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·Page-10-The Daily Senuriel

FRIDAY
PORTI.AND - Revival services
at the Portland FirSt Church of the
, Nazarene will be held through Sun/ · ~ d~y at 7 p.m·. nig~tly. Jan and
• ,. Kathy will perform. lim
' Heckathron will be the evangelist.
POMEROY · The Pom eroy
· Senior Citizens Dance Club will
·· sponsor a dance on Friday from 8. II p.m. with music by the Happy
· Hollow Boys of Athens. The public
is invited and those attending bring
snacks for the snack table.
ROCK SPRINGS · The Meigs
. County Grange officers will meet
Friday at 7 p.m. at the Rock
· Springs Grange Hall.
MIDDLEPORT - Special se'rvices will be held at Rejoicing Life
Church in Middleport oo Friday
and Saturday at 7 p.m. and on Sunday at 10 a.m. Billy Joe Grandstaff
will be tne guest speaker. Pastor
Michael Pangia invites the public,
LONG BOTTOM· The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom will have a hymn sing on Friday at 7 p:m. Pastor Steve Reed
invites the public.
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a round and square dance sponsored by the Tuppers Plains VFW
Post No. 9053 and Ladies Auxiliary on Friday. Music will be br,
"C.l. and the Country Gen~cmen. '
The public is invited to attend.

night at the
Center will be
7 p.m. to midnight. .
will bll.. a-vailable and all bands are
we~.omfo..- .-~- ...... ·. --~-· ..

Quartet, God's Little Lambs, Living Word and Faith Harmony
Boys.

BASHAN - Weekend servi ces
at the Red Brush Church of Christ
on Bashan Road will be held Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at 10 a.m.
and 6 p.m. Denver Hill, Fo ster,
W.Va., will be the speaker. The
public is invited to attend.
POMEROY - "Silver Fox and
Sani Davenport" is the title ofthls
week's children s m"ovie at the
Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy. on Saturday and Sunday
at 2 p.m. The library in Pomeroy
and in Middleport will be closed
Monday in observance of Veterans
Day.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Ladies Auxiliary of the Tuppers
Plains Fire Department will sponsor its annual smorg·asbord style
turkey and ham dinner on Saturday
begi nning at 4:30 p.m. Cost is $5
for adults and $2.50 for children.
RUTLAND - The second meeting of the Rascals 4-H Club will be
held Saturday at5 p.m. at-the home
of advisor Donna Smith. All members arc encouraged to attend. New
members arc welcome.

Actress Gene .Tierney led
life offame, sorrows

· minger and released in 1944, is She - was educated -at private
perhaps her best-known role. Tief,,.. oilRPJ.$. , ig Copnectieut and
ney played a socialite who is appar- Switzerland. .
·
cntly a murder victim and· Dana
She overcame family disap.
Andrews played a detective who proval to pursue an acting career,
falls in love with her through her first on Broadway in 1939.
poriraits.
She was appeaiing in a support- ·
"Leave Her to Heaven," !945, ing role in "The Male Animal,"
was abquJ.an selfish woman who 1940, when she was spotted by
causes unhappiness for those producer Darryl F. Zanuck and
around her and eventually commits signed by 20th Century Fox. She
suicide. Tiefll~Y re&lt;:eivec! her on[y~ _ma_d_c .. ' 'Th ~ ~_e_:ur!l y f Frank
Oscar nominat1on fat thatro!C:Out ·James same year.
lost out to Joan Crawford selc'cted
She was married to designer
as best actress for ,'Mt'ldred . Olcg Cassini from 1941 to 1952..
p·1erce."
·
.
They had two c_hildren, Dan
. ·a, born
Among Tierney's other films in 1943, w~owas_ mentally retardwere "Belle Starr" 1941· "Heav- ed;-andChnstina,m 1948. c - ···
en Can wa· 1.t .. 1-94
• 3. "A'-Bell ~or
In t!le I950s, Ti~ev_ had a~ele•
•
b d
'th'
Adana," 1945; "Dragonwyck,"
rate romance Wt Prince Aly
1946· " The Ghost and Mrs. Khan, the famous playboy. After
Muir:. 1947· and "Night and the being trcaled for mental illness, she
:. 1950. •
married· Houston oilman W.
~I~~~i~~1~~~f,of~~~i~~n.~-:~'ee-~w.~e~e---'d~!:~i~~·~:
Howard Lee in 1960. He diect in

POMEROY · A 12-stcp AA
meeting will be held Sunday at 7
p.m. at the JTPA office, 117 West
Second Street in Pomeroy.

Pioneers
celebrate
80th year

SUGAR .RUN MILLS

POMEROY

-•

TA'E
CBm OLDS CADILLAC 810

POMROY, IBID .
NEW UD OlD CARlAND tRUCKS
A'r
LOW PIICIS

-------.

:Star Grange
plans supper

'
-( -

·-

...
RI'. 33
MASON. WV
NEXT TO FAST 4 U AND MASON MOTEL
SYnday lhlu Thursday, 6•00 1111-9 pm; Friday &amp;Salllrda!Y;6:00 am-ol am

WhyWaltl

'ROAST BEEF DINNER

50

Chicken &amp; Dumplings
Mashed Potatoes,

Green Beans.

$4.99

Soup &amp; Salad Bar
Or Try One Of Our Other Great'lienu Itemsr

OPEN SUNDAY, 6:30AM TO 10 PM

.

II Carty Oat Orden Available (304) 773-5321 II
VISA • MASI'ERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEP'It:D

' -t,.

Automatic, gas mileage.

$122

CDBII UD Sa DD 11•
CIIIIOLI! LUMIIII 34

_.!lilt,_ lallaclldrd

•11 't,EIIIIt DIP' I

permo.

M.UfT OTHER PU.
OWNED~IAHD

TRUCUTOm
· ANTIUDOET

Along the river "'""""... Bl-8
BusinessJFarm ............D-1-8
Classified ........,... _.........1)3-7
Deatbs............................_.A 1
Ediioral................... _,,;._.,A.l
Sports .............................C1·8
Weather ..........;............:. ....A·3

"Today," Schaad said, "our ·
By BRIAN J, REED
community's schools need one .
Times-Sentinel StafT
POMEROY - A program another more than ever before.
designed to lend community sup- Businesses need competent graduport to Meigs County's pubhc ates entering the work force."
A reciprocation of activities is
schools is aboul'to be'gin·under the
direction of the Meigs County .required to make the program a
Chamber of Commerce and the true partnership, Schaad reported.
co unty's three local school dis- Business can serve as corporate
tricts.
· volunteers, mentors to students,
"Partners in Education," now members of committees and task
underway in several Ohio counties, forces, advisors for curriculum
is a p(ogram in which students, development, providers of facilities
teachers and business professionals and s~rvices, grantors of awards
share information and experiences and incentives, trainers, initiators
· with one another. Once in place, of special projects, and more ..
"Partners in Education" will link
·Schools, meanwhile, can proCOMMITTEE MEMBERS - These educa- left, are Beeky Triplett, Joan Wolfe, Donna Noreach school in Mei~s -County with vide tickets to school activities,
tors and' community. leaders are a part of the ris an!f Don Vaugban; back, from left, Dr. Nick
a Meigs County busmess.
performances from musical groups,
Meigs Couuty Cbamber of Commerce "Partners Robinson, Cbarles Moore and Thomas Kelly.
Chamber Executive Director use of school facilities, lessons in
in Education" Committee. Pictured front, from
(Times.Sentinel pboto by Brian J. Reed).
Elizabeth Schaad said such partner- computers, speed reading and other
ships provide opportunities for stu- skills, refreshments from home
dents to understand how the basic economics classes, ar~ work, pu~- intended to be a financial c~mmi~; ~nd Don Vaugha!l - are~rrcntly
skills that they learn in school arc hc•ty and other semces to theu menton ihe part of local busmess,
m lhe process of matching hools
applied in the business world.
busif\CSS partner.
.
Schaad said. "Instead, businesses .' with busint ss partners. chaad
"These partnerships also give
There is no cost involved in the wlU'be exptcted"IO mu..a coniri·• '"'fll)l(l'lbd'lhat pmiri'ers((tp; uld be
those in the business community program for· businesses or the billion of human rcsourcc;s.•-, ··~.
completed by the end of Novemreal insight into the workings of the schools
j$limSchaad and the chamber's "Part- ber, at,which time the partnerships
school," Scliwf explained, "and a ited to
as the nels in Education" commiuee will begin. '
·
better understanding of the needs pilflies want to
, · k .... .consi!linfat&gt;llchaad; Joan:Wolfe
Schaad anticipates thhr'a kiCk:·
of tbe education system." · ·
."By rio means
Ernie' Sisson, Dr. Nick; Robinso~
Continued on A·3

•Wild Bird Seed
•Striped Sunflower
•Black Sunflower Seed Seeds
•Niger
•White Millet
•Fine Cracked Corn .•Soot Cakes

1988 DODGE RAM

Inside

'Program calls
for business,
schools linkag~

SEE US -FOR ILL YOUR
BIRD SEED NEEDS

Featuring

'

Penn State 47 Maryland 7 ·
Tfitn, 35 Notre Dame 34

Sunday, partly cloudy, High
near SO.
·

A MulllnMdillno.

IS CO lNG

Make Plans To Have $unday Dinner With Us

Rio Grande College played last
football game in 1949 • Sands B·7
slated.Thursd~y,
Nov.
14 .~ -Page' ----B-2 ~
-!#- ~ -.

By JAMES MARTINEZ
Associated Press Writer
CBS
36
23.3
1. 60 Minutes
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)- Peewee Herman actor Paul Reubcns
ABC
23.1
35
2. Roseanne
SUNDAY
pleaded no-contest today to indeABC
19.8
30
3. Coach
POINT PLEASANT - The quarcent exposure charges in a plea barterly meeting of the Sons and
NBC
gain that requires him to make an
19.3
30
MONDAY
4. Cheers
Daughters of Pioneer River Men,
SATURDAY
POMEROY • All courthouse anti-drug public service commerNBC
29
18.2
5. Unsolved Mysteries
REEDSVILLE -The Fou rth Ohio and Kanawha River Branch, offices will be closed on Monday cial.
.
6. NBC Sunday Night Movie, Part 1,
Reubens, in a dark suit, cleanAnnual Eastern High School craft will be held Sunday at the Mason in observance of Veterans Day.
show will be held Saturday from 9 County Library in Point Pleasant. They will re-open at 8•30 a.m . on shaven with his hair cropped short,
NBC
18.0
28
Gambler Relurns: Luck of Draw
W.Va.lohn Hartford-will present a Tuesday.
had nothing to say as he entered
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the high school.
ABC
17.9
28
7. Home Improvement
video "Banjo Fiddler and River
and left the Sarasota County Court17.8
26
CBS
POINT PLEASANT - The Boats. " Jerry Sutphin will have
SHADE - Bedford Township house for the brief hearing before
B. Murphy Brown
available
his
book,
"Stemwheelers
Trustees
meet
at
the
town
hall
at
7
Judge
Judy
Goldman.
Handmade Holiday Treasurers VII
17.7
28
ABC
9. Full House
He nnddcd and told the judge he
Craft Show and Sale will be held on the Great Kanawha River." The p.m . on Monday for the regular
24
CBS
16.7
monthly session ,
Saturday from 10 a.m . to 6 p.m . public is invited to attend.
understood terms of the a\l_l'ccmcnt 10 . Murder, She Wrole
with prosecutors that w1ll leave
and Sunday from I to 5 p.m. at the
POMEROY - The Meigs Vocal
POMEROY - The Disabled him with no criminal record if he
Ratings points
Point Pleasant National Guard
OVERALL RATING
Music Department will present its Ameri~an Veterans and Ladies successfully meets the conditions.
Armory.
, mlilion TV
NBC CBS ABC
annual fall concert on Sunday at 2 Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7
"Mr. Rcubens continues to
ot
12.5 12.1
12.9
RUTLAND - The Ru~and PTO p.m. at Meigs High School. Stu- p.m . at the hall, 124 Butternut insist upon his innocence- it was
a plea or convenience," said the
Fall Festival will be held Saturday dents in vocal music, grades 7-12, Avenue inPomeroy.
wi
II
be
participating.
Admission
is
actor's
lead attorney Richard Gerfrom 6-9 p.m. at the elementary
free
and
the
public
is
invited
to
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy
Elestein.
"It
was a fair resolution for
school. There will be food, games,
attend.
mentary PTO will meet Monday at everyone concerned."
prizes, a country store with craft
The judge, noting Reubcns '
7 p.m. in the school gym. Debbie
and gift items. Door prizes will
CHESTER - The Ken Amsbary Brennan will be the speaker. Sixth "creative genius and ability," told
also be awarded.
Chapter of the lzaak Walton grades will have the program . The the actor: "It is my hope that by
giving something back to the comLETART- The Narrow Way League will host a slug shoot on public is invited to attend.
munity that some restoration of a ·
Singers of Lclllrl, W.Va. will be in Sunday at l p.m. at the club house
REEDS VILLE - The Riverview positive manner wiU occur."
gospe l concert on Saturday at 7 ncar Chester. Prizes include meat
The 39-year-old star of televip.m. at the Laurel Cliff Free and money. Free hand and bench PTO will meet Monday at 6:'30
rest
events
for
scopes
and
rilles.
sion's
"Pee-wee's Playhouse" and
p.m.
at
the
school.
Open
house
will
Methodist Church in Pomeroy.
such
movies
as "Pee-wee's Big
be observed and there will be a
Pastor Bill Williams invites the
RACINE
Racine
Baptist
·
Adventure"
was arrested at an
short program presented by grades
public.
Church will hold revival Sunday 1-4. Babysitting and a movie will adult theater July 26 after detectives claimed they saw him masturLETART FALLS- The fall fcs- through Nov. 17 at 7 p.m. nightly. be provided.
(nlstle Seed)
bate twice.
. tival of the Lclarl Falls Elementary Speakers include Earl Shuler ,
He was charged with exposure
RACINE - The Racine AmeriPTO will be held Saturday begin- Charles Norris, Rick Harris. Steve
ning at 5 p.m . Cost is $2.50 for Deaver invites the public. Special can Legion will sponsor a bean din- or sexual organs. a misdemeanor
•
· ad ults and $2 for children. There music by Kings Harmony Quartet, ncr at the post home for all ·veter- that canies a maximum penalty of
60
days
in
jail
and
a
$500
fine.
ans
on
Monday
at
II
a.m.
Southern
Hill
Gospel
,
Marty
Short
: will be a craft store, entertainment
Under the plea, Reubens must
and LuAnn White, Kyger Valley
: and games. The public is invited.
pay only the $50 fine plus $85
court costs. And producing and
paying for -the nationally distribut180 MULBERRY AVE.
ed
anti-drug spot would fulfill a 75By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Trudeau . Quayle said the allcga- offenses.
Associaled Pre&amp;o~ Writer
tions have been investigated and
992·2115
The Drug Enforcement Admin- hour community service requirement.
EL TORO, Calif. (AP) - Vice discredited,
istration said Wednesday that it had
President Dan Quayle expressed
" l don 't mind a good political investigated allegations in 1982
outrage. over an upcoming fight," Quayle said. " But this is that Quayle, then an Indiana sena"Dooncsbury " comic strip that just totally absurd. It's wrong. It's tor, had used cocai ne and
replays unfounded allegatio ns false. And I'm not surprised, but! Quaaludcs. The DEA said it found
Quayle ·used cocai ne and am outraged."
the allegations to be groundless,
Quaaludcs.
Quayle responded to reporters'
"Garry Trudeau knows that
The vice president called it a questions Thursday after arriving at these allegations on which the latpersonal vendetta conducted by El Taro Marine Corps Air Station est comic strip (is based) on are
"Dooncsbury" creator Garry to slarl a two-day California cam- totally without foundation."
paign tour,
Quayle said. "He knows that these
00 S efS t 0
The allegations of drug use by allegations come from c·onvicted
Quayle will be raised in a forth· criminals."
coming two-week series of panels
Meanwhile, Atlanta Journal in the satirical, liberal cartoon strip. Constitution editors said they have
The Meigs High School Band
In the strips, a fictional newspato drop the Quayle comic
: Boosters will sponsor an all-you- per _repQr!cr ~ tollLth.e_.Yfbite decided
--1-987~BUICK .
. can-cat bcal'l dinner on Thursday, House has covered up a federal strips.-Managing Editor-John M:
CENTURY
Walter said the decision was made
: Nov. 14 from 4:30-7:30 p.m. in the probe into cocaine use by Quayle.
on
the
basis
of
fairness.
: high school cafeteria. The cost of
Much or the Doonesbury strips
"Trudeau walks the line conthe dinner is $3.50 for aduhs and are based on an accusation made on
stantly
- that's the edge that cre$2.50 for children under 12. The the eve of the 1988 presidential
ates
so
many fans," he said. "But
dinner will-include soup, corn- election by Brcu Kimberlin, a fed'
sometimes he goes over, and in this
: bread, slaw, dessert and drink.
era! prisoner serving a 51 -year term particular instance, we thought it
for drug smuggling and bombing was uncalled for, an unfair shot."

Plans were made for the annuril
, Thanksgiving supper when Star
Grange met recently at the hall.
, The supper will be held Nov. 16
: at 6:30 p,m. at the Salem Center
· Fire Station. The grange will fur: nish the turkey. Members and
guests arc to bring a covered dish.
Allen and Vicki Smith and Tina
: Slater were welcomed into the
: grange and received their degrees.
' Dorothy Bolen was presented a
.: 55-year membership seal by Patty
, Dyer, master.
Catherine Colwell. Women's
Activities Chairman, announced
· the baking contests will be held at
: the Janu81)' me.:ting. Her safety tip .
· was on locating exits in large build: ings and meeting rooms.
· Eldon Barrows, legislative
: agent. reported on uncmp,lo~mcnt
benefits, hazardous waste mcmcra. tors and redistricting.
: Pauline Rife and Christine Napi·
: er gave an informative d~legate
: report from the recen~ state grange
· session they aucnded •n Hudson.
' County officers· conference was .
· announced for Friday at ·? p.m. at,
·~o Rock Snrings Grange Hall.
: There were J6ruuli,:;,c:-£, vi~itors
: and juniors P..csent for the meeting.

Mlchipn 59 NlWtbwesttrn 14
OSU 35 Minn~Ota
.
. 6
.Florida 38 S. CirolinalO ' Virginia 4Z .NC Stale 10

'15th Great American Smokeout

MIDDLEPORT - The Wahama
Choir will perform at the Middleport Community Church on Pearl
Street on Sunday. Rev. Sam Anderson invites the public to attend.

:.Ban d b t
hold bean dl.nner

College ·
Scores.

B-1

enters no
contest plea .

·.Vice president denounces 'Doonesbury' strips

7::-- rtnh

Foster
care
rewards

GALLIPOLIS .- Modern Wood-

lion.

''

Sun&lt;lav.

By SUSAN FAHLGREN
·
l\ssoi:lated Press Writer
m&amp;ICtiliiP'i23o'rwiif 'liave-~lurr-e'
HOUSTON
(AP)- Gene Tier. cheon on Sunday from 12:30 to
ney.
whose
striking
looks helped
2:30p. m. at Dale's Smorgasbord.
her
win
roles
in
nearly
three dozen
Cost is $2 per person with children
feature
films,
includmg
"Laura"
age nine under free.
and "Leave Her To Heaven," has
MIDDLEPORT. There will be died at age 70.
a Veterans Day dinner on Sunday
Tierney, who had emphysema,
at noon at the Middleport Legion died Wednesday at lier home.
Annex for post. unit and invited
The actress' striking, highguests. A hymn_ sing_ru!L!1cgin lll 1 c~ce~boned goodJpoks helped prop.m. with the Narrow Way Singers pel her to stardom before the age of
· · 20. But she later·weathered a series
0 l. Le tart, W·Va. The hymn smg
IS
of tragedies, including the birth or
Open to the Pub l,·c ·
a daughter who was menially
RACINE - The Racine PTO will · retarded because Tierney had Ger.
.
.- .
-~ ·1 ~ 1\ .l
-- - d
have a ham and turkey dinner on man meas es w t e pregnant, an a
Sunday at Southern High School bout of mental illness -during the
with serving to begin at 11 :30 a.m. mid-1950s.
Cost is S3.75 for adults and 52.75
" Laura," directed by Otto Prefor children. Craft tables, at S5
eac h, arc ava ilable. Call Cathy

:..=

.

..

· Frtday,'November 8, 1-991

Po me,Oy--MIOO ieport , o n.o

'

'·

-r·~

--

-

GALLIPOLIS - The Telephone
Pioneers ot America began a yearlong celebration on Sunday, October 27, when the organization
marked its 80th year. The 850,000
Telephone Pioneer mcm bers
throughout the United States and
Canada are employees and retirees
of the .telecommunications industry. Locally, they are associated
with AT&amp;T, Ameritech and Ohio
Bell.
The organization has 12
region&amp;, 105 chapters and thousands-of-smaller--units. ~There- are
four chapters and 33,000 members
in Ohio: The Pioneer organization
began in 1911. By 1958 'the members chose "United to Serve Others" as their mono and became
involved with community service.
Although relatively unknown,
the Pioneers provide more services
to a variety of disabled and disadvantaged people than any other
voluntary industrial group.
In the beginning they were literally Pioneers: men and women who
gave America the best telecommunications system in the world . It
was only natural that the people
who believed in universal servicea telephone in every hone - would
dc t~rmine that the "spirit or service" on the job was equally ·
rewarding in their neighborhoods.
Today, Pioneers donate their
technical skills along with their
dedication to serve They tackle

PIKETON (AP) - The news
that production of highly enriched
urani)lm"wiU end at the Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion Plant didn't
come as mlMih of surprise to officials from the llfea surrounding this
southern Ohio community.
"It really doesn ' t mean anything," Oil, Chemical and Atomic
Workers Local 3-689 President
l ohn Knauff said of the announcement Friday in Washington by
Energy Seerewy James Walkins.
" The high-assay material makes up
a very small pan of the plant's production."
He added that with the end of
the arms race and talk of scaling
back the military budget, " we've
been expecting this for some
time.,.
Tbll plant has been run by man-agers since June II, when Local 3689 members went on strike.
It bas· been malr.ing highly
enriched uranium for use in submarines, research reactors and
medieilte But·Walkinnaid future
needs can be inet by using uranium
retrieved from ·dismantled nuclear
••
weapons.
Watkins said the plant will continue to make low-enriched uraniBy DA VJD WILKISON
um for nuclear power plants.
Associated Press Writer
"There has been a lot of talk in
CHARLESTON .-W.Ya. (i\P) the Department of Energy that this
- Fires burnin~ across southern might happen. We just didn't know
West Vl!glnia Will have long-range · the time frame," saiO Tom Rccdcr
effects on the environment and the ~hief executive or the Portsmouth
state's timber industry, officials Area Chamber or Commerce.
said.
About 2,600 people· are
"As the coal industry begins to employed at the plant, which is run
decline, something needs to take its under contract by Martin Marietta
place, and timber is a narural. But Energy Systems Inc. for the U.S.
. we're destroying that potential Department of Energy.
'
resource before we have a chance
Watkins said 500 jobs eventualto utilize it," said Bill Richardson, ly will be eliminated once produca West Virginia University exten- tion is suspended, probably late
sion agent in Mingo County.
next year.
More than 1,000 fires have
The Portsmouth·Piketon area is
scorched more than 337,000 acres in the running for an advanced
in nine Appalachian slates since technology uranium enrichment
OcL 26. West Virginia has been hit plant, and Portsmouth Mayor
hardes t, with more than 670 fires Franklin Gerlach. expressed optiburning more than 275,000 acres.
mism that the job loss would prove
Arsonists arc blamed for 95 pcr- beneficial in the long run.
ccnt·of the fires." This could l&gt;c :i'lllcssing in dis- West Virginia is trying to devel- gusc in that it could accelerate the
op hardwoods into a major indus- AVLIS technology ," he said .
try . It currently generates about AVLIS stands for atomic vapor
$500 million annually.
' laser isotope system, the name or
Elementary school, watch as Donny shows them
GIVES DEMONSTRATION· Local PioOfficials also arc concerned the new uranium enrichment
how weU he types on the Braille typewriter, preneer Club President Mike Cochran and Ann
about how the fires will affect ero- method,
Boyd, teacher or the vision unit at Rio Grande sented to him-by the Telephone Pion~ers.
sion and stream and river contami" l am deep! y concerned over
nation. In addition, they said, the this loss of job~ and will mobilize
trees that live will be more suscep- the appropriate state agencies to
problems that require the unique ·the attention of '.he media is the Pioneers bought Ohio's first assis- tible to disease.
assist the displaced workers,'' Ohio
skills many of them usc on the job. making of Hug-A-Bears. The Pio- tivc li stening devices display for
" Rain falling on an acre of Gov. George Voinovi ~h said in a
Pioneers have invented and devel- neers have spent thousands of the Cleveland Hearing and Speech ground that's been burned is like press release.
oped all kinds o devices now used lunch hours at work or in homes Center. In Dayton, the Pioneers I 0,000 little wood~kers hammerA release from Martin Marietta
in therapy for sight, hearirig and during evenings or weekends cut- bought a four·unit aparuncnt build- ing awny at wood, ' said Bill Gille- and 1hc Energy Department said
ting, sewing, stuffing, and packag· ing which will be used to house spie, director of the state Division the company would offer displaced
motion impaired patients.
Pioneer chap~rs and their mem • ing the lovable little creatures Tho homeless smiles.
or Forestry. " It's a catastrophe. 11 workers training for other jobs in
·
~ers serve thousands of projects . Pioneers have delivered 350,000
On the local level, the Gallipolis
(Continued on A-3)
(Continued on A-3)
providing funds and volunteer sup- Hug-A-Bears to safety and emer- club has.worked with older hospital
port. The results are staggering. gency units so ther can comfort by purchasing and installing li[cLast year. the Pioneers churned out ' victims in stressful situations.
line units, and donated a voice acti25 million hours of volunteer serIn the 1990s, Pioneers will fight vated train to the speech clinic.
vice, and raised S10 million in net illiteracy and help homeless peoThe local club has been bu sy
•
•
profit for various projects.
ple, battered women, the hearing- with other worthwhile community
One project that has captured impaired and runaway children .
Continued on A-3

POMEROY - Calvin Bates is
a man with an irrepressible spirit,
who dwells on the good times,
shrugs orr the bad ones, and goes
merrily about the business of
enjoying life,
At least that's the impression he
conveys.
The 79-year-old uncle of Gary
,Bates, of Flatwoods Road, was a
hobo during the Great Depression
who lost an arm while riding the
ralls and after that went on to make
it into Ripley'sBe/leve It or Not for

a

Forest fires
pose peril .
for·tilnber
industry

Hearing set to resolve
•
sewer proJect questions

From hobo to Ripley's life's a
hole in one for Calvin Bates
By..etfARLENE HOEFLICH
' times-Sentinel Sta"

Piketon
cutback
will cost
SOOjobs

his golfing prowess.
The one-armed golfer who
doesn 't bclieve in saying "I can't"
scored an Eagle 2 on a 360-yard
par 4 hole ~ the Oceanside-Carls·
bad Country Cub in 1954 to qualify for Ripley's. That same year he
played in his ftrst national amputee
tournament in DetroiL
An avid golfer who just recently
competed in a tournament in San
Diego, he organized the first
Amputee Golf Association west of
the Mississippi River in 1957 and
is still actlv~ in the group. .
Bates, a resident of Noble County, has a fascinating story to tell-

kind of from rags to riches, to the
current state of just a comfortable
senior citizen,
It was the late 1920s when Bates
got out of high school. He worked
for a time in lhe coal mines and on
farms for a dollar a day. Realizing
there was no future digging coal or
loading hay, he decided to sec what
else was out there. His way of
doing that was hopping freight
trains and riding the rails cross
country.
Yes, Bates was a hobo, and for
five years crisscrossed the country
on freight trains. .
(Conthlueci' on A:3)
•

CALVIN BATES

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RUTLAND - A public meeting to clarify several unresolved
issues concerning the $2.2 million
waste water collection and sewage
treatment system will be held at 7
p.m. Thursday at the Rutland Civic
Center.
Sandy Smith,. project manager,
encourages everyone t oming onto
the syslem to be at the meeting.
She said that the meeting will
be the place to ask questions and
address complaints on the various
facets of the project.
David Parsons or Aurora Pump,
Ashland, will he there with a work. ing display model or the grinder to
be ins.talled at each residence. He
will demonstrate the efficiency of
the culling blades in reducing misccllanco~s materials to a consislency which will pass through the inch
and one-half lines which are being
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installed from the homes to the
main llnes.
In addition to the actual working
of the gnnder, Parsons will demonstrate the alarm system which sig·
nals a problem.
. The p~ject engineers, Engineertog Assoctatcs, and representatives
of the contractors, along with Rut·
land Village Council and Mayor
James Fink will be at the meeting
to clarify issues.
To date all of the main lines and
all of the manholes have been
iristalled with the e~ception of
along Depot Street and that work is
expected to be completed nc~t
week. The treatment plant will be
completed in mid-December Smith
said, and soon after that the contractor will begin installed til\'
grinders in homes.
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November 10,1991

Commentary and perspective
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November 10, 1991
Page-A2

•

WASHINGTON- The savings
and loan "bailout" is not the only
bailing Americans are doing these
days. The commercial banking
industry is taking on water also,
and guess who is helping to keep
815 Third Ave., Galllpolls, Ohio
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo ·
· those banks afloat? Credit-card
(614) 446-2342
(614) 992-ll56
.
customers.
·
Even though mterest
rates have
ROBERT L. WINGETT
been
dropping
in-other
arenas,
Publisher
credit-card rates are still out of
sight. And the interest that banks
HOBART WILSON JR.
PAT WIHTEHEAD
Executive Editor
pay
to depositors, if any, has not
Assistant Publisher-Controller
gone up as loan rates go down. The
ugly truth is that huge financial
A..MEMBER of ,_The- Associated Press, Inland Daily Press
firms realize they can prey on·small
Associillimund the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
savers and credit-card holders,
forcing them to bail out the banks
from stupid and speculative loans
3·00 wor~TfEionRg.SAIOIFie?tePriNisarOeNsub~eecw elcedo~~gThandeymshuosullbed b,•,.8tne:ds ei.onth
"'
'
and
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned let1ers will be
_] mvestments.
th
lh
- ~published.beners-should be in good taste;-addressill""giSsUeS. n.no"t-11-~n- e.pas twa.year~,t e.rateSpersonalities.
banks give on savings accounts
have fallen .to about 5 percent ,-:-:hardly enough incentive to take
your money out from under the
.
mattress. At the same time, interest
rates on plastic have jumped to
approximately 19 percent.
It couldn't hit Americans at a
worse
time. The jobless rate is
By Dominic D. DiFrancesco
National Commander
The American Legion

0

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110

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•

~ Veterans
•

Day, 1991

: Monday, Nov. 11, is Veterans Day, a holiday set aside to honor the
: men and women who have served our nation with honor. They earned the
: right to be called "veterans" by their sacrifice and devotion to duty in
• some of the darkest hours our nation has known.
: This holiday should certainly salute the newest generation of ve.ter·
• ans- the men and women of Operation Desert Storm. Just a year ago,
: American forces were joining those of more than two dozen other nations
: to meet the ctiallenge of an ag gressor and eventually restore a tiny
: nation's sovereignty.
.
.
.
• The American veterans of Operation Desert Storm/Desert Shield d1S·
:played the same valor and dedication to the defense of freedom that prcvi• ous generations had shown at Chateau Thierry and Belleau Wood ... at
:Normandy and lwo Jima .. . at Inchon and the Pusan Perimeter ... at Khe
: Sanh and Pleiku . .. in thousands of JUngle firef1ghts .. ·. wherever !.herr
; country called for their service.
.
.
• As this world races toward the end of the 20th Century, we are scemg
:great changes _in international attitudes _and relationships. The Iron Curuin
•is no more. M!lhons have thrown off die yoke of communtsm and eagerly
:seek governmental systems that recognize the dignity of the individual.
; The rush to reduce nuclear warfare capability seems 10 herald an era
' when nations will resolve their differences through negotiation, rather
:•Jhan arme9 conflict.
.
.•. Shoukl we reach that long-sought day of world peace with honor, we
::~an thank the veterans whose sacrifices and devotion to duty-whose
::voices over the years clamored for a strong national defense-have borne
·: sweet fruit.
:. But a biller fate is threatened for many of the veterans of the 20th Cen: tury if there is no reversal of trends· affecting the benefits their services
.• have already earned. By the year 2000. just 9 years from now , there wiU
! be 9 million veterans age 65 or older. While most of them will be able 10
! meet their health care requirements and expenses, there will be thousands
:: upon thousands who will be the poorest and sickest of our entire popula·
:• tion.
·: And if current trends are not reversed in health care benefits for vcter:• ans when they tum to the nation for the health care they need-"-the health
::car~ they have eared through their servicG-that care will not be available
·: 10 them ! Is this the way a nation, supposedly grateful for the wartime ser- ·
:• vices and sacrifices of her veterans, will care for these men and women in
:; their sunset years?
·' On this Veterans Day, 1991, let us do more than salute the 29 million
: Americans-men and women- whose honorable service in defense of the
::national purpose is the highest calling of citizenship. 'Let's make sure that
-:there is a strong veterans' health care syslllm to car_e for the oldest. the
:• sickest, and the poorest of those who answered our country's call and
::defended with honor her purpose.
·
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:~Today

·...•

in history

By The Associated Press .
• Today is Sunday, Nov. 10, the 314lh day of 1991. There are 51 days
1 left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
: On Nov. 10, 1871, journalist and explorer Henry M. Stanley found
1 missing Scottish missionary David Livingstone in central Africa. Stanley
: delivered his now-famous greeting: "Dr. Livingstone, 1. presume?" To
·which Livingstone replied: " Yes, and I feel thankful that I am here 10
· welcome you. "
: On this date:
--- c --In~1483 rMartin Luther, the leader of the Protestant Reformation.- was
: born in Eislcben, Germany.
In 1775, the U.S. Marines were organized under authority of the Conti: nental Congress.
.
.
: In 1917,41 suffragists were arrested in froin of the White House.
In ·1919, the American Legion held its first natiomil convention, in
: Minneapolis.
; In 1928, Hirohito was enthroned as the Emperor of Japan.
In 1951, 40 years ago, direct-dial coast-to-coast telephone service
: began as Mayor M. Leslie Denning of Englewood, N.J., called his c6un: tci'part in Alameda, Cah f.

.

Berry's World

•

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By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

The longest hour of the day___Fr_ed_W..-:--Cro___w

Duke has unusual
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enc.cd trial _lawycrs do not show
thctr emo~10,ns, bijt ms1dc, thw
guts are tw1stmg up and down.
Most ~very PB!'cnt has cxpcrienced thts sensa!10n. There 1S qn
hour before dcl1vcry that never
sc.cms .to pass fast cqough,. For
example, when a mother is about
ready to give_birth to a child, the
father IS wa11mg the arnval-of the
chtld to be b~m m an extremely
nervous condiUon. He has to be terribly concerned about the mother
as well.
. I hav~ cxpc_rienccd this sensatmn. Dunng th1s hour the father 1s
pacmg the room w1th all kmds of
thoughts going through his head. Is
the child healthy and normal? Is the
mother alright? Is the child a boy
or a ~irl? This hour of pondering is
cerumly one of the most d1~f1cult
hours a father has to expcnencc.
Rupettc, what do ~ou think goes
through the mother s mmd m th1s
hour of waiting?
.
Since 1 have formerly been
actively enga~ed in the field of athleucs, there 1s.an. hour befnre the g~m~ _that causes 1each athlelll cons1derablc stress. Th1s cmotron 1s
extrcm'ely predominate before a
football game. usually, the athlete
reports to the locker room atlgast I
1/2to 2 hours before the game. The
final hour is one in which .the pressure real! y g~t~ 'to the athlete.
Whtlc he IS waumg to go on10 the
field, most males will visit the
restroom at least once every ten
minutes in an auempt to urinate.
Most of the time this is a sensation

and not a reality. Most athletes
pace up and down the locker room·
as if they were a bunch of wild animats held in a cage. As the hour
progresses, the athlete's insides
become volatile. His nervous condition rea,~;)les its height. Once an
athlete hitS the field he regains his
normal composure.
·
There are, of course, many other
hours of waiting that can be excruciating to an individual. Probably
the worst hour on~ can experience
is waiting word from the doc10r on
whether or not your loved one is
going to survive an operation. This
hour of .waiting is probably the
most hectic one can undergo.
For the most part, all of us feel
that time goes too fast but there arc
hours that arc difficult, to say the
least. One of them is waiting for
doctor, dentist, attorney or other
professional appointment. Each of
us docs have an hour or so th~t
app~ars to be ~nusually long, but
that s what hfc 1s all abotit.
.
Anyhow, Rupe, may all your hours
be. happy .. ln .the meanume, den"t lo?k. back, as something. maybe
gammg on you, as Satchel Pa1ge
would say.
·
Carry on.
(Long-time Allorney Fred w.
Crow is a contributor of columns
for the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
~~aders wishing to applaud, c.rit.
1c1ze or comment on any subject
(except politics and religion) are
encouraged to write to Mr. Crow
in care of this newspaper.)
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bedfellows._B_..:;..y_Ch_uc_kS_to~ne':

The collegiality-shattering mes- life-long-Democrat Ann Jernigan at
sage out of Louisiana is not David a Baton Rouge rally. "How can
Duke's "Ku Klux Klan member to anyone who looks like thai be
elected official" respectability, but bad?"
the depth of support among rightEasily. That's why an ex-actor
wing Republicans and black con- was elected president.
servatives for his ·legislative agcn,
Handsome David Duke is the
da.
logical evolution of the past three
When the Republican guberna- presidential elections, iii which cintorial candidate denounces quotas, ematic Reagan was elected twice,
affirmative action, welfare abuses, and his water boy was elected the
escalating street crime, widespread third time. And now shocked
school failures and a massive job- Americans are shedding crocodile
losing recession, who can disagree tears over the gall of Louisianians
with him?
voting for the same mcial evil that
When Duke calls for more self- has .been lurking -"in lhe heart of
initiative 10 replace spirit-debilitat- man" since 1980.
. ing welfare, isn't that what
"There is no bigger problem we
Clarence Thomas said his sister have ... in the coun~ than the risneeded?
ing welfare class,' Republican
But, insist Duke's opponent$, he . Duke declared recently. "I believe
is a KKK wolf in three-piece-suit in equal rights for all, special privi·
sheep's clothing. The accusation leges for none."
.
faUs on many deaf ears. This is the
Tliat is a catechism that most
age of videocracy where the medi- Republicans repeat, that George
um is the only message. '
· Bush advocates and that black conAnd David' Duke comes across servatives preach. The only two
on television. like Jack Armstrong, dilrerences between the 1991 polit·
the all-American boy. "He's so ical messages of David Dulce and
cute," gushed retired nurse and black conservatives are tile tawdri-

ness of his past and the color of
their skin. .
The rise of Duke should come
'as no surprise "to informed
observers of politics. For the past
II years, the subliminal racial
appeals of Reagan's "Chicago welfare queen" and Bush's Willie
Honan have nurtured Republican
supporters ranging from Northe~r:n
conservative Georjle Will to Southem conservative David Duke.
But subliiJlinal messages don't
remain subliminal forever. Eventually; somebody acts them out.
Louisiana voters did this year.
Southern-reared columnist
Edwin M. Yoder Jr. touched on the
etiology of Republican strategies
and Duke actions when he rccen~y
wrote: "Not until the Republicans
chuck the whole nasty kit-bag of
appeals -to race, the sly and subtle
with the rude and blatant, will their
suit for divorce from David Duke
be granted."
.
.(::uriously, I have yet 10 hear any
cries of distress from black conservatives about David Duke. But if
vou dig a little deeper, their silence .

makes _sense. In the game of power
p,olitics, a David Duke will help:
attract more Democrats to the con-:
servative camp. Black conserva-•
lives mistilkenly. believe that this:
will enhance their power base. : :
Lest some fret that I misrepresent the politics and malign the)
integrity of black conservatives, 1;
would suggest that there is not one•
ioUI of political ·oifference between;
what David Duke is preaching in:
1991, wbat George Wallace advocated in 1972, and what black con-i
scrvatives Tom Sowell,. Glenn}
Lowry and Shelby Steele, Clarcnce1
Thomas and Robert Woodson are;
urging.
•
But David Duke's contribution .
to American politics goes beyond;
his symbiosis with black conserva-;
lives. He has provided white racists
with the imprimatur of legislative'

success.

:

Black conservatives provide a'
similar imprimatur for white con-- ..
servativcs who are ecstatic at the :
prospect of breaking up the ethnic ;
unity that ushered other ethnic ;
groups into political power.
·'

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CHESTER - Two people were . Damage 'to Young's 1990
injured .in a two-car accident on Mazda 626 was listed as heavy and
S.R. 7 in Chester Township ThW'S· disabling. Damage to Schultz 's
day aftemoon.
1970 Volkswagen Beede wa,s also·
According 10 a report from the listed as heavy and disabling.
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Schultz was cited •by the patrol
Highway Patrol, Connie S. Young, for failure to yield,
28, Barboursville, W.Va., was
Meanwhile, five deer car accis6uthbound when another ve~icle, dents were probed recently by the
driven by Christine E. Schultz, 18, patrol.
Pomeroy, pulled from a privaJe
No injuries were reported.
drive to and into Young's path.
Charles B. VanSickle,. 83,
. Young's car then struck Schultz's Cheshire, was southbound on S.R.
car.
·
.
218 in Gallia County Thursday
Young was_ll'ansPQrtecf!Q Vetei-__ morning.when adeer struck his car.
ans Memorial Hospital by the Damage to VanSickle's 1984 Ford
Meigs County EMS, where she was Tempo was tisted as moderate.
treated lind released for minor visiNorman L. Price Jr., 50,
ble injuries.
. .
Pomeroy, was northbound on S.R.
Schultz was transported by the 7 in Meigs Coun~ ~~dat_m_QrnirJg
EMS to St; Joseph's· Hospital in and struck a deer. Dam~g e to
Plll'lfersourg; where sfie was-admit- . Pri~s 198g FoiirE~rt was lis-ted
ted and released Friday, according as light.
to a hospital spokeswoman.
Deanna G. ·Coole, 51, Rio

.

soaring, and more people are more fairly with their customers. ·
unwisely living off.Jheir credit Hi~ bill requires banks to en~age in
cards because they have no choice, fuller disclosure of such thrngs as
and they hope that tomorrow will rates, annual fees and grace peri- depriving the private sector of
bring something bener.
ods, includin~ granting customers much-needed loans 10 sta
, rt a~d .
Ideally, consumers should cut 30 days nouce before rates are.
up their,eredit cards and mail them raised. The current imt\ce require- expand businesses. Interest rates .
in bulk 10 the greedy banks that mentis 15.days. . · . .
are becoming more reasonable, but ·
-~
•
still tightfisted.
issued them. But the bau~~.~ know
The rapidity vilthwbi£h a cred- banks
Theare
hanks-blame
the regulators
'they' have consumers· ovenfbarrel. it-car(\ interest rate can go up . for that stinginess, The 1980s were
They can charge what the market would make the plastic spin in your a period of fast antlloose lending,
will bear, and a market in desperate wallet. Horror stories abound or and now the banks are· paying for
need for credit will bear just about consumers who found that their that in failed inNestments and
anything that it ~sn't have to pay rates w~nt up 5Qpercenll!ecause . ·defaulted-loans. Regulation is an
for untihfexlmiintli: - - - ·
their bank was bought or had oven-eacti·on that, the-banks say. ; ·
10
· Even if the barucs· dia riot have memed
.
consumers cornered, they could . · ·frn~redibly," says Schumer, · ·-~Once the banks start blammg
st1'tl set therr· own terms bec-ause the " red '
d·
·
too much on regulation, you can
_
c
~t-ear
mterest
rates
remam
at
forbPresident
10 buckle
industry is fast becoming a the stratospheric heights they were twatch
those
nks He Bush
will press
for
monopoly.
A
few
giant
banks
conat
during
the
early
'80s
when
the
o
.
a
__
:;
I :h
k Th
less stn '"·"'
tr{) -1 e-mar et. ere -are-more--{cost-ohnoncy)-was-andmosrls--- · . ..::.
, " -;,,; the
1
than 6,000 card issuers, and you percent."
.
Bush ts desperate to b' · : . econknow this because you~ have
MORE SHOCK WAVES _
omy a shot m the arm ~fore the
received junk mail ,from most of One of the ~fter-effccts of the 1992 ~lecuon, and, he can. I do that
them. But the top 25 1ssbers control banking bust is that loans are dry- 1f bus1ncsses can t get .money to
two-_thirds of the market.
ing up to small businesses and con- cx~d.
.
.
Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., sumer borrowers. President Bush . llus~ already tned one tache but
is sponsoring a bill that would has been warned by his economic 11 d1dn t work. He leaned on the
force credit-card issuers to deal advisers that the credit crunch is Federal Reserve B~nk to lower
'Y· stalling the economic r'ecovery; mtcrcs~ rates and pump m?rc
money mto the banks for lendmg.
That was supposed 10 break do"Cn
the credit barriers and flush fresh
money into the stagnant economy.
The money supply rose inside the
banks, but it was dammed up there
and the flow of loans did not
increase. .
·
As long as credit remain's
scarce, the economic recovery will
sputter, leaving the GOP vulnerable next November.
MINI-EDITORIAL- There
are approximately 37 million
Americans without health insurance in the United States today .
The Democrats are happy to point
out that the number of uninsured
equals the population of 23 states
- the least populous states in the
nation, to be sure, but the figure is
still nothing to sneeze at.
DemOcrats would like to blame this
health-care crisis on the Republican
administration, and the White
House certainly shares the blame.
But as long as the Democrat-controlled Congress is held hostage to
the campaign donations of the
insurance and medical industries,
then there is plenty of blame to go
around.

Each individual, during his life- • ~cady for a lengthy trial before a•
time, has experienced an hour of Ju,ry. _There are so many.last mmute
waiting for some important event detatls that the attorney has to
to happen. This hour never seems undertake. When you are a]lout
to pass quickly enough. Eventually ready 10 ~o to the CoW'thouse you
the appointed time will arriYe. In hav~ l~ think about matters such as
the meantime · the individual usual- exh1b1ts, law books to take wtth
ly under goes' a great deal of stress you, your notes on the various witand anxiety.
nessc~ . your notes on the jurors,
For example, last Friday checking to see whether y~ur _w11evening, 1 attended the wedding of nesscs _are present, and espec1ally
my granddaughter, Anne Lowry the apj)Carance and condtuon of
Crow, daughter of my son, Judge your client. On one occas1on, I had
Fred w. Crow.lll,to Ronald Casci, a chent who carne 10 Court _drunk.
son of Paul Casci of Middleport. I A~so, you h~ve to conlllnd wuh last
had no part in the wedding other !'!mute mouons filed by .lhe opposthan being a grandparent
mg atwmey. As a result of all thts,
It appeared that the longest hour even the most expenenced altof!ley
for both the bride and groom was undergoes a great. deal of anx1e!y
the hour before the ceremony start· and worry. Most trial atto!'"cys _will
ed. People were rushing around tell you ~at you leave a h~ bit of
completmg last minute chores. The yourself m the courtr?Om m any
groom and his attendants were case you try before a JUry. Nev~rextremely nervous. It seemed the thel_css, the hour befor~ the '!tal
formal clothing must have some bcgms never seems to amve qu1ckeffect on the male attendants. I ly enough.
.
heard one of them say, "Come on,
Another rouj!h hour for the tr1al
let's get this show on the road." 1 aqomey 1s v.:a1ung for the JUry to
did not sec the_bride.untiL!atcr.on,. ICtum a verdict. U§l@lly~ !!t_e...@!!.9r- .
but I can imagine what a struggle ney will go from one room to
she must have had with the wed- another, pace the hall ways, smokding dress. It would seem to me ing a c!garette, and enga~e in small
· that it must take an additional 2 or talk w1th anyone who wtll hstcn to
3 women to help dress her.
him.
I should mention that the dinner
Usually when you have a good
served by Paul Casci and George case, you feel the JUry W 111 be O~l
Horak at the .Pomeroy Legion Hall . in less than an hour. Howc·:er, _,f
the ·night before was out of th1s the·Jury takes several ~ours m
world.
reaching a verd1c~, the attorn~y
Other tong hours
begms 10 worry. This hour of wa1tEvery trial at~mey has ex peri- ipg is, again, traumatic lJl any tr1 ~1
enccd _the sensation of getting lawyer. Outwardly, most ex pen-

Sunday Tlme&amp;-Sentlnei-Page-A3

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S•- '1\11 ku.tJ -' 01)"1

O.•..._J,,..... I

·
NOTABLE FEAT- Calvin Bates, a one-armed golfer, made it
· · into Ripley's Believe II Or Not in 1954 after scoring an Eagle 2 on
· a 360-yard par 4 hole at Oceanside-Carlsbad Country Club.

