<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10114" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/10114?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T00:09:26+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20554">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/0d68d7d84f1245cc5812db10972bcc52.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b366706710f3983b91ef79f860185c71</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32321">
                  <text>_.

-...-

·-. ......

~-

·-. ·- ·- .

·~

.... ...

.

- .....

.. .. .

...
.Pig1 1G-The Dally Sentinel

• ca1endar .
C
omm
unt
· =======~~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;~~~;;~~:;;:::;:;,;:~;;,;:::;;:;:;=~~
P'RIDAY
LONG BOTTOM. Failh Full
Gospel Ch~~rth in Long Bottom
will have preac:hing and singing
Friday at 7 p.m. Pula Steve Reed
and local Singers, Public invited.
will .
Fellowship . follow.
.
TUPf£RS PLAINS • The Tup.
rs Plains VFW Post No. 9053
adies Auxiliary will sponsor a
round
~uare dance on Friday
from 8and
·11·.3 p.m. with music by
CJ and the Country Gentlemen.
Red Can- and Melvin Croa will be
callers. Everyone welcome.

:

~

RUTLAND • There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
p.m. to midnighL Music will be
provided by Pwe Country Band.
Public inviled.

POMEROY • There will be a
teen talent show at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
Sawrda
7
on
y at p.m.
KANAUGA • The Liberty
Mounlaineers will perform Satur·
day at the D.A. V. Center in Kanauga

.
RACINE A
o( 40 . •
MILLFIELD • Benefit music
·
•
.
group
JUIIIOI"
and senior high students from the show, Salurday, 7·11 p.m., Russell
Toledo area will present 1 JAOiullll Building in Millfield.
on drugs at Soudlem High School
on Friday from 1: l.S-2: l~ p.m. The
MILLFIELD • Round and
program is·open to the public.
square dance, Saturday, 8-11 p.m.,
Russell Buildi~, Millfield. Music
RIPLEY, W.VA. ·The Liberty will be by Out the Blue.
. Mountaineers will perform Friday
· Ripley, W·VL
atSkaleland1o
L OTTRIDG"
., ·• Th c B as han
l.adics Auxiliiry will have a smorREEDSVILLE • The Eastern gasbo~ dinne~ Sunday from II
Athletic Boosters will ~Friday a.m. 10 2 p.m. at the Bashan F"ueat 7 p.m. in lhe higb school cafele· house. 1'be menu consists of two
ria.
kinds ormeat,·mashed polatoes and
homemade noodles, green
d
MIDDLEPORT • There will be
dressing, desserts an
a dance Friday from 7·11 p.m. at drinks. slaw,
Costs arc $4.50 for adults
the American Legion Annex in and $2 for children under 12.
Middleport with music by George
Hall.
CHESTER • Chester Baseball
~
POMEROY • Revival at Cal· Association will hold sign-ups or
the 1993 baseball and softball sea·
vary Pil~ Chapel on Rol!te 143 sons
"-•·-'- y from 1·0 a.m.IOnoon
............
will be Friday through April 4 at at Chest«
Elementary. Registration
7:30 p.m. iughUy with Rev. Amos is SIS per playa. Anyone who did
Tillis and Rev. Bill and Naomi not no,..;..ipare last year will need a
.-· Tillis, evangelist and singers. Rev.
Vic10r Roush, pastor, invites the copy of their birth certificate.
public.
SUNDAY
POMEROY
-Proclaim, a drama
1
RUTLAND • Rutland Youth · and singing group from Cincinnati
League will hold an organi2llional Bible College, will present a promeelin~ Friday at6 p.m. at the Rut· gram at the Pomeroy Church of
land Civic Cenra: for anyone inler· Christ on Sunday at 7 p.m. .The
esiCd in helping with the 1993 sea· concert is free 10 lhe public.

•
=

son.

'

SATURDAY
POMEROY • Darren Smith,
with guest, Crystal Powell, will
;present a gospel Concert 01! Satur· .
·day at 7 p.m. at tile Laurel Cliff
· Free Methodist Church near
Pomeroy. Call Pastor Pete Tremblay at 992-5326 for information.
RUTLAND ·Rutland Youth
League will hold its third sign-up
·ror the 1993 baseball season on
Saturday from 9 a.m. 10 noon at the
-Rutland Civic Cenler. Anyone who
did not participate ~t year will
of lheir bilth
neet 10 provide a
cerdficate. Registc:::foo is SIO per
child, not to exceed $25 pet family;
ROCK SPRINGS • The Shade
'valley 4-H Club is sponsoring a
.beef hoof trimming Satunlay at 9
a.m. at the Meigs County Fair·
grounds. For more informauon and
an appointmmt, call667-6535.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

POMEROY • Country-western
line dancing classes will be offered
at Pomeroy Village'Hall Auditori·
um on Sunday from 2-4 p.m. Dona·
tion is $2.50. Call 992·7853 or
949·2455 for infonnation.

Friday, March 26,1893

Public Notice
Public Notice
. Public Notice
not in ""'I oecutod the lheruflllr the blcl quote will Goner.r
chief uocullvo offlcer or 1M r_.ved and opened on Govern-1.........14,171.32
For infonnttion, or to register, call
FUNDfl.
other officer of :fplicont the IMt
of -h Public Solely ........... 8,2gg.S7
Bob Pullins, 667·38al31~;~ ~&lt;:&gt;d • ~c;!~=-,::'~ol•,
~~:o::=,~~~·~G .iw~~·O::
~rt•~-= Hoalth .......................2,1114.14
'
667-6348; or Ed Wig • uur"UU~ •
on or llbout April 5, 1tl3. menlll ,..,._ ncord lor the Melp County Hlghw.y c:.ptlll
Outloy..................... 1,554.1S
the Melgo County proJect indl- Oftllulon Dep•rtment. Eollm•t•d TOTAL
REEDSVILLE • The Con· Colnmlooionen wiN ,....t of • required decioion, quenllllee of liquid....,..., IIENTSDISBURSE·
.. -.-......
te
querors will perform at the the Ohio Dop•tment of finding, or olep eppllo.J&gt;Ie required, •pproxlm•tely Tolll R,MIP!a OVert
Reedsville United Methodist Development, Office of to the proJect In the •n· liOO,DIID .-.lor the .,.r. (Undor) Dlob.--.1,115.7~
Ch..-h on Sunday at ?:30 p.m. A l.oclol Government Bervluo, vlronmenlal,....... pro cor Propoulo oro to bo Fund Ceoh 1111-·
·
to rol•••• Fecler.r Fundi Objectlono muot 1M pr• returned on bid lormo Jon. 1; 1•...--S11.067.se•
potluck dinner will !'recede the undor ndel of the Houollll porod and oubmltted In aupplled by tho Molgo Fund Caeh llol•oe
program at 6 p.m. Public invited.
and Community Develop· occord•n•• with the r• County Engln•• end m.y DoC. 31,1 ......... 40,753.1 ~
mont Act o11g74 (PU3 313) qulroci prooeduro (24 CFR be obtained through the Atrtrwe for Encumbfancee.
NELSONVILLE
.. An lor tho followlng_p,........:
Part 58), ond may be En9noer'o office.
Doc.-31, 1t82 ....... 40,753.1.4
Overvl·ew of Ohio Foresm." will be
1. RUTLAND YIUAGE: oddruood to OLGS at P. 0.
Mary Hoboto-, Clerk ·
•
-,
w1 1
d Sew"or 2700 Box· 1001 Columbuo Ohio
BOord of Mol-County DepooJtotY
111111'101
................
40,753.
1~
esented al135 College
orfHI
••of&amp;" P.V.C.'
'
· eomnil.olonero
S daHall at linear
43216. •
Cuh on Hend-...... 40,753.14
ocking College on un Y at 2
2. MEIGS COUNQL ON • obj ..llono to the r..._ (3) 111. 26. 2tc
Total Tr-ury
•
p.m.
AGING: Public Servloo. of !undo on booeo other
Pu.bile NotlBolonoe.-............ 40,753.14
Pur 0 hau 2 pleceo of th811 tho. . otelod above wfll
.....,
Outatondlng
;
BURLINGHAM - Junior Mod- equipment
not be oonolclered ~ OLGS.
NOnCE 10 ASPHALT
atecka...- ..................... -o.
3. SUTTON TWP.: Strrt No obj..tion received oflor
TOTAL
"
em Woodmen wt·u have a fam 1"ly Improvement
Repovo .77 April 22, 11!13, will be
CONCREIE VENDORS.
BALANCE
......
...
40,753.11
get·IOgether Sunday at 2 p.m. atlhe mllr of rood.
conoldered bv OLGS.
Sealed bldo will bo
IUIIIMAAY OF
'
hall , Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
4. SCIPIO VFO: Fire
~Hobo._, rocolv"' by the Boord ol
INDEBTEDNESS
Sanders, Gallipolis, will have the Equipment Purchooo 40
Cl• ~
~~:~!ra~"~~'Jrt C~~::-.::: Outatondlng
program. Refreshments. Everyone pl..
s •BofAs":luAipNmYenF~· Fir•
Commllolo,.,. Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;g until ~ '· 1-.--..............-oNilw ......_ .......1,5411.00
"1 Pur 0 h~•• 4 131 2s, ltc
welcome.
E ·1
10:00 A.M, on April 7, um. Retlred
.......,_,,,•. ,_ 1,714.01
plqu
..rpmen
ohqulpment
.
·
The bldo will 1he.n bo
Outala'""'Jn
·
POMEROY
Dr. . Ri ck
&amp;. SOIL CONSERVAT10N: , PubliC NotiC$
open,.t and rled oloud ot Doc. 31,1 .........
4,771i.t1
1
Brintz-nhofe,
Fellowship Tract Fl"qu,.
E J......-L
-:::=-=~10:45
on tho
7th deythe
or
~
... -.. lnolllllallon 1 "..;,•...---....,.,.,:-_
NOnCE
TO .
April,A.M.1gu
. for
I cortlty thlo r.pon to •
League, Lebanon, on Sunday at 2 or ~~1!:¥:-o:--MEIGS: AGGREGATE VENDORS
turnlohing of v•louo grlllll coneot oi)CI " " lo U.. brt
~
p.m. Music will be provided by Adminlotration. ContrecL
Sooleci bldo will be of Alphllt Concrete.lor the of my knowtadga.
.
llerGhl3,1
.
.
Guy Priano.
8 . COUNTY OF MEIGS: reaolvoll by the Boord ol Molgo County lilghwoy
Connlo
Kill'
a.-,
Cleric
Folr liouol"'.
Mel go County Commie· Department Pro-lo oro
-IR143
ROCK SPRINGS - Revival ill
Tho .nvlronm.,tal roviow olonaro, Court ~ouoo, to 1M retumod on bid forma
POmeroy,
Ohio 45781
Rock Springs United Methodist record 11 on file at the Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;g until oupplled by the vendor. The
114-742-3121
Church will be Sunday through Commloolonoro Offlco •• 10 A.M. on April 7, 103. blcl price oholl be firm end (3) 25. Ito
'
R
W d
welloo at the Buck.ye HIMe· Tha bldo will then be In effect during tho 1H3
Tuesday at 7 p.m. . ev. en e11 Hocking Volley Regional opllfted ond rled oloud at povlng ouoon from Moy
Public Notice
Vermillion will be the guest speak· Devolopment Dlotrtct onc1 1o 10:15 A.M. on the 7th dey of through N~~VM~ber1 ...
er. There will be special singing avoHoble for public April, 11113 for tho
A Speclllcotlon Shrt
LEGAL N011CE
Notloe le horeby given
nightly. Rev. Keith Rader invites eumlnatlon.
fumlohlng of oil ldndo ond may 1M picked up ot the
lhe public.
Molgo Countr. will ••- of .....ole that m.y orn.. or the Melgo County !hot • olnale otory hcllll
undortako 11111 pro ect with ba required by the Melga Engin-.
·
togiiMr wlih .IIIProxlnuW) ·
·
Block Gr•nt Fu-..• from ..._ County Highway Depart•
Mery llo\l•to-. Clerk two
rill ••te
SYRACUSE ·Darren Smith Ohio · Dopart,.,..
u..
1 oro 1o 1M
D-... loceted otof 101
Union
of ment. propoooo
~rd. or·~
-11 eou n.,
111 ont
will be at the Syracuse Mission Develop~t~en[, 011101 of returned on bid .forma
Commlool~oro Torr•o•, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Church on Sunday at 10 a.m. Pas· Locol Government 11erv1-. ouppllod by the vendor, .,d (3) 11, 2G, 2tc
-ned ~ Ruby Sllwlll,lb
tor Mike Thompson invites the (OLGSl. Meigo County Ia will 1M oponed on 1M dolo 1.:..::.....:.....:.....----- Ruby lloooMon, · ond
drcrlbecl In Yolwme 210,
public.
certllylng to OLGS thot thoy and ploc' opoclflod.
PubliC Notice
conunt to occepl the Speclllcotion for bidding 1-FI-N-AN=a~A~L~RE=PO=RT=-:O:::F:- p... 711, wll ... lOki lithe
office of cr- •nd Crow,
REEDSVILLE • Gregory jurlodlctlon ol the Fodor.r moy 1M obtolned through
TOWNSHIPS
2nd ond Mulberry ""'·
Courlo II on octlon lo the Elllln-·o Offlc., Rook
Pomeroy, Ohio on -.ctl31,
Lenhart will present a seminar on brought to enforce Sprlngo Rood, Route 2,
For Floolll V.. Endl"'
New Age on Sunday at 10:45 a.m. rHponolbllltl• In roloUon Pomeroy,Ohlo457611.
o.-1Mr31,1~
1 - 112:110 p.m.
Bold rMI •tote wfll ...
and 7 p.m. at the Fellowship to onvlronmentol revlowo,
Miry Hobotattar, Clerk
rg~~~
oold, at not Jooo lh8n
Church of the Nazarene in declolon making, ond
BoordofMelgeCounty
..,
twenty lhoueend dollan
"Thlo
lo., u...,clt
Fl.....,lol~
Reedsville. Rev. John Douglas action, ondo that thllll l 9 26 21cCommlollonera
($20,0DO
110). lo the hlghrt
. . th
bl"
rHponolbllltiM hovo been 1 1!::3!..1!!:.;•~-::,;•=......,.--SUM,..,_ Of CASH
bidder. The ex....... ot 111e
IDVItes e pu IC.
eotlofled. The legol elhct of 1"
N I
""'"' RECEIPTS
..tote retain• the right lo
the certification fo that u~
__.:.P.:ub::;U:::c=ot:::::ce~BALANCEI,
..
~..
AND
EXPENDilURES
0
A
h
0
NOnCE 10
GOVERNMENTAL' FUNDS r..eot llfty and II bldo.
P MER . Y • n open ouse Ita opprovol, llhlp County
rill "lilt- w.. form
will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. for moy uoe tho Block Grant BITUMINOUS VENDoRS
REVENUE RECEIPTS:
applllllld at sao,ooa.oo. "
1
Albl:rt Roush, Bailey Run Road, futindfoled'ond
W Nb hlv
.._~
Sealed bldo !'Ill be T - .................... $1fl,lta.81
C.h on hend on 118J ef
1~• OLGS
Pomeroy, 10 honor his 76th birth- 11 1
rupon11 111.,_ received by the Bo•rd ol lntergcwernmenllll . .
'
. '
day. Everyone welcome. It is En~or th.:l ,.:.:~~~~ Molga County Commlo· fleceljiiii ............... S7,6W.gg
Tho eole muot be
n !""o~GenS
Y ., a Ionero, ·Court Houoe, lnlerllt............- ...... t,8te.31 •pproved by the Prob._to
requested lhat crifts be omitled.
Pomeroy, Ohlo·457&amp;g, until All Other
.,.
I 111•· '" w111 occop1
Court of llelgo County,
'
objecti1on to lto1 •1pprdooval ofd 10 A.M; on April 7, 1g93, Revenue................. 8,220.7e Ohio.
MONDAY
tho re uoo o un an. Tho bldo will then bo TOTAL;
Rolle
REEDSVILLE • Eden United acrtlcofipltlononco · IYollf ·ltbl~:r: opened ond reed aloud ol RECEIPTS ............ t7,355.14
Executor of the~ ol
Brethren Ch~~rth will have revival co ..
on
I
• 10:30 A.M. on the 7th doy of EXPENDITURE
llsallt.dun•MI
of the
following ~ w•· April • 1t93 ond ... h month DIS8UASEIENTS:
with Betsy and Peter Martindale LonoThot
I 1~1 1111, llll,, ;ou, llo
the .rtllcotlon
and family Monday .through April
4. Special music nightly at 7 p.m.
Public Notice
NOTICE OF INTENT TO
REQUEST A RELEASE OF

~

.

Wodn•:::X.

OSU women
edge
Virg·
i
nia
7
5-73
•

Getting
ready for
Easter eats

bl:'.!:n:.":..

7

-.m.

The perils of traveling in a blizzard are
noted in Beat of the Bend - B-6

-B-1

Fred Crow concludes his series on
the McCumber murder case - A-6 ·

r:

=.:v

J.

•r•

cl'8'J:lv

=

.....

I..,...

Vol. 21, No. 6
Copyrighled .1e83

· Thomas, 60, passed a high
school equivalency test and was
gillduating Thursday from Cocon~t
Creek High School near his
Broward County, Fla., ~om~.
Thomas also has a house m thiS
Columbus suburb, where Wendy's
.is based.
: Thomas. a high school dropout
who founded tile chain in 1969,
said he grew inrerested in earning
the equivalency certificate while on
a 26-eity tour to )AOI1IOte his book
"Dave'sWay."

Baker a apia 011 the I)TO"I1III Tllursday on Day·
toD Btacll. (AP plloto)

to overwhelming response, this Singer sewing machine de11ler

extending the sale of a limlled number of new special 1993
Iheavv duly zigzag and open arm sewing machines lhat are made
to last, and sew on all fabrics: denim, canvas, upholstery, nylon,
slretch, )linyl, silk_. EVEN SEWS ON LEATHER! No attachmeniS
needed lor bullonholes (any size). It monoorams, hems, sews on
buttons, satin stitches, overcasts, darns, appljquea and me. Juat
set dials and see magic happen wilhoul old·faahionecl cams
programmers. These singer Heavy Duly Machines are suitable lor
home, professional or schoolroom aewing. Twenty-five year
.
.

YOUR PRICE WIIH AD '169 - WITHOUT ID '2H

'

Meigs ready for April reclamation projects
· By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentiael Sta"
POMEROY- Several recJama.
lion projects will get underway in
Meigs County next monlh, according to Barbara Niemczura, con- ·
struction project specialist witll the
Ohio Department of Natural
·Resolirces, Division ofR,eclama-

Middleport, reclamation of strip
min~ land a~ Pageville, landslide
reprur on Bailey Run Road, and a
reclamation project on Wilton
Creek Road 1n the Laurel Cliff

area.

The Pageville project is to
reclaim a strip-mined area of 68.5
acres. Niemczura' said that it is the
last acreage in the hu11dreds of
tion.
acres
which were strip mined at
Niemczura said that the 'projects
Pageville
10 be reclaimed. Cost of
wiU include drainage problem cor.'
tile
project
is $392,555. Complerections, one on Chestnut at Sevlion
date
has
been set for Sept. 30.
enth and the other on Fourth in
Final!&gt;8petWorkontheprojectis

.Rainfall
prompts·

being completed now in prepara·
tion 10 ge_lling t!1e \I;'Drk un&lt;~erv.:ay.
probably m A!Xil. N1emczura SBld.
The project is 100 percent feder·
ally fun~ed wit~ money CO!ftin_g
from exctse taxes on coal which IS
mined.'The tax is35 cents on stripmined coal per ton, and IS cents on .
each lon of coaJ taken from a deep
c.oal inine.
'
Contract for til~ wor!c on what
· has been titled .tile Lyon project,
located at Chestnut and Seventh
Street in Middleport, has been
awardedtoMid-StateConstruction,

Optn I to IS MondiY thru lllturdly

'

Cheshire. The project cost is
$9,670 with work to get underway.
early next month.
The project, Niemczura said,
~Yill consist of installing drainage
hie about 225 feet along Chestnul
Street. June I has been set as the
completion date.
Currently under design and
expected 10 go 10 bid in ~Y is the
Mullen project on Fourth Sireet in
Middlepon. It also involves a mine
drainage problem.
The CEPS Co. of Byesville has
been •awarded a contract for

$36,730 on the Bailey Run

R~ad

Niemczura said that the Wolfe':
swisher project o~ West Mail)
Street in Pomeroy IS slill under
design. She said that the aerial phO:
togrsphy has~n c~mpleted ~
that mapping· u g&lt;)lng forward .
Once the design is·cQIIIpleled then
the project will go to construction;
Work there will be to til conJrlll
the water which runs down Salt
Street and onto WCSI Main from an
abandoned mine on the hill above.
(Conthiued on A·8)

pro~t. It inv~lves a landslide near
the mtersect10n of Route 124.
Completion date on that project is
June 30! according.IO the consb11C·
bon pro.JCCI spec•alist.
Another reclamation projectiO
get underway ibis spring is in the
Laurel Cliff area on Wilton Creek
Road. Contraci for that project in
the amount of $9,105 went .to the
Civilian Conservation Cmps. Work
will begin there next month.

G ran d JUry
•
•IDdIC
• ts

3 men on records
tampering charges
.,

~Mason
·
.
-

.

.

:(:losings

'·.

1_

•

;,; -

and Dam. Seen aboVe Is tbe high Willer sign clos·
ing Three MUe R!lld in Henderson. &lt;T·S photo
by MiDdy Keams).
'

POMEROY - Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Lentes flied eight indictments Friday as issued by lhe January reno
of the Meigs County Grand Jury
which met Thursday.
Steven Taylor, Long Bottom,
and Carl E. Moore, PQIIIeroy, were
eaeh indicted on twO counts of tam. pering wi.th records. Thomas Stevers.'Pomeroy, was indicted one
count of tampering with records:
• They are accused of tampering
with government records maintained by the Veterans Service
Commissions of both Meigs and
Athens counties, a prosecutor's
office spokesman said
"These importailt cases invtllve
the illegal receipt of funds designed
to aid needy veterans of our armed
forces," Lentes said.
"These funds were received by
individuals who made simullane,
ous applications for benefits in
bolh counties, alleging residence in
bolh counties." Lentes said.
"We are especially grateful for
the assistance we received from
Max Cale of the Meigs County
Veterans Service Office, who was
extremely cooperative in lhe detec ·

·tion and investigation of lhe crimes
involved in these cases," Lentes
said.
.
The charges against Taylor,
Moore and Stevers are felonies of
the fourth degree.
Also, Sky Aynn of Pmland \vas
indicted on· two counts or lnaking
and entering.
Flynn -is accused of breaking
.Into structures owned by NOimlln
Hamlin and Clarence Conger. Thcl
charges are felonies of the fourlh
degree.
Dale Riffle, Pomeroy, was
indicted on a fourlh-llegree felony
charge of trafficking in drugs,
specifically marijuana.
Rodney Klem, Pomeroy, was
indicted on one count of breaking
and entering.
Klein allegedly entered the
Lawrence Klein res•dence with thC
intem 10 commit a theft offense.
Lawrence Klein and Patricia
Klein were indicted on one charge
each of receiving stolen property,"
specifically a motor ·and au10 ...,.:
owned by Larry Klein, with a spec: •
ification from the grand jury that
the items stolen were of more than
$300 in value, each count being a
fourlh degree felony .

U.N., Serbian
military slate
ceasetire today

**********

•
'

NATIONAL PRODUOION CORPORATION
**********

'

PRODUCERS GAS SALES, INC.
**********

COSHOCTON ENERGY CORPORATION

IUiplld.

THE
FABRIC
SHOP
· POIIEIOY, OliO • H2·2214

....___

.

NGO · DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION

National
Gas &amp; Oil CoMpany

He said people_ ~ the tour~
about the coritradicllon between his
ta1kJ on the importance of cduca·
lion and his lack of a diploma.

"TJ!ey kept asking inc why I
say education is so im~t, yet I
never fmished school, ' he said. "I
didn ' t have a good answer, so I
decided io get lliy high school
'diploma."
·

17 Section 188 Pag•

A lluhlm.,.. Inc. nowopeper ·

**********

SALE OFFER EXTENDED

Chatk, cash Mica•., VIS~ Masfll(art A•rrfc•
lrllllll .... FACTOn SWED CAiro

Showers. High 55. to60

NATIONAL" GAS &amp; OIL . CORPORATION

ATTENTION

.

•

Weather. ......................... ..A-2

Serving East Central and Southeastern Ohio
With Clean, Reliable and
Efficient Energy Service .

•

'

Sports..............................Cl-8

.YOUR LOCAL DIVERSIFIED
NATURAL GAS COMPANY

#

I

u ... ............

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Galllpoll.._poJnt Pleasant, March 28 1 1993

HIGH WATER- Six sec:oadary roads Ia
' Muoa (:nuaty have been closed due to bigb
water. The OIUo River crested Friday afternoon,
according to a lpOkcspenoD at the RadDe Loclts

DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - Dave
Thomas, the folksy piu:hman for
his Wendy's resla'!f'allts; did :Mth·
. out a high school !liploma until last
year.

Along tbe river .............. Bl-8
Business/Farm...............Dl-8
Classified .......................D4-7
Deaths. .......................... A· 7·8
Editoral ............
.A6

.es-

•

. Passes test

Inside

L••

BASHAN • The Bashan Ladies
AUlliliary will "-ve a smorgasbord
dinner Sunday from 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. at the Bashan F"uehouse. The
menu consists oftwo kinds or
meat, mashed potatoes and gravy.
homemade noodles, green beans,
POMEROY - The Meigs Coon·
slaw, dressing, desserts and drinks.
Costs are $4.50 for adults and $2 ty Veterans Service Commission
will meet Moodav at 7:30 D.m. in
for ehildren uncia' I2.
the
Veterans Service Office in
MIDDLEPORT. Rev. John
Pomeroy.
Haley will preach at the Middleport
Community Church Sunday at 7:30
RUTLAND. Revival at Rutland
p.m. There will also be special
Freewill
Baptist Church wilh Bob
singing. Public invited.
Stewl{t will be Monday and'TuesCOOLVfi..LE - There will be a day. Marvin Markham on Wednes·
hunters safety course for turkey day and thursday; and Rick
hunting on Sunday from noon to 5 Weaver on April I and 2. Pastor
p.m. at lhe Coolville Fire House. · Paul Taylor invites the public.

GYRO-GYM • Rob G~ney or Dayton Beida,
Fla., gives Ualverslty of Toledo studeat Je..l

C-1

•

national

1500 Granville Road • Newark, Ohio 43055
(614) 344·2102
1-(100) 255·6115
UCIIII 614·949·2166

By ROB~T E. MILLER
By STEVEN KOMAROW
Associated Press Writer
Auodated Press Writer
COLUM9US - Ohio's new
WASHINGTON- President
budget has triggered a political
poker game between House Clinton's jobs bill seemed well
Democrats and Oov. George protej:ted in the Senate Friday, in
the bands ofa aslf-deacribed "rus·
Voinovich.
·
tic
boob from West Virginia,''
Speaker Vem Riffe, D·Wheel·
Robert
C. Byrd.
enburg, opened the game Jut week
In
a
day of colorful rheiOric bot
by trimming $200 million from the
little
action,
the approprialions
bill proposed by the governor, a
committee
chairman
taunlcd his
Repubbcan who shines his own
col~ues,
Republicans
and con·
shoes "and don't mind beinc
servauve
fellow
Democrats,
who
called a tightwad."
criticized
the
president's
pacbge
Riffe 8lso shifted funds around
and added money to cdaratloo and but haven't found the votes to
other pro11rams that Voinovich chaniL
pvc priorities In his $30.8 billion · ..fmorson sald tllat God does
spending plan. .
.
- not manifcst himself· to cowards,"
Byrd said, .d arinathem to offer
(Continued on A·B)
their BmC!IdmeniS•.
'
l

The jobs bill includes $16.3 bil·
liop for summer youth jobs, unem·
ployment insurance, highway pro·
· ~ects, and various other c1vic
Improvements. The president is
scUing it as a Ionic for the economy
at a time when the slmlath of the
recovery is uncertain.
.
Leon Panetta, the president's
budget chief, told a Nlllional Press
Club luncheon the jobs bill was
"absolutely essential" 10 keeping
the economic recovery moving.
"The chance Is 100·great that it
will remain weak and that it could
. fallllack in10 a receaion" without
the added push provided by the
jobtl bill, Panetta said.
"This is not the right lcind of
stimulus pactage," said Sen. La1JY

•

Craig, R·Id8ho. " The only way we
rruly w!ll c~te long term, high
paymg JObs IS 10 get government
out ..of the way ... or the private sec·
tor
.
' 'I am startled, I am amazed and
chlgrincd." said Byrd. "Why cap' t
we as Democrats support the lead·
er.... Are we going 10 put chains on

and now stands toe to toe with
other PQWers in Washinglon.
"A rustic boob lhcy would say,
I su~. A rustic boob from West
Virgmia," he said. "A country boy
between two lawyers is like a fish
between two cats," he mused, a
laW)'Q' himself.
"Why, th!~re arc mough Repubhim?"
lican senators here 10 Jrnch me.
Byrd was doing his best 10 make They could ride me out or town on
sure.1t was his feDow senators who a rail," he chuckled at one point
were chained down. He maneu· when fellow Democnts were
vered .Clinton's bill so that even if somehow absenL
·an /amendment won, it could be
' He compared himself 10 .the boy
wiped out Jater.
with his finger in lhc dike, and to
Not bad, he boasled, for some· other brave, lonely fiaures iQ literaone who went to a two -room ture: '.'If he's in the ri&amp;ht, then God
schoolhouse in hillbilly country st11nds in the dim . sltadows an.d

.

holds sway over his home. So I am
~ere now," he said;
Byrd lalked about his dog, Billy, '
a Maltese tenier whom he praised
for his loralty. And, eventually;
Democrauc colleasues arrived 10
pick up the debate.
Sen. James Sasser, D-Tenn .•
talked of how Clinton's plan was
like eating spinach. "That spinach
is what made Popeye the Sailor•
Man so strong." and would have
the same effect on lhe country. he .
said.
.'
Senate leaders said they hoped;
to finish work. on the jobs bill ;
work out any differences with lhe
House, and get It 14&gt; Clinton's by the eiid of next week.
· : ·:
I

\

,~,

'

I

?

.•.
•

.•

'

:•:•.

�Pomeroy--Middlaport-Galllpolla, Ott Point Plaaunt, wv

Paga A2 Sunday llmae SanUnal

m

~

IIOHIO Weather

Sunday, March 28

Accu-Wealher• forecast for daytime conditions and

· Accu-Weaiher• forecast for

.

IToledo

.
I I

to
The Lebanon Township
AA group to meet
Trustees will meet Tuesday •t 7 . The·~croy GroUp of AA will
p.m. at tbe township building.
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Cleo-up set
JTPA building. Call 992-5763 for
Cemelel'y clean-up will begin in information.
Olive Township oo Apri112. AllyBow shoot planued
one wanting to~ flowen should
The Chestef Bowhunters Club
have them removed by t1w date.
· will hold a 30-target McKenzie
· Speclll meedu&amp;
Shoot on Sunday at the range on
There will be a ~ial meeting Pomeroy Pike. Registration will be
of the Olive Township Truslecs DO from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m,.

conditions and

'

OHIO

58"

March 28, 1993

AreaTrustees
activities
announced
meet
River Stare Forestry Building.

WEST VIRGINIA Weather

Sunday, March 28
MICH.

·

IMansfield ls7" I•
• lcolumbus!se• I

~ =~
~-

· VA.

1 ~ 00 , 9 : 10 DAILY
IM't . U'!' SU. . 1 ; DO ): 1t

........ -.CB4
T••

••

-ow•• 'JI) o

t:20

~JLY .

~ MATT~ CIS .

C1993Ac:cu-Weather, Inc.

Meigs County announcements
Admission is 25 cents and there
Cemetery clean-up
LETART - Clean-up of the will be games, dOOr prizes, a counLetart Cemetery will begin on try' store and food. A dance will
April S. Anyone who wants to follow frl&gt;m 8·11 p.m.
Dinner pJauned
remove flowers or other items
GALLIPOLIS - A·bean and
should have them removed by that
cornbread dinner will be Served by
time.
the Gallipolis OES on Friday at the
TrllStees to meet
REEDSVILLE - The Olive Masonic Temple fi:om 11 a.m. 10 7 ·
Township Trustees will meet April p.m. The cost is $3 for the dinner
5 at 7:30 p.m. at the Shade River or SI for a hot do~t.
State ForesiJ'Y Building.
COLONY THEATRE
Meeting rescbeduled .
FRI. THilU THURS.
ROCK SPRINGS - Beef proMEL GIBSON IN
c
ducers, the beef clinic meeting has
BEST OF THE BEST II R
been rescheduled for April'S at 8
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs High S.chool
ADMISIIOH$1.60
Library. Excerpts of a video on
SHOWING AT 1:30
"Beef Spring Breeding" produced
FAt, lAT., ·suN.
LEPRECHAUN A
by the University of K~tucky, Ed
•
ONE EVENING SHOW 1:30
Vollbom, Gallia-Meigs AgriculDU'e
AIIIMSIION SUD
WARM STATICWARY
Extension Agent, will follow-up
44UI23
with Ohio State University's latest
beef production recommendations.
. PERI group to meet ·
POMEROY - The Meigs CounNATIONAL SUMMARY:
ty PERI group wiU meet Friday at· .
Rain wiiAk portico ot the Northulllomonow, and will combine with rapidly m.tting snow to
1 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center
ptOCII.II»tt.ltnM at fkMidirlg. CokieraFwlll Mttll Into II• northlm PlaN. Thl northern Roc:kita will
in
Pomeroy. All members are urged
get l'llln, whM MOW
ovw pM• cl ~ Showe,. wll lilted Soutt...m Califorria. Sunltir~e Is
inltcn tor thrl
· · ·
to attend.
Carnival planned
REEDSVll.LE • There wiU be a
"Coun!I'Y Fair Carnival" at Eastern
BIIIF!SS.C0111fy
date was 81 in 1910, record low 15 High School on Saturday from 4-7
By The Associated Press
p.m. sponsrn:ed _by the junio~ class.
Sat., April 3, 8:00 P.M.
High temperatures Sunday are in 1955.
:expecled to range from around 40
•hrttRKn.r"r•_.••~••
11ear Lake Erie to 55 to 60 over
Friday, Alii 2, I P.M.
· :southern Ohio.
•d 6orottiy Haeldno
: A lhrea1 of rain wiU accompany
Ariel.,_.
1he clouds across the southeast half
426 2nd Ave., O·tMpolla, Oh.
Cell -ARTS for-~ Info.
of the state through Sunday. The
:greatest chances for rain will he
found near the Ohio River.
; Cloud amounts incn:ased across
:Southern Ohio Saturday and were
-expected to spread across the rest
:Of Ohio Saturday night and Sun-

••

A~t;.!t

t•

~Rain expected in south Ohio

IDLETYMES

The Cellular One
Service • Guarantee
Receive 1 Hour of Free Time
Offer Good March 15 -April 30
1. Quality. If y"u're not satisfied with the quality of the
call in your home ~overage area, call us and we'll
give you credit (one minute air lime).

' repair your phone in an hour dur2. Service. If we can't
ing a scheduled appointment, we'll give you a loaner
phone- free. You pay for air time Ol]ly.

.

.

.

3. Value. If the phone doesn't meet your expectations in
the first 60 days, :we'll b·uy it back. You pay only for ·
the air time you've use~~
'Cuetomer muat algn a 12-moilth contract.

.

'

CELLULARONE®
The One

You Can Count On

ChoHI
Matttr

SATELLITE

UMtt

su.noN

Boh's
Electronics
UPPER RT. 7
KANAUGA, OHIO

)lay.

Ohio weather

:charcoal industry
·topic of Syracuse
ri)an 's presentation

::JACKSON - Michael Struble
or. Syracuse will present a slide
si\'Pw and narration of his recent
research entitled ''They Coaled the
Hills: Technology and Change in
t~ Charcoal Industry of Jackllon
· County, Ohio" at the annual meeting of the Ohio Association of Historical Societies and museums to
b~ held in Ironton on Saturday,
Apnl17.
;Struble's research was recently
accepted for publication in an
uPc:oming Journal of the Pioneer
Al)lerica Society Transactions and
will also be presenled at the 22nd
annual Society for Industrial
A~heology Conference at Pittsburgh, Pa., m June.
:The paper covers the evolution
of J)uit industiy and its impact upon
tho American landscape from the
"nJ!s" and "hollows" of southeastern Ohio to the industrial cities
across America. The cost for tjle
alt·day conference will be $9
which includea the program and the
mO.!. Reservations may be made
by ;calling 532-1222.

N~w

trustees named

PoMEROY - Carleton CemeterY Trustees Ralph Carl, Clarence
Story and Wayne Beal have
resigned, due to heallh reasons ..
~y have appointed David King,
Paul Smith and Brian King 10 serve
as iernCiel')' rrustees. A meeting of
the;rrustees will be held Tuesday at
7:39p.m. at the Carleton Church.
L

Redecorating
for Spring?..

YOUR BUSINESS

SELECT CARPET

ss'~!

SAVES MONEY WHILE
YOU' SLEEP.
Columbus Southern Pbwer's
commerc1alleasing program
for off-peak water heaters saves
your business money 3 ways

•

~

FREE Installation and
maintenance.

Mf,I qs C.9l!J(P'E/I &amp;
1YEC09{Jllrr19\[(j
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
MON.-SAT. 8:30=5:00

,,

One Year.. ..................................... _..$46.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
SundAy........................................... 75 C('n iAt

The Sunday Tlmca-Sentinol will not. br.
nepon.ible for.adu ncc p~~ymen UI mAdn
&amp;ocarrien.
.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
!honcl... Only
One YMr.............................. .:-........... $47.84
llbl Monlhs ....................................... $24.79

For more information
Clll441=4611

Dolly ond hncloy
MAIL 8UB8CRIP110N8
IMide Co•nty

ta w............................................. l2t.s;

· 36W•b....... ..................... ............ .. $43.16
62 ~b ..................................... ... .. $84. 76
bt• Ov.a.tde Co•nl)'

992-6173

•

t3 - b........................... ,.............. $23.40
36 - b........................................... $45.150
62 w..
.o

u ...........................................au.

.

•
"

',

•

y....,_.,.

c:an.

..

*":'

-*- --

ill*
* fJLi::r::fl

Man cited for D.U.I.
POMEROY -James A. McDonald, 27, Rutland, was cited by
lhe Gallia-Meigs POst of the State Highway Patrol early Saturday
morning for driving uitder the influence and no operator's license.

GVFD respond to grassfire

.

.

scene.

Man injured
A Gallipolis man was •inj ured
but refused treatment foUowillg :a
two-vehicl~ accident in Gallipolis
Township Friday afternoon., illle
patrol reported.
·According to the accident
repon, Lewis A. Elwood. J r.• 44.
177 LeGrande Boulevard, GalliJ»Iis, was southbound on State Roule
7 whel} he stopped iri traffic :and
was struck froni behind by Billie
A, Wells, 21, S.R. 124, .Reedsville.
Wells was cited for failure 110
maintain IIIUSSURd dear di"'Pl!Ce
Both vehicle sustained light ·dam-

CROWN CITY - Fourteen firefighters from the Gallipolis Volunteer f'ire Deparunent responded to a grass ftre Friday afternoon at
the Roben EUis residence, 492 Chambers Road, Crown City.
The deparunent responded with' two trucks and used I 00 gallons
or water to extinguish the blaze, which burned approximately llf. an
acre. The fire was caused by sparks from a trash ftre, which 'ignite4
nearby grass.

·

CROWN CITY -Jennifer Allen, 23S4 Davis Road, Crown
City, told Gallia County sheriffs deputies Satl!fday someone stole a
14 karat diamond ring from her residence sometime last week.

Windows vandalized
GALLIPOLIS- The Galiia County Sheri,ff's Department
reponed two incidents of windows being vandali&gt;ed Friday.
A deputy on routine patrol Friday in lhe Crown City area found
- two windows broken out of the Bethel Church, Bladen Road, and
Sabrina Boyles, 23, 79 Solar Road, Gallipolis, reported someone
shot her bedroom window with a peDe! gun.

'.
.

'·~ ·:

·..•.·

LineS to be flushed
TUPPERS PLAINS ·- St.lil!g
on or about April 1, flushing of all
lines in the Tuppers Plains~
Water District will begin, .Dou
Poole; manager, innOUnced 10day.
He said that the process •will
continue over a two week ,period or
until the entire system 'has been
flushed. During that' time .customers may notice a slight ·disooloration or their water for .a •sbalt
period of time, Poole said. He ·Slid
that if customers feel the discoLoration is continuing too :long, IIIey
should call the district office. l 800-686-3747.

Vehicle vandalized
GALLIPOLIS - Audry Davis, 52, Sycamore Street, Gallipolis,
told.Gallipolis police someone scratched the entire left side of her
1990 Olds Thursday as well as the trunk, top and hood.

, River crests at 41 feet
RACINE - Water in the Ohio River is going down at the rate of
one-tenth of a foot an hour, according to a spokesman at lhe Racine
Locks and Dam.
.
The river crested in Pomeroy Friday at 41 feet, the Pomeroy
Police Department reported.

e
Your Old Ring
MM'"WJQS

d

I

ilk

. ....,_
._
...
.........,.....
- ·

SF

--~
~---,_

I

:i::

~

Theft, damaging investigated

"'-~

•

CHESlER - A 15-foot, three seat; blue aluminum boat was
re~rtedly stolen from Gary Dill, Reibel Road, Chester, sometime
wtthin the last two weeks.
According to a report from Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, a yellow tarpaulin and a blue tarpaulin were also stolen
from Dill's campsite on the Ohio River at Great Bend.
In addition, it was reported Friday that new basketball hoops on
the o~tdoor playground at Tuppers Plains Elementary were damaged Thursday.
Both incidents are under investigation.

I

.,,

, . _Diauado 33'1 otr
I CLAst- AI - · -'1799
"'Do.p.nD:
&amp;; ., ,., .

n....toa

Wll'I!!,_.GIFI' CEilTtnCATE

..' '

(_.fiu,l(!}f)auw r f}mlt' l"~ r tj,,,.:·
·I" I';( I &lt;Hill 1\\11
l o~ l lll• ~ r ; I~IM'

446 9515

CARPET &amp; UPIOlSIEIY .ClEIIIIG

DID YOU KNOW?
I ,,

Herman L. Dillon &amp; Associates

I .,

1480 Jackso1 Pie • Galpols, OH. 45631
446·2206

PHYSICAL TIEUPY • SPOilS MEDICINE
·lACK REHABILITATION • WORI RECOVEIY
CARDIAC RIIAIILITAYIOI • AHLT FITNESS
Sen1ing the Po&amp;iene orad the Play•ieitm /or
ot~er !10 Yeon.
We Accept Medl~re. lnauranclel, and Workers

CompenuUon for you.

HII.AI L
DtUM
MI,Pf,IOC

MICIAIL L
. . .IILL
•• 11 (

MAH1 1D
....... •;
." '
•

I'•' ·"

!.111.11111lAI.tiiUU IU (il l.l ' ol" • l• ,

Editor's note! Names, ages and addresses are printed as they
appear ou citrocial reports.

1

·,

5

· Wtipl~ lfa&amp;e Bt..
Tet-NewO.Diop!oJ.

GALLIPoLIS - Local authorities cited four people Friday.
Gallia County sherifrs deputies cited JerQme A. Gordon, 36, 130
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, for no operator's license.
.
Gallipolis police cited Denver L. Johnson, Route 2, Vinton, for
open container; Timothy D. Shank, 23, 1034 Second Ave., Gallipolis, for no operator's license and wrong way on a ~ne -.yay stree~ l!"d
Joshua H. Haislop, 21 , 517 1/2 Fourth Ave., Galltpohs, for drivmg
under suspension. ·

Yeu en t1b yeur physlul ther1py
prescrlptlen 11 tkl tllnle 1f ye11r ehel11?

-•

•._CMc,odS-bJth&lt;
C'anL-- S1art1ac et $4.0G ct

Four cited by authorities

SUND :I'ONLY
8UB8C
ON RATES
. By Cflrrler o Motor lto•tu ·

One Wer.k•......•...•.......•.••.•• •..•.....1••••••••••• 00f!'

• Employed the following ·
houri J adult personnel: Betty:
Adlcins, Clrde Beasley. Milton:
HoUy Cisco, Charles Harper, .
Jun Howard, Shirley Jeffers, Fred-·
erick McGowan, Mike Marshall,·
Mitt Martin, Joyce Murphy, Linda '
Niberl, Clint Patterson, John
Ptlers. Rex Phillips, Greg Shrader,
BiU Wells and John Yates.
• Granted permission to enter
in~ a1reement with the Galli ~ ~
Meigs Head Start program to pro·
vide adult literacy training from ·
Fcb. l through January 1994.

'•*

*"'

GALLIPOLIS- Henry A. Hudson, 30, 196 Midway Road, Bidwell, was arrested Saturday night by Gallia County sheriff's
deputies for disorderly conduct after a warning..

Advertising Repmac nt.a Livc, BranhR m
Newapaper SRicl, 733 T hi rd Avc nt~t. r
New York, Now Yor l(MJ 17.
I

Cen~le

GALLIPOLIS - Three people :lflC.. Wds'
+ li~t damage. Both vehicles were,.:
were injured in Friday .accidents. Mil Elwaad'$ daitm driven from the scene.
•
local authorities reported Saturday. :aay.
. ~r-related ~ideal ,'; :·
A 17: and 19-year eld were
Ga!'ia County shenfrs depubes
treated and released fo.llewing a
A Bithdl ,_. cilld b
mv~galed a deer-~ acci~C!'t~
~ne-veh1cle acctdent Fnilay Di,pl r z
ID
• - •
cbr early Thursday morrung m Spnng_• .
m Sutton Township, Meigs County. 4 ·
c *-1 ...,_itc • aa:i- fiellt Township, Gallia County.
the Gallia-Meigs Post ef ,Qie :S!ate *-: fiidl) _.,. • a-a Sit: c1,.
.(\ccordmg to the accidett)O:
Highway Patrol reported.
G•••lfipaliia:aqaaltd.
rejli'lrt, James G. HalfhiU, 24, Jack-·,
Shawn M. Garnes, 19, 27;!84
Al:alnlilt&amp; ut die aa:idnl SilO Estates, 536 Jackson Pike, Gal- '
State Ro11!e 124, Langsvme, :anll RpJII, c.ne 11.. Jw\pw n. 6(9 li~lis , was southbound on Left :
Shawn E. Petrie, 17,, 43 Qol·e G:ab:id ...._Bind,,.. cast- Ad: Road when a deer reportedly ·
Street, Middlepon, were 1transpc11t- l!oudd wloao sk sand&lt;. rm. "!" in· fronl of his vehicle, causing :
ed by Meigs County Emergency lx:lliwt a ,.,.idc driwca boy• lliiD to lose control and run off the :
Medical Service to V•e ~erans iMaJ111cw c_~ 19, 5919 left side of the road where he ·
Menikorial Hospital after •Games• .st.ltoulc MLC llis•• '!~tc~.
ed
:
struc a tree.
No - j j o ; - 1 ltil Jll:t.- • .o•~Junes were report and :
J\,ccording to the acc'idem -·~ w Mlr
• '"'*
110 atattons were ISSued. The vehi- ;
repon, Games was eastboumh m "'' 11e auud O.wiuo' s
1 - d d e was not damaged.
Sta~e Route 124 passing .anamec
••--..:ltu ple
'a
vehtcle when he met a westhoJmd
lDi!u'• . _ _ . • ...,. 5-.r
··
vehicle and went off ihe riibt side
pow;any - A •
' Cllt 11 dJelt charge entered a plea • ·
of ~e road to avoid a collisian.'The
eL . . pillly filiii&amp;J
lll:ip.Ciltmty Coun of Judge Patrick
vehicle then struck a tree and ame
~
'•
to a rest in a stream.
~C.,,
S'.-bine Mix, a brand of startNo citations were issued. 1be
iutB viii, Jilta R ' a
- · fint,a Plants, was released on
vehicle sustrud·ned heavy, dfr.isabliiQ; · .._. 1 r z fa'
'
'
damage an was towed om 1be

Deputies make arrest

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - None.
Friday discharges - Margie
Schuler, Shade.
Thursday admissions - Grace
Call, Pomeroy.
.
Thursday discharges - Clara
Haning, Albany.

With

Three injured in Friday wrecks -.:

GALLIPOLIS - · Gary M. Hymore, 29, 2536 East Moreland
Stfeet, Otegon, and Ricky J. Hymore, 35, 842 Dearborn, Toledo,
were jailed Friday on municipal coun ordered three-day commitments for wildlife violations. ·

Hospital news

f1

;_...-GIOia&gt;

Two jailed for commitment

Ring.stolen

ooA ••"'

I

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man was arrested by Gallia County sherifFs deputies early Saturday morning following a domestic
dispute.
Robert C. Cook, 34, 6078 Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis, faces
charges of driving under the influence, domestic violence and no
operator's license.
:
According to the repon, Cook arrived at his wife's residence on
.Bulaville Pike .and, when she refused to talk to him, lbok a gun our
of his vehicle, threatened to kill her and shot three or four deer slugs
into her vehicle.
He then drove away from the residence and was stopped by
deputies on Brick School Road.
·

Ballots ready
for absentees
.by.March.30

No s ubscrip,ion• by mAil pr.rmiHed in
areal where mol.or cnrri er e rvicc ia
aqjlable.

There's no installation charge
and our plumbers are available
to you 24 hours a day

B~io::

alAe

was hired as Agricultare Mccb•• "':C ul
finlll:lditl&amp; of
ics instructor .for the remaincb' ,o f •ctpl!ll
pnliit::J_
the I992-93 school year.
• Aft ul
199J.M.Iriml!
Substitutes employed by die )ICII' • • ht wiiii *fiatt day a
board included David A. Curfma daB far
.sbAtlfi,.!A.
Sr., teacher, Tom Neal, McAntwr
• C• , I ; •iv- • fOI' lie
bus driver; Jeanette P runuuoni "' . h •111 ~ illlo a
Chesbire , educational .aide; aud soli e
wiiiiSBl'VEC.
Judy A. Calven,· Gallipolis , ·~
&amp;lkAdlllDi:-- lklard:
tary.
• A u l doe JillltNil&amp; proIn other action, the:board:
p · 'Ad - 1 • WI ' f co wlicfl,
• Acpepted donations from Fed· l!i:p Madt II; 1\aui*::.Ellliaera! Mogul Cqrp., the Galli&amp; Couu- i ·• s itt"*l ••willlS'IIidir
ty Literacy COuncil, and a Ohevm- Oua • c ' - • A&amp;~
let pickup truck to be :used l or :liDI.il .. t ...

Man jailed after domestic dispute

Member: Th l'l As11odat.cd. Prt:M , nnd Lht&gt;.
Ohio New•pRJH!r AHtlociaUon, National

Our storage uni~s heat water
.
during low-cost, off-peak hours
~I) RES
to meet your demands for
~~
0~
hot water all day long .
~
(i.

s,

*
*

from a Gallipolis trucking company lot, the Gallia County Sherifrs
Department reported.
According to lhe repon, someone stole a 1983 Freightliner truck
and 34-foot dump trailer overnight Thursday fiom the lot of Pierceton Trucking Company, Inc., 4311 State Route 160, Gallipolis.
The truck and trailer are owned by Steven Hill, 2901 Brook
Drive. Point Pleasant, W.Va.
,
Mary E. Barcus, 29 Central Ave., Gallipolis, told Gallipolis
police someone stole .her 1990 Chevrolet Corsica. Friday evening
while it was parked outside of Mary's Market, 24 Central Ave.,
Gallipolis.
.
Barcus left the keys in the ignition, the repon said.

· POMEROY- Kii'fdergarten
registration and screening for
Meigs County Schools ~as heen
announced by John Costanzo, elementary supervisor, and Ki tty
Hazier, Talented and Gifted coordinator for Meigs County Schools.
Children who will be five years
old on or before S~t. 30, 1993, are
eligible to attend kindergarten during the 1993-94 school year. This
year, Jl:gistration and screening for
new kindergarten students will he
conducted during the spring in
Eastern, Meigs and Southern
School Districts.
The kindergarten registration
and screening schedule is as fol lows: Tuppers Plains, April 8; Mid-,
dleport , April 12 and 13; Harrisonville, April 14; Bradbur¥.
April 16; Chester. April 23 ;
Pomeroy, April26 and 27; Rutland, April 29 and 30; Southern,
May6and 7.
, The following information
.about the kindergarten registration
:may be helpful to parents.
· Call or visit the school listed
:above that is closet tQ you to
·arrange for an appointment. Chil·dren and parents can be better ·
served by school personnel when
visits are arranged.
Bring your child· s birth certifi:c ate, social security card, and
immunization record to registration.
.
' Your child should have had four
OPT, three Polio; one MMR, and
one TB skin test before entering
school. School nurses will be present at registratipn to answer questions that your may have about
immunization requirements.
Your child' s hearing. speech,
physical and language abilities will
be assessed by trained school personnel. Parents will receive information about !heir child's performance in the areas that are
. assessed.
Information obtained during the
registration and screening process
is very important because it allows
school sraff members to plan activities that will make your child •s
first year of school as successful
and enjoyable as possible., Contact
the school closest to you as soon as
possible to make an appointment to
111gister your child for kindergarten . .

Olllce.

Reduce your operating costs.

In

A

Publi•hod each SunaJty, R25 Third Avt&gt;. .,
CalllpOiiR, Ohio, by the Ohi o Valley
Publi•hing Company/Mult.imcdiA , Inc.
Second· class posla@:e paid at 0\llipolis. ·
bhio 46631. Enl.ered as e~'&gt;cond cl iUttl
rnllilin1 matter at Poma roy, Oh.io, POKL

Pay one monthly lease fee
with your utility bill.

