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~riday, oecember 23, 199(c

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

•

Laid-back churches promote great awakening
'

EDITOR'S NOTE- Out or tile genentlon lll8iDIIDe churclaes roraot
... uilea a aew religious middle dll8s that Ia tnaslormlllfl Amerkaa
Jlroteltaadlm. loB the lint IDstallmellt or the two-part series ''The New
Devout" details, baby boomers aad busten are lladlo&amp; a spiritual home
Ia three aew movemeata that combiDe a casual worship style with a
cleaaaadlq coaservati.e theology.

!tv DAVID. BAtGGS .

--

.

AI' Religion Writer

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP)-The lineofcarssnakeddown the long driveway
of Harvest Christian Fellowship and stretched for a quaner-mile alongArling·
too Avenue.
Outside, between the capuccino stand and extensive playground, young men
huddled in T-shirts proclaiming' 'God's O~m,'' ~bile bro~ ~irtysoJI!ethin~

.
'

~mong
!

,.

middle class

•

,,
Cl o ud y

psrents in denim watched their children run ahead in play clothes donned
before - not after- church.
!aside, Bonnie McNichols, dressed casually in a brightly colored shirt, knelt .
in prayer. She bad been baptiied in Baptist, Nazarene and Salvation Army
churches and had thought of church as a place to go on Christmas and Easter,
and only then if you could afford nice clothes.
When her marriage broke up and "I was hurting so bad I didn't have
anyplace else to go," she ventured into Harvest, part of the Calvary Chapel
movement.
"It was like I got married," said McNichols, 61. "I cried. I knew it was a
commitment for life."
Parking jams in church lots. Bible-toting baby boomers and busters. No
suiiS, no ties, noduli services. Three rapidly growing movements are emerging
from the fringes of American religious life and transforming Protestantism.
Since the mid-'60s, the Hope Chapel, Calvary Chapel and Vineyard Chris·
tianFellowshipmovementsliavegrownfromthreetomorethan900churcbes.
And while boomers and busters increasingly tum their backs on mainline
churches, nearly three-quarters of these movements' congregation members
are between the ages of 21 and 45.
Calvary, Vineyard and Hope have reached out to many of the people often
overlooked by mainline churches - youths, blue-collar families, people
recovering from addictions to sex, alcohol or drugs, and the adult children of
divorce.
.
Reflecting their Southern California roots, the movements have achieved
success by blending conservative Christian theology with a laid-back approach. Pastors dress in jeans, rock replaces organ music, and members hug
one another.
Already, the influence on mainline churches can be seen in the addition of
contemporary music at youth services and the evolution of specialized ministries for men, women, singles and young couples.
Some are calling it a third Great Awakening among the middle class in
America.
. "In my view, it's been a reformation," says the Rev. Carl Tuttle, the cherub; faced senior pastor of the Vineyard Christian Fellowship.

em\)lem can feefat home.
·,
~reaching to the first generation in modem times raised to a large exte~t
outside the church, the leaders of Vineyard, Hope and Calvary share the sam~
credo: Don't get hung up on dress codes and music from another century ~h~t
keep people away.
,
"We've alienated people on the negotiable issues and they never have an
opportunitytohearthenon-negotiables,"saidtheRev.GregLaurie,Harvest's
pastor.
Those non-negotiablcs include traditional Christian beliefs in the divinitY.
and resunection of Christ and that the Bible reveals the Word of God. Based
on their understanding of Scriptures, church leaders also take strong stand(
against abortion and homosexuality.
c;ompletely untraditional is the spareness of both the churches' services and
their architecture, with sanctuaries containing little of the -usual Christian
symbolism such as altar tables or large crosses as backdrops.
For the first 30 minutes at Hope Chapel, a band plays. contemporary
Ch~stian music. People Clad in shorts and jeans, jogging suits and &amp;expensive.
slacks feel free to raise their bands, clap, stand up or sit quietly as the spirit
moves them.
When .the music stops, a minister stands and gives a low-key, hour-long
sermon.
Nazarian, a former Catholic whose lanky frame and silver hair could make
him a stand-in for Phil Donahue, is no hellfire preacher. Often, he roams the
front of the room like the talk show host he resembles, explaining the fourt11
chapter of John.with his left hand cas)Ially tucked in his pocket.
.
"High-grace, low-risk" is the way Nazarian characterizes the churchgoing
experience at Hope.
~· Sometimes, we get ·focused on the church as an institution, rather than
people encountering God," he said. "You have to minister to your culture.';
That requires work in a culture where many baby boomets and busters view
the church as an uncaring institution inelevant to their lives, Nazarian said.
i\t Hope, the church holds events such as free car washes to encourage
newcomers. "Jesus washed feet. We wash cars," he said.
;
The Rev. Chris Cannon, associate pastor, was first attracted to Hope Chapel
\
in :1985 by the surfing ministry, which sponsored surfing films, trips and
Greeters welcome members of Hope Chapel in Hermosa Beach the moment giveaways to the young men and women hanging around the beach a couple
· they enter tbe psrking Jot of the Lucky Mart supermarketthat overshadows the blocks away. He is typical of many of the movements' ministers, who,ari~
· convened bowling alley housing the chureh.
diiectly from the membership without bothering with a seminary degree. ,
The Rev. Zac Nazarian, dressed in an outfit more akin to golfipg than
OnSaturdaymomingsoveratVineyardChristianinAnabeim,one~UQuo~f
pastoring, waits at the top of the stairs to add a hug and his own warm greeting. members picks a neighborhood for street evangelism, which includes.worship
Forget about stains on the rugs. Drinking coffee is encouraged in the and clothing distribution. Another"evangelism-grocery team" goes door-tosanctuary, a simple meeting room with hard-backed chairs and a podium. It is door in a different ,11rea, inviting residents to church, volunteering prayer for
a
whe.rc a ~ou~g man in a black leather jacket sporting an American flag needs in the household and offering groceries.

pace

•
mttsBig rigs deliver Christmas
Family of truckers puts holiday on parade in Vinton
By KEVIN PINSON
Tllil11 81ntlnel8tatl
VINTON-Christmasmustbeprettybigin this village
The truckers, joined by Santa Claus
of300pcople-ittookmorelbanadozen18-wbeeltrucks and other village residents, greeted the
to delivef it Friday.
Erom the air, it must have looked like the world's' Christmas weekend whh blasts of air
longest and slowest-moving convoy. Actually, it was just . horns and the smell of dleaelfuel.
tbe ·Marcum family parading through the center of the
• village In 15 Atlas Van Lines, Inc, trucks decorated with
• wreat~· tinsel and ribbon.
true~.
.
The truckers, joined by Santa Claus and other village
"It was better (money) than anything I had seen at the
residents, greeted the Christmas weekend with blasts of time," he said. Five of Harold's brothers, some of whom
air horns and.the smell of diesel fuel.
were making$50 a week, saw that that he was bringing in
Tliree generations of Marcurns drive trucks for a living._, $50 a day and decided to join the hauling profession.
moel of them -for Adas.
Today, more than 20 memben of lhe extended family
~lroi!I Marcum, the oldest son of the late HoUie and drive trucks. Harold, the oldest, is now retired. The youngLola Marcum, started the trucking tradition in 1955 when csris·his nephew, 27-year-old J.D. Campbell.
bo qliit pumping gas for $1 an hourand bought himself a
When not on the road, most of the Marcums reside in

•Let it snow•:

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8 PM • 12 MIDNIGHT
EVERYDAY ·SiVINGS
FROM
.
I

L----'-'--\---'-- - - '

POLAR PREPARED • Ed

20%To·60%

.,

8 PM·9 PM-ALL SWEATERS
REDUCED All ADDITIONAL

•

Sllloastudsaexttooneofthe
Ustatehilbwtydepartmeot's
..ow plows at tile Chester of·
Ike.

15% SAYINGS TO. 50%

&gt;

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r

9 PM·l 0 PM- FREE GIFT
WITH EACH PURCHASE

in early
January,saidoffice
manager Dave
Speaecr.
The new irucks,
equipped with
snow plows, along'
with a new road
grader, will bolster
thegarage'ssnow~

fighting arsenal which is responsible for clearing 250
miles of road, he indicated.
In addition, the garage has enough salt stockpiled to
· handle three-to-lour really bad snow stonns, he added.
As fat as preparedness: "We're ready, willing and
able ... and we don't WJnt to," he said..
The Ohio Department of Transportation garage in
Chester is fully prepsred for another monstrous win·
ter, said Earl Crothers, area maintenance supervisor
for Meigs, Gallia and Vinton couQties.
The Chester office has1,118.9 tons of salt, 920 tons
of ciaders and 300 tons of salt-cinder mix, Crothers
said. 1be state offtee has 12 plows wilb three trucks
that can have plows and spinners attached within 30
minutes, bo added. A spinner is the attachment on the
back of a vehicle that slings the salt and cinders.
"I think we can handle anything.Meigs County has

By KEVIN PINSON
Tribune r.- Stan
GAlliPOLIS - Two upcoming' .
murder trials have the county sweat :
ing.
,
·
Becausfthe alleged murderers are -·
indigent, the county must foot the bill
for their defenses.
"We are worried to death about it,"
' County Commission President Ken- ..
hteth Fanner said."We hope tbe$C two
murder cases ... will J['ot break the
.county. We have othei: reapoasibili-·
ties in the county that need the re!IOurces. But we, by law, are forced to
defend the indigent and we will make
sure we meet the letter of the law."
According to records from the
auditor's office, lhecountyspent more
than $81,000 in 1991 for the defense
of William Mathias, who was convicted of the rape and murder of a 12·
year-old girl.
Total expenditures from the indi·
gent defense fund for that year were
$250,000, Commission Vice Pr~i· ·
dent Harold Montgomery said.
"
This year, the county spent' ·
$120,663 of the $130,000 appropriated for indigent def~nse. And there"
were no major trials.
If the Mathias case is any indication, the two upcoming murder trials.
could more than wipe out the yet-to-'
be-detennined !995 appropriation.
In 1991, money had to be pulle..:.
from line items in the General Fund to
meet expenses, Montgomery said.
The commission is anticipating taking the same steps for 1995, possibly.·
on a grander scale.
"We're going to have to take into
Continued on
A2
.

· IN THIS DAY WHEN CHRIS~S Is so
hlgh,Y commercialized, tM Bntdford Church
of Chrl8t In Melp County u..d s live Mtlv. tty to ptJint up the "'!'I mflllnlng of the obs.,.nce- the birth of Christ This Is the
third ye.r for the church's tableau. Roles
were taken by costumed church meml»rs,
and brought In for the display were two
sheep, a goat and s donkey. While st right,
Ammee Carman, 4, daughter of Tim and
Beth Csrman of Gallipolis, puts In her order
to Santa Clsus Thursday at the Gslllpolls
City par/c. Santa was ·making one of his/sst
publlt; appearances before returning to ttr.
North Pole to prepare for Saturday night's
toy delivery.

COntlnUid on p~~ge A2

'St/f·motlvstetl achiever'

.,

·as Eastern grad featured

~

.'
,•'

as star of •Generation x·

•

10 PM·ll PM- ALL JEANS
REDUCED AN
ADDITIONAL 15%.

•,

'
'•
~

•&gt;
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We're delighted with how Southeast Ohio has taken to dialing 10-ATI first •t
41

.:.··

for 10% toll call savings within the 614 area shaded oo the map. So to keep "
those savings coming, we're ~oing to extend the 10% offer rhrough 1/31/95.
Keep dialing 10-ATI first; and the savings will keep coming your way.
That's 10-AIT + 1 + the number as you usuallY do.
With Al&amp;T there are no time restrictions, no gimmicks. No need to sign
up. No monthly fee. If you have any questions please give us a call at
1800-282-4212, ext. 80010. It's all so simple. It's lOtATI and 100/o savings.
Al&amp;T is bringing quality and savings even clos~r to home.

AN ADDITIONAL 10% OFF
YOUR

liVE!

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Glft\Vnp

~--~-. A1lf. Yollr_'lhle_\'oice.'" _

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'SoYe .m. on hills hi S25 or 1es&lt; Comparison 10 Oh;; Belts loll
sched&gt;le B. SUbj&lt;ct 10 hilling mi~hillfJ&lt; Nut milable in M1. \\:moo,

1\ederi&lt;klown, Danville, Go']'hier. Martinsbufl!, Ulico, ilomer and
. Ct:nlero•nl! areas. l'romolioo extendc:d lhroujjh 1/31/9S.

.f

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Meigs County hires fair housing
coordinator, grant administrator

GOOD MORNING

Governor ties gas
tax increase
to voter approval

Dl
83
D4-7

Insert
A4
A5

Cl-6
81
A2
...=.._

c.,..,ow.v...,,.......c..

N-~~~~1~~~23. Raqdolpll moved to Minot (average February te!flperature: :~:c~:=~~~~!:~;:.~.::a~d~:~~r:~ Miners going back to work at once-idled mine
ni~_l_and 11l!ilt a buaincss from scra.t~l).,__~~ i)lt~rviewed most j~_

~

1'

ews capsules

Business
EAST MEJbS -One 1985 Eastern High School graduate has landed herself ~ By JIM FREEMAN
an exclusive position in Europe and has been featured in the Dec. 12 issue of
Tlmt...Sentlnel Staff
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Calendars
Fortune Magaiine.
POMEROY. The Meigs County Board of Com misVoters - no! state legislators Classifieds
Beth Randolph was chosen a5 one of the top
sioners. Friday hired Jean Trussell of Long Bottom as
should decide if the stale gasonine of 250 candidates to be featured in this
fair housing coordinator and grant administrator.
· line tax is increased to provide Comia
article about diligent members of generation X
Cunently, Trussell is the executive director of the
more money for highway con- Editorials
• thoSe born aftel1963.
Meigs County Housing Authoritl( and is employed by
struction, Gov . George Local
Randolph, a Reedsville native, describes herthe village of Middleport as grants administrator for two
Gov. volnovtch
Voinovich said.
self as a self-motivated achiever, according to
and three days 8 week, respectively.
Voinovich said he has not Obituaries
Fortune Magazine. She bad managed a major
According to commission President Fred Hoffman, detennined if a boost in the 22-cents-a-gallon fuel tax is Sports
reservations C:enter for Choice Hotels, which
she will be hired as fair housing cootdinator and grants necessary.
.
Along the River
operates Quality and Comfort Inns.
administrator for a minimum of 16 hours a ·week at
"Let's put it this way. I have not had the extens1ve
Her father disappeared when she was 8 years
$1l .50 per hour, her cunent waae. Sbe will work 16 • discussion thatl should have with thee.pcrts atthis stage _W..._ea:.:.:.c:th_:e_r_ _ _ __
old, so she and her two younger sisters were
hours a week for the Meigs County Housing Authority ofthegametocommentonewayortheother," Voinovich
raised by their mother, Jenny Jackson, on a high
and eighl hours a week for the vill•sc ofM«iileport.
said.
·
school secretary's salary. Randolph put herself
Hoffman said the county is required to have a fair
The Ohio DepartmentofTransportation warned earlier
through two-years at Hocking College by workhousing coordinator and does not have one at present.
this month that the share of gas tax money used to build
L..!!!~~~~..J ing in a telemarketing facility that Choice opcr·
"Meigs County also nails a grants administrator to . roads was beingdrainedforthc State Highway Patrol, tax
ated. ·
not only assist the county and communities in applying credits for ethanol, environmental mandates and olher FmiCrpw
"I was a sponge," Randolph told Fortune Magazine in an interview· "llo~e
for grants, but to do the necessary administration and purposes. ·
.
BobHoe]k;h
tfavel. I absolutely love tho haspilality industry. And yes,l had seenn m~y~
m~om~+~~~oca~l'~~~~~:grants and rcvolviliJ loans which we
Another $!50 million a year js needed to keep hlghway JimSapds
... "Struggle: I wanted·more·for·myself:"
.
. --· siiCI-. -·
c onSitllCli'On-from-halting'Within-two y~ars;-the-agency&lt;
After graduation in 1967, Randolph worked as a travel agent. Then &lt;:;boice
"Not having such a person has caused continuing said. An increase of 3 cents a gallon in the gas tax would
called to 'I'Y that the compstiy planned to open a large reservations center in
problems with the Ohio Department of Development raise such an amount.

