call

Hove Outllclo

8

Houlthold

Fomll)o Loolilng T~ 2 To 3
l1drocrn HoUle In ~.

-·..-•nor ·

(S) 12, 14, 15 3tc

~

tor Sale
=~""":":=~=:'::'~

13 Wariled to Rent

$tl2.17 por month lncludlna oli
INtolol
.....up,
- lldrtlnf
~170,
dollvored
and oot
andllepe.,t-100-13~~5.
,·
- . I I - . born. 12xU Amhoral Traitor, Z Bod'
~3oil AI. 7, iatllllo, ~"IGO·, At. ..
080

....,, 114-371-2111..
PU8UC NOllcE
! F«Mt Ac,.. Pwk (Fort
.ltMIIelo New U•• Road,
lftotland, wll be clooed lor
~

.32 Mobile Home•
for Sale

32 Mobile Homes

5 CUR:, 2 blillh, llimiiJ room,

Pomeroy-Middleport-;-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleaaant,

1215

�..

..

OH ' Polnt

Times Sentinel

March .14, 1993 .

-=

Manual trudmll for walking, 3
lncNno, price 111:15.
Muel ... to lpprKiele, f14..112.

310R, ollll kit, CO ployor, olom,
CUtlo. · '-·
·-·
Ill£
liiC, S3,DOO.

Mlc,_.. S75. Long Alanor
COOl (121 $50. Roll awor iod

11&amp;1 L . - Town ·~S::

;:"riu,""i:.'-....

IIHrs cotolog 136-A 171. :IIJ4.
17MIOO.