'From hobo t~ Ripley's ...
(Continued from A-1)
He said there was nothing boring about bumming around, and
desc ribed his years jumping
freights to travel from one place to
.another as a good thing to do at the
time- a chance io see the country.
Besides that, it was 19.30 and
the country was in the midst of a
depression. Jobs just weren't easily
found.
Bates became a part of the hobo
jungle scene of that time, cooking
.under trestles and bridges, visiting
.the Salvation Army for food and
clothing, and frequenting the bars
and houses close to the tracks for
handouts. He said people were gcnerous and most everyone would
give a hobo something to eat
After five years riding the rails,
something happened in July 1935
which changed Bates' life.
He was in Chillicothe and
decided to hop a train to Corpus
Christi, Texas, where he hoped to
stow awav on a boat and go to
Africa.
B.ut he slipped as he made his
jump for the moving freight, and in
·falling, his arm went under th e
-wheel. After several weeks of hos- .
pitalization he returned to hi s

native Noble County, ran for county recorder in 1936 and was elected. After losing his bid for a second
term , he spent the next few years
working in Canton.
From there he went to Florida
where he bought a restaurant, prospercd at firs~ and then lost everything.
'
Bates then moved on 10 California where he worked several jobs
before getting on at General
Dynamics in 1950. He worked
there until 1973 when he retired.
For the past several years, he
has been back in Noble County,
visiting in Meigs County frequenUy
with Gary and Linda :Sates.
He is still active in an\putec
golfing activities and involved in
the association he founded.
"I hav.e been for years and still
am interested in assisti ng in the
rehabilitation of amputees by
encouraging them to play golf. The
game can do more toward making
an amputee self-reliant then any
other sport," commented Bates.
He contends that it's not what
you've lost but what you have left
that counts a philosophy which is
clearly reflected in the story of
Bate's life.

Forest fires pose peril ... .
·
(Continued from A·l)
will set sam~ of the woodland back
roo years."
The Caperton administration is
waiting until the fires are out
before determining the extent of
the damage, which has been placed
at $100 m1lhon by some foresters,
said George Manahan, spokesman
ft&gt;r Gov. Gaston Caper10n.
Te n fires set Thursday contin'
·

Program calls ...

ucd to burn uncontrolled across
thousands of acres Friday, while
other f!fes that have been contained
are burning themselves out across
the southern half of the suite,
foresters said.
Light snow and misty rain fell in
the southeastern region of the state
on Friday, but conditions remained
dry where the tires were worst. The
National Weather Service says it
will be at least Monda before
morcrainorsnow falls.

POMEROY- W. Dean Scholl,
past National Executive Committeeman for the Ohio American
Legion, will be the guest speakenat
Veterans Day services in Pomeroy
on Monday.
Hosted by Drew Webster Post
No. 39, ihe service will be held
• outside of the Meigs County Courthouse on East Second Street at 11
. a.m.
Prior to being National Executive Committeeman, Scholl served
for four years as.the Ohio Legion's
Al!Crnate National Executive Committeeman. He is also a past State
Commander of the 159,000-member Ohio Legion, serving in that
leadership role for the 1975-76
legion year.
Scholl is a veteran of World
War II and joined the Legion in
1946 in his hometown of Bremen
as a member of Oscar McVeigh
Post No. 20, where he continues·his
membership.
He has served in all the offices
of his post and is a past commander
of the Ohio Legion's, Eighth' District, which comprises eight counties in southeastern Ohio. He was
also State First Vice Commander
and Second Vice Commander and
Historian, as well as being a member of several committees of the
State and National organization
over the years. · ·
Scholl works in the construction
business and for the past 30 years
has been ·a retail lumber salesman
for, Potter Lumber Co . of Worthington.
He and his wife, Wanda, have
two daughters, both married, and
all of the women in his family arc
members of the Legion Auxiliary.
The public is invited to attend

Faccnmycr·tumber;-Ki'O"g-cr,P lc:a s-~

~- -~

Weather

~-~

. Iii, was southbound on S.R. 7 in ·

Gallia County Friday evenins and
struck a ~r tha! rari PolO tb!: 'nladway. Damage to Wamsley's 1987
Toyota Corolla was tisted as mod:
erate.
·

Lottery numbers
·CLEVELAND (AP) _Here are
the Ohio Lottery drawing seltc;lions made Friday night
·
Pick 3 Numbers
II

· ~

Pick4Numbers
8-1-4-6
(eight.. one, four, six)
·'
Cards
3 (three) ofHearu-- -- - --....- --A (ace) of Clubs -- ~~----' - ~
Q(queen) ofDialiionds
'
3 (three) of Spades
I

•

Piketon
...
(Continued from A-1)
the plan~ establish an outplacement
center and provide job seateh training.
The department will decide
within three years whether the
idled part of the plant should be
permanently closed or kept in a
standby condition.

OFFERING:
• Stock.l

•

\~

• Corporate lloHI
e U,S, 'l'reaSUI'J Securities
• Mutual Fuacll
e IDSured Tu·Free

•

Munldpalllollds
• Insured Millley Market
Aeeouatl

e IRA's

,....

Contid:

STAN EVANS

.w. DEAN SCHOLL

Ubby Hotel, Suite 100
444 Second AYCII!Ie
GaUipoUs, Oblo 45631

the ceremony, according to Post
No. 39 Commander John Weeks.
· "As we have planned this program, we extend to the public a
chance to be as united veterans of
Meigs County and proclaiming
'Thank God for America, the land
of the free and home of the brave',"
Weclcs said.
The public is invited to join the
legion for beans and cornbread at
the post home following the service.

(614) 446-%125
1-80()..776-4691

Pioneers
...
Continued from A-1
projects as well, according to president Mike Cochran. Local mem bers ()uilt Beeper Eggs - large plasti c eggs which emit a constant
beeping sound - for the Vision Unit
at Rio Grande Elementary School.
Local members supervised a
Beeper Easter Egg hunt for the
children last year, and plans arc
underway for another hunt this
spring. The club also donated special beeper playground balls to the
class, .and supplied one student
with a braille typewriter to assist
with·his studies.
Local members arc participati ng
in the national Hug-a-Bear project,
and a number of bears arc just
about ready for distributi9R to local
safety emergency units. i

GAHS ATHLETIC BOOSTERS
WOULD LIKE TO
CONGRATUUTE THE 7th &amp; 8th
GRADE CROSS COUNTRY
fOQTBALLAND VOUEYBA
TEAMS ON A FINE SEASON.

Publishing Company/Mullimcdill. , In c.
Second clas11 postage paid at Ga llipolis,
Ohio o4563 L Entered ill second class

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28
MENU INCLUDES
Baked Turkey wHh Dressing
Baked Ham wtRalsln Sauce
Cod Almandine

Candled Yanis
Whipped Potatoes

Saltloned Green Ileana
Corn O'brian
. Cranberry Saue~
Complllt Salad Bar
Rolls with Butttll'
Assorted o....rts

w/Glbtet Gravy
Children 10 I under.._. ..$4.95/Chlldren 3 &amp; under eat

. •a•s
Freel

OF GALLIPOLIS

446·0090

Last Day
Monday,
November 11th

DUKE CLEANERS ANNOUNCES

INFLATION _FIGHTERS

muiling mnLt.cr at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post

omcc.

Member: Th~ Associated Prcsa, Inland ·
Daily Preta Auoeiation and the Ohio
Ncw1papcr Associali~n, National
Advcrtiaing Rcprcacnt.atavc, Dranham
Ncwapapcr Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

New York, New York 10017.

PANTS or SWEATER_$ ·

.

3·

01 MORE

$

2

.

UCH

bdudes Sametlay Servl~t ar Car1ii IIIGa·No C011p1111 Necess.-y

SUNDAY ONLY
BUDSCRIPI'ION RATES
By CaiTier or Motor Route
One Weck............................................. .90e
One Year...... .............................*~·····$46 .80

.
BINGLE COPY
•
PRICE
Sunday......... ...... ................ .......... 75 Cents

No eubtcriptiona by mail pcrmiti.Cd in
aroaa where motor canicr service it
available.
Th~ Sunday TilllC8·Scntincl will not be
reaponaiblo for advance payment.&amp; ma de

wcanien.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
•
S•nda)' Only
One Year................................... ....... $4 7.84
Six Moou........................................ $24.79
Dolly ond Sunday
MAILSIJBSCRIPTtONS
IMide County
ta w..u .........................................$21 .84

-~8-W....................................... ....... $43.16

62Woekl .......................................... $84.76
Rateo O•llldo Co•nty
•13 Weeki ..,....................................... $23.4D
28 Weekl ...... ............................. ....... $45.50
112 Woeb .......................................... $88.4D

WHITEWAY

SHIRTS

EA.
6 OR MORE

85 4 EA.

2419 Jackson Avenue
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550

3o4/875-4f30
656 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

814/441-1412

Makn It Easy I

Make your Christmas
Shopping easier this year by _
opening a Diarponds
UnlimitE:d Charge Card now,

4M Sf.C()NC) AVE
(W.UPOliS, ( 'U() -1!'11831
Mf.t.teER

~RICAN

(;f.M S(.ICIE I Y

.,.
~

....

-~·

·--··· ..-

'

.

-

.

~-4-S

----- cthiee. four, eight)

Special Good thru 'ovember
Published each Sunday, 825 Third Ave.,
Callipolia, Ohio, by th e Ohio Valley

,,

'.,

.

Continued from .4.-1 ·
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
off ceremony, wh~re businesses
and schools will sign participation
agreements, will take place around
the frrst of December.
Businesses who have already
signed up as partners are: Southern
Ohio Coal Co., Central Trust, Bank
One, Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.,
Meigs County Chiropractic Clinic;
Vaughan's Cardinal, Big Wheel,
1.1. __ _
er's, Ohio Valley Publishing Co ..
WMPO Radio, and DowningChilds-Mullen-Musser Insurance.
Not all schools have been
matched with partners, and those
Meigs County businesses intercsllld
in participating can contact Schaad
at the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce (992-5005).

'

Grande, was westbound ort U.S. 35
in Gallia County Friday afternoon
and £truck and killed ,a deer in· the
roadway: Damage 10 Cook's 1989
Oldsmobile Cutlass was listed as
moderate.
Diana L. Farley, 34, New
Haven, W.Va., was eastbound on
U.S. 35 in Gallia County Friday
afternoon and struck a deer that
was crossing. the road. Damage to
Farley's 1987 Chevrolet (:a valier
was hsi.Cd as moderate.
. ·
Ju!Je M. Wamsley, 28, Gall1po-

day and
in the 30s, except
day.
·

~ ........... '--l'l Dolo

Jt- ~~~~-'~"""'

'

eaker slated for

v.Df.:~~~~~':.ii~
~-~OH-HIOO~.Wt&gt;
""'~ -4·12«1.iA~I
A .
SL.:IRLO·lH (AGI.£
·~-'i i&gt;I.Uf.U -IN II 1.!1

I

Pair taken to hospital following 2-car accident •
.

(USPS S25-8001

'

,.

Believe It Or Not

-·

Intrest _rates go -down, credit ·cards ~go" up:
A Division of

Pomeroy-Middleport:-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

=~~~~~==~~~==~~~~~~~~~==============~========~~~;;~==~~==~==~~==~~~======~~==~·~~~~~==~~~~~==~

j -____ .__

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November

polls, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Times-Sentinel

1991 '

Nqvember 1~, 1991

~- (" .

l C. '
,I(;, •

· ·$50 susiiendeti." costs. one year pro-.
bation, alcohol assessment;.Robert ,
L!Juis Roush. Pomer~y. fasioe 1~.;
display valtd reg•sf!8UO~, . an •
costs, seat belt vtOlatt~n •. cost.s .
only; Robinn M. Jon.es, Cmcmna~: ~
speed, $22 and costs, Joseph J. Fn.
dley, Obetz, speed, ~24 and costs,
_ Diana L. ~oachi Lmle Hockmg, ;
assured clear d1s~nce, $10. and
costs; Shelby J. Ptckens, Racme, ;
c~JJ of cen~er. $10 and costs. .. .
EarJ. Len
Scott Depot, .

20

_:s~~i!5i:~:O~oo;s~tsb;~~am~·~ue~l~p~.Al~ex~an~:~w:·~v~a.,~se~a:tEbe:lt~:!·~S~~an~ ~

,...

,.

...~·
.•
,.,.••

. .'

: annual banquet on Wednesday night for his longtime contribution
. to the group. Jody Neece, DU committee chairman, left;·presented
' the award to Reed's Widow Nancy and his son Bruce.

nreWaar.

'•

~

L

1

on behalf of his brother, the lateR. Kenneth '·Kerr. Presenting the
award, for iongtime dedication to DU, was Jody Neece, DU com·
mittee chairman.

ed upon enrollment and completion vehicle, $100 and costs, fine susof Residential Driving School· Paul pended· spotiightirig (two charges),
E. Wilson, Pomeroy, no. ope~tor's $100 fine and costs· on each, two
!•~ense, $75 and costs, ftve d&lt;lys in yean probation; $50 suspen(\ed on
.,
J8ll, suspended upon proof of valid each charge; David Scot! Hall,
bperato,r's license within 60 days; Reedsville, spotlighting, $100 and
Donald Gene Jones Jr., Reedsville, costs; two years pro,balion, $50 of
two counts. of spQilighting, $100 fine suspended, taking a deer out of
and costs, two years probation, $50 season $100 fine and costs, twO'
of fine suspended, taking deer with .. Years
. .P'ro.bation •.,no. h,unting.privi·
~a gun during closedcseason;--$100
·
of fine .and costs, two years proba·
lion; no hunting privileges for two
¥ears, SSOO of fine suspended,
~hootiqg ~ d~r from a motor vehi- .
.. cle, SIOO and costs; two years pro·
bation, fine suspended, expired
_ ;.-chicle registration,.$20 a0d.costs. , --~
. ' Eric R. Fields, Long Bottom,
~potlighting, $250 and costs, two
years probation, . hunting privi~eges, $15.0 of · · .ms~~~~g~t;-1H~~~i._
-----Fharles-Ec-Hensley;

''

l~d•smry 4 ID 6
..... (f....)
v~m (fiN

s.t••r

..... ills,.... _
tlrtl)

~

: .: .POMEROY- Two benefac10rs
! :or Eastern Ohio Valley Chapter of
; ·Ducks Unlimited were honored
; :posthumously at that organization's
: ~n·nual banquet on Wednesday
• night.
: : Theodore Reed Jr. and R. Ken' neth Kerr were honored for their ·
• long-time contribution 10 the con~ ~crvation group.
• ' 1991 Ducks Unlimilcd Commit: lee Chairman lodyNeece presented
: plaques to the families of Reed and
~ Kerr. John E.M. Kerr Sr. accepted
!. lhc award on behalf of his brother,
' Kenny, while Ted Reed's wife,
• Nancy. and son Bruce accepted the
: award on behalf of Reed.
: : ,Also at that meeting, committee
• member Horace Karr recop;nized
;_,_,,
{Continued on A·Sl

au""
11r..
Cempethl.e Pricitg

COMPLETE MEDICAL EOUIPMflf
FOR HOME USE .

Let our family
help your family••.

·• Reliable all weather traction.
• Fuel savings with low rolling
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• Extra strength and· stability from two
steel belts.
• Polyester cord body ensures a
smooth comfortable ride.
• Whhe sidewall styling .

HOME OXYGEN - 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE

BOWMAN'S HOMECARE MEDICAL

•HOSPITAL BEDS
•WHEELCHAIRS
•BEDSIDE COMMODES
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FREE.DELIVERY

family Owned
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.........
..,.....
......
$29

"-

.....fled . , , •• Ill
lire Prk11 Slwrt AI
95

a= ill

Serving The AIW For 7 Years

. Across fro• G-Mart-1•• luil•i•g

THIRD &amp; PINE ST.
GALLIPOLIS

'S AU'O CLINIC

1818 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
446·1113 - 446-4744

Beginning Monday'·
Nov. 11 These Downtown
'
Merchants Will Be Open til

'•

.,:;•.
200
DRESSES............. /o}}'f.
GROUP Of Iff
. !f. ~·SPORTSWEAR•••••• 20~·:RFF
GILMORE •••
.: ~ ·

CALIFORNIA IVY

m
m
P• .-u • .•

Clip These Specials and Save

'

0 JR.IILLERY
oO

'l/.:.~-•~..:·~~·::.::.•··-·~~;~~;·i~~;ij~!~··1~~~·-·~·~';;~J;Jf-r!_"c~~;~~!!: •_.,:_•---~ ~NIGHT ONLY 5·8

: :

•• Women's Dress Shoes :. :.

: 20% Off Regular Price • :

:

NIGHTSPECIAL 5 to 8

:

All Soft Spots

:
~

20% Off.Regular Price

su•rs
..........•..
.,.
~·· ~-"v

I

-

1.,

'

.~

• :-- -.- -- :-·:!'rl
9.30 5.00 .
:~
d
on Satur ay ·

11
TO " 3

:

:

""" SPECIALS 5"8

All Tennis.Shoes

•

NIGHT SPECIAL ONLY 5·8

.:

sHoEs MEN's. woMEN's

•

~·························

~

:
•

IIIIT.,.l&amp;l

ONLY 5·8

: : NIGHT SPECIALONLY 9:30·5:00 :

•
: Red Wing Wo_rk Boots : : . , Buy ONE Pair Shoes
:
• 20% Off Regular Price . : :Get the SECOND.P,air 'h Price :
• •

~

MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY 9:30 TIL 8 P.M.
SAtURDAY TIL 5 P.M.

-

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Star Bank, N . A., Tri~State

IIIIIIAL IIUSIIC

LENDER

MEMBER FDIC

__rrliis WeeK_

B£GINNING MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11 t.hTHE
HASKINS TANNER CO. WILL INTRODUCE

On[y
Sorey
No

Layaway•

LAFAYEnE MllLh
GALLIPOLIS, OH~v
MCIVISIIDisc.:

~-~~,,

IEAUTIFULLIIGERIE
WARM ROBES
ISOTONER SLIPPERS
ISOTONER GLOVES a ·lcARVES
EAGLES EYE TURTLE NECKS
EAGLES EYE SWEATERS
SUITS by Kasper

We sympathize with your busy
schedules during the Holiday
season. In order to help you
budget your time, we are offerl.JJilg_E.wwm~LTc~Uch Shopping. _votL __ _._
may call for an appointment
with a member of our sales staff
at the time that is convenient for
you, Monday through Saturday.
. You are always welcome · to
stop in during our regular store
hours without an appointment,
but if you do need a special time
set aside for just you, call to take
a·dvantage of Perso.nal Touch ~
Shopping.

COATS: Alll'lrposeCoats ~-~ OFF
AND MUCH, MUCH MORE!

7J·

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

:ill

•

There's a star within your reach.

Ul'S~T:.

•

••••••

...
.
·.•

STAR BANK

~t
..!~4

Southeastern Ohi~' s Olt!!st an4 Lar9'jt
- Childr~n'
.
. s Clothing Store!

·························~
···············~·~·······~
:
WEDNESDAY COUPON
: :
SATURDAY COUPON
:

~~-:----~~
•

...

aiAt

)ACK &amp; )ILL'S

........................ ~

·-HObiDAY.· CA$H*

',. '

t)

'

~ . 20% Off Regular Price · ~ ~ 20% Off Regular Price ~

l •

•"

,

· : : All Asics Basketball or Running :

: •

Rutland Church of Christ
11
·,~
W~Y·. di
ill be · ·~
H'.l OnuDJ C OSZng Set 6:30 ~-:ith,n:: p~o~::T
p.m. to include the Southern HiQJ
RUTLAND -Offices of the Gospel singers. The public is inv~Leading Creek Conservancy Dis- ed tQattend.
•
trict office will close Monday in
Recently, the church observed
obseryanpe of..,Veterans-Day. In . iis 162nd home'coming and
addition •. bills due ~n.~ov .. 10 !"~1 an'niversary with .62 present for
be. cons1dered patd on ume tf worship and 57 for the afternoon
· J)ru!l_ on Qr befo~ Tuesda)(._ _ -~·. program . .

·certain restrictions apply

.
SISTt.ft'Si. .

........................ : ~ ........................ .
1

f .·.

·

Stop by or call any of our Star Bank locations today. If you
can't make it during our regular hours, call 1-800-274-4111.
Monday through Thursday from 5 until 8 p.m.

,

:·························~
TUESDAY COUPON .
.. :·························~
FRIDAY COUPON
•
•

Richard L. Fry; Pomeroy, failure to
control, $25 a(ld costs; Tammy L.
Congo, Belpre, failure to yield, $20
and costs; Donald Kennedy.
Pomeroy, DUI, $350 and costs,
three days in jail. operator's license
suspen~ed f9190days,ppon enrollment and ·completion of' RTP
School, $150 of fine and jail suspcnded.
--~ -·"--'

S60.

Sfwp Our Sture S p.m. tiC 8 p.m. ·
'J,{afs your purcliase ant! tfraw your
savings from our Savings 'Bo!(. · you can
10 96 to SO% crf JIOUT purcfinse

,.

Monday
thru friday

WE'RE OPEN EVENINGS NOW TIL 8 P._ft\.
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY- SATURDAY TIL 5 P.M.
e p
Specials
B

~~~~~~·s~~~s~~~:~~~!~~~~~

1

Forfeiting bond was Zachary
RUTLAND_ A 'Illanbgi~
.
Ma~es~ato~ ~ouge, La., speed,,_ program will be ,presentcd 11 ~ -:-

A. P.R.

PreSa{e!
Montfay tfi.ru Saturtfay ,
tJ.Wvetn6er 11tli tfi.ru 16tfi.
5 p.m. til 8 p.m
SJ'l'V'E 10% to 50% off

.-.\...t

8:00P.M.

ing bad checks, n~ and costs,
restitution; Keith R. Myers, Long

'

:
(Continuedfrom A-4)
1oscph Sommers, former director
pf the Ohio Department of Natural
/ll.esources, wlio is credited with
' being instrumental in getting funds
• ·:tor- the new boat launching faciliJics at Forked Run State Park.
• According to banquet otganizer
Keith Wood, the local support for
pu from businesses and individu· ·
als in Meigs, Athens and Gallia
.counties in Ohio and Mason Coun,ly, W.Va., makes the work of
.-Ducks Unlimited possible.
: Ducks Unlimited is comprised
.;of over 600,000 members, dcdicat:.:d to ens_uring th~e.futurc of.North
·JAmcrica's waterfowl and their wet·land habitat. Since the organization
,:was founded over 50 years ago,
;DU supporters have raised over
'·one-half billion dollars and
:reserved over 500 million acres for
::the cause. ·
:· Some 4,000 water-control pro·
jccts now provide precious habitat
acres to more than 600 wildlife
species, including several which
arc endangered - the whooping
; .~rane, bald eagle and peregrine falcon.

F'" lk• Rolatlal

:are honored
l posthumously

Sunday Tlmel Sentlnel-.pagt M

pu supporters~ ..

Stn~ls

~

9

leges, $50 of fine suspended,;
shooting a deet from. a motor vehi~~ti:n:~:s~~~Je1.0 yean proRick Laudermil~ Lon~ Bottom,
operating under suspeps1on, $100
and costs, 30 days in jail suspended
to 'seven d&lt;lys, two years probation;
Cathy A. Jacks, Gallipohs, passing
bad checks (two counts), $25 fine,
, costs' and restitution on each
charge; &lt;&gt;wen Folrner, Pomeroy,
passmg bad checks. $25 and costs,
restitution; Angela _S. _Fi~her, pass_· --

,ft ~o 0~ ~~sa~~ji\Ueu~U:~~~~~: · ~:C~tC:Y~~~;.:;arro!~~~~; ·

Sisplllll111 Wllk
IF'" bHmatel
Shocks

'

~

. costs; David R. Ballard, Pemeroy, taking a deer out of season, $100
DWI, $300 and costs, three days m and costs, two yean probation, no

_____IH~~-~~

.......

! ;DU supporters ·
L

•

Insure ... Best

®

f---:rr~:~~~~;-~Th~e~od~o~re~R~e~ed~J~r:.
w~a~s~h~on~o~re~dJp~os~th~u-~~::K~E~RR
HONORED- John E.M. Kerr Sr., right, accepted an
I'
: mously at
Ohio Valier Chapter of Ducks Unlimited
award fro.m the Eastern Ohio Valley Chapter of Ducks Unlimited
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.Poaching cases.•. _..:.:&lt;c:..::on=tln:::u::.;:e&lt;~..:::tro.:;:m:..:A::...-4:.:...&gt;_ _ _ _ _....._..,._..~-------__,.-------·:;,..·._ _ · Holidlly program set

Court rules on poaching·cas~s ;
··
POMEROY - Several poach· in and other hunting-related cases
w:re on the docket when Meigs
~- ~~~~~~,tf.·~·~~~ Jiidge Patfic1C1t
processed 26 cases on
· Wednesday.
.
Fined were: Roben A. Hoeritig,
Euclid, speed, $28 and costs;
William Marshall, Mason, W.Va..
· speeding, $32, suspended $17 and
costs; Odrey R.eeil, Pomeroy, seat
belt Violation costs only; Clarence
R D
Rllc· e stream littering

Pomeroy~lddleport-Galllpolls, OH.-Polnt Plealant,

Llfoyotto Mill • Gaillpolle
·
Open IN 8:00 Every Night ttl Chrlttmtt
Sahlrdoy 1:3'0.5:00

LAYAWAY
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s•ill

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FREE '

STORE HOURS
MOIDIY\FRIDAY

GIFI
,WUPPIIIG

9:30.1:00
SITUIDIY 9:30.5:00

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.)~age-AS-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,
OH-Point.Pieasa~t
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Local News in B

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November 10, 1991

Deputies
investigate"
incidents

Bookmobile schedules visits

POMEROY- Veterans of all
. wars will be commemor~tcd on
Monday, Veterans Day; dunng ser·vices sponsored by the Amencan
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39.
The service will be held at the
"entrance of the-Meigs •County
Courthouse in Pomeroy at II a.m.
Past Ohio Department Commander Dean Scholl, Bremen, will
be the speaker.
. .
~I veterans or.gamzauons and
aux·iiLaries arc mv1ted to be a part
of this event.
. At the conclusion of the service
--'-alll~ are-invited -to the post home_for
.bean soup and coffee.

POMEROY - Deputies of the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department are investigating several incidents.
Deputies took a report on Friday
from Michael Proffitt. Route 124,
Portland, lhilt sometime during the
night someone had taken approxi-

Ch-amber seeks ~stemwiTeel photos
POMEROY -.,. The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce is
currently developing a tourist information broohure for distribution
throughout .the state promoting the activities of Meigs-County. The
brochure is being funded by the Meigs County Planning Commissiorrand the Meigs County Commissioners.- -The chamber is requesting the help of the camera enthusiasiS in
the area who may have captured "that perfect shot" of the stem- ·
wheelers duri!lg.the Second Annual Big Bend Stemwheel Festival

c:__---f:-tboJ'Osclu1bulrlm:ict~their photos

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for possible front page coverage in the
.

Solid Waste Board to meet
•

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:"Four mcarcerated
overnight
•
; GALLIPOLIS -Four people were recently incarcerated in the
• Gallia County Jail. Jailed were:
Terry Dcwayne Haner, 31, Gallipolis, arrested and incarcerated
t Saturday morning by the Gallipolis Police Department for disorder: ly conduct by intoxication; Bart Allen Hughart, 22, Cottageville,
• W.Va.. arrested and incarcerated Saturday morning by the Gallia
; County Sheriff's Department for driving under the influence;
: Steven James Calvert, 31, Gallipolis, incarcerated Friday morning
• for a previous driving under the 10fluence commitment; Michael R.
' Smith, 20, Gallipolis, incarcerated Saturday morning for failure to

f

r ppcar.

.:• Three hurt in two-car wreck
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.•. GALLIPOLIS - Three people received minor injuries as a
~ result of a two-vehicle accident at. the intersection of U.S. 35 and
wS.R. 7 Thursday afternoon.
_
According to a repon from the GaUia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Pao-ol, Doris E. Martin, 53, Letart, W.Va., was north' bound on 7 and attempted to tum left onto U.S. 35. Blondena B.
' Clark, 23, Cheshire, was southbound on 7, failed to stop for a red
:.light and struck Martin's car in t11e side.
According to the report, Clark re(:eived minor visible injury and
· was transponed to Holzer Medical Center by the Gallia County
EMS.
The
said that Martin and her passenger, Brenda M. Huffman, 27, Letart, received no visible inJury but were transported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by the Gallia EMS.
Damage to the front of Clar~·s 1988 Chevrolet S-10 was listed as
heavy and d!p~b!i!Jg" D~lll~gHQ tl]_e left side of Marlin's 1989
Chevrofct lmpata was also liSted as heavy and d•sabhng. Both vehicles were towed from the scene.
Clark was cited by the patrol for failure to stop for a red light.

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. GALLIPOLIS - Fourteen people appeared in the Gallipolis
Municipal Court of Judge Joseph
L. Cain Friday and 60 others forfeited bond.
Appearing were:
Donna J. Tompkins, 37, of Gallipolis, $100 plus costs, passing
bad check; Joseph F. Blevins, 50,
of Obctz, $450 plus costs, three
days in jail, 90-day operators
license suspension, driving under
the influence, charge of failure to
signal lane change dismissed at
request of the state; Stanley Perry,
37, of Ironton, 44 days in rehabilitation, 12 days in jail, 90-day operators license suspension, fleeing
and eluding a police officer,
charges of reckless operation, no
operators license and squealing
tires dismissed; Rosetta Clark Pat·-~·

POMEROY -Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medica
Service responded to 10 calls £01
assismnce on Friday and early Saturday.
.
On Friday at_12:28 p.m . the
Racine unit went to Fifth Street fo1
Alleyne Rees, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 12:30 p.m. the MiddlepQ~t­
----un-it went to OveroroorCCnter for
James Spencer. He was. taken to
Veterans.
Lawrence Scarberry was trans- ·
ported from Front Street to Veterans by the Racine unit at3:25 p.m.
The Rutland unit, at 3:40p.m ..
wenrto Main Street for Homer
Mills, who was taken to Veterans.
The Pomeroy Fire Department
responded to a brush fire at the
Mike Litchfield property on
Welchtown Hill at 5:23 p.m.
At 8:51 p.m. the Tuppers Plains
and Olive Township Fire Departments when to. Rice Run Road on a
report of brush fire, but nothing
was found.
On Saturday, at 2:13 a.m., the
Racine Fire Department responded
to a motor vehicle accident on
Route 124 in which John Evans
was transported to Veterans. At
2:23 a.m. the Olive Township Fare
Department was called Ill assist on ·
the accident
'
At 2:59 a.m. the Syracuse unit
was called to Hoback Road for
Clarence Wickline, who was taken
to Veterans.
· Finally. at 7:59 a.m . the
Pomeroy unit responded to Sand
Ridge Road for Helen Stewart. She
was uansported to Pleasant VaUey
Hospital.

...cut yout!!mYrlflceJ:OSISI
TO PRESENT PROGRAM- Stephen Dixon, .a magician who
presents a program using magic to convey the message of the hazards aQd Illusions or using drugs, will be at the Monday night
mretiog or tbe Middleport PTO. The meeting will be held ·at 7 p:m.
at the Middleport Elementary School. Dixon has performed at
many schools throughout West Virginia and Ohio as well as a
"Just Say No" rally at Marshall University's Convocation Center
and on the Delta Queen. The public is invited to attend the presentation.

RUTLAND- The Rutland Fire
Department will be sponsoring· its
annual Turkey Supper on Nov. 21.
Serving will begin at 5 p.m.
with carry-out and pick-up service
to begin at 4:30p.m.
Tickets arc on sale at Rutland
Department 'Store, Joe's Country
Market and Millie's-Restaurant.
Also from any fireman, or by calling Danny Davis at 742-2372,Joan
Stewart at 742-2421 or Marjorie
Davis at 742-2809. Advance tickets
only will be sold.

d

INTEREST RATES ARE FALLING!
WANTING TO
AHOME?
OR HOW IIOUT
REFINANCING THAT HIGH. INTEREST lOIN?
FHA, VA AHD COHYENTIOHAL LOAHS AVAILABLE
FliED, VARIABLE AHD BALLOON RilES

OSCAR'S RIITAURAIT

NO DOWN PAYMENT TO 20% &amp; UP

WILL BE

'""'lalt9"'·

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trulmlnla, th1 only permanenUaalr removal ~hod. The dhloee ·you bur tnn
magaztn• or dlpart- oloNa, do thor IIIIo tllor oro Slarlllzod (nloanlng aarmfiHI? Aa on lloclrologloll'- thla1nlarmlllon holpa you wkh rour hair ...-_
Aa 1 compallianota - - hod obnomlol hair grawth 11om an odronal datlcloner II olio 14 tl\lllod lo 1 baird, mllllacho, aldabumo on lho '-,1 knoW oactly how
youllll.
.It you have unwanted htk, ~rolyall can htlp rid rours.H of the p~oblem. Our
equipment Ia the ._.._ ttut It n•lable, our trutm.ntt IN llmott pelnlna. If your
,...,_, lllhla a111ee hurtall'"" you con toavo wll- poylng. Tho old llblo ollloe-

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S~ecl1l

Cltarmt Ptlet

$2675

$~50

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C91·1B

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Sensitive Service

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We, the undersigned directors, a:test to the
correctness of this statement of resources
and liabilities. We declare that it has been
examined by us, ·and to the besT of our
knowledge and belie! has been prepared in
conformance w~h the instructions ~nd is true
and co·rrect.
Robert L. Dalton
· J. Craig Siraflord Directors
Wayne F, White

f

I, Daniel P. Davies .Jr.
Senior Vlce·Presldl!nt
of the above-named bank do hereby declare
that tliis Report of Condition is true and
correct to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
·
Daniel P. Davies Jr.
Nov. 3, 1991

BAUM LUMBER

Star Bank, N . A .,

Tri ~ State

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Montrie Chaksupa. M.D.
Chairman. Department of 08/GYN

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neonatal nursing staff members have highly specialized

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skills to care for both mothers. and newborns. •. Holzer
is
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the best option for natural, 'traditional or cesarean births. .
1&gt; Additionally, Holzer
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offers an epidural service to reduce

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· labor pain. 1&gt; In the Southeastern Ohio River Valley, over

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one thousand women will choose to have their babies at

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Holzer this year. 1&gt; Holzer MedicaL Center ... leading the

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way to provide the best possible health care, right here . .

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Donald E. O'Aourk9, M.D .

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Holzer Medic·a l Center

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J . Craig Strafford. M .D.

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Member FDIC '
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Thomes P. Price, M .D.

boara-certlfied or board digible.-a!ioall-oostetricand-

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There's a star withiny6ur reach.

CHEmR
915·3301

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women. ~ All obstetric and gynecology physicians are either

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STAR BANK

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Holzer Medical Center provides excellent health care for

.
Common stock .. . .. .. .. . . . ...... . .. . .. ·-· .. . .. . .. . ....... . .. .. . •. . ..... 5,000,000.00
Surplus .... -. . ................ .............. ..... . ............ ...... 4,346,571 .29
U.ndivided profits and capital reserves .... ........ ............ . .. . . . . . . . . .. 10,840,760.38
Total equity capital.. . .. . .. .. . . .. . . . . . . .. . .. .. . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . .
.. . 20,187,331.67
Total liabilities, lim~ed-tife preferred stock, and equity capital . . . . . . . . . .
. .. 270,475,782.36

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Hospital news

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Cash and balances due from depository &lt;nstitutions:
Noninterest-bearing balances and currency and coin
.. . . . . ....... 10.858.795.17
Interest-bearing balances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.000,000 .00
Secunt1es ... . ................ .. . .. _. ·..... . .... . ........ .. . ..... . . . .. 71 ,699,049 .72
Federal fund s sold . . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .. . ........ . ... . 23,3t 1,ooo.oo
Loans and lease financing receivables:
~ Loans and leases. net of unearned income . . . ..... .. .. t 56,590,972.21
"' LESS: Allowand for Joan- lnd lease IMses . .. .. ........ 2,085,423.90
~
Loans and leases, net of unearned income. allowance, and rese rve . . . .
. . 15(505,548.31
Premises and fixed assets (including capitalized leases) . ..... . .. . ............. 4,012,919.34
Other real estate owned ._ ...... ... ..................... .. .. ..... . .. . ... ... 28,012.50
Other assets .... . . .... .... :. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .... . ...... :-~4.060,457 . 32
Total assets . ... .................... .. , . . . .. . . ... . . .
. .. . ...... 270,475,782.36

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·• Hurry in while selection is at its best.
· • No money down, no payments and no interest for
qualified buyers on Taro's Revolving Charge Plan .
·• Ask your dealer for details.

1

""lcenoii.~It .. oR

- we're sorry. due to the manufacturer's inability to ship. we
will be substituting the Memorex
COX 305 personal stereo for
Memorex Sport AM/FM personal
stereo advertised in ihe
Novembe r 10 Ames circular.

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IIY NOW AND SAVE SOME GREEN
' ON ATORr-R HORSE:

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11:30a.ll.to 7:30p.m.

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.'s Electroly

Deposits:
~
· In domestic ollices ........ ..... . •. .. . .. : . . . ...... . ...... .. : ... .... . 233,607,838.68
ffl
.N 0ninlerest-tearing-,, .... " ,._.. . ... . .. . .... .. .... . 30,051,914.38
§
Interest-bearing . . . . . . . . . . . ........ . . : .. . ..... 203,555,924.30
_ Federal funds purchases . . . . . . .
. .......... . ............. .. ....... . . 420,000.00
~ Securities scld under agreements to repurchase . .. _..... ... .. ......... . ... . 13,833,915.87
:J Other liabilities. .......................... . ... . ... .
. . .. . ..•... ..... 2,426,696.14
Total liabil~ies .... ........................ . ...... . .. . . . ... . ......... 250,288,450.69

Tractor M'ith

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no pain, no gain ·lanllluo. O....Eioolrologl..._ lochnlquo, and ..... _
ualng llorillzod lnaJ....-a .-you lha ~,,,_In otoelrolroto lodaJ.
,
1111 only paopto thai c:omt to our o - havt hair ..,-,.. Thoro .,. 4 lloel•oloo
gl~a on ataff· at Candy'a E..ctralyslt whleh have 111 experiii'ICM thtlr own btttlt
unwanted hair.

THANKSGIVING DAY

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the
Star Bank, N.A., Trl-Staie of Ironton in the slate of Ohio, at the. close of business on
Sept. 30,1991, published in response to. call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under
title 12, United Slates Code, Seclion t61 . Charter Number 1660i' Comptroller of the
Currency Fourth District.
Statement of Resources and Liabilities

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37" mnwillR deck

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PORT
OF CONDITION
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310-RLa•·11 a11d Garden

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - Millard
Gilmore, Cheshire; James E.
Pauley, Middleport; Edwin
Burnem, Middleport; Lawrence
Scarbeny, Racine.
Friday discharges - Emery
Gorden, Ralph Ours, Gertrude
Nease, Lee Bing.

Buy both A\110 and
Homeowners lnauranoe ,
from Automobile Club
Insurance
Company

.

NO INTEREST
'TILAPRIL'92:

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NOVEMBER 17·19

terson, 21, of Gallipolis, $100 and license suspension, driving ·under
Call Angie
costs, no operators license; Barbara the influence, charges of failure to
Today far Details
L. Collins, 30, of Vinton, $12 plus maintain assured clear distance and
446-0699
operating 4nder f.r.a. suspension
costs, expired registration;
Randall A. Penney, 20, of Bid- were dismissed; Shirley M. Cole,
well, $50 plus costs, underage con- .29, of Pomeroy, $100 plus costs,
sumption, charges of failure to con- operating under f.r.a. s~,spcnsion;
trol, failure to stop after accident Sheila Hodges, 33, of R10 Grande,
and driving under the influence $12 plus costs. failure to control.
were dismissed; Ryan T. Moore,
26, of Gallipolis, $50 plus costs, .
expired registration, $13 plus costs,
'
speeding; Rita Montgomery, 26, of
Crown City, charges of failure to
stop at a stop sign and unsafe vehicle were dismissed; Mary .Sheets,
OPEN
of Gallipolis, $100 plus costs, child
endangerment, two other charges
of child endangerment were dismissed; Lori L. Chambers of Patriot, charge of passing bad check disFeaturing A
missed; Dwayne B. Beard, 27, of
Gallipolis, $450 plus costs, three
days in jail, 90 -day operators
license suspension, driving under
the inOuence, charges of failure Ill
.
wear a seat belt and failure to can:
trol were dismissed; Walter Krodel,
WITH I LARGE VARIETY OF FOODS FROM
36, of Gallipolis, $750 plus costs,
10 days in jail, one year operators

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DIVID.IENOIT

BUFFET

Turkey supper
planned

report

Units respond

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DOUBLE DISCOUNT

14 cases processed in municipal court

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THE ROCK9

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RIO GRANDE- The University of Rio Grande Symphonic
Band concen originally scheduled for Thursday, Dec. 12, has been
rescheduled for Thursday,Jan. 23 at 8 p.m. in the Christensen The- ·
1 ao-e
of tHe Fine and Performing Arts Center.

WELLSTON - There will be a meeting of the AGIUMV Solid
: Waste District Board of Directors on Wednesday, Nov. 13, in Well• ston at 3 p.m. in the city council chambers.
: The cny building is located at 203 East Broadway in Wellston
: next to the AGIUMV Solid Waste District Office.

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killed Virgil I. Grissom, Edwatd H.

Band concert rescheduled

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WHAT'S

Wbite and Rog~r B. Cbaflee on Jan.
zf 1967. Tbey were the.only U.S. astronautS killed in
tests.

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· _ Fire i_bQ;I_rd sp!_~~raf! AJ111IIO I on
the ground at Cape Ke!lnedy, Fla.,

· and had gone to a residence in Dexter. It was reported
that the windshield was damaged ,
following an incident at a neighbor's house. The information is to
be forwarded to the prosecuting
attorney's office for possible criminal charges.
On Thursday night, Andrew
Pinkcman, Willow Wood, was
southbound on . Route 7 when he
struck and killed a deer. Light darnage was listed to the pickup truck.

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Not just a Job

lf anyone posseses such a picture, they are asked to call the

chamber office at 992-5005.

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POMEROY - The Meigs County Bookmobile will make the
following stops this week: .
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Tuesday- Pomeroy Nursing' and Rehabilitation Center, 11:30
a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Darwin, I p.m. ~o 2 p.m., Burlingham, 2:30p.m.
to 4:30 p.m., Wildwood Estates, 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.; Wednesday Racine, noon to 4 p.m., Letart Falls, 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.; Friday The Maples, 11:30 a.m. to I p.m., Overbrook Center, 1:30 p.m. to
2:30 p.m., Hobson, 2:45 p.m. to 3:45 p.m .. Baum Addition, 4:30
p.m. to 5:30p.m.; Saturday- Rutland, 9 a.m .. to l p.in., Danville,
2 p.m. to 3 p.m.. Salem Center, 3:30p.m. to 5:30p.m.
-

in Cambridge and the Order of the
.J .. ••
- E.astemStarChap!CrNo.211.
_,
C:::L~SSIF=IED ~DS
She married Bruce
on
•
June 6, 1931 and
~er
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In death on Jan. 14,
• M
.
· 1-, ~-,
.,.,.....,_ 11 Wau~·
h
Surviving
a n~~~~Is~~~~~~
G_eorg•a. •-Bul'leson . ~i.tha-'iOD,
Tom~of9aJlipo-:.__ d11Cted~~.m.
obin-ion
ofare
Canton;
a
hs, a daUghter, Patricta Ellen Hud· ijall~y- ~uneral "'11111e, w•~ law, Mary Robinson of 1..a:nto1';
. Q~LLIPOLIS '--- ' Gear ia sor of Elklns,. w,v~.; five gtjrnd' Rev._~
COofliC1811!1i. Bun '-lindtwogreat•nephews ..' • ,
~el Burleson, 78, Galli fis, children, Heather, Hea_tll and Jamie al Will be m the h•o Valley.Mem- . . Services wiD he 2 p.m. Monday
d1ed Saturday in the Oak Hill~n Hudson, and MackeRZJe and Adam ory Gandens.
10 the Scott Funeral Home, 1009
Term Care Center at Oak Hill.
g Gfreene; and a brother, Jeny_Greene . h Fncn~ 1 at:; funeral S\eubenville Ave_., Camb~i~ge,
Born Feb. 9, 1913 in Cheshir 0 Lake~. Fla.
·ome on · _ Y ~m
p.m.
· w1th Dr. Dudley Field offic1aung.
'
Township, Gallia County sh _ e.
Semces )Yill be n a.m. Tues- . Pa,llbearer~ Will lie Loren , _Burial will~ -be~ig.ni~~~~- ~::~__,_:
the daughter of the Iaie Jc ;~~ • dapn the McCoy-Moore f~neral Beaver, Kev1n Northup, Pa_ul Gardens, C _ ·
Horace and Mabel Leonard kan Home. Wetberhi&gt;lt ~pel, GaiUpo- N~rthup, Loren B~aver, Jr., Tim call at the funeral
on Mooday
• She was also preceded in death b · hs, ~1th !he Rev. J?c:nn~ €obum Noi'thup, and Jeff.Bli'Cbfteld.
. fl:om noon until the time of the scr'
her husband, T.F. (Nic~) BurlescJ ·, ofOciBtmg. Bi¢a! .will be m Cente- llo.T ha. R R h b
1 . VICe. ·
_
_ ---~~'BEHIND~~ on-Aug:--l,-I991~ iiiid by a sis"ter - • nary Gemetery. Fnends-m~y-~all-at-- l-~at D- .· :. ot ge · , . · · .
·. _
A graduate of Cheshire High the funeral home Monday from 7-9
GAl:.LIPOLIS .;_.Nathan Ran- Dolph SWick
·
School, she attended Ohio Univer- p.m.
.
dall (Randy) Rothgeb, 49,
VINTON~ Dolph Swick, 85,
sity. She was a member of-the Lit- Charles L. Northup ,
Ches~ire, died Thtirsda~ in Ho~er J&gt;!qua, a former. resi!~ent of Vin~n,
tie Kyger Congregabonal Chnstian
G'.' -'-"'eLJ"'--- e-h ·le Lo U~- Medical Center foJ)Ollo'IJ)g a bneL_ dte~ Saturday 10 -P•qua .Memonal0 • .
Church-and the Ladies Aid7lhe - .
ar s we . iUn~. . · ·
_
.Hospital.
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Galha County-Fann Bureau and-the Northu~, 75, ot Bethel Road, Route ~~ - SerVices_will oe 2 p:m. Sunaay- Born May 24, !9Q6 in Gallia
L1ttle Kyger Advisory Council, and 4, Galhpohs, died.Satl!"day, No! ., .in the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funer-- County, son of the late JJ~~~~es and
. the Little Kyger Grange 2074. She 9, 1991 at Holzer ~ed•cal Center, al Hom~. with the Rev. Harold _ Edith Jolly Swi~k. he .was a memwas a 4-H club advisor.
after two years offaihng health. . Tracewell officiating, Burial will berof the Trinity Gospel Mission
.S
· are two sons and
He was ·born on Sept.
19 16 be in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
at
·
1ate
Johnston, Steve
by his wife,
' Janyce Burleson
· nine
son,PerryBeebe,BartStumJ!._and on Sept 17, 1986; by a s9n,_
County-native was a Jini Rife. Honorary palllieareiS arc- Harold; and by a brother and two
,grandchildren and. 14 great-grand.chlll!ren; and one sister, Mrs. Fred r~~;~;~~~~~~ of the GallipOlis Millard-Spaulding, Noel Miller; - sisters.
- ' . , · · -F•.....,.,NIIIIDNJ!Ir IC~ k...,.p;,i
~
Center, retiring in Greg Weaver, Jim Neal, Die~
·(Polly) Thompson of Cheshire.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Services will be II a.m. Mon- 1979 . 29 years of servic~. He Young and Lawn:nce FeUure.
Charles (Audra) Oiler of Piqua;
.day in the Li_ttle Kyger Congrega- retired as a Gallipolis City Schools
seven grandchildren; three brothReveobng - • • on Oeeulllom and Violeaee in Hoek Mooie br a
,
.t10nal Chnst1an Church, with the bus driver after 18 years of servie&lt;e. Luella Robmson Snyder
ers, Kenneth Swick, Dorman Swick .
former roek mllli~lft,
He is survived by his wife,
:Rev. Richard Vinson officiating.
CAMBRIDGE_ Luella Robin- and Curt Swick, all -of Vinton; and
:Burial will .be in Gravel HiU Ccme- Ardilla Cantrell Northup; three son Snyder, 89, 301 -1/2 Highland four sisters, Velma Sprague of
·tcry. The body will lie in state in daughters, Loretta, Leota and Ave., Cambridge, died Thursday in Batavia, Dorothy Brandum of Yin:the church one hour prior to the Shirley Beaver; all of Gallipolis;- Bethesda Hospital, Zanesville.
ton, Audra Rogers of Hamden, and
eight sons, James and Ronnie
service.
Born
March
-27,
1902
in
Gallia
BessJe~w•she_rofColumbus.
· Friends may call at the McCoy- Northup, both of Vinton, Roy, County, daughter of the late Lewis . ScfVIces will be 2 p.m. Tuesday
'Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Blake, Richard, and Hiram and Ella Carter Robinson, she · ID the ~cCoy-Moore Funeral
Chapel in Gallipolis on Sunday Northup, all of GaUipolis, and Ger- attended the University. of Rio Home, Vmton, wllh the_Rev: C.J.
Unwamod or a-..a111a1r g.- Ia 1 many ora upoflenelng
ald and Larry Northup, both of Grande and was a teacher for nine Lemley offic•allng. Bunal w~ll be
from 2-4 p.m.
todlr. Thoro . . z ..,.. "' hatr-..~Juo (JitMI. anc1
(dll1&lt;1. • ..., han
Pallbearers-will be grandsons Akron; 32 grandchildren; 10 great- years. She was a member of the '" Clar~ Cbapel Cemetery. Fnends
... 10ft and....,,
halra ai-t darll, - - and ctoop a dIn lha o1 ,..., aldn. H ""'
Bill, 'David, Jay, Jeff and lusty grandchildren; tWo step-grandchll- Westminster Presbyterian Church may call at the funeral home Moo- . Tormlnll
ha,. • hair prablom bo VOIJ . _ . . , - you do 10 lho hair. l1ghl hair.., llo ......_ l dren:
one
brother,
Francis
Northup
Burleson, and Robert Massie.
day from 6-8 p.m.
lllld k!to dirk hllr br tt rling, wa5ng or ....,.. hair r.nonl ~an rour bodr- ~
of Gallipolis; and one sister, Eva
Ia }uola- W0J ol I
••• E- H jQU lion dart hair and you lwiOio, :
.Northup of Gallipolis.
WU,
or
.....
ONIIM
fOU
...
li'l
tor
I
nlghemare
of hllr Md lkln plll~lrm..r...zlng or ~
Robert R. Greene
He was preceded in death by
hllr 11010¥al_,. wllllrrllato lh!o oldn. Tho ...,. • - lha ¥In has to to • one infant. son; three brothers,
,... cloopot'ha~.,.. ...,_ inaro hair- you hacl-.. Stopanclthlnk -II•
Wooten, Frederick, and Edward;
hair 11010¥01-. nlhar n'at,...IIICIUgllto- t11o hair oHrour 1aoo- to
BUY
I doing to our aldn. er- and -zing .., toad 10 .,._, halrt tho! oro
and one sister, Eleanor Neal.
lnloetod and 0111 aear tho lleo or body. W. - o1 t11o _ . . hid tho __, IIIIJ ,
Funeral services will be conapon1 on 111¥1-, • .._, and wu• lhar oould have l....od k ln1o •locln!lroto
•

Special service set

.~

...

,

oM· • . . , _ , , ,

........

-·~- -- . . .

�~

-

-··

.

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-. _,. }.':!,. .. ~ - . - - - .... - ,_ ~

.

• - - -

• -

al

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I

10, 1991 .. •

OH-Polnt Pleesant, WV

:1'
'

Crisco
·
-

-~~~.

.~

. rJen1n

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
SAM-10 PM

.;.

•

;

3 LB.

99

------

298 SECOND ST.

long the ·River
~imts. ientnul Section
eWafOS-of fOSter-parenting can be 'endle.ss:

••
By JULIE E. DILLON
.: ·
Times·Sentinel Staff .
'
;:
~..--ME-IGS COUNTY - Do you
:ponsid&amp; yourself to be caring, giv~--

POMEROt~OH~

PRICES EFFECTIVE NOV. 10 THRUNOV.l6, 1991·
..

Cotton-nelle
4 ROLL PKG.

$ 29

PORK BUTI

(

SteakSor Roasts••L:. -1
SPRING HILL
$ 179
Boneless Hams••:~. · ·

your foster care license. You can they are in need of foster care
live in a house or 8n apartment. ·in because they are
and feel.
the.~ity or co'unty. You may be~lost.. Some
. been
marri«J or singlebut you must be . phystcally,
at I~ 21 yearS old.
. abused,

~-~-~~llf~yio:u~d~~o~d~ec~i~d~e~to~b~ec~o~me~,aH:~~~i~~

.c,tng,
ingUL.the.answ&amp;-is-yes-lhen-per·
compassionate and understand· ·•haps you might consider becoming for
and
'a foster parenL
transportation, as well as medical
;, What is foster care? -A service
, for children which P.rovides a temcPOr!![y, stable.famliy atmosphere
-.for those who have ·been separated
. from their families .
there are on)y four ramiCounty at this time
to provide foster
to Carol Au!~
dren Services Meigs County,
many more foster paren~ are nceqed. This type of care is needed for
children of all ages, from infants to
, teens, and in all three school dis: tricts in lhe county.
•. What do you have to 'do to
: become a foster parent? First thing
: you should do is contaCt Mrs. Ault
at Children's Services. From there,
. she will guide you through the nee• essary steps. In order to be a foster
• parent you must first become
; licensed. which happens with the
· assislance of Mrs. Ault. Foster par~ ents must under~o a.minimum of
; I2 hours of trafumg annually. This
· training, which is provided in
•
is necessary to maintain

care many
the ·children
be in an instichild if •~~
tution .without the opportunity to
ouL
doesn't. in any realiz.e their full potential. Others
way. reflect on
next time foster would have to remain with families
parenting is needed.
who cannot properly cope and
One thing .you must remember some would be on the street with·
when providing foster care is the out any opportunity to receive help.
desired goal of thatcare.which is to Often the guidance of a foster famireunite the family whenever possi- ly is their only chance.
.
ble. This means foster care could _ So, look deep inside yourself
be as short as 24 h.ours or even as and ask - Could I be a foster par- ·
long as six months 10 a year. It all ent? Can a youngster count on me
depends on the situation. Mrs. Ault to provide care, shelter, love and
says you can think of foster care as guidance. Even if you are only
temporary care until a permanent thinking about it, pick up the phone
solution can be worked ouL
and call Mrs. Auh at Children SerMrs. Ault stresses foster chil- vices, 992-21 I7. Help to change a
dren don't always come from a child's future. The reward could be
troubled household. Often times more than you'd ever imagined.

Accorc:liflg to Mrs. Auit. ·~~r.!~

KEEBLER

$219

'

~

Graham
Cracker
Sausage••••••••••••~•••
FLAVORITE
s129' Crust
HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED La

49( Lunch·Meats•••••••••
.le Quarters••••~~••
LB.

CHICKEN ·

6 oz.

(

$129

CHIC EN

Breasts............::·•••
TYSON CHICKEN PATIIES·or
$229
Breast Fill.L.ETS.~::l·
_ COR~ KING .
59(
W1eners...........::!.. .

a roster family is tbe only chaiice a child pts
and many-times:1'oster parentlftflf"a jHilltlve , .
experience.
~

FRANCO AMERICA

Spaghetti
O's14.75 oz.

1

s

''
•
••

·: FOSTER CARE COORDINATOR· Carol
•· Ault is the Foster Care Coordinator for Chi!·
: : dren Services In Meigs County. She works with
•'

those interested In providing foster care as weD
as families whose children are in need or that
care to reunite the family whenever possible. .

••

•

•

.9ls I Coo{ in tlie mirro~

see agirC crying.
.9ls I Coo I( in tlie mirror,
· -!-see-agirf-wfio-ts -afone · ·- ·- ·" -·- --- anc£ lias no liome.
.9ls I Coot in tlie mirro1i
I see agirC wlio feefs .
asliamec£ ana scarec£.
5Is I Coot in tlie mirro4
I see agirC witli a 6ro~n fieart .
.9ls I Coo{ in the mirror,
I see agirC wipe tlie tears
from lier face, ana I
see tliat girC is me
5&amp; I Coot in tfie mirror.
.
I

f,
\

--

99(
Margarine•••••••~"·'u'·· ·
GRADE AMED.
$
·
2. . 1
Eggs......•.........•.
ro~rs
.
S
P1zzas•••••••••••••••l ·S
BANQUET
·
(
TV DiMers•••••:~~::~•• 99
FLAVORITE

·

DOZ.

0

CARNATION

FlAVOR In

EVAPORATED MILK

SUGAR

• TIRCM

2/1v• '

,_.,,s.,.

""~ 11*'111.16,1991
OlfwliM
1Wt I r. C.1ttr

.

SLB.

$ 49

1

HOUSE

COF~EE

••

360l.FlROAST

390Z.lPorADC

399 .
•
s.,. v•

o.N ~· ,,...,,
Offw o.N . 10 tln llow.l6, '"'
u.tt I l'w C.st..w

o.N ~t ,.....,.Vall
OffwGeM .10 tln llow.16, '"'

.... , .. c.......

I

.......,...

GROUND
B·EEF
10 LB•.PACKAGE

•
•'

.,•
..'
••
.••
' •
..
•.•
•
•.
•
'
';

•

$1390

.• '''
•'

.•
...''
:·

••

.
''

I

!.,'

STAR·KIST OU or Woter

•

·

_......

,

~~2il1

••
''•

--

•

•

13y-afoster cfii{cf
:~ L.~
" --~·......................................~~

THE FOSTER CHJl..D • Sadness, loneliness,
confusion. Many times these are the emotions
felt by a cbild who Is In need or roster care•.Some
children bave been physically, sexually or emu-

•
'
tionally abused, nellected or even abaad•ed bJ ••
their parents. Desp1te these dllflcult experietleea :
at home the children stut retain loyaltlo to tllelr .:
own famiUes.
·

.

�'

Page-B2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-G~Iip~lis,

.
OH-Polnt Pleasant,
.

I

I

November 10, ,1991

WV

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~~~~~~k=~~~~~~~~~~~~P~o~me~ro~yi-~L~~Id~d~le~p~o~rt~-~G~a~ll~lpo~~lls~,~O~H~P~o~fn~t~P~Ie~au~·~n~t,~WV~~~~~====~S~u~n~daynmee

___

SentiMI Page 83
,

.Centerville participates
in recycling program

Great American Smqkeou~ ·
scheduled November 21

.•

GALL.IFOLIS- --R iverview- ooded boxesofred(plastici);-wbite . ~
Recycling ~enlly announced ihe (newsprint); blue (green, browa, or
establishment of a fifth drop off clear glass); and R (ReCI Ill' al._,u~
- _
site in Gallia County. -.~--·~.minum cariS)-:-All carii, boUiei, aad
Along with drop off sites .in Gal- plasti~ should be rinsed ..fore
. lipolis, Cadmus, Vinton,
Rio recycling. .
· . .
•
Grade, four boxes have been set at
Accordrng to·Manlyn Shealy,
the old schoolhouse in Centerville. program manager, five more Iiles
Ted Perroud, mayor of Center- wiD be esraNisbed durin&amp; lhe ~mt' ·
ville hBs -~eQ-ae~ively-cworking-.t~o months,includiJII ~ _e~q.- - .
with Riverview Recycling to create Bidwell-Porter,
~encenary· ·
this new sife.
.
.
Northup, . Mercervalle, •nd ~----. Uc.JliJxetLare· ·the.Jamiliar.color- Cheshire.- - - ' ·_ ~~ ...._,....:,~-"+--

~-GAhll.IP9J..I~-··-'i·rus

year, the- Mass;;-to give-(Jp-cigarei!Cs;for the
American.Cancer Society will cele- day and donate the saved '!Ioney to
. brate the 15th. anniversary of its a high sch_ool scholarship fuqd_. __
. Great American -Smokeout on - Mlilfaney coined the tenn SmokeThursdar, Nov, 21 ·11Y . agam out
.
. " ~
encouragmg smokers to qu1t for a
Later, _Lynn R. Sm~th. eqltor of
day; and possibly for good.
the Monucello Tunes m ,M1~nesota
According to a Gallup survey, spearheaded that state s f1rst D37 8 percent of the nation's smok· Day, or Don't Smoke Day. D-Day
_ e~. or 18.9 million-people, heeded spread like wildfire throughout
the Smokeout challenge last year, Minnesota, and then. blazed west to
· 7 4 million stayed off California where 11 became the
~,'"'c- +--oig&amp;nltte''s:fo,r-the day. c
- ~ .GreatAmericanSmokeout. ~'-'-'. ~~
though the Smokeout offi·
h is estimated ibere are 38 !llli'
cially began in 1977, the event's lion. ex-smokers tn the Un1tcd
roots reach back to ·1971._Tha! Siates. Certm_n_l}'_,__someofthe_m a.re
. ·year, Arthur P. Mullaney chal• breathmg more freely to.day
lenged the citizens of Randolf; because of the-Great Amencan
_ Sf!lokeout _

and

!frWiy, ?(pvem6tr 15, 1991

A[[ PERMS

10:00" 5:00

ON SALE

!First 'Baptist Cliurd.k.tivitit.s 'IIuiliing
LocustStrut, Cjalli.po{is, Ofiio

MR. and MRS. JOSEPH (LEAH) MANK
GALLIPOLIS • Leah Michelle
Cusack and Joseph Edward Mank
were united in marriage Saturday,
•I
Sept. 21, at the Kingdom Hall of
MR. and MRS. DANIEL (TRACY) HALL
Jehovah's Witnesses in Gallipolis,
with Joseph Lloyd officiating.
t
,;
The bride is the daughter of Joe
~
MIDDLEPORT · The Middle- featured pouf sleeves. They carried and Louise Cusack of Gallipolis.
=port Church of Christ was the set· candles with peach and aqua flow The groom is the son of Donald
..ting for the Sept. 6 weddmg of ers accenting the rims of the candle and Concetta Fales of Clearwater,
: Tracy A. Ellis and Daniel Jeffrey holders.
Jason Hall, brother of the FL.
' Hall. AI Hartson officiated the dougroom, was best man. Ushers were
i blc ring candlelight ceremony.
David Ball of Florida; Kevin
~ · The bride is the daughter of Bob
: and Peggy Ellis, Middleport. The Pullins, Pomeroy; Tim Jeffers, Gal·
: groom is the son of Carl and Paula lipolis; Steve Tracy, Pomeroy; and
Curtis Dalton, Pomeroy. They wore
: Hall, Pomeroy.
GALLIPOLIS • With the cold
gray
tuxedos with peach and aqua
~
Music was provided by Emma
winter
months just around the corcummerbunds.
~ Lou Davis, organist, with Steve
ner,
now
is the time to think about
The
bride's
mother
wore
a
red
~ Martin and Jody Manin, vocal
all
the
work
to be done around lhe
two-piece ensemble wilh red roses
: soloists.
• The church was decorated with in her hair. The groom 's mother house.
The Job Bank, located at 220
~ Gandles of peach and aqua in the wore a powder blue ensemble.
A reception was held at the old Jackson Pike, has the applicants to
•. windows.
American
Legion Hall following fill the work .needs of painting,
~
Given in marriage by her father,
the
ceremony.
The three-tier wed- repairing windows ~r roof~. or stor! the bride wore a long white satin
ding
cake
was
of peach , aqua and ing away lawn a pauo fumllure.
~ und lace gown with pouf sleeves of
Those in need of any_ of these
white.
~ lace a high neck and long back.
services
can call 446-7000 and the
Jerri
and
Ella
Roush
presided
at
t The-'cathedral length train was carJob
Bank
will try to provide a
the
bride's
table
and
a
friend
of
lhe
; ricd by Stacy Pullins. The bride
senior
to
fill
any position.
family
registered
the
guests.
.
~ wore pearl and diamond earrings
The
Job
Bank
is open from II
The
bride
is
a
graduate
of
Me1gs
• given by her parents and a diamond
a.m.
to
3
p.m.
on
Wednesdays;
and
High School and is attendin_g
bracelet given by the groom.
• Honor attendants were Cindy Hocking Coll ege where sh e 1S from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Thursdays
and Fridays.
: Fraley, Stacey Young, Kim Jeffers, studying nursing.
Th
e
groom
is
a
gradua
te
of
~ Melanie Adams and Bndget lam·
~bert. Their tea-length low front cut Meigs Hi gh School and IS
employed with Pullins Excavating
~ dres ses were of peach and aqua and
.
of Pomeroy.
REEDSVILLE · The Riverview
•
PTO is S()lling coupons fodamjly
photos to be taken at the school on
Nov. 16. All pictures will be taken
by appointment. Laura Hawley,
~ The Sunday Times -Sentin el Thursday, 4 p.m., pnor to tile date 843-5104; Debbie Barringer, 667h cgards weddings of Gallia, Meigs of publication.
6278; Patty Hayman, 985-04340;
~·and Mason counties as news and is
Photographs of either the bride and Teresa Smith, 378-6161 may
! happy to publish wedding stories or the bride and groom may be be contacted for coupons.
~ and photographs wilhQut cl:t_l[fge_ __
P!!b.lis!Jl:d..witb wedding stories if
However, wedding news mu st desired. Photographs may be either
meet general standards of timcli- blac k and white or good quality
ness. Th e newspaper prefers to · color, billfold size or larger.
•
publish accounts of weddings as
Poor quality photographs will
POMEROY · Mr. and Mrs. Roy .
soon as possible after the event.
not be accepted. Generally, snap- Hoi tcr will host a reception this
To be published in the Sunday shots or instant-developing photos afternoon from 2 to 4 p.m. honor·
edition , the wedding must have are n01 of acceptable quality.
ing his mother, Mrs. Ada Holter,
taken place within 60 days prior to
Questions may be directed to lhe on her 90th birthday. The Holters
the publication, and may be up to editorial department from I to 5 reside on Route 7 near Five Points.
600 words in length. Material for p.m. Monday throu gh Friday at . All friends and relatives arc invited
Along the River must be received (614) 446-2342.
to attend.
by the editorial
by

Ellis-Hall

Getting ready for
winter weather

.

Photos to be taken

'

~ Wedaing policy

Holter reception set