DON'T WAIT TO ORDER!
OUR WAREHOUSE IS FULL
OF NEW STYLES AND
SPRING COLOltS.

~y

(USPS saS.ROO)

No capital investment.

S'mwy Ttmes-Sentincl/A3

Kindergarten .----Tri-County briefs
JVSD bo.a rd approves teacher hiring ·:
RIO GRANDE peuooocl iolll•••• ill* A-. P' ' •
County Firefighters Association;:
registration
Semi truck, car stolen
th; GalJia.. daB.,_ C
al M••seo.,
Fireflghte!", in cooperation;
actions approved
GALLIPOLIS - Local aulhorities investigated two reports of
Jaclcllon-Vmton Jom.t VocaliODII
•
the
Volunteer F'tre·
vehicle theft recent! y, ·
Boardof Educationat itsMm:IID Gla:i~ '111-~-0Cta; Department; and CAD CAM,:
dates posted
A $30,000 semi truck and trailer were stolen Thursday night
meeting, Thomas Jenkius, Jrtson. -llll'beginning April13.
•,

: POMEROY - Absentee ballots
will be available at the Meigs
tounty Board of Elections office
Qn Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy,
beginning on Tuesday. according
to Rita Smith, director.
, Qualifying to vote absentee are
persons over 62 years of age, those
ilisabled, anyone wbo will be out of
"'e county on Election Day, ser~icemen;and anyQDe incarcerated.
Absentee ballots must be in by
Saturday, May I.
The only election in the county
to he held in May will he one in
Pomeroy, the dnector said . In
Pomeroy village residents will be
voting on a new five-year, 1.9 mill
current expense levy.

· · Lows tonight were forecast in
dte mid 30s to lower 40s as areas of
fog developing again.
• Sunrise Sunday is at 6:22 a.m.,
aoo sunset is at 6:52p.m.
: Record high temperature for Ibis
' By The Associated Press
• Sunday, showers lilc:ely. High 55
10 60. Chance of rain is 60 percenL
.
Extended Forecast
: Monday through Wednesday:
• Monday, fair. Lows in the 40s
ind highs mostly in the 60s. TuesOay a chance of showers. Lows in
the' 40s and highs in the 60s.
Wednesday, a chance of rain or
$now. Lows in lhe 30s. Highs in
the40s.

.

Local

March 2s. 1993

. .- .
{j)~

··--e&gt;
EULY liB
SPECIAL

25%
1·800·300.9.515 ia ••
1·800.227·9515
•

I

•

~·

WV013372

Get AHead
Start On Your
Spring .
Cleani'ng!

We do file fillia .... otllers ....

�•

Ohio/W.Va.
Vet's death leaves grim· reminder of another war, another
place
.
~

·

By MITCH WEISS
· '" Assodated Prt$5 Writer
PORT CLINTON - The Viettlalll Wac ended for Barry Donahue
o(le niJ!ll this year when he died of
Ia' ltcrom and llcohol overdose.
, , But the battle still rages for
1bousands of v~ fighting subsranee abuse, depression and other
f!toblems 20 years after the last
. U:S. troops left Vietnam on March
;!9, 1973.
:". "Time hasn' t diminished the
pain for Vietnam veterans. For
blilny •.the perfect way to bury their
pai!J is.wirh drugs and alcohol,"
!laid Steven Bentley, a Vietnam
¥eterans of America board memtiCr. He also is chairman of the
lxlmmittce on post traumatic stress
disorder and substance abuse.
• Donahue, 42, of Pon Clinton,
Hfred Jan. 16 while riding in a ·
l friend's car near this L8ke &amp;ie city
~ about 3S miles east of Toledo.
~ that night, his friends drove
ID ToledD and dumped his body in
lbe shadow of a south side grain
~levator. A man walld.,!f his dog
thenextdayfoundthe
y.
' .
, : Friends and family membtrs
i~ aid Donahue was a fun-loving

l

I"
r
· -'

teen-ager when .he enlisted in the
Anny in 1969. He joined because
he wanted a military career.
He was in Vietnam for about a
mooth when shrapnel from a hand
grenade hit him in a leg . He
received a Pwple Heart.
"He said he was in a foxhole
during a battle when alrenade
landed near him. He sai he saw
some of his friends die," said Ruby
){ohlman, who lived with Donahue
for eight years.
He came out of the Army in
1910 disilhisioned.
"Barry was totally different .
when .he came back from Vietnam," said his sister, Barbara I;lon·
ahue of Sandusky. "He didn't
drink or do drugs in high school.
When be came back, he had a drug
and alcohol problem."
Donahue was in and out of drug
and alcohol treatment centers since
the early 1970s. Sometimes he'd
work at his father's marina. Most
of the time he was unemployed,
living on $260 a month he received
in disability benefits from the 1!0Vemmen_t for post traumatic stress
disorder.
Bentley said Donahue's smry is

Ohio News in Brief·._

: Voinovich picks mission companions
l

•
COLUMBUS -Twelve t;OmJ?anies will participate in Gov.
: George Voinovich's business mtssiQn in Eastern Europe next
month.
·
Nook Industries Inc. of Cleveland, Borden Inc. of Columbus.
, Ohio Bell of Columbus, and Procter &amp; Gamble of Cincinnati are
; among the companies participating in the mission, Voinovich said
: Friday.
,
The delegation will travelm Austria, Slovenia, Hungary, the Slo, vak Republic, the Czech Republic and Germany April 14-30. .
"I strongly believe that this business mission will help Ohio
manufacturers break new ground with their counterparts iri the
I newly emerging markets of Central and Eastern Europe,"
Voinovich said.
'

•

'

Defense auomey Thomas Tyack said Jenkins did nothing wrong.
He said Jenkins relied on professionals to hliJldl&lt;; his businCS$ transactions.
"My faith does not waver," Jenkins said. "If I'd done something wrong, I'd be very much worried.
Delaware is about 20 miles notth of Columbus.

;

:
;
,

: Crash leaves one dead, four hurt
:
.
,
'
•

'

He also read law books and
Bentley said that many vettnns
have emotional problems from the wanted m be a lawyer. He pracwar !w:anse they wen: sem m Vicr- ticed in jail.
Donahue was arrested 25 rimes
nam in their late leeDS or early 20s.
since
1972, mostly on charges
The average age of soldiers in
related to drugs and alcohol. The
World Warn was 25.
When their tour of Vietnam was. last time he was arrested was in
over, mOst were discharged right August, when he was charged with
away. There was no period of drunken driving, possessiorf of
adjustment like there was for ~.paraphernalia and cultivating
World W111 U velef'a!lS.
IDIIll.JUifiL
• 'They went over alone and
He filed 42 lawsuits against law
came home alone. So there wasn't enfoo:ement and coun officials in ·
lhe group solidarity," Bentley said. Otuwa ~!)'. comjllaining about
"Ulere wasn't that deftned end of
oonditions • the jail and o~
' srut,
. he complained
the war for people. They came ·poor
ISSUes. ·w one
home and it was still g01ng op. about being served raw chicken
Their friends wen: still there."
and hard rice.
Vietnam bCcame the focal point
He acted as his own defense
of Donahue's life, his friends and
family said. He read books about
Vietnam.

Chemical spill clo·ses
stop near Parkersburg
MINERAL WELLS , W.Va. Tucker. A General Electric PlastiCs
(AP)- Chemicals leaked from a hazardous materials team was helptrac!Or-trailer, closing a rest slOp on ing.
Officials said. they believed the
Interstate 77 southbound near the
double
trailers were carrying severOhio border, authorities said. No
al
chemicals,
including:
injuries .were reported.
•
Sodium
hydroxide solution. a
A Roadway trailer began leak·
ing about II a.m. Friday, said Judy -chemical solvent used in the manuSheets, an employee at the wel- facture of many different products;
• Sodium chlorite, a bleach.
·come center near Mineral Wells,
• Hydrogen peroxide solution,
about I 0 miles south of Parkersused
widely as a bleacher-deodorburg.
·
State crews and firefighters izer.
Both hydrogen peroxide and
were finishing cleanup of the scene
sodium
chlorite pose potential rue
this morning, after which the rest
and
explosion
risks. Sodium
area was to reo~X:'l, said Division
llydroxide
is
corrosive
to tissue.
of Highways radio operator Paul

SHE.LB Y - A woman was lcilled and tour people were injured
in a head-on collision, lhe State Highway Patrol said.
Brenda J. Holmberg, 37, of Chatfield, drove left of center on
State Route 39 abou_t 2:50a.m. Friday. Her car collided with a pickup driven by Jean C. Smith, 20, of Mansfield, the patrol said.
Two passengers in Ms. Holmberg's car and one passenger in the
pickup were injured. Smith was in critical condition in Ohio Sl;lte
University Hospitals early Saturday.
-The Associated Press

"You have to remember that
this is only a recommendation of a
panel dominated by students,''
Gilley said.
The panel is composed of five
students, four faculty members and
t\\10 adrninistra!OrS.
It also made recomm~ndations
on other fees, including· a suggestion Iii cut in half a fee of $7.75 per
semester for music organizations.

;: CLEVELAND (AP)- There
tA'ere three tickets sold naming all
ifive numbers drawn in Friday
!i\ight's Buckeye 5 drawing, and
teach winning ticket is worth
~100,000, the Ohio Lottery said.
: • The winning tickets were sold at
$e Firestone Star Market in Akron,
~nited Cigar &amp; News in Niles and
;The Pony Keg in Lima, lottery offi~ials said. .
The Buckeye 5
~umbers were I, 6, 13, 23, 35.
!. In Pick 3 Numbers, the wi101ing
ljumber was 644.
:1 In Pick 4 Numbers, the winning
Jlumber was 1160. ·
•' Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
~1 . 130,207..

.

GALLIPOLIS
412 VINTON PIKE

446-5500 .

.'

I

•Roofing •RepiCKement Windows
•Siding •New.Ho~es
eGarages

CaH today and ask about how lhese services can
help YOU··

p

614-~~6-226~

TOJ.I. FRitlf 1-800-~ 88- 226~
.J.II~I.tll, OliO

.'

·

.

Faahlon Flex
~

446-5554
TDQ AVAILABLE

OUTSIDE OF
GALLIPOLIS
CALUNGAREA
TOLL FREE DIAL 1
'THEN

MULBERRY HEIGHTS

800:252:5554

992-2192

POMEROY

·-

ULTRA HIGH EFFICIENCY
HEAT PUMP SYSTEM
The Most Efficient Heat Pump in the
Manufactured Housing Industry.

/::;g:;;:;:1.
_,_

·. - rlt

.

Features:
•10 Yr. LimHed Warranty
&amp; Copeland Scroll Com-

-Hause.Contents for
· ~ ZJ Alll••ii
"o•n•s Hameowners Insurance
...Qadbations
~ EE!IIsI!IIIIZis
r.~~~~lill!rBF_.._SIP.,. a. 16mlti, Slides Pictures
. ID VIIS Tape.

A'uli·- s .....reVHStapeJto VHS Tape
Clllb'
r
'

•Designed for your
Coleman, lntel1herm &amp;
Millar Furnace
oFrae Estimates

. •Finanaclng available for
everyone no matter what
utility compl!ny you are
on.
•Very affordable

·Iu 1zu iFrD. . . _

lnratrr&amp;iurL ~~
..,..._
-·

•• w.mation

litt ttllil. 514! 4.46-7390

·

..-

CALL

BENNER'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

-to-

(614) 44&amp;-9416or 1-800-872·5967 ·

Spac ...W•In manufactured houllng'MIIIng a
o;oollng _oJOiomowlh ~II! (IOO!o A
I"!'·

1391 SAffOU,KIIOOlii.,IIUIPOlll, tl.

Holzer Medical Center

SALUTE THEIR PHYSICIANS
n.
7s..n
•
·a.n •
~
D c a.z

Gene H. Abels, M.D.

R~tltuto

B. Alooao. M.D.
Darid P. Altbaua, M.D.
Clarence E. Alia, M.D.
Dltuae L • .Atlrtna, M.D.
C. Steven Batiste, M.D.
Eclwud J. Berklcb1 M.D.
Daniel R. Black, D.O.
ROD Bcmftjuo, II.D. .
0. Wilson Bowen, M.D.
I. Nacl Boaktr, II.D.
Keith ~ Braacleberry, II.D.
Reid C. Bnlbllltw, II.D.
Daricl R. Carawl, D.D.S.
118Duel A. C.•noft, II.D.
lloatlle Cblllt•pa. II.D.
Belrel\y A. a.Jalbltea', II.D.
. . . G. ClulstoplaeJO M.p.
Olcu W, Clute, II.D•
~el Q. Cozoael, II.D.
.....td W. Co'trtOil, II.D.
J. A. 4e I.ul.ereU,II.D.
Daricl P. Efta8, II.D.
non••d A. I'IHo, D.O.
J••• R. J'tHo, D.O. .
11\m•• B. Gu'cla. D.O.
Jo.epb B. Oo«HHImen,II.D.
Bowud N. Oneae, II.D.
.AIIoe A. Odcoekl, II.D.
JobD 1'. Groth, Jr., II.D.
1181...'11Dd L. Butlw, II.D.

•

5112 -10
COMPARE AT 30.00
~

. •also ovallable in a spectator style.

1·900-

IBOE CO.

57-. .

1

'

'

7,_ ......
7 - ,n.o7
.D.o.

••

7 ......

a7 •. . ..
w.J ,,_ . . .
T 57
7 wp
I
'A.M I '
LaD•.
"17 ... 7

5

a

J..l

r

.

-

vz....

7

L._"

n

•n

7 ._,
7L I

r

T

n

pw MD,
•
.? ..IE.. aD.
• •D.

,.._,

c.•
3 "7
Sg •&amp;MI

- --~

&amp;D.

.....

...

,aD.

....
........
• ...., ..
• 'S,,.

a ' •;Jt.n · ,, ....
n II&amp;.
ao.

Carol II. Sboltla, M.D•
Mel P. Simon, M.D.
Richard B. Simpaoa, M.D.
Tbomaa A. Skinner, D.D.S.
lllcbael Sorbello, D.O.
J. Crail Strafford, M.D.
Rebecca T. Strafford, M.D;
Raaclall L, Stratton, M.D:
Balul'my Subblah, M.D. ,
Jon M. Sulllftll, M.D.
Doaald II. Thaler, II.D.
Oerakl E. Vallee, II.D.
Joba B. VIall, II.D.
lsom C. Walker, M.D.
Mark A. Wallr.er, II.D.
Dulel B. Wblteley, II.D.
Murray 8. WWock, II.D.
Lawreace J. Yo41owkl, II.D.
Michael J. ZlrlUe, D.O.

1

'

I

CPffiD[(JctP ·EPI:brnffi~ffimq:p
675-787fJ
OPEN DAILY 9·6
I

Many

The Staff and Management of the

RESIDENT
PSYCHIATRISTS
PSYCHOLOGISTS
&amp;
•
SOCIAL WORKERS

LOCAL C~ISIS UN(:

,that would create a vacuum of
pt':esije~st,s~ey w:~ ~ ~';.,~~~ ~:
..... •·mv and .... hard .,_._ ·•·
.... .....,.....
u"'
..,.._..
new ~;~residential and legislative want the elections 10 be sirnultlncelecttons should be · held and ous. Currently, parliantenWy clec:.whether voters sup~n Yeltsin 's tions are scheduled in 199S and
• 'course of $Octal-economic presidential elections in 1996
.
reforms"
·
Another draft resolution ·be·· '•
Russians who have seen considered by Congress wo~
their lives worsen under Yeltsin's place Russian radio and relevisi!ln
free-market rerotrns would proba- under the control of the lawmatCJ;S
bly find it difficult to answer· and forbid the executive bran~;b
"yes." If voters said they did not from interfering with broadcau
h
r
·
ld
·
support t e re orms, tt wou
operations·
·~·
0