-'*'II· 112 ' ml
IW. Pt. Pl....nl, WY,

f

~~~---

m ~l1ppl1r"
,, L"cslork
1'

1ol'112' dull ....... !loy t..W;
$450 010; 10110 otrioood ..... good lor

_

............, ..... for Ilia, .,...
247-4121.
.

110011.

-lo

.

=e·.- -=.r-=x·

,.

sm 010: .-lnor, 171;•

64

Z:.nlth
$35;
114-182·7102.

81

- ·114-141·1810.
Uko - · Prlco Noll"'
tloblo.
Dodgo ea....., LE., 1111 1

- -· Complote roconlo. K'ep~
~- C.ll •tter e p.m., e14-

Motorcycles

V-Bonom Fishing Boat, 2
Motors, Seats, Anchor, 1110
Socond, Ottlllpollo . .

76

.

RHUS 0 D

Wintod To I.Moo: T ~rl Poy .31111,., Lb.

. 6

•

17

Ml F R

rra•1sportation

ll

While attending a family
rBunion I overheard granny
talking abol.it a not so popular
niece. "She's the perfect pic·
ture of her father; granny said,
·and a perfect .......... of her
mother!"

Autos tor Sale •

l:'...J:.dlc:o:"~
..:::
• $3,100.

GAN F I C,

(

9·

1m Oklo Dollo 11, $1200 or
1 - lor plcll up ot von, 114-

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

5

I~I,I'M-211-117l

0~1.

Sunday

like new, 304-675-8735.

Hay &amp; Grain

Vory Oood

'·····~

Evei'NlHit 4 hp outboard motor,

3

~

11

·

motor .nd tralttr, S700, 114-71122241.

NI P P I G

MerchllndiM

.... .

75 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

R OZ N I C

• - TV,

54 Miscellaneous

,

:104~.

W.- To Buy: T - 8111,

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

wv

..

lol' 11~1UI lllltlria boat, 10hp

- - with llghlo, ttll; ft•

"Have a cellular phone inetaUed In my ear so 1
cen make last minute changes in my will. •

·~··

~

11111 Yamlha 200 4 whlllot,
, . _ ohaft drlvo, oloetrlc
...~. Oood condhlon. $11100.

2

'

CL, 11,111111 milia,

LM lllnl 3114.e_,.ll ot 11754411.

114-1112-~-..ilpm.

•

74

U N H0 G E

--~.·--··
Cllollrilr

1N4

I'OUAN - - - ' - - - -

Reorronge lhe 6 Kramblad
words below lo make 6
simple words . Print letters of
each in its line of Squares.

la,JOO,
•• · -~4
JN..7Hm
oft•I:OO
PM.- ·
1N4 a-.- Citollon I 1H8
Fonl 2 ion lruc~ !1,000. ooch.

~

I!Orlio.':
MSO·oeo: liUnooln. 30:1, rune · ·

One woy olrllno tlckllo to
Tompo, Flo, Aorll 7th. :JOI.II75o
1111aa.s:ool&gt;M.

~

1813 Aero.t•r LX, L.oHed, AU

0

1N4 a-tto - , AIIIFII

61 Finn Equipment . _

One yoor old ' oupor

- - - - - - Ed.d loy CLAY R,

.... -~

3041.

PK:KENS RJRNITURE
•
-.cl

'

73 VIne &amp; 4 WD'a

That Intriguing Wore/ Game with .Q Chuckle

--Ia,

-ion

LAYNE'S fURNITURE
Compltl• home fum/~~~~~=­
llj&lt;w&gt;$11, ..5. I
~ out lulnUio Rd.

s·

S©~~~-L£~

Autos tor Slle

1111 Dodao -~
Cyj!ndor.
POOOIIG:s.noR
tiiO, 114-211,1ol)l.

Merchllntllll

MerchanciiM

Goods

71

KIT 'N' CARL'YLE® by Larry Wrltlht

54 MIICIIIenloUI

54 Miscellaneous

Household

•

OH-Polnt

Uvestoek

Janllllo

0

1993

'

51

'

,. 0

Mt-3oo5

e·by

Budg.. TranamiMiont, u.d &amp;
robulh, all typos, otonlno II $81;
owner 814-245-5171, ~M-.371-

2213, Pomoroy: 11oi.OP2·!100.
New

t•• 11nkll, one ton lruck

whMia1 radlatora, floor mill,
lie. 0 a R Auto, Aipl.y, WV. 304-

372·3833 or HIOO·:I73'1328.

79

campers .&amp;
Motor Homes

Hunttl"' lpac..l, 11 toot
YountalnMr truck camP'r, 304171-4082.

3·1'1

Complete lhe chuckle quoled
filling in lhe missi~g words
·¥Ou develop from silop No. 3 below.

I

.,
817 Poco Arrow,

)I'

Splh Both W11h

'!Win Bods,

sn-r

Tub,

AIC, Oolr Wood Waolt Sl11po
Sht, Mlcrow1ve, T.V. Eacell.nt
Condhlonll14-441-1440.

Cam'* tor
1ITI Chrplor ~

*

11'!111

- - $400;-

81Pl!of--Tioc1or,
~-Good, - : l14-

F

-

~ w.;

., _ _........h ..... EoCih lw
- . With - · mo. a..,.,.,

·.•

Clupploo, ...,.

·*

Real E~t~te General

·,'

bod, $200

.

RESIDENTIAL ·INVESTMENTS· COMMERCIAL· FARMS

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

Real Estate General

OEIIOIIAH ICITU, IIEILTOR-..- ... . _
LYNDA FIIAI.EY, IIUL1011 .................IIICHAELIIILLIR, II£ALTOR ... :....., ...PAT~ 110111, IIEAI.1011................ .24~
. STEVEN IGT.IWOIIDI:...___ _ MW101
WIUIA WII.UAIIIOH, 1 IIOCIATI.... 241 1011
JAIIU WllLIAIIION,AIIOCIATE... :M1 IDII

___

~Iilii

l~j ltf&amp;f 1

·---'

(CALL US ANYTIME)

'72 Trucks tor Sale

72 Trucka tor Sale

- - · m.

4,

oo'!.

good cond,
or 171-

~m-!110

Serv1ces

-8111111, IIICICEII,..............;..JINIH
EUNICE NIEHII,- REAL1011:..........._ .. _111T
RUTH IARII, IIULTOII._ ...................44M722

Ill · ~.-

Each. .,..._ Lib now hoopltol
..SO 1M 1ft I A.ll. •7 P.ll.
ftnn,l14·1112·21211.

~71W717.

o1 iiri
114--1.

PROFESSIOHAL,SERYia MAKES THE DIFFERENa

.21N I!HII, 10

Autos tor Sale

~

NEW liSTING - Pomoror - 'lfly lEW LISTING - , _ . . , nlct brick ranch. home located on Loctfed on Roctc: Spftngl AIL. M
Btech St. ,.,.., •mentary .:hool. home hal 3 bdrm1,- lg. .....
Big living room, alllll:-ln k~&lt;:hen, 3 klchln wlh kU of ~ k
bedroom• wJhardwood noor.. ful rm •• -h. lUI bMIIMh
- n,_.. ,_. ...,• rwc.
RecentiV
BG '"" _.
bltt'l, •.
1U 1
- n Wol"""llWid ln1ullled.
*
• .... ~Efiiil~
FA gas. 1 car atlac:hed garage. carpeted porch. ,_., a1 roc. tar
Appl~-~~ !h.~ b~ homt Wllf garden and nice ~an. Pdaed 11
undei'p'Ka~U ... ~.-.
111 n mid 30'1.
a.condAw..IIJ R i ~1\ 2*"'Y"'-~BR.Ontyll31.i(IO.

li£¥·

. '

..

-,.......... ~
-·
•ap-:"1-...
'!:: "l, BA, 2 -.y,~162,&amp;00
J20
.,_.IOU

.

a.

Rcd:
c aat ••· 2 wtoty 3 BA. tii,aoo
. . . . . . . ~Rd.,