~~~------------------~
WANT TO STARr SEEING

Maid of honor was Rachel
Cusack, sister of the bride, of Gal·
lipolis.
,
Best man was Carl Hegglin,
friend of ihe groom, of Largo, Fla.
Registering guests and gifts was
Cheri-Jo Mank, sister of the groom,
of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
A dinner-reception followed at
the DA V building in Kanauga.
Music and dancing were provided
by the families.
The bride is-a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School.
.
The groom is a graduate of
Dunedin High School in Dunedin,
Fla.
Both are volunteer full-time
ministers.
The couple resides in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.

REG. $40 to $85

'

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'

·. ... ··
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WALK-INS WELCOME
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
446.3353

HaJr HaPPening

··'

Get ittod~

Buy One D/R far $9.99

FREE!

LARGE SELEaiON
VINYL &amp; PREPASTED

WALLPAPER AND
_.BLIND SHOP.
MEMOIIAliiiDG( APPROACH ON
GAiflELD AYE. PAIIOSIUIG

Mon.·Fri. 9·1;
9-5:30 Sun. 1·5

from Stanley Steemer®
!

r ••• ~ ·-·. •• •• • • .• • •• • • •• •P •

CARPET CLEANING: CARPET CLEANING :
:
SPECIAL
:
SPECIAL
1

• •. • · • • • • - · ••

1

:

.. 2 ROOMS

1

:l$44. 'i;';t':
I

ANYSAREAS

s44• ~lqlml s44
1/10/tl

t•fr;t.~=~:::.-.~.:II

·---I .

:

1

:
:

•

~lqlml
t/10/lt : .

: . (Seclklnall Are Extra)

1·800·325·5136
992·6788 '
STAHLEY
STEEliER
we say we c:lun i1 , we me1n it

SUPER

SIILO'"

w~en

• t"I S!I"""SI-irnlr!\111-l ~~t

Roil!lllilan Fei .......... Stl.IIO
Fl~t Moetlnv Fee-:::::::::s 9:110
RogularPrice .............. $26.110

'

ARB YOU AWARE•••
HOLZER CLINIC is recommended by The Ohio Division of the
American Cancer Society on their toll· free "Cancer Hotline" as a
Certified Mammography Si!~· __G&lt;!i_l"1.:800-~ _CA~C!;R"_(42~6237) to obtain the ACS's Accredited Mammography Providers.

ing.

''~"'·

~. ~':!':'

I-

HOLZER CLINIC

!SO lbl. and has kopt II
olf fOf cwlf 25 yeart.

WITH TliE TRI-COUNTY AREA'S ONLY

CERTIFIED.MAMMOGRAPHY

GALUPOUS

ST. PETER'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
541 Second Avenue

Tue: 7:00 p.m., Wed:9:30a.m.

Phone 1nd Wllllloll Cclmmunlty
mntlnptMIIryou.

. · Obstetrics/Gynecology

446-5381

Miftnmography &amp; UltrasoWI(J

446-5289

·-

friends, relatives
'attend
funeral
'

HOLZER CLINIC and HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER offer
EPIDURAL ANESTHESIA for childbirth. Expectant mothers can
obtain-further information from the Clinic Obstetrics/Gynecology
Department.

. on.r tnd~ Novembw 1f. 1tt1. -

-

,,, At the party were Hamyell and
,Marie Curd, Marvin R. Marc.hael
Of Texas, Freeman and Lee. Enoch,
~athan and Bette Biggs, Bob and
Esther Harden, Walter and Mary
Grueser, Darla, Amber and'
Autumn Thomas; Dude and Sarah
Gibbs, 'Pam, Meredith, Wes and
IZ:arrie Crow, Bob and Katie Crow,
Floyd and Dink Mitchell, Henry
and Ktahleen Wells,. Nettie and
Willard Boyer, Dortha Neutzling,
Jane, Danny, Car a and Malt
Mitchell, Mildred Wells, Lori and
Robby Crow, Christi and Kellic
Collins, Ruetta and Robert Crow.

HOLZER CLINIC is the area leader in Women's Health
Services, with seven physicians (both male and female) in the
Obstetrics/Gynecolqgy Department - serving Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs, Lawrence and Vinton Counties in Ohio, and Mason and
Jackson CountiesJn_West Virginia. .

.

'
:Birthday
celebration
•
'

HOLZER CLINIC features two modern mammography suites
and two stato: of-tha.art ultrasound uni.ts at ·the Main Clinic,
Jackson Pike in Gallipolis.

$)600

: GALLIPOLIS • Because of the
Benoit will give his personal
; rise of teen suicides and satanic testimony of being involved in the
; practices ~n the increase in Ameri· rock music industry_and how God
~ca; First Baptist Church of Gallipo· changed his life. He will address
: lis, wijl be Mnging Dav.e Benoii to · the_use of rock music to-promote
:. the community and address these violence, occultism, and other anti: important issues.
God philosophies. He will give
• The programs will be held on insight into the question of whetlier
~ Sunday, Nov. 17 from 9:15-10:30 rock music is a cause of problems,
: a.m. and 6 p.m., Monday, Nov. 18 a symptom of problems, or an
: at 7 p.m., and Tuesday, Nov. 19 at unrelated past-time:
• 7 p.m. and are filled with infonnaThis seminat is appropriate for
.: tion, slides, and documented facts. young ~le and adults. First Bap; The public is invited to hear this , tist Church _
will also provide ours~ nationally kn?wn ev_angelist who !s cry and al~emative children's pro: known for h1s studies on occultJc .grams for every service. However,
, and violent tendencies in rock most children in todays society
:music. He has been interviewed by 'from the fourth grade and up are
;affiliates of ABC, ~BS1 and NBC already dealing with the ~oncepts
:news programs. HIS VIdeOS have addressed·by the most relevant pre' been aired nationwide on Christian scntation.
' networks and he has been interLisJen .lo WEMM Chr.istian
;vicwca by the· LA Times '"Oiange radio on Sunday, Nov. 17 at 5:30
~Section." In .the past five years, he p.m. when Benoit will be intcr:;nas spoken 10 hundr~ds of thou- viewed locally from Huntington,
:Sands of people in live appear- W.Va.
•ianCes.

POMEROY · Edward Well ,
Pomeroy, was honored Sunday
with a surprise birthday party in
recognition of his 75th birthday.
• The event, hosted by his wife,
Mildred, and daughters, Jane
Mitchell and Ruella Crow, was
~·!ld at the home of Ruetta and Bob
~row, Syracuse. Gifls were presented to the honored guest and
cake ice cream, nuts_and mirus_
!Yere served to the 40 guests attend-

HOLZER CLINIC is the only Certified/Accredited
Mammography provider in the tri-county area.

YOU SAVE

I .

-···················~--------·

IIUU'IITIDIII-

428·1065

SOFA and
CHAIR

:

ing. She is employed at Veterans
MemQrial Hospual.
Arnold is a 1979 graduate of
Meigs High School. He graduated
from Muskingum Technical College in 1981 with a~ Associat_e
Degree in Applied Sc1ence. He IS
employed w11h Wesam Construe·
lion of Chester.
.
.
The open church weddmg w1ll
be a May event.

;Nationally known evangelist
ito speak at First Bapti~t

The One Year
Clean
Guarantee.

WALLPAPER
'
SPECTACULAR

Get~~~

RACINE • Bill and Doris
Grueser, Eagle Ridge Road, ·
Racine, announce the engagement
of their daughter, Dawn~ R., to
Randall L. Arnold, son of Stacie
and Marica Arnold, Forest Run,
Racine.
Miss Grueser is a 1986 graduate '·
of Eastern High School. She graduated from Hocking College in 1990
' with an Associate Degree in Nurs-

.

'

',

Amold-Grueser

Effective Nov. 11-16

imperial
.

RANDALL ARNOLD ud DAWNA GRUESER

.•

MIDDLEPORT · ·several out·
of-county relatives and friends
were here for the Nov. 2 funeral
5ervices of Jo.hn ~ryan held at the
Fisher Funeral Home.
i' They included Mr. and Mrs.
stanley Bryan and family of
Romulus, Mich .; Mr. and Mrs.
Alben Bryan and family of
·Reynoldsburg; Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Bryan, Sr. and family, Springfield;
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell and
family, Lorain, E. C. Michael
Davis.and family ofFon Dix, N. 1.;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pryor, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert RusseU and son,
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis ~p. all of
Lorain; Mr. an.d Mrs. John Van
Meter and family, Warren, and Mr.
and Mrs. L~wis Schwartz, Point
Pleasant, W. Va.

ROBERT aad ESTHER HARDEN

Couple to celebrate 50 years
SYRACUSE - Robert and
Esther Keiser Harden will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary on
Saturday ~~ the Syracuse Presbyterian Church Annex from 4-7 p.m.
They were married Nov . 15 ,
1941 at the. Presbyterian Chureh in
Middleport b~ Rev. Henry L. Carr.
Harden is retired from Ohio
Power Company·after 43 years of
services. He is the son of the late
Roscoe and Florence Nease Harden. Mrs. Harden is the daughter of
the late Thurman and Pearl
Aumiller Keiser.
·They are the parents of Robert
Harden, Cincinnati; James and
Johnetta Harden, London ; and
David and Debbie Harden Sapping-

For That Special

ton, Raeford, N.C.
Their grandchildren are Eric and
Joan Harden, Hillard. and Jacob
and Janet Harden, london. They
have one great granddaughter,
Alexandria Rene Harden, Hillard.
The couple requests that gifts be
omitted.

Occatdon ...
Special occasions requite 1pl1Ciiel .,.. pll'lltlons. lf you.are plannmg 1 Wed~
ding, annivenary or prom, then yocJ
should come see us at Haalti""' Tan-

nil'.

Yqu will h1va over 190 ltyles of tUll·
edos to choose from. We h1ve a 1.-g.e
selection of the late1t atylea and complimentary accessories for this tpeelal
occasion.
· Quality Fonnalwear
at Affordable Prieeo.

GROOM TUX FREE WITH 8 OR
MORE IN WEDDING PARTY

Historical drama
to be presented
GAGE • "An Evening of
Remembrance," the historical
drama of Salem Church written by
Wayne Ingles, will be presented at
the church on Sunday , Nov. 17 at6
p.m .
An open house will begin at
4:30 p.m., which includes horsedrawn rides for children and adults.
There will also be antiques on display throughout the church.
Refreshments-will follow-the
drama.
• ·

THERE IS NO CONDEMNATION
Thtrt Is no condemnation
To those In Christ Jesus.
Ht P.lld the whole price
So that Htcvuld f111 us.
Thtrt Is na condemnation
He Is N rlght~a~~s ~·
Accepted by the Father
On that CrUcifixion Day.
Thtre Is n• conrltmnatlon
If we belong to Him.
We art now lbs shetp
Called and born-again.
There Is no conrltmnatlon
He finds in us no fault.
We art now made a new
And are His light and salt.

open Mon. I Fri:-'ti

I p.nL: TUII., Wtd.,

TiMin: I -14!f. ' tl 5 P,IIL

Ho-liday Sale__._._
if:¥1!1::11'10(1'!:::&lt; ~ l'l:t!!al'l:t1'10( r;:s 1'10(1'10( SO! 1!1::11

.
'I

I

3 I
Different 1·-~ ·-· I'''
CURIOS~

I·

Ughted, with
pecan mirror ~
back.

25"x71"

Pidurtd Above
Oak padded top lane
cedar chests.

1 """,.,,..........
....
~
0..12Mf01111

Shown right: Lara•
cedar lintil sweater
chest. lwailablt in oak
or cherry.

5

Reg. 349 I
$
00 I

_lt9__II

Rt,,

'16 0 ---

I
I
I

FROM '19910 $999

$2 49

5

49-9--

Grandfather C

W

·30 to ·40% Off '. ~:-

I
.12 DIFFERENT STYLES IN STOCK - ~ ;~ f;:!l'j:t lEI:&lt; !~1':1:1' f;:!!ij:¥1'1:t'IS:II'I:tli&lt;0¥1E!:&lt;~

Gifts!
Our Gift Department is
overflowing with special
· items for your home!
•Willia11sbur1 Brass
•Pinecone Potpourri ·
•Cotton Throws
•Decor~tive Wooden Picture
Fra11e1 .
•Floral Arrangements
•La11p1 •Decorative Pillows
•Jewelry Chests

Cherry Oodt

.Oci Cilwlw1her

Inn.
... $1595

1-.W 1 h:l«

Calrltw.JFI
tit. dtlritt,
SAl.(

'999

Cherty Oassk
_
&lt;
a..
.............. olio._, ....

-

.......'
"""""'

... $1395

R.. $17ft

SAU'699

w'999

SECOND &amp; GRAPE
IN GALUPOLIS
•Custom Drapery
446-0332
•Carpet
•FREE PARKING
•Wallcovirlng
•FREE DEUYERY
DAILY P:30-5:GO P.M.

•
•

'

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''

J

~

�Is, OH.;_Polnt

wv

. Pometoy....Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt PleaNnt, WV

November 1

BEF craft show considered
a treasure: AAA magazine
READER ADS IN 1l!lS SEC!!ON PREPARED
BYCON'!MCT ADVERTISING,
.
. INC. • AU.
- RIGHTS RESERVEo,l991 ;.

&amp;Diseases of.the Eye ·

.· :

Eyesight is one of' · most precious gifts we possess. your sight or the sight of a family member Is
endanget:OO by ~n \Jli,ury, def~t or disea.se, make an appointment t~ con~ult witfl Dr. Edward J. Sh~.
Located mGaJ!ipolis i!t 258 Pinecrest Dnve, phone 441Hlll2, Dr. Shendan 1s an ophthalmologJSt, a phySICian.
speciaJ!y trained~ djaW,10se and treat problems of the.eye such as ~ataracts, gla~coma and retiilal ~· ..:·
This .eye specialist 1s completely knowledl!eable mboth medical-and surgJCal treatments. He IS skilled m
delicate ~-surgery-such as cataract removafamtthe implantation of intraOCular lenses.::U~ing modem ~!:
technology, Dr. Sheridan utilizes the YAG laser to treat secondary ca\ilra~ Wh\ch sometimes cloud VJSIO!i
following c~~~ct_surgery_._?nd the AJ:gQ!JJ~Lto..treat,glaucoma.arul-rliab.~ti&lt;;-retinopath~!&gt;a
. ser-treatmeql$- - generanyt:al(e only a few mmutes and are painless. He 1s also avqilable tQ g1ve a second opm10n 1f eye surgery,
.
fias been recommended to you.
· ·'
.
:
Why not take that first step toward better vision? For professional ophthalmological care to restore:
preserve or enhance your vision, call the office of DI'. Edward J,Sheridan for additional information-today. ..: ..

Pinecrest. Center,
Carelocated
Center
~
at Pinecrest Drive in Gallipolis, phone
non1e-11Ke
·

.

.

FUNDRAISER • The Gallia County Deputy
Sheriff's Association recently donated a gun for
the Bi~ Brothers/Big Sisters Organization
fundraiSing project. Proceeds from the gun giveaway will bene.fit BB/BS. Presenting the gun to

Charlie Huber, BBIBS vice president, is Johnny
RusseU, (Jeri) association president. ~ooking on
is Charlene Wood, BB/BS board of directors.
(Times-Sentinel photo by Kris Cochran)

Assistance offered _______,__________
VINTON · Bernadine .S teincbrunncr, Outreach worker for the
Senior Citizens Center will be tak ing applications at the Vinton Post
Office on Nov. 13 from 10 a.m.1:30 p:in ., for the Home Energy
Assistance Program and Golden
Buckeye Card Program.
. To qualify for a Golden Buckeye Card, a person must be 60
years of age or older and bring
proof of age (i.e., drivers license,
birth certificate).
Persons 18 years of age or older
may qualify if they arc completely
and totally disabled and they must
bring proof of age and disability
papers.
HEAP (federal program) is
designed to assist low-income families meet the rising cost of home
heating and a household may qualify for this assistance if the total
household income falls within the
income guidelines. For example,
one person cannot exceed $9,930

(lor each additional member, add
$3,390).
Applicants must bring proof of

mcomc, the most recent heating bill
and social security number of
everyone in the household.

LEBANON-TOWNSHIP
VOTERS
YOU FOR
YOUR SUPPORT AND
YOUR VOtES.
LAWRENCE HAYQII
Paid for by the candldato, Lowronce Hayman,
32535 Rooa Rd. POrtllnd Ohio

Plenty of Used Mud/Snow
nres in Stocll ~ --- -

Parent-Teacher
Conference Days

13 in., 14 in., 151n.

saoo AND UP

'

: POMEROY · Parent-Teacher
Conference Days will be held
Thursday (rom 6to 9 p,!fl.. and Friday frol)l 9 10 noon in schools of
the Meigs Local School District
There will be no school on Friilny. Puipose of the conferences is
to allow the parents and teachers to
discuss pupil progress-and 10 keep
the parents and schools informed
about student activities as they
relate to-school bchaviorand per-·
forrnance.
• ·Parents are invited to contact the
Schools where their children attend
10 schedule conferences. . ·

51495

13 in. Recaps, Non•radial
Mounting and Balanci~tg_
Check Us Out For Prices

•

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
JOHN FULTZ - J. MARCUS FUIJZ
242 W. Main
OWNERS
. Pomeroy

GAHS gym classes analyz~d

,.

170
44&amp;-7ll2, welco'mes you to theit
where your loved ones-canfeel individual eorilfort and security in the company of
. ·
and private 1111~ semiprivate rooms are available for men and

Approximately 200 Gallia
- -Aeademy-Juniorliigh"'School gym
Students were provided a no-charge
body composition analysis recently
by Christine Wilcoxon, B.S., one
of Holzer Clinic's Exercise Physiologists.
· State-of-the-an body composi·
t.ion analysis is accomplished by
low voltage electrical' Impedance
and is accurate within I pe~eru on
total body make-up. The tesfis
quick and causes no discomfon.
The amounts of body water, fat and
muscle arc determined: The subject's basal metabolic rate is idcnti·

state of Ohio, and only klndness and ctmsideration prevail
.
Complete nursing services are available, their accommodating, friendly staff provides nothiru! but the best
in professional care and supervision to all their residents. Their dietary department prepares nome-cooked·
meals, and special diets, if needed, are monitored for each resident. This health care facility has been equipped
with the most modem fire alarm and smoke detection system available, which ensures the total safety of the
residents in their charge.
It is comforting to know that those you care about can enjoy the fulfilling luxury of leisure they deserve wiili
companions of the same a,ge. Pinecrest Care Center is truly a home away from home, and your personal
inspection is invited at any ttrne.
·.
·

O,Brien
&amp;O'Brien Attorneys At Law
· Financial difficulties present painful and distressing problems that everyone would like to avoid. However,'

GALLIPOLIS - Gerald E.
Roach, CIC, of Gallipolis, was
. honored recently by the Society of
Certified Insurance Counselors for
his more than five years of "steadfast commitment to leadershfp 'imd
excellence through continuing
insurance education."
·
The honor was conveyed in a
testimonial signed by Dr. William
T. Hold, CIC , president of the
national organization that for over
21 years has administered a comprehensive system of continuing
education for insurance pr(lfession'

Donald
M.
Thaler,
MD Orthopaedic Surgeon
Orthopaedics is that specialty of medicine which deals with conditions of the muscles, bones and tendons of

the human body. Problems with these structures !Jlay arise from birth defects, industrial, auto and other,
accidents, sports injuries, aging, and many diseases. T~ese conditions often result in pain, swelling and difficulty,
in movement.
·
·
Dr. Donald Thaler specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of orthopaedic conditions. His office is located
at 362 ~acks&lt;Jn Pike~ ~allipolis,_ Ohio,_adjacent,to Holzer MedicaLCenter,_where he is on.staff. He is also on
consulwmstaff at Pleasant Valley Hospttal. Appomtments may be made by calling (614) 44&amp;0100.
.· ,
Dr. 'Thaler has been treating patients in the Galliil·Mason area for nearly 30 years. He has wide experience
in sports and work-related injunes, as well as auto accidents and birth defects. He is skilled in the surgical care
of fractures, arthroscopic surgery and joint replacement. His examination determines the type of treatment .
needed, ~ible risk and the probable result. He also supervises post-surgical therapy,if needed.
:
For professional treatment of any orthopaedic problem, Dr. Thaler and his staff are highly recommended
in the community. Call his office for appointments and further information.
:
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.

HALLOWEEN HAPPENINGS· Pictured is Nicllollls .Straltllll---frcim ·community, Nursery Scliool as he parlicipates in the reeeot
Halloween festivities d.uring the Tuesday--Thursday cli!SS party.• I·
The school js located at tbe Presbyterian Church,. 51 Stale Street, .:·
Gallipolis. Also pictured are Joee Jarvis and Barbara Moore, , ·
administrator. There are two-classes -held at· the school. The three
year old children meet oil Tuesdays 'and Thursdays or every week ·

1 _s~~:~JO~-t~t~:3~o~~~~~~n~~fo~fl~
fied, pinpoiming how man caiQ:..
I
G:Ju•·u:.lll a.m. Anyone inte1rest·
ries per day are require 10 main- ~-.......,--;
enrolling
child can call446-1030, Barbara Moore, 446·
tain body weight. The individual's __
2795 or Roberta Roush at 446-4274.
optimal target weight is also given.
A body composition analysis is
provided at no cost 10 anyone joinIng the Holzer Health Center
(HHC), located a11he Holzer Clinic
Occupational Health, _Sports
Medicine and Rehab Center on
Sycamore Street in Gallipolis. For
Confidential Serltices:
membership, appoimmcm, or further information, call Ms. Wilcox·
Birth Control .
on or any of the HHC staff a1 446V.D. Screening
.
WINNER • Ronnie Payne of Mason County was the
5502.
Cancer Screening
wmner or the Bid Brothers/Big Sisters West Virginia Belle giveawar, Payne.won two tickets for prime rib dinner and cruise. PrePregnancy Testing
sentmg the ttckets are Judy Sofranko, left, BBIBS executive direc·
tor and LesHe Sheets, right, BB/BS board member.
Sliding fee salt.. ' .No 011t f'lfustd services beca1111.
als.
--.'
-·
.
According to the .ciC testimonial, Roach's commitmenlto excel-.
lence "has been demon strated
SCHOO~
through outstanding. individual
achievement an&lt;;! througli the highPOMEROY:
GAlUPOUS
est levels of professional compe236 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
414 St&lt;ondAre~ 2nd FIMr
tence in all areas of the insurance
992-5912
446-0166
business."
1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Roach, an agent with the WiseClosed
Thursday
1:3 0 to 12 Soturtltty
·
man A~ency, earned the CIC designation m 1985 and ranks among the
Closed Thursday
top one percent of agents and proPaid for by Candldote, 36150 Rocko Springs Rd., Pomeroy, OH.
ALSO: J111kson, Chesapeake, Athens, Chi~cothe, logan &amp; McArtto
ducers in America.

· Family Planning
It Makes Sense•..

Local professional honored

when the situation arises where legal services would be advisable, we want to be sure that the law firm has the
expertise and experience to handle your situation effectively.
.
.
The law firm of O'Brien &amp;O'Brien, ,located at IOOlfz Court Street in Pomeroy, phone 992-2381, can provide
professional, personal serviees-to· help you r,esolve your financial diffic~lties whether they be busines!} or.
·personal. These attorneys will carefully consider all aspects of your particular case, answer your questions
clearly, and fully explain your property rights. In many cases, you may be able to preventforeclosures and
repossessions and reorgaruze your- affairs to provide a dignified way of repaying your debts. O'Brien &amp; O'Brien
can put an end to creditor harassment, wage garnishment and lawsuits, and help you take steps towards a fresh
financial start.
..
If you or your business are faCing finanCial distress,.you should know your legal rights. Call O'Brien &amp;.
O'Brien at 992-2381 for a free consultation. Through the proper channels and with assistance by professionals.
knowledgeable in these speeific cases, your financial future may appear less bleak.

MD Obstetrics &amp;Gynecology

NEW AND RECAPS

RIO GRAN DE - The 1991 crafts 10 be displayed and sold will
Christmas &lt;;:raft Show al ·Bob be housed at thefarm's Craft Barn, ·
Evans Farm in Rio Grande Ohio Log Cabin Village and the Homehas-been-namedT"A'I\A"Travel -stead Boll EvilJIS' former home
Treasures" by Home &amp; Away, the which is now on the National Reg·
official membership magazine of is~r of Historic Places," the story
1.8 million AAA-member house- re~.
.
.
· holds in the Midwest.
·
Home &amp; Away, the nation's
A profile in Home &amp; Away's lllrgest-circulation travel magazine,
November/December issue reports (according to Audit Bureau of Cirthat "the shQlllto be held Nov. .30 . . culation figures), features at least
and Dec. I follows an 1800s l!!J:me six "IJ;lvel treasures" in ea~h biamialhe historic and pictuesque monthly iss~c. Bare Wade, exeeuseuing-of-tbe-J.;-100 faun." ·
tive ediiOnif'the magazine, says
Accordin~ to the anicle,.craftsthe travel treasures are "unique
people arrivmg from other parts of Midwest attractions," selected for
Ohio, W~st Virginia and Kentucky their appeal to typical American
promise 10 dress·for the pan.
Automobile Association members.
BODY COMP · .Holzer Clinic Exercise Physiologist Christine
_ "T)le S~()\V) .
· Wilcoxon is shown petforming_a.J!!!I!Y.c:.ompllSition ~l!a.lms o~tJ.i!l __
-· ROderus, a Gallia Academy Junior High cheerleader. All GAJHS
gym classes were offered the body comps.

.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

THANKS TO THE VOTERS Of THE
MEIGS LOCAL
BOARD FOR
YOUR CONFIDENCE
AND SUPPORT.
RANDY HUMPHREYS

~•

OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

o·FURNITURE ·CO.'s
S REWIDE SALE

--

0

professional care for the women in this area, the office of Dr. Benjamin J. Sol is located in the'
Pleasant
Hospital Office Room 215 in Point Pleasant, phone (3M) 67:h1400. Dr. Sol specializes in the
problems and
of women's health. He is trained to evaluate, diagnose and prescribe proper measures fo~
a wide variety of women's health problems and conditions.
.,
"'
:
Annual examinations are a significant part of preventive health care for women of all a~es and are:
~mmended by many docto~s. Dr. Sol is.available for these routine, yet very importa.nt examinations. Female.
disorders; whether they be·mmor or major, are all capably handled by this s~talist as well as pregnancy:
testing and infertility counseling. The doctor also s~ializes in complete obstetncal care. From confirmation of·
your pregnancy and prenatal exams through the b1rth of your baby and postnatal checkups, he offers up-to-date,·
supportive cate.
·
·
:
Many women in this area have come to rely upon Dr. Benjamin Sol for sound medical advice and treatment'
in all phases of gynecological and obstetrical care. The doctor and his staff are dedicated to serving all their·
patients' needs.
.
·.

•90- -SAME -as CASH
·~..........,

•nNAICINO AVAILABLE
•FREE·'DELIVERY

TheThe Medical
Medical
Shonne,
Inc.
Hennan L. Dillon, MS, Pr
.
Shoppe's licen~~ysical therapist offers a full range of therapeutic services for all types of

JO CARS TO CHOOSE FROM ALSO

orthopedic, neurolog(cal and musculoskeletal rlisabilities. Located in.Gallipolis at 565 Jackson Pike, phone~ -·
2206, the physical therapist at The Medical Sboppe is pro\essionall~ trained to detect, evaluate and treat all sortS ·
of physical disabilities and pain caused by injury or disease.If you ve experienced asports injury, an automobile
· accident, a fall or work-related injury, this health care specialist can help you convalesce. Herman L. Dillon has',
been' serving the physical therapy needs of this commumty for thirty years.
. ~
He knows how to evaluate your present condition and can plan a program of physical therapy to help you
progres5·as·quickly-and·safelyas possible:-Iftl'eatmentis indicated, he will provide his professional services on;
a regular basis and will also mstruct you in therapeutic and preventive exercises and activities that you can ·do'
yourself, He will also evaluate your need for a supportive or corrective device and work with you so that yo!¥
achieve the maximum benefit from it.
·::
If you or someone you knuw needs physical therapy for any reason, don't hesitate to give The Medical:
Sboppe a call. They are here to serve you when you need them the most. ·
·
:

AT WHOLESALE PRICES
00

$9,888

~ I&amp;~

:&lt;

..
~
~

STOREWIDE SAVINGS
SAVE FRO
'

20 /a TO 501Ja
1

'

Continuity
Of
Care
Medical
Equinment
&amp;Supnfies
~
With major advances constantly being made in medical teelmofogy, more and more peopfe with respiratory•

::r

:i!:u

c:

DON'T FORGET
RUTLAND FURNITURE'S
BIG GIVEAWAY WITH
DRAWINGS ON NOV. 30th
· AND DEC. ~th.

or breathing problems are now able to carry on with their nonnallife through the use of oxygen equipment.
:
Well-known to respiratory patients throughout Meigs and Gallia counties, Conlinwty Of Care carries a:
complete line of quality oxygen and inhalation therapy supplies. In addition to their oxygen reservoirs, they.
su~ply nasal cannulas, Il)asks, tubing and all equipme~t esse~tial to tl)e comfo.rt of the respiratory patient. Local:
delivery and set-up semces are available, and·these mbalation spectahsts will be glad to consult w1th you ant
help you select the equipment and supplies best suited to your needs. Most of their services lire covered by:
insurance and·Medicare;and·they willbil~direct for·you. --~ -·-- - ----- -·--·. ,Continuity Of Care has earned the respect of doctors, nursing home and hospital administrators aOO:
patients alike for quality equipment and courteous, professional servtce. For all your respiratory needs as wen:
as a·complete line of healthcare and convalescent equipment. Continuity Of Care, located ~t ;m Mulberry'
Heights in Pomeroy, invites you to call them at 992-2310. These local professionals are the area's healtheare; .
. conneCtion:----,
-·
- ·
· •
- ...
1

~

!!l
::r

·-~

.