ll

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9
~~~ :sr:!!·:
Expense of pending
murder trials may
strain county budget

POMEROY- 'Let it snow,let it snow,let it ID()w'
is the fune some
and state snow removal worke11 are
singing.
:
Once frost-bit·
ten by last winter's
heavy snows, local
removal crews
aren't being twice
shy about preparations for ·thiS win- ..
ter.. The ·Meigs
County Hlt:hwllY

TONIGHT

•·

Symbols of the season...

~ORGE

•.

.Sill!

Vinton. Although
they spend a lot
of time traveling
(brother Holley
bas been in all 48
of the continental
United States as
well as Mexico
and Canada), the
family is still very
close, Harold
said.
BIG RIG PARADE-Onlookers watch u15 tndls iach their way dowl State RGIIte
"We had what iD Vinton Friday. ne Marcum ramlly, wlllch luis more than 20 professloul tnlck drlv~
we called a pray- Jlllracled through the •lllage berore holdlag their annual Christmas reast at the towa haiL. _
ingmotherandwe
always stuck together," he said. "If one of us was in tiona! attention. The Wall Street Journal spotlighted titi:
trouble, all of us were in trouble."
Marcums in one of its " 12 Days of Christmas" features ~t
The family's holiday homecoming bas attracted anaContinued on page A2
••

By
ABATE and JIM FREEMAN
Timll Santlnel Statl

Nonoal
hPIQIIII

Details

on Page

Meigs County crews
prepare for winter

(Lee, Zena, Wrangler, Carhcnt, RIO &amp; ••)

•

cailllldltea. trained the sujlervilcrs; and rieJIUiiated contracts for offtee' '!Uip-

ment, cleaning supplies and even food for the kitchen.
·~was scared to death of supervising people older than me," Randolph says,
"and at first I hired passive.people like I uaed to be." Refreshingly unjade~·)his
"simple Miclwestem gal," u ·• calls herself, wauld stun most MBA types .
with her ideas for motivating worken.
Her best, which helped makt; Mi'not a model of productivity for Choice, is
. her ~okiest: "My communication hig~way, • ihe said excitedly to the Fonune
Mal'zine interviewer. Last Febru..:l', when SOII1C of her 18.supervisors were
.

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Contln

•O!I'JIIIII A2

local monitoring, Sll,OOOJnthe-1992-Community-Dc~ C-HARbESTON,-W.V~. (AI') -At least So Unit~ Mine Workers coal miners_hi.V••t~i:j-t-velopment Block Grant formula grant wu not used by b.red at a onoe-idled Eastern Associated Coal Corp. mme m Kanawha County, a umon 01
Meigs County and therefii!C lost." ·
said Friday.
·
. .
.
. .
Funding the position comes from $15,500 available
Bob Phalen, president of the UMW'~ Dtstnct 17 tn Charleston, satd mmers and ~ntractors
from fair housing and local CDBG administratioa funds. agreed to a contract Tbussday. The !"aJonty of the atc?'d follows the 1993 Bthjmtnous Coal
Hoffman said the aetion will be "good for the county" Operators Association agreement With the umon, he sat~. .
.
and "could develop into 1arJer activities ~ 'the future
Up to 175 jobs will eventually be added at the Mountam Vtew surface.mn~ near Cbely~. he
with grant fundi obtained t!uouP tllis·~ for Meigs said. The min~. fonnerly known as Slaughters Creek, was closed about ten years ago, .•dhna
County and villages and IOWDIIIipt Within the county." hundreds or workers, Phalen Slid. Some of the 50 lUred were former employees of the mtne; he
1 Trussell is to begin her acldi~ duti~ ~Jan. 1.
said.
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�Pomeroy-Middleport~e'III.,Oiia, O~bint.

Page A2-Sundey Tlm.....S.ntlnel

Accu-Weat~Je~A' forecast for daylime coodilioos BDd

MICH.

j

IMansfield Iso• I•
IND.

I

Christmas Day cloudy,
·but no rain in forecast

50

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to filii to the mid·:itls :Salllrday with
and highs on Christmas will be
around SO north and mid-50s far
south.
The record bigb temperatUre fOI'
Salllrday at the Columbus weather
station was 66 in 1889. The recon1
low was -12 in 1983.
Weatbtr forecast:
Christmas Day ... Morning clouds
and fog ... Becoming partly sunny.
Continued mild with bigbs from
the upper 40s north to lower 50s
south.
•
Monday ·
through
Wednesday ... Fair. Lows in the 30s.
Highs 50 to SS.

Continued from page A1
consideration these coming trials and
adjust our budget accordingly," Mont·
gomery said.
·
The state reimburses a portion of
the indigent defense expenses at the
end of lhe year, but the county must
r pay out of its own pocket first. The
amount of reimbursement has been
rapidly shrinking, Montgomery said.
The state used to pay 50 percent of
the cost; this year the reimbursement
rate is 38.5 percent.
"Not only are we experiencing
higher costs, we 're getting less reimbursement from the state," Montgom·
ery said. The Ohio County Commissioners Association is putting pressure on the state to bring the reimbursement level back up, he added.
On the prosecution end, the possibility of two murder trials is not as big
of a problem financially. Unless unusual expenses such as DNA testing
arise, Prosecuting Attorney Brent
Saunders said he is confident his of·
fice can handle the costs.
"I've been able to cover almost
every murder case out of my budget,"
he said.
Awaiting trial are Michael Wolfe
of Huntington, W.Va., who is accused of shooting Eddie A. Ferguson
Oct. 4 during a domestic dispute in
Crown City, and Johnny White of
Gallipolis, for allegedly killing his
2

~~:;h~n~~e~u~;!~d~~. attxheir

.Generation

Continued fi'om page A1
acting cranky and apathetic, she plastered her office wall with a self-constructed cardboard highway. She des·
ignated a vehicle for each supervisor
• and called herself "the 911 car."
In three-hour one-iln-ilne discus·sions, Ms. 911leamed that some suAccording to Israeli news pervisors viewed her as intimidating.
reports, the .Syrian chief of staff, ·Others wanted more praise.
Gen. Hikmat Shibabi, participated
She told them: "Some of you are on
for bis government
one-way highways. You're the yes
Barak several times has questioned ~ wisdom of giving up the people who never tell me you disagree, and then go bitch outside of
str~tegrc Golan !"leagbts e!lclay~.
· whtl_e also pledgrng Israel s milt- meetings. Others are on roads wilh
tary would carry out whatever pot holes. You blame everyone a.-ound
you for problems. I want everyone to
peace treaty was COI)Ciuded.
travel
on my four-lane highway, conIsrael has refused to consider
stantly
passing, on ramping, and offyielding to Syria's demand that it
ramping."
surrender the Golan Heights withSchool doesn't always matter. As
out assurances the border would be
safeguarded against surprise attaCk. Randolph shows, success doesn '.I necIn capturing the enclave in tbe essarily require a fancy sheepskin.
1967 Six-Day War, Israel ended Recently she told, Don Brockway,
cross-border firing on northern vil- Choice's vice president of reservalages.
tions operations, "I'm ready to be
In Jerusalem, Likud opposition more creative and solve problem~ at a
leader Benjamin Netanyabu higher level."
.
accused the Rabin government of
In November, he offered her a two"making cynical use of Israeli offi- year-position at Choice's rapidly excers to give the negotiations with panding reservations system in EuSyria a kind of security stauis for rope.
the people of Israel."
Relocating to London, England,
If bot obstructed, tanks can Randolph will serve as reservations
cross tbe 20-mile stretch of Ole
director for" Europe where she will
Golan Heights in minutes.
The territory tbat Syria demands work and travel extensively across
includes land Syria occupied in the continent.
1948 during Israel's war of independence as weD as the land Israel
seized in 1967.
By Tlae Aasoclated Press
Two people bave died in traffic
accidents on Ohio roads over the
holiday weekend the State Highway Patrol said Satunlay.
The pattol counts fatlllities from
By The Auoclated Press
midnight Thursday to midnight
The following numbers were Monday.
seledcd in Friday's Ohio and West
FRIDAY
Virginia lotteries:
URBANA- Lori 1. Morris, 3S,
OHIO
of Urbana, passenger in a one-car
Piclc 3: 1-0-3
accident on State Route 296 in
Piclc 4: 7-S-9- I
Champaign County.
Buckeye 5: 5-8-12-14-29
BUCYRUS - Bessie R. Wade,
.Three .Ohio LOttery tickets show 18, of Bucyrus, driver in a one'car
the right five-number combination accident on U.S. Route 30 In Crawin Buckeye S, and eacb entitles ·the fordCounty
owner to claim a $100,000 prize,
the lottery IIIIIOIIICCd Satunlay.
The winning tickets were sold at
"Minerva Market in Columbus,
Goshen Dairy Store No. 32 in
Gnadenhutten and Rite Aid Pharmacy hi Toledo.
Sales In Buckeye S totaled
$547,697.
The 28Hiuckeye game ticlcets
with four of the numbers are eacb

··Hopeful signs emerge

··from.lsraei-Syria talks
; .By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic Writer
WASHINGTON .!.... Israel and
Syria have expanded the closed
talks their ambassadors are holding
bere to include military experts a sign that the peace negotiations
are gelling serious.
·
. The talks recessed after an ini·
tial session Thursday and are
expected to resume next week but
-without military participation. The
jdea is to bave experts on band as
:Ambassadors !tamar Rabinovich of
Israel and Walid al-Moualcm of
Syria consider security conditions
onthecontestedGolanHeights.
The ambassadors bav~ met spo'rlldically since early summer without breaking a deadlock over IIU\ior
'issues that must be resolved if
Syria is to follow the lead of Jordan
and the Palestine Liberation Organization and oonclude terms with
Israel.
: 'A State Department spokesman,
David Jolmson. said Friday the two
pdcs were "serious" in their pursuit of peace, but be declined to
confirm tbe meeting bad taken
. place or to provide any details of
negotiations between Israel and
Syria.
·, While the State Department,
like the rest of lhe government,
quietly eased into a long Cbrisbllas
weekend, Dennis Ross, the senior
Mideast specialist in the admlniS.traUon, was overseeing the lsraeli"Syrian meetings.
Lt Gen. Ehud Barak, tbe Israeli
chief of slaff, and Maj. Gen. Danny
Yatom, aide to Prime Minister
y itzbak Rabin, represemed their
·government's military aims and
concerns in the meeting, accooling
to informed sources wbo spoke on
oondition of anonymity.

(1111'11Jl1.811l

M- SulllaJ, 125 Third A,._,
0 "\ ~~.OI!Jo. b)'a.OiiloWio)'~
c 5 ,..... ,.. 1M. Secoldt -poll•

pold. OlllllpaUo, Ol!lo 4$63 • - .

- - ...... llllllllf. - , . Obla,
l'iDII oatoo.

.......,Tho' tr! ·-.IOdl!oCll!lo
fttw;: .• 'h

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Two killed

Lottery numbers

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Ditly.---·--------------11.00
bJ .. .. ~··­
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... fllr_,.,.. ___ _

'lllt.....,.d_ I ..,. wiUIItM..;..

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bers are~ wonb .
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$1,050,158.50 to winners in Friday's Piclc 3 Numbers daily game.
Sales In Piclc 3 Numbers tca!cd
$l,S80,142:SO:- ~
In the otber daily game, Pick 4
Numbers players wagered
$355,583 and will share $123,800.
Tbe jackpot for Saturday' a
Super Lotto drawing was $4 million.
. WEST VIRGINIA ·
Daily 3: 0-9-9
Daily4: 1-2-7-6
Casb 2S; 9-10-16-19-21-25

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Pomeroy-Middleport-:Galllpolla, OH

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House damaged by fire'

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. I!Y JIM FREl?.MAN

ten and agreed upon by the SERC
• The LEPC must bave a comTlmeaoSentlacl Starr.
and must be updated each year;
pliance program wbicb documents
' :. POMEROY- Emergency Ser• Th~ L?PC must bave by-laws . record keeping, public information
VIces Director Robert Byer ~nt· or consnwnon;
and enforcement;
.ed the Meigs County Comnusston• Must bave an emergency coor• The commtttee must show fls·
ers Friday with a pl!l'lue given to dinator with a 24-bour number to cal responsibility .twi.ce a year to
t.l!e commissioners and the Local recetve emergency requests;
the SERC and marntain records of
~ency f!armillfgthCoSmmitErneteeat
• Must have an information expenditures as outlined in the
a recent meetulg o e tate
r- coordinator wbo handles public grants received.
gency Response Commission.
informalion requests;
Byer accepted the award on
M~igs C~u~ty was o~e of 48
• Must bold at least one meeting bebalf of the commission and said
counttes recetvmg re.cogrunon from per year (Metgs County meets SIX be was "very proud of the commitSERC for excellence ~ LEPCs and times a year, Byer said.);
tee for its work and the commission
for tbe support provtded by. tbe
• Tbe county's plan must be for its suppm."
county commissioners, Byer satd.
·exercised annually or an'llctual
"I would like to thank the frre,
Byer outlined 10 criteria the event must have occurred in the EMS, sheriff's office, the amateur
LEPC must meet to qualify for the county;
radio group, staff and others for
award:
1
• Commissioners must appoint
individuals to fill 12 mandated
positions;
• Each planning coJI!IIIinee must
function with officers as directed
bylaw;
• Emergency plans must be writ-

.,~JS. _ A Neijb~ R~ reaideocc vJas heavily
cd by~ Frlday_P!§bl. 1 spokesman for the Oalllpolls Volunteet ~ ·Depanmentllllio.
.
· n.:~:YntJ:tted qne room and dalnaged anoth~r. making the 1
•.
home
.table. The'eause of the frre Is uodeterinincd. No one
, w•lune 11 the.time (if the lire; the owner's name was unavailable
at, pes&amp; time.
Twenty:tbree firefighters respbnded' with two trucks and banled
, . . the blaze (01' more than an hour, using r.~ gallons of water.
The-GVFD also answered a false alarm at the Scenic Hills Nursing Center, 311 Buck Ridge Road, Bidwell, Friday. Fomteen lireRghtm responded with one truck.
·
The calls was tbe 3SSth and 354th of the year, respectively.
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Lumber truck overturns'on SR 7
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TRUCKING CLAN _;:~::~of~the Marcum family of Vinton pose for a pb11tograpber Fri41Jly be~qre
leading a parade down Sta~e
160. MOI'e than 20 members ':lf tbt family drln·trucks for a ~viJ!g. ('tlmeSStntlael photo by Kevin Pinson)

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GALLIPOLIS - A Little Hocking man wa.S injured ·when a
,lumber truck overturned and bloclc:ect State Route 7 Friday afternoon, the Ga!Jia-Meigs Post ~f the State Highway Patrol repoited.
Roy P. Shaffer, 30, the driver of the lru!:)c, was taken by the Gallia1Cour'tty Emergency Mediclll Servi~ to Holzer Medical Center,
~ be was treated for contusion~ aiKl abrasions and (ele:ised, a
hospital spOkeswoman said.
' · According to the crash report; Sba{fer was norlttbound wben the
truck went off the right side of tbe rOad in a slight curve, struck a
guardrail and overturned.
The truck was severely damagetl. Shaffer was cited for failure to
control. ·

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Police make arrest

(EDITOR'S NOTE: A lawsuit
GAlliPOLIS ..,.- Clarence H. Roush,
2961 Bulaville Pike,
outlines tbe grievances of one
was arrested ,early Saturday II)Oming for disor~erly conduct by
· party apllllt another. It does not
establlsla guilt or innounce.)
intoxicati,on. the Gallipolis Police Department repo~.
· .
· PbMEROY - A Mason ,
W.Va., ~ciuple filed suit Wednes&lt;!aY
iri the·Meigs County Court of
GALLIPOLIS -John R Blackburn, 8il3 State Route 141, was.
-Common
Pleas against a Pomeroy
cl~ Friday night for driving under the infiueqce and driving und!:r ..
4.octor
l!lld'
. Meigs HCI\Ith Services
suspension, the Gallipolis Police Deparnnent reported.
. :
', Also cited by police; was RObel! A. SOm!JICrville, .35, 218i' . · Inc. ofPomero~. ·
-, CO.Wmplainants Marjorie and
. · Cbesrnut Street, for driving under suspension. : .
. ·
.David Rbpades allege Wilma A.
Mansfteld, M.D., negligently failed
to report and diagnose a medical
test undertaken by Mrs. Rboades
;GALLIPOLIS -A 16-year~old 'Cbat£e5ton, W.Va., girl was .
and further failed to proscribe a
taken \Dto. c!IS!Ody frid;ty after .sbe 'allegedly shoplifted condoms
course of treatment for Mrs .
. frolll Hil.ls Departm.ent Store, UppkRiver Road, the Gallipolis
Pl)lice Depatlule.nt reported. ·.
·
Rhoades.
The couple seeks compensation
YIJIUII was later rele.OO ·Jnto the custody of her parents.
· in excess 'o f $25,000 plus interest
and -'ourl costs . A jury trial is
requested.
· SPRING VALLEY - A local business college was broken into
TbllfS(Iay nigh\, but nothing was stolen, the Gallia County Sheriffs
Office re(l011ed.
. ,
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.
Robert Sbirey, director of Southeastern Business College, 1176
POMEROY - The following
Ja~n Pike, told deputies someone pried open the college's ba~
actions to end marriage were filed
~t and kicked ope11 an office.door .
recently in tbe office of Larry
Spencer, Meigs County Clerk of
Courts.
r&amp;ANAUGA - A $2,000 satellite dish was stolen from a local
Dissolutions filed: Jodi L. Dodman's ytird recently, the Gallia County Sheriffs Office reponed.
' son, Middleport, and Britt H. DodCharles H. Grimm, 210 River Street, told deputies someone
son, Pomeroy, Dec. 20; Robert A.
removed the disb while·be was on vacation.
Davis, Belpre, and Kimberly A.
Davis, Tuppers Plains, Dec. 22.
1

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461 SOUTH THIRD

4flDDLEPOR\, o\"\

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4 .6 V-8 engine, Power steering, Power

brakes, auto trans, dual air bags, air
cond., AM/FM stereo cass., All power
windows, locks, and mirrors, &amp; seats.
Rear defroster.
516
WAS

.,1't!e

Meigs crews prepa.re for winter
Col)tlnued from page A1
an exceptionally goodcrew,"Crothers
said. "What really bothers me is black
ice." Unlike normal ice, black ice is
especially slippery and difficult for
motorists to detect. .. until it is too late.
The department has l7 crews in the
coupty and three mechanics with nine
back-up drivers available, he added.
Ch;mges this year include reducing
the numbers of miles drivers must
cover and using pure salt' in excep·
tionally harsh conditions, Crothers
said.
Generally,saltisappliedwhentem-

peratures are abov~ 15 degrees, l!e
added. But, .a mtx IS us~d when the
barometer dips below th1s level.
Met.gs and· Galh~ co.unlles are pan
of a nme-county davasaon that shares
salt based on demand, Crothers added.
"Under emergency situations we 'II
go anywhere we have to go and we're
always willing to help out other agencies whether they are the county or
township,'' Crothers said.
One t(p for area residents Crothers
offered is: "just exercise a little com·
moo sense. Give us a little chance to
do our jobs."

lnthecounty'seatofPomeroy,street
superintendent Jack Krautter said
workers have been busy repairing
I";~Cks and equipment, preparing for
'¥IDler.
New this year is ablade fora smaller,
one-ton pickup truck to help clear
smaller roads and hills, he said. ·
"We've already stocked up on 5060 tons of salt, • he said.
.
Krautter said hisworkcrsaren'l intimidated by the possibility of another winter like the last.
"We've been through enough of
them, we'rejust waiting," he said.
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Mike Ralston, maintenance super·
visorforMiddleport,saidhisvillage
had ats vehacles ready a month ago.
Thisyearinsteadofjustoneplo.won
ties.
.
the salt truck, the village ~as added a
"If Ibis is not a gift; if·there is plowontoafour-wheel-dnveveh•cle.
no quid pro quo, Mr. Gingrich
Thevollagehasa2Qto30-tonsupought to tell us " Bonier said ply of salt that should last several
Thursday
'
heavy snows, Ralston said.

• • h b00k uea gripes
G/ngflc
.#"
..#
d18·
• gtan
• f
life
,rom
me
dByraw
JEANNINE AVERSA
Associated Press Writer

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W~SHINGTON - Fo~ Inc. .IS

accusmg House Democranc Wbrp
David Bonior of taking part in a
"scunilous
net- 1___. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
work
over attack"
a $4 .5 against
millionthebook
advance to Speaker-designate Newt
Gingrich.
Preston Padden, Fox's president
• FAMILY PRACTICE
of network distribution, wrote to
Bonior on Friday after lhe Michi. ·
PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
gan Democrat raised ethical questions about Gingrich's acceptance
WEIGHT CONTROL
of tbe advance from HarperCollins,
whicb is part of Rupert Murdoch's
media empire.
Padden called Bonier's statements "part of an orchestrated
political campaign of slander and
scurrilous attack against Fox Television." Fox asked Bonior to withdraw his remarks.
Phone calls to Bonier's office
were not answered.
Bonier noted that ownership of
TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
Murdoch's Fox TV network is
being investigated by the Federal
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
Communications Commission. The
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
main issue is whether Fox's acquisition of TV stations that made up
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
the network's foundation violated
POINT PLEASANT
foreign ownership limits.
The ownership Is being contest(304) 67.5-1675
ed by NBC and the National Association for the Advancement of
•
Colored People. The NAACP con- ·
tends tbe acquisition deprived
minorities of investment opportuni-

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

Now wat~h television
on a Flex-A-Bed.

,Business college repQrts B&amp;E.

.

,Dissolutions filed

Satellite dish stokn ·

HOBSON- A Bidwell man was cited for {ailurcrto cont.-ol followirig a one-cat crash Friday morning on Silver Run Road (Salisb\UY T9wnsbip Road 189), the Gallia-Meigs Post or the State l;llgbway 'Patrbl reported.
.
.
According to the ~ fqJOI1, .Mark A. Harrison, 29, 648 Wild·
wood Road, was westbound wbep bis car went orr the right side of
the road, struck a dircb and carne to'rest on its top.
The car was moderately damaged.

IS YEAR WARRANTY

OFFER GOOD THRU SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1994