5 BR. 3.,... mil, ....tOO

1-800-585-7101
(614) 44~7101'

••

1141. COIIBO, HOllE AND BUIINESI BeiUIHul
white brk:t horne wtlh 3 bedrootnl, flrepla~. 2 car
garage, heat pump. Also Includes 4000 aq. n .
commerdal bulking, presently being used tor a
woi&lt;Jng bullnttla. his 3 ph ... electric. For mott Into
cdstevo
Swords.

·~iill,.r.l

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

510 SECOIID AVENUE, GALI.JPOUS, OH. 4&amp;131
Rt~~nl D. Wood, Brollw...-441 4811 Judr Oawltt..-----------441 4415
Pl•r•• Mh..............- ........ 2&amp;&amp;-1131 11Mhalmllh.--------311-2t111
J. Merrill c.ter ·----.......,..3.,._1 c:.diy Wnit --'--------· 441 4:1115
TMIIIill O.Witl...--......- .....441·1514 andf Dror....... ild-----2411111

- .. C a l l a r - - I

•

1521

-...lomly 100111, 1

USnHGI FAMILY FULFILUIENTII

lhlo Iaing. 2 1101y 3 bldtoom ' - -1111ing of living 100111, ldtchen will plonly of calli· dining or ....., room, bllh, Ulllly
.,_, loll of ~. Bam. delldted 2 ..,
gar~~g~ . F - in palllura. "-"· ueo
ICIU of land Ioiii. Pricod '91t. f34,100.00.
Cal today.
1111

•

•

Rllecoon Twp.
Racc:00r1Twp
Harrioonlwp.
OliOTwp.
Hill
Twp.

"'lgl&lt;ll•

118Aents
80Acnts
81 Acnta
133Acnto
teAcnto

.

ThiS home features 4 bedrooms and Unlshed
blsemenr. Cal lor more dtt81s. Priced $40's.

.tll4. NEW LISTING - NEAT I CLEAN 8~
LEVEL - 3 bedrml., 2 bllhi, Ill. ~lng rm .. lllr*lg nn ..
lclchln hal ..W.ty Cli&gt;lntno. t cor a11chod gorogo,

comor lot.
MUOO.

Prlvllo

polio W/awlng. Tho price II right .

lfiSO. COUNTRY COTTAGE WITH' PAIYATit
LOCATION • 2 BRa, liVIng rm., lrll. WICOUNry
~ator;a:_~'IIW.'Catpon, 2.1 - · Mako

39 ACRES, MINUTES TO TOWN - Nlco
homo '"' proporiy lttaturas 3 BAs, bath, LR
kilchan, bam, tobacco bose.
'

1113. MAINTENANCE FREE IHI IKYLINE
ROYAL COVE MOIIIlE HOME - Renlll. lot,
londscopod. and lonco. c-.. bull un1 an the extru, CllhldraJ dllir9, inlulatkNI, bul!·lft

-.1ft-

hutcft, -2.ballil.roolnow1y
- · - - Wllunlo,
bednns.,
-..!, down--2
gutters oro now. c.ntntllllr. A vety good bur """ llil

OWNr warts., ower. $18,000.

·
flU. CHECK ·THIS HOME OUT • Beau!Hul 3
l&gt;ldroom brlcl! wllh. lui basamolll, lvlng room, dntng
room, lddton, I~ balhli, 2 ca~ago,tnground poor,
eorw.nku11 klcaUon. Som. I
room IPOtl rum1uN
logo wllh homo. A muatlo .... 79,000.
·

LR, DR. kil, both. Second hou• has 2 BR,
t5Z ZND AVE. GAWPOU~r home in LR. bath, baHINnt, kitchen. Bam, tool
'"'''""' ,_;,, 2 BR. DR. kit .. LR. base· houoo and 3 mioc. bldgo. Pond, fencing,
"*IL lg. lot approx . 43'x162'. 011 stroot pork· includoa mineral rights. Call today lor com·

.· . CHERRY DRIVE - 2' BRa, 1 bath, LA,

LR,
arum:

ER •• 111 Gavin SINet- Nlao homa oflero .
3 BRo.
ldtchln, FR. bolh &amp; t.undry rm ..
tiding, nlco yord.
.

-

414 THIRD AVENUE - 415 BRo, 2 balls,

kildten, gas hoo~ city water, ulld ao rental
proporiy. $29,000. (518)

kitchen, DR, LR, alum. olding, gao

h4a~

cont. air, new Clr'pll (803)

'

1511

11512 pilte isting!

,, ' .

·, '

t840. RANCH HOME - d o n Slllo Route 218.

. Skylighlo a many exlrllo too numarouo to
maution. Cal today for your privalelhowing. FARM COHIISTING OF 114+ AC, PWS I
o-rolocating.
HOI HOUSES - 2 atory ColorOal horne with • BR,

inll·

home locllod '"' ll oc. m.1 'In Addloon To-.tp,
carport, etec. ~ . pu~ and cent. alt. Rlvtr valtey
schools. Priced $40's.

i

na-·-

lakoaloold

}4(1{ AT h.i'£5 Ri~i [ 1 · .:·:
997 240] 9\2 2J8L)

18,. NEW USTINO - 3 - - · 2 bllh ronc1t

1125. ClOSE IN - 5 1ct8S m.1 ol ro!lng lind.

lamily 100m heighten• · lhl
IUIMuly deeo..tad tri-ltwl.
2 full batho. 2 (Y,) batho,
k - with nocanlly ,.placed
rM9" ..rrigorator. Roc. ,_,, 2
C11 aor-go, -'llo in11:ound poal. Slor~~g~
blilding. Ptuo much mo... lmmaculale condi· COZV I CUTEII1t,ICIO- Wheller ~::. 1
lion . Make an appoinlmont today.' Romey oul or ..riling lhit io home lor you! 2
a-1
1520 roomo, living room. ldtehen, bath, ...,, llding. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
Ml7
.
.
CITY IQIOOLII SMALL ACREAGE! 3 BR
will family ,_,, living room, NEW UITifiGI 247 EVERGREEN ROADJ
aat-in kilchon, 2 bello. Large wood 20'x10' IMIEDIATE POSSEIIIONI Sian periling
clock. Within minutoo of Gallpclio. Call today lodly, thlo 3 bedroom·hoina will ball, ldtchtor c:ampletoliMngt Pricod in lie $10'o. 1511 .... liYing room - . 1 '-t1ily! Owner hu
,.ptaciid rool, 'fumaco, -tor h4alor and
BEAUtiRIL BRICK I 25+ AC. Home con· mo,. within lie put couple of VOIR ~
oioll of 3 BR. FR, 1y, bod!, LR, kit. 201140 and -II'IIQod S20'o.
1111
jnground pool Wlblth hOUII, 1OX20 blid&lt;
~. Energy efficient haat pump. 1 car
' Lola of oppoi\lrillao. l!loc:k
anachad ga111ga pluo addldonal 24x4&amp; COIIMEACIAL:
~MD'· Cal today lor an appoinlmonL 1513 builclng with 2 aportmento. Over 1 Mobile !lema till with ooplic and -liar.· ·
I
STORY OLDER HOME WITH Plrlect tor omaH .grocory ato... GrMI mool( ..
QIAfiACTER- SiiU- at 90 Clay s-. 4 and pop Of*allon.
bedroom•. nu:e large hYing room, dining
roorn,lrltct-. 1Y.balla&amp; mo...
1517 NEW UITIHGI NEAll CLEAHI I COZVI
Ranch otylo horne with vinYl tiding, PREITIGIOUS CEDARIII City Khools, icio· gar~~g~. 2 badroomo, hina """"· kllchen.
. . . , _ . . , 3.2ac... -lot4bocl- bath,llundry, ~ 43 .............
rvotnl, 3~ balha, den, t.mity room, toyer, tiv· for juat ot.rting O..t or retiring. Call uo and

