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Pomeroy~lddleport,

BORN LOSER
511£

..

Ohio
TIIA1 DAllY

Television
Viewing

~ TH~ l!EAA'1"'Il

~~T~~=·~

•

FRI., JAN. 31

•

a:oo !2l • Cll Clle 111 1121e
aJI Ntwa
(!) VIdeo Power
\ZjSquare One TV Stereo.

'(ES. MAAM WELL, ALL
I CAN SAY 15 ...

~~

Grandpa always said that a
D0Hy 0
1---T-..,_--r.-.;,~ ".·.1 politician was someone with a
I ·1 Is 1 ~ wagging tongue and that a
=~ cian
statesman
waslearned
an ex·politi·
,.~=·
who had
the art
W0 R N N E
of ....... his tongue.
6 I 17 oft Comploil the chuckle quoied
.I .I 1
.
.
.
V ~v filline In iho misslne -d•

awa~dTiy
Rln nn Tin, K·l Cop

TH E'r' SURE ADD
UP, DON'T T~E\' .?

C1J1

=·==·==·

Stereo. Q
8:05 CIJ llaverty HlllbiiiiH
8:30 (2) e aJ1 NBC Newt~
(!) Sloved by lhl Bell
Cll (J) e ABC Newt
mWild AmoriCII Ster . Q
\II Square One TV Stereo.

~ Tho Jefferson~

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS
,.,o
Wreath • Giant • Curly • Upheld • TWICE a DAY
Our son was away at boot camp. We got a real laugh
from one of his letters. He wrote that before he signed
up he never knew lhat4:30 came around TWICE a DAY!

0 g~ic:~~JWR LETIE Rs 10 I

Clllnalda Edition 1;;r
(!) MecNell~hner

I THIN/( SHf

w.ANT.S Mf .A/.../..
TO Hf~.Jf/.f! Sfff
.5.AIO SHE WOl.Jt.PN''f
WISH Mf ON

ANYIOPY /

-

ALLEYOOP

New aHour
Clle Candl Camere
(f) l.egiiiiUvo UP!!IIe
i11J Current Allalr C
tiD 1D Stir !k: Tilt Next
&lt;lentrallon
1121111 Ente menl Tonight
Stereo. C
aJ MacOY.or Q
ID SpoiiiConter
12!1 Monoyllno
C1J1 MOVIE: Three Ring
Clrcua (2:00)
7:05 (l) ,Addams Family
7:30 (2). aJI Jeopardy\ c
(!) Now II Can Be Toiif
(I) Enttrlllnmont Tonight
Stoteo. Q
~· Mamed ... WIIh Children

rnNowaHour
MacNtlllblhrer
1!11

1121111 Paid Progrem
a Be a Stir Stereo.
1D Sid World
12!1 Crotaline
7:35 C1J Sanford l Son
8:00 (2) e iiJI MOVIE: Madock:
Tho Wltn~ll Klllnga (2:00)
Stereo.
(!) MOVI : The Mikado
(2:00)

Clla Family Mattera
Steve's female pen pallrom
prison c~es to vlsll CarL
Stereo.
(!) Welh ngton Waok In
Review Stereo. C
Ill 1121111 Reocul: 111 A
pregnant woman goes into
cardiac arrest. Stereo. ~
tiD ID MOVIE: 'Young Quna'
Fox Nlahl at lilt Ma'llla (RJ
(2:00) Stereo. Q
Murder, She Wrote Q
' aaJ On
Stage Stereo.
1D Woild Cup Siding
a PrlmoNowa Q
8:05 &lt;D MOYIE:.Deadly Lnaona
(2:00)

8:30 Cll (J) a Capital Crltltre
(Preview) Me• has the
opportunity to see some
iiUcians In action. Stereo.

i

i I

;•

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
SH~ eAtD SHee HAD

'MYMOMAND I
HADANARSUMENT
~Y.

IT... SHe:e. FED UP
TO HERE .

I DIDN'T KNO'W
N011-II:R5 COUl-D
RE6\SN .

*"""'

Wall
Waofl Stereo.
Are You Being Sarvad?
a T11aa Coni*llon Stereo.
9:00 (I) (J) a Baby Talk
Jealousy keeps Maggie from
casting James as Prince
Charming. Stereo. ~
(!) Dick Cavett Willi Gore
VIdal Writer Gore VIdal's
shares his views on politics
and history and anacdoles
about writers and Hollywood
personalnies. (1 :00)
(f) Wnhlngton Waofl In
Review Stereo. E;1
iiiJ 1121 ~equlla. l IIonetti
stereo.
11J Bey Aaallty
a Naahvllle Now Stereo.
1D Top Rank Boxing (L)
a Larry King U.el
Felhor Dowling Mrallrtll

6

9:30 Cll Chltn C
(J) a

Billy (ifremlere) A
college Instructor gets
married t:•tay In America.
Stereo.
\II Woll I Waok Sterao.

BARNEY
HE

PERPDSED
TDME
TODAY!!

YEP II HE THROWED
PINE BURRS AT ME-"""'
ALL TH' WAY
HOME!!

Vol. 28, No. 52
Copyrlghled 1892

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
voters will be asked Tuesday to
restore a three-tenths of a mill levy
to the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
Memorial Library so the library
can resume a number of services it
offered prior 10 this year.
· Polls will be open in all 36

+QJ971
+A Q4

PHILLIP

WEST

EAST
.Q3

• J 87
'KQ86
+s 2
+J 10 7 3

ALDER

9742

tAK1063
+86 2

SOUTH

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

OtJP

e

ave

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
I -Finn
5 - - about
9 Meadow
12 Dramatic
conlllct
13 Seaport In
Alaska
14 Laat mo.
15 BaNal

movement

16 Columbus'
aponaor
18 Oulatnoaa
20 Oxide ol Iron
21-111 mode
22 12, Roman
24 Common·
place

27 Athena native
31 Cllmoroua
32 White froal
33 Author
Tolatoy
34 Stop
35 Conaecralerl
36 Garman Mr.
37 Saturday and

Antnr to Prewloua Pu. .

Sunday
39 Plump
40 Domestic
animal
41Mlaerables
42 Dangled
45 Kinder
49 From a single
perspective
52 Feaat In
Hawaii
53 WWII area
54 Suspend
55 lrllh
56- Quixote
57 Cut
58 Waltr plant
1 Chanc11
2 Cllrua lrull
3 Wind about
4 Goalle'onood
Sin readlnen
(2 Wdl,)
6Winbye7 Medical

5J

IUifiX

Conledlralt
IOidltr
I Something
remarkable
(II.)
10 AddiUonato
hOUiel
8

~Nowa

~ Emplrii ollhl
.

(J) • 20/20 Stereo. Q
lllllll'!lllon Spadll

men who made radio
popular; lnt.orvlews wtlh
GarrisOn KaNtor, Red Barber
and Olhora. (2:00) Sleneo. Q
i11J 1121• llearta Are Wild
0na or JaCk's wealthy
lrlends, whO's dying, visits
and !ala Jn ~lfj Stereo. Q

'

Qrtller activity II Indicated tn tho year
llield 11 11 making major Chenglll In
;our
Thtngl you nwlly thOught .
lllaUI dOing ~ could now bepo!M 111111111.

tit..

AOUAIIUII.IM· 20-f'.et.' 111 Problem·
JoMnll could be yout 11rong polnl tocloy, provided you can do It In a vonu~
•
ltOII1 outlia dlllr!IC!Ionl. Don t
mlltefl with otlterl until they're
raaalllld, Know,.._ lO ~ ~tro­
,.._ IIICI, you'll lind n. , ,,. ..a roa

...

way
OVjl:R THE TOP • It's official. United Way
or Gallla County recently reached Its $55,1100
goal, and then some. UWGC board members
met Friday afternoon to move the thermometer
to the 100 percent mark for everyone to see.
According to President Wayne Benson, aa
awards ceremony will be held at 8 a.m. Wednes·

SYRACUSE - In an effort to
stem the accumulation of delin·
quent accounts, the SyracuseRacine Regio!131 Sewer District has
adopted a policy of shutting orr service to customers who are three
months or more late in payment of
their bills.
The policy was put in~P effect
on Jan. I . Service chargeficcrued
prior to Jan. I will not be counted
toward the three-month delinquen·
cy period.
. In a statement released Friday,
sewer district trustees Edwin Neut·
zling, John Murphy and Jim Wick·
line said the district hired a Columbus attorney ill July 1991 to collect
on delinquent accounts.
"The district had a few cus. tomers who consistently refused to
pay their monthly bills," the slate·
merit said. "The Board or Trustees
felt it was unfair for the customers

Air: The
Men Who Mada bello Three

Feb.1.~

GO.AL

Sewer district
officials impose
shutoff policy

DOWN

Ray Bradbury Thlator
10:oo ()) • ®In lilt Heat ollhl
Night Gillespie looks into a
~-and-run death. (R) Stereo.

B~ BRIAN J, REED
Ttmes-Senlinel Starr
POMEROY • Oladatun Fashe·
un, 39, a Nigerian native convicted
of theft and racketeering charges,
has filed a motion for a new trial in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Coun.
The motion was filed by Meigs
County Public Defender Charles H.
Knight, who represented Fasheun
in lhe week-long jury trial in
December that resulted in Fashc·
un's conviction.
Specifically, Fasheun was con·
victed by that jury on five counts of
lheft deception and one count of
en~agmg in a pattern of corrupt
acttvily, all felonies . He has since

d

br

•'

day, Feb. 19 at the Senior Citizens Center with
certlncates being presented to all UWGC contributor~, Those donatio&amp; should RSVP to the
chamber office and the event is open tb the public, There wDI be a $3 donation. (Times-Sentinel
photo by Kris Cochran)'

Top 10 UWGC donors
GALLIPOLIS • The rouowing are the top 10 contributors to
the United Way or Gallla County program.
• University of Rio Grande....................................$7 ,200•
• Hills Department Store...... ~.................................$4,900•
• Federal Mogul ........... "....................................... $4,800•
• Pillsbury Co. or Wellston ...................................$4,400•

• Gavin Power Plant.............................................. $3,600
• Big B~ar............................................................... 53,200•
• Holur Medical Center............................ t .... ...... $3,100
• Kmart.................................................................. $Z,$00
• Reliance Electric .......................................... "'''''''$2,600
• Star Bank ........................................................... $2,1 00
• Denotes both corporate and employee donations. Special .
recognition goes to Star Bank and J ,C. Penny for obtaining a 100
percent goal.

who do timely pay their monthly
bills 10 'carry the load· for those
customers who are not paying their
bills."
While the attorney has been sue·
cessful in colleclin~ the delinquent
bills owed the distnct and will continue pursuing payment, the district
fell action had to be taken "to pre·

vent large delinquent accounts
from accruing again ." This has
resulted in establishment or the
shutoff policy.
If service to a customer is shut
orr, service will be not resumed
until all delinquent charges have
been paid, the statement said. This
Continued on A-7 ·

CIJ)700 Club With Pit

Robtfllon

10:05 &lt;D MOVIE: Demon 8Hd (Ri

11:00Cil• Cll (J)• •
IIJ,....

c•

~==Q
R• AIMitla Hill Stereo.
OPGAQalt

• On . . Stereo.

Ollaha" Till

:· QIIpoltaTMglll ..
· Ill locdlltoan Sterfo,

'

.1 N D

ilr...£. Crime

TIIM:!
Sino.

l'iiN Tlilll.

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11:30~~.1:\L

'

15 Secllont, 114 PIIIIH
A Muldmacllai Inc. Newop.,.r

organization, which supports and
encourages programs and improvements at the library, will meet
Monday at 7 p.m. in the library.
The library is going back 10 the
ballot following lhe 4,330-4,160
defeat or its three-tenths of a mill
renewal levy in lhe general elec·

tion last Nov. 5. Loss or revenue
from that levy has forced the facili·
ty to impose a number or cuts in
service.
These reductions include closing the library on Wednesdays and
Saturdays; cancellation of chil·
Continued on A-8

been conveyed to prison to begin
serv ing his sentence of 19 to 40
years in prison. He was also fined
$17,500 and ordered to pay reslitu·
lion in excess of $670,000.
At the hean or the case was the'
finding by the jury that Fasheun
lied to a Rutland couple, Lee and
Beatrice Wood, convincing them to
enter.inlo the sale of their propeny
and home based upon the fact that
Fasheun, through the Athena Trad·
ing Company or Athens, was
involved in an alleged computer
sale in Nigeria. Fasheun purported
to have a commission in the
amount or $15.5 million waili~g in
a Nigerian bank, and ultiJllately
failed to complete the transaction.

As a result, the Woods lost their
home and property, and Fasheun
was indicted by the Meigs County
Grand Jury.
Knight's motion for a new trial,
filed last week, requests the new
trial on the basis or "newly discov·
ered evidence which the defendant
could not have discovered with rea·
sonable intelligence and produced
at his trial."
Among this new evidence,
Knight's motion says, is a certification from C. AMuni, an officer of
the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation, thai a contract
between the National Petroleum
Corpo1atic;m and Athena Trading
Continued on A-7
·

Middleport residents belpg JtS'ke,d
to volunteer in recycling program
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Starr
MIDDLEPORT • Plans to
involve 500 households in a volun·
teer recycling program to start Ibis
spring are underway in Middle·
port.
The project is being carried out
with a $11,910 grant from the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources,
Division or Litter Prevention and
Recycling.
.
According to Jean Trussell,
development specialist, residents of
Middleport are being asked to par·
ticipate on a volunteer basis.
Volunteers will be provided
with a set or three brightly-colored
bins especially constructed for the
program. The bins are slackable
with front openings, one to be used
for aluminum cans, .another for
plastics and the third for glass.
Plans call for the filled bins to
be picked up at the curb once every
IWO ·WeekS by a village truck.
The aluminum cans will be sold
10 a recycling center, and the
money used by the. village to pur·
chase additional bins for use in the
village recycling program.
WANTED: RECYCLfNG VOLUNTEERS· ReSldeQts In 500 ·:
Currently the glass and plastics
households In Middleport are needed to participate ia 1 recydlna
will be donated to a recycling cen·
project funded with a $11,910 grant from the Department ol Natu.
ter since neither has a monetary
ral Resources, Division or Litter Prevention and Recyclina. Tbe
value in the recycling market The
program will gel underway this spring. Mpney gained from the
village will also pick up newspa·
sale or.recyclables eoUecled by the village,will be used to purchue
pers which have been tied and
more bins so that more residents can btCOI\Ie Involved. Here Jean ·
placed at the curb.
shows il set or the bins.
Trussell
Trussell said that the. village will
•
be divided into two sections and a
village truck will go oul to do col·
lecling in each section once every
lwoweeks.
The emphasis this month will be
'•
on gelling volunteers to sign up to
what he is doing and says he can·i:
participate. The recycling bins are
By JULIE E. DILLON
wait to geuo work every day.
:·
on display in the Middleport Water
Times-Sentinel Starr
When
he
first
arrived
for
his::
Office where residents are encour·
RACINE • It has been a little
:
Continued on A-7
over five m.onths since Meigs
aged to sign up.
.
In the meantime, Trussell rs County native, Bruce Wolfe,
seCuring material from the Division accepted his entertainment position
of Litter Prevention and Recycling at the Wall Disney World Compa·
which she 'will be taking into the ny as a dancer at the resort's Magic
schools as an educational 1001. She Kingdom Park. Wolfe came home
also plans to have a poster cpntest for a visit on Wednesday and left
for a slo'an and logo with .prizes early this morning (Sunday).
for'the wmners. One emphasiS, she
Wo1fe, age 22, who has been at
, explained, is .6n educali~g the pub· Disney World since Aug. 23, says
lie llbout the 1mponartt roleDf recy- . he just ''stumbled into" his job at ·'
cling as it relates to the environ- Disney World. He went simply to
mCDl
wafuh the special auditions for the
She said that with Middleport 20th anniversary celebration of
initialing the prognun now, the vii· Disney World and says he had no
lage will ~ one step ahead when intentions of triing out until he saw
recycling becol'fleS mandatory in the other performers. He tealizcd "I
Ohto. Recycling is one method of can do that" and he did. Bef~ he
reducing what goes to the landfill, knew il he was offetlld a fuU-time
Trussell said, and that makes an job.
· ·'
· if11pacl on how we all live. .
Wolfe is a Calypso Dancer in
The bins, constructed of heavy the Surprise Celebration Parade
duty plasti~ wbitb can be easily and also in the Speclro Magic
· hosed out and disinfected,
will be Parade in Disney's Magic King. .....
dom . He says he ·absoltilely loves
BRUCE WOLFE
Continued oa 11.·7

''..
Meigs native 'just stumbled :
onto job' at Disney World

gc::-Thio
awortdNtn

12:00)
10:30 0 Tile llllcNtllllt
• CIOOic tllld ChaN

'

Based on new evidence, Knight
requests second Fasheun trial

+5

er~. ~

BERNIGE
BEDEOSOL

a1 the Greenfield Township Volun- ages or 2 and 12, 1he read-a-than
teer Fire Depanment instead of lhe will feature volunteers reading
old Gallia Elementary School.
aloud favorite stories. Children
The Friends of the Bossard may choose a book to have read to
Memorial Library are sponsoring a them , or listen to other youths '
read-a-thon Sunday from 1:30 until selections.
5:30 p.m. in lhe librlll)'. Free and
The event is being held to draw
open to all children between the attention to the levy. The Friends

+K95

(f)

Graph Matchmaker instantly reveals warding cycle for the fulllllment oi pracwhich signs are romantically perfect lor tical and ambitious objectives. Oon't lei
you. Mall $2 plus a long, setf·ad· indiHerence cause this propitious peridressed, stamped envelope to Match- od to Slip past you.
maker, c/o this newspaper. P:o. Box VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bepl. 22) Try to lighten
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
up and organize more effectively an on·
PISCES (Fob. :ZO.March 20) In order to deavor In which you're Involved. You're
be successful today, you must bellave on the right triCk and, with a little mole
thai victory Is a foregone conclusion. If thought, most of the risk etomonta can
you do, you lhOuld lind It rather easy to be removed .
fill In tho blonks that make It so.
LIBRA (llpt. 23-0ct. 23) ImproveARIEl (Mitch 21·April 11) Your suc- ments are likely at this lime whore your
cess todoy wtll be predicated upon the business and financial Interests are
l~tenslly ol your motivation. If thare are concerned. There are h6polul Indica·
specific objec11vee you Intend to Ilona that you could aet larger·returns
'achieve, the probabilities ane running In than you Initially anticipate.
your ravor.
SCORPIO (Oct. :M-flov. 22) Mattera
TAURUB(Aprfl 20-Mer 20) You're like- t~at. require lmmedlata diiC!IIIIon
ly to tearri a tot mone'lodl)i ltOIII persdn' llllould be·put on thllable today:You're
at experience than you wtll gamer from abla to elicit onthuslum lor your con·
lactur08 or bOOks. You'D lind uooful ap· copla, 1-y getting thl nod of ap.
pltcltlona lor what you learn In the real provll you need.
.
world .
IAGITTAIIIUI(IIov.2S-Dec 21)Ambl·
GIIIINtiMar 21-.1- 201 Changes are tlon and Imagination, ertactlwly CDU·
In thl oiling todoy, 'but don't lot IMm plod, provide you wtllt a dynlmlc com·
concern you. Tho odds agatnat anything blnetlon todl)'. Whln t'-lactoro are
going awry arovory nominal.' .
operativ., PttiDilll glin llllklly.
.CANCElliJune 21..,., 22111 you have CAPIIICOM (Dec. 22..-.. 18) Thoro it
oomothlng or consequence to work out nothing wrong with oxorcillng your lnl·
with anotner. do It on a raee-to-fac:t ba· llativa and -~~- tOday lor the
II• fr•lrom outlillo lnftuonoo. Negolla· like of furthering your pertonailnter·
nona today lhould work out favorably 08ta, provided you don't.do lnyllllng to
for both partlol.
.
hurt ollterlln thl procon.
'
.'
LIO 'IJulr 23-Aug.;221 You'roJn are· . '

precincts from 6:30a.m. until 7:30
p.m. The levy will be the only item
appearing on the ballol
Board of Elections officials
have pointed out thai the only
change in polling places for this
election will be tn Greenfield
Township. Voters will cast ballots

••

s ou1

·.

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, February 2, 1992

'AJ5

West Not til East
One of my favorite teaching hands Soulb
Pass I NT Pass
1
gives the declarer, playing in three no·
•
All pass
Pass
3
trump, A·K·Q·f&gt;.4 of clubs in hand op·
•
posite 8·7·6· 3 in the dummy. Declarer
Opening lead: +8
has no side entry in his hand and needs
five club tricks. Given that the oppos·
ing clubs are breaking 3-1 , how would
you manage the suit?
.
.
,
Apart from failing to count, many contanued · .
players don't pay sufficiently close at· AI th,e trme, declarer crossed to
tention to the vital spot-cards. In the dummy s club queen and played a
above .example, almost everyone runs heart .to the jack, but West won wrt,h
the clubs from the top and finds that th~ k1ng. one down. True, East s
the fourth round has been won with . swttch to lhe heart t~o looked as
dummy's eight. The club five in hand . thouglt he had an honor tn lhe SUit (and
is high, but there is no way to cash it. ·West had ~essed well not to return
Under the A·K·Q, dummy 's 8·7·6 must the su1t at tnck three), but. South over-.•.
be unblocked.
ilooked lhe power of the dtamond sevDeclarer overlooked a vital spot· .en. Clearly East had lhe clla.mond ace.
card on today's deaL Alter an aggres· ;After entermg lhe dummy wllh lhe
sive auction, South was in four spades.jclub 9ueen, declarer should have led
West led the diamond eight: jack, king, lhe dtamond 9ueen, rulflnl away the
five. East returned the heart lwo: five, face. Dummy 18 re-entered ~tth a cl~b
queen, three. Back came the diamond . to the ace, and declare~ diSCards bis
two: nine 10 spade two. South cashed heart loser on the established diamond
' '
·seven. Spot on!
the A·K ofHspades, bhoth doppohnentshfol·
®•-.-.-u•uu 111 ow

Sunny. Higlt In mld-4tls.

.AK10952

Can you spot
the solution?

1owmg.

..',

Library seeks public's support in Tuesday vote

l·ll·tl

'10 9 3

By Phillip Alder

i11J Wheel or Foiluno Q

(I)

Wt-4Y WOULD OL'
TUNK LAUNCt-4
A.N ATTACK
ON U5?

NORTH
t64

...

.,

•
tmts·

I I I I I .I I

BRIDGE

Along lhe river .............. B1·7
Business/Farm ...............D1·8
Classified ....................... DJ. 7
Deaths ................................ AJ
Editorai ............................. A2
Sports ............................. C1-8
Weather...........................A'J

Old papers contain good source of
Gallipolis black history • Sands • A·6

A-8

f t PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
{;:II IN THESE SQUARES

• p.

Inside

A touching valentine story · Beat of
the Bend by Bob Hoeflich • Page A-4

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IDIII CBS Newt Q
trn II Andy Oilfltth

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Saturday's basketball results - C 1

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8:35 (l) Andy GrtHHh
7:00 ~ e II)) Wheal of Fortune

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "To oopy others Is neceoury, but to copy -1'
Is palhlllc." - Pablo Plcauo.
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·• SAYING FAREWELL · • Well·,lalttra
'stopped bylhe Stowaway Ruuaraat Friday
·ane,..ooa to '117 farewell 'to Palla TbKit:er,
•(ceater), uecutlve dl.-eetbr of tbt GaiiiJ!OIII
'Area CbaiDber'of Co!Dmerct. Tbttelter, wllo U&amp;
t1ee1 wkh the eham ber for 1 ynr aad a hiU'I

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rtmtlylmDted tbe poilldol of Melp COIIDty
Clwaber Ill toanatrCtiEcoboll!le DeveloDiaent
Director; Pictured wltl Tbttelt:er art Jaa II'OWII, ·
(left),' GIJUpolls RetBII Merchanll A110e~tlon
prtsldeal, aad Roa McPade, (rl&amp;ht), chamber
prealdeat. (TIIIti·Seatlnel plloto by Krls

&lt;;oebnn)

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Commentary and perspective
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February 2, 1992
February 2, 1992:.

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

Sunday, Feb. 2
Accu-Weather~ forecast for daytime conditions and high

ei"UTMEDIA, INC.
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-1341

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohlo
(614) 992·2t56

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Exeeutlve Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signe~ w1lh
name address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
publi;hed. Letters should be in good taste. addressing issues, not
personalities.

I.

Center aids immigrants
are seeking new home
By LISA CORNWELL

Associated Press Writer
; CLEVELAND- A gro~ing intlux of Eastern Eur?pean, Soviet and
other immigrants mto the Umted Stales ts provtdtng challenges to a local
agency that has been helping newcomers for 75 years.
· "As the need for our services grow, we obviously need more staff and
financial resources," said Algis Ruksenas, director of the Nauonahues
Services Center. •'But we also need to make the public aware of the need
1pdo more than just pay lip service w America's repulation as a haven for
tlfose seeking a new home.' '
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: Tbe center is a non-profit resettlement and soctal servtces agency that
¢isists refugees, immigrants and other newcomers adJUSt to a new culture
at)d a new way of life.
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: Rukensas said the dramatic changes m world poliucs began to affect
l'!!fu~ec and immigration services in Cleveland and other U.S. ctUes m

wASHINGTON - Cutting
your health-care costs is a hot topic
almost everywhere in the United
Slates today - everywhere except
in the doctor ' s off'tee. Wh'l
te
. ker over ho w to
national leaders btc
lower the bills, many in the medical
· · ways to c1ear a
f.te Id are devtsmg
·
fi
fr
·
btgger pro 11 om eac h patient
·
d
Ca l.f
t ornta actors recent 1Y
received a flyer from a medical
.
equtpment
who1esaler te11·mg them
·
they conid ' 'Increase your mcome
- big time!" The wholesaler was
· · a ptece
·
·
·
pttchtng
of d tagnosuc
·
the
H
1
h
equtpment,
o ter cart mont-·
h.
h
th
1
tor, w tc
e sa es broc hure told
dactors could " put ano th er $15 ,000
to $50,000 in your pocket every
year." While profitiS on some diag· tests have sI'tppe d , 1he
nosuc
broc hure promtses
· tha t th e money
nowmg
· tn· from HoI••~r' s tests has
" never been h'tgher. "
The qua l.tt Y of the Ho1ter equtp·
mentis not in question. It can help
diagnose hean ailments. But the

l.i~eR~L$

iN
CoNGReSS BeTTeR Li;.Tet-1, Be-"lll$e.
FRoM No'W ON. THiS f"~e.S; DeNT iS
G0 NNa HoPe THe ReCeSSiON etli&gt;S~

~ 9 ~•in 1988

we resettled about 29 refugees. By last year the number had
lirown to a~ut 200," said Ruksenas, adding that even more refugees than
that came to the Cleveland area.
.
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"Many of the refugees are often helped by other agcnctes and family
members so we may not be their sole aid," he said. " There are probably
about 2,00o-plus refugees in the area at this time."
.
However refugees make up only a small part of the people served by
the agency. Ruksenas said the center serves about20,000 .people a year..
" There are many immigrants who aren't necessanly tlcemg thetr
ceuntries but are still seeking a home here, or they have become permanent residents who need our services," he said.
. .
As the number of immigrants has increased, lbe. U:S. lmm1gratton and
NaUtralization Service has allowed the center and stmtlar agenctes around
the country to take on more responsibility.
Beginning March .14, the Clevelan~ .center and about 38 others around
the country will admtmster the U.S. Ctttzenshtp le~t.
.
Guadalupe Valencia, 52, who came to the Umted States 26 years ago
from Mexico, plans to take advantage of the new syslem. .
" My husband, he wanted us to take the lest for a long nme. bull was
100 nervous," Ms. Valencia said. "!"ow that I can take !' here where I
know people and feel comfortable, I m not so nervou.~. I ltke my teacher,
and 1am learning better Engli.s~ through th_etr classes.
.
Ruksenas said that in addition to provnhng more servtces, the center
also focuses on education of the general public. .
"According to some recent polls, more Amencans than ever before
seem to think we have 100 many immigrants,': R~senas said. '.'We have
10 work at debunking the myths that suggest tmmtgrants take jObS away
from native-born Americans and that they automaucally fall mto wei-

r "

areRuksenas said an immigrant might take a job inili!'llY that could_ go to a
native-born American, but that eventually most tmmtgra.nts create jObS.
" Many immigrants.are entrepren~urtal, slartmg_ th~~r own bu.s,messes
or creating their own mche m the bus mess commuml)'. he satd. People
who have given up everything to start hfe over.~gatn ma new country are
risk takers who can conoibute much to soctely.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
:. Today is Saturday, Feb. I, the 32nd day of 1992. There arc 334 days
le[t in the year. . . .
Today's Highhght tn H1story:
On Feb. I, 1790, the U.S. Supreme Coun convened for the first tim e,
at the Royal Exchange Building on Broad Street in New York. (However,
since only three of the six justices were present, the court recessed until
the ne'xt da'y.)
On this date:
In 1861 Te~as voted to secede from the Union.
·
~· In 1862, the "Battle Hymn of the Republic ," a poem by Julia Ward
"owe, was published in the Atlantic Month ly.
:• In 1893, Thomas A. Edison completed work on the world 's first
liotion picture studio, in West Orange, N.J.
:• In 1896, the opera " La Boheme," by Giacomo Puccini, premiered in
1urin, Italy.

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Finally, how can OSU ever expect
to win a championship without a
good throwing quarterback?
·
There is a serious question in
the mind of the writer as to who
designs the plays and formations in
the offense at OSU? Is it Coach
Cooper, or the offensive coordinator? In shan, who is in charge of
the play book? If it is Coach Cooper. then why the difference in Colletto's and Uzelac's systems of
offense? Finally, why would a wide
receiver ever attend OSU under the
circumstances? It is noted that
three of Ohio's best were listed as
OSU signees this year.
Rupe, you will nole that OSU
has a limit of 25 athle1es who have
given a verbal consent to enroll at
OSU this coming year. The conference rules limit OSU to 25 signces.
What happens to the other two or
three additional potential athletes,
since 27 or more have agreed to
attend OSU?
If you multiply 25 times four, it
means there are at least 100 grantin-aids given to football players on
the roster. In addition, if you .
include the fifth year athletes and
the walk·ons, then you could possibly reach 175 football athletes .on
the roster.
How does a coach keep this
number of athletes happy and not
enrolling at another school? Simply
speaking, no athlele wants to sit out
a year before (I laying - he . gets
rusty and someumes the destre ts ·
no longer there. Thus, the player
stays at home.
In my mind, it is most unfair to
have freshmen participate in varsity
spans. Also "red shirting" should

be abolished. If you permit a freshman to play varsity football, why
not permit the other athletes to
transfer to another school in order
to play football immediately
These rules have been adopted
mainly because we have selfish
coaches who want to keep the
entire 100 to 120 athletes under
their wings. The rabid fans don 't
care a hoot about the forgotten
players , all of whom have been
"All Everything" in high school.
Everything that is, except playing
on the OSU varsity.
Shouldn't they be given an
opportunity tq .go to another school
to play? I can see some logic in not
permitting the best athletes in the
group from transferring at will.
You don't want a siwation where a
disgruntled athlete among the top
37 would cause a coach's headache
if he would threalen to transfer.
Whenever an athlete can tell a
coach what to do, you are going to
have chaos in your organization.
On the other hand , the 60 to 75
non-playing athlcles should have a
chance to play immediately and not
have to wait another year before
competing.
My sugsestion would be as follows: Abohsh the freshmen playing
varsity athletics his 'first year: Also
the "red shirting" policy should be
trashed. Or, if you won't do this,
then ~opt a plan similar to plan B
in professional football which
would requir~ a coach to designate
the top 37 of his athleles to remain·
and the balance to be able to transfer 10 another university without
penalty.
This article is written for the

benefit of the non-playing athlete
who spends most of his time root-ing for his school, while siuing on;
the bench but not playing. It is
tough mentally for the former high.
school star to go home an face the;
public, especially when he knows
that he will never play at the big ·
university.
Will there ever be a change?
Not if the coaches have their say. :
In order to change this rule, one of
the concerned athletes will have to
take this issue to court. If he canna(
afford an attorney, go to the Legal
Aid or ACLU and get one free. A
law suit would change some minds;
in a hurry, as th e present rule
appears to be unconstitutional.
:
Rupe, let's give these players a
break, instead of a distressed mind.
·1 should mention, however, tha(
this is not an exclusive or peculiar
OSU po).icy , but that all major
NCAA Ma ms follow the sat:ne
rules.
Carryon.
NOTE: Wendel Frecker, formerly of Pomeroy, ha~ been includ;·
ed in the 1991 Honor RoU of Meigs
and Gallia counties. Wendel died in
1991. This information' was furnished by Avice Rous~ F~cker ,
whose address is Mayfair Retire-.
mcnt Village, 3011 Hayden Road,
ApL 302, Columbus, Ohio 43235. .
Editor's note • Long-time;
Attorney Fred W. Crow Is the
contributor o'r a weekly .column
for The Sunday Times-Sentlnet •
Readers wishing to applaud, crit· :
icize or comment on aoy subject 1
(except religion or politics) are :
encouraged to write to ·. Mr . ~
Crow, in care of this newspaper. ·I

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Chuck Stone:i

You're probably mad as hell, rise up and drive the political es of the House and Senate, the
and you claim yqu're 1101 going to money-chlngers out of the temples uncontrollable budget deficit and
· "' :
take it anymore. The question is, of their lives. But eventually, nor· the government's complicity in the ment" to take over the politics of:
how . mad? Mad enough to do mality retunis, and the politicians S&amp;L and HUD rip-offs that he running a school system. In Dade
something about it? Or just Otad retake the power SIIUCture.
invested his entire savings of County, Aa., Prince William COWlperiod.
Still; the momentary elixir of . $45,000 in six newspaper ads, call- · ty, Va., and seveml North Ctuolina
The late Rep. William L. Daw- powe~" reminds the ~ tha1 they. ing for a clean sweep of Congress.
school districts, committees of par.l !
son, D·III., •once told an audience are the ultimate cnsrodttms of gov·Talk about a ptairie fire being ents, teachers and •princiJ)lils are'
angry at insults by an. Eisenhower enunent, even if they subsequently fanned into a bonfire of action . making decisions about curriculum ..
cabinet member, "Don't get mad. sink bact into the quagmire of People responded to the Philadel- school budgets and new hires. ·
Gej smart."
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letllarRv.
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phia•born Gargan's summons for
- School-based manag~meat or•.J '
,·
After JohncF. Kennedy was . 'AIFciver Xmetl~, gius-roots '· acli!l'l with S~.l,millicin iii' conoi- decen~lizM itdmini_s:c::
elecled, the .self-styled "Irish revolts are flowenng. By grass buuons; (Phtladelphta seems to been tried before, but 11
did
Mafta" in the White House impish- roots, IIDCID penons who hereto- have a curious affinity for bir)hing not worlc. ~is time, lhe di
: .
ly revised Dawson's' wisdom to, fore bave 1101 aelively tried to.influ· • .~evolts for representalive govern· .
be a wtder base of eaoqotic'
:'Don't get "!ad·Get even." . .
ence ~ decisions of government. · rnent). · ,
. ..
mvolved IJ!ifents .1'1!81l01idilll 10
Angry, dtssusted and dtstllu· Grass-roots democracy is also
Oargan s contnbu~ want to . documented failures m acboolsy~- , '
' siOned Americans are flming their democracy's pandoxicaJ ·confes. cffcct~;bange. Before, !hey have ·. terns.
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lonJ·Smolderin~
· scnlmcnt in til .sian()( failure.
·
felt impotent. Now, at least they · mRO has delicious tllmtpeulic
pratrie frn of
. The followOne movement thai has ca • can now enjoy the comfort ·in the · value.1118l the notion Ihat u ~~:live
ms may sound li e a political lured a large scsment of the puC. numbers of lite-minded eruladcrs moveme11 il atternplins 10 ~.
r~dundancy, but Americans arc · .lit's fancy is THRQ (Thtow the who also want to "throw lhe ras- all43~ memiJers of the Houli and .~
using grass·roota democtacy to rascals put). It began in Tampa eals out.''
.
' OIIC·thinl of lhe Senlto will iatDxi- · •
make dtmocracj' wo1Uor them.
Pia., witluetired ftntlncial plannet
The movement bas i!S counter- CIID any DOIVCrlessl*IOa. " .j
This catlunis happms·cyclical- 1obn 1. "Jack'' Oirgan. OiJe day parts in education, where people
.(CH992 . NBWSPAPBR ·j
· ly in any delllOCIII:y. The people be got so mid at the amoral cx'cess: are using ''acbool-bued manage- EN'I'ERPRJSE ASSN.
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Senate proposal for protecting
drinkin~ water sources from contamination by fertilizers and pesticides actually is an industry
attempt to avoid strong regulation,
an environmental group said.
The Ohio Environmental Council charged that the measure spohsored by Sen. Robert Cupp, RLima, is a bid by agricultural and
chemical interests to put a weak
enforcement plan in place before
tougher protections are demanded.
"As introduced, we are very
strongly opposed to this bill. It has
no envtronmental qualities whaiSOever. Other states for years have

PA.

IMansfield I 35' I•
IND.

•I Columbus I 37' I

Showers T·srorms Rsin Flurriss

Snow

lcs

Sunny

Pt. C/Dudy

Cloudy

C1992 Aocu-Weather, Inc.

--Area death-Jean Margaret Cole
GALLIPOLIS- Jean Margaret Cole, 81, 158 Woodland Drive, Gallipolis, formerly of Jasmine Trails, Pon Richey, Fla., died Friday, Jan. 31,
1992 at her residence, with whom she had made her home wtth her
daughter for the last seven months.
Born Oct. 13, 1910 in Ontario, Canada, daughter of the late John and
Jennie McCallum she was a retired secretary and sales person. She was a
member of the St Stephen Episcopal Church in Florida, the Florida Historical Society, and the West Paso Art Guild of New Port Rtehey, Fla.
She was preceded in death by her husband. Gerald E. Cole, on Aug.
II, 1991, and by two bro.thers and a sis1er.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Ali (Shirley) Golji of Proctorville, formerly of Gallipolis; two grandchildren, Kim Goldcamp and Jeff Golji,
both of Gallipolis; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be Monday at 6:30p.m. in St. Peter's Episcopal Church,
with the Rev. AI MacKenzie officiating. Burial will be in Oak View
Cemetery, Royal Oak, Mich. There will be no calling hours. Arrangements are by the Willis Funeral Home.

Bush and Yeltsin pledge
beginning of new relationship
WASHINGTON (AP) ..,.. Presi·
dent Bush and R11ssian President
Boris N. Yeltsin met Saturday "not
as adversaries but as friends" and
vowed their once hostile nations
would join to reduce the danger of
nuclear war anywhere.
The two leaders met for three
hours at the presidential retreat at
Camp David, Md., and announced
they would hold summits in the
United States this spring and in
Moscow later in the year.
Bush said ·Secretary of State
James A. Baker IT! will go to Rus·
sia aild other former Soviet
republics later this month to discuss arms reductions and get a
first-hand view of the efforts to
provide humanitarian aid to the
troubled region.
The ineeting was their ftrSt since
the collapse of the Soviet Union
and the resignation of Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev boosted
the international stature of the Russian leader. He later met members
of Congress in Washington before
departing for Ottawa, Canada, on

his way home.
Casually dressed when they met
reporters in a helicopter hangar, the
two presidents emphasized the new
warmth of their personal and political relationship.
"We agreed here that we're
~oing to·pull closer together economically and politically," said
Bush.
"I consider him my friend,"
Bush said of the Russian president,
who was viewed as an interloper by
the administration not too ~any
months 11$0 when the United States
was rootmg for the political survival of Gorbachev and his Soviet
government
"Today, our relations have now
been firmed up as friends ," said
Yeltsin who added that they talk
frequen~y by telephone ~nd "we
say llons, we say George.
It was Yeltsm's 61st birthday
and Bush gave the Russian president a pair of Texas cowboy boots
and a silver belt buckle adorned
with Russian and American tlags.

Sanford to be sentenced

Area man injured

POMEROY - Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story repons that Thomas E. Sanford pleaded guilty on Tuesday to
two counts of rape. Both counts are
aggravated felonies of the first
degree and carry a possible prison
sen1enee of 10 to 25 years on each
count. Sanford is being held for
sentencing by the Meigs County
Common Pleas'Court which will be
held on Monday.
Sanrord was charged with the
fall, 1991 rapes of two teenaged
girls in ·the Monkey Run area of
Pomeroy.

(USPS 52.1-8001
Publiahr.d each Sundny. B26 Third Avr.. ,
Gallipolia, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley
Publ h;hing Company/MultimediA , Inc.
Second c:ln1111 poytng,., pnid At CRllipoiia.
Ohio 4563 1. Entered a11 ar.cor.d cln11a
mailing mnl~l!T a t Pomeroy, Ohio, Po.t
Offioo .

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BUBSCIUPTION RATES
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(.

CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Friday night's Ohio Lottery selections:
Pick J Numbers
7·1·6
(seven, one, six)
Pick 4 Numbers
5-6-6-0
(five, silt, si~. zero)
Cards
J (jack) of Hearts
K (king) of Clubs
· 5 (five) of Diamonds
A (aee) of Spades

ARE FOUND AT
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422 Second Ave.

iw!VE 'rHOs£ SYOWII LEGS AMIJIET ..•

South-Central Ohio
Sunday, mostly sunny an~ :
warmer. High 35 to 40.
Extended rorecast:
Monday through Wednesday: · :
Monday, fair and unseasonably ·
warm. Lows, middle 20s to lower :
30s. Highs, middle 40s to lower :
50s
·•
Tuesday, a chance of rain show;:
ers, possibly changing to snow,:
Lows from 30 to 35. Highs in the
40s.
Wednesday, fair and coldeti
Lows in the 20s. Highs in the 30s.

When your watch needs
Special Attention Let
Our Experts give it the
attention it deserves.

....,...,.@JJUJJim

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«M M.CONO Htf.

OALI.I'OUII, 0110 •5e31

ME,_A .wERICNfOUI SOCIE1.Y

Tommy Veughn

Vote YES Feb. 4th for the Library Levy

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS
None.
FRIDAY DSCHARGES
William Thornton and Bertha Tuttle.

CLBUBRS

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ASTHMA AND HIATAL HERNIA PATIENTS
•

should retain nexibility to pas}
more protective standards," he:
said.
:•
Cupp said the question of set&lt;
ting standards was a legitimate;
issue for continued di$Cussion. ·
"In terms of the EPA, I under&lt;
stand that concern. Obviously, th(
pe(Jple that depend on making their·
living from the land are concerned:
that EPA won't know anything ;
about their interests and needs alsQ,
and so we need to protect them,'' :

Special Attention

Lottery numbers

THE BEST 8U1S

GALLIPOLIS -A Vinton man
was treated and released from
Pleasant Valley Hospital for minor
visible injuries suffered in a twovehicle accident on Eastern Avenue
Friday at the entrance to the Ohio
River Plaza.
Gallipolis City Police said
William M: Carpenter, 18, 118
Head Road, was southbound at 8
p.m . when he reportedly failed to
yield to an oncoming northbound .
vehicle driven by Vernon W. Burnheimer, 59, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, and
collided.
Damage to both cars was severe
and .the drivers complained of
· minor injuries. They were taken to
PVH by the Gallia EMS, where
Carpenter was treated and released.
The hospital had no record of treating Bumheimer.
Carpenter was cited by police
for failure to yield.

retribution from the military there.
More than 14,000 Haitians have
ned the Caribbean nation since a
military coup Sept. 30 ousted JeanBertrand Aristide, Haiti's first
freely elected president. Some
1,400 made it to the United States
to pursue asylum claims, 955 went
back to Haiti and 350 have gone on
to a third country.
"We think it's a disgrace to
send people back to a country that
President Bush has called a totalitarian state," said attorney Ira
Kurzban, who represents the
Haitian Refugee Center in Miami.
"We know that some of them are
going to die."
The State Department said it
expecled no such retaliation.
"We note that we have received
no credible reports of reprisals
against any individual Haitian who
attempted to reach the United
Slates, including those who were
repatriated after the coup," the
agency said in a statement.
It cautioned Haitians not to
attempt the treacherous 150-mile
trip across the Windward Passage
from Haiti to Cuha.

fully we'll satisfy everybody's concerns and have a good workable
bill, but not one that 's extreme
either way."
The m~e would require the
Ohio Department of Health to set
standards for an acceptable level of
fertilizers and pesticides in sources
of drinking water.
A monitoring program to .detect
contamination would be conducted
by the Ohio Department of Agriculture.
Enforcement .orders in the event
of violations would come from a
proposed Interagency Pesticide and
Fertilizer Council.
The Council would be made up
of the directors of Agriculture,
Health, Natural Resources and
Environmental Protection, three
agricultural officials from Ohio
State University, two legislators
and five persons appointed by the
governor.
Sahli said the Ohio EPA already
may set contamination levels in
excess of minimum federal standards.
''Certain Iy the maintenance of
drinking water standards should
stay with EPA. This bill would
limit us just to what the federal
minimums are. I think the state

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MIAMI (AP) - Military officers awaited orders Saturday to
forcibly repatriate thousands of
Haitian refugees held at a U.S.
Navy tent city in Cuba after the
Supreme Court cleared the way.
''We will assist the Coast Guard
in repatriating Haitians once we
have been given the order to do it,"
Lt. Cmdr. John Griffin , a
spokesman at Guantanamo Bay
Naval Base in Cuba, said Saturday.
The high court on Friday set
aside a federal judge's order that
had blocked the return of H~tian
refugees. Advocates for the
Haitians have resisted the government's repatriation policy in an
Atlanta court.
Haitians have been encamped at
the naval base in Cuba since Nov.
26, 1991. The Coast Gul!fd began
intercepting their rickety boats in
an exodus that continues. On Friday, the Coast Guard picked up
418 Haitians from 14 vessels.
On Saturday, Griffin said ,
10,448 Haitians were at the base;
another 1,500 would-be immigrants
were aboard Coast Guard cutters
anchored offshore.
The State Department said the
fust to go back to Haiti would be
about 5,500 refugees deemed ineligible for asylum by U.S. immigration officials. That could begin as
early as Saturday, officials said.
The cases of the others remain
to be decided.
The U.S. government says the
Haitians are fleeing poverty, not
political repression as asylum cases
require.
But the refugees' advocates
have warned that Haitians sent
back to their homeland will face

SLEEP BETTER AND LIVE ·A HEALTHIER LIFE .

Member: The A!!:sociflt.f:d ProKw. Inland
Daily Pri'IBa A.Baocbtion an.d Lhe Ohio
Newa pnpttr A&amp;IJOClALion , Nalionnl
Advt~.rLilmg P.cpresl'.nt.ftlivt'l, Branham
Newapaper Salt!:&amp;, 133 Third AvcnuA,
New York , l":ew Yorld0011.

passed bills that make this billloolc
like it was drafted in the Dark
Ages," said Richard Sahli, the
group's executive director.
Cupp said the measure, which is
pending before the Senate Agriculture Committee, is designed to set
.up a scientific, sys1ematic app~ch
to solving problems wtthout pohUcal or panic reactions.
Cupp said he approached the
issue from the standpoint of farmers who need fertilizers and pesticides, but also are concerned about
drinking water.
"We're willing to talk with the
environmental council and we're
going to do that," he said. "Hope-

U.S. prepares to repatriate
Haitians camped in Cuba

W.VA.

·j

~ '

·~·

This past week the Columbus
Dispatch has been full of articles
pertaining to the recruiting of
potential football athletes who
intend to enroll at OSU this fall.
According to the article published on January 26, OS U has
recruited a team consisting of the
top 20 players in the state. Already
in 1992, OSU has verbal commitments of 27 potential athletes. It is
noted that there have been no
po1ential quarterbacks listed in this
roster.
In another news release, Joe
Pickens, quarterback, who was
third string last year and polentially
a first stringer this year, has decided to transfer to Duke University.
Pickens was rated as one of the top
five quarterback prospects in the
country when he signed with the
Buckeyes in 1990. His decision to
leave has drawn headlines.
It was indicated that Pickens
became upset when Jim Colletta
resigned and went to Purdue as
head coach. Elliot Uzelac, now
offensive coordinator, preferred the
running vs. the passing game. Colletta was branded as a passing
coach. Last year the Uzelac running t~ offense would only J.&gt;BSS
on thtrd and long, Pickens ts a
passer and not .a runner. Hence his
desire to transfer.
Pickens' transfer should have a
long term effect on the recnliting of
future passing quarterbacks. If
Coach Cooper's team continues to
accentuate the run, no skilled pass·
er would play for OSU under the
circumstances. Wide receivers will
also jump to some oth\\r school
because of the lack of passing.

.

~

.

Ohio State University .footbaJJByFredw. cro~;

Can the voters take back America?

.·'•
•,.•

e

referring their patients to the lab. :
Slark has held hearings on the·,
self-referral game and is pushing
legislation in the House to outlaw
such cozy ownership arrangements.
He contends that it is not only costing patients money, but is tleecing.
the laXpayers through higher Medicare bills. Sen. Brock Adams,
D.
Wash ., is working a stmilar bill
through the Senate.
·
The Florida Medica1 Association has whined that banning the
J.Oint ventures would "result in an .
inferior level of patient care," and ·
would deprive some rura1 areas of
modem medical services. fThe asso- ·
ciation, which seems ar more
interesled in profits than patients, is
now trying its best to protect the
existing lucrative labs from any ban
that might come down from Capitol
HilL
B!Ll;'S BILLY - If Jimmy
Carter thought his brother Billy
was a po~tical millstone, he should
a:J Sl'e.iti'U look at Roger Clinton, younger
brother of presidential hopeful Bill
~MIN­
NeWs • r-l!a
Clinton. The head of the Arkansas
State Police told us that one of the
toughest things he ever had to do
was tell Gov. Clinton that his little
brother was about to be arresled in
1984 for conspiring to distribute ·
cocaine. The police made sure the
charges were bulletproof, and they ·
told us the governor did not try to ·
interfere.
Roger Clinton spent a year in
jail before being paroled. Since
then, he has been arrested for disorderly conduct at an Arkansas night- · .
club. Gov. Clinton has publicly ·
admitted that his brother had a drug .
problem dating back to his teens.
Roger's problems have been the ·
source of some erroneous rumors ·
about Gov. Clinton. One false lead
in Littlc. Rock alleges that the State .
Police secretly !aped the governor ·
si tting across the table from a
mound of cocaine. ·But it was the :
other Clinton. The tape was part of
the surveillance evidence against
Roger.
Copyrigh~ 1992, United Feature '
Syndicate, Inc.