BOWMAN'S
HOittfC:.U£ lttEDI{:AL SUPpLY

Gallipolis 446-7283
Jackson 286·7484

Toll F~e 1-800.458·68411

2 Dr, 4 cyls, 16 valve engine,

power steering brake, air
conditioning, AM/FM stereo
cassette, tilt and cruise, rear
defroster, cast aluminum
wheels.
WAS$15,900

Library closing for holidays
GALLIPOLIS - Bossard Memorial Library will be closed Sunday and Monday in observance of the Cbrisbnas holiday and Jan. I
and 2 in observance of the New Year's holiday.

No injuries reported in wreck
PORTI..AND - No injuries were reported follow.lng a one-vebi·
cle wreck on Ross Road near Portland f'riday night.
John R. Alldre, 18, Minersville, was southbound and lost control
of the 1917 Ford pickup truck be was driving, according to a Meigs ·
CountY sheriffs report. The truck slid off the left side of the road·
way, struck an embankment anq rolled over before coming to a rest
on the driver's side.
,
The vehicle sustained heavy damag_e and was towed from the
scene. No citations were issued.

EMS units log five runs
POMEROY - Units of tbe
:Meigs County Emergency Medical
:Service answered five calls for
·assisrance Friday. Units responding
:included:
CHFSTERVFD
1:04 p.m., State Route 7, motor:vehicle accident, Trista Docrfer,
:Andrea Doerfer and Johu Adams
·IV refused treatmen~ Pomeroy and
'Rutland squads assisted.
MIDDLEPORT
I :44 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Eber Lewis, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
POMEROY
5:56 p.m., Lasley Street, Belva
MiUs, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
RUTLAND
8:40p.m ., State Route 124,

Jerry Eads, Holzer Medical Center.
SYRACUSE
I :57 p.m., Syracuse VFD and
squad, auto fire, Larry Hoffman
owner, no injuries.

Pets Plus.
Pet Shop
(inside G.C. Murphys)

Year-ehd Sale
20% off all
Pet Supplies
Mon- Sat.

DR. R. IODD RAGIN, Optometrist
lOW OPU na BUSINESS
at 458 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(Formerly Dr. George Davis' Office)
•Treatment of Eye Infections
-complete Eye Exama
-Foreign Body Removal
•AduH, Infant and Children
•Treatment of Glaucoma
-contact Laneas - AII'JYpes
. •Lallie Selection of Eyeglaaeas -Evaluation of Cataracts
-Most Insurances Accepted
Saturday and Evening Houra Available - 446-2236

Snrin~P

NOW

Hospital news
VET.ERANS 'MEMOIJIAL
Friday admissions - none.
Fliday discharges - Floyd
Stewart, Pomeroy; Basil Cremeans,
Rutland.

Valley Plaza • Gallipolis, OH.

• Small Classes
• Flexible Schedule
•Indivlauiilliecl liistructlon
• Job Placement Assistant
• Approved for Training of Veterans
• Flnanciai'AidAvailable to
Those Who Qualify
"Accredited member ACICS'

!IRUS

1114 nBD PROBE Sl

Patrol tickets·Bidwell man

SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS COLLEGE

OFF-~

'iow*l3,900

'·

LET US HELP YOU CHOOSE THE
RIGHT GIFT THIS CHRISTMAS

•

PHONE 992·21 96

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,.'f.lJUth·detainedfo~ ShopU.{ii~g

PREPARED· Racine's David Proffitt sll!nds In front of 1,100 tons oful~ at the state bigbway oflke, PrOmtt,
who now Is bead mechanic and bas worked for 21 years at the department, said bls departinent Is ready for aay
conditions. ('11mes-Stntioelpbot~ by George 4bate)

theit support of the actual events
last January and the support during
the exercise beld in June," Bye(
cOIIIDiented. "It is a good example
of everyone working together to
make things bappen."
'
The commission told Byer to
display the plaque at EMS headquarters in Pomeroy
In other business· the board paid
weekly bills of $341.796.10, con; ·
sisting of 574 entries.
Present were Commission Presi
dent Fred Hoffman Vice President
Janet Howard Ta~kett Commissinner Robert Harte~bach and
Clerk of Commission Gloria Kines.

11.

Man cited for DUI ·

.

Lawsuit filed
by area couple

....... 448-4387

"

Sundey nm..-Sentln'l Pege A3

·~;~· ·Tri-Co.unty Briefs:____,·Officials honored for_ emerge~cy planning

COATS I .

numbers
are7,S74
each worth
$10.
.:._,_~l::dg~~~~~:. ::-~l~ !w~ortb~$~250.
The
with three
~a.YI'UCII

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Indigent
defense

Q-Q.

. By The Alloclated Prea
• Ohio will remain unseasonably
· warm and dry tbrougb CbrisiDlBS,
· but winds ate on the increase
. across the state tbaDks to a strong
• storm system now centeral off the
New Jersey roast
Cloudy skies were to break by
midday Saturday and allow for
partly to mostly sunny skies to
develop during tbe afternoon.
Highs were near SO in most areas
with 45 to Closer to Lake Erie.
The clouds were to fill back in
· .Saturday after sunset and were to
remain into Christmas morning
' with tbe sun breaking out once
. again in the afternoon. Lows were

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Continued from page A1
week.
Mer lhe parade, the Marcums meet
at lhe Vinton town hall for their annual feast·and fellowship.
"It's kind of an old-fashioned type
Christmas with the family," said
Sandy Marcum who, with her bus:
band Dave (also a trucker), co-owns
L&amp;S Pizza in Vinton.

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•ieolumbu8!53•

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Big rigs

OHIO Weather
SIIIHIIIJ' Dec. l5

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12,900
WI

IIIIIQUII Ll
Dr., V-8 engine, power
steering, power brakes, auto,
air cond., AM/FM stereo cass.,
tilt &amp; cruise, all power windows,
locks &amp; seat, rear defroster,

IL
4 Dr, 3.8 V-6 engine, power 4 Dr, 4 cyl, power steering, p.
steering, power brake, auto .
auto, AM/FM stereo
, air cond. , tilt, cruise, P.
trans., air cond., AM/FM stereo
cass., power windows, power
&amp; lock, luggage rack
locks, rear defroster, dual air
deck lid, rear defroster,
bags. Stk 4150700
28,000 miles. Extra clean.
WAS $14,995
.
$9,995

NOW

13,419

I-IIlLI
PUlllEI
4 .Dr, V-B engine, power
steering, power brakes. auto.
air cond., AM/FM stereo cass.,
tilt 11&lt; cruise, all power windows,
locks and rear defroster.
WAS$4,995

lOW

Dr., V-6 engine , power
steering, power brakes. auto ,
air cond, AM/FM stereo cass,
tilt, cruise, power win dows,
and power locks . rear

IOW4,295
1181 FORD
PIOBI.
. I

4 cyl . engine, power steenng.

.• ,..

••roaD

IDOS'rll xur

DUICDIIBIID

power brakes, automatic 3~ 8 V-6 engine, p. steering, p.
length, 7 passenger,
transmission, AM/FM stereo brakes , auto, air cond., AM/FM
engine, power steeri
cassette, tilt and cruise, a ir StereO CaSS., power WindOWS &amp;
brakeS, autQ, air WIIU . ,
conditioning, rear defroster, locks, rear defroster, cast alum. AM/FM stereo cass., tilt,
wheels, till and cruise. Low cruise, power windows, p.
miles, extra clean.
locks, rear wiper &amp; defroster.
WAS $12,995
I

NOW

3,295

•••roaD

UBOS!IBXL
7 Passenger, V-6 engine ,
power steering, power brakes,
auto , air cond, tilt and cruise,
AM/FM· stereo radio, rear
defroster
WAS$5,995

IOWII700

Cargo van , 6 cyl, power
up , 302 V-B engine,
steering , power brakes , auto , ln~.w&lt;or steering, power
air cond , AM/FM stereo, glass
, auto , power win•dolrtSI
side &amp; rear doors, hinged side,
power lock, tilt wheel and
&amp; rear doors. tow in inventory.
8 foot bed , rear
WAS $5,995

NOW 4,495

NOW4,995

1113 CIDILI~•e
SIDIll

1-F-1104D

,,

4 Dr, V-8 engine, power
steering, auto , air cond, til and
. cruise, power windows, power new tires, good condition .
locks, tilt and cruise, leather WAS $4,995
iQterior, dual power seats.
WAS $19,995

Nowl7,999

NOW 3,995

.·

lOW 1,498 ·

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Qecember 25, 1994

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WASHINGTON - Recent
comments by House Speaker-elect
A Dl'fllloa of
Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., about reopening Olpbanages for children of
~N:.
broken homes are apparently hitting home tiJis Christmas season.
Based on phone calls to the
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
8l5 Third A••~ GaUipollo, Ohio
office of Rep. Jim McDermott, D(614) 446-1341
(614) 991-1156
Wash., there is evidence that Gingrich's facile rhetoric struck fear
ROBERI'L. WINGETJ'
among
an often voiceless conPublllher
li
stituency - children. Consider
these notes of phone messages
MARGARET LEHEW
HOBART WILSON JR.
taken recently by McDermott
beculln Editor
Controller
staffers from mothers on public
assistance:
A MEMBER of Tho Anociated Pro11, and lbe Amcric:an
- ''Daughter did not want to
Newspaper Pubtisben Association.
go to school. Afraid that teacher
would r.ut her in an orphanage.' '
LETI'ERS OP OPINION ore welcome. They should be leas tbao
- 'My kinderganen son was
300 words. All !etten are subject to editins and muat be signed with
name, address and telepbone number. No unsigned !ellen will be
watching Hillary Clinton on TV
publiabed. Letters should be in good tute, addressing issues, not
(responding to Gingrich). He did
penonalities.
not Want to go to school because be
was afraid !bat when be came bane
bis mother would be gone and be
would be sent to an orphanage.''
- "Daughter was told by classmates !bat ber mother would be
thrown in jail."
McDermott, who was a child
crafts as well ai belp sell farst aid ·
Dear Editor
psychiatrist
before entering poliWe would like to let everyone kits.
tics,
may
be
lbe only member of
Tbe profits from the activities
know what a great group of pareniS
1111d
sales
will
go
toward
the
purwe have at Chester Elementary.
Chester Elementary Student cbase of computer programs and
Council bas sponsored a skating art supplies for each classroom.
party, a dance, and a craft and bake This is possible because of lbe supsale within the last two weeks. Our port of parents and the community.
.
Pat Sbriveri
council pareniS have been so sup- .
Chester
portive to chaperone activities,
donate bated ~oods , and make

Letters to the editor
Great group of parents

Opposes proposals
1 write this letter to oppose proposals in lbe strongest possible
terms, included in tbe Person
Responsibility Act (PRA), to
replace current federal food assistance programs wilb block giant
funding. I oppose both the concept
of block grant funding and the
sbarply reduced tundinzlevels !bat
have been proposed.
I oppose these proposals for the
foUowing reasons:
1) The block grant approach
fails to assure that federal dollars
will go for·their intended purposes
Under the PRA. large portions of
federal funding for food assistance
could be provided in cash. Specifically, lbe PRA would allow benefits previously provided as food
slamp and WIC coupons to instead
be provided as cash. Thus, states
would be free to provide assistance
that could be devoted to other nonfood needs This approach could not
only have a serious deleterious
effect on low-income cbildre.D and
families, but .also could effect
adversely lbe entire food and agriculUJre economy. In addilioo, lbe
block grant eouverts nuttitlon pro"grams from entitlements i~to discretionary programs subJect to
annual appropriations. Thus, there
is no gu~antee lb~t any federal
dollars Wtll be available for food
assistance
2) The block grant approach is
inherently insensitive to lbe poor
when their needs ~~;re . g.reatest.
There is no IIICCbam~m to blo~k
grants to assure assistance will
expand.during a iecessionoc ~ben
need anses (such as a natural disasIa'). At the very time !bat ~ go
up in .one state and pot~nllally
do~ m .another, lbe fundtn~ w11l
be mflextble and thus mefflClCIIUy
applied to !bose slates.
3) The PRA would likely end
lbe school lunch program as we
know it By proscribing assis!aDCC
paid for meals served to "nuddle
tnCome" children, tbe ~l.Y result
of tbe PRA is ·that mtlhons of
scbool children and thousands of
scbools will abandon lbe current
system !bat guarantees fr~e and
reduced price meals to low-~e
children. Far smaller cutbacks m
this subsidy in 1981 resulted in a
loss of about2,000 schools and two
million children (750,000 lowincome) from tbe program.
4) Tbe block grant approach
removes from food assistance any

tie to nuttitional standards. Once ·
states are free to design any program they want, there will be no
assurance that lbe federal dollars
lire being spent cmsistent with fundamental standards on diet and
health
The block grant approach, especially with reduced flinding levels,
wiU result in milre children io this
country going hungry. Most of lbe
programs affected are child nuttition programs, and half of all the
participants of the largest nutrition
progr.n·arrccted (food stampS) are
children.
The resulting tremendous
inaeaae in need cannot be met by
private charities. 1bcse instlllilions
bave repeatedly documented !bat
they cannot meet the demand currendy
upoo them. Furthermore, SIRilUOusly object to any
policy that could have the effect of
an exponential iDq'CIISC in the nomber of Americans wbo must feed
their families through soup
kilcbens and bread lines. This is no
way for the greatest nation In the ·
world to care for its needy real"dents.
Finally, I suggest that a reUim to
block pts ignores the history of
wby federal food assistance programs were establisbed. The federal government stepped in because
states were either unable or unwilling to meet lbe needs of ciur people.
Tbe fedeml nutrltioo programs
are an enormous success story,
built with bipanisan support from
Congress over many years. Study
after study has documented tbe ·
effectiveness of the very programs
that proposals like the PRA would •
tum bact to lbe, states. 1bcse programs have been poveri to enhance
lbe health and education of our
children, some saving money in the
long run.
Initial estimates indicate tbe
PRA could reduce food assistance
funding by about 10 percent ($4 to
$5 billion a year) from the projected $40 biUion FY 1996 food assistance funding level. Even Ibis inadequate level would not be guaranteed since eacb year's funding
would be subject to appropriations
There is a need for the federalgoveminent to save money, but not
feeding hungry children and their
families is a poor place to start.
Sid Edwards
Executive Director
Gallia-Meizs CAA

flaced

Berrts _World

lbe House who bas ever testified as
an expert court witness on child
deprivation cases, treated young
abuse victims or bad to recommend

NEW YORK (AP) - Authorities investigating the man accused
of making a ftrebomb !bat went off
in a subway car full of passengers
want to review videotapes and
computer disks seized from his
New Jersey bome.
Investigators bave already
seized handwritten notes, including
one with "Terror Mad Bomber"
scrawled across the top, sketches of
several bombs and an outline of a
plan to terrorize the New York City
subway system in an extortion
scheme, according to police who
spoke on condition of anonymity.
Edward Leary, 49, remained in
critical condition today at Cornell
Medical Center's bum unit, himself
one of 48 people injured Wednes·
day in a bolched fuebombing of a
subway car in Lower Manhattan.
Investigators also believe the
unemployed computa' technician is
responsible for a Harlem subway
ftrebombing last week that injured
two teens.

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ORPHANA6E ...

lishing Co., at its ~Gallipolis plant short tlme .ago thi.; young looy died
until tbe !Did-1116Qs before moving and one bas to wonder the number
to Michigan.
· of beautiful things sbe saw in the
1did not see Aaron many times river !bat we cannot see. She certainly seemed at peace with the
Fred
Crow
world's problems.
Now I have lbe following quesin the following years. I did know lion. How many times do each of
that be worked in Detroit and that us loolc at the river and enjoy it? I
be wore a beard. It pleases me to bet you pass by every day and
know that be returned to Meigs never see it.
County to be bmied. This act indiEarlier this week, I ran into Tom
cates that his home and bean were Parker, whose wife passed away a
really in Meigs County mther than sbort time ago. Tom was our cak:bDettoit.
er: and a good one, o~ the Pomeroy
Danny Morris, Jim Carpel)ter, Htgb School cbamptonshlp basePat Vaughan (who only had 'one ball team In 1933. This team went
arm), Larry Wildermuth, Vernon all the way to the finals in the Class
Harrison, Vincent Knight, Ted A tournament. Pomeroy High
Beegle, Rick Crow, Bobby Dillard, School was defeated by Warren
Tommy Garnes, and Junior. Harding High School by a score of
Hawthorne were also on my 71b 4-2.
and 8th gJWle teams over the years.
When I saw Tom, I expressed
For those I bave overlooked, and my sympathy about bis wife's
there are many, please let me know death . I also asked bim how be was
and hwiU mention your name In a getting,alo~~· Tom grumbled. i~ a
future article:
low votce, ~at it was bell l!ymg
Our Coach, Rex Jarvis, was a alon~. and domg housework. ~e
wonderful man, He did like' an obvmusly was upset aboutthts
occasional beer, but he-would only incident but also you could see bis
drink Red Top. The rea&amp;on for Ibis affection towards his late wife.
was lb:!t Red Top was .advertised as
What Tom Is going through has
"sugar free as beer can be." L!lter happened to many of us, myself
Rex died of sugar diabetes as . included. Tbe death of one's
Aaron did. Also, Red Top beer is spouse near Christmas is worse
dead. ·
t11an at any other time of the year.
Another reflection of lbe past Your good memories of your
was tbe sight of seeing Karen depaned spouse are accentuated at
Haggy almost every day lbe past Christmas time. Before too long
summer season. This young lady you become exuemely sad and
was mature pbysicaUy, but sbe had want to be alone. The fust Christother problems, However, during mas alone is the hardest.
the past season sbe would pass Ibis
Have you ever stopped at your
office either walking or ·on bcr local post office in tbe morning
bicycle. She would then proceed tn around Christmas time? Nearly
a beiloh on the river banK near the everyone smiles at you going in
Pomeroy Junior High School wbere this building. That is not always
she sat and watched the river by the uue when lbe individual leaves.
hour. Sbe often bad ber dog with Some smile and this could mean
her and both appeared interested in that the letter _or package tbe·y
watching lbe Ohio River flow A expected has arnved and they want

W.

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Bela&amp; Santa Cia• 11 not aB bud work. The

JoUy elf wu spotted Tllunday In Steamboat _

BURNS

The woman's real name is
Janine Brookner. She worked for
WASHINGTON (AP) - The the CIA for 25 years.
said Friday ~ goverrunent's
"The settlement does not con~~::!'ftt1to· pay $410,000 to settl-e cede any of the assertions Ms.
by a senior female CIA , Thompson bas made against lbe
nffiO.... is not Ill admission that sbe
agency or its individual officers,..
was dj~criminated against for CIA spokesman Mark Mansfield
~ponji!J . a male deputy for wife .. said.
beating.
Mansfield accused Ms. ThompTbe officer, referred to in lbe son ·and ber attorney of "grand"btiw!iuit by lbe pseudonym Jane standing" by issuing a press
'IbompSon, received $410,000 release Friday announcing !bat the
attorneys' fees and agreed to- · selllement bad been made fmal on
from the agency . Victoria Thursday evening. The press
lli.II'&lt;ten:sin;g, her attorney, said tbe release repeated Ms. Thompson's
'Wctmim officially resigned on allegation that sbe was discrlmlnatTbursday.
ed against after she reported her
Prea Writer

a

to open it right away: On"theOiber '·~
.· bancC lbe one that receiVeS lid iilail; '-7
usually bas a disappointed look oo· ,.
ber face. Others receiving bills
would usually wear a frown. 1bcn &lt;'
there are others who receive only
some sort of junk mail. This receiv- ~
er bas a perplexed look and won- '
ders why be was left ouL 1 saw one
man wbo received a check in tbe •,
mail six days after it was sent. It
was mailed from Athens witb a
· postmark December 14, aqc1 was
not received until December 20th.
This man was very angry.
Practically every morniog at
some tiJhe between 9:30 alldl0:30
a.m. one will see our old friend,
George Schneider, at or.near the
post office. &lt;Jcorge is almost blind ·•
and walks from his home to lbe
. post office durin&amp;_ good weather.
You have to give lJeorge aedlt for 1
not giving up and having tbe mail
delivered to him.
•
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Fmally, those wilbout balidlCipl
should appreciate lbe efforts of
those wbo have difftcult problems "
to solve during .the Christmas sea- ·1
son. We should pray !bat we can do
as well as we can and not be1 ton ·v
large a burden for others.
. Do you know who is buried iD 1
Grant's tomb? Diet Seyler wants ·•
to blow. 1 am offering a priz,c of ·,
five dollars for lbe one who can .,
give me the tint and last name of ''
each oecupant of Grant's tomb. H ·~
there is a tie, then the winner will •'
be drawn by lot.
•
In God We IIUst.
"
Carry on.
.~
Editor's note - Long·tlme ··Attorney Fred W. Crow Is 'the
contributor of a weekly column
for The Sunday Tlmea-SentlaeL ::.
Readers wishing to apPlaud, crlt- •
k:lze or.conunent on any IUbject :
(except religion or (KIUtlct) are ·.
encouraged to write to Mr. ctow · !
iD care of this neWipaper.

5

THINK ABOUT JT , .

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An attorney for Leary, arresled
in his hospital bed Thursday and

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Officials aUege that Leary hoped :
to use his crude bombs to create an •
aunospbere of fear in the subways,
then cont~ct media and tran si t
authorities with demands for
money.
A new set of warrants were
being sought s.o that detectives
could watch videotapes and computer disks seized during a search
of Leary's Scotch Plains, N.J .,
house , said Transit Police
spokesman AI O'Leary.
Le&amp;r'J:' was arrested early Thursday 10 his hospital bed on 45 counts
of attempted murder.

104 Years Of Service
Most of our business Q)meo
throul!h JlOOPit we've
lhoughlfully HrVed. The

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..ason - undentandlllg. .

GAILIPOUS - Edgar Mahan, 84, Gallipolis, died Friday, Dec. 23,