MARCH 30, _1993

•BLACK
•NAVY
•CHAMPAGNE

5112- 10

not.,;,'::!~~~~y:~

DOCTORS' DAY

same features as our midland pump

•POWDER
•ROSE
•WHITE

strengthen the position of hard-li _
·
·
n
ers who w~t to ~~erse or slow
down Yeltsm s polictes.
yel~tn does not. op~se new
~~~;lauve and pre~tdenllal elQt-

TOHONOR
·
'I'HE HOtZER MEDICAL CENTER
MED-ICAL STAFF ON

•CQPP~R

24 HOUR
CRISIS LINE

.....

20 Years.Exp•.

·SMITHVILLE
r. FLAT

'J..Gs

L.

7

I

Mp
. •Dl

r .... rs .ao.
r

r

,

.

pressor
•12 S.E.E.R. efflciency

Your Comp' 1 V"ldeo Taping Service

•ORANGE
•LEMON
•GREEN .
•SOFT GOLD
•CHAMPAGNE

Certified Public Accountant
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 446-8677
'
. Open 9-5 Weekdays, Evenings and Saturday by
appointment.

I

TROMM BUILDERS

·

port for a nationwide vote clearly is
.
tin
d Yel · •
moun ~· tv tsm s opponents
apparen Y · e dec!ded 10 try 10
~the ballonng agamst the pres•de .fhe were ushin at the
Con~ S8111Ida~ for th~ ballot 10
inc~e. four qfestiof~ In additi~n

y_

COMERCIIL &amp; RESIDENTIAL

level Payment Plan
• Ferrellgas Installation Review • 24-Hour Emergency
Service • Automatic Keep-lull Service
~

"

*" .,_

•RED

Lynn E. Angell

•

WE DO IT Al.l. .

5112 • 10 COMPARE AT 30.00

736 Second Ave.

1

•BLACK
•BLACK PATENT
•NAVY
•WHITE

WHITE/RED
WHITE/BLACK
WHITE/NAVY

286:5075

I ...,.

When you call Ferrengas, you gel all lhis ana more lor your
propane dollar. Your delivery team is safety trained, and
experienced in providing prompt delivery and emergency
service We also oHer special budgel-minded.cuslomer
programs that help you save money and eliminate worries
about running oul of proj,ane.
·

ONE OF THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE &amp; PROFESSIONAL MENTAL HEALTH AGENCIES IN SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

200 MAIN ST.

:

f;

didi not include any reference 'to

·Ma•Ph musz·c unne•unp
CU.It lt:UU.C:T
, __ _.._
,..~,.,
.

WACO, Texas (.AP) _ The
t"
1 .. FBI
., ,._
con muous y,
age.n t ...,.,
tone of an off-the- R"tc•-, .gh-pt' tch•d
w
..... sat"d th"JS ........
'""""• te.ernqg liD
' hl
hook photic: screeched from \oud- ·the popular, but repetitive, Billjl
• Speakers Friday. It was another Rny Cyrus wne~
·
• selection from federal agents in an
Cult leader David KoreSh illH
"expressed a certain'-''""..._~.
liD
· escalati ng war of nerves des"gned
•
ue,_,
, to end the month-long standoff the noise, Ricks said. And~
' wilh armed cultists.
has griped that the rank moVIlJJ!Mt•
• Along witli jarring helicQpter !1fC a breach of trust between
' fly-bys and mquent movement of twqsides.
, tanks and armored personnel carriThe siege entered its 27th &lt;ilay
.,..'-'4
,_...
ers. the FBI thl·s week has blared Fn"d ay, an d FBI agent ...
~ progressively more irritating tunes Swensen said talks wiib !ICorelih
• at the nearly 100 Branch Davidian and his followers were not~
" m~~~- have played chants .o f up."There has been an ellfeCI,"
. Tibetan monks,. Christmas carols Swensen said. "But in tennsd:lJI!Y
by Mitch Miller, military drills lilce · minute they're going tobemmiing
: Reveille, and Nancy Sinatra's outlhedoor,Idon'tbelicve•so." '
:· These Boots were Made for
The standoff began Reb. :211.
' Wa/kin'.
.
when a gun battle broke out :aslfoil..
·'One person was recommend- era! agents tried m serve IICIItiblllllil
, ing we play 'Achy Breaky Heart' arrest warrants for fir.caliiDs

What maHeiS most to you when it comes to propane?
I'IOIJ1lt delivlf}'. Reliability. Salety. Eneroy-savings.
Knowledge and expe~ience. Friendly, helplul delivery people.

~' ~dec!~e~~=Y

ial rule"
spec
•
. . ~attempt m oust Yelisin durmg, u..,·second day of an emergenC)! session of Congress came
cfespite acknowledgements by
lian:IJ-liners that theY, did not have
tlic!~essary support: Such a_III?Ye
wourd rake a two-thirds majonty,
or689•vores.
.
•
.,__
......., "-·•
~mv
_on Fnday C8J!IC out
q
a...,_.
"'-•'""""' agamst removmg the prestdent'
-•·" '
-.
although ·he had previously said
r. a&amp;a;.·· • .._, mmiiz: amll tliere' were "clear grounds" for
..........,. ••"""" ~ Q1181Jc
iinpcachment .
~cif
··
··
·
111ii1t r
" ''
e'•-'· wants the April25 re'er.,.._,...._,__._.,
___....._ _ _.
"""'
•·
~.., _ _ _ . . . , . . . . , . , . _ endilm to include just two ques~ 1lliilb ~ lliltlt5111l lions;: whether the people have con,.._
-n.e AinltJ' IIMIIICIIP :llldl 1'QU fidi:nce in him, and whether they
IIIIIRt:ll!lti:Jiplbttll-7
eiY.. liavC'confidi:nce in the Congress.
Res' U• •ell INI~•t•i" Ill!' idm ~ I!Ii:illl:~~ he hopes a ~f~dumd
"' ..,...oo aofnew
an a
Q)ruwtillf• Hlllt..,. mu• m
replitccrnent
the consutuuon
Congress wilh
'"l"'tt••:rbiclmerallegislarure.
.
Hard-liners at first opposed
llolding any referendum. But sup-

available In

Woocf{and Centers, Inc.

JACKSON

' :SCI{ .

andl its ~peaker, R~lan Kbasb\llaID!I, which have stnpped the prestdl:nt of some of his powers. .
Yeltsin also announced on
Mlut:h 20 the imposition·of "speciall rule," in which hi$ decrees
~o~rake rce~en~e ~ver ~e

.;:;oz

;+

',

Ferrellgas Specializes In Responsive
cu;lomer Service

For complete, professional individual and ·
business taX preparation assistance call

PATIENT
CONFIDENTIALITY
PROTECTED

1

1900

'

PRIVATE
INSURANCE
PLANS PROCESSED

President Bons Yeltsm from office.
. . _The voteS followed intense jOe~' ~:ti~ ~~?~~~:n~f~~;u~
; m the nation in an April2S referen; dHu'?..o~ wh o shou~d rule Russia.
• a•.,. me 1awmao.ers declared
y
· had · 1 d th
.
' ti:n1tstn
VIO ate
e constttu' 8 th c
·
; C. ut ~ on~. dommated by
mmpm~ elected before
e ovtet Un1on s collapse, voted

-•-*

389-342 against a resolu~ 6111 ~"'•• " adllflua;
would have called the pre$ideal":6
r.
recent actions " an unaccqJUib'le
lbrll · - ' • die -&amp;J'III'J'
violation of the constitution mihe
- 'WiiiiiiC ..,.._ • - lli=DRussian Federation."
, _ • "llii*"'l' 2
'fl,&gt;
~-liners in the Russian lliJ~ Yd..., .. dtcil: al• ~'"~¢ ':II
~C" then made ashddca biil ifc. jjerlle~Lg a 'I 1 - caa wllgdieJr
lo~ oc:'~o~i:~~~::l~"'~ :· !' • fU ~tBut the cha~miD of tJ1e ps ;;,• ... 'V''"'i••• wu
coffice.
· 1 · ·· ....:~ ...... •·
- •• __.,. - tl
ongress rues conuruttce - - - lP • """" ....s'ilcc 1DJ
item ftrSt needed m be put 1011ilbe di!i!IIR£ "ae
agenda.
.. a
- • ·· "r llll"lll::risfu
The vote of 475-337 wllb 46 a" --.....i:l!pl, YdllittlllDabstentions fell short ,o f tl1e '5171 Jlll!llllildltl: -x -·•-•
klii&amp;
votes needed for a majority lin ilhe iPJIIIID •• p ~Qfilllitc (lattlllU'&lt;
~

MIDLAND PUMP .·

•

•

MOScpw - Hard-line law-

mak~rs failed Satur'!&amp;Y mnmove

"He would never back down
from 1 fight- a fJS! fight, Vietnam
or counroom," Heineman said.
"Wheri I think of Barry, I think
that God ~ves us all scxts of ralents
and abilillell. Barry had taleats and
abilities. You use it or lose iL In a
sense, that's what. happened to
Barry. He lost iL"

~ 614-446-2264

•Electronic Filing Available.·
•Direct Deposit of Refund Check

WOOdland C.n11rs it funded In part by lhe Gallle·Jickaon-Melgs Board of
Alcohol, Drug Addiction 1nd Mtnlal HeaHh SII'VIc..

ess Wrtter

-underdog.

·When You ·Need Prompt
Dependable Propane Delvery...

'

:;

B~~tJg?PER~AN

lawyer. He also advised other
inmates of their rigllts.
He nevc:a- won 1 Q!SC, but be did
win the respect of judges and
lawyers.
.
.
Phil Heiueman, a childhood
friend. said DQnabue was a talented
man who always stuck up f~ the

quality flex sole, padded Insole pump, macle on a
combination last, in all the spring colors you want.

I:

:phio Lottery

Sunday Times-Sentinel/AS

.

-

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A panel of students, faculty ·
members and administrators at
Marshall University bas recommended cutting in half student fees
that support the university's student
newspaper.
Under the proposal by the Presi·
dent's Advi$ory Council on Stu·
dent Fees, students .would pay $3
per semester to support The
Parrh.enon instead of $~ per
semester.
r
- The Parthenon stands to lose·
$56,000 of irs sns:ooo annual
budget, said Herb Kar!et, Marshall's vice president of (inance.
"They recommend-we get the
other half from the general revenue
budget, and that's not very likely,"
said Parrhenon Editor Greg Collard. "I don' t know where we're
going m get lhis.rnoney..'.'
:rile proposal was sent to Marshall PresidentJ. Wade Gilley. who
feuded with the newspaper's editors decided to publish the names
of mpe victims. Gilley, who eventually was successful in urging the
newspaper m reconsider that policy, said the proposal is a long way
from being implemented.

;
COLUMBUS - A jury will resume deliberations Monday in the
: government's tax-evaston charges against the pasmr of a Delaware
, church. .
:
The Rev. Leroy Jenkins, pastor of the Healing Hill Cathedral,
• faces two charges of income tax evasion for 1987 and 1988.
l U.S. District Court Judge John Holschuch insb'Ucted the jurors 10
; retire after deliberating for about six hours Friday . .
"
Jenkins failed 10 pay about $47,000 in income taxes said Dana
•: Boente, a Justice Department tax anomey. If convicted on eilher
: count, Jenkins faces five years in priSon and a $100,000 fme.
·• · Boente alleged that thousands of dollars of undeciJ!red income,
.- including money from the church, 'Went to Jenkins' personal

account.

emblematic of the problems coolinl!ing to haunt many Vietnam IVeler- .
ans. In 1988, a five-year congressional study concluded that
830,000 of the 2.8 milliQo Vietnam
veterans had severe post traumatic
srress disorder. .
The condition manifeSts ibelf in
many ways. Some people can't
sleep at night. Others. become
depressed. Many have problems
with personal relationships !w:anse
they won't talk about their experiences.
Only about 30,000 receive any
benefi~ for post traumatic stress .
disorder. Many don't think they
have a problem; others know they
have a problem but don't know
where m go for help. Bentley ~The firsr clinics to treat the condilion opened in the late 1970s.

Panel suggests fee cuts
for MU student paper

: Jury ponders tax.evasion case

,

Nation/World
Anti-Yeltsin bid ftops as momentum builds for referendum :·
March 28,1993

Sunday Ttmes-Sentinel/A4

March 28, 1993

7.r.r

d • ...
E7

·•

.,.

HONORARY MEMBERS
Joeepb P. Brady, II.D.

Charles B. Bolser, Jr., II.D.,

Prelldelit ltme.rltua ok the Medical Staff
Rayllloacl L• .J•nln,., II.D.
Jam• A. Kemp, II.D •
Tbom" W. Mortua. II.D.
Riclwd 0. Pattenoa, II.D.

•

1. .

�. ,.

March 28, 1993

Commentary

\

March 28, 1993

Russell J. Graham

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A6

Rockefeller's keen insights on health care
A Dl.taton or

~-:c.
W ntnl Ave., GiiUpolls, Oblo

111 Court St, Pomeroy, Oblo

(614J -.234z

(614) 99Z-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlsller

HOBART WILSON JR,

PAT WHrrEHEAD

ED&lt;:utlve Editor

A511s1Ut Publlsber.COntroller

'
A MEMBER of The Auociated Press, md the American

Newspopor Publisbers Association.

LE'ITERS OF OPINIQN are welcome. They should be Jess than
300 words. All lellels are subject 10 editinJ md must be signed with
niiiM, addless md telephone nomber. No unsigned letters will be
published. Letters should be in good taste, 8ddressin• issues not

~~.

0

•

•

rhank you, readers
~(and editors too)
I can ~ my pr-esident one beirer

the order desegregating base facili·

.pograpby of Wlllds.
• In his address to lhe joint ses4ion of Congress, PresideD! Clinton
:promised 10 succeed in one people'"sa~ing area w~ bolh Presidents
=tteagan and BUsh -bad failed miser-

Roosevelt was slill president then.

,

WASHINGTON
The
epiphany for President Clinton's
healdK:are plan may have come on
Oct 26, one week before lhe election. CJinlon - oo lhe campaisn
bus in Nonh Carolina wilh AI &lt;lore
when Sen. lobi! D. (Jay) RockefeUer, 0-W.Va., climbed aboard.
Until ihen, Clinton's plan revolved
around lhe ''play or pay'' model,
which forees employas 10 provide
hcallh insurance Ill pay a.substantial jl!lJfolltax.
' (Clinton) said, 'I'm not F,Oing
to do that payroll w, I can 1 get
that through Congress," R.ockefeUer says. "And )'Cia know what,
he's right"
Loog before Hillary Clinton had
her own task force, Rockefeller
waa crisscrossing the country to
stump for health-care reform. The
problem was, nobody would
. believe he wasn't running for pesident
"I went to lhe Des Moines Register, and said 'I'm not here
bec•use "I'm running for presiilent. •
And they all started lauahina,"
Rockefeller says~ It was a year
before the 1992 primaries were
starting. "I said 'I'm here to talk

about health care."
Rockefeller's non-presidential
campaign continued, until " the

By Jack Anderson
and
· Michael Binstein
most awful thing happened. I started aeuing a reasonably good
response, and not just on health
care. I started moving in the poDs."
Soon ~. Rockefeller oPted
out of a While House bid. -n.'lt
besides catapullin&amp; Rockefeller 11&gt;
the national stage, this brief campaii!JI now ranks as one of lhe primary catalysts that brought heallh
care to the forefront of the Democratic agenda.
.
The rise of health care as a
national issue parallels Rockefeller's rise til prominence in the
Democratic ranks. But lhe soft-spoken senator wilh lhe famous name
traces his interest in the issue to
tooa before his polilical career took
off. The rooJS, he told us mcently,
lie in the coal-mining iown of

In extolling our unity through the ties 49 years ago, since Franklin

._
., ,oony

""
---r:-· zones. ""'
..e ..ww

~

briilg ... new jobs 111 Sllllefronts and
factories from South Boston to
.South TelliS to South Central Los

•Anreles"

liut ;,l hear America Singina"
iuou8h an llmost pcrlect alphabet~ ~lalioa or cilies and towns in
~0 states from Athens, Ga., to
'\"at::ima, Wash~ A is for Athens, B
_is for Blackfoot, Cis for Cam:;:bridge and lhen, Dubuque, Easton,
~Flint, Galveston, Havre, Johnson
I·City, Kearny, Lafayette, Manch:ester, Nacogdoches, Orangeburg,
~xsutawney, Raleigh," Salisbury,
~Tifton , Uniontown, Vallejo,
:,Wapakoneta and Yakima.
-: Eat your heart out, Walt Whit·
:.man. Those cities were among the
•:120 where my column appears, but
'·I 'm still missing cities or towns
·:wilh names beginning with I, Q, X
:

·:andZ.

1: Many or you write. A few occa: sionally call, as clid a pleasant-man.pered doctor from florence, S.C.,
7 ho took f11111 issue with my col·
.umn on cult leader David Koresh
the NalioDal R.ifle Association.
~ · An outpouring of dissenters
me to the epistolary woodshed
for my column on gays and the
-ptilitary. A retired lieutenant
:colonel in Dolgeville, N.Y., (near
:1-iUie Falls) sharply disputed my
position and questioned my use or
-e. Thoreau quote, "The maas of
lnen lead lives of quiet despera-

::am
'""*

Jion.,.

.

.,. "You would have done well"
;)le admonished me, "to remember
,'Thoreau •s concludinj! sentence ·10
:ihat J?8fllgr&amp;ph. 'Built is a charac;)erisuc of wisdom not to do desper·
1111e things."' (I love literate peo.:J!Iel)
,, When I dumped on Dan
:Quayle's orthogniphic deficiencies,
Mt. Prospect, Ill., grammarian
:}:hided me, pointing out that I could
a liUie dictionary time myself.
~ 'Your column cootained two misl)peUings." Natwally, I copped out
;the editors missed it
.:. Cherry Hill, N.J., spanked me
:f« writing lhat Truman had issued
.

•a
:-use

Chuck Stone
(lt was Roosevelt who desepegat·
ed base facilities; a few years lattz,
Truman desegregated the armed
services.)
But a $eographic ~urvey of
responses IS not the mam purpose
of this column. It is to thank so
many of you for your $enerous
coolributions 10 the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee's
humanitarian efforts to build a
refugee center for 20,000 Soma·
lians after you read about them in
this column.
Especially_ennobling of the
eclectic spirit 'were ,the efforts of
Lynda Farrah, • member of the
Uniwian Universalist Church in
Hudson, N.H., to Orpnize church
members, family and friends to
conlribuli: 10 AIJOC's work.
Because of that kind of wannhearted spirit, the AJJOC director
of special opellltions, Amir Shaviv,
and l were brought together when I
made a recent visit 10 New York
City to be a paneliat with thePrinceton Review's.Jay Rosner on
the" subject of standardized testing.
How depressingly ironic. I sat
there, arguing about the abuse and
misuse of SATs, while thousands
of Somalians are starving to death.
Mr. Shaviv is a tall, heavyset
man whose = u e matches his
bighearted go
"We are nonpolitical,•' he told me wilh 1 ~·
"We simply want to help people. •
Even af~r. 3S years in tliis business, the Amir Shavivs of the
world~ .cause me II? ~hoke ul'.
He has mv11ed me to VISII Somaba
with him. After my university
classes letout, I may try to take
that trip with my AJJOC brother.
So, thank you, gentle readers,
for remindina me of our essential
oneness. But the editors of your
newspapers make our connection
possible. I really thank them!
And remember, newspapers in
cities be&amp;inning with I, Q, X and Z:
Taking this column will complete
. lhe chain of reciprocity lhat binds
our alphabet of geogmphy.
Chuck Stone Ia 1 syadlcated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Assncladon.

•lll'derOn March 31, 1926, Richard
Rhoades, John Bryant and John
for lhe murder of James McCumber. Hedrick

Hedrick

- ·amstcd

pad plky lllll Bry1111t..cl RhOad·
es plead not guilty and had jury lri·

als. JuCige A. P .Miller was the
Judge in both trials.
.
Jolm Hedrick
On Apri13,' 1926 John Hedrick
cntmd a plea of gullty 10 the Jim
McCumber murder and was
remanded to the custody of the
Sheriff. On May 10, 1926, the
coun ordered that John Hedrick
shall be electrncuted on Sept. 2,
1926 by the warden of the Ob io
Penitentiary. The coun appointed
Dana Tracy, J.E.D. Hartinger and
Dana Roush as additional auards
for John Hedrick and that he be
transpc)rted to the Ohio State Penitentiary.
Trial of
Richard RMida
Richard Rhoades plead not
guilty of murder on April 3, 1926.
c. E. Peoples and Fled W. Crow,
S
r. were attorneys representhi&amp;
Rhoades. The Judge. was A. P.
MiDer. The records show lhat L. L.
KeDer was the foreman. The second jury venire drawn contained
the followinl=es: Harry Radfr--' Arlh
.,.u,
ur
• C. H. Berry, I .

~i~g:~"u:J~~Y A.s~:· ~~

:~

Thomas, Harley Musser, Leonard
Grueser, W. E. Harmon, Bert
.,__,_
Shu!tz, .,_,Lee
...,..,
• ......... Whaley, E.

.' .....

•••

"'·

,._

~::'\¥;:;~~· ~~~ .~~~~:

·Berry's World

,
May, Dale Lee• John Slivers,
T. F.
Dye, John Massar• C· C· CaldweD•
Homer Welsh, E. c. Jewell, Allen
Brewer, A. J. Beaver, Harry
Hou das he l t, I . H• Parr • J . E .
Radekin, Val Mitch, J. M. Cald·
11 H M R th Ch 1 0
we •· · · u • ares
ray,
Raymond Ebersbach, F. M. Coeres,
Jacob Klein, H. P. Feiger, George
Hqwell, Charles Reuter, J. H.
Shenefield, C. E. Blackwood, W.
D. Lannina. E. P. Landon, W. E.
GiDogly, Georae R. Collins, Floyd
Mees, Thomas Tlonas, W. G. Farley,!. C. Matlack, H. D. DeWolfe,

•
·,•

!is~~G~~:d

•

Stout, John E. Coleman, Ray

s ·h

mil • John D. Sheppard, Raymond Killinger, Willtam Manuel,
F. C. Andrews, A. D. Betzing, Dale
Musser, J. F. Parker, L. L. KeUer,
S. A. Eastman}J. A. Bradford, Oris

•
•

t

•

'
•l

0

d

• b•

_ay ID

Gaul, J. Pickens, A. B. Cross,
Charles R~ and D. 0. Whaley.
.An additi0Jl81 Venire\contained .
thtrty names as set forth herein:
B_yron Saxl&lt;in, A. E. Crew, Geo.
-'-ens• H. K. Coe,· Sr., Ray HayPi..,
man. Hey Carpenter, A. E. Fellowtl,
Ed T~ylor, Geo. E. Hauck, Jacob
Werhng, C. M. Radcliff, C. H.
.Amos, J. E. Turner, w : R. Halla·
day, James Boggess, G. F.
Schreiber, c. B. Tigner-, Eldon
Clark, T. E. Smith, Frank Hepp, L.
I. Bryan, Elmont Stevens, J. E.
Torrence, D. F. Fick, E.· W. Frost,
Z. Jewell, Frank Guthrie, Chas.
Price, E. V. Atkins, W. D. Baker. .
In ~rving the venire of 7S, the
sheriff's cost was $S6.1S.
On April 12, 1926 the ~heriff
1
also ~umll!oned the fo~lowmg as
poss1ble JUrors: Cla1r Taylor,
H~er Ashworth, I~ Stout, F. R.
Alkire, Thomas Snulh, D. A. Arm·
strong, Home~ Cook and Jacob
Musser. The hst of actual _Jurors
has ~ot been located as of thiS ~·
The Jury reported to coun on April
30 and on ~ay 1, 1926 ~ound
~boades gu1lty of murder m the
fust degree. On the lOth day of
Ma&amp;;.{:dge MiUer sentenced him
to
by the electric chair.
Rhoades
was to be escorted by
three guards, namely, W. C.
Weaver, Peter Reinhart and Tom
Duff, to the state penitentiary in .
Columbus. The execution date was
Sept?-· 1926.
Wttnesses subpoenaed fo~ "!e
de_fe~.nt, Rhoades, were: L~z!e
Hll.ew1ck, Flpyd Clark, Ph!hP
M~1':r (b~}. Emmett Mankins,
"-:llham ~uvers, Charle~ Hysell,
Rich DaviS• Mack Hawkins • ........
........
Hartenbach
-~Robert Hunnell
.
•ou .
. . ·
It 11 to be IIOied 10 revJeWtng the
court files that numerous motions
were fll-'
-~ that lhe de' dan •
"""'')'
.en t s
attorneys we.re successful i~ the
chB;Uenae agamst the first ven1re of
73 Juro_nl. ..
As mdicated, my father, Judge
Fred W. Crow, Sr., represented
Rhoades. Accordina to Sybil
Ebersbach, his stenographer for .
many years1 my father Worked ve?.
hard on this case. I~ short, Sybil
stated that a! the tr1al 1 Rhoa~es
blurted -out his. coofesston, whtch
waa the fust ume _my falher ~ad
heardRhoades~thewaaguilty.
T~er~ waa no discovery rules at
!hiS tm:'C· hence there was no way
m wh1ch the defense attorney
would kno'\Y w~at.lhe ll!ile could
prove at lh1s cnmsnal lriru. From

IStory

By The Auocllted l'ral
IS Sunday, March 28,1he 87th day or 1993. There are 278 days
Ieft-.:odathey
1D
re-. .
Today's Hi&amp;ltliaht in Hi11ay:
On ~~ "28, ·1979, America's wont commercial nuclear accident
oc:cuned inaide lhe Uillt2 Rlll'b' •lhe 11lftlc Mile Illlnd plant near Middl~. PL. a a aaiel of hliman llld mechanical flilurea caused lhe
10 malfunction, reaulllni in daJiia&amp;e 10 lhe Rlll'tor's core
~~ty.
'
.

..

~··
._4
... ~- a ,
- 11t3 by
N£1., Inc.
~

'•

'

STILL AROUND

,,.

Emmons, W.Va., where Rockefeller went as a VISTA volunt.eer in
lhe early 1960s. Having lived a life
of immense privilege, the ex peri~~his!n -~-mmo·.-I)S cbanJed his life,
..,., - . "Here I was, a guy named
Rockefeller, who was fluent in
Japanese and knew Chinese and
(served in the) Peace Corp•. I
couldn 'I break in . ... people just
closed their doors." BufRocke·
feller did break in, and the expericnce reminds him to this day that
health care is not merely about
lofty COncepts like managed c:Om·
petition and global budgeting, but
about scrvina rural communities
like Emmons. The problem there
was more basic lhan,fmding affOrd·
able health insurance. There
weren't any dac:tors. .
. .
Roc:kefetler told us or the lesson
he learned after pressuring the
county aovemment to send a van
out 10 Emmons to offer free Pap
smears. After goina door to door
tel~ residents about Jhe van,
no 1y showed up for their free
lest. Two months later, the van
· came back, with the same results.
Eventually, RnckefeUer realiml his
mistake.
"They probably didli't want to
take the test because there was so
much goina wrong in ·their lives,
that why would Jhey want someone
to tell them thc;re was something
really bad going on in their lives."
There· has. to be .trust built up
between doctor and patient, .trust
that takes time to build when medi·
cal care arrives in the form of a
mobile laboratory. It's a pattern
that continues today.
· Hospitals arc not lhe answer to
heallh problems in lhe thousands of
communities like Emmons, Rockefeller says. He wants to see more
rural heallh clinics like the one in
Lincoln County,•W.Va., which cut
the local infant mortality rate in
half. o_ver ~ f~vep;;;rs!j'an .. The
nauonal
admwstrauon s

service corps would be lhe pcrlect
place to find the staff and the
reaowtes neec1et1
R.ockefeller' s other defining
moment on health care came as
chairman of the Pepper Commis· sion, named after the tate Rep.
Claude Pc:i1Jer. D-Fia., and charged
with · fort:~• solution to the
emerging
-care dilemma. He
took lhe job "because nobody else
wanted 10 do the wort," and then
~it like lhe oppmtunity of a
lifetime. It turned out 10 be one of
the moments that led to the word
"f~ock" entering America'-s
po · · lexicon. ·
.
After two years of hard work,
the commission developed the
"play or pay" model for h~th­
care reform, which Clinton
embraced until days before the
·· election. Then lhe Bush administrilion entered the (ray, "Three weeks
before (the vote), (John) SUIIunu
and (Rtchard) Darman started
going around ·saying 'Don't vote
for Rockefeller's plan, we don't
want bipartisanship oo health cate
until after lhe '90 elections." The
P)an squeaked through lhe commii:s1011 With an 8-7 vote, but waa dead
on arrival once it reached Capitol
HilL
•
"I waa so fruslnlted by that and
so angry at Bush - whq'd esaentially groWn up cxacdy like I hall
-lhat it son of developed my contempt for hiin," Rockefeller told
our assnci•te Jan Moller. Not long
afterward, Rockefeller found bini•
self in the offwe of the Des Moines
Register explaining why he wllsn~t
a candidate.
.
.
With a like-minded ex-governdr
in the White House, Rockefeller
now feels confident about health•
· care reform passing this year. He'D
even tell you when it'll happen:
"Mark it down. On Dec. 22 1993
we'D pass heallh-care refo~. FJai
out."
,
Jack Ander~on and Mlchae'i
Bln&amp;tein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Conclusion of the James McCumber murder case
James McCumber

::':t::.Jylfem

.

Olltllll'

m.::~::1, Nathaniel Briggs of New lfam)llhire patented 1 waahing

u.s.

In 1834, lhe
Stnlte voted 10 eetllln Preaident Andrew 11Cbon
forlhe removal of fodelaJ clepolits from lhe Bank d dlo United States.
&lt;I

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpol_is, OH-Polnt Pieasant, wv

my experiences lattz on lhe prose- ments, hearings, selection of tbri:e ·
cutin&amp; attorneys were under no jury venires, the three trials, con-obligaliooto give you any evidence victions and executions or all three ,
which would usisl in the defense me\) on Sept. 2, 1926, is truly
of the accused.
amazina.
. .
. :•
The tt1a1 or
The writer would like to com- ·
Jolul .g.-" Bl'JPt
ment 11n the status of criminal law,
John "SiiOrli' Bryant was enrorc,ement in 1926 8s compllre4 :
indicted for murder in the first 10 present day law. In 1926 asher·
degree on March 31, 1926. His iff or prosecutor would grill
auorneys were A. D. Russell of defendant or person accused of a
Pomeroy and R. A. Mack from crime as exttnsively as lhe sheriff '
Gallipolis. L. Crary Davis was spe· or prosecutor deemed necessary:·
cia! counsel for lhe state and D. Somcdmes the .defendaniS would"
Curtis Reed waa prosecuting auor- underao extensive questioning,
ney in this case. The juron were C. aometia)es bein&amp; unrewmble. ·
E. Roecher, A. N. Schaefer, J. W.
Usually the invcllij!ator'a offi-'
Wolfe (foreman or the jury), Cun em bad a pretty good idol whethe(
Frederick, W. A. Dye, William the defendlnt was guilty or 1101 bui
Nicholson, Henry WarreD, w. E. aomctimes it took an unreuonable
Jeffers, Tom Gorrell, Dale Dye, G. amount of lime to exlrllela Confesi
E. Frecker andJ. B. Giles.
. sion from a defendant. This law has
. The. jury wa! convened on May· . been changed by the ruling of ~
3, 1926. A motion was filed to U,S. Supreme Court in Jhe MlrandM
mo_v;e the jury to view certain vs.Arizonac:uedecidedln 1966.
places in Meigs County, including
The U.S. Supreme Conn has
the residence of Jerry Nuby, the . '!d~ that 111Y lll!spect prior Ill ques~':
bam, die·residence of John Bryant uorung, when m custody, must be
and the barn on his property and warned in ck:. unequivocal ~am~
the cistern on the farm commonly their right 10 remain silent, that an:r,.
called the John Arnold farm in statement !hey make can and will ·
which the body of James MeCum- be used against them, lhe ri&amp;ht fll.
ber was found. ~
have an llllOmey and if~ CIA not:"
af~ d
lhe
The jury found Bryant guilfY in
or one,
coun wil appoin~·
the first degree in the murder of · ooe for them. The failure 10 &amp;iYC'
McCumber on May 4 and he was these warnings 'to a suspect woul4
sentenced on May 10 1926
·
nullify any confession made by::.
On May 10, 1926 John. Brrant run;·::
was sentenced to the state pemtenn. the McCum~r case Jhese"
tiary to be safely kept until the Wll'lllllll8 were not pven. 1be con~'
Sept. 2, 1926, on which day victioN may not have occ:urrcd halt
between the hours of 12 a.m. and lhe defendailla remained lileat Thei
sunrise of the same day, John method today in obtaining coofes•;·
Bryant is to be electrocuted by the lions ilto- one oflhe llllpects 10':
I
warden of the Ohio Penitentiary tlll'll State!".&amp;-:
.
.wt'•~·
....... and In. return.
1:
he
W1U
be"'
en
lcni
-;·
until the said defendant, John
, .,.v some
ency m,.
Bryant, is dead; and that the defen· lhe aettlc:ment ofhiseriminal cue. :!;
dant, John ,Bryant pay the costs of
Under the discovery laws of lhe•
State of Ohio it .
ib'· • ,,
this prosecution. A. P. Miller,
IS now JXIIIl "'•Ill'•
Judge. ·
lhe defendant 10 obtain of~
Judge Miller. also appointed evidence lhe ltate has prior to lhe':
three guards, namely, W. C. trial. In short the confcssioni or:
Weaver, Peter Reinhart and Tom Hedrick and Rhoades would beti
Duff to deliver Bryant to Cilium- available to lhedefense attorney\•
bus U, lhe state penitentiary
under IOday's law. The coofessioosi;
Timotlly O'Brien ·
would Probably have been inadmis-"
Through lhe confession of·one sible today. '
;~
ollhe defendants in the McCumber
· The pendulum has swung from~
murder it was disclosed that Timo- evellivfl inlenoption of 'IUspcc:tl~
thy 0' Brien was involved in the 10 Ill almoa protective lhield for~
murder of Susan Rhoades ori May individuals commiUing the crime;;;
6, 1923. Mrs. Rhoades was shot The writer feels that there should';
through the head and her house set be some middle &amp;round between'·
on fire. The trial date was set for lhe two extremes, whelher this ever:;
Timolhy P'Brien on May 24, 1926 comes about is anolher qne'lim "
and the jury found 11tat he w11s
F'maDy lhe writer would JitC Ill ';
guilty of mwder in the rust degree COIIIIIICIIt oo the lpeed in which lhe:'
on May 2~. but recommended invcatlplion waa made. ·Three ~

a·

~~·May

31, O'Brien was sentented 10 lhe Ohio State Penitentiary for life. The 11tiee defendaniS
in the McCumber murder were
retumed from Ohio Sllio Peniteil·
llary to lellify againa O'Brien.
Shedir Rice, prosecutor D. Curlis Reed and L. Crary Davia and
especially Iudge A. P. Miller ban·

~.=:,~~~~~~..:~~·:i
liary 10 be eleclrocuted on

SeDt. 2 ·1:

19~ wilhout any delay. All or.;
lhem euruted on the IIIPIJint-'~
od dale. '11111cuo is I ._,-In;.,
die rrinllaelNCUicla of Oblo ia lbal !j
dille deli...... coovicled a(:•
lhe 111111 crime and all wac
cllledwitiJialliltiiCIIIhaoflhemar·:!;

eu-·:
~ :i:..~-:::.e~~~u!~t~ ~=·:0:;,:O,::J;· :!':i~

never

1Y I1ICb quiet case resolu-

lion. When )'Cia think that a murder
wa committed oo Man:h lS, 1926,
lh\1 speed in which lhe sheriff hln·
. the 1'nd'tCt·
died the in vesdgauon.

,,

,;j
,!:

State of Ohio k
In Ood we Tru&amp;

"•

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

~:;.

•J

·~;
.~,

.Marie _Berry
: . GALLIPOLIS · Marie Berry, 84, GaDipolis, formerly of Gahanna, died
Fnday, March 26, 1993, at Overbrook Centtz, Middleport
~ Shew~ born !une 27, 1908 'in Lawrence, Ky .. dau&amp;httz of the late Lon
.-and Catherine Prince Hall.
-.-· Mrs..B~ attended the Assembly of God, Gahanna
.• SurviVors mclude three daughters, Bonnie Jean Berry of Vinton Mrs
~Charles (Billie) Maynard of COlumbus, and Mrs." Otis (Frances) ReYnold~
.,Qf Gahanna; one daughter-m-law, Frances Berry or Gallipolis· 10 grand~Ghil(jrtn; and 14 great-grandchildren.
'
·: ~ She was pm:~ in dealh by her husband, Delbert Berry in'l983; one
.s_on, C~les ~ tn 1992; three brothers; and IWO sisters.
~ Semces Will be held 2 p.m. Monday at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
~ H~e. We~olt Chapel, GaDipolis", with lhe Rev. Marvin Booth offici~ abng. Burial wtll be Tuesday at noon in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park
~columbus.
'
'
- Friends may call at the funeral horne on Sunday from 2-4.
'

~Jerry M. Blake

• ; CROWN CITY - Graveside services were held at 11 a.m. Saturday at
~ller Memorial Gar~ns, Mille~. Ohio, for Jerry M. Blake, 45, 391 Big
};:reek Roa~. Crown Ctty, who died Tuesdlly. March 22, 1993 at his resi.dence.
.
1
~ The Rev. Charles M. Turley officiated and arrangements were by the
Willis Funeral Home.
·
Bo~ Jan. 24, 1948 in Huntington, W.Va., son of Jerry Marrah and
.Veroruca L. Blake, he was self-ct!!ployed and a Vieblam Wai veteran.
~,; Surviving in addition 10 his parents are three sisters, Sandra Hartford
'o~ Idaho, Sheela Joyce Kilby of West Virginia, and Sata J. Pailcs of Elk
,Cuy, Okla.; and a brother, James M. Blake of Crown City.

PROCTORVU..LE- Ru.sseD J. Graham, 58 ProctorviUe died Salurday, March 27, 1993 in St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, w.va.
~om Oct. 25, 1934 in Lawrence County, son of the late Homer and
J~Ste Graham, he was a weD-known gospel musician and retired truck
driver.
Surviving are a sisttz, Wilma Thacker of Chesapea!ce; two nieces and
two nephews; and special friends, Virginia and Freddie Langdon of Proctorville, with whom he made his home.
S_ervices _wiiibe 2 _p.m. Monday ' in the Hall Funeral Home, ProctorviDe. DunaJ will be m Rome Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home S110day from 4·9 p.m.
·

JamesHall

· Sunday nmes Sentlnei~AZ
She was born March 14, 1919 in Oauia County, to the late William H.
and Dora Mac Shoemaker Cundiff.
.
Survivors include her husband, Ray Sayre of Syracuse· one daughter
Shelby Lewis of Columbus; one son, Jack (Donna} Lewis of South Bend;
Ind.; one son-in-law, Ivan.Sayre of Massillon; three sisters, Kathryri
Moore of Syracuse, Pauline Bender, of Huntington, W.Va . and Mildre¢
Coot or Columbus; seven gJlllldehildren, seven great-grandchildren and:
several nieces and nephews.
:
She is preceded in death by one daughter, Katheryn Sue Epling· two;
brother.&gt;, Robert and Hobert Cundiff; and three sisters, Jeffe Snyder Betty=
Jewett and Edith Medley.
.
_
'
•
Friends may caD 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m, Monday at the Fisher Funeral)
Home i~ Middleport. Services will be 11 a.m . Tuesday at the funeral'
h~me wtth the Rev. Glen McClung orr:wiating. Burial will be in Grave(.
HiDCemetery.
(Continued on A-8)
•

i

_

CALHOUN, Ga. - James Hall, 63, Calhoun, formerly 'bf Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va., died Friday, Man:h 26, 1993 at his residence.
Born March .31 , 1929, son of the late Kemmis and Thelma Hall, he
was the former owner and operator of the Rich Oil Station in Gallipolis
and was a member of the Grace Baptist Church of Calhoun.
Surviving are his wife, Ginger; two daughters; and six stepchildren.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Brannen &amp; Sons Funeral Home,
Calhoun. Burial will be in Chattanooga, Tenn.
The family requests that cards and flower.&gt; be sent to 756 Lovebridge
Road, Calhoun, Ga. 30701 .

•

Virginia E. Sayre

MEDICAL SUPPLIES
FOR HOME USE

MIDDLEPORT - Virginia EB~T~estine Sayre, 74, Syracuse, died Friday, March 26, 1993 at Qverbrook Center in Middleport. She was a
homemaker and attended the Pomeroy Nazarene Church.

Sales .- Rental - Service

Juveniles held

?·

PORTLAND - Charges are cases, Sheriff James Soulsby said.
pending against at least four West
Virginia juveniles for the theft of a
four~wheeler owned by Raymond ·
Ginther and Jhe arson of a vacant
'.
house on Eaton Road, Portland.
The Meigs County Sheri(f's
'•..
.
department reported Friday that the
• l'OMEROY - Anna Marie Cornell, 8S, Overbrook ~enter, Middle- four-wheeler has been recovered in
.port, died Saturday, March 27, 1993 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Jackson County, W.Va. The
•· Born June 28, 1907 at Delaware, Ohio, daugbter of the late Charles vacant house was the residence of
~iUiain and Lucretia Davis Cornell, she was a housekeeper and was the late Simon Powell and is owned
·!lmployed by Robinson's Laundry &amp; Dty Cleaning. She was a member or by his granddaughttz, Betty Cossin,
Columbus:
the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. ·
· - Surviving are a brother and sister·in-law, James and Bernice Cornell or
Investigator Robert Beegle
SEE OUR COMPLETE
.Middlepon; a nephew and wife, Charles William (Bill) and Bea Cornell .!'l:pof!ed that the prosecutor's office
of Racine; a niece, Lucretia Cornell Stobart of Middleport; two great- ts bemg asked for advice on the
LINE OF PENIAl
:Pieces; three great-nephews; four great-great nieces; and several cousins.
procedures to be followed since the
• She was also preceded in death by a,brother and sister-in-law, Charlie Juveniles involved are now in cusCAMERAS
.and Viola CorneD; a nephew, Malcolm (Mac) Come!!; and by two infant tody of the West Virginia Youth
Services.
··
·
J&gt;rolher.&gt; and an infant sisttz.
:• Services will be 2 p.m. Monday in the Ewing Funeral Home, with
The West Virginia State Police
422
Elder William Roush officiating. Burial will be in Gilmore Cemetery. assisted in the investigation of both
;r.nends may caU at the funeral home from 6-81! m. Sunday.
·

-Hospital Beds
•Wheelchairs
•Bath Safety Aids
eOstomy Supplies
•Diapers &amp; Chuxs
•Lift Chairs
•Hundreds of Other
· Items in Stock

'Anna Marie Cornell

HOME OXYGEN THERAPY
Respiratory Therapist - 24 Ho~r Elllel'gncy Service.
We Bdl Medkare, Medkald, etc., for the patle11t.
Home Owned and Operated

Galbpolis

Tol Free
1-800-458-6844

TAWNEY JEWELERS

Jadt101
286-7414

Jloy·o. Edens
GALLIPOLIS- Roy Oscai Edens, 89,920 Fo\lflh Ave., Gallipolis, died
"Friday, March 26, 1993 at his residence.
He was born Dec. 11,1903inCharleston, W.Va., sonofthelateJamesand
Cynthia Miller Edens.
• He was a retired dairy fanner and
a member of the Dairymen's Association.
· Survivors include one son, Dams
Scragg of Vinton; three granddaugh·
ters, Mrs. Betty Claypool ofOrlando,
FJa, Mrs, Mike (Priscilll)) NeveU of
Eno, and"Mrs. Torona Hash of.Vin«in; and five great-grandcl\ildren.
: He was preceded in desth by his
w.ife, LiUian Viola (Scragg) Edens,
J\ug. 30, 1987; two brothers; and one
sisttz.
: Services wiD be held 2 p.m.
Monday at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton, with the Rev. C.
J: Lemley officiating. Burial wiD be
iii Vinton Memorial Park.
.:, Friends may can at the funeral
home on Sunday from 7-9.
ROY EDENS
'

•

SUNDAY 1 P.M. 'TIL 6 P.M.

5 BIG HOURS

. lASSEn DINING ROOM

3 PIECE SECTIONAL

.

••.
'988

9 PIECE DINING ROOM SUITE
Light pine, country flnlah.

'
.
Not$3799.95 SUNDAY

w/2 RECl-INING ENDS
her In bro~n or lllliuve.

"It

~

SUNDAY, lURCH 21TH
FLEISTEEL SOFA

SOFA·LOVESEAT

SOUTHWESTERN LOOK.
Beige end ru1t 81rlpe.

Traditional, pale green velvet.

s

Helen Zahl Keller

'
, . MINERSVILLE
- Graveside services for Helen Zah1 KeUer will be
held Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at the Minersville Hill Cemetery with Rev.
Deron Newman officiating.
'
~- Arrangements are with the Chambers Funeral Home of Cleveland.

$58811

Not $1899.95 SUNDAY

•

MIICB 18'1 I P.M. ''IL 8 P.M.
DROPLEAF TABLhl/4 Chairs

TWIN MA'RRESS

Oelt flnlah.

&amp; Matching Foundation.
Sold In Jets only.

'.

SUNDAY

_.

$39995
Flor•~

SJ68

Not $1999.95

88

SUNDAY

98888 '

5

$399.95
• SUNDAY

. Whether you're an adventurer or armchair traveller take a relaxing
-_, drive along scenic country roads winding through the foothills and
"•mall towns of Ca!!ia County.

SJ88

Well type Colon lei, tee I pleld.

Nostalgic Clawfoot Table

SUNDAY

TABLE &amp; 6 CHAIRS

4 .p ,... Beck CIMilra•

Not$1299.95

SUNDAY

O•k flnlah.

·

Not$799.95

$688

18

SUNDAY

•

..Country llf*.a'"

'

lla joint prq.ct of lh~t ONo Yallry VlaiiOf'ICenttr; 0 . 0 . Mcintyre Padt Dltb1ct, 111d
'Tht Bob Ev an~ Fum

--------------------.,
"COUNTRY ROADS AUDIO TOUR"
ORDER FORM

I

1

Hoi $999.95

18

.

· The "Country Roads" tour package of a cassette and guide can be
·,, purchased for the prHale pnce of $12 (a savings of $31) until May 31.
. The tape will be available after June 27. For more. information, caU the
., Ohio VaUey V'ISitors Center at 446-6882.
·
1

FLEXSTEEL RECUNER

Pine flnlah.

.

v

I

1
, · Naine: - - --

1

- - - - , . . . - - - . , . . . . - - - --

'.

· I Street:

City:-------

1Stille:

Zip:

., I

TeteP•O!I"• ~..,.____

· I P1eue send-toor packets to the .._.ellddreaa.
Tot.l1111011nt included-------

·'I

1

PJtE.SALE

IIBGVLAR

' _ (Won May 31)

SU.N

(Allor May 31)

St5.N

• I Saito 1'u"

....-71.

Saito Tu 0

__,II

1

'J'ol8l
liDI
OOioloR-.,oU--11R

•

,......

115Jt

r.. ......,_.. ll. . oUII.It.

·------------------lend COIIIpllted fomlllld check p!lyiiii11D Ohio Vlll-v Vlaltcn
Clnlllr, 41111D II., Qdllpolla, 011. 41a1.

'

$42222

SPRING AIR
SETS
SPRING·O·PEDIC MAXIMA
TWIN SRS

FUll SETS

QUEEN SRS

NOT $499.95

NOT $699.95

NOT $8H.95

SUNDAY

Ee. Pc.

n•¥y, meuve,g-n.

TABLE &amp;4 CHAIRS

· "Countcy Roads Audio Tour" takes a different approach to a tour.
·: Interviews wilh local residents give the tour a -personal feel and
· colorful information. Th""" comments are then' blended with sound
,' effects, commentary on area history and traditional songs to take you
· back in time to hear and discover a "different" road than y;ou see
today. It's a unique driving adventure that provides fun. information
and lets a traveller explore at their own pace.

4997

5

SUNDAY

SOFA, lOVESEAT Tradltlanal

Oakflnl•h.

Rediscover Gallia County

$77777

Y-8 BIB HOURS

Not $6V9.95

Not 5349.95
.
SUNDAY

$899"

.Not s1799.95 SUNDAY

6 MONTHS FREE FINANCING*

Not$1399.95 SUNDAY

I

l

95 SUNDAY 539995
$22995 SUNDAY
$329
.
KING SUS
~
.
95
NOT $1099.95
SUNDAY $499
'

SUNDAY 1 P.M. 'TIL 6 P.M.
6 MONTHS SAME AS CASH*
*lWitll AfProY.. Crelllt)

FREE.DELIVERY AND SET UP
(WILL RIMOVI OLD RIMS)

BIGGEST SELE(TION IN AREA

152 Second A¥..

Phone 448-1405
. Gelllpoll•

38888

5

·'

�\

Pleasant, WV .

William .

r.

POINT PLEASANT-. William E. Stover Jr.• 60, Point Pleasanl. died
Fndl!y, March 26, 1993 m Holzer Medical Center.
Born SeJII. _10, 1932 in Point Pleasant, son of Oma Samples Stover. and
the !at~ Wilham E. Stover S~ .. he was a member of Trinity United
Methodist Church and a U.S. Air Force veteran. He was a supervisor with
the Goodyear Tire &amp; Polyester Plant for 29 years. He was also a member
of the Loyal Order of the Moose in Point Pleasant ·
Surviving in ii!ldition to .his mother are his wife, Yvonne (Dam wood)
Stover; three childre~, Mtchelle, ·Angte and Matthew; (wo brotherS,
Robert L. Stover of Pomt Pleasant. and Thomas E. Stover of Loniin· three
grandchildren; and three nieCes and one qephew.
·'
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday in the Wilcoxen Funeral Home with
the Rev. Steven Dorsey officiating. Burial will be in Concord Cemetery
Henderson. Friends may call 8l the funeral home Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made to Point
Pleasant Emergency Medical Service.
·

Ruby Thompson
GALLIPOLIS - Ruby M. Thom~'l!'· 89, Lewis Drive, Gallipolis, died
Friday, March 26, 1993, at Scenic · Nursing Center.
She was born Dec. 13, 1903 in Nelsonville, daughter of the late Sam
and Della (Traugh) Nichols.
'
·.
Mrs. Thompson was a member of the Cedanown (Georgia) Bap.tist
Church and the Cedartown Order of the Eastern Star.
·
SurVivors include one daughter, Mrs. Jean Greene of Gallipolis; a
grandson, Tom Greene of Gallipolis; a granddaughter, Patricia E. Hudson
of Elkins, W.Va.; and grandchildren, Adam and Mackenzie Green,
Heather, Heath, and Jamie Hudaon of Elkins; and one sister, Julia.Nichols
of Columbus.
She was' preceded in death by her husband, Linwood Thompson.
Graveside services will be held 2 p.m. Tuesday at Ohio Valley Memory Gardens, with Pastor Demy Coburn officiating.
Arrangements are under the direction of McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis:

William Harry Wilson

March

Area man arr~ted ..

By DONNA CASSATA
A5rlociated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Defense
Secretary Les Aspin unveiled President Clinton's slimmed-down,
· $26~.4 billion military budget Saturday, ponraying it as a "very cautious" blueprint that preserves
many Reagan-Bush era weapons
systems.
Reductions
in active
duty
military,ofa 108,000
pay freeze
and
modest cuts in the Strategic'.
Defense Initiative account for ·
much of Clinton's defense cuts in
the spending plan for the fiscal year
beginning Oct. l.
But the overall fiscal 1994 budget is about $10 billion less than
this year's level - and some $12
billion shon of wh;u fanner President Bush envisioned for the post·
Cold War era.
Over a four-year period, Clinton
plans to cut defense spending by
$88 billion. When running fill"~tdent he had pledged a $60 billion

POMEROY- A Reedsville'
man was arresled Friday night for
£ailun: to pay a $446 fme.
Larry Bishop was arrested by •
the order of Jhe Meigs County •
Coun and released when the bal ~
ance of the old fine was paid.
·•
Bishop was also cited to the
county court pn a charge or no
operator's license. ,
·

red~ction.

Left unanswered was the fate of
'!lajor weapons programs,
mcludm~ future develop~ent of
tacucal auc~ft for !he Air Force
and Navy, a ltght helicopter for the
Anny·and an attack submarine.
Aspin is reserving judgment on
those programs, and scores of others, pending the results of a major
review expected this summer. The
defense secretary acknowledged
~ost

ment review and then making the
changes larer on this year, •• Sen.
Sam Nunn, D..Qa.,.said in an interview on CNN's "Newsihaker Saturday."
Clinton foresees a total number
of troops of roughly 1.4 million
toward the end of the decade some
200,000 Jess than the Bush ~dmin·
istration pt'ojected.

1988 FORD BRONCO ·n

' n,e pastel tones of spring's fll'Sl

'

.
'

I

'

One owner, XLT Package, auto., air, eXfra ·sharp · '
and priced right.
·
.

.insurance
' Let meneeds
analyze your
a free
with

Fainily Insurance Checkup.''
'

CAROLI .

· CUTTING PRICES

SNOWDEN

342Sec..IAvo.

WIP.Is. Oh.

Plooao 446-4290

,. Home 446-4511
lf4ll · , ....

A

UIIUUUICI

•

State Farm
Insurance Companies

fALL ME.

Home Offk(:S; Bloominglon. lllin~lis"
,j

422 SICOIID AYI.
IIAWPOUS.OIIO

Like a good neighbor. State Farm is there.®

(Continued from A·l)
He·sweetened higher education
POMEROY - Units of the between Syiacuse and Minersville
by $52 million, added $7.6'·million Meigs County Em'ergency Medical for Shawn Garnes and Shawn
to primary and secondary education Ser\rice responded to five calls for Petrie who were transported to
and gave an extra SIS million to a assistance Friday including a motor VMH.
program that' provides day care for vehicle accident on State RQute
the eligible working poor.
124.
Did Riffe use smoke and mir- · Responding were: 9 a.m.
(Continued rrom A·l)
rors?
Pomeroy to Fast Main Street for Last year $1,150 was set ;~Side in
Voinovich and House Republi •. Esther Carson who was transported federal funds for the project design
cans say he did. So does Budget to Holzer Medical Center; 2:03 and $53,700 was designated for
Director Greg Browning, who p.m. Rutland to Salem Street for construction 'of a drainage system
claims the budget is now S19S mil· Merle Davis who refused treat- to divert water froth the under- IC~)~~ess is at the point on acting on bill which
lion out of balance.
men~ 5:11 p.m. Pomeroy to Whipground mine away from houses and Jtalll.es away the rights of babies, the states, and
The House expects to pass on ple Road for Linda Brunty who streets in that area
themselves. This radical bill, known as
Tuesday what is now a $30.6 bil· was transported to Veterans MemoWhile Niemczura could not give
lion budget.
rial Hospttal; 9:10p.m. Pomeroy to a constrw:tion date, she said the I(F'O(:A) would allow the following in all 50 states:
It then goes to the Senate where Welsh Town Hill for James Litch· federal funding for the work ·.
majority Republicans, usually more field who was transported to VMH; remains available, that the prelimiamenable to Voinovich's wishes, 9:18p.m, Syracuse Fire Depart- nary design work is moving for·
Uncler FOCA, a baby
will get their turn.
ment and squad along with ward, and that the project could go
The Senate will get later rev- Pomeroy Squad to State Roule 124 IUider construction later this year.
could even be aborted the day before a normal delivery!
'
enue forecasts, which may be
adjusted upward if Ohio's economic outlook improves before July I,
or collSent
the budget deadline.
If so, the GOP will have more
before a minor aborted their graudchild.
money, and new options.
Browning said the House threw
Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds
the budget out of kilter by lowering
welfare caseloads to show a savGallipolis, Ohio ·
ings on paper of $225 million.
Under FOCA, a clinic would only have to give
woman information about
Riffe used caseload estimates
abortioll8 ~ not options such as adoption .o r parenting the child.
provided by Dennis Morgan, direcInside
&amp;
Outside
Dealer
Spaces
tor of the Legislative Budget
Office.
For Information. Phone 245·5347.
Browning said he thinks
Under FOCA a .woman could abort
caseloads will steadily increase in
her baby because it was the ..wrong" sex.
•
the next biennium to almost
750,000, c~pared with an average
of 726.000 during the first seven
months of the current fiscal year.
Morgan said caseloads dedined ·
to 720,000 during January and
February. He sees a decline to '
Contact your Congre88m~n and the President. Ul"@e them
vote against
714,000 but could make no guaranthe Freedom of Choice Act. The note can be very brief- a sentence or
tees.
"This is our best estimate of
two along with your signature is enough.
Take This Summer Off
what we think will happen," Morgan said.
.
We'll Take Care of the
Rep. Ronald Amstutz, R-Wooster, a member of a House committee
Senator John Glenn
Senator Boward Metzenbaum
which recommended the bill 23-8,
United States Senate
offered an unsuccessful amend·
United States Senate . ·
ment that would take welfare
Washingtou, D. C. 20515
Was~o,D.C.20515
money from other programs if
•
(202)
224-3121
(202) ·224-3121
Morgan lllmed out 10 be wrong.
Amstutz accused Democrats of
"tryinJ to play hero by creating a
surplus dtal doesn't exist ... Their
hand needs to be called on this
Representative Ted Stricklaud
Presldeot Ointon
issue.' •
S. House of RepreeeotatiVes
The White Bouse
Meanwhile, Senate President
Washington, D. C. 20515
Stanley Aronoff, R·Cincinnati,
So Llt'l Get StartBd/1
WuhiDRtoD, D.
20500
gave no clue as to IYhat he thinks
(202) 225-3121
(202) 456-1111
Call Today For AFree Ettl~e
will happen. He said he does not
like to comment on bills "that are
still in the other house."
Aronoff and Riffe said they
Contact Lmda Bini at (614) 245-9067 .to f1Dd out more information
expect the budget to &gt;Yind up in a
confen:nu committee in late June,
about the FOCA and other Iqieladon which is auti-famUy,
when posturing will have to give
way 10 reality.

•,

Section B

March 28, 1983 ·.

Today's Easter Bunny,bakes luscious cookie baskets
leaves and small flowe!J symbolizing the rebirth of nature
- have always been cause for eeleb~tion, and this secular outlook
overlays the Eas.t er holiday in
anticipation o£ the warmer months

....

In this lighthearted spirit, decoratiilg with spring flowers, ·filling
~ts with sweet treats and the
fable of the Easter Bunny delight
&lt;;ltiltnn of 1!1 iges. And while the
trll(itiona1 jelly beans and marsh'mallow bunnies have great appeal,
Baiter bunnies all over the COUlltry
wiD fUid that cookies can be just as
colOrlul and delicious, and provide
a 'Wlcome change from ultra-sweet
alid sup-y candy.
.
• t.'hile many families bake cook·
ie$ JOgether at Christmastime, East~r has traditionally involved a trip
to the·candy counter. But that need
no~ be the case, and baking easy
c·ookies for Easter baskets and
ent!rtainina can become part of the
IK?liday tradition.
This Easter, you can even cne8le
edi&amp;le, frosted cookie Easter baa·
kets. They can be made quickly
and easily by baking a simple sugar
cookie dough over a f0J111 such as a
small flat-bottomed custard cup or
·souffle dish. This basket then can
be decorated and filled with ~r
or cellophane "grass" in wh1ch
other cookies are nestled. They will
look most appropriate if made in
bite sizes, and will fill the edible
basket nicely.
For exa!Dple, chocolate .chip
cookies can be made in a miniamre
size and studded with colorful,
candy coated chocolate morsels fer
the Crisco Kirchen's Ultimate East·
er Chocolate Chip Cooldes. Crisco
cookies also can be turned into a
"nest" made from a delicious
coconut and oatmeal cookie on
. which jelly bean "eggs" are nestled
in tinted sreen coconut "grass."
FOrmulated as a baking ingredient,
CQsco makes cookies that bake up
h_ip and stay chewy and moist.
.Chocolate Egg Peanut Butter
Cookies are also welcome addi·
lions to cookie Easler baskets, And
since Crisco is stored in the JliDiry
arid needs no time to soften to
ro.9111 rempe.-.wre, baking a batch
of, these cookies can be a spont;i·
Dei!US activity.
.
•Another property of Crisco as a
balcin1 ingredient is that it melts at
a ~igher temperature than spreads
SUfh as butter or margarine. This
means that pretty egg-shaped cook·
~: hold theu shape durina baking.

Eggs and bunnies - the two
most rrequent playful symbols of
Easter - both have their toots in
pagan lore. While no species of
rabbit bas been known to lay an
egg, the two .. irnals 11e linked by
ancient myths. Dwinl! the ancient
spring festivals, children were
tau~ht to look for fabled .-.bbits
wh1ch would lay eggs for which
they would. hunt the next day.
Thus, the rabbit became the living
symbol·of fertility and the return of
spring.
. In the U.S., an annual egg
rolling ceremony, as well as an egg
hunt, takes place on the lawn of the
While House the Monday following Easter. Staned by President
~adison, this custoin of inviting
children to the executive mansion
has been observed annually except
in·times of war. .
Actually egg rolling, a holdover
from the country.' s English ancestry, is a less bellicose game than
the e~g shackliDg played by chil·
dren 1n Europe. Shackling involves
· striking eggs against one another 10
see whose egg survives the longest
· without a crack. Another European
games is egg tossing, to see who
can toss their eggs back and forth
for the longest time and at the
longest distance without dropping
it.
While hunting, rollina and other
Easter egg games are usually
games for children, wearing new
clothes for an Easter Parade is a
practice £or young and old which
long pR-elates the 1948 Judy Oarland film which popularized the
5011g of that title. Early Christians
were baptized on Easter Sunday,
and donned new white garments
for the following week to signify
the new purity of their souls.
Since the Puritans discouraJed
any suggestion of peacock-hke
plumage, it took until after the
Civil War "for the custom of show·
ing off new spring clothing, complete with bonnets, to be accepted.
. These traditions are generations
old, but bakitiS Easter cookies with
Criaco shortenin_g can become this
year's new addiuon to Easla' enter·
for family and friends alike.
In
"lion 10 the cooldea filling the
edible besbg, ~ious treatl such
as Lemoo-Ru!lberry Cheesccalce
Squares are a fitting end 10 a tra(Ji.
tionll Easla' meal, and the ·younger
set will be delighted to end th~
meal with yet one more egg - this
one lllllde of chocolate and crowning a peanut butter cookie.

EASTER GOODIES • Ready to be eaten up are Easter egg

-·

·

· ·•

-:

supr oookies, coconut nest cookies and utbmate Easter chocolate
chop cookies in c?.O.kie laster baskets.

'

Cookie Easter baskets make great treats
Cookie Easter Baskets
Cookies
2{3 cup Butter Flavor Crisco
3/4 cup sugar
l tablespoon plus one teasppon

tain!ft

milk

1 teaspoon lemon extract
1 egg
2 cups all-purpose flour
1/4 teaspoon salt
Decorative icing
3 cups confectioners stfgar
2/3 cup Crisco Shortening
2 tablespoons millc
I teaspoon vanilla
Food coloring

Decora,tions: coconut, jel.ly
beans, non-pareils, etc.
1. For cookies, combine Butter
Flavor Crisco, granulated sugar,
milk and lemon extract in large
bowl. Beat an medium speed of
electric mixer until well blended.
Beat in egg. Add flour and salt.
Add to creamed miltture at low
speed of electric mixer. Mix until
well blended. Cover and refrigerate
several hours or overnight
2. Cut paper circle patter 5-112
inches in diameter. Use pattern to
cut 12 foil circles. tover back. of
standard (3· to 4-inch) custard cup
with foil citcles. Grease with Butter

Flavor Crisco.
3. Heat over to 375 degrees F.
for 8 to I0 minutes, or until very
lightly browned and firm. Cool
completely on cups before.removing. Remove foil.
6. For icing, combine confec- ·
tioners sugar, Crisco Shortening,
milk and vanilla in large mixing.
bowl. Beat at low speed of electric
mixer until creamy, adding addi·
tional milk, if necessary, for
spreading consistency. Add food
coloring to desired color.
7. Fer basket weave fmisll, place
icin' in pastry bag filled with thin
wriiUig rip. Pipe venicallines frcrn
base to top or basket Fit P!'siry bag

with basket weave (84K) lip to
complete basket weave loolc. Pipe
row or basket weave around basket
form. Pipe over evel)' other vertical
line and alternate each row to
achieve weavin11 effect Varia&amp;ions:
frost buket with icing, smooth
with spatula, score icing with tines
of rort for basket effect. Or; frotit
Sides of coolde basket. To decorate,
tJ)ace additional icing in ,-rr bag
lilted with writing tip. Pipe ~rs
on frosted basket. Or, froflt sides of
basket cookie. Decolane with colored coconut, jelly beans,. non
pareils, etc. Fill wuh decorated
bite-size cookies.

'u

,•
.,
···
,''
·

,
·'
'I

....
'

.b THI C.OO iCIIUiiril

.or do they?

~
]14

lsitl
4toS
l/2

~llf"DIWi

l. r.s

'1

modiuol-"

•

,,

•

1/4

1

3/4

.... --Criaco

"

-

S.

r. kiM. f

bleodo4 IIIII -

5

111111

~-

lloNp'*--., or ••• ;...

"*""

;.,.;,;, tip. .... delipo on boUd cootia.

....:

Ill;• -

vanilla

,,

9xiJ.iodl,. wido- Fla- Crioco.

4. ol 350 de,_ F for t5 "' II m"- or Ulllil tipdy browa. ...... &amp;om '"'en.
of jam ovtr CNOI. o..a whilo 1"'1"' .,. ........._

• , _ - - · 011- wioh ............ cookie cUllen
ohetta. ..... widt ,....inin&amp; dou&amp;h.

s,....

Ill cup

' · For1Dnrfy c '' &lt;:ram ct.... IIMI p ' · d supr .il 1arzc bowl. Bell at medium speed of eledric
mi•or until well blc..tod. in . _ - • • time. A,. ••ilia, peel, and lemon juice. until

..-. '"'"""over jam .......
6. ...,. 11 JJO
.round cdgn.

............ ia - ·

,.,. i&lt;ina in puCJy bot flaod witlo -

-oven to 350 de,_ F. -

r~ Dllil

I

0..... peel of- lemon
Juico or .... 1emon
cup ooodlcu ood rupbtny jom. wanned

2. Fors• sc '' flour, COIII'Ktium ...-. a.o. peel. lftd ... iD . . . bowl. C. in 8uaer Flavor
Crilco uaina putry blcndef &lt;• two a.u-) Ulllil 1
I._..,... ......... r.. dou&amp;h into IRued
pan with llourod banda.

confl(llliJ nn ..... WIMr, com r~. Ind. .vuilll in rmall bowl. Stir until ""ell
· i&lt;ina inlo- - ·· A.. .wr..... food •-"'...., howl, o few dn&gt;po Ill a

--.- ......

...... -

Ill

-

I.

375 do..... F.

"

1 Ill

oollcncd
cup snnutat.d IUpr .

4. -11 375 . . , _ F for 7 to 9 m - . O N I 2 - .. i&gt;lllliol ....... - · lo o:oolina rxk.

entite

deana F. for 20 to 25 minllla, c:w umit eram cheese mixture n. ld and liJhtly browned
·

1

.,

7. SJftlill 112 cup jam ovw baked cream checN mixbln:. ..._ to G'l/cn far 10 minutes. Cool to room
~cmpcnluro. twill..- ......t houn Or ovemirJil Clll into 2-inch by I Ill· inch ban.

ABOUT l TO 4 DOZEN COO~IES

'

·~ .

'
- T i l l CIUKlO kiiUIINII
VLTIMATIIIAITIIII ClliCDI.It.f t aar rYXWJIB

·'
I l/4
]14

cup finnly piiObd llahl
~up

-

....,

I 3/4
I
J/4

Ill*« FlaV« Criaco

tabk-llmitk

...,.._ •.,ua.

cupt oii·JI"'PPO&lt;' flaw
'M p00111

Ill

Ilk

3

"-balinJoocla
cupt Cllldy-&lt;OIIcd ohocotat. piccca

I Ill

ll/4

CupJ fomly pocked liaht b&lt;own lUll&lt;
cup t:reuny peanut butler
cup Cri1e0 shontnina
(ab lelpoons mill&lt;
tablespoon vanilla

]/4

'"

•u

.._..,.

cupo al~purposc flow

3/4

....,...bal........
Onllula1cd supr

]104

dozee smoll solid milk
elM cal~ E.wr eap

..a.

I.

I . 0, 'I ..._, - · , . - ......,., CriKo,
Md -ilia in lorp bowl ckctric miller until wen blooodod. - i n ... ..Ul jullblmded.

_.....,,]7,!10..... F.

2. 0 II ..._, ..... Plo- c-, ..... 1114 Vlllillo in ..... bowl. oloctric ..... uillil-...... itolo ......... - ·

-·....---.
3. C

PI

J. -

2. C · tL flow. AII.III41Nkin&amp; oo4o. .U. .,....ay to .......,
blanclod.

·Ill ...... .,_j of

-

3. AfNac:-

OM

m-

'

1111

• .,......, opced of
\ 11

i.l
II low opood. Ills•jull"""l

,,,

hour.

"! 375 . . . . F f• 7to I •int•

ONI• 11o1&lt;inJ- 2 •int•• 7

"•I'd IUpr 10 cover.

l'lot&lt; on ..,.,._ blkina ..,... 2

'" to c:ooUaa oock.
~- -•J75...-F. Ibr711il..-. - . - - - . llnnlodilloty--chocololtcu
into tile centc&lt; of caclt cookio.
2.............. - . "'-Iiiii oock.
AIIOlJT 4 DOZEN COOKIES .

..

-·

.

'

..'..
'

. ,"

.

1! .

'"

•••

o..a

ABOUT 7 DOZEN •MINI COOKIES

''

'••

4. _ovn,375 . . . . F.

5. llllopo .,..;&amp;h illlo one-inch bollo. W in 11•
inchoo lpllll.

l .... "'"" Oft ............... - -

· -

'

••

floor,oolt,_. ..... - . .U.toCI'IIIIIOdMi-lllow ...... jullunlilbloa!W. Nrin

4.........lh iito J/4-ilch -

,,
'

)

Ill

""'*- (1-ounc:• ...h) ..... - .

v•illa
Foodoo...

1t TfCIID

l

LAWNLORDS

•• .,

Onled .,... orono-

l

l/4

3. W botr of doup t o - tll-loidt 6" I
or p............ 2 iftchoo '911' O f t - d

We're the

1-soo-sn-ooso

f ......

c " p ·' , t ..... ......, PIIYor Crilco, milk., lftd vaailla iD .... bowl . . . . at
of olodric ....,.llllil ..a II I I ... io .... A,. floor Md lilt II low~ .,;a well

-o-to

2.

Lawn

c.

9

'"'P" all·~ llollr
cup confectioneR-

I Ill
1/4

liaM 00111"""

btoodocl. O..erdoup.

Withholding Information About Options.

u,

. !dlln1

Cllllll • purp an flout

114

~cup eoftf'Mti:nen..,..
M rpotll....,

I 213

elax

LAWN CARE
:S IALISTS!

~

.

'1

Ioppiae

.

• Sex Selection Abortions.

...

l

'h'r•IUpl'

w_.nviOilta

• Elimination of Parental Notification
.

April 9·1 0·11 - 8 A.M. til 5 P.M.

Clip • •

SPRING OPIP!SBC\Jai!IARS

.... .._ ,.,_ Criooo
•1 II' U I plul I 11 I ( DD;P mi..

·lJ:I
t

• Abortion of Full-Tern• Babies.

a

PROM Till CR!S(l) naraiEI'IS

IAITIR 100 lUGAR OOIW'D

a

•

~

:&lt;

Meigs•.. ,

1113 SEISDN OPBIIR
FRENCH BOD FLEA MIRK.,...ET

'

,·

~n

.

•

~imts- ~entinel

.

to ~e.

Confe_derateflags removedfrom school

Meigs EMS answers 5 calls

Along
the
River
.

~~--------------------•

WILLOUGHBY (AP) - Offi.
"This is a sensitive. issue," he
cials
at a high school have ordered said. "So, what We are trying to do
GALLIPOLIS- William Harry Wilson, 73, Cedar Points, Stuart, Fla.,
Confederate flags removed from is address it in a constructive and
died Thursday, March 25, 1993 at Friendship Village Health Center,
the walls after ~iving complaints positive way,"
Dublin, Ohio. A native of Gallipolis, he had lived in Stuan for the past 22
that the flags symbolized racism.
years.
.
"We don't want to be part of a
During W~ld War II, he served in the U.S. Navy as a Radarman Ill
practice
that is offensive "
Class. He was a member of the First United Methodist Church, Stuan,
Willoughby
South Hi'h Sch~ol
F.&amp;A.M. Lod~e No. 340, Reynoldsburg, Ohio, and was .a member of
Principal
Glen
Caroff wd. ·"So we
American Legton Lafayette Post No. 27 in Gallipolis. He served as past
have
replaced
the
flags.''
president of the Reynoldsburg Lions Club, and was a transfer member of
Oag1 had
The
Coufederate
the B.P.O. Order of Elks No. 1870 in Slllart.
For 10 years, he was the high school superintendent in Bellevue-But- become f11!1 of athletic tradition at
ler, Ohio. After moving to Florida in 1971, he taught in the Martin Coumy South High, which calls its teams
the Rebels. About 98 percent of the
High School until 1977.
·
'
'
Surviving are his wife, Margaret Bess Wilson; a son, Jack; Allen Wil- students in the northeastern Ohio
Tile
Next
Few
Days
We
Are
school
district
are
white.
son of Columbus; two granddaughters, Gwen Ann Kline of Columbus,
. Three Confeder'ate flags - two'
and Stacie Rene Wilson of Sacramento, Calif.; a great-grandson, Evan
the gymnasium and one in a
m
Max well IQine of Columbus; and three brothers, John Vincent Wilson
public
area near the office - were
01 Most Evetytlng l1 •
·and George Edgar Wilson, both of Columbus, and W"lliam Hobart Wilson
removed
last
week.
They
were
Jr. of Gallipolis.
Our Store at Ullllellevallle
Services will be 11 am. Monday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home , rC?Illaced with a sign welc?ming
Low Prices.
Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, with the Rev. Joseph Hefner officiating. vtsttors and two bannerS·touiUig the
school's
athletic
and
academic
sucDltllionds, WatcheS, 14K Gold
Burial will be in Vinton Memorial Park. Friends may call at the chapel .
c~es.
from 6-8 p.m. Su)lday.
. Chains, Earrllgs, Ptnda1ts,
Visiting athletes and coaches
Military grl!veside rites will be conducted by American Legion
Ladles &amp; Gtt~ts Bllfalcls,
Lafayeue Post No. 27. Masonic services will be conducted in the chapel had complained about the flags,
Razors,
Callllflll and many
Caroffsatd
at 8 p.m. Sunday by Morning Dawn Lodge No.7, GaUipolis.
Superintendent Roger J. Lulow
other Items all at Great
Pallbearers will be Lonnie W. Thompson, Tommy L. Thompson, Larry
W. Thompson, Stephen Wilson, Keith Wilson and William Kline. Hon- .said officials realize.d also that
Sawlllp.
orary pallbearers are George E. Wilson, Hobart Wilson Jr:, Jack A,. Wil· many blacks find the Confederate
flag offensive.
·
'
son and John V. Wilson.
TAWNEY JEWELERS

GOP says..•

1993

Aspin unveils military budget propos~l
thebud$CI is aslaildpatplan.
''This is a .cautious budJet on
the weapons Stde. Very cauuous,"
Aspin told reporters at a Pentagon
briefmg. "We are maintaining a lot
of optionS' ... treading water on two
accounts - research and develop·
ment and procurement."
Amon11 the services, the Navy
will see tis total of battle force
ships
drop
443carriers
to 413. will
The
number
of from
aircraft
decline from 14 to 12. And the Air
Force will lose four ofits 28 fighter
wings. ·
·
··
The number of U.S. troops in
Europe will fall to 133,700, down
from 304,000 in fiscal1990.
While the number of unifonned
forces drops, the budgei would
increase spending for training,
upkeep of weapons and ships alld
fl~f time, from $86.4 billion in
fi
1993 to $89.5 billion for next
year.
"We're cutting force structure
and protecting the operation and
maintenance," Aspin said. "In a
few sentences, that s the summary
ofthe '94 budget."
Members ..of Congress reacted
ravorably, including the chainnan
of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, who has suggested
Clinton may have cut defense .too
deeply.
"I think Secretary·Aspin did the
prudent thing in waiting until he
got;s through his major procure-

•

.

I

i

�Page

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, wv

B2-$unday Tlmn Sentinel

March 28, 1883

Pomeroy-Middleport

Sunday Tlmea Sentinel-Page B3

Center scheduled announced
GALLIPOLIS • The following
are activities and menus for March
29 lhrough April 2 at lhe Galiia
County Senior Citizen's Center.
220 Jackson Pike.
.
Monday, March 29
10 a.m. • Walking
10:45 a.m.· Annchair lnlvel
11:30 a.m.· Blood-pressure
I p.m. • Chorus
Tuesday, March 30
10 a.m.· Walking
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. • Quilting
10:30 a.m.· STOP/Exertise
II a.m. • Lenten service
12;30 a.m.· Matinee
Wednesday, March 31
1_0 a.m.- Walking
10 a.m. to.noon- Crochet circle
10 a.m. to 3 p.m . • Adult day
care
.
I p.m. • RSVP reception
Thursday, April!
10 a.m.· Walking
.
10 a.m.to 3 p.m.· Quilting
10:45 a.m .• Bible swdv

-..
~

~~·

....

~

•'

•'

.--•

~

--.....
----..,....

...

~

10 a.m. to noon • BlOod pres·
sure
Friday, April2
10 a.m. • Walking
I 0 a.m. 10 noon • art class
1·3 P.lll· ·Craft class
Menu$ consist of:
Monday: Beef Barbecue, oven
fried potatoes, cole slaw, bun,
chocolate pudding.
Tuesday · Ham and beans wi!h
onions, cheese cube, spinach, com·
bread, fruit cup. · ·
Wednesd.ay
Roast
beef/gravy, whipped potatoes,
green beans, cole slaw, rolls, cake.
Thursday • Tuna loaf, buuered
rice, cole slaw, bread, chocolate
pudding.
Friday • Chiclcen, whipped Jl018· .
foes, green beans, com, bread, carrot cake.
Make reservations by calling
446·7000 before 9 am. on lhe day
you wish to auend.

'

..-

s

' I

s

lOR
ILl.

•

CoUPON - .- - - - .-

.....
'

..

•

Amold-Sams ·
'CHESTER • Mr. and Mrs. Rick their children, Natha~ Eddy and
Sams. Little HOcking, lllld Mr. lllld Melissa Lynn.
Mrs. Nathan E. 'Arnold, III, . . The couple wiU exchange wed·
Pomeroy, announce the engage- dmg vows. on Friihy at 7 p.m. ai
ment alid approaching marriage of New Life Covenant Church of God
·in Chester.
•

"

I
I

With Coupon and $1 0.00 Additional Purchase

'I

8,·8~

By KIRA L. ~ILLIK
• ----Iated Press W 'te
"""""
n r
PHILADELPHIA -;- Jo~ ~on
Jovl stood bac~tage, h•s mtlltonmegawatt smile to~ed down to
about a thousand. He s cropped his

ILiaD

c

..

,..

SftLE
I LBI. PICD.

'

MOORE'S

•

'

ONION RINGS

•

· ··~801~

•'
•
•
•

BIBS

I LBI. Pll.

•
·-

R C COLI

IWI"IIING
IIDI!IIIIG

.

..••

4101. CAll

~·41

•
•

--•••

COFFEE

•

•
•
•

34.5

•

•

oz.

ILICII • 111L118

na.cu
SBDRftiE
PEICIES

•••

$399
•

BlftROOM
ftiiDE

-·~

•"
•
"
•••

'tr

HO,. DOllS

UIIIIID IUiftiU

'I

.

"

'

H81r. t-taPPefllng.

LA

8 East 8r011d strHt,

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

sune 900
,
Columbus, Ohio
1..800 186 OLAW
(HI00·8116.:o529)

446-3353
FACTORY AUTHORIZED!

SPRING SALE

FURNITURE
GAUEAIES

ON ALL CUSTOM

WINDOW.TREAT NTS
SAVE 20% TO ·35%
•DRAPERIES
•SHEERS
•FANCY
TREATMENTS
'
.

'

•PLEATED SHADES
•VEROSOL SHADES
•LEVOLOR BLINDS

All Norman's Drapery now Reduced
35% from suggested retail - All special treatments and sheers included.
Any lretllment you . have - n or can lm1glne
Tope'• h• the I'I'IMDI, ldue end lnetalllltlon
profe.. lon•ll.

The aa.n et r-·· wilt help you wllh wory
declelon you need to lllelce 1o "'"'" the m...t
practical Mel lleautilul wi-• you - rm..

-un.

glnlf Tope'• *ill
help you Hlect
,._ .......... Mel ......... ot t.IIrlc .........

!'~_'""'-'L~Ion·
1i• · , - ~ ..d o. 9 . ,
u .... pro.11 y alUm .,_ 1o "'--t

..,.

EASTER BASKET

'

50%

'

••
•
••
•

••
•••

-

01•

•

Specl•l Good March 28th til April 1

•
••

•••
•
t
"•

•

c

FREE
PROFESSIONAL
IISTALLATIOI

.'

-llesiH•II•I ot

OPEN SUNDAY I TIL 5

-.,.-...

.-

,.

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

•

lea.&amp; Fri.IUP.M.

-t

....•
..•

."

. r
j .

t,

116PJL

...' .

S.l~datiiSP.M.

·"

•

C••••rc...

FIUNIIIIIG
FlU DIUVEIY

•

(

oFF

When purchasing matching
drapery at 35% Off•

~

••
•

,.

~·

NORMAN'S
BEDSPREADS
.

•

79c

•PADDED CORNICES
•WOOD BUNDS
•VERTICAL BLINDS

SALE ENDS APRIL 30 - ALL PRICES INCLUDE' PROFESSIONAL INSTALLATION

r

•

fl

"

$29.95

PRE--EASTER PERM SALE
Effective
March. 29-AprillO. Walk-ins. Welcome
'

r

BACO

•

614·221--"081
-vv
I
1
W
CENNAMO
.....,.
• •
.
•·nORNEY •·r lli'W.

ease

PICK AN EGG FROM OUR

....-

.

j':';~~e~~ r':m~~~~

m

and
said. "That time, I decided to'write
do_ wn.: 'I. ·m, having.a hard urn
·
e gettmg II OuL ... I was in the midst of
a h~ll of a hangover at a rather gray
penod.m my life, trying to say
somelhmg that you're not always at
saymg...
But some lnlcks, such as "I'll
~Jeep When I'm Dead" and
Blame It on the Love of Rock 'n'
Roll,:' echo less weighty, older
maten:'!, such as "Bad Medicine''
from New Jersey" or "Social
D1se~se" from "Slippery When
. Wet,
,
.
It s cruc•al, said Sambora, to
keep_that ~alance between experi.!"enllng w1th new ideas and keep·
mg,!"'e to your signature sound.
You can't, as, an artist, ignore
your past hiStory, cause it's a very
•mponant road that led you to get
to thiS pom~'' he said.

•"•

•

ggc

-

,.

•

12 01~ Pll•.

gel the words out. It, teo, ~s forglveness this time 'or ne .
·'
"
ng to
perfonn at the cost of being away
from ·loved ones.
. "The. hell that creativity some~es _brings you, 99 out of a hun-

.

NOW TIL EASTER

•

SAUSAGE

Drummond, son of Judith Drum·
mond of Cheshire and the late Gary
Drummond.
The wedding will be held July
17 at the Gallipolis Christian 1
Ch=b. A reception will follow. •

perfeCtion.

-

II Dl. PBG.

..
•

"•••

99~oz.

SHURftiE
Bii'fl

•'

..

24 PICK

I·LI.· RILL.·

CHESHIRE • Mr. and Mrs.
Keith (Carla) Snyder of Rodney
and Mr. and Mrs.~ (Rebecca)
Stwnp of Cheshire, announce lhe
eng3!1ement and aPProaching mar·
riage of lheir daughter,' Danielle
Dawn Stump, to Michael David

Easter Special

"•

JUICE

II PICI

2 age
•

TOMATO

IUPU CIOICI

IIOI.CII

•

SHURFINE

ILICD •WBOLI

wife Dorothea H · 1
e an •s brirnme_d black hat into the solo
· ing their
' fiiSI.child
·
urineyMay.
• are expect· · ·arena
·
. w1th
· hiS
.. albu m, "S~ger ~n
Bon Jovi's back, and so is his This Town. Keyboard!~' Davlil
eponymous band. The group's new Bryan;~cored the film Nether"
album "Keep the Faith " di 1
world. Basstst Alec Jon Such and
lhe ~mbets' maturity_.::. anJ~~~ drummer Tico. Ton:es basically just
venated attitude about thciir careers res~.
.
.
The group scored big-time with fi Keep the Faith," the band's
the 13·million-plus-selling 1986 ifth al_bum,IS _full of the ~ost soulalbum "Slippery When Wet" and :archmg mu~IC. Bon ~ov1 has done,
its 9-million-selling 1988 follow· d om-~ opll~!Silf 11fle ~k .that
up, "New Jersey." But after a gru- es~ • 1!5 on ov• ~d •. a man
eling eight-year pace of making ~tforgJVeness f?!' hiS mistakes,
albums and touring (the lliSttoudn to
ry County, base~· on a
1 1988-89 spanned 16 months and ~~s-country ~oiOrcycle tnp Bon
237 dates), the New Jersey band 0~f'took dunng the band's time
mem~rs took time off and went . ·
. ,
.
their separate ways.
.. The most l,lgO~I~mg song on
"I had the opportunity not to .. ~:JP f~ Fa•\~ IS the bal!ad,
0
consider that (previous success) at
oses, w~1ch de,scnbes
all," Bon Jovi said backstage at the the ch~lenge of.creallvlty, ho.w dif·
Speclnlm before a concert.
ficull 11.can be for a ' songwnter to
"I had nothing 10 prove. All I
had to do was make a record that I
felt had something to say in order
for me to want to release· it " he
said. "A guy told me here wit this
is the 11!11 time I've played here ,
(the Spectrum). How many times
do you have to play the Spectrum
before you're fulfilled? How many
more No. .1 anythings do you have
to have before you're fulfilled?
_"You have to be successful, but
you have 10 be successful for yourself. You don'thave to be successful on someone else's 1erms."
During th.e band's hiatus, the ..-

•
"•
••

•

MASTER BLEND

singer (reiu name: _John Bongiovi)
put out a solo project, lhe sound·
traclcto the film "Young Guns II"
_ lhe No. 1 single "Blaze of
Glory" from that album earned
him a Golden' Globe award in 1991
and a'Grammy nomination

1
cn8 :;-e
·00n!~~l.~~~e~:J:.~
~a~~~~n.
~ thr~!i~\s5t RtircahdieemSaarmkbobrar·0a8Jsd~
to tummg 30 And h
dh

LB.

•

'·

Stump-Drummond

Music ,rnakers: A re-energiz~d Bon Jovi is back BIIIRUPRY

HALF
PORI LOll

110187, lftll(,
810UID ClUCK

ClOPPED

..,.

DANIELLE STUMP and MICHAEL D~UMMOND

IJ•aoo

•••

:

FRESH MADE

•

I LBI :oa IIOU

CIDi:l

1

---- -·- - --------·

1

::;.

~:

IIIII ldl 8.8 Ia 8.• OZ.
HE~PER

-~

I

a-

$ 39LB.

I
I

....-.

HAMBUROER

: WHOLE TAVERN HAMS

:

.'

.NA111AN SAMS and MELISSA ARNOLD

BAMS
r- - - - - -

·-.....
....
..
..........

FURNITURE
GALLERIES
SECOND

a GRAPE ST•

~ON. •44S 0332

efiNE FURNITURE
.CUSTOM DRAPERY

.CARPET
oiNTERIOR DESIGN

HOlliS! faOO.S.OO..,
(W. . ...,,

t&amp;OMIO .....
FtUw &lt;r 1

4460122

�.

•

•

Pomefoy llddleport Gallipolis, OH Point Plt!B..Rt, 'wv

Page 84 SUnday llm11 Sanllnel

March 28, 1893

March 28, 1993

POINT PLEASANT • Max L.

sity olWilcalliD-MadiJOD.

·

Niben P.adualed from Point

Pleasant Hi&amp;b ScboOI in 1976, and
in 1980 euned a Bachelor of Sci·
enco in Microbiology from the
Uaivcnity of Noc,rc Dame, Notre
Dame. Ind. He was ella valediaorian at boih his bigb achool c:oUese
gradtJ81ions, He tlleo earned Ill M.
b. from Harvard Medical School,
Boston, Mass., ·and a Ph.D. in
• Microbiology and Molecular
CJr·Lic:a from Harvard Uni-.i ,
Mass. He
compl
a !elidency program in
•· CJinlcal Palbo!OSY ll the llripam
and Women's Hospital in lkwtnn.
. His DOW responsibilities II the
University ·of Wisconsin-Madison
will includllleiiCIUns biochemistry
and virology to graduate and
undergndwilc siUdonts; llowever,

Camb!~'!fe,

Basham·-Grover
STROTII lllld SHELLY SAWYERS

Sawyers-Stroth

'

: RACINE - Shelly Ann Sawyers
imq Jeffrey Neil Stroth 81Ulounce
their engagement and approaching . marriage.
Miss Sawyers is the daugluer ol
&amp;esa Sawyers, Upper Marlboro,
~d . , and Robert Sawyers Jr.,
Shade. She is a 1990 graduale or
Southern High School and will
graduate in May from the Uni.asi.t'y or Rio Glllllde with an associale
of applied business degree in
accountin~ .

l Stroth IS the son ol Mr. and Mrs.
Neil Stroth, South Webster. He is a
.1:990 p;raduate of South Webster

High SChool. He holds an associate
·degree in drafiit\s and design technology from the University of Rio
Grande. He is now workina
towards a bachelor of sCience
degree: in indUSlrial technOlogy at
the Uni•euity of Rio G~
The ~ will exchange their
vows during an open chll!l:h ce~
mooy at t:30 _p.m. on April30 w!th
mUSJC _be8Jnm~g at 1 P.ID: at U.DIOR
FreewiU ~ Cbun:h m Wheelc,rsb~ with Pastor _Joe ~anMetcr
ofrteiBbDg. A ~on wtU follow
at the feUowship hall.

MIDDLEPORT - Rae Lynn
Basham and Todd Brandon Grover
were uniled in marriage on March
6 in U:xington, Ky., with Rev.
Denald E Andeno om · · lh
.
n telllnng e
double rinjf ceremony.
:rhe bnde is the daughter of
Gary and Lena Basham, Coolville,
and the granddaughter of Bonnie
and George Ingels, Rutland, and
Goldie Basham, Pomeroy.
The IUOOill is the son of DatiOn
. "Butch!' Grover, West Virginia,
and Joyce Hall, Pomeroy. He is lhe
. grandson of Dorothy Collins,
Pomeroy; and Mrytle Grover,
Pomerqy.
·
The couple honeymooned in
LexingtOn~Ky.
·
The couple resides in Middle-

Jlc wW deYolc 1001t limo 10 cliRJc:K
ias and dolus wort Ia his ow~
research laboratory, which will,
focus on fdndamen\al steps
involved In the initljtion of viilf
infectians llld on lbe&lt;patms: "'lis
of d!== ~ certain enleril: and,

·
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Proclaim, a drama
and singing group from Cincinnati
Bible College, will present a program at tlle Pomeroy Church of
Christ on Sunday at 7 p.m. The
concert is free to the publjc.
·

·'

Niben's curran addreu il 360Tappan Scroec, Brookline, Man.•
02146. His mother Lois ruides at
2902 Spruce Avenue, Point ~
ant: his falhcl- Malt died in 1978. ,

trapped in! ibrary w~ll {

· HOOVER, Ala. (AP) - Offi-'
cials a~ HQ9vcr,.Library are now:
apolo~lng to paiiODS accused of
failingiO return ov~ bobts ud
videotapes.
: "
~
This Week, more than'30 "over-·
due" boolcs mid videos were founcl:
in a crack in a libnuy wall.
'" ;
A flaw in the $5.5 ~gran-&gt;~'
ite B!ld marble buildip~'.s ouldooct
book drop was sendmg library ·
materials insi~ the wall inStead' ofj
down the chute 10 be returned.
1

BASHAN - The Bashan Ladles
Auxiliary will have a smorgasbord
dinner Sunday from II a.m. to 2
p.m. at lhe Bashan Firehouse. The
menu consists of two lcinds of
meat, mashed potatoes and gravy,
homemade noodles; green beans,
Slilw, dressing, desserts and drinks.
• Costs are $4.50 for adults and $2
for children under 12 ..

and

port.

The groom is employed by Don
Tate Chevrolet, Pomeroy.
A bridal shower will be held
Friday by. Ioyce Hall, Terri
Yeauger and Stacy Basham (or the
bride at her home on Hysell Run
Rqad• .

Bean dinner slated
GALLIPOLIS- Ordor of the
Eastan Star No. 283 will sponsor a
bean and cornbread dinner Friday,
April 2 on the second.floor of the
Gallioolis Elks'L.Qdge, from 11 a.m.
tliltil '7 p.m. · · &lt;&gt;
I
Beans, c:ombread and dessert are
$~ a11d- hot clogs will be $1. The
meal is din&amp;-in and canyouL

Licens~d
.

Speech Pathologist
-

I

TAMPA, Fla.- Lorene L)'IIIICIIC
Hall and Thomas Charles Jennings
UI were united in marriage Feb. 20
at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church in Tampa, Fla.
The bride is the daughter of
Karen W. Hall and Charles R Hall,
Ir., both of Tampa. She is
employed by Budd Mayer Compaof Tampa.

ny

The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald L. Harrison of Gal-

adults with a wf~e range of handicapping
conditions. Call or write:
14, Cheshire, OH. 45620.
(614) 367·7371

Applications will be accepted through
April19, 1993.

H arkhas·solll . g
for everybunny this Easter.

JenniDgs,Jt. He is an auomey.
Maid of honor was Victoria
Evaos, Maidand, Fla. and best man
was David R. Forbus, Point PleasanL Groomsmen were Dr. Donald
DeCoy, formerly of Point Pleasant
. The couple =ide in Tampa.

•

.·

.·.

..

SAT., APRIL 3, 1993-10 a.m.- 6 p.m.
SUN., APRIL 4, 1993 -12:00 p.m. - 5 p.m.

.: just

·-

West or Gallipolis on SL ltL JS...,..- Holzer Mcdkal Ceater
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:

'

Brenda G. Henson -614 446-3044
Vicky LawwiU -614 446-9471 or 245-9518

.. '
V

,,

Discount Brokerage
.SERVICE&amp;. SAVINGS

-

Our low-cost discotiiit brOker.tge servicf is ideal for imeslors \Wo do

ll()lrequiredtebenefitofresearchorrecommendalions,rut\Wodl
.insist on serYice and personal benefils.
·
·Low~

• Plixnpt, efficient service
·1

onlrades

I

•

• No annual fee IRA. 3CCOtlll
• First trade in IRA. account
is free

Refer to our COIIliilis;ion ,schedule and oornpare fees.
Then C3ll to set up )UUt personal account.
MIDDLEPORT

TDD ONLY

992-6661

·1-376-7123

$295 .$495 $595
LARGE

Commission Schedule

STOCKS

Stoci&lt;

1·100
. shares
$1-$5
$20.00
$40.00
Ovorssr:
RoundT . $20.00 .
$40.00
Over $20
Round Trip
$20.00
Price

200
· shares

-100

300

125.00 1130-tlll
$50.00 . $60.~
125.00
$60.00
$60.00

ao.ao

ao.oo

.....
shares

shares

$70.00

131.011 .
$110.00

140.00

S4l.tiO

·-··500
shares

1000

UUD
$80.00 $105.00
• !IUD

$100.00 $125.00

seuo·

Stt&gt;ek eemng at less man 51 :$15.,., trade Plus $ .03 .1 * .t hiN . M6n6muiTI $20. T,.,. : ·

'

•tl·ts

Of over !WO tl'larts a&lt;kl $.0251)1r adclltloNIIttlare to tnt 500 c:omtnleMotl ,.., Aegullr and Round
'Trip traowtiOnt o'* $5 and owr 500 ,,_.. ldd t .OI ana $.Ct25
~_.
rtt~l-rtly, to the 500 shtfl commltaiOn rat• . Rcwnd 'Ti'lp,.... only 1PPfY llntoc:llt overt$ and
on tranuctiona CloM:CI Ot.ll within 31 dl'fl . COI'J)0.-.11 Bondi: $25 PI'!' ~rD. p1U1 t5per bond.

'*

-..

PfOI)Iea ~ brokeraoe Hr.-itt's are Offered througtl OkM Dlacount Colpo;ation, ......., StPC,
NYSE, NASO. Dlseoun1 BrOkttage tun41ure nol FDfC? Insured and ,1~ not Jn : t Pi liOn ol ~
Bank .

P«HHfl
Member FDIC

.

.

WALLPAPER OUTLET

Our long-established
Home Health Service,.
designed to ·
.
.
.
provide skilled nursing, home health aides and
. physical
therapy in the comfort of .your home, is.available in Meigs
County as well as in nearby communities in Mas~m County,
'
W. Va
.
Our Home Health SerVice has been in operation since Sept.
20, 1971, so our experienced, well-trained staffis equipped to
provide you, with valuable medical assistance. Last year, we
inade almost 30,000 visits to homes in the are~, Our staff
members are·licensed both in Ohio and West Virginia.
Referrals for our service may be made by physicians,
hospital~. family met;nbers, friends and agencies and our
quality care is provided through the orders of t~e patienfs.
physician.
.
,
If we can be of help to you, please call 614-992-2104 or
-,.
614-992-3231.
......

BRING

~

.

:z:ce

Celebrate spring
with collectible Easter
Keepsake Ornaments.

YOUR

WHOU:
BOUSE TO

"

• From$575

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

REEDSVILLE - Gregory
Lenhart will present a seminar on
New Age on Sunday at 10:45 a.m.
and 7 p.m. at the Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene in
Reedsville. ~ev . John Douglas
invites 111e public.
·.

WE'RERERE
~ AND READY TO SERVE YOU

I

-

• TUCSON, Ariz.- Diana Sword,
Jt.N•• has been named the Detention Services Worker of tbil Year
for Tucson. One of 29 selected
oationwide by lhe National1uvenile Detention Association', the
award
· · ou~ iitdi•
_vidual
of staff mem- ·
bets in the juvenile delention field.
Sword manages tile cl,inic Bl .lhe
· Pima County Juv~nile Detention
Center. The clinic -is a service of
lhe .pediamcs department under a
contact between The Unive_rsity
J?b~cians and the state.
.
• Sword bu been managing the
cUnii; for a year and a half.

SPEOAL
EASTER BASKET OFFER

SMALL MEDIUM

· TUESDAY
PORTLAND • The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the tOwnship building.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE. There will be a bene·TUPPERS PLAINS - The
fit soup supper at the. Racine Unit- . Orange Township Trustees wiiJ
ed M~ c
meet in special session Wednesday
st burch on Tuesday at at 7 p.m..at the home of the cletk, ·
3 p.m. oup, _sandwiches, dessert Patty Calaway.

POMEROY - An open house
will·be held Sunday at 2 p.m. for
Alben Roush, Bailey Run Road,
Pomeroy, 10 honor hts 76th .birthMIDDLEPORT - Rev. John day. Everyone welcome. II 'is
-Haley will preach at lhe Middleport . requested that gifts be omitted.
Community Church Sunday at 7:30
p.m. There will also be special
CHESTER - The Chester
sin,~ing. Public inyited. .
Bowhunters Club will hold a 30target Mcl(enzie Shoot on Sunday
COOLVll..LE - There wiD be a at the range on Pomeroy Pilce. RegMR. aud MRS. ROBUT iMn.DRED) BOWEN
hunters safeiy course for turkey istration will be from 9 a.m. 10 1
hunting on Sunday from noon to S p.m.
p.m. at the Coolville Fire House.
For information, or 10 register, ·call
MONDAY
Bob Pullins, 667-3831;. Ed Rood,
REEDSVILLE&gt; Eden United
POMEROY - ROben and Mil- 1943. They have one son and 667-6348; or Ed Wigal, 667-6657.
Brethren Church will have revival
dred ~owen ?bserved their _50th daughter-in-law, Robert and Joyce
with Betsy and Peter Martindale
' .
weddtng anmversary on Fndar. Bowen,J&gt;omeroy; and one grandREEDS VILLE • The Con- and family Monday through April
They were married in Pomeroy m daughter, Carolyn McGuire, Ljln- querors will perform at the · 4. Special mtisic nightly at 7 p.m.
. casler.
Reedsville United Methodist
·
Church on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. A
POMEROY - The. Meigs Counpotluck .dinner will precede the ty Veterans service Commission
program at 6 p.m. Public invited.
will Jlleet Monday at 7:30 p.m .. in
GALLIPOLIS - American ·Red · Giving blood ~a 1iule more the Veterans Service Office in
Cross Tri-5Iate Region Blood Ser- than an hour. The aclual donation
NELSONVILLE .
"An POI)leroy.
vices urga area ~denll 10 don8te takes about 12 minutes. During the . Overview of Ohio Forestry" will be
bJood ~ the .biQodmobile visill hour, donors go through a four-B~CP presented at 135 College Hall at
RUTI.AND • Revival at Rutland
Grace United Methodist Church, process that involves diScussing Hocking College on Sunday at 2 Freewill Baptist Church with Bob
Second Avenue, Gallipolis; on their medical bistcJ:y, having_a brief p.m. ·
Stewart will be Monday and Toes·
_Thursday, April IS from 11:30 a.m. pbfsical exam, doriating blood, and
day, Marvin Markham on Wednes•
106p.m.
·
·
enJoying a brief rest and some
BURLINGHAM '- Junior Mod- day arid Thursday, and Rick
"Mostofourbloodmobileswere refreslunents.
~
em Woodmen will have a family Weaver on April I and 2. Pastor
canceled the week of the snow
Anyone who is 17 years of age get-together Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Paul Taylor invites the public.
·storm," said Joy Cuny, public rela- · or older, weighs at least 110 hall. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth ·
dons direciOr for Tri-State Reglbn pounds, and has not donated in the Sanders, Gallipolis, will have lhe
RUTI.AND - The Rutland GarIUood Services. "We need to last S6 days is eligible to give program. Refreshments. Everyone den Club will hold its regular meetincrease our blood iavtbtorY level blood.
,. welcome.
ing Monday at 7:30 p.m.' at the
10 meet patient needs in nearly 60
Iiospita[s we supply blollll 10",
&lt;;wry added. '
•

Receives award

A tisket, a tasket, Hallmark can help you
build yo\n: baskets. With cellophane wrap, ribbon
,and grass, they're just

. AT GALLIA COUNTY JUNIOR FAIRGROUNDS

...

1

BIG TWO-DAY CRAFT SHOW ·
Fourth Annual ArtS&amp;: Cnfts Show
Sponsored by Rodney Pike Ch.in:l. of God Ladies' Ministries

SYRACUSE - Darren Smith
will be at the Syracuse Mission
Church on Sunday a.t 10 a.m. Pastor Mike Thompson invites the
public. ~

POMEROY - The Meigs Alhletic Boosters will meet Monday at
7:30 P..m. atlhe high school.

B loodmobile visit planned

GALLIA COUNTY BOARD OF MR/DD,

•

lipolis and the lale Thomas Charles

ROCK. SPRINGS - Revival at
Rock Springs United Methodist
C~urch· wm be ·Sunday through
Tuesda'r at 7 r.m. Rev. Wendell
Vennilbon wil be t1ii guest speaker. 'There will be special singing
nightly. Rev. Keith Rader invites
~public . '
.

POMEROY - The Carleto~
Trustees, .Ralph Carl,
Clarence Story and Wayne Beal,
have resigned, due to health reasons. They have appointed David
King, Paul Smith and Brian King
to serve as cemetery uustees. A
meeting of the ttustees will be hekl
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Car·
le10n Church.
·
Ceme~ery

I

Hall-Jennings
1

and drinks will be available. Public
invited. All proceeds will go lhe
Joe H.ill family.

home of Mrs. Virgil Atkins, New
Lima Road, Rutland.

50th anniversary observed

Full~Time Employment. Must serve children and

P.O~. Box

POMEROY • Dr. Rick
Brintzenhofe, Fellowship Tract
League; Lebi!JIOR, on Sunday at 2
p.m. Music will be provided by
Guy Priano.

POMEROY - Country-western
line dancing classes will he offered
at Pomeroy Village Hall AudiiOrium on Sunday from 2-4 p.m. Dona_tion is $2 .50. Call 992-7853 or
949-2455 for infooriation.
'

' 'Overdut' books found,;

' ~ \ I I :~ I
School Nurse·R.N. (B.S.N. Preferred)

MR. and MRS. TODD (Rsi\E) GROVER

~EFFREY

reeentf~

Community Calendar Items
appear two days befCJrll an eveat
and tile day or lbat eveaL Items
• must be rectived weU In llllvaace
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.

•

respiralol'y-

Sunday

Meigs County calendar of events

Max Nib~rt accepts position : ·
at "Q". Wisconsin-Madison
Nibert. 1011 of Lois Collen Nibert
and !be !ate C. Max NibertofPilint
Ple"•t, bu IICCepled a poaition
bosinnin4 1uly 191J3 as uailtant
jro't I Ill m the Deplrlmeat of Biochemistry and tho Institute of
Moiocular ViroiOSY at die Univer-

wv

OH--Polnt

•.

UFEWITJI
NEW
WAJ,l.SAr
ROCK
BOTTOM
PRICES!

r

I

Jelly beans to cream-filled
eggs to chocolate bunnies,
we have your favorite
Easter candy. From-45(

•

Gu•litr For•..- • m

AHoruW. Prices

Nothing says "Happy Easter" quite as t~efully
• as a gift of Crown eh~latier can~y. lndividually
wrapped 'Easter candtes pr a ~utifully boxed

SPECIAL
CRAYOLA® .
· BUNNY
OFFER!

ROBERT M. HOLI,EY, M.D.
FAMD:Y PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CON'I'ROL

from

;

•

Veterans Memorial Hospital

.

'

115 E. Memorial Drive
· · Pomeroy
992-2104 '
I

S.O(io$1195

$395

TANNING CENTER
5 BEDS AVAILABLE.
AC, TANNING ROOM I STEREO
•

Figurine is
3" 1.111 by 5" wldt

••

~FABRIC

DIANA SWORD

Weputlhe
Crayola Bunny and
Candy Cottontail on a train
, bound for your house! With any ·
• Hallmark purchase, this 1993
Crayola Bunny Eggs press
figurine is just

•PRE·PASTED
VINYLS
•WAVERLY
DESIGNER
PAPERS

'3 PER PERSON
10 SESSION'S '25

To locate the Hallmark Gold Crown store nearest you carrying
these Easter gifts; check the listing, or call 1-800-HALLMARIC

Startfnt April 1st Ianning
Rooms will be Open
I A.M.•I 0 P.M. Dally
Saturday 9 A.M.•5 P.M.
Sunday 12 loon·5 P.M.

BACKED
~
It

SJ99
.

•I

~·

P.et loll

•j

••

1 Inch to 10 Inch
Borders
Startlat At

99

4

•

.,

Spool

. '1-800-425-5627 Answered 24 hours. Limited supplieS.
•

...•

Gallipolis··
Full House of Cards
Ohio RiVer Plaza
446-7330

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTE~

25TH A: JBPII'Zit801J AVENUE

POINT PLEASANT

(304) 875-1875

,.

••
••

I

J

,.
I

Sip. up IO an one
ofour 3 larw•
E011er Btulreta lo
be pen _,..,

(

•

, ..

•

•

Meigs Carpet &amp; ·
'Decorating,Center
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

112 8t73

�....

,.,... ~

·.,.

......

~--

..,__

__

~-

··-

~-

nmaa

~

..

- . ..

..

.'

.

(jl,".

~ Heading to Pomeroy after .their
$.orida vacation, Ken and Peggy
&amp;!it to Atlanta whcie the SI001l had
(Ially taken over. They were able
g) get into a motel but were told
!hen they registered they,.would
lilve to leave the next day because
~ mOle! had reservations for the
oixt day and no room would be
Wilablc to them,
t~ So. the alternative was to make
; contact with formet residents,
Chet and Sylvia Rice, who coinciC#ntally and fortunately live in
!Vianta. They made the contact
Qd the Rices invited them to stay
ai their home until things got bet~Pf, Ken and ~ggy were advised
tlie next morning though that the
as a result of the storm had
Qr.cellations and a room would be
available after all. They declilled
die late offering and went to the
Wee horne and .visited several days
~th Chct and Sylvia before headiag back to Pomeroy. So it was an
tftjoyable "old home week" time
ftlr both couples.
·
·~ Actuully the two couples are
kind of relatives by marriage, kind
81, that is. Chet's brother, Denver
'-icc, is married to Ken's sister,
P$llra. and you know that Denver
· lmd Nora Uve in Middleport Now,
arc we all clear on that?
;:, By the way, while in Florida
ten and Peggy did visit the Reds
l.(lining camp in Plant City. Carian Norris of Syracuse and James
AGuth and Luther Smith, both of
New Haven, W.Va., were visiting
die camp on the same day. Like I
t,lll1 you. It's a small world.

morel

.

-:; Congratulations to Paul and
JOsephine Smith, Racine, Route 3.
The pleasant couple will be
Observing their 62nd wedding
..,Uversary on Wednesday, March
11. Paul was recently returned
libmc after being confined to Parkersburg, W. Va., and Columbus
IM.spitals for 16 days.
~ , I know you join me in extendillg
best
. wishes to the couple,

.

.
·Thank you so much for your
r!sPonse to the fund raiser of the
.

-

.....

.. ~

. ..

.

,..

....

•

'

wv

March

Sllllday, Marcia ll
cer Society Support Group ineetGAlllPOUS ~ Support group ing, 2 p.m. at New Life Lutlimn
meeting for an~ intmaUid ill or Church. For infonnation aill 446conacctcd wilh multiple aclerosia, • 3538, 446-4895, or 446-8657.
1:30 p.m ., New Life Lutheran
Church.
GALLIPOLIS - Narcotics
Anon~ Just For Today Group
Q~US · Lenten services mcellnJ, 7 p.m. at Grace United
at diriit United Methodist Church, Methodist Church. Use Cedar
. featuring special singing, 10:30 Street enuanc:e.
a.m. and 7 p.m. P.-or Mike Smith
.
welcomca everyone to allend.
LOGAN • Narcotics Anonymous Courage to Change Group
BlDW;ELL • . Bor11 Again meeting, 6:30 p.m: at 1st Church of,
Believers ~ill- l!e singing at Christ, 935 Main SL Prospect Baptist Church, 7:30 p.m.
ATHENS - Narcotics AnonyMERCERVll.LE • Grubb Fami- mous T"e Walk .of Life Group
ly Singers will be at Mercerville meeting, 9 p.m. at Uniled Cl!mpus
B~t Church, 7 p.m. ·
Ministry, basement
'

Women 's Auxiliary at Veterans
.Memorial Hospital.
The organization which is a
dandy has placed "good egg trees"
in the lobby, the cafeteria and the
skiUed nursing facility. Residents
are asked to pay ·$5 to place the
name of their favorite "good egg"
on one of the trees. 'The Auxiliary
then places the name on a pastel
egg and the eggs are used to dccorate the white trees.
As of Thursday, the auxiliary
was working on selling the 12th •
dozen of eggs so the response has
been good. However, the goal for
, the fund raiser is 19 dozen so mpre
' support is needed: · Auxiliary
members have used pastel ri)lbons
and other lrims on the trees which
do create auractive hospital dccora-.
lions for U!e season. After Easter
the eggs will be given to the honorees as souvenirs.
I! you'd like to add your.support
just send the name of your favorite
"good eggs" and money to the
Women's Auxiliary at 115 E.
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. And
again, a big thanks to so many of
you who already have been supportive.
Heather Friend, nine-year-old
daughter of Dawn Roush, was
taken to Children's Hospital in
Columbus Saturday. No doubt
Heather would appreciate hearing
from you. The room number is
5032. Surgery is scheduled for
Tuesday. Heather has cystic fibr!J-

MRS. ELLA MASON

Mason retires

CROWN CITY - Rev. Bob
Tliompson will be preaching and
· the Copley Fami!Y will be singing
GALLIPOLIS - A retirement at Kings Chapel Church, 7 p.m.
party was recently held at Wood·
land Centers in honor of Mrs. EUa
Monday, Marcb 2!1
Mason.
GALLIPOLI$. • GARS AeaMrs. Mason had been the senior demic Boosters Club meetiRg will
assistant and cook at Woodland have as its program the public
Centers' Adult Community Train- induction ceremony for new
ing Program since 1979. Prior to National Honor S!ICicty members
that position, she was with the Bid- at 0 AHS auditorium, 7 p,m.
well-Porter Elementary School, Reception to follow:
Gallia Ht;ad Start Program, and the
Gallia County Children's Home.
CHESHIRE • Kyger Creek
Mrs. Mason, 80, has three sur- Junior High School Booster Club
vivjng children in _the community, meeting, 6:30p.m, at the C-K Midandwas widowed in 1978.
·
die School.

8 AM·}~ PM
298 SECOND ST.
.
POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES .
. SUN., MA~. 28. THRU APRIL 3, 1993 .

·'
cal-'~

.24 PAl 12 OL CANS

•

COMPARE RICE'S PRICES!
4 :·•'
Draw• .::•.
· Gist ••

2 Pc. Eariy•Amer.
Living Room Buill

'199"

'

;

-·-

S..,I&amp;S.M.ts

THANK YOU

'

S...W$69.95

'

SAVE
$25

RECLINER

' 59995

Cubed Steak.. ...........-...-LB.

•
•'
•
•

'

~u~m

.•

Fri,day, Aprfl9, 1 P.M•.
liTH

-

$129

MOUNTAINEER LB. ROLL or 10·0Z. UNIS

89(

·Steaks /Roasts...............LB. ·

•
•'

•
•

Sug.Retall
5180
SAVE

$289 CHERRY .PIE

BUCKET BEEF

' ••

.
95
:
·
$44 .••
•

••

Po.rk Sausage. . . . . . . . . . .

••

$80

Amerkan .Le.lll AIL
•
Post 27
1

LO,NGHORN

Colb Cheese...........-LB• .

Bob McCormiCk Rd. - ·

GalllpoPe, Oh•

..,

RC
PRODUaS

t/11. Galli11olir Dally Trlbn1 .In
""-"for /IMbllilllilJn) · •

RUft

TO SPEAK • Evangelist Rev.
Jim Franklin will be speaking at
Salem Baptist Church, Patriot,
(Gage), April·l-3. Services wlll
be,ln at 7 p.m. Thursday and
Fnday and at 6 p.m. on Saturday, along with gosp~l sln1ing _
featuring the Shafer Family. and
The Exodus Quartet. Rev.
Franklill is pastor at the Church
i;1 the Valley in Milton, W.Va.,
and host or "Songs In the Night" ·
on WEMM and WPAY

99(

Monday thru Sunday

, , . , llpfl"1' two dtlyi priDr ro 1111 '
I Filii. Tilly Mill bi NCiifld by·

Tuesday, Mardl30
. GALLIPOLIS - ~pring tevival,
March 30 through
April 4 at the
..
'

2 LITER BOnLE

STORE HOUR~ '

BIDWELL - Bidwell-Porter • .
. Elementary vs. WTCR ln basket- '
baD at 7:30p.m. at the school, fea- :
turing Chuck Black, Judy Eaton, :
. Steve Reinhardt, Paul Pace Bl!d,; .
othm.
•
. ·
.
',
· POINT PLEASANT - Narcotics •
Anonymous Clean &amp; Free Group,
meecillg, 8:30 p.m: at ·804 Main SL ;
Episcopal Church.
,•

·( IU-.for tht commanU,

PEPSI-COLA
PRODUaS

'

.

EAiftii .IIO·
,

•
•

PJ!!,·

GALLIPOLIS • American Can-

Is the same person designing all
of the cars these days? If not, why
do most of them seem to look
alike? Whatever happened to the
special styling features that distinguished one make from another? I
liked fins, two-tone paint and all
that good siuff.
,
Friends of mine recently _boUght
a new vehicle. It wasn't an impulse
purchase. They had talked about
trading for a year or so. However,
the vehicle they brought home
wasn't one of several they had
mentioned over _the year. When
asked about the. switch they commented they had opted for a vehicle
with a higher mileage per gallon
rating because they are expecting
.the new administration to pass
alOI)g a new gasoline tax and they
have to think economics. Another
tax to look forward to? Now that's
special. Can you handle that·and
stiU keep smiling?

.-

1893

Gallipplis Church of Christ in •
Christian Union , 2173 Eastern ·
Ave., with the Rev. Robert Kline, •
evangelist, and The Sisson Family, ;
7 p.m. nighUy. Sunday evening at 6 ;

GALl.IPOLIS • Advisory council of the Gallia County General
Healli! Dislrict 'llceting, 7 p.m. in, .._ _ _ _....;;;;;;;;,:
the courthouse basemeqt. .

.•

sis.

Uan:h

1993

Gallia County calendar·of·events

by Bob Hoeflich

:: There's nothing like a trip to
t'lorida to get rid of the winter
tabs. Right?
:· Wrong!
•: At least it was wrong for Ken
alld ~ggy Harris of 11C8f Pomeroy
:irf1o did Aorida and it would have
lllmed out fute except they becaine
Victims of the "siorm of the centu-

·~--.

.·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gall

Sentinel

eat of the Bend...
Q

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

~- -

i.

$ 179

RTS

·FROSTING
16.5 oz.

$119

.

out there. But thank goodness

BLUE BONNET

~~--------.-------------~------------------~--------~
-·' · there are still• a few thjngs you .can
•

LITE SPREAD

•

1-800-462-5255

'•

•

•

&gt;

: HOLZER HEAlTH HOTLINE

99(

BE Ill' CROCKER

world

.

FILLING .
21 oz.

count on. Like sunrise and

3lB. TUB

stirisei. Kids catching fireflies

$119

.in jars. And the weath~rm.an

'''

being wrong. Like that old pocket-

•

watch your father gave you that ·his

WHITNEY

father gave him. Or your 'favorite

PINK SALMON

•.

•

'.

-'

"

•

·'

'

.'

•

recliner, with the fabric wotn through, · ,
•
.
right where you set your elbows

14.75 oz.

.

'

'

•

'•

..•

'

,_..2-52.15

t11
POU&lt;It11l
Hll

.
'

'

Lettuce..........~................HEAD

~very night around six to wat.:;h

ltOIZD HOTUIIl .

••

·•

~

.

'

clle evening news.

.

&lt;- Cellular One• is like that. Take ·

our service guaran,tee for
instan,ce. Try
a Cellular One ·
.
.

2 %. Mdk. . . .~. . . . . . . . .GAL

'

back. If you experience any-unsatisfactory calls at all, you don't have

KRAFT .PARKA! .

•

.•
.

\

fixed at any Cellular One service center, ·we'll give you a

I

/

'

free loaner phone. And on top of all that, you get 60 minutes

THE ANSWERS YOU NEED ...
AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE!

/.

That's right. Cellular One's kind of like that old pickup ,

BEm CROCKER ·

you keep around for hunting and fishing and airing out
•

•Illness or Injury •Physician Referral
•Health Care Events •Support Groups

· your dog. It's one of the few things in this crazy world'
I

. you can always count on.

.

A specially trained R. N. is on duty to answer your questions on
health care &amp; inform you about available seFVices•. ~
11 am-10 pm 7 days a week.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
.

..

~,

'

&lt;

'

Ill,..,

Cdltdtlr oDe
pAt.efw

ny '

q h's a rlrbt fw
,..., we71 bur h Hck.

._.socv.a.. -••

3

Gl••ll• Coupons!

$1

Wit• , ••
RIPlE VEIDOR
CO. . . IELOW•
(Yott - • • •rl11 •••
Triple YtiNior (OUpol)

•
•

$299

._.PAIL .

FLAVORITE

'

.

'

LB•

;.. '

,•

CELLUL..-.
.

MORTON SALT

.-. 10t .

The One You
. Can Count On

Authorized Agents ,1
Nate CommunlcatiODI
· Pt.Pleuant

•

304-675-2722

~J·

260~

MAC. &amp; -CHEESE
6 OZ.,.
CANS

7Y.OZ
,. ..

s· $2=v.tu

o-:a'::~Mar.
AI 21 thna•
Olw
1..1113
Lim•• Per Culltomlr

.

,,

WI . .ll REDEEM UP
TO 5 VIIDOI COUPOIS

4 Ice Cream...................
e Juice_J2oz. 69c
Cake Mixes.........1a-1a.5 19(
Peas..""............~....-16 o~.·

offree'airtime, just to make sure you're completely happy.

!,

KEMP SQUART PAIL

'

"'

..

Margar1ne............-LB.

to pay for them. If it takes more· than one hour to get your phone

I

$ 189

BRgUGHTON•

•

phone for sixty days and if you don't like it, we'll buy it

•

$]59

•

•

"'

SUGAR

SJ69
~MP.:: r.s s '*
orr.
111r.. 11n1 ANI a, 1 -

1.111111 Pw C I

I

,1

••

'

-· .

'•

�..'••
Tlmea Sentinel

~im.es- ~etttincl Section

Sports

·.

G

March28, 1~

In NCAA East Regional title game,

OSU women edge!as' Virginia 75-73

. RICHMOND (AP) - Audrey
But~ Cavalien scored die
Burcy scored 20 points, i,ncludiilg a seven po!J!ts of_ ~ half and trailed
layup with 3:18 remaining , that 40-34 atmtenniSSlOII.
..
gave No. 3 Ohio State a six-point
· Virginia's surge continued early
lead, and the ~uckeycs held on to in the second half, powered by
'defeat No. 9 V~nia 7S-73 in die Heather Burge's quiclt 9 points that.
NCAA East Regaon championship gave Virginia a 47-45 lead with
Saturday.
15:51 remaining. Burge sco,red 22
The 'Buckeyes (27-3) will take a of her 30points in_ dle_sccond ba!f.
13-gamc winning slreak against die
There were SIX lies and. mne
winner of the Iowa-Tennessee lead ch.ngcs in the game, with a
game in Friday's Fmal Four semiff. final lead chang9 coming when
nalgamc.
Katie Smith's three-point goal gave
Virginia fmished 26-6. ·
the Buckeyes. a 62-59 lead with
The Buckeyes had a 19-7 spun 8:2.4 rcmainin~. :
late in the first half to move w a · Tlte Cavaliers tied the ~ore at
40·27 lead with 2:40 remaining. 62 o~ a_ Burge !Jet r,hrow w1th 7:22
Burcy scored eight and Averrill remmnmg. Oh1o State moved til .a
six,-point lead with 3:18 remaining
Roberts had seven in the spwt.

son, Taryn Doidge, Heather McLain. They will
participate in the ~trlct Competition at Oblo
University on April 13. Tbe &amp;ebool's talr was
held Tuesday eve111D1.
.
_
THE MOST HWSTEO NAME IN TRAVEL.

. llECEIVE SUPERIOR RATINGS -·Tbese
·:nudents at Meigs Junior Hi~b Scb!IOI received
ntia1s of "$uperlor" on tbear projects for tbe
, llllnual Klence fair beld at tbe scbool on Tuesday evening. Pictured, 1-r, are: front, Libby

CLINT BLACI(
&amp; DOLLY PARTON

MJHS science fair
· participants honored

''

'
Travel to Pigeon Forge, in the neprt of the Smoky
Mountains, to see Clint Black and Dolly Parton,
. two of America's hottest country performers, in concert
ot the opening ceremony for Dollywoodl Don't miss it I

April 23-26, 1993
Escorted by Bre.-.da Roush
'
G.ALLIPOLIS

.........,.....
360 Second

"'f ,

Ill

Melli I , - . • ,

1

a.-.v

CaH or stoo by today/
446-0699

...5.
I

sz

7a

, 7 .... k

a a

MAYJAG

FE

SWJ 7

t

""1'..-%-fA G

100
.....,,, I,,

......

' .

d

I

1a

y"

• Heavy duty, l!lrge capacity

!is ..... _....._ ... , •••

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

,I
I

II
'

MIDDLEPORT · The Middlepon Arts Council will offer a
'll'lf,eltOior worlcshop ·with instruclllr Lee Fritch on April 23 from 6-9
p.m.; on April 24 from 9 a.m. to 4
P..m.; and on April 2S from 1-4:30

1I

"rne workshop will include a
li!c:ture, slide presentation and
Clelnonstntion of II:Chnique by the
lnltructor, as well as exercises for
ilie IIUdent to get the feel of the
mldium and technique.
; · Pritth hu been painting with
Watercolor since 1971 . He began
fll*blna in 1984. He is a charter
1110mbcr and trustee or the West
Vlrllnla Watercolor Society and
bu won several awards for his
!!Witercolors in Wesl Virginia.
PJorida and Ohio.
: · The COlt for die workshop will
be S60 plus supplies. Registration
and a non-refundable deposit of
$25 is necessary by Wednesday.
Farther information may be
abWned by calling Gail HOvatter
at 992-2606 aCta- 6 p.m.

By RUSTY MILLER.
the field and added seven assists, A free throw by Kevin Whitmer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) five rebounds and· four steals. For made it37-33.
Mike Schwallie scored 2() points mo's~ of the day, he created mayFree-throw shooli!Jg held the
and was in the middle of almost hem on Elder's press.
Panthers back all day. The finished
every critical play Saturday as
The victory marked the second just 9 of 22 at the line, while St.
Cincannali Bider beat Toledo St. tinie this season that Elder has John's was 13 of 17.
John •s 62~S3 for the state boys beaten St. John's, the Panthers winSchwallie opened the fourth
·Division·I 'title, .the fu-st time ever ning 70-63 at horne in December. · quarter with another three-pointer
'that two parochial schools have
In a physical game; tbe teams to put Elder up 44-38. After the
met in the final.
jostled for die lead throughout un!Q Titans countered on a three-point
The championship was the first Elder - much as it had against play by Neshaun . Coleman,
for IDder (24-4) since it took back-· StQw- pulled away in the second Schwallie assisted aa Pat Kelsey hit
to-back titles in 1973 and 1974. ·
half.
·
a thrce-poinier w make it 47-41
.Dave Ginn had t:2 points and , Trailing 33-31 with 5:30 left in with 6:45 remaining. That bucket
Andy Marx came off the bcncll to the third quarter, the Panthers started an 8-0 ryn as St. John's,
add 11 points and eight rebounds. pulled even on a steal and bucket which had 2S turnovel'$, remained
John Miller, who had 30 points in by Miller. They took tl!e lead for scoreless for die ncxt4:08.
an-&lt;II-7·8J semifinal upset of· top- good when Schwallie, w~o ha4 · -By die time Denny Amtbein hit
'fai!kcd Stow, was limited to ~D!e ·seven points in tile ~mifinal, a IS-foot jumper at the 3:05 mark,
pomts.
·knocked down a three-pointer froiD Elder was ahcad'52-43 and in comSchwallie hit 7 of 13 shots from die left side with 4:46 on die cloclc. mand.

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) :Philip Huyler scored 34 points, hitting nve free throws in die last 48
seconds, .as Girard brought home
.Trumbull County's first state boys'
,basketball championship ever by
beating Whitehall-Yearhng 64-57
'in die Division II title game Saturday.
.
Trumbull County teams had
failed to win a championship in II
previous trips to the state tournament and four previous title games.
· Huyler. a native of the Bahamas
whose father saw him play for die
fll'st time in the semifinals, hit 12
· of 18 shots from lhe 'field, his only
three-pointer and 9 of 12 free
throws. He added four rebounds
and two assists.
,
He had to sue the Ohio High
School Athletic Association. to
even play this season, after the

'5 9CoudSL

€lass offered

.I

Beginning April I • . .

...._.a

• 2 Speed • 4 Temperatures

• Regular, Permanent Press,
Knits/Delicate cycles

-to-

$

-LLAT1713
LAT7800

L UN·c HE OH BUFFET
11:,15 A.ll.. 1:45 ....
SUCH AS THE FOLLOWING:
2 Homemade Soups
4 Salads
Wann Homelllalle Bread
3 StardJes, Sldl as:
Potatoes, Ike, MacarGII

$

·

I

25

You'll Find Caviar, F....... _. •

DINNE

7

FIT
6-1:31

'

13 points and nine rebounds in die
first half against the Seminoles,
whose attention was focused on
Travis Ford and Jamal Mashburn.
Dale Brown also helped keep
the Seminoles at bay with three
three-pointers and 10 points. He
finished with 12 points, while Ford
had 19.
Mashburn, the Kentucky junior
who has already announced he is
going to the NBA next season,
scored only 12 points on 5-of-13
shooting. But he got nine rebounds,
·seven assists and plenty of support
from his teammates•

SCRAMBLE FOR BALL- Ohio Stale's Averrill Roberts (top),
and Virginia's Weady Palmer scramble for the loose ball during
Saturday's NCAA East Regional title game in Richmond, Va.,.
where tbe Buckeye&amp; won 75-73 to become tbe first Big Ten team to
make it to the women's Final Four. (AP) ,
o,

Schwallie was a driving force
behind the streak that put the game
away, assisting on Kelsey's threepointer and scoring the other five
on a three-point play and two free
throws.

The Titans never .got closer than Colemah, a sophomore, added 16
while Amrhein added 12.points.
seven points to the fmal buzzer.
St. John's (23-5), which had
Jay Latranaga had 17 points and
eight .rebounds for · St. John's won ils last 14 games, was making
despite being saddled with .foul its first appearance at the state tour·
trouble for most of the second half. nament.

.·

its first trip ever til lhc state tournament, led 54-SO after Walker assist- .
ed Gary Hankins on a layup and
then hit a baseline shot with S:08
remaining.
After a Girard timeout, however, the Indians took over.
Kris Kelly who had 12 points,
COMING TO RIO GRANDE- Gail Adams
started a 9-0 run with a IS-foot
(center), chosen t1Je Piekaway C011nty Player of
jumper from lhc left side of the key
tbe Year iD glrll' bubtball, bas signed til play
at the. 4:49 mark. After Walker
for tbe University or Rio Grande Redwomen
missed inside, Huyler drove the left
next year. Fla!lklng"tbe Loaan El111 Hiib School
basclineandwasfouledwith4:10
'
three-point
The teams traded misses before

senior are· her parents, Connie and Georae
Adams, and behind them are her hiRII school
coach, Clayton Stahr (left) and RedwO!Jien bead
coach Dave SmaUey.

·
• ks
Logan Elm
. s Gat•1 Adams
pte
~4£:~1~:~~!~! Rio Grande for college career
~~~f~~~~~~Y:~.e