~ ·I Gorra ieLL '{otJ-- ~ND!
MeaAI iT. NoW, iN Tile $TRoNGeST VlaY
! C-aN-- ~ND THoSe

• ( •:
Mzc• hae l B zns
ezn.-

bald profiteering approach betrays
This se~f-referral bo~anza has
that for some. the botlom line in the made •ts. btgg_est splash m Flonda
business of life and death is still and Cahfornta. One exasperated
money .
Florida radiolpgist said he has. seen
10
"Ads like this help create an enoug h unnecessary Iab "!SitS
•
ake
h'
"
'ck
t
be
a
doctor
inflation ra1e compounding at over m . tm st o
·"
10 percent per year in health care," He told.us, ·.·M~dic,,ine and capitalsat'd Rep. Fortney •'Pete" Stark, D- tsmJUS t.don t m1x.
,
Flo
d
d
t
d
Calif. "The ad cries out for a doe. n a oc ors on t want .to
admtt
the Yhave a problem • desptle
tor to overcharge and overuse the
Holter morn·tor device. ,,
the fact that about 70 percent of all
· tmagmg
· · labs tn
· the state
Doctor-owned diagnostic equip- diagnostic
ment is the latest way for doctors to · are now owne d by doc tor s who
rake·t'n money. Instead of referring refer their patients to those labs.
th•;• patients to outside labs, many 0 ne stu dy revea 1ed th at doc tors
~
' th etr
· pa t'ten ts f or 40 percent
physicians
are investing in the labs re.er
e
1
b
and equipment themselves so they mor a work when the doctor
can profit from their own referrals.
owns th c 1ab.
The result has been a deluge of
Our associate Jim Lynch ha s
overpriced and unnecessary tests. seen a report by the Florida Health
.
· t Board wtth
As we have already reponed, elder- care cost contammen
· ev.t'dence. The study
ly people who have bouts of , more dam mng
.
f
unsteady ' balance are referred for
ocuses on one Boca Raton dta g·
·
· g lab whose doc· tor ·
$1 000 CAT scans. Healthy young nos t.tc tmagm
'
·
· ed. from
athletes are given costly magneuc owners recetv
. . $23
. ,000
. to
resonance imaging tests 10 confirm $210,000 each m dtvtdends m one
that their thighs arc indeed brUised. year for doing nothing more than

temperatures

MICH.

Doctors reap big
bucks
off
lab
referrals
.
.
.
Jack Anderson,

A Division of

Group blqsts water pollution bill

OH 10 Weather

Page-A2:

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Pag....A3
••.

.Youowe•lloyourselrtocomtlnor .

catllor prim today.

BOWMAN'S

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70 Pine St. ..
G.nipolla
446-7283 or l-800-458-6844
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UPPER
RT. 7
·KANAUGA,
OHIO'

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�We

Page-A4-Sunday Times Sentinel

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
It's February so how about a
touching valentine story-one that
started in 1905 and continues
today? Can't miss, can it?
Martha Vennari , 42015 Seneca
Drive, Pomeroy, is preparing to
send her valentines and a small,
very special one is going to Mrs.
Marilyn Shakelford Griest who
resides in Tucson, Ariz.
.
Martha ' s Mother, Ada Zahl
Ohlinger, received the valentine on
Feb. 14, 1905 from Mrs . Griest's
Mother, Fae Greene Shakelford
when Ada and Fae were fii'St grade
classmates in the one-room school
house which was located in Dutchtown at Minersville.
In the 1950's, Mrs. Ohlinger
found the valentine among some of
her keepsakes and sent it to Mrs.
Shakelford who resided in Middletown, Ohio. From then on, the two
women sent the valentine back and
forth until their deaths which
occurred only months apart-197980.
Fae ' s daughter, Marilyn and
Martha had become good friends
too many years ago because they
spent every summer with their
grandparents in Minersville. Mter
the deaths of their mothers, Martha
and Marilyn began sending the
beautiful little heartshaped and
well-worn valentine to each other
continuing the tradition of their
mothers and Martha is seeing to it
that the tradition continues this
year.
A message written on the back
of the old valentine reads:
"Minersville, Ohio, February
14, 1905. From Fae Greene to her
dear lit~e seatmate, Ada Zahl".

Now that's a nice valentine
story.
1va Sisson is president of the
Middleport High School Alumni
Association this year and Iva is
assuring all of you Middleport
grads that this year' s reunion is
going to be special and different.
She will see to that
Right now Iva and the current
offiCers are searching for a Storage
room in a business building or a
home where supplies of the association-paper goods, shirts, etc.can be stored. If anyone has a dry
storage space they will allow the
group to use please contaCt Iva at
742-2187 or any of the other oflicers who are Pat Arnold, vice-president: Diane Lynch. secretary, and
Gail Hovatter, treasurer.
And-the officers are also looking for 8mm movies which were
taken over the years of Middleport
High School activities, particularly
events ,involving the sports program or band activities. They'd
like to borrow the film for just a
short period to follow up on a plan
they're working on. Again, if you
have ftlm you can loan, do contact
one of the offiCers.

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

About 177 workers -about SO
pen:enl of the workforce al Quarto
Mine No. 4 near Claring10n were laid off. Another 143 miners,
about half the workforce al Consolidation Coal Co.'s Ireland Mine in

Gallia deputies probe thefts
GALLIPOLIS - The driver of
a pickup truck who pumped gas
into his vehicle at the Super America store at 458 Pike St., Kanauga,
left the store withoul paying for the
gas, 1he Gallia County Sheriff's
Departmenl was informed Friday.
James Siders, an employee of
the store, told deputies the incident
occurred around 8:30p.m.
Bill Davis, an employee of the
Econo Lodge Motel, 389 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis, informed deputies

that abedspread was removed from
one of the rooms somelime
between 8 p.m. Wednesday and 8
a.m. Thursday.
Booked into the Gallia County
Jail at 12:59 a.m. SaiUrday was
Richard G. Gilbert, 20, Vinton.
Gilbert was charged with fleeing
and aggravated menacing. Jailed at
10:30 p.m. Friday was Kenneth E.
Hamblin, 28, Jackson, on a bench
wanant for failure to appear. •

February 2, 1992

Moundsville, also were furloughed,
satd c~mpany spokesman Paul
Kvedens.
The co"!pany said !he layof~s
should be tn effect le~s than s1x
months.
Kvederis allributed the layoffs
to a soft market, adding that the
work reduciion will allow the
.

down.

.

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

Sunday Tlmes-sentlnei-Page-Al

.

\

Larry Ward, U~tttd Mine Work-

ers of Amenca DIStnct 6 prestdent,
S81d '!'e layoffs took effecl J_an. 26.
Miners at the _Quarto mm_e suspected a reduction was gomg to
take place because thai mine had
been idled · Jan. 22, Ward said.
The
49
will
said.
,.

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Call me.
UROU SNOWDfN

The Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy must have
been the fii'St location to answer a
request from the Meigs Division of
the American Heart Association.
The division had asked that
businesses and organizations having ouldoor signs for which texts
can be prepared use their signs to
help the division on the fii'St three
Conlinued on A-8

'''...

Corner of Third
A¥1. &amp; Statt St.
GoiNpoliJ, Oh.

Pho111 446-4290
Homt 446-4511

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INIUIANU

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Like a good rwighbor; Slate Farm i.l there.

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Home Office: Bloomington, Illinois

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Breasts

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If you think electric

here's some infonnation
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cooperatives don't invest
in technology. ..

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Each year, Ohio's 27 electric cooperatives invest mil~ons in the latest
technology. Why? Because for cooperatives to provide their members- who
also happen to be their owners- with the most economical electric service
possible, investing in high technology is a vital necessity.·
Every day. cooperative technological investments are paying off. Uke one
of the most sophisticated satellite-controlled load management systems in
the nation. From one room, the computerized system detects and deters ·
costly' peak power loads before they occur.
In addition. some cooperatives are equipped with other computer sys. terns so advanced they can detect- then correct- potential costly electric
._power probJems before they affect cooperative mj'!mbers-owners.
But that's how an electric cooperative is different. After all, if it meant
saving money and adding protection, wouldn't you invest in technology to
keep the owners of your company happy?
·
We do. Every day.

. n

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11.5 oz.
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February 2, 1992

Miners may return to work within six months ,
Dll.LES BOTTOM, Ohio (AP)
- Miners laid off last week from
two .Consol Coal Group mines may
return to work within six momhs, a
company spokesman said.

..

•

�....

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

Page-AS-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

Patrot reports deer accident

GALLIPOLIS - The GaUia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol reponed sli~ht dainage to a Wate(loo man's vehicl~ following a collision wtth a deer Friday on State Route 141 tn Perry
Township.
Troopers said Wayne R. Miller, 55, was westbound at 6 P · ~ ·
when his vehicle struck a deer crossmg the road. Miller was unmjured in the accident and the deer left the scene.

Gallia included in erosion project
GALLIPOLIS- A federal program is planned to reduce erosion
at 16 Ohio sites this year and includes a site in G~lia County.
In addition, the Raccoon Creek Watershed m Galha, Jackson,
Hocking and Vinton counties is under re~iew for future ~ork..
The Rural Abandoned Mine Pro.JCCI, auned at recl31mtng SOil and
water resources in rural areas affected by coal mining practices, is
under the supervision of the Soil Conservation ~ervice. Among the
16 Ohio sites is the Kyger Creek Watershed Pro1ect !" Gallia County lt. along with the Duck Creek Watershed Project tn Noble County. represent the two largest projects to be reclaimed this year. .
'Joseph C. Branco, state conservationist for the SCS, said the
Raccoon Creek Watershed construction would focus on erosion,
sediment control and wetland development to treat ac1d mme
runoff.

Traffic to be rerouted Monday

By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS- "Several colored
persons will attend the World's Fair
in New Orleans from here. I was
infonmed by the subcommissioner
from this district
that he had sueceeded in getting
some fine work for
exhibition at the
fair. The Gallipolis colored school
sentsomeworkfor
exhibition. Gallipolis certainly has some enterprising colored men: Mr. John W. Sn:tith
has a finely fined barber shop wtth
bathrooms and does a thriving business.
"Mrs. Hill and Robinson also have
nice shops, and the town's young
men find employment in machine
shops and other places where they
can learn to be machinists and mechanics.
"She can also boast of a young
colored lawyer, who is a regular
graduarte from the Jaw deparunent of

Yale. Coloredmenmustshowthemselves to be proficient and tlten the
avenues of life will be opened to
them."
The above paragraph was written
for the Cleveland'Gazeue in 1884.
This black weekly newspaper usually had a Gallipolis column wriuen
by one of the persons in Gallipolis
who was Afro-American. Tbese various columns as well as similar columns in the Virginia Star are good
sources of Gallipolis black history.
Thehousewehavepicturedtoday
was probably built about 1885 although a portion of the house may
date to 1849 when Samuel Humphrey
lived there. In tlte late 19th century
and into the 20th century the house
was home to Mary Anderson. This
corn~r of Fourth and Pine was a busy
one in the middle 1880's as tltere
were two stores, a blacksmith shop, a
Iiveryandrestaurant(allblaclcowned
businesses) located here.
Other news of 1884 and 1885 in
the Afro-American community ineluded considerable debate over the
F

·

· '

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipoli s City Manager Glenn Smith
announced Saturday nonh and south bound traffic on lower Second
Avenue at the Vine Street intersection will be rerouted Monday
while workers repair a gas line leak.
Smith said southbound traffic moving down Second Avenue (or
SR 7) will wrn right at Grape Street, move over to Third Avenue
and go down Third to Vine Street to get out of town.
Motorists coming off SR 160 should turn nght at Fourth Avenue
and Pine Street and take Founh Avenue out of town to avmd congestion down town.
Motorists coming into town off SR 141 or SR 7 must turn left at
Vine and Third to proceed through town Smtth S31d. Work on the
minor gas leak at Second and Vine should be completed in one day,
Smith concluded
·

Consumer complaint lodged
RACINE- Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported on
Saturday that his department is investigating a consumer's complaint regarding a company named Custom Guard, Inc. of Columbus.
According to Soulsby. a perso~ representing the company
obtained partial payment from a Racme res1dent for mstallauon of
replacement windows, but since that time, no further contact has
been made.
This incident occurred in September and according to the report.
the individual representing tlte company had mentioned he was
doing work in the Langsville area. Anyone ~ith similar contacts
with the company are urged to contact the shenffs office.

school issue. Some blacks favored
integration and some opposed it. A
law suit filed on behalf of four William Cousins who wished enll)' into
Gallipolis High School was resolved
outofcourtwiththeGallipolisSchool
Bom:d agreeing to do every thing
posstble to insure funding for the
highschoolprogramatwhatin 1890
came to be called Lincoln School.
Also in regard to the "mcc" issue
the Yale trained lawyer mentioned
above was J. G.. Willis who in 1884
was asked to play the trumpet at
revival services in the white Method,
ist Church (Grace). It created a great
furor. It was apparently the first time
atrumpethadeverbeenplayedinthe
church.
After a few nights Mr. Willis was
told his services would no longer be
needed. Some in the black community thought it because Willis was
black and white Metltodists insisted
the problem was not race but the
trumpet itself. In order to smooth
over feelings leaders of the Republican party, many of whom were
members of Grace Church offered to
back Willis in the election for city
solicitor. Willis did win that election,
though two years later he was defeated .
Social events in the black community in the 1880s included: roller
skating parties at the Mammoth
Rink(located in the 600 block of
SecondAvenue),amasqueradeparty
at the Mammoth, Masonic activities
and church activities.

Based...

j

the
of
Ga~bpolls erected a Masomc lodge
whJChstoodne:artheJohnGeechureh,
from 1884 unul the early 1970s. The.
masquerade party also had a. contes.t
to see who wou.ld be the king and
queen. James Hill ran agwnst 'Y1h·
ham Jones and El~ Scott ran agams.L
Mtlhe Butler. Wmners recetved a
gold watch.and the losers had to split
a barrel of flour. .
.
. ··
There was an mteresung ~lal.
event called an egg party'" wh~h: 1
the ladi~ carried an egg WI ~r
name on 11. Tbe eggs were pla&lt;:ed 10
a sa~k and the gentlemen then packed
out m tum. one cegg. ~~;as :e~ the&gt;
gentlem~ sdutytow th to his ~~e
the egg(gttl) he cho.se at.s e mag 1
ha~e dmner ~·th hts family. It was'
satd ~at the gttls dad not laugh wherr
the nght ~an drew the wrong egg,
These.par11es became so popularth~.
for a ume m 1885 they were held blweekly.
. .
.
·
Thecommunttymthethatemh.ad
a marching band called the Excelsior
Brass and and tltey played m alltbe,
parades, in the pwl&lt;, and in halls. , .
From one column we learn thl\1
the winter of 18&amp;4-85 was a rough
one in the black community and the
reason was the low water in the Ohio'
River. Steam boats were forced ashore.
forlongperiodsofti!"e.TheGalli(IO·'
lis black commumty was heavtly.
dependent on river traffic as about
half of the Afro-Americans in town
made a living from the nverboats or·
loading and unloading the same.

BUILT AROUND 1885 - For many years, this structure was
home ror Mary Anderson. It was probably built around 1885. In
that year, a number or black owned businesses were located on lhe
corner or Fourth Avenue and Pine Street in Gallipolis.

-~-----

' Continued from A-1
·Company Limited did exist. The
new evidence is also said to include
testimony from Martins Itotoh, an
officer and agent of the Nigerian
National Bank to the effect that
$IS.5 million is now being held in
that bank for Athena Trading Company and that those funds have
been available to the Athena Trading Company upon completion of
all necessary government clearance
~9g .procedures since January, '·"
• According to Knight's motion
Rlsheun was indigent and the pub:
lie defender's office was limited to
~500 for the production of evidence, and that those monetary
restrictions prevented him from
p,resenting the new evidence at the
trial. The manner in which that evi:
.jl:nce has since b~n obtained by
tbe defense, Knight says, will be
ALL LOCKED liP- Tbt
presented by subpoenaed wimesses _
use Friday 1 steerlnt wheel kK:king
if a new trial is granted.
me~bet
of the Mothers Against Drunk
:· (:~;,!~~i;
: "I\ is clear that the sworn affidevace, m effect, allows poUce otrlcers to put a ear te
davits directly contradict the conor operation, particularly In situations where the driver is .tr;·nl&lt;.
tentions of the state and are affiring. Pat Thoma, the kK:al MADD Chapter's slate representative,
rpative proof which mandate a new
won
the device In a drawing at a state meeting last weekend in
t/ial ," Knight's motion says.
Worthington,
and presented illo Cbler or Police Gerald Rought
"t'fhey) totally repudiate the slate's
ror
use
by
the
Pomeroy Department. Cbier or Police Rought and
case."
his wife, Ellen, abo attended lhe meeting. Here the police chier
·' Meigs County Prosecuting
demonstrates how the locking device works as Thoma looks on.
Attorney Steven L. Story says that
he will oppose Knight s motion,
saying that the affidavits add nothContinued rrom A-1
ing to the case, and that Judge Fred
W. Crow lii should not consider
this evidence in deciding on a new stamped "Village of Middleport". particiJJ&lt;uing in recycling this year,
They will be free to anyone who Trussell concluded.
·
trial.
wants
to
participate
in
the
project
~ : · "The court," Story commented,
COLONY THEATRE
If someone volunteers and then
~ "should not ovenurn the verdict of
:~ a jury that listened to five days decides they do not want to continFRL liiRU liiURS.
ue in the program, then the bins
~ worth of testimony and had the
WILLIAM SHATNIR, LEONARD NIMOT
must be rerurned to the village.
~ opportunity to judge the defenIN
Originally the village applied
:•dant's credibility through both
for a gmnt which would perptit an
;: direct and cross examination."
incentive plan - a slight reduction
in tlte trash piclcup fee - but that
PG
•'
phase of the grant was not funded.
ONI MltliiG SNOW 7:30
The goal is to have 42 percent
ADIISSIOII $1.50
of all households in Middleport
446-tf%3