1994 at Scenic Hills Care Center. He was a retired farmer and a retired
employee of lbe Gallipolis Developmental Center. He was a member of
the Paoiot Masonic Lodge.
Bom Oct. 4, 1910 in Walnut Township, Gallia County, be was the son
of the late Enoch and Gamet White Mahan. He married Mabel Allbright
April 8, 1938.
.
.
Survivors include bis wife; two daughters, Mary (Bobby) Crews of
Patriot and Edna (Lawrence) Tawney of Gallipolis; one son, Richard
(Shirley) Mahan of Gallipolis; four sisters, Alberta Thornton and Elva
Dillon, both of Gallipolis, and twins Ida Eblin of Columbus·and Edna
Sheets of Grove City; two brothers, Charles Mahan of Columbus and
Frank Mahan of Gallipolis; and five grandchildren, two step grandchildren
and three great grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by bis parents, two sisters and two brothers.
Friends may call 6 to 9 p.m. Monday at the Waugh-Halley-Wood .
Funeral Home where services will be held 1 p.m. Tuesday with Pastor
Denny Coburn officiating. Burial will follow in Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens.
.
•
Pall bearers will be Mike Tawney, Roger Crews, Bill Carter, David
Baker, Oakey Tawney and Leo Tawney. Honorary pall bearers will be
Sam Wilkes, Earl Wilkes and Herbert White.

deputy for wife beatin·g in 1991 in addition to being unjustly denied
while Ms. Thompson was serving promotions after reporting tbe
alleged wife beating, she also
as chief of station in Jamaica.
Mansfield called the references became the subject of an inspector
to alleged wife beating "unfair, general' s investigation based on
false accusations made by those
inaccurate and outrageous.''
"They are made without regard she bad disciplined.
Mansfield indicated that Ms.
to lbe damase caused to the reputaBrookoer
received far less in the
tions of illdividuals," .Mansfield
said. He declined to be more spe- settlement tban she originally
cific, saying, "We are constrained sought in the lawsuit, which was
from further comment because of ftled in federal court last summer.
" There's a stark contrast
the Private Act." The CIA in its
between
what was requested and
previous comments on the case bad
not specifically disputed the wife the terms of the settlemem," be
beating allegation.
· said. He declined to be more speMs. Brookner bad charged that cific.
A government official familiar
with the case. speaking on condition of anonymity, said Ms.
Brookner originally bad requested
promotion at the agency as pan of
a settlement. The official said she
also demanded much more than
$410,000.
"I am gratified by the selllely forbidden tor nome use and can·
not be used to screen blood donors.
Patient instructions accompanying the test warn that it is less accumte than blood tests. The instructions also·advise patients on how to
avoid the risks of HIV infection.
The oral fluid collection system
is markeled by the Epitope Corp. of
Beaverton, Ore. under the brand
P""" I.igh~ a b&lt;autjful and p=ial
name "OraSure." The kit used to
alu:marive
10 a memorial andle, casu a
test the specimen .in the laboratory
is made by Organon Telrnika Corp.
warm, soorhing glow at night. The
of Durham, N.C., and is sold under
p""" Light will bms cnrnhm fitr y=.
the brand name "Oral Fluid
Yironostika HIV-1 Microelisa System."
Epitope bas been seeking FDA
approval of its saliva test for 3 112
long and lean years. The firm's
A lovely addition to your
profiiS toolc a beating as it awaited
cemetery memorial.
the federal action. In 1993, Epitope
OHIO VALLEY
bad iiD annual loss of $14.7 million,
and earlier this month it announced
MEMORY GARDEN
a fiscal 1994loss of $15.6 miiUon.
659 LeGrande Blvd.
After the FDA announcement,
. Galllpqllo,Oh. 45631
Epitope stock climbed $3.50 to
614-446-9228
$24 .50 at midafternoon on the
Bob Johnson • Linda Johnson
American Stock Exchange.

FDA approves AIDS test
using saliva instead of blood
By PAUL RECER
AP Science Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- An
AIDS 'virus testlbat uses fluid from
tbe mouth instead of blood bas
been approved by tbe Food and
Drug Administration.
The FDA announced Friday that
lbe new test will be 'available only
from physicians and will be administered only by people trained in iiS
use.
Dr. Jeff Lawrence, a consultant
to lbe American Foundation for
AIDS Research. said the test using
oral fluid could encoumge people
who would avoid blood tesiS to be
tested for buman immunodeficiency virus, or HIV, lbe virus that
causes AIDS.
"As long as a positive test is
followed up with a blood test and
as long as tbere is appropriate
counse~g available, it is a reason. able tbirig to do," said Lawrence.
The FDA approval actually
involves two sysrems: a way to col-

•

Deputies probe
trailer shooting
LANGSVILLE - The Meigs
County Sberifr s Department is
il!vestigAii!lg tbe apparent drive-by
shooliDf of a Langsville mobile
home Friday morning.
IUclwd Fetty reported ~
fired a shotgun five or six times at
his residence, which was struck
four times. One of the shots reportedly struck below a window just
above two sleepfttg children,
according to Sheriff James M.

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The academy would require abont $5 nfulioo a year in ·stare funds to '{ .
operate.
!''
Joe ~go. Wright State's director of zovemment afflin, said similar
acadeDIIes have been set up in about a dozen other states
If
''We wan.tto oovance math arid science education in' the state ofQbio . •
so that we will have the work, force In Oblo to take us lnto·the 21st centu- );
ry," Mingo said.
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He said lbe academy is designed io create an environment that ~II IJ·
Qlax.lmize the students' potential.
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·· "You put these gifted cbildreti In a class with like students and Dot
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only are they cballenged, but they have people they can identify witll"
said Mingo·. "Hopefully, it's giving them a better arena in wbicb·to ~form JIC8I!cmically~" _ .,..
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Mingo said the claues would be available to high scbQols 8I'DUDd
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state via two-Wily, Interactive televisloo wbicb would benefit
normally eou1d not afford to offer such
oc have only a small DUm "' l!jt
ber of interested Jtudents.
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"They will all have lbe lidvantage of tbe same 8C$dellli.. _,.;"""'ft .. ~··
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Mingow'd.
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Pbillis said interactive televisioo would not offer tbe same lovel of ilea- ; ~1!
eflts u the academy experience · ·
·
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"Aa a sales pitch, that's
weat." be said.
·
. J.ast week, lbe Ohio Board of EcJ11 cation ·recomme'ooed 1 ncH
~~
$250,000 ~ aiUcly ~ feasibiHty ofeslabli•birig such an_acaclcmy.pe na

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dasses

EDWARD LEARY

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sincere guidance alld
d!!pOndabiUty
In helpingy011
stltclaflno

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POMEROY
Meigs County Dlaptay Yard Near
Pomeroy-Maaon Bridge
Klllie Miller, Manager
992-2588
VINTON
Gallla County Display Yard

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A settles lawsuit, won't concede to discriminiation charge

State academy for gifted students sparks debate
By JAMES HANN!dl
A.oelated Prea Writer
'
DAYTON- Bactm of a state-funded academy for gifted studeDIS iD
Ohio are ltoping their pnipl.IW will get a passing grade ffilm lav.'illlikm.
But it~ ~ IIIDootb sa!liDg for the idea;
.
.
WllliaiD
cm.ulivc clireUilr of the Ohio Coalili!X! for flqutty a!!d
of School Fuodlng, said lbe state should first pve aid to all of
1
students before spending mooey on a select few.
:
. coalition J'ClRICilla 500 school distriC!J wbo slied .the state fO( jta
iut&lt;quitable ~ system. A Perry County )udge ruled m July that the
IIIIC's ttcboolIIIIYSII:m was unconstituuooal.
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"The state's f~tst obligation is to se!"e all the Bifted.'' Pbillis 111110.
"OOcc they get 1b!Jt task dale, to putlbi'._enhancement 011 top is~~
- ~&amp;~:"
· - ~ ·· -' - -- - •
Sare enriellment prognii!IS cum:otly serve aboutlOO,OOO- or 40 percaat- of tbe stale's 250,000 gi,fted students. ,
.
Under the proposal, 400 gifted math and SCience btgh school st:udeijts
would be enroUed in a boarding school at Wright State Uaiversity in Fajrborn .
.
Those junior and senior ~~~ woUld go ~gh ~ special two-rear
program .and CM'II a high school diploma ~ong wtth their t"ll'lt year of COllcae credit. At the same time, lbe school's advanced math~ scienoe
classes would be beamed to other schools throughout Ohio v•a two-way
telcvlaton.
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Sprinp, Colo., relieving a little bollclay stress by
enjoJinla few rut111 through the powder. (AP)

charged with 45 c:OuniS of attempted murder, said his client denies
making the bomb.
"(Leary) didn't do it ... Here's a
man who's in critical condition and
he' s already been tried and convicted by the Police Deparunent and
city officials,'' said Stephen Murpby,

Edgar Mahan

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--Area death--

GAWD £Ares,

Some reflections o,n old friend·sJn Meig$
By now most of his friends in
the area blow that Aaron (Eightball) Buffmgton passed away. He
was sufferin~ from a lonf siege of
diabetes which ultimate y caught
up with him. One of his friends told
me that Aaron lost one of his legs
due to this disease.
,
I returned from die FBI after tbe
war and agreed to assist RCx Jarvis,
foothall coach at PHS, to coach the
7th and 8th grade teams. I distinclively recall that the first thinz that
was done was to purchase 22 green
jerseys with numbers and 22 red
jerseys with numbers. We only boo
44 jerseys and we were going to
divide the squad into two separate
teams and play ei!Ch other. It was
ton late to try to arrange a schedule
with 7th and 8th graders from other
schools.
We passed ou~ the jerseys and
when we got,..down to Aaron we
bad already otstrlbuted the entire
lot. He was player number 45
(drawn by lot) there was no jersey
for him. I can't describe lbe bun
look be bad on bis face. He bad
tears in his eyes and was greatly
disappointed. It almost made me
cry. I Died to calm him down and
told him we would get him a jersey
shonly, which we did. Aaron did
not play much football for us as be
was small in stature; however, be
was an outstanding basketball player at PHS.
His senior year in 1956-57, be
made Farst Team All-Southeastern
Ohio League and was niuned lbe
league's Most Valuable Player, one
of few Purple Panthers to earn that
honor down through the years. The
5·8 guard led PHS to a third place
finis!:l iq tbe SEOAL, tbat year
· under Coach Diet Retton.
Aaron worked in The Daily Senrinel 's composinz room after
graduating from bigb school, He
served with the Obio Valley Pub-

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his other recent allegations about
drug use at the White House alld
lbe first family's "counter-cui· Budget-and • cy u..,.~..,.a;,CI · ~
ture" values because it preys on :::es~dt:C:UJ:)::
the fears of some of the most vul- efi~ fr~e R ubllCan •'•CORII'Ict ;
nerable members of soctety. .
· W'tll Americaep, Ia CICICted Mole- •
"He's (G~gricb) !'laying with ov~r the report alleges
simply ~
By Jack Anderson
lbe psychologtcal s~btlity of ch~; the fear of losinz 8 child could !
and
dren and people m poverty,.
cause a po'or parent to.act Jtra- •
McDermott told us. "I don't mmd
.
,
, ·· · '
Michael Binsteln if you pick on adults because !bey u~hllt many ~ts may alti- ~
can ~e care ~f tbemsel~':'· ~ m&amp;Jiy be forced to leunquisb 1bcir 1
you pick on kidsJor political gam children on euher a temporary or ;
that chUdren be removed from dan- you are scraping.,
.
permanent basis, it Is also· impor- ;
gerous living environments. HavMcDermott and others believe tant to req&gt;golze tlW ~IS eould •
ing seen the problems of abused that orphanages are merely as~- ·• fr u~ntl take eJI)reme measures :
and exploited children firslllarid, be bol of bow children are g~ung
~ ~cir families ~ogetbcr " •
agrees with Gingrich that children • 'p!c~ed on'' by tbe new GOP 1~e
sa s. "Some inay ioo~
must, as a last resort, be protected maJonty. In lb~ name of welfare · to dangerour. or more dangC'IOUs, ~
from unfit parents even If it means
ref~h· Repubchlicanildrens ~the~y tof neigbborbo~ds to sil.ye on reut. ~
separating mother and child.
Pun!S JXXI'
aor
sms
Food bud ciS might be cut bldt.... •
Gingrich, however, offers up an
tbeu parents, The GOP speaks Some moft.ers might be forced. to :
absurdly false choice between about ending onerous unfund~ rely on in abusive boyfrlcud for :
orphanages and "dumpsters" for manda~s to the states, bQt .there s bel in meetinz tl)elr children's •:
unwanted kids, referring to publideafeiDilg silence about moral man-.
needs. ••
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cized cases of infants who are
dates for poor children.
Orphanage OpponeniS also point ' :
dumped by parents. Liule attention ·
.Already more thaD one In five out !bat keeping cbUdren Ill holllc is i
is paid to attacking the root causes
l:btldren .un~er age 18 lives In a far more cost-effective · !ban •
of.poverty: drug abuse, teen-age
family With •ncomc below the fed- orphanages. Rep. RobdJt Matsui, :,
pregnancy and inner-city unemeral
pove~ level. About ~Jler- D-Calif., notes' that lbc av~a11e !
ployment. Gingrich's grenade
cent
of Afri~-~~ ch~ combined AFDC and foOd ..tan'ip :
abeut orphanages stands out from
and 36 percent of Hisparuc children beneftt for a.family qf three is $661 i
per inonth. But the average resideD- •
tial treatment facility for a child• ~
removed from a home run~ about ,,
FOR
$100 per day - or about $3,000 ~
per month.
,'
'
$TTH~
While Gingrich is promotinz •
IN AN
"Boys Town" as a cure for the :
welfare state, his GOP ~ 8R ~ •
beating a hasty retreat on]lana 10 ~
HE'S: LIVIN6
abolish approxilllately $1 billion ~
pnce supports, though the 1
WITH ANIMAL$! inpricefarmsiiJlll(IU
cost about the same ,
as AFDC. Republicans want to cap ~
spending on nutrition assistance, :
though half of all food slamp rccip- •
IenlS are children iD poverty. And a .~
recent Department of Agricultnre ;.
study found that one-fifth of all 1
families receiving food stamps ~
were working, but remain mired in +
•}
poverty.
There is a difference belween a ,.. .
deoobeat and a destiwte parent, but • •
it appears _lost on the new Republi- ..
can maJority.
,
Jack Anderson and Mlcllael '•
Blostein are writer• for U-.Ited .4
Feature Syndicate, Inc. .
,,

::m

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Pag&amp;-AS,

...------:...Skiing Santa--~ Investigators eye videotapes
in .subway ~irebombing case

~
are~nt ~· by tbe ~ret 00 !
u ""'""'''" d

Newt's orphanage idea.inspires fear in kids

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

Soulsbf. '

An mvestigalion into the shooting ia contioulng, Soulsby said.
'l'he incident happened around 6
a.m.
In a4dltlon, Soulsby reponed
depulies were called to a vacant ·
Langsville bouse after a realtor
found a partillg meter, several
county highway signs, stop signs,
railroad Iighu, traffic cones and
1
•
other ilems within.
The Incident is also being invesI. tiptect,.Soulllby ~·I

acboo1a.::

pretty

I

teet and preserve tbe oral fluid, and
a way to test the specimen in a laboratory for the HIV virus.
To collect fluid for a test, a specially-treated cotton poo on a stick
is placed between lbe lower gum
and the cheek and allowed to
absorb fluid . .The stick then is
placed into a plastic container with
a preservative solution.
At a laboratory, the specimen
undergoes an ''enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay," or ELISA,
test that is able to detect antibodies
to HlV.
Positive tesiS are confumed with
a blood test called the Western
Blot, which is more sensitive than
the ELISA and is able to detect
antibodies specific to HIV.
The FDA said that in trials, the
oral fluid test bad a two percent
error factor in both po~itive and
negative results.
"That is much, much poorer
than with a standard blood test,"
Lawrence said.
Under the · guidelines for
approval,_the ~fluid test is soict·

~if~-

HOME"Serving
MEDICAL
EQUIPMENT
Southern Ohio for over 17 years"
Lift Chairs
Wheelc.hairs
Hospital Beds
Shower Stools
Grab Bars
Commode Chairs
Walking Aids
Diapers &amp; Chux
Ostomy Supplies

Diabe~icSupplies
Feedmg Pumps

Everything
for the·
Patient
at
H0 me.

Mastectomy Supplies
Cervical Pillows
Traction Equipment
Tens Units &amp; Supplies
Back Supports
Knee, Ankle Braces
Nursing Supplies
Support Hosiery
First Aid Supplies
Dressings

TH.E MEDICAL SHOPPE
-146-2206

1480 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH
"Just Minutes From Holzer"

Toll Fn'l'

ment," Ms. Broobler said in the
press release issued by her auorney's office, "and hope tbat lbe
CIA leadership and culture changes
so that the truly dedicaled people
may get on with the important mission of protecting our national
security without feat' of reprisal and
relributioo for doing their duty and
obeying U.S. law."

151Moin St
Jay I Joe MOofe, M•nagera

MEIGS MEMORY GARDENS
RT. 7 &amp; EAGLE RIDGE RD.
POMEROY, OH. 45769
614-992-7440
PRE-NEED PLANNING FOR
• MAUSOLEUMS • WEST~INSTER CRYPTS
• MEMORIALS • LOTS • VAULTS

NO BIG ADS
NO HASSLE
....

STOP IN AND.

WE WILL DEAL
ANYTHING IN
INVENTORY
WILL BE SOLD FOR

ONLY s94oo
PROFit
94 IS ALMO$T OVER • SO
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS

s94oo SALE
SEE: Mike Northup, Dwight Stevers, Pete
Somerville, Tom Sprague, Morris Sheets, AI
Durst, Eric Blackburn, Bob Stanley.
252 Upper River Road, GaHipolls, OH. PH. 446-0842

1-XOU--t-tS-22U6
•

-----•

n

.
•

�..-·

-~

December 25, 19M'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ott Point Pleaunt, WV

nc.

'
Annual Liquidation

.

·V·
,,,

.

'

'

, r'

.,. ·•

' ":('

.,

, '

t

'

'

.

lO'

December 25, 1Jk ..

.,

~n urcn Dells
~ting· ittMeigs'

\Ca;Jebration .
1

Qf~ Hblidays
...

1995 CHEVY LUMINA

1Q9S Glf.O ~ETRA0 d. . .
3DR Coupe-r speed - c:ireat Mi1eage- eon ltiODing

4DR - V6 -Auto -Air - Cassette - Power Windows
&amp; Locks - Cruise -Tilt

If

$8,995

1995 CHEVY C1500 Ext. Cab
V8 -Air -Tilt - Cruise - Cassette

1 ~~- Sir~!?ssf.t!\l~M

MONTE CARLO LS
V6- Air- Cassette - Loaded

$14,299

. PU -All New - Air Bag - Anti-lock Brakes

699

1995 CHEVY CAMARO

1995 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC

V~~~-~~Ya~ ~s~Pffmel

V8 - Auto -Air - Dual Power Seats - Loaded

1994 CADILLAC BROUGHAM

1995 PONTIAC FIREBIRD FORMUlA
5.71itre V8- Auto- T-tops- CD Player- Dark Green

Y·8 - Leather· Dual Air Bags · Heated Seating Area More

$21,995

$31,995

1995 CHEVY S SERIES

SEDAN DEVILLE

$14,695

$31,5 95

1995 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX SE

I

V6 -Auto -Air - Cassette

$17,995 .
1995

Leiither-

•

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Custom Quad 4- Tilt-Cruise, Cassette, Auto- Air

1995 OLDS CIERA SL

U&amp;;JJ&amp;I£

V'6- Auto- Loaded

$16,495 .

No J.,uxury .

CUTlASS' .
SUPREMESL

SEVitLES NbRTHSTAR
V8 - Lealber- Loaded - MSRP $4fo.842
:save
5
Now$33,588
9,254

Leather Power Seats- V-6- Auto- Loaded

1995 CADILLAC ELDERATO

1995 OLDS 88 ROYALE

$16,440
Loaded- Remote Keyless Entry- Power Seats

$36,995

waded- V-6-Auto-AirCruise

.
"
Choice 8' 99 7
$

$10,995

1994 BUICK
CENTURY
Auto-Air-.Casse~te-Cruise-

V-6-Auto-Air-Power
Windows

Auto-Stereo-Cruise3800 V6-7 Passenger

~12,495

~15,495

1994CHEVY 1994CHEVY
,CORSICA
LUMINA
4DRCruise-Air bag

.,

1994 OLDS
CUTLASS
SUPREME
V-6-Auto-Air-Cassette

$9,999

$13 995

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
Taxes and title fee not included.
All-payments-subject to Gr-edit~approval. - --. .,_ -

.DOl.'A'I 1·-riRS, Inc.
..; T

•

Plains.
William Matlact ran a hotel at
the tum of the century and through
collections from bone and buggy
travelers and bls own resources lhe
church was completed in 1906,
Arbaugh said
· Her father took great pride in
this church and would ring the bell
for Sunday school for at least 30
minutes beginning at 9 a.m., she
said.
"We would !11, to ring it wbeo
we were small, • Arbaugh said,
adding each New Year's Eve they
would ring out the old and in lbe
new With this bell. "We thought it
was lbe neatest thing."
But, this church and her closeknit family didn'tlast forever .
"Tbey told me they were going
to take that cburcb ll9wn and I told
tbem'overmy dead bOdy," sbe sald.
"But they didn't pay any attention
to me."
Today, all that remains of the
church sbe grew up in is Ibis bell
- wbicb now stands in front of St.
Paul's United Melbodist Cburcb,

1994 BUICK CENTUJlY
Auto- Air- PoWer windows &amp; I..ocks - Tilt- Air-

.

.

V-6- Auto- Air- All Power ' .

~16,995

The church defined one's life
then. But today's generations are
less sincen:, less bani-working and
not as full of tbe "good spirit,",
said Arbaugh.
"When a bell rings it almost
tells you to get up and go to church
no matter bow you feel on Sun. day," sbe said.
Tbe ringing of church beUs during lbe holidays reminds us of the
true meaning of Christmas,
Albaugh said.
"It's the birth of Christ our living savioc. He set a pattern for our
lives," sbe said. "He came to save
us all and if we don't abide it's
going to be too bad." ' .
The old Portland cbureb Gayle
Price remembers from his boyhood
is long since gone. This church was
built in 1840.
Hiram McDade, who bad river
connections because be was an area
produce buyer, bought the iron bell
fropl a riverboat between 1850 and
1860, Price recalled.
.
· When the' new church was erected in 1928, the old clock and the
bell were the only items salvaged,
be added.

1995 BUICK LESABRE CUSTOM
. \