Ina ,_.,, noc. room, 20'x40' inground poal•

IYITY

We Are Looking Forward
To Being of Service

nn. or study ttnd .............

I bell, coveNCI corport IMMEDIATE A FEW ACIES? If oo, lien onqui,. about
H02

L 1 )~

1130. CHARMING HOME - l.oclllld jUot ott SR 35.
lmmacutale ranch wtlh new lmprovernerws. Lcwely
- corpet llnugltoul, now &lt;lode. root 3 yuro okl, 2
bftd!m&amp;., LR, dn. nn.. 1&lt;11., endosld lront pon;lt, ottlea

car gantgt will-

·
ap~MrMdmorw. E~ac•l•ntlaclllionl
...
CMEAI'IEIII 111,000 -14 Mil &lt;;~ Uvtna
- · kilohen and lining room combo, bad: NEW UITIIIGI LOOKING FOR AHOllE I
POSSESSION!

_..,

446-6806

,•;t*·

TO ·.YOU,•1

NEW UlliNGI CO:rEFWALIUILDING- OWNER . lAYS IIAICE AN OFFI!RI
51 011.. · p,._lly utod ao ,..,.. SM DATE POIIEIIIONI Juol ....... lor
hou• IIIIPIOnnet.ly 3,900 oq. ft. 18' llllnt ·yau. 3 bedroom ~ ' - • 1Mng

-

··---

, 3 BR, 2 bllth. Rtlnoh
Alii* &amp;.IJ......, 3 BR, 2 Blth Ranahi3S.OOO

Caak Rd..

'

VACANT LOT - IDEAL LOClnON Approximate 80X71T clooo 11&gt; shopping, hoo·
C.
church. Porlect lor bulking that":.;

tWEITVACO

ACAEAGEIII Ai.HIIllllt II If 12.113 Ac. oltuaJ.
NEW UlliNG- 100 AC. FARM • Si"ult ~ ad In Hunlingllln Townollip, ftlntl - · on
'SR 14t. I atory brick atyt0 hontUCtlliUng of P"'I*IY I ellctlk:. A1oo lndudad 21'
3 BR. 2Y. boll, LR, QA, 2 cor garaga, FP &amp; lnilor.
mo... Approx. 1200-1300 lb. lOb. baM. Cal
1101
lo&lt;ntONinfo.
1151•

ATTRACTIVE HOME II VI.LAGE OF
CENTERVILLE ·- ConvoanlanUy located,

••F

owners have done wor1c: to make this •

comlollablo home.

12Tx115' corMr lot. Aaking only $30,000. lot.
Cal today lor your.IPf'Oit-l
11411 1

1710. NEW LISTING - 2 or 3 boelroom ronc1t homo
and tomly room IOCIIod In IOwrt. Prtcld lo 10~ . Call

1or tocattcn -

FOR 110M INFORMATION ON OUR IEHTIRE IJITIHQI PICK UP 1HE FAll! QUAIJTY
HOIIEI IROCHUAE AT lOME OF THE LOCAL IIAHKI, IIETAIL llOAEI,
IUPEFIMAAKETI,IIOTEU IIIIJ RIITAUAANTI.
._c..,n.._._
_.,...,............. a.. ..

•te,..

tll7. MAKE I DIAL- 24111S- ftoml. 2.4
nntlan or m11cr1
1111 otrtr.l25,000. 311-1821
H&amp;l. NEW LIITINOI - ZS acre farm In CIIY
Townlhip lor only $43,000. TtH farm lndudM 11
mfnlral ngNa, tobaCCO bua, bam, celar, lbove"
~und pool lind ....., Clolt. Tltl ltouoo hal 31o 4
bldroorno, 2 boltto. LR, FR, ond .. Hiy room. Huny

ac. rwl, Z w QINDI. lltnr

ttndCII-roron-'••tort.

-- ·

~·'-·

---···

"21. PRIC&amp;O TO IELl' - Thllftoml 1-.11000 1q.
" · .. IM!tg jpiOI, 3 bedrcollll, ...... ,....llcllng .lnd
dua1td on ~ KN

rw:. PriCid &amp;20's.

"

' ·--

. -··' ~

-

~

...

~.:.

..

"'

~·~: ~.:.:

.......

· LAKUIEW IUBDIVIIION - 1 i:ttcittl

LOOICIHQ FOR A PLACI! POll A HIW
IUIIHEM?- SR teo naar....,.. Pllco.

:::=;,.a1 .,_

\t!IIIIIW.

(Ill)

aCC!p- . Rtotrfi:llvtt .....,.1111 apply Cloeo to
lnd ihowfltg.
.
-

VACANT LAND~ I -•lann land lind 72 · - . . , . . . bern. Cltlyanl'o!&gt;.

-

'

.

. "

. ·.
'

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 2.4 mit, 241
SA 7 ju11 .ac1011 from Ohio
River Plaza.

IIOIItago along

CARMEL ROAD - 4 mi. N. Ql Rio Gnonda.

Approx. 24 .. ,., of .. rvoyod vacant land.
Ideal lor naw horne . .I 19,000.

'

.. . .."... ...
:---r--·· .. ·' '
~

\ '!'

200'11200' loL All ~ Mlllabla;
.

Ill vacont land. ldaallor clevoloprnanl

1.111

ACRII + 70dll METAL

BUILDING aqulpJ*I Will ki11chon, bathe,
olllce, .... o............
•
FoR IALE - COAL11'r!PPI.E with all
=t.~ltiaa. 1.11&amp;7 II. rf&gt;eoltonl Call for

WANT TO OWN A HOME? NQ MONEY?
GOOD .JOB? GOOD CREDIT? CALL
BLACKBURN REALTY today. We are
mortgage consultants. You may be
SURPRISED at what you can buy.
can &amp;14 44&amp;-oooa.
IIM!110RS - Racooon Road, 40 A. m~.
moolly wooded. I teo J&gt;lr mQnlh Income
from - · horne pede.

111o1

.

.. .
1 .......--:.. ~ .. .. ~-

HIO,

124.423 ACRES 11/L, GREEN AND
SPRIHGRELD 1WP1. - Juot off St. Rt. 35,

OR. J;:; fumaca, oenl. air, FP, patio,

!}ACE TO -D-2tol-motoorloto Drive
•• Rd. IO Qwo . . Loko Dr. 10 Llkotlliw Cl
Ollorlng 2 ftoi to loll, a
anti
bo-ul vlow alllll liM. AI
1 ............
Avril ..... undooaiOINid tloolllclly, ....... orllllfni

"II I · 2 IIEDAOOM Kljln . . - 1tom1 wlh
LR, Ml•ln kMcntn, 2 Ntht, gu lumace, ref. ancl
range on 112 ace. mil: Can be purchand wltl\
-.....i ICriiQI. BONUS: 21&gt;1droom okltr mobllo
homo.
"17. IWUT a lOW- Ccmlorlll&gt;lo- 3 bodnn.
ltoml. Lalllllt1H', nnl Wllar, B. goo '-1 on ololo

"" :.r..

CITY LMHG - Come In ltiCI look II thll
IIIIa nlca horne. Equlppiid ldloltan, FA. LR.

·.:"Q.::.·

·

RT.

ljORTll GALUA E.TATEI - Approx. 314
acra, mil. Baaullul !pOl lor a homl.

WI-.-~-~=-­
khchon.
lllo oairy
161153-.- ..... __. ~ ...
•
~ -IDaldng ......... ""~ ..-, . ~ ~

. -. $16.000.

--- - ···- ..

LOT FOR SALE ON ST.

z I "TNI
Roornyrtnc11--tnh •
Eft
work ~ed U loloWI: ~~-"=
1712. FOUR li&amp;DIII D11 HOllE

low

-.a.

,_.,_~

....

and

motntonanco II In your IUiliM, con-r tltl• 4
be.._ c,opo Cod brlcl&lt; · Homall lluotod on
2114- 1nd hal 1aoo !'!- n. c1 ~lng _ . . ~·
f111111
lnd I 14~ bUilding Uild lOr I 1t111l
bill--.
'

..._.._......_. - - - - · - II . . , _ .. .CI'IIllla

· -~···· ~.:.;;.""'.

prlol.

1103. IF A HOME OF HIGH STYLE

1101

NEW UlliNGI 40 ACRE FARM with 2 111ory NEW PRICE! MOIIILE HOME &amp; 4) ACRESI