---.~

••

shoulders or neck? PerhaJ.lS you have a backache or have recenUy been injured in an accident. Whatever the
problem, Meigs County Chiropractic Clinic, located at 963 General Hartinger Parkway in Middleport, phone~
2168, may be able to help.
· .
~
Each fV'arL\hOUsands of people find relief from pain and tension as a result of chiropractic care and also feeC
that routine cniropractic visits greatly benefit their overall health. With rising medical costs and more:
information available on side effecl'l of various medications, many people are investigating alternative methods
of healthcare. Meigs Counly Chiropractie Clinic believes that chiropractic is a philoso~hy and science of~
naturql following the rrinctple that a well-balanced nervous system relies on the body Sinnate ability to COITe&lt;it'
itself without the use o surgery or drugs.
•.
Acareful and thorougfi examination including x-rays, if neflled, can reveal the source of discomfort or pam:
and enable the doctors to recommend an appropnate treatment pro~ram. Surgery and drugs can be avoided in
many cases through proper spi_nal adjustment.&lt;; an~ various therapies. Chiropr~ctic care mar be the, natural'
,road to your better health, and IS covered by many msurance plans. Contact Me1gs County Chii'Opractic Clinic
today for additional infonnation.
~

AT THE

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Elrample: $1,000 Purchase
Equall 11 Chances to Win.

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· SEE DWIGHT STIVERS OR BOB ROSS

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No Purchase Necessary.
~-.-'-E-very -stoo-Pili'chase Receive
Another Chance to Win •

Meigs
County
Chiropractic
Clinic
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Are you continually sUffering with a headache that won't go away or recurring pains in your arms, legs ·

"LOADED"
ONLY 19,000 MILES.
MIIIT CONDITION.

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Tliouiands oi.DollanWorih ol
Fumlture To Be Ph•en Away.

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. Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllp.OII$, OH-Polnt Plea$anl, WV

Page-86-Sunday Times-Sentinel

REEDSVILLE . The Riverview attend.
PTO will meet Monday at 6: 30
p.m, at the school. Open house will
TUPPERS PLAINS • The
be observed and there will be a 'Meigs County Chamber of Com- .
short program pnesented by grades
ConiiTtunlty Calendar items
MIPDLEPQRT • There will be · 1-4. Babysiuin~ and a movie will merce will ·meet Tuesday at 6:30
p.m. at the VFW Hall in Tuppers
appear two days before an event a Veterans Day dinJier on ·Sunday
·
Plains.
The meeting is hosted by
and the-day or that event. Items at noon at the Middleport Legion be provided.
I
•
Roger Hawk of Hawk's 76 and
must be received well in advance Annex for post, unit and invited
RACINE • The Racine Ameri- Fred Goe.bcl. John Redo.vian,
to as·sure publication in the cal· guests. A hymn sing will begin at I
can
legion will sponsor a bean din·
endar.
p.m. with the Narrow Way Singers ner at lhe post home for all veter- grants coordinator fo( the Meigs
County School System, will be the
of Letart, W.Va. The hymn sing is ans on Monday at II a.m.
guest speaker. MaleC reservations
SUNDAY
open to the public.
POINT PLEASANT · The quarby calling 992-5005 .
RACINE. The Racine PTO will
POMj&gt;RO~ • A eyve-wcek ham
terly meeting of the Son s and
LONG BOTtOM • The Flame
Da~ghters of Pioneer River Men, have a ham and turkey _dinner o.n r~_d1o clas~ ':"'ll begm Monday at
Oh10 and Kanawha RIVer Branch, Sunday at Southern High School 6.30 p.m. m Pomeroy.~Forfunher Fellowship Chapter will tifeef
mformauon call 992-6857 after 5 Tu·esday at the .Faith Full Gospel
will be held Sunday at the Mason with serving to begin at 11 .30 a
ouom. Hazel
County Library in Point Pleasant, Cost is $3.75 for ~dults ;u;d
p.m. Money for b?oks must be _ Church in
-WNa. !,ohn Hanford-will-pnesent-a - for chilaren-:-Craft tables, at s:s- ~- tumedm at the meeung.
video BanJo Ftddler and R1ver each are available Call Cathy
·
Boats." Jerry Sutphin will have Clark at 949-22 21 ~r Mi!r Ann
RE~DSVILLE ·.The Eastern
available his book, "Stcmwheelers Shoults at 949 . 2993 for informa- Athleuc B.D?sters wtll meet ~on_ - -WEDNESDAY-on tlic Great Kanawha River." The lion.
day at thchigh school. c__af~t.e_na at
public is invited to attend. ·
7:30 p.m . Everyone tS urged to
POMEROY ~ A ceramic lighted
auend. •
winter
scene class will be offered at
POMEROY · A 12-step AA
the Meigs CoiUity Public library in
POMEROY • The Meigs Vocal meeting will be held Sunday at 7
TUESDAY ·
Pomeroy on Wednesday at 10 a.rn.
Music. Department will present its p.Ll) . at the JTPA office. 117 West
POMEROY ·The Ohio E!a Phi The cost ·is S13.50 and is payable
annual fall concert on Sunday at 2 Seco~nd Street in Ppmeroy. .•
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority, upon registtation;
. . at
School. Stu·
its Preferential Tea on

Meigs

t,

Novemj)er 10;1991
November 10, 1991

GARS conferences slated ·

·GALLIPOLIS • Parents of all
st~dcms attending Oallia Academy
High School, grades 7-12, will
have an 0pponunily, to talk. wimthc
teachers .concerning the student's
progress and performance thus far
m the school year. .
School admini strators, counsclors, and teachers encourage all
parents to call the high school guid·
ance .office to .makc appointments
to talk with thCir childrcn~s teach·
ers . .

Conferences at Gallia Academy
High School will bC fteld on _Tucs•
day Nov. 26 from 3 : ~0-6:30 PM
.and on Wednesday, Nov. ~7 from?
a.m.•noon.
'. '
Piii'ents sfioulll c1111446-3250 to
set up conference appointments .
with the ·teachers. Parents should
have the following information at
the lime of the phone call: student's.
.name and the !lame of the teachers
they would like to visit.
.. ·

CHESTER · The Ken Amsbary
Chapter of the Izaak Walton
League will host a slug shoot on
Sunday at I p.m. at the club house
ncar Chester. Prizes include meat
and money. Free hand and bench
rest events for scopes and rines.
RACIN!i · Racine Bapti st
Church will hold revival Sunday
through Nov. 17 at 7 p.m. nightly.
Speakers include E~rl Shuler,
Charles Norris, Rick Harris. Steve
Deaver invites the public . Special
music by Kings Harmony Quartet,
Southern Hill Gospel, Marty Short
and LuAnn White, Kyger Valley
Quartet, God 's Little Lambs, Living Word and Faith Harmony
Boys.

Choir will perform at the """"'cport Community Church on Pearl
Street on Sunday. Rev. Sam Anderson invites the public to attend.

of Susan Clark. Mctnbers
potluck dish. Park
at the
Pomeroy Fire Slation at 6:15p.m.

MONDAY
POMEROY · All courthouse
offices will be closed on Monday
in observan ce of Veterans Day .
They will re-open at 8:30 a.m. on
Tuesday.

RACINE • Racine Lodge No.
461 F and AM will hold a regular
meeting on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
with work' in the M.M. degree .
Election of officers will also be
held . All members are urged to
attend.

returned fo tl\e 40- .
yard line the .

POMEROY • Revival at the
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel , Route
143, Pomeroy will be held Tuesday
through Nov. 17 at 7:3op.m. night·
ly . Dana Walker, Rockwood ,
POMEROY · The Di sabl ed Tenn., will be the evangelist. There
RUTLAND • A Thanksgiving
Am erican Veterans and,Ladics will be special singing nightly. program
be presented at the
Auxiliary wil,l meet Mon'day at 7 Rev. Victor Roush invites the pub- · Rutland will
Church
of Christ on
p.m. at the hall , 124 Butternut lic.
Wednesday.
A
carry-in
dinner will
Avenue in Pomeroy.
begin at 6:30 p.rn. with program' at ·
7 p.m. to include the Southern Hills
POMEROY · The Pomeroy EleMIDDLEPORT • The Middle· Gospel singers. The public is invitmentary PTO will meet Monday at port Elementary PTO will meet ed to aucnd.
GALLIPOLIS · Modem Wood- 7 p.m. in the school gym. Debbie Tuesday
at 7 p.m. Steve Dixon will
men Camp 7230 will have a lun- Bre~nan will be the speaker. Sixth be the speaker.
The topic of discuscheon on Sunday from 12:30 to grades will have the program. The sion will be "Drugs
Arc An Illu2:30p .m. at Dale's Smorgasbord. public is invited to attend. ·
sion
."
All
parents
arc
urged to
Cost is $2 per pe~on with children
age nine under free.

Annual fall
open house

•

's
Family Restaurant
-2FOR

POMEROY · The annual fall
open house will be held at Meigs
High School Thursday from 5 to 9
p.mThe evening will begin with an
"all you can eat" bean dinner sponsored by the award-winner Meigs
High School Band. Serving will be
from 4:30-7:30 and the cost will be
$3.50 for adults and $2.50 for chil·
dren under 12.
Following the dinner, members
of the National Honor Society, the
band and the choir will present an
informative and entertaming program in the cafeteria. Tgurs of the
building will be from 7:15-9 p.m.
Guides will be available to dtrect
visitors to classes where lei!Chers
will be on hand for conferences
with parents.

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SALE
BtJr ONE ROT FUDGE CAKE
AND GET ONE FREE!!

•

GRILLED CHICKEN ·
SAJI(DWICH

8311

AND MEDIUM
FRENCH FRIES
Gtn. Htninp Pkwy.
MIDDLIPORT

614-992-5248

479 Jacboal'lh
GALUPOUS
614-446·3837

354 East N1 St. ~
POMEROY
614-992-6292

THE SHOE CAFE .

LAFAYETTE MALL
GALLIPOUS, OH.

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RUTLA D
BOTTLE
GAS

COMPLETE LINE OF WARM
MORNING-GAS HEATERS
IN STOCK

Cash and balances due from deposilory instirutioru:
blonuuerC5t-bearing balances and currency and coin ...........................................................................982,000.00
~SCCWlUe&amp; .......................-................-•.•• ,....~ .. .-.-.-•. .-.-. ...... m1nr.......... ....... .... ... ............-......... .... ... .--; .-.... ; ;:;.. . .. .. .... .. . 4, 760iOOO:OO-

.

Federal funds sold ....................... ;.......................................................................................... ..............6,764,000.00
Looru and lease fmancing roceivables:
Loans and leases, net of unearned income........................................:.......... 24,559,000.00
LESS :Allowance for loan and lease losses.......................................................309,000.00

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- -Premises IIlli fi&gt;ed assciS (including eapilaliud 1WC5)...... :...-.::·......................... :..................................2S4,000.00
Otller rcalesl81ll owned................................................................................................................................3,000.00
Otller assets ...................................................................... .............. ... ................................................,......679,000.00
Tou.l asseis .................................................................................................... ... .................................. 37,692,000.00 ·
Tou.l asseu ond loSies deferred porsuon112 U.S.C. 1823G)..............................................................37,692,000.00

5
; .Interest-bearing........ ,..........................................................................30,061,000.00

•• •

· NO OTHER TRIBUn IS AS WnNG
:: 4S API.RSDNAUUD MEMORIAL
: l .ROM LOGAN MONUMENT CD. IT
•: ·IS AWORTHY EXPRESSION OF
: • lOVE AND RESPECT.

=Common sLOc:k .........................................! ..................................................................................... ........... l25,000.00
; Surplw ................................................................................. .................................................................... 125,000.00
• Undivided profit.s ond capital reserves .................................................................................................3,949,000.00
~Total equity clpital ............................... .'................................................................................. ............... 4,199,000.00
Total equily capi1al111d losses deferred
;
punumtto 12 tJ.S.C. 18233(j).....:..................................................................................................... 4,199.000.00
~ Total liabilities, limiled-life P"•ferred stock. and equity capi1al,
O and loues defa:red pursuan110 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) .......................................................................... .37,692,000.00

••

LOGAN
:: MONUMENT
:&gt;COMPANY, INC.

.RUTLAND FURNITU

Ill

I. Gary P. Norris, Cashier, of Llle above-named bank do hereby declare Lllatlhis Repon of Condition is I!Ue and
corre&lt;:IIO lhe ben of my lcnowledge and belief.
·
Gary P. Norris, Cashier
October 25, 1991

POMEROY .

and·.B.OTTLE GAS

We, the undeni&amp;ned directors, attesl Lllis corrccmess of lhis statemenl of resources 111d liabilities. We dec late
that it hu been examined by us, 111d to lhe best of our lcnowledgc and belief has been prepared in ccnfonnonce
witlllhe inii!Uctions and is true 111d correct.

GEORGE.GIATE-MANAGER
STATE 10m 124

John T. Wolfe
Muvin HiD -Directors .

' MEIGS COUNTY DISPLAY YARD
, NEAR POMEROY-MASON

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Oeorac Neialer

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BRIDGE

JAMES A. iusH, MANAGER
•
PHONE te2·2588 ·
'

VINTON, OHIO

GALLIA COUNTY :
DISPLAY YARD
JAMES A•• KIMBERLY
· • .BUSH, MANAGERS
PHONE$88-81!03 .

.Thursday, Nov. 14'
10:45 a:m. -Bible Study ·
I -p:m. ---oln~The~Know "Getting
Through the Holidays"
·
I p.m. -Play practice
Friday, Nov. 15
10 a.m.-noon and 1-3 p.m. Art and craft class
I0 a.m. - 'walking Club
10 a.m.-3 p.m . ..:. Pool
Menus consist of:
·
ll(!onday _: COuntry steak with-~
gravy, whippoo polatoes, kale, bis·
cuits, peaches.

Tllll'sday-=-Chtckelncalloped-~"'

potatOes, peas and carrots, bread,
and ice cream..
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Wednesday .--::- Meatloaf, MCl'i· .
can rice, cole slaw, bread, fruit cup.
Thursday - !lam and beans
with onions, chcesc ·cube, mustard
greens, cornbfead, pineapple
chuljks ·
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1I9{.f£ J'F/WEL'l{Y'

Holiday Sale!
LAYAWAY NOW!

l4K GOLD CHAINS

50% 70%

SAVE
TO
OFF SUGGESTED RETAIL

OYER 500 CHAINS IN STOCK!

r----

1·':;fitFZi/s-=---1

OLD FAMILY
COPIED

$2495

I """"'"'

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SP!R~'U.o~
~-,-p-·"&lt;-i&gt;M"-- ,I
en

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;:-c. .
'!oioJ C.0.""

$AJ95

PRICE/

llrSI)c.filil*

11/lfJtf

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IOK GOLD DIAMOND s ,s
RING. ~~g. Sl25.tlll 59

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r •assic Style {Ui
I

2-5X7

&lt;~:......

A t:p'all,ta.stic Sanfs•
- V. tne OlfiiMI Family Ha11cutters •

Reg.
$19.50

$995 1'
.

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446-SAMS

TAWNEY STUDIO

Oltto IIVEI PlAZA
lotwoon Hll~ I lig loir
GAIUPOUS, Oltto

424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIP.OLIS, OH.

Fri. 9 lo 9 P.M.
Sat. 9 to 6 P.M.
S.f!llay 12 to 5 P.M.

Mon. I

1OK GENJS

19 OlAMON CLUffiR

s

loa. lrilo 5399.95

165

FA-MOUS

SEIKO

.Pedi&lt;ltrician
•

ENTIRE STOCK

30% OFF

Physician

s

· SUGGESTED RETAIL
SHOWN: LADIES GOLD CLASSIC

SALE 519 2
•
ALSO -PULSAR ~AND CITIZEN
REG. $275

I AL

s

I

T

OVER 100 IN STOCK

urge(')Jl

DIAMOND-RINGS IN--STOCK
SaHtalres • Clusters ·Dinner Rings • Anniversary Bands

FROM $4900 TO SJ 0,000°0
OVER 200 DIAMOND RINGS IN STOCK
JUStURIVED

CHRISTMAS
BARS

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C Other liabilities .........................................................................................................................................351,000.00
:::S Total liabilities ....................................................................................................................................33,493,000.00

~~

was
record in their
Despite
fact that Rio Grande
Wilmington 33, · Grande 7. The last year was 2-7 ,.with Earl Arnold
won only two orlhree gam~ a year,
they held their own againsti!ie likes Redmen were humiliated that yeru: by being the college's last football coach.
of Ohio Uniyersity, Morehead, Kenlucky Wesleyan, Marietta, Findlay
and Kent State.
ThelasttimeBolenandlynemet ..
was in 1932 at Rio Grande. It-was
homecoming and alarge crowd turned
out.ThescorestoodO·Othroughlhree
qu~· A .Pollard to B~llman pass
and conversiOn put W1lmmgton up 7•
0 before a fast ·and funous R~men
rally netted a touchdown wtth II
seconds to go. On the extra point,Rio
Grand~f~ed the conversion an~ tried
to run 11m. But they fwled losmg 7-.
6.
. ,
It was the nextycarlhat Wtl~!ngton suspended football compeuuon.
It was not picked up again untill948
and Rio Gran_de' was back on the
sc~edul~ . A slippery turf led to two
qu1ckRioscores. The,firstcamewhen
~ckle George ~nck recovered_ a
htgh punt snap tn the end zone. R1o
Grande's two other scores came on
runs by "Kiddy" Carr.
The final score was Redmen 20,
Quakers 6. In 1949, Rio Grande's

No matter what they're called,
here.'s how to call them.

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12:30 p.m. - Video matinee'
1 p.m. - Walking Club; Auorney Tim Foran
Wedne5day, Nov. 13
10 a.m.-noon- Crochet circle
IOa.m.- Walking club
I p.m. - Garden Club; Auorney Tim Foran

PRESENT HOME· The present home of Willmiiigtc&gt;n
lege's footbl\11 team is Williams .Stadium where
year
"Sbifty'~ Bolen became a member or the Wilmington Hall or
Fame•. ~olen and Rio Grande's Paul Lyne had a good Football
rlvalry ·m the 1920s.
,

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a. In domestic otlices .... .- ..................................... j .. ,~ .. .................................. ..... ..............................33,142,000.00
.
bcarin g.............................................................................
'
Nonmterest·
3,081,000.00

•

One was
quarterbya
· bacJcanda
second was
fighting.
Wilmington won the game easily 27· ·
6. It was estimated as the biggest
crowd ever to watch Wilmington play
and
on ·
ln"l929
Rio's
. a fake
'yards

A TOTALLY
.UNIQUE DESIGN

_Buy From An L.P., Gas Dealer
With' Experience - Buy From

~= ~! ':..":~~:~.~~".:.~. ~~-~ -· - ····~ . .: :. . . . . :. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . .,..= ..,......24,2s0,000.00_

::J Deposi11:

WhMol81uoiTaal

Air Foret 180.

WANT RELIABILITY
AND SERVICE?

of Racine, in lhe state or Ohio, at the close or businesses on Sept. 30, 199l published in response
to tall made by Comptroller olthe Currency, under title l2, United States Code, Section l61 .
Charter Number 9815
Comptroller olthe Currency 4th District

~

WhltoiAOfal

For Home, Farm,
Business and Industry

Home Nationai .Bank

111

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• Heating &amp; Water Heating
• Lift Truek Gas Delivery
~ _Grain DrY-ing &amp; Cooking
• Construction Heating

REPORT OF CONDITION
Conscilidatlng domestic subsidiaries or tbe

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Harvey, Capi[\11 and
~~:i~ gu~ losscs,themosthean·
01
were a l0-0 trimming ad·
miniStered by Ohio University and a
6-0 loss to Wilmington.
The coach ofthe Wilmington team
'I'B.S "Shifty" Bolen, who just this
yCarbecamconeoftheinducteesinto
th_eWilmington College Hall ofFame.
\Vhile'Shifty Bolen was the coach at
Wilmington, and Paul Lyne coached_.
Rio Grande, the two met seven times
with Wilmington winning six of tht('
seven .
The 1924 game was played a tRio
Grande. In the first half, !he Quakers
threatened the Rio goal line repeat·
edly but were turned away. Stephens
ofWilmington missed two easy drop
kicks and one Quaker drive sial led at
the Rio one-yard -line.
In the third quaricr, Wilmington
again made drives deep into Red men
territory where Stephens missed two
more drop kicks. At the beginning of
the fourth quarter Rio put together
four straight ftrst downs which took
them to the Quakers' 20-yard line
·:lndthistimetheredandwhitemisscd
:the try for three points. After an ex-·
·change of punts, Wilmington got field
pasition moving in for the touchdown withjustafcw minutes to play.
.Rio Grande then completed a number
of passes into green and white territory, but an interception spoiled the
drive shortly before time expired.
The 1925 game was played at
Wilmington on ThanksgiVing before
a large crowd.
• Rio Grande led 6-0 at the half.
After 3 quarters it was tied 6-6.
Wilmington scored 9 in tho final
quarter to take the game. The
Wilmington paper was highly impr~;~sed by the R10 quarterba~k by the
name of James. According to the
:t&gt;ail yNews-Journal, Mr.Jamescoold
throw with either hand and could
:P,unt on the run with either foot. He
:Was also the only player Wilmington
played against that year who was fast
· enough to get around Wilmington's
~ods.
·:- In 1Y26thc game was scheduled
fd'r· Rio Grande, but five weeks be·
·Core the season was to stan, "Shifty"
:soJen pulled a shifty move. It seems
· :t-hat Ohio State had an open date in
.f926 and Shifty scheduled Wilming¢xl.to play in the "giant horseshoe"
illStead of a1 Rio. In order to make up,
Bolen forfeited the game to the Red·
(lien and gave part or the gate receipts
from the Ohio State game to Rio
Grande. By the way the Buckeyes
barely beat the Quakers 13-7. Ohio
State was 7-1that ycar- losingonly
to Michigan.
· lnthc l927Wilmingtongamc,thc
only highlight for Rio Grande was
ihc punting of Jones . He punted 13
(jmcs for an average of 49 yards per
~ick. He punted one forovcr80yards.
Rio Grande tried one pass which was
intercepted for atouchdown and made
q.nly one rushing first down ..But they .
were behind-only 6·0 through-three
&lt;fuartcrs. Wilmington scored twice in
~t~E:Iast stanza lind Rio picked up a

Over 40 1urt of Dependt&amp;le Servlee

MONDA~ NOV. 11 TIIRU SUNDAY, NOV. 17

touchdown when Poke Knox, who
was probably RioGrande'sf!Tstblack
athlete,piekedupafumbleandraced
70 yards. The game did get a liule ·
rough, much to the chagrin of. the
Quakers, who complained much to ·
. the officials. Finally the referee Mr,
~Eichenlaub~ said to the protesters,
'"IJ!is is a football game, not a tea
"

yc:ars: It
also
that year that the
try-for-point fol.
lowing a touchdown was mo\led rro·m
the f)ve-yard line to the three-yard
line. lastly, teams that went through
shifts before "the snap of the ball were
requtired to come to a-complete stop
· the ·ball could be
Rio

MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport literary Club will meet
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
hpme of Mrs. Wilson Carpenter. .
Mrs. Sibley Slack will 'review "A
Generation of leaves" and Mrs.
Betsy Horky will review ·"Water
Babies." The roll call is an eminent
Victorian.

SHADE · Bedford Township
meet at the town hall at 7
p.m . on Monday for th e reg ular
monthl y session.

GALLIPOLIS - The following
-are activitie~ and m.enus. for the
'?iJil!:'" week of Nove II at !he Senior·Citi·
zen's Center, 220 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis:
·
•
Monday, Nov.ll
10 a.m. - Walldng Club
10 a.m.-3 p . m .~ Pool ·
II a.m. - Short Subjects
. 12:30 p.m. - Veterans' Day
Program, has"\ Midge Daft
1-p.m. - Chorus
Tuesday, Nov.12
10:30 a.m. - STOP/Physical
-Fitness~ ~

Chapter parent meeting
.be- ·
held Wednesday lit 6 p.m. at Salis~·
bury Elementary. An overview of
the Chapter I program will be given
by Wendy Halar, director. Everyone IS welcome.

TruS\C~s

by JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS- In 1924, college football rules required lhe kicking team ..to place the ball at the 50yilrdlineinsteadofaulie4Q.yardline
as had been done

Sunday Tlmea-Senlinei-Page-87

Seniors' schedule-announced ·

Rio Grande College varsi~y .
football ·discontinued
in -1949
---

J&gt;reviously .~h

WS

l'omeroy-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Point Pleasant,· WV '

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Noveml!er 1o, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH- Point Pleasant, wv
Chapter 511 of tile Public Empl~y­
ees Retirement, Inc. will meet at
the Senior Citizen's Center at 3
p.m.

News briefs

1
Long Bouoni 'Chapter of Flame home of Gail Sprague. Alia Dailey
Fellowship meeting, 7:30 p.m. at will have the program..
. .
Faith Full Gospel Church. Hazel
The
Olympic torch was lit .for
.
Life of I;ittle Hocking will be tile
GALLIPOLIS
·Choose
to
Lose.
the
first
time at tile 1928 Games in
speaker.
·
Die~Class
meetin~.
9
a.m.cat_
Qrace
_LAmsterdarn.
·- ·. ...:____
GALLIPOLIS • Chamber of
UDIIe,d
Meth?dlSI
,
C
hurc
h.
For
Ken
Fraser
caughi
Commerce meeting, noon at the
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. • Rev. more mformatiOn call 446-4055 qr bluefin tuna ever - thea largest
I ,496
Stowaway. Call the chamber for Robert Parson&gt; will be preaching
446-2403.
pounder
at
Aulds
Cove,
Nova
reservations.
and singing at the Stela Fuller SetScotia, on Oct. 26, 1979. ·
-·
tlement at 7 p.m.
Wednesday,
Nov.
lJ
A Caesarean section, the surgiGALLIPOLIS - GARS Athlelic
GALLIPOLIS
c Human Service cal removal of a child from the
Boosters meeting, 7 p.m. at the
GALLIPOLIS • GFwC River- Council mee.ung .a~ Frontier Family uterus through an abdominal incihigh school.
side Srudy Club meets I p.m. at the Reslaurant,ll:30 a.m. 10 1 p.m.
sion, is named afte(.]ulius Caesar.
GALLIPOLIS ~ Gallia €ounty. Extension Homemakers Council
meeting and open house at the.First

Sports

•

Florid-a·State rips ·.
_South C~ro~ina; OSU
-pasWophers
'

'

- . TALLAHASSEE, ~a. tAP)~ on the next play.
The Wildcats fumbled two plays
Casey Weldon returned 10 the lineup Saturday and threw three touch- later and Michi~an went 37 .yards
down passes as top-ranked Florida in four plays waih Powers scoring
State won its 16th straight game from 6 yards out. That gave Michiwith a 38-10 victory over South · gan a 21-0 lead jus( 4:53 into the
Carolina.
game.
The Seminoles will
A ~n -•,• r~

senior art show
RIO GRANDE - The Area
Agency on Aging District 7, Inc ..
will host the lith Annual Senior
Citizen An Show from Nov. 12-29.
The artwork ·will be displayed
from 8 a.m . to 5 p.m. weekdays
and 1·5 p.m. weekends, in the atrium of the Fine and Performing Arts
Buil~ing on tile campus Q( the Universlt y of Rio Grande.
The art show will showcase
paintings by senior artists from
Adams, Highland, Jackson, aild
Ross Counties. Sonie of the paint·
ings on display can be purchased.
For .more information or questions,
contact Joyce Beaver of the AAA7
atl-800-648-2575.

.
TD UPCOMING • Ohio State running back
."..Carlos Snow makes bis move past Minnesota
:- linebacker William Collins in Dig Ten action

ATTENDS CONFERENCE. Kim Bush, Vinton sales manager
is shown meeting Kurt M. Swenson, Rock or Ages President at the

EVERY ITEM IN THE STORE ON SALE! LISTED BELOW IS JUST ASAMPLE!
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STARTING II
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Qak 8ecretary Base-DropUd·3 Drawer Storage...........1269 .. .'229 .............s179
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BEDROOM SUITES

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8 PC. Solid ChillY Sultt-Extral,argt PtiCit-Rict Bed ........'3299 ... 12699 ...51999
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Berta UHra Firm....................................................................'249 ..... 1189...~~.. ~· .'139

OPEN HousE

&amp;:TOURS
!Wednesday, Nov. 13
7-9p.m.

down against Miami.
·-··---Weldon;-- whQ-c missed last
·week's game against Louisville
with strained ligaments in his left ,
knee, completed 19 of 28 passes
for 184 yards before retiring early
in tile final quaner.
The Seminoles (I 0.0) jumped to
a 17-0 lead, but led only 17-10 at
intermission.
South Carolina (3·4-2) ·scored
its only touchdown when Bobby
Fuller teamed with Eddie Miller on
a 79-yard scoring pass to pull the
Gamecocks within 17-7 with 11 :59
left in the half.
Marty Simpson's 2l-yard field
goal as time ran out in the half cut
Florida State's lead to seven.
Flori'da State allowed South
Saturday .IO'score a second quarter touchdown.
The Bucks went on to win at Minneapolis 35-6.
Carolina past midfield only twice
in the second half and then only to
(AP)
the 38.

EMU edges.OU_Bobcats 13-10

first Rock of Ages North American Dealer Conference, held in
Barre, Vt. One hundred fifty registrants representing 75 firms
from 22 states, the District of Columbia, and 4 Canadian provinces
attended the Conference. It was convened to consider the future of
tbe death care industry' and how monument retailers could better
serve the oeeds or their customers. The participants were also
given a tour or Rock of Ages' world famous quarries and manufac·
turing plant and a visit to the renowned Hope Cemetery.

Buy From Alocally
Owned
--

C

November 10, 1$91 · ·

(ltems-fodhe..community
GALLIPOLIS ~ -American
calendar appear two days prior to Legion Post 27 Annual Veteran's
an event. They must be received by Day Fish Fry, 6 p.m. AU v~tetans
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune in who honorably served during
advance for publication)
WWI, WWJJ, Korea, Vietnam ,
Lebanon/Granada, Panama or
Monday, Nov. 11
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Desert Storm are invited.
County Deputies Association will
CROWN CITY - Mt. Zion Mismeet at 7 p.m. at the courthouse.
sionary ·Baptist Chillt:h revivarser. N 11 15 ·th peak R
GALLIPOLIS - Serenity House VIces . ov.. - WI s
er ev.
month!~ support _group meeting, 6- Keith Adkins.
Pre.sbyteriap~Cb_urch,
8 p:iii: alWOOtlliin[ITenters mu1Ii-- - · ~· ~
T - d - N - 12
. gram on stren"'heningi'a"ri~ltci~~
' th c th ·
ues ay, ov.
.
o••
purpose room! w1
a . enne . GALLIPOLIS_ Th Gallia cipline by Becky Culbertson, 11
Wood of Prov1dmg Alternatives for County d1stnct
. . ltbrary
.
e
board
of a.m.; Potl uck 1unch a1 noon; 1 p.m.
Community Employment (PACE).
··
.,
·
· · · · program· on ·can·cer preventi'on and
trustees w1h meet at 5 p.m. at ihe
Bossard Memorial Library.
detection by tile American Cancer
MERCERVILLE . Hannan
Society. Everyone welcome.
Trace PTO meeting, 7 p.m. at the
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
elemenwy.
LONG BOTIOM - Pomeroy-

ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS
U ACCESSORIES

1timt11&gt;- itntintl Section

'

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OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY
9AM-5PM ,
LIVING ROOM SUITES

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ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Bryan
Wauldron set up a touchdown with
a 44-yard punt return and Jeff
Marchant missed a 37-yard field
goal with two seconds left as Eastem Michigan beat Ohio University
i3-10 Saturday in a Mid-American
Conference game.
Ohio U: (Zl7-I ove~ and 1-6-1
in ihe MAC) drove from its own 20
to a first down at the Eastern 20
wiih seconds left, then~secup •for
the potential tying field g'oal. But
Marchant's kick sailed wide right.
Eastern then ran out the clock on
the next play.
Eastern Michigan (3-6-1 overall
and 3·3·1 in the MAC) trailed 10-3
tllrough three quarters. But late in
the third quarter, Wauldron took a
punt at his own 12 and returned it
to the Ohio 44.
The Eagles then put togeiheu
drive that was capped by Eddie
Nwagbaraocha's 1-yard touchdown
run. Jim Langeloh 's extra-point
ki ck tied the score at 10.
Langeloh then .added what
would prove to be the winning
points on a 20-yard field goal early
m the fourth quarter.
Ohio U. opened-thC scoring on a
7-yard run by Tim Curtis. After a
Langcloh field goal of 45 yards cut
the lead to 7-3', Marchant added a
20-yard field goal in the third quarter for the !0-3 Bobcat lead.
The Bobcats held a 20-11

'
advan1age in first downs and had overcame a second-quarter deficit
more tolal yardage, 291-194.
to !&gt;eat error-8rone Middle Tennessee State 3 -10 Saturday afterDayton 14, Hofstra 7
noon.
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Pat
Small carried 34 times for the
Hofacre ran 3 yards for a touch- fourth -highest rushing total in
down in ihe fourth quarter to give Cincinnati history and the most
Dayton its 26th straight regular- every by a UC·freshman. He scored
season win in Saturda)"s 14-7 vic- on runs of 13 and 4 yards after
tory over Hofstra.
· Cincinnati (4-6) fell behind.
Middle Tennessee (6-3), ranked
Mount·Union 43,
No. 6 nationally in Division 1-AA,
Marietta 6
led 10.7 in the second quarter when
ALLIANCE, Ohio (AP)- Jim Small got the Bearcats' running
Ballard threw two touchdown pass· attack moving . He carried nine
es in the first quarter as Mount times in a IS-play, 70-yard drive,
Union jumped to a 29-0 lead and capped by his 13-yard touchdown
held on for a 43-6 Ohio Confereace run, for a 14-10 lead with 5:35 left
victory Satlirday ov~ Marieua.
in ihe half.
The Purple Raiders improved to
. Cincinnati held Middle Ten 7-1-1 overall, 6-1-1 in the OAC nessee to three plays .and ~punt,
ThePioneersdroppedto0-8andO- then went 47 yards for another
7.
·
touchdown before ihe half. Lance
Ballard completed 13 of 22 Harp threw a 9-yard pass to Marlin
passes for 177 yards an~ thre ~ Pearce for a 20-10 halftime lead.
touchdowns before being replaced
Middle Tennessee lost five of its
early in tile third quarter.
six fumbles, including one on the
Mount Union receiver Ed second play of the second half to
Bubonics caught six passes for 95 put Cincinnati in controL Ronnie
yards: breaking the school record Shannon recovered at ihc Middle
of 50 receptions in a season set by Tennessee 22-yard line, and Small
Ed·Hogya;n I987. ·
catried three times for II , 7 and 4
yards to score again:
Cincinnati 30,
UC rushed for 312 yards over·
Middle Tenn. 10
all. Small 's 219 yards were the
CINCINNATI (AP)- David most by a UC player since Reggie
Small rushed for 21 ~ yards and a Taylor rushed for 259 in 1986.
pair of touchdowns as Cincinnati Small has rushed for 10

.

Browns face Eagles, former coach
By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND- Bud Carson
turned down a chance to talk with
Cleveland reponers this week, and
who could blame him? Talking
about his days as tile Browns' head
coach can get exJ)ecnsiYe. .. . _ .
A year and five days after the
Browns· fired him, Carson re.tums
to town Sunday as tile coordinator
of the Philadelphia Eagles' topranked defense. Nothing would
please him more than to have Reg-.
gie White, Clyde Simmons, Seth
Joyner and company prove there's
nothing faulty about h1s coaching.
Carson, however, won't be the
one to say it. Last summer, while
the Eagles were practicing for an
exhibition game in London, Carson
compared their holdout situation to
similar problems he had faced in
Cleveland.
The Browns considered the
remarks critical of tile organization
and voided the remainder of their

contract with Carson, a move that against," Gleveland coach Biil
cost him $200,000. He's appealed Bellchick said. "You know what
to the commissioner's office.
the ir strengths and weaknesses
So when Cleveland reporters are."
tried to arrange interviews with
Beli chick kept his practices
Carson this week, he declin ed, closed to reponers for tile second
issuin' a statement through the straight week, but he said he didn' t
Eagles )lubJiudalioi!S~of.fice~that .. ihink there~was. much .he. could do
read in part: "In light of the fact to surprise Carson..
that some issues between the
"I mean, you can't make Bernie
Browns and I are still pending, I'm (Kosar) any faster,' ' Belichick said.
going to decline to do an interView. "I'm sure Bud knows the players
I will say that I'm lOOking forward · pretty well from the time he was
to playing the Bro)Vns this week here. You can't hide that kind of
simply because I still have some information."
friends in Cleveland and it will be
Carson, regarded as one of the
nice to see them . Beyond that,. I prem ier defensive minds in the
thirtk that saying nothln·g else is game, toOk tile Browns to the AFC
really the best thing for me right Championship Game after tile 1989
now."
.
season, his first as a head coach.
Because he was the Browns'
In 1990, it aU feU apart. Carson
coach for a season and a half, Car- was fued after ihe team lost seven
son knowns many of tlleir swters of its fU'St nine games.
well. They, likewise, are very
Rlch Kotile, a former Cleveland
familiar wiih his defensive system. assislani who replaced Buddy Ryan
" I think you can prepare your as the Eagles· head coach this year,
team a little bit better when you readily brought Carson aboard as
know the players you're golng his defensive coordinator.
·

No. 4 Michigan 59, ·
Northwestern 14
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Desmond Howard had 201 all-purpose yards as No. 4 Michigan rout·
ed Northestern 59-14 on Saturday
to keep its Rose Bowl hopes on
track.
Michigan (8-1 overall, 6-0 Big
Ten) scored three touchdowns on
its first seven plays, the first two
coming just two minutes apart and
requiring only 43 seconds.
Howard took a short pass..froliL
Elvis Grbac, slipped a tackle by
Dwight James and turned it into a
64-yard touchdown on Michigan's
lirst snap.
After a blocked punt, Ric ky
Powers burst off tackle for 36
yar(!s, then scored on a 2-yard run

.

Daryn White fumbled the cliSiF
ing kic~off, with Chico Nelson
popping the ball loose and Brent
Johnson recovering at ihe Minneso·
ta 24. Six
later, Snow scored
on a I
sweep.
On
. 's next posses,.
sion, Marque!
threw

by
loss. Brian
then returned
Dean·Kaufmall's-39-yai'd plllit 24
yards to the Gopher 19. Jeff
Cothran scored three plays later on
a 5-yard nin' for a 21-3 halftime
No. 19 Ohio State JS,
lead.
Minnesota 6
In the second half, Ohio State
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Carlos got touchdown runs of I yard .from
Snow sparked the offense and No. Butler By'not'e and 72 yards from
19 Ohio Slate held its ninih straight backup quarterback Kirk Herbstreit
opponent under 20 points in beat· and Chalberg added a 26-yard licld
ing Min~esota 35-6 before the goal late in tile game.
smallest crowd ever 'to watch the No. 9 Penn St. 47,
Gophers play in tile Mell'odomc.
Maryland 7
The Buckeyes (7-2 overall, 4-2
BALTIMORE (AP) -Tony
Big Ten) solidified hopes for a Sacca threw for one touchdown
bowl bid with their lOth straight and ran for another in Penn State' s
victory over Minnesola. The· Buck- 24-point first half, and the No. 9
eyes are 22-1 against the Gophers Nitlany Lions continued their domsince 1966.
ination of Maryland with a 47-7
Ohio Slate, 12th nationallf in victory Saturday.
scoring defense, has allowed f2.9
Penn Slate (8·2). which hasn't
points a game and only six touch- lost to Maryland since 1961,
downs in six Big Ten games.
improved to 33-1-1 in one of the
The Gophers (2-7, 1·5) lost thei r nation's most lopsided'" rivalries. It
fourth straight and seventh in eight was Maryland's worst regular-seagames, their worst sll'etch since los- son setback since a 48-0 loss 10 the
ing the last 10 games in 1983.
Lions in 1969.
The Gophers have have been
Maryland, which got its only_
outscored 141-32 in the last four touchdown on an 11 -yard run by
games and arc averaging a 41-ycar reserve Raphal Wall with 6:56 left;
low of 8.9 points a game for the fell to 2-7 for the first time since
season.
197 1.
Belying their season-long image
Sacca played three quarters,
as an inept offensive and kicking completing 13 of J8·passes for 198
team, the Gophers d(Ovc 76 yards yards to become Penn State's
in 12 plays to open the game, tak- career leader in passing yardage.
ing a 3-0-lcad on Mike Chalbcrg.'s . He has 5,556. breaking the~stan~
-24-yard field goal. It was Minneso- dard of 5,382 set by Chuck Fusina
ta's first field goal since Oct. 5.
from 1975-1978.
·
Minnesota checked the BuckRichie Anderson rushed for 96
eyes until 8:02 remained in the yards, including 72 in the first
half, when Scottie Graham pow- quarter, and scored twice in the
ered 2 yards through the middle for Lions' tuncup for ne xt week's
a 7-3 1ead.
game against Notre Daine.
and set a school record for points
stored in a·first quaner. The old
mark was 23 in a 1976 game
against Wisconsin.

Tennessee rally nips Irish 35-34
outside chance of playing for the da State-Miami winner will go to
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) Tennessee overcame a 24-point national title in ihe Fies1a Bowl and the Orange Bowl to meet the Big
deficit witll a miraculous second- probably gwiranteed that the Flori- Eight champ.
half comeback and beat fifthranked Notre Dame 35-34 Saturday
when wallc-on kicker Rob Leonard
missed a 27-yard field goal for the
Irish as time ran out
Leonard was called in to attempt
his first career field goal after
Notre Dame's regular kicker, Craig
Hcnaich, injured his right leg earlier in the game . But the sophomore's kick sailed wide to the right
and ended slim Irish hopes for a
1 Florida State beat South Carollna ...... 38-10
. nati011al championship.
2 Wuhln~ton (tle) beat Southem Cal ...... 14-3
No . 13 Tennessee (6-2) had
3
MJ•ml (tle)beatW'eatVlrllnla ............. 27·3
taken its fmt and only leaa of the
4 Michigan beat Northwestern .............. 59-14
game with 4:03 left when Andy
IS Notre Dame loat to Tennessee ........... 3~315
Kelly ihrew a 26-yard touchdown
pass to Aaron Hayden. The score
6 Florida beat Georgia ......................... 45-13
capped an amazing rally by the
7 Callfomla VI. Oreton State ....... ........... late
Volunteers, who trailed 31-7-bcfore
8 Alabama beat LSU .............................. 2~17
Floyd Miley returned a blocked
9 Penn State beat Maryland .................... 47-7
field goal 85 yards for a touchdown
10 Iowa beat 1Ddl1n• .............................. 20..17
with 14 seconds remaining in the
first half.
1 L Neblrul!a.bcaUl~u.....~ ..... "'"""'"u !S'Il-.2.~L. --~(~ -After Hayden· s TD catCh~ Notre 12 Teas A&amp;: M beat TCU (Thurtday) ....... 44-7
Dame (8-2) drove 66 yatds to the
13 Tenneaaee beat Notre Dame ............... 35-34
Tennessee 9. The Irish called a
14 Colorado beat Oklahoma State ........... UH2
timeout with four seconds left
b~f_Qre Leonard\ .who kicked_one
1~ . ~!enttQ!l -~' Nortl! Carollna .................. la~e
extra point earher 1n the sc.son,
16 East t"aillllna beat SOuthem Miss ...... 48-20
carne in to try the field goal.
17 Syracuse .................................. Did not play
The loss spoiled Notre Dame's
18 N. C. State lost to Vlrtlnla ................. 10.42
19 Ohio State beat Mlnnesota ...:.............. 35-6
20 Oklahoma beat Mllsourl .................... 56-16
21 Baylor ..................................... Did not play
22 UClA. n. Stanford ····························••tla.te
MATEWAN, W. Va.· Matewan
23 Georgia va. Florida ............................... late
eliminated Wahama from the 1991
Class A playoffs Saturday, 51·13.
24 Vlrtlnla beat N.C. State .................... 42· 10
The White Falcons finished 7-4 on
25 Indiana lost to Iowa ........................... 21· 38
the year.
, Matewan advanced to second ·
round play with a 11-0 record.