V-6- Auto- Air-waded

1995 BUICK PARK AVENUE-.
Loaded-Lealher-All Power-Dual Air

••

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRiVEl

93 LUMINA·Z·34- Loaded- Red ........ ~ ..............................................................!l3,985

93 GRA.ND PRIX· Red ............................................... ~·········••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ~l2,985
92 CADILlAC BROUGHAM· Wbite .......................................................... ~l7,990
91 BUICK PARK
•Wbite......................................................................... ~l1,985

AVE

91 FORD T-BIRD ······--···--·---···-··-··-··········-·-···-··-· .. ·--· ......................... ~7 ,945

83 MERCEDES 190E ......................•............•...••.........••..••.• ~ ....•.•...•..•.58,990
92 MAZDA MIATE MXS • Conv. Black 5 spd........................................... ~l3,995
88 CADILlAC SEVILLE- White.......................................................... ,995

n

90 TOYOTA CRESSIDA • Loaded... ~·············· .......................................... !7,960
91 PONTIAC FIREBIRD ·Biack •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••!7,930

90 GMC 1/2

-2 WD- L-WB- Blue ....... ,............................................................ ~9,989

90 FORD F-lSO SWB XLT- Larict- s spc~- 4x4............~ .......~.........................~10,975
90 NISSAN PU • 5 Speed, wbiie ................................................. ........................ :.. ~5,970
91 GMC SONOMA ·5 Speed, Blue .................................................... ~ ............... ..S5,985
93 DODGE CARAVAN GRA.ND ES· Loaded, Wbite ................................ ~l6,?40

85 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER SE ...•.....•.........••...•.•.••...•.•.•.••...•••••.•...•.•.•s2,930
89 S-10 BLAZER 4.3 ·Auto-Alum wbeels-T.T. fai~t .......................................19,920 .
92 &amp;·10 PICKUP S.OB ·Air Cassette, Green, 5 speed. ...................................."17,965
94 NISSAN PATHFINDER· Loaded-Auto ........... ;...................................123,995
92 CJ{EVROLET 4X4 LWB SILVERADO ·Au10- V-8- ...........................'14,900

/11e'l'll( Ch'llstmtts
II

&lt;:to flU

*All prices Include
-~
·( !,lostd - -rebate.-to dealer.
Tixes &amp; fees not ·
ehtlstmas ?Jtt.,
Included.

Opua

;lt~mdtty

BELLS OF MEIGS COUNTY
- Numerou churches slog tM
joys of this Cluistmu - n a
their bella send a Ole' 'It l'llr ud
wid~.

Tile tradition of rlniiDI

bells diii'IDc the lilolldays _ . .

ues even today. Abon, tWs ft.
yar-old bel now altlln tU .._
of tile SL Pa.a United Metltodld
Church In Tuppen Pial••·
Altlloqh tile Ol'iglul d11rrdl U.
beea tom do-, this bell

re_...

a testimony to the spirit and

work of the original daun:ll&amp;oen.
said Ethel Arbaugh,,.,.._ fatller'
founded tile church in 1906. At
left, Dallu and Donna Hill atallll
. next to a bel f01'111ed In tile Buck-

eye Bell Foaodry In 1171 by 11 .
Clnrl-tl ·eompany. Tltla bell Is
all tllat's left of the chun:h Mn.
H.lll arew up In near Apple
Griln. .
·

sbelldded.

OR

1994CHEVY 1994CHEVY
BERETIA LUMINA AD

4 door· Auto·
Tilt

average citizen's lite, area citizens
sald.
One bell will always be most
significant for 89-year-old Ethel
Arbaugh. One of five children of
William and Minnie Matlack in
Tuppers Plains, her father helped
raise the money that built the fm;t
United Brethren Church in Tuppers

1994 OLDS "'......,~

.$11,995

19940LDS
ACHIEVA

· : POMEROY - Tbe crisp mom-·
· ing sky Is sliced by a far-()ffbell.
: Tolling. Tolling. Tolling.
_; · Its unchanging tone beckons
:-ellurchgoers to worship.
+ But, lbe resonance of these bun·died.year-old bells conjures memo..~5 of a small-town Christmas,
:lllinily and a time when the church
.:Jtlayed a mucb larJ!er role in lbe

$20,495
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1994 OLDS 88
ROYALE

(by G-ae Abate,

.......:.rm..sendnel Sllllf

1994

V-6- Auto- Air, Temp Control- Steering wbeeltoucb
controls

{.

V8 - Auto - Air - Tilt - Cruise, More

Auto- Air- Cassette-Spoiler- More

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$22,495

$12,995

1995 GMC SIERRA4x4 P/U

1995 BIJICK SKYLARK

V-8 - Northstar - CD player - Sport Pkg.

Aluminum wheels 111ore

4 Door- V-6-Auto-AirCruise

3/4 ton - 4S4 V8 - Trailer

1995 OLDS ACHIEVA S COUPE

· VS - Leather - Loaded

Includes Under 30 Allowance

~alino~f tell~ you to get up
~nd go .-to church, no matter
thow you feel on Sun~ay'
f
-Ethel Arbaugh

No Luxury Tax

1994 CADILLAC

18~~d~~~~~ACfft~r~~eleE

vour

1994 ·GMC SUBURBAN
SAVE $2000!!!

Ext Cab - V6 - tilt - cruise -Air - Cassette LS Decor

;:~~nen a·.c_hurch bell rings, ~t

~$tory IIDtl photos

Don't Be Late!

$15,995

'f.

•

$19,495

. $12,995

1994CHEVY
CAVALIER OR
1994 PONTIAC
SUNBIRD

SAVE!!

4 x 4 LS, V6- air- Cassette - Airbag

$17,595

Includes First Time Buyer Rebate

1995 GMC JIMMY

4DR- V(i -4 x 4- Black- LTPkg

Includes First Time Buyer Rebate .

1995 CHEVY S SERIES

Polo Green - V6 - CD player -Aluminum Wheels Cruise - Power Windows &amp; Locks- Keyless Entry

$13,995

$21,249

1995 CHEVROLET S SERIES

$17,593

1~?rd~~Ja~~PR

4 x 4 - Tahoe - Auto - Air - More

. $17,495

$16,695

Includes First Time Buyer Rebate

1994 CHEVY S-10 BLAZER

I,,,

HOURS:

Monday.
-· Friday
9AM·8PM

Saturday
9A.M'·4PM
I

0

'

...

1 l1

... . .

~

"People wanted (the bell) but
they couldn't get it ou~" Price said.
The bell since bas been moved to
the new Portland church.
Prij:e remembered tb~t Perry
"Bunk." Browning would toll Ibis
bell better lban anyone else. He
would not ring it over and over and
over again. Browning would just
strike the bell once and then pause
and lben strike again.
"It rang when there was an
emergency," Price said, adding lhe
bel' sounded for boors at the
armistice in Wocld War I.
No other church bas compared
.with this cb!!!'ch from bis boyhood,
he added.
"When you went In there something bappened." Price said. ''They
practiced lbeir religion. It was the
center of tlie community. Church
w~ the center of life, since we
didn't have any social events."
Letart Falls' resident Aaron
Sayre remembered u a YOUII8 boy
wasn't tall enough to reach llld
ring lhe beD.
"I've bad the opportunity to do
the fame with my daugbters,"
sa~~· MI tate pride in It"
•• Dexter's Cindy Hayes said ber
lWO clildren love to ring lbe Dexter
Cburdl ~ Cllrist bell - reminding .
AN ORGAN "BELL" - Tile bells In the
ber of towns Norman Rockwell
Trinity Churcll In Pomeroy really ueu't even
woulddepict . .
, "It's an old-town event 8Dd it's , bells, altllou~ they ~ be played by an ClllJIIL
Tile cllvcll 1 ''eariUon" Is completely dl&amp;lt.l,
• m., to my,~~U~;" Hayes said. '

,

orpalst Ralpll Werry laid. Wltll tile coatriiMItlolll of tile late Jimmy Weber, tills •)'Item ~

boaaU aboat • year •lo to c•lehrate Ute
davclt'sl75th MIIIYenary lin 1997.

&gt;

.
••

•

,,

•

I

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�OH---¥olnt PleaSint, wv

.
.
--·
-

·New program to recognize
excellence of 4-H members

'

POMEROY - The State 4-H

.•" ,
M

;,

-•.....

--------•
•-.-·--·..---...
..--:::
-.w

MR. AND MRS. KAREL CUBICK

MR. AND MJlS, MICHAEL McCONNELL

Horky-Cubick

Elliott-McConnell

MR. AND MRS. RICK DAILEY

.runner- Da1. ey
B
1

with pearls, baby' 5 bn:atb, ribbons
and
ivy.
· Elliott~Micbael~.McConneU
were umted in mamage Nov. 4 at
The flower girl was Brittany
Elliott, niece of lbe bride. She wore
tbe Gallipolis Christian Cburcb.
a
white teal-lengtb sillc dress witb
Denny. Coburn performed tbe
double nng ceremony for tbe scalloped nyloo overlay. The badt
da~gbter of Evelyn and Eugene was 'V -shaped witb a satin bow.
El!t~tt. and the son of Etbel and She wore a headpiece of white
flowers witb white sillc bow, and
Wtlliam McConnell.
.
!be al.lar was decomted w1tb a teal and fuschia ribbons. She carwhite latbce wall, decorl!ted witb a ried a white basket witb teal lace
s":"ag of teal and fu~cbta flowers and threw fuschia rose pelals.
Best man was Paul McConnell,
w1tb greenery, baby s breatb and
teal bow. Candleabms and ferns brotber uf the groom. Groomsmen
were at tile sid~s. A unity cand!e were Mike Taylor, Brian Landrum
was decorated wttb u:aJ and fu~ua and Phil Valentine, all friends of
flowers, 3!1d were hgbted durmg the groom. Ushers were Phil
Valentine, Terry Elliott and Tim
the ~m~y.
.
Elliot~
brothers of the bride.
GIVen m marnage by ber parRyan Elliott, nephew of the
ents and e~ned to tbe altar by her
fa~. Ox: bride wore. a fl~·lengtb bride, served as ring bearer. He carwbtte saun gown w!tb wbtte lace ried tbe wedding bands on a white
overlays. The neckline was beart- satin pillow decorated witb teal and
shaped. The . sle~ves were full- fuschia lace and flowers.
Tbe falber of lbe bride, groomslength r~ger Up wttb lace overla.ys.
men,
ushers and ring bearer wore
The bodice was accented witb iridesc.ence and pearls. The back black tuxedos witb teal ties and
openmg ~as also h~-shaped and cummerbunds and boutinnieres of
at ~ W81St was a sau.n bow, from fuschia roses.
wblcb ex~ded tbe lrain. .
Music was by Ashley Valentine,
The bn~ wore a ~aded and soloisl, and Jenny Mill«, pitmisL
pearl be~·~ from which feU ber
Patty BelviUe,JIIId Brigitte Newfing~~ Up vetl. She earned a~- man resiJtered Pests and banded
cadirig ~uquet o~ teal and fuschia ' out pregrams. Amanda Wotbe
magnolia; .and w~te roses ~nted handed out bird seed bags.
wltb pearls, baby s breath, nbbon
A reception was held at the
an~ tvy. Botb ~e~e made and AMVETS Building. Music was
des.}ted by tbe bride s molber.
provided by Don Wotbe and
.
.groom wore: a black tuxedo George Thompson.
~ttb Jails, along wtth a b~k bow
The three-tiered cake was
ue .and cummerb~nd. Hts bou- topped witb tbe bride and groom
toruerre was a fuschia rose
and decoraled witb white icing, teal
T
D
ed ·
and fuschia magnolias, witb
eresa
arst
serv
as
matron
of honor. Missy Call, Margi Webb stain;teps leading to side cakes witb
and Julie Easton were bridesmaids,
all friends of tbe bride. The atten- a lighted fountain in tbe middle.
The cake wa; baked by Jean Hendants wore teal bigb-low length derson.
satin dresses . The neckline was
Wilson's of Point Pleasant,
scalloped and tbe backs and silk W.Va. catered the reception.
bows at the top and bottom of beatThe couple honeymooned at
shaped openings. All attendants Sanibel Island, Fla. Tbey now
carried cascading bouquets of teal · reside in Gallipolis.
and fuschia magnolias adorned
GALUPOLIS -Tamara Marie

. GALLIPOLIS - Sharon Bon- gift: She wore a 3/4 length white
nie Brunner and Rick Donovan satin dress, trimmed witb white
Dailey were united in marriage chantilly lace and tapered necldine ,
Nov. ~ at the OurHpuse Tavern.
with an applique. She carried a
Tbe bride is the daughter of Mr. wbite basket filled witb teal rose
and Mrs. Walter Brunner of Oliv«, petals.
The ring bearer was Tyler EastBritish Columbia, Canada. The
groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. man. He wore a black tuxedo witb
,Larry E. Dalley of Gallipolis.
a teal bow tie and cummerbund.
The double ring ceremony was His boutonniere was a sonya rose
performed by the Rev. Paul Voss, baby's breath and teal pumosa
'
and music was provided by Ryan
Best man was Dwight Dail~y of
Dailey; nephew of the groom.
Piketon, cousin of tbe groom. He
Escorted to lbe allar and given wore a black tuxedo with teal bow
in marriage by her father, the bride tie and cummerbund. His bouton:·wore a tnlditional white satin full- niere was a white carnation witb
, length gown, witb a fitted bodice teal pumosa. Usbers were Brent
and high neck,- trimmed with scat- Eastman and Roger and Rand
, r~tered motifs. Tbe sleeves were Dailey.
Y
i: -adorned witb sequins. Tbe full skirt Following the ceremony, a
;::was also trimmed witb seeded reception was held in tbe formal
~~ JIC8l'ls and iridescent sequins, witb dining room of the Our House.
-: -alencon lace Cdging the catbedral- Louise Dailey and Rosemary Dai: ~;:length train.
.
ley served as hostesses. The three::• The bride's hair was swept up tiered wedding cake was decomted
~: ~nto a Dial~biilg tiara headpiece, witb peach roses and teal leaves •t
!~ "trimDJed with seeded pearls and irl• was topped with a bride a~d
;: descent sequins, witb a white flng« . groom.
:-: lip veil puffed at the batk 11 She carMildred Dailey of Gallipolis,
·:!. ried a hand-lied bouquet M SOIIya aunt of the groom, atiended tbe
~~·~miniature white carnatioos, bridal registry.
.
breath and teal JIUDIOS8 lied
Tbe bride Is a .a graduate of
wbite lace peach and white Cariboo conege in Williams Lake
~ibb«JDS.
British Columbia, and is em lo ed
Allison Hendry of Houston.. at St. Josepb Hospital in Hgufron
~""lrex.os. was tile maid of booor. Sbe - as a labour and delivery nurse
:&amp;vore a 3/4 length two-piece teal
The groom is a graduate of Obio
dress. Sbc carried a bouquet of Unlvmity and 15
·
· ed
.
S
_,.
b'
.
emp10 Y at l.
sooya ..... one w 1te rose wtth Joscpb Hospital in Houston as
~]~=~breath
·and lace
tealand
pumosa
.
.
witb white
peach
.
'
manager o f tb e 1men
se~v•c~s
department. The couple res1des m
Houston.

~

~

MIDDLEPORT - Sheila Edna
Horky of Middleport and Karel L.
Cubicle of Canfield exchanged
wedding vows in a ceremony atlbe
Middleport First Presbyterian
Cbun:b at 4 p.m. on Oct. 29.
The bride is the daughter Mrs.
Betsy Parsons of Middlepon, and
the late Carl Horlcy. Tbe groom is
tile son of Robert Cubick of Ventura, Calif., and the late Janet Hendricks. Tbe Rev Kris Robinson performed the double ring ceremony
following a program of music by
Tim Watts, organ; Diana Totb,
flute; David Bowen, trumpet; and
Nancy Adamson, soloist.
White Wies, spider mWJJs, laitspur, carnations with burgundy
slargazer lilies, and mixed greenery
decorated lbe allar. On piUars were
arrangements of waterfall design of
greenery wltb white carnations.
The bride was esconed to tbe
allar by her stepfatber, Eldred Parsons. Sbe wore an ivory sillc brocade gown witb three-quarter
sleeves. Tbe gown was accented
with rose replicas of tbe same
material and ber veil fell from a
band of the rose replicas. She carrieda English oval bouquet of burgundy IIJ!jl cmun tlowers.

cbarge.

However, wedding news must
meet gen~al slandards of timeliness. Tbe newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, tbe wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be n:ceived
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to lbe date
of publication.
Those not making ·tbe 60-day
deadline will be published during
tbe daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of either the bride
or tbe bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larg«.
P\)Oi qualit&gt;: p_!!otog~pbs will

•

•
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i.
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••
•

•

i.

MR. AND MRS. COLE BARTittlM

f Epling-Bartrum

.
i Norm
OALLIPOUS - ~. aiid Mrs.
Swindler of Gallipolis are
.!:, dauplel',
announdna tiJc m~ge of tllcir .
Amber Dawn Epling, to

0

1.

: Cole Batuum. 1011 of Mr. and Mrs.
• Bill Mullins of Crown City, on
J Dec.l61lNJW10WS, Va.
-,.,...--!'·~ . Tbc Ra. Laly.,JViJijam• nffid-

....

.

Tbc bride il a 1989 ~ ~

·

. . -~Talae HIJI! Sdloolllltlli
•~
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J
aD
liz« Modkal Cciacer.{Tile
l : ifOOID·il. 1990 ....... ol u.-

1

; r ! nan Trace High Scllool and Is

·

t employed

t

., ~ Dod&amp;e.

at Norris· Northup

IO:Io·I~M. ·· I P.M.

•tfope's :Furniture qa{(eries
~

·151 SECOND~AVE:~

~Lifestgk :Furtpture
CORNER THIRD AT OUVE

•5tcquisi#p1tf :Fine Jewefrg- Gallipolis
(MI~dleport ~losed

11£.C.. Tlle co~j resides oo~ S~te
polis.-.•,,. '

I ·~2!8,

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.

until Tues:,
Dec. 27)
'

A reception was held at tbe Hoiiday Inn in Gallipolis immediately
foUowing tbe wedding. The bride's
tiered cake topped wltb a Lenox
china vase of flowers was served
after tbe dinner. Tracey O'Dell registered lbe guests.
·,
Tbe couple took a wedding trip
to tbe Island of St. Lucia,
Caribbean.
· They now reside at 9535 Leffmgwen Road. Canfield.
The new Mrs. Cubicle: bolds
both bacbelor and master's degrees
from Obio University, and was formetly employed at Wright State
University in Dayton. Her husband
received his bachelor's degree from
Kent Slate University, and bis mas·
ter's degree from Obiu University.
.He is in tbe Canton office Of M.S.
Consullants Inc.
· "' ·::&lt; 1 ..

POMEROY -

The home of

Mrs. 'Opha Offutt decorated in the
boli~y 'tbcme was tile scttinr, for a

Christmas potluck Tuesday of 14
members of Friendly Circle of
Trillily Oaun:b;
FoUowing lbe diDDel, a memorial $aVice was held for Mary Elizabeth Cbapnan by Gay Perrin and
Maye Mora. Miss Chapman, a ded-

YGR

Shafer, cousin of the bride. BridesMR. AND MRS. DON WRIGIIT
maids were Lucy Mullen, April
Loveday, Breezy Roberts, cousin
of bride, and Toni Saunders, cousin
of bride. Tbe flower girl was Britlany Corwin.
GAU.IPOUS - Mr. and Mn;.
Tbe Wrights bave five children,
They wore tea-length fuschia .. Donald E. Wright of Gallipolis eel- . Donald, Floyd, Terri, Cberri and
dresses witb accenting headpieces ebrated tbeir 40th wedding anniver- John; and six grandchildren, Tessi,
and carried fans decorated witb sary Dec. 15 witb a dinner in tlleir Sheena, Alex, James, Ryan and
fuschia, black: and white flowers honor.
were manied Dec. 15, Kristyn.
and ribbons.
1954 in Galllipolis.
Tbe groom wore a black tuxedo
with a white vest and tie. The best
man was Mike Kemper. Grooms·
men were David Roush, Don
Mayes, Cliff Parsons ll, brotber of
bride, and Cody Bjclc:ers, .brotber of
the groom. The ring bearer was
Setb Parsons, cousin of tbe bride.
Tbey wore black tuxedos with
fuschia lies and cwiunerbunds.
Guest_ book attendant was
Leshia Saunden;, aunt of tbe bride.
A reception was held at the
American Legion Post No. 27.
Hostesses were Lesbia Saunders,
Melinda and Erin Meaige, and
Nancy Fellure.
The couple spent tbeir honeymoon in Gatlinburg, Tenn., and
they now reside in Gallipolis.

Wrl"ghts note annl"versary

icated member of tbe cirCle for
many years, died last montb.
. The Christmas program was
g1ven by Mrs. Roland Wilcbnan
1
and was based oolbe
"Wbat
Can I Give Him
Mrs .. Diane Hawley,
,Harris, and Mrs. Don
Mrs. Wildman as
symbol~ gifts to tbe

gram being introduced statewide in
1995 to recognize teens for
achievement of standards of excellence.
1n anoounc:inf. tile new program,
David R. "Chip ' Haggerty, Meigs
County Extension 4-H agent, said
that all Ohio 4-H teens wbo have
achieved excellence in 4-H work,
4-H participants, 4-H citizenship,
4-H leadership, 4-H officer/committee work and non 4-H leadership are invited to apply for Ibis
prestigious honor.
According to Haggeny being a
State 4-H Ambassador is botb a
tremendous honor arid an important
responsibility. Teens who are
installed as Slate 4-H Ambassad&lt;n
bold tbat lille for life, although the
term of active status is one progr.un
year.
Ambassadoo bave the responsibility to maintain high slandatds of
excellence related to 4-H pledge
commitments of clear thinking ,
great loyalty, large service and better living, for tbe betterment of
tbeir clubs, communities, country
and world through positive citizenship and leaden;hip.
In addition, 4-H teens wbo
meet tbe Slandards of Excellence
and accept tbe invitation to become
S.tate 4-H Ambassadors will be
ex~ected during their one year
acuve term to do the following:
I. Participate in leadership, citi-

mties, ·

.

2. Serve as 4-H spokespersons
10.develop and streoglben 4-H partnerships witb government officials,
lbe media, state associations, donor
groups, civic grQUps, parents, volunteers and otbers on the state, district and local levels
3. Work witb other State 4-H
Ambassadors to plan, implement
and evaluate an annual State 4-H
·Ambassador project to strength 4H youtb development programming in Ohio and expand 4-H marketing and promotion to make
Ohio's positive 4-H image even
better.
All Ohio 4-H teens who are high
school freshmen , sophomores,
junion; or seniors, document, in the
application, that they hav e
achieved each of tbe six standards
of excellence, accept the invitation
10 be State 4-H Ambassadors, agree
10 meet tbe terms and cooditions of
tbe program and participate in and
complete tbe State 4-H Ambassador Orientation, will be officiall y
installed as tbe fll'St group of Stac c
4-H Ambassadors.
Meigs County 4-H teens Wh o
wish to become on·e of the first
State
4-H Ambassadors should contact
tbe Meigs County Extension Office
at 992-6696 for more information
and applicalion malerials.

Gallia community calendar
Sunday, Dec:.lS
- Old Kyger Free
Wtll Bapbst Church services 10
a.m. No nightly service.
KYGE~

•••

. ADDIS&lt;?N - Candlelight servtce, Adduon Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m.

•••

Monday,Dec:.%6
GALLIPOLIS - Divorce Support Group, 7:30 p.m., New Life

Lutheran Church.

•••

Tuesday, Dec:. 27
· GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Anonymous, 8 p.m., Woodland
Centers.

•••

RIO GRANDE - Open Gate
Garden Club, 7:30 p.m.. home of
Clara Belle Bradley . Program,
"Christmas Tradition~ Around the
World." Gift exchange.

IIIII-

40TH ANNIVERSARY • Lawrence Alvin and Mary Mitchell
will celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary with an open reception from 6 to 8 p.m. Dec. 26 at the Christ United Methodist
Cburcb, 9688 SR 7 South. The celebration wUI be hosted by their

famUy •.

Meigs community calendar

:-•'

CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-926-0025
For An Appolnb••lt or ltlfonnltlon.
Ewnln1 AppolnlnJMI8 Anr.llte
Our,., flflr•IN Ia AWII..,_ At AI QJL:11.

I

t
',

SAllE DAY SERVICES ON REUNES AND REPAIRSl
DENTURES START AT 1143 PER DENTURE!
SMALL ADDI1lONAL CHARGE FOR SAME DAY SERVICE

•-

Vlrllnla Dental SerYlce
William v. Bell, D.D.S., Inc.
1• POPLAR RIM Ill.

SUNDAY
SYRACUSE - Christmas Day
Sunday school, Asbury United
Methodist Church, 8:45 a.m.; worship service 10 a.m. at Forest Run