9

~~~
I

I

7.99
2Medium

II

I

Pepperoni

I

I

$8.99

One Lar£e

IP£pperoni Pizza I
I and 4 colas 1

Jeffers reports check missing

i....!t. !...Jt.l

POMEROY- John A. Jeffers of Eagle Ridge Road near Pomeroy
reported on Friday tltat when he went to his mailbox, he discovered
that a check was missing from an envelope in the mailbox.
The U.S. Postal authorities and other appropriate agencies were
notified, according to the Meigs County Sherirrs Department.

Iii------ ------

.......
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aaa.~ ...... ,....... .. uu•o.ioi,.~~-,......
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...........
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.................
:1
ac::.- ....
~M • • , . . . . . . . . . , . _ ,

I•1W1 ._.,.,.., .._ c..-.IIMI

11101

,.
•

Meigs EMS units
answer five calls
POMEROY - Meigs County
Emergency Services crews
answered five calls for assistance
on Friday and early on Saturday.
On Friday at 11:19 a.m.. Mid4leport squad went to the Holzer
Clinic for Carl Young. He was
taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 12:10 p.m1, Racine IUiit went
)0 an auto rue on State R01,1te 124.
Charles Young was the owner. At
3:40p.m ., Pomeroy squad was sent
)0 Meigs High School for Tyler
\Volfe, who was taken to Holzer.
At 4:58 p.m., Racine squad transported Deborah Henry from the
swion to Veterans Memorial HosIJital.
· On Saturday at 9:14a.m., Rutland units were sent to an auto
accident on Main Street. Kevin
Harris was taken to Vererans.

Connie Kay Chapman, Scipio
Township, of Meigs County, and
R. Shane Hampton, Huntington
Township, and Marva Peck, village
of Rio Grande, of Gallia County.
The two day seminar is
designed to orient newly elected
fiscal officers with governmental
accounting, budgeting, financial
report preparation and the rules
adopted by the Auditor of State.
Sessions cover issues such as
budgets, expenditures, depository
law, sunshine laws, public records,
bidding procedures, the powers and
duties of council and clerk-treasurers. and the Uniform Accounting
Network for townships.
Monday County Auditor Peter
Couladis will speak on the budgetary process. Topics to be discussed included budget hearings,
the budget ccimmission, communication between county and local
govemment,a and determination of
revenue sources.

992·
2124

..

..

614·221·0888

LW.CENNAMO
AITORNEY·a'·lAW
8 East Broad Street, Suite 900
Columbus, Ohio

.,

LOCAL CONSULTATION

.,

..

992·6417

In Pomeroy With
~nORNEY D. MICHAEL MULLE~

.

ANYONECANSELLYOU
-.

,.

Ferrellgas provides you with a long-term
commitment to safety and quality service.
Ferrellgas gives you a ro1 more than just what we put in
your Jank.

You get propane PLUS.. .

SPECIAl.SERVICES".Because we value-vou as a

customer, we want to give you betler service while we help
you control costs. .ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL

CUSTOMER PROGRAMS. including our Level Payment
. Plan anct the Ferrellgas Installation Review.

..

Ferrellgaa
St.le Route 35
Orlllpolll, OH 4$631

Clll ua at

448-2264

.

'•'
.
: I

' 'd

,.

SAFETY•••We have one of the mosi expe~lenced propane
delivery lellfllll in the business. We give you more for your
money when.it comes to salety and dependability.

,

.

II

~Ill' Mmm SATURDAY 6 SUNDAY.

IARGAIN NIGHT TUESI)I, Y.

"''

7:00,9 :30 DAI LY.
SAT &amp; SUN ~ T mES
1: 00, 1:)0

"Arl

ii.•

Marshall University

N nnl, ht n).!

l l'hil'ltmr nr
.\ m1"": uf hrJfl , .,.,uJ JrlU

KLI\ E

'!JJ.:J.!~r:.~..L!. ~:~·_:.~~ ~I tt' ~

'",.

JAZZ

............. "

IIIIN
I!IWIIIS

EnSEMBLE

NUA

lOB

lllBEll! IIII!IIINS
'AI~ Ill~~

Saturday, February 8
8:00 , ....

SID1N SIIB.IIG
Ill H~ IU'IIIlT.'
~;.o r.-

........

Wu(R of tlw BRIO(

Monla and Dorotllr Haldna

Ariel Theiltre

/l,, un~;.'\1 ~ . I~ lU I l•'lh llf ~II

'!ill
7:10,9: 10 OAil V. G
SAT I SliM MTINEES 1:10 3:10

421 2nd AVL, OatlllpollaiOh.

Call446-ART8 lor mora Tnro.

f intimidating. There are

.

.

•

payment," the trustees said. "Thi~
new policy will not affect you. The•
district relies upon the prompt pay-!
ment of its invoices in order to con-,
tinue operating.
•
"Another reason that this policy:
is being implemented is to delay, as•
long as possible, an increase in our!
monthly service charge;" the state-:
ment said. ''The costs of operating
the district increase every year anit
it is' especially important now .thar
all customers stay current wit~
their monthly biDs."
:
The trustees referred questionsto the district office.
:

~:
t;ontinued from A,l
~ employment he admits it was very

BANKRUPTCY

PROPANE!

&lt;

fI!, Meigs ...

446·
4040

Training seminar scheduled
: POMEROY - Auditor of State
Thomas E. Ferguson's Management Advisory Services Division
will hold a training seminar for
approximately 40 newly elected
township and mumctpal off1ctals
Monday and Tuesday at the Ohio
University Inn, Richland Ave. ,
Athens.
Included in those scheduled to
attend the seminar are Barbara
Grueser, Bedford Township; Carolyn Powell, Village of Racine; and

Sewer.•. ___c_on_t_in_ued_fro_m_A_-~_ _ _ _ _ _ __.

includes late fees and a $40 service
fee for re-establishing service. Tbe
POMEROY - The Gallia-Meigs customer's water department will
Community Action Agency has also be notified that sewer service
been notified br the Siate HEAP had been stopped.
Customers with delinquencies
office that the deadline for the Regfor
service periods through Dec. ·
ular HEAP program has been
31,
1991 are having their accounts
extended from Jan. 31 to Feb. 28
turned
over to the attorney for colby Gov. George Voinovich.
lection.
"We have instructed the
This extension allows an addiauorney
to take all steps necessary
tional month to apply for regular
to
collect
these accounts," the stateHEAP. The emergency program,
however. continues to be in effect ment said.
"If you are one of the customers
!hJ.ough April 3. Assistance is limwho
pays your monthly bill on
Ited to once per heating season.
time,
we appreciate your prompt
Low income persons with heat
' related utilities disconnected for
threatened by disconnect, or bulk
fuel persons whose supply is less
than 10 days meets the emergency
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
requirements of the emergency
446 4524
' . .. •
HEAP program.
For further information residents
may call 367-7341 in Cheshire; or
992-6629 in Meigs County. The
Gallia County Outreach program
telephone number is 446-061 r and
the Meigs County Outreach number is 992-5606. Tbe toO (ree hatline number for regular HEAP
inquiries is 1-800-282-0880.

STAR TREK VI

,.

1I

Pizzas and I
4 colas
I

HEAP deadline
is extended

Sunday Times Sentlnei-Page-A7

Middleport...

.,

I&amp;~~
l~s

Pom.eroy-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

~

"IT~ TIME FOR DOMINO'~ PI71A"

r---· ·~

~

F.ebruary 2, 1992

February 2, 1992

oapers .
..--Local Briefs:-- Good source of Gallipolis black history found in oldI~ 1~84
Afro-Am~cans

- ...

.

.' .
".

'

33,000
t employees at Disney World with
· 500 employees in h1s department
alone. Wolfe says he has made
many friends and met some very
interesting people.from all over the
world.
. Much of his time is spent
1 rehearsing up to eight hours a day
i and he performs in the Spectra
· : ~agic Parade seven days a week
•and twice a night during the summer and in tbe $urpriS!l Celebmtion
Parade once a day. ·
An interesting bit of information
that WRife shared is the cost of one
of the 'costumes he wears in the
Spectra Magic Parade. That costume costs $15,000 and there are ·
six dancers in his unit.
When perfonming in the Spectre
Magic Parade, the largest parade in
the history of Disney World,
Wolfe, and all the dancers, are .
electrically connected with 110
volts to the floats in the parade. He
admit~ this took a bit of getting
used to bul now poses no problem
at all. He has performed in 196
parades while at Disney World,
each parade being just a few feet
shon of a mile.
The fttSt time he performed in a
parade at Disney World he was a
bit anxious - well - a lot anxious.
He reponed to his position 20 minutes before "step-off" and was
amazed thai the other performers
weren't worrying about their costumes or anything. Then, like a
wave, the wardrobe employees
came from behind the scenes to
insure the perfection of each performer. Wolfe stated that if something Isn't just right at Disney
World then it doesn't happen.
Wolfe loves the excitement of
being employed at Disney World
and often can't believe he is acwal- ·
ly there. He resides in a town called
Winter Garden which is 12 minutes
from the Magic Kingdom employee parking lot. He says about 80
percent of the people who live
there work for D1sney but that Disney World has nothing to do with
the housing.
·
He points out everything an
employee would ever need is provided at Disney World. It's like !ts
own little city, he says. 1t has ats
own emergency medical services, a
bank, post office - everything. Disney World doesn't have to rely on
anybody - it is self-supporting.
Another interesting facet of Disney World is the imdel'ground tunnel system which the employees
must use to get to various ~t!'t~­
tiOIIs in· the park. Wolfe wd tt u
like a .whole other world down
there. Th9 public does have the
·opportUnity to see this ''world" .if
willing io pay the $250 admission ·
price to see the underground systein.

I

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llllmlEIGHT

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Welte 11ys he doesn't see himself tllere many years down the
road bul that he doc$ plan to continUe Ilia employmelll.for. at lealt a ...l
~or men yar. He feels 11111
evUJ!!IC should work at Disney
W01141t 1eut onco.
.
WHile' there he has seen such
cclobtltlea u Ben Vcrone, Sally
StruthOrl, SteJibanlo Powers,
Howlo Mandolf, Onrllle Redoa·

bacllot, Reali Pllilbln and Cadly
Leo Olffora, Vanna Wblll, Clan··
dace Camero~, Cllrill)' Brinkley,
Bl')'lllt O..rabel, Amy Grant. Leo
GteeaWIIOd. Jimmy Ctner • llld
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.~=.:!l:~
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twl II:I ..... 21,
~....-c.;.:· l•llmltlp Is I .a1111 left

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.WEST Vh31111.'8INIGEIT CHEW, OLDS, PONTIAC, BUICK, QEO AND CUSTOM VAN DEALER, RT. 21 SOUTH RIPLEY 422.o753 372-2M4 3U 5147

alew.

•!

)

7

34WM7

�..•

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•
February 2; 1992 ·

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

Page A8 Sunday 11mes Sentinel

Two Pennsylvania farmers 'Bah Humbug' to Groundhog Day
Wh'le th
DOTI, Pa. (AP) - 1 0 •
ers fuss osver a g[Oundhoalg called
Phil and unday s annu f wmler
rite, the harried owners 0 a veg·
rable •ann say " Bah humbug'" 10
e
•·
·
the rodents.
·
UnderneathMthe 60:acreF organi~
Flickerville ountam ann an
Groundhog Ranch in cenl!'ai Pe~sylvania, a tiny ~roundhog-bullt
sub:way
ground, ahums
nalUTai
w1lh
all-they-can-eat
life . Above .
s:alad bar offers a groundhog par·
adise.

That's fine for the wildlife, not . critter sees its shadow, tradition
says that 1'ndte
' :ates Sl'x men weeks
so fine for lhe humans who own the of wimer.
place.
"We've never seen a groundhog
"I wish people would srop dol- • - on Groundhog Day llld don't
ing on the little (exnletive)," said '""~
one owner, Ward sfnclair. " They care 10," Sinclair said.
domassivedamagehere."
The farm is thick with groundGroundhog Day as celebraled in hogs. The properly is punctured
Punxsutawney, 125 miles norlh- with enuances 10 !heir sublenanean
west of Dolt, marks the animal's tunnels.
fro hi'--• · If the
Cass Pel•~nn, 42, 1ike Sinclair a
...rg;e.nce
. ._m_....._ ....
1eme

Man pleads
innocent in
shootings
STANTON, Ky. (AP) - Police
knew Ralph Sleven Baze Jr. as
someone who had had scrapes with
the law, but no one imagined that
he was dangerous, Powell Counly
AtiDmey Jeff Stiles said.
While Baze pleaded innocent
Friday to lwo counts of capital
murder in the shooting dealhs a dsy
earlier of Sheriff Steve Benneu and
Depuly Arthur Briscoe, flags in the
eastern Kenlucky coumy new at
half srafl.
Baze, 36, who was shackled,
showed no emolion as he entered
the plea in Powell Dislrict Court.
He was ordered held in the Montgomery Counly Jail in lieu of
$500,000 bond, and Jud~e William
Bach scheduled a prelimmary hearing for Fridsy.
Baze's legal scrapes were relatively minor, but they indicated
continuing problems with hiS slepson, Aaron Highley, and Highley's
wife, Dana.
The Highleys had filed complaints against Baze wilh Powell
County authorities, alleging that he
hadn'l reiUrned tools valued at
more than $100 and that he owed
them more than $1,300 for a l!ailer
he had agreed 10 buy.
But Highley said they had
dropped the issues because Baze
was shooting toward their property,
apparently 10 intimale them.
A funeral service for the slain
officers was scheduled for 2 p.m.
EST Sunday in the Powell County
High School gymnasium in Stanton.

former reporter for The Washing- celery, beans and lelluce.-And ari
ton Post and the farm 's other Orange Line linking carrots to
owner, compares it 10 a city sub- squash.
way. "The subterranean tunnels
Sinclair,.58, lfied to lface the
must be like the Washington Metro tunnels last July 4 by dropping
sysrem,'' Peterson said.
smoke bombs in the openings.
There's no subway map for
,Efforts lalef lo trap the animals
these crearures, of course. But it's y#ded jusl 14 groundhogs in two
easy to imagine a Red Line thai months.
·
stops at toma10es, radishes and
"Since I don'l have a gun and I
beets . A Green Li.ne connecling would get no pleasure from shoot'
.......- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .

no•n.------·w-~----------

EASTMAN'S•••

ing creatures, we take them some
distance away and release them,' :
Sinclair said.
.
" I think we're the only people
in the county who l~a them.•"
1se ,
Pelerson said. " Every Ye Jus,
shoots theirs."
- ·
The rodents either reium or il'lh·
ers come lo take lheir place.
"They're, monsters, but they're .
well-fed," he sat_'d_.

--~~~~~~~~~,

Did I mention lhal we' re
pulling oul of lhe recession?
Unemploymenl is up; orders for
durable goods are down; the stock
market is a daily roller coas1er ride;
even Macy's has gone the bankrupt
rou1e; the housin~ markel drags.
Oh yes, we're pulhng oul of il. Do
keep smiling.

:Along the River

.. '

.

By JULm E. DILLON
Tlm~Seatlitel Stair

..

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AN -O_DD FIND· Marc Fultz, au 'avld luochbo• f:11llector, buyer
seDer, has In bls co!ledloa a pair of Manbal Dillon luochbox·
Wllat is so uousulls .that one .lias a mlsspelllrtlf. The box ID
2Miare'• right hand Is correctly spelled ''Manbal" and the one ID
left hand is misspelled "Marshall."
~·

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Pickers are people who assist Marc you're not qy doing il then it's
In ciQsing, Marc stresses,
in locating a desirable lunchbox not ~y worifr 1t
"Don't
ever throw anything away." ,
and then conllll:ling him about what
_,
is available.
.
,
He also fmds some lunchboxes
through phone calling, For exampie, he received a call from il
woman who had a !9S4-55 Howdy
Doody box. Marc offered her·$200
for it and later sold it 10 another
buyer f01 $400.
Now if you think thai sounds
unfair, it's really not. Marc says
that's how lhings happen. He
slfesses the irnpo!lance of underslanding how markets increase and
that you have 10 be able' to keep up
with lhe market. The value for a
box in an older publication is niosl
accept.
likely much higher now b,e says.
Marc says when he began col- Prices don't remain constant and
lectin~ quilts he didn't really know that's why he could sell that
anythmg about it. Now since he has woman's Howdy Doody box for
.,
been doing it ~ while he has come $400.
,,
to ttuly apprec1ale antiques and has
According to Marc lhe most
become quite knowledgeable on desirable lunch boxes are those fealhe subject. He does, however, turing scenes from "Hometown
point out that it took him about Airpor~" which are worth $1,000
three years lD become comfortable 10 $3,000 beeause of the rarily of
wilh quilt collecting and buying those boxes; lhe "Jetson's," "Case
and selliR¥· This, he conlributes to Jones,'' "Deputy Dawg" and "Bull
going to JUSt aboul every auction winlde."
and sale that he can.
Marc feels another good area for
A big part of collecting quilts collection of lunchbox is anything
fcir Marc IS the buying and selling related to relevision. For example,
which goes on and he points out items depicting the old s.iiCOms are
that there is money to be made in a pretty good inveslfDent Accordthe field if a person knows what ing ID Marc it rakes about 30 years
they're doin$. This first became before the items see a real increase
evident 10 h1m when he made to in value. This he says is influenced
lrip lD New York and while explor- by the facl that everyone looks
ing the quilting field was !Old thai back ID their childhood.
anyone co~ld make money buying
There 'is a variety of lypes of
and selling quilts.
lunchboxes accordmg to Marc,
According to Marc, there is a including dome, metal dome, metal
greater risk with quills lhan with square, vinyl (square, dome and
other collectibles in rerms of male- brunch bag) and plastic (dome and
ing money but he does offer these square). Only plastic lunchboxes,
•j
',,,
........
helpful hints.
which were manufactured begin. ·~-...._:~ ·· . . .
.
If you're inlerest.ed in purchas- ning in the 1970's, are available
ing a quilt· say, for example, at an now as metal boxes werediscontin·
auction - you should look for all ued in 1985. According to Marc if
OUTSTANDING COLLECTION. Pictured are but a few of
cotton quilts in subtle colors such you buy a newer lunchhox it almost
the luitchboxes In the col,lectlon of Marc Fultz. In just a little over
as blue and white, which is the has to be in mint condition.
a year he bas collected three to four thousand boxes and be is
bes~ red and white and green and
What makes lunchhox collectnowben near llulshed. Marc is very much into buying and selling
while, as well as flower gardens. In ing so effective, Marc feels, is lhlit
luochlloxes and be says it Is a field In which anyone can get
·
·
regards lO the age of the quilt, Marc it is different from anything else - IDvoll't!d.
says quilts frolll the 1930's are thf For example, a "Donny and Marie~
best. He. SlfeSses that age doesn t lunch box mar be a collectible
necessanly mean Value.
items for someone who likes
. Som~ '~d~n'ts". according{to music, for som'eone who likes
Marc are qutl~s Wl\h~ut =·9.ers. "Donny and Marie," or for someMarc S!IYS. havms. a qutl.t WI u. t a _one who ·collects 'lulichboxes.
border IS like bavm~ a p1c1.
!th· There are '!IQre qpt_\ons open ·for
ouJ a~ o.~.a C!1f m Flortds Wlih· people who collect lunchbo~es.
'
ou1 atr-conibliomn,. He .also sa~s
Since the ftrst of this year Marc
stay away from qu1lts w1th dom1- has been inlo collecting toys
nanl col~ ~f orange ~r JIWP.Ie.
because he sees it as a growing
In a~d1110n to. qutlts Mil~ has. field for collection. Ilems such as
~n QUite busy latel,Y wofk!ng on the old tin sandpails, water pitchers
h1s _lunchhox ~ollecuon. Th1s col- and metal shiflers will all rake off
lecuon began m June of 1990 and in value. Marc feels this is a natural
as of now h~ has !"ree to four thou- progression as he was constantly
·san~ boxes m ~places.
stumbling onlo such items when
Marc says he S.Ot mto the lunch- looking for Junchboxes. Marc says
box scene on a u_p from th~ Wall the best wys 10 look for are those
Slreet Journal which s_taled 1f any- made by Ohio Art, which is pmbaone had any money It should be bly best known for its Elch-ainvested in lunchhoxes. Marc was SkeiCh. He also says it's best to put
hooked. . . .
your money inlo the better condi·
As wtth h1s qutlts, Marc says he tioned items and to remember there
knew nothing aboul collecting is an enormous amount of wealth
luncbboxes at the time but he out there 10 tap in10.
leat!!ed by g~g lD yard sal~ and An imporyat~t thing to.keep ~n
reading anythmg and everythmg on mind, accordmg to Marc, 1s that m
the subjecL Marc,. whO is 33 years general, anything you collect
old, admits that ,his wife and his should be in mini condition and to
•
mother and fatber thought he was find out as much information as
cruy when he llWChued bis firSt -you can aboul that item lhrqugh
lunchbox • il Hogan's Heroes box - publications, price guides, eiC. And
for $30. They thpUJht it less comi- remember, price isn't always the
cal however, when he sold it to object. condition is the key.
anotherbuycrfor$275. __.
_ _ Marc says he collects what he
· Marc now locates htS lunchliox- enjoys bul he feels lhe same values
·es through a IDy magazine publica- hold true for any collectible. If
A
VERY
RARE
ITEM
·This
Thermos,
a
part
or
the
iunchbox
"•
. lion as well as through ''pickers."
collection or Mart Fultz. is a very rare item. It depicts a "Home- ·~
tOMI Airport~' theme, A luncbbox wilb a scene from this theme "'
would be worth $1,000-$3,000. The scenes art so valuable because ..
of the rarity oltbem.

POMEROY - What do. quilts\ moo? Well, they're all items paslunchhoxes and IDys have m ~ sionately collected by Mate Fultz,
co-owner and co-operator of Holly
·
Hill 1M in Pomeroy.
Marc, who lives in Athens and
·
•.~.
has been collcctiJm for about seven
yeari, 'bigan colfec!lng quilts by
J!olng locillly ,to auctions with his
m!)lhti and fathOr, John and Marllyn Fultz of Middleport
Marc rclates this story that hat
pened !Yheu he firSt began qudt
c~llecting. J:lis mother told him,
"any quilt is worth $SO," So Marc
bought a quilt only lD see it bring
$25 when he lri~ 10 sell it Marc's
point to this story is that you can
!ost money in CQIIecting l!ut that's
JUSt a part you have to be willing ID

SEE THIS WEEK'S ~INSERT FOR
RIG SAVINGS!
,____,.

I

WIN '{OUR sHARE~DUCTS INSTANTlY!

&amp;4,000 Of tHESE

---=-=--

Library...
Continued from A-1
dren's programs and school visits;
a reduction in bookmobile slOps
throughout the county by 40 percent; reducing bookmobile visits 10
every other week instead of every
week; and a SO percent reduction in
the purchase of materials.
Library offteials have slfessed
tha1 if the levy is successful Tues·
day, the library will begin benefit·
ing from the additional revenue in
1993. At that time service will be
restored lD normal. The library has
asked its patrons 10 be patient with
the service culbacks.
In response to some concerns
voiced in the community about use
of the library by various groups fa
meetings, the library's hoard of
truSieCS,.chaired by Dr. JIIIICS Orr,
have instilUt.ed changes in its meet·
ing policy. Ubrary-rclaled activi·
ties will have precedence in use or
the meeting rooms, but Cl!l be uaed
by "the eeneral pt1blic of Gallia
Counly for educational, cullural,
90eial or civic poujll meetit!l, IUbiflct ro lhe availlbility ll the meet·
c 1001111," includlna the Switzer,
~Intyre and Children' • Study
rooms,llld the allium area.
'Libnry supponera pointed out,
lhallhe 6Xplllllon of the building
in 1990-91, wblch ~ $681,500, _
•IIIOIIIy paid for by a p'lllt ~
' · &lt;Jocalwca. Tile Ll'brary Servicea
Coas&amp;ruction Act contributed
$295,7~5 to the project, while
$77#» W11 dol r:1 by the Raben
M. Swiller lr. beaUNt IIIII $12,500
CIIIC froti the llrieads of Odd

February 2, 1992

=
Marc Fultz learns the ins and outs·of collecting

,___j

Beat of the...
Continued from A-4 ·
days of February. Friday, the
library had prepared its sign with
the requesled !ext: '1'his Is Heart
Month".
'
Hopefully, olhers will also
respond 10 the request. The local
heart group feels that the message
will remind residenlS of the importance of February as Heart Month.
The annual door-10-door fund drite
and educational program rake place
this month.

'

,_

-

..
ODDS TO WIN
PIUZ!
'Mil(

TOTAL
. PRIZES

ll,l*l.OO

11110.00

10TAI.
00DS R11 I OODS FoR 13 OODS Rll26
1111.11 , STORE 'II&gt;IT STORE VISITS SllJRf VISITS
1Wt 11.723

1 ift U 12

115 112.5/JDOO 1m 41 .1124 1m 3,111

20 $20,000.00 I in 258,«8

1io 1.!78

1111 11.11111!-00~1-o 14.111 ' " 1.111 no 11&lt;
11 .00 1.21111 • .001.00 I ~ , 4,113 1~ 121 . , 1" 1a.

~120.00

11.111 30.1!110 ao.aoa.oo 1 •
32 , _ - N,1110 113.731.11 1•

111
II

'"
I•

'' • 1 •
I 1•

1

3

Me~

Tile $346,2" balaace of tbe

Coli came from capiw improve_._IIICllliel "we IIIli Jll'lldentially
tile yeltl - paid for II
10 ldtlidollll-10 die lllllly peo-

..... O¥W

=

ple wiiO 1111e our licllklel, whethel
y taxpayera or not,"
e
ned Marlene Calbou.,, a
••hr oldlellnry bon.

·. TOY COLLECTOR-• Not oaly iloa Marc
Fultz coUect qulltiiHiua... •la,lltliOW II
. Into collectbll 1o11- PlebL
id M jplt alnr el
tile
'
'

.......

to71 lae aow baa Ia bls collection. He IHII the
lllld fl to7 CGIIectlq Clllllld M a very laeratm

,, .

'

,,'

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

Times-Sentinel

Burnette-Abbott

_

CHESAPEAKE - Mrs . Mary lege with a B.S. in History an'ct
Lane of Gallipolis, announces the Government, and is currently a parengagement and upcoming mar- alegal with Robinson and Rice,
•
riage of her daughter, Teresa J. L.C., of Huntington, W.Va.
Mr. Abbott received his B.S:"in
Burnette of Chesapeake, to Charles
F. Abbott, Jr.,of Chesapeake, son Mechanical Engineering from .tile
of Sylvia Abbott of Waynesburg, University of Cincinnati. He ii:a
and Charles F. Abbott, Sr., of Mag- chief mechanical engineer wUh
Steel of West Virginia, Huntingtml,
nolia.
~·.
Miss Burnene is the daughter of W.Va.
The
wedding
will
be
held
F.c.b.
the late William M. Bumetle. She
is a graduate of Rio Grande Col- 29 at the French City BaPlbt
Church, Gallipolis.
·"'

- ...···."\

1L

ROBERT RITCHIE JR., and JAN SPRINGER
MONICA ADAMS

Springer-Ritchie
REEDSViLLE - Robert Ritchie School in Lancaster.
Ms. Springer is a 1972 graduale
Jr. and Jan Marie Springer are
announcing their engagement and of Fairfield Union High School .
She graduated from Ohio State
approaching marriage.
The wedding wiU be an event of School of Cosmetology. She is
Feb. 15 at the Presbyterian Church self-employed and the owner and
manager of Country Cuts Beauty
at Bremen at2:30 p.m.
Salon
and Tanning.
Ritchie is a 1970 graduate of
The
couple will reside at 6150
Easlem High School and later of
Thornville
Road. Rushville.
Ohio University. He teaches and
coaches at Fairfield Union High

·.

their many programs," said K ott:
spokesman Jeff Zerkle. "The tUDner co.incides with the Gallipolis
Blue Devil basketball game wlih
Point Pleasant Some people n\iy
want to stop by for dinner befdre
the game." Several area busineq;;
have donated items for the dil1ner
according to Zerkle.
:::
. K of C members will be prejlUmg vegerable soup. Other items llJl
the menu are cole slaw, sandwicfi9&gt;
and dessen. Cost of the dinner-tS
$3.50. Tickets are available fro~
of C members, the Gallipolis Mlllisterial Association or by caliinOt
446-4283.
....

-

and JAMES CHADWELL

Adams-Chadwell
POMEROY - Mr. and Mr.
Bobby Adams Jr., Pomeroy, are
announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Monica Jo Adams, to
James Bryan Chadwell, son of
James Chadwell, Reedsville, and
Patricia Ingram, Reedsville.
Adams is a graduate of Eas1em
High School and is now employed
at BJ. Adams Drilling Company.
Miss Adams is a senior at Eastem High School.
The open church wedding will

Woods-Gates

THOMAS GATES and TARA WOODS

GALLIPOLIS -The Saint Louis
Chapter of the Knights of Columbus (K of C) will sponsor a benefit
dinner Saturday, Feb. 8 from 57:30 f.m. at the Saint Louis Chun:h
socia hall. Proceeds from the dinner will go to the Outreach Cenler.
The Outreach Center is a community service organization that
helps area residents with financial
and domestic problems. Their services include a food bank, budget
clothing and referral for people
with housing, job and domestic
problems.
·
"The dinner is a way of helping
the Outreach Center fund some of

CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert A. Woods, Chester, are
announcing the approaching marriage of their daughter, Tara Marie,
to Rev . Thomas L. Gates II,
Racine, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas L. GaleS, Irondale.
Miss Woods is a 1987 graduate
of Easlern High School and is currendy a student at the University of
Rio Grande majoring in elementary
· education. She is also employed by
the university workin$ in the office
of the Dean of Educanon.
Rev. Gales is a 1982 graduale of
Stanton High School, a 1986 cum
laude graduate of Kent Stale Universiry receiving a B.A. in telecommunications and political science,
and a 1990 graduate of Nazarene
Theological Seminary receiving a
Master of Divinity degree. He is
employed by the Racine Chun:h of
the Nazarene.
The wedding is planned for Feb.
29 at the Chester Church of the
Nazarene.

be an event of Feb. 8 at 2:30 p.m.
at St Mark's Methodist Church on
Third and Maple Street in Belpre.
A reception will be held immediately following in the fellowship
hall at the church.

:You're Invitea
fJo 1fe{p rus Ce{e6rate
"•

TRAIN FOR
MONEY
MAKING
CAREER IN
COSMETOlOGY
•Financial
Available
to Those Who Qualify
•Approved By Ohio State
Board of Cosmetology

We're Celebrating0ur6&lt;h'H YearOfServiceToThe :
Tri-County Area And Our Way Of Saying Thanks Is ·:
Offering 60% Off Our Entire Stock of Jewelry.
·

60% ()FF
Oll{ E\TIRE STO('h. OF Ql.\Lil\'

.JF\\'FLRY, RI\&lt;;S, ( 'OLOREil
STO\FS A\D IH \\10\DS!

J·Car~~ J)¢WJM6 •.
Point Pleasan,

"Quality Since 1932"

GALLIPOLIS - Toddlers to
Tassels Mothers League of the
Ohio Child Conservation League
met recently at the Rodney United
Methodist Church for the group's
regular meeting.
Members made a basket as part
of their Service Lea¥ue achievements to promole acuve participation of the members.
The league's December meeting
was held at the home of Sharon and
Ronnie Hutchins with members
and their husbands enjoying a
Christmas dinner and gift
exchange.
••
During the business sessions,
•
MR. and MRS. DONALD (TRACIE) STEIN
the
league made plans for an all•
league South Central District meeting on Tuesday, Feb. II at the Gallia County Senior Citizens Center
-.••
at 6:30p.m.
.• MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- pianists. Whitney Bruker,
The Ohio Child Conservation
jlon First Presbyterian Chun:h was Coolville, was a soloist.
League is a state organization of
·, the seuing for the Dec . 14 double
Registering guests were Blythe mothers' leagues numbering more
·"::ring ceremony of Tracie Rae Hub- Waters, Athens, and Mary Stein, than 8,000 members from all over
;bard, daughter of C. Roger and sister of the groom. The table fea- the state of Ohio. Through educa·:Nancy Hubbard , Syracuse, and lured baby photographs of the bride tion of mothers, the league·~ pur•·Donald Lee Stein, son of Patricia · and groom and a vase of red roses pose is to fulfill its' slogan, "A
.'.Stein, Middlepon. Rev. Thomas E. in memory of their grandparents.
child well guided today. tomorrow
.:Fisher officiated.
The reception followed in the
·.~ The bride is the granddaughter church social room. The bride's
•of the late Bill and Margaret table featured a four-tiered wed::·Eichinger of Syracuse. The groom ding cake decorated with holly and
The following students were
.':is the grandson of Don and Ethel gold beads. The cake was topped named to the Dean's List at Ohio
::·Lowery, Middlepon, Mary Stein, with two porcelain doves. The table University for the fall quarter:
--·Sun City, Ariz., and the late Edwin was decorated with fresh holly,
Delores Wooldridge of Bidwell;
~· Stein .
gold mesh ribbon and red and gold Emilie Sisson of Cheshire; Scott
.: Escorted to the altar by her candles. Reception hoslesses were Bailey, Edith Long Baker, Arman: .father, the bride wore a hand craft- Judy Musser, Mason, W.Va., Janet da Brunicardi, Kelly-Jo Chapman,
; ed white taffeta gown with a baleau Leffle, Minersville, and Rexanna Trenda Miller, Mark Stockman,
• neckline. The bodice was embel- Knighting, Ravenswood, W.Va.
and Sandy Whileley, all of Gallipo:.: lished with seed pearls and fell to a
The bride is a 1987 graduate of lis. ·
: basque waistline. The pouf sleeves Southern High School and a 1991
:: featured diamond shaped cut-outs cum laude graduale of Ohio UniCraig Johnson of Gallipolis,
• detailed with seed pearls. The versity. She is the Admissions recently graduated from Ohio Uni~ cathedral train featured appliques Coordinator at the Pomeroy Nuts- versity with a Bachelor of Sci~nce
;· with pearl accents and fell from a ing and Rehabilitation Center. The · ,in Communication degree. 11
.: large bow at the waist. The bottom groom is a 1987 graduate of Meigs
~· of the gown was edged with_ seal- High School and is continuing his
- loped lace and pearls. Her veil fea- education at Ohio University. He is
{· tured a blusher and was enhanced employed with the United Parcel
' :.lli white flowers and pearl sprays. Service and the College Book
- . The bride carried a cascading Store.
:bOuquet of fresh red roses. miniaThe couple resides in Athens.
liille while carnations and greenery
~cented with white tulle, pearl
· ~rays and gold lame ribbon.
..... Carla Shuler, Long Bottom,
?irved as matron of honor. Amelia
.E:'ampbell, Columbus, and Ann
HAIR IIID TINNING SALON
1'teidtmann, Atheqs, served as
54 STATE STREET
~desmaids. They wore red velvet
446·HAIR
:Mid red taffeta tea-length gowns
(4247)
~aturing sweetheart necklines.
irjie~ carried a single red rose hand
Stylist: KIM, FRANCIE,
~ld bouquet wrapped with white
VAI1RIE, MICHELE, TINA
iliille.
:;: The woom wore a black wxedo,
SPECIALS
:JDllck: ue and cummerbund and a
TANNING SESSIONS s
'%1:11 rose boutonniere. The father of
~bride wore the same.
Sweetheart Special Halre~ts:
~ Chris Kennedy, Pomeroy, was
5
iXfle best man. Groomsmen were Joe
men, 5 women,
:!bush, Racine, and David Shuler,
ibOng Bottom. They wore black
couples 5
I·
- ~os with red ties and cummerPERMS 1
:21Jlnds and red rose boutonnieres.
:;: The flower girl was Margilee
·-mley, Syracuse. She wore a red
:i:ielvet and red taffeta dress and car21M a small while petal baslcet. The
Xi,Jtg bearer was Derek Quinn,
. ''Siewart. He wore a black tnxedo
• :Mih a red tie and cummerbund and
:.-ned a white ring pillow.
:: The mother of the bride wore a
•iehampaign beige lea-length skirt
a lace overlay jackeJ. She
: re a · fresh red rose corsage
;»enled with while tulle and gold
.::ljne ribbon. The .mother of the
."'t!IOo:m wore a m1nt green tea·~lgUI skirt with lace overlay jackwore a corsage of Silk white ,
~~s accented with babyls breath
while ribbon.
Music was provided by Carla
~:r:~:r, Long Bottom, and Lisa
""
· Ravenswood, W.Va.,

will guide well its own destiny."
OCCL is dedicated to improving
the moral, mental, physical, and
spiritual development of children in
the home and community.
The South Central District is
one of 12 distticts in the state.
Any mother is welcomed to join
the league.
RSVP by Feb. 4 by calling Jean
Gillespie, South Central District
president; at 446-3969, SR 588,
Gallipolis ; or contact Sharon
Hutchins of the special activities
committee at 446-4793, 565
Mitchell Rd., Gallipolis.

College news

10

Our diagnostic services now include ...

:§,'h

Resonance
Imaging
•

.MRI

Modal U4617-910

• ra .,_ l'lrlll r rr· •

OllrUiftOd«&lt;gecloaning
onbotholdel ·
• To~tool.,_lion
• Altoc:htd ~wilt\ !i&gt;lece tool

oet

• 2 polltlon corpot n.lgnt
adj-

/sAVE 550/
._II
wlfii'OWII'·IfOZZII
., .,.. ,

TRILLIUM" CLASS RINGS
BY GOLD LMCE

. . ..

IIOIVBs FIIUPis Clnfllel'
-$3$36

,.~:~···

• 3.1 Peak Hf'' Motor

• SwiWihOM
• eon...niOnttool ltolage
• Powwmattc.. Nozzle with bNihed
«1ge cleaning on both lldel

IIUJRr. ..SALB ENDS SOOJrt

TAWNEY JEWELERS
477 5-.1 Ave.

G.,.as, Olio

s70

Save
February is
National Canned
Food Month. Bring
in a can of food
and receive an
additional 10%
Discount- Canned
goods will be
donated to the
Food Pantry.

$11999
UIIIIIIUl.avEie EII"
. . . . . l.thC I
•nn&amp;UI

--

.,. . . . . . Ill

••

• Deluxe topllll boO IYIIOm
• . . _ automallc: • Includes &amp;-pc.
holgN ~

1001 oet

s70

Save

OPEN MONOAY &amp; FRlOAV
'TIL 8:00 P.M.
TUES.·WEO.-THURS. 'TIL 6 P.M.
SATURDAV'TlL 5 P.M.

lmllellll.....'"ll

_,,.,

• G&lt;aatlot quieti plclwpo
• £oly-empty, . .-thru dirt cup

• Eolyeo&lt;d-

-e•••"'5

~~ 199
..........

99

• Sllpcc; Utd
• E&lt;tgo cltaollllg on both lidoo

SAVE 520~
5

7999

m
IIU·IIIIf
11111111

ussell-Clary

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

. ., , _.....11
Cllfi
Cl

MRl ~a atroas ~ellc field aad rldlo •

hllioalrJ fanD of dllp01dc IIJIIIIDI useiito dl&amp;&amp;· waves ·to produce computer·procmed lmqea of

your Inner body. Uollllo x-ray ·or Cf II'IDDIDS.
IDGil l""ahJellqeS. Fer some dlseue ptOCCIICS, MRI doa DOl require tile uae or IODiziDJ radlt·
WJU bu .. ovea 10 be superior 10 other forms of lions. The ICIDDIDJ praced1n Cilia 10 pala C1
lmlliDI IIDd' may ellmiallc ~ aecd ror additional discomfort aad hu DO DOWD aide efrects.
lfan J,tR1 acan .Ia rccommellded 10 diiiDOIC
' dllpOIIic pocedurel. . .
O'llleDell Memorial H0111lta1 talrea.arW pride your medical condition, Ilk your phyalclan about
'
• Ia die lddld• of Mtll""lc RIIOIIInCI Imaging a rercrniiO
to Ita wide r~nge of ..rv~c~e. Flxed·alte
lnlttWion 1111llel lhll «*gnootfc procedure O'BLENESS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
•.Your Plrtiler for Ule"
ll\'lllble to lie I'Midenll of Southeutem
Ohio Molldlr ~ Fttdlry yeer-!Ollld.
593-555llnAtllll.
at tbcir earllcat.

• UgN; tl;ht

. • -rugond- nouto
·----ng
• llnefudlll Qllac:tlmtflb

.

.

INGELS,FURNITURE
Ohio RIVII' PIIZI

r

HIIOVEI. EIIIN II
UDI'liiiVICIIIII

7

25

Magnetic

1011 a ......, or belltil problc~

·s99''

15

10.

••""41....... (MRJ) Is a revo-

I

Hubbard-Stein

5

II

Immunization clinic at 'the Meigs ·
County Health Department liave
been changed from· Feb. II and 25
to Feb. 4 and 18 from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m. No appointments are
necessary and the service is free.
Sick child clinics will be held
Wednesday, Feb. 12 from 11 a.m.
to noon at the health department
with Dr. Douglas Hun1er as atlending physician, and on Wednesday,
Feb. 26 from II a.m. to noon with
Dr.•James· WitherelL A "sliding
fee scale IS used and noone is
turned away due to inability to pay.

(ALISA) KING

Personal To.ch

O'BLENESS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

M p lk I

and Mrs . Thomas G. Ferguson.
Athens. She is a 1987 graduate of
Alexander High School and a candidate for 1992 graduation from
Ohio University with a bachelors
degree in psychology.
The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd D. King of Pomeroy.
He is a 1983 graduate of Meigs
High School and is employed by
Wesam Construction Inc.
The privale wedding ceremony
was conducted at Athens City Hall
by Judge Douglas Bennett
The couple is making their

Dates
changed
. POMEROY - Dates for the

Mothers league holds meetings

...

'lla{en tirie Party!

675-2689

home at 175 Route 33 Shade.
'

~ ·

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506 Main Street

•' '.

M~. and MRS. BRILL

·

POMEROY - Ahsa Susan Ferguson and Bnll E. King were mar-

ried~~b~de is the daughter of Mr.

-..•.

, Benefit dinner scheduled

Ferguson-King

. 1.

'ennttY '-'•~'••~•u· Store

·"

. 106 NORTH 2ND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 43760

PIOIE 992·~635

· • Phone (614) 446-3525

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OH-Polnt

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TAMPICO

. CITRUS
PUNCH

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STORE HOURS

$ 29

Monday thru Sunday
8AM·10 PM

STORE HOURS

Monday .thru Sunday

.·..

8AM·10 PM

..
...
•

298 SECOND ST•
POMEROY, OH. -

- - - - ::':

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

'

CARNATON

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

~-

HOJ COCOA :~:

PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB. 2 THRU FEB. 8, 1992'

MIX

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10 EN.VELOPE PAK

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BEEF

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB. 2 thru FEB. 8, 1992

10 LB. PKG

$1390

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CHUCK

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Steaks /Roasts..... u. ·1

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DONUTS

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frying Chickens ...

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$ 69

Beef Chuck coMBo PAcK.•

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USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOTTOM

Round Steak...........

1

$249

Boneless Ham .........
OSCAR MAYER
.
$119
1eners................ oz.
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2 LITER

ECKRICH SMOKED SAUSAGE OR

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$

HONEY HAM.."...............1o oz.

199

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CHICKEN KIEV...............6 oz.
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Honey

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LB.

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SLICED
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ECKRICH FRESH ITALIAN, BRATWURST

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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, wv

February 2, 1992

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

Bossard Memorial Libntry monthly
meeting, 7 p.m.

· Community Calendar Items
appear two days before aD eveat
and the day or tbat event. Items
.must be received weD In advance
to assurr publication in the cal·
endar.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Any person who
is single, never mllll'!ed, di~orced,
or widowed, who as wllhng to
become pan of a core group to plan
opportunities fo~ other singles m
Meigs County as mvued to the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
on Sun(lay from 4-5 :30 p.m. A
light supper will be served.
LOTTR!DGE · There will be a
smorgasbord dinner at the Lottridge Community Center on Sunday from noon to 2 p.m. Cost is $5
for adults and $2.50 for children
under 12.
CHESTER - Paul Tafoya, president and a direetor of Arm of the
Lord Ministries in Dallas, Texas·,
will speak at the New Life
Covenant Church of God' in
Chester on Sunday at 6 p.m. and
Monday through Wednesday at 7
p.m. nightly. The pubhc as mvlled
to attend.
POMEROY - A 12-step AA
meeting will begin Sunday at 7
p.m . at the JTPA office, 117 West
Second Street in Pomeroy.
MONDAY
CHESHIRE ·Women Alive
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Kyger Creek Club House. There
will be a devotional speaker and
Mrs. Pat Elison will be making
bleach bottle baskets. Refreshments
will be served including sweetrolls
or donuts.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at .the Star Mill Park Building
for regular monthly meeting.
SYRACUSE · The Sutton
Township Trustees will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Syracuse
Municipal Building.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
pon Garden Club will meet Man·
day at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Carl Horky . Mrs. David
.Bowen wiU review "Shakespeare's
Rowers" by Jessica Kerr. Roll call
is to quote a poem about a flower.

mentary PTO will meet Monday at
7 p.m. All parents and teaehers are
urged to atrend.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Orange Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at the
home of the clerk, Susan PuUins.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Anyone interested
in working on the 1992 Pomeroy
Merchants Association Fashion
Show !nay attend an organizational
meeting on Tuesday at noon at the
Fabric Shop.
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
Junior High Acade'mic Boosters
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
POMEROY -The F.O.E. Ladies
Auxiliary No. 2171 will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. There will be a
pouuck at 7 p.m. and all members
are urged to attend.
RUTLAND - The Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
meet Tuesday at 4:30p.m. at its
office in Rutland.
RUTLAND · The Rutland Village Council will meet Tuesday at
7 p.m. at the Ruuand Civic Center.

LOGAN

MONUMENL
COMPANY, INC.
POMEROY
IIEIOI COUNTY DISPLAY YARD
NEAR POIIEROY-IIASON
IlliDGE
; ; JAIIE8 A. BUIH, MANAGER
PHONE 8t2·HII

'

LAFAYETIE MALL
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

LOOIWBA!WI
DO•••
•Ring Sizing
•Re11ountlng
•Watch BaHerles

LUTHER AND GRACE LEMLEY

V.J. sCraft Sfwp

:~":Lemley

Learn to decorate cakes
like the professionals do.

Beginner Cake
Decorating Class

Installed While You Wait

open house slated

:: : BULA VILLE - Luther and
:· ·.Grace Lemley of Bulaville, will
:· :celebrate their SOth wedding
·:- anniversary on Sunday, Feb. 9.
; ·: The couple was united in mar·
. · :riage on Feb. 9, 1942 in Pomeroy,
-·,by Percy Peoples.
&gt;· They have one son, Rev. Ron

•Trophies 111d
Engraving
•Ear Plerdng

Lemley and daughter-in-law,
Nancy; three granddaughters; and
one great-grandson.
An open reception ·will be held
Feb. 9 from 2-4 p.m. at the Poplar
Ridge Fellowship building.
The couple requests gifts be
omitted

;&lt;
·&lt;

Monday Evenings
6:30-8:30
Tuesday Morning
I0:30·12:30

.f
JOE AND FRANCES RUSSELL

Couple to observe anniversary
GALLIPOLIS -Joe and Frances
They are the parents of Mrs.
Russell of Gallipolis will celebrate Elizabeth Mazey of Finley, Mrs. ·
their 25th wedding anniversary on Eileen Hill, Torn Brown, Michael
Monday,Feb. 3.
Russell, and Scott Russell, all of
The couple was married Feb. 3, Gallipolis, and Mrs . Vanessa
1967 at Salem Baptist Church by Queen of Gallipolis
W.Va.
Gomer Jenkins.
They also have~ll==~~

ALL WINTER
MERCHANDISE
Give Classic Sweets
Chocolates now...

tes.esfT
,,

. l·

LAFAYETTE MALL
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
(614) 446-4446

.'

:Couple celebrates 35 years··
GALLIPOLIS • Mr. and Mrs.
Conard Hudson, Sr., of Gallipolis,
celebrated their 35th wedding
amiversary on Dec. 9.
. They were married Dec. 9, 1956
· at Rodney MethOdist Church.
: . · The couple has two children,

..
. ., "'
"

...and Hallmark mails
the Classic Sweets Reminder later!

"
0

Open house
BIDWELL - An open house
'{lill be held in honor of Elizabeth
Donnell's 83rd birthday.
'·
Friends can stop at the home t1f
Yvonne Donnell of Bidwell, on
Sunday and Monday

PAINTING
CLASSES
STARTING:
Thursday
Evening, Feb. 13
6:30·8:30
Instructor-

Gloria Roush
Come in and register
today.

OUR PRICES ARE .
VERT REASONABLE

1J.J. sCraft Sfwp

Tawney Jewelers

SPRING VALLEY
PLAZA
446-2134

422 SeCOIId Ave. Gallpo&amp;s

,.

·

)I (jram{ ijveivoat 'Era !J(oteC

•

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THE

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1·800·458·8844
70 Pine St.
446·7283 Gallipolis.

SWEETHEART SALE!

Sat~

F , 8, 10-4
Pt. Pleasa11 Twit River

ENESCO PRECIOUS MOMENTS Collect/ott Cf!lebrarrs

bl!arrwarminR Valentine sentiment1J· tbrvUJ:h f?xquisite porr:elt1in

bisqut'f'8urimos.
Visit our store today to share in tlx.•
U!(,jmt/b of l-'ale11ti1tt "s /JQy u•llh
our bl!autrjul Sf!{tction of

~~-I

n'

PRECIOUS MOMENTS sifts

and coJ/ecrtbles.

PHARMACY
364 JIICkloft Pika

Gallipolis
Full House·of Cards
Ohio River Plaza
'
446-7330

'

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
•

·'

. 2 · 8 X 10
2· 6X7
8 WALLETS
18 HALF SIZE
WALLETS

,

.

:.
too'

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•

.,

REG. $14.95

NOW

$995~~Ntry

.95 Cltposlt
We have the new picture button.
•
· Pereona under ·~mull be ICCOmponMd by peient.
·
GROUP PICTURE $1
F!ER SUBJECT.- PAY-WHEN TAKEN.
LIMIT ONE SPECIAL NO ONE FREE PLAQUE PER FAMILY.
GALLIPOLJ5-POMEROY

'

•We Bill Your Insurance For You
•Medicare Assignment Accepted on Most Items
•Respiratory Therapist on StaH
•Phone Orders Welcome ·

Q

'

© 1992 HaHmark Cards

·FREE Delivery, Setup &amp; Instruction

0

COl.LE(lO'I

2

~

.

Mol., Feb. 3, Noa~·7
Gal!pols nird Ave.
Wed., Feb. S, 11·7

•Wheelchairs
•Motorized Wheelchairs
•lightweight Wheelchairs
•Heavy Duty Wheelchairs
•Motorized Scooters
•Wheelchair Cushions
•Ostomy Supplies
•Urological SuppRes
•Oiopers &amp; Chuxs

C&gt;

FRUTH

1111 ,. ........

MOTHERS!

•Home Oxygen
•Concentrators
•Portable Oxygen
•Hospital Beds
•Air Mattresses
•Trapezes
•Patient lifts
•Feeding Pumps
•lift Chairs

1-'altntine 's Day In 61 fovinR way. An isr Sam Butcht&gt;r exprtssts

•

,.

0

Angela Renea of Washington Court
House, and Conard Hudson Jr., of
Gallipolis; and one granddaughter,
Lauren Elizabeth.
A reception was held in their
honor at the Gallia County Gun
Club.

'S

BO

ALL AGES AND FAMILIES

Hallmark Classic Sweets Chocolates, an exclusiVe selection of the finest milk
and dark chocolates, packaged in a beautiful gift box,
·
· •
Then, a few weeks later, Hallmark mails your
._ ·. ! ,• ,•
valentine a delicious reminder of your love: more
~
fine chocolates, along with your personal message.
·
But hurry, supplies are limited. So get yours
'"'-'UIW.AN'\today at any participating Hallmark store.
' '
,I'

•

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This year, show your valentines how much you care: Just give t~em .

rJhe)·Lafayette
&lt;

OFF

M\' SISt~ft'S

EDWARD and HELEN PRESTON

CHESHIRE - Edward and
They are the parents of James
Helen Preston of Cheshire, cele· and Connie Wise of Cheshire, and
· · brated their 60th wedding anniver- Sue Jarvis of New Carlisle. They
· sary on Thursday, Jan. 9 with fami- have six grandchildren and three
ly.
great-grandchildren.

s.nlnR tpOMONd lly Ohio Wine Pic ~clng .._t.llon

l

%

•

Coming events at
Your 9-{ote{. ..

For mort Information call373·5552

Rio Grande announce the birth of
their son, David Lorenzo, on Jan. 3,
at Holzer Medical Center. He
weighed 7 p&lt;iunds and was 20 incM:
es long.
.
Maremal grandparents are·Bob
and Barbara Allen of Rio Grande'
maternal great-grandmother is Gar:
net Allen of Oak Hill; maternal
great-great-grandmother is Nellie
Davis of Sandusky.
.
Paternal grandmother is Lena
Stout of Thurman; and patern al
great-grandmother is Jesse Carroll
of Bidwell
:
David has one brother, TravtiS,
age 4
·

;:.'

i'

Come in and register
tolfa,.

Comedy Club Returns This Sunday Night!
Featuring: John Kirby and Jessie Nutt
$4.00 cover charge
Doors Open at 7:00 pm
Show at 7:30 pm
Sundays: Feb. 2 • March 29
Sunday: Chef Kevin's Sunday Brunch
Fridays: Jan. 24-Feb. 28 "Seafood Buffet"
February 13th: Jazz&amp;. Blues Society Event
Rory Block Acoustical Guitar
and Singer 7:30 pm
February 15th: Valentine's Day with the
Cruise Brothers
9:00 p.m. $5.00
February 21-22: Ohio Arts Showcase and
Wine Tasting Weekend
Wine &amp;. Cheese Party with Art Displays
Friday 7:00.9:00 pm $7.50 per person
Saturday: w'lne Seminara $3.50 per person
1:3Q. pm St!laory Tasting
•
.., r
2:30 pm L•rn, ~y
•
Understand and Taste Various Wines

New
arrival
·
:
Mr. and Mrs. Rtchard Stout or

;ti~ ;::::::::==-~========~

Class Starting Feb. 10

Open Mon. &amp; Fri. 'til 8 p.m.; Tues., Wed., Thurs. &amp; Sat. 'til 5 p.m.

•

·
'd
VI
.
the slate.
.
pres a ent, .a ley Chapter m
Kay Spencer of the Racme McConnelSVIlle; Mrs . Be_tty
Chap_ter, Deputy Grand Matron for Schenkel, secretary, Aurelius
Da~tnct No. 25 will open the .school Chapter •. Macksburg; and Mrs .
of anstrucUon .. The school "':ill fea- Shryl Ohnger, treasurer, Eudora
!~~ slate offacers performmg !he Chaple!', Nelsonville.
. .
1010atory work of _the Order. Mrs.
Dunng the past year, dastnet and
Spencer was appomted last fall to chapter offacers have sponsored a
repres~nt _the . ..yorthy Grand number of pro~ts to SUP\X)rt EastMatron m this distnct
ern Star chanues. Statewade, Ohto
Georgaleen H~ckenberry, a E~stem Star members have con,
member of the Marietta Ch~pter, IS tnbu_tCII nearly $75,000 to sup~n
servang as 9rand Orj!~ms_t th!s medacal research for the prevenuon
year, and wall be p~acapaung an and treatment of bean dasease and
the school of mslrUcUon.
.
cancer. In addiuon, members have
Kathy Johnson of Evangeline donated more that $55,000_ to
Chapter, Maddlepon, presadent of ESTARL (Eastern Star Trammg
District N&lt;!. 25 ~ssociation of Awards for Religious Leadership).
Chapters, wtll prestde at the. bus•- The ESTARL Fund provides scholness _meeun~. Reports of dastrtct arships for individuals studying for
acuv1Ues dunng the past YC:W: wall the ministry or preparing for
be presented an~ new offtcers careers as youth directors and min·
elected for thecommg year.
.
isters of music in religious settings.
Ms. Johns~n has also been m
The District Meetings of the
charge of makmg the arrangemeniS 25th District Association of Chap·
for the day's activities.
ters will begin at 4 p.m., followed
District officers who. have by dinner at 5:30p.m. with the
served wllh Ms. Johnson th1s past school of instruction to begin at 7
year are: Mrs. Wdma Mautz, vace p.m. All Eastern Star members are
invited to attend.

44&amp;-24n

60th anniversary observed

GAl I lA COUNTY

I'HCINIIII IIOa

Chclsie Nichelle Bush, daughter
of Cathy Bush and Greg Bush, celebrate her second birthday on Jan.
26 with a clown and balloon theme
party at McDonald 's in Henderson,
W.Va.
Attending were: Marti, Michael,
and Sara Baird; Laura and Jensia
Steele; Brenda, A.J., and Markia
Wright; Vicki and Mandi Carpenter; David and Justin Schaffer;
maternal grandparents, Clayton and
Marcy Lloyd ; and uncle Mayo
Lloyd.

Special occasions require special preparations. If you are planning a wed·
ding, anniversary or prom, then you
should come see us at Haskins- Tan·
ner.
You will have over 190 styles of tux·
ados to choose from . We have a large
salection of the latest styles and complimentary accessories for this special
occasion .
Qualily Formalwear
at Affordable Priceo.
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 6 OR
MORE IN WEDDING PARTY

VINTON, OHIO
DI8PLAY-.ito
JAIIEI A. I KltlllllY
' BUIIH, IIAfWIP'

INCLUDING ALL COATS!

For That Special
Occasion .•.

New arrival

fROM LOGAN MONUMI!It (0. IT
IS AWORTHY lXPRESSION Of
LOVl AND RlSPEO.

Celebrates birthday

Taught by a Wilton
certified instructor.

CHESTER . The Chester Ele·

NO OTHER TRIIUTliS AS WnNG
AS APUSOIWIItD M£~0RIAL

OFF

PAGEVILLE . The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the town·
srup building in Pagevillc.

POMEROY · Revival at Old
Bethel Free Will Baptist Church on
Route 7 and Story's Run Road will
be held Monday through Saturday
at 7:30 p.m. nightly. Rev. Norman
Taylor is the evangelist. Pastor
Ralph Butcher invites the public.

A TOTALLY
UNIQUE DESIGN

ALL WINTER
MERCHANDISE

CHELSIE BUSH

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
446·2134 (

POMEROY - All who would
like to sec Pomeroy become a
retirement mecca arc invited to
attend an organizational meeting at
Trinity Congregational Church at
7:30p.m. on Wednesday in the
downstairs meeting room. Ideas
will be developed that were pur·
sued at the "Take Charge" meet·
mgs.

MIDDLEPORT . State officers
o~ ~e Order of the Easlem Star and
vasators from throughout Ohio will
gather in Middleport on Feb. 4 for
the annual meeting and school
inslruction for District No. 25.
Tbe Order of the Eastern Star is
the largest fraternal organization in
the world for both men and
women. In Ohio, its membership
numbe~ 109,000arnong492chapters. Dastnct No. 25 encompasses
the counties of Athens, Meigs,
Morgan and Washington and
includes 20 chapters.
The annual meeting and school
of instruction is expected to attract
more than 300 ~rsons and wiU be
held in the Maddleport Masonic
Temple.
Special guests will be Marilyn
Bennett, of Toledo, Worthy Grand
Matron, and Algin Miller, Springfield, Wonhy Grand Patron. Mrs.
Bennett and Miller are the top two
elected officers of the Order in
Ohio. During the month of January
and February, they wiU be visiting
28 district conferences throughout

%

WENDESDAY
MIDDLEPORT · The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at 2 p.m. (note time
change from 1:30 p.m.) at the
Pomeroy Library. Mrs. Chester
Erwin will review "Livingston."
Roll call is to name " A place I'd
like to visit in Africa.

LET ART · The Letart Township
Trustees will meet Monday at 6
p.m. at the office building.

RIO GRANDE - Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Stout of Rio Grande
announce the birth of their son,
David LorCllzo, on Jan. 3, at Holzer
Medical Center. He weighed 7
pounds and was 20 inches long.
. Maternal grandparents are Bob
and Barbara Allen of Rio Grande;
maternal great-grandmother is Gar'net Allen of Oak Hill; maternal
great-great-grandmother is Nellie
Davis of Sandusky.
Paternal grandmother is Lena
Stout of Thurman; and paternal
great-grandmother is Jesse Carroll
of Bidwell.
David has one brother, Travus,
age4.

GALLIPOLIS ·"Let's Go to the
Rock," sponsore(l by the Grace
United Methodist UMYF group,
wiU hold a meeting at4 p.m. in the
church dining room. Open to all

POMEROY- The Meigs Local
Band Boosters will meet Monday
at 7 p.m. in the high school band
room. Fuwre bal)d activities will be
discussed.

OES.annual district meeting slated

CHESHIRE - Revival at Old
Bethel Freewill Baptist Church, SR
7 and Stories Run Road, Feb. 3-8
Monday, Feb. 3
7:30p.m., with Evangelist Norman
GALLIPOLIS . Frien(ls of Taylor, Pastor Ralph Butcher.

uALLIYU'LI~ - Friends of the
Bossard Memorial Library will
have a children's Read·A-Thon at
the library from 1:30-5:30 p.m.

Sunday Times sentlnei.....Pag&amp;-87

~£~~~K

SCENIC
BACK·
GROUND IN YOUR PACKAGE

D

·~'-'~ o..r "I®/Fianders
JAll-Weather Wicker
Perfect Valentine's Gift!

Corbin M(1J Snyder furniture ·
. 955.SECOND ~VE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

.. ,

(614) 44&amp;-1171

·''

�~
~
~
~

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.,~

February 2, 1992

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

Page 88 Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

~

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

Sports

1!imts ~ itntintl

Section C

February 2, 1992

Duke passes milestones in 10.0-.71 win over Irish

FRESH

BEEF

D
DIU LEU

c

8 fO 10 LB.

PICUGES

LB.

GROUND
CHUCK

s 49

PER

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MOll

I

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IOLB. BOX
EIDCft

U.S.

CHOPS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - Christian Laettner
scored 29 points, Bobby Hurley surpassed the 1,000.point mark in his career and top·ranked Duke won its
500th game in Cameron Indoor Stadium with a 1()().
·71 victory over Notre Dame on Saturday.
· The Blue Devils off to their best start ever at 17-0,
joined Washington, Pennsylvania, Minnesota and
North Carolina State as schools with 500 victories on
their present home courts. Duke played its ftrst home
·game in Cameron on Jan. 6, 1940. The Blue Devils
·have won their last 26 games at home.
· Laeuner did most of his work against Notre Dame
reserve Jon Ross, who replaced injured starting center Keith Tower. Ross had trouble stopping Laettner,
scored just six points and fouled out with 16:46 left
-to play.
As they have all season, the Blue Devils went on
·one of their offensive sb'eaks that rums close games
into runaways. Following an Elmer Bennett basket
that got NOire Dame (7·9) to 19·16 at 13:33, Duke
went on an 11·0 run over the next three minutes.
Laeuner had six points in that spurt
No. 13 Michigan St. 76, No.4 Indian~ 60- At
East Lansing, Mich., Michigan State's Mike
Peplowski had 16 points and II rebounds Saturday
as the Spartans snapped Indiana's 13-game winning
sb'eak with a 76·60 Big Ten victory.
The 13th-ranked Spartans (14-3, 4·3), rebounding
from a 10-point loss to arch-rival Michigan on
Wednesday night, held the fourth-ranked Hoosiers
(15·3, 6-1) to 39 percent shooting- their lowest of
the season -and outrebounded Indiana 40-24.
Indiana's lowest previous shooting performance
was 42 pe!l:ent against Boston University. During the
winning s1reak, all 10 Hoosiers who play had been
shooting over SO percent. But no opponent has shot
SO percent against the Spartans in 29 games·, dating
to last season.
Dwayne Stephens and Mark Montgomery each
had 15 points for Michigan State and Shawn Respert
added 14 for the Spartans.
Greg Graham scored 23 points for the Hoosiers,
who never led, and Calbert Cheaney, who had only
six points at halftime, finished with 17 on 8-of-19
shooting.
. St. John's 90, No. 6 Connecticut 57- At New
York, Malik Sealy, held under 20 points the past
!hree games, broke loose for 2S points and 18
rebounds and St. John's dominated the boards in
crushing sixth-ranked Connecticut 90-57, in a Big
East game Saturday at Madison Square Garden.
It was the worst loss for the Huskies in seven
years, since St. John's beat them by 33 points Feb. 2,
1985. The Redmen led by as many as 34 and no less
than 20 the final 26 minutes of the game. The
Huskies are winless (0·13) against St. John's in New
York.
Sealy collected 16 points and 13 rebounds in the
first half as the Redmen (11·7, 5·5) snapped the
Huskies' (16·2, 7·2) five-game winning streak and
halted their own losing skid at three. St. John's outrebounded Connecticut 54-31.
Lamont Middleton came off the bench to score a
career-high 19 poinis"for St. John's. ShliwneUe Scott
scored 14.
Chris Smith, the Big-East's leading scorer, led
Connecticut with 17.

Cincinnati 71, Marquette 57 - At Milwaukee,
WIS.,Herb Jones scored 18 points and Cincinnati
made 10 of 14 free throws in the fmal2:45 Saturday
as the Bearcats beat Marquette 71-57 for their fifth
consecutive victory.
·
Cincinnati (16·3, 4·1 Great Midwest Conference)
outscored Marquette 13·2 in the fJrSI six minutes of
the second half, )loin)l ahead 42-27 with 14:091eft on
a pair of free throws by terry Nelson. Jones had ftve
points during the run and Nelson had four.
Cincinnati led 53-37 with 9:35 left, but the Warriors (11·8, 2-2) pulled to 57-49 on Robb Logter·
man's three-pointer, but the Bearcats, who have won
eight of nine, made their free throws down the
.stretCh.
Ron Curry scored 15 points for MarqtJette, which
had lost four straight. Logterman and Damon Key
each scored 12 for the Warriors while Anthony
Buford scored 12 for the Bearcats.
· ~arquette had a 9-4 run to end the first half,
pullmg to 29-25 at halftime on Curry's basket with
47 seconds left. Down 25-16 lale in the half after a
basket by Cincinnati's Erik Martin, Marquette came
back behind a free throw by Key and three-poin1ers
by Shanoon Smith and Logtcrman.
Ball St. 73, E. Michigan 54 - At Ypsilanti,
Mich., Keith Stalling scored II of his game-high 19
points in an early second-half surge Saturday to lead
Ball State to a 73·54 Mid-American Conference vic·
tory.
Ball State (15-4 overall, 5·2 MAC) shot just 35
percent from the field in the first half and trailed 3025 at halftime.
But Stalling led the Cardinals on a 24·9 run to
open the second half, including a layup that put Ball
State ahead to stay with 15:19 remaining.
Stalling scored all but one of his points in the sec·
ond half.
The Cardinals hit 70 percent of their shots after
halftime.
Jeermal Sylvester scored 16 points off the bench
for Ball State and added nine rebounds. Bill Gillis
had nine points and nine rebounds for the Cardinals.
The Cardinals held a 36-22 advantage on the
boards.
Eastern (7-12, 2·5) played without forward Kory
Hallas, the only returning starter from last year's
conference champion that reached the Sweet 16 in
the NCAA tournament.
Hallas broke a bone in his left hand during
Wednesday's 64-56loss to Kent State and will be out
two weeks. He was the MAC's third-leading scorer
with a 17.8 average and the league's second· leading
rebounder with 8.6 a game.
Chris Pipkin scored 14 points for the Eagles. Mike
Boykin had II and Bryant Kennedy added 10.
· Mount Union 104, Heidelberg 78 - At Tifftn,
Ohio, Chad Nigro scored 28 points - hitting eight
three-point field goals - as Mount Union relied on
perimeter shooting to beat Heidelberg I 04· 78 in an
Ohio Conference game Saturday.
Scott Gobely added .21 points, Eddie.Norman 19
and Anthony Stewart 12 for Mount Union (5·13
overall and 3·9 in the OAC).
The Purple Raiders hit 10 of 18 three-pointers for

NFL to conclude another year's
action with today's Pro Bowl
By KEN PETERS
AP Sports Writer
HONOLULU (AP) - Mark
Rypien and Jim Kelly go at it one
more time today, when the NFL
season ends with the Pro Bowl.
Rypien, the MVP of Washington's 37-24 Super Bowl victory
over Buffalo a week ago, js the
starting quarterback for the NFC
all-stars. The Bills' Kelly, roughed
up by the Redskins in the Super
Bowl, is the starter for the AFC.
The Redskins and Bills each had
eight players voted into the Pro
Bowl, a number matched only by
the Houston Oilers and Los Ange·
Ies Raiders.
Kelly, who threw four interceptions, fumbled three times and suf·
fered a mild concussion in the loss
to Washington last Sunday;·said a
win in the Pro Bowl won't necessarily ease the pain of losing the
Super Bowl.
But· he added, "Anythjng you
do, you don't wanf to Jose. You
don' 1 care if it's the Pro Bowl and
doesn '1 count in the standings. I
dQn 'I like to lose."

"After what I went through last
week, I think I'm going to enjoy
it," he said.
Rypien, who threw for 292
yards and two touchdowns in the
Super Bowl, said he also was look·
ing forward to playing in the Pro
Bowl.
"It's great to ... play with the
best athletes in the sport," he said.
"You try to play your heart out
whenever and wherever you're
playing."
Rypien will be joined in the
NFC's starting backfield by running backs Barry Sanders of
Detroit and Emmiu Smith of Dal·
las. The starters at wide receiver
are Jerry Rice of San Francisco and
Michael Irvin of Dallas.
Other Redskins on the offense
are linemen Jim Lachey and Mark
Schlereth, wide receiver Gary
Clark, and running back Earnest
Byner. Washington aU-stars on the
defensive unit are cornerback Dar.
rell Green and end Charles Mann,
with Redskins kicker Chip
Lohmiller also on the NFC team.
Kelly will open with Bills team·

RIBS. Ll. PICKIGE

.

JUICE.

c

'

r- . -~----

mate Tburman Thomas at one run·
ning back and Marion Butts of San
Diego at the other, and another
Buffalo teammale; Andre Reed, at
one wide receiver spot Haywood
Jeffires of Houston is the other
starting wide receiver.
Other Bllls on the AFC squad
are wide receiver James Lofton,
who'll be making his first Pro
Bowl appearance since 1985; guard
Jim Ritcher; linebackers Cornelius
Bennett and Darryl Talley, and spe·
cial teams player Sieve Tasker.
The AFC defense features ends
William Fuller of Houston, who
had 15 sacks this season, and Greg
Townsend of the Raiders, who had
13; nose taclcJe Michael Dean Perry
of Cleveland, ·and strong safety
Ronnie Lott of the Raiders, who is
making his lOth Pro Bowl appearance.
For the NFC, linebacker Pat
Swilling of New Orleans, who had
a league-high 17 sacks, will join
with Philadephia end Reggie
White, who had 15. Also on the
defense are cornerback Deion
Sanders of Atlanta and safety Mark
Carrier of Chicago.
For the first time, both squads
have three quarterbacks. In addi·
lion to Rypien, the NFC has Troy
Aikman of Dallas and Chris Miller
of Atlanta. Backing up Kelly for
the AFC are Warren Moon of
Houston and Ken O'Brien of the
Jets, who was selected after John
Elway and Dan Marino withdrew .
from the game because of injuries .

the game. Nigro hit ftve three·poinl!:rs for' all 15 of
his points as Mount Union took a 49-36 lead at the
half.
.

Troy DiFranco scored 21 points, Mike Hurst 17
and Matt Adams 16 for Heidelberg (9·10, 6·7),
which lost its fourth in a row.

AND THE CHASE IS ON!- Michigan State
frontman Matt Stelgenga (35) and Indiana's
Greg Graham give chllfie to the loose ball after

the Hoosiers temporarily lost possession during
Saturday's Big Ten match up, whlcb tlie Spartans won 76-60. (AP)

-

OSU, Funderburke to take on

M.ichgan's youngbloods today
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - and a senior, to make way for Fun·
Ohio Swe's coach says he's conft· derburke. Ayers feels that a change
dent the Buckeyes will eventually this late in the season could upset
adapt to the talents of sophomore the chemistry on the team and
Lawrence Funderburke.
could have a negative effecL
"I certainly hope so," Randy
"Lawrence has helped us from
Ayers said with a laugh. "But it's the standpoint of blocking shots
only been six games with him. and that has really helped us," said
When you bring a player in at the Ayers . "We've never had that
midpomt of the year, there is an presence in the middle. But he still
adjustment period you have to go has a ways to go as far as getting
.
down .mto a stance and sustatnmg
. .
through. "
The 6-foot-9 Funderburke his defensive effort when he's
gained eligibility Jan. 7 after trans· away from the basket guarding a
ferring from Indiana. In his three guy on the perimeter."
short weeks on the roster, he has
There is liUle doubt that Fuoder·
shown that he can be a force scor· burke adds a lot to Buckeyes when
ing points, rebounding the ball and he's swatting awar shots. He has
blocking shots.
·
16 blocked shots m his ftrst five
The former Columbus 1tigh Big Ten $ames, while ?-foot senior
school star is averaging 12 points center Bill Robinson - who has
and 6.8 rebounds a game. He has started every game - has 15 for
already marked himself as an up- the year. Robmson's 15 came in
and-coming player in the Big Ten. 265 minutes; Funderburke's 16
"Offensively I still think we're came in 135 minutes.
adjusting to him," Ayers said.
Another dilemma for Ayers :
"We have a tendency to stand and Robinson has four assists in 15
warch once we feed the ball to him ~ames; Funderburke has three in
in the post. We've got to get more five.
movement once Lawrence has the
Ayers has been steadfast in his
ball, because he's a good passer . decision to stick with the Starters
who can feed people."
who brought him this far, regard·
Ohio State, ranked I Oth in the less of what Funderburke does. He
nation, is in second place in the Big could, of course, replace Robinson
Ten with a 5·1 record heading into with Funderburke . Or he could
a showdown with 13th-ranked make 6-7 senior Chris l ent the
Michigan (4-3, 12-4) today in Ann sixth man - a role he relished a
Arbor.
·
year ago.
Ayers is hesitant to change the
"We talked about that some,"
Buckeyes' starting lineup, which is Ayers said of the Funderburke for
currently comprised of four juniors

•

La Salle women
beat Loyola 106-67
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. - La
Salle University's women's basket·
hall team posted a 106-67 victory
over visiting Loyola (N.J.) Satur· ·
day afternoon.
'
In that game, sophomore frontliner Lori Hamilton (GaUia Acade·
my '90) ic6red
points - four
frOm the field lllld one from !he line
- and had one assist before foul·
ing out. She commiued one
.• NEWSMAN HONORED:_ Gallla Academy head basketball turnover in 12 minutes or playing
•eoacl1 Jim Osblll'lle (rlaht), on bebllif of tile Olllo Hlah School Bas- time.
!lletball Coacbel AIIIOCiatloa, praenltcl Hobart Wilson of t•e Gal·
Teammates Jennifer Cole and
.II polls Dally TTibune ud Sunday Tlmu-Stnthiel ail Ho•orary Lisa Auman propelled !he ExplorMembership In tbe OHSBCA "In rec:opltlon and appreclatloa of ers (17-3, 8-1), who never trlilcd,
:loyal and valuable ·lirvlee to hJa• sehoul Nlketball In lbt lllte or with 22 and 16 points, respeclively.
• DANCIN' DAYS arrived clurl•l Frldi!J
!:Oblo. Ou.r belt wllhea ud ilelrtrelt tha.Dkl a«ompany ttill tll)lrts- Pllty Stoffey led Loyola .with 21
nl&amp;ht'l aame betwHB the Southera TC!I'IIIcloea
(~lon of aratltude.". Tlie P.laque, praented durlnl Friday nil~t'a
points.
.
. and North Gallla Plrata - a pme tile TOI'III·
.• J.oa•.OAHS pme, wu -'aned by Gary Walterw, veieraa Newark
.La sane will play I~ 81 New
d~ '11'01183-61- u tile Southern c•eerleldert,
:Hlp
Sdtool
eaae
aeh
aad
prtlldent
of
the
OHSBCA.
.
.
RocheUe,
N.Y.
on
TueSday.
·
:
who
are .l!ootid ror theCbeerleaders of America
.. ..

five

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*

Jent switch. "But we feel at this
time, our five starters have earned
thai by the way they pra~tice every
day. We feel Lawrence gives us a
nice spark off the bench. For that
fact alone, that's why we're staying
with our starting lineup."
Ironically, a similar situation
exists for Michigan. But where
Ohio State is trying to include one
new player in the mix, coach Steve
Fisher has been trying to blend in
his glittering freshman class Chris Webber, Jalen Rose, Jimmy
King , Ray Jackson and Juwan
Howard - with the veterans.
" We have been up and down,
like maybe I thought we would and
hoped we wouldil 't," said Fisher.
"You can pick out individual
statistics and say, 'What a great
player,' with all of our young kids.
But it hasn't been with the consis·
tency you need to challenge the
truly outstanding teams in the
· league , and there are a lot of
them."
1
But Fisher sees progress, as was
di splayed when the Wolverines
took top-ranked and defending
national champion Duke into overtime in December.
"Since the Purdue game, when
we were outhustled, outrebound,
outfought and outscored on our
home court, we have played with a
lot of controlled emotion and
played fairly well."
The Ohio State-Michigan game,
nationally televised by CBS Sports,
will tip off all p.m. .

�l

f

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

Page-C2-Sunday nmes Sentinel

February 2, 1992

Oak Hill hammers
:Eastern edges KC 66-65; Southwestern falls again
Hannan Trace 86-56

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
..
Times-Sentinel Staff
· OAK HILL -Oak Hill's control of the boards and its fast break
SllUCk Hannan Trace like lighUling
in Friday ~!Ct's SVAC conte~l.
which the
won 86-56.
The Oaks reeiOd off the game's
first seven points in the first two
minutes, while the Wildcats'
offense spultered and came up
empty on their first three posses·

SIOns. But when Trace finally got
on the scoreboard, the hosts kept
driving the lanes, denying second
shoiS·· on a regular basis and firing
cross-court passes to .defuse the
Wildcats' defensive schemes. '
"We toOk Hannan Trace out of
their 2-3 zone and forced them to
play man-to-man," said Oak Hill
boss Doug Hale, who wiUlessed his
charges take a 23-poinl lead into
(See OAKS on C-3)

·jJ: ?J..· \.\ ·.. .. . ..

. ·..

.. . · .·

i

·: CONTROLLING THE BOARDS was one or the principal ele·
ineniS in Oak Hill's 86-56 win over Hannan Trace Friday night, as
:Oaks Chris Simpson (00), Bill Potter (20, behind Hannan Trace's
)immy Brace) and Mike Turner (1!) demonstrate in t~e first q~ar­
(er. Here Simpson coUects one or hiS 16 rebounds. (Tomes-Sentmel
~bolo by G. Spencer Osborne)
•

SVAC cage standings

·:•

(OveraU)
7eam
W L PF PA
1)ak Hill ..............9 4 861 757
llastem ................8 5 904 918
Southern ..............? 6 925 814
Bannan Trace ......? 6 811 877
~orth Gallia ....... .5 8 742 860
J{yger Creek ........4 9 697 787
Symmes Valley .. .3 9 677 746
$-Oulllwestern ....... l 13 752 1016
•
•:
(Conference)
Oak Hill ..............8 I 644 517
$outhem ..............7 2 689 522
HannanTrace ..... .7 3 681 633
Iiastem ............. ...6 3 603 586
~orth Gallia ........5 4 560 565
~mmes Valley ...2 7 509 573 ·
Kyger Creck.. ......2 7 487 569
· Southwestern .......O 10 527 735
~OTALS ..........37 37 4700 4700

•·

Friday's scores
(varsity)
Oak Hill 86, Hannan Trace 56
Southern 83, North Gallia 61
Eastern 66, Kyger Creek 65
Symmes Valley 63, Southwestern
42

CHESHIRE Eastern's
Eagles, behind by eight points
heading into the final quarter of
Friday night's SVAC game against
Kyger Creek, took advantage of a
Bobcat turnover in the final seconds of the contest with a Jeff
Durst jumper coming .with four
seconds left to post a 66-65 victory.
The Eagles, who won their fifth
straight game, began their co~e­
back when senior guard Tom f!1ssell scored si~ points in the f1rst
minute of the fourth quarter to cut
KC's lead to 52-50, and then the
lead changed hands several times
the rest of the way.
Senior forward Terry McGuire
canned a jumper to put the Eagles
ahead 64-63 wiih 40 seconds left,
but Bobcat center Phil Bradbury,
who led all scorers with 27 points,
came through with a basket willl 17
seconds left to give KC a 65-64
lead.
The Eagles went to the foul line
for the one-and-one on their ne~t
.possession. but they missed. The
. Bobcats attempted to gel the ball, ·
· but lost it out of bounds, and Eastem toOk possession once again, set·
ting up Durst's game-winning shot.
Freshman Charlie Bissell led the
Eagles with 22 points and II
·rebounds.
Eastern, which played the middle game ofits three- game road trip
.at Waterford Saturday night, will
end its tour Tuesday night at Hem· lock against Miller's Falcons .
Kyger Creek will host Wahama
Tuesday night.
Quarter totals
Eastern ................ l5 13 1612 = 66
KygerCrcek ....... l517 2013= 65
EASTERN (66) -C. Bissell 50-12=22; T. B'issell 9-0-1=19;
Durst 5-0-3=13; McGuire 5-00=10; M. Newland 1-0-0=2 .
TOTALS - 25·0-16=66
Field goals- 25-56 (44.6%)
Free throws- 16-20 (80%)
Rebounds- 33 (C. Bissell II)
Assists- 14 (f. Bissell6)
Steals-13
Turnovers- 19
KYGER CREEK (65)
Bradbury 9-2-3=27; Covey 5-31=20; Crace 5-0-2=12; Kingery 20-0=4; Villanueva 1-0-0=2 .
TOTALS- 22-5·6=65
Field goals- 24-64 (42.2%)

Free tbrows-6-10 (60%)
Rebounds- 25 (Bradbury 7)
Assists- 10 (Villanueva 7)
Steals-16
Turnovers - 12
RESERVE GAME - Easu:m
45, Kyger Creek 37
Leading scorers - Robert
Reed (Eastern) - 17; Mike Brad·
bury (KC)- 19

steady until the final quarter, when
it cranked out 21 points against .a
Highlander squad that had seen its
offensive output decline since the
second frame.
Chris Mandeville and Adam
Simpson paced the hosts wiih 13
points each.
This week's schedule shows
Sym,mes Valley hosting Southern .
on Friday and heading to
S· Valley 63, Southwestern 42
Portsmouth on Saturday to face
At Gage, Jerome Fuller took Notre Dame's Titans, while Southresponsibility for a shade more western will travel to North Gallia
than one-third of Symmes Valley's on Friday and to New Boston on
offense in leading the Vikings to a Saturday.
21-point win over Southwestern.
Quarter totals
The Vikings' offense remained Symmes Valley .. 14 14 14 21 = 63

.••.., ,.•.
SALE •7999

LYNN E. ANGELL
Certified Public Accountant
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 446·8677

Open 9·5 Weekdays, Evenings and Sa~urday by Appointment

s-. clolh lnllrlor, ,...,

By SCOTT WOLFE
.
T-S Correspondent
. RACINE - A string of 11
· unanswered poiniS in the fmt period and a 20-6 stretch gave the
Southern Tornadoes a 29-19 lead
which they took and ran with:
enroute to an 83-61 SVAC victory
over the North Gallia Pirates Fri-

Oaks win ...

RusseD Smgleton had 10 pomts..
_Jeremy Ro~sh ~dded mne
pomts, but had s1x assiSts and did a
great JOb ~f runnmg the_ SHS
offense, which did lis best JOb of
getting !~Je shot from the paint. ,
· _Kevm Hu~tled North Galha
w1~h 17, Dann Smtih added 16
pomts and seven rebounds, Rob
Canady. had 13 pomts and none
rebounds.
Southern grabbed ·a 2-0 lead on

(ContinuedfromC-2)

the second quarter following a
frame that saw the Wildcats score a
m'?'6 si~ points (only Trace's fourpomt fust quarter in iiS 100-40 loss
to Fairland on Dec. 28 was less
productive).
"We don ' t match up well
agamst Oak Hill," said Hannan
rraee chief Mike Jenkins, whose
lroops fell to 7-6 overall and 7-3 in
!he SVAC in losing their chance to
~tand aiop the conference mounlain. "And our foul shooting was
htrocious," he added·in reference to
his team's missing 11 of 15 shots at
· the line. The Oaks, by comparison,
!lllssed as few at the charity stripe
!11 as many tries as the Wildcats
made.
·. Junior center Dave Poling was
the only bright spot for the GalHans , but of his team-high 23
points, only two came in the first
quarter when an effort similar to
Ole ones he had in the following
guarters (especially the second,
when he had nine) would have
lllken some steam out of the Oaks'
fast-break offense.
: If Oak Hill center Chris Simp"n's eight-point effon seems to be
an example of aberrant hardwood
l)ehavior or a testament to Poling's
tight defense a~ainst him, think
again. Hale dido tlceep his 6-fool-7
jpnior on the floor for the full 32
minutes, or even the fmt24. Sim~­
&amp;on got plenty of rest (a strateg1c
move in light of the fact that the
AiD had to play South Webster 24
hours later), but managed to find
lime to collect 16 rebounds. Junior
Gene Hall, who saw plenty of time
ip tile post while Simpson rode the
pine, also had more rebounds (10)
tiJan points (six).
· The south Jackson squad used
the Bill Pouer-to-Benji Lewis (or
vjce versa) and the Lewis-to-Devin
Hale (no relation to Doug Hale)
combinations for the myriad of
four- to eight· foot jumpers in the
lane and layups the Oaks were ~et­
J!ng a$ainst the Wildcats, who cut
t~e H1ll's lead to 20 for the last
time when sophomore guard
~hawn Cox sank a four-foot
;umper in the lane with 25 seconds
left to make the score 45-25.
.;. 'Those passing combinations
~ere highly instrumental in getting
:Potter a team-high 23 points, Lewis
:tiis 21 and Devin Hale his 12.
F Meanwhile, the Wildcats got an
~ncharacteristic game from _scoring

leader Chad Swain. The 6-foot-2
senior forward saw his scoring
average dip when he scored eight
points..,... only the·second lime this
season he has scored fewer than 10
points.
This week's agenda will see
Oak Hill (9-4, 8-1), now ahead of
Southern by one game and Hannan
Trace by I 1/2 games in the final
conference title race, taking on
Eastern at Tuppers Plains on Friday. Meanwhile, Hannan Trace
will host Raceland on Tuesday and
entertain Kyger Creek on Friday.
Quarter totals
Hannan Trace .......6 19 1417 = 56
Oak HiD ..............29 16 22 19 = 86
OAK HILL (86) -Potter 9-0·
5=23; Lewis 9-0-3=21; Hale 4-1 1= 12; Turner 2-2-0= 10; Simpson
4-0-Q=S; Hall 3-0-(),.6; R. Morgan
1-0-2=4; Dutra 1-0-0=2. TOTALS
- 33·3-11::86
Field goals- 36-64 (56.25%)
Free throws -11-15 (73.3%)
Rebounds- 50 (Simpson 16)
Turnovm-19
HANNAN TRACE (56) Poling 10-0-3=23; Brace 2-2-0=10;
Swain 4-0-0=8; Co~ 3·0·1=7;
Davis 2-0-0=4; Unroe 2-0-0=4.
TO'J'ALS- 23·2·4=56
Field goals- 25-69 (36.2%)
Free throws -4-15 (26.7%)
Rebounds- 30
Turnovers- 15
RESERVE GAME- Oak Hill
57, Hannan Trace 38
Leading scorers -Josh Don ley, Jason Dunlap &amp; Wes
McCorkle (OH) - 10 each; Heath
Hutchinson Qrn - 13

Hunt gave NG a 3-2 lead on a driver and ,free throw, followed by
Canady_s follow-up shot. The next
four_l)lmutes was mostly North
Galloa s as they surged onward II5 and 13-7 behind alternating buckeiSfromHuntandCanaday.
At the 4:06 mark Southern head
coach How1e Caldwe!l called umeout. He must have swd the mag1cal
.words, because SHS went on an
11-0 spun that gave them an 18-15

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Limit 2 at sale price.
REGULAR
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REGIILAR
TOU9

but lay-ups and in-the-paint
jumpers (exception: one Mark
Allen three-pointer) by Roush, Bailey, and two back door drives by
Russell Singleton.
SHS led 20·15 at the quarter.
SHS went up 31-19 (an 11 -4
spun) in the second frame. mainly
behind the fine ten foot shooting
and driving of Scott ~isl~. That
spawned a Nonh Galha ume out,
but in the ne~ttwo . min~tes SHS
went on an 8-2 shoollng bm~e.
A frustrated NortJ_t Galloa crew
saw Sou\h~rn play us best team
ball, rem1mscent of past Southern
teams, where the lay-up was the

WINTER SPECIAL .
PRE·SEASON TUNE·UP
•New Plugs
•Lube &amp;Grease
•Change Oil
•Check Belts
•Sharpen Blades
•Co111plete Inspection

$

BAUM LUMBER

FOR HIS HANDS ONLY - Southern guard Michael Evans
(right) pulls down a rebound out or the reacb or North Gallia rrontman Darin Smitb (30) during Friday night's SV AC contest at
Racine, which tbe Tornadoes won 83-61.

H.D. VEST FINANCIAL
·sERVICES

ST. RT. 248

CHESTER
985·3·301

DO
TI'E
cam DLDS CUILLIC BED

KARL KElLER Ill, C.P.A.

Registered Representative
IRA's * SEP IRA's
MUTUAL FUNDS * UIT's
.MONEYMARKETS

POMIROY; OliO
NEW UD USED CUI liD !RUCKS

A., LOW, LOW PRICES

~---------

~--------~

1992CHEVY
CAVALIER

KEllER BUSINESS SERVICES 614·992·7270

Securities oHered t•""9• H. D. Vest lavest111111t Securities, l1c.
433 E. Las Col11111 ~lvt ~!~tt, ~~0 ·lrvllg, TX 75039
.
zl4·nD·IDll

1988 OLDS
CALAIS

rlf.f/

Quad 4, automatic, air.

$5,995
Reg. Price........... $9,374.00
Sale Price ...........$8,999.00
Rebate ...................$500.00
$8,499.00
..--$400.00

or Pomeroy, Ohio Alld Foreign and Dommie Subsldlarlel, al the cl01o or buobtoss D&lt;eomber 31. 1991, a
state banking Institution organized and operating under the banking laws or this slate and. a member of
the Federal Reterve Syotem. PubUohed Ill accordance with a caD made by then Sblte Banking Authorlly
iond by the Federal Re..rve Bank ot this Dlotrlcl.
State Bank No. 10SOX
Fedend Reserve District No. 4
ASSETS
Cub and balances due from deposilory instilutionS&lt;
a. Noninlcresl-bearing balances and currency and ccin ....................................................................2,529,000.00
b. lnle10sl-bearing balances.................................................................................................................. 300,000.00
Sccurities ............................... ................................................................. .................... .... .. ...................25,31S,OOO.OO
federal fund• sold &amp; securities purchased under agreements
to 10seU in domestic offoces of the bank &amp; of its
Edge &amp; Agreement subsidiaries &amp; in IBf's:
federal funds sold .................................................... ..................................... ........... ..................1,450,000.00
Loans and lease financing 10ceivables:
Loans and leues, net of unearned inoome ................................................. .34,296,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and leuc losses .....................................................345,000.00

1991 CHEVY
CAMARO

Alltntlotl, Business People

1988 OLD$

1991 CHEVY G20
CARGO VAN

Automatic, air, much more!

V8, Automatic, Air.

$13,999
1991 GEO METRO
Automatic, Air.

Reg. Price .........$14,290.00
Sale Price ......... $12,242.00
Rebate.:................. $750.00

Loans and leases, net of unearned income,
allowance, and reserve ............................................................................ ............................ ............33,95 1,000.00

Premiles and faed assets (including capitalized leases) ........ ..... ................ ................... .....,................. l,087,000.00
Other real estate owned .................................. ......................... ............... ............................................ ·....... 41,000.00

Reg. Price ...........$8,488.00
Don Tate Disc.....$1 ,489.00

YOUI PIICE••$11,4t2.GO

YOUI PIICE••"$6,ttt.DO
If $149 per ••II•

1991 CADILLAC
SEDAN DeVILLE

1991 CHEVY
CORSICA

PIICE••$27,497.00
NO lUXUIY TAX

.OVER 700 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU- CHECK YOUR LOCAL
0111ECTORY 0/f
YELLOW PAGES FOR THE STORE
NEAREST Y(Jl/1
.
'
.

.......
""--·---"'
............
... ... ..........

,_

"_.,"""'-

....... lliffiNI. fiW ............ .

,

,....

,.

'·

$4,995
$8,999
1990 BUICK
SKYLARK
1 owner, 29,000 miles.

$6,995
1991 GEO
METRO
· CONVERTIBLE

YOUI PIKE•• $7,9tt.GO

One owner, 10,000 miles.

•t,495
NEW 1991

CHEVY 5·10
PICKUP

4x4 SllYEIADO VL leatle4
Reg. Price.: .. :.... $17,847:00
Sale Price.....~ ..$18,499.00
Rebate ........... :....... $500.00

Reg..Price......... $11 ,999.00
Don .Tat• Dllc;..-t1 ,000.00

TOll PIICE•• $15,999.00

YOUI Pltci-SIO,tM.OI

Automatic Transmission

'

Slate o!()bio, Coui1ty.arMeip, u:

,.......,.......,.:......,,,..,
.........

Reg. Price........... $8,999.00
Don Tate Disc...-$1 ,000.00

1991 OlJ)S
CUTLASS SUPREME

••lgned

Fermu E. Moore

Automatic, air, 2 door.

1990 BUICI
CENTURY 4 DR.

I, Ro&amp;or W. Hysel~ Vke President.Cuhler of lbe above-named bank, do hereby declare that the Report of
Condition bu been prepored in conformance with official ioJtructions and il .bUe and correct lome best of my
lmowledse and belief.
Roser W. Hytell-Vice Prelide.nt-Cubier
·Dale Signed: llnlllly 21, 1992
..
"\ .
We, the
dl!ecl@n. attell !be conec:llleu of' !be Report of Condition and_declare that ifhu_ been . · ~'-­
eumined by us and to the belt of our knowledp .,.. belief and bu been prepared 10 conformance woth oflicu1l
instructions and 15 liUe and co.moct
Paul E. IClooo
I. Canon Crow - Dlnoctora

,., •.

1987 OLDS
CALAIS

s6,495

(I ) N'oninlerest-bearing ............................................................................... 6, 415 ,000.00
· (2) Interesl-bearing ........... :....... ........................... ..................................... .53,092,000.00
.
Other liabilities...................................................... ................................ ........ ··· .......... ·· .... ··· .....................308,000.00
'lbtat liabilities ........................................... ......................,............................ ..................... ..................59,815,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock (No. of Sbare a. Authoriud .................. 20,000
b. Outstanding ................. 20,000)............................................................. 500,000 .00
' Surplus ................................................................................... ,.................... ........................................... 1,000,000.00
Undivided p-ofils and capital reserves ..............'............. ,.................. :........................ ........ ..... ......... ....4,149,000.00
Total equity capital... ............................................................................... ........ ............ ·...... ................ ··.5,649,000.00
Total equity capital and losm 4ffened
'
purouanl to 12 u.s.c. 18233(j)..................... .......:.............................................................................. 5,649,000.00
Total liabilities, limittd-lifc Jftfemd otock, and oquily c:apital,
JDd loues defened punuanllo 12 U.S.C. t823(j) ........................ ........... :............ ........................... 6S,464,000.00

!ALE '8999.=
116991 ..
.

$4,295

Ot1e owner, automatic, air.

O:po~i:~meslic oftices ............... ....................................................................... .................................59,507,000.00

Nt,.....; O.rw delrOIL

CIEU

1990 CHEVY
LUMINA

Totalusets......................................................................... "' .......................... "' .................................65,464,000.00
Tolalassets and losses defencd pursuant 12 U.S.C. 1823(j)...........................................................65,464,000.00
LIABILITIES

SALE 17499
'138°5 Per Mo.

95

OIL FILTER, POINTS OR OTHER NEEDED PARTS AND
LABOR NOT INCLUDED:

~:~;~~-~ :::::::: : : :::: : : : : : : : : : : : : : ::: : : :: : :::::: :: : : : :: : : ::: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :;~l:::~

defroet

nineteen assists in an unselfisll
offensive game.
CaldweU commented, "Finally,
after 12 games of playing individu·
al basketball we learned that if we
play as a lelim, we can have a lot
more fun, This was a great team·
effon and we hit the open man.
.
"Also, although Jeremy Roush
only had n.ine points, 1 thought this ·
was his best game of the year I
thought he ran the ball club w~ll.:
and played a nice ball game. This
is what we'll need in the toumament."
&gt;
Southern got a welcome charg~
(See TORNADOES on C-4) : ,

Right at home.

Farmers Bank and Savings Company

TRANSMISSION FILTERS.'PCV.
FUEL FILTERS &amp; BREATHER '

Sunday nmes-Sentlnei..,..Page C3

Y..~~!X.-2!':.~-~~!.~~J~~J~~,~~!.~~Y~~~L ... ~

day evening at the Charles W. Hayman gymnasium in Racine.
Southern is now 7-6 overall and
7-2 in the SVAC, while North Gal·
lia drops to 5-8 and 5-4.
Southern senior Scou Lisle had
a great game with seven field goals
and 21 poiniS to lead all scorers.
Roy Lee Bailey had 16 points,

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON FOR

"fOFF

tn,_

For complete, professional individual and
business tax preparation assistance call

This week's games
Tuesday- Raceland (Ky.) at
Hannan Trace; Eastern al Miller;
Wahama at Kyger Creek
Friday - Oak Hill at Eastern;
Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace;
Southern at Symmes Valley;
Southwestern at North Gallia
Saturday - Hannan Trace at
Fairland; Symmes Valley at
Portsmouth Notre Dame; Southwestern at New Boston;

REGULAR
OVER3.59:

tltlfl••u,,. I

•ELECTRONIC FILING
AVAILABLE
•DIRECT DEPOSIT OF
REFUND CHECK ,

They played Saturday
Oak Hill at South Webster
Southern at South Point
Eastern at Wau:rford

Original equipment quality. Limit 2 at
sale price.
Reg. to3.59

SALE '7888
'14612 , . , • •

Southwestern .: .... 13 14 II 4 = 42
SYMMES VALLEY (63)Fuller 7-2·2=22; Lester 6-0-1=13;
Jenkins 3-0-4=10; Pierce 3-0-4=10;
Blake 2-0-0=4; Gate s 1-0-2=4,
TOTALS- 2Z·2·13=63
··
Free throws- 13-20 (65%) ·
SOUTHWESTERN (42) Mandeville 4-0-5=13; Simpson 2'
2-3=13; Morse 3-1-2=11; Mershon
2-0-0=4 ; T. Ashworth 0·0-1 =1;
TOTALS -11·3-11=42
Free throws- 11-17 (%)
RESERVE GAME - Symmes'
Valley 51, Southwestern 44
Scoring leaders - Jamie Lyalf
&amp; Todd Robinson (SV) - 18 each;'
Trevor Ashworth (SW)- 10

(reserves-SVAC only)
Southern 72, North Gallia 23
Eastern 45, Kyger Creek 37
Symmes Valley 51, Southwestern
44
Oak Hill 57, Hannan Trace 38

OIL FILTERS

134 HP engine,- than Toyota.

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

,southern posts 83-61

WE'RE SERIOUS ABOUT
YOUR TAXES •••

736 Second Avenue

February 2, 1992

.

,

Sworn to and iubecrlbe!l befole·me Ibis 21• day of lmuory, 1992,and I bereby certify that 11111 notao ot!icer
or dl!ector of lhll blnt.
'
·
·
·
,
. .JoAnn Crisp, Notary Public
loAM Crllp, Notory Public, Stall of Ohio. My eoinmiuioo e~pireillltly 17, 1993.
~
.
..
.
'

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

I·'

'

,.,"

~
_·

,'·'

,•

,,)