lfinWI ojdtd horne. 3 8R. LR. lUI., family 100111, o- lo daall Ilea loltullz molliki
WI. - car deliool&gt;ed ga.-ga. Some fane.. " - will 3 lll1l • ..,., bath wMI flll'dariiiAI•.
1ng, bam &amp; Pr1ooc1 $10'o.
• • ,IMna 100111. kitchen, 11111V .,...,... llill
appliancao pluo wailler and dryer. Older
I.OTSI L.OTSI L.OTII atv Khoola. Si\lalld bam, metal building. Clo11 to Holzar
..,.. to downlown. Col today lor mo,. lnlo&lt;· HoiPillll
1MM
mlllon. ·
MIO

REMODELED OLDER HOME - 1 ~ llory,
3 BRo. kilchon, bath, PR, oltuatad on 4
....... mil. eaa Ruth tor locoliOn.

,..

LOCATIONt LOCATIONt LOCATION!
II VIITON VILLAGE! Ha,. you wil ind 11tio LARIAT DRIVEl Brick oty1o
s BR. 11$ bolh ona olory hoino w~iving 100111, BRo. 2 baflo, biiiMII~, FR, LR,~;:.:~~
llilcltan. t..ndry &amp; don . A ona cor dining 1raa, Low u•litiH. Hou•
gar~~g~ , blown·in tntulation &amp; mora. On o 1SII7. loluot lo appraciat..

\..

...

•

•

••

�PliO•

D8 Sunday Times Sentinel

~enty-five
-

Farm Flashes

GALLIPOUS • The Ohio Beef
will be held in Columbus at
tile Ohio State Fairgrounds next
weekend. The schedule of events
will start with a beef symposium
and O.C.A. annual meeting on
Thursday afternoon. Friday ·activi·
ties will include shows for nine diffczent breeds of beef cattle during
the day and the O.C.A. awards ban·
qlll:l, in the evening. Sale activities
highlight Sa~y with the fust of
nine dirferent auctions starting at
to 11m.

~po

·Gallia County's
tobacco statistics
are released
·

Approxima~y 25 Gallia Coun-

RegtStrauon for .thts event will be
between 7:30a.m. and 8:30a.m. on
Saturday. The Gallia &lt;;'ounty CatUemen 's Association w!ll pay the
entry fe~ (.or all Gal.h.a County
y_outh wanung to pantc~pate. The
fu~al pracuce sess1on Will be held
th1s Monday, March IS, 4 p.m. at
Butler Hereford Farm! l~ated on
Route ! south of ~alhpohs. Good
!uck.ktds\ T~ere IS alsp an adult
Judgang diVISIOn for young adults
and parents th~t want to compete.
The 1993 Oh10 Beef Expo will
conclude on Sundav. March 21

llftftCiftOI!!
.10,000 111111 DRY
ORDERED SOLD!!!

.

'D
Layaways
All Salas

FREE DELIVERY!
*FREE FINANCING

SALES
FINAL

65%0ff
Sunday

J

Pick 3:
.761
Pick 4:

1839
Super Lotto:

·.•,'•

6-8-23-26-30-31
Kicker:

Page4

•..

ALL GOODS
NOW .•

•

•.

.

·.
·,

'-

. Vol. 43, No. 223
Coprrltlhlld 1!183

. __...JIP.!ro

·Not all~ work and no play-

Appllc~i011s!ll

P.M.

lASSEn • FLEISTEEL • SPRING AIR • SMITH
BROTHERS' · · ENGLAND • KIMBALL STEWART--..
RESTON IC · ·JIMSON • COROLLA CLASSICS ·•
CALDWELL • VAUGHN BISSEn

'~" on

Residents began digging
out Sunday afte\the massive
"' winter ~tOf11!' .llump~d ab_O!It
18 lntbes or-sn11w In the Bend
area Saturdiy causing Meigs
County omclals to declare a
snow emergency.
For some the snow meant
all work and no play bnl not .·
ror these boys who ''rested" 1n
a deep drift of the white nurry
sturr arter l!elplng shovel a
pathway or two.
Dressed ·ror tbe low temperatures and we,a rlng ski
maaks, the two teens declined
to identi~ themselves. Carrie
Alibott olned them at the
deep drl and then went back
to the run or crawling through
tbe tunnels built near the
Chapman home on High
Street in Pomeroy.

SUIDAY OILY, IWICH 14, 1991

6
IIOIITHS
FREE

SOLD IH SRS
OIILY

...$49 97

FIIWIEIM

I HOURS ONLY SUNDAY!
9 PC. DIIIJIG aOOM SURE

TIOble1-lelf, a Chllra, Bldlobol1rd,

Hutch. Country Ught Pine.

I

,.-,

~::" $1 08811
CHillY fiiiSH SLEIIN
DAY lED _
• -' SUNDAY ONLY

The Secret Is O..t And The Heat Is On!!!

$34444

TWill FULL IIIII lED

IlliG SIZE

MATTRESS SET ·
SUIIDAY OIILY

811
24
For letl

White or Red ,

1..w .. u.ks,.1..

Suday Ottly

$24811

FI..IIMI TrHit-1
SIIDAY OILY

Sunday Only

IIGGEST SEUCTJOII Of FUIIIITURE
II AIEL
All 011 SALE SUNDAY!

,w, '48811..,

INNEfiSPRING MATTRESS

DINETTE 4 SWIVEL
CHAIRS
Sunday Only

SPECIAL ·oRDERS

$49995

AT SALE PRICES!

ALLSPtECES

Trlldltionat

::•r $59995

QUEEN SLEEP SOFA

488 81 Fer letlt
FLEXmEL WILL RICUNER
TNI end "-h Plllld

SUIIDAY
OIILY

'

lOTI

UP '1'0 II% OFF IUJIDAY!

$38888

WOOD iJIETTI, 6 CIIIIS
111 7. ,..,.,, Selllllay O.ly

$22222

QUIEII IIATTRUS SET
Ortha•• .. t llatlftls
a roe.!l•tl•

$19995

· SettdllrOIIIr ·

SECTIOIAL W/IECLIIERS .
Onr Stalltd 2 Piece s.cti...J
W/1111, hr Radlllen
. • • . . , Chtly
.
Mt
Onr 10 Sectl•••h Ia Stodl
•

$19995

lnelildle IMler &amp; Fren~~e

...... AIR WI!~.., ........

FULL IUnRESS SET
hltdayOily

DAYIID

=•Y$37J77
at• HUJCI

Pine Flnlah, GIMa Doora
BUFFET &amp; HUTCH TOP

~it' '299'

5

$48811 s.t •

'·

lncludea Unk Spring

.

THE 01111 SIDE Of EIPIREI

s..dll Orders • Salt Pdctsl
~ .....,s• Fleut~ •

MUST SELL SUIIDAYI

l

QUEEN SOFTSIDEI
WATERIID

"With Approved Cradlt

WMITI WICIEl

Strnrt

\

6 MONTHS
SAME AS..
CASH*

SOFA &amp; ·LOVESUT
a.- Velvet

1 P.M. 'TIL
9 P.M.

I

Sl!f.... fiHarTIUJ
'&amp; 'IOISP...
s....

$69995
·

CountryBiue

'177777

. SPIIDIAIIIM•t leek

QUEEN SlEEP SOFA

P.&amp;~L9P.M.

IATIEDS Wootl &amp; ...., (lnctudM Unk Spring)
Sull4ay Otlly
. ,• • •
S..rti.At

W Pieces

IOfA•lOYESIAT

I

THIS IS All UIIPIECEDEIITED DISPEUIL
SALE AIID SHALL II COIDUCTID ON THE
PIIMISES OF:

IRE
'
FURNITURE C

COlUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - A
formal dmner that lflarkOO the midway point of Ohio's Statehouse
renovation project will be followed