pass from Kelly with 1:10 left to
RIO GRANDE- The athlete
makcitS7-S4.
chosenasPickawayCounty'sPiayAt the :55 mark, a pass for er of the Year in girls basketball
Walker was stolen by Girard's will be extending her career into
Keith Swan and Huyler was fouled the collegiate scene with the Uniat the 47.8-seeond mark. He hit versity ofRio Grande.
both to make it S9-S4.
Gail Adams, who holds J,.ogan
The Ramsfmally broke through Elm High School's record for
with 36 seconds left when Lupton career points at 1,14S, recently
popped in a three-pointer from the committed to play for the Redleft corner to cut the lead to two.
women team coached by Dave
Forced to foul, die Rams picked Smalley that went 26-5 in the
die wrong man in Huyler, whO' hit 1m-93 season and won the c~amtwo more shots with 29.2 seconds pionship of the Mid-Ohio Confer·
left.
.
ence.
With 20 seconds left, Alrashan
"Gail is a tremendous athlete
Clardy IICiiPed in front of Pass by who plays well inside, die area we
Whitehalf"s Charles Alston and need to strengthen for next year,"
was intentionally.fouled by Lupton. said Smalley, who completed his
Clardy hit his only rwo points of · fll'st season as head coach of the
die game to make it63-S7.
Redwomen. "She fits nicely into
Wallcer stole lhc inbounds pass, our style of play. runs the noor
but Lupton missed a shot. Huyler wen and is a good kid who, in our
then;:loaed the scoring with anoth- system, will get 'l.uality playing
er free throw aa .the Girard fans time as a freshman.
went wild.
' Smalley added that he saw
Gitard won the title despite a . Adams play three times in high
rocky seasqn which saw them win• school and felt she improved in
their ram game by two points, then every area each time out
lose the next three by 21, 26 and
"She's a player who willllliiUn:
·five poinll. . · well within our system,," he said.
But the Indians won their last IS "A quality person off the court,
to take the crown.
. Walker was aupporled by Hankins, who bad lS poinll, and LupCLI!VELAND (AP) - Autbclr·
ton, who finilhed with 12.
ilics
told oftk:lals of t1!e Cleveland
The Indians won despite being
ouuebouncled 27-12 and outshot ~dill pilcher Sreve 01111 fJom tile fteld (24 of 45 for S3 per- not intoxlcaied 11 die limo or the
cent to 25 or 43 for 58 percent). !Joalinaaccident thll killed blm
But they forced twice as many and teamniiiD 11m 0ews, I lleWI·
(20-10) and OUliCOied die papu reponed Saturday.
Team manaaement wu told
Rama by five from die foUl line.
.
Whitehall was aeeklng to gun 'a blood-alcohol Ie•el waa
become the tint Columbus public 0.02~. Tlw Pltiii!IHtll•r ald. The
school to win a state title since lcpl thrCIIthold for lniOiklllon in
Florida Is .0.10". The newspaper
Beltloy a deeD IJO·
.'

she'S'the type of kid we like to
have in our program because she
works hard 10 the classroom and
comes from a very family-oriented
program under Coach Clayton
Stahr. I was pleasingly impressed
with the camaraderie shown among
Gail's teammates during her signing of the letter of intent"
Adams, a center for the Lady
Braves, brings to Rio Grande a full
compliment of achievements. A
four-year member of the team, she
ended the recent season as the
team's most valuable player- an
honor she was awarded in her
sophomore year as wen- and was
named !he Mid-State League Player of the Year.ln addition, she was
flrsr team, All-Central DisUict and
second team All-Ohio. During her
senior campaign, in which Logan
Elm went 20-3, Adams averaged
1S.7 points and 7.7 rebounds per
game.
As a junior she was the county's Coca-Cola' Player of the Year.
In addition to her basketball
accomplishments, Adams was a
three-year middle hitter for the vollcyball team and was a catcher for
die softball team all four years.

Asked why she chose Rio
Grande, Adams said she was
attracted to lhe closeness of Smalley and the team and its resemblance to the relatiooship between
her and her teammates at Logan
Elm .
"They were all very helpful and
I felt very comfortable with the
campus," she said. 'Tm used to the
up-tempo style they play at Rio
Grande."
.
'Tve been here 10 years and
Gail is probably the best player to
ever come out of LSohg~n Elm ·.~
commented 5tahr. .. e sa very
unselfish player who's had a super
career, and I think the awards she's
received are an indication of the
kind of excellent player that she is.
She's a hard worker who can play
both ends of the noor. and die better the competition. the bette~ sbe
plays.
"I'm sure that in four years
she'D have as many fond memories
of Rio Grande as she's had with
Logan Elm," he added.
The daughter of George and
Connie Adams of C_ircleville,
!'dams plans to ma)Or m accountmg at Rio Grande.
1_ •

Olin had little alcohol in body, sources Cwlm

c._. .. t

.,.,..., • ..,

7 Days AWHk

,· .

state's ruling body of prep spans
ruled that he was a recruited transfer.
.
The victory ruined a 'littering
performance by Whitehall s 6,foot9 junior center Samald Walker. He
hit 11 of 15 shots from the field
and scored 24 points and had 14
rebounds - two more than the
Girard team. Wallcer sat out five
minules with foUl trouble.
Girard, whose only previous trip
to the state tourney had come in
1953, finished 22-6. Whilehally earling. ranked fourth in lhc final
regull1r-scason poll, closed at2S-2.
Neither tcaril led by more than
five points aa Huyler and Wallcer
took turns scoring, die 5-10 Huyler
blastinf past a defender for a layup
in tra f1c or Walker hlttinl! a
turnaroundjumper despite bemg
flanked by Girard players.
Whitehall, wh1ch was making

• 3 Water levels • Seij-clean filter

Ita

east Region as lhc No. I seed, took
an eight-point halftime lead, then
broke it open with· an I 1-0 run in
the second half.
By the end of the game, Kenlucky fans who followed their team
to Charlotte were chanting "Final
Four, Final Fourl' • They also
chanted "SEC! .SEC!" to show
their pride in the Southeastern Conference in the heart of Atlantic
Coast Confercnc:ecountry.
. Prickett, a freshman who ·
replaced Rodrick Rhodes in Kentucky's starting lineup and who
started both ~ames in Charlotte, got

Girard beats Whitehall-Yearling
64-57 to claim ·Division II crown

IIYIImEU.-

OSCAR'S
.RESTAURANT

I

I

bitter memories of last year's East
Regional final loss to Duke on
Christian Laettner's·miracle shot at
the overtime buzzel.
The Wildcats (30-3) will be
going to the Final Four for die lOth
time and die first time since losing·
to Georgetown in 1984 semifinals.
Kentucky has won five NCAA
national championships, tied with
Indiana for second to UCLA's 10.
Like their three previous tournament games, this one was over long
before the final buzzer. The Wildcats, who averaged 97 points a
game in roaring through the South·