Church.

munity Organization (RACO),
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Star
Mill Park. New oflicen; to be elected.

Sanborn Society
issues donations
to missionaries

FRIDAY
PAGEVILLE- Scipio Town ship; Trustees, 6:30 p.m. Friday,
Pageville Township hall. Organizational meeting to follow regular
meeting.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Free Clothing
Day, Salvation Army, Thursday, 10
TUESDAY
RACINE - Racine Area Com- a.m. to noon. All area residents in
need of clotbing are welcome.

,

MIDDLEPORT - Money
donations to missionaries were
made when the B.H. Sanborn Missionary Society of tbe Middleport
F'U'St Baptist Cbun:h met recently at
overlooking Blennerbassett Island.
tbe borne of Mn;, Dale Walburn.
James is a gmduate of tbe UniMrs. Manning Kloes conducted
versity of Rio Grande and is tbe meeting, which opened witb
employed by American Alloys Inc. devotions by Mrs. Bert Bodimer.
of New Haven . Lisa is an honor Refreshments were served by tbe
student attending Marshall Univer- ·hostess and 15 plates of goodies
sjty, majoring in elementary/special were prepared for shul-ins of the
educahon.
·
·
cburcb.
.. "'
A mid·S~UJ~D~er 1995 wedding is
Tbe next meeting will be in
planned:
Febi'IJal)o.
·

LISA STARCHER, jAMES MOODY

Starcher-Moody

CHAPMAN SHOES

.
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,
·

. . rtJfrnaJ

SE L-A- 'B RATION
Monda-r, pec~mber 26th
9:0,0 - 5:00 pm
.

.,

..
• Chlldrens
-.

• Dress &amp; Casual
'

.. .. Athletic

-";·T-

Pomeroy;s '(lua1~ Shoe ·store ·
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STAHL'S. -- .

ANNOUNCING

,.

Veterans Me11orial Hospital

SR - 50, Little Hocking, OH

' (()141 989-2271
•
'

Open Mon.-Fri. 8 to 6 Sat. 8 to 5

"

-

General Surgeon Neal J. Nesbitt, a medical
staff member at Veterans Memorial Hospital,
is available for consultation, emergency,:
general and elective surgery at the Pomeroy:
hospital. .
· .
On January 9, Dr. Nesbitt will be moving~
into quarter~ formerly occupied by Dr.:
Malcolm Lentz in the Meig s Medical:
Building adjacent to Veterans Memorial. His.
office may be reached by calling 992-3632.
Dr. Nesbitt received his medical degree atU.C.L.A. in Los Angeles, Calif. He interned, served his residency and
practiced in California for 12 years before becoming associated with a
large general pra9ice in Las Vegas, Nevada. He is currently on the:
active staff of O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens, and Doctors,:
.___ __
Ho~pital in Nelsonville.
i2
1

Christmas Shoppe

•

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December 26. January 8, 1995
20% off all artificial trees in stock
25·% off all Lights, Tree ornaments, Nativities,
Candles, GarlanQs, and selected giftware.
40% off all wrapping paper, paper plates,
. napkins1 and cups •
50% off all boxed Christmas Cards
and selected ornaments
·-~

I

CHAPMAN,SHO-ES

WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va. George R. and J uditb M. Starcher
of West Columbia are announcing
tbe engagement and approaching
maniage of lbeir daughter, Lisa G.
Starcher, to James D. Moody, son
of George R. and Marjorie A.
Moody of Cheshire.
The couple become engaged
Sept.IO, 1994atlbePointofVIew,

After Christmas Sale

l/2 ·Price Sale

•Mene

. Gl\LLIPOLIS - Tina Maria
Parsons and Tlinotby ''Craig" Bickers were united in IIUIITiage Ocl 22
at Trinity United Methodist
Cbureb.
Tina is tbe daughter of Cliff and
Sharon Parsons of Bidwell. Sbe is
the granddaughter of Violet and tile
late Frank Parsons of Gallipolis,
and Thelma and· tbe late Elmer
Mwrell Folden of Bidwell~ .
Craig is tbe son of Renae Muller
of Gallipolis, and Tim Bickers of
Winfield, Ala. He is tbe grandson
of Ben and Helen Bickers of Rio
Grande, and Bill and Lillian Rece
of Vinton.
The Rev. C.J. Lemley performed tbe ceremony witb music
provided by Matt Muller and
Christian Scott: Vocalists were
Allen Ross, Vinton Rankin, Matt
and Renae Muller, and Christian
Scott.
·
The bride wore a white satin
gown accented with pearls and iridescent sequins. Her veil consisted
of white iridescent flowers, pearls
and sequins. Sbe carried a bouquet
of cascading white fuschia and
black roses.
Matron of honor was Annie

Cuatoni F1ttld Dent-In One Day At Our T..,. Vllll-r ~· .
By Our ProMalatl8ll And Tnllned ltllfl.
: ·,;
Mldeln Our DeRtiJI LlbonJiory By au.lllld Tec:hnlclenf..,

not be acceple(l. uenerauy, snapshots or instant-developing photos
are not of acceptable quality.
All materiaf submitted for publication is subject to editing.
Questions, may be directed to
tbe editorial department from 1-5
p.m. Monday through Friday at
446-2342, .

•Womens

Parsons-Bickers

re~tic;ms

•. . . . . .

?'

. . .

Holpllll

, 115 E.IIUIOIIAL DIIYI
PO MElOY
992·2104 .

..
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I 1

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dleport.

MR. AND MRS. CRAIG BICKERS

zensbip, communications, public
and scbolaJsbip opportu-

·Ambassador program is a new pro-

Frtenaly Circle gathers for celebration~~~:Vil

Wedding policy
Tbe Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards tbe weddings of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason cOtmties as news
and is happy to publish wedding
stories and photographs witbout

Serving as matron of bonor for
her sister was Jaget Kohls. Bridesmaids were Catbleen McAnnery
and Jean Azar. All wore burgundy
taffeta gowns and carried bouquets
of burg!Didy and white ~ns.
Karl Seeds, Canfield, was best
man and ushers were Robert Abcrnetby, Canfield; Glenn Beck,
Cleveland; and Bruce Fisher, Mid-

Sunday Times Sentinel Pqe 83

-·-..-··-·-- ·- ., •• _ _..

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�December 25, 1994
Times

Christmas
in 1864 not
especially
joyful one
c...-.

8DecW
"CCIr11lmml. willian

its joyous
felllvkiea, il just at biDd, and we
ICDIIariOouricadeaaourmostCIDICSl
wlsbel, dllliO tbem it Jill)' prove •
IIIIJPY Olle. WbiJst 10 very IDIDy, it
,.........,ly will prove pleaspm, we

the lallyeildc
-menlO be
lllCII widlin ill InfbWM'CI

...... _ _ _•dtaribic-bas

,.., r-•- into IDIDY housoc:aniediiiClUIIIilta

bolda tiw OIIC )'1111' 110 knew no
bereaVCIDCIIt, IDd tbe members of
which loobtl fC.wad with pleasure
ua1
of
Olrist
10 tbe
mu. ama leCUiil merry
-

"It biB IOIUriiOd butalu to them it
iladayofiiiOUIIIiq. Tberc is weepin&amp; lllllllmcn..,O. Ill CMI' tbe land.
RacbciiiiOUIIII for her c:hildrco llld
refulelto be c:omforted bec:ause they
are DOL
"Tbc able babilliments of woe
iacliiiOUI'DiD&amp; meet us at every step.
The 1111 flail of tbe picf Slrickt.n
•. ~r. _ . . _
•
tbe
wuc,.........., or Sill« as y pus us
Oil tbeir weary way, llbow tbat tbe
Deltroyer ... been near them and'
robbodtbemoftbeirpla:iousjewcla.
To them·nrc • burden, 8111 in
'tbe billemela of tbeir lllgllish. they
arc t.cmpll:d 10 mlnlur qalilll tiw
Provideacc who doclh 111 things
weD."
S··~ · tbeGal
So -R.I..
...._.
....... m
llpoliaJOIIIIIljultbefcRCbristmas
in 1864. 'lbat puticuJar Chrillmas
may ba~~e been tbe .,.,...,1in GaUia
hislllry.
ThelewualJiamowabouta.istmu lime. Sb iacllel feU in Cl1e clay
and sleiifw --e DU1 in force. The
winlcrof 1~- not nearly 81
aovae u tho two p-ec:eding wintm,

OLD SHARTZ HOME • The Mary J.ae Sbartz home on
Fourth Avenue In Gallipolis dates tO 1864. When buUt, the boUle
,... on wbat was called "Cow Avenue" as only a path connected
Grape Street and Vine. The Christmas of 1864 Willi perhllps tb.
addest one In GaUia biJtorv.
twoot the worst in U8llia h;.,.....,,
SOpen:e~~tin Cl1e year, llllkingfood
·-,
w.rylllla!I008ble. Tbeadsarel&amp;lgely
There did not seem 10 be IOOmany bad't of any referenllC to the joy of
parties or dinners that year. Even tbe tho ~ Wbal gifts were bought
poems writtt.n by local people had a -"'-lyiOber::.· tbe ...... ·.c:.......
son of military tone. Wrote Alvina ;;:;,~..'::'_ and•'turc.._
"""
Saunders:
.... ...,....,
There wac two art galleries that
Hurrah, for the Christmas tree,
offered pbotographs, ambrotypes,
Hurrah/or the brave and the
melainotypeS, sphereotypes and
free,
.
·
Let ev~n~•luwltlrroughoutthe
ivorytypes.
··"
Perhaps IIIICtber cause for tbe
b'tear~;,. a Christmas tree ,
somberness of that ChrisbllasrclaltJd
Let no gewgaws bf hung, no
cotbebitterncssoftbe 1864prcsidentrinUts bf .swiUig
lial election. McClellan, tbe Democrat, woo only two Gallia townships,
From the Ur!IIICMS of liberty ,
AddiSIJJ and Oreenf~eld.
. Bill the nt~~ttts ofthe detul whose
The Journal printedaftertbeelccblood llllSbfm.rhed·
tion:~GrcatSlaughterof'Shnaits'".
Sillct tlie rebflliontul/llrled her
One humorous note was provided
black flag.
by a lady and a soldier. A Gallipolis
One organization tbat was busy
Iainthatall
was the Benewlent Association, lady had written 10 comp
which oo Dec. 19, 1864 went door 10 tbe good looking Union soldiers had
been moved elsewhere leaving only
doa 10 every bouse in Gallipolis 10 ugly ones in tbeirplace.
ascertain tbe need of every family •if
A soldier from tbe 37th Iowa
there wu a need.
Volunteer Regiment, tben wintering
BecauaooftbeextralllnlinCIIUIIed at Gallipolis, wrote 10 tbe Journal
bytbeCivilWarin-servicesneedcd, taking exception 10 tbe point ·lhill
a S pen:e~~t incone tax was in forte. only ugly soldiers remained in Gil·
A
tbe returns tbe
wiDrich
show
a ...,......
•
1 :.....~;.
.....study
...m., of
_,.,.,;.,of
and
r-·--.. ......--·
HeJurther offered a tour of the
JIOCI' during the Civil War.
rcjiment SO tbe WOIDID could judge
Gallipolitan• who made the most for bcraelf.
mooeyopemcdthe inu ~ArmgooclsTbis8J!i
services to
moo
y.
Jama Suds Is a special corre·
poop included millelS, produce ~toltlieSundayTJmes.Sen·
dcalers,stcamboatcaptainsanddcal- tlllel. His address Is: 65 Willow
en in Uvcstoct.
Drive, Sprillgboro, Oblo 45066.
Inllalioo pew by u mucb u 2S 10
JCS.

Racine. UMW members celebrate
season at
Christm~s gathering
..

RACINE - Members of the
Racine United Methodist Women
enjoyed a Cllrlstmas dinner and
party at the Kountry Kitchen
Rcataunnt in Rlldne recently.
Sharon 1fa11 and Karcli Walker pRICIItcd die program. After Mrs.
Walker read a version of the poem.

456-1177.
appe&amp;r in the col
~· J?ue W !~Je
By ANNE I. ADAMS lind
STUMPED:
A
DEVICE
TO
volume
of
mall,
JlC
o~1epbes
NANCY NASH..CVMMINGS
.}, ..
,
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: Pa'- KEEP YOU AWAKE WHILE . eannotbeprovlded.
(Anne I. Adami allll ~aney
haps you can hear me saying: "I DRIVING - Charles Lord of
cq-a•JWn..
dido 't blow lhal..... from lime 10 Dtmndlon, Fla., is looldng f« this. Nuh..CIIIIIIIIInp
n,'' ,.b_..
time as some unknown bit of news He thinks It clips 10 your glasses of "A•k Anne lc
appears in your column. It is a and mates an audible signal wbeb Udled by Wlleatune, illi4 "~
refreshing bit of reading apart from your bead droops or falls on .your le~~"_!u..~'!r ~
the dismal "news of world chest. Does anyone have any ideas
- · ...., from Bantam).
'
events," wbicb monopoUZC5 news- wll= to get sudl a thing?
Write 10 "Ask Anile &amp; Nan" at
paper spao: nowadays.
All this is leading up 10 a ques- P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 0~.
Copyrlgbt1994 NEWSPAPER'
tion I have - 10 wit: Where can I Questions of general interest wlll ENTERPRISE ASSN.
· ·
get old newspapers - I mean
OLD? In the small business catalogs, there used to be a column of
ads in the bact pages and one of
these would give the address of
bow to secure old newspapers to
alert one of the news-of-the day
around one's birth time, for
instance. This makes an unusual
present as so few people think 10
save them. I would be interested in
1914 onward. - LILA E.
INKPEN, Goldsboro, N.C.
DEAR LILA: Tbe Signals cata·
log carries these newspapers. When
you order, you should specify tbe
day, month and year of the paper
you want as well as the city.
Asking for a specific newspaper
doesn't guarantee you'D get it The
paper costs $35. To order, call Signals at 1-80!ki69-9696.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I
really love those Lactona tooth.
brushes. Jewel Food Stores in my
area used to stock them. Any suggestions? - E. EHRENSCFT,
Palatine, IU.
DEAR E.: We spoke with tbe
folks at Lactona, who said they are
a smaU company and many scores
have slOpped carrying their product
because of competition from bigger
companies.
·
If you can't find LaCIODa brushes, you can order them directly
from the company, but you must
buy at least a dozen brushes. can
them at 1-800-523-2559.
FEEDBACK:
TIBET
ALMOND STICK - This is a
peachy furniture scratch remover
that we couldn't find, but they
found us. The product is made by
Zenith Chemical Worts in Addison, Ill. It's available at Home
Depot and Ace Hardware stores.
If you can't find Ibis product in
your neck of the woods, it can be
porcbased directly from tbe company. Send a check or money older
for $4 10 Zenith Chemical Works,
P.O. Box 127, Addison, IL6010l.
WITH APPROVED CREDIT
CLIP·IT: WELLINGTON
BOOTS MADE FROM OLD
WELLIES - ~ are available
from Seventh Gerietation. To order
''From Our Home To Yours" ·
pr receive a catalOR, call 1-800-

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"Twas the Nlgbt Before Christmas," .seveml games were played
and pnzes awarded.
Members exchanged gifts and
prayer partners were revealed.
·Names for tbe 199!1 prayer partners
will be drawn at the January meting. Margie West distilbutcd the

Sunday Times-Sentinel Page

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WE 18EINE THE RICHT 10 IMT OUNfTrrES. NONE SOlO 10 DEAlERS.

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COPI'RIGHT 10M • THE KROClER 00.11EM5 1KJ P11C1S COOIIII!lHMY. DEC. 21,
TIIIIOUQI SATIIIIDAY DEC. 31. 18114 tH GAU-.. a -..c!t.
.

Get your birthdate newspaper .h~. re

byJIIISudl

&amp;. ~ ~r-~~--~
otben whoso
belnl will be
fouad '**e•tDy
lid, MIIIey mill
llowdafrall

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

December 2S, 19.94

Ott-Point Pleuant, WV

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D•rlng Corbin &amp;Snyder Furnlt•r•'•

YEAR· END
CLEARANCE
SALE
SALE ·DATES: DEC. 27·DEC.31

STOREWIDE SAVINGS

·,

FRESH "5/L VER PLATTER" WHOLE

Boston Butt
PorkPound
Roast

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VIE WILL BE CLOSED DEC. 26
IN ORDER TO REDUCE·PRICES
FOR OUR FINAL 1994 SALII

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liSH "SILVER PLAnER"

one-1n .

••

Pork Steaks

NO PAYMENTS
TIL JUNE, 1995

FRESH "SILVER P.
,
• • • • • Lb.
IesSnER CENTER cur

IS

0

Bone
Pork Loin Ch0/1$ .•••• ~:I~S

~·'iii·

new program books. Red Christ,
mas b~tets filled with potpo~rri
were g1ven to each one attending
by Lee Lee.
It was voted 10 mate a sizable
monetary donation to the Meigs
County Cooperative Parish to be
PHOTOGRAPHY
~sed for Christmas baskets, clothProf8SS/onsl WBddlng Photogtsphy
mg. and toys.
(614) 446-6700
Attending were Alice Wolfe,
955 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Chris Hill, Lois Bell, Vinas Lee,
(614) 446-1171
Ann Calc, Margie West, Etta Mae
Hill, Sharon Hall, Dolly Wolfe,
Margery Roush, Stephanie !font,
Clata Mae Sargent, Karen Walker,
by Bob Hoeflich
Gladys Shields, Frances Roberts
and Lee Lee.
At a recent regular meting
the 'nlpt before Christ·
1 hope you weren't too disap- Sharon Hall bad the program .
11111
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pointed with the offerings. You're World Thank offering boxes were
"WWIea all dlmugh tbe bouse,
probably one of those people who collected and it was noted that the
"NOtaeiallire was stirring,
have "everything". Now I don't new carpet bas been paid in full.
"Not even a mouse." .
want to buy you a present, 1 just Since tbe Christmas bazaar was
I'm c:ertai~ent Clarke want tbe recipe on bow you got it sucoessful it was suggested it be an
Moon: bad no idea
he penned aU. U it came legaUy, I'm interest-. annual event.
tbe linea of bis
and beauti- ed in the formula. Let me know.
Members recently served dinner
fuJ '"lbc Nigb erore Christmas."
Buying ror one or these "every- to 35 members of the Meigs Couolhat it wOIIId Uve for generations thing" people is a task. You give ty Fair Board. Christmas boxes
cootinuinB Its widespread populari· one of 'em a gift and apologi:ie were sent to Good Works in
ty across the nation every bollday before they opeli it by cmunenlinll: Athens. Monthly donations to variseason. Despite all of tbe change in
"It's not mucb."
. ous organizations were reported
tbe ift and · you sent. The annual UMW report bas
ved
lifestyles wblch have evol
over oneThcof~'tboseopen...
wbicbg•vleseem been sentiO the district president.
the years, tbc poem continues to
.....,....
,'
n
. ~· Lee attended a district met10 interpret as saying:
ve~.pocm was written by Moore
"You're rigbllt's ootmucb."
mg •.n Athens and.has accepted the
· 1870 124
..,0 He orilri
s 'f are carrying some of publiaty and publiC relations offiCe
m titled
• It ~
~ frool
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"- tboseo !bayouve0 ....;....h;ng"
people 011 . for 1995 for the Athens Disuict.
nally
A Visit
Satnt
-~Nicholas" but tb.at somehow your gift list, maybe you ougbta Next meeting will beheld at the
became c:lumged over the years 10 drop 'em. After all, if they have cMburcHh,i!JlaniO.ba23, 7tbe:30 pm. wtlh Ena
tbe "Nl&amp;ht Before" title most of us "everything/ they do~'t really
ae
ve
program.
oowuse.
·
need a .present from you. On the
. Apparently, it's going to live other band. tberc arc always tbose
'
forever - at l.,_t as long as we "thouabt behind it" and ~better 10
~a IIOIItallic: breed. If you've give than rec:eive" routines, so
Wlldletl •y'.televlsioll to spealc of maybe you better let them bang
over tbe bOiidiiY ICBSOII, you proba· on10 the lilt a couple more years.
bly notecl· dill ~~ prostan~s
you are now aware, of course,
pictal up on at least a P.lfl of bis of tbl' bigb cost of Christmas .
.popul• VCIIC· tmcl President COn- RCIIICI;Ilbcr when yoiJ did most of
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
• read It to a number or ebildren your boliday sbopping at tbe "Five County Right To Life group, durat a~ In Wasllinston Ibis wcclt. and Ten"? ADd wbat great trea- ing its December meeting, elected
The number of patents who have sores you~ get there foc very officen roc 1995.
·
read it to tbeir children over boli- little mQney - and mostly all
Mite Merry was re&lt;4;lected presday seasons or the past would be siiBigbl from JltlliD. wen, aauaUy ident; David Clay vice president;
UIICOUIIIable, I'm sure.
they prabably wcren' t reaDy trea- Jan Davison secretary; and Barbara
Tbe reading of Moore's effec- sures but they seemed so at the White re-elected treasurer.
live poem wu al~ys tradition at time '
•
Merry reported on the 'Jan. 22
our bouse. We llill try 10·do that,
A,t ~ I'm sure you spent "March
for Life" trip 10 Washingbut at 30, our cllughlcr Jayne thinks each dlllic you r;ould afford Ibis con. The group will leave GaUipolis
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It a Httle mucb. She ptobably feels year illlchben10111e. You ran out of early Jan. 22, and rei!D'n home on
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"allpoWD up" and too big for a cash? ·Nq pro!llem. Y~u ~ ~e
lap. However, ·~~ae '-yet co realize easily-acquireil plastic. It d1dn t
tbal "a .JOie is • IOiil!" and tbal our seem'lite much at the time you
childl'en always remain our c:hil· were ~na out the credit ~·
may contact ,
dral. U tbey t1Jink we're going to It's in Jlnuary when you real1ze
Merry
at
245-5032
roc
more infor1
} 1
1111 •em pow UJI, they'd betf;cr just that you were completely out.of
~dllnk-apin; bah?
- - ~
cootrol.
. .
~::s~gardlng bus ~d motel __
on~ilnebal· t'll~~ea.re.
~
By tbe time YOI! get around 10
So Santa came. Tbe gifts have
Members Dr.
were
urged National
to send
reading •Ibis during a very busy been opened and you're stuffed 10 letters
Varmus,
.a. T .a.
~ In the lives of most of u1,
tbe eyebrows with aU of tbat great Instituteasking
of Health, 10 ball proposed
SaDII'lw ~ly 'lllady made food, especially all of those sweet, guideUnes roc embryo re~ and
hJa IIOP· I n wager youtlll had blgb ca100e aoodies.
experitoentation due 10 immoral
one more thing to ~~be ~ . . . ~ 10 inc it's l.iJne ~ seUle lllllllle of this reiean:b.
'. 1
~"· ADd oocc iiPII!:}iw;lltM: '· .down for a long winter s nap.
''
Next meeting of tbe group is set
"You~:'cttnnmutiity
'
'stuff" b,ut that'i' wf!y YDII.t' Happy holidays and do tcep smil.· foc 7:30p.m. Oil Tbunday, Jan. 12
I '
!law the bouse ~ a jllace to· tcep ing.
' at tbe Bossard Memorilll Library.
we
tht~
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The public is welcome.

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co9{fJ3I9{&amp; s~
j'f{19{9{JPU9{i£

~~-it:"e.

-Beat of the Bend ...

Holzer Health Hot ine

"T'was

U.S.D.A. CHOICE, GRAIN FED BEEF,

Boneless Top
Sirloin steak.

has all .the right ingredients
for .a~swering your
health. care questions.

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Pound

gg

.Right to Life ·
elects officers
for new year

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN

Diet Pepsi or
Peps/Cola

Referral

* Health Care Events

-2-uter

uy

more

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::~~~~:: :.~:::£~ From 8 a.m. to 11 p.m., seven days a week,: :
res:~:~=it!d
a specially trained R.N. is on d:uty to d. :
answerf your -qu.eshtionsan "
tO in OnD YOU a OUt ava • a e -Se._,._:CeS·.
.

Holzer
Medical
Center
,
p,arlner .i, ·cltange ..·• · ·

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continue
Holztn' Tradition" .
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.Kroger Apple or "
orange Juice
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Ruffles
Potato Chips
6-0z.

VIDEO
GET-I

*Support Groups

Call 1-800-462-5255

£

Golden Ripe
Dole Bananas
Lbs.

*Illness or Injury

* Physician

•1N THE DAIRY CASE· CHILLED

�Ptge-B&amp;-Sunday 11mn-Sentinel

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