Falcons eliminated

1

FULL SIZE .

fEATURING A LOOK AT THE LATEST IN

Imperial HoteUMotel.. ...........................................................'199 ..... 't39 ..................'98
Serta Gentle Firm ................................................... ..............'239 ..... 1t79 ..~.a.·. ~:.'129
Ther·A·Pedlc Melli Coli ..................................................'269.. ,•. '209 ..~~ - ~:..'169

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9e11a Ge1ntle Touch ............................................................'549 ... •m....~~~........'299

&amp;, LASER SURGERY

lmperlaiBedoiRolleS ....................... :...........................1......'569 ..... '419.....§9t ........'329
~r·A-Pedlc Medl Coll................................................ -'799 .... '599 .....~~1.. ..... '399
Serta ltlldlum Flnn......,.................................................... '699 .... 1479..... ~ ......'349

Do_ublt Drawer Storaga-~ots of Storagt........................'599...'479 ...... .'131)1~1
lt!aplt10 !)un Clblntt·Brown Mlplt Ftnlth·Ail Wood .... :..........'519...'439 .......5361U
Light Olk 12 Gun
2~ BI•Hiddtn Storage Drlwer;Ught ...............'649...'529 ......,$,1ltU
8Gun CIIIIMt.curto Gllla SidM-An WOOd ....................'349.. .'269 .......121

Reheshments will be served In the
AdmlnlstTadve Conference Roool.

lkJ PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPrrAL
111 Till Fami~ ol proleuionals ,
2520 Vdey Drlvt, Point Pteaant, WV 25550 (304) 875-&lt;1340

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Beng3ls host Steelers; seek second straight win
J!y JOE J'A.Y
AP Sports Writer
CfNCINNATI - It's a little spooky, all right.
Balls bouncing off uprights. Reliable kickers
missing in tile clutch. Dependable receivers dropping
touchdown passes in the closing seconds. Games
turning on the most impJ:I)bable bounces.
You name it, tile Cincinnati Bengals and Pittsburgh Steelers saw it last Sunday. There was one
main difference: tile Bengals finally got ihe breaks 10
go their way; tile Steelers came away a second consecutive week wondering who has it in for them .
· The Bengals (1·8) got every imaginable break to
beat the Cleveland Browns 23-21 for their frrst win.
The Browns botched two field-goal attempts - one
hit the uprig~t- dropped a touchdown pass and
fumbled the ball away in the closing minutes.
The Steelers (3-6) played the victim's role in a 20·
13 loss in Denver. Gary Anderson missed a 24-yard

field goal.in the fourth 'quarter - his first such misfire in four years- and Eric Green dropped a touchdown p!!Ss.-:· only his second drop of the season ~
1h the final mmute.
Thisjust one week after Anderson had a 52-yardcr
hit the upright in a 17-14 loss in.Cleveland.·
No wonder tllese iwo teams are wondering about
the law of averages as tlley prepare for their game
Sunday at Riverfront Sladium. Luck -· good and bad
- has become the bottom line.
"If we ·get that kind of luck every week, maybe
we can salvage our season and finish 8-8," Bengals
comerbaclc Eric Thomas said.
They needed every bit of lt to end one of the two
worst starts in franchise history. Thomas blocked a
field-goal attempt in ihe closing seconds to prescrYe
it.
The wobbly win did wonders for the ~engal s'
spirits. They feel as though they ~ ve broken a Jinx. .
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"Let's face it, you play hard each week and still
walk away witll a loss week after wecY. it pounds on
yo u, no question about it," coach Sam Wyche said.
" It lOOk that pounding away."
"We know we can win now," safety Barney
Bussey said.
.
The Steelers might be privately wondering when
they 'll fmaUy win again. They've los! their last four
games - their longest losing streak In three yearsdespite playing well enough to win in Cleveland and
Denver.
·
" That's how the ball's !J9unced," quarterback
Neil O'Doruiell said. " We're not trying to make any
excuses.
"Cincinnati is a good football team. They haven '1
gotten any breaks, eitller (until last Sunday). I think
their football team and our football team are pretty
much similar." ~
They
both down in the Slandings and on their

are:

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luck.
"We're not going to worry about it,' ' coach
Chuck Noll said. " We're going to work on trying to
change it."
They've got a tough place to do it. Riverfront Sta- · .
dium has been one of iheir most unlucky places to
play tile last decade.
Pittsburgh has won just twice at Riverfront since
1979, most recently in !987. The last three games
there ended up 42-7, 41-10 and 27-3. The Bcngals
have won th ~ last slx ga mes overall against Pittsburgh.
Wyche says good fortune has something to do
with that, 100.
· " Most of the games have been really close with
Pittsburgh the last three years," Wyche said.
"We've had things go our way. I think it's just been
·tough games, close games we've happened to have .

won."
·/

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"Page-C2-5unday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant,

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November 10,1991 ·
_•.

:Improved depth will be key
to Redtnen basketball ·season

Dallas, Houston claSh in Houston this afternoon

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;N~o~v~em~be~r~1~0,~1~99~1~============~========~P~o~m~e~ro~y~-~M~I~dd~l~~p~o~r~t-G~·~a~ll~ip~o~ll~s,~O~H~-~P~o~in~t~P~Ie~a~sa~ry~t~,W;v~=============~Su~n~d~a~y~n~m~e~s~~~n~t~in;e;I;P~~~-~·;;C3~.

By The Associated Pres$
. . Plus.' both tea!TI§..have egjored
By all rights, the ·Dallas Cow- success lhrough ,tile yetirs, and have
boys and Houston Oilers should comj)etect for attention in the offhate each other.
season.
Aftei all, they bolh play in
So guess what? Going into Sun·
Texas, where football comes ahead dafs·giune at the Astrodome. they
:.of family on fall weekends, And don't.hate each other. Actually, the
~ they represent the state's two Cowboys and Oilers get ~long
~ t:r~~~~~cities, with their different quite well.
~. "It hasn't

~~

a.heated rivalry bec~use we don't J!W1i!lle sin~~ 1286, They are
play cacti other every year except three .games behind undefeated
m the preseason," Dallas coach Washington in the NFC Easl'
Jimmy Johnson said. ·~r lcnow the
Houston is '7-2 and leads the
Cowboy people have tremendous AFC Central by lhlee games over
reSpeCt for Houston over the years Cleveland. The Oilers have won
and what they've done this year."· seven straight at home.
The Cowboys lind the· Oilers
The rivalry may~ more perplayed only six tinnes in the sonally to Houston coach Jack
_re,~uhir Season, with Houston win- Part1ee•. who battled the Co~]!Qys
the last meeting ~25- !Tin
a
for the I,os Angeles
leads seri\l&amp; 4-2.
lhe
were
computers•and we had the work
ethic," Pardee said. "We wanted
to beat the compoters. '·' · · - ·
In oth_er games Sunday . it' s

Atlanta at Washington,-the.-bos~ ·haveoutscored:QilPOIIelltS 'lOO•·:l\lt--·~~Angeles Raiders at Denver, Kansas
The Falcons wtll ,be •..•. ,.. ·:
City at the Los Angeles Rams, run-and-shoot team to play
Detroit at Tampa Bay, Buffalo at ington this season. Washingto
Green Bay, Seattle at San Oiego beat Detroit, which was wi!hou\
and Philadelph.ia at Cleveland.
injured Barry Sanders, 45.() in lhe
Also, it's Indianapolis at the o~ncr and got past Houston 16-13
New York Jets, the New York in overtime last week.
. .~
Giants at Phoenix, San Francisco at
"They're tough, but we wot~'1
Nc?l Orleans, .Piusbutgh atGincin- see thi,~gs that we~haven ' t see~ nau and New England at Miami.
before, ~et,~~n~ lineb~cker Man .
On Monday nigh~ Chicago is at Millen said. We re getung used to
The Redskins wili try to become
the 14th NFL team to start out 100. They'll take on Atlanta at RFK
Stadium, where ·tliey'rd:o and

Johnso.nless Lakers fall'
'.

RIO GRANDE REDMEN
1991-92 SCHEDULE
Nov. 15/16- Bevo Francis
Classic, H
Nov. 19- Georgetown (Ky.),
H

A

Nov. 22/23 - Subaru Classic,

PRO BASKETBALL
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J .
(AP) - Kenny Anderson finally
signed a contract with lhe New Jersey Nets which will pay the No. 2
draft pick $14.5 million over five
However, the Nets had to
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern years.
waive
center
Dave Feitl and forAthletic Boosters will host the ward Jud Buechler
to get back
annual fall sports banquet for all under the NBA's salary
cap. In
junior and .senior high football addition, five other Nets -Derrick
players on Thursday at6:30 p.m. in Coleman, Tate George, Chris Dudthe high school gymnasium. Those ley, Sam Bowie and the retired Roy
attending are to bring three covered Hinson - all had to agree to defer
dishes. Drinks and table service salary from this year to sometime
will be provided.
in the future.

Nov. 30- Denison, A
Dec. 3 - Cenlral SLate, H
Dec. 7- Findlay, A
Dec. 11 -Ashland, A
Dec. l4-Dyke,A
Dec. 15 -Lake Erie, A
Dec. 28/29 - Marietta Shrine
Tournament, A
Jan. 11- Pikeville (Ky.), A
Jan. 14- Ohio Dominican, A
Jan. 15- Wilberforce, A
Jan. 18- Mount Vernon, H
Jan. 19 -Lake Erie, H
Jan. 22 -Tiffin, A
Jah. 25 -Walsh, A
Jan. 28- Shawnee Stare, H
Feb. 1 -Urbana, H
Feb. 4 - Cedarville, H
Feb. 8 -Ohio Dominicim, H
Feb. 11 - Mount Vernon, A
Feb. 15 - Tiffin, H
Feb. 18 -Walsh, H
Feb. 22 -Shawnee State, A
--Fcb.-l,S-lJr-bana;-A ·~~. ----\iiiiiii~:.i~
Feb. 29 - CedarviUe, A

FOR

WILD
DRIED
GINSENG
ROOTS

By The Associated Press ·
Magic Johnson was lhe heait of
the Los Angeles Lakers for a dozen
years, and that's exactly how they
played !heir first game without him
-lilce !heir heart wasn't 'in it.
Johnson,.who announced Thurs·
day that he is retiring after testing
positive for the AJDS virus. wasn't
with the Lakers Friday night when
they fell to the Phoenix Suns 11385.
"I knew it was going to be really good or really bad, and unfortunately for us, it was lhe latter,"
coach 'Milce Dunleavy said. "We .
couldn't make any shots. The effon
was there. Phoenix did a ni~e job,.
they were very aggressive."
"We did the best we could do
under the circumstances," said
James Worthy, who scored 14
points on 4-for-22 shooting.
"We're a very strong team, but
some things you can't overcome
quickly. !twas just yesterday."
The Lakers, who fell behind for
good in the o~ning two minutes,
missed !heir first five shotS;-!&lt;!-of
..
their first 16, and IS of their first
24. For the game, they missed 68.4
percent of their shots.
"This is without a doubt the
toughest situation I've ever faced
as a player," guard Byron Scott
DRIVES PAST FOR TWO- Phoenix Suns Kevin Johnson drives said. "You look for ·him to kind of
past Los Angeles Lakers new guard Sedale Threatt during action in yell at you, 'Let's go B-;-let's get it
their NBA ~arne Friday night In Phoenix. Threatt is considered a going.' He's not there. It's just
".strong candtdate for the new position opened by the retirement of weird right now." .
I Magic Johnson Thursday. Suns beat the Lakers with a score of 111·
The Lakers play their ftrst home
: 85. (AP La51!rPhoto)
game since Johnson's retirement
Sunday night ~ainst Minnesota.
Elsewhere m the NBA on Friit was Atlanta 100, Boston 95;
.t
Golden State

TH FOLLOWING FINANCIAL
INSTITUTIONS WILL BE
· CLOSED MONDAY,
NOVEMBER 11
VETERAN~$ DAY:
'

BANK ONE
OHIO VALLEY BANKSTAR BANK
.
UNITY SAVINGS &amp; lO

·~·-·

~ourney ga111es this a(t~rnoon

Direct Shipment To The Orient

on
•me:nts kicks into hi gear
p.m for
; 1\'eekei~d with two games on Sunwinners will meet the champiafternoon.
onship game with that game start'. At 2:00 p.m. the· Veterans ingat7:30. :Memorial Hospital Dolphins will
The consolation game and the
'meet the Home National Bank championship game will both be
~Mustangs, and at 4:00 p.m . the played at Bob Roberts Field in
:Pieasers Eagles will tangle with the Pomeroy. The Meigs Marauder
·b.D. Blake Construction Browns. Band' Boosters will have the conThose two games ·will be played at · cession stand and admission is only
:ytahama High School.
$1.00.

Peoples·Choice Presents...

"COOKIN' UP A CUUHTRY CHRISTMAS"

'

December 11 &amp;. 12, 1991
Columbus, Ohio ,c:::.::.~

·rifJin grid coach
$orry about remarks
RIFlED SLUGS

--TaRe a-tiit!alftronr yo(lr 005y 5C.hedwe to ·retax nfenfoya hOIIilafconcerrwrth-yow-renow P"eoPies Chdce members. This ten18c Ou1stmas show stars Jim Nabors, Louise and blene Mandrell and Jeny
Oower and l"eatures a tribute to the late, great Terutessee Ernie Font. We will have overnight accornmo41Jions at the &lt;:;ol\l"n,bus IM, Where we 'Mil be served a spedai'Counay Christmas' ~~p~or_to _the
show. Follovvlng the perfunnance at Veterans Memortal Audlto~wn. we will tour the dty to see the
holcl.ly decondons before returning to our hotel.

. '7

BOX

Following a deluxe breakfast buffet the next morning (also Included), ~I go to the Contlnentai/Fimdl
Malket - a complex of over 100 shops and restaurants featurtng unlque, one-of-a-kind gift Items - before
retumlng home.

Lots offun fora very low prtcel Cost per person: · $140 Double, $135 Trlple, $130 Q.Jad, or$165
' Slngle.Thls Includes luggage handling and $25,000 travelers Insurance as well as the meals, accommodations and activities mentioned above. (There Is an additional $25 ree to non-members.) A SSQ deposit Is
required by NOvember 22 to conftnn your reservaHon. For lnfonnatlon or reservati~, call MaJy Fowler,
Peoples Choice Coordinator, at (304) 675-1121.
..

1'YINCH£.f1'£R.
Rifle type front and
adlustabll rear
sights.

l'eoples Choice. Choice ft~ beneftts and choiCe travel opportwllt1eS ror people 50 and over. To be eUglble, ~mbers mwt maintain
a $t 0,000 mtnlmwn balance tn a Peoples Bank savings acrount. CO. IRA or any comblnadon thereof. Ask about our spedal Peoples
Choice cheddng aa:ount.

loml. ...... ,. .... ........

........
.Ywlllloolii••••"'
"'•,....,.,..
...... w.
oloolilllt"' ..... poifoo

'Division Of ..

~

Pt. Pleasant - Mason - New Haven
Member FDIC

$19999

12 ...
Only

.

a
IIODII.I70 IIHlSS (01110 PUlP lCitOtt
SIIDlllll WIIH IWII UIW
o(ouloto ....... !Ysl• w11• 21•
. . . . . . .Clob ... Jrlli ..... ...

Jl

• TIFFIN, Ohio (AP) -Tiffin
University's head football coach
Says he's sorry about yelling racial
~lurs at two freshman players, but a
black students' organization says
~e should be fired.
• Coach Bob Wolfe, who said he
~polgiz,ed to the players, said he
wouldn t res1gn.

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$279

99

l11 County Sport Sltrlp

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The episode occurred Oq. 23
when Wolfe confronted football
players Ty Witherspoon and Kush
Flournoy in a student lounge where
a party was taking place.
Wolfe asked the players if they
had transferred to another school.
His question was prompted by the
players' absence from practice and
-study tables;
- ---- · ·-1972.------------. Armon Gilliam had 28 points
The players said they quit prac- and Hersey Hawkins 27 for the
tieing because their scholarship 76ers, while Chris Mullin had 17
money was taken away. The stu- and Billy Owens 16 for Golden
dents weren't eligible for scho!ar· _ State.
ships this fall because thctr h1.gh
Golden State led H0-102 with
school grades didn't meet qualtft· 7:30 to play, but Philadelphia
·cations Wolfe said.
·
responded with a 12-1 run for a
'

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PROPANE!
Ferrellgas provides you with a long-term
commitment to safety and quality service.

~~~sti~.ursday night to discuss the

SPECIAL SERVICES...Because we value you as a

. "This meeting was held so
everyone could share their point of
view, not so everyone could vote,"
Kidd said.

customer, we wanl to give you ~etter service while we help
you control costs. ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL
CUSTOMER PROGRAMS, including our Level Payment
Plan and the Ferrellgas Installation Review. ·
·

· MIDDLEPORT · The Meigs .
Athletic Boosters will sponsor a
baseball card ·show. on Sunday,
November lOth at the Meigs Junior
High School. Their will be door
prizes to be given away through out
the day. The show runs from
IJa.m. tlntil5 p.m.

Atlanta beat San Francisco last
week on a Hail Mary heave-on thefinal play. Billy Joe Tolliver, who
threw the winning pass, may plaY.
again instead of quarterback Chrill
Miller, whose ribs are b111ised.
·
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~~IIIIIIIJJJIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4514

.

NAKED GUN 21f2

o•

their
four. It was theit worst
offensive output since Paul Wcsthead took over as coach at the
beginning of last season, and their
32-point first half tied the clu6
record-low.
Spurs4 07, Cavaliers'IOI
David Robinson scored 31
points, and his basket and four free
. throws keyed an 8-0 run in overtime for San Antonio against.
Cleveland, which lost for the fourth
time in five games on a seasonopening road trip.
.
Robinson tied the game 99-99
with a basket.,a_n~ t~~ Spurs pushed

Bpm Channe/22

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SPRING VALLEY PLAZA GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
STORE HOURS; Mon.·Tues.·Wed.·Frl. 10.7; Sat. 9:30-5:00
Cloled Thurs.
·
(614) 446-2335

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120.... 0•1y

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· ~I-feel -l'm-trying- to .get-helpfor

lhis tem~r. I don't go around call lng kids names. You can 't do that
in a position of leadershtp, " Wolfe
Said.
.
, .
. "I feel very bad about the mc1~ent and I'm gom.g to do, my very
best to make sure 1t doesn t happen
~gain . I'm grateful that Tiffin has
stuck beh\nd me," he said.
: Paul Walker, president of the
Black United Students Organizat:ion, said it was " inexcusable" that
Wolfe shouted slurs.
• The coac.h was suspended for
ti.vo weeks because of the remarks,
~ut Walker said he should have
been fired.
'
.
; Paul Moore, president of the
National As sociation for the
Advancement of Colored People's
Fostoria branch, agreed.
" These students have fresh
minds and he is tearing them down.
The coach uses old ways to destroy
them," he said.
. University President George
~adedh.sa._i .d__he~ou_ldn't_ fire the

in overtime; Chicago 108, Dallas
92; San Antonio 107, Cleveland
101 in overtime; Portland 121,
Indiana 96; and the Los Angeles
Clip~rs 106, Denver 82. ·
The Suns led 60-46 at halftime
th
d
an the Lak ers got no cIoser an
14 points in the second half.
Jeff Hornacek ;w the Suns with
22 points, while Dan Majerle
scored 19.
· -----·" We are just glad this game is
over," Suns coach Cotton Fitzsim·
mons said . "Let's get this game
behind us and go on. We kept the
preisure on them and 1 think that
hellled us a great deal.''
Terry Teagle led lhe Lakers with
19 points and Scon added 16.
76ers 126, Warriors 116
Golden State became the last
NBA team to lose a game as
Charles Barldey had 31 points and
15 rebounds for Philadelphia.
Tim Hardaway matched hi s
career high wilh 40 points as the
Warriors fell short of winning their
first four games on the road, a feat
not accomplished by the team since

1!4:1!1 edge with 3;41 remaining. the lead to IU~-~~ '" the final
The Warriors closed to 116-115 minute.
on a layup by }Wdaway at the 2:40
mark, but jumpers by Hawkins and
Johnny 'Dawkins gave the Sixers a
COLONY THEATRE
120-115 advantage with 1:431eft
Trail Blazers 121, Pacers 96
FRI. THRU THIRS.
Portland won at home against
LESLIE NIELSEN,
Indiana behind strong perforPRISCILlA PRESLEY
mances from its two point guards.
IN
Terry Porter scored 20 points,
all in the first half, and backup
Robert Pack had II points. six
steals and five assists in 18 minPG 13
utes.
MI•G SHOW 7oJO
Porter led the Blazers, who
AIMIIIIOI $1.50
snapped a three-game losing srreak,
446-0923 '
to a 61-52 halftime lead. Pack, a
free-agent rookie ftom Southern
California, scored seven points during a 10-2 spurt in the final two
minutes of the third period \hat
gave Portland a 91· 74 lead, and the
Blazers expanded the margin to 25
in the fourth quarter.
Rile Smits led the Pacers with 24
points and Chuck Person had 23. .
Clippers 106, Nuggets 82
Los Angeles stretched- its-winning streak to four games and
extended Denver's road losing
streak to 20.
Ken Norman led a balanced
attack with 18 points, and Gary
Grant had 14 pomts and 16 assists
for the Clippers, who are off to the
second-best start of theini-ghtsca·
sons in Los Angeles following an
o~ning-night loss at Sacramento.
The 1985-86 club was 5-0.
Reggie Williams had 21 points
and Dikembe Mutombo added 18
points and 17 rebounds for the
Nuggets in their first appearance
this season
from McNichols

The Falcons (5-4) fiel~ a modi7
fied version of the system coacll
Jerry Glanville first tried inHous'ton~ typically using four wide
receivers and a running back"who
can become a fifth receiver.
"The run;and-shoot has some
real good points to it," Glanville
said. "If we didn't
it in
we were in Texas, I
think
ever would have
the

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:Page C4

Sunday Times-sentinel

November 1o, 1991

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

. November 10,1991

•

runnerup twice. He is the only run- Electric Corp.. then for Kaiser Alu,
ncr in the history of the district to minum Co. For the last several
be its champion in the 100, 200 and years, be has been a substitute
400.
teacher in the Gallia County Local
He also competed in the NAJA School District. He served as coach
Indoor Track Nationals in the 60- of boys and girls uack at North
yard dash. Brown will become the Gallia .High School, from wh1ch he
55th member of the Hall of Fame, . graduated in 1973, and is currently
which started in 1973.
assistant football and girls junior
Brown said the news of his high basketball coach atNGHS. ·
being named to the Hall .of Fame
Of his experienees~at- Rio
"got me excited.
Grande, Brown, said he remembers
.,
"It was something I hoped I'd the people he worked with the best.
make someday, and I do.n't think
"Lguess some .of the people I
it's quiie sunk in yet," he added. was around made the bi ggest
"It'll probably hit me the night of impression on me, because I ran
the ceremony."
with some All-Americans," he said.
At Rio Grande , Brown ran "!had some 'good times when we
under three coaches, including ra~ in Kentucky against schools
George Wolfe, Rod O'Donnell and there, but the most exciting inciBob Willey.
dent for me carne when I broke the
"Harvey.was a coachable youn~-~~{i'r~,Orfi~f&lt;/;~~~~~c;}-1~~
.'--..:_7c!!!lliiiiSllsllll!t-s;chooi'S:recroril:-~-ma~ "- Wiiley•emarke d:- "H
me keyed up
: The
winner for the worked hard and was a fine rcpre- for it,
it,.it was one
&lt;team as a ·
and senior, Brown semativc of Rio Grande. Harvey is of the most exhilirating experiences
4;ervcd as co-captain of the team still working hard today to help of my life."
Greater cutting accuracy,
r:ith 1983 inductee Bernie Tilley. boy s and girls learn more about
The son of Herman Brown II of
precision
controls, bench top
.ttc was named All-Mid-Ohio Con- track and field."
Romulus, Mich. , and the late Ruth
convenience
and work
l'erence six times and All-District
Following graduation, in which Jane Brown, Brown resides in Bidcapability
make
this the perfect
~2 on eight occasions, in addition he received a degree in recreation,
well with hi s wife, the fo rmer
benCh
top
table
saw.
lo being the conference and district Brown worked for Ohio Valley Gayle Craig, and their three· chit• Powerlul tO Amp . 2 H.P.
~
dren: Misty Ann Pleasant, Eric
motor. 5,500 RPM, rips a
full t2" ·
and Harvey Allan
• All ball and roller bearing
construction.
•
Solid.
one-piece t6"x27" die
•
•
cas1 aluminum table
: COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) best light," he said.
• Acc.ommodates dado head .
"About the only thing organizers of
"We are the fastest-growing
molding head, sanding wheel
: the Columbus Marathon can't con- marathon in the U.S.," Thurston
: trol is the weather.
added. "We have increased from
MODEL 3102
t But that could be an important 4,000 (runners) in '89 to 5,000 last
~factor Sunday, as mostly sunny
year, and now ... our biggest year
~skies and high temperatures in the
ever, with more than 5,700 partici•50s arc pre4Jctcd for the event.
pants.
; ''The weather is important in , Thirteen of those entrants have
"&lt;!ny marathon," said race director qualified for next year's U.S.
'DOug Thurston. "It allows runners men's Olympic marathon trials,
:· -io perform at their goal pace.
scheduled for April II over the
•
"Of course, "that's the one thing same course.
1 we cannot control. But one positive
"I think the interest is building
key is that we do have the support as we approach the Olympic Trials
of Columbus. We all can get out. . in '92, " Thurston said . "I've
and cheer the runners-on because heard a lot· strong interest about ...
we want the runners to see all 26 this being the same course used for
miles, 385 y;u-ds of Columbus in its the. trials, which has helped ,jlttract
, ·Lebanon resu Its
a very favorable field."
HARVEY BROWN

• The Montreal Canadiens knew it
' couldn't last forever. So did the
; ' San Jose Sharks.
·
;
It just so ~appened that their
· ;-respective~streaks both came to an
' end on Friday night: The Cartadi·
• ens lost to New Jersey 3-2 to end a
' nine-game winning streak and the
. ..; --Sharks beat Edmonton 6-210 end a
•
streak:

for

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'

Evason, David Bruce and
on the blue ·
Wayne Presley also scored for San took a pass from Yves Racine
Jose . Dave Manson scored a , ~tell !Q_theJop.of the left cjrcl~.
power-play goal and Craig-Mac- · where he unleashed a slap shot that
Tavish·added a short-handed gol!l whisked past goalie Don Beaupre
for the Oil~rs, who ~bad won three to give Detroit a 4-3 lead.
1.

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If you think

we have some
information you·can
take tolhe bank.

electric-cooperatiVes

·are in business~
to make money. ..

CAROLINA LUMBER
. AND SUPPLY COMPANY

'-

BUCKEYE RURAL ELECTRIC
·coOPERATIVE, INC.

I

One of28 Ohio Electric Cooperativet

•

1~3 Third Ave.·
.
Gallipolis, OH 46631-0279

HOURS: Monday:Friday, 8 am-5 pm; Saturday, 8 am-12 noon

675·1160

.

That's why at the end of every fiscal year, any monies a
cooperative may have after expenses are allocated to cooperative
members-who also happen to be cooperative owners- in the
form of capital credits.
Think about it. Cooperatives deliver more than atfor@ble electricity and outstanding service. By adhering to a ·'non-profit"
tradition that began in 1935, cooperatives deliver savings as well.
But that's how an electric cooperative is unique. After all. whet
our memb.ers save money, it makes our owne~ very: happy. _____ ,_.

LIMITED OUAifiTIES 0'10Mf lffMS. PRICES GOOD ON ITEMSllrSfOCK

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Delivering service- rather than making money, is the foundation
on which Ohio's 28 electric cooperatives firmly stand.

$83.99

Point Pleasant, WV

POWER BY THE PEOPLE,
FOR THE PEOPLE.

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oftheiipteviousfourroadgarnes.
- "Our goal tending saved us," '
Wilkinson said. "We've gotten
great goaltt~~ding other nights, 1,00,
but we lost".
.
;
-:
R~!tWings ~. Capi!als 4 .· .........._ __ .
. Bob Probert's second goal af ~
the game with 10:27 left snapped a :
tie and lifted visiting Detroit past •
Washington for the Red Wings' .:
ftrst victory-against the Capitals m -:years.

.• • --..••

MHII:IIItO

·--OOICK ©F VIME •• ~

ished with 18 saves in the tight-checking.garne.- Sharks 6, Oilers 2
Paul Fenton scored tw. o goals
and goaltender Artur lrbe stopped
. 30 or, l2 sh~t,s ID.le;td the S_llarks ,
who returned home after going 0for-7 on their fiiSt eastern swing.
The Sharks dominated the first
period,
to a !1-1 lead and
19-6; before
in his first NHL

r-------------------~

crowd of 2,523 wagered
$228,350. .

~UST DNliHE

. ''It's a tight lea~ue and 1~ go its opponents 36-8 during the "(The firs.t 10 minutes) was the
mne ~~mes l.lJ!n accomph~h:... str~ and.never gave up more than_ ·most emotional stretch-of-hockey
ment, ~on.t!eal fo~ward Ktr~ two goals m ~game.
we've played."
Muller S81d. The thmg about tt
Meanwhtle, the Sh~rks won
Elsewhere in the NHL, it was
was that _every nme ~e played and o~ly theu second ~e m 1~ tnes " Detroit 5, Was~ing!on 4; Toronto
won, teams were gelling that ~uch ·~ thts seaso~, It~ thetr filS~ vtctory 1, J.'le,'!". Y,or~ Ran.$ers 3; Buffalo 4,
mor~ prepared to play us. It was smce .bea~ng eaigary-4•3 on Oct. PMailelphta· 3~ m overtime and
g~ttl~g tougher and tougher to 8, ~etr !bird game ~fthe ~n.
Pii!Sburgh 3, Winnipeg 1.
wm.
·.
•
~ome·of the thmgs we ve been - Devils 3, Canadleul
Th~ def~t was the ftrst for the lookm,g for to happen th~ Ia~!
Stephane Rieber haunted his old
_Canadiens SIJ!Ce a 3-l_Joss to .Buf- month fi~ally . ~p~ned_ tomght,.. . teammates with two goals in leadfalo on Oct. 18. Montteal outscored San rose s· Net! Wtlkift~on satd . ing the Devils over the Canadiens
at the

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M-ODEL 822S -

~:.

Sunday nmes sentinel-Page C5

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

•

.Saw "Variable . ·
7%"
speed Straight Circular
UneJigsaw . · BaiiiiiCed, llglltwtlght,Saw

r-----------------_,
SEE US FOR ALL YOUR

By KEN RAPPOPORT

: -·-- Ai&gt; Hoc~y Writer

.. RIO GRANDE - Harvey A.
Brown, a 1977 graduate of the University of Rio Grande, will be the
· 1991 enirant into the Athletic Hall
•of Fame during a banquet and
.induction ceremony in the Student
Center on Saturday, Nov. 16 at
•5:30_p.m.
..
The banquet will be preceded by
'a reception at S p.m. Cost of the
mcaLis-59. and.rese!'-Vations. are-due .
by Wednesday, Nov. 13. Reserva'Lions can be made by calling the
Office of the Alumni Relations at
'245-5353, extcrl'sioii .43C ~
.. D.uring his career as a track athJete at Rio Grande, Brown· set
school records in the 100, 200 and
~00 meter dashes. His time in the
.i:listance medley in a meet at Martiall University was at that time
fastest in the nation, and

LEBANON, Ohio (AP) Homemade Hanover broke out on
top and went wire-to-wire in .wintHng the featured race at the
Lebanon Raceway on Friday night

*

•

(Montreal, San~ Jose streaks .come to an end in NHL _pla·y

Gallia resident will take place
:. in Rio's Athle:tic Hall ofFam-e~

iWeather important factor
~in Columbus Marathon

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·Pag_e-Cs.;...sunday Times-sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipoli~,

Sc(H·eboard
Na llc1tal FOotball Luaue
AlA Glance
·

Semllllll Rlllllla
Dl,~~&amp;oam

By The Asl()(iatfd Prea
All Tlmu EST -

-

AMERICAN CONFERE!IiCE

Eon
WL T Ptt.PFPA
Burfalo

....... s 1 0 .88926'1187

N.Y. Ict5
Mial1li

.. .... S 4 0 .5:i6116 1S6
....... 4 5 0 .444150 181

-~ew

FnJland

, 3 6 0 .33:111.5 165

.... 0 9
Ccntnl
... ... 7 2
..... 4 5
...... :1 6
8

lndi•n•polil
Howaon
Cle'fCJJnd

Pitt&amp;burah
Cincirumi

0 .000 61 203

Th\Uiday N'~l

-

-

Loodoit\lille del. Arthbold l l-15. 1.5l, lS-ll.
' Fairview Part del. Cincinnati Finn~y­
.toWniS-3, 15-1.
Friday Nlahl
DM1.!onl
_C~rnon Mc:Kinloy _d.cr. Amhenc
SlciOle 15-6, 16-14.
_.c~-'i"il"!~n;,;Dati Mother of Mercy def.
~
' Mapif'lC&amp;t. 15-ll , IS-13.

0 .778244121
0 444157 112
0.:1:13 169 191
0 .1111:1:1262

-- W L- T -Pet. PF PA

Wu~ton

... 9 0 0 1.000.264108
.667 1871 'r1
.4441:18160
.44413:1 12,]
.400 122 204

D1llu
........ 6 3 0
N.Y.Gian\1
.... 4 S o
Philadelphia .... 4 S 0
Phoenix
. 4 6 0

~

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New

Orl r:~ns

.. 8

0 .889198 97

National Basketball
Association

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvlllon
WLPct. GB
Orlando
:1 I .750 M.i.tmi
2 l .667 1/2
Ailladdphi•
:1 2 .600 112
NcwYock
2 2 .500
I
· WuhinJ\On
2 2 .500
1
Bott.On
2 3 .400 I 112
Ncw-JtliCy ..... .. I 2 .3:1:1 11/.2
'
Central Dl~l 1lon
Detroil
2 l .667
ChiCIBO
:1 2 600
Milw•ukcc
J 2 .600
Atl1nt.1
2 2 .500 1/2
Indi1na
2 3 .400
I
Chulouc
I 4 .200
2
Ocvcland
........ I 4 .1.00
2

WESTERN CONFERENCE
MldwHI Dhillon

WLPcLGD
San Af\lllnio ...... 4 I .800 ......... 3 I .750 1!2
, HOUIIal
~YC"
.......... · J
2 .600
1
· Utah
....... .. ... I 3 .250 2112
D•Uu
.. ..... ... I 4 .200
.]
M.inneiOII
....... 0 3 .000
]
Pu!Rc Dl~l•lon
Golden Sut.e ..... .. 4 I .800 LA Clippen
4 I .SDO ' Phoenix
3 2 .600
I
2 2 .500 I 1/2
2 2 ·.soo 1 112
23 .4002
I J .2.50 lIn

LOS ANGELES (APf - A
beaming, joking Magic Johnson
shifted-from his role as-a-sports champion to his new role as cham.pion of AIDS awareness with nc
sign of self pity oi
"You don't have feel sorry
for me because if I
tomorrow
" he told
onFriday in ~is .first
appearance
since arlnouncing that he has the
HIV virus.
-The-smdio audience at ''The
Arsenio Hall Show" gave the Los
Angeles Lakers superstar a twominute standing ovation.
·
Fans, fellow athletes .and others

ence "to practice safe sex, start
using condoms andbe aware.''
"I came on to let the people
know what time it is. Please put
your thinking caps on anll put yow'
cap on down there," .be said, gesturing below his-belt~
People alrea!IY are paying attention. After his announcement,
callers floodeai\IDS- 6ot lines
around the country, including one
at tbe federal Centers for Disease
ContrOl in Atlanta. ·
Between 5 ·p.m;-and midnight
Thursday, the CDC hot linewhich normally gets about 3,000 ·
telephone calls a day- recejved
40,000 calls, said CDC spokesman

Suns.
"She almost smacked me
Both teams gathered at the cen- upside my head," he said. "She's a
·tcr of the court before the game-and strong-woman-and 1-was · smatt-to ~
Laker A.C. Green led players, marry her."
.
coaches and fans in a brief prayer.
Kelly, who has tested negative
Laker Byron Scoti cried. . _
for the virus, is-about seven w&lt;7~s
- "You look for him 10 kind of pf~gnan~ aUker
Said.
yell at you; 'Let's goB, let's get it
Johnson said
touched by
going.~Scott"said .-!-: He''-s -nc&gt;t~.l!!!.
there ..lt'sjust weird right now."
.
.
with which he
During the interview with Hall, has endorsement contracts have
Johnson told viewers not 10 be said they wouldn ' t cut ties wit~
frightened by his illness. _ . _ _ him because of'his infection. ' 'I'm
---, "Wc"ilon'i. have to run ftQm il still with tfiein and inai's beautiWe don't have to be ashamed of it ful," he safd. ·
,.. You don't ~ve tonm from me
He also has gotten ~n.,outpour,
like, 'Uh-oh, here comes Magic;'" · ing of suppon from fellow baskethe said.
ball players, he said.
·

AI
Il,LouUvilloo
AI Laotuaor Full'"
c~....., -~ 10. Po"'mo'~
2I
AI Flndla7 Donnell
Fonori161. Halhnd Springfield 7
At Btru Finnie
Solon 28, Bay Villqe 9

At Eut UYerpool P11tenon

Sta~bcnville 21, Y01mgstown Ciw'lcy
Il
Dh•illonm
AI LebaRon WarrlDr
Gncinnati Academy of Phytical Edu·
cation 26, K«win&amp; Alaer 9
AI Plqu1 WeriJ

''I
this is an alarm clock response to the disease, saying it
He
he had .believed
for a lot people," said Chicago hild "increased funding dramatical- myths about the disease. •"It can
Bulls star Michael Jordan. "God ly" for AIDS research..
only happen to gay people.' That's
did this for a reason and I think we
"I can't say I've done enough," .so wrong,'' he said. "I WllS naive."
should adhere to that and learn Bush-said. "Ofcourselhaven't."
When he told his wife of two
from it."
The Lakers, in their first game months, Cookie Kelly, that he was
Johnson offered some AIDS since Johnson announced his retire- infected, Johnson said he offered to
Friday, urging Hall's audi- ment, lost 113:85 to the Phoenix split with her. She said no.

spirited rivalries with _him since
their college days, said Johnson's
infection "doesn't seem fair."
"1 hope he can keep his smile ... ·
I've told him that~if he needs anything from me I'd be glad to do
anything I could for him, " Bird
said.
·

Bellbrcd 17. St. PuiJ Gnham 7 '
At CHanna Uncoln '
Colwnbwi DeSales20, ULica 13
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airl.l mte ~ollcyball tournament S1t11td1y
at Wrigt'll State Univcrtily'l Nuuct Ccn·

"'"
DIVISION I
Cincinnlti.Molhcr

of . Mu~y

(22·4) _
,II, CaniCIII McKinley (2l-4),4::10p.m.

. DIVISION ll

Mauill(ln Wuhinaton (8-2) vs .

l&gt;IVISIONM
LOIIdcriVillO (23-3)
(20-6), llun.

AI Sprlnandd E'lnt
MiddletOwn Fa!wict ('7-3) V ii. Mu ion Plcuant {9-1)
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. ~inc!nnui Ma rlcmon l (IJ · I) v1,
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OIVISIONIV

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James 1-fOD 't play_. against Steelers today
CINCINNATI (AP)- Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Lynn
James won't play Simday against
Pittsburgh because he hasn't
returned to the ream since leaving
camp Wednesdi~. general manager
Mike Brown said.
James also won't be paid for the
week Brown said.
·-The Bengals obtained a roster
exemption for James and will activate defensive back Antoine Bennett from the taxi squad to fill his
spot.
·
·
Brown declined to comment on
James' future with the team.
"I did talk. with him today,"
Brown said Friday. "He agreed to
come (to Spinney Field) on Mon- ·
day and tallc with Sam (coach Sam
Wyche). I guess we'll see then
whether he still fits.''
-.rames was-drafted-in-the fifth
round last year and has been used
as a backup receiver and occasion-

ally .asakiCkrewrner.
"He told me today thl!t he was
unhappy with his playin~ time, but
I have a feeling that s not the
whole story,'' Brown said. "It just
doesn't make sense to me that a
guy would leave because of ~)~at
withoutsayin~ a word to anyone.''
Wyche SIUd he has not spoken
with James.
"I'll just wait to hear what he
says Mondar.,'' Wyche said.
"Maybe there s a side to this that
deserves some sympathy, or maybe
one that deserves some more discipline."
Receivers coach David Shula
said Thursday club personnel had
spoken with James' wife.
"She told us they're all fin,e,
including their baby," Shula said.
"But I haven't talked to Lynn, and
I have no idea what caused this."
Shula said James, 26, last was
seen at Spinney Field at a 9:30a.m.

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TENNIS
OAKLAND , Calif. (AP) _ ;
Top-seeded Monica Seles and sec- i
ond·seeded Martina Navratilova i
both easily reached the semifinals ,
of the Virginia Slims of California. j
Seles, who beat Navratilova in 1
last year's final, topped Linda Har- •
vey-Wild 6·0. 6·2. Navratilova
defeated Mary Pierce of France 62. 6-2. Scles will next meet No. 3 :
Manuela Maleeva-Fragniero, who •
beat seventh.seedcd Amy Frazier ~
6-3, 6-2. Navratilova will take on
No.6 Lori McNeil, a 7-6 (7-2), 6-2 :
winner over Stephanie Rehc.

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meeting on Wednesday.
"We had a receivers' meeting at
9:50, .~ut he didn'tcome in," Shula,
said. I thought maybe he was one •
of the guys on the weekly list for :
ran.dom dnlg test~. but apparently ;
he JUSt left at·that ume.
'

'

100 w~ sJc h . n'nn rms. 8

UNIVERSrlY

gomery, Mlcbelle Crouse, Gena Jllorris apd
Melanie MiDen standing, from lert, are Coa.eh 1
Do11g Foote, studtnt assistant Helen Caudi\1, ~
Stephanie Gudorr, Elizabeth Gannelll, Tflm
Collins, Paula McClellan, Ann Barnitz and
Kathy Snyder.

REDWOMEN SE;T FOR.CAMPAIGNThe University or Rio Grande wome~·s basket·
ball team buins its new season Tuesday at
Wilberforce University. Seated, from 'left, are
Jackie Hannon, Kim Sowers, Mindy Mont-

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. ; Nov. 26-Fairmont State. A·
: • Nov. 30- Notre Dame, 'H
: : Dec. 2- W.Va. Tech; H
· Dec. 7- Concord, H
":: Dec. 10- Wilberforce, H
" Dcc.l&lt;I-NotreDame,A
• Dec. 16-Mount St. Joseph, H
: Dec. 27/28- Baldwin Wallace
Tourl)luhent, A
.
• Jan. 2-0hio Dominican, H
• Jan. 4- Mount Vernon, A
Jan. 7- Urbana, H
Jan. II -Walsh, A

Mcmari&amp;l6

'""'~C~~m~oin~n•~ti~~Prinl~
· ~cet.,, on
(I 0-0) V1 . 01·
At
7:30p.m.

said
the
Year who emers his third campaign
with the Red women with a 40-22
record. "There's a lot of pressure
associated with that, but we want
that kind of pressure. We want to
get into the playoffs."
.
The Redwomen open the season
, on the road at Wilberforce Univer. ~ity on Nov. 12, following a set of
~preseason scrimmages _against Wit·t:enberg University and Otterbein
:college. . ·
;'_ .
Valued experience
,', Leading the Redwomen will be
:rorward Ann Barnitz (5-11, stnior,
·llclprc), who 'was named the MOC
elayer of the year last season. and
·~fellow starter Kathy Snyder (5-10,
·senior, Gahanna). Barnitz consis'ltcntly led the team in scoring and
!rebounding, while Snyder's contin'IIial
improvement durin~ her Rio
.,

"Schedule-wise. this is the
"To be honest, I'm excned toughest one we've ever faced,"
abou\ this season," Foote jaid. · Foote said. "Within the district and
"With nine of our 12 players being the conference, everyone, for the
either sophomores or freshmen, most part, has everyone back,
we're preuy young in spots.
except us."
"But with youth comes enthusiFoote said he expects Central
asm," the coach continued. "I like State to repeat in the district's top
our r~ruiting ..cJ'ass and we have spot, W.hile Shawnee State_and
great leadershipjn our tw.o seniors__j:_edarv~le will be the most likely
Our .upperclassmen are very good co~petuors for the_ MOC crown.
athletes, and in our $ystem, that's a
We hope to -fmish m the top
key."
five and re-enter the postseason,"
'Run it, score quick'
he said. "1 think that's a realistic
Overall, Foote. felt his team is goal for us."

RIO GRANDE REDWOMEN
1991-92 SCHEDULE
~ ' Nov. 12- Wilberforce, A
. : Nov• 15/16- Bevo Francis
!:I.Ssic. H
.~; No•. 21--,Pikcville (Ky.), A
• : Nov. 22 - Alice Lloyd (Ky.),

SaturdaJ'I C.mt~

Volleyball pairings

GrandecareerhasmadcherinvaJu- . academically and athletically sound
and "what we'll lack in experie~ce
able at the post
- Mindy Montgomery (5_&amp; ,_ _we'ilmake up with team c_hem,
juriior, Chillicothe) sat 0!11 a nom - istry."
Team strategy will (ocus on
ber of game! last year d)le to illness, but is expected to make a full-cqurt press and three-point
strong contr-ibution this year , - shootinr.:an area-the team had sucSophomores Gena Nor.ris (5 -2, cess with in the past, the coach
. said.
·
' ._
Cro_use
(5-8,
-__!_~~D~o~u~g~.F:~o~o~t~e~,~~~~~~~~;t~he~~R~ed~-~ )(ingston),
In aaaifion. ilie1&lt;edwomen
McAitlnfr) Michelle
anOSJePhlffiie
-Guam
seasons
the pro• (5-9, Sl. Marys) are back after ta'kle two Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference teams, Alice
gram. The number
victories impressive debuts with the team.
topped \he record of set in 1979Foote said he considers the six Lloyd and Pikeville, ana·go· up 80, -while the ream-placed-third-in - freshmen newcomersrs••~·.~~f~~~ against such WVLAC oPponents a5 -West Virginia State. West Virginia
- Distric~ 22 and .shareS-the champi- the· ~st recruiting ~~
Tech, Fairmont State and Concord.
onship of the Mi~-Ohio Conference . include 'Tricia.
- Seeks playoff be"rth
with Tiflin University at 8-2. ,
Carlisle), Elizabeth GannelU
Tournament play includes. the With ,that and more behind Lebanon), Jackie Hannon
Bevo Francis Classic and the Ba!dthem, Foote's revamped team' wel- McDonald), Paula McClellan
W!tlla.:e invitational, in which
challenge the'new camMelanie Miller

;

At Younaatown Spartan
Warren Kennedy 34, Campbell

~w.

.RIC? GRANDE - Yo~th,
enthuSiasm and ream chemistry are
expected to combine for the University ofRio Grande women's
basketball team in 199lc92 as it
prepares . to il)lprove its 22-10
standilfg froin last season.
Under the tutelage of Coach

!

Oatct Milh H1wkan 6, Akron
Manchsa-0

S111ndar'1 Gamet
WuflinaiOr\11 Dcuoit. 7 p.m. ,
o~~a~•t PCIU&amp;nd, I p.m.
MinnaOll II U. Laken, 10::10 p.m.

.

.

sa~ing

..

Crat\'iew 7

I No PUrchase requir9d
no ObligaUon, tl's simPly·
I our way of
THANKS lot Shopping
I With
us in 1991.
1 ·•68·1022or11'68-TQ.40
1 :~l;:~,:~~c"':~
PAfMENI•~: ;:M~:.,~~.•r!;'

wv

Redwomen feel enthusiasm,
uth~will boost,new-season ·

that he had
·
he said. ·
ty, and
entered the NBA
samq
~~~;::::;~--~~r~a~lliied~to;~~~J~o1hn~so~n~~~te~r~h~e~K~e~nt~T~a~y~lo~r.~Th~e~c;ru:s~h~c;on;un~·;u;ed~~~H~e~
· w~$~~fr~an~k~~~ru:·sl~s:~:u:al~i-:--f~~fo~sfto~n~C~e~lu~
·c~s~star~~L~arry~~B~ir~d~,--~
'
he said.
ricd on one of
most
'L_~~;~:j~~o~r~re~~~~~-r~;~~r-~~~~~
.impressive careers in high schO?I.

0 .7781471:18
0 .667175 184
0 .500 182152
.222126144

Atl1nt.1
....... 5 4 0 .556159166
San Fr1nciJ ~o ... 4 5 0 .444 201 135

-

Magic Johnson: From sports
ehampion~ to ~hampion-Jor ~a c_ause-

Pomeroy-Middleport--Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleaunt,

1991

November 10, 199t

OH-Point Pleasant, WV

.•

�Page-ca-sunday Times-sentmel

Final
Slandlngs:
W•L
_Qak_HiU _
12.0
Kyger Creek
9-3
Southern
8-4
Eastern
~-~
North Gallia
4-8
Hannan Trace
3-9
Southwestern
0-12
Most Valuable Player:
Jo Chapman
Oak Hill
Jody Nance
Kyger Creek
Megan Wolfe
Southern
Lee GiUilan
Eastern
Oak-HillHeather
North Gallia
Marcy
Southern
Alicia Ward
Kyger Creek
Tanra Stiort
Hannan Trace
Alicia Chambers
Southwestern
AmyWeU
Eastern
.Keri Black
Kyger Creek

r Oak Hill
Jennifer Ramsey
Tara Fisher
Stacy Adkins
Anita Carney .

sr.
sr.
sop h.
sop h.

Kyger Creek
Sally Saunders
jr.
Amy Gindlesberger jr.
Tonya Drummond soph.
Southern
Sarah Duhl
Angela Swiger

sr.
jr.