In 71 st Oltio boys' state title action, .

~~~~~~~~~~~~&amp;A~~~~~~~N&amp;~~~~~~~~~

~

.I

By TOM FOREM~ Jr.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Kentucky made sure a last-second
shot woul!ln 't stop its run to the
Final Four this time.
The Wildcats, getting 22 points
and I I rebounds from unlikely star
Jared Prickett, defeated Florida
State 106-81 Saturday in the Southeast Regional final to move to New
Orelans and meet the winner of
today:s Michigan-Temple game.
It was Kentucky's fourth
straight blowout ip the tournament
- by an average margin of 31
points a game - and helped erase

.Cincinnati Elder defeat~ Toledo St. John 62-53 for Division I title

11Jc
"lll -~'~i:~ei=,!~'=''=·~
- p J .....

dM
. . . . =5575 a 11.r't .6'11111
. JOIINM
MA,

......... ,

.

Kentucky bombs Florida State 106-81

0

: MIDDLEPORT · The annual Carl Tromm, Whitney Haptonslall.
.scienc:e fair at Meigs Junior High Melissa Whaley, Amy Clonch,
·School was held Tuesday evening Scott George, Frankhn Pierce,
at die school.
.
Stephanie Stewart, Jason Runyon,
· · Libby King received top recog- Devin Curfman, Matt Ault, Ryan
nition as she was prcsemed the Baker, Tomie Shaffer, Chrissy
lohn Mora Memorial Award for Williams, Mike Marshall, Jeremy
her project, "Keep Warm."
Pierce, Michele Miller, Josh WI/II·
· King was also presented a Gov- dling. Erin Krawsczyn, Adam ·
woor's Award for Energy. Other Smith, Janel Spencer, Bradley
Governor's Award winners were Whitlach. Josh Witherell. Megan
B'.J. Nicholson, "Waste Incinera- Swearingen, Jason Mullen, Aaron
l!lr." for litter prevention; Heather Hockman, Tim Peavley, James
McLain, "Will Air Monitors Find Ditty, Jamie Williamson, Darrick
lhe Presence of Asbestos?" for St. Cljlir, Brian Young, Brandi
P.(eservation of the environment; Meadows, Adam Jenkins, Beverly
Tlryn Doidge, "What Types of Soil Stewart, Emily Fackler, Cindy
Absorbs Water the Best?" for water Hawkins. Adam White, Betsy
conservation; and Stacy Stewart, Houdashelt, .Randy Smith, Stacie
'!Does Color of Light Affect the Reed and Carrie Glaze. .
Growth of Plants?" for_a~culture:
Ratings of "good" were aw~
. , Otl!cr SIUdents ~IVIng supen- to Jeremy Cowdery, Jar~ King,
or nungs were Jess1e Blackford. Mike Parker John Barnhart
Tara Grueser, Billy Crane, Anna Wilbur Ward 'Michelle Johnson'
~ink, Melissa Canan, Cynthia Tabitha Faw,' Amy Jones, Jame;
Sandy •.BJ. Workman, Becky Scott Dean, Donald Elkins, Max Wilson, ,
and Leigh Mash.
. .
April Herdman, Carl McDade.
A~ards . tlr those receiVIng Angel Kelley, Carrie Harmon,
·I!UJICTIOf ntillgs wae presented by David Stewart, Daniclle Lambert.
~eigs ~unior ':ll&amp;h Swdent Cou~- Brooke Dailey, Pa~icia Tobias,
Cil, Me1gs Jumor H1gh Academ1c Robert Qualls Jimie Tyffe Mcli5Boosters, Southern Ohio Coal sa BaneU, Naiwma Tyree. 'wesley ·
COmpany. Tuppers Plains-Chester .McClure Micbacl Wilfoog, Shawn
Wltcr Di_strict, Meigs i:itter Con· · King, b::bel Bush, J,osh u'azelton,
trol, Oh1o Power, Me1gs Local fR. Blackwell, Shawn Michael,
. Effective
_Schools
Team, Mary Barreti, Ricky Hoover, Julie
e.A.P.S.E., Scaence Club, Veterans McGuire Virgil Hartley Shaye
Memorial Hospilllllll_ld _the Meigs· Bare, Nathan Goodwin, Rkk Yost,
Local Teachers Associ~b!Jn.
. D.J. Blanks, Tim Lewis, Cheryl
Thole students recc1vmg supen- Jewell Misty Jeffers Josh Phalin,
Of. n_lings wili.J!articipate. in the Am rei Slavin, Chad bocsson, Amy
District Compeuoon on April 13 at Cleland Robyn Hunt Casey
Ohio University.
'
Booth Amanda Muss~r Josh
. Students ~eiving "excellent" Howard, Aric Patterson, N~te Sis~tlings were Lynn Robbins, Paul
son, Cassidy Coffey, Robert RitterEwerson. Morgan Vanaman •. Billy beck, Timothy Stearns, Je11nifer
S,Oath, Caleb Shuler. Jod1e S1sson, · Clifford, Chad Molden, Brent
DeeQI Jacks, Jay.son Parsons, Whaley Matt Kirk Shannon
Shawn Mite!', Jennifer E!tvin, Matt Pettie, J.ilie Kin~. AdahJ Barrett
B.arrett, N1ck Goodwm, Ka~en
Others receaving recognition
Kauff, ~ndy ~yers, R1cky Sm1~, were given to Timothy Roush.
Sbaun F1f, Jess1ca McElroy, Anna Chad Bartrum and Carlie LcMasCollins, Jana Jude, Stacey Price, ter.
·

· ''I felt lill;~ we played hard but
we wen: not~ 1~ 1~ ~ ~ormally
to ccruun thmgs,' Vll'gama coach
Debbie Ryan said.. " Ohio State's
seniors played well and dley were
the differmcc in the game."
Burcy, a senior, was named the
tourname.n i's most outstanding
player. Fellow senior Roberts and
freshman Smith were the other
Buckeyes on the all-tournament
team. Virginia's Evans and Burge
also made the team.
·
"It's extremely rewarding to go
to die Final Four. We took a team
not ranked in pre-season," O~io
State coach Nancy Darsch sa1d.
"It's overwhelmmg."

In NCAA Southeast Regional title game,

In Concert Together At

Libby King receives top honors

LEE FRITCH

.

'

on Burcy's steal and l~yup. The
Cavaliers could get no closer than
two die rest of die way.
Smith missed the front end of
three onc-and-ooes in·the fmal31.5
seconds. But the Cavaliers had rwo
turnovers and Jenny Boucek hit
one of two free-throws with 9.3
seconds remaining. Smith got the
rebolilld and the Buckeyes held the
Cavaliers off.
.' :
·
Roberts led the Buckeyes with
25 and Burcy had 20. Smith added
14 and Nikki Keyton 11.
Burge, who set Virginia singleseason records for points and field
goals made had 13 r~bounds in
addition to her 30 pomts. Deana
Evans added 18.

ClrOANT'•R
Oar ......,

~

I

•

.' I

did not identify its ~(blood-alcohol) level ·waa sianifi·
Indians spokesman John cantly lower lhan tho loplllmli
Maroon said he could not confum because everyone wbo knows
the report but would not be sur- Steve know• he dldn 't drink,"
prlaedlfitwcrc true.
Maroon said. "I think you'll find
Tho Florida Game and Fresh that JJODe of the guys wu loplly
Water Fish Commission had not intoxicated."
released any acc~nt fi~
· 1JQ.. _ ,
lhe team, Maroon said 1'0111 tli6 ••Itt
training camp officp• Winter' 1
Haven, F1a. '
I·
I
"I
wouldn't
be
~
if
die
~. . .
"
!
'
' w•

I

......-----~

.,
I

,,,

�•

•

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, wv

'-De C2-8unclaynmes-Sentfnel

March 2$,1993

March 28, 1993

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

In NCM regional semifinal action,

Gallia's baseball teams building
with melting pot,·youth movement

Temple, Michigan; North Carolina, Cincinnati victors·
By Tile Associakd Press
If you like favcriles. you shculd
love the way the NCAA tolll'llament is shaping up.
. All four top seeds (Michigan,
Indiana, Kentucky and Nonh Carolina) have reached the regional
. finals, along with two No. 2 seeds
(Kansas and Cincinnaii) and a No.
J.5Ced (Florida Srate).
:· The only real surprise in the
E~te. Eij!hl iS seventh-seeded Temple, which upset Vanderbilt 67-59
F.riday night to reach the West
Regional final against Michigan.
, Temple alumnus Bill Cosby
joined the celebratioa in the Owls.
locm IOCIII II lbt Kinadome. IIIII.

later offered reporters a parting
quip.
" I never bad so much fun going
home so esrly ... he sui.
In ot.hc:r regional semis Friday
oiJbt, Michi&amp;an struggled to beat
loogsboc George Washington 7264. North Carolina edged Attansas
80-74 and Cincinnati topped Virginia 71-54.
Today, Temple plays Michigan
in the West and North Carolina
meets Cincinnati in the East for
spocs in the F'mal Four.
Saturday's resional finals were
Kentucky-Flonda State in the
Southeast and Indiana-Kansas in
the Midwest.

\1:\

"--

\ ( ' \ \ ltilll'lll'l

EASTERN CONFERENCE
,...,.

'!I' L
Nowv....___ _...
:ao

_

_ , _ _ _ ,,40

Pd.

.WI
Jll

:ll

..·, ou.
·--·---..
lJ :ll
_____ll
:M
36
... . pt..1 t \
.2} 4S

- ·-----..30
t

• •

_____

• Wuhin. . . ---.- 19 41

G8

7
1~

jft
.m

14~

.455
.311
.211

16
2S
XI

.

'c . n t l ) l -

1..o.a..--...41

1!1

• ..........- ....·--...35
. . Owlaaa- ---·..35
• Jodiea,.. ,_.._... _._,

n
n
n

..122
..!15
.500

• .,.... .......... ,___30 36
• ' hllw...ce .••. ______ _zs 42

.m

.106

. 111M!l.AND.. _ ..4] :M .642

·~
12.5
13
,.

.455

.E.E..,._hlp

17

Southeast Reglollllt

22.S

'

T

AI ·

&lt; WESTERN CONFERENCE
'

M-IDhllloo

. 1..-Hauaaa .•~---····"..
J' San Analio...........41
lllah .......................«l
Donver ........... - ......27
......- ...... 15
Dollu...........,___ , ..7

.641

l4
2S

.621

.sao
40 .&lt;103
s1 :m
60 . liM
29

Pacl'kDiwilioa
IS .711
a-S.alo. ......._ ......-16 Zl .616
r.r.J.od ............... .AO 25 .61S
L.A. Lokaa...- ......33 33 ..500
LA. ~ - ...- ..33 3S .oilS
Oaldea Sla&amp;o.-...... .21 J9 .411
Soaunonto ..,_ ..... - ~1 45 _]11
a-dhlc:llodployolr-

l

.u

16.5

GROVEPORT, Ohio (AP} One day recently, AI Matthews
spent a few minutes worting on
Lilia Osterloh's forehand service
return. Having the advantage of
knowing where the ball was coming, she destro,Yed his offerings, no
malter their spm or velocil)'.
·
After Osterloh had smashed
three suaight winners, Matthews
went on to something else. "My
ego can only take so many of
those, .. he said.
.
"He was taking it easy on me,"
Osterloh said later. trying to help
him save face. .The 14-year-old pupil is almost
too much for Matthews, head pro at
the Scarborough Tennis and Fitness
Club. "I have to work to.beat her,"
he said.
But Osterloh is not the average
teen. In rankings released by the
U.S. Tennis Association last
month, the freshman from Groveport, a Columbus suburb, was
ranked No. 1 in both singles and
doubles in the 14-and-under category. She shared the top singles
spot with Marisa Cadin of Clear-

21
36..5

6

IO.S
II
19

w

30

Frlday's scores
106, DoUu. 9'1

Q.EVElAND 103,,1•U

1 '; • i· 14

HouiiGa 90. w........ ,.,.
Mi1mi II 0, New lcaey 100

o...ill".a..daaollfl
~S&amp;Me94,K

.,1 .

au.-1111 . ~16

I.Julll04.

s . - 91

-lOJ.Mil-103

New Yodt 105. L.A. I - . 95
122, L.A. aq,p.. 110

, -- t::.::'~

Tbey pla.ted ~ttarday

Now_,.

7:30p.m.
Milmi•-1:30p.m.
lndianlll Drnnr. 9 p.m.
LA. CUppen a Seoale,IO p.m.
Milwaukeut S
&amp;a, lO:lOp.m.

II .S. kt&gt;kl'lhall
Boys' state semifinals

..

GeorgeW~64

At Seattle, Mich1gan slowed
down after a fast start and barely
held off the 121h-see«d Colonials.
After racing 'to a IS-2 lead, the
Wolverines sputtered and couldn't
put away GW until the final minutes of the game. Michigan led
only 64-62 with 1:36 remaining
befoo: taldng control of the boards
and hilling eijlht free throws down
the stretch. . .
Juwan Howard led Michigan
with 17 points, including nine on
free throws. Kwame Evans led
George Washington (21-9} with 13
points.
·
Michigan pushed the ball inside
and intimidated GW in the fli'St six
minutes. But the Colonials rallied
despite a horrible game by 7-foot-1
freshman Yinka Dare, who missed
all five or his shots, got just five
·rebound&amp; lind played only 19 minutes.
Temple 67, VaoderbUt 59
Eddie Jones scored 26 points
and Temple withstood a late barrage of three-pointers by VanderbilL
The Owls, using only six players in the game, rallied from a fourpoint halftime deficit 10 take a 12point lead in the secona half. But
the)' needed four free throws by

Dlvlslba IV

....,...._. 43. Uma Colbolic 42

Nawltiepl7l,LJ .....,oayGI

FS76

1.5ci•24cc

517HC

Carter Tractor Sales
2204 Eustern Ave. • Gallipolis, OH.
614-446·0523

·

1989 Chevy Caprice

.,.. ""'
-r
~

V-8, auto., air, mora. '

1993 Chevy S·1 0 Pickup

Tahoe, VS, alr, AMIFM caaaette, - r b!lmper, afidlng
window•
Aratnmt Buyn Siva $400 More

$918 8

1989 PonHac.Firebird
T-topa, ahlrp. ·

Ext. Ceb, loaded.

1ra11~ ••"

$18,921

1992 Chevrolet Cavalier

$I .
NOWONLY
49 9 ·

5 apeed, bucket INti, bright red.

.

I
I

stereo, rear defrost.

I

List . . ..... . . $8855

I

Taytlr .

I

.I

V6, automatic, air, tilt,
cruise, cassette, driver
and passenger air bags.

.,... ,..,

List . $16,191

s7 ,999

NEW 1993
DODGE DYNASTY LE

1992 Geo Storm

~

va.

.

air,
cassette, 8 foot bed.
List . . .. ... . $16,673

1993 Chewrolet Yl Ton Pickup

Auto., long
'!l'inclow.

TaylOr
DIICIURI· 1,192
Rebate.- 500

Automatic,
passenger,
defroster.

SALE

$14,499
List . $11 ,194

,'

Tayllr

List . . . .... _$19,620

DIICIURI . - 8g 5

Taytlr

Rebate .· 500

DI-nt ....... · 2, 761

Rebate ... ... • 1,000

V6, 5
alloy

SALE

sgggg

cassette.

*13,495

.. $13,499

~ \,~

1993 DODGE
DAYTONA DEMO

1992 Oldsmobile Clera

1983 Ford Conversion Van

'10,999
Automatic, air, till, cruise,
cassette, Manager's demo.
LIS I . . ...... $13,622
Tlyllr
lllaceunt ... .. .. · 1.123
Rebate . . . ... • 1,000

~ 989 Chevy Astro Coaverslon Van
HI Top, loedtd.

Automatic, air conditioning, V-6, eter.o, tilt.

...

,,. 1993
.., .
Olds Cutlass Oera Value Edition .
V-6, auto., eter.o.

· 1992 Olds Cutlass Supreme

•12,999
·1992 Olds Delta 88

sl

CHRYSLER

594-3528·

Plymoutn

·ALL SIZES· LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP RAP

~ 30.................... ~:~:~~ ~
~ 2 ................. at Fairland

1993 Chevy Lu•l••
Only 200 mllet.

t

13,695,

(girls}

~ 3 ................. .at Ironton (boys}
April9 ...:........................at Fairland
4'\Pri!IL ............at Fairland-S p.m.

, Aprill9 ............................ .at Logan
).pril24....;... Boyd Co.lnviL (girls)
1qJrii 27 .... .River Valley &amp; Jacksoit
. -April 30...................Fairland (boys)
May 4 ......... ~ ...........at River Valley
fday 8 .............at Ray McCoy Invit.
May IS........SEOAL meet at Logan
:
(10 a.m.)
IJead coacb "'- Keith McGuire .
; NO~ AD meel&amp; lllart at 4:30
t.m. ulllnl olberwlrle noted
•
•

•Mas~n

.'•

:HoMEOWNER
OF

GET UPTO $250 BACK INSJANILY FROM
YOUR PARTICIPAnNG TRANI DEAlER.
It's never been easier to enjoy the unequaled perfonnance and reliability of
a Trane Weathertron · heat pump system. Just buy a Trane XL 1200 heat
pump, air handler and ele~tronic air cleaner before May 31,1993 andreceive up to $250 in Quick Savings Rebate checks
on the spot.
As one of the ~arid's premier heat pumps, the
XL 1200 comes with an exclusive manufacturer's
10-year limited warranty on compreSsor and coil ,
plus two years on parts. It also has a high efficiency rating of up to 13.0 SEER. Hurry to your Trane
dealer for up to $250 in Quick
Savings Rebate checks today.
, _ . .-

ENROLL NOW!

TRAIN FOR
EMPLOYMENT

Classes begin April 5th
Call the Adult Education Center.
Tri-County Vocational Schooll -800-637-6508

•
•
•
•

Carpenter
Line Mechanic
Welder
Electrician

It's Hard 1b Stop A Trane.N
•.
$150 on XL 1200 HP,,$60 on air handler. SflO on EF air cleaner.
OtT~r not available lo contractnrs and builder!l.

•
•

•

•

WARNER BEATING
ANDCOOUNG
·CHESTER

'fH.c-.,. -1-lldlooi

~-···1

1-ID0-767-4223

,' Nea....W.,OW.41,_.
'
~Ill

,I

\$~00J

PAV

Sand
•Top Soil
•Concrete Sand
•Fill Dirt
•Pit Run
•Shredded
•Drainage Gravel
Top Soil
•Pea Gravel
•Straw
•Drainage Tile
'•Cuhr,ert Tile (all sizes up to 5")
, •Block and Mortar Mix

•
•
•

•
.•
•
•

iLL

"We Denver and
Spreaci Limestone"
.,

•'

••

"DDIWEII TO BE THE BElT"
STATE ROUTE 13 AT 33 &amp; 550 ATHENS

E.

LETART CORPORATION

Only 3,oo0 mllu, one owner.

*13,995

JW!-01 MO'IOIS
I

$7999

·

Ollceunt . . ..... · 1,674
Rebate ... ... .• 1,500

NEW 1993 DODGE DAKOTA SPORT
Power seats, windows. 1~ . cruise.
cassene. wire wheels. loarlecl.

Auto., air, hatchback, star.o

l!ed. air, atereo, bedllner, •lldlng _ ,

Taytlr

Olacallll .... .... · 356
flebate .. .... . • 500

~.,.-.,~

~16,925

A

;G!lllia Academy's
:track schedule

.$17.~25

Discount· 1,000
SALE
2 dr., 5 speed, AM/FM

1992 Geo Metro
Auto., air, stereo,

Tayllr ·

In business for yourself?

r--------------------------------.i.

1992 Chevy Yz Ton Diesel Pickup

list

ahama•:

"w

$7995

NEW 1993
DODGE COLT

By G.SPENCER OSBORNE
junior Mike Cook , Poling and ways.
Gama Academy
•
Times-Sentinel Staff
Bradbury. Shortstop is a toss-up
With
only
four
seniors
and
three,
GALLIPOLIS - Creating a between McCarley. Shawn Cox,
juniors on hand, Gallia Academy's
melting pol of talentlaken primari- Poljng and Jason Jenkins.
ly from two now-closed schools in
Looking to. play in the outfield Blue Devils show plenty of ne.w.
a consolidated team's first season are seniors Dave Dobbins, Rusty faces and a new coach in Larr,-.
and a return to fundamentals in the Lear, Keith Smith and G!lldy Soy- Carter, who was last seen in base.~·
wake of a youth movement are der and juniors Paul Covey, .Shawn ball circles as Breu WilSOII's assiJ&lt;-.
what Gallia County's high school Hollanbltugh and David Newberry tant in 1990 before taldng over the:
baseball lC(lDls arc looking to give as well as sophomore Howard GAHS softball program in 1991
andl992.
;.;
them what they need to carry them Caldwell.
.
.
"What I'm trying to do is ~(
through campaigns that will begin
Behind the plate will be senior
this week.
Tom Meade leading a group of back to basics, Mhe said. "I want
River Valley
candidates that includes Cook, them to look alike when they're.
fielding and when they're hitting.
At Bidwell, 18 players have · Caldwell and Hollanbaugh.
been working in R1ver Valley's
Manning the pitching staffwill I'm i!tterested in kids maldng coerfli'St baseball spring training camp be Bradbury, Canady, Covey, Jenk- laC~ in pulling the ball in play. M , .:
Carter has a lot of young facr:s
in preparation for Tuesday's ~ ins and Toler.
opener at Point Pleasant, which
, ."It's not fair to say who's hOI, - seven sophomores and seveO:
willstartat6p.m.
but our altitude's good,M said freshmen, to be exact - on han&lt;(
Former Kyger Creek coach Joo Rothgeb, whose charges share the because or the removal of the
Rothgeb, who will be assisted by fate of the rest of southeastern reserve program. However, he' S:
Ron
Toler and Dave Bwn!)ll, will Ohio's diamond crews in that out- looking to instill a work ethic lha(
&gt;
A l&gt;AY at tbe ballpark In GalUpolis, if spent
on the road
see
have
several of his old players as side practice time has been limiled starts in practice with game-lik~
at Memorial Field, m'ay mean an outboard on
~pril 9 app!lintment wltb
Valley, the
well as ~vera! former North Gallia by Mother Nature's capricious
(See IIASEBAI.,L on C·4)
the iuinual transformation of tbe baseball and
GAHS softball team is slated to start play on
..:
players and a few former Hannan
softball fields into bayou country. Wblle Gallia
Ibis field Wednesday against Warren Local.
Trace diamondmen.
!
Academy's baseball team ·bas its first four games
Time will tell. (Times-Sentinel pboto)
Rjver Valley baseball slate
The varsity Raiders wi'll play
their home games at Bidwell - Date
Opponent April28 ................. at Warren Local:
In Ohio boys' state basketball semifinals, .
Porter, and the reserves, coached Marth 30 ...at Point Pleasant-6 p.m. April 30 ........................ at Marieua• •
by Tim Conley, will play their Marth 3l............................Jackson May 3 ........... ...............at W
home contests ill Cheshire-Kyger April 2 ....................... .......at Athens May S............................at Southern:
Middle School.
.
April S................Eastern at C-KMS May 7 ..........................at Wellslon• •
Wbo's on rust - Junior Chris April6 .............................Wellston* Head coach -Jon Rolhgeq
· :
Toler seems 10 be the leading can- April 7 ................................... Logan
NOTE: All games will.begin at:
didate at fli'St base, but chasing him April9 .............at Gal~a Academy* 4:30 p.m. unless otbefWISe post-•
By RUSTY MILLER
for the Division IV tide at S p.m.
didn't."
are
seniors Rob Canady and Dave Aprill2 .....................Wilrren Local ed. Reserves will travel witb the:
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP} - · . "Our kids read all that swff in
In the other semi, Michael Far- Poling
as well. as sophomore Mite April 13 ,..........Southern at C-KMS varsity .softball team on road:
Cinderella got jilted at the· Big the papers about them being a Cin- rington had 17 points 10 lead three
Bradbury.
for time at second Aprill4 ..............................Mariena games, ~hererore playing a sched-'
Dance.
derella .team," Belpre coach Joe teammates in double figures as are junior Vying
Chris
Crace and senior Aprill6 ...........................atJackson ule opposite from the varsity:
Coldwater and Cincinnati Garrett said of Coldwater. "But Campbell Memorial rolled over
Ryan
McCarley.
At third, Canady, April 19 ................................Athens baseb'll team. Most Tbursdays~
McNicholas, both of which made it what can we do about it? They McN1cholas.
who
has
played
there in seasons April20 .. ..... ....Wahama at C-KMS will be reserved for make·uP:
to the 71st Slate boys state IOurna- deserve a lot of credit I don't know
Farrington hit 7 of 9 shots from past, leads a field
that features April 21 ... ................ .Point Pleasant games.
:
ment despite ugly losing records, how they lost 16 games."
the field and also had IS rebounds.
April
22
...........................
at
Eastern
C·KMS:
Cheshire-Kyger
Mid-"
were eliminated in the semifinals
Coldwater had a chance to stay A native of the Bahamas, he 'had 10 Gallia Academy's
April 23 .............................at Logan die School '
:
Friday night at St. John An:rla.
alive but missed one shot that win a court case just to be eligible b~ball schedule
April
24
...........
at
Meigs-noon
(DH)
• - varsity only
,
Coldwater, which closed its run would have given it the lead and to 1a ~ th Red De 'Is th'
18 seaApril 26 ...............Gal~a Academy"
•
P Y or e ·
vt
at 10·17 after going 4-16 in the another that would have tied the
•
· th fi
son.
· ' Date
Oppone t
regular season. had its remarkable game - al] m
e mal 7.9 sec.
Thefiloss ~ept MthecNicholas win- March 3! ...............at Warren~
march end when it lost 58-55 to onds.
1ess m 1ve lnps 10
Slate tournaApril I
· at F · land
·• Belpre.
.
Trailing 56-SS with 18.6 sec- men.
' t The Rockets a1 so 1ost m
· the A '15 ............................ J-'--llll
:: : · Gampbell Memorial destroyed onds left, Coldwater brought the sem1'f'ma1s m
· 1974 • ' 84 • '85 an d Apri17
pn .............................at Athe
..........,,
. .. ..........................,..81
ns
[· .McNicholas • hopes of getting to ball upcourt after a missed free· '91
•
throw.
Mitch
Lefeld,
who
had
17
T
.
h
R
d
D
·1
d
........................
.River
Valley
Apnl9
·:-.soothe same time it won a state
.
~ e . ev1 s was.te 11111e
April 10 .......... .at Coal Grove (DH)
: .championship as· it 'used an 18-3 points, puUed, up near the foul line, lime
m pulling the game out of
(11 am)
:::blitz in the fli'St quarter to pocket a where he found Jim Mueller open. reach, reeling off the laSI 16 points A 'I 12
·
Lo
·: ·6946 victory. The Rockets bowed But Mueller's 10-foot jumper of the fltStquarter to lead 18-3.
PI'! .........................:...at gan
i·;outat 12-IS. ·
.
under -fire fell short and was
Not until 2:30 remained i~ the A~ 14 ....................Poml Pleasant
'
As a result, the Di~ision III title knocked out of bounds to Belpre half did McNicholas have more ~prilpri1 16 .....................Warren~
-will be decided Saturday 9 p.m. with 7.9secondsremaining.
shots made than blocked. By that
· I9 ..........................atMarietta
:when Campbell Memorial (20-6)
Upon inbouncling the ball, Russ point, it was 33-14 and the end was A~ 2 l .............................. Jactson
Tax Relieffrom America's Tax Team
Jacob was foule4 with 4.8 secoods 10
· 81• ht
Apri122 ............ .Ponsmouth-S p.m.
:takes on Belpre (25-1).
• 1n Division IV semifinals, New left, and he hit both.
•
•--~
'th the April 23 ................................Athens
e were com•u•""' 1e WI
April26
Ri Vall
;Riegel bear Lynchburg Clay 71-67.
Coldwater inbounded and hur- tempo of the game," said Camp· April 28 ·········..........at vec.Lo ey
·and Fort Loramie earned a shoe at ried the ball down floor again . bell coach Brian Danilov. "We like ' · ................................ · gan
GALLIPOLIS
POMEROY
its third state title with a 4342 vic- Jason Stammen avoided Uaffic al going up and down' the cou'rt."
:Apnl30 ..............................FIIllland
SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE
618 EAST MAIN ST.
:tor)' over lOp-ranked Lima Cenual the top of the key and was able to
In the Division IV semifinals
May 3..............,.... .81 Point Pleasant
446-0303
992-6674
~cFriclay.
.
· .
get-of[an l)fl'balance jumper from . wild·and woolly -laSt-minute fmish: H~~AUga~ ~at4:30
• Sliilrday's finals found White· behind the arc just before the es were the rule of thumb.
'•
~all- Yearling (2S·1j meeting buzzer sounded. It hit the right side
No . !-ranked Lima . Central p.m. unless otberwiae noted
-Girard (21-6} in the Division II
the rim and hounded away as Catholic missed two shots in the
:finals at II a.m .• followed by of
tiine expired.
final six seconds as Fon Loramie
:Cincinnati Elder (23-4} against
Erin Hall had 23 points, an~ pulled off the one-point upseL
·Toledo St. John's (23-4) for the Mark Ohl bad 12 for Belpre.
"We always seem 10 find a way
:Division Lcrown at 2 p.m.
·
Mueller led Coldwater with 20 to win," said Fon Recovery coach
: Fort Loramie (23-4} then points, including hilling 6 of 8 Dan Hegemier. .,
,:squares off with New Rieg~l (23-3) three-pointers to tie a Division Ill
Ed Maurer, averaging nine
state tournament record.
points a game, Scored that many in
River Valley
. "This is great tolally satisfying the fourth quarter alone as Fort
even though we lost," said Cold- Loramie ato{led for a 51-40 loss
1rack schedule
water coach Jim Niekamp. ''We during the regular season to the
didn't
want to come down here and pall champions.
·
~at~
.
Opponeot(s)
embarrass
ourselves.
And
we
Apnll ............... at Meigs (tri-meet)
~pril6 ... at Federal Hockin~ (quad}
&lt;April10 .................at Oak Hillin vii.
:April13. ..............at FairlllQd (quad)
'l'l.prill5 .........................ar Oak Hill
April24 ....... Federal flocking Invit.
?.pril27 ....................... .at Gallipolis
PLANT #3
KANAUGA, OH.
tday l ...........GAHS, Point Pleasant
UPPER RT. 7, JUST PAST BURLILE OIL
May 6 .., ............................. Wells10n
May II........Eastern, Point Pleasant
tday IS ........ S~OAL m~~t Logan
May 19 ........... 'Toughrilan cootest
!'&gt;fay 20 ......"Toughwoman" cootest ·
Coacbes - Tom Weaver (boys)
and Harvey Brown (girls)
•
• ..,. [ autcK sAVINGS REaATE \

Belpre, Campbell Memorial, New
Riegel, Fort Loramie head to finals

water, Aa., and teamed in doubles
with Katherine Nasser of Chicago.
"I've always. wanted to be No.
1," Osterloh said. ''I'm so ~P.Y
accomplishing my goal this year. •
Matthews said "Being No. I in
both, no one in this ci I)' has ever
done that.
"Ann Grossman (a pro from
Grove Cil)') wasn't as good as Lilia
when she was 14. She couldn't
have done some 'of the things this
girl can do."

·

.

•••

'

Osterloh's courtside skills make
her queen of 14-and-under class.

(25-9) ... X..ucky (29-

r.-ftw:Jalil ••.- •••••- ..51

-

West Regiooal .
Mlchlp•7l

freshman Derrick Battie iJi the fin31 has lived on three-pointers all sea39 seconds to clinch the victory son, made three during a 134 run:
over Vanderbilt, which took only · that ~utlhe Temple lead to 61 -59
one free throw in the game.
·on B1lly McCaffrey's jumper with
Vanderbilt (28-6}, a team that . 32 seconds to play.

Collletlm

WL~Ga

TeaM

turnovers.

plaJ•lS•I•rUY

. C..._N.C.

-· 3), 3:31p..ll!-

ished with 19 points, but made only
six of 21 shots and bad five

Michigan, Indiana and Cincin·
nati are seeking their second
suaight trip to the Final Four.
East ReglooaJ
N. Carolina 80, Arkatias 74
At East Rutherford, N.J.,
Geocge Lynch scored 23 points and
Donald Williams added 22 as
North Carolina reached the final
eighL
Arkansas pulled 10 75-74 on a
three-pointer by Darrell Hawkins
with I :06 left, but Lynch then
made a perfect piss to Wi.lliams for
a layup. Williams sealed the victory by maldng three free throws in
the closing seconds. ·
Lynch scored 10 points as the
Tar Heels rallied from a three·poinl
deficit to take a 68-61 lead with
9:20 left. Eric Monlros$ scored 15
points for Norlh Carolina, while
Robert Shepherd had 13 for
Arkansas (22-9).
Cincinnati 71, Virginia 54
Nick Van Exel, benched briefly
after getting a technical foul and
missing a breakaway layup, came
back and hit two key three-pointers
to lead Cincinnati.
Virpnia (2I-IO) did a good job
handhng Cincinnati's pressure
defense, but still eouldn 't stop the
Bearcats.
. Van Exel, held to a total of I 0
points in his fli'St two tournament
games, sparked a 23-8 Cincinnati
run that broke the game open in the
~ond half. The BearcaJs star fin-

C!

Sunday Times SenUnel Page

,

'

,,

,,

..

�•
Sentinel

wv

Point

~

Reds, Rijo OK·multi-year contract
B JOE KAy

Y
( P)
. PLANT CI!Y • Fla. A ~tcher
Jo~ RiJO agreed ~Y to
51
~ ~ mul~-ycar con.lfi!Cl wtth the
Cmcmnau Reds, ~ng up the
· ~tobecom~ a
agentafter

season.

.

· ·

The agreement ':'! pnnctple ge~
general mana.ger Jtm Bowden o
the hook~ hJS vow to ~one of
the team s four potential free

March

March 28, 1893'.

agents before opening day if he
couldn 'tsign any of them.
Rijo and the Reds are still at
odds over length of the contract
and dollar amount. accordin$ to a
soun:e spem111 on the condibon of
anonymity. Rijo has said he
wouldn't SigD for less lhan $S mil·
lion a year
·.
The right-hander was entering
the final year of a three-year con,

tract paying him $3.5 million.
Rijo, pitcher Tun Belcher, lhird •.•
baseman Chris Sabo and second '·
baseman Bip Roberts wae the four
players eligible for free agenc.&gt;:
after the seiiSQn. B"owden dido t
wanttoloseallfourwilhoutcom- .·
pensation, so he vowed to !lade one ·
of them if there was no contract •·
agreement'
Bowden said today the agree- '
.nent in principle voids the trade , ·

do.
..
.
These postttons, hke sand
dunes, are subject to change at any
~. especially with pitching ~nstderattons to be taken tnto
account

Bowden said.
Rijo and the Reds have been far · .
apart in ne$otialions this Spring. •·
Rljo, 27, wd today he will make
less money by staying lhan by lest· ''·
ing free qcix:y.
·
·.

High ~Pre~cription Costs
. ..

'

-

.

· By T.A. BADGER
NOME, Alaska (AP) - Winter
rules apply in the Bering Sea golf
classic, and they're more complex
than St. Andnew's.
. Anyone whose ball hits a polar
bear ts assessed a three-stroke
penalty - a concession to the
-Endangered Species Act But. if the
player retrieves the ball from the
bear· - atld survives -· five
strokes are subtracted from the
scorecard.
' Stealing a partner's ball is
accepted practice, as is making lots
of noise while someone else is
putting. And no one seems to know
wllat' s an ilnplayable lie when
you're waist-deep 10 a snow drift.
"I don't know if (the touring
pros) could handle the competi·
tion,'' said tournament founder
Elliott Staples. "This is a tough
course to }.'lay. People at Pebble
Beach don t know tough."
She Bering Sea Ice. Classic, a
six-hole, par-42, charity tourna:tnent played ou~ each year on the
snow-covered ice of the frozen
Bering SCJI, was held for the lOth
time Saturday.
' Sixteen fOUI'l!Omes, paying $50 a

.orne Together' Raiders' theme;
ung Angel pitchers need .heat

~Low Pr,Krlptlon Prien
•Free Parking (Video Touch Lot)
•Fall &amp; Friendly Service
•Store Charge Account•
•Free Dellver.Y to Home or Wor~

~

Academy's
schedule

~=

31 ....................:...
1.......................·.•••.81 Fairlarad.
2 ............................at Marietta
s................................Jacbon
6.................. .at Point Pleasant
7 ................................. .A~
8................:..............Well1110n
9 .....................81 River Valley
12 ................................ .Logao
14 ......................... .at Waverly
16 .................at Warren Local
19 .............................. Marietta
21 ...........................81 Jacbon
22 .........................at Wellston
23 ............................at Athens
26 ...................... .River Valley
27 ....................Point Pleasant
28 ............................ .atl.ogao
29 .....................at Portsmouth
4 ................................ .Fairland
coach- Brack Houchens
~!NOTiE; AU gatMS start at 4:30

.

..

.

.
(

•.
'

oJien Wednesday at home against
Warren Local , are scheduled to
ptay their pmes at Memorial Field
10 GallipoliS.
·
..
·
•· The team ...:. Barbie Greene
Cindy Elliott, Mandy Jividen :
Meghan Kolcun and Tiffany Varney are the candidates ,for . the
mound. "They can throw strikes,
l&gt;ut can ther do it with speed?" was
Houchens question that can be
answered in dribblers in the infield
or hard shots to the power alleys,
depending on how hard they work
on their technique. None of them ·
have extensive pitching experience,
1992 GAHS graduate Jo Harmon ruled lhe hill in the last three

'·
!

Mlneravllle, Rudand, Syracuse)

J

'/' t'.s. ...-::: " . .

WITHOfJI' PVITING
A LJD ON V4LUE!

.,.

•

as

Prescription Shop
.

head into a Lions Club's scholarship fund, ventured out in a snowstorm and 20 mph wind to knock
bright orange balls across the snow
ooto lumpy greens made of artificial turf. Coffee cans serve(! as
holes.
.
Some players wore plus-fours
and argyle kneesocks, but the dominant fashion statement was heavy
parkas and fur hats. Snowmobiles
served as golf carts.
There are a few things about
an:tic golf that warm-climate duffers have to get used to, said Staples' brother, Larry, from Makanda, Ill. ''The fairways are a lot softer, but you don't have to replace
your divots," he said.
Lots of balls were lost in the·
deep snow, an incentive for swiping someone else's boll.
"Any f.UY who finishes with a
ball wins, ' summed up former Lt
Gov. Steve McAlpine, who wasn't
quite able to swipe as many as he
lost during his !Qund.
The tournament is pan of a
mooth-long carnival that centers on
the lditarod Trail Sled ))()gRace.
The course, a short wedge shot
from the Iditarod' s finish line, is

Gallia softball peek. ~c:&gt;ntinuedfrom C-4&gt;

•..

(Cheshire, Bradbury,
Middleport, Pomeroy, Ma10n,

~ns.

Wearing the &amp;nnor and handling
the hurlers should be junior Amy
Morris. Kristin _Howell and Marie
Kuhn are chasing her, but one of
ihem may be called on as a backup

,

992-6..9 .
llldiloport, OIH

'·

SPRING
·CLEARANCE

Aliy. group ~r organization
planning to reserve the ·
SHELTER HOUSE at
STAR MILL PARK ·
in Racine should now call
949·2926.
Those who have alrea.-y made
reservations for 1993 should call
to reconfirm their date before
March 31.

.

rio you tee! you lij'e paying too much tor

this

varsity Raiders, who will
their season Tuesday
at Ordnarice Field in Point
as the Lady Knights'
will
their home games
villaae field, which
the railroad line that runs
1tilrl1een Hobson and Gallipolis off
. 554 . The Raider reserves.

..
'

your prescriptions? Then you shOuld be
shopping with us. With the cost of medica·
lions constantly on the riSe, we leellt is
our responslbUtty to offer our
customers even· •dvjllltage p05slble.
You see, we've inade it a potnt to know
when generic equivalents are avauabte. ,
Then, working hand·tn·hand with your
doctor, we till your prescription. exacuv
llS ordered, lll\d you ~ave tn the process.

Ott-Point

Bering Sea linkfest contains rules
on bears, allows theft of golf balls

Gallia baseball preview .&lt;~~tinued._fromC-J) ~ou can put that to bed," •:
• situations
Where they will play remains a
mystery, despite Carter's insistence
that they will play on Memorial
Field. Why?
_
· Does bayou counlry ring a bell?
Carter said he would contact the
University of Rio Grande for use of
its field if Memorial Field remains
unusable. That may mean lhat the
home schedule would change a little or drastically, depending on the
games Dave Oglesby's Redmcn
will play there.
vn:tw GAME TUESDAY ...:... River Valley's
Jennlrer Neal, Maureen Kelley, Tonya J&gt;i'llm·
team wiD p~a,r its rtrit..ever gall!e Tuesmond and Brooke Lieving. Behind them are
He's on tbe bill - The Blue
u the 1uests or Point Pleasant's
coach Sharon Vannoy, Michele Peck, Amy
Devils' strength .seems to lie in
pitching, with one member from
at OrdDBDce Field In Point Pleas·
Gindlesberger, Luciana Scott, Alidrea Hudson,
in front are (L-R) Nk:kie. Meade,
Sally Saunders,. Bethany Rose, Paula Kemper
each class - senior Brian HutJ ,
Beth Salisbury, Alicia Ward,
·and C~e.Petrie. (Times-Sentine,l photo)
junior Chad Barnes, sophomore
Brett Cremeens and freshman Mark
week's Gallia softball openers,&lt;
·
(Moose) Clark - slated for starting duty and two other ·seniorsLarry Howell and Tim Slone providing osh&lt;ln relief.
Behind tire plate sophomores
1ohn Carroll and Dylan Evans he is the son of Rio Grande athletic ·
direCIOr
Clyde Evans and the brothG. SPENCER OSBORNE
coached by former Kyger Creek cited in senior Beth Salisbury in
er
of
Marshall
University women's
Tim,es-Sentitllel Sta"
and Rio Grande multi-sport stand• left, senior Sally Saunders in center
basketball coach Sarah Evans - Bringing out Renee Gilmore (nee Ward), and junior Andrea Hudson in right
are
being chased by freshman Eric
talent {tom Gallia Coon- will play their home j!:&amp;mes on the
The bench will have infielders
northern half in.preparatioo for field behind the old Btdwell School Michele Peck and Cassie Petrie, Humphreys,
At first, Cremeens leads a field
inaugural seiSQn and putting in BidweU on S.R. 554.
outfielders Amy Gindlesberger popuiQted
by sOphomore Chris
a pitching·staff that must
She's pitchlna- "We' ve got . this senior, 'who is making an albCasiO
and
freshman
Casey Canaa new chapter for itself foi- the best 16 we could come up letic comeback after sitting out bas·
day.
Second
base
is
the
objective of
E~~ the graduation of its ace with," said Vannoy of her team, ketball season because of a sore left SQPhomore Ryan Barnes,
freshman
are what Gallia County' s · which plans to have senior and ankle, is playing softball for the
Rick
Perdue
and
junior
Shawn
softball teains will be facing two-year starter Luciana Scou on ftrst time- and Belhanv Rose and
Waugh.
week's season openers.
the mound and a reliable backup in utilitywoman Paula Kempet.
Chad Barnes, fellow -junior
River Valley
GaiDa Academy
junior Alicia Ward, who has seen
:"f'••m•. Together" a song from pitching duty in seasons past
With Larry Carter's trading in \lllike ))()nnally and Clark are the ·
years, has
Working behind the plate will the Blue Angels' helm for that of Ieadin~ candidates for shortstop,
that pays for be junior Maureen Kelley, but the Blue Devil ba~all program, and thtrd base may see ·Howell,
at River Valley this junior Tonya Drummond, who former GAHS baseball coach Slone or sophomore Dave Wright.
The outfii:ld will have seniors
started her varsity ·career wearing Brack Houchens takes the reins of
Rob
Sanders, Hurt, sophomores
'For1mer Kyger Creek mentor armor, is a solid backup.
a program that got to the district
Brandon
Hill and freshman Jason
. ~11'0~ Vannoy, who will talce the
Seniors Brooke Lieving and finals before bowing out to New
Dailey,
Greg
James and Tom Tira,
Valley helm and has coached Jennifer Neal will split time at ftrst Lexington.
of her charges during vol- base, and Drummond is penned in
Gallia Academy softball, like its
l~l~all season, has seen it work
at second. Ward, a veteran at short- baseball counterpl!rt, was hit by ~e
former Bobcats as well as stop, will remain there, and sopho- district-wide budget crunch wtth
mass of former North Gallia more Niclde Meade has third well the deletion of its reserve team for
Ji)lj•,ers on her new team. "We've in hand.
this season. The Angels, who will
had a problem there," she
In the outfield, Vannoy has pen(See SOFTBALL on C-S}

1993

\fneceswy.

t

Gallia Academy ,5
tennis schedule
Date
Op"ponent
March 30 ..........................at Athens
March 3l ............................Marietta
Apill ................................ Jackson
April 2 ......................Point Pleasant
Apri16 ..................................l..ogan
Aprill2 ...............at Vinton County
Aprill3 .......................River Valley
April IS ............................... .Athens
.Aprill6 .........................Chillicotbe
AJwi120 ...........................at Jackson.

Mays ................................~ord

Around the keystone, Kolcun is · May 1 .................~ ......81 ~th
Head -.:11- Jim Osborne
Kave competition there in Elliott
NOTE: All m1tcbes slllrt at
~ Andrea Chevalier. Shortstop 4:30 p.m. ylal otberwile noted
•I •

!!"' front-runner at second and wiU

I

-··

91 BUICK CENTURY

90 HONDA PRELUDE·

·-"""'~·-""· .
~~:.~ . - '12,900

4 door. silver. aufomatft, alf. 6 cyUMer.
WAS

llllw'7995

S8995

91 ·TOYOTA CAMRY

I

4 door. white. auloma!ic. &lt;~ir . AU /FM
W4.S

, 91 BUICK SKYLARK

$11 ,795

AullliNI&lt;. IIir. ~.... 11d. llllri'fldl lritorior
WAS

-'7400

S8995

91 CHEVY CORSICA
4 door. aulomalic. air . while. red interior

WAS

HOw'7900

S8995

Automatic, air, stereo

$6995

-'55oo

WAS

$9995

· ABOUT ·

WALKING.t
Roclcporl' Yoo should be In our shots."

KIPLING

WAS

SHOE CO.

I

Automalic, air, 4 cloor. local trade

$3995

AUTO., AIC,
AIRBAG

Polllt l'leultnt • 175-7170

llllw'8900

WAS
S&amp;-195

-'5000

GET SERIOUS

door . automatic, air, 6 cylinder

87 CHEVY CELEBRITY

'

TILT, CASS.
•LOADED•

91 BUICK CENTURY

Gray. ~

87 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER
Aulomatic. air, maroon

AIR. CROISE

••

89 MAZDA 323
WAS

·1Rockport I

will be decided between Leah
Johnson and Tia Hollinshead-.
Third base mar go·to former~~woman Kellt Hemby, Knsun
Davis, Greene, Spence or Varney.
· Senior Lorri Haoldren will have
one o! ~ outfield slots locked up,
but Jmden an~ any of the oth~r
players not startmg at another po~ -·
~on will tak:e the other two postuons.

: At first, former trackwoman
Misty Coleman willlry her hand, April22 .............................at Lopra
ind at 5-foot-11 her reach should AJwi123 •.•...•....•.•• ~.........Porwoouth
lte helllful if the summer softball A(lri127 ..........................at Malietta
pemmia1 can get the ~lang of fli'St·
...................at River Valley .
6ase footwork. Other contenders Apri129
Apri130 ..............:....Vinton Couuty
tt&gt;r this position are Beth Brown, l\lay 3 ........ -.;......:......... Cl\ilJic;()the .
Stephan'ie Spence and Shelly Walk:- •May 4................................... ~tcrt '

Prices Good
Thru Monday,
March 29th
Only!

laid out amidst the Nome National
Forest (Seasonal) - that's last
year's Christmas trees stuck
upright into the snow and ice.
Nome, built on a beach during a
tum-&lt;&gt;f-the-century gold rush, has
no real trees.
Cardboard animals, including a
bear, wolf, penguin, w.alrus, pig
and giant squirrel, papulate the for- •
est. There is also a fake palm iree ;
and a pinlt flamingo.
After an obligatory visit to the
"clubhouse, " a Front Street
saloon, players tee off from a bluff
overlooking the ftrst three holes. ·
They then make another club·
house visit before ta'ckli!lg the back
three, which take them several hundred yards offshore.
Then it's lime for a restorative
visit to the clubhouse.
Greenskeeper Mark Mahoney
said"he doesn't have much to do to
ki;ep the course in tip-top shape,
"You don't have to mow the
greens that much, and the fairways
talce care of themselves," Mahoney
said as he cleared a green with a
janitor's broom .

-'3200

1989 CHEVY C2500......................................V·8, Air, 4x4, Low Mlles!.............;..•1 0,995.00
1988 BRONCO XLT... ....................................V·8, Auto., Loaded! One 0Wnerl....'8,995.00
1990 F·150 XLT................:................:............. AJC; 4x4, One !)wnerl..................110,995.00
1992 AEROSTAR 4X4...................................Auto., AJC, Loaded!...:...................116,495.00
1992 AEROSTAR XLT...................................Auto., AJC, Loadedi.......................S15,300.00
1989 BRONCO II ....................;....................... XLT, One Owner! Loaded! .............S8t995.00
1990 BRONCO II ............................................XLT, AJC, Power, One Owner!.......S9,495.00
1986 DODGE WAGON.................................V.S,SE Royal, 7 Passenger...~ ...... ..S4,995.00
1991 RANGERSUPERCAB ........................XLT, T~pper,AJC..............................S9,995.00
1992 EAGLE SUMMIT.................................. Auto., Ale, One Owner!...................'7,995.00
1988 CHEVY CORSICA................................V-6, Auto., Air ..................................14,800.00
1989 OLDS CALAIS......................................Quad 4, Auto., Power
..'4,995.00
1990 TEM PO....................................................A/C, Cruise, TIH, Clean!....................15,500.00
1986 CHRYSLER LeBARON GTS ............One Owner, Loaded! Cleanl..........'3,495.00
1988 DODGE SHADOW...............................Auto., AJC, Low Milesl.... :................'3,995.00
1992 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS.......One Owner! Loadedi....................S15,495.00
1991 TAURUS GL..........................................Auto., AJC, Cruise, Loaded!............'9,995.00
1991.CAPRICE CLASSIC............................V-B, Auto., One Ownerl....................'8,995.00
1988 ESCORT WAGON...............................Auto., AJC, Low Mlles!....................'3,995.00
1985 F-350 XLT...............................................Fiat Bed, Diesel, Power!.................'S,995.00
¥ ..................

Oppoaent

=~~ ~?.~.t.~~.~~.:.~~~g~:

2................ .'................. Athens
S .............................. .Eastcm•
6 .............Wellston at Bidwell
. ••
6 ........................... 81 Metgs
7 .............................. .atLogan
9 ................. Gallia Academy•
12 ......':...... ....at Warren Local
13 ............................. Southem
14 ..........................at Marietta
!6.............................. Jackson
19 ............................at Athens
20 ........................... Wahama•

23 ................................. Logan
26 ...........at Gallia Academy•
27 ................................. Meigs
28 ..................... Warren Local
30 .............................. Marietta
! .........Alexander (DH-noon)•
3 ..........................at Wahama•
4........................ Point Pleasant
5............................at 'Southern
7 ............................at Wellston

j

l'
I

1

I

I

,,I

coach - Sharon Vannoy

90 TOYOTA COROLLA

91 BUICK SKYLARK

WAS ·

Automa!ic. aif. sl!rea. ~ cylinder . OOr~ndy
WAS
'

4 door . aulomatic . air. oray
IIOW 1

$7995

6995

••'740Q

S8995

90 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM

Aul""'l&lt;. iii', blo:k tllo!y burp1dy inlefior
WAS
$7495
-

'6400

·.

246-H rard Tracwr
with JW mowin~ deck

BUY NOW AND SAVE
GREEN
ON ATORCrWIIEEL ~

Friday April 2M, 1993 • 9a.m.-3p.m.

• Hurry in while selection. is at its best.
• Thi s Toro• yard tractor features a big 16 HP Toro
Power Plus•• engine with electric start.
• No money down, no payments and no inte.rest for
qualified buyers on Toro·~ Revolving Charge Plan. _
• Ask your dealer for details.

89 BERETTA GT

90 HONDA ACCORD

5 Speed, '16. rtd, one O'lfntr
WAS
$7795 .
'110•

D~, 5 Speed,

'6495

• Free.Blood Pressure Testing from Holzer Clinic
•
• Talk with Maxine Griffith, ,Classic OnesM Director
G
• Find out about ·upcoming Classic OnesM Trips
G
• Refreshments

ail . while

WAS

$9995

-

'8900

TOHO
Haven't youdJne widtoutaToro longeDOl¥dJ?"

91 TOYOTA CAMRY
• !f«&lt;r, aulomilic. maroon, air

BAUM LUMBER
CHESTER

88 SAAB

WAS

$11,795 •

-

'9995

900 Turbo, 2 door . aultm~lic. IIMded~
,WAS

. .....
1.
-.

ATHENS

915·3301
'"For qualified buyers on Thro's Revolvi na Charge Plan .

~~~~~~~JTho~t~oro~C~~~p=~'~~----~
Pri=c"='"~~=u~
l ~~~~=·' ~ka~le~ro~~i~on~
. ------~

16995

91 CHEVY S-10

lalloo Pltk09f, ~ SIIOOCI. V6. IGpper, Ill
WAS
'
1
~
IIIIW

0

8495

•

.~ '
/•_,}'( / \'tJ//1'

CARS

BANK"'DNE.

.

.

111

/1

1 '

·Whatever it takei

',,'t

Bank One,~NA

Member FDIC

'

"

' '.L![ -=-:....:.._---:~=....::_;;:L::;:___::__;:,-.....;__

f

"

.

a~

~

__:,_--:-_

___::___..:..J

244 S. Church
Ripley; WV

DRIVI-A-utnl

SAVE-A-LOT

I

SEE RICK TOLLIVER. TOM MllSTE~n,
GUY SAYRE oR TIGER SAYRE

�/
Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH

P.IIQII C6 SUnday Times Sentinel

Point Pleasant, WV

March 28,1993

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

Outdoors
!d
Congress announces details, guidelines for pleasure vessels

Rio Grande soccer_ team nets ·first tourney championship
· RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio Grande soccer team
emerged from an off -season tournament at Tiffm University with its
fust-ever trophy after knocking off
ah. comers in a full-day
of competi.

'

lion.
Rio Grande Hnished with a 5-0I record for the day, tying in its
opener with Tiffm I 2-2 and then
going on in preliminary action to
beat Ohio Northern 6-0 and Heidel.

TOURNAMENT CHAMPS -Members or
the University of Rio Grande soccer team bold
' aloft the trophy they won as champions of the
~ ,Tiffin University Tournament, in which they

•'
~

'I&lt;.
l

berg 7-2.

.
'
Finishing nrst in that bracket,
theRedmen swept its remaining
games with Bowling Green 5-2:
Tifnn II 2-0; and the Tiffin alumni

2-1 in overtime. The final round
consisted or the winners and runnerups from both divisions in the
preliminary bracket, Coach Scott
Morrissey explained.
While the Redmen have participated in regular season tournaments, the Tiffin event marked the
highest the team has gone in that
kind of competition.
·
'"They played very, very well,"
Morrissey noted. "Wmning the trophy was the highest the team had
ever achieved, and I'm very happy
for them. And. of course, u's nice
to win at Tiffin . I ho.,pe ihatthe
feeling will carry over mto our next
season.
"They played some very good
teams in this tournament, and we
hope .the results are a~ thilt
things are changing," he
.
The Redrnen, who finished 8-11
last fall ,'• have been training
throughout the off-season and have
been spurred by two consecutive
berths in the District 22 playoffs
since 1991. _Last year's entry alSo
marked the first time Rio Grande
eme111ed S-0-1. From left are Sieve Nac, WiDreceived a home field advantage in
ston O'Connor, Michael Bush, Jim Eper, Brent
the postseason.
W~ and Jack Wproiolbiiilews-·ki.·---------Miiiiorrtsiiiiiii.•se.y.,;is~curre;,;,;;;;ntl;;y;.,;;co;;;,m;;:ple;;,;.t·

March 2s; 1993

ing his recruiting for the 1993 cam- scheduled to play in two scrim- ·
paign, which opens Aug. 31 at mages against King and Wilming- 'l:
Marietta. Prior to that, the team is 1011.
&lt;

======

The Recreational Vessel Fee
·'(RVF}, as maQdated by the
.:Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
::Ac.t. has been amended. Legislation
',initiated in both houses of
CoQgress and made part of the
::High Seas Driftnet Fisheries
:Enforcement Act was signed into
.,aw on November 2, 1992. This
;pew legislation limits the number
pf vessels subject to the fee in fls:~al years (FY) 1993 and 1994, and
:~liminates the fee iQ FY 1995.
:1: While the legisilltioQ is entitled
''Repeal of the Recreational Vessel
:Fee," it only amends the purchase
:requirements in FY 1993 and FY
:~994 for phasing out the fee.
:1
Ame_ndments
1 The Recreauonal Vessel Fee as
,amended applies only to recreation:~! vessels, and the fees are to be
,)lssessed as foUows:
•&lt;
FY 1993
::.
Errective Oct. 1, 1992
;:. • B Vessels more than 21 feet.
;but less than 27 feet-$35
;: • C Vessels 27 feet, but less than
;~o feet-$50
, • D Vesseis 40 feet and longer-

AEROBICS

'

'''
~

Get Ready lor those Bilrini's

't

Starting Monday, .March 29
Certified Instructor
Angie Cannofty

~100
•

FY 1994
~·.,.
Erreclive Oct- 1,1993
' • C Ves8els at least 37 feet, but
than 40 feet-$50

••• 6w.,k Session .

)
I

Classes held Mondays and
Wednesdays 6:00 to 7:00 at the
Carleton School.
•

C::OD..JOIN lN t'BB FUM

I

FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 247-4285

'•

'•

SHO

POINT PLEASANT

Sunday Times-Sentinel

• D Vessels at least 40 feet and
longer-$100
FY 1995 -Effective Oct.},
1994, the Recreational Vessel Fee
program ends.
.
Where the ree applies
ThC fee applies only '!I "navigable waters of the United States
where the Coast Guard has a presence." The .c '* of Federal Regulations states that the fee-will apply
in the following Waters:
• Tbe tenitorial seas or the United States.
• Internal waters of the U.S. subject to tidal influence.
· • Internal waters of the U.S.
from which a powered vessel over
1(i feet with a displacement-type
hull can travel to tidal waterS (by
connecting waters, canals, locks,
etc .) during most of the boating
season;
• The following specific waters:
Lake of the Woods (MN), Lake
· Roosevelt (WA), Lake Tahoe (CA.
NV), the Colorado River between
Headgate Rock Dam and Davis
Dam, Lake Havasu and the Parker
Strip (A'/., CA).
Nosudl ree
for these vessels
The following types of vessels
are not subject to the RVF:
• In FY 1993, recreational ves-

sels 21 feet or less in length.
• In FY 1994, recreational vessels less than 37 feet in length .
• Ves.sels that are .owned and
operated by local, state. federal or
foreign governments.
• Coast Guard Auxiliary vessels
bearing a current C)perational
Facility emblem and wreath.
• Vessels that are propelled solely by oars. paddles or poles, such
as rowboals, canoes, kayaks, racing .
shells, rowing sculls. racing
kayaks, jonboats or rafts.
·~Foreign vessels operating in
U.S. waters less than 30 days in
any one calender year, or under a
current U.S. Customs Cruising Per,
mit.
• Vessel tenders or lifeboats
which are used solely for direct
transportation between .the shore
·and the numbered or documented
vesSel to which they belong, and
for no other purpose.
.
• Unpowered barges, houseboats, or floating buildings tllat are
not self-propelled and are normally
used only while tied to a dock,
moored or at anchor.
• Vessels owned or operated
exclusively by recognized nonprofit charitable organizations who
use the vessel primarily for training ,
youth in boanng, seamanship and

PHONE 675-7170

,•
I

'- • RACERS SIGN AUfOGRAPHS -RadDe resldmt Scott Wolfe,
oae of nearly 20 area auto racers on band to sign autographs at the
~niversity Mall in Athens Friday nlgbt, Is shown with a happy Jes~ica Smith or Racine who has received an autoaraphed picture.
:Wotre, a teacher and coach at Eastera Hip School, bas again joiDed
fprces with the local McDonald's ~unntll in Gallipolis and HenClerson, W.Va. Other spoD!IOrs on the car are Predsloa Automotive
Jb Darwin, O'Brien Produce, Larry and DoUy Wolfe, Wolfe and
~s-:ia.tes Accounting, Shain EnaiDeeriDI, Eber's Citgo, Wolfe's
Shop, Mark's Auto Sales ill Middleport, D&amp;M Pizza, C&amp;M
Jf(ltor·s, Anderson's Home F~raishiags, Baum Lumber and A&amp;A
Rental ofRaveaswood, W.Va. The can remained on display at
Mall until Saturday.

BOWHUNTING WINNERS ...... Winner's Iii'
the Chester Bowhunters Archery Indoor L~gue
ror this year were (L-R) first-place team ·mem-

AKRON, Ohio (AP) _ T•.,..,.;ng
bats as ugly, mean, and ~epre-;;ta.
live of the darker side of. people's
fears is not fair.
At least that is the opinion of
Denis Case. a wildlife biologist
with the Ohio Division of Wildlife
who classifies bats among the most .