this week by more pastoral, downto-earth reminders of Ohio's heritage.
A cow-milking contest, livestock display and other less stately
events are planned in and around
the Statehouse on Tuesday, wh.ich
has been proclaimed br Gov.
Ge6rge Voinovich as Agnculture
Day in.Ohio.
~ the '900 people who attended
!he Saturday night gala sat down to
dinner, but the governor said Tuesllay's events celebflle an· industry.
"that affects every consumer three
iimes a day."
: He noll:d that agriculture and
related businesses. including food
processors, packers and others that
belp· bring the food to market, provide about 700,000 full-time JObs
and add almost $40 billion' a year
(()Ohio's economy.
•: No other single
industry comes
'

.

•• C1eMup of'flre damaae at Meigs

tM snow stonn, Supt. James Car-

ANY
PHONE

C46·1405

~bserved

even close to-that, he said.
Voinovich and Agriculture
Director Fred Dailey will Icicle off
the annual celebration by slicing an
8-foot loaf of Oh.io-made bread that
they are billi11g as a ceremonial ribbon.
The governor has planned a
news conference to release the
results of a task force study or
problems in Ohio's meatpacklng
mdustry.
He also· will talk about a plan to
revitalize the state's livestock
industry and some capital improve- '
ments at ~cpartment buildings in
suburban Reynoldsburg, which will
be open for tours. ·
Also announced will be a new
program that will honor farms that
have been in the same family for
more than 100 years .
The day will' end with a reception for members of the Legislature, who will sample Ohio food
and agricultural products.
. Meanwhile, the department
~clcascd statistics that $ho~ed Ohio

Fire damage clean.up delayed ·
lfJP Sc:IIOQ1,11aa been delayed by

142- SKDND lVDIUE
-DDWN1DWI-

GAWP0US, OHIO

Agriculture ~ay will be

l*w.l' aald rodly.

.

:. C'Jew1 at:qulred by the school's
iAiurance qency were unable to
lilt here S&amp;lllrday because of the
IDOw storm 10 begin )he work, but
fie upeciCd tomorrow. carpenter
• dlltllhele will be no school at
llle Hipl Scbool Tuesday because
~ the cleanup work. The ceiling
die lllllll be removed and the .walls

I

I

'

1 Section, 10 .p_. 25 OMIIa
A MuHimO!Iia Inc. IMuuapaper

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 15, 1993

I

MEICHQDISE DISIIIISID AT

Tuesday, raln,hi&amp;h arouad 50.

•.

OPEN.I HOURS ONLYI
SUNDAY I lt.M.
'TIL 9 P.M.

,,.IL

1:00 P.

Low toalabt Ia mid 301. lbla-

508045

•

pora,t"'cOrparation
its principal
subsidiary, Star Bank, N. A., have
paid a dividend each year ~nee the
Bank's founding in 1863. Prior to
this latest inctease, the most recent
increase in Star Bane Corporation's
quarterly dividend was March 10,
1992, when the board of directors
voted tD increase the quarta'ly divi- . ·
dend by four ' ~t to $0.26 per
share.

-·

cage
• •
parrrngs

•

UP
TO

C!NCINNATI - Star Bane Corporation announces that the board
of directors voted to iQcrease the
quarteri)' dividend to $0.29 per
share to common stoelc shareholders, ari increase of more than 10
pertent from the previous quarterly
dividend rail: of $0.26 per share. .
The quarterly dividend of $1.50
to Series B Preferred stock Shareholders was also declared. These
dividends are payable April 15,
1993 to shareholders of record
March 31, 1993. This announcement was made by Oliver W. Wad.dell chairman, president and chief
executive officer of Star Bane Cor-

(

of production but simply reallocated in the burley belt, with Kenlucky reaping the majqrity of the
economic' benefit. A significant
number of quota owners showed no
activity only one of the years 1991
or 1992.
Those persons need tO either
produce or lease away in 1993 in
order to keep their base. Specific
questions about the burley tobacco
program can be answered by calling Lisa Collins, ASC Executive
.. Director or her staff at the Gallia
County ASC Office (446-8686).
Ed Vollborn is Gallla Coonty's Extension Agent, agriculture.
,

Ohio Lottery

IOIICE: Purcll•••• •••t be
paltl lor llty Cash, Perso•el
Clleck, •••••rC•rtl, VIs•,
•Btl/or Acceptalltl• Cretllt

ALL

Final.
Up To

('With Appr.oved Credit)

Star Bane Corp. hikes
·quarterly dividend·

GREENVILLE, S. C. - J.
William Grimes, President and
· Chief O!lerating Officer of Multi·media, lnc., has been elected a
· member of lhe Board of Directors
of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
The U.S. Chamber, the world's
· largest' federation of companies,
local and suue Chambers of Commate, trade and professional asso- ~. i~ "!C pri~cipal advocate .
, for the nabQ!I s business communi-.
ty. Virtually all the nation's largest
campanies are active members, but
more than 90._, of the 215,000
members are small businessmen
with fewer than 100 employees.

'•

No

GALLIPOLIS - Paul Goebel
and Dean Murphy, associates at .
Hilla Department Store on Ohio
River Plaza, were n:c;ently honored
for five rem of dedicB'ed sezvice.
"AssociateS like Paul and ~
are lhe IJackbone of our company;
said Hills District Manager Ed
Husn. "They have put in many long
·hours to help ~e HillS a viable,
strong com_PIIJIY, and we want to
'show our !f!.OCere appreciation for
their hard work and dedication."
More than 6,400 associates
throughout the chain were recognized during the past month.

Grimes named to
:u. S. Chamber board

•

NCAA