"

OH-Polnt Pluant, WV

House of the we-e k-Economical Home Doesn't .Cut Corners on Style

''

Tips for improving home lighting "'
AP Spacial Features

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F·27
ARCHED WINDOWS fool the eye In tbla ODHIIoly home. Odler clncdc de4allllnclude pbiN 8lld _,.,.••
By PAT UJKt\S
. a striking pair of boxed colllllUl8 plant shelf above.
AP New ' atnrea
into the 18-foot vaulted great
Acroaa the home, an angled
Eye-c:atchllll exterior details room. This central gathering ~with a knickknack niche
esign F-27 baa a great
fool anyone estimating the area is warmed by an inviting ·leads to th~ two secondary bedroom, dining room,
~quare footqe of thia a~ng
fireplace. TaU "!ndow arrange- rooms•• whiCh share a compart· ·
kitchen, brealdut area,
bome.
·
mente on both •des of the firementali.zed bath. Near the front
sitting room, three bedrooms
. Dealgn F-27, by Homeetylea place allow bacllyard views.
of the ball there is acceli 10 the
an~ two baths, totaling 1, 715
"Source 1" Deaipera' Network,
The great room Ia linked to the optlonJI daylight basement and
square feet of livable space.
It juat 1 715 IIQ1I8I"E feet of llvinr open kitchen by the aame 18-foot ~ preae.
11lere Ia a garace and apace for a
apace. limit on the square vaulted ceilinc and a !Iandy paaeUnless otherwise noted, a.ll
washer and dryer off the break·
!ootace a11ow1 for luxurioua fea.
through. A serving counter- main-8oor rooma have 9-loot ceilfut area. The breakfast area has
turel tllll otherwise milbt not be
anackbar joins the kitchen to the inga. The plan is available with
access to the backyard.
ettainable to many homeowners.
breakfast area, :which offers a 2x4 elrterior wall hming.
Foundation options are a dayOne of the highlights is al'ormal large pantry, a convenient launfight basement, slab or crawl·
(Foro 111or1 llftGilfd, uokd plo11
dlnillf room, which Is located dry clo~~et and a door to the back·
space foundation. Generic founof, tllil lloll#, illdlldi"' pida to dation ~ · diagrams may
just off the 14-foot·high foyer.
yard.
This space, also with a 14-footThe aecluded master suite fe• llliiiiGii., COlli Gild /itltJtltitlg,
be requested when ordering the
high ceiling, has a soaring · tures an elegant 14-foot tray ceiJ. "'•d $4 to Hbllll• of tllr Wed,
blueprints. The overall dimenwindow wall that brightens any ing in the sleeping area. An P.O. Boz 1562, N1111 Yon, N.Y.
sions of 49' by 55' Include the
occasion.
adjoining 13 1/2-foot vaulted sit10116-1562. Bt '""' to it~cltull garage.
To return to the exterior,
ting room features overhead tiN , . , of
gables, keystones and arched plant shelves.
The master bath boasta a dualwindows adorn the stucco
facade. The remainder of the sink vanity, a comer garden tub,
exterior hu hardboard eiding a separate shower, a private toilet
and~ of windows.
compartment and a walk-in closet
A high, arched foyer
with built-in Unen shelves and

Here are some bright ideas from Better Homes and Gardens magazine for
improving the lighting around your home.
·
Eliminate excessive contrasts in lighting- bright pools oflight surrounded
by darkness_ To do this, supplement task lights, such as table or floor lamps and
pendants, with general, or "ambient," light from ceiling or wall fixtures,
recessed or track lighting or chandeliers.
Illuminate a room slowly to help you{ eyes make the transition from dark to
light.
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Full study plan information on this house is available in a $4 baby
blueprint. Four booklels are also available at $4.95 each: Your /-lome-How
to BuilD, Buy or Ss/1/t, Rsnch Homes, 24 o1 the most popular from this
feature; PractlcBI Home Reps/rs, whk:h tells how to handle 35 common
problems; and, A-Frames and Other Vaca~on Homes, a collection of ~4
stytes.SendcheckormoneyorderpayabletotheAssoclatedPressandth•s
label to: House o1 the Week, The Sunday·Times Sentinel, P. 0. Box 1562,
New York, N.Y. 10116-1562.
CHp this Ofdlr and return label

EnciOMd liM for pllln N o . - - - - - - - - . . , - - -

EncloiiCIII $4.15 11ch for th1 booklat(l),- - - - - - - - -

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mE MAS1Eil SUll1! ~en die bomu ol a ..,.d111111itdac-, a
falllre not bmd E¥m In 1111111)' llqer bomel. Thel'e 11 ailo I teparate comer tub 8lld a ..., uu. The areatroom 11 -meet by 1 lireplace, IIIII a aenq ._ II at.nd by l!olh die , . _ IIIII the

llnwlrf-t-.

gerator condenser requires maintenance

By POPULAR MECHANICS

For AP Spec:al Faaturea
The condenser is an important part
of your refrigerator's sealed refrigerantsyste~, and it is !be only part that
necds mamtenance.
Fortunately, all that's required is to
clean the condenser's coils by vacuuming off the dust that accumulates
on them. You should do this every
three months or so,
Here's why it's important to keep
the condenser coils clean: The con·
·denser cools hot refrigerant vapors
inside its tubes. If the condenser coils
are dust covered, they cannel expel
·this beat efficiently. The dust acts as
insulation and prevents the heat from
cscaping.ln tum, the temperature inside the refrigenitor compartment is
.higher than it would be if the condenser coils were clean.
This increase in temperature also
causes the compressor to cycle refrigerant through the cooling system more
frequently than it otherwi~e would.
Notoolydoesthisincreasetheamount
of energy the compressor uses, but
the additional waste heatgivenoffby
the compressor further reduces the
refrigerator's efficiency.
Efficientcooling,therefore,isthe

=~~:~: :i~~m! ~f:1~ ~~~:~~a~e~~:
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sibleandcreatingminimalwasteheat.
Looked at another way, a little dust .
on your refrigerator can cost you a lot
of money on your utility bill.
'Jbe first step in the maintenance ·
_ ~ is to determine w~ kind of
condcnler your refrigerator bas. It
either bas a static condenser mounted
on ill back, or it has a fan-cooled
coodcnser mounted underneath in the
cOII!pressor companmeot. The fan
blows air across dae rondcnscr to cool

i'a.

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cover (~n m~t m~els thi.s is held in
placewnhspnngchp~).Gnptbecover
on both sides, pull it down from the
top, then ,lift it off. There is often a
small tag on the cover's lop edge that
stateshowoftenlhecondensershould
be cleaned or inspccied (usually every three months).
Oeanthecondenser,usingtbecrevice tool attachment on your vacuum.
After vacuuming, check that the condenser is clean by shininga flashlight
through its coils . .lni:identally, the
flashlight should have fresh batteries
in it so it throws a nice, sharp beam,
Next, go to the refrigerator's back
and remove the rear access pa·nel by
backing out the .hexbead sheet metal
screws thafhold the panel to the refrigerator body. Use a nul driver to do
this or a small socket on a cordless
drill.
Vacuum the coils clean from the
back. If need be, use a paintbrush to
dislodge duat thatthe crevice tool did
notpulloutorthalwaspushedtoward
the back of the appliance. Check with
a .flashlight to make sure it's clean.
··
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The process is nearly the same in
cleaning a static condenser. You
vacuum it and brush it clean,
Next, pull out ihe condenser drain
pan·and wash it with mild soap and
water. Dry it thoroughly and slide it ,
back in place.

Finally, plug the refrigerator back
in,andcleanlhefloorbchinditbefore
pushing it back into place. Leave
enough space behind the refrigerator
to allow air circulation (this is especiallyimportani)Vithstaticcondenser
models).

All offices of Bank One in Athens, Gallia,
Hocking, Meigs and Perry counties will be
closed Monday,·December 26, 1994,
and Monday,January- 2, 1995.

Bank One wishes you and
yours a safe and happy
holiday season.

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BANKEONE.
Whatever it takes:

llll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!l-1111!11111!11111!11111!11111!1•1111!11111!11111!11111!11111!1. .

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Medical Shoppe

JACKION( PIil)~'l
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Pliilll .. Thirlpr81Moe
..,_..llaii.IIIJe
~Finln

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.,......,.lAd Alhllllo Tnllner Mw

ouwl7v-~oraan*lriidillll-.rtif.O.

.WOitt FIIDOWif
. · "We IICCII!tlll .. lln,llecllald, Prlva
· -c.ar«'ho flell&amp;llldwl
... uranu, Woe_.. Compenatlon

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for the past 23-1/l years. Wltb Averion, a ndloJ.
ogist, from left, are Mike Slwp, Kim Sbunblin,
department head, Debbie Flnlaw and Kelly
Shean. The deJNII1-nt stapd a reception bon·
orlng Averlon on Thundlly.

·'"Inventor hails
·;new warning
pevice light ·
'6110CIIIWJ Press Writer
Terry Shaffer got
·11ae idea as he watched children
&lt;biking to school in the dark. Why
ilot a safety-patrol warning device
iinposiillle to miss by approaching
tilotorists?
· Shaffer borrowed a strobe light
by the Coast Guard and stuclc
it on the end of a luminescent pole
rpr crossing guards.
• Shaffer, 48. of suburban Englewood, came up with the idea sever~ years ago after he noticed how
scbool buses nash all kinds of
ltgbts when picking up ~ dropping
~ iust a few p~Ssengers.
~ 'Then I would cane to a aossi$g wllere there were ·hundreds of
~ds aossing, and there was just a
RETIREMENT_ Dr. Roger Averlon, right, wnc presented
~d with a small stick," he said. "I
giltl by Veterans Memorial H01pltal Adminlltrator Scott Lucas
dj;dn.'·t feel tber~ was adequate
Thursday 115 8 part of a reception held to bonor Averlon's retire··
warning to the motorists for them
ment from tbe b01pltal. Averion, a radiologist, bas been alllllated .
slow down."
with the Pomeroy b111pltal for 23-112 yean.
, Tbe patented device makes
s~hoolchildren
more visible. mu1
~hool crossings safer in lbe dart
aiid bad wealller, he said.
•
"Tiie strobe light is a brlllialit
.Dale A. King
December 1982.
a(teotion-geuing device,'' said
Navy Petty Officer Third Class
Sbaffcr. "The darker it is or the Dale A. King, son of Vera Y.
Eric M. Jacks
~ lbe wea~~ conditions, the
Thompson of New Haven, W. Va.
Navy Seaman Recruit Eric M.
lf!II"C II sbows up.
.
has been serving off the coast of Jacks, son of Daniel R_ and Wanda
• ~kind of strobe light Shaffer _ _ Bo~nia-Herzegovina with tbe L. Jacks. of 43065 Cook road,
u$e&amp; IS powered by a small baltery amphibious ship USS Gunston Pomeroy, recendy completed U.S.
3lld is also used by the Coast Guard Hall part of the USS Nassau Navy basic training at Recruit .
uf alert rescue wo~ when a ves- Amphibious Ready Group.
Training Command, Great Lakes
sd is lqst ~t sea. It can be ~ up
ICing left the U.S. in late Octo- Ill.
Ill three DUies on a clear mght, he
ber for a six-month overseas
During the eight week program.
siid. , .
deployment. Departing from Nor- Jacks completed a variety of train·
,:'lbe liB!lt•s attached to the end
folk, va., King traveled to the ing which included classroom
of _a 44-mch-long fiuoresc~nt Mediterranean Sea wbere the ARG study, practical bands-on instruc·
ora.nge plaslic pole. The devtce was scheduled to tate part in sever- lion, and an emphasis on physical
W:e•ghs l~ss than three pounds, a1 mullinalional amphibious land-. fimess.
"
Sllaffer said.
ing exercises.
The 1994 graduate of Meigs
~· He said.tbe poles are ma~e in
The 1978 graduate of Wahama High School joined ·the Navy in
~ylvama. and 1be strobe ligh_ts
Higb School joined the navy in September.
are purchased from a company m
N'cw Jersey.
!Tbe devices, which cost $47
apiece, are assembled by Brite Life
Guard, a two-year-old company
fqund~d by Shaffer. The work
force consists of four part-time
e~floyees who also work at Shaffer s chiropractic offices in Eaton
ar11 Tipp City.
t "I'm really just getting it off the
g ' und," said Shaffer.
~He bas sold about 50 of the
devices to a dozen area schools and
bal. Olders pending from the Troy
p..,lic school sysJem. He bopes to
m,.ut the devices across the country.
:Shaffer said the only problem
the devices is that the strobe
ts are breakable. He said they
be replaced f&lt;»" $12.50.
1'be American Automobile
Association has not formed an
opinion on the device, said
sPOke&amp;wCJDan Barbara Crystal. The
.
AAA is waiting for feedback from
i~iomc:es whee lbe devices are in
use, she said.
"I think tbe jury's still out on
bow effective it is," Ms. Crystal

'i

M·11 1·ta·ry news

f

.• .

Ann
Landers

This is my ChriStmas message for
1994:
Dear Readers: Today is
Christmas. What has happened to
peace on Earth, good will toward
men? In many parts of the world.
there is no peace, and in the hearts of
many men, there is nothing that could
Jlliss for good will.
Our youth insist that we are
poisoning the environmem, and they
are right. They resent living in a
world they didn't make, and who can
blame them? But what generation
ever made the world it had to live
in?
,
Although our universities are once
again places of higher learning,
racism abounds on many campuses.
Prejudice against minorities is on the
increase, and I fear it's going to get
worse before it gets bettet
Unfortunately, the "war on drugs"
turned out to be acolossal failure. The
increase in the number of homicides
is staggering, and most of it is
drug-related. Guns and knives
are standard equipment among
teen-agers. It is not uncommon fot a
teen-ager to get shot or stabbed for
his jacket or his shoes. Metal

Serenity House
items detailed
during meetkig

detectors in schools help some,
not enough_
While alcohol is still the most
abused drug of all, marijuana and
stronger substances like crack
cocaine arc commonplace in junior
and senior high schools. The
dropout rate is appalling. Why should
a kid stay in school when be can get
rich dealing drugs? This is the
message too many young people are
getting.
.
Suicide is the third most frequent
cause of death among young people
in this country. (The first is
accidents.) Every IOS minutes, a
young person in America will kill
himself.
More bad news is that venereal
disease is epidemic, and now there is
AIDS, for which there is no vaceine
and no cure_
We arc becoming increasingly
desensitized to filthy language,
garbage "arf' and rotten stuff on TV.
Violence, bigotry and talking diny
must be tolerated , we arc told,
because we dare not endanger
'freedom of speech."
I am lirmly against censorship, but
God bless you aU.I hope 1995 will
where is ihe moral outrage against all be your best year eva .. Ann Landers

POMEROY - A report on
items taken to Serenity House was
given by Kay Adkins at the recent
meeting of Xi Gamma Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, held at
the home of A.R Knight
Plans were announced for a
soup supper to be beld at the Bradbury O!urch on Jan, 3. Thank you
cards were read from Beth Slivers
thanking the group for a remembrance during her recent hospital·
izalion, and from Charlotte Han·
Ding for a silver bean jewelry box
on her 25th anniversary.
It was noted that second half
chapter dues are now payable, and
that gifts can be purchased at a discount if ordered by Man:b l. Let·
ters concerning oogoin; cllaoges to
the by-laws and seeking information in city council status were
read. Sheila Harris presided at the
meeting wbicb opened in ritualistic
form.

Hyou are plahning a wadding,

then you should come Ht ue at
Haaldna·Tanner.
You wil have over 190 atyln of
tuxedol to chooae from. We have •
large aalactlon of the iatHt styles ·
and COII1llimanltiiY accauorias lor
thinpeclal oceuion. ··

.....It, ........... ..
IHerthiW.Prlces

.....

Prices Start
as low as:

NO BIG ADS
NO HASSLE

WE WILL DEAL
'
ANYTHING IN
INVENTORY
WILL BE SOLD FOR

saif

. Make honor roll·
GALI..U'OLIS - Twq Galllpolls "BIUdcoll have been named to tbe
bonor roll at the .Mercerst&gt;urg
A~y in Mereersburg, Pa.
They are Blait E. $Impson, a
ju.por, dllugll~ of Dr. Rlcbard and
Tlllldy.SimJIIOil: and F.lic M. Rod·
eri!*, a ~; 1011 of Richard and
~Roderick.

.'
'

~59

STOP IN AND

i:

...

~

I

-'

Celebration set
'
CENTENARY
- FriendS are
invltcd to a birthday celciJrallm for
Ec1vi1D EUiott in honor of his 7pdl
birdlilay 00 Friday, Dec. 30 from 68 ~~m. at, Centenary United
M~paodist Cbllrcb, State Route
141:
'
0011 an to be omitted.

lbch

.... -~

PRESENTED PLAQUE - Employees of tbe
Radiology Department at Veterans Memorial
-_.Hoepltal presented Dr. Roger Averlon, center,
wtth a penonallzed plaque to bonor him upon
· !ala retlre-t from Veterans Memorial Hospl·
where·be bu been a medical staff member

used

;

'•

' '•

~ · DAYTON -

. HELLO, TRAVELIN' fRIENDS!!!
. WHAT A WONDERFUL. HOLIDAY SEASON WE ARE ·
. SHARING TOGETHER WITH OUR BANK FAMILY AND ·
.
· MEMBERS OF OUR FANTASTIC PEOPLES CHOICE
·· TUESDAY EVENING THE BANK LOBBY WAS FILLED
·. CAPACITY AND OVERFLOWING WITH MUSIC, FOOD,
·. GOOD FELLOWSHIP AS WE LOOKED BACK OVER THE
: YEAR THROUGH OUR SCRAPBOOKS, AND REI~EI~BIEREiDJ!
:: THE "GOOD TIMES" WE HAVE ENJOYED.
OUR THIRD ANNUAL CHRISTMAS PARTY WAS '
·.: HIGHLIGHTED WITH MUSIC AND DANCING PRESENTED
•· THE POINT PLEASANT HIGH SCHOOL JAZZ ENiSE~fBL.E,
· SWINGIN' SQUIRES UNDER THE DIRECTION OF
· STEWARf AND JEFf HILBERT. AND ALONG
· SPECIAL LIGHTING , COSTUMES AND PR&lt;)FESSII:&gt;NI~L
MUSICIANSHIP, ADDED MUCH TO THE HOLIDAY CHEER . .
: MEMBERS OF THE NEHACLIMA GARDEN CLUB AGAIN
SERVED A WONDERFUL ARRAY OF PARTY FOODS AND THE ·
.
· TABLES WERE A PICTURE THEMSELVES. DOORPRIZES
· AWARDED WITH A FREE WEEKEND TRIP FOR TWO BEING . ·
THE TOP PRIZE.
.
TO BEGIN OUR CELEBRATION OF THE SEASON,
COMPLETED A BEAUTIFUL SMOKEY MOUNTAIN
CHRISTMAS TOUR TWO WEEKS AGO WITH 99 IN .·
. ATTENDANCE. WE TOOK TWO BRAND NEW 55 PA!iSEI~GEiR
MOTORCOACHES AND ALONG WITH HOLIDAY MUSIC, .
. VIDEOS, GAMES AND REFRESHMENTS ABOARD, A PARTY · ..
· ATMOSPHERE PREVAILED ALL ALONG THE WAY. THE ··
WEATHER WAS GREAT SO WE ENJOYED THE TRIP AND ALL ·
. THE DECORATIONS · ENROUTE. BANK PRESIDENT
.
ELliSON ALONG WITH .HIS WIFE DIANNA
ADMINISTRATIVE · ASSISTNAT
BECKY
BENSON .
ACCOMPANIED OUR GROUP ON ONE OF THE BUSES AND
· THE WAY BACK WE SWITCHED SO WE COULD ~ •.::-.:..:.·'!1'1·.
.
ALL OUR PASSENGERS.
OUR ACCOMODATIONS" AT PIGEON FORGE WAS
·. COUNTRY INN, A BEAUTIFUL BRAND NEW HOTEL RIGHT IN
. THE HEART OF THE FANTASTIC LlGHTING DISPLAY OF
QUAINT LITTLE TOWN ~ UPON OUR ARRIVAL WE WERE .·
·. TREATED TO A TOUR OF THE MOUNTAIN WINERY AND A · · "
.· COMPLIMENTARY WINE AND CHEESE TASTING RECEFnON, ·.
. WHICH THIS AREA IS WELL KNOWN FOR. FOLLOWING THIS .
. WE HAD DINNER AT THE HEIDELBURG INN, A GERMAN •.
FESTIVAL RESTAURANT, COMPLETE WITH ETHNIC fOC)D!i~
· AND MUSIC. OUR GROUP, OF COURSE BEING THE
.· ARE, JOINED IN THE DANCING AND GAMES. THE NEXT.,..,, ·""'"·
·. WE TOURED GATLINBURG, RIDING THE TRAM TO THE
&lt; OF THE MOUNTAIN WHERE ICE SKATING AND SKIING ARE A. ·
HIGHLIGHT OF THE AREA. THE LIGHTS Of BOTH PIGEON
FORGE AND GATLINBURG ARE A TREAT AT NIGHT AS THEY
·· WERE HAVING THEIR ANNUAL WINTERfEST.CELEBRATION.
· THAT EVENING WE DONNED OUR WESTERN WEAR AS WE
ENJOYED A SPECIAL CHRISTMAS SHOW AT THE DIXIE .
STAMPEDE WITH EXCELLENT RIDING AND HO•RSI~M,~&gt;,NiiH~P;
THE MAIN ATTRACTION- NEXT MORNING THOSE WHO
WANTED TO ENJOYED A LEISURELY MORNING AT THE .
HOTEL AND THE REST OF US HIT SOME OF THE MANY
&lt;OUTLET SHOPS TO GET SOME WONDERFUL BARGAINS!!'.
LATER THAT DAY WE WENT TO DOLLYWOOD PARK TO
.• ENJOY THE DECORATIONS, MUSIC AND GREAT DOWNHOME .·
COUNTRY CHRISTMAS TREATS IN THE GOOD OLD- ·
·. FASHIONED WAY. WE SAW A GREAT MUSICAL PRODUCTION
·•. THERE AND THEN LATER THAT EVENING .BOARDED OUR ..
.·. MOTORCOACH FOR A SHORT RIDE OVER TO DOLLY'S
. : BRAND NEW 2,000 SEAT MUSIC MANSION THEATRE WHERE
·. WE HAD GREAT RESERVED SEATS FOR ONE OF THE
. MUSICAL REVUES I HAVE EVER SEEN ANYWHERE· AND :.
.· UPON BOARDING THE MOTORCOACHES fOLLOWING
.
. . PERFORMANCE, ALL 99 PASSENGERS AGREE.D. NEXT WAS ·.
· OUR VISIT TO THE BIBLICAL GARDENS WITH i'HE LIFE-SIZE ··
• SCENES DEPICTING THE LIFE OF CHRIST, THIS snRRED OUR &gt;
. ·: VERY SOULS AND TRULY PUT US IN THE PROPER SPIRIT OF ..
· THE SEASON. IT WAS REALLY A FANTASTIC TRIP AND I ·
.·. APPREOATED ALL THE SUPPORf FROM OUR MEMBERS.
WE ARE NOW BUSY PUTI'ING THE FINAL TOUCHES ON ·
·•. OUR 1995 PLANS AND WE H.AVE A WONDERFUL SCHEDULE .
SHAPING UP. OUR NEWSLETTER NEXT MONTH WILL Nmrl~' :¥
MEMBERS OF THSES PLAJ':jS. OUR NEXT TOUR WILL·BE
·. ·. HAWAII TRIP NEXT MONTH WHEN WE WILL FLY TO
FRANCISCO FOR TWO DAYS OF TOURING
. ACCOMODATIONS ON FISHERMAN'S WHARF AND
. TO HONOLULU FOR TWO DAYS ONTHE·· BEACH BW10RE:
.• BOARDING OUR DELUXE CRUISE SHIP FOR SEVEN DAYS
': VJSffiNG ALL FOUR ISLANDS, A REPEAT TRIP FOR US AS WE
. TOOK ~IS CRUISE TWO YEARS AGO. HARD TO BELIEVE
. THIS PROGRAM IS STARriNG IN TO THE FIFill YEAR.
· DOES FLY WHEN YOU'RE HAVING FUN!!
• I HOPE EACH OF_)'QU HAVE A WONDEREUj.. HOLIDAY
· SEASON WITH FAMILY AND LOVED ONES. GET READY TO ·
: WELCOME IN 1995, WHEN WE WILL ONCE AGJt.IN ...

the filth? It's almost imjlossible to
lind a family movie ihese days. What
has happened to plain. everyday
decency?
As John Underwood wrote so
eloquemly in The Boston Globe a
while back, "Civilizations do not give
out, they give in . In a society where
anything goes. eventually, everything
will."
·
Every day we all must make
decisions that dctamine the direction
in which our lives will move. Noone,
no matter how wise, can make the
right decision every time. To err is
no disgrace. The disgrace lies in not
learning from our mistakes. piclcing
ounclvcs up, dusting ourselves oft'
and trying again.
Because this is an advice column,
.I spend the greater pan of every day
with grief and trouble. Docs it~
me? No, it does not
After 39 yean, I still fmd writing
this column immensely rewarding. !
realize that many people who write
to me don't want advice. They just
need someone who will listen.
My column has provided me with
an opportunity to shine a spodight on
ignorance and fear, to comfort the
afflicted and dlict the comfortable.
I am well aware that inine is an