.us

••
•

..•,.

~

:,'.
•
•'
•'

••
••~

"

j

f:

'•
:~

••'

.r

(614) 992-6402 or 1·8Q0.552·1990

24FT.
ABOVE
GROUND
POOL

4-llls. 115.99 16-llts. 141.99
l·llls. 121.75 25-lk 164.99

We've
5, .
to help you finance your business.
·You -can.discuss it with any 1
of our commercial lending officers.
•

How many reasons do you need?. .

~

~

tj

~

~

'

INSTALLED

..

•

s199S 00

--------'

,

M.UIITU

ATIIPft

IILPII

LOWILL

KltiLIPOlf

NIUOnJLLI

Til U .U IU

TDI ONLY

373-31"

~93-7761

•u-1~16

e96-a369

99:1-6661

1IJ-19U

797-4547

!76-711!

.

f

'

Sports briefs
Swimming
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
Olympic silver medalist Greg
llurgess .of Florida set American
and NCAA records for the second
straight night, winning the 400yard individual medley at the 70th
NCAA swimming and diving
championships.
Burgess won the medley in 3
minutes, 41.54 seconds to lower
the mark of 3:42.23 set by David
Wharton of Southern Cal.
Top-ranked Stanford heads into
the final events with 385 points.
Michigan was second at254, Texas
third at 246, and Arizona fourth at
180.
Other individual champions
included Arizona's Seth Pepper in
the 100 bunerfly in 46.51; Josh
Davis of Texas in the 200 freestyle
in 1:34.25; Tyler Mayfield of Stanford in the 100 breaststroke in
53.07; Derek Weatherford of Stanford in the 100 backstroke in 47.10,
and Dean Panaro of Miami on the
3-meter board.

"1 , ·1

be assessed a civil penalty not tp :
exceed $5,000. Generally, penaltieit'
have been as~essed at two to fow
times the face value or the decal. •
Enforcement policy
:•
The amendments to the RVF d(i:
not affect the U.S. Coast Guard'(
enforcemeill of compliance mea•

•

sores .

Refunds
.Boat owners who purchase(~;
RVF decals on or after Oct 1,1992:
and have boats that are no longer
required 10 display decals will be
eligible for full refunds and will be
automatically notified by mail.
For more information
Questions not answered by the
information in this document
should be referred to the Boating
Safety Hotline 1-800-368-5647.

Some homes try to separati:

you from the envirorunenC:.
Our homes make you a :
part of it
· ::

Tennis
HOUSTON (AP) - Top-seeded Gabriela Sabatini breezed past
Italy's Sandra Cecchini 6-2, 6-1 in
the quarterfinals of the $375,000
Virginia Slims of Houston.
No. 3 Conchita Martinez beat
Patricia Tarabini of Argentina 6-~.
6-2, fourth-seeded Jana Novotna
stopped Radka Zrubakova 6-3, 7-5,
and unseeded Sabine Hack toWed ·
Tatiana lgnatieva of Russia 6-0, 6-

...

-

Gall today ror moreln(ormalloai;~:

••

Jtpp

~Qurea, ;; .

C5

Inc. .
More choicts .....U for betur living.

. P.O. BOX 614
RIPLEY, WV. 25271
1-800-458-9990

3.

,l

NEW

'·'

12 Volt or 9.6 Volt

·•

MAKITA .
DRIVER· DRILL

'

•

l

'

Keyless Chuck
o6 Torque Setting

"They aren'(like that at all,"
-Bats are mammals, giving
fascinating creatures he has stud•Variable Speed with 2
Case
said,
stressing
the
placid
perbirth
to live pups and feeding them
led.
Gear Range
"lreallyenjoythem," he said. . sonality of hats over the imagined milk.
.Convenient Carrying
-Bats are covered with hair
Case said he is tired of all the aggressive nature of the bird-like
beast.
and
their
"wings"
are
in
fact
membat bashing. Bats aren't mean and
Case
Case said that bats are extraordi- brane-covered hands.
aggressive and they don't go
-Bats are really poor fliers.
around looking for someone's hair nary animals that live up to 20
years
and
produce
only
one
or
two
They
use a highly developed sonarto use as a landing field. he said.
offspring annually.
type system to locate insects in the
"That's totally out of the ordi- dark.
nary for such a small animal," he
-Most bais migrate south for
Comes With 12 Volt Battery
said.
the winter or hibernate in underOne group of bat protectors, Bat · ground caves or structw'CS.
Conservation
International, does a
-They don't swoop at a person
so that developing root systems
lot
for
bats.
It
encourages
people
to
but
often are simply losing altitude
will help anchor stream-bank soil. ·
be
more
appreciative
of
them
and
and
appear to be droppirig toward
This is as a key factor in providing
there
are
plans
available
for
buildsomeone.
long-term stream-bank erosion
-Bats can carry rabies and
ing bat houses. small wooden
control.
17 COURT ST.
h9xes
designed
to
attract
a
resident
other
diseases and should not be
"What the Division of Wildlife
446·2374
handled.
hopes to do is to develop several · population of bats.
A ~mon bat, like those foimd
more or these demonstration areas
in other parts of the state to show · around your yard, can eat up' to
how an alternative low·-impact 3.000 insects every night.
"Those figures come from tests .
method for stream-bank soil eroCut The Hype! Here's The Way It Is!
sion control can be achieved." said which represent optimum condi1983 VW RABBIT, white, 2 door, air, AWFM, cloth interior, (Reduced) .............................. ..
tions, like putting bats in encloMaloney.
The eventual reduction of sures where there lire swarms of
1983 FORD THUNDERBIRD, while, VS, air, A~M. tu-tone, (Reduced) ............ ..................
stream-bank erosion and agricukur- insects to catch and eat," he said.
19M CHRYSLER LASER, black,air, leather interior, sport wheels, loaded .......................... ..
"Bats don't specialize in
. al runoff is seen as a step in helping
1986 CHEVY NOVA. red, 4 door, air, new tires, 5 speed, cloth interior........ ...........................
to promote wildlife diversity and mosquitoes. They eat moths and
flying
insects
as
well,"
Case
other
protect vital aquatic habitat.
1985 FORD EXP., black, autQmatic, AM/FM, low miles, cuslom wheels ............................... ..
The Mad River is Ohio's only said.
1987 NISSAN SEHTRA SE, black, 2 door, 5 speed, air, sunroof, I~?C&amp;I owner........................
Here are some other bat facts
inland trout stream which receives
from
Case:
annual releases or brown trout by
1987 FORD ESCORT GT, black, air, 5 speed, custom wheels, sport slripes ..........................
-Ohio is home to mostly little
the wildlife agency.
t989 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE, white, 2 door, air, AWFM, one owner, (~ ................
brown, big biown and red bats."
t985 CHEVY CAMARO RX, bronze, VS, aulomatic,low miles, raly wheels, (RecM:ed) .......
1986 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88, blue, 2 door, VG, autxnatic, AWFM, one owner ................ .
'
.
1986lORD TAURUS WAGON, gray, V6, aulomatic, AMIFM, low m~es. local owner............
1987 FORD MUST.4NG Convertible, brown, 4 cylinder, 5 speed, air, oow tires, one owner
1987 MERCURY TOPAZ GS; black, 4door, automatic, air, AINFM cassette ........ ................ .
1985 MAZDA RX7, white, 5 speed, sport wheels, custom wheels, lOaded.............................

.'

"

•

DOW researching alternative
method of stream-bank erosion

•

••
,.••'
•'v

gated the responsibility of implementing and en(oreing the amended RVF law. Public information
programs through various communication means are underway to
·create awareness of the amended
law among recreational boaters.
These programs include special
news releases and targeted information packages for government,
private and association distribution.
Noncompliance penalties
By statute, those who are
required to display RVF decals and
are cited for noncompliance may

BatS not as mean, aggressive as most believe them to behave

Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2

253 W. MAIN ST.,' POMEROY
(614) 892·5724
CALL 1-800.552·1990
FULL SERVICE POOL OPENINGS
' CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT

bers Jolfli Youn,, Damtiy Glaeen, Lpn Young
and Larry Holsanger and second-place team
members Debbie SidweU and Buddy SidweU.

skills:

navigation
• Vessels owned or cperated by
volunteer fue, departments. rescue
squad units, or similar organizations. and used for public safety
purposes.
• Passenger-carrying vessels,
research vessels, public vessels and
commercial vessels. .
Proof of payment
To be in compliance, all vessels
subject to the RVF must display a
pair of RVF decals securely
attached within six inches of the
locatio11 of the vessel registration
or identification number. For vessels not required to display a vessel
number. the decals should be
attached where such a number
would be located if required. Documented vessels may place the
decals on any visible surface on the
forward half of the vessel.
Dec!ll description
The RVF decal is square in
shape with a large letter B, Cor D
printed in the center to designate
the size classification. The color of
the decal designates its calendar
year validity. The decals for 1993
are blue, and for 1994 they will be
international orange. A green decal
with the letter E printed in the center is also available for veSsels that
are considered exempt from the
RVFlaw.
. Decal purchase options
The owner or operator of each vessel subject to the RVF must purchase a pair of RVF decals each
year, good for one calendar year,
using one of the following options:
• Write-in: Submit payment by
check, money order, Visa or Mas. terCard with a completed· decal
request form. A pair of decals will
be received within two weeks after
receipt' of your payment. Decal
·request forms are available at most
Coast Guard s.hore llnits, or may be
obtained by calling toU-free 1-800848,2100.
.
• Phone-in: Payment may be
made by Visa or MasterCard by
calhng toll,free 1-800-848-2100.
Allow up io two weeks for delivery. Many deliveries are, made in
five working days.
• Overnight Mail: If an individual would like overnight delivery of
decals, this service is a vailab)e
Monday through Friday 9:00 AM 5:00 PM Central Standard Time by
calling toll free 1-800-678-2715
and paying an additional $13.95 by
·MasleiCard or Visa.
Enforcement
awareness programs
The Coast Guard has been .dele-

'

'

By JOHN WISSE
Divisioa or Wildlire
URBANA, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Division of Wildlife is developing a demonstration area along
the Mad River. four miles southwest of this Champaign County
town, that would feature an alternate method of controlling streambank erosion.
Wildlife personnel have completed about half of the project.
which began earlier this month
with the help of the Ohio Division
of Forestry, Ohio Division of Parks
and Recreation &amp;l)d the Soil Conservation Service.
The project aims at correcting ,
severe stream-bank erosion along a.
stretch of the Mad River, east of
the State Route ·55 bridge, and just
north of the c;:edar .Bog State
Nature PreServe.
The project also will show other
· government 'agencies, conservation
clubs and landowners a method for
controlling stream-bank erosion
other than the pl~~Cement of concrete walls or riprap shoreline
.
structure.
"Stream-bank erosion is a significant problem in many water- .
sheds in Ohio . .This is something
that bas occurred for many thousands of years and though it is a
natural process, Ibis type of erosion
has been accelerated by develo~­
ment, urbanization and changes m
agricultural practices,' • said Doug
Maloner, the Division of
Wildlife s southwest Ohio district
fish management supervisor.
Workers have been challengell
by late winter stream flooding to
reshape the Mad River stream bank
at the project site. .
·
Once the stream bank has been
coolOilled. workers will anchor red
cedar treeS removed from the Cae·
sar Creek State Park in Warren
County to the base of the stream
banlt to help llow the ·erosion process. Next, willow posts will be
placed !Jiong the stream bank above·
the Wlllerline using heavy conslnlCtion equlpmenL
Finally, ~e seedlings will be
planted alon' the."!!' of the s~ .
bank where It adJOIDS pasture land

.,

' I
'

I
I

C,entral·Supply Co. ~ ::
GALLIPOLIS, OH. :' 1.,

TRUCKS- VANS

.

1888 FORD RANGER, long bed, red, automatic, V6, one owner, air, low miles, (Reduced) ..
· 1989 CHEVY &amp;-10, Tahoe, blue/silver, long bed, V6, fiberglass topper, rally wheels, (Reduced)
1987 FORD BRONCO R, red, automatic, V6, 4x4, sport wheels, XLT Pkg., loaded ...............
1987 DODGE CARAVAN SE, blue, automatic, air, AWFM running boards, 7 passeriger......
t989 FORD PICKUP, gray, 6 cylinder, AMIFM, power steering &amp; brakes, 5 speed ................ .
t887 GIIC SIERRA, Classic 4x4, black, VS, new tiras, air,AINFM, (Reduced) .....................
11182 FORD CONVERSION VAN, tan, VB, automatic, air, captain chairs, nice ...................... .
1879 FORD CONVERSION VAN, brov«l, VB, aulomltic, air, local owner..............................
1eTT FORD F250 PICKUP, brown, low miles,~ owner. Reese hitch, fiberglass topper .....
1983 CHEVY &amp;-10, 4x4 Pickup, black, long bed. V6, automatic, just traded in .................... ..

.

The Shoe Cafe
LAFAYETrE MALL

GALUPOUS, OH.

MU'k~a,Satea

'P_.,allgurod 111111\ $, ..ooo

· Dua Baldwin, OWner

Air Force Max:·

'

-.,_,or !lidO, pluo IU &amp; tllo.

:.

·"Ducover The Difference"
1 South Pialns Road
Corner of Rt. 682 &amp; Johnson Rd.

797-4731
'

'·

�•

'
Page C8 Sundlly lTmsa SeaUnel

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

March 28,1993

Farnllllusiness

Texas Tech's Swoopes named NEA's top female col~ege eager· ·
By GEORGE ROBINSON
·
NEW YORK (NEA)- Even
ber name evokes basketball
prowess. She swoops 10 the boop.
But Sheryl Swoopcs offers a lot
more than Just a great sports name.
The Texas Tech forward can drive,
score and defend like ademoa. ·
Swoopcs, a 6-foot. senior. led
the Red Raiders 10 the Top 10 in
women's college basketball this
seas~. Now her slashing style and
shooung eye have earned her the
title .of Playa of the Year for 1993.
She leads the fifth annual AUAmerica women's college basketb:lll tem:n an~ by Newspaper
En~ Assoc1111011.
ln praase of Swoopes. CBS-TV
basketball analyst Anne Meyers

says: " She' s very quick. She can panel of experu. including coaches shoot the jumper, but she's also numbers like last year, but s~e·s
stop 1111 a dime and get a jump shot from leading women's teams. The physical underneath- plays good · such .a hard worker. She's a conoff. She's got a great jump shot and results Wel"C syndicated by NEA 10 defense. She does a Jot for Ten- summa!C team player. She never
a dribble-drive to the basket. · more than 600 U.S. daily newspa- nessee, and she's kind of taken complai'!s• she never changes her
Inside, outside - offensively, she pel"S.
·
over th~ .leadership role."
expressiOn , ~ou do~ 't ~ee too
does a lot of things. And she's a
Rene Pol'\land of Penn State was
Wh•tmg knows about leader- many play= Iilce her m e•ther the
good rebounder too."
chosen as the 1993 NEA Coaeh of ship, too. She was also an NEA men's or women's game today.''
He~e is the ~~ of NEA's' l993 the Year.
flfSt-leam All-American last year.
Vukadinovic, who is from Bel.All-America women's basketball
Nobody expected the Lady and one of the keys 10 Stanfqrd's grade, Yugoslavia, is an outstandream:
Lions to contend after all their 1992 NCAA dtle.
ing point guard and a deadly threeCenter Val Whiting, a fi,foot-2 starters graduated last spring. But · "Val hasn't shined like she did point shooter.. She's as bard to SlOp
senior at Stanford;
Ponland rebuilt quicker than any· last year because she's.~ oiple- as ha !'311le •s to pronoun~. (It's
Fonwni Usa Harrison a 6-foot- one could have foreseen, leading and quadruple-teamed, says Mey- Mll..L-aiS-b Voo-ka-DIN-o-vtts,
2 senior at Tennessee:
ha new squad to a 22-5 record dur- ers. ·She may not have put up the way.) She came 10 the
Guard MilicaVukadinovic, a 6- ing the regular seasog.
fOOl,- I senior at California;
"She graduated so many peo·
Guard Sonja Tate, a 5-foot-6 pie, including an All-America in
senior at Arkansas State.
Susan Robinson, and they were
The 1993 women's college bas- going into a new conference,"
kethall selections we~e made by a Meyers notes, referring to Penn
State's inaugural season in the
highly competitive Big Ten.
"It's lOugh to adjust to an Ohio
!ilatc o~ an Iowa or Purdue," says
Myers. "Especially when your
team is very young. It spealcs a lot
lilm, but it bas dlllwo intqest from
for
her that her playel"S had the conthe Atlantic 10. Metro and Mis- fidence
10 make the adjustmeniS."
souri Valley conferences.
_
Loaded up whh •peclal
The
NEA All-America
A COIIIIJiilme of univmity offi- women's1993
equipment
cials will research the practicality . includes: basketball second team
of constructing a new arena and
Center Heidi Gillingham of
enminc an;hitcctural studies.
Vanderbilt,
a 6-foot-10 junior: for"This doesn 'I mean three ward Lisa Lealieof
Southern Cal, a
months from now a deCision will 6-foot-S junior; forward Lauretla
be made on wbether we will or will Freeman of Auburn. a 6-foot-1
not build an arena." Fogelson said. semor: guard Niesa Johnson of
"We're kind of putting down a Alabama, a 5-foot-9 sophomore;
wish lisL It will go on through the and guard Molly Goodenbour of
aammer IIIII the next sebool year. Stanford, a 5-foot-6 senior.
"Wbal arc the implications if .we
Meyers, who was a four-ye·ar
had an arena? That's our starting star at UCLA (1975· 78), notes that
See Herb SIDith or Vernon
poin.L··
H81"rison, the other forward on
Xavier must determine how · NEA 's first-team, is known for
much money is needed for an arena power on the boafd5:
and bow the money can be raised. .
"She is a strong player. She can
135 PINE STREET
446-2532

Xavier University looking to get
its own home for basketball
CINCINNATI (AP)- It's been
more than two years siDce Xavia
UniVefSity basketball coach Pete
Gillen began 10 dream that bis tam
might someday have the home
coon advantage.
.
For the last 10 seasons, the
Muskereets have played their bome
games away from home- allbe
43-year-old. off-aunpus CincinDMi
Gardens. Gillen has said olit:n lbat
his team needs an arena 10 be tlllllpetitive.
Now it looks like the Wlivc:nity •s executi-e COIIIIIIiur:e is fioally
beginning a ~wdy that will dererminc if an arena at the university is
feasible. The committee produced
an 18-page blueprint rcpon last
month.
"Ova the next seveni IDOIIIbs,

States in August 1991, and thereaf~ began her first season at Californaa.
.
.
"She's like a Magtc.Johnson,
~use of her s~e," Meyer&gt; says.
I ve seen her bnng Cal back from
a certain loss 10 a win. Last year,
against Stanford, Cal was down by
14 points arid she scored 12 to
bring the!R baclc, Only a block by
Yal Whiting stopped ha fm'!l beatIDg them. She seiS Jll&lt;Ople up well,
not only from the til~ of.!l'e key.
but also from the baseline.
•

DElilA 80WLAND
COLUMBUS - Tlae "Uaemplo)
O«'JCC..• Tlae tide coa-

Tlll1 is wby it is 10 imponaat do the job the employer wants nearly 3,000 employees has comfor the Oltio Bureau of Bmplqy- done. At the same time we must pleted or will soon complete a cusJDall S«nicea 10 be more ?bin Jult help workers having a difficult tomer service uainlng program.
·~ .., - JIRilT 11 r. . . tbc "UDemppoymeDt
Office.· GcJV... time finding work get the training Most of our workers already were
v
v...:-.
.:-.1. ..____..... u
and ot11er aasiatanee they need 10 committed to helping ~ wbo
. . . .U. E c - laudaliJp. --.op . • UIIIU•.... ~ ......,
, that
hobao:t1Mc, o:opcaailc bw t - cJc., that tbe eecmomac fulare of become a valuable asset for 10me come 50 our office, but
.
It's 111111a . ..... l.Giial·a Ollio Rill oo developina and mak- employer.
attitude of serving people has
That has always been the core of become the corners10ne of all of
~ llJ18 dl: ••law -'liis in&amp; lbe belt - ol oar n~mbcr one
the OBES missaon. But over the our policies and management deci...a, iato a ••-it plri1. lllbllll ~our worlrrn.
Aflli;.-ewe.-ID..._Ipat
Few Ohl() Inclusuy ro compete · years our off'aces began to be per- sions as well.
One of the most obvious places
~of a. ....... - .... we dlecliwely in the world mama we ceived u just a place wheae laid·
d4.for a
dl: 1aa of a jab mull put our people 10 work in off WOJbn go 10 collect 8D unem- where people will see the changes
...
... of d
bi&amp;b pafOIDIUIIle worllplaces. Our ployment cbeclc, not a place where involved in our new approach to
-Bwa • t •
J esisls 10 ,b · 111 aced hiab qnal" work- you can begin building a new doing business is at our new "Cushelp duriq dli• ~ tillle, il is en with basic skillJ. Our ales are future. We needed to tearil the les- tomer Service Centers. These are
-~~ to 4iad IC Auc IIIII ~ full of bigb quality workers, son that private indust,ry learned new kinds of OBES offices that
lie fcdiQ&amp; .., be simk to the aJibou&amp;h lack the basic sldlls long ago: customer service is of will in .the next few years replace
all 76 of our existing offices. Late
dl&gt;aJbt.of~., diJ: 61 • " ' - ~yas - .lnoting for. Our Job
du-ough last rear we converted our offices
~ 1110111dp ,.r about anything IS clear. matcb employers Iooldng
·10be wwbaeelae.
for wtllb:ts with OhilliKIS who can massive changes. Every one of our in Tiffin, Mariella and Xenia iniO

~~~·going

Come Look-

Prlce(IS,ye

•eat.

...

Harvey

BJ CONNIE W1DTE
GaliaS&amp;Wm

. GAlLIPOLIS - Emphasizing
. ~ the tpealeSI. influence oo the
e8VU(MM!I&lt;W COllieS f'rom iadividuall clciiag ordiowy, thoagiMhJ tatb
~ their acia'•..lioods, the Gam.
Soil llld War Oi
wllioa Dis-ub is I I+ I o•4P« iadiWiOJIIs !IJid
lcpl vhoql. dlun:la - '*P' +
tiel! lailk:a.s Ml jam die llllioawida

ze

o6servaacc of Soil and Water
s-•ddlip weet., April 25-May

2.*:

· Your coaservatioo district,

~ wurts lbnJu&amp;bout the years
on soil aad .water conservation
m'. Gs. is IXowidm&amp; rapJI'P"biii-

tr.:aocl care for ubnl-laoun:es.

.ffe ~ SWCD i s - of -'Y
300 COJISClWiioa dislrias llllioawide dlat -u wid! tbe Notiooll
Aqooa«ioa of c-.ruioo DisIritis to - - · tbe wise usc of
omnl ILSIII.WU:S IIMIIICb the auualweel:Joagobic:niBlL
Tile ~ SWCD will be pre.seated ac:bYJty ~ ~ aU F"IISl
Glade s!J!'"'•saa &lt;!,~ COilDly
al~l w1tli '"'?'"-- rten ~
P
s. lafomaMI(In wiD be~' able at tbe B~~ We•o~•al
.~
-:ct a~ s IIOiy liDJC
11 ~P.
.
. 'Aim~
distiiuiiii m iaols., the local cllaatbes

piSt.--=

~~~~ theUMily. We~asts « •ep •
~

t~!r church 10 coalact Coaa~
Wlli.te ro make ~aemeats 10
n:ceavc tile~ and sbe can
lctJOII whaiiS 8¥1iJah!e
~ul Dunc;u•.~ of the
~ SWCD. ~ ~bopc:s S~-

Lyne Center slate

=: :. .n:.,. ,.•'::' ==
v"'aal cooservllioa acti~ tllat
1JYC.
·;
- - 18 ·~
•.
·, ~
..;:, tbe ·-- . _._icb tbey .

Money
Ideas
•

,,

. ·lnaea••ec·a-"'"

~~~~

'

'fnlm

...

tile....

'*P--ik

10 )lie ::19

1
bit
Qf.doeltbcleCICill
raJlr-'r:lbeeod
or.~ is ilmady• ialwupi&amp;aof,
the blo-wiab uaatdiia dial fol.
lfted the - Octobcr-JCIM•y ad-?
v Alllloi.P wo1ame ..ay pelb
.litiqiil six - ... lacfJR dl: fiatll
llull'-b:tpeltaallle-,jor-..... tbelriidtilietllldltobe.....
willa . _ .. • 1 il
.., · d
bY --. " •te p:,ice •
tbllis-CWJcadJdl:ca&amp;
IIIJjla- a
r ._ ade
~ U
f ( - MJ two jliH 0
ll(iQf PDJ • dalilc dl: ... -

·o~c~ ·w

SAVE SOc ·

Mr. Relailer.
Tnil coupon will be rtdeemlcl bV
~r Pepsl·CoiiMieamln. You will

.

rectlYe ~ fact value plut 1M for
handling in ICCOfdlnCe ,will 0\lf
consumer offer,Con1umer mull PlY
any dapolit••ndlor . . . 111 In·
'IOfYid. Invoices prOYinQ; purdlue,
60 dlyl priOf to aubmi111on of auffi·

w._n you buy two 12-packs,
one 20-pack or one 24-pack
of Diet Pepsi or
Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi

Citnl IIOCk 10 Covet COUpontiUb·
mined must bttnown uPQfl rtqUtll
Clth vetue 1120 of 1c. Olflr weld
where prohitqdOf lietnM rtQUlNd.
Offer Yllid in . , . Wtic«&lt; by ..
~ Cola Bo~;"'l Co. of l'ono·

DIET PEPSI AND CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI are registereolrademarks o1 PepsiCo. Inc. NutraSweeland
llle NutraS- symbclare registered lrademart&lt;s ol The NulraSweet Company tor its brand olaw-ing
ing!edieut It
· •t
TS328!13

L

SII.ESOc

r - - -- - - - - - - I
I
I
I
I

L

mouth and Athena. Ohio.

I

.··"·_. . -

EXPIIIATIOH DATI: 4/10/U

I

~~~-~~-Wl~r_;~;~~§~T

-~--

... _,,
Tl\is coupon w111 be rtOiti'IIICI br

M'"' '. '"'

''" Pot&gt;t&gt;·Col• ,.,.,,,., You oiU

rocoivolhe '"' """ ""'' 11 tar

Wh en you b uy two 2• L't
I er bott1es
or any muIt'i·pac k o f

handl"v '" occord!nco .., .,.
con1umer ofttr.Conaumer mutt Plf
111
ondlor ¥01'11&lt;11- IW&lt;i¥1"11 -

"""'*'

~:0,~~::"0::!"::

.,;..,. ....,.,.......... _
.., · ;:.;,::.:...~&lt;&gt;:,::

Crystal Pepsi or Diet Crystal Pepsi

CRYSTAL PfPSI AND DIET CRYSTAL PEPSI are regllleledlrademarks of Pep~Co. Inc. NutraSweet
~oo':~--sym bot are reglstereolrade,.rks ol Tne NulraSweet Company lor Itt brand o1
1
ng ""'~' It• ' ·I
TS 32893
.
.

01tor YOiid ;n _ , bJ 111o
P..,. Coli llotlt;~. "' -

moulllllld A·
IDIPIIIATIDII DATI: 41101 M

~-------------------t

I

Potash use ;
helps cut
crop risk
..
'I

'l

Farm Flashes

FolloW-up grazing seminar set AprillO

11

-

CJ!C

~:O«
Clll'Ulifq wle-bas
ia -

articles. from T-ball 10 the majors, :
• and
ell
as w as otha spnng
summer
sports. is the day of the last game
of the World Series. The deadline
for phoiOs
related
articles
for ·
football
andand
other
fall sporiS
is the
Saturday before the Supa Bowl.
These deadlines have been instituted 10 give readers plenty ot time
to get their phoiOs back from the
pho10graphy studio of cboice and
10 give the staffs the opponunity to
publish these sports photos and
articles during the appropriate aea-

s.. E•

ill &gt;)~iiWdll•t

Sports deadlines posted

~:if~~~~~~~~~~~:!~:,t:;~~laa:

Tcfrtmjnt Faa.

Cab a 2 '1iJ

receiving service. Perhaps mosl ,
imponant, each customer service .
center offm not only services from
OBES, but also from any other •
agency that an unemployed or :
underemployed individual might ·
need. That can include such things .
as job training, adult education, 1
vocational rehabilitation, registratioo for food Sllllllps or other public •
assistance and a whole range of
other services. The organizations '
providing these services have •
office space within the Cus10mcr •
Service Center and coonlinare their .
programs with tho.se offered by •
OBBS.
·
A fowth 'CusiOmcr Service Center will open this summer in Can- ,.
too and 10 more will be in opera- ·
tioo by the end of this year or early • ,
.,
(Coatiaued oa D-1)

'
By PATIY DYER
"The fact that you may now run
GaUiaS&amp;WCD
less water 10 brush your teeth is
GALLIPOLIS
- Potassium is '
just as important to our environthe
"efficiency
expert"
of plant "
ment as a builder installing sedinutrients.
It
improves
the
plant's ..c
ment control basins in a major
abilitv to use water, niuogen and
urbln development. Both require
other nutrients and inputs necessary "'
individual actaon.. ,both make a iliffor crop production. The reason is .;,
ference," said Duncan.
potassium's
role in the plant,'that •.
So, materials designed with the
tncludes
assisting
in more thaa 60 ·
1993 theme, "Hands of Healing,"
processes,
some
of
which are lisled ' '
arc being distribull:d by the Gallia
here:
(I)
helps
the
plant fight off ''
SWCD and may be obtained by
diseases,
(2)
improves
winter bar- "
calling or visiting the disaict offace
diness,
(3)
increases
protein
syn- ~I
durillg business hours at 111 Jackand Sblrley Adkins, manager and stylist LisSa
.
NEW
SALON
OPENS
Lissa's
River
View
thesis
and
(4)
reduces
water
loss "·
son Pike, Suite JS69, (nextiO the
Adkins and stylist Pal Stacy. (Times-Sentinel
Salon
of
Beauty,
located
on
480
S.R.
7
iD Kanaia(roni the leaves. Adequate potassifairgrounds) 446-8687.
·photo)
ga, bas scbeduled its IJ'and opening for Tuesday
um; nutrition improves both the ·' '
at 8:30 a.m. From left to rlgbt are owners Glenn
yield and quality of seed, fruit and ~~
forage.
•
Profitable farming practices :·•
include measures that reduce risk.
.Obviously, climate is one of the "·
grcatest risks farmers face. Often, t
'
manager Frank Bauman at 513L for the contestants.
Meigs County cai1 992-6696.
we describe a ¥rowing sea.Son as ""'
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
544-3414.
being either 'good" or "bad," ,r •
In anotha big surprise, the local according 10 whether it was one of. l~
::"~o::e~t
The "Ohio's Outstanding Centu~
GALLIPOLIS_. A follow-up ry Fa!'lll Award" program is curCongratulations to all the youth cattlemen •s organization won cattle '"low stress" or "high stress."
handling
equipment
valued
at
Management
strategies
which
·"
seminar 10 a successful grazing renUy seeking nominati0115 for this in the area that ~ipated in Ohio
$1,200
for
their
memberaround
help
minimize
risk
are
a
critical
'
'
seminar held last November is selection. The property must be Beef Expo Judgtnf Con~L
ship
efforts
this
year.
This
was
component of the farm's manage- ••
. scbeduled for Saturday, April 10 · owned by an illdiv•dual or memDesp1te a lot o bad weather, 16
from 9 .,DL 10 110011 11 the Univer- bel"s of the ori8illa! family for more Gallia County"youth panicipated. much ilii: lellllt of the Jiui. 13 nieel=-· ment program. That's why adeing held here to promote OCA quate and balanced fertility is ~·
. sity of Rio Grande in Wood Hall.
than 100 years. For the-purpose of The contest was so large that the
membership.
Joe Foster was on essential to maintaining top pro- •::
The program will feature Dr. the program. the "farm" ·must cur- system 10 get t11e resuiiS out broke
hand
at
the
banquet
Friday and duction capability. Potassium, by .
.lid~ Animal Scierace Profes- rcntly generate $1,000 in agricul- down and we still don't have aU of
officially
accepted
the
award. Jim promoting the activities of the '"
D' Emaiws, ~a);ipg 011 "Potcotural income per year. I have a the individual resuiiS. In the senior
Baughman,
Gallia
County
Cattle- other nutrieiliS, provides the "effi- .•:
tial for Jncrcasang Livestock Pro- copy of the application. Call if division some 97 teams otilicipatmen's
'president,
most
of
the
direc- ciency" which reduces stress and :~
dartilliJ with~ in Southeastinterested. Deadline for applica• ed. The two River Valley FFA
IOrs
and
a
large
GaUia
Cwnty
dele- improves profitability.
'd.
em Ohio"· DarYl Clark "Under- lions is April30.
teams placed 25th and 33rd.
gation
were
on
hand
Saturday
for a
Ohio State Univel"Sity soil fertil- •1!
stariding How Grass Grows~; Dr.
A Gallia County 4-H team
group picture. I will keqi eve~e ity researcher Jay Johnson studied
David Zartman. OSU. Dairy SciStrategies for spring breeding of placed 26th and the Gallipolis I:FA
ena: Depanment Chairman, "Pro- the beef herd was the topic of a team placed 30th. Of the 363' senior informed, but probably the eqUip- com yields pioduced during either .
ducing Milk from Grass."
·
satellite program from the Univer- youth, Amber Baughman placed ment will be made available to uhigh" or loW" Sb'eSS gmwin'g sea- ...:_
sons. Research data p,roved the
A farmer grazicr from Kentucky sity of Kentucky last week. We 35th with 454 points. In the junior local farmers to borrow.
importance and benefit of potassiwill bopcfully complete the mom- piirchase~ a copy of _the .tape ~d divi.sion with 152 youth participatI
am
finding
farmers,
including
um in reducing yield stress. In 1r
ing program. A registration fee of are plannmg .a sho~mg m M~1gs ing, Kent Butler j!laced 41st.
myself.
getting
pretty
depressed
.
"low"
stress years, K20 applications ••
$3 for an ~ndividual and SS for County on the evemng of Apnl 5
A special thanks to the followwith
the
weatha.
The
snow
blizup
10
200 pounds pa acre oo low
partners. wall ·l_lc collect~d at the and . in Gallia Coun~y on the ing for participating: Angie Lewis, zard of a couple weeks ago caused
potaSsium
was tremendous. Withdoor. Rcservauons are helpful. In evenmg of Apnll2. I will have the Kent Butler Lisa Jo Vollborn,
considerable
loss.
The
"mud"
blizout
added
potassium, yields we~e ·~
Gallia County call 446-7007 or in details next week.
Amber Baug'hman. Adam Clark,
The 24th annual Ohio "Perfor- Beth Vollbom Brian Brumfield. zard of this week made even the . only 81 bushels per acre, a yield ·
mance Tested" Bull Sale will be Jason Butler.' Manny Kemper, most simple task very dirficult. I loss of 50 percent due to stress - , ,
am ldokmg forward to getting drought. W.ith 200 pounds of taO
held Saturday, April 17 starting at Todd Bryant, Steven Stout, Ryan
spring fever and have even ~h~­ applied per acre, corn yielded much ·•c
1 p.m. at the Belle Valley.Test Sta- Ald~•man, Tim Slone, Barney
tion. There will be approximately Vollborn, Troy Duncan and Jeff uled a couple days of vacabon m higher, 129 bushels per acre. That's
140 buDs selling. Pe!S!l"S interest- Pope. The Gallia County Cattle- early April (usilally asswes rain) to a whopping 48 bushel per acre
enjoy the great outdoors.
. increase' from potassium and ...
sigosofiaclasingtechnicaldeterio- ed in catalogs should call the sale men's As~iation paid entry fees
reduced drought effecL
raUoa.Secondary-stockaverageshad
Cenainly, yields are reduced in
a 1lrJa' dcclioe in early-ro-mid Feb"bad" years. that fact bas 10 be recI1BJ and aleuer "rebouod lire in
ognized. As imponant as yields are .. ,
FdJMry lhla ?heirbi8CQipcoantcr10 profitable production, the oppor•
J*1S, and the Jl!lll*lta&amp;e of
tunity for reducing risk in those
stocb above their 200-day IIIOVIilg 1
unpredictable years is even more
•'l'ai&amp;CS has clcarly declined from
important
to the farm's financial .• ~
I
aniMibonglltleYCI.Asaresult,.leadhealth. Good fertilizer management
enllip 11M I litely to sllift 10 the
-strategies minimize the drastic con- 'j
Ia:ge tIP leCtor in the next phue of
sequences of "bad" year effeciS.
mubudvuc:e. ·
Adequate potassium helps two
ways: it offseiS seve&gt;"e yield n:duc:- ,,,
Although sentiment measures
tion caused by high stress condi- ";
havcpDeii1JyCCllltinuedtoimprove.
tions; and. it minimizes the cash •; 1
mu•nen!UIQ ille8SUrel have
flow and income problems which . '•
Rlll8iocd a&amp;, or aerecuming to, overresult with lower than anticipated
boull!« positions. 11lat Sllggesll that
yields. Better yet, adequate plant ·•
a fwtllei correction,.or at leut a renutrients put everything in place ~
- - . of the Jllid.Fd!Mry lows,
for top yields iii the years with ·
coald oa:ur in arly-ro-mid March
excellent growing conditions.
beflft faRittz piJII.
WecoaciJu• 10expecuhe ovtra11
.MYSTERY FARM - .This week's m]'Stel']' '
45631, and you may wiD a $5 prize from tbe
-kthj..eud 10 Rltime. with new
••
farm, featured bt tbe Meigs Soli aad Water
Oblo Valley Puhllsbla1 Co. Leave your name,
'i&amp;l"oadl:lllf,jorawaaeallilllikcly
Couervatloa District, Is located somewhere in
addrHI and teleph011e aumher witll your eard
by lpiaa llld problbly led by imJliOVIal lndu•riiJ, capital-goods, Melli Couaty. Individuals wlsbiill to partlcl- . or le?ter. No telephoae calla Will he ICCfp?fd. AU
pate iD tbe weekly COD?es? may do so by gueala1
CCIII ?at eatrles should be taraed ia to the newsif, and ICia:ted technology isthe farm's OWIIer. Jut mall, or drop orr your
paper omce by 4 p.m. each Weduesday. Ia case
IUe&amp;l
to
tile
Dally
Seatlael,
111
Cour5
St.
or
a 71e, tbe winner will be cbosea by lottery.
• We c:oatinp 10 m:onunend a scPomeroy,
Olllot
45769,
or
tile
Gallipolis
Dally
Next
week, a Gallia Coua5y farm will be rea·
lecli11e buy-oo-weakoea apjHoatb,
Trlbuae,
US
Tlllrd
Ave.,
Gallipolis,
Olli.o,
lured
by the Gallia SoU and Water C~rvitl011
.
..SIIIepUip thatweCOllliderto be
District.
•a:tlwe - CJlllneerlng ml coo·
,... tioo, machinery and IIIIChinc
IDOls, piper and forest !Xoduc:IS,
CCWIJ. oiJ.-vicea, oil and PI J)IO. . ......... lrlwicel and workBy USA COLUNS
crops for higher prices. Acreage Program in-which producers devote
h •, - • t"dd•IDn, ~
Galli Coualy ASCS
reduction requirements are 10 per- aU or a portion of their acreage 10
haab, .......-relltcd, DMmll ~.
GALLIPOUS- Producers are cent for com and zero percent for eonservin8 _. (lrass) and nx:eive
..SMI/11110.
deficiency payments as if tboy
now wei(hing 1993 Acreage wheat.
.....,dnaaandhealth-weltoeb Reducdon PIOJpanlllenefits 10 their
When prodocers sign up for the planled • propam Ci'Dp. Signup fOr
.... rehe~led fnlm aelling eli- farming operations. Producers II'C 1993 programs, they may reques1 producen with J!f!lgrBRI crop bases
- a ; diu&amp;IICCboow appell' 10 be considering target prieoa: Corn SO percent of the estimated defi· will end on April30.
11DJia1 ro Jeli•II!C!O - . while $2.1S.4Iolbel and WhoiiC $41burbel, .ciency paymeniS in advance. These
*Note: Feed Grain and Wbeat
HMOand-.-tena care IIOCb still loan rates, deficiency payments, paynlents are limited to the produc- participants in Gallia County
... 10 be In~ uprielldl.
llj
, fle~ibility, and acreage reduction ers intended program acreage. received about $85,000 in deficienJOINS SALON - flhQ ,.i ~
' percentageS beflft signing up. .
ASCS warns that only producers . cy payments on their 1992 crops.
Contact ASCS at 446-8686 for Br......,llaJIIIMdtlltllalrfil ~~
Producen will hive the advan- plll1icipating in the 1993 commOdiIIIII a, ''II
• ol tafiCI prica 50 pioteel their . ty programs will be eligible for additional information or stop by l'lt'a
income, and the opportunity 10 benefiiS on their crops: one option lJie.-oiJICC in the new C.H. McKen- G.Uipolfa. Slle- .. rru' 1Uw .,,.
u ippola. . .t at .....2121.
obtain loans while holding their available again in 1993 is the 0192 .zie A cultwal Center.

·.
..·:.~eekly 0 b serva· t•I ODS

UJ

Note: All facilities in Lyoe Center except the pool will be closed to
the public until further notice
because of work on the new gym
floor.

Likewise, the deadline for sub-

•vcs

ini ••

--

pilot customer service cenrers.
These offices have been
designed to be spacious, comfonable and JX'(&gt;fessional. The policies
and work now have been
redesigned to allow customers to
meet promptly with a CUSI!H1ler service representative and to n:ceive
whate- services they need quickly ·and cff'.Ciently. A career center
with modern computer equipment
ia available 10 the· CUSIOmer 10 aid
in finding a new job.
Families are encouraged to
brinf their children along when
visitang an OBBS Cus10mer Service Center. A parent supervised
play area called KidSpace has been
provided to keep the youngsters
busy while mother or father is

fHands of Healing'
is·them.e for 1993's ·
Stewardship Week .

• 4X4 350 V-8, auto.,
H.D. radiator &amp;
Iran•. . oil eoolw,
eng. oil cooler, SlE
equipment, center
&amp; 1'811r
front &amp;
rear IXIe.

we have 10 get an idea of the whole
arena issue," said Jcff.f.ogciJon,
the university's athletic dim:tor.
"We have 10 give a clear m
to people supporting us of e
directioo we wantiO go. 111at's auc
of Xavier as a university and .at
just Xavier as an atblebc deplrtment."
The feasibility of an arcoa is
only pan of a study initiall:d by
university president Rev. James
Hoff to determine the school's
. objectives and priorities.
The executive committee's
report also requires the ;athletic
department to determane the
school's conference affiliation~
the 1993-94 season. Xavier is a
charter membel" of the MidWCSiml
Collegiate Conference and bas.
signed a contract 10 remain with
that league through the 1993-94
academic year.
Fogelson said the school hopes
to dclcrmine iiS coofercoce affiliation after the 1993-94 scasoo.
Duquesne and Dayton are leaving the MCC this summer. The
teague will have six full-time members next season and no "fnm'tic
bid for the 1994 NCM men's basketball tournament.
Xavier bas not received invilli-

The Gallipolis Daily TribUM,
The Daily Sentinel, the l'oitu
Pleasanr Register and the SwulayTimes·SenriMI value the conoibutions their readers make to the
sports sections of these papel"S, and
these contributions wiD continue 10
be published.
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be obsaved. The
deadline for photos and related articles for basketball and other winteT
sports is the last day of the NBA
Finals.

,.._a

li....,

SMITH'S GMC TRUCK CENTER, INC.

Home athletic eveats
Tbursday - Softball vs.
Shawnee S~atc. 3:30p.m. (DH)
Saturday - B•eball vs.
Cedarville, I p.m. (DH)

Section D.

'.Unemployment office' looks tocbange image ;

SUBURBAN

RIO GRANDE - Tbis week's
activities schedule for Lyoe Center
is as follows:
Pool boars
Today- 1-3 and S-7 p.m.,
open swim
Monday-5-1 p.m., college
swim .
.
Tuesday - S-1 p.m., college
swim
Wedllesday- closed for class
Tbnrsday - S-1 p.m., collcgc
swim
Friday - 5-1 p.m., open swim
Saturday-closed for class
SUDday, April4- 1-3 and 5-7
p.m., open swim

·~imts - ~entiatel

•

·J'e

1

me·· w--·-- ...
a

'

•

•

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

-laa.9icw,tllllill_dw_
taiilicofalllc . . ofac,clnllll
.. a ....... '-ltiliellefale•
eo
eJ price pat. We 0
-bclineillaldi:...-19!JOhallqdl.
el&gt;Girililli..
e-.,dbas

......... p

...

Oa--

lloll.llle..

~·4aaJJjJkl!llmllpricllbas

I.

t I 1!1 . . . w ..... • •

....._ . . . -~
olwaz •.low-

•

. . laillllo m . ••• 7
. lleaod 11 111111-llllide
. . a • e ., wiaJ

qll t

e,

0

&amp;livitJ.

,... .. , ·--·
~·-

I

32

•

•

dyfF 5' ,+ovid

flcl "'c:aeii!IIJfllr'
. ....._ • •
nC

plllle

w'ZS.•
... _

11-.p..........

Producers update

.

Farmers scrutinize target prices

._.,a..,.

\1

'

�...

.

~

.

.

.... . . . .
~

!

llmea Sentinel

O~olnt Pleasant,

P~r.ts

Inc. presents
its top annual award
to 3 GPW staffers

An no unc emf'll~ s

~:~~~:~~~w~~~~:~ .USDA

•

••

. .

.. ' ... . . ,. .... .. .

..

..

'

..

~

..

..

-'

wv

7

Yard Sale

11

Help Wantld

•

.
' AVON' ALL UE.t.llllhono...,.

.....

J &amp; O'o Auio Pllll - Solvage,
olio ltuvlna tuM coro &amp; trucllt.
304-n:H343.
Old

furniture, g&amp;IM, china,
artowl 11da, loola,
llono ln. olio lumHon
nllnlalllng, Ooi&gt;r Mlrlln, tM112·11141,
mart)IH,

Employment Serv1ces

$1Ul

ACCEPI'S EAGLE AWARD , Bob Farril, ript, marbtlll&amp;. •
developmeat lilaaager, GaWpolll Par1s ware•oase, IDe. aecepts ·:
bla Ealle A~d from Kea Walker, tile firm's presldeat llld cbltf :

executfve oflker. . ·

.

·

;·

Da,.,

.
·.

1-'"'

llorloolo.
dOoll
Ecl,_r Ho. NO.

• T4.e ·A rea's ·Marketplace ,
Public Notice

I

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
; Tho Board ol Orange
fownahlp, llhlga County ol
Phlo, will r.acolvo bids until
7:30 o'clock p.m. tho 7th
jlioy ol April 1H3 lor tho
p·uochuo of a uaod
l'iood~r/backhoo
with
minimum apeclflcatlona ••
lollowa( .
Englno Dltatl - . 43 .not
horaepow.Tronoinllllon - (8) ap"d
. conatant mooh with
hydroullc r.vorser
·
Brokea -Wet dlac
Steering - Hydroatatic
Encloaod Cob '7 WIUo h1111ter
ond defrooter
Loader - Lilt capoclty 3:100
lbo. ·Bucko! 314 yard· 81"
wide
.
Bockhoo - Digging depth
13'8" • bucket 18"
Tlrto - Front 7.50 x 16 •
Roir t4.1 x 24
"
Control• - ·Dual
Bidder to aubmlt datailod
oji'eclllcallona of equipmont
ollorod. The Board ol
Traoteeo reeorve tha right to
reject ony or oil blda.
By Order of the Board ol
Truateea ~f Orange
Townahlp,
Pat~cla Calowoy, Clerk
46616 GuUorle R011d
Coolville, Ohio 45723
(3) 15, 21, 28, 3tc

!e-.

Public

&lt;••

.

BRIDGE

PHILLIP

ALDER ·

ready wit enlivens
and
writintl. He found the way bome oo today's deaL
The bidding was wild. Eventually
Kantar bid six clubll, expectlitg bla opponeota to sacrifice. Not only did tbey
not do tbat, but East doubled instead,
tlpplnl bls band to declarer.

NORnl
+J
.J52

-

-

....

"'
.Iii I

,A;...
•

(

r

f

0

Mory McCarley

Charlet Euler
MAR. 28; APR. 4, 7, 11193

J::" ....f!lllie,........
port

114-246-

3

DJ.'s Craft s•op
Pre-E1sler Slle
To .alv.way, uprlghl frNzer,
614-.11112·7511 alter 5pm•

Lost &amp; Found

6
.:__:::.=;:..=...:....:.:::.:.::......_
Iorge IOI)Q loalrocl
cot, w-Ing rill eDitor l
tog. An- to 8liltuo,
Folrvl- Rd, ~ eontor.
LOST

moll

REWARD, :104-11

•
LOST vtclnhy of Zlih Sl &amp;

Jockoon Ava. Block locltllil

Loll: .t.KC Roglo ..nd blondt

Lolonodor Rllmor, Soltm Con-

tor vlclnhy, Edmuttdlon Rd, $20

IWWinl, ti4-71t2· 2472.

.

. March 2e-Aprll 3
Print Rlbbon·&amp;O% Off 5
yd: · min. Hme roll;
Knitting . Act:eeJDri ..
40% Off; Soft Touch
Fabric 40% Off; Select
H!oond Towele lor · X
Stitch Painting 40%
Off; Crall Cork Sha~
60% Off; Grumbacher
Fabric Paint It Dye
30%
Off;
llllnole
Brona Acrylic Paint
50% Off; Folk Ari
Spray Paint 30% Off.
Spring Valley Plaza
Phone: 446-2134

CHANNEL MARKER
CONDOMINIUMS
N. Myrtle Beach, S. Carolina
Limited Weeks Still available!
6-5/6-12, 6-26n-s, 7-31/8-7,
718-14, 8-28 I 9-4
Spring &amp; Fall Rates also
available
Call 446-2206 Mon. Wed.:· Fri.
info/Bookings

L..---------------__,1

1993.

An Eqinll Opportunity Employer
SECRETARY II· DEPARTMENT OF
MILIATRY SCIENCE
The Unlvers~y or Rio Grande announces an
opening lor a Secretary in the Oepanmeilt o1
Military Science: This lui!" lime twelve monlh
position reports directly to the Chairperson of the
Oepanment of MJJ~ary Science and Includes the
responslbll~ies _
or word processing, typing, mll~ary· ,
filing, budget mon~orlng, scheduling appolntrn&amp;f11s
and compilation of reports lor the Department of
MIIH'ry Science, 111e UriHed States Army and the
University or Rio Granda. Qualfflcatlons lnclr.lc:le a
high school diploma or equivalent w~h previous
olllce experience required. A degree In Secretarial
Science Is preferred. Typing skills of 60 WPM and
knowledge or and previous experience with word
processors, Windows Program, along with good
wrttten and verbal communication skills Is expected.
Knowledge of military Is preferred. Entry wage lor ·
this 371/2 hour per week position Is $5.40 per hol!r.
Paid leave and insurance ' benefits available.
Interested persons · should .send a copy of their
resume Including the names and a&lt;l&lt;lrasses of three
.telerences before the deadline of April 5, 1993 to :
Ms. Phyllis Maaon, PHR
Personnel Officer
University of Rio Granda
Rio Granda, OH 45674
The Univ•rsity of Rio Grande ia an Equal Opportunity
Affirmative Action Employer

~------~~~---~---~~================~!

..

+10872

•

. WEST
+t65

EAST
+KQ7U
.KQI063

•••

••Qu

+AKJ115

·7~

•Easy-to-etart 2·
cycle engine
-convert• to side'

•• •

SOUTH

....

·'

+At083

•u7

dlachllrge
-Easy-to-maneuver

Wool

Nortto

Eut

' Put

It
p..
PIM

PIM
Dbl.

u

PIM

•

111824

$69,43
4'!. HP, 21"

Cut Mulching Mower

traffic jam
called Los Angeles

-2-qcle engine
-converts to side

oS-year llmltld
wemntyon
"Ignition

111770

••

·. Tb8 coaurbatlaa tbal Ia Lol Aaaela
· Ia a f u c = area - If~ can IDI·
•Deliver
u., COIIIIallt traffic
. jaDII to - IL op. NaUI clalmad ·
that LA. Ia erratic, erotic, crotcbety,
Clll~ ~ IIOteril: IIIII
eatlc. ran Lebowlts .,. tbat Ita
eMil PID' ,ta are DOYeiiiiUoaa, Ill·
... pmt IIIIW balta, polatl, lllaiClt
• taDa, miaillliaa IIIII rwrltaa. All of
tllfM lteml are aportld
m111cle t.e IIIII polatl, DtiUIIr wblcb
to travel well.
'rbert are !!IUJ tqp brlt!le Di* ts
' la:.t;A.'•·•vli'oll. Tblr•rt ~- 111
· · , tlli warm clllllale aDd euualllfllt)'le.
Tbe ardlet7J111la Eddie Kantar, a "
.
~

FURNITURE ON THE T

Self~ProDtlled Mu~lllll11ia ~~~­

The Store with "All Kinds ot'Stutt" tor

Pets,

Stables, Llrge and Small Animals,
Lawna and Gardena,

R&amp;G Feed &amp;Supply Co.
399 W. IWI

· _992·2164
•r

•

•.

CORNER OF Mill ST. AND 3RD ST. - MIDDLEPORT
•

COME IN AND REGISTER FOR AFREE RECLINER TO £!
GIVEN AWAY APRIL 3. ·No purchase necessary.

dlacharge

. By PW1IlJI ~der

'"

GUND OPENING TUESDAY, MARCH 30, I 0:00 A.M.

Rear Bagger Kit

'•

:"!r.

•

'111768

The

.,

•PPJOL 1•2moo.