~~~~o:~}~~e~~s~~:ei:~nse:~~':.
Tobacco base lost is 11ot laken out

SftRE BAS Bill
CLOSED ft PREPARE
FOB SALE.
BOOBS OPEl SUIDAY!!!

UNPARALLELED

-Goebel, .M urphy .
'honored by Hills

~d

tollecco leasing season 11 scheduled
to start on Monday, March 15. The
sale value of lhe 1992 Gallia County Burley Tobacco crop is now
being estimated at about $250,000
under the 1991 crop. With basic
·quota reductions of 10 percent for
1993 the economic loss to Gallia
County will become even more
serious. It is very imll()l1ant to the
local CC!XIDnlY.that all of the Gallia
County quota is either grown or
leased to a producer to !lC grown.
.-\SC regulations now stat&lt;: that a
q1101a must have activity in twO out
of three years.
.
A few quota turners have not
had activity in 1991 or 1')92. Their

library of Meigs High School on
Monday, March 15 stan,mg at 7:30
p.m. The $peakcr wtiJ. be Dr.
Steven Boyles, Extension Beef
Specialist from O.S.U. Dr. Boyles
served as an Extension Beef Specialist 11 North Dakota State University prior to returning to Ohio
last summer, Boyles was lllised lit
the Belle Valley Research Farm a
few yeats back while his father,
Charlie Boyles, was the well
Juiown and highly respected manager of that facility. Plan to be a
part of a good program and good
fellowsllip. No reservations neces·
sary,just bring a friend.
·
In Galli a ~ounty ~he annual

•

GOODS TO BE
EXPEDITED 10
PUBLIC SUNDAYIU

burley quota farms with a basic
quota of 2,247,354 pounds and an
effective quota of 2,742,462

.

with the Preview sleCr and Heifer
Show that will start at8 .m.
We have had a lot of interest
again this year from individuals
wanting to become certified as l'li·
vate Pesticide Applicators. A final
. testing session for private applicators has been scheduled for M&lt;?n- .
day, AprilS, from 3-6.p.m. A quiCk
review session will start at 2 p.m.
for those retaking one or IIIOill ~·
New people should call ~ Gallia
County Extension OfflcC? (4467007) to get study matenals for
self-st.udy.
Beef producers from Meigs and
surrounding counties will w~nt to
attend a producer meetmg m the

PUBLIC

q!Klta).
.
In 1992, the county had 1440

Tobacco nottce·s matted on
March 12, 1993, reOect a 10 percent dectease in basic burley tobac·
co quota. A display list will be
available in the county office after ·
MarCh 12 for producers to examjoe.
The list contains the farm number, basic quota, effective quota
and producers name; This listing
· can be helpful for producers who
want to tease q1101a to their farm . A'
copy of the Jist is available for a
fee.
Beginning with 1994, burley
tobacco farms must have history in
two of the previous three years to
avoid losing their quotas.
Farms which currently have no
1991 and or 1992 history will
receive notices with the message:
' "This is 10 inform you that the
effective quQta above n:Oects that
this farm does not bave history to ·
· maintain P&amp;CP credit, which could
result in quQta being reduced to 0."
The ASCS office will maintain
listings of persons wishing to
buy/sell and lease from/to their
farms. Contact the ASCS office II
446-8686 for additional informa.tion.

March 14,1993

youth to take part in. J·udging co. ntest

~Y youth are expected ~ panici~
m the Ex~ Beef l.udgmg Conidt.

GALLIPOLIS - According to E. ·
A. (Lisa) Collins, County Executive Director of the Gallia County
Agricukural Stabilization 800 Conservation Service Office, Gallia~s
tobacco producers sold 2,391,048
pounds of burley tobacco in the
1992 crop year (87% of effective

pounds.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

washed before classes can be
resumed. The acbool staff will be
assistinjl ln cleanlnrr desks, equipment, and OoOrs, the superintendent said.
:
He also said thtit other schools
may or may not be in session Tues·
day depending on road condidcins.
All of the schools have used the
five c:alamlty da&amp;~:owed by the
11110 and days m
from now on
will '*ve 10 be made up 11 the end
. of the ,.-, Calpenl,er lllld,

Tuesday

produced 500 million bushels 'of
.corn last year to rank fifth in the
nation. The leading counties were
Darke, Clinton, Wood,. Fulton and
Fayette.
Ohio also ranked fifth in soybeans with 135 million bushels,
most it coming from western counties; eighth in pork production with
3.4 million hogs and sales of $415
million; and eighth in milk prodbclion with 4.7 billion pounds.
,
The state was the second largest
manufacturer of Swiss cheese (55
million pounds) and fifth in ice
cream (44 million gallons).
The value of all cattle and
calves irl Ohio was. listed at more
than $1.09 billion.