~~~--~..... . . ... ..;~/
.

·'

.

.'

' I

(&lt;)

'I

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

·Page C4 Sunday nmea-Sentlnel

'

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

• F~bruary 21.1992

February 2, 1992
'

Logan comes from behind to ·defeat Gallipolis 54-51
:· GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
'blew a golden opportunity to take
~over sole possession of firSt place
·in the Southeastern Ohio League
basketball standings Friday night
:~w losing a 54-51 heartbreaker to
~isiting Logan.
While Logan was handing the
)'llue Devils their second conference loss of the season against live
wins, Jackson pulled off an upset
tiy knocking off host Marietta 5240, thus the Tigers and Blue Devils, who clash at Marietta Friday
remained deadlocked for top spoi
with identical 5-2 records.
-

Coach Jim Osborne's lads dlebarger to pull within five.
jumped off 10 a quick 8-0 lead GAH.S led 27_-22 during the half·
be.hmd Enc Hoffman, Nathan tune mtermiSSion.
M1lle~ and Ch~d Barnes before
Logan knotted the count at 27Logan s 6--.8 !lnc Bums canned a all with 6:55 leflm the thud. It was
charity toss (3:44) for the Chief- 31-all at the 3:42 mark. The Blue
tains first tally. !he Gallians led Devils pulled ~~~!cad 3~·32 behind
14-S after~ pen_od of acoon.
Hoffman _and Miller with 2:01 left
GAHS h1ked Its advantage. to 10 the thud. Galhpohs led 42-36
· 20-7 with 6:23 left in the rust lihlf. ·--- going into the fmal canto.
However, lhe Gallians second leadThe Blue Devils were up 44-38
ing scorer,. S~ott Jividen, had with 6:44 remaining when the
p1~e;d up h1s thin! personal foul by Chi~fs began t~eir comeback
thiS orne and was on the ~nch.
behmd Tom Smith, Burns and
Logan came stormmg ba~k Chris Conrad. Logan tallied seven
behind Joe Hanning and Brarn Rid· straight points in less than two minutes to grab its first lead of the
game, 45-44 (5:27).
Gallipolis was up 49-45 when
· the Blue Devils started missing
front ends one one-and-one free
· throws (three 10 be exact) . To
make matters worse, Jividen fouled
out with 2:21 remaining. The
Chiefs knotted the count at 49-all
with I :02 left.
With Logan on top 50-49, Eric
Hoffman picked off a rebound and
was fouled with 34 seconds
remaining. Hoffman sank both
charily tosses to give GAHS a 5150 advantage.
Smith got free underneath with
: 17 seconds left to score what
proved lo be the game's winning
goal.
Gallipolis came back up court
with the ball, but lost 11 on a
turnover with five seconds left.
Riddlebarger was fouled on the
inbounds play following a Logan
· timeout. He then canned two free
·: . throws to ice the victory with two
·. perfect tosses.
Burris paced the visitors with 16
points. Riddlebarger added 13
. while Smith and Hanning each
· totaled eight.
Logan connected on 19 of 40
field goal attempts for 47 percent.
The Chiefs were 14 of 22 at the
line, had 15 personals, 26
rebounds, 13 ~Y Burris, and made
only nine turnovers.
Barnes paced all scorers with 19
points. Hoffman added 17 while
Miller chipped in with eight and
Adam Blair seven.
Gallipolis shot 37 percent from
the field (19-51). At the line,
GAHS of II of 15 (seven of II in
the final period). The home squad
had 19 personals, 30 rebounds, 10
Hoffman, eight turnovers, 16
assitsts, four by Miller, and six
two by Ryan Young.
G_allipolis dropped to 9-5 overall. Logan improved to 5-9 overall
YOUNG REBOUNDS- Gallia Academy's Ryan Young (30)
and 3-4 inside the conference.
high ror a rebound against visiting Logan during Friday
Logan played at Chillicothe Satur·
:::JI.igbt:'sSEOAL basketball game. Teammate Adam Blair (32) reachday while GAHS visited
out while Logan's Chris Conrad (20) and Joe Hanning (11) look
Portsmouth.
, on. Logan won 54-51 to snap the Gallians' five-game league winning
The Chiefs will play Lancaster
· itreak.
Tuesday and on Friday, they will
open their new 2,000-seat capacity
gym against Warren Local.
Gallipolis will play at Point
Pleasant on Saturday, Feb. 8.
In Friday's reserve game, the
GAHS Blue Imps rallied from a
; =:-·. The Southeastern Ohio Athletic Warren Local downed Athens 63- 27-15 second period deficit to take
•:League featured a pair of upsets in 56.
.
a 39-37 lead with 4:55 left to play,
: 'Friday's action in which co-leaders
Next :oveck's feature cont~st w~ll but lost 51-47 in the closing sec: ;Gallia Academy and Marieua were see Galha Academy at Marietta 10 onds.
; ,~th beaten, setting up some cru- a clash of the co-leaders, Warren
Dustin Dennis paced Logan's
• ·~ matchups for next week. Logan travels to Logan for the first conte~t reserves with 19 points. Chad Zim~~iallied to whip Gallia Academy 54- ever m the new Ch1eftam athleoc merman added 13. Jeff Pope tossed
•:f.L Jackson traveled to Marietta complex, and Jackson Journeys to in 18 for the Blue imps. Chris
:•and upset the Tigers 52-40, and Athens.
Somerville added II.
·!
·
Jackson 52, Marietta 40
Quarter totals
Marietta was leading 27-25 at Logan .................... 5 17 14 18 = 54
,•tl I
'It
• • •
(See SEOAL on C·S)
·'•
·!•' (Continued from C-3)
::~(om retummg Michael Russell in
:~second frame, when he hit sev•:tra1 ~oals to push SHS to a 45-27
: lialftune lead.
• Although Southern played well
: in the second half, North Gallia
_ played a more upbeat game and
played near-even the remainder of
: the way. Southern continued to
; play good team ball, was content to
• make three or four passes, then hit
; the open man near the bucket for
• the score. This included several
; great pas59 from Roush and Bai·

Gallia Academy .. 14 13 15 9 = 51
LOGAN (54) - Joe Hanning
3-0-2=8; Chris Conrad 0-1 · 1=4;
B~ Riddlebarger 3-1-4=13; Jeff
S!~•hson, 1-0-0=2; Colin Mowery

I ,0-1=3; Eric Burris 7-0·2=16;
Tom Smith 2-0-4=8. TOTALS 172-14=54
GALLIPOLIS (S't) - Chad
Barnes 7-0·5=19; Scott Jividen 0;

j dso notch SEOAL wins

SALE ENDS NEW STORE HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY, 9:30 AM-8 PM
MARCH 1, 1992
SATURDAY, 9:30 AM·S PM; SUNDAY, 11 AM·6 PM

BLAZER "S" LOADS
3501 25 Auto 50 FMJ.................................$7.99
3509 9MM 115 FMJ ....................................$8.99 .
3542 357 Mag 158 Gr. JHP.........................$9.99 ·
3562 44 Mag JHP 200 Gr..........................$14.99

~FEDERAl:

'

night bul only converted three of
they were never closer, as the hosts nine free throws, and committed 23
used the free throw to maintian the turnovers.
lead.
Quarter totals
Ryan Dennis led both teams in Athens ................ .13 10 19 14 = 56
scoring with 20 points, including a Warren Local ......22 12 14 15 = 63
perfect 12 for 12 at the line before
ATHENS (56) - Justin Scholl
missing one with,just nine seconds 3-0-0=6: Reid Schaller 0-2-0=6:
left. Dennis had extended his free Pal McHugh 3-0-2=8; Jason Reed
throw shooting to 16 straight, car· 4-1-0=11: Dan Kiger 0-0-1=1;
rying over a four for four effort Sco11 Hillkirk 3-0-0=6; Sunny Kalu
from the Jan. 17 Marietta game. 8-0-0=16; Kyle Lonas 1·0·0=2.
Scou Brackenridge added 15 points TOTALS- 23·3·3=56
and Eric Harper II for lhe winners.
WARREN LOCAL (63)Warren finished with 23 of 51 Jason Harris 3-0-1=7; Eric Harper
fielders, including a three for 15 1-3-0= 11; Scott Brackenridge 7-0night from three point range, 14 of 1=15; Jason Cravens 4-0-0~8;
19 freebies, and 25 rebounds.
Ryan Dennis 4-0-12=20; Aaren
Sunny Kalu poured in 16 points Merrells 1-0-0=2. TOTALS- 20·
for Athens and claimed live of their 3-14-63
21 rebounds, with Jason Reed
Reserve score: Athens 50, Waradding 11 points. The Bulldogs ren 38
shot 57.7 percent on a 26 of 45

Jimmy Ball
Stacy McClure
Floyd Cobb
Charlie Adkins
Todd Robertson
Craig Tolliver
B. Hagley
S. Hughes
Shane Cook
Randall Wiley
Mau Smith
Totals
F. Moffatt
B. Harper
M. Moore
C. Hunt
E. Hall
D. Ellison
R. Osbome
J. Richards
B. Day .
R. Johnson
J. Smith
Total

0
0
0
0
6

0-0 0
0-0 0
0-0 0
0-0 0
3-8 15
I 4· 7 15
0 0-0 0
0 0-0 0
0 0-1 .6
0 0-1 30
0 0-0 .J.
1 7-17 .70

·0
0
0
0
0

4

0
0
3
15
I

30

WALTON
0 0 2-2 ·2
4 2 1-2 15
0 0 0-0 .o

5 0 0-0 I'll

0 0 0-0 .o
I 0 7-8 :9
7 I 0-0 !:7
000-00
0 0 0-0 .0
II 0 7-9 7!J
I 0 0,0 2
29 3 17·21 84

Tot Fouls: Hannan 18, Walton 18.
Fouled Out: C. Tolliver.
Officials: J.Cunningham, J.Straub;·

t.rHJD/iEA.

TIEMPO
$~A05 .

,~,,- P155BOR13

The Store With "All Kinds of Stuff" For Pets, Stables,
Large and Small Animals, Lawns andJ,~iir,dens

R&amp;G Feed·&amp; Supply Co.
992·2164
399 W. Main

Pomeroy

CONCORDE

· - -....-

$J69~ssS

See Puzzle on Page D-2

Warren Local63, Athens 56
; • AI Vincent, the long-suffering
:Bulldogs shot almost SS percent
·from the floor and outgoaled the
:Warriors from the field but fell vic: lim to ~ free throw shooting by
. jhe Will'riors to fall to 1-6 and 1-13.
; ~Harren's record now stands at 3-3
·lnd 6--7.
•
•: Alter nailing lhe host learn from
;II to 15 ~ints the Bulldogs rallied
ih lhe thin! quarter to outscore lhe
:Warricn 19-14 and close the niar·•

400 COUNT BRICK
HOLLOW POINTS

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pass from C. Tolliver to Wiley ad·
In the preliminary matchup,
ded two more points with seven Coach Randy Thompson 's junior
more minutes left in the malchup. squad same pretty much the same
Tolliver and Wiley finished the type of game as the Lit~e Cats
game with seven and nine grabbed a 17-4 lead at the end of
rebounds, respectively, while Wiley the first quarter and held omo that
also had nine blocked shots, ac- lead through the third quarter, 38cording to Boyd.
36, but began a slow descent in the
Looking as if Hannan might · fourth and allowed the Walton
overtake !heir opponents, Cook junior squad to overtake the lead in
then continued the Hannan scoring the last five minutes and win the
spree with two more from under- game, 52-47.
neath, while Robertson followed
Leading the Hannan junior squad
with two from inside the lane, was Charlie Adkins, who lit up the
making the score fJJ-67 with five scoreboard with 16 tallies, while
minutes of play remaining.
Floyd Cobb and Rodger Whiu
However, Walton began their rounded out the top three scoring
own scoring onslaught with more slots with seven points each.
shots by Johnson, Osborne, and
For Walton, Josh Richards tossed
Dwayne Ellison, increasing their in 18 points, while Mike Moore
lead to 78-68.
.
was only a basket behind with 16.
The final score of the game for Billy Westphal fmished the top
Hannan came courtesy of Wiley, three with eight.
who worked inside to get a rebound
Hannan's loss 10 Walton sets
from a shot by Jimmy Ball and tap· their season record at 4-7.
pcd it in, reaching the final score,
INDIVIDUAL STAtS
84-70.
"Overall, I'm not displeased with
our play, but we definitely need to
HANNAN
be more consistent with our play,"
FG 3PI IT TP
I 0 0-0 2
Boyd said of the Wildcats.
R. Tolliver

=··!

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~

)

: the entire second half, as they made
• only two goals"in the third period
· : while missing II straight shots,
: giving lhe lronmen a 38-31 advan• tage after three quarters of play.
: Steady defensive pressure by
· JHS in the fmal period conlributed
: to a 31 percent shooting effort by
; the host Tigers, who dropped to 5-2
r in league play and evened their sea·
;. son mark at 7 · 7. The visitors
: outscored the Tigers 14·9 in the
fourth quarter to post the upset.
: Jackson was led by the high
l scoring duo of Matt Walburn and
~ Willie Woodard with 17 points
:·each while Doug Zollar scored 12
• and Chad Lincoln 10 for the
: Tigers.
: The Ironmen , tied with Warren
• al 3-3 in league play, upped their
: season record to 8-6 on the strength
: of a 45 pen:cnt shooting night (20
·.of 44), hitting nine of 14 free
: throws, and outrebounding MRS
: 33-24. Mike Morgan garnered
•.seven for Jackson and Zollar
• picked off eight for the Tigers.
•: Marietta suffered through a 31
' 'percent shooting game (16 of 52),
made six of seven at the line, and
made 1wo shots from beyond the
::'iliree-poirit arc. Mike Smith had
·: one and Josh Offenberger had the
:• other. Walburn scored both of
-:Jackson's three-pointers.
~ Quarter totals
:· Jackson ............... 15 10 13 14 = 52
.: Marietta .............. 13 14 4 9 = 40
~ - JACKSON (52) - Matt Wal~ 2&gt;um 3-2-5=17; Willie Woodard 6~3).5=17; Brad Mulln 2-0-0=4; Mike
: Morgan 5-0-0=10; Brent Jewell J.
• :0-0=2; Trent Douthelt 1-0·0=2.
: TOTALS 18·2·9=52
•: MARIETTA (40) - Mike
~;smith 2-1-2=9: Ryan Robinson I·
~-0-2; Chad Lincoln S-0·0=10;
: .:OOug Zollar 4-0-4=12; Josh Offen•l:&gt;erger 0-1-0=3: Steve Boord 2-0; 0=4. TOTALS - 14-2·6-40
•: Reserve score: Marietta 48,
: j ackson 33

~lill

FOXFIRE II
150 lb.

tum, however, as Roland Osborne
sna~ed the ball ori a Tolliver-toSmith pass, making the score 22-23
with 5:43 remaining in the first
half, giving the Tigers their first
lead of the game.
With 4:09 remaining, Hannan's
Shane Cook rolled one off his
fingertips for two more points,
while a Cook-to-Randall pass
proved 10 be successful for more
points, boOsting the score to 28-33
with 2:55 remaining.
By the end of the second quarter,
Hannan scored two more o~ a
layup by Randy Tolliver, but Walton still held on and finished the
first half with 8 32-40 lead.
"We did a good job in the first
quarter with the press and the
hus~e. but in the second quarter it .
was Walton's tum," Boyd said of
the Tigers.
Wiley opened up the third
quarter with two consecutive shots
frol!l under the basket to cut into
Walton's lead; however, HarPer
found the mark again with his
second three-pointer of the
. match up.
Walton finished the third stanza
still han~ing onto the lead, 61-52.
Opcnmg up the fourth quarter. a

•• halftime, but scored only 13 points
gin to just six points, _al 48-42, but

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Robenson also grabbed 16 boards,
whileTollivertotaledseven.
Less than 6() licks later, Han·
nan 's Mau Smilh showed the right
touch from way out in the field for
the game's second thn:e-point shot.
Walton's Brad Harper, who,
finished lhe game with 15 points
for the Tigers, carne right back with
a three-pointer of his own, making
the score 14-11 with 2:10 remaining in the first stanza.
Tolliver again came back to
secure the first quarter lea~ for
Hannan with two shots, giving the
Wildcats a comfonable 18-11 lead
before Walton's Harper hil the
backboard at the buzzer for two.
'"Chis was by far Todd's best job
running the offense and working
inside the lane," said head coach
Chuck Boyd, adding that the
Wildcats sbot a 49 percent from the
field. "And this was by far our best
effort running the offense as a
team. We just need to get more
shots."
In the opening of the second
stanza, Hannan gained two more
points from Wiley, who grabbed the
rebound from a missed shot by
Robenson.
Walton began to &amp;ain momen-

-: SEOAL games .•._&lt;c_on_ti_nu_ed_rro_m_C_-4_)- - - - - - - - - - -

'OM'S AUIO CLINIC

• ley.

1
"

Dirty ball came to Hannan High
: School on Friday night, but the
' Wildcats proved they could play
that way, also, as the local squad
. held on to the visiting Walton High
School Tigers squad's coattails and
suffered an 84-70 hardcoun loss.
Hannan, led by 6--foot-3 senior
cenrtr Randall Wiley with his
season-high 30 points, jumped to
an early 4-0 lead in the first stanza
on a free throw and a three-point
shot by Craig Tolliver before even
30 seconds had ticked off the clock.
Walton answered Tolliver's
banging of the board with a shot by
Russ Johnson, who proved to be
Walton's leading scorer's by the
end of the fourth quaner with 29
points.
• , Holding onto their early 'lead,
~ · Hannan kept up the pace with back·
•. to-back shots by Todd Robertson
;: and Tolliver, makin$ the score 10-2
:- with 5:00 remainmg; Robertson
; and Tolliver, who have ' proven
0' throughout the season that heighth
:: is not necessarily the key to scoring
'· (they round out al 6-foot and 5·
:: foot-8, respectively), finished the
:: game with 15 points each.

$29

:•Tomadoos wz"n

i

By Dan Adkins

Nathan Miller 3-0-2=8; Ryan
Young 0; Adam Blair 2-1·0=7;
Eric Hoffman 5-1-4= 17; David
Hager 0; Bryan Hall 0. TOTALS
17-(2)-11-51

Tuesday's games:
SEO, Opponents
Chesapeake at South Point
Cambridge at Marietta
(AII.Games)
Portsmouth a~ Ironton
Team
W L
P OP Lancaster at Logan
Portsmouth W.esl at Waverly
Chesapeake ....... 16 0 1186 915 Point Pleasam at Hurricane
Southern at Symmes Valley
Waverly ............. l3 2 1153 1045 Valley at Wavery
Greenfield at Wilmington
Fairland .. .............9 3 828 629 Greenfield at Fairland
Northwest at Wheelersburg
Gallipolis .............9 5 715 638 Fairland at South Point
Nelsonvill-York at Vinton County
Southern ..............&amp; 5 935 804 Trimble al Vimon County
Feb. 8 games:
Friday's games:
Jackson ................&amp; 6 847 882
Point Pleasant at Gallipolis
Portsmouth ......... .7 7 1027 938
Athens at Chillicothe
Marietta...............7 7 826 820 Gallipolis at Marietta
Walnut
Ridge at Ponsmouth
Warren Local ......6 7 901 879 Jackson at Athens
Hannan
Trace al Fairland
Wheelersburg ......6 8 966 962 Warren Local at Logan
Greenfield ...........6 8 663 6&amp;1
Logan ..................5 9 823 887
Point Pleasant......3 9 733 864
Vinton County ....2 12 774 874
Athens ................. ! 13 765 969
What We Offer To ·
(SEOAL VARSITY)
Insure tile Best
Team
W L
P OP
®
Gallipolis ............ .5 2 399 364
nreWear.
Marietta ...............5 2 437 394
Jackson ........... .... .3 3 344 326
Computer Balance
Warren Local ......3 3 386 394
IFrH with PurchaH of
Logan .................. 3 4 441 443
nrtS)
Athens ................. ! 6 359 445
Aligllaeat
TOTALS
20 20 231" 2366
Suspwion Work
Friday's results:
(frH Estimate)
SEO varsity
Logan 54 Gallipolis 51
Sliocks
Jackson 52 Marietta 40
Struts
Warren Local 63 Athens 56
Frtt nre Rotatl01
(SEOAL RESERVES)
Remhlders every 4 lo 6
Team
W L
P OP
m11ths.
(frtt)
Logan................ 6 I 383 320
Safety Valm (frtt
Marietta.............. 4 3 328 330
Jackson ............... 3 3 233 255
ftlll wt fnJI. 011' IIW
Gallipolis ............ 3 4 296 303
tlrts)
Athens................ 3 4 297 292
Gualhy Tires
Warren Local.. ... I 5 252 289
CoinptthiYe Prfciag
TOTALS
20 20 1789 1789
• Reliable all wealher traction.
Fint111lng !11-s to
Friday's results:
•
Fuel
savings
w~h
low
rolling
qualfietl buym It lit
SEO reserves
resistance compounds.
Logan 51 Gallipolis 47
CIIJ liudgel.
• Extra slrength and stability from two
Marietta 48 Jackson 33
Dre Prl111 Start ls
steel belts.
Athens 50 Warren Local 38
Lowls
-Friday's area scores:
• Polyester cord body ensures a
95
Point Pleasant 52 Wahama 45
smooth comfortable ride.
Chesapeake 93 Buffalo 68
• WMe sidewall slyling
Russell 95 Ponsmouth 78
Waverly 89 Wheelersburg 83
Southern 83 North Gallia 61
Miami Trace45 Greenfield 42
Meigs 59 Vinton County 56
Across fro• G·Mart-Red Building
Last night's games:
Gallipolis at Portsmouth
Belpre at Warren Local
Logan at Chillicolhe
~818 EASTERN AVE.
GAlliPOLIS OH.
Nels-York at Athens
Sou tern at South Point
446·1113- 446-4744
,
Wheelersburg at Fairland

~~Jackson, Warren Local

• , Southern hit 31-51 for 61 per: cent: 16--27 in the first half lllid 15·
:-~ in the second. SHS hit 4-11
•:p Jll:!inrtrs and 9·12 at the line.
:~o hit 24-55 for 44 pen:ent, was 1:•ton three's, and 11-20 at the line. ·
•:•' SHS had 32 rebounds led by
:;flailey witli eight and Lisle four,
:•i'id 18 turnovers, nine steals, 19
,
and21 fouls.
••. NO had 26 rebounds (seven
(
h by Smith and Ryan McCarley
··and nine from Canady), 22
: turnOvers, 10 sttals and 16 fouls.
: Soulhem won the reserve game
• 74-23 as preclically every young
: •2'mnado had a line game. SHS was
• lOci by Andy Orueset wilh 15, Trent
Cleland with 12, J.T. Northup wit!l
~ 10, Kenny Rizer.and Robert Reiber
' nine each, and Kevin Turley seven.
• Jeremy Belleville had eight for NG,
• and 1t811111181e Cluis Toler had live.
:•J Southern wenl to South Point
: Saal'day.
.
: ~Iter totall
I
·
•Gallia ........ IS 12 15,19 • 61 .
; Soadletn ...:.... (..l•20 25 2117 . 83
&lt;1
NORTH GALLIA (61) -t a*Je1 Peck 3-3-9, Jim McClure
~ 1-0.2, Rya" McCarley 2-0.• 4,
• Darill Smith 6-1·1•16, Roll
' c:-ty 4-0-5-13, Kevin Htllt 8-0-, 1•17•.TarALS-:14ol·U"'l,
~
SOUTHERN (13) - Mark
~ A1111 3·1-{1-9, t.flclllcl E¥11113·1·
~ ~ Jen:my Roulll2-l·:W, Scou

Walton-plays rough in chalking up 84-70 victory over Hannan

- - - - - - - - - - C a g e standings----- - - - - -

\

Sunday nmes Sentlr\ei-Page-C5

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•

,:30

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

Page C&amp;-Sundsy Times-sentinel

February
2, 1992
.

Har~ison helps Meigs record

Point Pleasant notches 52-45 comeback win over Wahama
By Rick Simpkins
Sports Correspondent

felt. Coon fed Hufl' with a nice pass
inside to give the Falcons a short·
lived 21-20 lead. Wedge scored
with 24 seconds left in the half to
give the Blacks a narrow 22-21
halftime lead.
Wahama came out with fire in
their eyes in the third quarter, led
by seniors Danny Hudson and John
Johnson. Hudson hit a pair of three
pointers and a field goal while
Johnson, a three-spon star at
Wahama, made two treys to help
the Falcons outscore the Big Blacks
18-16 and take a one point lead of
their own going into the final canto.
Poim hit a couple of threes of their
own, one by Moore and one by
Wedge to stay even with the Fal·
cons. Wedge connected on two ftcld
goals to go with his three pointer to
fmish witll seven tllird quarter
points.
The Falcons scored the first two
points of tile fourth quarter on a
pair of free throws by Coon to take
a three point lead. But, after Malt
Wedge converted a three point play
a couple of minutes later, the Big
Blacks were back in the lead. VanMeu:r scored for the Falcons to tic
the game at 43, but the Big Blacks
then went on a 7-0 run to ice the
game. Wedge stole the ball and

went the length of tile court for a
layup and the Blacks then scored
the next five points from the free
throw line, two each from Chip
Wood and Moore and a single foul
shot by Wedge. Coon scored again
for Wahama at the :23 mark, but
Dorsey capped the scoring by
making both ends of a one and one
to set the final score. ·
"Point took us out of our oircnse
at the end and as a result, we took a
couple of bad shots," said Hall.
"But, I was very pleased with our
effort all night. Especially Mike
VanMeter and Danny Hudson.
Mike rebounded the ball very well
and Danny played perhaps his best
game of the season. Our guys gave
it everything they had and for that
I'm proud," concluded Hall.
"We were able to shut down their
three point shot in the last four
minutes and that helped us win the
game," said Barnette. '"And, we
rebounded better tonight than we
have all season. I am especially
pleased with the elTorts of Kevin
Boyles and Austin Moore on the
boards. They really worked hard
under there and that was a big plus
for us," added Barnette.
Boyles and Moore emerged as
the game's leading rebounders with

The Point Pleasant Big Blacks
and the Wahama White Falcons
met on the hardcourt last night in
the first of their two annual
meetings, and the Blacks pulled out
a hard-fought 52-45 win over the
Falcons.
The outcome of the contest was
in doubt throughout the evening as
first one team and then the other
would gain an advantage only to
see their opponent scratch their
way back. Point's biggest lead was
seven points and they enjoyed that
margin on two occasions; with :46
left in the contest and again at the
fmal buzzer. Wahama, on tile other
hand, built an eight and a nine point
buzzer. Wahama, on the other hand,
built an eight and a nine point ad·
vantage midway through the first
quarter and also enjoyed a seven
point lead early in the second.
Both teams shot the ball poorly
as the statistics bear out. The Falcons made only 18 of 53 shots or
, 34%, while the Big Blacks connected on 17 of 45 shots which figures
out to 3M% shooting pcfFentagc.
"We didn't shoot the ball very well ,
e~ially in the first half. But, I
thmk Wahama's defense had a lot
to do with that," commented PPHS
head coach Lennie Barnette.
Wahama mentor Lew Hall also felt
his defensive scheme worked as
planned: "We pretty much did what
we wanted to do defensively," said
Hall. "We forced them to do certain
things offensively, but unfor·
tunately for us, tlley were able to
capitalize on some of them," added
the long time Wahama coach.
"Probably the key to .the contest
was the fact that we were able to
convert on some big free throws in
the fourth quarter," said Barnette.
"They were in a position where
they had to foul and our guys came
through," added the PPHS coach.
Coach Hall also felt there were
some keys to the contest, but he
differed on what those keys were.
"Point made the shots down the
stretch when they had to and I give
them credit for that. But, there were
some critical calls that I felt had a
lot of bearing on the outcome of the
game. On two occasions we con·
verted on three point shots and
were credited for two point field
goals instead. They came at crucial
times in the game and·had devastat·
ing elTects on our team .. Now, I'm
not trying to take anything away
from Point because they have a
pretty good. young, basketball
UP FOR THE BALL-Point Pleasant's Matt Wedge and Chip
team. But, those calls really hun
Wood
battle for the rebound against the strong Wahama defense.
us," explained Hall.
Wedge
finished the game as Point's leading scorer with 18 pointS,
The White Falcons came out of
the blocks very quickly, scoring the while Wood finished with eight.
first four points of the game enroutc
to building a 14·5 lead at the 2:15
mark of the opening quarter. John
Johnson led the Falcon charge with
a field goal and a three pointer
while Doug Huff connecu:d on a
pair of field goals. Four different
players scored for the Big Blacks
with Austin Moore and Matt Wedge
striking the biggest blows with a
three pointer each.
The Big Blacks used a 10·2 run
in the second quarter to turn a
TM McCulloch TITAN• 50 Cha•n Saw •• a powerful value.
seven point deficit into a one point
• 3.t cub&gt;c-&gt;nch eng&gt;ne
lead. After Wahama scored the first
a AdJUStable gear-dr iven mler w1th manual over r1de capability
three points of the quarter, Moore
• Cham Brake"~ /Hand Guard and ant1·V1brat1on syste m
• Easy-start electroniCIQnlt lon
hit a trey to trim the lead to four.
• Professional hard-chrome cylinder bore
Mike VanMeter then connected on
• One·year consumer warranty js1x-month profess1onal warranty)
a field goaf to increase .the margin
to six points. Moore and Elliott
Dorsey then scored the next seven
points of the game to take the B1g
Blacks to their first lead of the con·
test. That lead came with 54
1 mile South U.S. 35, Henderson, WV • 675·7421
seconds remaining in the half, and
was the result of a free throw from
Dorsey. Craig Coon, Wahama's
seasonal scoring leader, entered the
game prior to Dorsey's. free throw
and promptly made has presence

GIANT POWER
AND PERFORMANCE

&lt;9

13 each while VanMeter hauled
down 12 for the Falcons. Point en·
joyed a 56-39 advantage on the
boards.
OlTcnsively, Mau Wedge was the
game's high scorer with 18 points, ·
while Austin Moore added 14 for
the Big Blacks. Danny Hudson led
Wahama with 13 points while John
Johnson added 11.
The next outing for the Big
Blacks will be on Tuesday night
when they travel to Hurricane to
battle the Redskins in a Pioneer
Athletic Conference game. Wahama
will take on Kyger Creek on
Tuesday at home.
In tile prelim, Coach Dave Bod·
kin's Little Blacks pulled away
from Frank Capehart's young Falcons in tile second half to post a 50·
32win.
The Falcons, whose numbers
have been depleted, fought gamely
for two quarters, but the Little
Blacks were able to wear them
down and pull out the win.
Wahama, behind the scoring of
Tony Roush, grabbed the lead after
one quarter of play 12-9. Roush
scored 10 of the points to take a 10
poim halftime lead. Five different
players scored for the Blacks with
Wally Smith and Andy Childers
leading the way witll five points
each. Tommy Mayes hit a three
pointer and a field goal to score five
of tile Falcons' seven second
quarterpoints.
Wahama pulled within six points
midway through the third quarter,
while holding the Little Blacks
scoreless, but after priming their
pump, the Poimers ripped the nets
for 16 points over the final four
minutes of ~1e quarter to take a
commanding 46-26 lead going into
the final camo.
The fourth quarter was played
pretty even, as neither team had
much success putting the·ball in the
hole. Wahama scored six points and
Point only five to set the final score.
Tony Roush led all scorers in the
game with 16 points, while Wally
Smith had 14 and Ryan Roush 12
for the Lillie Blacks.
"We hit the boards pretty well
and played outstanding defense,"