Avallllblel

Community $ervices Director position open
an 8 county Aging services planning
I organtization based in Marietta.
Supervises social service and
lc&lt;mtt·acts, plans for community services for
responsible for policy &amp; pr~oceclune4
ldc:velopment and needs assessments. Fre:quE:ntl
lr:irJblic relations assignments.
Bacl!elors degree in gero,n tology, vuou1q
laclminisltration, social worl,c administration
1re1au:u field plus two years prc,fe!;sicrnalf
leJ&gt;perieltCe in a human services orE:aniizalliott.J
and verbal ' co&gt;mntunic;tltion "'"u8 4
lneceSl;ary. Knowledge of co11~mu1nity basedJ
aging services and computer skills de:lirc:d:1
Salary - mid 20's. Excellent benefits. :ser~&lt;l~
!resume to P.O. Box CD104, c/o The Daiilv~
Sentinel, Pomeroy,- Ohio 45769, by April

---------

LAWNIDY.

~

ao-. 1~ :&amp;r."lut

booutllu!,_

Aec.._ - .

NEW

1-l'l·ll

Openinclead: t K

...'
,..
..."
' ......

-u..

+AQJH

Put

•r.•

concerned cuetornera are

welcomo. to •tt•nd to
expr- their opinion on tha
aale ol tho VInton wSyotem to Gallla County
Rural Wotor AIIOGIIUon.
Bo.d of Public Affalra
Wotor Dop•
t
Billy McCarley

Kania{
twotbe
rounds
of trumps
· West
Soutb and then
Arter ~w
ruffinl
diamond
lead, lost
justcoqratulated
ooe spade trick.
endtng 0. .tbe dummy and called for .kicked bimaelf for falling to lead a
the spade JA!Ck. He was plalllllnc to run beart.
it, but East co~ with tbe queea.
n-

•

,.•••• •• ,. ..
...•..
..•...:J.

~ ...,lng

To

Oopondoble, alllctlonoto ~
liilor In ...- .._,
lor 3 - s ,.., old, 2-11 ..,,. 1 ~
I P.M. 7 woolr, I welloon4 i mont It, 114. Ml-2840. .
·

Cl---••=•

S..tlo

.

PUBUC "'"',...,
board
Public
meeting Aprll .l,
p.m. ot VInton Town

Kantar won with the a,ce,
spade three in the dummy and ruffed a
diamond In band. Now came the' key
play: Kaatar led the spade 10, piniiiDI
West's nine. Dummy's beart two wu·
discarded: a loser-on-loser play. Tbe
beart five went on tbe establis~ed
spade -elpt a moment later. Kantar

Vulnerable; North-South
Dealer: South

"'

r&amp;l':"·

5510,

Public Notice

olllnd.

9 Wanted to Buy ·
Femoio
YtliOw Lo- Rllrl..,., I ~-~~;;;~*""&amp;:
mo~e . old, ~,. bred, no ~· Ha.,..hokf ..9f' U.
lo a- horne, 304-II'IS- illtol
Anr ,.,,. or '""'"'"''·
Applloncoo, Ailllqut'o, Etc. AIM

Toorilr, $100. REWARD, 304-II'IS-

"Ill

tKIOVII3

~

LEGAL NOTICE
NoUco Ia hereby given
thot tho 111nual mHUng of
tha ehanltoldora or F...,.,.
Bancaharee, Inc. will be
hold ol the moln office of
Farmer• Bank and Iovings
eom,..ny, 211 w..t Second
Stroot, Pmooroy, Ohio,
according to lla by-IIIWi, oio
tho third Wodnoaday of
.t.prll, 11193, at 4:00·p.m:·ror
tho purpoee ol electing
dlreotore and the trona·
octlon ol auch olhor
buolnHI •• moy pro,..rly
como balora aald meeting.
PMII M. Reed, Socretary
(3)2t, 28; (4) 2, t9, 4tc

'

.

the residents of Overbrook Center.

'

PubliC Notlc:a

OBES JTP.QHIO
Woohlnglon, DC 20210. If
DIVISION AND
you elect lo file your
GAWA-MEIGS
complaint with · th·e
COMMUNITY ACTION·
reclrlonl, you muat wajt
AGENCY .
unU tho recipient leauea a
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
cleclolon· or unUI 80 dayo
.
IS THE LAW
have poaoect, whlchwer It
Thlo recipient It pro· oooner, before filing with
hlblted from·dlacrlmlnotlng OCR. If th~ rocl~t Ilea.nol
on tho ground ol race, provided you with a wrlu.n
color, religion, nx, flllllonal daclalon within 80 daya of
origin, age, dlaoblllty, tha flUng of lho complain~
poiiUcallllflllaUon or belle!, you need not walt tor a
and lor bonetlclarl• only, declalon to ba laauecl, but
clllzenohlp or partlclpaUon may file a complaint at ony
In progr111111 lunded under Umo ~ .lho nplratlon of
tho Job · Training Pari· tha 60 daya wllh OCR
norahiP. 'Act (JTPA) In ecldr- above). If you are
odmloalon or accMo to, dluatlaflod · with tho
oi&gt;P"'1Unlty or tr•bnerot In, ..clplonre raaolutlon ol
or employment In the your complaint, you moy
admlnl.alrotlon ot or In file a complolftt with OCR.
connection wiUo, any JTPA· Such complain! mu~t ba
funded progtam. If you filad within 30 doya of lho
think you have been dola you received noleo ol
oubjocted to dlaer""lnetlon tha reclplo'nt'a propioaod
!n a program operated I!Y reaoltillon.
.
thla reclplont, you may flo a MARCH 21, t11113
complaint within 180 daya 1--=-:-::---:-~--trom ~ data of Uoo alleged
Public Notice
violation wltlrUoo racllllent'a 1---:-:-:~"':":":~~Equol Opportunity Olfloer
LEGAL NOnCE
or tho paroon dealgnotod
Tho Board ol Trualaea ol
lor thl 0 purpoae, or you Cloy Townehlp, Gallla
moy fill • oomplajnlclrectly County, Ohio,
recolvo
with
tho Dlreclor, bl~Ul 8:00 p.m., 11ay~,
•
-un
01 roctorate of Civil Rl ghII 11193 for the aale ol 1 11181
(OCR),. U. S. Department of GMC D
1i k (350
Labor, 200 Conolltutlon
um.r, rue
• 5Avon• NW., Room N-41-, •r,•ed). ruck may be
.,. vowed ot 103 Teene Run
Rood, Gallpolla, Ohio.
MAR. 28, 29, 111113

-

...

•

'

.

~­

-Alio
...,
'" .....
PM, MI.
Ailollon
c:.nter,7:10
Rt.
Z N l Rt. 33, •on top ollllo hill".
'*'-! · doolono In nightly.

Ore cut. on Frid.ly8 too. R•

.

.
.....

to glvo oway,

t wll Old
Ilk Lo- l
II&lt;IUanr lponiOito. good " GIMI wfth kldo, gOod pratoof-., IM-24$.8115.

on

Row One, I.JR: Mindy Barr, Robin Wo(ld, Barbie Coleman, LeOla Wolfe, Love Baley,
. Naacy Manley, Nancy Whltteklnd, Delores Riggs, Donna good, Shawn Older. Row Two,
~ I.JR: Tabalha Swisher, Sharon .Kearns, Penni Jeffers, Peggy Caldwell, Penny L. Smith,
Stephanie Dowell, Cindy L. Rowe, Phyllis May, Ana Van Meter, Judy Young. Row Three,
UR: Joyce Wooten, Diana Herdman, Lonnie Sroufe, Palty Hern, John Kearns, Tim
Baker, Bonnie Roush. ABSENT: Sibley Slack, Anna Wile, Denise Trussell, Linda
, Lauclennlll, Sharon Wickersham, Peggy LeWis and Thny Hawkins.

To Slart, Pluo

Human Services Planner

pu-

I wk old klttono
304-1171-2071.

SUNDAY ·p uzzLER

'

IHr

Elll. 1'1432. · I A.M.

••••

~~~~

' POSTAL JOBS •

lonollb. Polloi C.rriorw, lJor.
tor., Ciorb llalnt..,.IIC4. For
An Application ·And hll!l Intonnotlon, con 1-211-738-4715,

Business Briefs.

{

Help Wanted

11

seeking alternative for use of key pesticide ~

':Unemployment office'...

I

j

tlmo •h ,., ,...,. -

•
.
.
·
.
By MARGARET SCHERF
a class I ozone.depleting substance ''We • ve developed a research preserve farmland resources for
"ThesC funds will help fanners .:
Associated Press Writer
in accordance with ,the require· agenda to ·~ive. key policymakers fut~ _g~ratio~s. said Secretary pass their farms along to their sons ..
WASHINGTON - The Agri- ments or the Clean Air ,&amp;\.ct, USDA the best sctenufic assessment of of Agncultwe Mike Espy.
.
and daugliters, al)d prevent· the ;:
culture Department says it is going sai~. but wiU pe~it its use in the current techn~y an.d estimate_s
. "We must protect America's farms from being C91!~ened ~non· ~:
to focus research on finding alter· Urured States unlil the year 2000.
for research n
from now until vttal farm resources from the pres, · farm purposes. Combined With the ,.
natives by the end of the decade to
''It's going to be a challenge to the tum of the century~'.'
sures of encroaching develop- funds from last, year; we can ~- ,.
a key pesticide, methyl bromide, find the large number of rep~eement," Espy said. "The demon· antee at least SO more farms will be •:
identified as an ozone-depleting ment chemicals or nonchemtcal
The Agriculture Depdttment stration program financed by these able.{O stay in farming."
.:;
substance.
.
substitutes for the broad range of will guarantee a $6.88 million loan loans is a step toward achieving
The Vermont Housing and Con· •
"The effort will involve privare methyl bromide uses," Evans safd. to help prevent Vermont faqnland · that goal. It will help Vermont servation Board uses the Farms for
industry. the states and federal govfrom being converted. to other pur· maintain a viable farmmg commu- the Future loans to purchase develernment in very close _colla~ra·
·
·
•
. poses.
,
,
nity, now and in the future.". .
opment rights on quality farms.
tton," Gary Evans, spec~ ~tstant
By Tbe Associated Press
'I)te loan ro the states. Housmg . The Farmers Home ~tntstra· The program helps fil\lnce rein·
at _USDA for globaJ change issues,
NEW YORK - Ending weeks ~ C~servauon. Board IS further uon g_uaranteed ~ $10 mt~ton ~ vestments in farm infrastructure,
S31d m a recent announcement.
of speculation, ffiM picked Louis fmancmg for the Farms for the for thiS program m 1992, IIICluding farm expansion and the transfer of
Methyl bromide is used f~r soil V. Gersbler Jr. for the most daunt· Future demonstration program to interest payments.
farms 10 the ne~t generation.
fumigation and to protect harvested ing job in American business:
·
· ·
·
·
crO{&gt;s in storage and 10 1:rea1 many restorin~ the power, prestige and
agncultural commodities in quar- profilability of the world's biggest
antine before export. The only compurcr company.
available registered pesticide for
The head of RJR Nabisco's
those purposes, it is more effective cookies-to-cigarettes empire fust
than any other single agent against needs a crash course in the comput·
..
many pests and is relatively easy to er industry. Gerstner, named Fri-..
Cros~word Puzzle Answer· P~e C-~
..
apply.
·
.
day, is just the seventh chairman
'
The Environmental Protection and the f1tst outsidei" w.lead·Inrcr- "ACROSS
• 77..P~x:har•
89 Sandarac tree
2 Report
Agency will list methyl bromide as national Business Machines Corp.
90 Set In place
3 High mountain
78 Narrow, fll1 ·
in its 79 years. ,
1 Walk wearily
4 Mysell
.
92 Cubic meters
tioard
94 Devotion
5 Lilt with lev«
NEwYoRK-RJRNabisco
80Melal'98 City on the Oka
6 Sltl
"
•'
81 Title of reepect
18 VCR button
1
in 1994. Those offices include: to build a new career, to put your took the unconventional step of
99 Insecta
7 Ogre
naming two executives of the food·
21 Sovereign
83 CUihlon
100 Dlatreu signal
8 HIIIVell goddeas
Youngstown, Toledo Southwyck, life back together.
to
jointly
22
Varnish
tobacco
conglomerate
84~1atata
102
Temporary
•
9
Tantalum
ayn)bol
Bryan, Defiance, Napoleon,
When Jim Conrad took over the occupy the post vacated by IBM·
Ingredient
87
Tried
10
Antlei'ed
animal
shelters
Waverly, Springfield, Marysville, Ohio Bureau of Employment Serbound
Louis
V.
Gerstner
Jr.
23
Lowest
point
11
POeniW
pole
88 Mo""V•"'I"'MII"'Oit
103 Even score
lifansfield, and Mount Vernon. . vices at the beginning of the
the title of chairman
24 Colorado city
12 Tardy
104 Sodium chloride
90 Sits for portrait
Additional offiCCS will be convert· Voinovich Administration, he set andSharing
chief executive •. Lawrence Ric25 Demon
13 Paid notlceB
105 Grant use of
91Speachlty
Cd to customer service centers out to create a new image for the • ciardi,
RJR Nabisco's general
26 Knitting materials
14 AQIIW plant
106 HaHs
92~tch
annually until all of our offices agency based on quality customer
28 •.:.,... Lariding"
15 Mlatakea
108
Snow
runner
counsel
and
executive
vice
presi·
Babe
baseball
,
93
Chimney carbon
reflecl this new approach.
30
01
service. As Jim's successor, I am dent, and. Karl von der ·Heyden, its
16
Butter
~uaraa
109
"-Law"
9li
Writing llukltl
Very simply, the "Unemploy· excited about continuing this new . chief financial o[ficer, portrayed
32 That thing
17 - Wedllitaday·
110
Spielberg allen
, 98 LubrlellteCI
ment Offtee," as we have come to direction for OBES. We have come
33 As far as
• 18 Elevator Sign
111 Wedding ring
34 Brown or muSic
97 Approacllell
.know it, iB about to disappear into a long way in two years in laying tllemselves-Friday as team players
19 Paris's rl112 Encounter
35 Poem
·
bistory.ln its place iB a new kind of out this new course for one of this so· compatible "we finish each
99
Twist
20 Go in
114 Cry
38 V8111181s
o1ftee, a Cusromer Service Center. stare •s most vital services. In the other's sentences."
101
Treata
mallcloualy
27 Priett's vestment
11"6 That woman
37 ()p, of WSW
Yes, you will still be able to get next few years citizens in every
105
Alight
29 "- Butlhe
I 17 Following lirsl
"
WASHINGTON - A con38 Do wrong
t1iaa unemplOyment check you need part of Ohio will be able to see this
108
Sow
119
Reward
.
,
Brave"
sumer spending spree helped fuel
40 Encourages
to keep food on the table when vision become reality.
120 Shadow closely
31 ShOihOnean
107 Projecting tooth
the
fastest
economic
growth
in
five
42 IndiVIdual
"
rour job 'disappears. But more
\22
Wanderers
111 VOlume
(Debra Bliwland is the Admin· years in laiC 1992, the goveQ~ment
Indian
43 Conftagratlon
Importantly,. you will find a staff istrator ror ·the Obio Bureau or
124 Brick-carrying
112
Pinochle term
36
Fruit-·
44 Above
reported, but analysts said the
of professionals extending a friend- Employment Services)
.
device
37Level
113
"Who's
That-?"
45 Employ .
economy since has slowed due in
1~ hand to help you find a new job,
125
Embrace
39
Trick
115M.,.._
. ,
47 Irritate
part 10 a sluggish revival in hiring.
126
Rue
40
Danish
Island
49 Wagers
118 Sulpend
128 "The Naked - "
41 Pllorce
50 Native metal ·
118 Scorch,
129 Saturate
42 Most advanced
51 Peaks of caps
119
Burrowing
131 Frigid
In years
54 Foray
.,lmal
132 Legal matter
43 Tolla .
55 Goller's needs
121
CondliC10r1
133
Pral44 Spoken
56 Talks
123
Greek
letter
135
Aeriform
fluid
48 Therefore
monotonously
138
Equallly
125
Stra!Ohtfooward
48 Baked clay
59 Fruit drink
139 Sharpen ·
126.._
49 Lager
80 Choose
140
Storage
333 Page Street
127 Tortolee
50 Buckeye Stata
62 Consecrates
compartment
51
Weetl)ercocks
64 Bucket ,
129~rMiddleport, OH 45760
141 Arid
52 Standard of
65 HarrlsiO
130 Fertile spots
142 Concalnlng
66 Neon symbol
pertectlon
ln143 Equally ·
67 Three-toed sloths
53 Playing-card sull
131
Study
There are times when dedication needs acknowledgement. The
144 Sheet ol gtan
55Siaeplng69 Chemical
132 Wulollglltly
145
Baptismal
baalns
•
compound
slckneu fly
134 Change color o1
employees of Overbrook Center who were able to brave the roads to
147 Heads, In Paris
70 Nevada city
56 Jargon
136 Enthulillm
149 Mountain on
71 Caspian57 Handle
"
come in and those who stayed until relief came, are representative of
137
Chairs
Crate
72 Consume
56 Portion ,
'
.
138
Kind
ol
lock
150 Rips
74 Clever person
81 Row
''
the caring and dedicated individuals employed at ·Overbrook Center. .
140 Nods
152 Presentations
''
76 Smail child
83 Portico
154
Minnie' 144 +- 11111
77
Choicest
84Nulaance
'
The employees worked together as a team doing whatever was nec~s~
158- card ·
145 On ltelllolf of
78 Mast
68 Raclted
·~ ·.
158
Bar
legally
79
Defamatory
146
Ml-all!)flng
pompously
sary .to care for the residents of Overbrook Center. With little sleep
'
159 Briel
62 Countenance
147 T-eloaped U011
70Mw.back
f''
180 Entertain
and long hours, the staff made life more comfortable for the residents
84 Type size
71 - of St. Louis
148 Pigpen
161 "The Wonder - "
85 Capuchin
73 Pendant
149 A GerMwln
"
during tltat snowy weekend. The Owners, Management Team,
monkeys
om amen!
151 Neet
DOWN
68 Single Item
74 Mine entrance
153 That man
Administrator, Department He!lds and other employees acknowledge
1 Commonplace
88 Comfort
75 Melodies
,.,,•
155 Prlnter'a meuura
157 Diphthong
and thank the following employees for their caring and dedication to

'

•

GCNriPMr. 1 -

P ALLIPOLIS - Rick Becker, Cllled people, for the Pans Inc. sysdisuibution center manager, Bob rem, and a loving, caring family."
Farris. marketing developme nt
Bob Farris, who has been with
manager, and John Farris, account •Parts Inc. for 12 years, exceeded
manager for Gallipolis .Par!s Ware, his sales goal by over half a miUion
house Inc. in Gallipolis, have all dollars last year. Honored four
received one of Parts Inc.'s top times as an Eagle Award winner, in
honors, the 1992 annual Eagle 1982, 1985, 1991 and 1992, Farris
Awlird.
said, "It takes a lot or hard work.
The Eagle Award, developed by Basically, I'm just doing my job,
Parts Inc. to recognize great leader- and that is, dQing the best job thall ·
ship abilities. exemplary customer can do."
service and outstanding achieveCriteria to win the award is
ment throughout the year, has been based on personal growth, team
FARRIS HONORED • Jolua Farris, right, account mauger ·
in existence for 10 years.
spirit, and ,individual conuibution for Gllllpolill'llrt8 W......_,Iuc., atcepllllil 1992 Eqle A~d
Rick Becker, who has been with to the achievement of company from Ken Walker, tile fll'lll's president ud claltf executive of!icer.
Parts Inc . for four years, is goals. Parts. Inc. employees
described by the. company's top throughout the company are evalumanagement as fum, but fair. He is ared and the winners are acknowl· edged for their exemplary perfor· ml!llee and going the extra mile.
responsible not only for the disui.
.

Columbus, OhiO. Becker S31d, ''1'he
Eagle Award was won in part, due
to the fa~ I ~hat . we operate the
largest dtstnbuuon center, even
~~hit is in the smallest cornmuOily.
: John Farris is a two-time Ea~le
Award winner. He started wtth
Parts Inc. in 1988 and has 32 years
experience in the industry. Farris,
who increased sales of existing
4CCounts by 16 percent in 1992,
plans to up gross profit by all his
JObbers.one per;centm. 19?3: Farr~s recetved hts fust I?agle
Award m 1989, and has conunued
wmeet changing market demands ·
by implementing such Parts Inc.
programs as Super Clinics, w~ich
are a series of sessions to teach JOb·
ber and installer operations the
basics .and keep them abreast of
c!wtges in tl)e market "Any award
like this is won because of the
combination of a lot of good people
qn your team," said Farris. "I have
6od to thank for 20 super Parts
Plus accounts, for a staff of dedi·
•

~ • l

Pa111r0y
.•

•Sofas
•Loveseats
t3 pc. Groupings
•2 pc. Groupings
•Recliners
eChlldrenrs Recliners

aBetter Quality Bedroom Suites
eSolld Oak Dining Room Suites
.•Imperial Orthopedic Mattress
eCoffee Tables
•End Tables
"'lrrora by Bassett

WE rJIJNX rOII'U. uxw 011Jl PJUC.II, aur .DON'1' TAU
Otlll W011D na 11', BOP AND COMPAUf

�.·

wv
21

FARM AUCTION
Qollla

Agooey
FOf Tho Pooftlon Of Tral,.r Aide
With Tho JTPA Program. The
Poallon lnyotv• Aftl• lng In
Dolivory of Tralnlna A&lt;:ilvftiH
.C. Dlroelod By Otllor Staff.
Out-. May lnclud• MalrUnance
Of Aeporta, Formi, Doc-umtnti,
Sc:hoduloa, And Rocordo. Pool-

tlon Roqulrtl A Hlah Sehoot
Diploma Or GED Ancl Excollont

•

ComnnanlcaUon Skill• lnc:ludlng
l'yplng. Po.lt lon Mar Require

lfaver

Btlwttn

Agency

F..ac:llltle• In lhl S.rvlct ArN

And.OCC.elonll T,.nl To Other

Locotlono. Appllc.lilono Moy Bo

Obtlilned And RMu,.... Submll·
ttd At The Centl'll Admlnlttrl·

live Office At 8010 North Stoto
Routt 7, Ch..,lrw, Ohio.
DNdtlne For Submlulon Pt
4Ppllc1tlon1 And RHUinll Is
4:30 P.M. Aprll12, 1993. EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.

HELP WANTED: tocoJ branch of
1'l stol'll r;:hlln nNda 11 people
to 11art work lrnmed.. .ttly. No
o l)er'lence necnaary. Wt will
tNln. $1200 per month to atartlt
you qualify. Phone for ·Jnttrvlew
Thursday, Thru Monday

w•n 10 a ' · 1514-448-4553.

a...

, HOUSE INSPECTORS
No Elpc Nocuury. Ur To $800
Wkly. Will Troln. C.l 21!1-78~
~8 Ext. H5174. t A.M. To t P.M.

7 Daya.

Join the leadet In the Conaunwr
Financial s.tvlcH lndul1ry.
· lmmGiate
opportunity
tor
ctrHr mlndld Individual to ••
sume a chaJienglng poahlon. No

experience
n..ded.
compraMnaln training, m~naa•
IJ*ll oppartunhy avallab...

RINM

call Kevin Smhh,
Manager, &amp;1..112·2111 lor tm·

('ntdlate coneldentlon. $moke

nea and drug frH environment.
EOE.

• reliable farmer to
.... "" ..,. acm ol ·good hay

614-'1112·2581.

I

VULGAR

Business

18 Wanted to Do
Bam,...,_.,: need an old bern
.........,._ .. O&lt;IIollho-"
Wll ........ far .....go.
256-.
D. • D. Photogrophy 1111 hH
:;'. dod• IDi -.

'*

llji;;;·~cal;lfn~-~30U7S-2SM.;;;t:~~'ii0
~ "::i.l:.~

lH,

E&amp;R TREE SEIMCE.
Trimming, li'M Rlrmonl.

Trimming. -

Eollinolnl I

367-7115T,..., 4p.m.

YONDER
QUAINT ·
AFFECT
FIVE DOl.i.AR

tho FeQerat Fa&lt; Hou~ng Ad
01 1988 whlcll rnakesltllogal
to adt'enlse •arrt preference,
lmMallon or llscr1111inaHon

Snowbarry,
II~:=~C~ol~u~m~b~lnle:~·:!Paony,
Silver ~ems ; Cla111atis,
skeleton keys,.
toothj)ick

tiued on reco, colo&lt;, religion,
l a~ial status

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Gla•' fa to bnltty grandson,

ScrMM, Toll Fr": , ..
, _ - '· 27ft., ... •Prlvacr
109-152-1110.
12200 ...... liking
$1000, tl4·1112·2011.

"''" '*'·

•

Dining Room Glue Top Toblo, I ·
High Bock ....,boo Ciullro,
WI. 114.Z4H031 Alar I PJI. '

Jividen's Farm Equipment
(614) 446-1675

or national

New Equipment • Zator Long &amp; Kioti Tractora,
loaders, backhoes, Vermeer &amp;. Laly hay equipment,
balewr!IPpars. A complete line of bale handling &amp;
feeding !lf)Ceaaorias, feadbunks, caMcreepa, mineral
feedera, automatic livestock waterers, galas, coral &amp;
feeder panais, squeeze chutn. haadgatn,
groomchute•• caMhutchn, stocktrailer, utility trellar,
act truckbeds, corn, tobacco, garden , &amp; ATV
Sprayers: seeders, sidedreasers, tobacco setters,
rotary tillers, plows, discs, aubsoilers, aanhscoop,
boxblade, rocj&lt;ra~e. gradelblade, post auger,
postdrivar, boompoles, bulhhogs, finishmowers.
Husgvar.na chainsaws
&amp; weedeetars, Toro
Wheelhorse lawn &amp; garden equipment, Circuhaer
groomers, Oster Clippers &amp; a complete line of
livestock grooming &amp; show supplies!
·
We earlY a complete line of pa118 &amp; saJVIca!
Uaedi· Roundbalers, rakes, hQywagon, gravity
wagons, sprayer buohhogs, finish mowers, tobacco
setters, disc, plows; po&amp;l auger · postdriver,
cullipacker; riding &amp; push mowers, 9n ford. ,

make ant such preference,
llmMatl!&gt;n or dlscdnina.tlon.•
1 hls ne~aper wit not
knowingly aa:op1
adVertisements tor real &amp;!tate
which Is Jn violation ol the
law. Our maders are hereby ·

54 llaceiiiiii80UI
Uttrchlndlae

25 TREES ONLY $15,25 HNvly
Roolld Will Bnnehld 1 SprucH
And Plnoo, Shlppto Dlroel.
Groot fOf · Wlndbrollto And

-rlgiweyouabraidnew shinypenny
if you behiM yourself. • The bratty
g~alllsol••e.a F BI , Td rather have. a
clity Okt FIVE DOUAR bill!"

ortgtn, or any lnlenllon to

rar"" newspapers, knives, Roy Rodgers
kriHa, J hort sword &amp; sheath, adV. terrw, '
Occ.
items, old toys, Indian
variety of pioturaa,
·frame, cider prasa, chlll'IV
boiler,
14"
other
Erie, Ozark kerns, egg
oillaNerns, buggy foot warmer,
crocks, stains, banks, calluloid
.
have buyers looking for furn~ure and' larger ftatna.
will receive mdse. up to 8 p.m. Saturday. Contcact
1
Isaac al\814) 388·8880 for fun~ar info. ,
Aucli-: Finis "'b" " ' - Phone: 114-311-8370, 311-·
11110 T.,_: calli or ipproved check with LD.
•
lin 11ed 8IICI bonded-Ohio, ln., W.V8.11030
Nol ruponoible for accldot ola or 1011 item I.

From Gallipolis,Take Route 141; Tum left onto Rt.
n5. Tum right onta Patriot Road, Watch for signa.
Farm equipment Etc. Auction
Saturday Apra 3, 1993 II 10:00 A.M.
Accepting Consignment Day of Auction
,
Service for Pick-up Men:handiee Available
930 c:aae bacl( hoe with lollder, 14 lt. com plow,
rotary cultivetor, 6 ft. brush hog pull type, 7 fl. frail
mower, new holland stt: hay bind, 1976 Ford piclalp
truck 250, 1111 turning plow, cuitivlllora, aHia charmer
tractor wide front end with cuftivlllor, aeara ,. 8
hp
. .rit
rkl!ng lawn mower, 8 ft. X14 ft. bc!x traile~ with
elec:tnc brakes; woiX tables, foors, wmdowa. sigl),
eabinat, hand tools, sockets, sunflo- ral(e; buaa
saw, corn · jobbers, hand tobacco setter, 5 gal.
hudson sprayer, truck mirrors, gas cans, 10 ft. metal
~. utilily li!lht. ·2 X 6 and 2 X 8 ft. luntlfr, bench
grinder 1/4 HP. .5 HP lawn chief garden lractor with
plows, and ~h much more.
Eats
Cash
Poeitive I.D.
...,... WDI.-yer Auct~ Lie. 13615
114-246-5152
Eatala Auction, Farm Auction and·household
available Ill your rilsidanl
Cal for detaila. 814-245-5152
Not rllsponsl!le for accident or losa of property,

l OUDLY

All re1111 ntare act\'el1tslng ~·
lhls newspapor Is SIA&gt;jod to

Sunday

54 Miscellaneous
. Merchandise

SCRAM-LETS

GLAMOR

Our Antique or collectible auctions are held on the flrat
Saturday of every month. TIM following Ia a partial list.
GIMe: Deprasaion, Fanton, Wtlltr, lf111eriel Camival
Smith, !lown, Cobah, Hull, Bltnko, Bavarian, McCoy,
(Florentine , Tourmaline, Fuschia, Whka '

'~

ANSW&amp;s TO

42 Mobile Homes
torRent

IAlURDAY, 7:110 P.M•.

•

": ..4.-., .· ...

r

Point Pleasrintr WV

OA COUECTliLE AUCTION
IUAC'I AUCTION HOUlE
CORNER OF JACKION IT. a IT. 111: 325
VINTON. OHIO
APIIl. a AD, 1 •

Bullllllll
Opponunlty

14

'

March

Saturday, Apr. 3, 1993 at 11:00 a.m.
located approx. 15 miles east of Athens
on S.R. 50, then north on Co. Rd. 53
(Bethany Ridge Road) or S.R. 50 west
from Coolville approx. 8 miles. Signs
posted from S.R. 50.
FARM EQUIPMENT
7600 Ford Diesel2388 Hrs., 90 H.P. dual power. dill.
lock 9N Ford Tractor, Hi-Lo Range, new tiraa, bush
hog, front end loader (Stan Hoist), No. eo NH bale
carrier, M.F. 1112 baler, like new. NH 851 .round baler,
NH 488 haybine 9 ft., extra knives, shaver post driv·
er, Gravely super convertible, cycle mower, 2 row Nl
corn picker, No. 300, 2 row cultivator, '3 pl. , Int.
Transport disk, JD manure"spreader, wagon, mount·
ed sprayer, 9' cuhi mulcher, Freeman end loader, 7ft.
disk, 3 pl., 8 ft. cultivator, JD rake NO. 660, 2 row JD
corn planter, 3 pl., MF 2 row planter; 3 pt., 3 bottom
14" Oliver plows, 3 pt,, 2 bottom 14" drag plows, AC
post hole digger, 8N Ford end loader, pickup &amp;lock
rack, Oliver 4 bottom 14" plows, 3 pt., Oliver 3 bottom
16" drag plows, 1200 bu. gal. com crib, potato plow,
20 ft. 1raUar frame, 4 axles, 2 Homeli1e Super E,aay
chain saws, Snatl:n Block, pipe dyn, saddle, swing,
gates, chain binders, 2- 16.9X3D tires, MF 7 It disk,
.grain drill, 2 sets of logging forks, 2 bale f.eeders, lots
of iron.
AUTOMOTIVE
1972 Dodge motor home (Funlinar) nice, 1980 Jeep
CJ7, 6 cyl., 4 speed, sharp, 1958 4 cyl. Jeep, 12ft.
alum. Sears V·bottom boat, 20 It van on dollies, 300
ft. chain link fence, 2 gates, 7 HP Evinrude motor, 3'h
HP Cialtsman motor. Mise. household goods, other
misc. ~ems.
·
CATTLE
9 Angus cows, 3 Angus·Her1 cows, 1 Char X cow,
now calving. 1 Angus bu11.
Tertnl of sale cuh or chac~ with proper I.D.
Lunch on the grtlunds.
OWner: Robart liart
Auctioneers: Bud Spirea- Tal. (614) 374-2819
Don Hart- Tel. (304) 428·5304

•

t

ln1orrriod that al l dwellngs

In lhls newspaper
are a.vaMible on an ~I
opportunity baSis.

PUBLIC

Empire Dining Room Tobie

·A.UCTION

Ma~any WoOd l)oubll Ptd....
111 logo 171, 014-446-9253,

--------~~
-· ~·--------------~~~--~---Real Estate General
•·
Real Eatate General

NNIE STUTES REIILTORcf.
BUILDING
SITES
ADDISON AREA
2.47 Acre
3 Each 5 Acre Tracts

-•d daytime blbyol1tor,
Groon School Dltlricl, muat

have r1f1r.nces, 814~~7

""'' 4 p.m.

'

4.m.

PARK RANGERS
Wardant,

S.curftr

Mllnt.nanc•J. Etc.

No

Exp.

Neces11ry. I"Or Info Call 218-11111-8649 E111. 8710 9 A.M. To t

1!)1. 7 Doyo.

·

Con1roct

~~~·limo

Clerical

Poeltlon 3 Days Per Week In
GalllpoUe. Comp~1r Experience
Whh Mlcrosaft Ward For Win•
dows NecMiary. Send Rnume

To: Qalllootlo Dolly Tribune,

CLA Box 213., 825 Third Avenue,
ct.nlpollo, OH' 415631. Oudllno:

l&amp;lrch 31, tH3.
~n-Tima

Slyllat Wllh Managara
UcenM NMded At Hair Happen.
lng, Call Blltwlien Hou,. ot 9-5

11'1-448-3353.
~I

.

&amp;late ClrHr. ProfHaJonal

trolnlng. ERA Town &amp; Country

Rul E.. ata, Broker, Beckie

sloth, 304-1175-5548.
.,

AN'S

l,.medlate

Employment, F1.1ll·
nm., Pa11·T1mt Day Shift
~titlone
Available In A
~togrnslv•

Long T1rm Care

FocHity. Compollilvo

Wogoo.

LucrtttlYe
Fringt
Btntllta.
HHith, Dental, Vfslon, And Lite
lnsunmc1. For Conlldtnllal lrJ.o
tervln Contact : Pam JtHers,

AN, DON, 614-446·7150, EOE.

In Memory

2:

In Memory of
:Matthew Weaver

;, on his 31 st
birthday.

Born

From Gallipolis, Take Rt. 141, Turn lef\.onto Rt. ns,
Tum right onto Patriot Road. Watch for signs.
Owner Re1iring and Moving OUt of State .
Thur&amp;day April!, 1993, 7:00p.m.
Antiqun and Collectible
Cherry library table, Oak center &amp;land, Deacons
bench, jelly cupboard painted, Lane cedar cheat,
dresser b9w Iron!, laundry baskat, fancy walnut chair,
ca$1 iron door stop, cut iron bank, handmade cherry
stand with 2 dovetail and C11J!11hored drawer, child
oak drawing stand, 3 quitts, Slone jars, jurrbo jar,old
county shaving mirror, Budweiser beer sign, Pepsi
thermometer sign, 1917 Gallipolis calendar; Gallipolis,
shot glass, pictures, stoneware stainer jar, drop leaf
table with 4 cane bottom chairs, .Singer Treacle
sewing machine, cast iron skillets, granke ware, cut
iron pots some with· lids, amber jars, jewel tea bowls
hull, rolling pins. ice tonga, upright player piano in
good condkion mada in Ohio, oil lamp, sad Iron,
washboard, wire egg bask~t. Gallipolis 1 pt. Springhill
milk bottle, CJYstal water p~cher, green stonet"are
p~char, jaweiJY, jar old mamles, glassware and
dishes, post cards, crock bowls; McCoy cookie jar,
pink green and yellow depression glass, and much
100ch more.
Houaehold
sofa and chair, electric organ, end tables, china
chbinet from German made in 1947, baskets, dishes,
gas grill, smoker, lamps, liens, tin boxes, kitchen
appljance •• lawn chairs, pictures, comer sheH, what·
nots, baskets. Linens, hand toOls, pictures, radio, and
much, much more .
Eats "
Cash
Positive 1.0.
Marlin Wed.noyw Auclionew Uc. 13615 and bonded
614·245·5152
°
Not Responsible for Accident or loss of property

..

Business
OpponunHy

21

RailE

- - ,..., ,.,., clo - wllh pooplo you k,_ 111111
N&lt;1l' 1o Hnd iho

IIWOUiih
moll untU f&lt;1U lumi 111-Tgroild
tho oJtortni.
.
LUNCH

WOLFFTAHIINCI BEDS
$111.00.~
Lallono,
-Fram
- · - ;.,
llnlta,
Ac -lea.
.....

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH 1.0.
Not P ; ,.'e 101 acc:ldentt 01' IOU of PfOPI4'IY
llcenMd and 9ondld In ONo; Kentudly, &amp; Wilt VIrginia He

Law AI $11.00, Colt ~

NEW Color C.talog.

I

•

11117.

Real Estate General

--...21

llEYEN · -.. ...............................2*1101

=..

WLMA WllllMWW, AIIOaAlES-......2-lV
WLLIAII-. AIIOaA11i ......... 2-lV

!living anns.
The memory o
loving ways,
1"·"'5,, .your

grin and

Love You 's that
sQ. freely given
be carried in
hwts forever.
Mom, Dewayne,

I .. : .•••

, Pap, A~Js~~~s~
and

1

'

-·--·

IHI 811yllne Holly Rldgo 14x7tl,
11 ..... a btdtoOriioo, NC.
oa •• eel porch, kttoMn illancf,
llorap blda, unclerpe~anlng.
111enew,:104-1711.z4M.
.
11• Sun~hln1, 14110, .._utlful
moiolla homo, .1ollol llec, I boclrotima, 2 bltho, gordon lub,

'

1125. VACANT LAND - cm.tn. 5 ..;_ruling lind..

· VN:ANT LAND • ~leld Twp. 59 AiJ. rro/l,
. . . _ lnxn Holzer Hoopltal. Gru1 location for largo
. . . h•.
H7D. WOOO LAND - HUNTINGTON TW~ 39 ac

ilshlng:

G~...

e....,.,...-·,_

Good--..
two-...........

APM111EHT

B1.00.

1110•• N:,

••s.aao -H....-roN TWP.

7

....,._.-,....&amp;...-ar.now.eo'*"'

'

• . A vwy good buy IRI h on - ·
118,000.
1712. FOUR BEDIIOOII HOlE, 2 BATHI - Roomy
country.Allldl
ExtOnoM
wori&lt;
con1*11d
u -IDioM:In•.•.n.rmo
wtndDwa.

~-v-.........
1777. 11.-.M TRACE ICHOOI.S - - - _ ,
311!--UI.IlR, ...... - . ...... 1.....

_., -...,
. -_ _
......
llol-.
..........
..1*"11
_ '- 1els3-.

- · COUimiY IXJJT- wmt PRIVATE'
LOCAliOII - 2 - . ........, 111. 1 noy -

•ooo.

DEAl.----·
.........
a

111

-

....

--__,.
:-="•'J:."r _e. :::-. . :.:.2.:
....

-.11-

-.-~--:
.._
MtciiiiL ww~ _....,. na.,t;a;.

Cll.-diill ~ ...,Ill ....... t
C 7lftMd
Mnd a. F1rt1 1D1r ll&amp;ntr. t
; •. a
,
PGNh ... 2mr s twd . . ..

"AA\*••••..,.

-~~~~~- ... " " - - 11lop loalt·

I

. . . ..

..... -

2A oc,
, a or 1n11ra
..

1171. POINT OF PERfECnOfl acuua INa gnt-

- -...-....

Only

4

o

-

'

or rooldonllol

2-

OWNERS WILL CON8IDEA AEAIONABLI!
OI'FERI - Quality buNt 4 bedroOm rarioh oty11
horne with fantalic view ol· Ohio Rlv1or. 21'1
baths, baMmenl h• finished family room .
Situatad on 1 aorv lot with paved driva.
Pomeroy arao.
1521

Alilton • APRia Orovi,
water.. 1 ecre · Ioiii with

•Pill......lollom
H[lllc
public

..,.

. C1~ -

.,..... M...
8Ub-Divloion.

· Jr. :ID4-8Ja.2338.

' 361

0

. . 1.111

--lol.

'I

LIITMG -LOOKING fOil

A'NOME,

UIALL IIUIINIII, Alii IOIIE ACREAGE? I 10,
oll-111113or4--llomo.2-.
.... -.-1--,21i&lt;31)110oplftll
o J top. 11111 P"'ff&amp;11f • - on 1 - m.11n
- T....... I'I*dlnlloll01o.

3--.
............, ,..car117111. -

!INICH: 81ul1lod on 1 ac. mil , upptr

111•~· Tllll-ltl1lu101 3
f . . . fulbiiM, IIIchlrt and diNng ...... 2 ~

Rt. 7-toll

t
_ . . , , _ , . . . . , _ ,, - t n b -.
1

,..

garago. Clllllor

'

p-

Rrnl&lt;ils

r

.·''" .

ll'ttl. NEW lilTING - 2 or 3 bN'o&lt;lito l'lfiCll IRIIornlly RICitll - I n town. P - fo oil. Cali lor
locatloniRipdot.
- · IF A - Of HHIH ITYLIIIIIIIIow - . .

-lhlo4bodl-. ·

-. - . lll...-cion2~IRIIWI tiOOoq. ll. ollvlng-, metolbColpaCoct

lng,llldl14124-.ull8forUNilt&gt;u-

.

'

''

. '
,.,
•

-RANCH HOII!t- ot&gt; SlaM Floll Z11. Tl1ll
home flllura 4 bazhc1n1 1nd ftnllhed buerMN.
Coli formtn- -1140'• .
1121, PRICED TO IELL. 1111111omo hllt,OOO oq. n.
olllvtng-,3tiJ....,omal~..,. ..,.

llled on 1A. - rn.4. Prtold t20'e.

.

j.L

•

'

.

home--.

NEW USTING· .SR 325 Near Danville- HERE IS.AFAIW
WITH A FUTURE! 92+ ilel'llt with mobile
don, flnoplece, collar hOJ,!se, bam &amp; ~:.= raul.
20+ haytand, 20+ pj1Sturf30+wooda.
· -..g 1o1o
oF nice laying land. $72,500
'

WE HAVE A WIDE· VARIETY OF HOllE AND ACil£.
AGE FOR 8ALE••• BliT WE WANT "MMRE" F YOU'RE
THINKING OF SELUNG GIVE US A CAW F YOU
WANT TO BUY ITOP IN AND lEE OUit IIELECTIONII WE ARE HERE TO SERVE YOUI

.•

HENRY E. CLELAND........................... _.. - ...- •....ItH1t1
KA114Y CLELAND .................-.....................- 111~111
T.AACY BRINA.QER•••••••••••••,_, ...,_,,,,_,,.,.__ ,.M.M.

."

""

r,

,,

ARf MEAl- Brk::k

auwa
'"'"
2 ........

OFFIOL- - · ·- ..--·· -·- -··-·- __....,.

•

,

••L

Nice
.......
ol
I I will&gt;

.... ':

. ._ _ _

.,_ . .
a.:...,. r n• .

. . USI

(POMEROY) UNCOLN TERRAC'EIU .:; This
home hu lots of characltr and the lady of the
houM hat Iota or good tuta when lteomes to
remodeling. If• a 2 11ory horne with. 3 big
bedroom a, nice siZed living R&gt;Dm and plenty of
apace In tho kitchen and dining • -· Full
baMment and large llltjc. RooF just 2 yra. old.
Tlke a look for only $24,800.00.
t522

..
u•-

)1 2cwa a . w

a
l;o2-r....O

... 7

IIOVE RIGHT INI lhll home In Mldclepon II mrlouiiJ
walling for a new awnarl It-offers 2-3 bedt., ..,.., c.blnelo, newerg,.fumance, iin&gt;pr-,t..-. 2-r
frame conllruclion with a large M11ing PQ«:h, good a.
lion· walking diotance to •- 1 ASKING $211,500

...'
r

I

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

5

•NEW U8TING- POMEROY.' App&lt;Dx. 3 lola o1 ground that has been rac:ently used u trsillr lilt. All
ytilltin are ort the site, immediate po11euian. Just your mobile home on lot and MOVE INI $2,500

I"" 1,

*

. ,. _
7 ill 13 I

has 3 bedrooms,
~8;:odriwway, carport,

~

7

.._.

'

-ul

.

'

SALEM STREET,. Good Investment property
older 2 stol)' consilling of 3 BR, t..th, FR Wid
morv. 3 Mwage and water hookups on
property. Cal for .,.,.lnlo.
1511

..

Oil, 21 ACAE FARM FOR ONLY $43;- Thol
prlco not only lncludoo llw 8nd · t&gt;ut
1111 Ill 11111: rlgloto, 1-eco - · bam,
-groUnd pool, .....,. dllll and
vllw.
Coli now, you don't want to _ , . ont,

-•.:r.:rlflu...

. -

:114 ft At. 2 ironi!OQO bot·

mlrlllo1 lrum holplill.

•

·-....
. , .....
- .or
g....
..
~Umr~W.
3 t-:leon•.
1 bill,
3 _...,-....

_ ,,
A lliWi
ftlo\
2 IIAICI!
w Olflll.

l!ll4. NEW LISTING •

ONF FRANK ROAD • A piu1ieJ brick ronch on
1.034 ac. mn with 3 bedrooms, 1)I baths, living .
room, dining room and kitchen. Ono car garsga
. attached. Asking only $52,500. Call today.
1523
EXECUTIVE HOIIEI - 2 story brick Colonial,
3 BR, 2\1 beths, lui finished basemen~ electric
heat pump wlsolar heating syslllin. Thl1 hou•
has amenities too enonnous to mention, Call
today lor mora inlormation.
,_

,

Homo hal 3 bodruomo, 111 bllho, ..,. 2 cor gouge
ot&gt; fllllo1 . BIM ,..,. yet, lho·-111
M Only
$40,11119. 11M1tr ell now I you want to-"*' one.

.....,. _ , ,

w....,. ••

..... ,

- · IIAINTEIINICEFREE 1tii81KYLIIE ROYAL
COVE-.! HOlE. - l o t, -..pod.IRI-. ~-'"*wlhllllot-.......

' thf _.._ lnr I
- I n hulcft, - . -~~
IRI·- -. - - . 2 -.,2t...,n&gt;ol

~· COTTAGE 011 IIEAUTtFUI. 0t10 IIIYEil

-~-.ra
. o1t1o:gt-.
*" qo~. 2A t .--.

wft~

white

- .dllpoNI.--

nllllll.

5

...........~.:.L,.

IIG. PRIZE PACKAGE FOR THE YOUNG FAMA.Y
3 BR wlh LR, oot·tn l!kfOon, boll, va holt, naw rori
lldng, fenced-In yanl, Qar!OQO, bulll·ln range, ~ ' ·~'

co ..... . ,. c ... .,

-·-"""·

I..,_

.

- · 71At:a. m.l. wllhlarl)lblm.

Aurlf - · IHI1IIrjpaonl-kl)&gt;.- . , _

::::::·.r~~c~w
.
.Pfi ...

1H8.

-utb-

rm. or lltUCtt '

..,.li dlng.......,

2
1
p
;s Q . . . ...... ~r
a I . I[Ddl _ _ _ paodL Twolaga
.,.._.,......_
W • t W . Good

1-2..,.. .... ~.ooo. llcnlo: 01&lt;1or ""'·

*"

zjz

Soil, On Uncotn Pilot, Horrfeon
T.......,lp, Cali Fran: 114-:ZU..

HU. COUNTRY LIVINQ, You Wll1 .,_ lhll 2 BR 2
blllo Kalon IMi Wlh Nl·ln k11chen, goo hoof, L.A. 'on

INVESTMENT TOWN..._
""· bld&gt;,j.- 3
TNro 1'1-'Y ....
been W8l Rlllrtllntd . ._rbDUpn:..

...... -

In Gollla c-.ty, :104-67W104.
U Mare Or ~ ..,,. fOf

h.

holSARGE.

- or-.
A CHOICE
-PLACE
· lAIIEVEW
TO 11U!L0 - llUIIDMSiol!
2., 5 - - .
D11oo
to While Act to ~ a.. Dr. 10 I 'p
Q.
01rtrtna 2 1111 ., -.g loll, a ....., 111 IRI
buulluf V1tw o1 h ..... AI ••• m, a , » .

'

HOME' 30
bam atyled home ·
Family room, living room,
fu
basement, garage. land rolling, approx. 20
tillable acres, fencing. pond, bam and other
outbuildings. Extra nice. Call today.
15~D

ll4oM7·3083. •

homo Wlh 3 . llrojMoco 2 ... htat pu'f~P. Alto lndude1 4000 ~q,
commerctai
' t&gt;ulldlng, ...,...~ being Ulod for a wtldlng
phooo Ollclrlc. For morotntormollon cal 111o

Inn. . - barn. You11 bo

EXCELLENT

Charyl Lemley.,....................... 742-3171
ShtoiVI Walter ....... 36NI421 or 192~$83

Dorcu, RKint, Ohio,

41 Ufoodtd - - . coune, • • ·

-ion

""!-~
-

Lota&amp;~ge
1.1" Ac,_, Co. Ad: 2S, Appla

. .1. NEW LISTlNG- 3111dtOtMro mobllllomo -

l)r1ck

--

-country
homo
.... ...........
3-·
._
LA
&amp; DR, tamly
n .J
ria •••
2 blftw

.....
- -1..,...
--rz•

35•

So.,lc tank, chy wolor, - ·

- · c:OMao, " - ond a - . .

M30.

•
'

FARM CONSISTING OF tU+ AC., PLUS 2
HOUSES - 2 story Colonial home with 4 BR.
LR, ·DR, k~.• bath. Second house has 2 BR,
LR bath ba-~ kilchon. Bam, Tool house
and 3 .;isc. bldgo. Pond, fencing,
mineral righ11o. Call today lor complalll

Wllh
1220. FJgldod - · MM-772•

H72. STATE ROUTE 110-3 at:. lot m'l. $tS,~.OO.

$44,000.00. Coli~.

30x40.-. . . ~.
· l.onlr
proud

LOTSI

Howl · Your Slngta Or
Dotrbie Wol1, -lo. Foundalloft &amp; Orjvowoy, Allin Cillo LAin
Pooltago; Law RoiM, Open loll

1· 5 olllnd- on loii: TIIIor Rd. Wont to
in&gt;w mDN , COrHcl lllto SARGE.
·
I
- · NEW LISTING - Loll o1 opaco In lhll 4 """"homo- on MI. Tabor Rd. llld ..._...,
1.5 ocroo, Including a pond. Vory n1ca

• ppn:~~.

11-a Smlth ..................................... 3'1t-2651
cathy Wrr, ....................... _............... 441-4255
ClndV Drongowaki ............................ 24S-1617

LOlli LOT! - City IChooll. Situated
claM to downtown. Call today for mora
inlonnalian. Mto.
.

LaiW MINna De.-.meut, El- - Cent• Will-You

~

ta4., BH.EYEL HOME - 3 - _ , ooHn ldt., 1g.
LA, 2~ baths. 1 -:=· m. lrNnKtete poea Inn.
·

m/1, ~ ac. pond. Ore11 hunllng lnd

•

Ju~ o-Jtt............................·............448-4411

30341 or 171-3431.

112ll, COUNTRY PLEASURE - ~ bodroorila. LR
bollo. -tn Ntctoon, lg.lornlly room. bomt. on 5 ocroi
noll. Con bo . , . . . _ w1111 ad&lt;lnlonal 5 ...,.. rro/l

$15,000.00.

rm. &amp; .,

,.,

1111!'171D.

v~ IWlH. ~. :..._. ... .....

&amp; ..-.y

•

'

14x'IO,

..-Jng fOf ADool? Conaldor A
P...OWilod Mobil&amp; Homo, Lorge
S.lactlon Law . . _ Dawn,.
p,. w::Up And Dollvory. , . -

446-6806

111111 ... lOT

homo

~t:-·•20.050.

I

when we think of you
safe in Grandma's

•

Real Estate General

PIIOFES~ IEIIVICE IIAICES THE DIFFERENCE

Directions from Pomeroy Ohio: Take U.S. 33 N. to Sr.
W
; st. Follow 681 West to Snowville. Turn right jn
Snowville onto Vance Rd. 60 Approx. 1 mi. to Auction·
Site.
Antique &amp; Collectable&amp;
Stone jars &amp; jugs from 1 to 15 gal. cast iron skillets;
cast iron dutch ovens, (1 large), 2 cast iron kattln
(large) 1 w/spider, stage coach 1,iUnk w!lley, 3 tier oak
stacked bookcase, small formal pie safe, 2 lunch
boxes, parlor table w/claw ball feel, pocket knives inc.
case ICC &amp; buck creek, meerschawm pipe in box, cast
iron boot sack, cast iron porcelean lined cuspidor.
Majestic and Dodge Bros car radios w/ cable controls.
(probably 20's or 30's), Ash Kosh work wear
thermometer (works), large slant lop feed box, quilt
hull an #L-23 5 112" pot, costume jewelry, small
dinner bell, mi~. glass ware, high chair, cast floor
lamp, buffet, library table, mick cans, ginny lind 314
bed.
Modem &amp; Toola
120 pc etched bar set, 3 pc. LR. Su~e . Blankets,
glassware, severql butcher knives, sound design
stereo w/ dual cassette, dining table &amp; 4 chairs, china
cabina1, 4 gun 2 drawer gun cabinet, magnasorgan,
lamps, school desk, 3 drawer dresser w/mirror, G.E.
dryer, porch glider, oak porch swing, 3 section TV
tower, older Hot Poin1 electric range, . refregara1or,
(frigidaire), craftsman chain saw, 6" vise, 6" grinder,
log chains, Iota of wrenches &amp; sockets, 318 Oar. Rev.
drill, saverallevala inc 4' hand tools (pos1 hole diggera
act.), 2 24' wood exh ladders, bamed chicken wire,
wheel barrow, several pes 1" rsbar, pile scrap metal,
pile scrap lurrber.
Note-This Is a paniallisting. Every1hing ia vary cltan.
starts at 10:00 AM. Be on time we sell good,
BAO, large and &amp;mill from beginning 10 and. Also for
by ownerl Hou... bam &amp; 50 acrlis. Mrs. Hulbba1rd I
will ba on hand day of sale to &amp;how the house.
Owner : Eclth Hubbard
Auctioneer: Col. W. Kehh Molden
Ohio LJc &lt;4318 814-742·2048
Lunch 11¥= Rutland Fr..wil Baptllt Church
Pothive 1.0.

moiollt

has been
surveyed and ready
to , bUild on. Flat to
rolling area.