·

FERNLEY! Nev. (AP) Wa~da C~gban reeall.s ndmg ~d
· -·r~pJng da1ry co.ws· w1th her twm
Sister on th~ familr fann when their
father wasn t lookipg. .
_
Those childhood games and
love for horses .1~ her.to the .rodeo
-a span tradiuo~l~ dommated
by men. No-w:. C~ghan, 55, IS the
top scorer gomg mto .the NaUQnal
Sen.JOr Pro Ro~eo Fm_als_. which
·begms"Monday m Reno.
Her closest competitior is another
49-year-old Pat

sr.
sr.
jr.
sr.

,\ 1~- ~t.thseinkah_ h _eath
..
uvn
e . as a c ance,

soph.
sr.
jr.
jr.
sop h.

jr.

Eagles win MFL crown
GALLIPOLIS - The last of lhe
In the second half, Gilmore ran
Midge! Football League was for 2 TD's, one for IQ yds. and the
recenUy played on a semi perfect other for 7 yds. He also provided
afternoon at Memorial Field. Game the extra points on his see and TD.
one saw the Cowboys (1-3) take on
Eagles 20 Raiders 0
Rcdskins (2-2). Late in the first
The fmal game pitted the undehalf the Redskins, Andry Howell feated Eagles (4-0) against the
was faced masked by a Cowboys Raiders 2-2). In this game all of the
player setting Josh Bodimer up for scoring was in the first half, with ,
II minutes remaining in the first
a 5 yd. TD run.
After the Redskin TD, the Cow· half, Amos Callahan scored for the
boys' Jay Stout ran 61 yards, giv- Eagles.on a 7 yd. TD run.
ing the Cowboys excellent field
Then Ryan Perdue ran for 40
position. With 12 seconds remain- yds . on a punt return, for the secing_in the half, Stout rambled up ond Eagle TD.-W-ith-47- sccond
the middle for a 10 yard TD run. remaining in the first half Perdue
Gory Butlile provided the extra 2 ran 8 yds for yet another TD. Jason
points.
Cremeans added the extra two
• In the second half, with 8:55 left points
Cory Burlile had a I yd. TD drive.
Paul Siders provided the extra the
points. With 1:30 in the game Chris
Bowman battled I yd. for a TD.
Bucks 30 Elks 12
., The
game turned au 1 to PRO FOOTBALL

n rop•ng compen-

wh~ilshcagliari ~Y
15.Jpr~n.
pomts,hco . es er opes bor
1
1

t'ct tor

tn~•~g t e. tt~:reh s 1
ag : wasn t . g er ea
grant ·
"Pat's a good

(Overall-final)
Team
W L PF .
Oak Hill ................8 2 319
Eastern .................. 8 2 346

Hannan Trace
Tammy Thomas
sr.
Kim Triplett
sr.
Stephanie Stapleton jr.

Southwestern
Jennifer Donta

rppmg_an n ,
uons.
.

SVAC grid standings

Oak Hill

North Gallia
Christie Ratliff
Beth Salisbury
DamaTwyman

Cagliari said.
.
in whiCh a horseman or woman. 8 lifelong love.
.. .
_ "B~f!!lY_--:o~:~td. ~~ur.n~_!lave_ _ her'!_s_£at~e -=-~and. \l{anll!l~q.Q!C~- !il!!ldr~ds o(~.bimm.terin~go,hL
to tJe on me to wm t~' s:ud rOdeo barrel racing- m wh1ch horses arc and silver belt buckles, illong w1lfi
general m~nager. 'fqtY !a ilion. taken through a slalom-like course saddies and trophies too numero.us
· 'Mathemaucallr 11 s poss1ble. But w1th barrels.
to count in a casual glance, are disit's a long shot.'
When not traveling to rodeos, played in an alcove that takes up
Rey~o.lds, who was kept out of Cagliari tiains banet.racing horses nearly half of the modest room.
compeuuon for much of the sea- at the 10-acre ranch she runs ":'th
Caj!liari isn'tle!IJng ·th.e pre~ure
son, was even less opumiS\.IC about her daughter, Cathy, the current of bemg expected to wm get the
his chances of wmnmg.
Miss Rodeo Nevada.
best of her.
"I can't do it," .he ~aid. "I
Her living room is •esmmem_jp
missed too many rodeos th1s year."
SEO ·- ·. - ·
The Senior Rodeo is the on!)!
gr1d standmgs
professional ciicuit that sanctions
Ll'~()y--~~~~E:=:::;:::~---~ ~ :~~- ]~~~ .~~

~winc~~s~~~·.B~~rz
.• is too far :a~~n~ ~::fe ~~~~~~g~~
beh ·nd to
real thr
·
·
d 'bbo
·
·

sr.
sr.
soph.
sr.
fresh.
sr.
sr.

Eastern
Jamie Wilson
· Tabby Phillips

November 10, 1991

Woman poised to take national pro rodeo title

1991 All-SVAC Volleyball

Coach or the Year- Richard-Hamilton

,·

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

2
3 1
3 ·221
4 266
Jack:~-~:::::::::::::::6 4 329
Marietta .................&lt;!' 6 140
Coal Grove ............4 6 125
Meigs ................. ...4 6 233
Warren Local... ..... 2 8 167
Point Pleasant... .... .! 9 · 66

Ponsmouth ...........9
Logan ................... .?
Col. DeSalcs .:.......8
Gall' r
6

f8.~

m~~t~£~:::::::::::i20

i2

FAMILY PRACTICE

PAiN CONTROL CLINIC

.

o-r fi
GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio Val- ority. over those. of individual fire
ley Resource Cpnservation and deparunents.
Three methods of improving
Development (OVRC&amp;D) Council
water
availability are being considis encouraging rue deparbiJents and
.
ered
at
present. They are the dry
county associationHo develop a
hvdtant
which
is a hydrant piped to
. reliable water supply for fire fightof water,
second type is

._ . • ..-J&gt;.\

PA
106

Boosters to meet

94
98
228
166
166
264
281

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Athletic Boosters Club will meet at
GAHS on Tuesday, Nov. 12, at 7
p.m. to make final plans for Thursday 's annual fall sports banquet
(Thursday, Buckeye Hills Career
Center, 6:30p.m .) and the annual
200 Club dinner (Saturday, Nov .
16, Elks Lodge, 6 p.m.).
·

Nov. 2score
Eastern 70 Southern 6

•

my neighborhood.
'
For !he 11GSI 27 years, I've been hel~ing my neighbors
here in Gallipolis proted the thi~ they value wkh
State Farm insurance. I'm P.rou'd of this community
ond grateful for my many friends here.

Thanks to oil of you in Gallipolis, for being my
"Good
•
WOU. SNOWDEN
CorMr of llrir4
An. &amp; Stoto St.
GalW"'i~ Oh.
"'""'446-4290
HDml 446·4511

ALL MAJOR BRANDS

sun

fUM

A

INSUUNCI

HOURS:

Mon. thru Fri.

8 :30·&amp; :30
&amp;lluldev
8:30·3:.00

Farm Insurance Compan1es • Home Ot11c~s1 Btoom•nQton . 1111no1s

Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.

"

-

HONORED - Mrs. Selma Call who has
retired as office manager at Veterans Memorial
Hospital was honored with a luncheon at the
. Olive Garden in Vienna, W. Va., Friday afternoon. She is pictured receiving a gift of jewelry

presented ·by Hospital Administrator Sc!lt11•
Lucas, right. On the left or Mrs. Call is Charles
E. Adkins, Jr., Point Pleasant, who has been
named new office manager at the Pomeroy Has·
pita!.

POMEROY . Mrs. Selma
· Call, an employee at Veterans
Memorial Hospital for ov~r 25
years and office manager there
sinc e 1973 has retired. Her
replacement as office manager at
the Pomeroy hospital is Charles E.
Adkins, Jr., Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Mrs. Call began her employment at Meigs Memorial Hospiml
in April , 1964, In October, that
year, the name of the hospital was
changed to Veterans Memorial.
Call worked in all areas of the business office before being promoted
to the position of Office Manager
in 1973.
·
Call holds various certificates
J;or successfyl completion of data
processing and key punch courses
a1 the Parkersburg Community Cotlege. She has attended numerous
·
sem1nars
over the past 25 years to
study updates of all t)1)CS of hospital billing and business procedures.
She is a member of the Central
Ohio Patients Accounts Managers

IIStM' Jlllll'lltRIIEI

Upper
resistor
terminaffon
Coppercored center
electrode

Precision-tooled metal
shell to resist seizing
Resistor center seal
to reducelelim1nate
radio frequency
electrical "noise "
Lower resistor
lermination

Anti-fouling,
heat range
control
insulator

Evory Spllrt'tTI Is
DtctN Dy I IIIII 30·

1

Lisle,

in
most recent survey.
Board of Trustees meeting, disctJS·
As
a
result
the
board is researching
sian focused on the annual Client
information
to
create an agencySatisfaction Survey. an agency
wide
smoking
policy.
smoking policy. and additional
Also, the hiring of addilional
clinic hours:
staff
has made it possible to extend
The survey is a reserved line of
the
hours
in the Meigs and Gallia
communication from the public to
clinic.
the Board and acts as a direct deterThe Meigs Clinic hours are
miner of the board goals. Both the

d1y. na·QIIflrl/11111·

....d. """~11·111•·

Jlldll IIIOIIEY-IACIC
GUARANTEE/

Brl.lfANIA

HAlOGEN

HEADI I...MPS
50%brighter than con,.ntional lamps.

Line of farm toys by Erti
offered by Quality Print Shop
MIDDLEPORT - Dallas K.
Weber, Quality Pljnt Shop in Middleport, is now offering a new line
of farm toys·by Em which can be
seen in a window display beside
the print shop. .
. _
The vintage ·and collectible filim
toys are of all scales and feature
name brands such as John Deere,
Case International, Ford New Hoi·
land, Deutz Allis, Massey Ferguson
and Caterpiller. Weber points out
that each toy is true to scale from
that of its farm machine counterpan whether it be 1/64,.1!36. 1/16
or 1/12.

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTE-R)

25m &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

(S04) 67S-t67S

.

STRONGSVILLE - With the Prograrri pays MMI members qual·
continued emphasis on the ptoduc- ity premiums far consistently meet. tion of highest quality milk, local ing or surpassing the established·
· members of Milk Marketing Inc . program criteria. Award recipiems
·(MMI) were honored during the earned this Quality Premium prerecent District # 10, Local #7 &amp; 8 mium for 9 (Honorable
annual meeting· at the Pt. Pleasant Mention\Merit), 10 (Bronze), II
Moose Lodge
(Silver) or 12 (Gold) months' pro·
MMI is the regional dairy mar- duction based on a 12 month base
keting cooperative.
period. Honorable Mention: Chap· District Board Director Harold man's Dairy, RuUand.
Scnacht, Canal Winchester. Ohio
Elected to the positions of vot·
announced that MMJ's Milk Ouali- ing delegate were: In Local #7 C.
ty Pricing Program, now in its sixth Thomas Hamm , Racine and
year, will honor over 1,000 mem- Bernard Allen, Albany. In Local
bers in MMI's eight state area.
#8, David Mills, Crown City and
MMI's Milk Quality Pricing John A. Payne, Vinton.

Weber states they arc the kind
of toys that could be purchased
years ago and constructed of heaVY
die cast metal. He feels these toys
are imponant because they encourage a yo,ungs~er 1Q' use his' or her
skill and 1magination.
Weber has a variety of the toys
in inventory and they range in cost
from $2.75 to over $100 depending
on the model and size. For funher
infonnation on the tine of farm toys
contact Weber at 992-3394 during
the day· or 742-3020 in the
evenings.

See Puzzler
on Pnge D-2
---··,

Wiseman
named to
position .
COLUMBUS - Independent
insurance agent Thomas E. Wise·
man of Gallipolis was installed as
treasurer of the Independent Insurance Agents of Ohio (l;IAO) during
ceremonies at the association'~
94th annual convention Oct. 13:15
in Columbus.
Mr. Wiseman, president of the
-wiseman Agency Inc., 451 Second
Ave., Gallipolis, previously Served
as a member of IIAO's board of
trustees for three years.
In addition to his position a~ ..
trustee, Mr. Wiseman served for
the past year as vice chairman of
the OhiO Agents Political Action
Committee. In 1990, he rece1ved
the association's Young Charger
Award for ouutanding- young
agenL
AKRON, Ohio (AP)- A feder.~1 judge cleared the· way Friday· for
a vote among Revco D.S. lnc. creditors on a reorganization plan
offered by a creditors' group and
backed by the comp,any.
u.s. Bankruptcy Judge Harold
~. !';·White atsol~ open }he possibil• ·
ity that creilltors coufd vote on
plans filed by two Revco competitors- JaclC Eckerd Corp. and'Rite
Aid Corp
·

,. . I
3$1 -

, ,_.u_
{

'

-

·d .

1' ReCOI'o

,I V

UnFIEEZI
,..
.......
...
."'"_."""""'........
OVER 750 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU· CHECK YOUR LOCAL
DIRECTORY OR YELLOW PAGES FOR THE STORE NEAREST YOU!

-. h,

...

.,

TOYS AV AJLABLE - A line orrarm toya by Ertl-ls now available in Middleport next to Quality Print Shop. Dallas Weber is
operating the toy bw;iness which offers all scales or toys by John
· Deere; Case International, Ford New Holland, Deutz Allis, Massey
Ferguson and Caterpiller. Tbe toys are may be seen.in the window
. display located next to Quality Print Shop in Middleport.
.
'

,,

Multipurpose Health
•
The Gallia Clinic hours are·
Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m.
lo 9 p.m. and Friday, 8: a.m. to 5
p.m. The Gallia clinic eveningt
hours will benefit families and r
individuals who work or whose :
schedules do noi permit them to '
come in for services during the ~
hours of9-5.
"

New tool rental business to open in Jackson

Judge CleaTS plan

--

-Sbong,-treasurer; Terry Midkiff, secretln:.y.;_··(seated): Michelle Bogcs; Geraldine McKinnis;
Karen Werry; and Stephanie Stover. Not pic- "
lured: Pam Boothe, vice chairperson; Marilyn
Reese; Mark Sheets, and Lila Buckley.

and

Rhomla Dailey,
.

1111111 Llsl75 . . .

vtcc~ oflllce. Soil and
vation District, or the
RC&amp;Doffice.
.
Programs and assistance of U.S:
Dept. of Agriculture are avll!lable.
without regard to·race, creed, color~·
sex, age, or national origin.

Woodland board discusses survey

MUk prQducers h_onor_ed __

Kiln -fired
ceramic
insulator ·

ground tank connected to piping
from a body of water.
- ·. The third type is a floating
portable pump. Each method of
supplying water has its merit and
selecuon should be based on local
needs and knowledge.
The RC&amp;D Council is working

Meigs County, the retiring depart- RN, BSN, director of nursing; Kim
ment head is married to John W. Shamblin, radiology; Mary Ann
(Happy) Call who retired from Wagner, pharmacy; Bob Hoeflich,
Conrail in May, 1982 after 40 years public relations, and Adkins, the
service. They have a son, William new Office Manager.
Richard, employed at Veterans
Adkins has been serving as
Memorl al Hospital. The Calls patient accounts counselor at the
reared a niece, Cindy Collins Rice Holzer Medical Center, a position
of Jacksonville, Fla. Mrs. Call has he held since 1986. He graduated
three stepchildren, John E. Call, from Point Pleasant High School in
Sr .. Hurricane, .W...Va.; Mrs. 1972 and received his _bachelor .oL
Margie Miller, Long Bottom, and science degree in organizational
Mrs. Linda Rollins, New Orleans, communications fro!ll Ohio UniLa., and she has seven step-grand: vcrsity in 1980. He worked in
chilclrcn
Huntington and Charleston, W.
Friday, a luncheon was held at Va., with the Melville Co., before
the Olive Garden ·in Vienna. W. returning to Point Pleasant and
Va., honoring Mrs. Call who was joining the Holzer Medical Center
joined by he! h~s~nd. Mrs. C~J-in t986._· __________ _- -'-- WOODLAND -CEIUERS-BOARD-- Mem·was presented a corf'Pce ana a ·~·
Aikins and his wife, Leigh, have bers or tb~ 1992 Woodland Ceaters, Inc., board
of jewelry. On ·hand or the reure- three children, Laura, 6; Christo- or directors are, standing, left to rigbt are • Joe
ment ob~ance
were Scott Lucas, pher 4 and Melissa, I. His parents, Cl k J0 b
R
J 0b Le
b •
hosp1'tal1 dm•'n1'strator·, Doris lhle., Mr. 'and Mrs. Charles E. Adk•'ns, son;
ar Kenneth
;
nny Baker;
usse11 ;Douglas
n Hunter;
ntes, c a•rper·
Larry
administrative assistant, and ho~p1- Sr. are also residents of Point
tal department heads including Pleasant
George Hoffman, chief fina.nce
officer; Jim Da!ley, purchasmg;

·of---·,~Eol~o~ri~~l~-~1't~m;1at~in~t:!en~:a~n;~c'~e~·· ~Su~e~-~~

WEIGHT CONTROL

\

available to purchase
needed to develop a water
.
The deadline to apply for
funds is December 2, 1991 through
the Division of Forestry in Columbus, Ohio. Applications. are scored ·
on the basis of need and benefit.
County applications ~ given pri-

Selma Call, veteran VMH employee,
retires following 25 years service

and the i\dmittl\ifManagers
-- -southcasttnrMd
Central Ohio.A resident of the Chester area of

'1111 FlniMIIII' .........

.

..

develop~reliable water-.~,~=~

Southern ............... 5
Kyger Creek .........4.
Southwestern ........3
Hannan Trace .......0
(Conference. final)
Team
W L PF
Oak Hill ................ ? 0 271
Symmes Valley .... 6 I 282
Eastem ........ .......... 5 2 253
Southern .............. .3 4 154
Nonh Gallia ....... .. .3 4 197
Kyger Creek ...... .. .3 4 108
Southwestern ........! 6 94
Hannan Trace .... ,..0 7 44

Section

Area groups. urged to

170 · ··
148 Friday~s resulls:
214
181 Gallipolis 41Jackson 22
125 Logan 29 Athens 2
24 3 Marietta 17 Warren Local 6
223 Ponsmouth 36 Miami Trace 20
254 Pt. Pleasanlat ·
(Man)

MFL season, with the

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

1times- i~nul

i1~ ~~~

SpQrts briefs

(AP) - New York
linebacker Lawrence Taylor said
Elks.
First, Jimmr Gilmore ran 10 he's undergoing blood tests to disyds. for a Bucks TD after being set cover if he's father to a former
up by his teammate, Jason Hurt for lover's 4-month old son.
The Pro Bowl player didn't
a :25 yd. scramble. Then the Elks
got on the board when Ryan Chap- deny he had an affair with the
man passed to Tim Elliott who ran woman in September 1990 while
65 yds for an Elk TD. A minute he was separated from his wife,
later Jason Hun sprinted 60 yds for Linda, the mother of his three chilanother Bucks TD, Jimmy Gilmore dren. The couple has since gouen
ran for 2 points. With 12 seconds back together.
remaining in the first half, Josh · The 32-year-old Taylor said he
Atkinson ran 5 yds. for the Elks' doubts he fathered the child, but
that he' ll find out Monday.
secondTD.

·Farm/Business

JnCOme

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Lancaster .Colony Corp. reported
record net income on slighUy hi~her sales for its first quaner, wh1ch
ended Sept. 3p
.
Lancaster Colony attributed the
increase in part to growth in the
specialty foods market
The company said Friday its
; after-tax profit ror the quarter
totaled $7.5 million, or 65 cents per
share, on revenues of $132.4 million.
·

•,

JACKSON - A new tool rental brand new and ·available on the Monday lhrougn t'noay, 'I :~ a.m .'
to 5 p.m. and 7:30a.m. to noon on ·
business will be opening in Jackson equipment lot and for ready rental.
Saturdays.
at 192 Twin Oaks Drive early next
The Wagner family .is, from
The fmn will alTer pick·UP. and •,
Wheelersburg, Paul Wagner is the ·
Y~Ground is being filled and the father of the present owners, who delivery service. Rental Will be: •
footers should be started just as people locally will remember for done on the hourly, half-day, daily,: :
soon as the 'plans are approved," farm equipment sales, and their weekly, and monthly basis. . 1;
The store is expected to be open:·
said President Mike Wligner of grandfather, Fred Wagner.
Wagner Tool Rental of Jackson.
Business will be operated the for business February I, weather!:
'·
The new Jackson operation will same as at the New Boston loca- pcrmiuing.
be an expansion of the business, tion. It will be open 6 days a week,
Wagner Rental and Supply Incorporated, located at Gallia Str~t.
New Boston . It is owned and oper'
ated by brothers, Mike, Dan, Tim,
''
and Dave, all of Wheelersburg, and
is a third-generation business.
The plans include a 3,200
square-foot building with 90-by
GALLIPOLIS • Hunting, fish· Association , the USDA-Soil Con- ::
foot equipment lot, on properly ing, hiking and nature enthusiasts servation Service-Cartographic:
leased from Dick,Coriel and Rick. now have a map and g111de to open Center and the Ohio Valley;
McCany, next to Jackson Building larlds in·southcin Ohio.
.'
· · Resource ConservatiOn &amp; Dev~lop=•"'.. -·
;·
Materials.
Skip E~minster, Coordmator, ment council.
Edminster
pointed
out
that':
Wagner ' s supply of rental for O~io "Valley R~D ann~unced
equipment ranges from the large that h1s office has J~St receive~ a development of this guide was ;
310C: John Deere backhoe loader, supply of such a gutde. The g~1de largely brou$ht about by ciTons of: ;
to a small torque wrench. ·
• shows areas ~f state forests, nauon· Gerald Tussmg the former coordi-; •
_
.•
"Everything from backhoes to al forests, wJldhfe areas, and the nator.
Because this is all' expensive:
loaders, Bobcats, concrete tools, corp~rate lands of Meade. The
drain equipment, carpet laying coun9es sho~n are Adams, Brown, publication, individuals are limited: :
equipment, lawn care equipment, Galha, H~ghland, J.ackson, to one copy. To receive a coj!y of ;
trenchcrs; rototillers, lawn-aerators; Lawrence, Pike, Ross,-Sc1oto, and. the Outdoor Guide to Public Lands.send 7 5 cents in postage-(no
and carv.et cleaning equipment, will Vinton.
.
be ava1lable for homeowners and
Th1s map furmshes ge~era~ re~- money) to the Ohio Valley RC&amp;D
contractors" said Wagner.
ulations on pennllled acnvmes 1R 612 Sixth St, Suite D. Ponsmouth,
"If you're building a home and the area. The guide is a joint e~fon OH45662 .
. '
the only thing you own is a ham· of the Southern_Obio; Tounsm
' ''
mer, Wagner Tool Rental of Jack·
''
son will be able t,o provide you
''
w1th every toOl you Uneed to bu1ld
' .
'
that home," he added.
·· c~ r
In addition, WagntrTooland ..
A
~:t:
~ental o~-Jackson w•ll· be:ortenng
l'l.
. U-Haulttue~ tn!llers:and _h•tches:...
. ~--· .,
- -- - • I
Also, specializ~ mechamc tools,
GALLIPOLIS - Steven R. in Japan as a participant in the .~ ;
engine lifts, ndge reamers, _seat Cuckler of All!ens has been chosen National PFA Work Eltperiencc 1 •
valves, torque brolts, 25-foot sciSsor FFA District Star Fanner fur Dis- Abroad Program. Cuckler lived - . ~
personnel lifts, and 20x20 and trict 10. The 15 county district with a Japanese, family to ClJ?Cti--:::,
20x30 party canvass canopies in includes Athens; Meigs, Gallia and erice Ja~ese culture and asncul·:.:.:
past~l-colors, g~ for weddings, Vinton counties.
ture pracuces.
• ,
At Federal Hocking Cuclder is : ',
reumons,andparties.
.
There are 10 districts in the
"Wa~ner's Tool and Rentalts state. The award is given to FFA student council president,. a mem- ~~~
somethmg the area needs we've members who have excelled in ber of National Honor Society and ''- ·
looked at this area for_a long _time, FFA IICiivities, leadership and aca- the Ecology Club. He was a dele- ·~ :
and feel that'Jackson IS a growmg demics. Cuclder also received the gate to Buckeye Boys' State and is/1-,
and prosperous community," com- state FFA degree in agriculture a Governor's Scholar at Ohio Uni-:
men ted Wagner.
.
production.
versity. Cuckl~r is the son of Dr. c., ,
·:we ~ p~nning on domg ~ur
A senior ai Federal Hocking and Mrs. William R. Cucklet. Dr. ~:
bus1ness m this area ~ ~ommg High School, Cucklez has served IS Cuckler, an A.tltens dentist, Is den- - •
a part of the commumty, added District 10 secretary and been a tal director at Gallipolis Devctop. ..;
Wagner.
finalist in district public speaking mpntal Center.
. •;1.;
All rental equipment will be contests. He recend&gt;: spent a month
'
·'
&lt;!J
0

O

-

··

-A A

Outdoor guide to open
public lands available

.
..

Cuckler earns DI"stri"ct·t·o
..
F. -..
d
FF' St.ar- armer .awar.·

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

I

'

I

r\

�· Page-02-Sunday Times,-Senlinel

..

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

November 1
November 10,

1991

~

•~The
Public Notice

-Area!s-ftuinber-1

M~rketplace--NIID c:HRIITIIAI CASH?
Work fM Your
ltunlng
En..lapoL
F"'
lnfo11M·
tlo&lt;iiA""'~IItlon Bond S0H-Addroooid ltomllid E"'llop0 To:
lllllillnaum liN. Publlohlng,
lox fll1, ZlnMVIIIt, otlfo
431112.

w-

IQT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry. Wright

Giveaway

Public Sale

Blac.Js_~rq,_ ~~"- 8 PI'1..1 Black tabrador pu·ppy,· no cOl..
with paptrs. 304-675-&amp;183•
lar, Long Bottom area, childs

New sulomatlve parts In·

. venlory, uaed turnllure,and

Bilek Walnuts, 114-446-1190.

ahetvlng, and various ltema
of
lnctud-

on Tuetday, November

~

Large female black dog. NHCia

· 12,1991at11 :00a.m.atGal·
. lipollt Parts Whie., 210
· Upper River Rd., Gallipolis,
,. OH 45631.
', Above IIems will be sold
:· as one single lot to the high·: est bidder. Termo will be a

Sale

'·""&amp;'AIIctlon ~ ·

ptl, 814·98S-4340

Frtt Pupplll, Mocllum Slzo Dog,

e14~e-4477.

8

country. 304-675-5892.

To Good Home: Mal• H~• Cit,

Part Angor•. Nelllered, 0.
Clawlld, -~ouubroktn, 1 V&amp;lr
Old, 614·2~l _

l.ollt: 300 Lb. Horolord Holfor On

Shont;':•~~~m;-~

..,,,,·

12 Evanlngt.

Days, 1

HOUSEHOLD AUOlON

Lolt: Doa, Small Ttrrt.ru.Ty.m"'od
Black - .(nd-- Brown, -· ,..

Fr~nklt. Vlclnlly: Hlnkla
And At.S8!1. ~!11~11.

Saturday, Nov. 1fat -n:OU~M~ .

II ·

1111, S14-4~MHrA11.

·. cashiers check to be paid no
_'later than 5:00p.m. the'date

Located tel) miles west. of Athena. Take 50 &amp;~
32 west of Athens and exit onto 50 west
towards McAnhur. Auction Is a ·quaner of a
mile on left. Signs will be posted •

•
•

•
;. to

and·may

Announcements

Complete Houlflihoad Or Eel

" We'll be

111111 Any Typt ot Fumllur._:
Appllancn, Antique'•, Etc. Allo
11·1
Apprallll A¥1lloblll 61-1-26ji,l
St52.
Yard Sale
WNI!tr
Wam to buy ltlndlna t~
:;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;:::==
~
'"
1a., NEA. ~ne,
pint, Tim B11rh1 tf4.e~-7880
:
1 .!:==:;;==:;:::;;::;=:;;:=::::===~ arterSpm.
1
Gallipolis
t"
Womld to buy, Stondlng Um'*i
&amp; VIcinity
Bob Wlllllmo l Sono 114-002'
1144
Pomeroy,
Pomeroy,
"
ALL Y1rd S1l11 Mull Bl Paid In
Warild To Buy: Junk Aulow
Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
Middi!!pOrt
Middleport
With Or WH- lloton. Col'
th• dty btlort the ad Is to run.
&amp; VI 1 It
&amp; Vlci n 1ty
uLlwtly. ew4a.l303.
Sundoy ldltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Cn Y
.. •
Frld1y. Monday tclltktn • 2:00 All Yard • • Mull 1, Paid In
W.nttd To Buv: Jwlk Aulo.i'
p.m. Sah.nday.
Advance. Deacllnt: 1:00pm the Large moving Nit, Inside, Scrap MM11 1'14-4414l13; Afllr.
2 refrigeretor, 2p.lll.
Reward! Loet·. Doric And Llp,ht day....btfon
lhl ad 11 to run, glau-lop
·'t
aas,..owe, fable,
hotpltal bedl,
houN
_
S
Brown Spotted Auttralln u•._y edlllon- 1:00pm Friday, tiold lttml (lg. and am.}, nice Tap Prieta Paid: All Old U.S~
Sh•prvrd, Family Ptt, 1 YNr, Mond~
ldlllon 10:aoa.m. clolhlna lntanl, chlklrtn adull, Colne, GWd R!ng~iJ SIIY• Colftll.
Vicln y: Rt.77S, 114-:ln-2111, Af.. Saturdly.
1o.m-??t. Sundey thru Tullday, Gold Colnt. M.T.t . Coin ShGp.,
ler7p.m.
Nov 1o..u
111 SlcondAwtnue,GIIIIpoUI. •

10 hibernate this year. I only

stored decaffeinated coffee beans."

· ~3 ~nnouncements

.Singlu All Agu And Lllulyln
-Awilt You. C"onlld1nlial. Write:
--stnglu, P.O. SoiC 1043, Gal·
11polls, Ohio 4563'1.

arvest ABargain...
..
Rea~ The Rewards...
When You Turn To
,r
The Classfieds,
Ml The Boon~ Is Yours!
Now that the weather has cooled
dowu, why net heat things up a bit
by dearing ;our closets, anlc or
baseintnt o those unfianted hems
and adYertlslng them ror sale In
the Cluslftedst
Aad, you eao put that extra
~; easn to good use by checking
Clusllleds ror load

• Meet with Host Families
and high school personnel as you promote
international education

• Enrich your own life
and the lives of high
school students from
Spain, Germany, the
Netherlands, Brazil and
other countries

• Make your own hours·
work at home!
ACROSS

Local Coonlinator
for America's #1
sludent exchange
organization with
27 years experience

1 NBC morning
show
6 Pastime
11 Beverly 16 Put ott.
21 Humpty Dumpty
shape
22 Clearer
-23 Standard ol
beauty
24 Expunge
25 Koppel or Danson
26 Tom - ol
storybook

Call Tlacey SOnrlat
1·80~322--4678
or write

AIFSSchrnarship Foundalion

140 Greenwich AVenue;
Greenwich, CT 06830
-

Real Estate General

Canaday Realty

weapon
35 Ginger· 36 Declare
37 Limb
38 Pigpen
40 Completa; total
42 Attempt
43 High cards
44 Mountain lake
45 Everyone
47 Slow-moving

446-3636vA~

animals

49
50
51
54
55
56
59

Small amounts
Obstruct
Moon goddess
Pintail duck
Prohibits
EstB&lt;lm
Mature

60 Pismire
62 Indulges to

excess

..

.

64
85
66
67
69
70
71

.

DEBIBY DRIVE - 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH llRICK RANCH,
LARGE KITCHEN, DINING AREA, BEAUTIFUL BIRCH
WOODWORK. FULL BASEMENT WIT H .SPACE FOR
FAMILY ROOM. 2 CAR GARAGE, CENTRAL AIR
COND.I $73,500. DON'T MISS SEEING THIS HOME I

·-'·-·-·

""

LOW PRICE Of $~,000 MAKES THIS PROPERlY A
GOOD INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY. 3 BEDROOM
HOME PLUS GARAGE APARTMENT. LOCATED IN
CITY.
•
"'"'---· -RESIDENCEAND UOBILE HQIIE PARK· VI:RY NICE 4
BEDROOM 2 BATH COUNTRY HOME ON APPROX.
23 ACRES.' BACK PORCHES, 2 CAR GARAGE, 8 MQ.
BILE HOME LOiS WITH MOBILE HOMES AND 5 MOBILE LOTS. ALL PRESENTLY RENTED. EXCELLENT
LOCATION. CALL FOR COMPLETE DETAILS.
RACCOON ROAD· ·3g ACRES, MOSTLY WOODED.
WATER TAP , 2·SEPTIC TANKS, ONE TRAILER SITE
PRESENTLY RENTED. $25,000.
$8 500. NICE WOODED LOT WITH BUILDING. WOULD
~lAKE EXCELLENT HUNTING CABIN.
STOP, LOOK AND BUYI PRICED $7,000 LESS THAN
LAST WEEKI COLONIAL HOME LOCATED AT 845
SECOND AVENUE IN GALLIPOLIS IS PRESENTLY IN
USE AS A4 UNIT RENTAL NEW LOW PRICE $48,000
BETTER CALL SOON THIS P.AOPERTY IS IN A GREAT
LOCATION ANO IS PRICED RIGHTI

'.j.

ad

Dodrill; friends
rtltllvtl for fht IIIIIJ

~ads

of kindness shown
llurl•t her Illness and
dootli:
Sptdal

thenks ·,,
; McCor·Motrt funeral
' Homt-Yinten Chaptl for
. their exctltnlsmke.
Alit.. flowers. food,
11rds end prayers wert

Studies
Babylonian deity
Negative prellx
Tibetan gazelle
Discover
Ms. Keeler
Condensed
moisture

72 Meadow
74 - science
76 Music: as written
77 Deposits
78 Stockings
79 Make more
durable
82 Fastener

84 Reveals
85 Wai borne
86 Condescending
look
88 Lamb's pen name
89 Cullivated land
90 Unlocks
92 Llquelled
94 Improvement

98 Church service
99 StrikestOO Animal 's foot
102 College officials
103 Fish eggs
104 Rep.
t05 Angel's food 106 Founded
t08 Mournlul
109 Nugent ID
111 Biblical WB&lt;ld
t t2 stv'r
114 Conducted
t t6 River In Scotland
1t7 Rise
. 1t9 Harbor
t 20 Ample: lull
t22 Sirong; vlgoroos
t24 Individual
125 Favorile word

for tots
t 26 Dress lorthe
dead
128 Goller's need
t29 Time gone by
131 Precious metal
t32 Olstress signal
133 Audacity: slang
135 Ordinance
138 Skill
139 Evaluale
140 Ocean

141
t42
143
144

Born
Note ol scale
As far as
Place ol

dinnerware
145 Musical drama

147 Related on
mother's

side
149 Long, slender llsh
t50 Bar legally
152 Ancient chariot
154 Dinner course
156 Pennanls ..
158 Chairs
159 Remains at ease
160 AcctJmulate
181 Country of Asia

DOWN

1 Carries
2 Open to view
3 " Major_ ..
4 Near
5 Still
6 Jets lorth
7 Beats soundly
8 Eye: poetic
g· Concerning
10 Attempt
11 Inane
12 Unemployed
13 French plural
ar1icle

14 Armstrong ID
15 Tolls
16 Antlered animal
t8 Astalre ID
19 Chemical
compoond
20 Rule
27 Chapeau
29 Hearing organs
3t Legal matter
36 Performs
37 Tibetan priest
39 Ivy League
university

40 Arm bone
41 Froiic

42 Subjects ol
discourse

43
44
46
48
49
50
51
52
53
55
56
57
58

Ventilates
Labels
Evans ID
River duel&lt;
Farm building
Negate
Goes by water
Heron
Entangle: Involve
Chastise
Reiner and Lowe
Pee WB&lt;l or Della
Coolidge's vice
president

61 Civil injury
63 Slrokas
64 Shrewd: colloq.
68 Track-and-field

man
70 Narrales

71-Window In rool
73 Take inlo custody

74 Finishes
75 Foot parts
77 Watched secretly
"

78
80
81
83

Damage
Vast ages
Openwork Iabrie

n.,

•

Com~or

Priest's

S.KIIolivltod, Wtiii:.tr:'r;:;
AnciWtlh To 1o ~~ F0&lt;
Your -nco? ·wo ,WUt
T - Y011 To lo A Momblr Of
Our Toom. ilooponolb11Hilll lnelude. ldmlnl"'lltlvo Footctlon
In
A
Flttanolllt lor·
vlcli OllicL With Ono Of Tho
l.oodon In Thl Fl..-1 lor·
wle11 lndullry. tt You Hlv. Ex·
llllllnt Ad 1 •- 1v
·
m •-rot • lklllo
And l"&amp;, Notch Phone lklllo
PI- II •- ~·- At 1~
• _. \.itlf,
rr

·eon....,,

oftor·

.\

.

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT II

-

Optnlnge. 1-IOO-II~ZIIl

8

87 Meal ·
89 Automobile part
90 City In Nebraska
9t Actress
Geraldine,
et al
92 Wallace of "60
Minutes"
93 Sprint
95 Soulh AfriCan
Dutch

.'

.
'

__

•'

'
&lt;

IHiiltr.!wHt.

97 Doclrlne
99 Dlfllcult
tOt Uses a scale
105 Walking stick
,106 Reveal
t07 Entrance
1t t Temporary

In loving memory of

Adeline L. Caaper
who pf!Ssed away

November 8, 1961

shelter

1t2 Desirous
113 Midday
115 Lavish londness
on
1t 6 Fight betwS&lt;l~
two
t18 Expense
t19 Heap
121 Chaperones
· 123 Exist
125 - nature
126 Float in air
127 Fears
t29 Meat pies
t30 Got up
t31 Aerllorm fluid
t32 Sows
134 Old timer: colloq .
136· Proverb
137 Least desirable
139 Tears
140 Barracuda
144 Speck
145 Forerunner ot·CIA
146 Man's name
147 Guido's high note
148 Newt
)49 Chatter: colloq .
151 Tantalum symbol
t 53 Com pus point
155 Early morn
t57 Roman 51

Asilent thought; a

seaef tear,

keeps her

memory ever dear;

Her

SaYlors feet; She Is
aaw stnmag dow• on
us, Forever In your
sight; Loving
memories of her are

our comfort through
the night.

SadlY mlued by
Edna,
Ado and ~on Wdham.

daughlers Mary,

·.

REALTOR'

10:00 a.m.

Auctioneer:·
David Boggs
Compressor (200 lbs)1 tire ·changer,

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1991 ·
9:00A.M.
LOCAnON: From Gallipolis go to Rio Granda, and
thtn go north on State Highway No. 325 for aboul
3 mil11 to Sailor Road, turn left on Sailor Road
and .tt lathe third place on your left, and 'n mile or

lell.
Duelo the death ol AI Russell the following hems will

be sold:

WHAT IS THE SENSE IN PAYING YOUR
HARD EARNED MONEY IN RENTI
When you· could be paying ler this ramodoled
home. Li\ling room, bath, forced.air, gas heat,
newer deck, nestled among shade trees on

Term a of oala: Caah or Check with proper I.D.
For Information cell 441-o724 or 381H728
Not r11ponalble for accldenta or loat of properly.
Allen end DIINI Herain1n, Adminiatrlxet

..' .
....

approx. t acre lot

l
:tr; ..... 91 •

llso ~Nov. 17
"Htnll h •we IIIDr" .

O..uwelov....s
ltftn, •Is Jot~ wes

Lot along Ohio River. Cali lor more information.

AT THE
HARTFORD COMMUNITY CENTER

INn ts; l•t y01 Al111.
1' tltlt. ftr of II
wllli ,..._ .., H

NEW TOYS: Rtmole Controlled
Banks, Race
Cars &amp; Train Sits, Don-l!itiles; Riding Toyi; Jtwelry,
and Many Mora nama.

God hows JOI hH to

'it

'"" c· ..... '-

we'"
1M IHr':r.•IH tf

•

SIXlY ACRE FARM - RECENTLY REMOD.ELED w,
STORY HOME. HAS VINYL SIDING. 3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS, DINING ROOM MODERN KITCHEN HAS
CUSTOM BUILT OAK CAWNETS. FENCED PASTURE
IS PERFECT FOR HORSES OR CATTLE. BARN,
STORAGE BLDG. CELLAR HOUSE. $62,000.

••'

'
'

••

AVDIUtY F. CAIIADAT, BROKER
LJNI)A G. 8tml110U
IIART P. nom
UALTOR S7~:zeae
UAI.TO!l4411-3S83

•.

AM lltlwnls Mdt -·
for

we hv•

hils••

'-tl
~by, ..-

..

,.....,'"
llo1CJ,

•

m
HOMES, FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PllOPERTIES
LQ '25 LOCUST S.TREET GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

.. ~

Clllfllll

~

PRICE REDUCED! MULTI-PURPOSE
Excellent location lor residen tial or commercml

propell)'. 35 West area. Vinyl sided 3 bedrool1)
ranch.'Over t acre lol and approx. 1,100 sq. lt.
commercial building.
12909

33, HARTFORD, WV,

4es~

I

.
$5,500.00
•
VIEw-OF THE OHIO RIVEfl
Wrth this 8+ net olland. Wooded. Site cleared
far mobile home or house. Rural Water and
elecinc -.vailabfe. Aloog SA 7.
Ht:M

c.,.,

NEW FUANTURE: Living

~ Suitet~Recliners,

.'
r

I

..

BEAT THE RENT RACE I!!
With this 2 or 3 bedroom home. Rem-led
vinyl siding , storage building, 1'/r acre plus
BKcellent garden area . Tobacco aliorment.

Raccoon Township. Unbeatable price. $29,000.
. Call today.
112895

CARPETING: 100+ rolls of New StalnmalterC.iplt·
lng, ,rious Slz11 lnd Colors, All Fully Guaranteed.

living room, study, formal dining, lamily room,

sludy wilh shelving, auached 28'x30' garage.
Electric heat pump. Make an appoin1men1 1oday
to view this beautiful home with. everv extra
possible . Immediate possession . Rio, Grande

NEW LISTING!
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS
1983 Schult Mobile Horne, Wx70' wilh 3 b&lt;jd:
rooms, bath wlgarden tub, ivfnv room nioa sized kitchen "'luipped wilh applianceS electric
heaUcentral au. Allhis resting on 4.8· aaes •
older bam, com crib, metal building wnh DOn·
crete lloorina. Cal todavl
t2113!1

area.
12919
SUPER LOCATION, SUPER HOME .

Very attractive 3 bedtoom· home . Larg~ l1vmg
room , family room. dining room and k1tchen,
recently remodeled. 2 lull baths . 2 car garage.
Over 2 acres. Situated at Buhi-Morton R~ad
juSI ofl SR 35. Call today. Immediate posseston.
12914
PRACTICALLY CITY- BUT !,;UUN I HY!
One story lrame home with over Yt acre lot, 3
bedrooms, full basement , anached garage, and
carport. Fireplace in living roOm, perfect lor
retiring Couple or newlyweds .
#2925
LOCAnON IS IDEALI
Super builing lots. Approx. 5 acres each, level,
rural waler available, cil)' schools.
12933

WHAT MORE COULD YOU ASK FOR
- - ~AT-THIS PRICE $32,900
3 bedroom ranch heme wilh living rC&gt;Om, eal-in
kilchen, utility, and baih. Nice fenced-in lawn
and anacl1ed carpon. Wilhin minutes ol Holzer
Hospital. Call today.
#2875
PEACEFUL &amp; PRIVATE
And comlartable living is what you'll find in lhis
at~aclive , 3 bedroom ranch, 3 balhs, lormal,
dining, tamily room, equipped kitchen, 2 car
garage wllh and detached 23'x36' garage.
Enclosed sunporch over 4 acres, pond and

mora. CiiY schools!
•2926
YOU CAN AFFORD TO TAKE A LOOK
ATTHIS HOME- ONLY $22-'1DOIMMEDIATE POSSESSiuN
3 bedroom ranch, eat-in kitchen , bath , utility
and more, approx. 1 acre lawn . Cali to take a

peep anhis one I

,2930

NEW .LISTING.
MUST SELL IMMEDIATELY I
1973 Grandville Mobile Home localed In
Quail CrS&lt;lk. 14'x70', 3 bedrooms, newly
remodeled b1th, front porch, new storaoe
buildiog &amp;~front yard lor ptey na. . -·12838
ATIRACTIVE RANCH HOME
ON JAY DRIVE
Offers 3 bedrooms , living room, lamil~ room ,
eat-in kilchen newly remodeled: 1Vt bath,
attached 2 car garage, central air, Green
Township, cUy schools. Within minutes ol
hospital and town . Call for an appoinrment.

$55,000.00.

12832

PRICE REOUCEOI48 ACRE FARM
In Walnut Township, tillable -land, .pasiUre andwoodloL Agood sita IObat:co base and IObacco
bam. Three bedroom mobile horne will\ sprin.9
development -t another nice homesite with utili·
ties in place Including septic system. A great

hunting area. Priced t&lt;&gt;&lt;lay al $36,000. Please
call lor mere details.
_1283/i •

3 ACRES MIL
Situated In Morgan Township. Good home sile.
Rural water and eleotric availabkl. 12917 .

LOTS OF RIVER FRONTAGE
Pnced al $2.800 and up. Callier noora details.
t21118

OWNER WANTS TO DEAL!
On ih~ acreaga, approx. ~ acr.. mere .or less.
Will sell into loll. Rural water and eleotnc av~~
~·· Fronlag&amp; alcng Racccoo C.,.k, and aloog
-Rl. 325. CaiLtor,more detallsl _
12922

OWNER MUST SELL Ill · You must make an appointment II&gt; M thio nioo
3 bedroom home loca18&lt;1 in lhe heart ol
City. Above-ground pool wilh nice deck na.
~rioed in lhe $40'1,
12834

Judy DeWitt, Broker..........................446·8147
.J. Merrill carter................... :..............379-2184
C::lltl1]f ""'tl1f.••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••...••.•.. ~li~:l!i!i
Tartlmv DeWitt..................................441..0532'

TER..:CAIIhrCHECK ·

AIICTIOIIIIIII Um IPUISOII YOSIIl 1125
IIIII YOSIIIl 1141
Phont 131')375-581 5' (3114) 375-4917

' .
'

NEW!- NEW! - NEW!
This modular is only 9 months old and situated
on over 1~ acres , 3 bedrooms, 2 fu ll baths ,

c.-n

446·6624

Corner Cabln111, Brus Daybeds, and Many Mort
noma Too NumerotJa To Mention.

'
I

..

WE ARE WANTING YOUR PROPERn TO SELL, GIVE US ACALL TODAY!

Dlneties.te,Gunc.lllntts,Oai!CU~GiaaChlne'a,

.

12923
ACREAGE
t3+ acres. Green Township. Lisled at $10,000.
loiS of development around the area. Soma
land is wooded. Small'stream running acros.s
property-and-has a small pond. Homesite is
graded ort. Has electric and rural Waler avail·
able. Call us 'now.
12927

SUNDAY, NOV. 17, 1991
AI 2:00P.M.
'·

LOCATED ON RT.