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Gllllpolll

E. Dorsey
A. Moore
K. Boyles
C. Wood
M. Wedge

den hit a three-pointer to give the
Vi~ings a short-lived 53-52 lead.
fu!OCKhitsrRII~~Sthro T~evgr Meags held a .43-30 lead heading
son
our . ws 10 • e mto the f1,11al period.
2
~~~t_! dsecon ds to g~ve the Meth•gs
The win gives Coach Phil Harri·
'":"'"u ers a · 56. Y1CIO!Y ov~r e. son's Marauders a 7-4 and a 9·5,
·f 10 ~n 1ounty v:m~s ~\["·~al· Vinton County drops to 2-8 in the
e¥ on ere_nce as et a acuon TVC and 2-13 overall.
FnctcJ evemng at Larry R. Mom·
Meigs jumped out to~ II- 7 lea~
J;On rrn~a:&gt;•um.
,
at the end of the ftrst period. Harri·
' The Vikings led only once 10 the son scored five of the Marauders'
·ball.game and that came With 1:09 first-period points, and John Bent·
J.eft 10 the contest when Ray Brad· ley added four, while L.J. Mitch

0 0 0-0 0
II li 12·18 52

B. Bamctu:
Totals

said Point coach Dave Bodkin. "We
forced them into many turnovers
and we scored on a lot of them . We
hustled for four quarters and shot
the ball pretty well also. This is a
good game to win and we went af·
ter them," said Bodkin.
"I think they just wore us down,"
commented Capehart. "We don 't
have many players and in an up·
tempo game we arc at a distinct
disadvantage. But, I give Point a lot
of credit-they did what they had to
do to win," concluded the Wahama
coach.

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

'

February 2, 1992

WAHAMA
D. Hudson
2
J. Zuspan
0
M. VanMeter
4
D. Huff
3
J. Johnson
I
C. Coon
2
S. Ross
0
C. King
0
T. Mayes
0
Total
12

3
0
0
0
3
0
0
0
0
6

0-0
0·0
1·2
0-0
0-0
2·2
0-0
0-0
0-0
3·4

By DtVE HARRIS
T·S orrespondent

:.

59

13
0
9

6
11
6
0
0
0
45

'V •
I' fl
,

•·

Score by Quarters:
•·
I
2
3
4
Tot
POINT
10 12 16 14 52
FG 3pt FT Pts Point
14 7 18 6 45
106-68 Wahama
0 4 2·2 14
2 0 0:3 4 Team Fouls: Wahama 15, Point 12
3 0 2-4 8 Fouled Out: None
5 2 2-3 18 Officials: B. McCoy, B. Neal

~~-·~=~~.n,

so

"- =:..n. e.con:65Akn&gt;nN.79,Aksa!Buehtcl69

"""''"

2

~=6.~ i!'=:""'

60

Amhent72,AvonLWo5o
~ 66·iv-::96~ 57
: .wdi'?66. von~!"'61
: ;to,:um~.T:!t~":yS.sl

· ••h~tl:7s,P,J;,Yill,Hmo•70,20T
:1:'Ash~bW.I!daewood 93,ccm..' ut 76
;~~:~~~,~~~St.John 51
sB•y79,FairvicwPut56
tit.~~;:;.:1~ 44
·:seUofon~ino69,Sprina, Nri-.m ss

FARM, TRUCK, AUTO

$325

Bmot.ficld52,CDftl"' t.ucview46
nmot.aido64,Avon52
)lrulh '~ MoploH~. 48
)lryan &amp;3, Mon.tpelier63
i:.tdweU6l, Woodofield s7,OT
i:unbridJeiOO,BuaoMUol9
70.cUclcvill• 66
cCanton
... twonchcacr
Hed.llp 83, E. [jYeJPOD]. Otr. 66
Conton Tunlten 6l,C..t"' &lt;l!..,o.a; ss
Cudinoi77.Lodaanootl7
):my 84, Tiffin Calvert 83, OT
c ...u..., ss,c."'""' s. •s
c..tori&lt;wJ64, E. Kno•61
Centerville S!S, Fairborn 52
ct..mpion 71 , 8 ,d.., 41
tt..nei!S,O.udon!IDa.l3
(J1Citpake 93, BWI'alo. w.v•.68
Chillicothel3, w..terVill, N. 51
c~ . """"""' 66, Amelio S2
, CAPE 62 C' lndion Hill S4
..~·.. ~--· ~........ IU&amp;.... 54
E
C~. Country Day 89, New Miuni 76
t~. EldorB6,Cin. B•con74
.,.. nm-~79 c· S Ri 44
~m. ~• ' an, L ~
Cin. Hu&amp;hct 70, Cin. Nonhwat S4
tm. Loildond 7S, Cin. Londmull 53
,.._,....,.;., 6
, 2.

IXBAU.S ' SPECIAL!

Dual Exhaust
w/glass packs
(Most Autos)
See Dean Rainey-

$99

95

.. , .. _

c~.!.oveWidi02,Cin.Readina 64

Cin. Muianont 57, Cin. Madeira so
Cin. Mocllcr74, Cin. MeNitholu l1
C.n. au HillA 60, Cin. ML Hulthy l6
Cin. Pwecll-Marian 63, Cin. LaSalle 52

~in. sov,. Hillol6. Cin.

14 Years of Experience!

SL Bemud s2

~in.Summitn,B•t.ovio64
53 C~. Twpin 44
Cin.
Cih. T•ft
Walnut•Hllll64,
Harriam 56

Cin. We~!an Hilli7S. Cin. Withrow 66
Ci,n. Winton Wood• 43, ND1"WWOOI42
CiD. Woodward 52. Olen B&amp;~.e48
Cin. Wyominl 54, Cin. Deer M 21
ymon14l,C"'hoolut38
)1«1 NDI'Ihm&lt;l'li63, Troy 57, Oi'
e. Calholic73, Padua SS
Clc. Collinwood 67, Qc. Adaml65
Clc. Clcnrillc71, Cle. Kennody 66
!e. Hei&amp;hli7S, Puma 70 .
!e. Linooln·W01147, Ce. Elll37
Je. Manhall70, Cc. Eaa Tech 64
Cle. Rhodei6S, Op. Jhy 62
C\c. Stll"atiua 44, Tol. St. Francia 43

Complete Exhaust SeNice

~

We do allga•eat, brakes, ••chaaic, oil chaage!

~

POOR BOYS TIRE, INC.
RT. 35, HENDERSON, W. VA.
(304) 675-3331
TOLL FREE 1-800-479-5025

(I~

Univenit,73,KiUi ..... 39

tie. Wctt Tech 94, Qc. Soulh 81
l;lermonl Northr.~llem Sl, Wcum Brown 62
CUnlon-Manie 66. CedmWe 61
Cloverte,(S6, Btun~wick S4
'cOl. Bri&amp;P 61, Col. Eutmoor61
:col BrOC*hivllll'l59, Col Milllin 53
1Col. Eul63,Col. Ccnlalnial 51
~Col. Lindcn-MdCinley 58, Col. Beeehcrcf\ SS
,Col. South 73, WalnutRidJc 71, OT

Where There's
Warntth,
There's A Whitfield

~.~·~}:,·~~.. 40

Onnvillo67, Mill"'port43
8::"',;.:~~~s. s7
!Umil~&lt;&gt;~~57, Cin. Sywn... 47
t::ll""'¥'dinS5,Cin.St.X•vierS4
Hoath':'d,B:I:;.~.!'S2-c.n.u 76
llob.,..l.akowood S4, Belley 38

~·,~w~"liit!~ ~

'JligW•In,.73,LieltingV.U.5l
)llmoh- Sl, SprinJboro60
•8 ,...1,66,A.,...s2

Clteclc Our Prices!

.......- 44
Onh•m58,vonaill
..

OWOU•Scio 4,, r...... wu c.u, 44
lolm01a1n7l,Mo'Jon60
Konw LUotol3, Elmwood 31

JJ~dlord64,Tri·Coun:rN. 52

ICol. w,...,.. 63, Col. R..dy 58
'Col. w..tlond 60, Thomu Worthinaton 59, ar
:O::ot. Whetot"'' 77, Col. NOdhlond &amp;6
iLoldWII.Ct 51, M.rion loeal.54 .
0Coloncl Cnwfonl64, Wynlon162, 20T

.Columbia 63, Be~~hwood 46
«:oo~~ Vall. 78, Edison N. 48

ICoploy l9, N""""lO

'covinaton 60, Milli11inawa v.u. 53
'Cridersville Pal)' 76, Pauldina70

hcbm !12., Marietta 40
lloll'.....; 80, ~dio&gt;n l7

~~e:!~k'i:!'::~~oOT
Milbu~
LUe 79, Syl•mi• SoothviewlB
·~

N.A..... l9,l.oeabwaF.u!icl l6

Wieltli1To77,0nnao48

KCIMOII 65, O!udm62

KM~&lt;&gt;~~l5.Cclinol3

48 ·S.rina.St..wnoo 47
KMtonRid&amp;&lt;
t..bnc58,Rubbulf48
Lcxlnaton74,A&gt;hl.,.dS9
l..ibertyContor 73 ·E•"'B""" 57
l..ibcn.y Otr. ?!, MiddletOwn Chr. 6.5
l..ibertr u.u... sJ, New Ait..ny 29
61
l..iokinls""·65 .FilhorCU..
61
Lim• ,Millon1
l.i,mt Shawnco63, Dafiam:e60

Lim• s,,95,

Millonl61
47·t.ucRidgel6
LincolnB•pa"
l.inoolnview 57, Columbul Grove SO
Lopn l4, o.tlipolilll
45
LopnEimll,Amond•.Ciw=o~&lt;
London B6, Jonldwl Alder 71
Loudcnville61, aou F&lt;Wlt 45
t.o.iavillo~3,Dovorl9

Lucanilla v.ue, S8, s. Webster 48

Madioon AoUu 14, '"""''"wn 60
Malvcm 72, Ridsewood 41
Mwficld
Oil. 66, Opal 0... Ou. 49
Marufield Sr. 83, Marien Hard6f
' 79
Marion·Fnnklin 89, Col. w,..
Mulinatoo 76·Minm• 63
Mu&amp;illon Jackson60, Musillon Perry SO
Maumee
62,R'"llood 48
McCm~b 59 • Co-rv-Rut50n 35
Mod~• 64 • 8 ~, 36
Mo••
· s9 v·tni.M o..uuuly
~-- S6
..
,.,l6,Marliddll
M
Miami Trace 4 ~. Orcenfidd 42
Middletown 69, Cin. l'!inooiDn 61
Middlelown Madio&gt;n 72. Cuiw.S 3
I

LYUIWILII

Wayne Trace 68, An\wc:rp 38
Waynafield·Gt.hm 79, RidJaMftl 76
Wt::ltlaie 58, Rocky River 53
Whclclina (W.Va.) l..Uu:ly 61, Toronto 60
Whi&amp;cha!i 71, MuyMtk. 56

Minford M, McDamou NW 38
Minao 66, BcllaiR SL1ohn's 64
Minatcr 44 , Parkway43
M01111 Vanon 75, Reynold!~ 74

N. Bond Taylor 56. Ennc)10Wn 37
N. Olnuled 65, Olmlted Falh 57, OT
N. Union66, Buckeye Vab. S9
Naliiona!Tni168, Ken~ 61
~~w BOltOn 87, Beav~f&amp;•tern 58
Hew Knoxville 83, NeW Brem.en 67
New Philtdelphia 69, Unioru.own Lake 59
Ncwuk 72, Zanuville 11
Newad C11h. 66, Col. Hartley 62

. Willard 66, Tilflll Columbian 53
Willi~m~bu1J88, Bethel·Tttc76.
Willo-Hill76, Medina Fim B•ptin 4g
Willoughby S. 64, Bedford 61
Windham 15, Field 12
Win~e 68, 00 Glen, W.Va. 40
Wol'lhinji\OI'I 0\r. 77, Lucu 69
Xrnia 61, Spring. Sw\1161
Xenia Will On 76, Mannathl Cu. 66

Nowbwy7l,FWpor!Huding64

Yellow Spring•82, W1yni:MU.62

NoW\(~!. F.U. 69,

Youna. Boardman 59, AlliWI10wn Fiu:h 58
Ywna. c.tvary 100. CJc. Hc:ri~qe 6S
Yout~~. Ott. 78, Sharon Otr. 24
Youna. Raycn 69, Youna. East 58
Younl.UnuJinc 71, Nite.ll
Youna. Wileon 64, Youna. Chaney 59
Zane Trac:c58 , Hwttingt.on 53
Zane.ville ROitlCftftl 67, Col. DeSalCI 56

Young. Liberty 54
· Nordoni• 87, Ravennt 61
Northridge 57, Danville 49
Northwood 71, Woodmorc 62
N,....tlt 65, Bellcvuo 58
Oak Hill86, HaMan Tncc 56
Oberlin 69, F'udand' 57

Olentangy 88. Utica 86
Oreaon Cl1y 15, Sylvani• Nor\hview 43

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

Cmakcvillo66, MoyMIIe63

!D•y. SIAibbiN62, WuhinatGICHl3
lo.Jpli.. JdfasCII 69, S....,..,;tlel2
,o.J.. 1s. s-74, or
·Ooblin l3, ou,...,. 43
d t CiniGII 63, SG~Ilwu\em 60
IE, L.ivapool69, Wellcville45
'E.d1wood 62, 0ueao SO

Siders Equipment Co.

Sidncv Ldvnan 94, Milm-Union 73

Sotoo'6HiahluNil2,
1. Twinobu'JMuion
S4 !¥"SO, ar
s,.,..
Sprins. Nooh6l,K...,;.~pwmon•l8
SL Hcruy 91, Ma~don·Uruon 36
St. Mary• 60, Olllwa·Gl111dorfS6, OT
s·-··-·"" 77 w · wv ss
s::.;'M:ii:..,.;,..'Sr'·
s,....bolv 7l.c...twood 63· '·
Stronpville 7 s.~~=« 59
SU\IIbml&lt;l, w,, Kemody 37
Svlvmil Sou&amp;hview72, N. RidFvillc 65
s;..,. .. v.u. 63, P.triot s.,thw"""' 42
TUirnod.. 66,GromS7
Toi.
Contni69,ToLBowlher5S
Tol. Quillian 149, Mlumoc V.U. 71
Tot Emonucl B•plilt S2,1•cksm (Mich.)a,. 47
Toi.
Rogen66,Tol.l..ibbey54
Tol. St. Jol.i'• 53, Tol. Scou 51
ToL w.;tc 10, Totswt 68, ar
To!. Whhmer96,Bedlood, Mic~ 60
Tol. Woodward 74, Danbury 70, ar
Tri·V.Uer 70, Philo 59
Trimble73,N.....,viii&lt;&gt;Yod&lt;n
Triwty 73, W. Holrra S7
Trot•ood·M•dilon 81 , Piqu• 55
r .. t.w n, Alum cov..uy 63
U
lu"·~- 73 Worh '
Kilbo
43
ppcr -•-· •
Wilton
\line
Vibey Fcqc 75,l.&amp;ltewood 48
v.u., Viow73, 8ellbrook 62
VonWen64,W•Pikon..,.,
Vanda'!·-Bu\la 55.,'Wott Carrollton 54
"'
ViClOf)' Ott. 84, Pmterl¥ille JJ
Vinoalt wuren 63, Alh&lt;m l6 .
53
W.Bnndsi2.C..•tFW!onNW
w. OiOILGl LU04178, Fairfield 39
w•dtwonu•
-•1s, "·"·· u··"•nd49
16'w.~hi..W• 76, LouiovilloAquin" 63
Wam:~t Hantina 66. Your~a. Mooney 49
wo~edoo 5l, &lt;10-30
w.tltwMemm.I70,Fm\l&lt;linH•.60
Wm&lt;ly 19•\Vhcclenbura 83

Cuylhop F.U. 66, Kll'll ROOICVdt45 .
Cuyahop Hta. 6!, Richmond Hll. 64
Day. Dunbtr93. Iny. Pattenm 78
O.y. Je!fetiOI'I &amp;5, Day. OW!ian 68
o.y. Oakwood 78, Preble Shtwncc 68

$329

&lt;mvillo 7o,MJnaficldModU&lt;&gt;n 64
o.roniT.t...nda9l,curouso
P.inavilloRivonid• 43· 0 "'.,. 38
Paint Vall. 60, Unioto S4
Pecbl.. 7o.s•.mn;.Eo...,.63
Piok•rinftoos7,Dcl•w"'43
~";,,&amp;,'~=·~
Plymoulh73,Mapt....,s5
:;;.,~·~~·Y~-:=.;::th E.38
PooumouoiiW. 78,Rockllill66
!UoineSouthomSJ,N.Gdlio 61
Reedn411cEu\em66,KJ~erCrcek65
Richmond
D.te south....., 79, Adenal2
River v.u. 74, Mowu Oilw147
~::!';~:~;,.~f"dac 62
swwty 69, Lenin 64
:::,~;:70:0~, 46
Shoridon63,RiverView43

2:.":~:&amp;..~1/ 1

,o~.•87,0•y.Meadowd.te8S

'.Bowlin&amp; ORen 41, Holland Sprina. 45

""'Tu

ou.. s6,u'afs.nduuyll
Ouf!cldH•. ,Lonh.,.,E.60

HowlandO!l.67,8cthoiChd2
~~~'&amp;2.'1.u~n w 75
Indian Voll 69, T•••a.•wu Voll 38
lno1ton5i,&lt;nocnupCounty,Ky.48

·BenJurutl Losm 70, T111d 4S
Bot.shire44, Kirthnd 34
1lerlin Hihnd 80, Strubur&amp; Sl

NEW RETREADS INCLUDING
245·50·VR 16
WITH NEW TIRE WARRANTY
SET OF 4 FOR ONLY

scored two.
Meigs used a balanced scoring
auack in the second period to
increased the lead to 27·16 at the
end of the farst half, Shawn Hawley
and and Mitch paced· the Maraud·
ers' second period scoring with
four points each. Andy Booth
~ored 10 of the Vikings 16 points
m the half.
Meigs outscored the Vikings 1614 in the third period and took a
seemingly comfortable 43-30 lead

·

Ab.aE.60,Amn OJrlicldS7,ar

TIRES!

FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

:Eaton 79, DWe 54
•E6on S. 56, Beaver Local 52
~Eli da 79, Uma B.uh 54
.Elyrio 63, Vozmilion 62
•Hiyria W. 63, Kc)'ltme49

:~::!~·#::t~!!8MJ 43

~Fai.dieW Union 77, Tet)'l ValL 67
:FaidCII 69, Sandy Vall. 59
oFodenl Hocl:inJ 64, WeloiM 5l
,Feli&lt;:ity Fnnk1in 62, N. Coll'1•11ill61
•Findlay 79, Lmwta 61 ,
•Fort Lotamie 57, R~a~il44
1
F01\0iil S1. Wcndclln IS, N. Btltimore II
:Franklin furnace Green 59, Po1t1mou1h Npu-o
,O.mo•2
, Ftodedcklown S4,Cn1Ulnc53

McCULLOCH.

'FNI!IOIII.RDII71. Fol&amp;oN 64

4Frontier 7l. FL frye 61 ·
~Fl. lemina- 64, MillerCI)' 62
~ Ft. R"""'")'l1, Dotphoo SL I olin ··~l

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

. 2STH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

(304) 675-1675

Rei iable . Solid Statt Controls

GET YOUR FREETIC
TO BE ELIGIBLE FOR
OHIO VALLEY BANK'S

~®®® [J=Q@@[F) ®[XJ@@

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•COMPLETE STOCK

M~n's Sport Shirt.s

Lo,.· Cost Installation · Vems Throu!).h the
\\'all Like a Gas Appliance!

Whitjitld.

Bums lip to 48 Horm
Wilhout Reloading!
\

Saje,-Overfeed System

·Corduroy Slacks ··

l11stalls Virtually Anrwl1ere!

Stlf Fueling ·N&lt;• Ha~'le!

CEDARVILLE-RIO GRANDE GAME
TUESDAY, FEB. 4, .1992 7:30 P.M ..
·'
LYNE CENTER
.
RIO GRANDE ···~

•COMPLETE STOCK MEN'S

Low Emissions · Whilfield Bums
Clean and easy to use; efficiem and clean
burning, Whilneld wann! the nation -one
satisned owner ai a time. Bring home the
woodhealin~ of lomorrow . today ...

~

.

Wh1tfield

•COMPLOE UNE

Prlees Wllllln'er be
lower on ov In ·
stock anltlu we

Men's Hats
,.

p...,....l~rlpl'lnc.

SPORT COATS

WARM UP TO WHITFIELD. COME FIND YOURS TODAY, AT.....
'

HOURS:

.

N Mon.~s.t.;
•CICIIICI8unday .
'
Evening~ by Appointment :,
· 701 leoond Ave.,
1

Gllllpolll, Oh. -~.

0 VB t0 s•nonsor R lO•ced. arvl"lle game
'

-

0

'J:'

RIO GRANDE
Oha'o Valley
Bank will again provide its annual
sponsorship of the men's basketball
game between the University of
Rio Grande and Cedarville College
on Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. in Lyne
Center.
Tickets for the game can· be
obtaa'ned at all OVB locations,
including the main office, the mini·
bank and the Jackson Pike office,
all in Gallipolis; the Rio Grande
office; and its new offaces in Jack·
I N ."
'II
son and Waver y. o tiC ets WI
be given out on the night of the
game'
·
Those wishing to panicipate in
the halftime activity- OVB's
hoop ShOOt with a $5()() Cash prize
-must have tickets. Bank offtcials
w•'ll draw a tt'cl:et enta'tla'ng the
holder to be called to shoot a bas·
ketball from mid-court. If unsuc·
be
cessful, tickets will continue to
drawn and those called will mover
closer to the b""Lel
until someone
a».
wins.

Sports briefs
BasebaU
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Barry
Bonds, who had lost arbitration
hearings the last two years, agreed
with the Pittsburgh Pirates on a
$4.7 million contract, the highest
one-year deal in baseball history.

'

A donation by OVB to the Rio Lawhorn commented. "Activitl·es·
Grande Athletic Boosters fund such as this game bring the campus '
enables Rio Grande to continue ·and community together for whai•
attracting quality student-athletes we think is a verv enjoyabl{
1•
th
th Oh'
B th
· 1".
'
to e sou em 10 campus. o
evenmg .or everyone.
Redmen Coach John Lawhorn and
:'Ohio Valley Bank is an organi::
Athletic Director Tom Perdue zauon that beheves greaUy in th~"' ·
hailed the continuing support from development of academic and ath· ·
OVB to the institution and its ath· letic talent at Rio Grande, and we' '
letic programs.
are most appreciative of their inter·
"Ohio Valley Bank Night has est and support, as shown in their '
h· f
traditionally been a huge success sponsors tp o this game," Perdue ·.
for the bank and our program." added.
,.

VOTE YES
February 4th
Support the Gallia
County Ubrary Levy We Need Your
Support.
GFWC.Community League ,
ol Gallia County
"

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Fol'1'1gn Subsidiaries)

·-'

The Ohio Valley Bank

•,

Federal Reserve District No. 4
of GaiUpolls, GaiUa County, In the Stale of Ohio attbe dose of business on December 31,1991.
ASSETS
Cash and blllances due from depository inslirutions:
a. Noninte,.sl-beariilg balances and cwtency and coin ............................................ ........................ 7,455,000.00
b. Intercsl·bearing blllanc:es ............... ............... .............................. ........ .............. .............. ............ 12,000,000.00
Securities ................................................................................... ......... ..... ........ ,....... ....... ... .... ·, ............72,433,000.00
Federal funds sold &amp; securities purchased under agreements
to ....uin domestic offica or lbe bani: &amp; of its
Edge &amp;. A&amp;IUotenl subsidiaries&amp;. in mFs:
Federal lundJ sold............................................................... .........................................................6,200,000.00
Loans and lease fmancing rec:c:ivabtcs:
Loans and leases, nel or unearned income .............................. .......... .......... t51.419.000.00
LESS: Allowance lor loan and lease losses ........................................... .......... l,701,000.00
Loans and leases, net or unearned income,
allowance, and ,.serve ...............................~ ... .............................. .......... ,, ..................... .... , ........... t55,7 l8,000.00
Premises and ftxed assets (including capilalized leases)........................... .......... ................................. 4,416,000.00
Total assets ............................................ ............ ......................................................... ,.................... 261,338,000.00
Total assets and losses deferred pursuant t 2 U.S.C. 1823G)........................................................ ,... 261,338,000.00
LIABILITIES
Deposits:
a. In domestic offices......................... ,.............. ,........ ... .................. ............. ........... ..... ....... ........... 23 8,965,000.00
(1) Noninterest-bearing ........................................................................... ... I8,470,000.00
(2) lnte,.st-bearing ............... ,.............. ,.................... ......... ............... ........ 220,495,000.00
Federal fundi purchased and securitier sold under agrecmenl
to ,.purclwe in domestic offices of lbe bank&amp; of its
Edge &amp;. Ag10ement subsidiaries. &amp;. in mFs:
Securities sold under ag10ements to repurcbase ........... ............ ..................... ...................... ..... .......... 3,859,000.00
Olber bono wed money......................................... ..... ...:............ .......... ............... ,............ ...........................20,000.00
Other lilbililiol..................... ................ ................ .. ................... ....... ,... .:.......... .··........... ,, ·,, ... ··............ 2,608.000.00
Tollllilbililieo................... ... .................................. ................................................... ....................... 245,452,000.00 ,
.
EQUITY CAPITAL
CoDIIIIon stock (No. of Shan: a. Aulborized .................. 459,606
b. Outstanding..................459 ,606)................ ,,,............. .. ...... .. ........... ,.4,596,000.00
Swplus (exclude allswplus related lo p-elerred stock.............................................................. ,..........6,906,00Q.OO
a.Undivided profits and capital ,.scrvcs ........... ,... ,....................... ............. ................ ... ...... .. ............ 4,61 0,000.00
b. LESS; Net unmlized lou on marketable equil)'•tecurilics ................. ,.................................... ........ 226,000.00
Total equity capital.......... ............................................... ... ....................................... ,............ ............. 15,886,000.00
Total equity copital anc1 loner defeiTed
punuanllo 12 u .s.c . t823(j)........................... ;.... .......... .................................... .................. ,.......... t5,886,000.00
Total UlbUilies, limitcd-llfe prefeiTed stock, and cquil)' capital,
.
· and losses detemd punuancto 12 U.S.C. 18230) ......................................................................... 261 ,338,000.00
MEMORANDA: AIDOunll outatandlng u of Report Date:
Slanclby leaen of credit. Total...................... ................................ ..................................... ..................4 t 4,000.00
· 1, the unclmianed oft"ICCI', do hereby de&lt;lare that Ibis Report of Condition bas be~n prepared in conformance
with officlallolbU&lt;:Iions and 'itll'Ue and correct to the best or my knowledge and bebef.
.
Madge E. Bous
Vice President andControUer, January 21 , 1992

. ..,

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.

~f th~' Report of CoOditlon and declare lblil it hds been
examined by Ill llld 1o !be besl or our tnowledgelllll belief IIK!Iw been prepared·in coafo1111ance wilb official
We, !be undersigned dirlcton, sttell this correctness

OFF

lnsll'Uclic)l• and it triio and correcL

B. Dalley
MoniJ B. Hastinr - OU.CIIln
Jetl'nly E. Smith
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Swcm 111 and sublcrlbtd before 1111 Ibis 2ht doy or lanuory, 1992 illd I beleby certify lbal I am not on
olftcc or director of tbll baM.
' ·
..
Plllla W. Salisbury, Notary Public
Plllla w. So!labury, Notary Public, Stall of Oblo. My co~lorlexpuer Moudt 18, 1993.
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COMPLETE STOCK

suns.&amp;

into the fmal eight minutes. But the ning coach Phil Harrison said afler rebounds. Aaron Drummer added
Vikings refused to roll over and the game. "We made far to many II points, seven rebounds and four
play dead. And Vinton took their turnovers, most of them unforced. steals while Jim Pullins had a good
only lead when Bradden hit the But we were able to get bact our game pulling in six rebounds.
three pointer with just over a composure in the end."
. Meigs as tied for ftrst place in the
minute remaining.
Harrison led all scorers with 21 TVC reserve title hunt with
Junior guard John Bentley points, and Bentley added 11 Alexander. The two teams will
answered Bradden's bucket when mcluding the key three-pointe; meet on Tuesday evening, with the
he drilled a three-pointer with 35 down the stretch. Meigs h1t 26 of game gening underway at 6 p.m. iri
seconds left in the contest to give 47 from the floor, including two for "The Alley" at Alexander.
Meigs the lead for good at 55·53. six from three-point range for 55%.
In other TVC games Friday.
After a missed Viking shot, Mitch The Marauders went to the line Coach Jay Rees' Spartans slipped
grabbed a big rebound for the seven times and hit five for 71%. past Miller 62-60 at Alexander,
Marauders. Harriso~ was fouled Meigs pulled in 24 rebounds, with Federal Hocking km~ked off .Well·
with 12 seconds left tn the con!Csl Jay Cremeans grabbing six and stan 64-~5 and Tramble slapped
while shooting .off the offenstve Milch ftve. Meigs turned the ball past archrival Nelsonville· York 73·
boards. Trevor hll both free throws over 20 tames, came up with 10 72. Belpre d1d not play.
and Meigs was on top 57:5~. But steals with Bentley leading the way Q~arter totals
:
Alan Kiefer gave the Vakangs a with four. Bentley had four of the VmtonCounty ......7 91426= 56
glimmer of hope when he hit a Marauders' 13 assists, and Meigs Meigs .................. lll51416= 59
three-pointer with two seconds left. was called for 15 .,.....,nal fouls.
VINTON COUNTY (56) --'
-The Vikings desperate to stop
Booth led the rVikings
with 20 , Ray Bra dd en 4 · I •0= II • And Y·
the clock, took a big gamble a points, 12 of them coming from Booth 3-4-2=20, Alan Kiefer 0-1 -;
called a time out despite not having long range. Bradden added 11 with 3=6 •. Scott Braden 3·0·3=9, Jason.
any left and Vinton County was ninecominginthefmalperiod,and W1lhams 2-2·0=10. TOTALSassessed a technical foul. Once Jason Williams added 10. No other 12·8·8=56
again a cool Harrison cashed in on st~t!stics were available on the
MEIGS (59) -Shawn Hawley
the free throws to close out the Vikings.
4-0·0=8, L . J. Milch 3·0·0=6,
scoring. After the free throws the
In the reserve game, Coach Rick T revor Harmon 8· 0•5=21 • John
Marauders were able to get the ball Edwards and· the Marauders rolled BenUey 4·1·0= II, Phil Hovatter J.
in ·bounds and run off the final two to their 12th straight win and their 0-0=2, Bobby Johnson ~-0·0=4,,
seconds o~ the g~e.
lOth in 11 bi~ in the TVC by post· Jay Cremeans.2-0·0=4, Enc Wagn-·
"We lned to g~ve the game back mg a 56-29 vactory. Jack Stanley er 0-1·0=3. TOTALS - 24·2·
to them in the fourth quarter" win· led Meigs with 19 points and ftve 5=59

~~·::~~::.~.~:::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::: ::::::::::. :::::::::: :::::::::::: :::::::::::: ::::::.. : ::::::.:: :: :.. :' 2~~j:~~

PELLET STOVES &amp; FIREPLACE INSERTS

High Efjicicnc.v for Maximum Heating

59-56 win over Vinton County

day 's hIg
• h sc h00 I.bas
· ketb aII scores

~'

Sunday Times Sentlnei-Page-C7

•·

�Today's comes

Allude Dhlllao

S.n.Joteat W,imipea.l:OS p.m.
Quebec II Ecinonton, 4:05p.m.
Cal&amp;try atN.Y.ldandca, 5;0!1 p.m.
St. C.0W. at Philldclphil, 1:35 p.m.

WLMCB

Now Yai..............ll 15
BOID\...." .." ''"'"''"'27 17

.6:11

.614

1.5

PIUiadelpiUa ...........22 23 .419
Miami .................... 21 24· .467

Now.Jeney _....." ... l9 lS

.432

7
I
9.5

29

.326
.250

17.l

w.....,.... .. .... l4

Orlando .................. ll 33

14

Ohio girls high school
basketball scores
Akrm Chr. 41, AlwltcrChr. 13
Chi1lico&amp;he 39, Wc:ltCn'ille N. 31
Clc. Collinwood 6S, Clc. Ad~ma62
Cle. Eut49, Cle.l...incoln-W111. 42
Ctc. Otmville 66, a .. Konnocty 38
Clc. H1y l4, Clc. Rhodco 45
C1c. Mmb.U 64, Cle. Eul TO&lt;h 21

Central Dhldon

Chicaao............•.....31 7
Ctewelud.---..29 13

.1144
.ftl

o-m. ...................25 20
Allanta ...................23 21

.556
.523

Mibt1ukce .............20 23

.465

lndUno ................. .17 21
Owtoa. ................l2 32

.378

.273

7.J

13
14.!
17
21

25.5

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwt1l Dhillon

Te..
W L
Ullll ...................... ~ 17

Pet.
.630

Gl

.591

2

HOUIIUI ........... ...... 2A 19
Denwr: ,_, ...............17 26
Dallu .....................l3 30
Minaco ... ................7 36

.558

3.5

.395

I 0.5

San Antonio ........... 26 18

14.5
.163 20.l
.302

Padn. Dl&gt;lokln
Panland ................. 30 13 .698
Golden S!flte .......... 27 13 .675
Pbocnix ................. 29 16 .644
L.A. utm ........... 27 16 .628
S..ute .................... 22 23

.489

S•cnmmto ........... .l4 lO

.318

16.S

L.A. Clil'l"" -········20 24

.455 10.5

Friday's scores
l'lillldolphio 112. Olbndo II

New Ycd: 125, Wuhi.nJt.on: 114, OT

Indiana 115, Alltn\1 106. OT
Scaule 122, Charlou IOS

o.u.;, 109. MWm 91

Milwwkoo 102.11oaon 100

ChiciJo 107, O.UU 92

San Anlfrlio 103, MinnCKU 101
UW. 117. Phocni•IIO. OT

Ponlmd 113, New Jersey 101
Ooidal StaLe 124, Deaver 103
s,.,..,_ 112, LA. Q;_. I 09

Tbey played Saturday
DOIIalll Philldclpllil, 7:30p.m.

Dcuoit It Allan&amp;a, '7:30p.m.
"Dt!W, 1•30 ~...

uw.

Ho!MICII It Phoenil. 9:30p.m.
11

Cle. Welt T«:h 12, Cle. Soulh 32

~bliA 64, Ooh~ru~~54
E. Liverpool Chr. 49, Can1on Hcritap 33
Ot&lt;Mport61, W......uteS. ll
Hilliud 56, Orove City 46
llowt.nd au. 4l,ll«hel au.31
JGdtm 41. CVCA 31
Noonlndy 56. Oodield !Ill. 47
Ro)UO}dlbu.ra 49, Mount V.mnon 38
R.oet:y Riverldaanlf'~ 52, Cl.e. VASJ
Shaw 71, Sllak• He~. 45

Lyne Center slate
RIO GRANDE- The activities
schedule lor Lyne Center is as follows:
Gymnasium hours
Sunday - 1-3 p.m., open recreation; 5:30-7:30 p.m. p.m .. college
recreation
Monday- 5:30-7:30 p.m.,
open recreation
Tuesday- closed for women's
baskeJball vs. Walsh, 5:15p.m.;
men's baskeJball vs. Cedarville,
7:30 p.m. (Ohio Valley Bank
Booster Night)
Wednesday- 5:30-7:30 p.m..
college recreation
Thursday- 5:30-7:3.0 p.m .•
college recreation
Friday - 7:30-9:30 p.m., open
recreation
Saturday - closed for
women's basketball vs. Tiffin (Parents Day), 5:15p.m.; and men's
basketball vs. Ohio Dominican
(McDonald's Booster Night)
Sunday, Feb. 9 -1-3 p.m ..
open recreation; 5-7 p.m., college
recreation

Trw ofW'c li,DclawareCht. 31
Upper ArlinJlOn 40, Wonhinaton

Kilboume30
Vicxm-y Ou. 39, Poncnvillc 31
Wau.inl Mcmorill 86, Fnnk.lin Hll .

l.S
2

3
9

New Jeney
p.m.

at TOICifltO. I:QS p.m.
V~er.I:OS p.m.

Chicqo allol ¥•· l 0:35 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
T-

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Brian Davis led Grace Christian's
22-point assault on visiting Ohio
Valley Christian in the frnt quaner .
of Friday nighl's game, and by the
time the Defenders were able to
match their fust-half offensive output in the third quarter, it was too
late. Grace expanded its 22-point
lead by ·10 in the home Slretch and
won67-35.
Davis racked up 14 points in
becom_ing Grace's lone double-fig-ure scorer. Ohio Valley's Noah
Smith led all scorers with 19
points, and teammate Dusty Hill
chalked up 12.
The Defenders, 3-11 overall,
will play HeriJage Christian Tues-

-..y
Hutfcrd at

In theNBA ...

L.A. Ciippen, 10:30

44

41

Watland 42, Thom11 Worthin£lon
Wbllthall58, Maryl¥i.Uc 42
Wi11o-Hill41, Medina FBCS 31

· Transactions
Baseball
Amerku Lupe
BALTIMORE ORIOLES -As"""
lO \ami with Dcnnia Rurmwen, pitcher,
CIR I minot-leifJC conlRCl with Rocht~~a
of the International leaJUe.

CAIJFOINIA ANOELS - AJ"""
lO tcrmt

with Shawn Abner, outfielder, on

I CJOOo)'CIIt COI\trut.

KANSAS CITY ROYALS - A'"""
to 1cmu1 wilb Kevin Se:iw:r, third

&amp;uc-

man, and Jim Eilenreic:h, outfielder, on
one-you c:cnttaeu and Jerry Don Glea10t1,

pi1Chcr, on a minor·le~pc oonuacl wir.h
Omaha ol.lhc American A.uociation.
National Leape
ATLAWT A BRA YES - Aped 1o
lCrml wilb Jeff Blauser, lhorutop, on a

ono-,ear c:ootncl.
CINCINNATI REDS - Agreed 10
wilh Norm Chuh.cn, pi~er. on a

Today's games

tennJ

GoWan St.aiO at Ntw Yczk, I p.m.
Orlando 11 Wubinpn, 1 p.m.
MlaMtOlllt Cle~tland, 1:31 p.m.
Seanle at Milwaukco, 2:30 p.m.•

Chica&amp;a tt LA. Liken, 3:30p.m.
CharloC&amp;c at Miami, 4 p.m.
Ind.i.w. 11 Dmva,4 p.m.
$aaamm10 II Por\llnd, 8 p.m.

ono-year conmcx.
COLORADO ROCKIES - Named

Pool hours
Sunday - 1-3 p.m ., open
swim; 5:30-7:30 p.m., college
swim
Monday -closed
Tuesday- closed
Wednesday - 5:30-7:30 p.m.,
college swim
Thursday- 5:30-7:30 p.m .•
college swim
Friday - 7:30-9:30 p.m., open
swim
Saturday- closed
Sunday,Feb. 9- 1-3 p.m.,
open swim; 5-7 p.m., college swim

Mike Swanaon director of media rcla·

tioo1, effective Mll'th 15.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS Agraod to \CnN wi1h Tim Crews, pit.cher,
Clll

ono-ycu contnct.

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES Aped to lCmll wilh Ricky Jordan, fi.n:t
bucrnan, and Wa Olamberlain, outfield-

In theNHL ...

er, Cl'l onc·ycu oon\nCII.

W~LES CONFERENCE
Patrlcl Ol&gt;iokln
Team
W L T Pia. GF GA
N.Y. R"''lm ..... 33 17 2 68 204167
w................. 29 17 4 62 214167
NewJcney ........ ~16 7 57181149

Pit""'-111 .......... 25 20 l 5l 221 195
N.V. W...dm .... 18 24 6 42182197
Philadelplti.o ....... 16 24 9 41 141 170

PITISBURGH PIRATES- AJ"""

with Bany Bondi, ouLC'tdder,
a Me·ym.r corontt.
lo tetm•

~

BasketbaU
National B.. keiiMII Auoclatlon

HOUSTON ROCKETS - Signed
AveT"j Johnson, auard, to a conlnc:t for
the remainder of the seaiiOft

Ad.... Dlt'llloa

M.....W ...........

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

Buf!llo ...............
llanlonl .............
Qud&gt;oc: ...............

31 II 4 66 167121
26 19 .6 l8 179171
20 22 9 49 183 184
15 2l 1 37 142165
12 32 6 'lO tl3 204

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Norrll DlvWoa

Tum

W L T Pll. GFGA
Detroit............... 21 u 1 63 207 166

em.., ..... ..........
SLI..oWI ............

19 1o 58 m 159
2220 9 53180175
24

Minnct&lt;U .......... 21 23 4 46 IS9172
Toront.o .............. 15 30 S 3S 133 184

Sm,O.. Dl&gt;lolao
V1r100L1vet ......... 2914 1 65177142
WUvoip&lt;s ........... 212210 l2 160162
c.~pry .............. 21 22 7 49 119176
t.ooru.1otu ....... 19 2011 49 179193
Edmontoo ....... ... 20 26 7
SanJ~ ............. 11 36 4

47 111204
26 129222

Friday's S&lt;ores
Buffalo 5, Montrul3
New Jersey 6. Detroit 3
~ 4, Wi.nnipe&amp; 4, tie
Edrnanlll14, Hartfm! I

They played Saturday
Pbiltdelph.i• 11 N.Y. lalandm, S:OS

p.m.

Buffalo 11 BaRt~~, ?:OS p.m.
SL Lauilat Piwbutafl, 7;3!1 p.m.
C.tom ,, w..h....... Hl p.m.

N.l': Ranacn at MinnCICU, 8:05p.m.
Delroit at Mmcnal, I:OS p.m.

~Farm/Business

Grace hands OVCS 67-35 defeat

Scoreboar·d
Nw

February 2, 1992

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

Page CB Sunday Tlmn-Sentlnel

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••

day night at Ravenswood, W.Va.
Quarter totals
O.V. Christian ......7 6 13 9 = 35
Grace Christian ...22 13 13 19 = 67
GRACE CHRISTIAN (67) Davis 7-0-0=14; Conley 3-0-1=7:
Akers 4-0-0=8; Jarrell 4-0-0=8; C.
Holley 3-0-0=6; W. Smith 3-0-0=6;
Wheeler 3-0-{F6; Ovelby 1-0-3=5:
J. Smith 1-0-1=3: E. Holley 1-00=2; Sammons 1-0-0=2. TOTALS
-31·0·5=67
Free throws- 5-10 (50%)
OffiO VALLEY (35) - Smith
5-1-6=19; Hill 3-1-3=12; Pralt 1-00=2; Swain 1-0-0=2. TOTALS 10·2-9=35
Free throws -9-16 (56.25%)
Junior high game -Grace 36,
ovcs 18
Leading scorers - Jarrell
(Grace) - 17; Lusher (OVCS) - 11

Sports briefs

.

~President Bush's
.
· BAyP~'TBuslnEFA!. FWArTSiteiS
·r
NEW YORK -President Bush's proposed bud.
.
g~t11 may or ~ay not ~bmulate the economy. But tt
wt surely stimulate hts opponents.
'Economists derided the plan as warmed-over.
Sl)me. of the ideas had already been proposed by congresstonal Democrats And on the campaign trail
Republican cha~lengir. Pat Buchanan accused the
P~tdent of plTittng h1s tdeas.
•Bush's bud I f $1 52 trill" be "til
. ,
age o ·
10'!
a num r WI
ll d1g11s- offers an array of piecemeal proposals
!hat wo~ld give Jax breaks to Americans across
mc;ome lmes.
The political rheiOric th~ year is dedicated 10 the
broad and nebulous "m1ddle class," bul Bush
o.ffered a tonic or two for most Americans.
Among them:
. •·•eral
•··
- A red uc U·on m
,.,..
""' WI"thh oldi ngs over
lhe next 12 monlhs. This would give the average

DISTRICT CHAMPION - Sarah Ward of Bidwell (holding.·.
trophy) recently won the 10·11 year-old division in the ~lks Nalio~·
al "Hoop Shoot" district tournament, held at Nelsonvtlle. She Will · ·
compete in the state tournament o~ Saturd~y, Fe~. 8 at Ohio Wes-' ··
leyan University in Delaware, Ob1o. Standmg w1th her are (L-R)
Gene Wood, Gallipolis Elks No. 107 Exalted Ruler, Jonda Ward,
Larry Ward and Tom Meadows, local tournament chairman.

INDIANAPoLIS (AP) - The
teenage beauty contestant who
accused Mike Tyson of rape S3ld
she willingly walked into Jhe
boxer's hotel bedroom because she
was misled by his pleasanl manner
confinement and criminal deviate world heavyweighl chal)lpion faces
and had no idea he wanted sex.
Tyson, 25, is charged with rape, conduct. If convicted, the former up 10 63 years in prison.

Home National Bank

Cash and balances due from deposiiDry institutions:
Noninteresl-bearing balances and currency and coin ........................................................ ........... 1,272,000.00
Securities ............... ...... ................................................ ......................... ................................................ 4,383,000.00
Federal funds sold .............................................................................................................................S.S9S,OOO.OO
· Loans and lease financing receivables:
lit Loans and leoses, net of unearned inoome .......... .................... .......... ........... 26,041,000.00
t- LESS: Allowance for loan and leose losses ................................... ................ .... 349,000.00

=

Loans and leases, net of unearned income,

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
GALLIPOLIS
414 Second Ave., 2nd Floor
446·0166
992-5912
8:30 lo 5:00 Monday· Friday
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday 8:30 to 12 Saturday
Closed Thursday
Closed Thursday
ALSO: Jackson, ChesaptGkt, Athens, Chllkothe, logan l McArthur

POMEROY
236 E. Main 51., 2nd Floor

grams. Frank "Buz" Mllls,IU Is serving as a
stale director for Area 5. Concerns that face the
board or supervisors are increasing the public
awareness of beller timber maaagement of our
woodlands, continued abandoned mine land
reclamation, erosion control In cropland and
pasture land. The term ofnonpoint source,ollution defines sediment and other ruaof that
leaves constructinn as well as urban and agricul·
tural sites. Because it doesn't come out of a pipe,
nonpolnt source pollution often goes unrecog·
nized as a problem by the general public.

GALLlA SUPERVISORS SWORN IN •
Rob Massie left, and James Howard right, both
of Bidwell, recently elected supervisors of the
Gallia Soil and Water Conservation District,
were sworn Into oll"tce by Ohio Supreme Court
Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer during ·the 49th
annual meeting of the Ohio Federation or Soil
and Water Conservation Districts held In
Columbus January 21·23. Elected to three year
terms, they join Paul Duncan, Lawreace BurdeU
and Mike Hughes In admlalslerlng the Gallla
SWCD's natural resource conservation pro-

allowance, and reserve ....................................................................... ....... ,...................................... 25,692,000.00
Premises and ftxed assets (including capitalized leases) ... ....................... ..................... ......... .................3S9,000.00
Other real estate owned................ .......................... ................................................................................ I02,000.00
Other assets ....................... ................................ ................ .. ............................... ......... .............................523,000.00
Total assets .................................................................·.........................................................................37,926,000.00
Total assets and losses deferred pursuant12 U.S.C. 1823(j) ............................................................. .37,926,000.00

l:J

Deposits:
.
omestic offices ............................................................................................................... ....... .33.468,000.00
:J! Noninte st-bearing ....... ...................................................................... .3.056,000.00
• Interest- · g.............................. .................................................... .30,412,000.00
~

C Other ltatiihties............................................. ... ........ .. ................................................ .. ..... ..................... 309,000.00

The ·History of Mills. on Raccoon Creek

:::::i Totalliabililies ............................................................ ..... ................................ ... .............................. .33,777,000.00
•

By WENDELL TOPE
Earth Team Volunteer

a, Undivided profits and capital reserves ........ ............................................................... ...... ................... .3,899,000.00
C Total equity capital ................................................................................ ................................................4,149,000.00
"' Thtal equity capital and losses deferred
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 182330)........... ................................................................ ................... .. ........... 4,149,000 00
5 TotalliabiUties,limiled-life preferred stock. and equity capital,
to 12 U.S.C. 18230) ................................................................ ......... .37,926,000.00
0Ill and losses deferred pursuant
.

RIO GRANDE - The Indian
tragedies thai occurred near the
MarietJa area forced many settlers
to look fcx safer areas to farm and
erect sawmills and grist mills.
Many or Ute rivers and streams
downstream on the Ohio River
seemed inviting and in 1794 many
se1 sail 10 a new home.
The first thing they did after
Slalcing out their claim was 10 erect
a qew sawmill. These mills were
portable so they could be moved up
an~ down the river or stream on
which they were located to areas
wl)ere there was fast running walfr.
These waters trovided more power
10 ltlm the mill wheel.
il'be mills were erected on two
boats which were from three 10 five
feel wide and 18 10 30 feet long.
boats were built depending
number of settlers needing
sc:rvice. Many of these boats
made from hollow Sycamore
Others were erecled on larger
boats. The larger boats ususerved bolh as a sawmill and a
mill. In the smaller ones the
hollow logs were five to eight feet
and fastened to each other by
planks or boards, creating a
work resembling the base of

t

Sliding IH lale. No one relused servkes because of lna~nlty to pay.

I, Gary P. Norris, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that this Report of Condition is true and
correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Gary P. Norris, Casbier
January 2S, 1992

•

' .

We, the undersigned direciDrs, attest this correctness of this Slalcmenl of resources and liabilities. We declare
that it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowledge and belief bas been prepared in conformance
wilh tbe instructions and is true and correct.

John T. Wolfe
Carroll Norris - Directors
Wayne Roush

RUTLAND BOTTLE GAS IS LOWERING
THE PRICE OF PROPANE AGAIN

were fumly braced
cross braces creating a strong
The mill wheel was erected in
center of this frame worlc with
framing supporting it
(djaiiis and pulleys were arranged
a scaffold so the wheel could e
·r, · • or lowered to different
of the water.
deeper lhe wheel was low) the water the faster the
1urned, thus creating more
to operale the grist mill or
The

Why Buy AHeat Pump When
·Electric Rates
.
Are Go.ing Out Of Sight?
.

'

GAS COSTS LESS THAN ANY OTHER FUEL US-D FOR HEAT

February 21 1992 l

taxes, which would raise the federal budget deficit to
$399 billion tht"s year
· .
.
The Jax cuts were v1ewed as a shon-s1ghted way
to jolt the economy. Widespread was a belief that
·
•
d b F d -··
tnterest-rate cuts engmeere Y e era1 Reser~e
Chatrman Alan Greensp~n would be the better, tf
gradual, anlldote 10 recessiOn.

Tile reJailer known for its Thanksgiving Day
blamed · fi
·
.--e .
tts manc1al woes on lite economy and
the debt 11 lOOk on when chairman Ed d s F"1nk 1
stein took the company private 10
· 198;ar ·
e•
•
- .
Th 1
e ast straw was a disastrous 1991 Chrisunas
se~on. When the New Year rnng m, Macy stopped
paymg suppliers.
arJne: unusual. Lwbanistkrufor the airline industry! 1WA
v . on ume m
ptcy coun. The earner had
languished under enormous debts resuiJing from
·
Car
•
.
mvestor llcahn s Jakeo~er, also m 1986..
IIJrS1WA had been ~egouaung formonUts w1Ut credi10 restrucJure tiS debt. NegouaJors last year had
ert;fted 1WA 10 seek protecuon around now as part
at proces~. . .
.
y ~acy •. dw~1ch ftled m bankruptcy coun m New
or • 5a1 It P ans to keep operaung tiS slores as
usual
·
· TWA ' which filed in .Delaware · where .,, 1·s
mcorporaled, plans 10 keep fly mg.
M-A

Ma~L~U~~~~:~~:!~tcy

T
' .·
wo more famtllar .names entered banlcrupJcy
coun last week the busmess world's methadone for
an addiction 10 debt
R.H. Macy &amp; Co. and Trans World Airlines, bolh
wealcened b enormous debt incurred in 19805 bu _
outs filed ftr Chapter ll protection from crediiOrs ln
fede;.w bankru tc coun
After a lasf.Jnute ~escue package with Loews
C
C
.
. h , 11
orp.
and
BS
Inc.
chamnan
Laurence
T!sc
throu h Mac ~00 nd itself ·m · $200 000 10
· .e
th
bank.g •
Y
WI JUSt
• .
e

°

1

Stocks drop, but ring up J anf!,ary gain

i ~=~~-~~::: : : : : :: ::: :: : : :.: : : :.. ::: :.:: : : :.: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :::· : : . : : : : : : :· :~::·~

Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

(thamily an N~tra $350 tof spedsnd. Buludt beJaxe~~?..~ld slay
e same. ext year, re un wo
suowa or laX
·
0weel .wou ld uu:rease..
.
.
. -A $500-Jl!l!:-i:hild mcrease m personal exemplions for the mtddle class
-A $5,000 tax credit for new homebu ers who
make their pYn:hase before the end of the yJr.
- A rax credit of u to $3 750
f I
income families to buy ~th htsur:le~ or ower- Tax benefits for invesunents in new Individual
R .
,.-_
eurement ,.....ounts.
-For businesses, a 15 percent Jax write-off for
equipment ~urchase!l this year.
The prestdent 581d he would battle Congtess over
his plan, and set a March 20 D-Day for action. After
that, he said, "The battle is joined."
~ut critics said some of Bush's proposals were as
ups1de-down as the 32 pages insened the wrong way
. the 1,216-page budg.eL
.
m
·
The main harping came over the decision to cut

of Racine, in the state of Ohio, at the close of businesses on Dec. 31, 1991 published in response
to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United Stales Code, Section 161.
Charter Number 9815
Comptroller of the Currency 4th District

:J

·

Section D~

proposed budget sets up battle

REPORTOFCONDn10N
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the
•

~hnes ~ ietdhttl

The grist mill was located on
one side of the boat and the
sawmill on the other. The power
shaft was placed in the hub or center of the wheel. One end of the
shaft going 10 lhe sawmill and the
ocher to the grist mill. On each end
of the boats they built a small
building. one building was used to
protect Ute rain the other was used
for floW" and meal.
··
These boats were anchored to
aees on both sides of the sueam.
This made it possible to anchor the
mill in a position til Jake advantage
of the water al a point where the
water wheel could generate the
most power.
The space between the two

boats was covered with strong
plank floors allowing the miller 10
walk from place 10 place while perConning his duties.
These early grist mills contributed greatly after ~e was assured
by General Mad" Anthony
Wayne's Victory Construction of
more land based mills aided in the
advancement of the pioneer setdements. These early mills paved the
way for a sJabilized influence in the
growth and economy.
Although these mills in most
insJances have been forgotten, they
have lefl a legacy that will be
important to early development to
this region.

Effective ·Monday, February 3, ·We Ar.~ Lo~eriig The Cost of Propane
Another 1o• Per Gplloi.
.
CALL 742·2511 or 1·800·837·8217.·TOLL FREE FOR PRICES
'
THIS PRICE DOES NOT APPLY TO GAS SOLD PRIOR TO FEB. 3RD -~~
\

7/8, and PaineWebber 5!8 10 23.
Coca-Cola rose 3!8 10 77 1/2 on
10p of 5 5/8-point jlii"P Thursday,
when the compan.Y reported a 23
percent earnings mc~se for the
fourth quarter and proposed a 2for-1 stock split.
Polaroid Jumped 1 1/2 10 28 1/2.
Late Thursday Jhe company posted
fourth-quarter earnings of $1.16 a
share. against 90 cents a share in
the corresponding period a year
earlier.

a

Autodesk, traded in "the overthe-counter market, tumbled 6 1/4
to 28 1/4. The company, which
specializes in computer-aided
design syslcms, estimated an unex ..
peeled decline in iiS fourth-quarter
earnings.
Scolts Co. led Ute active list in
NASDAQ trading of OTC issues,
changing hands at 22 1/4. An initial
public offering of 12.5 million
shares of the lawn-care products
company's stock came out at $19.

-Business briefs---.
ASHLAND, Ky. (AP) - Slumping Armco Steel Co. rebounded
slightly in lhe founh quarter but still posted a net loss of $45.5 million, bringing Ule partnership's total losses for the year ending Dec.
31 10 $196.8 million dollars. the company announced Friday.
The joinJ venture between Armco Inc. of Parsipanny, NJ., and
Kawasaki Steel of Japan lost nearly four times as much as it did in
1990, when losses totaled $50.5 million.
Armco Inc.'s share of the fourth-quarter loss was $30.3 million,
which contributed 10 an overall loss of.$241.5 million, or $2.75 a
share, for lite parent company.
It was Ute worsl quarterly loss for Armco Inc. since the second
quarter of 1986, when it lost $384.7 million, company spokesman
Jim Herzog said.
. For the year, Armco Inc. lost $336.5 million, or $3.89 a share. Of
that, Armco Steel was responsible for $119 million.
Armco Inc.'s 1990 losses totaled $89.5 million, or $1.10 a share.
As in Ute previous three quarters, Armco officials blamed Annco
Steel's losses on the recession.
PADUCAH, Ky. (AP)- Paducah Newspapers Inc. has spun off
in a move that the
presidents of both companies said•will help the companies grow.
"With separate companies, each can pursue their own interests
easier and more readily than being one combined company," said
Jim Brockenborough, presidenl of Hannan Supply. "It will work
real well. What it does for us is allow us 10 take advantage of any
possible business expansions in surrounding states."
The family of Jim and Pal Brockenborough swapped part of llteir
Paducah Newspapers stock Jo acquire Hannan. Jim Brockenborough. p~;esident of Hannan, will remain on Paducah Newspapers'
board of direciOrs and his wife, Pat, sister of PNI president Fred
Pax10n, remains one of the media company's largest stockholders.
"Now, they can have a single-minded pu1p0sc," said Fred PaxJon, president of PNI. "The two companies arc so differcnL ... We
want 10 focus on the media business, they want to focus on whaJ
they do. This lets both companies do thai without being distracted
by the ~ of the other.''
PNI owns The Paducah Sun and WPSD-TV in Paducah. Utrcc
daily newspapers in Arkansas and several weeklies in Aikansas and
Missouri.