Real Estate General

-rot llr, 1 112 bllho, olt1ro
nlco. s-till&amp; Raally, 304-175-

&gt;

~~
23 LOCUST ST.

10:00AM
Saturday, April 3, 1993
at
Edith Hubbard Ras.
Vance Rd. Snowville, Ohio

becomes bearable

1HI

•

Property

; .•R~..n.o. Wood, Brokw ..................448-4e18
' PhyiH• Mlller.............. ......... :...- ..... 256-1136
J. Marrlll Cartar ........... -.................... S'1t-21M
T11111mlt ~11 ............... ,........"".......441·1514

1.....585-1101
(614) 446-7101

•

~!!!!!!!!!!!~. '.

Real Eatale General

Public Auc:tloi\

:The pain that is
supposed to ease with
time ha s only
deepened.
:our sorrow only

~~

MASON, WV·

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
OWNERS: JAMES &amp; FLOANN MCCLURE

PATftiCIARDU, IIEAI.TOR. ......................24H575

A year has passed
you were so
y taken from

I·

tllliiisl '

EUNICE - . AEALTOII . ..........................11t7
RUTH liARR, REAI.TOR ............................~722

October 1971·
March 29, 1992

Real Estate General

5

INOilCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSIING CO.

March 28, 1962.
Sadly missed by
Mom and Dad,
wife and daughter,
brothers and
sisters.

RACCOON CREEK
PROPERTY
2.25 acres, more or less. Lovely
modern home; 2,1 00 sq. ft. of
living space, 4 bedro~uns, 2
baths, · le,rg~ 'garage. Ideal for
aurrmar fun. larga deck
oVerlooking creek area.

_

...
, _,_

~

7

III::GDEii I IUSJE lET·
. , llllng

liE I
&gt;,2
.......... - . .... -.llill:ilm.~

:...;.,-a a

a;;

- Cllf
-..r7
7 7 •- u ;·;::;·~

-Ills,
1111.4

-

=
0..

.__....-...,,.....paal.
,_,_ ..,.,,

....... - . .

nJFaiD

i+

Clll .... ,., ,... .........

1

,,

•

-

DWNEA

.~: ~3

MAKE

AN

OFFIRI

you, 1 bedroom IWlch oty11 home.llvtrtg - .
l.mlly room, I ~ 1111101111 with IIIIo b[)llllr Md
mor8. ew 11rnt ~·I
·· . . .

CFTY S0700UIIMALL ACREAGEI-3 BR
-home with fwnlly _ ,, Uvjllg room, Ml·
In ldlltten, 2 ..... lafl[l wood 20'x10' dock.
)VItllln mlnuta1 of Gallipollo. Cal today for
CG11.1sillilllng. Priced In lite S40'1.
1518
RIIICh .~ tt:on:t•
2bed.-ns,

lAYS

171 LUIA'IE P08SESSIONI - Ml Willing tar

0

.

Raccoon Township .......... ........ :... ....... 118 Acne
Raccoon To'MIIhlp ...............................eo 1!ocna
~hio
. 1iO'M1••'tlf".to··
T~''":.
· ~·:" "'':;''":·~·v~-!1 ~
~· ,.;........:·'!.l ........._....... ..........
H.inlngtl:lfl TownlilijJ.....-..,. ...........

O

:_il';_

lUi

or Ntiring.
1124

'

'

.:tiE K OF '11011 Cll OUR ENTIRE usnNGS PICK U~ THE fR!=E QUALITY HOMES BROCHURE AT
OF liE LOCAL 8AN1CS, RETAIL STORES,
SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS AND RESTAURANTS.
_,
•

\1

•

5

:··~

FEW UITINQI COMMERCIAL BUILOING II Ollw ilrwt. '"-IIY ueed as warehouse •
~= 3,11011 aq. II. 11' flllflt door. Call
•.. ,
·15u

n c;~NI com .

•.

mo,..

t

ri'

''

HAPPY HOUOW ROAD - Is this 1\1 atol)'
log homo with baseman~ 3 badroornt, 21/lt
betha, lsmily rot;lill, living room, ldlclhen
laundry skylight. lllalilll ~al!lm. -.,.d
porch, heat pump, Olnlnll air, 12'X12' building
M'ld much
Call for dolaila.
1425

--~4--+'11

•

'

•'

�•••

O wo
Rearrange the 6 scrambled
rds below to make 6
simple words; Pr int letters of
ea ch In Its line of sq uares.

I

e

W1n1 to ..... tobacoo
Ma_, County, caM Andy S ler,
Monlan'a F1rm, A1. 35,
y,
304.t37-2011.

11

Wooa~alty,

Autos for Sale

446·1066 .
-=~~=:::::::-.::-a:;f
Mooo C.llrllury, Rullo r I II UOI

, . Oodoe ,.,., ..c. cond.,
2dr., horiltap, under 100 000
milo, will 11011 lor $600 F1rm;
1178 KIWIUid, IXC. cond.,
$100; 114-Mf.2141.

,.. . . . .. u.. . .

JMirellt :::-n:=::--:1745
2017 .

1V/5 Ptymollh Fury, vory good
condHion, now tim, 1800. 814-

.s

good!

112!;
w1nl to bu_y ~., ...... ng boK

bodr

-=

1 n1o lllln brood brown robbll,
110, 1...}'124710.

te-

z
1 U-'n Poll Roats• - · 3 Yllrl Old; 1 Clt.iroltlo
Bull camo From Bob Evono
F"""" AoalotoriKI, 3 YNr Old,
114 lli IZf'r, Anor 1 P.ll.; or

For s.... lnldmlll . IOith
opudomolor IIMI
con'""' $90.81, good oond., 1...

11124041.
..... - t l d _ N _ ,
.... .. $11. ... - . -771ittor I:GO.

ca~ For Hon-

lnatNmenta

lllh61• ,..,_ a Roland
I_,
~· Sl,otlll (lq - · Gultoro 'And lllr11n
lluch Pllnl•llll gun, Nko ,_, _ , - - P - HIOftml!l§lilld
lluolc,
Joclteon,
OH
114'011no, 1100. -1721 oftlr 1111.

. :lf!on.

1!9* ~iKI
'bolgo ..........
, _ -,·
.

:=c.--..... PII!Ch

-

""' lor !logon.

•

o.taun

moo oao, e'K-185-

31140.
I cro. Cowl WMh COI¥H 6
Chi lull ",100, 114 3810312 Af..
tori P.ll.
Alpine- .... FebNiry 11112.
F..., llorch 7, 11193. Color:
Block And Whllo $70 814-3181311.
uo And Cfti.Anauo . Black
- . b l y Prlood. Stoia

310,

2 · Door

Good, Body Folr, $100. cau 114-

Hltcllbock. 4 eyllndtr Englno,

441·11:11.
1H4 c.brlty CL, 88,000 mltoa,
$3,300, oil _ , , ouloL 4 - ·
304-47W792 oftor 5:110 •II.

or-.

Pram-.,

-..-tv--.

Prilm Do

..

.

.

.

.

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

.

Home
BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

Uncondlllanal llt.llme gulf'lln·
let. Local rolorlncoo 1\imlobiKI.
can 1-400.287-45711 Or 114-237·
0488 R - Wtltfii'OOIIng. Eataii&amp;W.d 1171. ..

eurad, "]:rw

ottt. .

1~1.

eity
sehoolo, dou.,.wide, 3 bedrooms, 2 batha, cenlral air,
gal9, two oul&gt;uldlnga and an abova.ground. pool.
CAU. ABOUT SEEING THIS ONE.

rrJ

~..:.

.,.

' FOR YOUR CONVENIE~.TRY~
·
OUR TOLL FREE NYM!ER
-

uoo 884 108f

.

Okf.r

/Newer

Etlll~n~~te._ 114-~7=­

TEAFORD'S FEA11JAE PROPERlY OF THE WEEK
101. NATURE, THE WAY GOD INTENDED IT TO
BE. I!Mudlul grHn lrMI and greu. FNII you can
pick bll ond aal And a Vie!' of the IUnMt and IUMOI
as you over1ook the peaceful river. It makes you glad
to be alive. Call now.

BUSINESS OFFICES &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE. CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

I DULLOY I
::;rr~tnd. brcwn,

.
101. NEW• UITING

NEW USTING - l.oeeted on Stata Roule

l)n

1171 011C Plt:VIp 4 liD, Ex ••• ,.. _ , .. Folr, -Sol

- HandyRran'o Spoclal.
Conveniently located In town, but otill vary private.
with work, could be an excalont rental proporty. Only
$10,000.00.

Campllig

--.--Til
..
---aetpt.-

. 1111Fonl3t... trucll- ....

~·----·
......,co
•ani.._._..

110. NEW USTING- Oldor home right smack dob in
the middle ot SyraquN. Easy aeco11 to owimming
pool, laMia eourto and grocery slo111. Uving ha111
ehildran ihoukl never get bored. For mon1 inlorma.'
lion call.
·

-

-

Equipment

C

p I , tl Vl - . good .,.
................... niC8

ltoor

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

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

$71.00 3Q4.Q5.

~

Foni 'MIQ, Pll, 1 Ton, 4
Wll; r-. [ I r1 BMr;

79

I

~S1.SOO.I1tt•3040-

' WE NEED USTINGSI

§W&amp;¥

F-111111'0 HN!Ing And Cooling.'

_campers&amp;
llolor Homes

lnatlilltion And S.vlc•. ASES

cartltlld. Allldontlal, COfnmor·
clot. !14-256-1611.

11M Wiiw t p, 30 ft. Chillh1in

FOR INFOAIIATION ON OUR ENTIRE U11111GI PICK'UP
THE FREE QUAI.ITI' HOIIEI tRX:HURE.' .\T SOliE OF
THE lOGAL IIANKI, RETAil. ITOREI,IIII'ERIIARIIETS,
=---;IIO;;;TEI.I MD IIEITAURANTI. .

-

-

84

$25,000. -

-·-~1731.

1117 Nomad camper. ••• fur-

.....

.......

.... p.tor,

BIL

• 37114111.

type home has aval)'l"!na you could uk Iori You will lind 3 BR, 1
bath, LA, eat-In ldlchen, lam. rm., baaemenl, 2 car garage. The
basemerc has a rae. rm., 101., Ldry. nn. Also, ttwe are add'l. rooms
- klcllon, bath, LA, DR, 2 BR Lots oldcooal&gt;l Aloo , a preparod troller lot lnclude(ll Excellent home. Way underpr~dl Call tor an
lfiPOinlmenl. OWner wonts IO Ill o n -

,.

ANI.nllal or comme,relal
wlrtna. new MrVkie or r.p~l,..

IMIIIweese • •'Ill cue. Mlc ....r
- . . - - • •••...,. alx,

-Font F-1511 1.or1o1 nT .... ... cond,

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

OWNERS READY TO DEALt
Beauttful naar-mafllenanct1 ,,.. homt jult outskie ol town on 4.3
acres rnA, tocoted on SR 124 JUII culalde ol s -. Thll ranch

-.nwr or IG-

M..ter

UcenHd

electrtcl111.

Ridenour Eloe:lrictl, WV000301,
304-471-1786.

Real Estate General

Houttna:
Ait,Whell. ChYCk

:

Anvttmo,

..,-·"·),r4"ir ·

Wii(IIIM,

Crook Touclolng. 114-246-

Canaday'

Raai·Eatate General

Realty ·

992r2886 .

For - · lluo,

a.-,

PIM. lllodt, Emorold

.

Improvements

Orooo ...., With Whlo

Solin llolohl"'
- :JOW75.1fl0.
-· 1,110,
Won
nowy wllohho ,.,.
lo lllllchlng hllr pltco, o1u I,
$10. 304-411--

4

ormt, Joclteon, Dhlo ,,..
21M316.

clorlno~ battor cau1o

thin llood. ""''""" ..
. _ ....~ '""' lpm,

0343.

z Purobnd Maino Anlou Cowl,

:Ill Chi, Ill Anguo Bull, block,
_ , . . , , . . . old, _
..

~_!!I.......,Spol.,.

N - Ballory Runa, 114-44!-

114-M7-72151.

11,210 loch, 114-317-'11117•

MuSical

1111 lllrcury . Lynx Waaon
Automalk:, PI, PI, $200 Firm
'1112

f~DD~M..

--1

2170.

· 81

Homoo. Addnlono, Foundallono,
AooHng, KHtMno 18atho. In·

108. ~ USTING- SQme time and ellort wil maka
lhaoo 42 acr.. a booutiful home lia. Tho ooncralo
building located on lhl 'p!OpOrty would be a grMt
a!Dntge placo. l\llloing only ~.000 .00

1m CMwy caprice, v.a, auto.,
tor 1178 Ford Bronco Of Font
4WD pickup; 114~17-4292.
1171 Chivy lmpola, runt good,
· - ,_ tlroo, 614·742·3141.
1110 Chln11o. Au~• vood,
good, .... londtr anG grlto.
Nice work cor. 1100. 304-882·

....

Services

periinc.

Inc.

32 Loculi Sb ~"'• Gallipolis

air. crulaa, runli

I

.

CUnle Home lmprov1m1nta. No
Job Too Big Or Small, Yurs Ex-

Transportation

441-7041.

RAGLUV

,

446•3636

Sl-: I To 11, 114-:1_,,

S..w 2ll'llo II onl'orool ltv Marcil
-.. Polnl Pluo, 2101 Joclteon
Aloe, -.. P-.nt, WV. 304~·

I

r

NEW FREE DUALITY HOMES ROOK SHOWING NEAR!.Y ALL
LOCAL REAL ESTATE LISTINGS, IN COLOR, IS NOW
AVAILABLE. PLEASE STOP BV OUR OFFICE FOR YOUR
FREE COPY.

Rod loquln Dnllo, For
kJt,- .. I04.a1M42I
Rdll A;t,liKI $10; ....... Drap

110; Wolnul DroP
LMfTable 140,114 441 3817.

IAil

So_,.l ,..,.. ol hllwy

QUALITY CONSTRUCTED, WELL MAINTAINED 2
BEDROOM RANCH IS A GI1EAT FINDI FIREPLACE IN
LIVING ROOM, SNACK BAR SEPARATES KITCHEN
FROM COZY DINING AREA. CARPORT, LARGE LOTI
BECOME A HOMEOWNER! $46,500.

-.n

~~~·
tor ..... UOpolr,l141123-

,_.,

Sl.. " lull, llllhl pink =~
$71.00-

-ftlnclmoill,.
_,_,
, -181, lf4.112.
cinctlo,
!IM4.

:·

Blloo WMh 11m, 114 4•·1111,
r~ a.rfleld
A-, Golllpolla.

T1no -

-·

Tool lox Fw eam,_ct Truck,
I~=-~~~Lillo
.

$71, Coli

TwD :I'd' while •lumlnurri "ldlna wind c a. $20 each, call 114-

IG43111.

Utod odjuollblo lncllno end lift
-111r ......
wlth
-wolahlo,
.
1w

ottortpm.

Utod ZIO i*Mf.ZIOI.

m.

""=!:3
•

ol .....
•

180,

PORTI..AHO- II you',. looking lor ihatournmer homo on
Ill rivor, wo'vo got ~. One to two bedroom farm houoo
has now windows, 2 cor garage, 2 bams, and on oiCI
chicken housa lilting on opprox. 137 ocres, with 20 to 25
tillable acnls.
ASKING $150,000

'IAPPY HOUOW ROAD - Looking lor a place to build
that droorn home or a placo to park flat homo.
Will hlro'o opprox. 2 ..,., alreody oot up and waiting lor
you. Land Onty.
'
ONLY$12,000

30M7HIIII.

1224. TAKE A LOOK AT THISII - ·
localed on Second A.ve., walk to store,
church, school and shopping, 2 story home
oHors kitchen, LR, DR, FR, 3 BR, 2 baths,
heaVcentrel a1r.

BOY, COUNTRY GIRLI - Htra'o a
house lhat will satisfy both. Within walking
distance to downtown, this home't location Ia
groat. Whoio altho oomo lme lfo locatacl in a
quiotloeation backed up by aeras and aeno ol
woodland . large 4 bedroom home with ovor
2100 oq. ft., 2ll baths, iving room, clning 100m,
eal·in kitchen and lamlly n&gt;om. ScrHn~ !n
porch, large polio ond abovo ground poOl. 2 cor
build-in gantge. Good storaga. s~1 ,ooo.

READY FOR SDME COMFORTABLE COUNTRY
LIVING - NEAR THE CITY? 3 BEDROOM, 2 !lATH
HOME HAS FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, 2 CAR
ATTACHED GARAGE. STOCKED POND, CABIN
BESIDE POND IS GREAT FOR OUTINGS. APPROX. 24
ACRES. FENCED PASTURE, NICE PLACE FOR
HORSES. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT. WE LOVE TO
SHOW THIS PROPERTY!

WE NUD USJINGS!
IF YOU WANT YOUR PROPERTY

room,

POMEROY - Uncoln Stroot -A 2·3 bedroom homo with
uppor ond lower r•r po~h. and utility room . Could be a
nice startar homo or rental property.
$14,000

y--ot-twln
touncfOI tvllo, good cond, ~D.

.

IN TOWN LOCATION - Good neighborhood.
Doop lot. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room,
clnlng
..t-in ldlehen. Won't find many at
thlo to!' p~ ~.11201
AVE LOTS FOR SALE - Loeated on Rt. 35
' and old Rl 35, thia property il privata and
convenient. Prieao start at $t,900. Call lor
moM infonnalion.
t223
• I\ICREASE YOUR UFEI - CLOSE TO THE
MINEI ...: Tired ol driving ovor 25 mllos to lha
mlnoo? Hare'a a country Mfting with a 3
ollera a
bedroom """" that·wil cut down your driving
eomlortabla way ol
opoeiouo rooms.
tima and lncraaoo the time you opond dolng
lndude 3 bldroomo,
ool·in kitchen,
thingo you wanl 2 balho, 2 ear garage.
fal!llly room with vaultacl coiling and briek
$42~. Coil Dava for details.
t211
finlplaco, and targo living room. Looda ol
REDUCED. • .REDUCED. ·• .Ownar hal •
- w • taka lui advantaga ol the 480 ft. ol
raducod the prto. 812,0001 All the opaco you
lake trontau-. HU!)E full walk out baooment
IIMCI. 120 ocreo, m~. plenty of woodo, .,.otunl,
doubleo living opoco il noodad. 2 cor ganga
filhg pond and 3 bedroom hu~ting lodge .
pluo garage door ontranee to baoemant
Loeatacl on Low Janos Rd., Vinton, $65,000.
workahop. Mainttnanet !roo exlertor allowo
' t700
you leioura ~me to watell thO gooM graeell.llly . Call to - or mab an ollerll
YOUR
CllFIER
OF
COUNTRY
HERE'I
gildo in and out ot the lakl or go altar that '
V.ry nlcoly ramodeled home raoting on 2.114
tunkar baH In the lalto. 52 toot traatacl clack
ocrao oi·Gallia County. Oalt lcitehln. remodtled
with abilm doo11 oil malllr oukl, u I'll oo
bathroom, now windowo and more, leave you
room, IIIIo onhancoolhl grtat lake tront
with 111111to do. FrM gao h•t. 3 bedroomo, 1 \
on, S152P, S.rioua buy111onlyl
'-'til bath, lYing room, dining room. 116m and
ouibuildlng. $68,800.
.
t224
YOUR "GET STARTED" HOME - Settle Into
thla homey' thnoa bedroom with feneod
backyard. You'll love tho targo klldlon .afl!!..
odjoinlng cozy htmlly room. Pltcod at t37,UOO.

CHESTER - Tuao Road - Thoro's more to it that a. 1
drive by won't tan - Inside lha houu thara are 3 bad·
rooms, 2 batho, a oeuna, family room, firaplaco, okyligh~
ond Mexiean elay tilo in the kitchln. Outlido ia a Gazebo
bar, inground pool, and privacy lance wllich would ba
gn1at lor entartaining guosts.
PRICED AT Sl'V,OOO

EAGLE RIDGE ROAD - Appmx. 7 aeras ol vacant
ground. Moat Ia hay land artd has a gn1at building site.
Water and aloclric is available. Owner will fonanco with a
reaoonable down peymont.
$10,500

.,....red
gpnge.

414 THIRD AVENUE -415 BRs, 2 baths,
kitchen, DR, LA, alum. siding, gas heal,
cent. air, now earpet. (903)

WANT TO BULD nil IPRING? - Bettor
,._ a look at No 8 acra lot on Lower River
Ro.d. Prlcad to Ml at $7,000.
ti5G3

' SpoclalIIDDLEPORT -IIH Stroot- A Handyman'o
2 tots and a five room houM with 2·3 bedrooms. Noodo
quilo a bit of work Inside, but the outside looks pretty
ni011.
$1,000
POMEROY- lllaln Stroot- A eommoraal building with
2,000 square loot and 3 aportrnonta lbovo tha1 have just
• n rornodoled and ali have new fumacos. Tho uplllaire
has a sns a month income. Great ploco for a bulinau,
ond an inOomo from the aportmonta to poy the billo.
SQ,OOO

QUIET COUNTRY SETTING FOR A
SPLENDID HOlE -AI btlc:k ranc_h. 2.374
aCreS mil, 4 8Rs, 2 baths. laJgo kitchen." 2
porches. dad&lt;. haat pump, 2 car

SOLD
GIVE US A CALL!

·"v

IMPRESSIVE BRICK RANCH - GREAT VIEW OF THE
OHIO RIVER FROM THE FAMILY DINING OR LIVING
ROOM. FIREPLACE IN FAMILY FIOOM AND LIVING
ROOM . 3 BEOROOMS, 2 BATHS, MASTER BEDROOM
FEATURES DRESSING ROOM AND SLIDING DOORS
LEADING TO PRIVATE PATIO/POOL AREA. EQUIPPED
KITCHEN HAS SNACK BAR. THERE IS AN INTERCOM.
ATIIC FAN, LOTS AND LOTS OF CLOSET SPACE,
ATIACHED GARAGE, MUCH, MUCH MORE. CALL
AN APPOINTMENT TO VIEW THIS HOME SOON.
.LISTING!

:'!Y,

bath briek homo with ki'itehlo~,
laundry room ond larga
be oonvlortad into 3rd-IJ8i:li00ift Nico covoirod
front pc~h and targa patio, a ono cor garaga
Rnd mora.
.
,
1300

·

ATTENTION FIRST ~ HOME OWif..
ER .... 121 O....ln SINI'I.- Nico homo allen
3 BRs. LR, kitchen ,'FA, bath &amp; laundry nn.,
olum. siding, nico yard.
·

tSOI

·, PRIME LOCATION -Whatara thothraa moat
inpot1ant oonoldoralonoln buving 'rwaleotato? ,
LOCATION . LOCATION. LOCATION . This it
oopoelaliY lmporlllnt In commo~lal p10p0rty.
WEJVE STOPPED FOOLIIQ AROUNO • • •
AVAILABI:- BEST LOCATION I~ town. Comor
And roduced the prto. an Iiiia chinning oldor
ol Stall SlrMI (RI. 518) and 2nd Avonua (RI.
claaole to $72.500. Thlo homo offer• 3 ..
7). Graat axpooura !tom ' otop . l~t. Comer
bed-.ro, 2 bllolho, living room·, dining room,
dloplay windowo. (Graat condition. 'Ovor 2,000
family room, lalga oat·in fdlchan, 2 cor garaga,
aq. ft. Dl ramodolod r.tall lpiiCI). Pluo olfioe
ojtualod on a ~,_,. 3 aen11, mil, wooded
. , _ and oto....-. Rental .,_ on IOCOnd
oottlng &gt;Mth accooo to ~ filii pond. Seller
1ftoor. 3 _,. apartment and 4 roorri offico Mt
moona bulinoaa. No -abla ohr rafuood,
up CMirtooldng the polk.' Cd Dave Wl11111an 1
Cal Carolyn lodoy.
IICD
tor moM lnfotmatlon.
11201

THERE'S MORE THAN MEETS THE EYEI
- Spaeiouo 3 bedroom Cloyton homo. 4 yean
old, located on 1.5 acres. Clooo to eity. City
water, contra! air, ollra largo outbuilding and
mono. CoN for mon dotaila.
1703
WOODED LOTS - Juot off Rio Grande •
Cante.rpoint Road. 2.5 aeroo to I acrao.
ProtedYI mtrietiono. All troo co...-rod loll.
'Ideal location' noar collage. Lat ua lhow you
the lOll in thrl quia~ wooded oittJng.
f237
.

.

""'- .

\

•

·RFAL FSiruE Jl'C ·
' 446?04~

RACINE - FornHy Nooded lor !hi&amp; HI atory, 3 to 4 bodroom homo with 4 pcrcltaa, l\ baoomont, dining room,
family room, and a small outbuilclng. Good sized lot. Woo
$28,500.
ht,$00

'

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker ................................ 892·5ft2
BRENDA JEFFERS.:......................................... 892-3056
DARUNE STEWART......................................... 892.a&amp;s
SANDY BUTCHER ............................................ III2-5371
JERRY SPRADUNG ................................ (304) 112-34et
OFFICE .............................................................. II2-2UI

..

RiA IALE

• 44~9555
. . -Sonny·oarnes- 448-2707

Thomaa- 448-2336

..

~

...

-- . -·

LOT FOR SA~ ON IT,
AT. 160,
NORTH GAtUA ESTATES - ·Approx. 314
ocn, ""'· a-.tiful opot lor
. a home.

a.)n ACRES + 7011~5 METAL
. . . . . . 1Cf 't# I~ ..... lcilcllon, .......
......... ~ .... bt . ...

114.421 ACREI MIL, GREEN AND
W L&amp;IWELO TWPI,.-.Nstoll SL Rt. 35,
a l - land. ldoal !Or clovolopment.

II'JES10AI - R_.,.,., Road. 40 A. mA.
rrroa1r wo dod $180 per ftiCI!'Ih lriCOnll

CARioEL ROAD - 4 mi. N. Ql Rio Grande.
Awrox. 24 ocroo ol surveyed vaeontlond.
ldiaJ tor new hom&lt;i. $19,000. .

.... -

~

$48,000.

•

school district. Minutes to town.
-

~.

NICE COUNTRY HOME ON APPROX. 10 ACRES LARGE LIVING ROOM , EAT· IN KITCHEN , AMPLE
CABINET SPACE, 3 BEDROOMS, DEN. 2 CAR
GARAGE, KYGER CREEK AREA BETTER CALL
- SOON! $52.000.
VICTORIAN STYLE APARTMENT HOUSE PRESENTlY
HAS FOUR RENTAL UNITS. LOCATED IN THE CITY.

khchon/dlning combo, laundry rm., city

COAL TW'I'LE with .tl
to6ding lldilioo. 1Mi71l tiiMrln&gt;OL Col tor

-

•

WANT TO OWN A HOME? NO MONEY?
GOOD JOB? GOOD CREDIT? CALL
BLACKBURN REALTY today. We are
mortg~ge consultants. You may be
SURPRISED at what you can buy.
Call 61-4-446~08.
·

REDUCED TO $43J!OOI • Great for new
home OWII811. 3 8111, 1 112 baths, l1'1,

_........

®

.

- ~J! ~

WOODED AREA - BEAUTIFUL PINES
SURROUND THIS OUTSTANDING REDWOOD HOME.
FAMILY ROOM/KITCHEN AREA, BEAUTIFUL FORMAL
LIVING ROOM AND DINING ROOM, 4 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS, LARGE STUDY OR HOBBY ROOM OPENS
ONTO DECK ON SECOND FLOOR. FIREPLACE IN
LIVING ROOM. WOOD-BURNER IN FAMILY ROOM. 2
CAR GARAGE. 9 ACRES. $1 25.000.

.

CHERRY DRI~ - 2 BRo, 1 both, LR,
k~ehln , gao h~l, eity w...r, uMd as rental
proporty. $29,000. (181)
.

pedt.

--

..

�.

J

•

Pomeroy--lllddleport--GaiUpolla, OH Point Pleaaant, wv

Pqe P8 Sunday Tlmea Sentinel

March 28, 1993

Community pledge will key Bane One merger deal
By M.R. KROPKO
Atsodated Press Writer
CLEVELAND - Bane One
Corp. has eliminated lhe only
obstacle to a $10 billion mer~er
deal by agreeing to improve tts
financial involvement in lhe city's
neighbOOJoods.
Mayor Mich~el R. White said
Thur~~ay the city will drop its
~111011 lo lhe merger of Valley
. abonal. Corp., based in Phoenix,

GARY MILLER

~iller,

PAUL CARDONE

Cardone promoted

• ' CHESHIRE • Two employees
·o l Ohio Power Co.'s Gavin Plant,
W. Miller and Paul D. Car·
jloao, were Pf011101Cd to key posi·
liOOs in ~ MainleiUIIICe Dept.
~ Miller; of 166 ·Roush Drive,
.f'lew Haven, W.Va., was named
·maiatenance superhnendent. He
succeeds ihe late Donald
'Honlmln, who died 111\. 23.
Bcainning his career at Kyger
Creek Plant as a laborer in 1955,
Miller advanced to maintenance
~per 1atu that year llld jr. mainltnince man in 1957. He was promoced to main~ man at Kentucky Powu (;o.' s Big Sandy Plant
in 1962, master maintenance man
in 1966 an4 maintenance foreman
Jo 1970 before transferring to
Gavin Plant in 1973. Miller had
Served as production superinten·
Clent·maintenance since 1980.
(Bolh KeniiK:lcy Power and Ohio
Power arc part of lhc American
Elcelric Power Srstem.)

·oary

Cardone, of Jolin's Road,
Racine, succeeds Miller as production superintendent-maintenance ..
Cardone was hired as a. uliliir manB at the company' s Muskt11gum ·
River Plant iii 1'965 8lld was promoted to utility man-A and then
coal handler in 1966, to mainte·
nance helper in 1967, jr. mainle·
nance man in 1968, maintenance
man in 1969 and master mainte·
nance man in 1971. He transferred
to Gavin Plant in 1973 and
advanced to maintenance supervi·
sor in 1978.
.
Miller is a member of the
Moose Lodge. He ancl his wife,
Sue, have a daughter, .Jennifer
Ranegar of Gallipolis, and a son,
Scott, Qf New Haven.
Cardone and his wife, Janice,
have two sons, Paul 1r. of Cincinnati and Trevor of Abenleen, Md.,
and a daughter, Annett of The
Plains.

Humphreys elected to AEf fower
~ervice Corp. board of directors
.: NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- Nor11111\ R. " Raildy" Hum~ys, Jr.,
manaacr of Philip Sporn Plant,
. J:{ew Haven, W. Va., has been
elected 1o a one yeai term on the
board of directors of lhe American
Electric Power Service Corpora·
lion, Colilmbwl.
. IS
·
.. The AEP Service Corporai100
t!Je management and technology
arm of the American Electric
System. ~r.,.spom Plant
is. operai.ed by A
hian Power
.Company, one of seven operating
cpnpanies in lhe AEP System.
Humphreys holds a bachelor of
science degree from the College of
En,inee~ing .and Technology at
OhiO Uatvcmty: He bas attended
the American Elecaic Power Sys·
tern Management Program at the
Upivcrsity of Miqhigan Graditate
Sehool of Business Administration.
NORMAN HUMPHREYS
Humphreys began his utility
career in 1971 in lhe Performance
Department at Sporn and uans- positions of performance en&amp;ineer,
to Indiana Michigan Power performance supervising engineer
C~mpany ' s Donald C. Cook
plant performance superintendent'
Nuclear Plant. Bridgman, Michi· and maintenance superintendent
gan, lhe foUowing year as a stan· ·before becoming assistant plant
up engineer. He returned 10 Sporn man~er in 1984. He was promoted
in 1973 and advanced lhrough lhe to plant manager in 1989.

r.ower

terred

Trawick ·named to AEP board
I·

\

into Bane One. Cleveland had
Thomas E. Hoaglin, chief execasked the Federal Rcaerve Boanlto utive· officer of Bane One Ohio
reconsider lhe merger's approval.
Corp., which oversees Bane One
While lhe Fedelal Reserve gen• operations in Ohio, said at a news
erally approved of Bane One's conference with White that the city
activtties in low- and moderate· and corporation have reached an
income-neighborhoods in the cities informal agreement to a set of
it~!CfVCS, illl merger report March I . aoaJs.
·
satd tho Bane. One affiliate in •
"This is not what I would char·
Cl~:veland needs to improve its per·
acterize
as a formal ~rcement,"
formance.
Ho~lin said. "It is a joint state· oil March 2, White called lhe ment of initiatives. It's a very
Federal Reserve's approval of lhe strong commitmentlo !Jte city.'' .
. . ~anc One-Valley National merger
Hoaglin rderred to the agreean OUII'IICOUS $lap in the face of ment as "a road map so that we
every citizen of Cleveland."
c~ more effectively penetrate the'
B1,11 on Thursday, White said lhe Clevelanll market ... ''
city is ready "to put past differ·
The city has estimated that
enccs aside.''
neighborhoods may benefit by as
Bane One operates in Ohio,
Indiana, Mich' , Wisconsin, lUi' much as $67 mill ion over four
nois, Texas, ~!~orado and Ken- years.
Bane One ~ to m8lce severtucky. Its Cleveland subsidiary, at changes
in Cleveland. Among
Bank One Cleveland, consists of them, Bank One Cleveland wiD:
five branch banta.
• Establish a new mortgage pro-

'• CHESHIRE • Andrew J. Traw
lck Jr., Gavin Plant manager for
Ohio Power Co., was recently
~to serve a one-year rerm on
the American Electric Power Ser·
vice corp. board of directors.
· Ohio Power is orie of seven
AEP operating companies. The
S'ervice Corp. provides manage·
ilient and technical services to the
ilj~C!alin• companies.
'"
.,· Trawtck previously served on
die board in 1989. He has been
cjpployed in lhe AEP System since
1956, ·when he was hired as a test
eilgineer at Appalachian Power
Co.'s Glen Lyn Plant. Following
ioveral promotions, he moved to
the John Amos Plant near
Charleston. W.Va., as operations
~uperintendcnt in 1970. Trawick
was promoted to assistant plant
manager at Mountaineer Plant in
1978 and jo,ined Ohio Power as
Joining Trawick on the AEP
Gavin Plant manager in 198S. board and representing Ohio Power
(Appalachian Power is a sister is Canton . Division Manager
company of Ohio Power in the William F. Sheffield.
AEP System.)
.

Bank One will offer small
.Jlusiness seminars April15, 16
ATHENS • Bank One. Athens.
with participation from the
.Women's Bustness Resource Pro·
pam of the Ohio Small Business
pevelopment PJ'ogram, is sponsor·
inl financial lllllllllllentenl seminars
on Aprill5 and 16at the Ohio Uni·
vcnity Iiiii in Alhens from 8 a. m.
toS p.m.
: The seminar, Managing and
Pinanciq Independent "Business:
Pntctical Tools for Control, Sur·
vi val, ll1d Success." will cover topics rangina from understanding
rmancial statements and monitor·
in1 cash lfow, 10 negotiating with
banb and learning lhe rules o( the
.banking game.
• The seminar will be led by

Steven J. Abercrombie, Executive
Vice President of Business
Resource Services, which is nationally known for illl financial seminars for business owners and managers.
.
The seminar is especially bene·
ficial for .busine11 owners, key
managers, entrepreneurs and busi·
ness advisors. Sixteen hours of
continuing professional education
credit are available 10 CPA's.
The seminar· is $295 per partici~L Class size is limited 1o 60 par·
belpants.
Reservations may be made by
calling Jane Heintzelman at (614)
593-6681 or 1:8()(J.{;77-4994 .

___

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

G. A. Burnett
promoted by
Columbia Gas
COLUMBUS ·G. AJail Burneu
of Reynoldsburg, Ohio, asset
accounting supervisor f9r the
Columbia Gas- distribution companies, headquartered in .Columbus,
has been promoted to manager of
asset accounting.
Bumeu joined lhe gas company
in 1956 as a plant accounting clerk
at Columbus. In 1958, he was
named unitization clerk !here, and
in 1975 he was promoted to coolin- ·
uing property records. supervisor.
Bur.neu was promoted to asset
aceouitting s~ in 1989.
A Reynoldstlurg, Ohio, native,
Burnell is a 1950 graduate of
Reynoldsburg High School. He
holds an associate degree in business administration from Franklin
University, Columbus.
Burneu acMd in lhe u.s. Army
in Kola, from 1952 lhrough 1954.
He and bi.s wife, Janice, a native
of Gallipolis, Ohio, have
two sons and two grandchildren.
The Columbia Gas distribution
companies, including Columbia
Ga.s of Ohio, provide gas aervice 1o
more lhan 1.8 million residential,
commercial and industrial cus·
tomcrs in Ohio, Kentucky, Mary· ·
land, Pennsylvania and Virginia.
Nearly 1.2 million 'of !hose cus·
tomers we in Ohio.
Yott never know.

But, you can always
be sure.
'
~1G1N6ct

.!:::.3

tfiii\'Ll

;,;:=~=·~yq~

\16~·
For the finest natural quaUty, on:

MEIGS COUNTY
DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
JAMES A. BUSH,IIIgr.
PHONE. 882·2511
VINTON, OHIO
DISPLAY YARD
MAIN·11T.
JAY and JOE MOORE
PHONE 311-11113

regional
finals

gram designed to cncoUiagc home
ownership for low-income 10 mod·
crate-income bonowers.
• Fund counseling programs for
a home buyers and people facing
foreclosure.
• Invest $2.5 million in lowincome housing tax credit projects
annually an.d make equity invest·
ments tn new housing develop·
. ments.
• Invest $100,000 in a city-run
loan program for small businesses.
• Seek to open three new
branches.
• Attcmptlo improve its minority hiong.
Getlin(! big banks to make loans
or invest m businesses In inner-cit~
neighborhoods has been a major
goal of White's adininistralion. The
city has agreements for neighbor·
hood investment wilh Clevelandbased bank~ Society Corp. ancl
National City Corp.

Super Lotto:

2-18-27-36-41-46
Kicker:
512405
Pick 3:
115
Pick 4:
0725

Page4

a1
Vol. 43, No. 232

Copyrl~hled 1993

By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL until last Friday.
father.
Associated Press Writer
Gore revealed at the outset lhat
A consumer panel was the ftrSI
WASHINGTON - Vice Presi· lhe task force will make available to testify, and speakers urged the
dent AI Gore promised that the starting today in a resding room at White House to include long term
Clinton admimsuation will give the Department of Health and care in a basic benefits package.
Americans "freedom from fear" Human Services the wotking docu·
Daniel Schulder, lhe legislative
about their medical bills, as he ments prepared by lhe task force director of the National Council of
launched a: marathon hearing today study teams.
Senior Citizens, said a heallh syson health reform.
''Fixing ·lhe system will not be tern without long-term eare "would
Gore, sitting in for Hillary Rod· easy. But the American people be like a transportation system
ham Clinton, presided at lhe 'first have demanded lhat we fundamen· without roads."
public meeting of the White House tally reform a sysiem that costs 100
Phyllis Torda, director of health
task force on heallh reform, which much and wastes too much and and social policr for Families
summoned ~4 , special interest :;erves 100 few," said lhe vice pres· · USA, said Amencans want the
jP'OUP5 10 testify at a 13·h0111: hear· · 1denL
peace of mind lhal will come from
mg on )low to revamp lhe ailing,
"Health care reform means ftrSI , knowing they will get the same
L\ ·~· system that is costing $940 and foremost giving the American
help caring for a relative with
btllion annually.
· people freedom from fear," said Alzheimer's Disease as for one
The task force has been under Gore.
· with hean disease. She said a suit·
fire from Con~ and lhe courts
Mrs. Clinton the task force . able benefit would cost $15 billion
for conducting most of illl work in chair w.as in Little Rock Ark.
to $20 billioo a year.
Clinton's heallh reform team is
secrecy and refusing to name its wilh President Clinton at the
511-member staff and advisers side of her ailing 81-year-o1d just five weeks away from its self·

cruise P. driver seat, cloth split bench
seitt, ·rear ' defroster, cast aluminum
wheels, low miles, extra clean, P. win.
&amp; lock$:

~~~995 lOW 812,881
.1181 FORD ,.IURUI GL 4 DR.

bed:

cassette, P. windows &amp; lock$, till &amp;
cruise; . P. driver seat, clottl split
bench seat, rear defroster. local one
owner, low miles.
WAS

•• sa,

1111 MERCURY TOPAZ IS 4 DR.
4 cyl. eng., P. steering &amp; brakes,
auto. tra~s., AM/FM stereo
. cassette, tilt &amp; cruise, P. windows
&amp; locks, P. driver seat, rear
defroster,
mileage.

extra

Was
$9,995

lOW

clean,

.

low

8,891

8

·1112 FGRD ftMPO 1L 4 DR.
4 cyl. eng., power steer., power
brakes, auto. trans., AM/FM stereo
cassette, power windows &amp; door

COMMUNITY SERVICE ·Pomeroy aecoun·
tant Kenny Utt, center, was presented with the
Meigs County Cbam ber of Commerce's commu·

locks, power driver seat, rear
defroster, low. miles 14,942, extra
clean/.

.,.c...•8,888

r

1187 FORD liP
4 cylinder engine, 5 speed
transmiSsion, AM/FM stereo
radio,
good
conditioning.

tires,

air

'2,11111!
..U

.Brlngln your bed
. deal on a New Car or Truck and we
Spacial

'

will t17 to meet or Beat the Deal.
FOB A GOOD D.Ur...
SEE BOB ROSS. BRYAN HALL or .JA&lt;:K ROUSH
Our Service Department Is Open PJion•.frl. 8·5; Sat. 8·12
Muffler Shop Mon.-Fri. 11-5; Sat. 8-12

~~==

~~~!

A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

imposed May 3 deadline to submit
a comprehensive reform bill to
Congf!!ss. The advisers have been
struggling in private to narrow !heir.
options.
Gore is not on the dozen-member task force, but-like the president - he has attended hours of
internal debates on how to provide
health insurance for everybody
while wrestling costs under control, ·
two bedrock promises of Clinton's
campaign.
· . .
,
·House Majority Leader Richard
Gephardt, D-Mo., said Sunday that
health reform will be lhe toughesi
issue Congress has faced in more
lhan half a century, but he vowed:
''If we can get it done lhis year, we
wilL"
•
"As the Clinton administration
is working ilay and night 1o get it
done, ioe'U work day and night in

help families s~gercd by nursing
hOme bills and lhe costs of provid·
ing care at home for ailing Or disabled relatives.
Clinton himself said Tuesday
lhat lhe extent to which long-term
care benefits will be provided is up.
in the air "because of the cost
question."

the Congress to get it done,"
Gephardt said on NBC.
In reality, virtually all of !hose
testifying have already flooded lhe
White House with position papers
and attended private briermgs wilh
Ira Magaiiner and other Clinton
health advisers.
As Phyllis Tonia, a leadoff wit·
ness for lhe advocacy group Farni·
lies USA, put it: "The most impor·
tant tbing to watch will be the
interchange between lhe task force
members and those testifying.
· "It's not that anybody will say
anything surprising," said Torda,
direclor of health and social policy
for Families USA. But the task
·force "may give some si$nals"
about !he direction it is heading.
Torda's group wants Clinlon to
include long-term care benefits
costing $10 biUionlo $20 billion to

Robert F. Allnutt, executive vice
president of the Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association, was
urging that the basic benefits pack·
age pay for prescription drugs.
The c!.tug industry and o.ther
groups representing doctors, hospi.
tals and insurers also were training
!heir guns on the possibility lhat
Clinton may try to impose a short·
term ~ze on prices, fees and premiums 115 be seeks to reshape the
health care system.

Yeltsinfoes vow to carry on battle :.

V6 eng., P. steer., P. brakes, auto.
trans., air cond., AMIFM stereo

..

1 s.ctlon, 10 P•• 25 e«olo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 29, 1993

Health care reform public meeting underway

3.8 V6 engine, PS &amp;: PB, auto, trans.,
AMIFM stereo casselle, air cood., lilt &amp;

$7,895

Partly cloudy tonll:hL Low Ill

the mld-411&amp;.

••

I.IIIIRCURY lAlLI II 4 DR.

matcbed craftsmanahip and
guaranteed value, Rock of Ages
memoriala sland alone.
Rock of Ages family memoriala
stand lor what people care to
remember.

LOGAN
MONUMENT
COMPANY INC."

Ohio Lottery

NCAA

nily service award Saturday night. Also pictured
are, lert, Chamber President Denny Facemyer
and Executive Dlredor Paula Thacker, right.

Freshman cong~essman
commends Meigs chamber
By BRIAN REED
Sentinel Correspondent
Congressman Ted Suickland
(D-Lucasville) commepded mem·
bel'l! of the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce for !heir community
pride on Sarurday night, when lhe
organization. met for its annual din·
ncr/dance at the Family Resort near
Pom-eroy.
Suickland, who was lhe guest
speaker at the fourlh annual event,
was inboduced by Chamber Presi·
dent Denny Facemyer as ''a man
who sincerely enjoys listening to
his conslillients."
. During his- campaign for
Congress, Strickland said, he
bec;lme active in working to save
jobs at the Southern Ohio Coal
Company's Meigs Division, having
attended public hearings both al
Meigs High School and at Canlon.
"I haven't known Meigs County
for very long, but I have found
something about Meigs County lhat
is very special. I have sensed in
Meigs County a tremendous pride
·in your community, in spite of scri·
ous economic problems," Strick·
land said.
"I don't ·lcnow what I can do to
help you, but whatever it is, I am
GIPT PRESENTED • CODJII'eiiiDan Ted Strlelcland, standing
commiued to do iL No individual
.
rl1bt,
was pr-ated with a handcrafted walkln1 sdck, made by
ean work miracles, but when peo·
Bernrd
LaValley or Racine, as alflt from tbe Melp County
pie join hands and minds and sou(j
Chamber
of Commerce 011 Saturday Dllht. Making lbe praeDia·
together, great things can happen,"
tlon
IJ
Chamber
President.Denny Facemyer.
:·
·
· ·
.
Strickland said.
Strickland, a former United
.Methodist
Church pastor, com·
1
When lhe lhornbush was aslced themselves in service to olhers,"
pared lhe members of lhe Mei4s
County Chamber to lhe fill trees m to be king, he accepted. However, Strickland said. '1'hole individuals
he said he would only be kina after are like lhe fig trees and ~
an Old TestamentiiQr)'.
Duri"8 lhe days of judges' Nlc, he sent. forlh firel to consume all in that story. But !here are thorn
bushes out there who would
lhe story goes, lhe trees decided lhe cedan in Lebanon.
''I believe that in a way, our desttoy 0111: communities."
they wanted 10 he ruled by a kina,
Following the Slricklllld's mesrather lh•n lhe judges. The trees society Is diainte~J,·" Strick·
asked a fig aee and a lflpevine to land iaid, "wllh dte dil ntqration sage, Facemyer presented him a
be !heir kinJ, but bolh declined of our communitioa and families, handcrafted walklna sdck made by
Bernard LaValley of Raclno.
.
saylna they produced wonderrul and violence to innocont people."
"There are lhoiC communities
Before Stricklan(l wa1 intro·
fruit and were 100 Important to be
wh~ people voluntarily live of
lhe king over alllhe olher trees.
(Condnued oa Paae 3)
.

.

By BRYAN BRUMLEY
Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW · (AP) The
Congress stripped Boris Yeltsin of
more power today and authorized a
referendum for next month to ask
Russian voters to. approve early
elections for president and parliament and judge his economic
reforms.
Presidential
aides
had
denounced the proposed question
on lhe economy as being designed
to elicit a "no" vote on lhe effon
19 build a market economy that
began early last year. ,
·.
The actions by the Soviet-era
Congress of People's Dep11ties
deepened the power struggle
between Yeltsin and lhe legislative
branch - a constitutional crisis
lhat has paralyzed political life for
nearly. a year.
Frustrated by !heir failed week·
end effort 1o oust Yeltsin, his leg·
islative opponents began work
today by passinJ a resolution
rescinding presidential decrees in
1991 that placed regional adminis·
tratoi's in power across Russia.
'YeiJSin relies on lhese personal
representa.lives to prqmote· his
reforms. They govern in 66
regions, including Moscow and .St. .
Petersburg.
The Congress made no provi·
sions for replacing lhe administrators, but the regions stiU have local
councils elected before the collapse
of lhe Soviet Union.
There was no indication
Yeltsin 's representatives would
obey lawmakers' orders to step
dowri.
The resolution also urged
Yeltsin to form a cualition "gov·
emment of national accord'' lhat
presumably would include hard·
liners who want to slow down or
reverse his economic reforms .
The deputies approved the resolution 535-213, with 31 absten·
lions.
Yehsin spokesman Vyacheslav
Kostikov denounced the Congress'
action as "a continuation of the

National Gas and
Oil benefiting from
deregulation . '
National Gas and Oil Corporalion's customers are paying lower'
gas bills due to deregulation of lhe
natural gas industry, lhe company
reponed recently.
According to a press release,
National has talcen advantage of
deregulation and reduced the cost
of natural gas.
Atlhis lime last year, National's
gas cost recoveiy (GCR) was $4.34
per thousand cubic feet, the compa·
ny reported. As of March I, the
GCR is $3.34 per thousand cubic
feet '
.
"No longer Is National one of
lhe higher priced nalllral gas com·
panics in the state," the press
release said.
''The current reduction of $1 J;IU
thousand cubic feet makes the pnce
to National's current and P,lteRtial
customers very compelltlve. In
fact, lhe total gu bill for National's
customers is now among lhe lowest
in its service area,• the press
release llid.
National 0as and Oil serves CUI•
tomers in Racine, Rutland .and
Syracuse.

·destruction of the president,'' and "open calls for revolt" during ·a
he said lhal "adequate measures" pto-Yeltsin demonstration Sunday, .
would be taken, He did not elabo· when about 50,000 people rallic;d
rate.
next to lhe Kremlin gates,
•
·Tbe president was not lit the ses· · '· "The editorial commission will
sion today, Kostikov said, because please prepare a brief resolution on
it was the ninth day after the death this questions, saying absolutely
of his molher - a day of remem· clearly that if our esteemed presibrance under Russian Orthodox dent, Boris Nikolayevich, caDs for
Chtm:h traditions.
revolt, we will immediately return
Yeltsin' s chief rival, parliament to considering lhis q uesuon" of
speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov, impeachment, Khasbulalov said. .
threatened to renew efforts to
AI the rally, Yellsin said he
remove 'Yells in if the president would obey "only lhe v.rill of Uti:
conlirlued 1o encourage Russians to people," and he accused the
defy -the ·CoDJmunist··dominated &lt;;lli!F 'Of 'stirring up'all ofRusCongress. ·
sta.
Khasbulatov said there were
(Continued on Page 3) .

1;{.!:, ~; :.4.~-: ~:.:·1:
· · l~i :J N!~ ,-··

"I'·

!('!'

' '!'

x .. v ..
,f_, '/.V
If )( • •

. ,(' ~- '

i

J ;!

J

j•.

. {- .·w.. ~ ; ~.v;.... .,,
. ;-.· . .~:o:.t'
i .. !I,)V /~'\(;1

'!

:' l "'l'

1111'~

, , .,.; ~&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt; , " "" lj :.w.·t.,.·u.v

.

•' l "'•l ff1 ~-~

FASIDON SHOW PLANS FINALIZED· Plans for tbe eighth
annual spring fashion show of the Pomeroy-Merchants Association
on Friday at 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy Elementary are nearly final·
ized. Here, show committee chairman,' Susan Clark, right, and
Vicki Ferrell, show committee member, discuss the program booklet to be used at the show. Tickets for the show are available for $4,
either in advance or at the door the night or the show.

--Local briefs-Food stamp insurance purchased
The Meigs County Board of Commissi,oners accepted a bid from
Downing-Child-Mullen-Musser Insurance for $600,000 in food
stamp insurance during its regular meeting Friday.
C~ of the insurance is $15,904 annually. The bid was the only
one received.
In addition, lhe commission approved advertising bids for the
refurbishing of lhe Tuppers Plains ambulance.
In olher action, lhe commission:
- Signed a resolution supporting Serenity House •. the domestic
violence shelter for Metgs, Gallia and Jaclcson counbes. The three
counties currendy
provide receipts of marriage license sales 1o the shelter as required
by state law.
-Agreed 1o pay an animal claim of $10 1o Wayne Roseberry,
Pomeroy, far five chickens killed at $2 each. .
Attending were: Robert Hartenbach, prestdent; Janet Howard,
vice-presiden~ and Manning Roush, and Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="336">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9630">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32323">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32322">
              <text>March 28, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1494">
      <name>berry</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="341">
      <name>blake</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="523">
      <name>cornell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6370">
      <name>edens</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="441">
      <name>graham</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="165">
      <name>hall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1586">
      <name>keller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5652">
      <name>zahl</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