12920
$3,000.00

.

wM pGSsM IW, 2

•
r'

~~~~ ~~.::;:

NEW LISTING!
A HOUSE TO CALL HOME!
3 bedroom ranch leaturing t II.! belhs, fireplace
in li-ving room , well designed kitchen , family
room, beaement Recenlly installed heal pump
wilh gas backup. Garaga patio wilh decking,
plus much mora. Stale Reule 160. cil)' schools!
Make an appointment today I
•294 t

I• Lovfat
·-~L
NorMa
M. Hysell

. OINING
••
I
BAR, FIRE
SYSTEM. GAS FORCED
AIR FURNACE.J. CENTRAL AIR COND . 2 CAR
BASEMENT GAHAGE. $65,000. ·

738 Second Ave.

bead straps.
Store fixtures, counter, ranges,
refrigerators, washers, dryers, gas
heaters, tires, small,hardware Items,
storage racks, painted slates, storm
pipe and ells.

lll-~~~i~;;o-r.,;;., I ind Dave Boggs, Auc;lon11rs -

on"~·-- •••B·/~T~~T~~~~~~ E~~~~~i~lll---~~

@

YOU MUST BE OVERLOOKING
-~ THIS -.
TERRIFIC BUY I
CITY SCHOOLS
EXCELLENT STARTER OR
RETIRING HOMEII
CALLTODAYFORYOUR
APPOINTMENT

1974 Fiberglass boat with lrailer and t962 Elgin
motor 25 hp 1977 Kawasaki motorcycle, 1969 Honda
motor bike, tractor, bush hog, and olher farm equipmen!, riding lawn mower, mechanic's lools, house·
hold goods including sofa and chair, dinello sol, 4
chairs, television, recliner, pots, pans, dishes,
· antiques and many more items too numerous to

6~,: ....

/uig ()Bwftl - fPDKet ·

very soul so ,ure

and sweet, will
blossom at our

..

Real Estate General

gout~ehn Sli.~~s CRea~ ·8state ~ne

PubliC Sill
&amp;Auction

SATURDAYNOVEMBER-16,.1991

Stttly ...... by lilly,

96 Memoranda

Ann011cements by alldlaaeer time of a•ctlon
take preacleace over prlllted llllllters.
"Not respaes1ble for acddeats qr loss of property•

Real Estate General

[])

lalovlllg memory of
my SOl,
BUD MILLER, w•o
passed away-Nov.10, 1979allf my
hush•d, LEWIE,
who left IS
JaL 23, 1991.

Ohla 157·68·1344
W.Va. 515
Phone 614·949·2033

Llcenl8d and Bonded In the State of Ohio
Aaaoc. Frank l!ulchlnaon 614-592·4349

~estment

'84 Teverns

Paul M. Reed • Administrator
. Dan Smith • Auctioneer,

614-698-6706

1 ===~::•:!:-=::__
Hllr.ltytltt: Would You Uko To
Join Our Stalf7 Shear PltuiQ
Hilt 8lfllng. 114 441 4442.

CONSTRUCTION
Ptvio&lt;l: Roloclto 81VIfll

Cast 127220

Terms of Auction
Cash or check wtth positive I D. No oul of alale
chacka. Not raaponalblo lor loea or accidents.
Auctioneer Mark Hutchinson

_ , lltlft, 2-lpm, pragoammlng HIR~. fs:OOOO ; S72.'J/I(JI'fo. 1·
hotphll, rMDOnd lo ComO. 1111-1
Ell. o-1 F.,.
Qpinler,
Ita
lox
11b, lmmed'-lo •Rivtn-,WV21tM

1o;...nd ring.

cfe•n and re1dy to be used In your Home~ Food
•vellable.
·

441.Z2111 FOI' lmmodlato Con-

lldwttloiL

Oplrltlono,

cna11rs, lawn chairs, stand, 10xt2 new carpet, toilet,
Christmu crab and bulbs, small and IQ. chalkware animals
a~ banks: whalltot shell wilh mirror, .,lt tootbed and soccer
bafls, hot rod cars, milk bottles, small antiques and collecti·
biOs , step ladder, small k~chen items, boxes ol ~ood usable
items. French Provincial twin bad with matchmg dresser,
maple dinette set, '!BW key wind regulator clocks.
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: llomo IIOied In thlo ouctlon oro

In Memory

2

L·SHAPED RANCI! ON JAY DRIVE - FEATURES NICE
OPEN KITCHEN/DINING/FAMILY ROOM ARRANGEMENT WITH FIREPLACE, FORMAL LIVING ROOM, 2
CAR GARAGE. NICE VIEW
THE SURROUNDING
AREA FROM THE POOL

-'~IiR

Ohio.

YIIJ IIUCh appreciated.

COUNTRY ESTATE: GIVE YOUR FAMILY THE PRI· .
VACY_ THEY DESERVE! 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS,
FAMILY ROOM, PLUS RECREATION ROOM, LOVELY
FORMAL LIVING ROOM .WITH FIREPLACE, EQUIPPED
KITCHEN , FORMAL DINING ROOM, REAR DECK,
SECOND FLOOR BALCONY. ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP,
NATURAL REOWOOD EXTERIOR, 2 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE. §.l!RROUNDEQ BY 9 BeAUTIFUL WQ®ED
ACRES. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT. $t25,000.

~~·

'

~-

See Answer to Puzzler on C-8

Be a

woods.

of Mary
would llt to
loA Port Of A140 a•ton AYexpress their slnltrt "
- - - Holfth And Nlltolonal
thanks to lht •mlng ,...,
lnd •.,....,No ~pori..., stall of PlnicrtSt Cart Hry.
IIY Will Tr1ln: APptlciotlono Ill lo Tolton 1101!- .
Center; Dodrill's Home ill1o
Novomboo t • 1 A.M. To
•
Care; Rn• . Darrell Hotldly
4:
P.ll., Somlnor: 'l-lp.m.
Inn, Rt. l, O.lllpo
' Ill
The Family

CaiU~a1

SU.N DAY PUZZLER

• Earn FREE FOREIGN
TRAVEL, and !inancial
compensation

(f~l[es,J~!ltlr!'~IIIOd

Real Estate General

~·--~:"ly ~
w~ron::=.-z•.,~~!.!!...':"

r

•'

&gt;·FrH Single Bullalln, Pertonal
.'Ads. Wrllt To J.S.O. P.O. Box
::184, Massillon, Ohio 44848."
·:unauachld? Sinc:ere Area

I .
i range, maple
woodburner, large bow window, two recliners,
r~~~~ chair, two couches • one with matching laveseat, 2
u1
freezers, occas ional chairs, two matching wood

9 . Wanted to Buy

.' above by being tho highest
·. bidder.
:~ Nov&amp;mbar 7, 8, 10, 11, 1991

···.·

~

Shirley Boster....................................446-1260
Sam Hoffnn...... ~ ..............................379-2449

Jeannie France..................................446 10111
Patti

Haw~ ...........................................448-1117

. , .. . .. ,
.... -...........
•

-· '
j

�..
1991

November .

Is, OH...... Polnt

S© \\4\\ ~-:- l£ 'B tr~~

'::~:~:~'

WOlD

UMf ·

ldltod by CLAY R. POLLAN -~-----

0 words
Rearrange the 6 scrambled
below to make 6
slm~le wordf.
eoch In its line

44

nday Tlmes-:-S,iltl

Pleasant, WV

46 Space tor Rent

Apartment
for Rant

-Qounlry33,- -

~~~~~;~~~jj~~. .=m:~~~~

5I

HOUSihold

· Goods
Sofllldof II, W-

-of ., ...
Pan,
...,,

Quoon

Slzo" Mutt Ioiii e~-1100,
td); o -·1107 to).

pollt,- Clil

Building loll,, ...rlond u~. TP I
C w.tw, Eittwn lhla8 Co.
quanor milt SA~ rif.lal-:11114 ''
F.II.H.A. 112 Aero U. Flnonctno
Avolllblo.l14 411 Ut:l.

,

-U. &amp; Aclrlao For Solo. LindCatllroct.
&amp;p.m.

Cont~touy-·

Without doubt the Rolls Royce of
bridge magazines is The Bridge
World. This monthly · public~tion co•!•
$36 a yea r, apd if you order more than
one subscription, you receive a gilt for
each additional order. The address is
39 West 94th Street, New York, NY
10025

Aolroln
NowiiiSoldhullom
luolnou Collogo, Spring Volloy
Ptw. Coli Toe~!~ !14-446-4367.11
Rogl11or1tlon ......,5'12748.

17

Miscellaneous

loot Tho Smoko: Puro 1lr, ctoan

Wllorbfllrollon oyolomo ovl ll·
1blo. utero :IO'JI..IOII.. 814-446·
1121.

18

elevation
Ntw Commercial , Homt Unitt , Front Street,
From $199.00. Limps Lotlont, Multi Unit Renttl, 1 Year Old.
Aecessorla. Montl11y Payments VInyl Siding, Low Mainte nance,
Low As $1a.oo, Call Today FREE
LocatM, $59,900. 614-NoW Color Colalog. HIOQ.22fl. Centrally
445-8568.

. WOLFF TANNING BEDS

WaJlted to Do

tiD Plymculh Grond Fur}',
11,1100. 1~11-4704.
WIN lobylh In lly Homo
Rodney
Aru.
Ro ..._.. Avllllblo. Coli 614·

Anr.lmo·

24UII7.

E &amp; R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, Tr• RamoVII, Htdge
Trimming. Free Eatlmatetl 6'f4•
31l''IIIT.
Q~arg• Portabll Sawmill, don't
hlul your k&gt;at 10 the mill just

6292.

23

Nice 4 room, blth, biHmtnt In
exc . cond., nice flncld beck

Professional
Services

yard, ullllly building. 304-8753030 or 675-3431.

Custom Butchering, 6 days a Rt ntal property: 3 BR full
week. Cattle, Hogs, o..r. 304- basement, In city llmltt. Prlclcl

882·2353.

IO 1111. 614-24~021.

32 Mobile Homes

Real Estate

tor Sale

31

1 Aero Lond WMh '73 llodol

Homes lor Sale

Mobllt Home, 2 Bedrooma,

1portmont. 114-

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer : North

By Phillip Alder

Training

oftor

114-1117-3044

the others that have appeared in the
.. magazine's challenging Test Your
Play feature. South is in six hearts and
West leads the diamond three. How
would you plan the play?
Perhaps North should have content·
ed himselflwith a two-spade rebid and
then cue·bid four diamonds over
South 's three hearts to show some
slam interest.
You must establish a spade winner
to discard your club loser. But the dia·
mond lead has removed a vital dum·
my entry. The best chance is to as·
sume both a 3·2 spade split and a 2·2
trump division. Alter winning the llrst
trick with the diamond king, play

Sou.1b

Wesl

Nor1b

2•
3•

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pas.1

It
3t
4•
~ t
Pass

~•

6•

Opening lead:

~klno ~vor. No Poll,

4jii.0331.

T I V A'' y_N.

'

+3

SCRAM·LETS
GIRDER
JOVIAL
IMPALE

~VANI'Pt'~

HAPPEN
EXPOSE
LIVE LONGER

ti) 1H1, NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Real Estate General

Two dynamic new friends could be par·

Nov. 10, t81t
Friends will play key roles in your per·
sonal aftalrs, both in the social selling
and the business world , en the year
ahead . These developments will prove
productive.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) There is
jusllllcallon lor teellng fortunate and for
expecting something good to happen
today. You are on a roll where a major
desire could be allained. Scorpio, treat
yourself to a birthday gift. Send· lor
Scorpio's Astro·Graph predictions tor
the year ahead by mailing $1.25 plus a
long, 'setl-addressed. stamped enve·
tope to Astro·Graph, clo this newspa·
per. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH
44101 ·3428., Be sure to Slate your zodl·
ac stgn.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0oc. 2t) If
you're

presentl~

working on something

1ha1 could generate financial re1urns.
. try t'!. O~ II11ng~ wrapped up as quickly
aa· possible. Timing ,is your ally. and
postponement could prove disastrous.
CAPRICORN I Doc.· 22...1an. 19) This
mlljh1 turn out IObe a red letter day for
you whme your social interests are con-

cerned. You could meet someone new
who will Include you in a group you've
tonged lo join.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. It) For best
reaults today le1 things happen Instead
ot trying to dictate the turn at events.
_ --· La_!!~ Luck 1.~n .apo~ltl9n to~do a be\t!lf
.l ob than you are.
·
PIICES IFeb. 20-Merch 20) You are

~

still In a cycle where your populartty is at
a high point. If you treat ever;'one you 're
Involved with as special , It will add addi·
tlonallust~r to your image.

ARIEl IMirch 2t· Aprllt9) Tenac11y ot
purpose and Lady Luck are allies today.
and they will operate like w nd and
glOve. The harder you w~
r .
greater
your chances for succe .
TAURUS (April 20-Ma
Good
tHings could h app~n ' lor you today
·WoughJndlvlduats wllh.whom you'll be
IOCially Involved. You could either make .
1 vaJuable new contact or have an old
friend do you a big tiwor. QIMINI jM1y 2t·Ju.. 201 A critical
lflll11n condl11ons. of which you may not
be lnlllally aware. could develop for you
today. Its benefic effects will become
quite evident tater.
CANCER jJu.. 2t·July 221 What you
t:111not c1o atone today can be accom·
pHihed with 1he assistance of a compe.
ttnlally. II you're involved In an tmpor·
tlftl underllklng, kHp thi s In mind.
LIO 1,.., :13-A,.. 22) You are likely to
~fill exPtCtlltont in your commercial
IIFid maler!ll 11fatrs today. Use con·
ttrueltve methodo tha1 ""' generate a
proHt bul, rnotl of 111. think pot 111vely.

social tile 1n the year ahead . These
friends will really know their way
around.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nav. 22) Even
though you'll be involved with others IO·
day. your way of doing lhlngsls likely to
be lhe most direct and effec11ve. Exer·
ccse your au1horily, bul do It graciously.
Major changes are ahead for Scorpio in .

the coming year. Send for Scorpio's As·
tro·Graph predic11ons today. Mall $1 .25
plus a long. self·addressed. stamped
envelope to Aslro·Graph, c/o this
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44101·3428. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign.
SAGITTARIUS INov. 23-Doc. 21) A po.
tenlially profitable, secret objective
you've been nurturing shout~ be pur·
sued en earnes11oday. Your probablll·
lies tor making il happen took ver}'
good.
CAPRICORN jDoc. 22· Jin. 191 ASSO·
elates may -wall around wishing lor
things lo happen today, bu1 not you.
You 'll be more interested In actively do·
lng what 's necessary to make your
hopes become reality.

A.QUARIUS (Jan. 20-flb, tP)Inst~nd of
being -stymied tiy obstacfes oi chat·
lenges Ieday, you're likely 10 find them a
source of sllmutallon. Overcoming dllfl·
culties arouses your Ingenuity.
PISCES (Fib. 20-Merch 20) II might
lake a lillie convincing 1o get others to
go along wilh your Ideas Ieday, bullhls
shouldn 't bother you. because when
you start selling, you're super.

ARIES (M1rch 2t•Aprit 11) S1rlve 10
work like hand and glove 1oday with
_your_rnate regarding a goat you have..ln
· comf'l'!_on. Desirable results are possible
- if you lunction,as a team.

TAURUS IAfl'll 20-Moy 20) Pu1 your
1magmat1on to work today and you
should be able to lind several new at1er·
natives to a dilemma you thought had
only one solution. It's-worth the elfort.
GEMINI (Moy 21...1unt 20) You are likely
to be as Ingenious as you are lndustrl·
ous in disposing ol difficult assignments
today. Your brlghlldeas can save you
steps.
"
CANCER jJuM 2t·Juty 22) Thl&amp; could
be a rather exciting day lor-you soolalty.
Be aten lor unusual developments In·
votvlng new people. Onets an Individual
you 've been eagar to knliW.
-LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Little l~ks
you'veleh hanging from last week can
be cleaned up a11hls lime - II you ap.
ply you reel!. This will give you a chance
10 begin new endeavors.
VIIGO (Aug. :13-S.pl. 22) Don 't put ·
1aklng care of several situations 1ha1 r..
Quire you r personal 1ouch all until tomorrow. What Is easy now could become much difficult taler.
LIIRA llhpt. :13-0cl. 23) You caul~ be
rather l01'1unett today In receiving lm·
pulatve, generous gea1urealrom othert.
If someone olltrt you IIDII1e1hlng, don 't
be coy; be grateful and accept. •

3 R-. Fum._ Apo~mont,
Hill IIIIo Eat Of Portor, On
Rl.ll4, $21Bimc.I14-388-411B3.
I Roorno, ba1h, upo11111, priYIIo

NEW LISTING IN VINTON VILLAGE - Very
nice one s1ory b_
rick home wilh 2 bedrooms,

·~W

.
.,,:,'

,

1132-111511, IQ4.f132.
18711, 114-31l'-GI4i.
""
I .bdnm houH In Rulllnd, IZ11
. month ptuo ,.llhllo, dopooM 1nd
iolor.,_ roqulrod, 814-1192·
7503
• '
Z Bldroom -1200 llonlh, PIUI
Ulllhlll, Rollronco And llopooK,
IIG4-175-!p8. ·-I BR houH. Rtf. &amp; Dop. 304175-5112.
I or 3 BR wMh 11ovo, wood bur.
!)or, corpotod, -mont, chy
=-=;,tf8 mo., 1100 dep.

.•,

·~ ~,#:f&lt;t\S

lllln

.&lt;

see.-

NESTLED AMONG THE TREES - A 3
bedroom home with familv room , livinQ room ,
bam. Also a large 20x20 building wim a t2x20
shed. All on 1.390 acres. Ccty schools . $53,900.
-~ .•
• #320
' TIRED OF RENTING? - Buy this 2 bedroom
home with LP gas floor furna ce. vinyl siding.
and .4 of an acre ml1. Re~dy to move into after
you cui the grass . You well wanl 1o lake a look
·at this one.
11386
WAITING FOR ,YOU - Is this t900 + SQ. ft. of
liv1ng space and 1985 Redman d/W. Nice lot
In Centerville. Has heat pump, huge living
room, 3 bedrooms, 2 bams, 3 car garage. Call
today.
1396

·-~
-~~·
CLOSE lN - $25,000 Vfill buy this 2·3 bedrooni
home with partial basem ent and detached
garage. Call today.
•
11298
OUTGROWN YOUR PRESENT HOME? .:. You
- can ·afford lo move upl-5 bedrooms, 2 baths,
kitchen, laundry, patio and 2 car garage, quiet
area but yet close 10 10Wn. Call for more details.
#3118
FARM IN HARRISON TWP. - 148 acres mil
with 4 badrooms, 1 bam home. Vinyl aided with
newer kitchen with walnut cabinet&amp;, ·sawmill
eqtJop,..ent 'go:vrim-lilrm. Don~·delay. '70,,000.
~8

HOME &amp; LOT FOR $28,90011 Ouiet country ·
surroundings make th is 3 bedroom home
allractive. -Located close to shopping. Features
2 full baths, large living room , eat~n kitchen
and dining area. Plenty of parking. Not many
places available for mis price in good condition.
12t8

KYGER CREEK AREA Very
room home. Large kitchen with
spacious living room, two baths,
tot .. and mOJo for a good price. $52,500 .

• .

~oom, 1 •ath BEAUTFUL APARTMENTS AT
2.Apt1 Pomoro•,
•· 4
~
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
unturnlohodil on ButtornUI Avo. ESTATE!J,. 1531 Jocklon Plkl
l14oii!IUIIO
·
1rvrn ttn&lt;mc. Wolk to ohop &amp;
2·BR In lllddllport. No po1l movloo. COil 814-4414H8. EOH.
Ply own uiNKIII, 1200 por mo. Dcwr«own llodorn, 1br, Com·
Doilaoii/Aoloroncoa roquiMd. ptllo- Kftohon, Full Corpoi, In·
ftWa·2311 doyo.
oulllod, EIOC1ric Hoal, AC,
2·BR iiililml"""!, dOWntown Dopoolt Roqulrod. IM-448-01311.
New Ho- WV. NO polo. 114- For ronl· Now 1 bdrm 1p1, tum
tlt:l·l'111, oloo 1500 Ill ft, com•
In lllddlopor1, 614•
.

~:~:~:~:·::::::::::::~t:::::::~::~==~~:::
Real Estate General

.

mn.

FARM - 55 acres mil on Providence School
Rd. Large tobacco base, 32x70 barn with
garage, pond, with 1976 24K46 mobile home
plus addition. 3 bedroom, livin~ room, dining
area, kitcl1en, bath. Asking $59,900.
1385

9""

'""'""""''""·'· " """' ,,,,, ·'~""'""'
CONDO IN CITY - All brick with 2 bedrooms, 2.

lull bams , equipped kitchen . tr..ing room,.dining
room. laundry w/Washer and dryer~heal_pump,
lloora,- t·-car- - -ce·nt:-alr,- m-any iixtraC Very- nice. Musl
laundry and
I attic. Nice back patio
Only $65,000. Call for more info.
M388
covered lront porch. Asking mid
S~RINGFIELD AREA- Here's a home for you
$50s.
1382
With 2 bedroom s, living room, dining roo m
QN BULAVILLE PIKE - ~ this anractr..e vinyl
kitchen, bat~ and ulilily room, two car garage:
si"ed home With 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs,large tr,.
Oil
and wood heat All on over 72 acres. Call
ing room , dining area, kitchen and laundry, gas
lor your appointment
1394
heal and central air, a 2 car carport wlloft. Patio
and storage buildings. All this and more on
COUNTRY LIVING - In· this remodeled 3
over '.\ acre priced In low 40's. Call lor your
bedroom country home featuring heat pump,
appointment today.
1398
large lamily and dining room combo, 111 bath.
small room for nursery or sewing room, lots of
122 ACRES MiL FARM - With tobacco base,
storage, rural water and much much more.
3 large .b~ms , home has 4 bedrooms. living
Situatnd on 20 beautiful rolling acres
Also
room, dcncng and kitchen, 11\ baths, Hannan
horse bam.
M375
Trace Schools. $45,000.
1397
RIO GRANDE AREA - 1680 sq. ft. ol living
NEAR RIO GRANDE - Newer 4 bedroom 2
space in th is 3 bedroom, 2 bath home which
bath home not completely finished and situaied
also has lamily rm., and lots ol other amenities
on 9.2 beau tiful acres mil with loiS ol road
Watch the birds and squirrels as you relax in
frontage and omer buildings. See this one.
your family room. All olec. Only $39,000. Call ·
t3n
now lor appointment
#346
BULAVILLE PIKE -Is mis 2 bdrm. home with
bath, kitchen, large living room and laundry ·
heat with natural gas, wood or coal , luti
basement, 2 car detached garage and t6'x20'
building. All on over 2 acres. Only $36,000.
1381

fully corpotod c._ lo otoroo
1nd ochOolo. E.O.H., all ulllllloo
pold ucop4 olocl~c. Bolle ronl
t1911 por month. 304-1112-3718.

PRICE REDUCTION .
the lamily moving up or startcng out.
$49 ,500, you're buying 4 bedrooms •. 2 baths,
living room and tam1ty room . Very mea eat·ln
kitchen with oak cabinets. Garage and ncce
deck.
schools.
11206

LIFE'S TOO SHORTII Relax
renew your·
sell in 1his 3 bedroom home overlooking the riv·
er. Brick &amp; vinyl exterior will keep malnten811ce
at a minimum. Other leatures include lamlly
room, belhs, 2 car garege ond 11lellilo dioh.
Call
for an appointment to see mis one.
tSOQ .....

OFFICE 992·2886
with 4
balh, dining room, den wim woodburner, livin9
room and kctchen, partial basement. detached 2
ca ~ garage. 20x30 barn. 8x30 covered porch ,
lru11 traes, and mueh more. Call for prices and
inlo. Must see this one.
11367
NEW LIMA .RD. - 3 bedrooms 2 baths large
spacious kitchen with island raOge. Horne has
had lots ol care . Look at this one . Only
$35,000.
1381

pond and tobacco base. Located on good
top road 1 mile o" Rt 7. Priced to $44 ,900.
.
1209
I IR - . In _,.own Gil~
=~ nHLI14 441 0144 or
,or

•

RIO GRANDE AREA - Three tracts of land. (1)
22 acres mn: (2) 20 acres mn: (3) 100 acres: or
buy all three with 40x60 horse bam 14x60
Implement storage shed. All have road frontage
on Tyn Rhos Rd. 1/arious prices. Call lor more
information.
11359

RUTLAND AREA - 1985 Sizzler doublewide
wolh 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, liv. rm .. kltchon on~
laundry, 2 car anached garage. Gas well with
oncome . 2nd home has living room kitchen
bath , ~nd 2 bedrooms . Call lor more
cnformauon . Only $30,000.
#37t

DEENIE DR. - All brick 3 bedroom ranch with
t Y. bath , full basement w/outside entrance. 2
car garage with openet. New roof and heal
pump, 12'•12' deck, tily schools. On nice lot
Asking..$64,900 .. _ _
11368

NEW LISTING - In Pomeroy. This home was
buclttn me 1940's and shows the character and
quai1ty ~f the era. Four bedrooms, large living room, dc01ng room, lull basement with drive-in
garage, ln·g~~!'JI p_ool. Asking.$A6,000. 1376 ~

124 ACRE MIL FARM - Located on Lincoln
Pike and th is ranch slyle vinly sided home with
4 bedrooms, 2 baths. family room, dcning room
. and kitchen. fireplace, 36x48 approx. barn, new
fences, tobacco base. some il)lplements.
Asking $69,900. Call for your appointment
today.
11277

NEW LISTING

FI"Y

wt,_

ttoroo•
bulldlng, 11rao yont.
$340/mo.,
.,u•
utllhl...

n,

- ...... ont1 - .. 11100111
-IMII. No lnoldo poll. Avol~
ljblo Doc. \ 304-875-lllt or 8754144.
ciHouM on Roulh Lone In

NEW LISTING - Sumner Rd. is this nice 2
b~droom t b~th ranch with aluminum siding,
hvcng room . k1tchen, family room, lull bsement,
woodbumer, one car garage, and more on..84
of an acre mi l. Asking only $40,000. Call lor
OliO.
f3t3
NEW LISTING - Located on Sycamore S1reet
'" Middleport. Ranch home with 3 bedrooms
level lot wilh above ground pool. Only $27,500:

Golllpollo

wKh dllhwllhor • ttovo no
,.frtgorotor. 1 bath. Catino l.no,
!orgo
AC unh,
~rd
hNI, corpotod.
Walher, drvor - ·up, omoll

NEW USTING - St. Rt 160 wilh river view
One acre with nea1 2 bedroom home. Must see:
Psking only $25,800.
1289

FARM mE - Two barns. a 3 bedroom , 2 bafh
home. com es with heat ou mo and full
basement Walk·in closets. flatland with almost
1000' road frontage. 8.2 acres mil. Need lo
see. Asking ' 53,200.
M395

Ront:

lcrTwo
Jtory, 4- BA,- LA, SCMol.
DR, lUtcher!

Chllhlra. 2 ot 3 Br, 1 blth. total

oltclrlc. 1321 mo. olu111e. dop.

114-317- oftor S. ·

1.1!91

2 Story Homo, 4 8od-

..Om•, 2 112 Bltha, Por1er At'la.

#381

'

·
- Eastern schools 3 bedrooms
1 an.d 1/2 ba1hs, family room:. extra good
condcbon. On approx. 2 ~res. Asking $45,000.
1384
ROS_
E HILt RD., POMEROY - Is thla
alum1num Sided 1 and 112 story home w~h 4
bedrooms , bam, dnino room. kitchen and living
UPCREEK ROAD - 67 acres miL Good
roam. Full basement on t acre. Con1111nien1 to
builaing -sites. Rural water available. Some
downtown Pomeroy. Only '29,000.
for
~mber. Road frontage. Call lor more
details. -~---·
informa.tion .
.
· .~ - 1290 -~.,..,-· 2 YEARS OLD - t story . vinyl sided
CHESHIRE AREA - 12.9 acres mil of vacant
bedroom. t bam with lull basement, gas. heat
land. Not restricted . Has two s10iy barn. Some·
large L·shaped deck. $18,500.
1243'
11mber and 700' road .~ontage on Story's Run
WHY PAY REN'I' - When you
own this
Rd. Call lor details. Asking $16,550.
•335
home. Only $20,000, Nice ranch home sinlng
on 112 acre mil. 3 bedrooms , -apple trees~
grapes and raspberries. CaH for appOintment. '
VACANT LAND - 4 acres of undeveloped
11357
residential land in Jackson County bordering
POMEROY_AREA - Character, style, country
Appalachian Highway.
1374
charm. Thts home has it all. Older home
completely refurbisl'ied. 3 bedrooms
' "
CLAY SCHOOL - 3 bedroom, family room,
elec. heat, anached garage, with opener, all on
Wrap-around porch. Several buidngs. ~~~~·~-~
...on-approx, - t and·-112 acres. Roclc .s
.5 acres m,1. Toot ·shed. lmmlrcfoalii possession.
Road. Asking $5g,500, Will take MH
See It today.
.
•
1392

i'

MOO/mO.
,...
Dopooh,
iltlor-. V.L. Smith, R.E. 1144411101, 114-388-182t.
SyracuM 112 double, 2 bdrm, no
11011, f175 me, ptul UIUHIH, Ph.
1114-M2-1324
Thftl Bldroom Ranch With 112
.ION Lawn, Nlw Home, In EJCIIIonl Condhton, Socurtly Dopoall
And R - RIC!Uirld. 3Q4.
m.e7111, 304-112·31N.

42

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

LANGSVILLE·St. Rl. t24·ApproK. 60 acre fanm wi1h a big
bam, pond, and aboul tO acres tillable. Also has a 1 t/2
story lrame home wim a big r.arport, satellite dish, and a 7
room house wim 3 bedrooms.
ONLY $47,900
POMEROY·ROCKSPRINGS RD-A country setting al a
low price. Thist4X70 1984 mobie home has a large 7X21
expando, 3 bedrooms. garden tub, and bay window, and
lots more all on a 1.5 acre lot

.

~~2,4M-10U.

14~70 oil otoctrlc on potva10 lot.
1250.00 ptuo ulllllloo. HUD Ap-

proved. SOI.e75-a8.

z bedroom 1r111or, • - • w1tor
tumllhecl. Aeta,.ncn, Alto
lrollor opoco. Norlh Rt. 1 Loculi
Road on rlghl, Pt. PH. 304-875·
10'11

Z.BR troll• In Raclnt, 1210

mOnth klclud• Wlltr, HWIQI
lnd trooh, 11110 dopooh,I14-114J.
:lOIII

114-.

LOCAT10N LOCA110N LOCATION - Ask any·
body I "Location is most imponant when select·
ing a home.• Here's a 6 room home on 1 acre
with a Ql'eat view of me river and only 5 miles
from town . Includes 3 bedrooms. fireplace, full
basement, garage and barn . $59 ,500 .
1118
WANT A HOME AT AN AFFORDABLE
PRICE? That you can move right into? Then
. you need 10 make a look at th1s beauty. Large
living/dining room combination. nice kitchen
wim laundry area , 3 bedrooms and 2 baths.
Newly painted ceilings &amp; exterior. Com bene mcs
low price with low interest rates and you can
lulfill your homeown er's dream. Only $32,000.
1613
BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME HER E - And
improve your view. This wooded lol overlooks
me lake In Charolals Lake Estate, and Is one ol
the last ones remaining . Better call today. The
prtca is only $1 6,500
1508

12110, 3 mi. 'aut 511, Z BR. Wll-r
Plld, 1235/mo. Rtf .• DopooK.

2

..;n

205 North Second Ave.
J'!llddleport, QH
MIDDLEPORT·N. 4th Street·A real buy on mis 3 bedroom, t 1/2 s1orr home that hasa full basement, large living
room, and a wooclbuming insert in fireplace. Lots of closets
and buil l in bookcases. and drawers.
ONLY $19,000

POMEROY·Ooyou need a MONSTEROUSLYiarge home?
orilcouldbe4apartmonts. This house hasl5 rooms, large
hallways, enclosed front porch. one car garage, 4 baths,
and 4 kitchens. Has a newer turnace and roof. Was
recently redeoorated. Possibilily of some owner financing.
Was $55,000
NOW $48,000
MIDDLEPORT·Histortcal looking corner store. Has 6
apartments up and anomer store down. Stan your own
- businesscHaslo1s of·room·and has· an income.
CALL FOR MORE OETAILS
1.1

3 IR moblll homo, 1 cor
g..go. for r1n1 or loll on lind
conlract. l14-211-1114.
For rtnt,amall 2-BA tr1ll•r In
Hor11ord;roqurna.
WV,J1.fl0304-112~104
.... '""""'·
dlpooil

OOES A LARGE LIVING ROOM wilh a s1one
fireplace. spac ious kitchen, lu ll basemen t
sound good? Well il so, we have the home for
you. Located just minutes from town You will

also get central air, semi-lined cedar closets,
extra largo lamily room and all at a very aHord·
able price. $45,900. Call for your' showcng
1odayl
1704
THE "PERFECT HOME" Is now being oHored.
Private 1 acre, mn , selling surrounded by beau·
tiful pine trees, yet close1o town. All brick rancl1
with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living room .
family room, fully equipped kitchen with dinin9
.parea, utilily room. Nice outdoor living area o"ering 26x10 covered pat&lt;&gt;, 38x 10 sun palio, 24 h
above ground pool with wood deck, 2 ca r
garage. Gallipolis City Schools. $75,900. To
make this "perfect home" yours, call Carolyn
Wasch.
1606

FINALLY A STARTER HOME you can'lllWe
to li• up!! You will need to see mis 3 bedroom
owim recently replaced vinyl siding, roof and gut·
taring, plumbing, 200 amp. elec;tnc soNIC&amp; and
new gas furnace . Large fam1ty room, ~ lull
bams convenient laundry room and prcvate
patio.' This opportunity is only minutes from
town on St. R1. 1~ 1. Cily Schools . $49,500. t
18 8

SMALL f)UT SNAPPY - Exceptionally clean
and unctullered 3 bedroom ranch. No honey-do
projects here. Don't miss mcs one - call lor an
appointmenlloday. You won'1 believe the price
of $37,900.
1505

•

FOR A LOT OF. " LITTLE REASONS",
CHOOSE THIS CLASSIC...
t 1 In town convenience • kids can walk to
schcols &amp; activities
2) Ample living space - lormal living room , dining room, 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs. sunny kitchen.
lam ely room (over 2.000 SQ. ft.)
3) Ample storage space • large attic &amp; bas•
men !, I car garage

4) The price • $63,000
All th1s tor the special people in your li fe

#609
OUIET COUNTRY LOCATION - Beaut iful and
immaculate brick home rests on a spacious lot
with open sunoundings. 3·4 bedroom home.
features attracbve oak Uoors, largo fami ly room,

RIO CENTER ESTATES - Build your home
among tho Ueos on one ol these semi-secluded
START FROM SCRATCH - And your pe~ec t
' "·· .. -can .' happen"·whe·n you build on ono at . lots.-1 mile west of Rio -Grande. Lots range In
size from 2.5 acres to 5 aaos, Restrictive covthese 5+ aci e parcels. Conveniently located
enants lor your protection . Prices range tram
n•ar RL 35 in Gree n Township. City.Schools.
'
ltiOO
$6,500 for 2.5 acre size to $10,300 lor solect 5
acre parcel. Country water available. C~ll us lor
more information.
.
11336
BRING US AN OFFER WE CAN'T REFUSE II
We're o"ering some of the best building sites in
WOODEO LOTS - Just oH Rio Grande
the county. Approx. 5+ acre sites in Green
Centerpo int Road. 2.5 ac res to 5 acres .
Township. Nice level lots, ideal sening for bwldProtective restnctions . All tree covered lots .
ing your dream home. City schools.
1600
Ideal location noar callege. Let us show you the
loiS in this quiet wooded sening.
#226
" THE PRETTIEST LACE AROUND" Thars
why l.he owner told us. We have to agree -i t
inviles comm endation. A finely cralled 3 bed·
room home with living room , dining room, fam ily room. large kitchen and 2 balhs. Situated on
a pictvresque 3 acres. m/1, wooded setting wilh
access lo large fi shing pond. Own with ·pride.
1603
$85,000.

-~~ homo lor rlnl, HUD op-

dining room. living room. 3 bams and much
more. Ouldoor enjoyment isn't overlooked with
·. large deck ·and feno~d l yard. -Grnen sot,_;,,, ...c..
$84 ,900
1706

•

WANT A BEAUTY OF A HOME WITHOUT A
B BEAUTY OF A PRICE? Then this t988
Fairmont Townhouse (14x701 is lor you. Largo
living room. dining area w1th built-in buffet
large master 'bedroom with built-in desk and

dres ser, 2nd bedroom . large bam wilh garden
tub. Enclosed laundry area with new Whirlpool
washer &amp; dryer. Oulcloor area offers nice deck,
concrete block sidewalks and storage building
Loca ted on a rented lot or _move Ia y_our own
lot Offered at a price that can't be beat, only
$t5,500!t
1610
NE\'1 LISTING ! Easy 1o Alford II Remodeled
2·3 bedroom home located one mila lrom town
is ready to move mto. Now fur nace, now roof,

new carpel and much more. Large-flat lot. City
sc11ools. Priced at $38,000 , It's easy to afford!
12t5

Will occop4 conlfruclton
- 1321 · 114-441o01101 or
.,. 411
provod.

!1rJII homee tor rant or uti,

~

114

1 100

~~...a~~~~~~~-r~~~~E~~~~y~ou

;r:"'...,t

:a~""ho:O '!:.~
· diYI'· ~7J1.12411111f11mo.

:{: \':,~..:0~~
Al!trZp.m.l - . o

44

.

Apartmlflt·
• .for Rent

now's me
to buy. owning
This busineu
is
evertime
dreaniedOI
your own
shake- machine,-:4- lreezers,- ioo cream
deep dryer, ice macl1ine, grill, and lots more.
Sitting on approx. one acre comer lot along a state route.
. ·
ONLY$110,500

1 1 z ll*m ID4 1n llldd._,,
Ulftltoo Fum, dop r111, no polo,
114-112-2211.

RACINE AREA·ST. RT. 124·Aimost 4 acres of nice ta1ing
lawn and garden area ·and a 4 bedroom home mat wcthln
the last 8 years has has a new root, new aking, new
cabinets, new fumace. ,_windows, new satellite, new
steel garage, new fixtures, and new plumbing In b4nh.
·
ALL FOR $40;000

1-liclnn !Urn,
opt InPIG
llldd._,,
Ill
ullllllll
monch, 114M14217.

DOTTIE TURNER• r....
-L,
r...............................982·HII2
BRENDA JEFFERS- ....................... -........ ...1112-3060

2 IR •~:· .....o Holzor~to,
~..
'"'• WV.
71-

SANDY BUTCHER..................... .....................IIt2•A71
IHERVL WALTER8......."'"''"""'.. "'"""" '":""317..Q421

-

.

PLEASE""CALL TODAY!

Wiseman Real· Estate
(6.14) 446 .. 3644
David Wiseman, Broker, 446-95 55

a'

DAR~E

STEWART......................- ..............112-1311

'
LORETTA McDADE, 446-7729
B. J . HAIRSTON. 446·4240

. CAROLYN WASCH, 441-1007
_SONNY GARNES, 446·2707

'

'
.

lowlr

St.,
ldllhloo pold, $3101mo. 30f.e7!.

,1,

..

Apartment
for Rant

1111 -1101·
Apootmwdo
lor
Ronl:
Rtrnodtlod
t-llon, 1210
41 Houses for Rent
monlhiYJ ~ I dtpool1. Mul l
hlvo ..,..,.., Ulllhlll not In·
2 Story 3br Corner Loc • In ·2~·apt~ 'r/llrd·Avo. eluded. ~75-7131- or 175l:lloohlon.lro_.
Ohio. Excollonl eon. lp m
3 or.
11103 boloro .5131._,_
. . ..

~·~xc~e~l ·r~n:•,:cha: ~n:ces~=fo=r~s:uc::c~ e:s ;.;•=n=th:ts~~c~y:·~-~-~·-":ba~:':h~,t~~~;~r~oo~m~·~'r-\~~~r,o~~om,

lially responsible for your more active

2 BR apt lor ronl, ptlyground,

Renta ls

' ~;\1~1.~...._:· "'-'"'~.., • ,,

Nov. 11, t81t

44 .

entranoe,

.~..

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Apartment
tor Rent

Comptu. ~5-3271 lor ap. PomtrOf, 814·...,·5531, 114-84112521
.
'polntmonl,
.

...

"

3

For Solo by Dwnor: 2 chy loll,
'NitiOdllld 3 bedroom homt~
lorgo oul bldg, oonvonlo.. toco!
opt, 111
,lloil, 1 block North Point 2 badroom hlrnl~ ll1d Clly Rocrootlon Ullllll" pold1 •• $300 month,

.

Real Estate General

I' .I' 1 r Is I' I' 1· I' ro I

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

. Real Estate General

live many years longer,"
the patient told his doctor. "That's
why I don't smoke, drink, or have
any other vices. " The doctor laughed
and asked, "Then- why wOuld yl)u
want to LIVE LONGER?"

happen.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) You might be
a tad stow in gelling yourself going to·
day. bul once you're on track. you could
be an amazing finisher.

IAerchandise

r :

RANNY BLACKBURN, BROKER 446·0008
RUTH .

"I want to

- -·-..

7

&amp; ~~Fiwo

I I. - tO

VIRGO (Aug. 23-llept. 22) Enterprises
you originate or personally direct have

· Loa Spun. for Ront.· Evono
lloloro, 1...-.m.

'

·Real Estate General

I

.

Equipment
tor Rent ·

T.V., Good Wor1clno Candl11on·
New R1dlllor Fill.!{~~­
LTD ~ Two 11 Inch - · Of•
LTD· IWO FRl'l-14 ... And Radloi Tlroo. Oood TrOid. Coli'
304-182·2778.
•

GET COZV IN FRONT OF THE FIREPLACE...
Attractive home offers 3 BRs, bath, kitchen, 12x24
family room with fireplace and living room with l ira·
place. Situated on 1.1 2 acre , mi l; approx. 10
.minutes from town.
·

coll304-17!·1t57.
IIIII Pouil'l DIY Coro Conltr.
lolo, 1-.blo, chlldclro. II·F
I a.m. • 15:30 p.m. AQII 2~10.
Sol-. oflor ochaal. Drop-lno
~~.
welcome. 111 Ul 8224. Ntw In· 2 BR home In Rio Grandt.
toni Toddlor c-, 114-44U227. Wlthln walking dlat1nce of col· 18'71 Wlnd110r, 14x70, 2 BR,
Will De babylhtlng In my homo logo. ·s2s01mo. ptuo ulllllloo. 14X14 bodroom odd-on. 614-245133
_ o._ _ _ _ _ _ __
onytlmil.l-·7151. -· ·
· Musl sign llaso:814-698-40t1. · _
TO

48

'

Corner Lot In Ctttahlre, Ottlo. From Chlal11re On 554, Clll 614Excellent Condition. Financing 317·7517, Will Soli On Lind ConAvailable. 904·932-695i, 90.f. ll'lld.
932-7670, 614·387-0649.
1m Schun, 2 bad-. ott'
3 1cras r.lua cllltr housa, dril- .-.atric, turnlahad, 304-171led wei , dug w.ll, 2 oul· 3408.
buildings, gar•g•, moatly llvtl,
good hunting, comer Gunvlllt • 1m 14x7o All E"ctric, 3br, Woodburner,
Tribble Ro1cf, 7 mllu from bowl- Underplnn1ng,
Dock/Slop, S4,000. 114-:MW050,
Ing alloy, Rt. 62, 304-755-7290.

AllfSWERS

iil
114.

251nch---~

three rounds of spades, ruffing the
third in hand (high if necessary). Final·
ly lead the heart queen f rom hand.
If the heart queen wins. play a sec·
ond heart and hope both opponents fol·
low suit.
II an opponent wins the heart queen
with the ace and leads another dia·
mond; win in the dummy and lead a
spade. If East ruffs, you overr uff, lead
·a heart to the king and claim. If E ast
doesn't ruff the spade, ruff high and
return to dummy with a trump. If East
has both missing trumps, congratulate
him on his good defense.

ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII Bath, Khchen, And lira• Uvlng
Rlductd To Stll: 2 Story 3br Room, Nice Loc1llon 6 Mil"

Fuml- Mobllo

horne, 1 mila Hlow town over-

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

••

I

•

••

'

�Times-Sentinel

lpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV .:

Po

56 Pets tor Sale

e4 ·

Farm Sup;ll'ro'

1991

)

gg1

November
Hly I G!'lln

~ ~

'
Sunday

llpolis; OH-Polnt Pleasant, WI/

, 71 ·Autos for Sale

,'; lrv!'.tock

,

Home

81

HQme
Improvements

81

1tU Buick ·RIYioro, II ..........

38,000 mUM. 114-44&amp;-4110 after

Real Estate General , ;

Real Eatate Genelll

Rul.Estate Genel'il

.

PIOfiSUONil sllv!U lWEI Tlll
. ..fiiUIU

.p.m:

--~ YIRGHASMITM,

1r:ll l 'i pm t:111011

82 . Plumbing &amp;
·.· Heating
Plumbing
Fourth ond P~

C.~•·•

-~ - .

R[SID[NIIAL · INVESIIIENTS--· CDIIIERCIAL-:'FARIIS

.

23 LOCUST ST.

·'L :J ...

!· ,

L'INDAFIIAUEY, AEALTOR,4411101
MICHA£LIILLER, REALTOR, 44IIIGI
J'ATRic:IA ~. ASSOC'aTE, Z411-t1711

446-6806

o:ll~~,:.lo

IAOIWl;-111-----.1...
DtAH CALLAHAN, AlALTOR, 4t11101
ELWICE NI£1W, REALTOR, 441.1117
- RUTH.BARR, .AEALTOR,441.o722
DEBOAAH~Ei, .REALTOR.-

EIICirlcal,

Upholstery.
Room oddhlono, oldlng, rooilng,
vinyl

Flohor Wood Slovo, Froo Sland·
lng Brick Llnod; Elc"lonl Con·
dlflon, $22S, ~-441-41111.
lnduotrloi

blltra Novtmber S1le: .
u.-ock Hauling, can
Fruits &amp;
31130 Ford 45 hp I doublo volvo, Haul
Hlllollolo Soloo Or Lo$13,500. 1720 Ford 24 hp 4 WD &amp;
Chuck
Wllllomo
l---~~~~~­ loodor
f14,000. 130 R Boloro Trl lc3UOrooll TIIICklng. 1141001 $U,400. llodol 141 8501, 2 -60N.
AI&gt;P.I... RN-blo Prlcod. fot. H,450; mod" 853 12001
ttr t Fruh Farm, SA M3 1 mile l10,t00; 855 11001 Roglolorod Point Moro, 2 Yooro
South ol C.rponlor, lollow 11 ~tOO. KHforw S...lco C.nlor Old, 10 Ooyo Trolnlng, 14ft.
•-1 ~ •- 5
Trollor, :11,2111; 811 AOHA
1 1gna. 0 penU•-V -m· pm Sloll Rt. 17, Point Pl-nl onil Stock
3 Yoor Old Oolclng. 14-211ro~o~nd

Rlploy Aooa, 304-ltlh'llllll. ·

.
i
1522.

ca-., 2-3 ononlho old 1------:--:-...;.-::---:-----:0~~~ozor sso, 1!4Real Estate General

One Monogram Automatic Futl 1------;,;,.::.:;..:.;;.:::;;..:...:_;__;__ _ _ _ _..._
ou H11tar, $100, 304-&amp;7S.2rn

Inc.

ltBO Ctvyolor ~ 1.1, 1outomlllc, oleo oar, uklna
$1100 010, .. rvot. 114-2113
1181 camoro z48, 2,tOQ aetuol
mil•, window lllckl&lt; build
ohool, jilko now) f13.i6o. 114-

IIOt. AEADV FOR OCCUPANCV _7 NATIONAL
REGISTER: Victorian, axcalltnl condiOon. Down by
!he Ohio River in Gallipolis. OH, VERY ELEGANT

,

3 BR, central air, double car garage,
.woodbumlng-flreplace, total electric.&gt;
CALL 614-742·2330

247-4ilei

1882 CIITIIIro, red, 12,000. 304-

571-7723.

lmlfmiCUHitl, PS, PI, AC,

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

ti'IKIIL . Excellent

GMC :t-15, PU, S1,7'Ui 1N4 S.10
PU, 11,795; lf19 Chivy PU,
Auto, V-8, $1515; IIVI Chivy
Van, 11,115. li&amp;D Auto S.loo,
Hlghwov, 110 N. IM-441-6865.

9 rooms, 3 bedrooms, lzo baths, lull basemen!, while
vinyl siding , front and rear porches, garage, concrele
driveway, extra lot What more could vou want in a
home. See it now.
IHIQB
BUSINESS.O!'fiCEs &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN; 2nd AVE., CLOSE TO COURt HOUSE.