Han!1311 S,upply Co. in10 a separate corporation

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Changes in Ute fcdentl income ta~
withholding rates will mean a little more money in the working person. s pe_ycbeck each week.
Married workers who earn below $90,200 a year will receive an
e~tra $6.64 a week when the changes take effect in March.
sity. He is also a Cenified Financia! Planner.
Single workers who earn less than $53,200, will get $3.31 more
He resides in Marietta with his
a wcelc.
wife, Sharon, and children Sarah
But the mj\joriJy of taxpayers withhold too much, relying on a
and Adam.
'
· refund in the sp:ing to pay property taxes or other expenses. As a
result of lite Withholding changes, taxpayers might see their traditional refund shrink sharply next spring because they received the
·money throughout the year.
"They are going to say, 'What happened?"' said Judy Krebs of
the Internal Revenue Service in Louisville. "There is no change in
the tall rate. Only in the tax withholding."
Many 18Xpayers who normally expect a refund may be writing a
check 10 the IRS next year, said David Beck, an accountanl with
Potter &amp; Co. in LellingiOn.
To avoid that pain, many Jaxpayers might have Lo ask Jhcir
employers 10 withhold more federal tax this year.
.
Bejlinqin~ next year, some people also could face penalties for
not ~thholdmg enou~.
"The IRS will w8lve under-willtholding penalties for any underpayment of tall in 1992 to Jhe extent thai Jhc underpaymcnJ is
WASHINGTON (AP)- The · caused by these adjusttnents to the Jax withholding Jables," Krebs
discovery that the crop-desttoying
said.
corn earworm pracuces family
planning opens up a whole new
approach for controlling it and possibly other insect pests, scientists
say.
The moth moms among the earwonns - also known as the cotton
JOHN MILIJER
bollworm and the lomato fruitworm - de..y sex until the crops
they love have produced the plant_
pans baby earworms thrive oil. ,
Enlomologist Ashok K. Raina
of USDA's Agricullural Research
Service and colleagues Tiniothy G.
Kingan and Autar K. Mauoo
reponed that finding in the latest
issue of the journal Science.
The females withhold 1heir
seductive pheromone, whicb males
search out 10 locate a willin:g lllllte.
Thus, mating is timed 10 the eir·
wonn.s' preference for eatina com
silka and kemola or tomal0e8 ,llld .
Coatlntlfd on (),8 ·
.
'

Miller joi~s Bank One staff
ATIIENS • John C. Miller has
joined Bank One.Ohio Trust Coolpany as trust sales reprcsenlative. ·
He will provide trust services
including professional money management for both irusl and nontrust accounts, esJate planning and
executorship of esiates.
Miller will have hours at Bank
One, Alhens offices every Thursday and Friday or by appointment
at offices in Athens, Hockiilg, Gal·
lia and Meigs counties. He can be
reached at 1-800-824-6954 or 614593-6681.
For the lasl two years, Miller
was a financial consultarit for the
stock brokerage firm or Wheat,
First, Butcher and Smger in Parkersbw"g, W.Va. Pn:viously, he was
an investment analysl on Wall
Street with Mitchell Hutchins Asset
Management, a division of Paine
-Webber. He has also managed
stock and bond portfolios for Paine
Wcb\Jcr TrusL
Miller holds a B.A. from
Columbia College and an M.B.A.
in fmance from Columbia Univer-

By CHET CURRIER
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - S1ock prices
fell Friday, yielding to a round of
selling near the close of an erratic
session.
The market finished January
with a gain, cheering traders who
look to the ftrst month of the year
for clues to what course it might
follow over Ute next 11 months.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials dropped 21.47 points 10
3,223.39, fmishmg the week with a
net loss of 9.39 points.
Declining issues outnumbered
advances by about S 10 4 on the
New York Slack Exchange.
Volwne un lhe New York Stock
Exchange came to an estimated
197.60 million shares as of 4 p.m.
EST, against 194.67 million in the
previous session.
Analysts said the lateSt economic news did lillie 10 son out tradeJS'
mixed feelings about the business
outlook.
The Commerce Department
reponed that the index of leading
economic indicators dropped 0.3
percenl in December, matching its
decline of the month before.
That drop in the index, which is
designed 10 detect fuwre economic
trends, seemed to further postpone
any prospect of a susJained recovery in business conditions.
Analysts said it also was seen as
increasing the chances that the Federal Reserve might soon decide io
give interest rates another downward push.
· For January as a whole, the
Dow Jones industrial average
climbed 54.56 points, or 1.72 percenL
That produced a positive reading for the so-called January
barometer, an indicator whose merits are disputed but which nevenheless gets a lot of attention on Wall
Street
Insurance stocks declined broadly on a proposal in the Bush administration's economic package Utat
would eliminate a key Jax break on
• new annuities sold 10 individuals.
. - Aema Life &amp; Casualty dropped
2 1/2 to 41 1/2: Conseco 7 to 68
1/4; Broad Inc. 2 l/810 17 7/8, and
Travelers Corp. 1 3/4to 21 1/8.
Securities industry issues also
ran iniO selling after a Wall Street
Journal article said the group was
"giving signs of cresting" after a
strong perfonnance in 1991.
~errill Lynch fell 1 1/4 to 57
1/4; Morgan SJanley I 3/8 10 56
1/2: Bear SJeams 3/4 10 18 1/8;
Charles Schwab Corp. I 1/4 Jo 31

Discovery
offers new
approach to
pest control

-·
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••
•

•
•

'

~

•
•
.;•

.

••

••
..••

..,•••
.••

'·•

Name contest
. winnert .
GALLIPOLIS - Carl Racer,
Patriot, wu n1111ed winner of
Jantlary 26 M~ Farm coolest
The farm liJ)peartng in thb SUilday
Times-Sendtiel.,. dial of Hennau
Wood, State Route 141, rar Gage.

me·

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.

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.
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�OH-Polnt Pleasant,

nmes-Sentlnel

Study suggests that high cholesterpl
triggers dangerous ministrokes ., ·
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Sdence Writer
PHOENIX (AP) - Researchers
believe they have discovered a new
hazard of high cholesterol: spasms
in blood vessels that trigger dan·
gerous ministrokes. And they say
lowering cholesterol may be urgent
after such attacks.
Doctors have long known
cholesterol plays a role in strokes,
but besides clogging arteries ,
cholesterol also makes blood vcs·
scls more lilccly to squeeze suddenly shu~ a new study suggests.
Researchers from the University
of Iowa reported evidence Friday
that cholesterol sets off a hazardous
chain reaction in the blood stream.
It appears to lead to ominous ministrokes called transient ischcm ic
attacks, or TIAs, and perhaps to
full·blown strokes.
The work, conducted by Drs.
Donald Heistad, Sanjay Kaul and
others, was presented at a stroke
conference sponsored by the American Heart Association.
"If this is true, it's enormously
importan~" said Dr. Edward Cooper of the University of Pennsylvania, ~resident-elect of the heart
assoctauon.
Until now, doctors have not
viewed lhe lowering of cholesterol
as especially urgent after ministrokes because cholesterol damage was lhought to be a long. slow
process.
"I was swnned by this, because
it means we don't have any Iceway," said Cooper. "We can't
casually wait to start cholesterol
lowering after the dust settles. We
need to start doing it immediately."
Symptoms of TIAs can include
temporary blindness, weakness or
inability to talk.
The Iowa team studied blood
cells, called platelets, taken from
seven men and four women who
had high cholesterol levels that
averaged 277. They compared
them with a normal group whose
choleslerol averaged 154.
Platelets have several jobs.
including making blood clots. They
also produce chemicals that can
make blood vessels both open up
and squeeze shut. In healthy people, the platelets primarily make

blood vessels relax so blood flow
improves. In those with high
cholesterol, the chemical balance
changes so they tighten and restrict
circulation.
The new research suggests a
double -barrel hazard of high
cholesterol - the slow buildup of
deposits that damage blood vessels
and the sudden interruption of
blood flow.
"We suggest that this combina·
tion will cause SJ?!!Sms. which contribute to T!As. ' or ministrokes,
Heistad said.
The researchers believe lowering cholesterol may make the
platelets normal again, reducing the
threat of strokes.
Heistad noted that platelets are
replaced quickly in the blood
stream. turning over in a few weeks
or months. So when cholesterol
goes down, normal platelets will
take the place of ones made hyperactive by cholesteroL

Kaul said the next stage of the
research will see whether the
platelets do indeed return 10 normal
once cholesterol is reduced.
The research may also help provide a new explanation of why people with high choleslerol levels are
more likely to suffer heart attacks.
While cholesterol clogs the
arteriel lhat feed the heart, doctors
cannot accurately predict which
people will have heart attacks simply by measuring the degree of
blockage. The new research suggests that high cholesterol could
play a role in spasms that might
trigger heart attacks.
In their study, the researchers
tested the effects of human
platelets on sections of arteries
removed from rabbits. Arteries
exposed to platelets from people
with high cholesterol failed to relax
or tigh1en, while those exposed to
platelets from people with normal
choleslerol relaxed as expected.

Riffle named to Who's Who
LONG BOTTOM - Julie Dianne
Riffle, daughter of Frank and Frona
Riffle. Long Bouom , has been
named for the third consecutive
year to Who's Who Among American High School Students and her
biography was published in the
25th Silver Anniversary Edition.
She is a senior at Eastern High
School and a member and treasurer
of the National Honor Society and
a member and president of the
National Art Honor Society. She
also serves on student council, year
book staff and newspaper staff. She
auended a session at Ohio Univer·
sity and was selected by the Congressional Youth Leadership Council to be a Congressional Youth
Scholar and represent Ohio in
Washington.
During her school years she has
been active in marching and concert band, chorus, softball. baseball, volleyball, basketball, cheerleading, girl scouts and volunteer
work for Red Cross Blood Drive,
Heart Association and received
awards in musicianship, directors
and the American Lung Association. She also received the Presidential Academic Excellence
Award. She was a member of the

.Jill•
Ley bon int~n~menL''
.

Moog's early synthesizers were
featured on the Beach Boys' 1966
hit single "Good Vibrations," lhe
Beatles' 1967 album "Sgt. Pep,
per's Lonely Hearts Club Band" ,
and the 1968 hit recording
"Switched·On Bach" by Walter
Carlos, who became known as
Wendy Carlos after his sex-change
operation.
The Moog synthesizer opened
new muscial worlds by using a
computer to electronically create
new sounds or duplicate. the sounds
of otheri nsuuments - even entire
orchestraS - that bands could use
in their performances.
•
Moog, S7, was 11110111 lhe fli'St
~roup or rock 'n' roll musicians,
mventon llld technicians enshrined
on the "Rock Walk," which
opened in LDs Angeles in 1985.
His newest inventiOn, lhe Multi·
' pie-Touch·Sensitivc Keyboard, one
of three 10 be built and housed in
the school's Compiuer Music Stu·
dlo, lets a musician alter sounds on
each key bl the placement and
movement o lhe fmgers.

.

,:, ·

GALLIPOLIS • The following
Friday, Feb. 7
10 a.m. - Walking Club
are activities and menus for the
I0 a.m. to noon • 1-3 p.m. - An
week of Feh. 3-7 at the Senior Citizen's Center, 220 Jackson Pike.
. and craft class
Menus consist of:
Monday, Feb. 3
MondaySauerkrautlweiners.
10 a.m. - Walking club
mashed
potatoes,
cornbread,
10:30 a.m. - Shan subjects
chocolate pudding.
I p.m. -Chorus
Tuesday - Ham loaf, sweet
· Tuesday, Feb. 4
10:30 a.m. - STOP/physical fit· potatoes, sprouts, bread, fruit cup.
Wednesday
Baked
ness
steak/gravy, whipped potatoes,
10 a.m .· 3 p.m.· Quilting
12:30 p.m. - Advisory council peas, cole slaw, dinner rolls, ice
cream/cake.
meeting
Thursday - Liver/onions, rice,
I 2:30p.m. - Video
broccoli,bread, butterscotch pudVVednesday,Feb.S
ding.
II a.m. - Birthday party
Friday • Fish/tartar sauce, tater
I p.m.- PATHS to a healthy
tots. stewed tomatoes, pea salad,
heart
bun, pears.
Thursday, Feb. 6
Make reservations by calling
10:45 a.m.- Bible study
446-7000
before 9 a.m. on the day
10 a.m. to noon - Blood presyou
wish
to
attend.
sure (volunteer)

Names in the news
fRYING, Texas (AP) - Country singer Willie Nelson will teatn
up again with rock stars Neil
Young and John Mellencamp for
another Farm Aid concen.
The three musicians, who started the periodic concerts in 1985 to
help fmancially troubled farm families, will perform in Texas Stadi·
urn in Irving, just outside of Dallas,
said Farm Aid spokeswoman Beth
Sanderson.
They hope to announce a date
for the concert at a news conference on Monday, Farm Aid officials said.
Previous Farm Aid concerts
took place in 1985, '86, '87 and
'90.

•
JULIE RIFFLE
junior-senior prom committee and
helped with the art and design
work.
She is the granddaughter of
Margaret Bissell and the late
Charles L. Bissell, Bashan, and the
late Floyd Riffle and Lela Riffle
Robinson, Racine.
She plans to attend the Columbus College of An and Design and
major in an therapy and fine arts in
the fall.

Ann
Landers
"1111, Los ~n1e1e1
nm .. Syndl- and.

ere..... S)'lldlalle."

Dear Ann LaDders: What should
happen to wedding gifts that were
acquired during a very short
marriage? The couple I'm writing
about separated after eight weeks.
They did not live tot~elher after the
marriage. The bride remained in the
home of her parents and the groom
stayed in his bachelor apanrnenL
Should the .gifts be divided
between the two parties or should
they be rewrned? They bolh want to
do the right thing. Your guidance
would be gready apprecialed. -- J.
AND R.IN NEW MEXICO
DEAR J. AND R.: Kaputsville
after eight weeks ... and they never
lived together? The classy thing to
do would be to return the gifts.
What's the truth about pot,
cocaine, LSD, PCP, crack, spud
and downers? "The Lowdown
on Dope" has up-to-the·minute
information on drugs. Send a
self-addressed, long, busiMss-size
envelope and a check or ltll)ney
order for $3.65 (this includes
postage and lttwlling) to : Lowdown.
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 606/1-0562 . (In
Canada, send $4.45.)

Moog. who ays bls ll1leiCSt lies .
in technological lnDQvations, has ·
no particular marnt for the keyboard. He said It wun 't designed
for mass production.
.
, "Todiy, th~ times are fairly
conservative, •' he said. ''Music is
becominJ more and more pre·
dictablc, and the f(l'lllulu for maki!lg successful ~ are beeom·
ina
underslood.
..
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...._ ..

___

ACROSS
1 Vapid
6 lavishes
fondness

on
11 Look fixedly
16 Pertaining to
punishment
21 Eye part
22 Muse of poetry
23 "- Recall"
24 Join
25 In music. high
26 Substance
28 Great quantity
30 Performs
32 Tantalum symbol
33 Agave plant
34 Permit
35 Native metal
37
38
40
42
43
44
· 45
47

Possesses
Secret agent
Plaster of Pigpen
Above
Rabbit
Moray
Assuage; mitigate

49 Barracuda

50 Deface
51 Consecrate

54 Okinawa seaport
55 Mast
56 Sea in Europe
59 Mont Blanc.
lor one

60 Sesame
62 Thoroughgoing;
extreme

64 Fortitude
65 Concerning
66 Guido's low note
67 Make lace
69 "Pretty -"
70 Formally precise
71 "- Badge of
Courage"
72 Left after
••pooses
74 English county
76 Armed conflict
77 Medicinal plant
78 Hollywood and 79 Threefold
82 Fully developed
84 s-· homes
85 Spare
86 Small valley
88 Wash

89 Comfort
90 Manservant
92 Lying face
upward

94 Powerful
monarchs

98 Stove part
99 Club
100 Gen. Sys. of
Preferences

102 Temporary
shelters
103 Nahoor sheep
104 Uncouth person
105 "A - of Two
Cities"
106 Call on
108 Click beelle
109 Louise lD
110 Three-toed sloth
111 Kiln
112 .. - Hospital"
114 Ocean
116 Bulgarian
currency

117 South American
an1ma1s
119 Foundation
120 Oriental nurse

122 Realm
124 Female: colloq.
125 Beer ingredient
126 Cubic meters
128 Electrified
particle
129 Pitcher
131 Transaction
132 Enemy
133 Fear
135 Dine
138 Young boy
139 Doom
140 In favor of
141 Limb
142 Behold!
143 Near
144 Landed
145 Coloring

R. KAY KOEHLER

On dean's list
MIDDLEPORT - R.. Kay
Koehler, Middleport, daughter Of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. King,
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Harold E. Hager, Racine, achieved
a 4.0 grade point average for fl\11
quaner at Hocking College in Nelsonville where she is studying
medical records technology.
She will receive an associate
degree of applied science in medical records on March 13.
While enrolled at the college slie
has been named to the Dean's List
five times and has earned a 4.0 two
times.
Tbe ceotury mark
A century consists of 100 co~·u­
tive calendar years. The lsl century
consisted of the years I througb 100.
The 20th century consists ol the years
1901 through 2000 and will end Dec.
31, 2000. The 21st century will begin
Jan. 1,2001.

substance

14 7 Narrow openings
149 Nod
150 Brief
152 One related on
mother's side
154 Musical study
156 Think
158 Wipe out
159 Speeds
160 Frock
161 River In Africa

DOWN
1 Quarrels

2 Flower
3 Suitable
4 Roman 51
5 "Nightmare"
Street
6 Hinders

7 Speech
8 Hindu cymbals
9 Latin conjunction
10 Distress signal
11 Tale
12 Ripped
13 Consumed
14 Sun god
15 Kite
16 Deposits
17 Abstract being
18 Nickel symbol
19 Essence
20 Renter's
document

27 Guido's high note
29 Carry
31 Medical
examiner :

abbr.
Assert
Male deer
Bark
Conspiracy
Float In air
Protecting cover
Semi-precious
stone
44 Stop
46 Spanish article
48 Melt; dissolve
49 Bridge
50 Cripple
51 Visit Intrusively
52 Change
53 Inside of
55 Frightens
56 Kind of cheese
57 "Goodnight"
girl
58 Gives up
61 Secular
63 Mohammedan
priest
64 Develop
68 Calumniate;
vilify
70 Schemed
71 Metal fasteners
36
37
39
40
41
42
43

' v

s

Attendance was a litde ·light at
By ED VOLLBORN
the first session. We need everyGallla County
one's help in making this series
· Extension Agent
GALLIPOLIS - A recent swdy successful.
A reminder of the Private Pestiby U.S.D.A. in cooperation with
Purdue .University shows a healthy cide Applicator Recertification
job market through the mid-90s for class to he held Thursday, February
6, at 7 p.m. in the Southwestern
Ag school gradualeS.
In fact ).he job opportunities for High School, Yo. Ag. room. If your
food and Ag Science graduates will card reads 3192 this will be a good
be greater than the number of qual· opportunity to get it renewed.
ified gradualeS. Iowa State reports
A training session for persons
90 percent of their Ag graduates wanting to become certified for the
placed wilhin three months of grad- first time will be held on February
uation . Purdue has seen a 28 per- 13, 7 p.m. at Hannan Trace High
.sent .increase in average starting School. Swdy ma1erials will be distribuled and class presentations will
.salaries over the past three years.
·.. Major companies such as Pio- be made covering several of the
~eer and John Deere are concerned categories. The test will be given
·. ~bout where their future plant by Ohio Department of Agriculwre
· breeders and design engineers will staff on March 2 from 3-6 p.m. at
'come from if qualified graduates the Senior Citizens Center just west
.are not available. According to a of Gallipolis. I hope to schedule
report in the January issue of another training session prior to
"Farm Journal" many companies March 2 and will announce it next
-are pulling money where their week in this column. This is a commouths is by offering scholarships plicaled process. Call 446-7007 for
t.o students pursuing degrees in more infonnation.
Tobacco markets at the end of
agriculwre.
·· The National FFA College and sales on January 23 showed a sea'/ccationai/Technical School son average price of $179.16 per
Scholarship program starled seven hundred Qr exacdy $4 per hundred
years ago with 16 scholarships with more than the same point a year
a total value of $14,500. Last year ago. Net sales for the season stood
the program offered 583 scholar- at 640.1 million pounds or about 98
.. :Ships, ranging from $500 to percent of the I 991 production. For
;,$10,000. The John Deere company the week about 40 percent of sales
. has a special program geared went to the "Pool" but for the sea··toward school advisors, students son 4.8 percent or just over 33 miland their parents to get the message lion pounds. Farmers continue to
across that there are agriculture try to sort an of this out and what it
means for next year.
jobs out there.
Mark your calendar on Tuesday,
William Shulaw D.V.M., O.S.U.
Extension Veterinarian will be the February 25, 7:30p.m. for the
guest resource person at the second annual Hannan Trace Tobacco J&gt;ro.
session of the Win1er Beef Series. ducer meeting. We are pleased to
This will be a herd Health announce that Mr. Tom Hutchins
· - Roundtable with topics such as of Rickard Seeds will be the guest
pelvic m.easurements, breeding speaker. Hutchins is a very enthusi·
soundness and quality assurance astic person with a lot of good
also to be discussed. A recent arti- · ideas and experiences . At the
cle in "Doanes Ag Report", says recent Tobacco Expo in Lexington,
selecting heifers for large pelvic he was one of the most popular
size is roughly a 55 percent inheri- exhibitors. His presentation will
focus .on variety selection and curtable trait.
Heifers are more likely 10 have a ing quality tobacco but will also
large pelvic size if sired by a bull cover several olher topics!
A reminder 10 farmers that while
having a large pelvic measurement.
Stop at the class on Monday the ground in not froze is a good
evening (February 3) at 7 p.m. , time to pull soil samples. Getting
Columbus and Southern Building ahead of the March·April rush will
and see what Dr. Shulaw has to say give you more time to make spring
about the topics. Dr. Phil Osborne lime and fertilizer decisions. you
from West Virginia University will could even be able to take advanbe discussing beef cattle marketing tage of some early season discounts.
options on February I0.

73 Culllvated
74 Narrow. flat
board
75 Public storehouse
77 Apportion
78 Endorsement
made on passport
80 Hammer point
81 Yalle
83 Bite one's 84 Chapeaus
87 Motor
89 Dinner course

90 Clamorous
91 Be of use
92 Seasoning
93 Being: Latin
95 Adam's grandson
96 Go In
97 Healing ointment
99 Church service
101 Pittsburgh
baseballer
105 South African
Dutch
106 Waistcoat
107 Domesticate
111 Khayyam or
Sharif
112 Strong wind
113 Fat of swine
115 Among
116 Boundary
118 Matured
119 Bundle
t 21 Harbingers
123 Italian river
125 Substance
126 At once, promptly
127 Wo~d129 Gladden
130 Liquid
131 Capuchin monkey
132 French 134 Danish land
division
136 "Home -"
137 Tall structure
139 Escape
140 Top of head
144 Beast of burden
145 Moccasin
146 Spread lor drying
147 Petition
148 Offspring
149 Large
151 Sun god
153 Sodium symbol
155 Roosevelt lnlts.
157 Greel&lt; letter

The Issue:

Capital gains tax
EDITOR'S NOTE -The Associated Press asks the major presi·
deatial candidates a question each weekday about their views on a
particular issue and assembles their responses. President Bush bas
declined to participate at least untU be formally announces his re-elec·
tion campaign.
Responses were nOl available for all candidates.
WASHINGTON (AP)- Here are the views of the major presidential
candidates on the question: "Do you favor a reduction in the tax on capital gains? If so, of what son?"
. DEMOCRATS
-Jerry Brown: •'I favor abolishing practically all federal tax including
personal and corporate income tax and payroll tax, t;eplacing it with a 13
percent flat tax on all individual and corporate income."
- Bill Clinton: Would not respond.
- Tom Harkin: "Bush's capttal gains cut, the centerpiece of his economic plan, is a giveaway to the very wealthy without helping the economy. In spite of his rhetoric, on average, those with over $200,000 will get
$100 for every quar1er going to average taxpayers ... We cannot get the
economy going by just giving a bonus to the weallhy and hope they will
invest it well."
.
-Bob Kerrey: "No. I suppon indexing capital gains so that innation
doesn't erode earnings. The president's auachmcnt to a capital gains taX
cut obscures two more crucial issues: restoring fairness to our tax sr.stem,
and generating the funds to make badly needed invesunen.ts that will create jobs and ensure long-term growth."
-Paul Tsongas: "The capital gains tax cut I favor is highly targeted. It
rewards long term investment in business by taxing it at progressively
lower rates the longer an investment is held. And it provides even lo~er
rales for invesanents in smaller f11'11ls, to ensure a flow of venture capttal
to developing companies.''
REPUBLICANS
-Patrick Buchartan: "The capital gains tax should be cut to 14 percent
for lhe affluent and eliminaled entirely for those with incomes of $50,000
or less. There's no good reason why the middle class should nOl benefit
from lheir own capital gains, allowmg them to buy homes, save for college for their children, their retirement, etc."
·
. -David Duke: "Yes. The reduction in the tax on capital gains should
be 15 percent."

"

.. '

,.,

.. ,.

Touch-sensitive electronic grids,
similar to those on automatic teUer
machines, are placed on 10p of each
key.
Rolling the finger forward can
create one sound; rolling to lhe side
can make another one. The sound
also is modified by the extent of
lhe musician's fmger surface on lhe
key.
Eaton said lhe keylloard wiU let
a musician imbue the often cold,
mechanical sounds of synthesized
instruments wilh more human feelings. ''You will hear the human
nuances! " he said.
•

~ ·

ALLENTOWN, Pa . (AP)Pop singer Gloria Estefan has
donated $1,000 to the volunteer
firefighters who rescued her from a
tour bus accident in Pennsylvania
in which she suffered a broken
hack.
"Volunteerism is a very solid
cause that she believes in," James
Dahnert of the Monroe County
Firefighters Association was quoted in Friday's editions of The
Morning Call of Allentown.
The now-recovered lead singer
of the Latin pop group Miami
Sound Machine was injured in
March 1990 when her tour bus was
rear-ended on a snowy highway.

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Study shows job market
good for ag graduates

See Answer to Puzzle on Page C-5

36 Years, to Juan

ANN LANDERS

more

":larm
·-·

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Synthesizer pioneer pushing
the limits with latest creation
By MICHAEL GOUGIS
Aa«lated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP)·- Synlhesizer
pioneer Robert Moog's creations
have had the same impact on music
· thai the 1elescope had on astrono: my: Both opened the doors to
· worlds no one knew existed before.
· Now Moog has leamed up with
Chicago composer John Eaton to
build a keyboard lhat will expose
mulicians 10 still more new worlds,
by !cuing them alter sounds by
· 1110\'inJ a single key.
· "Wbat we envisioned was a
keybotlrd on which each key had
die Ylrilbilil)' rt a violin DOle,'' lhe
l'llller of tile Moog Synthesizer said
PridiY • be demonslllled his Jau
t:NIIIfoil in 1 ,University of Oticago
; recilll hilL
• Tile re~ult II "the world's most
~lllitive mt~~ieallnstrument next
. "' lbe buman voice," aid Ealon, a
· • LTlliveni~ of Chicqo m111ic pro-flltot . ' PlayinJ i_t II • kind of
~liMtioD of pllyliiJ a very sen·
jtlcive .... d ilistrumentllld play-

2,1992

Seniors' schedule announced

;.

Adopted girl says she's doing fine
Dear ADD Laaders: You hear so professional. I do wonder about
much these days about adopted you on occasion but I am not
chil~n searchi.ng for their birth · ·searching for you. I hope you:ve
parents and_ havmg. touchmg reun- had a happy, fulfilling life. I have,
tons. I felt tl was ume I wrote my and I lhank you for thaL -- C.B .,
frstletler to Ann Landers to tell a SHREVEPORT LA.
different story. I'm sure there are
DEAR SHREvEPORT: What a
others like me.
mawre and comfoning lcuer. The
I am adopted and I don't wish to parents who raised you should be
ftnd,my ~mother. ! know who terribly proud. The mother wbo had
my real parents are. I was born m the courage and good judgment to
a home for unwed 1110lhen so I know allow you to be adopled should also
my birth mother did what was best feel good about herself when she
for both of us wben sbe gave me up. reads this today.
I was adopted by a lovmg couple
Dear Ann Landers: Will you
wbo alrtady had an adopted son. answer a real puzzler? Some friends
Even though my brother was and I have debated this issue and
~ysically handicappecl my parents have decided to seek your counsel.
lllill had room m lhetr hearts and Here is the scenario:
their home for him.
"Bob" and "Carol " are divorced.
I've had a truly wonderful life -- Carol was the one who left and has
pi~o lessons, private schools, since remarried. "Nancy" is single
f.vnily vacauons, clothes, cars and a and is Carol's friend. They see each
college education. But ~ven more other frequently at the local country
tmponant. I was ratsed on a home club. Nancy has become acquainled
where morals and values were not with Carol's ex-husband, Bob, and
only taught but s!Jown by example. she is beginning to like him. Sl!ould
My parents had a .45-ycar mamage Nancy consult Carol before she goes
based on strong fruth and true love. any further with Bob? .. PUZZLED
· When my father passed away, no IN THE PINES
"Daddy's girl" ever grieved more for
DEAR PUZZLED: Nancy has no
a natural father lhan I did for h1m. obligation to consult Carol about her
Now the ume I spend wnh my relationship with Bob, since Carol
mother seems a lot more prectous to is (or should be) finished wilh him.
me.
.
.
.
Since they are good friends, howl know thts letter ts. geumg long, ever, it would be rather odd if Nancy
so let me conclude wtth a message didn't mention it. If the buddinR
to my birth mother. Thank you for romance should develop into
giving f!!e up. I know G_od helped to something lluly serious, Carol
put me m the best possible home. I might wonder why Nancy was so
1111111 grown up now and a respected silenL

wv

Bond endorsed as
GOP chairman

'"

'

••.

I •lr

• "\ I,

a

.. .
I"..,
lh

'

...

"'•••
• •' '•l

-•••

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
Republican National Committee
unanimously endorsed President
Bush's choice of Richatd N. Bond
as its new chairman Saturday, com, pleting President Bush's makeover
of his election-year team.
· Bond, a vetelllll GOP operative
who has given Bush political
advice for more than a decade, suc·
ceeds Clayton Ycutler in the top
·party post. Friday, Bush named
.Yeuuer As While House COIIIIICIIor
for domestic ~cy- new Cabl··
net-level ~Ilion with widc·raDJI•
ing autllllity.
In outgoing remarks u party
chief, Ycutter presented a sober
assessiJ!Cnt of lhe president's polili·
cal plight ~th lhe economy m_ired
1in a recessiOn and ·lllPOvaiiBWIJS
the lowest of his pmidency.
"In my judgement, this prcsi·
dency is JOins to rise or fall on
how tt peif(l'llls between now and
November," Yeuuer uid at the
conclusion of lhe RNC's lhn»day

•

"

.

winter meeting.
Bond· was approved by a
resounding voice vote. There were
no dissents.
.
The job shuffle essentially puts
in place all the major players for
Bush's re-election campaign. It
also comple1es a staff shakeup ini·
tiated by chief of-staff Samuel
Skinner when he toOk over the job
in December from 1ohn Sununu.
Bush is expected to formally
amounce his candidacy for re-elec·
ticin Feb. 12 in"Ncw Hampshire. · .
· Bond, 41, is a closli psoc:iate of
bolh lhe president and 'the laiC Lee
Atwater, the activist RNC chair·
man who died list year of a brain
tumor.
·
And from hJ, fii'St momenis on
the job, Bond lllldD ii clclr that he
would bo more adildple of Alwa·
1er, whose aasreaaivc and tome·
times unonhodol1 taCtics w~ him
both 'praise and critlclam, lhan of
more tradidonal.OOP figures.

wv

Sunday nmea

Sentlnei-Pag....03

ASTRO·ORAPH
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Public Nollca

PUBUCNOTICE
On Soturday, February 8,
f992, 11 10:00 A.M., the
Homo N1t1onal Bank,
Raclno, Ohio will ollar for
11le at public aucdon on tile
Bank parking lot tho
following:
1988 Hyundal Excel GS
KMHLD3f
JU220006
Feb.2, 11112
1988 Ford Aeroatar Van
· 1ve yourse If ·'"the year ahead IFMCAffU3JZA23105
Try to 1nvo
Flreblrd SE
1983 Pontiac
In endeavors where you'll have a lG2AXS
HfDNZ2ZS
7
31
chance to use your own ideas. The

c~our

W'Birthday

Public Notice
combined lingle llmlta.
•100% co·ln•ur•nc• p•r·
contago 1hall apply to both

building ond conlenta.
'Thoft lnaurance on all
building• content• ($fOOD
doducUble~

'5% lncreoae In value of
Building ond Con tenia.
Note: If any of tha above
cannot bo lnaurod, pleaoe,
ao Indicate and explain on
your bid.
Eutern Local
School Dlotrlct
pmducts of your imagination have
1978 Taurus Camper
381100 SL Rl 7
strong, profitable probabilities.
50E29357S4567
Reedavillo, Ohio 45772
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19) Concepts
The Terms of ulo are
6f 4-985-4331
that work for you might not be tailored cash.
(1) ZG; (2) 2, 8, 16, 41c
to the needs of another. Make allow- The Home NaUonal Bank
ances for personality variables when reserves the right to bid at

giving advice today. Aquarius, treat

sale or lo remove any

yourself to a birthday gift. Send for Item from the ule at any
Aquarius' . Astro-Graph precllctions tor

time.

7

Friday. Monday edlllon • 2:00 Nationwide Company. Minlatp.m. Saturday.
mMd ODportunltltt Av1llltile, ·
301-916-!'054, Sunday- 12-lp.m.,

8

Woll VIrginia, 304-Tr.J.5785.

Wademayar'• Auction Servlca,

Rio Grando, Ohio 814-245-5152.

9

Wan1ed 10 Buy
:::Co:-m-pl:-.ol-o-:H':"'o-un~h~o':":ld-:-Or-:E-o·
lltos! Any Typo Of Furnltu••·
Appliancas, Antl~ue'a, Etc. Alto
Appraisal Avallabla! 614·245-

5152.

Farman Cub Tractor With At·
tachmants. Call 614·998..:&amp;528.

the year ahead by mailing $1 .25 plus a
long. self-addressed. stamped envelope to Astro-Greph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland, OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state your zodi-

1;..;_2_6,'-2-9,'-3-1'-;('-2)'-2'-,_;s,_7_6_tc_ "A Wondarful Family EJ:.
1
perlence" Aultl'llllan, Europun,
P_u_b_llc.:..;.N;.:O.:.tl;.:C.:.e__ Scondlnovlon High School Ex·
1_ _ _
change Studantl Arrlvl~ In
t
Auguat. Become A Hcflt Family
PUBLIC NOTICE
For American lnlti'cullural StuTo: lnterNiod CompaniM
ac sign .
dent Exchange. Call Sharon,
From:
Efolae
Boaton,
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) Someone
Ohio R1p, Cllfi-800-Sibllng.
Treasurer
who recently told you something in conMeet Sl~las: Guya • Girls. Call
fidence will be very disappointed with RE : Spaclllcatlona for Today.
Data Tonight. 1·900-407building
and
contenta
you if you reveal to others today what
1004, $2.95/mln. Must 81 Over
lnauranco.
was told to you In secret Zip your lip.
lB.
bid the buldlng
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Small talk IS andPle01e
Wantad:
tamale companion to
in1urance, on
likely to be more appealing to yoo today on allcontenl8
11vt4n, agu 25 to 45, It lntarnrlak
AND
on
a
named
than weighty conversations about comtltd write Companion, Box C-29
plex problems. Try to pal around with perll.baola (lire, wlndllorma coro Pt. Pit R1glstor, 200 Moln
and hall, udloalon, emoke, Sl, Pl. Ploannt, WV 25550.
friends who focus on the lighter side.
aircraft
an valllcloa, riot
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 2G) What you riot ·auondlng
a otrlko o; 4
Giveaway
can't accomplish with force or brawn
clv
ll
com
m
o
ilo
n
on
d
today can be accomplished with your vandalism or mallcloua 2o4 Month Old Kittens, 1 Calico,
1 Black. 614·446-ans.
mind. Put your imagination to work to
mlschleQ.
fulfill your ambitious obJectives.
6 W•ks Old, Females, Part
The apeclficaUona are:
GEMINI (May 21-June 2G) Treat the imShepherd, Solid Black.
•Replacement
coat Garman
614-446-8713.
mediate with the respect it deserves,
coverage for building 1nd
but also think about tomorrow. When ground1.
Firewood, You Cut , Easy To Get

Wantad To Buy: Junk Autos
With Or Without Motors. Call

Lor•y Llvoly. 614-388-9303.
Top Prlcos Paid: All Old U.S.

prove unwise to leave bits and pieces of
an important business matter unre-

•comprehensive general

Mixed braed, part Collla and
Norwaglan Elk, 8wks. old, varY
cute, 814-149-3084 or 614·241·

mont a1 per alatement of
CANCER (Juno 2f-July 221 It could value~
.

Mondoy Thru Frid1y 2'10p.m., .
Only.
AVON I All Arou I Shlrl1y
Spuro, 304-ll~14:!9.
Avon reprettntatlves wanttcl,
no territory ntcuaary, trl1 aUt

with algn-up, Call Kay, 814-912·

7180

C1rtlflad medical 1nlatant tor
local physicians' oHice, part·
lima only, lind rteumas to
Dally Stntlnal, PO Box 128M,
Pom~roy,

OH.

Workers, New
Project To $22 Hr. Carpentart,

Construcllon

Labortrs1 Palntare, Drywall
Masons And Helpers. 1-800-5510163,
Construction
Wantad, new project, to 122hr.,
carpentera, Iabore,., paint.,..
drywall maaont and helpera, ;.
800·!111-0163

Coins, Gold Rings, Sltver Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 S.Cond Avenue, Gallipolis.

Cosmetologist Needtd: Gauran·
t11d $170 Par WMk, Paid
Vacations, Call 614-44&amp;.7261.

Wanted:
Indian
Artltacts,
Winchastar Model 300. 614·446-

Dairy Outan Galllpolla For
Kitchen And Grill Cook, Coma In
For Appllca!lon Batwaen t-4
p.m.

1142.

EmpiDymenl Services

Driver from Pt. Pit. to Cincinnati
and rttum, use vour own aulo
good dilvlng raeord, 2 hr 45 mlrl
ro eastside Clnn. dnUnatlon.
11 Help Wan1ed
Stnd name, address, llle no,
----:.~P:::OS::T;;:A-:-l-::JO;:o;B:::S::.-- auto dttc::rlptlon to: N. Spr•n
728V Smokeywoods L1na, Clnn:
YOUR AREA
45230. Componsollon: gn
123,700 Par Year Plus Banatltt, Ohio
plus 150. per round lrip.
Postal Carriere, Sortare, Clarke.
For An AppUcatlon And EXIm Easy World Excellent Payl A•
lnlormaUon Call 1·218-736-1807 sembla Proch.actt At Homa. Call
Ext. P-6432 9 a.m. To i p.m., 7 Toll frM, 1-800... 67-5566, Ext.
Days.
313.
Allanllon! Earn 1300.00 Ta E•perltnead lnduatrlal S.IM
$500.00 WHkly Roadlng Bookl Rap For Epo•y Compunds And
At
Horns.
Fuii/Pan•llma, Coatings. Calling In Enginaarlng
GuaraniHd Paycheck! 1-501· And Mllntenanc::a Otpanmanta.
484-7000 Ext 546.
For lmmadlatt Conaldaratlon
Sand Retltlme Or Llttar To;
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Route 1 Bo• 25817, Gallipolis
E•callenl
Pay,
Benetltt, OH4563t
'
Transportallon,
407·292-47117,
Ext. 511. 9a .m.·10p.m. TaU Financial Sarvlct Career Oppor·
Rolundod.
tunily. Small Bualn..a Dillraa
Po,.on With Outgoing PorIOnallty~ Typing &amp; Ccimputor

:-:-====...;.-:-:=To: Days : 614.-141·1608, Nights:
614-446-0101.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Paar1on Auction Campany,
full tlma IUcllonur, camplate
auction urvlca. Llcanud Ohio,

3 Announcements

•Agreed amount endora•

Help wanted

ALL V1rd Saltt Must Ba Paid In AVON • All lrN..'1. COli lla~lyn
Advonco. DEADLINE; 2:00 p.m. W•nr
304-882·itM5.
.
th1 day -balort the ad Is 10 run.
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m. An._ Phcnn Ll&gt;coll)' f«

Announcements

making plans now , consider future
developments.

11

liability ($500,000.) with 2622
solved today. Stick to your endeavor
until all the details are concluded to 1 card of Thanks
Whit• mala pur.~py, brlndla
your satisfaction .
-;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::; spats, 10·12 wks o d, half Boxer,
304-675-7368.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Regardless of r
the issue. there are always two sides.
5
Happy Ads
Skills. uppor1unlly For Advon·
The family of 6 Los1 &amp; Found
and both should be obvious to you toctmtnl Within Or~nlutlon.
Denver Lee Green
Send Rnponu Ta: Bo1 CU.
day. This cOuld put you in a favorable
LOST White Bird dog, orantJI
107, c/o Galllpollo Dolly T~buno
wants to thank eve- collar, Lumbarport, WV, nama
position to arbitrate a delicate matter.
625 Third Avonuo, Gllllpollo, Oil
VIRGO (Aug. 23--Sopt. 22) Details that ryone for thai r pray- tag on If found call 304·675·
45631.
3246.
escape the attention of co-workers
ers, food, cards,
Jobs In Kuwait tax frH, conaren't apt to be overlooked by you to- flowers and dona· Lost- Walk1r dog, blacll., bfown
struction wortl.lrs, $75,000, tn•
&amp; whlta, nama on lags, Norris
day. Carefully review everyone's work
glnHrlng $200,000, oil lltld
!Ions during the Nunn, 614·367·7520 at' 304·77'3as an insurance against possible
workers 1100,000, 1-800..279STJS collact, loll at Mine t2,
8555 lit. 1572.
mistakes.
passing away of our Aaward
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Do something loved one.
Llc::ansad Manager For Local
enjoyable today, but make sure it is
1 card or Thanks
Beauty Salon. Competltva
mentaUy relulng. Try to stay away from
Wagas Paid Vacation · Madlcal
Plan Avallabla, Training. 614·
activities you tend to treat too seriously.
We the family of Dowie
446·3353.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be vocal
Wdllams
wish
to
express
We
would
like
to
today regarding domestic issues about
Managlng/Coamatologllt
our gratitude fo the many
thank the following
Nndtd. Booth Aanltl. Upper
which you leel strongly. If you don't
Lordy,Lordy Cut1
Btauty Salon1 Stata Route
lndlvlduala lor all the
thoughtful people who
make your voice heard now, you may
160, 614-446~m, Mil For Oarla
concern
they've
not have an opportunity to do so later .
provided comfort during the
Or Kolly. 614-446-005! IDorll),
Bevs
SAGm ARtUS (Nov. 23--0ec. 21) While
614-682-7188 (K1IIy).
ahown during the
lime of our boreavement.
you're in the mood, allot some 1ime for
reeenl illnees and
Nolalllt among dtest •e:
Turned 40!
clearing up your paperwork today. If 11
of
our
mother,
death
Plneuesl
Nursing
Home,
gets past you now and begins to accu·
In Memory
2
Goldie L. Ingels, of
Holzer Medkal tenter,
mutate, It could become an e•tremely
Maaon,
W.Va.
Wlis F-al Home1
unappealing task.
Dr. Spencer, who
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22--Jin. 11) Be satReverend John Wooa,
Isfied to make a small profit today inexpertly cared lor he.r
Rnerend John Jelhey, ond
In loving
stead of holding out for an uncertain,
w hII a 11 Veteran•
oil those who sent ftowm,
memory of
larger one. Unreasonable expectations
Memorial, ao well aa
cords and food. Your love
could cause you to make a poor choice.
nurtlng alafl. The
UJiressed In words and
Arthur Orr
Emergency
Feb.3,11182
deeds wll always be
who passed
SqtJad peraonnel.
. therished in our liearts.
Carmel ccu
Impressive changes In your game plan
away Feb. 2r
are likely for the year ahead. You've
tranaport unit peraon·
learned a lot from experience, and now
1982.
nel and Dr. Erdy, Dr.
you'll know how to select more fruitful . The family of Harold
Beaver
and
the
nurs·
Missed by wife,
Ferrell would like to
targets.
lng
IIIII
In
CCU.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 18) Yoo may thank everyone lor
daughter and
Fogleaong Funeral
have an opportunity to disengage yourthalr eupport during
Home
In
Maaon,
W.
grandchildren.
self from an unproductive arrangement
our time of aorrow.
Lordy,Lordy
Va. for their klndneu
today. let It go without looking bact&lt;,
Thank• to Dr.
and replace It with something new and
and conalderatlon,
Julia Ann is
Howard Linder, Dr.
beller. Mljor changes are ahead for
they are surely
Three Very Important
Aquarius In the coming year. Send for
Oacar Clarke, the
prolelllonal•.
40!
People In My Life...
Aquarius' Allro·Graph predictions to- lntentive Cara nureee
Rev. James Satterday. Mall $1.25 plus a long, self-ad- (aapeclally Terri), the
Dellona Pannell ·
field lor 1 wonderful
dressed, stamped envelope to AstraAug. 3, 1884-May 22, 80
Progre11lve Care
aervlce and to Mt.
Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Bo•
nurae1 (eapeclally
Moriah Church of God
91428, Cleveland, OH 441Q1-3428. Be
Rudolph Gordon
sure to state your zodiac sign.
In Racine.
Dottle), Rev. Paul
Fob.2,1813-Fob.25,17
PISCES (Feb. »-M•ch 2G) You can
Cryatal Powell of
Von, Rev. Marlin
Latrlsh Hurt.
acquire better Insight now In regard to
Racine who eang so
Campbell ,
Willla
Feb.4,f88&amp;·Filb. 5,11
something you previously viewed from a
beautifully.
Funeral Home, copurely Intellectual level. Your feelings
You wero 1 Vll'l opoclal
Friend• and neigh·
workera, friend•, lamand emotions are factors that should
"GrMdmother."'
bor• of our mom and
also be considered.
lly and everyone who
You
olwoyo loved mo.
each one olthoae who
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 11) If there Is an
aent llowera, food,
You
w•o
o Vll'l apoclal
helped uo through a
endeavor you've been wanting to Initiand money. Your vi•·
"Father".
ate but have held oH on because of one
very dllllcult time with
ito and word1 ol comexCIIse or another, aet a deadline for toI alwoya lovod you.
prayera, food and
tort will never be lor·
day. It's a good time to start.
And
you w•o 1 vory
llowero.
TAURUS (April20-MIJ 2G) Begin toesgotten.
loved
ond opoclal
THANKYOUII
tabliSh loHier objectives than those
"Deughtor".
From the children,
you've becOme accustomed to recently.
Mino lorov• In my hurt.
Hedy,
Patti, Slilrley,
Even II you miss your mark. which Isn't 3 Announcements
I will rornomMr"you
likely, your progress will still exceed
Kathy, lbnda &amp; Tom.
HaPPy
23rd
llwiY• ond you •• wllll
your old targets.
me, In my ho_., EVERY
GEMINI (MIJ 21-June 2G) Don't overBirthday
DAY OF MY UFE.
look any opportunities at this time to
3 Announcements
You oro a
·
acquire U!Oful knowledge pertinent to
your present plana. You'll find ways to
"Davey" C!
"VERY SPECIAL"
uee Information gained In this cycle to
part of me.
REWARD OfFERED
your advantage.
You
are
"mlulld" 10
For lafol'llaiiDI aboul . a
CANCER (June 21-JuiJ 22) Listen at·
much
by mo.
In Memory
24HOURCARE
kaadttl, Nuuy·Palroal 2
tentlvety to any proposals others present to you today. Thera Ia a strong pos5/W 357 Rnolnr sloltl
Home style meals·
alblllfy you may be able to do yourself
fro• ll'f Ito.. 01 lin• 16
and diets. Semi·
some good through a(olnt venture.
IN
1991 11 Garatrsford Roa~
LEO (Jutr 23--Aug. 22) An Important
privata rooms.
btiWtll Rio Grandt and
matter you've been negotiating could
HEAVEN
Man
and
woman.
be close to agreement today. Although
NO NIGHT IS lHEREI
256-6509
It's been a tedious process, there is fl.
Cal
lHOUGH HERE THE NIGHT COMES DARK AND CHILL
naHy a good chance for amicable terms.
245·9401
AND SHADOWS EVER CORNER ALL,
Crown City
VIRGO (Aug. 23--StpL 22) This Is a
lHE DEAlHLESS MORNING COMES'AT LAST,
good day to lnltlote the diet or exercise
WHEN ALL OF TIME FOR ME IS PAST,
.
program you've been contemplating. If
NO NIGHT IS TIE REI
you begin today, tho odds are you'll
NO PAIN IS lHEREI
ttlck to It
lHOUGH
HERE PAINS WRENCH lHIS MDftTAL FRAME
UIRI (Stpl. 23--0ct. 23) There Is an inAND MEN ARE SICK ANO WEAK AND LAME,
volvement In which you've been wantIN lHAT FAIR LAND AWAITING liE
Ing to play 1 more·active role. It appears
1
SHALL FROM ILLS AND PAINS BE FREE,
thll. II you usert yourself today, ·you
NO
PAIN IS lHEREI
can ei•cl18 greater management over
21
yr.
old
lnJI.
company
currently
, lhllli!UIIIon.,
NO
~ARS
ARE TIEREI .
.
,~.
'
. ""
ICOfttiiO (Oct. :M-Ho¥. 22) ConttrucTHOUGH
HERE
WE IIS81HE LOVED ONES DEAR
doing $30 million monthly, lo~king AND LONELY ARE
liYI •dlllllm!""l• tllat aHect you, aa well
AND OFlEN FEAR,
aa your famll)l, Cln be made today. for aggressive people to hire, train
IN HEAVEN, OUR HOllE, WE'LLIIEET lHEM AU,
E.., If othtt'a aren't quite ready now,
AND ANSWER ONCE AGAIN THEIR CaLL,
and motivate a sales force.
llley'll hop on board later, onceyou get
NO TEARS ARE TIERE.
the wegon rolling.
Management
experience
a
PLUS.
OUR CHRIST IS MREI
IAGmAIIUI (Nov. D-oec. 21) Begin
COME AND TAKE USTO IIMIELF,
••
to ....,..,. yov~lmmedlltt plwtocfay
Co. benefits package to those who HE'LL
AND GIVE US FOR THIS WORlD'S PELF
10 ttMI(re men concllt end ordlrly.
AMANSION MADE BY HIS DEAR HAND
qualify. Co. training provided.
AND WITH US DWELL IN lHAT FAIR LAIID,
=r::...:.~=.~
YEA, CHRIST IS THEREI
CALL
CAJIIIICOIIII (Dio. aw... 1tl It lilrt
EACH YEAR WE 1118 YOU MORE lodiY lor ligna of new Rnenclll tr1nd~
Wlle-Eallt
9AM·SPM
lllal could be peraonaHy r8WIIdllla.
Cltl'*-- Llny a NanoY. a.nctr a
Plant yov1 ..ell now - IIIII don't ex614-992-6225.
Qnntlahlldren end Ft. . .