Meigs County
remains under
snow emergency
From staiT and wire reports
effective .until temperatures go n:stored electric service to two cusMeigs County remains under a abovefreezing.
tomers with transfonner problems,
snow emergency after Saturday's
No wrecks were reported in Ron McDade, area CSP manager,
storm dumped approximately 18 Pomeroy.
'
said this morning. Buckeye Rural
inches of snow and created sixSnow removal crews have been · Electric Cooperative, Inc., also
foot-deep drifts in some locations.
advised to record license numbers reported minor power outages in
All area schools were closed of problem drivers so they can be Meigs County.
today along with most governmen- cited to the Meigs County Court,
Ohio Power reported no power
tal offices with the exception of the Soulsby said. As of this morning, outages.
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart- · no license numbers have been
Although units of the Ohio
ment and Emergency Medical Ser- reported, he said.
National Guard pro~ided support in
vice.
I thought we did fairly well some area of the state. no National
Sheriff James M. Soulsby this under the circumstances, Soulsby Guard units were deployed to
morning advised motorists to stay said.
Meigs County, Soulsby said.
off secondary roads unless absoNo major power outages, major
Souls by said many· residents
lutely necessary.
disasters, frres or serious accidents volunteered the use of four-wheelPomeroy street crews have been were reported, Soulsby said.
drive vehicles.
out since Saturday morning and
The sheriff's office provided
Around Ohio
worked in around-the-clock shifts transportation to some stranded
Snow emergencies in all coonthrough Sunday.
motorists, Soulsby ·said. Most acci- ties except one were lifted by today
According to the Pomeroy dents were minor and motorists as Ohioans got back on the road
Police Departmen~ most of the vil- simply abandoned their stuck vehi- after a weekend of record snowfall
lage streets in Pomeroy have now cles and sought refuge, he added.
and low temperatures. ·As much as
·. been opened but many remain
Columbus Southern Power had 22 inches of snow fell in southern
slick. Salt has been applied to some · a crew on standby from Saturday Ohio. streets, but salt is apparently not until the end of the storm ·and
Continued on page 3

Death toll tops 112 in
blizzard's aftermath
By RIC LEYVA
Associated Press Writer
Blizzard victims were found
dead in snowdrifts as . the East
Coast struggled. to dig out and get
to work today. The death toll
reached at least 112, and dozens of
youngsters on a hiking trip were
missing in the wilderness.
Bitter cold hampered sno\vplow
crews and motorists trying to clear
roads and free ice-encrusted cars.
"As soon as the highways open,
I'm out of here. I don't care if I
have to dig the whole parking lot
ou~" said Chris McCade, a student
from Wayne State University in
Detroit who was stranded at a
Charleston, W.Va., hotel on his
way to spring break in Key West,
Aa.
The storm hit Florida with tornadoes on Friday and pushed up
the coast with hurricane-force
winds Satur:day, wrecking seaside
homes. As much as 4 feet of snow
fell, and winds piled drifts 15 feet
high.

"It looks like something out of
'Dr. Zhivago,"' said Rooks Boynton of Clarkston, Ga. "Nothing's
moving out there.''
Rescuers used helicopters, ·frontend loaders and four-wheel-drive
vehicles to reach scores of hikers
and travelers. About 100 hikers
hunkered down in shelters and
tents in the mountains of East Tennessee, where the rescue was suspended until daybreak today, and
dozens of suburban Detroit youngsters were missing in the North
Carolina wilderness, a full day after
the storm passed through.
Ray Carson, a spokesman for
Cranbrook Kingswood Upper
School in Bloomfield Hills, Mich ..
said park rangers had rescued about
half of the 122·person school group
·and had maps showing the planned
routes of the others.
"We'd like to go in, but we're
still impassable here," said Frank
Findley. an assistant ranger in the
Nantahala National Forest.
"They're just barely able to move.

We just hope they stay put until we
can get to them."
In Alabama, an elderly woman
was found dead in the snow on a
neigh'lor's porch, and the body of a
69-year-old man was found a few
feet from his apartment door. A 77year-old man was found frozen to
death nellf Kittanning, Pa.
Dozens of people suffered hean
attacks while shoveling snow.
It was the deadliest blizzard to
strike the United States since one in
January 1966 that killed 165 people.
After the snow let up, rain and
brutal cold turned it 'into rock·hard
ice. "It's not just carrying it
away," New York City Sanitation
Commissioner Emily Lloyd said of
the cleanup. "Now it's chipping
and carrying it away."
Airports in Atlanta, Washington, New York, Boston and other
cities reopened•Sunday, but there
weren't many flights, and air travel
was backed up nationwide. ThouContinued on page 3

Teenager testifies in
shooting spree hearing
DAY-TON, Ohio (AP)- A 17ycar-old boy testified today that he
saw a man shoot one of two people.
who were wounded in a shooting
spree in whic~ six other peop)e

were killed.
The spree began Dec. 24 and
tnded tWO days lall:r. .
Nicholas Woodson of Dayton
testified in Montgomery County
Juvenile Court at a hearing to
determine whether two of the four
people charged should be tried as
adult,S. Woodson is not amon1
those who were charged.

'

Meeting canceled
A meeting or Pomeroy , Village ·
CounciiiCheduled for 7:30 tonight
hu been ·canceled, Mayor Bruce

Reed announced.

BEING A GOOD NEIGHBOR - Just as
many othen wltll anow clearing equipment
belpeclthelr neighbors, Wally Hatlleld, Jr, spent

•••p

hls tractor and plow to
mucb ol SunclaJ
open up drlftWaJI o bls nel1hbon aloag Did

Route 33.

·

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