DO YOU LOVE THE OLDER HOliES IN
TOW,N? - Thlr one ia located just across
from GAHS. ~ BRa, 4 baths, LR, kitchen,
sunroam,
lot.

STATE ROUTE 218-1 .263 acre mil. Very
nice home offers 3 BRs, 1 balh, living room
kitchen range and refrigerator, fireplace, cily
. waler, basement. city.schools.

"""lltr

QUIET, SECLUDED setting just minutes to
HMO and downtown. Home leaiures 3 BAs ,
kitchen wlrange &amp; refrig .. LR, DR, carpet,
fireplace, city school district

.. .

GREEN TWP., PORTERBROOK SUBD.,
WITK VERY NICE RANCH • 3 BRa, LA,
kill:hen, ball. &amp; haH, 2 car garage, fireplace.

CQRNER LOTS- Very nice home offers 3
BAS, bath, kitchen, carpet, fireplace, 1 car ·
detached gBI,age.

Camelburq, Inc. 45719
Specialilrng in Pole
Buidings.
Designed to meel your
needs. Any size. ,
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Posl Bt.lldings and

EXCELLENT COMIIERCIAL PROPERTY
· - Presendy used as Rlven~ide Marine~ steel
building with approx. 3,000 sq. h. 1.057
ac:nt1. Prtce reduced.

RIVERVIEW FROM YOUR OWN BACk
YARD -Very nice aD brick home olltn 3
BRI, LA wnireplace, eqUipped kitchen, ..u
buernont
·
·
·
TAKE A LOOK AT TKISIII -localed on .
Second Ave, walk to store, church, scho91
and shopping. 2 s1ory home oHers kitchen.
LR, DR, FA, 3 BAs, 2 baths, gas heaVcan·
tral air.

· Package ~afs. Save
Hundreds, even Thousands
of Dollars.
Local Sates Representative

5 ACRE LOTS, Green Township, Fairlield
Vanco Rd. and Wilson Bostic Rd. Beautiful
place to build a home.
FRONTAGE ON THE RIVER- 3 BAs, LR,

-\i1'~t~J.'g~·-~t.lir:·

GOOD IN·TOWN LOCATION - Just a
·block lrom grocery s10re. Ni98 home oHert
LR. kitchen, BRs, bath, large lront porch.

DONNA CRISENBERY
E.S.R., Box 166
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

JUST -THE HOME FOR YOU II! Very nice
all brick homelocaled on Kalhy St., jus l oil
SR 35, new kilchen . 3 BAs. LR, dining, w,
bath.

NEW USTING - 3 BR, Ill brick ranch with
full baaement and 1.25 acres mil. Green
Twp. Juat a few minullls from town ~ SA
141 .

PH. 614·256-6518
Roconclilionod wuhlro &amp;
dry..., NCh f100 ond 1111· Wo
...Jooollmolllo.ThoWIIhl&lt;&amp;

RIO GRANDE - vacant lot. Utilities
available. Just off SR ~25 near apartments.

87.457 A., rn/1, Clay Twp., Sect. 21Md 27,
$30,000. Near Clay School.

OfVI&lt; SJioA&gt;I, 114-441..1M4,

le£11 ned Olk, Alh And Mlck-

;m.tp-==~~
,

.......

$21,00011 Older home need&amp; some work
but hu potsntial. LR. kitchen , bath, unat·
. tachad workshop &amp; carport, 3 lots ea.
66x166. ·
·BE A HOME OWNER I Very nice starter
home offeil • BRs, 2 baths, LA, FR.·
dinette, lull baSement, gas heaUcent. air,
city IChools.
EVERYTHING YOU COULD WANT - This
sectional home is located just a few ·
minutes from Green Elem. School, 4 BRs,
2 baths, LA, equipped ki!Citen, DR. fireplace,
central air . 16x32 pool wfheater, covered
patio, 20x211 shelter house .
· MOVE IN IIIIIEOIATELYI Attractive home
locattdo on Debby Drive. Thit one has a
beautilul kildltn, family room with c:orn~r
hearth tor woodburner, LA, 3 BRS, I~
baths, dining room, carpet, lzo lots.

PRICE REDUCED BY $6,000... 16 acres
plus nice Cape Cod slyle home w/4 BAs,
balh, kitchen, city schools.
CONCRETE BLOCK GARAGE ' IN
VINTON - 28x32. Concrele llooro, 220
electric Hrvice, forced air luel oil furniC8,
two 7'/$ overhead doors, one walk-in door.
- PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT T1l8 ON~!
- Large log home c:an be purchased wllh
182 acnu or 2
11111 home o"era 4
BRa,_3 ~~. !!C!U)Pf!td kitchen, LA, FJI, 2
fireplacei, heat pump/cant. air (bac:lwp IYI·
tem), ovan~lziKI 2 car attached garage.
Frontage on Raccoon CRI!Ik.

me.

se

..
--

MAJOR REDUCTIONI On lhlt COMMERCIAL BUILDING IN POMEROY. Features n.ice office/1howruom with
llr~e-display window. Loll of storlge space, ruoml _l!P"
stairs for possible apartment. Main Street accesalbilil)',
rivet view... UNLIMITED POSSIBILITIESI NOW ASKING
$t5,000
VACANT LOT· 60 x 100 on Main St. in Pomeroy. Utilities
available, lmmedial8 pouesaionl ASKING $3,900

IIIII brindll, caU o14-112·

irid lupply lhop-Prt
Qoowo.... AI lnide, IIVIH.
Pol Food OMlor. Julio
..... Col 114 4441 03:11, 1-100Qnoooj

.

UICC lloololt,_ Fl&lt;nlll Chow
- . Ill'*- Olcl, Rod, l71

............,.47.

- ._lol.,-

IMCC ChlniH PofolngMo,
l*hlhundo,
JoW7N2II7. 11111:00 pon.

·- ....

-·~· ·-·

·OHIO "OWNSHIP - 53\ol -acrao, more or
less, vtry nice ranch etyle home o"lll'l 3/(
: bedroano, LA, kitchen, balh, lull baHmen~
carpet decll, garage, aiding. Tobarx:o base
and tobaa:o bam. Additional land .

. 181 ACRE FARM - Large brick home, 6
BAs. 2 baths . LR. kitchen, FR. eleo. heat.
carpot, property Iron!&amp; on Raccoon Creek and
Little Raccoon, tobacco base. Can be
purchased wilh more or less land.

MEIGS CO., 240~ .• mil, Beclord 6 Cht.ater
Twp., old original log home with ldd1b0n
added,." orillad well, oounty water
ava~ .. has bean owned by ..,. family tor 4
generation•.
·

NICE RANCH'STYLE HOllE loc:ttleci on
l&lt;ll*/l Dr. ollero 3 BRa, bath, LR, kilchen,
ful buement, gas heal Nice otarter home
or relinlntent home.

RETI~E TO A NICE LOCATION -This
home '! $i1Unt9d on SR ~ near shopping
and ho~pital , 3 BRa, balh, LA, kl!!:llan and _
allacl1ed garalJO w/opener.

OFFICE BUILDING LOCATED AT 250
-SECOND - Office down and 12 ,BR
apartment upsialrt. Very nice building. Call
.for detail.
.

TUPPERS PLAINS. Comfortable 1 floor plan home with 3
bedrooms cozy fireplace in livi~ room, full baaement, I car
=~rner,.~lel~ill dish, 100 K200 lot. ~KING

FAMILY SIZE HOME - Allrac:tlve home
localed at Cerytenary, offers 4 BAs, 2 balhs,
kltct&gt;en, LR. Attached garage ~~~ nl~
lawn.

IIIODLEPORT· IMMEDIATE POSSESSION orUhis one
ftoorplanlrame homewllh deck, carpet, vinyl &amp;hardwood
ftooring, 3-&lt;1 bedrooms,! balhs. Home needs some repeir.
ASRTNG $11,900 Make an offer.
'

TO ALL THE HOME FOOTBALL
Very nice home just 1
blockl
do~IOiov•n, 3 BRa, 111 balhs, LR, OR,

SPECIALI A IItie house located in Antique for Only
$5,000.00

FRONTAGE ON THE RIVER-3 BRa, LA,
ecruippe&lt;l kitchen, fuel oi fumace. cent. lir,

$40 FOURTH - Ill ttory horne oilers LR
kilchen, dining rm .. balh, nice bacl&lt;
gu hee~ don to alemenlllry school.

LOOKING FOR A UTTLE HOME, JUST SOMEPLACE
TO CALL YOUR OWN? WE HAVE WHAT IT TAKESTO
SUIT YOUR NEEDS, GIVE US A CALL HERE AT CLELAND REALTYI

30.5 AC. 11/l, Raccoon Twp. Garntrt Ford
Rd. Pond and bam, lovely place for a new
home.

.18 A. 11/L (Hobart Dillon Subd.) along
Rlc:c:oon Creak, great lor a mobile horM.
Large pine n. on 33 llidel. All level.

-patl lor Sail

- - ... rt •• ..... Pupo", """'·

.

lrame
"':'~:',!t~~ly:~i~u':.
gnge, bam. Approx. 3.88 acres
from town, yelsecluded enough to be
call , come take a look .....
$27,000......... MAKE AN OFFER

ROOMY HOME- Village ol VIRian, 2 11ory,
5 BR, LR, DR, FR, kitchen, carpet, city
water, 2 rm ..bkfg., """'tl&lt;fy used ao ollice.
Shelter house.

r.w

pordl:

I)IU blltfllln~ -.chad garage. .

OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE BY
S10,000III Very nioe home offers 3 BRa, 2
baths LA, kill:hen. This farm is situated on
Sugar Creek Road, Ohio Township, and ·
has a riew '28x40 bam, tobacco base. CaU
for more details.
. LeGRANDE BOULEVARD - An brick, 3
BRa, LR, kitchen, balh, lull basement gas.
forced lir, attached garage, city schools.
$35,80011 - WHY PAY RENT? - Ranch
style home on SR .160, 3 BRs, LA, kitchen,
·· balh, attached garage, 100x300 lot.
THE PLACE TO BE - Near hospital and
shopping, Ill briek, ( BRs, LR, knchan, run
basement, attached garage, large lot.
TKIS COULD BE YOUR LITTLE FARII66 acres m/1, Harrison Twp., t6x24
ecruipped shed, 8x8 ahower house, county
water and electric:, some farm equipment
MOBILE HOME and .82 acres m/1,
$14,500. 2 BAs, LA, kitchen wlranga,
relrig .,_washer and dryer, Nral water.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 2.4 A., nt~,
248 frontage along SR 7, just across lrum
Ohlo River PlaZa.

•

'1731. COMMERCIAL or RESIDENTIAL. Prime
localk&gt;n. Eutt!O A... Opponunily to combine home
and buslnell. Ohio River frontage. Very nice 3

supor_
b_qualily.

&amp; STONE RANCH- Everytltif&gt;;'t opocial about; thia•fashionable contempor•ry home.
Harmonized LR, 1 0~ 3 bedrms., 2 baths, lg. master
bedrm. Loads of'.ea nell in kit., new family room with
a Vicmri ~;~t~ tou~ ,u unit built In w/bar area and
extra storage. Bai::k daot" patiO and gar&amp;Qe . Large lot
wllh trees In a lovely neighborhood. Thla home ia of

1741, Mlt!DLEPORT ANYON£?121,000 -Will buy
litis exceptionally nice 3 bodrm., t~ balhs, 2 s10ry
home. Lovely new carpet, range , washer and d~er.
1'h car garage. Neat and clean home located 507

btdrm. home wtappliances, full basement. This is a
money makilg proposition. can for appolntrnanl

Clooolto,
Good

Sycamore St
.
1780. HANDYMAN SPECIAL- MAKE OFFER. Land
c:ontJact. You,l go beck in time if you live in thia la-ge
2 oiOry homo, 3 bodrmo., bolh, kit, din~g rm., utilily
rm., eellat. Bam w1approx. to olM acre . $26,000.

~

Condhlon,
Mu!l· Soli:

1m

Ford robuiN motor ond
-loolon. 304-t75-3406.

,,
'

Qood 305 Chovy MOior, 3111

TIWbo ChiVy Tlanomloalon,
l200 For llolh, Or Will Trade.
114-317-7127.
171o

.,.,.,

Foi 11Je. rock1 I Dlnlon tor
Olclomoblll, $50, 114-Gt2-lllae

-

ou lonko, bodV po~o. ono

lon lruck w'-1•, rallltDrl,

lloor "'!~, otc. D &amp; A .Wo,
Alplov, ..v. 304-372·3033 or I·

IICIO·Z'IHIU.

79

$28,g()O.....Evono H.lghta, 3 BR, LR, kitchen, bath, run basement.

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

1m Wlnnobogo 311 ong, looko
ond •rune aocid. Cnood lo NIQ

RID G~ANDE AREA-2 .87· acres, mn,
lovely 2 story home wilh 3 BRs, 1112 baths,
kitchen , LR . Ideally located near new
highway.

BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME- 2800 sq. ft. of livings pace, 3
bedrooms, llol baths, located~ 10 acres and borders
Raceoon Creek, Green and Gallipolis schools. CALL
NOW!I , _
1973 MOBILE HOME - A 12x65 mobile home on a
rented lot, washer &amp; dryer hookup In bathroom, 2
badrooms, -13zo x 1m storage building. Priced al
'6,000.00
100 ACRES II or Lon Friendly Ridge in Clay Twp. Water
&amp; electric ava~eble . Priced at $32,500.00.
GOOD INVESTMENT PROPERTY - A 2 Slory frame
double localed on Second Avenue. Gallipolis. 4 rooms
alld bath downstairs and 4 rooms and balh upslairs. Call
today.
LOCATED IN GALLIPOLIS - VIne Street - 4 renlal

22fi.

llonhor Fully Soli Col&gt;-

•

8f.
Home
• Improvements

HOUSE IN GALLIPOLIS- 3 rooms and bath. walking
dis lance to schols and slores. Priced al $16,0¢0.
•
GREAT LAND FOR-DEVELOPMENT- 40 Acres lor sale
in lhe city limits of Gallipolis. Check this one out
GREEN ACRES- Two lois, 1 large level home site, 140
ft. by 148 II. ci!y water, Green School, good ~ondilion .
Priced rig ht at $10.000.00 .

.

.'

....

--~~--

-

•

~

......

~·-

- · -

_

..... ¥

•

.,. .....

I

r.·
• "'.•..,..._._,.,..!..

1734 MAKE OFFER FHA·VMARMER HOME LOAN

CAN MOVE YOU JNTO THIS HOME WITH VE RV
LITTlE MONEY. OWNER Will TAKE A MOBILE
HOME FOR PART PAYMENT. Oelu•e doublewlde,

~

.. . . .

LEA~ , or BUV GROCERY . ,.nlal,
game room ilnd otfler saleo rms. Localod m glOWing

1114.

ma1ter bedroom wlbalh, famil~ bath, 3 bedrma., formal
dining, loads ol pine cabinets. 1 e:ar garage. Super

areo Large 2 otary bi.tlcl"tJ ,wllh shcwroom, 2 bodrm.
apMmonl, lnlc · Plus a nice~ bodnn., -

buy .

heme. Call lot delllil.

NEW USTING:

·

AND SPAN, Like new 1988
wilh 3 BR's, LR, ~!chen
Also 8'•10' util. bldg.

1617. CEDAR RANCH HOME- silualed on 47ocras.
This home feature&amp; 5 bds .• and or, offiee, playroom,
2'A batha utility roorn, cathedral ceilings over livinq
room, dinfng room and kitchen, oonversation pit in liv··
.room and atone lire place, fire and security alarm
system, fi nished family .room with rireplace •. h~at
pump and central air, 2 car g11age, ceNtred pauo,
barn, atocktd pond . Home haa app. 3,000 aq. ft. living
space and many other a~T~enitias . Call .for more
information.

1710 30 ACRE FARM MIL- with IObaoco·base and

barn.' 2 atory trame house with 3 bedoom~. balh,

living room. utillj room . Call lor price and 1oea1ort

1749. NOW IS TKE TIME'TO BUY. 3 ac .. ol ftal
l~nd m~. Enjoy living in a country home very closa
to 1own. Large 2 story ,w/4 bedmts., balh, kit..
dinir19 rm ., LR. 2 cement porches, barn and
bldgs., large trees and a good garden spot
1iJ&gt;
Allordable price. Mid·$40's

CALL TODAY FORAN
APPOINTMENT

1621 PRICE REDUCED: Great olartlf l'omo IIIIU~ng

3 bel. bath, kitchen, INing roam wilh app, 1000 aq. ft. of
living space. Call for app. Priced in the $30'1 .

"1 i NEW LISTING: This home is I~ ltd on 1 ~· m.1
··--- featuring 2 or 3 bedroom with tam1ly room, knehen
bath covered carport, large storage building. This
ho~ it an excellant starter home priced in the 130'a.
Call for mort information.

17'¥1. NEW USTING: IS acreo rrVI,Icleal lor building
houses. Call for mOI't info.
1723 SMALL FARM 16 acreS mil wl 14 ac. mil ·

t662 . OUALITY- LOcATIOK-SPACE- OUallly Is in
lhe ~Jrlck Cape Cod home lhll his a lrlend~ hOme

plisrura and older houoo has 3 brs, LR, l&lt;il, and balh.
Alao 60x75' barn in good condition, corn crib,
macllinery ohtd ond workshop. Mid &lt;0'1.

body ol walar odjolnlng properlY bollndarlas. Sp;K:elo

1726 INVESTORS make yours~! soma mney, 300
acrel"mtl with lour old houses, 3 barns, approlt. 36•48

atmosphere . 11 features 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, living
room overlOoking the Ohio River and a lar~ lake type

a 361146 ~TH181 btlildlng. Perfect far someone that has
a boslness and needs a large stOtage area. Plus, a
14x24 buading that could be used lOt' a showroom .or
a small apartment. CaR foJ mort

more inlormalion.

m

~

1

. WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS In Rodney Village II. Call lor
~ ..;jjie ,

'•

garage. Vou have not idea what a 01~homt unll you

•see 1inside. $40.000.
.

FOR SALE- 62 acres. lawrence Counly.

units, good ir}come property. Call lor more information.

Services

VILLAGE OF CENTERVILLE - Nice 2
slorv oilers 3 BAs. balh, LA, kilchen, DR,
gas heat, 2 fireplaces . Siluated on 1.850
acre.

HOME &amp; ACREAGE IN HARRISON TWP. - 3 bedrooms,
1 bath with deck acrose from and size, 24x22 block
garage. Tobacco pounda~o . Call about lhis one I

obo,' l14.fi}.Jl141

t1W. lfiiO.

CHARM" WIT!rCHIO RIVER
FAONTAGE.Imrnaculale oondillon, 3 beclr!l1o., 1·112
balhs, kilchen, lR&lt; OR with woodburniffl ~aco.
This heme is weu carod lor and k&gt;catod,-.ndy
10 1own and shopping, V«Y gocd. ~on opel. I -

LOG HOllE WITK 10 ACRES M or Un Harrison Twp .. 3
bedrooms, 111 bath, large living room and kitchen. Large
bam and s1orage shed. Nice c:ounlry salting. MUST
I
COUNTRY SETTING FoR THIS A FRAME HOME
- 3 bedroom, living room, family room, ba1h located
on 2.5. acres . Green-Gallipolis school district.
HURRY II CALL TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

75

-noo. COtONIAL

CONVENIENT LOCATION • COM·
FCRTABLE HOME- Jus! at lhe edge ol
• ~ lpwn lhis home oilers .3 BAs. batt&gt;, kitchen, ,
LA. DR. 24•30 garage. Nice shade trees .'
Very well kept.

•2

each, timbet, and all mineral rlghls. Cal few more Info.

1724 CHOICE LOTS Each lot onr 112 acre for
buil~ing houses or for moDi~ homes. ·checK these lots

or 3 bedroo m home,

IMng rocm, flmiiV room. wllh app. 1300 sq. ~ - ol i v"tJ
lpaot. can tor mort k'lformation.

REDUCED TO SM,goo - Older home and
1.75 acre mil, on Neighborhod jusJ a short
distance lrom 141. 4 BAs, kitchen, LR, DR,
unattached garage, Thamtopane windows,
gas heat
NICE STARTER HOME-tocated juat
.the edge of town. This home features
'bedro9ms bath, Wving room, kilchen, clirilng
room and a full buement Five minules 10
downtown.

1875. TAKE A LOOK- AND YOU WILL IE
SURPRISEO TO FIND THIS doublowlde ranch 10 bo

me than just what you are looking for. Perftclly

harmonized in OVIfY wav. LRIFR. DR, 3 BAo, 2 bot!io,

kit. wlbar, range, dishwasher, woodbuming fireplace,

ale. ~P. CIA on awo•. 1¥ · Mrl.. Call today.
EXTRAORDINARY-112 A. mn, beaulilul
large log home, 4 BRs, 2112 balhs, LA, _:.
kitchen, DA: FR, 3 llreplaees. Call lor more ·
detail.
Lli!IColN PIKE - NEW LISTING _ 3 BR
rench, fenced m· yard for pels or children
baaublul covared deck, barn style utilily'
bldg ., affordably priced.

OWNER WANTS ACTION ON TKIS PROPERTY
LOvely home~st waiting fol a nice famUy. Beautiful living room. 22x24 lamily room and
den area..3
ooms, dning aiea wlatrium.doorl.leading.to badl-deek-area- Large Irani
deck aroa. Lola of privacy. Call for 1!0 appoinlrnenl
·

HERMAN NORTHUP RD. - Green Twp
J lo'\f to Green Elementary School. 34 trac:tl
aprox •.20 .aa~~~aa . I tract approx. 5 acres.

;
NG - LOOKING FOR A NICE COUNTRY TYPE HOllE?- Only 3 miles from
9
!'!W1~ !., more or leu. Nice !g. living room _wlfireplace and w_Jwoodburner 1naert.
ril dinl""
and complete modem ki~
room• (lar;t~t ba!nQ 32.2 • 12.3, gas
orm
"1'
....... bai oc: , c pi!!'&lt;D~ ...O) 23x20 unattached garage and also
heat, 2 porcnebull(~ng Largnge a&amp;poncl • FnJil treei and a flat .yard. Don't pass !his one
.extra slorage ld1 .
upl A~le $(D's. 0111 lor an appointment
·
.

I

f'' ·

17.5 A., PM Perry Twp., Symmes Creek
bOttom land, some hill, tobacco base
$a,ooo
·
·
·

31· A., mil, Springlitld Ave., Sec:t.
$45,000. '

az.

iNG

1171 , A·E·D·U.C·E-D-'10 l3t;500- FOA YOUNG
MODERNS - AHordoble 3 or • bedroom ronch Wllh
lR, eat·ln ki!Ghtn, bath, ret.,_range, FA, gal htat,
CIA , on ,g ac. n¥1. cal lor iocolllr1.

""'end ....

f!W. IIAICI OJIFIR- T-.
rooon
12 mil. Alto 2 8R ranch wllfl fi'HI ""'"'·
Rroptace, kilchon: dlnono. balh, patio and nico
bocloprd. Col lot location lftd price.

\\1:\\TI.\\D
Prestigious Neighborhood
5.6 Acr.es more or less of Woodland. Excellent
building site. Land has been .surveyed.

.•... -..,. ..

·-~

1711.

Star, XL, Air, PW,

lol"" C.mplng Trollor, AJC, l
Awning, Excolllnl Condlllonl
301.fl'6-1514.
. Fot loll: IIVI Prowllr ComJIII:I
Sl..,. I, Excollonl Condlllonl

HE~RY fi. 'CLELAND.......,................................t112-t1 81 '
TRACY BRINAQER...........,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,, ............Jt41.2431
JEAN TRUSSELL..............................................Mt-2110
JO HILL.............................................................MS-4481
OFFICE............................................................... II2·2251

. ·--··..

tUed
kit., din . area, cozy living tm., hardwood floors, full
basement wlfamily rm. and woodburner and outside
emry. AC. Shaded dock wlcarpcrt, 26'•32' garage.
Exc811tnt to work on vour cart. SlOfage sheet. O.Vner
ready to deaf. WaniS to mcwe down river.

!tiiZ Ful-slzo Ford Bronco, 300longlno, 4-whool drivo. 614-742·

--------------1

D. C. lettl Stles,l~e.

sewer

· 351 ong. $100.

PRICE REDUCED 10 S24,10011111 -Large
h9me oWers 4 BRa, I zo baths, kitchen, LR,
diiJing room, oil furnace, large unattaChed
girage, located in !he village of Vlntan.

24HII\

~J.!~C~;~f? 13t,tOO -

USTING CLOSE TO TOWN schools, 3 bedrrna., vlnvl ral"'eh, '

Solol Soiol ltBI Nloiln PU,
Auto, PS, 27,000 Ulltt, $5,200i ·
1tl8 Hillin P.U. 5 SpHd,
$4,000_; ltll Ford 4x4, PU; ltl3

Real Estate Generai ·

............... ...... winllnlolo, ole. ClaUde Win,..., 111o Glondl, OH Call 114-

mtchanlcal

ohopo. l2000. 304-175·1541.
GMC Haovy Halt 112 lon pickup.
A-onobly priced. 304-882·

,22St

~- ~-

-

'

niW ll~o, __$7500, mow llko
lrwdo,l.......-6407
CIMC '81 modal lon 112 dump

Mlln Slreet, CMtttr, utt

Building
_Supp[lel .

cond~

75-3433

1188 Bronco II, V-8, 5 epltd,

Aatt Or Mlct? In Your HouH?

55

r:,:

qr 175·7108.

Buv ENFORCER, Klllo . fila &amp;
mice In C&gt;l1ly I loodlng,
GUARANTEED! Avalloblo al:
loum Tn~o Voluo Sl~r. II Will

dec adar, ltf.ll2o1173

v.ry

~on, low
. mlllago,

whHichalr,

11oo11 1arg0 oapoclv ToohlbO
....... 1100.114UIOIM.
Uoool Ollolilll' equipment, 111cliodlntl oyllom wllh
111 am~lrt rtellver, dlah l

turn-ol·thl·century home. 4 bedrm.• 3 baths, hbl'ary,
useful attic and complete basement, 5 fireplaces, gas
heat with c:Sntral air, garage. Ro.mantic paz,ebo,
patios beautituUy landscaped. All loVIng!~ ma~ntwned.
Potenial bed and breakfast or remain residentiaL

1g11 Chovy S-10, outomollc, 4

-w--d~Vo,

Ewtnlnp.

Ralt Or MJct? In 'Your HouH?
Buv ENFORCER, Kille 0111 &amp;
mica In onlr 1 tHdlng,
GUARANTEED! Avolllblo ol:
O'Dell Trut Value Lumber, 634
Eool Moln SlrHI, P-rov. OH
RATS OR MICE?
In Your HouN? IUV ENFOR·
CEA. Klllo Role And Mlco In
OniV I Folding. GUARANTEED!
Avalli!M AI: C.ntral Supply, 17
Cou~ Slrool; Spring Vollov
Hafdwart, 121 .-cuon Plkt;
Odol Truo -VIIuo LBA, Vlno
StrMI AI Third Avenue, Gal·
Jlpcllo, Ohio;·

""'.In

cyl,

Movlo

Practically new
$131,1M-812·2a67

windows,

Real Estate General

~Jd lroclor l Now Holland

For Solo: Now (Novor UHdl
Doon.bch.
Pro-hung,
Slu:Tobacco
32x80,
$10
3 llrgt
Prooo Box11, 145 Eoch. 114-4461272, E.. nlngo l WNkondo.
Moved: Mull Soli: Mogle Chol
Gaa
Stave
$120
G.E.
Rolrlal&lt;alor, St50, Both Whllo,
Goocl' Condhlonll14ool41-0126.

r.pltci!MMnt

corpontry bv AI Tromm, IM-'N2·
mi. CALL COLLECT.

MowriY'L~phol".orirlg oorvlc·
lng 1~ counlv 1111 26 Vllrl· Tho
lllmlluro uphQIII~ng.
Coil 304-175-4154 tor · ho ...
llmolll.

.
UmNOS NEEDED!
WE HAVE GOOD CUSTOMER!il NEEDING RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIE~.
GIVE US A CALLI .

----·-

·•

,,

1117, IPACIOUI DOUILEWIDE rorteh wlllt 3 8R,
LA, DR, kll. Wibar, ronge, rol., lg. lront porch, bocll
- · oloc. hHI pump, CIA, 2 car l'riQI. 2 car

_ . .. 1 ... 11&gt;1.1401.

'!14. ~ NOWI2 IR RANCH, 1bot!i, LA
,.Ill dining aroo, oat·ln kllchtn loc:altd on •z ac:roo
t,tt on S&lt;lrjc Dr. in MorglftTwp. Call.
· ·

..

I

.

,.

1'121 RIVERFRONT PROPERTY • H ACS Mr1. cltcib
land lor blilding hcmu or lor IMbllo hem". llvor
tntrlnot.

'·

17211 ACREAGE· 72 ocril mol {70 f!&gt;1 posiUrt). VtfY
old hcull, omon born, pend, 3lflringo and o! mineral
&lt;Wlll. Col.
1711 COMMERCIAL BUILDING ; HOME •
APARTMENT· al ollhls In ono bUndlt ol rool "!all.
Thlo PfOPirlV lllocoltd on a oomor lol wllh ~
Mlllng ... r1var u Ill boundlrt. Tltio hOrM 1111 1
_. iMtl ol-llal 11 a hcono "' olllco ·M
, . . _ 3 bd. 1 112 bltho, ...,lly .-.. boo-n
...., ' , kMI ol IIDt'aglnl. II, alto, l.atUrtl a 2
bd, I bolh lplllmlnl ovor a 2 car ttrtgl. Calllar .,
oppalnhtllll 11 llllhlll-llng hcono.

--.-..-

- ..

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

Page-08-Sunday Tlmes:-sentlnel

November -1o, 1991

..

Another drop in interest
r-ates-ge-ts-.'so -wh-at!.-res,_,_,_,.,
By JAMES M. KENNEDY
AP Business Editor
NEW YORK - Under almOst
any other circumstances, the news
of another wave of interest rate curs
would have been cause for celebratiQn.
_ •• __
But when the Federhl Reserve
dropped a key rate to its lowest
level in 18' yean;, the
this

his w1dow said that would not he
the last word.
The episode was further clouded
by a brewing scandal over his possible ties to the Israeli intelligence
service and reporrs that his business holdings were in disJress..
To quell concerns about the
comp;uues, two of·Maltwell's sons
were

Farm Fla~hes

Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
number witb your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All contest entries sbould
be turned In to lbe newspaper omce by 4 p.m.
eacb Wednesday. Ia case or atle,tbe winner will
be cbosen by lottery. Next week, a GaUia County
farm will be featured by tbe Gallia -Soil and
Water Conservation Di&lt;ltrict.

Enrollment still open in tax
farm income tax 'course

By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
County Extension
Agent Agriculture
GALLIPOLIS • Enrollment in
the Farm Income Tax Letter Study
Course is still
open. The ten lesson course provides basic infonnation on income
tax regulations and procedures
especially appropriate to farmers.
They also make a ruce reference for
future use. The cost of the course is
S I 0. Call the County Extenswn
Office (446-7007) to start th e

enrollment process.
The U.S . House of Representa·
lives Ag. Subcommittee approved a
plan last week to pay farmers to
produce less milk and to raise dairy .
supports by $1. Representative
Steve Punderson said the plan is
more acceptable than an earlier ·
two-tier plan. Secretary of Agricul·
turc, Madigan, has said tlie adminIStration would "reluctantly agree"
to a d1vcrsion program but a price
increase was out of the quesbon.
A few days earlier the Senate
Ag . Commmee approved a dairy

Gallia County approved
for livestock feed program
GALLIPOLIS - On November
5, the Deputy Administrator, State
and County Operations for the
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service approved Gallia
County for the Livestock Feed Program.
.
To be elig1ble for assistance, a
livestock owner must have suffered
a 40 percent-loss of feed production
on the farm because of a natural
disaster wh1cl! resulted m a need
for purchases of feed in quantities
larger lhan normal for eligible livestock. Eligible livestock are-eaUie,
sheep, horses, mules, swine, goats,
fish and poultry which have been
owned at least six months: or. if
owned less than six months, are
either offspring of eligible livestock or were purchased as a nor·
mal operation and not to obtain
additional benefirs.
A dollar value of all types of
feed crops grown in the county is
established by the County ASC

Committee.
This value is used to determine
the value of feed production loss,
and the value of current year feed
production lhat lhe livestock owner
has available to feed livestock for
the feeding period each eligible
hvestock type has been divided
into eight ranges The dollar value
of feed needs for ~ligible livestock
is based on the average market
price (posted COl!llty price) for com
and the pounds of com needed to
maintain each weight range of each
livestock type the total value of
livestock feed needs is reduced by
the value of current year feed production the livestock owner has
available on the da~ of application
to determine the value of add1tional
feed needs.
The total benefits available lo a
livestock owner are the lessor of
the value of additional livestock
feed needs or the value of feed pro·
ducuon loss.

blll. That bill included a provision
requiring the addition of non-fat
solids to I percem milk and a provision to reduce millc production
through cuts in the size of dairy
herds. It is uncertain how all of this
w1ll shake out or even what is the
best management decision while
waiting for legislation. Dairy is a
major contributor to local Ag.
economy. Financial stress as a
result of drastically lower milk at
the farm level seriously threatens
lhe local Dairy Industry.
The bottom has dropped out of
the hog marlcet. The market experienced nearly a $10 per hundred
drop from mid-October until the
end of the month. Heavier than
expec~d marketings has caused
cash prices to come under so much
pressure. "Doane's" Ag. report
indicates that the only way prices
can recover is if pork featuring
boosts demand or if packers narrow
!heir margin. They feel that neither
look like a viable possibility.
Waoch for fiiCwood insects and
their relatives! A number of differem beetles may be found developing in firewood. The homeowner
may be frightened that the beetles
or wasps may attack them or the
structural lumber in the home. Neither fear is justified. ·
Carpenter ants and termites
may also be found in firewood.
Both are social insects and the
integrity of the colony is usually so
disturbed when the wood is cut and
spht that establishment in the home
is not probable. "Invasion" can be
prevented by not stacking fiTCwood
in or againit ,the home--or other
buildings. Bnng in only enough
firewood lhat can he used up in a
couple of days and keep it stacked
1n a cold portion of the house.
'

Fed's discount rate for loans to
banks is astQnishing in lhe abstract,
considering it was more than three
times that a decade ago.
But in the depressing con~xt of
1991, no number- no maner how
low -looks like a bargain.
While the economy managed to
expand in the third quarter of lhis
year, la~ly it has shown signs of
slipping back into recession.
A monthly sales report from
retailers, for el\ample, showed
more disappointing results f r
October and boded ill for t e
Christmas shopping season.
The banks followed the Fi 's
lead and dropped their prime
ing rates, but the cuts were t
expected to boost holiday spend
since credit cards still carry doubledigit interest rates. ,
PEOPLE:
Maxwell's
Mysterious End
Only a few months ago, flamboyant publisher Robert Maxwell
was making headlines in New York
for his single-handed rescue of The
Daily News, ihe financially troubled tabloid.
His sudden death at sea wrote a
tragic end to one of the ·yc-ar's
biggest business stories.
His nude body was found Tuesday in the Atlantic Ocean off lhe
Canary Islands, where he had been
. sailing on his 180-foot yacht.
Puzzling questions surrounded
his death. A preliminary autopsy
suggested he died of a natural
cause before falling overbOard, but

-1

\

Ohio Lottery

. Bengals lose
__ tQughJm.e~+.. .,
Pittsburgh_

trading suspensiOn, andJhe compa- _
ny announced lhe sale of irs Berlitz
schools as part of a plan to reduce
debts by selling assers.
MAGIC:
Johnson's Disclosure
Hits Business
Magic Johnson's startling
announcement that he had contracted the AIDS v1rus
would have

Cards: 3-H, 1\·C,
3-D, J·S
Super Lotto:
2-8-13-27-43-45
· Kicker: 147216

Page4

Low tonJabtla mld·:!GL
Tuesday hlp In mld-40&amp;.

•

unprecedented buSl·
as well as an •emo-

cal.
"So what?" went the typical
comment - from economic
expe·rts a,nd regular Amerfcans
alike.
The reason for the .widespread
d1sillusionment wasn·~ hard to figure. The Fed has been'i!ropping
rates s~dily since the recessiojl
last year, with little to show
featured by tbe Meigs Soil and
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate
in the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your guess
ofho tbe Daily Sentinel,lll Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769, or-tbe GaUl polis Daily Tribune, 825
third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, and you may

•

I

1 Section, 10 Peg• 25 centt ·
A lluldiMdla Inc. '"wapaPf'

EB6500

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Models From 2200 to 12,00J Watts
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GALLIPOLIS, OH.

'

UNDER CONSTRUCTION • This 24 by 40.
foot extension to present storage facilities is
underway at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy. The addition is located behind the

quarters of the Meigs County Emergency !\1edlcal Services and is being built by Associated
Fabricators, Inc., Pomeroy. Work is expected to
be completed next week.

AIDS virus bill seen as
natient
. . . '" right-to-know
.
.· .
....

4~ ~

~-

~ ~·""

CQLUMBU$, Ohio (AP) - A
bill that would require health care
professionals who know they have
the AIDS vaus or hepatit1s to
•rcport'that information is bemg
descnbed by its supporters as a
paltcnts' right-to-know law.
The bill affecting doctors, den-.
tisrs, nurses, dental hygienists, limited practitioners or podiatrists who
perform exposure-prone procedures
such as surg~ry is awaiting a vote
by th ~ House. probably Tuesday.
Rep. Paul Jones, D-Ravenna ,
said he introduced the measure
because of a situation in his dis·
triCL
"A surgical resident had performed 325 opcrauons on patients
after he had been HIV -tested positive, and then he died,·' Jones said.
He said patients and the State Med·
1cal Board never were told of the
resident's condition.
"Months later, a TV station in
Cleveland began uncov_ermg thi s
and then the hospital said, 'Well ,
maybe we ought to tell the patients
and offer some voluntary tests and

so forth ,"' Jones said.
The bill would require health
care professionals who test positive
fo r the HIV virus to report the
informatiun to the Ohio Department of Health and the appropriate
professional licensing board, and to
patients whom they might have
exposed to the virus as a result of
procedures they perfonned.
Licensing boards then co uld
modify the future practice of an
mfected health care worker. People
failing to report such information
cou ld face revocation of their
licenses.
"No physician should be fearful
of this. It's not an intent to economically destroy somebody. The
intent is to modlfy their practice
accordingly .... Jones said.
The bill would create an advisory committee headed by the Health
Departrn(IIJ~ to specify which surgical or dental procedures arc covered and to establish guidelines for
retroactive notification of patients.
It also would require that all
health care professionals use

--Local New Briefs:-

~'""''-~ ,.:.~·4- :;;~

Rape suspect
held in custody
by officials

m_e.et

1

Balaace ~~ 36/50 Factory
Warraaty

PLANNING FOR CAREER DAY- Mem·
bers of the Council for Exceptional Children
chapter at the University or Rio Grande discss
plans for tbe upcoming Career Day for develop-

f

--

mentally handicapped students"rrom a fivecoun!y area or southeastern Ohio. The Career
Day is set ror Wednesday in Rio Grande's James
A. Rhodes·Student Center.

·tcareer-·Day function to .asstst
students from 5-county area

Pomer.oy..Yule parade

-·Man hurt

appomt a ncgollating-team ·to
resolve the situauon "not through
use of a state of emergency but by
pohlical means." Yeltsm's apparent indecision in using·force, and
the limited number of troops he
was able to send to the region to·
enforce his decree, showed his gov- .
ernmeni to be weak in areas not'
dominated by ethnic Russians.
If Yeltsin had ordered troops to
open fire, violence could havC:
spread to other parrs of lhe Russian;
Federation with substanual nonRussian populat10ns. The backlas~
could also have worsened Russia'!·
relations w1lh Mushm republics. ••
Cheehcn-Jngushetia. declared''
independence from Russ•a
on Nov.·
2. Six days later, Ycltsin declared a.,
state of emergency and sent troops;
to the republic.
- ·•
Local leaders responded by'
massing tens of thousands of pea,
pic in the strccrs, forcing the badly
outnumbered uoops to wjthdi'aw td
the Russian city of Mmeralny ~
Vodi.
Russian authorities had issued
an arrest wammt Cor Dudayev. But
Yelrsin's roprese,ntative in Grozny
failed to carry it out
•
Dudayev has led the drive in th~
mainly Mushm autonomous region
of 1.3 million people 930 miles .
southeast of Moscow to break frcp
of Russian control, which began
under the czars.
·
r-- ~·

nationally recommended p~ccau ­
tionary measures in dealing with
blood and body nuids.
Such disclosure also would be
required by patients.
"We did put languRge into the
b1llthat said ... if a patient is tested
HIV -positive, they have an obligation to ~II the physician or lhe person that's perfonning the invasive
surgery," Jones said.
The House Health and Retirement Commiuee headed-by Jones
recommended the measure for passage last week after defeating an
amendment from Rep. Raymond
Sines, R-Perry, that would have
required annual tcstmg of health
care workers.
"In my opinion, anyone who's
tested pos1tive is not going to come
up to the board and say, 'Hey, I'm
HIV positive,"' Sines said.
'

Thanksgiving supper this weekend

'91' Sunbird Convertible..S10,900
'91' Grand Ams................;58888
1' Skylarks:••••..S8900 in"S0 onn'91' Celftvry-V·6•••••••••:::srr,900
'9-1LGrand-Prix .............~.5 12:1lDI1
'91' Regals.....................S12,900

"Why should Russia, Moscow.
from where this evil and force is
coming, not feel a response, a reaction?"
He did not say how such auacks
would be earned out, but noted
several times that he once commanded stra~gic nuclear bombers.
" Why should our mothers cry,
our old people cry, why should our
children cry and live so much in
fear," Dudayev said.
There was no immedia~ reaction to the thr!:llts from Russian
officials.
Yeltsin d1d not attend the leglSiative session and had no immedl·
ate comment on the resolution,
which also called for negotiations.
for a pohlical soluuon.
But two of his close allies, Vice
President Alexander Rutskoi and
speaker of the legislature Ruslan
Khasbulatov. backed the resolution, signaling that the Russian
president had decitred to retreat
from a confrontauon.
There was no sign of compro·mise from the Chechen-lngush
leaders on their mdependcnce declaration.
The Russian leg1slature's resolution. approved by a vote of 177 to
4, underscored the necessity of preserving the .territonal tnfegrity of
Russia and said Yeltsin had acted
legally in declaring the state of
emergency.
But the leg1slators voted to

A Middleport man is expected
J'
to be charged ami arraigned on
t~
~aturday
Monday following the alleged rape ·
of two teenaged girls in Pomeroy
The Meigs County Retired Teachers Association w1ll meet Satover the weekend.
According to a Pomeroy Pohce
urda y at 1hc Me1gs Museum 1n Pomeroy at 12:30 p.m. Call 9923887 for reservations.
Department spokesperson, Pohce
Ch1ef Gerald Rought and Lt James
Stacy - with assistance from Middleport Police officials and Me1gs
County Assistant Prosecutmg
RIO GRANDE : K coordinated
Star Grange will hold irs annual Thanksgiving Supper on SaturAttorney George McCarthy • tOOk, effort between the University of
day nt 6:30p.m. at lhe Salem Cehtcr Fire Stauon.
the suspect mto custody at_approxi- Rio Grand~. public school educaTurkey will'be-fumishcd by lhe grange and ·evcryoncattgnding 1s
mately 3:30a.m. on Sunday, after a tors and area businesses-win result.
to bring a covered dish.
rape was reported at a Sta~ Street in a Career Day program for
residence.
approximately 350 students who
All members, potential members and friends arc invited to
attend.
Two females, both in their early are developmentally handicapped.
teens, were transported to Veterans
The Career Day win be held in
Memorial
Hospital
shortly
therethe
Student Center at Rio Grande
Dec....l ~
after, one by private car and the on WedneSilay,-Nov. 13, saial&gt;r.
The Pomeroy Merc~ants Association win host the Chnstmas
other by the Pomeroy unit of Meigs Ralph Shibley, professor of educa·~
parade, "Home For the Holidays" on Dec. 1 at 2 p.m. during o[ien'
EMS.
.
lion at Rio Grande and director of
house in £omeJ.oy,_Lin~,up will begin at 1 p.m. behind lhe old
The qohce d£Partment the event.
- "' ~· Poineioy'Jililior High School. Deadline foi entr)' is Nov :25 and fu r:' • ~otesper~on. repor-ted··thaHhe ~·f~c~~r~e~a~t~r~d~1l~~~·h·~il~d~re~n~1~~~~~~
- thcr-information-On-the..parade.may be ObtainCd-by..calling-.Vicki- ~alleged ra~lSI lS beheved to hav~ Ferrell at Buttons and Bows 992·5177.
fo_rced hlS way through a ftrst-noor .
'
wmdow.
jected ~
. one. on an
.ll~'tet
trifUO river
. . Meigs County Prosecuting -al~~aunpear basis, Sh1bley srud:
':1'1.
6
Anorney Steven L. Story reported
Han&lt;li~apped yo~th ar~ un~er• &lt;. -t
on Monday morning that rape employed, he exphuned. StatlSb·
A Long Bottom man was hospitalized after his car ran into the
charges would be filed sometime c~l research data md1cates tha! a
Ohio River near Reedsville early Saturday morning.
on Monday against the man. At h1gh percentage of these spe~1al
According to a report from lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
press time, those charges had not n~e~s gradu~tes t~nd to re.s1d.e
Highway Patrol, John J. Evans, 32, of Long Bottom was westbound
been filed, and the subject Wl~m .a 20-~tle radius of !he msbon S.R. 124 and fell asleep atlhe wheel. His car went off the right
remained in the Meigs County Jail.
tuuon m whlC~ !'ICY were educated.
side of the roadway, then went back across the.road, through a
Story alsq reported lhat the sub"The tranSitJOn from school to
guardrail and into lhe Ohio River.
ject's arraignment was set to take work could be enhanced by !he
Evans was transported by the Meigs County Emergency Medical
place sometime on Monday, as development of a comprehens1ve
Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital. He was lhen transfercd to
soon as County Court Judge Career Day pro~ stryactured_ to
Camden-Clark Hospital in Parkersbur~ where he was in stable eonPatrick H. O'Brien could make !nclude mulu-moda11ty mstrucuon
· dition as of Monday morning, accordmg to a hospital spokeswomarrangcmenrs for the"hearing." (The · m such areas as career awarenes~.
an. ·
Meigs Coun~y Courthouse was c_areer plann.~ng _and mature decl·
Continued on page 3
closed on Monday morning in s1on making, Shabley added.
, · ·
' "'· •
observance ofVetetans Da~.)
Coptlnued'on page 3

Retirees

FACT9RY_·
_PROGRAM CARS~

MOSCOW (AP) - Russian
Federation President Boris N.
Yeltsm suffered a setback today
when his legislature refused to
endorse the state of emergency he
had declared in a secessionist Mus'lim enclave.
The crisis threatened to badly
damage the authority of Yeltsin,
who emerged as the most powerful
Soviet leader af~r the failed hardline coup in August against Sov1et
President Mikhail S. Gorbachev.
The reSQiution is not binding, but
may force Yeltsin to withdraw his
decree.
The situabon remained tense m
the Chechen -lngush capital,
Grozny, where militan!S flred automatic weapons in the air and
honked car horns to celebrate the
Russian retreat. Militants on Sdnday forced the retreat of nearly
t,OOO Russian troops sent into the
enclave Saturday to enforce emcr-.
gency rule.
-Immediately before the legislature voted, the president of the
Caucasus Mountains enclave in
southern Russia said he would
order terrorist attacks on nuclear
power stations and subways in
Moscow if Ycltsin did not back
down.
" Around Moscow, there are
very many nuclear power stations," the prosiden~ retired Soviet
army general Dzhokar Dudayev .
told Western reporters in Grozny.

drivih

.

4

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