GWINN'S
LICENSED
CARE HOME

·-~ ~'-atlll

PIONEER THE INDUSTRY OF THE
. 90'S TO EARN WHAT
YOU ARE WORTH!

...

TUESDAY ONLY

pect 111 .lmmedllt• harveat .

~I

.,,

�~ - -'

....

~--

...

-~-

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

· · ---~·-·--

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

.... __

~

_

j

11

31 Homes for Sale

Help Wanted

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt

Page-04--Sunday Times-sentinel

31 Homes for Sale

31 Homes for Sale

32 Mobile Homes

32

for Sale
Medical
Assistant
wanted.
Muon Co. pt'lysician wants full
time medical 111istaot. Send
r"uma to PO Box 245 , Tuppera
Plains. OM 45783
Medical Transcriptionist • Ex·
perlenca Necessary. Medical
Terrnlnol~y
And
Accur~te
Typing. Salary Commensurate
Wilh Ex~rience . Full Time, Day
Shlt1, Excellent Benefits. EOE .
Send Rnumt To Pertonntl
Department, HOlzer Clinic, PO
. Box 344 , Golllpollo, OH 456:11.
No Phone Calls.

NEED A JOBI GREAT PAY!!
OVer 350 COmpanies NMd You
NOW! Worll From HOME And
GET PAID, 001-837-5076 Dept.
03, 24 Hours.

•

NSW/Director Social Strvlcu.
136 bed progt'lmmlng nu.-.lng
laclll1y SMkl dapl director. Supervisory and caae man~~ge­
ment skills required aa well as
currenl license. Point Pleasant,
WV, area. 304-675-3230 ext 28
lor details.
Part lime help wanted, Duke
Cleaners, 2419 Jackson Ave,
aJ)ply betw11n 8:00 &amp; 3:00PM.
Part -Tlma Babyslller For 6
Month Old Boy In Centenary
Aru. 614·441.0718.
Qualified hauler sought tor
regularly scheduled pickup and
transport of tight recyclable
goods. For further information
304-m-5839 after 6.00 PM.

RADIOLOGY TECHNOLOGIST
Applications Being Accepted
FOf IMMEDIATE Openings For
Fuii·Time
Rotating
Shift
Positions. We Otter A Very
Competitive Salary Range As
Well As Excellent Education
And Othar. Hoallt'l Rotated
Banellts. Must Be Registered Or
Registery Ellglble Wllh The
ARRT. Conta et p.,sonnel At:
O'Btaness Uemorlal Hosphal
ss Hospital Drive, Athens, oH

3 BA Home tor s . Low 20's.
New kitchen, wirl , heating,
city. Point Pltasent, WV. 304·

675-6939.

One Story DUJ)Iex: 4 Rooms
Each
Bath, Garag!J Pallo.

II ·~~~~N~o"~h~
. ~C~al~l~·o=r~A=-P614-446·6850.

~--=~::;:==
8

Reduced

Sell:

To

Cheshlro, Ohio. 904-932·6959,
904-932·7670, 614·367-()649.

Tupper Plains, 1-slory 2·bdrm
house, utility rm, 11tachtd
garage, 1.9 acre, storage build·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

fng $28,500 614-989-2719.

32 Mobile Homes

PUBLIC AUCTION

1 Acre With 12x60 Total Electric
Trailer, In Kyger Cr11k Sctlool

SAT., FEB. 8, 1992
12:00 NOON

614-446-8922.
Win Free
Tupperwaro
Call Rose Yocham 614·949-2029
Would You Enjoy Working With
The Elderly1 Wayne County
Community Services Corp, Inc.
Is otferlng lrae training to those
lndlvlduars who are West Vir·
glnia resident&amp; 55 years of age
or older and meet JTPA
eligibility requiraments. You will
bt enrolled In the agency's olderly care program where you
will receive training In caring lor
the lrail elderly In their ho1111s.
You will receive stipend for
transportation, meals &amp; lodging
If necessary. Af1or successful
completion of program. You wJU
be easlsttd In finding employ·
menl caring tor elderly In your
area. For mora Information I to
sea about JTPA eligibility call
Tim or Judy 304·212·5112, EOE.

14

Business
Training

Ralrain
Nowii!Southeaslern
Buslnesa College, s:r~~~ Valley
Plaza. Call Todaiy, 61
~367f!
Regltterellon 190-05-12749.

18

Wanted to Do

Will Babysit In My Home. Rod·
ney Area. References Available.

Call 614·245-5a87.

Dry Wall Hang St'laet Rock
Finish or Texture, With Years Of
Experience. 614-446·8699 .

E &amp; R TREE SERVICE. Toppmg ,
Trimming, Tree Removal, f-ledge
Trimming. Free Estimates! 614·

367-7957.
Goorgas Por1able Sawmill, don't
haul your togs lo the mill just
ca11304·675·1~57.

Mi18 Paula's Day Care Canter
Safl, aHordable, chlldcare. M-F
6 e.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ages 2¥1-10.
Before, after echool. Drop-Ina
welcome. 614-446-8224. New In·
!ani Toddler Care, 614-446-6227.

1986 Clayton 14x70, 2 Bath, 3br,
Two Porches, Total Elec11rc,
$12,500. fi14·446-4134;
After

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Turn your ta• refund Into a new
home, 1i92 Mx70 3-bdrm, in·
eluding dllhttry, Ht•UP. skirt·
lng, .teps and btockt, only
$151.114 por month, Coli 1-800-

417·7171 botwoon 11 :00om-5prn.

33 Farms for Sale

458 acre farm 1111 betwHn Rt.
1990 Sprucerldge, 14x70, 3· 62 1nd Kanawha River, 4 mlln
bdrm., 1·bath, heal pump, 275 from Pt. P-. 304-e75~m.
acres, 2 miles north ol Chaster,

34

District. $17,Soo. 614-367-726c

614-985-4492

Evenings.

1991 Sunshine 14x65, 2br, 2
Baths, 614-441·0313, 614-441-1016.

14 acres, 2 bedroom mobile
home, country water, Ltlar1, WV,
$16,500. 304--895·3421 after 5:00.

This 11 the pe11onal property of the late Lillian
Napper. Located from Pomeroy, Ohio take St. Rt. 7
North to Co. Rd. 30 (Forest Run Rd.) to first road
on left. Twp. 642 (Block Plant Rd.) to 1st house on
left. Watch for aale ligna.
"HOUSEHOLD ITEMS"
Two 3 pc. bedroom suites, 2 pc. living room su1te,
Frigida1re frost-lree refrigerator, dinette set w/6 chairs,
small Lady Kenmore washer &amp; dryer, Enterprise gas
range, hall tree, coflee &amp; end table, recliner w/heater
&amp; vibrator, metal glider, lamps, misc. odd chairs, wood
&amp; metal cabinets, metal base cabinet, Kenmore small
microwave, misc. linens, pots , pans and dishes.
"MISC."
Oval picture frames, walker, potty c hair, toilet seat
extension, Westinghouse window air conditioner, fan,
exercise bicycle, Singer upright sweeper, stools,
Westinghouse electric roaster, misc . electric appliance
and etc., lots of clothes &amp; coats.
OWNER-LAWRENCE A. NAPPER
Cash
Po11tlveiD
Phone 614-949-2033
DAN SMITH-AUCTIONEER
Ohio *57-68-1344
W.Va. 515
"Not rooponolblo for aecldonto or lou of property."

1981 Nashua mobile home,
14xS4, 2 BR, 1 balh, newly
reearpettd, washer/dryer, 8x16
front porch. Park Lane Court.
614-446-8132 attar 5. $9,300.

1972 Hillcrest 12x55, 2 bed·
rooms with porch, nice, $3,750.

304-m·5109.

Business
Buildings

Bualne11 property, formly Dr.
2 trailers 14x70 &amp; 12x65, $2,000. Rankin Ray Pickens office, 501
lor both will not separate. 304· S. 3rd St. Middle,..., $400mo &amp;

575-2504.

•lllllloo, 614-985-4231

2-bdrrn, naw carpel and paint,

$3000, 614-949-2526

35

11

Full time position lot an experlenud RN who would
like lo (oin a progressive Nursln'- Division. With, tht
new Open Heart Program at King s Daughters' MH!cal
Center you have the opportunity Ia care for surgkal as
weD as matlkal cardiac patients.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

NICI Nolghborltood And CIOII

$650,

coo

King's Daughters' Medical Center
Norma Rice, RN
Director, Nursing Resources

Monthly

Psymete: $92. Owner Flnenclng.

1-000·927·2741.
Lots for aalo, trallo.-. acceptablo. 304-875-2722.

Real Nice 2br Trallar, localed 8
Mllet Out State Route 218, NHd
Deposit, Reference. 614·256-

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

1981 Model, Excellent Condition,

814-4411-8732.

#638. LAKEVIEW LOTS: - Chotce lots wttl1
spectacular vtew. You wtll want more than one. Oak,
maple, dogwoo&lt;J and e._ergreen lrees make th1s a
suburban parad1se Also lots fronting on Wh1te Ad
For lull partiCUlars call to Inspect

VACANT LAND MAJOR SUBDIVISION KNOWN AS
"LAKEVIEW ESTATES"
lor•1 2 25 ac MtL Puce $16,500
lot 12 2.348 ac. M'L. Pnce $22.500
lot tt3 2 348 ac. M'L . Pnce $16 ,500

#759. COMMERCIAL BUILDING . .. HOME ..

OUT LOTS FOR SALE ....
LOI AS 322 m/1-$34,500
lol B 5 acres m/1-$34,500

Lot 11 2.472ac. ml!, $16,500
Lot 112 2.477 ac. mil, $12 ,900
Lol 113 2 418 ac. mil, $12 ,900
Lo1 #4 2.418ac ml! , $16,500

BEWARE OF RIP-OFFSI

Gel The Truth Aboul Phone Ap.
provalt, 800 Numbers, High
F.... For REAL. Loant Call 803-

213-1641. Bod Crldll OK.

23

Professional
Services

MONEY FOR COLLEGE
If You Qr Somt&lt;&gt;nt Y.. Know
NMdo Flnonelal Allllllnoo For
Col1tgl Wo Con Help. For FrM
tnfotmotlon:1 1~21'531111. .
MONEY FOR COLLEGE: Wo Con
Hofp You Find MOllOY I'« Col~ Every Sfudlnf lo Ellglbfo
FOf Flnc!nclot Ald. Homo to: Exlro Dnlnorr S..lco. 114-4417014.

' .

.

Rea! ESIJIC
31 · Homes for Sale
2 brick hom14, 1 with pool,
locotld 4 mllll 11 At. 12. :10417S-Im.
3 Unit ' Rtt!CIII lttutllld On 112

Aero 'l.o.!t_~- Free, b·

Clfllnl-.111

~~ ·~

Fumloh.-1 Smell
Houoo, $250/mo. Pluo UIIIHIIol
And o.-11. 114-446-4331. Col
Complofly

'

Bel«!nt 1p.m.

1770. BRICK RANCH HOME with 2112 sq. h. ollrv,ng
space, 228 sq h. mJI porch, 12x2t covered pat10, 1
car garage, 3 large be&lt;Jrooms, 2 lull baths, spac1ous

EHIC,Ionoy opt. lor rent, bNutlhll

cerp,tt, nice couch ana bar, 304·

li\11ng room With Strauss chandeliers, formal d1ning
room. tam11y room. w1th woodburner. Situated on
4.652 ac. m/1 app. 2 miles from University of Rio
Grande. Call lor appointment

675-6042

Worfc boo1o. 614-446-:1159.
Uood Goocflos 2-llaytag Wrlngor

W, 65,000 WJM gas Meattr, port.·
able waaher &amp; dryer 24" ttack
watharl dryer Haggarty 134 Mill

'

rpmo $60. 304-m-!109.

ANSWERS
SCRAM-LETS
SAVORY
TAKING
WALLET
UNRULY
HEARTH
EXPOSE
STARVATION

Olive St., Galllpolla. New &amp; Ultd
tumhure, healerw, WHtem &amp;

Bedt, a.tc. Insurance And
Medicare Accepted. Clll Advan·

tage Huhh, 1-800-589-1020.

'TO
When I was a kid my best friend
and I would always have a fight and
than not speak to each other lor
several days. Granny always said
that if you neglected a personal grievance long enough it would die of

STARVATION.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

'Wood !RJ_a{ty, Inc.
32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

446·1066

#687. CEDAR RANCH HOME - Situated on 47 acres
mi l Thts home leatures 5 BAs, andlor, office.
playroom , 2Y. baths, u11hty room. cathedral cedmgs
O\ler · room , d1rung room and stone fireplace, l1re
and
i alarm syst em, lirushed fam1ly room w1th
pump and central a•r. 2 car garage,
stocked pond Home has approv.
and many more amemtJes .

Fumlshtd 1-bdnnJ. paid altclric,

"niiiN1rRY LOCATION
immaculate bnck home rests on
a spacious lot with open surroundings 3-4
bedroom home features anractive oak floors.

NEWUSTING
ALL DECKED OUT
Front and rear decks enhance this 3 bedroom
ranch situated on a deadend street. You'll

apprec1ate the large tamily room and efficient
kitchen and utility area. Priced wtlhin your

means at $66,500.

t512

large famtly room, dining room, ltving room. 3
baths and much more. Outdoor enjoyment 1sn't

YOUR
WILL BE PROTECTEO
WITH A HOMEOWNER WARRANTY PLAN II
When you select lh1s spotless 3 bedroom, 2
bath ranch home wilh large great room, formal
dm1ng room and lully equ1pped kitchen Other
leatures included a fenced back yard and
oversized 2 car garage . Priced at $54.000.

overlooked with large deck and fenced yard.
Green Schools. Reduood to $1!2.000.
#706

..

U~ll'l,

[·

No

Pllt,

··

LOCATION- LOCATION- LOCATION
Ask anybodyi"Location is most imponant when
selecting a home ·Here's a 6 room home on 1
acre with a great view of the river and only 5
miles lrom town . Includes ·3 bedrooms,
hreplace, full basement, garage and barn.
Priced at $59,500.
1116

OFFICE !1!12·2886

$135]mo. IUQ Second Annue,

nithtd apt, depolh · and
refi!1Ktct required. 304-882·

258cr;

Now~ rldocorotod 2 bldroom

apt, , retaNnCt a dtpod ,...
qulred, no pets, 304-675-5182.

~chen, blllh, Sears k'lsutaled do~t root . This home

Ccmplllly

b like

Fumloh.-1 mobllo

home, 1 mile bttow 1own over-

looking river. No Polo, CA. 114·

446~3!18.

PIHhnl upotalro Apt, 50t 112 S.
3rd 'lrMt Mlddlopart, living rm,
2·bdim, kh both. lg yord,
$300rno &amp; utl111111, 614·985-4231

45 :

Apt lor rent bW month or WNk,

304-t82-25H.
Roomt tor rent. week or month.
St:r:tl 11 $120/mo. Olfllo Hotel.
11

can mo;;ey;)U

9580.

SIMI&gt;ing

1001111 with cooking.
Arto:lrall~ spice. All hook·upa.

home with very linle money. Owner will
home for part payment. Deluxe doublewida, master

Col ,oftor 2:00 p.m.. 304·7735851,, Mooon WY.

bedlroorn. with balh. family bath, 3 bedrms , formal
of pine cabinets, 1 car gatage. Supet

46 • Space for

Rent

lndllQdual to ohoro 5 bldroo"

Middleport, OH
Hysell Run Road -Two nice laying 2 acre lots. These would
make beaublul homesites.
$6,000

fireplace, nice eat-in kitchen, 1Y, baths , full
basement Very n~ce lot with option to buy
additional lot. Frindly neighborhood se11ing for
your lamily. Cily schools $59,000
N612

MIDDLEPORT·S. 2nd-A roomy executive type 9 room
home wilh 4 bedrooms and 3 lull balhs Th1s modern
ktlchen is every woman's dream wllh the sohd cherry
cabinets, Jenn-airrange, Corian counter to:PS. dishwa.sh~r.
and island work area Now on to lhe lam1ly room .wtth 1ts
skyhghts. calhedral ceilings, peachtree doors &amp; Windows.
and beautilul fireplace with a buck sto"!' 1nsert. The man of
lhe house will enjoy the 2 car garage With storage over top,
the new winng and 1he full basement Bnng lhe fam1lyto see
this home today .
Prlcod at $79,900
Middleport· II you wanl privacy near t?wn with a great VIOW
then we have the place for you. ~n thts 6.n acres y~u can
build your dream home. There ts water &amp; alec. available .
Has a Great Price at JUST
$17,500
TUPPERS PLAINS-Mane St.·A 4 bedroom ranch wilh a
larQ• family room. Also has 2 b1g I
11 ' and
pat1o. The house is well insulated,
and
newly carpeted inside Has newer root -·": .-·'"'

Merchandise
51

furniture, new roof, new carpet and much

more Large llat lol. City schools Pnced al
$38.000. il's easy 10 afford I
#215
BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME HERE
And 1mprove your view. This wooded lot

overlooks lhe lake in Charolais Lake Estates ,
and is only $t6,500
#508

POMEROY·1112 story frame home. N G.F.A. 2 BR's, 1 tl
2 bath, 1 112 car garage, rear balcony wilh beautiful river
v-.w. Ornamental fireplace, built in bOokshelves ASKING
$23,500
•

Into.

"

w1th cathedral ce1hng and fireplace w1ll
welcome your guests for you Full basement

Includes 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room ,

dining room and fami~ room 2 fireplaces. Very
nice backyard area lor k1ds Located on tst
Avenue. Pnced at $79,000.
#208

bedroom and more . lnground pool. Large
outbuilding with po1en11al to become a gues1
house. t .5 acre lot with a view. 4 car storage
Give us a call lor an appointment You'Ve got
everything to gain and nothing to lose .
$125,000.
1204
EXCELLENT BUSINESS POSSIBILITIESII
Located in high traff1c area ~n St. Rt. 7 with so·
lrontage and t80' deep. Includes a reSidence
with 2 or 3 business rooms and 2 mobrle

homes. Dnlled well and 2 sepnc tanks. County
water available. Owner Is very anxious lo sell
Asking $54,900, but would consider any
reasonable offer.
1203
A MOVE IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION
.$tep up to becoming a· homeowner, This 3
bedroom ranch with desirable 1n-town location
Is waiting for your inspeclion. Call today to see
this affordable home priced al $39 ,900.
1511

A GOOD PLACE TO STARTII
Nioo 1983 Mansion mobile home on 80 1 230.
m~ . nicely landscaped tot. This homo offers
nice eat-in kitchen, living room. 2 bedrooms, 1
bath. Can be boughllurnished at $14,000, or
unlurmshed at $ t 2.500 Call to make this
affordable home yours.
1601
HIDEAWAY OVERLOOKING CITY
Looking lor privacy? But still want to be dose
to town? Here's the perlect home for you. Very
lovely ranch localed al the end ol a dead-end
street. Plenty of living space wih over 3,000 sq
11. 4 bedrooms. 3~ baths. large family room.
study and large ltving room with beamed

ceili ng and a wall full ol windows ove~aoking
town and W. V. 3 fireplaces, large screened in
pord! and much, much more. Kids can walk to
school or town. Would y.ou believe all lhls for
under $t00,000? Cal us now.
1201

Wiseman
Real
Estate
.
(614) .446-3644 .

WE NEED LISTINGSIIF YOU WANT TO SELL...CALL
USI WE HAVE HOUSE HUNGREY BUYERS WHO ARE
TAKING ADVANTAGE OF LOW INTEREST RATESI
LET US SELL YOUII HOM£1 CALL TODAYI
1711. RIDUCID P,OOO, WARM AND 1'1111HDLY II'
who1 rou will find In lhio 3 SA ronch to bo wllh LR,
kitcltln. Widln. n1, rwngo, rtf.. tl\ bolht, tltc. 8B
lttst .,-c, fruit 11111, polio lnd Clrpon. Col fat more

the most complete bedroom suite. Living room

SPLIT LEVEL - Three levels that provide
zoned areas for separate activities of fam ily
living , yet combrnod gives space wilh a g~
1raffic flow 3 bedrooms . 211.! baths. d1mng
room , ltvlflg room , efficient kitchen and large L~
shaped lamily room Heal pump, central air. 2
car garage and storage building. Located in
Clearvtew Estates Subdivisidh City schools.
$72.500.
1408

We Have Bu,er$!
We ?:feed Listings!

rt18. CEDAR 6 ITONE RANCH - Everythlng·o
opocial U&gt;out lhlo luhlonoblo aanlomparoa homo__
Hormor'lod LR, OR, 3 bodrmo., 2 bathl. lpnallor
bldrm. l.aadlof cablnotaln kit., ntw llmNy room with
a Vlc1Drion loud!. Woll unit buiH In wlbar .,.. and
'!"' • -·Bock door polio lnd gJtlige. Lorge lot
With- Iii olavtly ntiQhbofltaod. Thlo homo i1 ol
luporb qUality.

1117. IPACIOUI DOUILIWIOIIIANCH wllh 3 BR,
LR, OA, lUI willor, rongo, rot., lg. lrQnt porQtt, boclt
diCk, oloc. hoat•
CIA, 2 cor gorogo, 2 cor
corpon 1ae.

TIRED OF LOOK·ALIKES?
We've go1 a 'one of a kind" home lor you. This
eye appealing rustic contemporary home has
somelhing tor the entire family Master
bedroom has adjacentloh and ample room for

that just won't quit has possibilities for a 4th

CHARMING HOUSE IN TOWN
AHordab1lity is only one ol the bonuses tllat w1ll
attract your interest The owners have
completely remodeled lhis home from top to

85 ACRE FARM ALONG RACCOON CREEK
Complete with 2 barns, 2 ponds and a very
nK:e brick home. Comprised mosdy of pasture
and tillable acreage. There's a 2,DOO lb.
tobacco base and good spring . 3 bedroom
home wilh full basement and 1 car 9arage.
Ex•a 2 car detached garage also. Ou1et area
in Green Schools. $120,000.
1202

WHY RENT? WHEN YOU CAN OWNI 14 i 'm-Nahua
Mobile Home wilh 3 BR's, currently sol up on a rented lo1:
lncl.udes deck &amp; underpinning. ASKING $7.000 OWNER
WANTS THIS SOLDI

FOR A LOT OF "LITTLE REASONS"
CHOOSE THIS CLASSIC.....
t) In town convenience - kids can walk to
schools and activities.
2) Ample living space - lormal liv~ng room.
dtntng room , 3 bedrooms, 2 baths , sunny
kitchen , family room (over 2,000 sq. h.)
3) Ample storage space - large a111c and
basement, 1 car garage.
4) The pnce . $63.000
All lh1s lor the spectal people in your life .

EASY TO AFFORDII
Remodeled 2-3 bedroom home localed one
mile from town is ready to move 1nto. New

wilh breakfasl nook, new carpet and decorating
and new furnace leave very .little lor you to do.

'•

1

landscaped inground pool in backyard.
street parl&lt;jng. Give us a call for an apf&gt;Oin,t·
ment.
-

bottom . New balhrooms, beautiful new kitchen

children, ,wlh
of entlre houM, long

NEW LISTING ON ARST AVENUE
Very nice 2 story home is waiting for you and
your family . rpis home has been complelely
remodeled m very fine taste Features tnclude
4 bedrooms, 2'1· baths, tam1ly room. formal ·
dining room and formal l1ving room. Beautilul
kttchen wtlh ch erry cabtnets , 2 i I
and
very altracl1ve oak sta1rcase.

SYRACUSE-4th St-Need an extra 1ncome? You can have
it il you buy !his 4 bedroom, 2 balh Duplex located close to
lhe park &amp; pool also Included is an extra trader lot
ALL FOR $28,000

or oljoof lirm. 304-07!1·1239.

•

NEW LISTING· Syrscuse• This mobile home has 2 bedrooms . 2 baths, an added room with central air &amp; underpin·
ning Complete with 4+ lots a shed, garden space and nver
lrontage! A GOOt:l BUY $29,900

205 North Second Ave.

living room w1th

hom,, will accept

hav~ Ult

Grant Street In Middleport· 2 story , 6 room, 3 bedroom
lrame home wlfull basement on large lot. GOOD LOCATION I Large front porch, 2 stall shed w/anached leed &amp; tack
. room.lenced area. As~ng $34,900 MAKE /IN OFFER.

livabililty describes this 3
bedroom all brick

Furnished

Rooms

bedrm ., vinyl ranch close to town, t 'h baths, LR, kit.,
dm. area, lull baument wwlth 4 rms. Family rm. and
'lr bath down wtth outSide entry. tMner works on cars
1n 26'x32' garage w1red at 220 elec. Owner sa~ •sen~.

POMEROY· A 31evellrame struclure w1th 21ots and 50+
• 100 pariUng area. Hardwood floors, gas space heat. A
possible Site for 3 apar1menls A nice large building ...use
your imaglnalionl ASKING $29,500

lulfill your homeowners dream.
NS13

814-441-0338,

Apoftmonll In Ml=ft. From
$191\ Coli 114-112. EOH.
Middleport, Bloch Sl, 2 bod·
roan\ hlmrlahld apt, uUIIIIK
paid) rotoroncoo &amp; dopotlt roqulrld, 304-882·2566.
N.w H1ven, one bttdroom fur·

PRICED AT $39,900 • O..n your own home. 3

RUTLAND- VERY NICE t IIOOJirame home wilh 3 BR's, t
112 bath, garage, carport, patio. appliances, heat pump,
storage buildings on approx. 6 acres. A very well kept
homel ASKING $39,500

'l&gt;'l,,UIJU.

Fumfohld
Efflcloncy, All
Utll11111 Pold, Share Bath,

OPI'ORITUI~ITY KNOCKS AGAIN - UNDER

143a.

Combine this low price with low interest rates

'

Real Estate General

living. 1 •nd 2 btd·
roora apartmtntl at VIllage
Manor
and ,
Rivtrtk1e

1768. BUSINESS • 30x50 block garage wilh 2 car
garage, baye. STATE APPROVED. Wi1ed 110 and
220. lnventol'y of garage and office equipment on file
65x14 Hollwpark features 2 bedrooms. living room.

~uv !

family room, k11chen and bath. Upstairs you Will
find 2-3 bedrooms. plus a large bath w11h
whirlpool tub. Ample outdoor area leatunng
large screened in porch , sun patio, 2 car
garage w1th shed and 2 horse stalls. C!"ltoday
for your chance to own your ~ mm1 Tara Pnced
at only $74,9001
N&amp;01

, REALlY NIFTY I
You'll county yourselllucky lo own this good
looking bi-level with one car garage and fenced
yard. There are 3 bedrooms and one balh, and
the handy person in the fam1ly will enjoy
finishing the lower lev~ into a re&lt;;real!on room
for the family Don't wait- the price is $39,900.
#506

Gradoua

1988 Schultz 14'x70' mobile home w1th 3 BAS LR
kitct1en w/dinette, 2
, I' rm. Also 8'•10' ~11111Y
bl~g You'll want to
Call.

what a

1-800-894-1006

room and dining room with 2 tirepla.ces. Coz_y

WANT A HOME AT AN AFFORDABLE
PRICE? THAT YOU CAN MOVE RIGHT
INTO?
Than you need to take a look at lhis beauty.
large l1vingfdining room combination , n1ce
kilchen wilh laundry area. 3 bedrooms and 2
baths . Newly painted ceilings and exterior.

Gl111po11o, 114-446-31145.

$30s.

1762. FOUR

Cltln,

Ro..tncl And DepaoH Roqulrtct. 614-446·151i.
Furrilahtd Apartment, 1br, nerl
lo Ubrary, parillng, c•nlral heat,
air, · rtftrencu.
Balor17p.m.

1121. PRICE REDUCED - Great starter home
featuring 3 BR, bath, kitchen, living room with app.
1000 sq. ft. ollivii"'Q space. call lor appt Ptlced in the

.
PRICE. 3 bedrooms and room lor
more. 31uil baths, 5 fireplaces, completed basement
wtth fam ily rm ., WB FP, equ•pped kitdlen, bath, also
an a&lt;khttOnal room with gas ftreplace . Possession on
the dose ol the transaellon.

Fuml1htd 3 Room• And Bath

trees.
1110. 30 ACRE FARM mil wlll'l tobacco base and
barn. 2 story lrame house wilh 3 bedrooms, bath,
living room, utility room. CaH lor pnot and location.

CALL TODAY FOR AN

NEW LISTING
CRAVING A LITTLE SOUTHERN ELEGANCE
IN YOUR LIFE?
Then you must see th•s ho'!'e. Be impressed
as you step into the oversrzed formal hvtng

night, 150.00 wook, 0~1141~526

couple · II in !ewe with this 3
Cozy
ltreplace in LR. Nice cabine11 in
.
9as
tleat, patto, 2 car garage, new Olnbuildlng Premest
corner lot wtth ra~l fence and some new shrubs and

.
I
- 28x:J6 lrame 2 wall
STATE APPROVED garage 1112 years ok:l with 8x10
office spacu. Wired 110 and 220 Business is sold
with 1rwentory and equ1pmant lor tire sales. List ol
equ1pment IS on file Emp1re by Redman t4x70 2
bedroom, 1t/2 baths, mob1le home year 1984 Home
and busmess 1s s1tuated on 1 ac mil lot. Call lor price
and location .

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS - Located on R1. 7
(Eureka) 30X36 block bldg., wilh stora!l" in basament, 70
n. frontage an Rt. 7, lot runs to Ohio R1vor,. currently usod
as Convenient Mart and Carry Out. All inventory, stock and
equipment in store goes, includng liquor licensa. (C·1)

APPOINTMENT

S2li0rno: ·All 10 Kaom'o 110.00

mil m1neral nghls PRICED FOR AQUICK SALE

JEAN TRU88ElL.:...........................................MI·2&amp;60
·OFFICE"......:.................................. ..................Hf-.2251

aii1S, 614-1192-7816

Eleclrlc hospital bed compllte
$100.
Antique
cabinet
r1dloirtcord player, playa 38

n, cam·

from $192fma. Walk to •hop &amp;
mavin. Call814-446-2518. EOH.

money mai1Jng prapooition . Call lor oppolntmont.

nfil.

-Real Estate General

HENAY c, CLELAHD.......................: .................1112-611i
• TRACY IRINAQEA""""'''""''''''"""''''''' ''"'"''''''"I41-243t

Merchandise

992-7511
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jockoon Pllco

VENDING ROVTE: Got Rich

22 Money to Loan

54 Miscellaneous

Ash Slrtll FrH Will Bap1111
church haa 15 pews tar tale,
$20 each, witt take offering tor

Uood WhHicholrol 3 Whoolld
ScootonL Llllchl ro, Electric

depaall, 118 112 E. Main Sl, 614·

Quick? No Way! But We Have A
Good, Steady, Affordable, Busl·
nHI. Won't Last. 1--800·284·

6212.

Medical Supplln: New And

Houra: U.T.W. 10;00 a.m. to 6:00

p.m., Sundoy 1:Qa to 0:00 p.m.
614-11112·2526.
.

lnllde Nit. fieb. 3. 4, 5,
Children'• Home Ad, tools, gun,
knlr., trailer, mlao, 8t4.092·7113

Apt. lor rent, $175tmo., $175

.. ,

Gain Financial Independence
Pay Phones, Local Area, Call
Now 1-800-741 -5514 .

NEW Color Cat1log. 1-800-228-

"0!1·

Al.o Will Haul Llmettone. 614·
441ofl321.

o pels. 614-

merclal.

locatiOn. Eastern Ave. Opportunity to combine home
and business. Ohio River frontage . Vary nice 3
bedrm. home wlappliances, full basement. This is-a

Lot C 5 acres m/1-29,500
Subd1vts1on lots to share t/6 of electr•c tnstallanon
Water available

VACANT LAND SURVEYED FOR LOTS KNOWN
AS "FARMYIEW ESTATES"

New Haven WV.

992·7WI, aleo 1500 aq

1731. COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIAL - Ptlme

1761. NEW LISTING. SPIC AND SPAN. l'k&amp; new

Low Ao $18.00, Call Today FREE

Modal T Spoodotor All Now, Ford F·1SO truck, flood cond.
Royol Ook · R-n Celli to
SoriH Now TlrH~, Exctllont Coaat memberahlp, Ideal_place
CondHion, Buoh
Oloc, for family recreallon $2,M5.
PI-, Boom l.ofl. $3,500. Col 304-875-1564.
114-4181-3305.

$3,300; MatMY Ferguson M·50

2-BR unhlmlohldil downlown

.APARTMENT - All ol 1h1s in one bundle ol real
IS located on a corner 101 w•th
property having the nver as hs bOundary n us home
has a grea1 deal ol potenlial as a home or ott•oo
space It features 3 BR, 1112 baths, fam1ly room .
basement w/llreplace, lots of storage area It also
features a 2 BR . 1 bath apartment over a 2 car
garage Call lor an appomtment to see th1s mtores!lng
home

estate Th1s property

Financial

Ntw Commtrclal, Homt Unlls,
From $199.00. Lamps Lotions,
Accttsoriu. Monthly Payments

Fir.wood FOf Solo: Big Loodo,
Dollv...t And Stockld, $45;

All conlalned, •xc cond. 1N1

44

Will Do HOUII Cleaning And
OMice Cleaning, Experienced.
614-446·7715, 614-441-1719.

8363.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS

22 • MonHor comportrallor hilly

Real Estate General

$5000, 614-949-2526

1112. SUPER BIG 4 BEDROOM HOME- t3 rooms.

1

Chatt11at.
Ton TNck Ex:c.llent
11,300; 1124

Merchandise

Water Iron! lot 11 Racine Dam,
reduced price, waa $7000 now

ranch home 1
in the country.
t
complete&lt;! as follows : new Thermo AUside windows,
secunty doors, steel S1d1ng, heavy rool, kit., ceramic
tile entry extended tnto the kitchen, 16x53 deck,
cement walks and pad . See this home and SlOP
looking elsewhere.

recommends that you do buslnnt with people you know, and
NOT to send money through lhe
mall until you t'lavt lnvesllgated
the offering.

1968

Cab And

Merchandise

Real Estate General

14l64 Deck Wllh Awning, Newly
RKarpeted,
Book
Value,
$10,200, Will Soli For $1,300.

~~

POMEROY, OHIO

Merchandise

54 Miscellaneous

E/0/E

more than 5,000 sq . 11. 2 baths, remodele&lt;J k•tch&amp;n
w1th BBQ bUilt 1n. 2 fireplaces, large garage. 40 ac.

EAST MAIN

Slack. Caah And Corry Mol·
lohan Carpets, 014-4411·,.44.

54 Miscellaneous

2201 Lexington Avenue
Ashland, KY 41101
(606) 327·4607

Viewing 2 Hrs. Jlrior to sale.

992·2259

$115. Slcoaa• _:r~onco1, 614- 53
Antiques
440-73Gfl, lli' 1
1111-341111.
0.:::"::7.::-:::-::~~':':'"'-Buy or 1111. Rlverl111 Anllquee,
Big Sovlngo On All Corptt In 1124 E. Main Slrtlt, Pomeroy.

for Rent

Antique and coUectible sale Saturday Feb. 81h at
11 :00 A.M. at the Vinton Co. Jr. Fa1r Building on
St. Rt. 93, 1 mile N. of Mu\rthur, Ohio.

614-594·3780 days
698·1231 late nig6ts

Cut To l125i Kenmore Dryer

S1. Mldd1opor1

54 Miscellaneous

42 Mobile Homes

For a personal interview call:

HOWERY'S

675-3984.

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Evenings.

KDMC NURSING ... APATIENT PROFESSION

Spflng Valley Area, 2br, 1 Bath,

BRING YOUR OWN CHAIRS!
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK
WITH POSITIVE I.D. OR APPROVED FIRST.
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE:
AUCTIONEER: RODNEY HOWERY,

Wlttrbtda • 2 OuNn Size, 614·

448·2230 Aftor 5 P.M.

614~46-3537

Roqulrod.

6251.

Cherry Corner Cupboard·7'9" taii·BIInd Champered doon,
pegged sq. nails &amp; all original hnlsh; prlmlllve Lg. chest, 2 small
drawen aver 3lg. ones (all champerecl &amp; dovetailed); walnul 2
door knock~own victorian Wll'drobt w/mlrrar doors; walnut Vic.
halltrea-umbrtlla stand; walnut wbite marble Insert vic. dresser,
walnut marble lop droster; walnul vic. washsland; walnut
dropleaf kitchen !able; wolnut 6 tin pie safe; lg. walnut pleaust
Stand w/paw feet; sm~l mll'blt top sland; oak bakers cablnel;
oak hooslers cabinets; maple double wide hoosier kitchen
cabinet; oak ftatwafls; oak ddel&gt;oard; oak Iarkins desk; 7 door
oak bookcase; oolc seaetary; sol of 4 press bade kitchen chcin;
oak washslands &amp; others; oak dressen; oak 4 drawer lilt
cabinet· pll'lor stands; pit cupboard; high bed; kitcken (sit In)
eating booth; rod&lt;erslndudlng double press; pr. of matching Iron
bedt; game lablt w/71eant; teakwood ICieen; MiiC. Seeburg
iuk.ebox model ST; edison cylinder record machine; new haven
regulator clock; Shirley Temple 113 doll 1934 marked;
glmware· 3 pieces ol Wavecrestlncluding cracker jar, dresser
bu, pin tray; havalin china; enameled pitchet; depression gla11;
1taffinshlre dog w/pheiGnlln mouth; picture frame•; loll of old
marbles Including a 1 1/2 lalllcenlo; several good old hand
11i1ched quilts; 11verol old lops &amp; several bous of old hand
stitched blodct; tin toys; lew old coins; mile. boltl ole. several
pieces of stonewaro· Blue &amp; Whitt soli glaze Buller aock· soli
jar; pitcher; crock also stone jcrs &amp; jugs some freehand bfue &amp;
10me mcrkecl donaghhootc.; ontlcrligned &amp; dated 1839; Many
more quality ..U.,tiloleL

Wohlr Hoovoy Duty Woo $150,

Washer And Dryer Elecurlc
Atnge, Fvll Bed, 814-441-7461.

To· Schoola $400/mo. Relartn·

~odtrn

Business
Opportunity

2174.

Pltlllnt Area: 3br House,
Carpeted, Newly Redtcoratld,

Bargain, Five Acru Sale!
WoOded And
Part
Open
Property, Nice Building Or
Mabile Home Silo~ Electric, New
S~rv•y, Ntar Alnens, $6,950.

Real Estate General

partnership dancing. Singlll,
Couples and grouJ)s welcome.
For Info please eall afttr 7:00
PM ask lo' Anna or Jim, 304·

2t

$415/mo. Otposil Required, 614448--4222, or Evenln;s: 614446·

P~nt

Monday Thru Friday, 9-4:30 P.M.

OopooH:

304-'75-~30 or 075-341l

Household
Goods

3-bdrm, 602 High Strut, Nol· Frost Frea Refrigerator, Coppw·
sonvill•, $250 mo 614-949-2528
tone, Was $150, CU1 To $95·
Refrigerator H1rves1 ~d. Uke
3-BA
on
Lincoln Hgt1., Now, $195; Upright FrHzor $125;
Potneroy. 614·992·7181 after Whirlpool Waahtr Harvest Gold,
5:00pm
SWAIN
3br 2 Batho, FP, OW, CA, AUCTION &amp; FU RNITUAE. 62

Lots &amp; Acreage

1.63 Aeroo, $6,000. 304-522-7996

LOCATION: JaycH Building rlghlacrooo RL 35
Con1lgnment taken 10:00 to 6:00 day of eale.
Truckload of new merchandlae, new dealero, new
and ueed merchandlae.
Torma: Caoh or Chock wlllt proper I. D.
Door Prine - Lunch
AUCTIONEER, DAVID BOGGS
Uc. No. 4596
Gollipollo, Ohlo114-44&amp;-nso
Uconnd 111d Bonded In State ol Ohio
Not
for Accldonto or Lou of

SISi Kenmore Wuher $75·
Whirlpool Waahtr 2 YNra Otd'
Llko Now, $195; Whl~pooi

5 Room Houu, In Counlry, Chy
Schoof Olllrlct, 614-446-0974.

Crown City 01-!io, Near Routt 7,

EVERY FRiDAY NIGHT 7 P.M.

Wt are In ntld of farms and
acreage. We have buyars.
Plene, give Ul a call If you are
lnt•rnted In telling your
praptrty. Thank you. SomtrVUit
Realty, 512 Flhh St, Pt. Pl1111n1,

41 Houses for Rent

REHABILITATION

&amp;14-446-11511, 814-448-3292, 814256·1267.

PUBLIC AUCTION

Goods

Rentals

120 Acre Farm On Bumeue Run
Raid, 2 Mlln Off At. 7, Good 9
Rooma And Bath. Farm House,

8

Wanted

WV.

Position lor lull time or part lime RN. Make a
difference as part ol a multidisciplinary team In an
Intensive physkal rehab en¥1ronment. An opportunily
to assist potlents to maximum re&lt;overy.
·
Outstanding benelits and progressive compensation.

All Electric. Good Farm Bulldtra
Ovlf 32 Hundred Pound Tobbaeo Base, City Sehoola, Aural
Water, Ready To Move Into.
$79,900, Call For Appointment:

~=;;:=:::=;P~o~m~e~r~oy~~M~Id~d~le~po~rt~~G~al~llp~o~ll~s~,O~H~~Po~l~nt~P~Ie~a~sa~n~t~,w~v=:=:=:=:::=F=~s~u~n~da~y~~:;;~~~~~~

2, 1992

;36;=~R;,e:a¥1E;,st:a:t:e==i~51~=:H:;o:;us:;e:;h:;ol::d=:=T51

Help wanted

REGISTERED NURSES
CARDIAC STEPDOWN

P1rtnar.hlp Dlnca lnslructlon.
Prof111ional young couple
teaching Country Wutem,

Ballroom, Latin end

2, 1992:

February

5p.m.: 614-446-8104

tor Sale

45701. 614-593-5551 Ext 227,
E.O.E.

Stylllt wanted for hlgtl traffic
salon, no clientele necessary,
we can tleiJ) build your future,
far appalntmant call Carol King,

$49,900,

February

1710.' HANDYMAN 8PlCIAL - 'MAKI QFFIA •
Lind oannot. Vou11 flO b4ICit In tlntolf,you !IW In 11t11
Iorge 2 •IDlY llamo. 5 bldrmo, bolh, kl\, dining rm ..
utility rf!1., ctllar. flatn Wiopprox. 313 of an ocr,.
$23,000.
...
)

David Wiseman, Broker, 446-9555
. LOREnA McDADE, 448-7729
B, J. HAIRSTON ·'"8·4240

.'

••

.••

•• •

.....

�•

February 2, 1992

February 2, 1992-

wv

Is, OH-Polnt
Autos for Sale

71- Autos for Sale

1982 Block Trona Am, 814-448· 1984 Dodge A~-. 4 dooo, block,
AMIFM cantltt, 4 cyl, new IX•
_ 18 Cu. Ft. .OIIvt RtfriS,:I'IIo r, 1'756.
haull, 114·H2·7Z3e, evtnlnge
. $50; G.E. Wnher, $50; UIT&amp;Y 1982 VW Robb" Gaoollno 4
: ,Rldln~ Lawn_ Mower, 38u Inch Speed, · Rtal
·
"• Condlllon,
'
1187 Dod~..... _Shelby
Slladow
Nk:t
I coalod
5-

BRIDQJ:

Merchandise

Cut, 50; 111&amp; Pl.,mouth ..olare $1,000 Or But Offer. 614 -441• CSX, 2.2 ur-, nltr
t..::::
· Station Wagon, 814-256-6850.
tpaM, AUIFM ca ... AC, t':lil

~

Nice Couctt And Chair $225; 0020.
. Bedroom Suitt $150(• Hldt·A·

-w.y Bed , $45; Smal Recliner

:· $48. 814-446-3224.

l~ulr1"

PB. Strlout
Town Car, claim E'flnlngt814·992 125.

~~~~/§'~loa
~do~d~,;&amp;~14_·99
;;2· 11987

:

only

Horizon, Aulomatlc With

Air; 1985 Tompol. 44,000 MillO,

&amp; 1984 Camaro Z-28 1 T-tops, 350 laad.d, $1,550 uch. 614-25&amp;dryen, uch $100 and up. We eng, tuto, loaded, $3000, or _::
12_::
70::_·--:-::-----::-:-::-::-----:-::Hrvlce all makes. The Waaher &amp; traG• for S-10 Blazer or S- 10 1987 Nluan Patntlnder, 4x4,
Reconditioned

waahert

Dryor Shoppa. l14·441-2944.
Royal Oak membtrehlp, great
for family, priced to 1111, 304675-4154 ' "" 4:30.
•·aao-·• Fl ... wood, Ash, Oakd
- Delivered Split An
.Hicknrv.

Stack.d, S55 Pick-Up toad. Don

uuck, 304-675-3319

1985 Plymouth Call , liar cond,
$1,200. 304-675-8899 atter 5:00

Pt.l.
1i86 Escort $800; 1986 Turlsmo,

low mlltl, tun roo1, S1 050; 1987
Horizon, 40 milts gal. 304-675-~~-~~;;~:;;;;;;;;~d,2rl;::

w.~a~ug!:h~,6;;14::-4~4~1-~96::;4;::6.-=::::;-::;:;: 2440.

~

Signa: Portable llghte d 11gn
wlftllars $299. jPa fmlnt Plan).
FrN JellersJdelivery. Plast ic let·
Iars S47.50 box. 1..S00.533·3453

anytime.

&amp;2,000 Milos, $8,500. 614-446:
::76:.:02::·-,---=-.,-::-c:-:-~
Mu1lang GT, white/black
5-opood, V815.0, 21,000MI,
power Lumbar 11111, laid oft
mua1 1111, $9500, &amp;14·992-61731
992 2015

1991 Pontiac
'i!lioQI~i:
4sp., amffmfcassaUe,
1987 c•, .. vy Nova: high m11
showroom
cond., 45MI ~per
nHda rtpalr. Good transporia61 4 94 9
tlon Clr. Reduced: $1,000. For lil~on~·~~-~~~-2~BT7i;j~i;d.$1i00:
more lnfOfmatlon Call 814-446Loaded. $1100.
2342, Ask tor Ptul.

••a-.

25". Eloclrlc '''~- Now condl·

PHILLIP

p.m.
1978 F·100 truck, 114·949-2888

ALDER

Tralltr. !14-441-3242, 2 p.m. To I

a her Spm tnd W1tk1nda

1f78 Bronco 351, 4 Speed, Ntw
Chrom• Rime, Paint Exheust,

Very Sharpl Must SOol &amp;14-4464462.
1984 Ford XlT 250, Work Truck,
614-446: 175&amp;,
1985 Ford F250 XL, heavy duty
supor cab, 4 wheel dolvo, auto, By Phillip Alder
PS, no rust, 62,000MI, very gooa

Eleven can be
a key number

condition, $6500, Elden -wat~
burn, 614-992·2805
1966 Mazda LX touck. 1987

Honda 125 four wheolor, now
tires &amp; batlory. 304-7T.I-51D9.
1989 Fold 4x2 F·150 XLT Lariat,

loadod, 51,000 miles, by owner,

~$~·:::·:.::::;:·:.:_5-:::::::2.::...._-,--.l
8 4 50 3 04 6 7 2 5 9

Snow Chltf snow blower. 8 HP,
lion. $800. 304-675·21&amp;1.

1973 Chovy; 1982 Chevy; ·18 F1.

Real Estate General

1------;,.;,;,,;;_;;;.;;,;,;_;,;;_:....:_..:..:.;_ _ _ _ __

Qullt•ra And Crahtrs: 1-lugt
Sale, This Friday And Saturday

1990 Nlssan/lck-up, gray, bod
liner, 5-spto , 21,000Ml, AMI'FM
stereo, perfect cond, S6200, 614·

992-6173/ 992·2015

The Rule of 11 is in essence simple
and useful, If the opening lead is
fourth highest, every player may deduct from 11 the value of the spot-card
led. The resultant figure gives the
number of cards above the one led that
are in the other three hands. So if the
seven is led, there are four higher
cards in

~-

d

the other three lidO s.

This can be especially useful for the
leader's partner in assessing the lay-

From 5 P.M. To 7 P.M. And All

Day Monday, Jack&amp;on Square

out of the suit, thouah occasionally as with all defensive conventions - it
will help the declarer. But in my expe·
rtence, most playen don't employ the
Rule of II at all,
North's four-dub rebid showed the
club ace and a hand suitable for play
in hearts.
West led the spade seven: two, jack,
five. Back came a spade. Declarer
drew trumps and started to run the
clubs. When East showed up with four,
declarer made a loser-on-loser play,
discarding one of his diamond losers
on dummy's last club. East had to lead
either a diamond or a spade, permitting declarer to lose only one more di·
amond trick and to make his contract.
South played well to duck the first
trick, but if East had applied the Rule
ofll, he would have played the spade
four at trick one, not the jack. He
would have known that South could
have only the spade ace and no other
spade higher than the seven. II South
ducks the trick , West can switch to the
diamond 10 (or queen), defeating the
contract.
South could have played better. He
should have covered the spade seven

Trucks for Sale

NORTH
+92
'A K 10 l
t K IS
+A K43

1-1·11

cond lion. 304·675-1965 or 3G4.

882-3525.

EAST
+QJ64

WEST
tK t0 8 73

't 7J

•s o

A

• Q 10 9

+ 10 5

73

t J9 86
SOUTH
tA~

Real Estate General

Ouln Unlng, $3.00 Yd. 90 Inch
Quln Prlnl, $4.98 Yd . (Ooublo
Wedding Ring! Loco 8 Yd. $1.00
Muslin Bleached Or Unbleached

Soulb

West

3'

Pass

Nortb

1 NT

••

Pass

••

Pass

Ea•t
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • 7

L-- - - - - - - - - - - '
with dummy's nine to forCe East I()

win trick one.
@ 1-. NEWSPAPER ENTIRL Rill AIIN.

Real Estate General

Pets far Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breeds, styles.
lams Pel Food Dealer. Julie
AKC Chinese Pugs, Pekingese
. &amp; Cockar Spanrels. 304·~7622C7 till 11 ;00 PM luva mes·
sage.

AtCC Male Ron Wtllar Pup\ 8
WHkl
Old,
Champ on
Bloodllnt, 1st Sholl, S300. 614·
AKC reglstlrtd bassett hound,
1yr. old, $50.00, 614·992·3537
AKC

registered Lhasa Apso

AKC

Scalllsh

pupploa, "304-l;75·2193.

Te rrier,

melt,

SwU old, non aheddlng, llrst
1hot 1 wormed, $200, 614·594·

1MB Kawankl LTD-454, vary
good cond, 4,400 mlloa, boll·

LAWELT

ROUTE 160••• SPRINGFIELD TWP...CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED NEAR NEW SHOPPING CENTER. HOME
HAS 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, FAMILY ROOM, 75
ACRE . LOTS OF SPACE. AFFORDABLE PRICE
$35, 000,

Will pay cash tor uMc:l motor

cylo parto. Colll14-4711-7055

·

I

L.

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

81

. . . - - - - - - - - - , each· other for several days.
HAT HE R
Granny always said that if you
, ~~-I neglected a personal grievance
1----rl~
, :..,.;I:.:...:r.-:
_ . . 1
. .
long enough it would die of

I

1

L-L-L-L_L_J..._J ----------

s0 X E E11 p I

~ .z

I c-.

1--...;:_..:,.......;..;..,..;::_:;;,...;-r~

Complete the chuckle quoted
g
0
V by tilling in the missing words
L.-..l--....1....-..l.-.J.L-....1.---l you develop from •tep No. 3 below.

I I l

1

0

32 Locust Street, GOOD

446·1066
Allen C. Wood, Reallor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446-0971
Mo8e Canterbury, Realtor-446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Aeal1or-256-1745
Tim Watson, Realtor - 446-2027

PRESENT HOME? - Vn11
can
to move up! 5 bedrooms, 2 baths,
kitchen, laundry, patio and 2 car garage, quiet
area bul yet close to town. Call lor more details.
1366
NEW LISTING - Beaulilul all brick home
si tuated on 50 acres mil with 3 bedrooms.

liVIng, dining and lamily room, 3 bath and lull
garages Asking $124,900.

#412

MOBILE HOME IN COUNTRY - 3 bsdroom s. 2 baths,
large porch , electric heat. central air, 20x30 garage
located on 2 acres m or I in Ohio Twp. CAL L FOR
APPOINTMENT.

Supply, 614-992-21&amp;4

CONDO IN CITY - All brick
.
full balhs, equipped ~Iehan , living room, 1
room , laundry w/washer and dry:er, heat pump,
cent. air, many extras. Very mea. Must see.

PupPIII for salt. Registered

Only $65,000. Broker owned.

mln1at ure Dachshun ds. 304·675·

1388

3521.
Roll Weller Puppies German
Ired, Perents O.F.A., CMw

Puppy, 1 Fomalo, All AKC Roglo!orod- &amp;14·245-St61.
Tho Porfocl 'llllontlnoo Day Gml
~C Atglltartd Botton Terrier
Puppltt, Now Taking Dtpoalts.
114-441-2741

Thorough Brtd Aultrllllsn Cattle
dog puppiK, 8 wko old, $35.
..Ch, 304-7112-222&amp;,

Musical
Instruments

Lowrey Ctt1t1on Thut•r Slylt
Homo Organ. Two Ughtod
Keyboard•, an. Oct•~• Foot
Podoll In Good COndition. call
!~Anyllmo.
TKO 85 Ball Amp $125. 304-67561112.

For Sale
or Trade

25&amp;·1624,

BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME sq.
I
space, 3 bedrooms. 1Yr baths, located on 10 _
and borders Raccoon Creek. Green &amp; Gall1polis
schools. CALL NOW 11 !
COUNTRY SETIING FOR THIS A FRAME HOME 3 bedrooms, living room, family room, bath, located
on 2.5 acres. Green-Gallipolis school d1stnct.
HURRY'! CALL TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT.

&amp; Livestock
Farm Equipment
$2,300. 614·

lntemallanal 424 Dlnel Tractor,
Bush Hog, S3,3i5; 10M International 1&amp;,1195; BOO Ford $2,950;

John 011ro 1020 Sharpl $4,995.
Owntr Wlll Finance. 614·21&amp;6522-

Jim's Farm Equipment, SR. 35,

Wnt Galllpolla, 814-448-1777i

Wide ltlec11on new • ulld farm
tractors &amp; Implements. Buy,
1111, tr1d1, 8:00·5 ;00 wHkdays,

Sat. till Noon.
M111lt Harris Ponay lrtctor
WICUOivolor, $1,500. 304-6752457.
Uvestock

GOOD LOCATION IN TOWN - 3 bedrooms, l ivi ~g
base~ent, 2 car garage. Home has new roof and
alum. siang. CALL NOW!!!

HOME &amp; ACREAGE IN. WALNUT TWP.- 2 bodrooo1s.
living room, kitchen and bath, House remodeled 11
ago, electric . B. heat, 76 acres m or I with tobacco
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT _
1873 MOBIL£ HOME - A 12x65 mobile home on a
rented lot washer and dryer hookup in bathroom, 2
bedrooms, 13!t'tx 11!11 storage building. Priced at
$6,000,00.
HOME I 3 ACRES IN HARRISON TWP. - 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, deck on front and ~de of home, a
block garage 2.4x22. CALL ABOUT THIS ONE!!
PRICE REDUCED - LOG HOME WITH 10 ACRES M
or Lin Harrison Twp., 3 bedrooms, 1Yo bath , large
living room and kitchen , Large porch, bam and
storage shed. Nice country sening. MU ST SEE Ill
·HOME IN CROWN CITY- 3 bedrooms, livin_g room,
kitchen, beth, 1\JII basement cerdral heat&amp;. atr condl·
tion 2 car ganoge. Ron!Bd mobile home on back ol
lol CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION.
100 ACRES M or Lon Friendly Aidgo in Clay Twp. ·
Watar and elaetric available. Priced at $32,500,00.

Bkl Billy Royol Show Soddlo.
814-2tHS22.
Plgo tor oalo,l14-742·2&amp;33

FOR SAL£- 62 ac res in Lawrence County.

Atgiltlfad Vurtlng ~nt• Bull
• AJ. 1FIIdlng, l14-4
47.

Transportation
Autos for Sale

seoo. can

Pallo and storage buildings. All this and more
on over ~ acre priced in low 40's. Call for
your app~ nlment today,
1398
BULAVILLE PIKE - Is this 2 bdrm. home wilh
bath, kitchen, large livi ng room and laund ry,
heat with natural gas, wood or coal., lui!
basemenl, 2 car detached garage ~d 16 • 20

Thcr
INTEREST RATES DROP!
New low nlca now
available wilh differe nt progra m• to fit
your nccda. Call on
one of the Real Eatate
Profeuionalt st Century 2 1, Dig Bend

GOOD INVESTMENT PROPERTY -A 2 story frame
double located on Second Avenue, Gallipolis. 4 rooms
and bath downstairs and 4 rooms and bath upstairs,
Call today.
LOCATJ:D IN GALLIPOLIS - Vine Slllle!~ 4 rental
un~o. · good income property. Cal for more
inloi!Tiation.
HOOSE IN GALLIPOLIS- 3 room s and beth , walking .
astii1Ct to ~ehoolo and otoreo. Priced al $16,000.00.
I

GREAT LAND FOR DEVELOPMENT - 40 ocnoo for
sole in the CitY
ol Glili!Jolio. cn.ck thio OM outll

lim»•

GREE~ ACRES -

today

$,... •""

COME IN
WILL SPEND MANY LONG WINTER EVENINGS
ENJOYING THE WARMTH OF TH IS HOME, COZY
FIREPLACE IN THE LIVING ROOM PLUS FAMILY
ROOM HAS HEARTH WITH WOOD-BURNER . 4
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, WOAKSAVER KITCHEN WITH
SNACK BAA FORMAL DINING, 2 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE. EXTERIOR IS NATURAL REDWOOD AND
BLENDS PERFECTLY WITH 9 PINE STUDDED ACR__§S .

ti~AMBLE
TIERS
11111111111

I
81

Home
Improvements

Home
Improvements

POMEROY AREA - Character, style,
chai!TI. This home has it all. Older home,
complolely refurbished. 3 bedrooms , 2 _baths.
Wrap-around porch. Several bullrings. Situated
on approx. 1 and 1/2 acre s. Rock Spnngs
Road. A s~ng $59.500. Will take MH for down
payment.
~
t345

Two IQ!o. 1 ·large lt""l homo ii11.

.:.:.:.==------,--,-

Will build patio cov•rw, dteks,
tcrMned rooms, pul up vinyl
siding or trailer skirting. 614·

245.V152.

82

Froo HllmatH. Call eolloct 1014-237:0488, day or night.
Aogtra Blltmtnt WalerprCM&gt;
ling,

Plumbing &amp;
Carter's Plumbing

Fourth and Plno
Galllpollo, Ohio
&amp;14-446:38&amp;8

Complolollabllo Homo Sot-Upa,
lltepalrai Commerleal, R11ldtn·

•

tlal Improvements. Including:
Plumbing, Electrical. lnsur~nca - - - - - - - - -

Curti• Homa lmprovomoms:
v..,. E•perlenct On Oldtr &amp;
Newer Ham... Room Addhlons,
l'oundatlon Work, Roofing,
ltchens And Bathl. Fret Es·
I mat•f A.r.renctt, No Job To
lg Or Smallll14-441-0225.
Frooman'a PlUmbing And HHt·
lng, 814-251-1111Ron'o TV Sorvlca, lpoclallzlng
In lanllll al• Mnlclna moll:
alhlr brandl. MouN c..ITa, also
~ma apf)llanca rapalra. wv
®4-578-2398 Ohio 614-445-2454.

IF YOU HAVE EVER DRIVEN
~~~~~~L;
YOU HAVE ADMIRED THIS
HUM!E•
R,ANC;H ON APPROX. 10 ACRES, 2
YEAR OLD HOME WAS CUSTOM BUILT FOR
PRESENT OWNERS. HAS TLC. S BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS, DESIGNER KITCHEN WITH LOTS OF
CABINETS NICE FORMAL DINING AREA, REAR
DECK ABOVE GROUND POOL, HEAT PUMP,
ATTAc'HEO 2 CAR GARAGE , REAR DECK, POOL,
OUTBUILDINGS. $135.000.
DEBBY DRIVE - 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH BRICK RANCH ,
LARGE KITCHEN, DINING AREA, BEAUTIFUL BIRCH
WOODWORK. FULL BASEMENT WITH SPACE FOR
FAMILY ROOM. 2 CAR GARAGE, CENTRAL AIR
COND.I $73,500. DON'T MISS SEEING THI~ YOME!

Heating

Cialmo Ai:cop!od. &amp;14-251·1611.

Electrical

84

&amp;

LOT - SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
One large lot appro•. 101'x171'. Cily
sower, natural gas, electric, ail are available a! .
Prepare NOW to build your draam home 1n
I
and nice subdivision just a
i
of Gallipolis. Lot #17.
1456

Refrigeration
I __...:_:.:.._:.:.:_:.;_
__...,...,

~

NEW USTING - Sumner Ad, is this nice 2
bedroom 1 balh ranch with aluminum siding,
living room, kitchen, family room, lull

REDUCED $ 2,0001 BEST BUY IN THE COUNTRY.
14X70 MOBILE HOME WITH NICE SIZED ROOMS,
KITCHEN/DINING ROOM COMBO, RANGE. REFRIG,,
F/A ElEC, FURNACE AND CENT. AIR , ALL SET UP ON
APPRO X. .25 AC. WITH DECK ON BACK. CLOSE TO
TOWN. ONLY $14,000.

446-0294.

tH. l.ocll refennctt fumlatltd.

L-SHAPED RANCH ON JAY DRIVE- FEATURES NICE
OPEN KITCHEN/DINING/FAMILY ROOM ARRANGE·
MENT WITH FIREPLACE. FORMAL LIVING ROOM, 2
CAR GARAGE. NICE VIEW OF THE SURROUNDING
AREA FROM THE POOL DECK. COVERED PATIO.
LOTS OF HOME FOR $58,000.

Rnldentlal
or commtrclal
wiring,
Hrvlce or repairs.
Mllter Ucensld eltclrlciln.
Ridenour Electrical, 304-6751788.

r.ew

BUSINESS OFFICE I SALESROOM FOR LEASE
OOWNTOWN, 2nd AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

.:.87:....__.:.U::.,Pho....:.;l.:..st.:..ery...:__:Mowroy'a Upholaforing oarvlc·

•r•

lng trl county
26 YNrt. The
belt '" fumllura upholstering.

NEW LISTING IN KC SCHOOL DIST. FRAME WITH
FULL BSMT. 3 BR'S, 1'1, BATHS, FINISHED BSMT.
WITH LARGE FA AND OFFICE SPACE. NICELY
DECORATED AND SITUATED ON APPROX. 1,165 AC.
LISTED AT $52.900.
25 ACRES - HANNAN
TRACE ROAD. $15,000.
101 ACRES - HANNAN
TRACE ROAD. $29,000.
VAN ZANT RD... .NEAR
KYGER - 8 ROOM HOME
APPAOX. 25 AC. $39,500.
RACCOON ROAD - 39
ACRES MOSTLY WOOD·
ED. WATER TAP, 2
SEPTIC TANKS. ONE
TRAILER SITE PRE·
SENTLY
RENTED.
$25.000.

REAL ESTATE IS A GREAT INVESTMENT FOR AL
TIMESI THIS COLONIAL STYLE 4 UNIT RENTAL
LOCATED AT 845
SECOND COULD BE THE
INVESTMENT FOR YOUI GIVE US A CALL. $48,000.

call 304-675-4154 for "" ...
tlmatH.

basement woodbumer, one car garage, and

more on ' .84 ol an acre m~. Asking only
$40,000, Call for info.
1393

MAIN ST., RUTLAND - Is this ~H,ractivo 3
bedroom ranch with bath, k1tchen, d1mng room,

..

I J '·

Sew·Yac
Strvlet,
Goo'lloa CrMk Rd, Pa•o, oupplloo, pickup, and delivery. 114·

OAKWOOD DRIVE- CITY CONVENIENCE, COUNTRY
TRANOUILITY, ONE OF THE OUTSTANDING
FEATURES OF THIS LOVELY HOME IS THE
ENORMOUS LIVING ROOM WITH A COLi FIREPLACE
AREA 2 LARGE BEDROOMS WITH SPACE FOR A
THIRD. FAMILY ROOM, DINING ROOM, AMPLE
STORAGE COVERED PATIO. LOTS OF TREES. WE
WILL BE PLEASED TO SHOW YOU THIS LOVELY
HOME. CALL SOON FOR AN APPOINTM ~NT! $79,000.

for

and living room , 2 car attached garage ,

IN TOWN _ 2 bedroom home
gataga,
wal~i!l!l distance to grocery, ga~ hoat ~nd
equipped remodeled kitchen . N1ce ga en
area.
1409

and equipment in store goes.

stock

including liquor license. (C·1)

1988 AOHA Golding 7 AOHA
Polnto. Youth Hor11 Of Tho
Tr~lltr,

living room, dining area, kitchen and laundry,
gas heat and centml air, a 2 car carport wfloft .

RT. 160 - Across from North Gallia High
School. Built in 1989. 3 bedrooms, 2 ba1hs,
great room. ki!rchen with cherry cabinets, plus
2 car garage. Asking $63,900.00.
*405

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS - Located on AI. 7
(Eureka) 30x36 block bldg., wilh storage in basement,
70 n. frontage on Rt. 7, lot runs to Oh1o RivEn,
currenlly used as Convenient Mart and Carry Out All

room kitchen , bath. Family room , bedroom, bath 10

Farm Supplies

'oN BULAVILLE PIKE - i~ this ~tt~~tive vinyl
sided home with 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large

Really

inventory,

Will Trade 1978 Chevy, 4x4 PU
tor Auto 112 To 314 Ton PU. 614·

m

Ropalr. Eloctrfcaf, Plumbing,
Rooflna, No lob foo ... 11, ~..
tstlmafu, pltllt callaflar 7:00
PM or laovo moooago, 304-6753984.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltlonol flfollma guaran·

building All on over 2 acres . Low 30 s.
'
t381
COUNTRY LIVING - In lhis remodeled 3
bedroom country home featuring heat pump,
large family and dining room combo, 1\\ bath.
small room for nursery or sewtng room. lots of
storage rural water and much much more.
Situated on 20 beautilul rolling acres mil. Also
hor&amp;e bam.
t375

• Tapeworms In Dogs And Cats.

U.S. C.nltr tor Vtttrinarl
Medicine agalntt hook, round,
tapeworms In dogs &amp; cats,
i~tllable 0-T.C al R &amp;G F11d &amp;

MIW.ItlfN

Affordable Profnslonel Home oa~l•

HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE:
Recognized Saft And Effective
By U::S. Center For Vttorlnary
Mtdlclnt Against Hook, Round
Available 0-T.C At J D NORTH
PROOUCE. 614-446-1933.
tappy
Jack
Trivtrmleide:
AIICOQnlztd 11fl &amp; ttftetlve by

HARRISON TWP. - A FRAME HOME HAS 3
BEDROOMS, 11\ BATHS, SURROUNDED BY A
BEAUTIFUL WOODS. $27,000.

R Y U N U~L.....-ll When 1 wa8 a kid my best
6 1 1 I
friend and I would always have
I --1..I__j.L-L.
1 --1..__J.L....-J. a fight and then not speak to

drtvon, $1100,114·949·2877

Serv1ces

Wood ~a{ty, Inc.

REALTOR 446-3S83

~48-7720

304-&amp;r....

basement, 2 car attached and 4 car detached

111711 Javallno, runo
114-111-71141
11'11 ChiV, llallbu,
114 2115-114111.

1983 Suaukl 450 4,500 mlloa
vary good candllfon. $600 614·

REALTOR 379-:1688

KNAT I G

\1175 CO\Ifltry Alroj 32 ft, fifth
wllool.._W!•wnlng, a oeond, nlco,

Real Estate General

Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave.
Point Plaisant, 304-675-2063,
full line Tropical llsh, birds,
tmall animals and supplies.

71

Motorcycles

FARMERS BANK &amp; SAVINGS CO.
At 992·2136 For Details

4677 Athens

Vur. Und 14ft. Stock

74

AUDREY F. CANADAY, BROKER
. MAllY·J.'· :n.om

LINDA G. SKJDMORE

NEAR HOLZER HOSPITAL - SPUT FOYER DESIGN.
HAS 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, LARGE LIVING AND
DINING AREA, EQUIPPED KITCHEN WITH SNACK
BAR, FIRE AND SECURITY SYSTEM. GAS FORCED
AIR FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR COND. 2 CAR
BASEMENT GARAGE. $65,000.

,14-992-3755

CONTACT

388-9354.

63

1 1

1111 Full Slu Bronco XLT,
Loadad, EI:CIIIIant Condlllon,
Call Anytime, 114--367-0659.

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Wabb. Calf 614-446-0231.

Tr~etor,

1

HOMES FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
2 ~ LOCUST STREET GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 45631

tlon, far more lnformallon caU

205-5121.

Ford Farm
256-6240,

r. I

1

2263.

931 HYSELL STREET, MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Real Estate Gene1111

446-3636cA~

VARSOY

1985 Full Sl111 4x4 Bronco, Ntw
33 Tlrta, Cllll14-256-47'17.

14 Inch S-10 Rail~ Wh11l1 $100.
llrm, 3~&amp;.7842.
llldiiOI Tranomlulono, Ulld &amp;
lliiMilH, '"'IIIItlnj_al $99; Auto
Pano. 114-2415-HTT, 814-37!1-

Block, brick, aewtr plpts, win·
dOWI, lintels, etc. Claud• Win·
ltrs, Rio Grande. OH Call 614·

61

1971 J11p CJ5, ntw top, 53,000
rhilts, local owner, 304-675-1264.

12&gt;:55 Buctcty Trallor, lair condl·

Building
Supplies

59

•imple word•. Print letter! of
each in i" line of squares.

Real Estate General

Wadding Gown Candle Light
Side 11Bodlce Neckllht And
Sletvta Are Pearl Studded,
1/Matchlng 1-iaad Piece And Vall.
Train Extra Long. 814-441·0125.

57

1977 Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4, $1395
obo, 114-949-21111

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer : North

Yd. l14·286·5271.

56

Q word•
Rearrange the 6 scrambled .
...,.-......__,-;,.
below to make 6 ~-....__,

+Q7 2

$1.00 Yd. Lois Of Othtr Solids
For Quilt• And Crahs Only 11.00

55

73 .Vans &amp; 4 WD's

opood, uk $5,000, call 114-9854412

• 84 2

Real Estate General

WOlD
GAM I

Edi10d by CLAY R. POLLAN

tiM S·10 Blozor 414, bluo, 5-

'QJ9 82

S© \\c{} }A-"' £irS®

T~~~:~;~'

Chavy, S.10 truck. Excellent

7'6

Shopping Cente~ Jackson Ohio,
Guhl'e Fabric :»tore. 90 Inch

Sunday nmes-Sentlnei-Pag~
_ 7
I

72

54 Miscellaneous

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

I

fireplace gas heat Cenlral air. Only $45,500.
1403
•
RUTLAND AREA - 1985 Sizzler doublewide
with 3 bedroom s. 1 bath, living room , kiichen
end laundry, 2 car attached gara~e.- Gas well
with income, 2nd home has 11v1ng room,
kitchen, bath, and 2 bedrooms, Call lor more
information. Only $30.000.
1371

VINTON VILLAGE - Very nice ona story brick
home with 2 bedrooms , bath, dining room.

living room , laundry and equipped kitchen,
hardwood floors, caranached garage. Walk-'"
attic, Nice back patio and L-shaped
coveredfront porch. Asking mid $50s,
11382
WAITING FOR YOU - Is this 1900 .,. sq. tt. ol
living space and t9B5 Redman dlw._ Nicolot.ln
C..nterville. Has heat pump, huge lwtng room ,
3 bed rooms, 2 baths, 3 car garage. C.. II today.
t3i6

64 AC. FARM on Clay lick Rd. and a 28x60
modular with 3 bedroom, 2 bath, livinR room ,
family room with liroplace, a 24X40 bam 5 yrs.
old plus 30x40 garage 2 monlh s old. Tobacco
base. Askifl!l $69,900.00.
t404
53 ACRE FARM - On At. 160 on edge of
Vinton County·with old brick homo and mobile
homo. Thirty-two acres tillable Wllh bam and
o!Mr buildings, Asking $74,500.
t399
FARM IN HARRISON TWP. - 148 acres mn
with 4 bedrooms, 1 bath homo. Vinyl sided with
newer kitchen with walnut cabinets, sawmill
and olher equipment go with famt Oon't delay.
Only $65,000.
1369
ARE YOU A WATER DOG? - Here's your
ohance town Raccoon Creek frontage at Blue
Lake plus a 2 bedroom well maintai ne~ mobile
home with deck and lots ol shnobs and traes, 3
lots, 1y, car garage ,picnic shelter, 2 docks, one
mila from rive r. See 1llodeyl
1383
CLAY SCHOOL - 3 bedroom ,. family room ,
elec. heal, altached garage, with opener, aU on
.5 ecres m~ . Tool shad, Immediate possession.
Seo ittoday.
1392
NEW LISTING - LOG HOME ON SR 7
ovettooklng the tlver. , Living nn, kltchon, 2
bedroom, bath, Asking $25,900.
,
1410
MERCERVILLE AREA - Is thlt 3~room
homo situated on 1 aero with county watso__r,
re
_ ""'
and laundty. All
lor
..... 2 walk~n
. cioMts
.
1400
26,800. C.llodlly.

~

1190. RIVERVIEW FROM YOUR OWN
BACK YARD,- Vory nice all b~k home off·
lrk3 BRS, LR' wniroplace, equtpped ~tch ·
on, lull basement
1153 REDUCED TO $34,100 - Older
hom~ and ·1.75.ocro mil, on Nelghbomood
just a short distance from 141 . 4 BAs, krtchon, LR ; DA! -unattached garago.
' ThermopaM wincfoW1, gao heal
.
_
GREEN TWP. PORTJ:RIIR.OOK
WITH VERY NICE RANCH - 3
BR"
k!Ehon, beth·&amp; hell, 2 car gatago,

'Hod

suaO

LA.

fiNpiace.

3os:·1o.s

A-c. MIL. Raccoon Twp .
1
Gamell Fold Rd. Pond and bem, lovoly
plact tor a MW home.
-

~~~ l
'5 "tK ;.,.~
7"t' ,..

.......

t221 • •18 A. MIL (Hobart Dillon Subd.)
along R1ecoon Croek, groat for a ·mobllo
home. Large p1no ttaos on 31idn Alllovol.

:

~·

NEW LISTING - STORY'S RUN ROAD Year old homo with 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 2garage, 33 aa-us, bam and sheds_
$45,000.

u 1,000

_ 3 loll + old or homo,
Bidwal, 3 BRa, beth, LR. kHchon, woi1&lt;shop

ti 14 •

'

and galllgl.
1112. 101 ACRES MIL. 'Quyan l'wp., .
- t lind, ~ring 011 pjOplrty. May help
~ 10 qualifted bllyer.
•

I

•

nO.. 71 lOIII mil, s;;ger Crook. Vacant
~ wallr lllp on propiiiY. Smal bem.

.-

:WOULD

YOU UKE TO GET OUT ,
lf~LF?- Thll could bt_!lie plact,
home oton 4 BRI (mastar
- - - hu.a fi,._), 1~ betho, LR ·
MfiP, 'llllaMn, !lining room, FR. Saoond old.

..,,log

taMe fMDplf\1.... 112.5 ens. mil.

'

·

1313.
- 161 Acres, mora or loss.
Huntington Twp .. Woods Mill Rd., large
home offers 6 BAs, 2 baths, LR, kitchon,
FA electric heat. Fronts on Raccoon ,
to~cco ba se. May be bought, wilh less
land or more.
1183. GOOD IN-TOWN LOCATION -Jus1'
a block from grocory store. Nice home off·
8rs LR, kitchen, BRs, bath, largo front

pon:h.

.

.

t1~3 GOOD IN-TOWN LOCATION -Just

a b~k from groery atono. Nice home offers
LA, kifthen. BAs. beth, ta~e hoot porch.
~

1110. CORNER LOTI. Very nice homo Ql•
Ill 3 BRI, bath, ldlctlon, carpet, ~f'l-, 1
cal dlt.chtd 11111111·

. • 1154: NICE STARTER ~OME .,,, at the tdllt or town. Thll homi INIIno
3 bectooml, bath, liVing""""· klldton, cln-

kat..!

lng room and a lu~ t&gt;tMinetlt, FIW mlnutoo
1
•
to downtown.
f

I

'

.

1510. WHITE ROAD - 20 acres , mil,
vacant land, approx, I mile lrom CharolaiS
lake. $20,000.

1121. 521,100....Evane Heigh.., 3 BR, LR.
k!Ehen, belt, full baHment.

'

!

t186. QUIET, . SECLUDED setting just
mi~utoa to HMC and downlown. Home
filatures 3 BRS, kilchen w/f118ge &amp; relrig ..
LR, OR, catpet. firoploce, city school dist
1201. PRICE REDUCED TO 555,0001 - 3
BR homo oituated near HMC and At. 35
shopping area. Call for more deta~s .

1181. LeGRANDE' BOULEVARD - All
brick, 3 BRt. LR, kHchtn, beth, IIlii bestmont ges foroed air, attached garage, city
schoolo.
·

'

"
·"'Il
t189. EVERYllilNG TOU COULD WANT
-This soctional homo is located jus! a few
minutu from Green Elem. School, 4 BRs, 2
baths, LR. equipped kitchen, DR, lireplace,
central air, 16x32 pool wlhoatar. covered
patio, 20&gt;24 shelter house.

.

1203. OHIO TOWNSHIP ;.. 53% acm, moro
or loss. Vory nicl ranch style home offors
314 bedrooms LR, kitchen , beth, IIlli basomont catpet, dock, garego. sidng. Tobecco
bua and tobacco born. Additional land.
1171. FRONTAGE ON THE RIVER - 3
BRo, LR, oqu¥!ped ki1chen, fuel oi lumaoe,
C&lt;K~tllir, IIlii butmant, attached garaga.

'

ti JIIll~!.,REOUCED

I

1311. MEIGS CO., 240 A., mn, Bedford &amp;
Chester Twp. Old original log home with ·
- addition added. Drilled Mil, county wator
avlilable. Has been owned by aame lomlty
lor 4 gonenotions.
1131. VILlAGE OF CENTERVILLE- Nice
2 story olllll 3 BRs, beth, LR, kitchen, DR.
gas heat 2 finopl-•. Situated ~n 1.850
ICJ'I,

1217. JUST nE HOME FOR YOUII Ve,Y
nicl all brick home 1-ttd on Kathy St..
;,st olf SR 35. New kilchon, 3 BRa, LR, din:

lng, w. both.

1141.... Fourth A -"3 BRe. 1112
betho, kllclten, dnitg room, LR. gao heat,
calpll, cioNIO ahopping anq ~~'

.

1540. QET COZY IN FRONT OF THE
F1REPL#.CE - AHroctivt home olera 3
BRa, batt, kitchen, 12.:14 lamillr """" wilt
fif"lpl- 'artd living room, with firwplaca .
Sltuaiad. on · \.12 acta, · mn,

OWNER HAS REDUCED THE
BV $10,000111 Vory nice home of·
. ,. 3 BR s, 2 baths, LR, kilchon. This lai!TI
ls situated on Sugar Croek Road. Ohio ,
Township, and has a now 2BX40 bern,
lobecco baso. Call for more details,
t228. SPACIOUS BRICK with an 80x450'
lot locatad on St. Rt. 35 near HMC. 4 BAs,
LR . DR, kitchen, bath, full basement with
outside entrance, garaga, utility bldg. with
carport and mu ch more. Call lor
appoin1mont.
1513. s ACRE LOTS. Groen Township,
Fairfield Vanco Rd. and Wison BostiC Ad,
Boautllul place to bu~d • homo.
1596. KUCKER ROAD - Lol contains ,824
acre mn, water lap and sept1c tank on
oroperty.

1224. TAKE A LOOK AT THISII - l:ocaioo
on Second Ave .. walk to store, church, school
and shopping. 2 story homo oftoll kitchen,
LR, DR, FR, 3 BRo, 2 be!ho, gas hteVctnlrei
air.

1209. RIO GRANDE AREA - 2.87 acreo .

mn, lovely 2 story homo with 3 BRs 1~
baths, kifchen, LR. Ideally located noar'ne~
highway.

-

1246. PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS
OIEI - Largo log homo can be purchaoed ·
with 162 acre s or 2 acros. This homo offe11
4 BAs, 3 baths, equipped kitchan, LA, FR,
2 ftroplaces, heat pump/cont air (backup
systorn), ovorsiztd 2 car altached garage.
Fron~on Raccoon Cr81k.
1172. UNCOI.Jj PIKE - NEW USTING- 3
BR ranch , fonced in yard for pets or children, beautii\JI covered deck, bem t lylo utilily
bldg., affoldably pricad.
1305; 30.5 ACRES MIL. Raccoon 1Wp.
Gam1ra Fold Rd. Pond and bam, lovely
plact for a MW home.

1260. OFRCE SUI LDING LOCATJ:D AT
250 SECOND - Office down and 1 BR
apa~mont

upotlliro. Vory nice building. Col

fordotail.
1271. 17.5 A. rn/1, Porry Twp., Symmoo
Croek bottom land, somo hill, tobacco beN.
sg,ooo.
'

" ..

.

t265. APARTMENT COMPU:LSouth Point
area. Col for moro delalls.

'

mn.

1578 LARGE FARM - 3811 aero
, .-' S!illtio bern. 3 ponds, tobacco basi . Call
lor details.

Ut A., m/1, Section 34, Aaccllon
'!Wp., lronll on SR 325, $25,000. -~ ·

12t2.

EXTFIA NICE MOBILE HOllE FOR
SALE•• .'86 Holly Park 14x72, 2 BAs, LR , .
kHchan, DR, cant. air and lots of extra
loatunas.

1142. US,tOOII - WHY PAY RENT? -:..·
Ranch otylo horne on SR 160, 3 BRo, LR,
kitchan, bath, attached garage, 100x300 lot. -'
BUILD YOUR OWN BUSINESS HERE Lot approx. 200x200. located on 6R·160,
Hanerville area,,
STOPIII New on the market 3 BR homo In
town. Kitchen, LR , DR, tarve 2 car Q8111g1.
gas heat, cent. llir. Call for more detail&amp;.

�-.......
,

4l .•.

OPPOSE PRISON • Morris and Martha
Boles stand oulsiile their Cburcbill Road bome
in Elton, Ohio tarlier tbis year. A prison is pro-

posed to be built outside this small rural communlty, and if tbe prison is built, the couple
could lose their borne, property and farmland.

·world poultry productl~n on steady rise
WASHINGTON (AP) - World
· poultry meat productioo for 1991 is
· expected to sliow an increase of 4.1
: percent over 1990, and similar
growlh is anticipated in 1992, says
· lhe Agricullllre Departmenl
Mexico, with a growlh rate of
: 20 percent in 1991, is the most
:. raptdly expanding poultry meat
: producer in the world, the depan: ment said in its January report on

~· Tree

crushed.
The bark is gmy and deeply fur·

:~

,
•

?.

"The United States is estimated
to have had anolher record-setting
year in tenns of broiler exports,"
the repon said. "Although sales
from lhe United States to lhe former Soviet Union were down in
1991, sales to markets in the Far
East continued to be robust, allowing lhe United StateS to maintain its

rowed into narrow scaly ndges.
The twigs sometimes grow a wing·
like appendage.
Flowers are tiny in the spring
and in lhe fall a long-stalked droop·
ing ball composed of many individ·
ua1 fruits appears. The fall foli'!le
is anywhere in color from a bnlliant red to a dark purple.
Sweet gum prefers a habitat ?f
valleys and lower slo.pes usually m
mixed woodlands. ltts perhaps one
of the most adaptable hardwood

_.The sltonger scz~:nru:pogh~t
. penonnance .slei!'s
· •
mduced decline m ~ou~.A!'Jert&lt;:BJ!
soybean producuo_n, 11 satd.
"Thus, at least durmg t~ ear!y
P.art of l99l -92, U.s .• supplies wil~
ftll lhe yotd. Season average soy
bean prices are expected to range
betwe~~ $5 .25 and $S. 75 a
bushsel.b
ott
e
oy ean mea 1 exp s wer

species in its tolerance to differe~t
soil and site conditions. Although II
does not do well on gravelly clay
soils or well drained sandy soils,
sweet gum can lhrive in moist clay
and loamy soils of river and creek
bottoms. It can stand in water for
several weeks and remain
unharmed.
Few severe diseases are associated with sweet gum, but small
mammals such as ridents and grazing animals have caused consider·
able damage.
Sweet gum is used principally
for lumber, veneer plywood, railroad ties, fuel, and pulpwood.
Sweet · gum (Liquidamber
styraciffua) is not to be confused
w1th black gum (Nyssa sylvatica)
which is commonly found in Gallia
County and has little economic
value.
For more information about
sweet gum or any of the other
species offered for sale call the
Gallia SWCD at +16-8687. All progmms and assistance of the Gallia
SWCD and SCS are provided
regardless of race creed, color! sex,
age. handicap, or nattonal ongm.

~=rage prices at between $165
and $180a ton.
The summary said domestic use
of soybean oil "will be l)p
mar inall to 12.~ biUion poundS,'
as s~bstit~te oils make inroads into
~taditional markets:" It added lhat
season-avemge prices for soybean
oil probably will fall between 17.5
and205centsapound.
·
··

Page4

Vol. 42, No. 189

Continued from D·l
cotton bolls instead of the less
desirable plant leaves, Raina said.
"During evolution, the insect
has developed lhe ability to associposition as lhe world's number one ate ethylene with a host plam's
exporter of broiler meat."
" he said.

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) State employees concerned about
working conditions turned out in
force to approve a new conlt&amp;Ct, a
union official said.
Members of lhe Ohiq Civil Service Employees Association
approved a two-year deal which
includes a 5 percent raise in the
second year, lhe union announced
Saturday.
Sixty-lhree percent of the eligi·
ble members voted. The vote was
13,489 to 5,932.
"By any standard, the number
of OCSEA members who voted in
this election is extraordinary,'' said ·
Paul Goldberg, executive director
of the union, which represents
about 35,000 state workers. "But
this is no accidenl OCSEA members have been deeply concerned
about their jobs and lhese negotia-

The home phone numbers for
staff for Gov. George Voinovich.
"The admini stration is very Rehabilitation and Correction
pleased that we've arrived at a con- Director Reginald Wilkinson and
tract that's fair and equitable to Assi stant Director Thomas Stickemployees and in the best interests rath are unlisted. No one answered
of lhe uupayers of Ohio," Steiner the telephone at the department
office over the weekend.
said.
A fact-finder recommended last
Goldberg said talks were successful despite "a very tough bar- month that the agreement be
accepted for 1992 and 1993.
gaining climate."
Under the new deal, sta te
Many of those who opposed the
conltaet were from the Department employees would get no general
of Rehabilitation and Correction, wage increa se during 1992 but
the union said.
,would still be eligible for step
''These employees arc already increases and longevity pay.
fed up with working in underAll employees also would get a
staffed, dangerous and overcrowd- 5 percent raise on July I, 1993.
ed conditions," Goldberg said.
The contract increa ses the
"They are angry at the failure of amount of the state's contribution
the adminisltation and Legislature to health care from SS percent to 90
to respond to their needs.' '
percent, effective at the beginning
Steiner said lhe adminislt&amp;tion is of 1993.
concerned about overcrowding and
The new deal includes ·improvelions. ''
will work with the Legislature 10 ments in vacation leav e and
The conltact does not require correct the problem. The adminis· increased child care benefits, the
legislative approval, but lawmakers lt&amp;tion also ts looking for economi- union said.
are not expected to tum it down, cal ways to build more prisons, he
The prev io us contract ended
said Cun Steiner, deputy chief of added.
Dec. 31 but was extended until a
new contract was approved.

• no cash needed-all fees can be withheld from your
check
•
• available whether we prepare your return or not

M/C SPORTS CARDS

H&amp;RBLOCK

FROM MATHEWSON TO VAN POPPELOPEN 11·7 MON.-SAT.; CLOSED SUN.
35 N. 2nd ST.
MIIDDLEPORT
Across from Western Auto

POMEROY
618 EAST MAIN ST.
992-6674

GALLIPOLIS
SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE
4~6-0303

PmL SEES SHADOW • Actor Bill Murray
loses control or Punxsutawney Phil as Punx·
sutawney Groundhog Club member Jerrery
Lundy, len rear, moves in to lend a hand Sun·

1991 CAVALIERS

and cooling bills with pink

RS MODELS. 2 Dr. &amp; 4 Dr.

STA~. .$6991

1991 CORSICAS

5

V-6 models, fully equipped.
15ln stock.

U:~NG~$7991

1991 BERETTAS
V-6, air, auto.

When you buy 10 or m01e rolls of R·13
01 nigher A-value Oweos·Corning pink
Fiberglas insulation. The Free NBA Team
Jacket is a pullover style witn front pouch.
rugged nylon shell and conon lining. Plus.
K'savailable in all 27 NBA teams. Hurry!·
Olferends March 1, 1992. ~ $3.50 for
shipping and handHng. see our In-store
disiJiaY for full details.

predicts six more weeks of winter
PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. (AP)
- Here's the forecast from Punxsutawney Phil, lhe Willard Scou of
the animal kingdom : six more
weeks of winter.
The groundhog took a quick
glance at his shadow out~'de his
tree stump condo Sunday, en had
his interpreter break the b d news
to a record crowd of about 3,000
shivering people who had come

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - An
archite&lt;:t who has studied problems
· a~~t.!l. with hi)using developl'f!CRf,S is lookihg for ways to help
lh'e city of Dayton beat crime in its
projects.
In October , police officers
responding. to a slaying near the
Dunbar Manor housing development in Dayton's Edgemont neighborhood were punched, taunted and
pelted with rocks by ·about 200
people, many of whom did not live
in the area.
The melee promr.ted city officials to tum for he p to architect
Oscar Newman, who wrote
" Defensible Space," a 1972 study
·that examined the relationship
between crime and the design of
subsidized housing.
Newman, a city pltinning consultant in Long Island, N.Y., says
redesigning a .housing project to

······--·
-· LUMBER
.....-""·CAROLINA
"'·-·

1616 WIEIN IRNUI • GALLIPOLIS, OH.
(614) 446·U72 · We s.,port tiae Lib,.,., ~

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, ·AID SUPPLY COMPANY
I I ' ,,,.IIJ. ...sJill; SIIINir. •12,,'·

He .believes if Staley Avenue is
extenlled tl)rough the center of
Dunbar Manor, wilh the rel)'laining
gmssy aren divided into semi-pri-

Trustees elected, meeting set

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doors.· •

Olive Township and Tuppers Plains fire units were sent to lhe
scene of a StruCture ftre on Slate Route 124 in ReedsviUe on Sunday
morning, but tbe home was destroyed by lhe blaze.
· The·struclllnl, overlooking the Ohio River on State Route 124, is
believed to have been one of lhe oldest in the community. It was
owned by Frank Lavelle. Olive Township Fire Chief Rick Barringer
reported Monday morning th~t the.,_cause of the blaze is still •
uhknilwn. .
'i
·
"30 men from !hedepartments were olt the scene for two h011r1. ·

•

R· t3 Premium Wall
Fiberglas• insulation
3112' lhick/15' wide
88.12 sq. ft.

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foster a sense of community will
help reduce crime.
He will visit Dayton this week
to look at ways to apply his theories to Dunbar Manor and the city's
Five Oaks nei.&amp;hborhood. The
$78,000 project ts being funded by
;the city and lhe Dayton MeltOpoli·
tan l;lousing Authority.
"Dunbar Manor tS very poorly
designed,"' Newman said. "The
entire project- windows, front
and back doors are completely
open to access. I find there is a
street (Staley Avenue) that should
have gone lhrough lhe project but
which is terminated at bolh ends. It
makes police patrol more difficult,
·and people can't drive to their front

Fire destroys Reedsville home
CIIEYROIET , . • GEO

'* I'll'• ur, WV
"

1

Gay Johnson .was elected Piesident of the; Columbia To\,YDship
'. Trustees al the board's recent organizational meeting. Granvill~
· StOut will serve as Vice Pn:sidenL
. .
: Also atlh8t meetins, lhe regular meeting of t1te Columbia Township Tnatees was set for the ftrst ~onday of .each morilh it 7:30
p.m. it lhe 'fire sta!ion.
.
·
The boat'd is scheduled to meet lilnight, BCCoolini to Township
Clerk Gloria Hut10rt. GranviUe Stout serves as lhe third ltUStee in
.tlial township.
·. , ,

. ., .
...

members of inner circle decide in
advance what Phil's forecast will
be.
According to superstition, if a
groundhog sees its shadow on Feb.
2, six more weeks of winter are in
store. No shadow means spring in
two weeks.
Since Punxsutawney inaugumt·
ed this forecasting method in 1897,
a groundhog has predicted an early
lhaw just 10 times, the last in 1990.

Architect says redesigning
housing projects can curb crime

,----Local briefs---.

*'14.0fper roll

. .I

from as far away as Australia.
Bill MutTay lt&amp;veled from California to do some research for a
role in the film "Groundhog Day,"
in which he plays a reporter
assigned to the event
Jimmy Means, president of the
Punxsutawney Groundhog Club's
Inner Circle, claims to communicate with the furry foreaster in
'' groundhogese.' '
The real deal is that the 14

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day morning on Gobbler's Knob in Punx·
sutawney, Pa. Phil emerged from his burrow,
saw his shadow, and declared six more weeks or
winter weather. (AP)

Effn.~suta. wney Phil sees.shadow,

'•
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A Mulllmodlo Inc. Newspaper

State emploYees OK
new two-year contract

Fresh Units.

Owens-Coming.

Low tonight in 30s. Tuesday
partly cloudy. High In mld·40s.

1 Section, 10 Pageo 25 conto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 3, 1992

Discovery...

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Kicker: 677179

Copyrighted 1992

IF WE DON'T HAVE IT, WE'U CET IT.

sale offerings

By CINDY JENKINS
District Forester
GALLIPOLIS - This week's
* featured tree in lhe Gallia Soil and
:: Water Conservation Dislrict's tree
:. sale is lhe sweet gum (Liquidamber
- styraciffua).
The sweet gum is a large, aromatic tree wilh a straight ltUnk and
. conical crown that becomes round
· . and spreading. It can reach he•ghts
· from 60 to 100 feet and have a
: diameter of up to lhree feel
The leaves on the sweet gum are
easily identirtable due to lheir five
toothed lobes which are star shaped
and have a resinous odor when

.:

the world poultry sirualion.

wASHINGTON (AP) - The
U.S. soybean crop yielded a record
34.3 bushels per acre and totaled
1,986 million bushels in 1991,
according to the Agriculture
Department's annual crop produc·
tion summary.
. "The Com Belt led .lhis sltOng
yield perfonnance, desptte summer
dryness that predicted subpar
yields," lhe department said in a
recent sumtitary. "Production, plus
a 329-million-bushel carryin stoCk,
placed supplies over 2.300 million
bushels.'
The soybean crush, to make oil,
is projected at 1,235 million
bushels, an all-time high, lhe sum·
mary said. Combined with a
rebound in exports to 665 million
bushels, it wiD put 1991-92 ending
stocks at 325 million bushels, near
the 199Q.9ltotal.

Ohio Lottery '

Ohio State
68-58 winner
at Michigan

Soybean ~rop sets r~~~!~... -

•

.

Fel!ruary 2, 1992

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

• Page DB Sunday llmee Sentinel

vate "front yards" for.residents,
the character of lhe neighborhood
will change.
"The idea is to make it Clear to
lhe outsider that lhey don't want to
be lhere because lhey will stick out
like a sore lhumb," he said. "People will want to know why some·
lhing is going on rather than being
prisoners in their own homes."
In "Defensible Space," New·
man studied lhe now-demolished
PruiU·Igoe housing development in
St. Louis. He used that cluster of
high -rise buildin~s to illustrate
what he believes ts the failure of
federal housing policy.
"I found that the outside
grounds, lobbies, elevators and corridors were ftlled wilh graffiti, broken glass and had been literally
desltoyed," he said. "But when
you stepped into people's apanments they were meticulously
maintained, clean and as well fur,
nished as possible.

Point Pleasant woman cited
on three charges after accident
According to Pomeroy police,
Young lost control of the· t991
Cadillac she was driving, as she
!raveled west on West Main. The
vehic)c;sti'JlCk Jt. utility pole and
lhen went into the corner ·of Legar
Monument Co. building causing
some sltUctural damage.
The front end of lhe vehicle was
heavily damaged and had to be
towed. The Pomeroy emergency
squad lt&amp;Dsported Young to Pleasant Valley Hospital where she was
lteated and released. Neither passenger, Ashley Egner, five, nor
Alexander Young, two, were
injured, according to lhe reporl
There were no charges filed as
WASHINGTON (AP)- An
the
result of an accident on West
Athens County kinderg8nen teach·
Main
Friday at 12:37 p.m.,
er told some of the nation's goverPomeroy
police reponed. Patricia
nors she has to worry abuut her stu·
Reeves,
27,
Albany, driving a 1987
dents' health problems before startChevrolet Caravan, was traveling
ing lessons.
east
on West Main when Mabel
"If they come to school in pain
Pauley,
83, Pomeroy, driving a
because they have not seen a den1982
Ford
pulled from the Nationtist or do not have enough to eat or
wide
parking
lot into the path of
have been abused, then I have to
Reeves.
deal with lhat," said Marcia Burch·
There was light damage to the
by of Amesville, Ohio.
" In shpit, I have to help lhem rear quarter of ~: !e!t.s!de of the
overcome many barriers that keep
lhem from feehng lhat lhey can be
successful, a task that can take
years if children come from a home
where no one feels success."
She sp&lt;ike Sunday to an education panel of the National Governors' Association. The panel is led
By JlM LUTHER
by Ohio Gov. George V.
AP Tax Writer
Voinovich.
WASHINGTON- Here' s to
"I do not want to be a social the great American middle class,
worker, but often I am because I whoever they are.
lack immediate access to these serFeeling neglected in the past
vices," Ms. Burchby said. "By and now fawned over by politi·
locating social workers, heallh care cians, middle-income folks earn 68
professionals and others within percent of the nation's wages, file
schools, they could become the 53 percent of the tax returns and
center .of suppon services.''
ante up 53 percent of the taxes.
One boy in her class who has
More or less. A lot more or a lot
behavior problems can't see a less, depending on wbo is included.
school counselor because the dis·
While somebody in Washington
ltict has only one counselor, she can tell you how many 'Americans
said.
went bowling in 1970 (52 million)
"I am worried that my care or how much office space in Housalone will not be nearly enough to ton was vacant in 1987 (32 perfix this little life, and he is current- ce~t). nobody can say with certainly falling lhrough the emcks of all ty who belongs to the middle class.
!he agencies," Ms. Burchby said.
"It means anything you want it
Three charges were filed against
Debm Young, 36, Point Pleasant,
W.Va. as a result of an accident on
West Main Street Saturday afternoon.
Young was charged with failure
to conltol, DUI, and lack of child
restraint.

Area teacher
addresses
governors

Reeves vehicle and moderate from
end damage to the Pauiey car. No
injuries were received by either
driver nor their passengers.
Yv.onna. Persinger, 43, Lo ng
Bottom , was cited for failure to
maintain assured clear distance following an accident at 12:54 p.m .
Thursday at the intersec tion of
Court and Main.
Police reponed that 1991 Nissan
vehicle of Robert Cunningham ,
Syracuse, was parked at a meter on
Court and that Persinger's 1985
Ford truck struck the left side front
fender as she pulled into the parking space in front of the Cunningham car.
There was light damage to the
left side front fender of the Cunningham car, and to the right side
back rear quarter panel of the
Persinger !tUck.
Pomeroy police are also investi- '
gating the theft of The Daily Sentinel and Sunday Times-Sentinel
newspaper rack at Pleascrs. Jim
Hill reponed that the theft occurred
sometime overnight Friday.

Just where is the
great middle class?
to," says analyst Paul Merski of
the Tax 'Foundation. He figures an
income range of $25,000 to
$50,000 is a safe guess.
Roben Mcintyre, director of the
labor-funded Citizens for Tax Justice, guesses lower and higher.
"The $20,000-to-$75,000 range
is where they ought to focus tax
relief and get lhe money from the
really rich, since !hat's where all
the money went in the '80s,"
Mcintyre said.
·
"Middle income means whatever constituency Congress wants to
appease at the moment," says Roy
Cordato of the conservative Institute foF Research on the Economics
of Taxation.
When Democrats demand tax
Continued on page 3

AIDS testing for health care workers

The Issues:

EDITOR'S NOTE -1J!e Associated Press asks .the maJor presi·
dentlal atndldates 1 qutstlo~
· eacb weekday about their vtews on a
particular Issue and IISSelllbl _their respo~.
Responses were not avallabl .for all candidates.
·
·
WASHINGTON - Here
lhe views of lhe major presidential candidates on lhe question: ''Do you favor AIDS testing of health care woll'ers?''
.
DEMOCRATS
•
-Jerry Brown: A spokesman said his position is lhat ' ~before rnanda·
tory aids testi:J~or heallh-eare workers can be considered we must ftrst
sansfactorily
ate lhe counlty about AIDS to eliminate .di~mlnation
and to increase·;t.IDS .funding for care research and JlfllVenboQ.
·
"-B.ill piinton: A spokeswoman said Clinton has not 'taken a posi,tion
on ·lhe ISSue.
.
.'
.
..
/ -Tom ~:. "The public is rishtfull
. y COncerned about the alarming
.4"rise .in the luunber of AIDS casea nationwide. The federal government
needs to lnveat ft!OF'C in the fight.agajnst this clrclld diSease.... ~lh ~
workers should adhere to univenil ttlaridards in all areas of ser\'tce deliv·
'

~

~

ery that prevent the spread of disease." .
-Bob Kerrey: "We must prote&lt;:t pauents and health-care workers
from HIV ~ransmission. But I question whether mandatory testing is the
best war. to accomplish lhis goal. Instead, I suppon requiring all h~lth ­
care facilities to use untversal precaunons based on CDC gutdeltne~.
- Paul TSOP.gas: ''In lhe context.of medical care, lhe ~fwa~ to protect !he .publids not mandatory testmg but enforcement.of mf~uon con- ,
tro1 practices and education of ~eallh care workers. Testmg, whtch would
have to be done repeatedly to be valid, would giv~ a false ~se of security to patients and might make people less careful m followmg proper procedures to avoid trailsmission' of lhe disease .••
REPUBLICANS
.
· . .
- George Bush: _Th&amp;I' Bush ·adillinistration has publicly opposed
mandatoiy AIDS testmg:
.
·
-Patrick Buchanan: "For .those involved in invasive procedures,
yes."
- David Duke: Favors testing ()Calth .care worters
. for .AII)S. .
.~

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