enormous responsibility, and I try
hard, 365 days a year, never to let you
down. ·

niodifJCations.

:Jy JAMES HANNAH

In lbe case Of.a· fan-cooled COD·
., - , deDICr fint unplug:~ lcfrigerator
' : ; .• 'aDd
rernoye the froVtlower grille

,.

1n 1955, the year I began writing
this column, I wrote an essay for
Christmas Day. Reader response was
extremely rewarding, and I have
reprinted it each year, with topical

'.'*:

A

till"""''

In spite of all the world's
problems·, don't give up yet

By POPULAR MECHANICS

For AP Spacial Faaturaa
Q: My basement bas a sump pit witb concrete sides ud alillld bottom.
lo other words, tbe bottom Is not lloed wltb coocre~ or other mateNI.
WheD it raios, tbe water table rises, ud my samp pump nns ror lour or
live days stralgbt. Would I have a problem IF 1 closed the bottom or tbe
•umpplt?
·
A: Yes, you would have a problem. Your sump pit is working as it should.
That is, it's designed so that the bottom allows the entry of subsurface water.
If the bottom of the sump pit is sealed. then as the water table rises, the water
will press against the underside of the basement floor slab and seep thro~gh the
cracks and open joints that often exist in basements. ~n the other hand, 1f there
are no cracks or open joints, depending on the level of the water table, the
pressure the water exerts on the slab (!mown as hydrostatic buildup) could
cause the concrete basement floor slab to cra~k and heave. With your system,
by pumping out the water that builds up in the sump pit, you are controlling the
level of the water table so that it doesn't iisc to a point where it will press on
the underside of the floor slab, thereby eliminating the problem of water
. seepage through the cracks into the basement. If the sump pit keep~ the
basement diy, our-adVice would be not to modify it.

Sunday Time.--Sentlnel Page 87

,•

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'

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PROFIT.
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TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS
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ports

·.

Entertainment

December 25, 1994

'

Sunday Times-SentinetJB8

Star Watch: Patrick Stewart

.!It's a wonderful .... town

Make it so? It is so

~ Jimmy Stewart's

hometown hopes
_:actor's popularity will boost e~onomy
. • INDIANA, Pa. (AP) - Smiling
Cbriatmas abopptn in scarves and
-beavy COilS exchange greetings as
.tbey bustle past a sign outside the
.brick bank.
: "You Arc Now in Bedford
·Falls," !be sign reads.
-~ Sound familiar? Well, DOW, bold
.on, just wait a minute, feUa.
v: It's not tbe ficliooal, aii·Ameri·
ean town from "It's a Wonderful
·Life." It's Indiana Pa hometown
-of tbe movie's ~'star, Jimmy
. Stewart. Tbe sign is part of tbe
City's holiday decoraliODS.
' Residents hope tbc connection
will draw tourists to make up for
· tbe decline In mining and manpfacJuring tbat bas left Indiana County
-..ltb an unemployment rate of
--~ostlO percent, tbe state's bigbest.
::· But be)'lllld Stewart's value as a
.tourist draw, residents in Indiana,
:.6J miles cut of Pittsburgh, bave a
. ,genuine aflcctlon for !.be actor.
: . "He'a very down-~. very
bumble 8lld Dot bigh-batled at all,..
. ~d Stewart's boyhood friend Bill
"l'dorehead, 91.
Stewart, now 86 and retired in
Allgelea, hasn't lived in 'tndi·ana since niritb grade and !lasn't
. visited ill years. But be's every. wbere bere.
.
· ,-: There's Jimmy Stewart Airpo~
:J-immy Stewart Boulevard, tbe
' "It's a Wonderful Ufe" Christmas
.·.Parade and tbe aonllal Jimmy Stew. ,l ilt birthday cctebnllions.
· .· Plaques 'IDIJ'k Stewart's birtb·J!Iace and bOyhood borne. A Iife·:siZc statue stands ou !.be cuunbouse
'liwn across from the brick bank. A
museum dedicated to Stewart is set

·IPs

to open by bis next birthday in
May.
In the film, George Bailey questions bis life's value and considers
suicide on a snowy Christmas Eve
until an angel intervenes and shows
bim the bell bis beloved town
would bave become without him.
The fiCtional Bedford Falls was
based on small towns between
Syracuse and Rochester, N.Y. But
Indiana, population 29,000, could
have been a slaJKI..in.
Cburcb spires soat over rows of
modest homes and tidy streets.
Drivers pause at crosswalks for
pedestrians wbo smile and wave in
thanks. ''Have your pets photographed with -Santa- $5,''. a
flier in tbe courthouse says.
And Indiana residents embrace
Bailey's commoo sense and plainspoken morality.
"Tbe essence of what we sttive
for here is !be same sense of Americoo fairness, honesty and community,'' said lawyer Jay T. Rubin,
wbo beads tbe museum project.
Rubin estimates the new museum will increase tbe town's number
of tourists from 34,000 to 54,000
annually, bringiug in an additional

...·

Tbe museum, 011 the top floor of
tbe public library, will display
Stewart memorabilia, awards and
movie posters. A Hollywood srudio
is donating projection equipment
for the museum's !beater.
Steve Misner, a contractor
working on tbe museum, said tbe
project goes beyond the jobs it may
help create.
"Jimmy Stewart P.ut Indiana on
the map," be said. 'This is just a
thanks.··

In theNBA,

By DOUGLAS J, ROWE
Aaoclated ~ Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- {t doe,sp't
just seem so. It IS so. Patrick Stewart is IIICIC3Pilblc these days. And
it's not just Stewart as Capt. Picard
saying, "Make itso."
Tbe actor g~ movie screens
in "Star Trek Generations" and
Broadway in Dickens' "A Christmas Carol." His.magisterial vocal
cords supply the voiceovers in
commercials for RCA, Pontiac and
other products. Wjtb an "Avas~ ye
matey" plratellkc bravura. be even
voices an animated character in tbe
new movie "Tbe Pagemaster."
And If tbat''- not enough, be's
called "intergalactically sensual"
by tbe latest Playgirl magazine.
wbicb suggests be can "reduce rou
to a puddle of libidinous musb.'
Tbe 54-year-old Stewart, wbo
bas a grown son and daughter from
a past marriage. says be's comfonable witb his sex-symbol status,
though be doesn't understand it.
"I personally don't get it," be
·says, denying lbat any mock modesty is at work. "Nevertheless, it
seems now to be a fact and one
!bat's not going to go away. So I
have determined to sit back and
enjoy it. As I've said before, it
would have been. nicer if it had
b&amp;ppened wben I was 19."
Back !ben, be was still having a
go at a career In journallsm. wbicb
be ttied ri~ht out of school.
"If we d have bad these tben,"
be says, .tapping The Associated
PresS tape recorder, "I would probably still be a journalist. One of tbe
reasons lbat I paclced it in was that
my sbortband was so bad !bat I was
constantly getting into !rouble for
misquoting, writing things wrong. I
used to just make it•up."
So Stew~ wbo grew up in tbe
English town of Mirfield, near
wbere be lives now, wmed to acting.
Associated with the Royal

$8 million.

BEDFORD FALLS - A sign outside Indiana, Pa., welcomes
vlsiton to Bedford Falls. Tbe smsU PellftlyiYanla town where legendary star Jlnuny Stewart was born Is tryJn&amp; to.attnct tourist by
c:onnedlng Itself to tbe town In ''It's a Wonderful life." (AP)

..

JIMMY'S BUDDY .:.... Bll Moon._., 91, looka o\'11' tnemora·
"IIUia llepictlnc hla boybood IM!dcly, Jlataly Stewart, ID hla Indiana,

tb~ books is

By CHUCK MELVIN
a.EVELAND (AP) - Ugly as
it might loot, Mike Fratello's system worts. Tbe Cleveland
Cavaliers are fmally coovinccd of
lbal.
"I lbiDk the tey this year is !bat
we accept this style," John
Williams said Friday night after the
Cavs won their c:lgbtb sttalgbt
game, beating tbe New Jersey Nets
80-75. "I lbiDk a lot of guys didn't
understand wbat Mike was trying
to do last year."
The Cavs, wbo got off to a 7-14
atan last year in Fratello's first sea·
100 as their coacb, improved to 178 and moved a game ahead of
lndle.na into first place in tbe
Central Division. Friday's game
was tbc first of an ;igbt-game
home stand, tbe longest in team
bistory and longest in tbe NBA in
five years.
The winning streak is their best
since they won a team-record 11 in
a row-last February and March.
"I doo' t care if anybody likes
Ibis style,'' Williams said. "Tbe
bottom line is tbat we win, and we
Iilre tbat."
Fratello bas installed a furious
double-teaming defense and a
deliberate·ortense, a system !bat
usually keeps botb teams under
·I00 points. Nine sbaight opponents
bave been held to 90 or fewer
points.
It's markedly different from tbe
defensive scheme used by previous
coach ~nny Wilkens, wbo bad bis
guards try to steer tbe men tbey
were guardins toward specific
areas on tbe court, where their
shots-could be blocked or disrupted
by the likes of Williams. Larry
Nance and Brad Daugherty.
Nance retired Ibis year because
of bad knees, and Daugherty is out
following back strgery.

Iowitig as an avS~t-garde guitarist,
Kaiser decided to ,take tbe patb
bcyoncfbis musical roots.
Witb David Lindley, the Bay
area-based musician who can
seemingly play any sttinged illstrumcnt, Kailcr took off for Madag~mcar. Tbe result was "A World, Out
of Time" on Slianacble ReaxdS, a
two-volume collection tbat turned
out to be surprisingly popular.
It led to tbe pair's latest
Sbanacbie collaboration, ''The
Sweet, Sunn[Nortb," gathered as
Kaisct-and . indley _crisscrossed
NorW~l· i!l a van dunng the country' I .:p-bour lllmmer days earlier
Ibis y~. As in M~gasear, !bey
met and recorded wttb tbe country's fineltmusicians.
"It stlrled wltb a lot of phone

ftiDia

:;:t;tma

e•

\.: .J,_··

··""·'...

~'

Hill led Cleveland with 18
points and 19 rebounds. Williams
scored 16, Terrell Brandon bad 13
and Pbills bad 12.
Kenny Anderson led tbe Nets
witb 18 points. New Jersey was
without injured Derrick Coleman,
who missed bis third game since be
cut bis band on the rim in a game
against Miami last Sunday.
"It's amazing tbat they can play
tbat style and win," Nets coach
Butch Beard said. "But you have
to give Mike and bis ballclub credit They get it done ,!bat way. They
slow it down, execute, run tbe pick·
and-rolls, don't take tbe fmt shot.
They do the rigbt thing in these
types of games." .
In other games, it was San
Antonio 98, Houston 96;
Pbiladelpbia 85, Boston 77;

By DICK BRINSTER
AP Spot11 Writer
Although they bad no designs
oa4tllng records, the lllb-ranked
Maryland Tcmpinl couldtl't bclp
themselves
·
'
•
"We were scoring inside and
outside," Joe Smith said after get·
ling 25 of bis team's school-record
138 points Friday night. "And
they were fouling us an awful
lot"
Indeed. W'mless Morgan State
sent Maryland to tbe free lbrow
line for 67 attempts. Tbat the
Terps (g·2) made but 41 was
allout tbe only negative coach
Gary Williams could find in tbe
138-72 rout of the Bears.
Morgan State did not take its
rust free throw until 12:03 was
left in tbe game,' and fmished witb
only 13 attempts.
But Williams was more inter·
ested in tbe 26 bis team missed
"I would like to see us shoot
around 73%. We bave the type of
team that's going to get fouled ...
so we'd better make them If we dn
get fouled."
The victory was tbe I,OOOtb for
Maryland in 72 seasons. The
Terps liave lost 743.
"I don't think any of us
thought about scoring all those
points or winning the 1,OOOth
· game," said guard Duane
Sunpkins, wbo matched a career

bigh with 11 assists.
Simpkins also was glad
Morgan State (0-7) was tbe oppositi~~llsidering ~!,a¢ was
. CiJIIIIII•:Oita ~~~' '
Maryland bad eight players
score in double figures, including
Johnny Rhodes (19), Sarunas
Jasikevicius ( 18) and Exree Hipp
(16).
Elsewhere In games involving
ranked teams, it was No. 3
Arkansas 82, Tulsa 63; No. 10
Connecticut 85, Fairfield 68; No.
16 Minnesota 115, San Jose State
68; and No. 20 Wisconsin 75,
Loyola Marymount 60.
Maryland scored tbe opening
12 points and led by as many as
69 in the second half in notching
tbe milestone victory at borne.
The 138 points surpassed tbe
record of 130 against East
Carolina on Dec. 7, I9n. The 66point margin matched the biggest
in Maryland bistory, a 117-51 rout
of Maryhind-Eastcrn Sbore in
February 1987.
Paul Grant scored 14 points to
lead the Bears.
No.3 Arkansas 8Z, Thlsa 63
Corliss Williamson scored
seven of his 21 points and Davor
Rimae made two slraight threepointers as tbe Razorbacks opened
tbe second balfwitb an 18-0 run.
Tulsa (3-2) made just three
turnovers in the first half while

building a 36-3 2 lead, but com- ures - Including Townsend Orr
mitted seven in the first 4:14 of with 17 points - and tbe Golden
the second half. The Razorbacks Gophers (7-3) snapped their drec(8·1) bit .six of nine shots during game losillg s!JWc.
tberun. ·
They sllol 52'5 In re•tcb1ln•::l
Williamson started the second their bigbest point total in n
half wbeo be muscled for a tluee- years. The loss gave San Jose (0polnt play. Lee Wilson blocked 6) its worst start since 1958-59.
Freshman Sam Jacobson got
Sbea Se;lls' shot at tbe other end
and Scotty Thurman's one-bander career highs with 16 points and 10
in tbe Jane gave Arlcansas its flfSI rebounds for the host Gophers.
lead since 24-23.
Jayson Walton and Vosbon Leoard
Clint McDaniel added 18 also had 16 points. Kweli Baker·
points for !.be Razorhactcs. Seals led San Jose with II points.
led visiting Tulsa witb 14 points.
No.lO Wbconsln 75
No. 10 Connecticut liS
Loyola Marymount 60
FalrOeldQI
Michael Finley bad 17 paints to
Ray Allen had 21 points and move into secood on tbe school's
Doron Sheffer 16, and both keyed career scoring list, and the ,
runs that helped Connecticut. Badgers spotted tbe visiting Lioos
UConn (5-0) oever trailed, break· a 7-0 lead before taking control.
ing from a 7-7 tie on five sbaight
The Badgers (6-1) also got 16
points by Sheffer early in the points and IS rebounds
Rashard Griffith before be fouled
game at Hartford.
Tbe Stags (5-3) kept it close, out with just under four minutes
trailing 19-16 before Allen had remaining.
Loyola Marymount (6-2) was
five points during a 9-0 run to a·
28-16Iead. The Huskies led 43-30 led by Mike O'Quinn's 17 points
and lme Oduok's 16. The Lions,
at halftime.
UConn also got 14 points and held to a season-low point total,
shot 34% from tbe field (23-forsix assists from Kevin Ollie.
Fairfield was led by Greg 67).
Francis witb 20 points.
Finley moved to No. 2 on the
No. 16 Minnesota 115
scoring list witb 1,752 points. He
San Jose St. 68
passed Rick Olson (I, 736) :tnd
Coming off its worst offensive Claude Gregory (1.745) and now
showing of the season, Minnesota trails Danny Jones, who scored
put seven players in double fig- I ,854 points.

Former Michigan &amp; NBA star finds calling in coaching
By TIM PUET
COLJJMBUS, Ohio (AP)For Cazzie Russell, coaching is
teaching - no mallet what tbe
level.
Tbe three-time all-~erican
and NBA veteran is sharing coaching duties at Columbus Centennial
High School after Dine seasoos as a
Continental Basketball Association

"I felt I bad been teacbing for
yearsasacoachandtomoveintoa
classroom wouldn't be all that
bard. This pOsition came open and·
it's given me an opportunity to do
wbat tbe Lord apparently wants me
to w.bile completing my work
toward certification as a teacher."
Russell, who bas a bachelor's
degree in sports marketing from
coach.
the University of Michigan, said be
He can't be a bead coach in bigh would not decide until after tbc
school until be obtains bis teacblng season bow be will get bis remain. certificate, wbjcb be will receive ing education credits.
.
after completing sill- more college
His coaching partner, Btll
aedit boors in education. For DOW, Acterman, carries the title of head
be is a substitute teacber ill tbe roach. But be said be lets Russell
Columbus system lind serves as an do most of the coaching.
unpaid associate minister at Love
"Witb all bis knowledge, I've
Zioo Baptist Cburcb. ·
given bim as much responsibility
Russell, 50, wbo was ordained as be wants. He bas taken over the
as a Baptist minister in 1988, said coacbins of our older players for
the ministry was what kept bim in tbe most part, wbilc I have tbc
Columbus after be was fired in yOitllger ooes. Whatever be wants
.- JJmuaty by tbe CBA's Columbus- to-do,-be·cllnlo11-. - -Horizon midway tbrougb bis sec· . "I was plltlning to get out of
ODd seasoo Mlldling the team.
coaching because my wife and I
"I felt called to remain in bad twins a few months ago. but
Columbus because I bad 11 .strotlg Cazzic coming along bas been a
commitment with lbe church. So blessing because it allowed me to
since I knew I was going to be stay on as a ooacb without bavinJ
staying bere, I decided 10 apply for to ~evote as many hours to tbe
ueacbing job,'' be said.
job," A~kerman said.
•

DANCE CLASSES

TV show?
•.

..

,,

IC'

. '

'

tbem.''

·'

STRING CLASSES

Q. I remember seeing a movie in
A. You have the lille right. :And
tbe mid-'80s called Don't Cry, It's there is a virleo, but no book, as it
Only Thunder, about a soldier in was an aiginal screenplay by Janet
Vietnam wbo ta1tes care of a 8\'(lup Green.
.·
. ·.
of orphans. Wbo starred in Ibis
Q. Your IIIISwcr could matc ·me
movie, and is it out on tape? $10 richer. Is Paul Gross (Due
L.H., Dorris, Calif.
South) !!le son of Larry H8ID!!!II ([ '
A. Dennis Christopher and Dream of ltDMie and Dallas)? Susan St James were lbe stars and, I say yes. - A.C., Amarillo, Texas
yes, a tape is available.
A. I pronounce you poverty·
Q. About 25 years ago, I saw an stricken. Gross is an Army brat,
outstanding English thriller about originally tronl Canada, unrelated
tbe murder of a black call girl to Hagman.
(Dick Kleln~r Is a ~olumDist
everyone tbougbt "Was white. I
think it was called Sapphire . If ·for News.- per Enterprise Assothere is no video, can I find it in ~Iatlon.)
book form?
N.S ., Bonita
Copyrigbtl994 NEWSPAPER
~pripgs, Aa.
EN'IERI!RISE ASSN.

Orlando 123, Mllwaatee 91; 34 points as Pbiladelpbla broke a
Miami 116, Cbarlotte 93; Atlanta five-game losing streak by winning
97, Detroit 77; Cbicago 116, at Bostoa.
Indiana 92; Pboealx 126, Denver
The 76crs took tbe lead for good
110; Washington 105, tbe Los on Barros' three-pointer with 2:48
Angeles Clippers 102; Portland left that made the IICirC n-75.
118, Dallas 92; and tbe Los
Boston was led by Dee Brown
Angeles Lakcrs 100, Sacramento witb 18 poillts and Dominique
89.
Wilkins witb 17.
. Spun 91, Rcickell 96
Magic 123, Bucks 91
A Texas-sized rivalry between
Sbaquille O'Neal's 32 points led
two of the NBA' s best defensive Orlando to its 11tb straigbt home
centers came down to blocked victory this seasoo.
The Magic held Milwaukee to
shots.
'
And for a change, it wasn't two field goals In tbe ftrst seven
Houston's Hateem Olajuwon minutes of !.be fourth quarter to
doing the n::jecdng. He was the one break open a close game.
wbose sboU were swatted away by
Nick Anderson bad 27 points
San Antonio's David Robinson.
for the Magic. Gleuo Robinson led
After Sean Elliott bit a 15-foot tbe Bucks witb 20 points.
jumper with 2.9 seconds left to put
lbwkl '¥1, l'lltolll 77
tbe Spurs ahead, Robinsoo blocked
Atlanta's victory at Detroit left
two shots by Olajuwoo to seal San Hawks coacb Lenny Wilkens ooe
Antonio's 98-96 victory Friday win shy of Red Auerbach's coachnight.
ing victaies record.
Robinson came up witb bis big
Willcens, wbo got lbc 937tb vicblocks despite. playing on two tory of bis career, can tie the NBA
sprained ankles. He bad 18 points, record witb a victory Tuesday at
10 rebouds and four bloclced sbots. Houston.·
Vernon Maxwell bad a seasonMookie Blaylock's 18 points led
high 27 points. Vinny Del Negro Atlanta, and Grant Long added 17.
led !.be Spurs with 26 points.
Allan Houstoo came off tbe Pistons
San Antonio beat !be defending bench to score 23, and Grant Hill
· NBA champions for tbe second bad 19.
BOOM! - Cleveland forWIU'd Tyrone Hill (rigllt) ~~ttJ two points
time in less tban two weeks. The
. Blilh 116, Pacers 91
tbe
easy way over the New Jersey Nets' Benoit Benjamin In the
game was played at tbe
Reserve Toni Kukoc bad 27 fourth quarter of Friday nlgbl's NBA game In Cleveland, where the
Alamodome before 31,514, tbe points to belp Chicago beat Indiana
won 80-75 In part be~ause of Hill's 11 points and 19
largest crowd in tbe league this sea- and snap a three-game losing .Cavaliers
rebounds.
(AP)
SOil.
streak.
Danny Manning scored 18 an earlier loss 10 Dallas.
Heat 116, Hornets 93
The Bulls led by as many as·30
points for !be Suns, wbo won their
Clyde Drexler added 18 points
Olen Rice followed a 30-point points early in the fourth qaurter.
13th
straight
at
borne
by
building
a
and
Rod Strickland bad 13 points,
performance Wednesday by scor·
Derrick McKey led tbe visiting
21-point
lead
with
4:18
remaining.
.
10
assists
and seven rebounds .
ing 37 as Miami beat Charlotte.
Pacers witb 17 points, 12 in tbe
Mahmoud Abdui-Rauf scored
Doug Smith led tbe visiting
Scott Burrell led tbe visiting fmt quaner. Reggie Miller had 16
22 points for tbe Nuggets, bitting Mavericks witb 18 points, and Roy
Hornets with 19 points, while points.
nine of 11 shots, and Rodney Tarpley scored 17 . But Jamal
Bimbo Coles bad 19 points and fl
Sum lUi, Nuggets 110
Mashburn and Jimmy Jackson,
assists for Miami, wbicb opened a
Kevin Johnson bad 21 points Rogers-scored 20.
Blazers 118, Maveri~ks 92
among tbe league's top scorers,
22-point lead in the !bird quarter.
and I I assists in his best game
Clifford Robinson's season-bigb were held to 14 and ·to points,
76ers 85, Cdtks 77
since coming off tbe injured. list as
31
points helped Portland rever11e respectively.
Dana Barros bad a career-high Phoenix beat Denver.

IT'S MINE!- In tbe midst o1 several or bls teammates and
Arkauas players, Including tbe Razorbacks' Corliss Wllllamson
(34), Tulsa's KwanzaJolmson (facing WUIIamson) paDs In a rebourld
during Friday night's game In Fayetteville, Ark., wbere tbe third·
ranked Ruorbllcks won 82-63. (AP)

b

By DICK KLEINER
with eyes, except for Wilma and
·:Q. Jut bow long doea it take to Barney, who just bavc black spots
onc-11our allow, sucb as MIJl· for.eyes? :-1.S., Waterloo, Iowa
loci lrliJIMurder, She Wrote, a a , .A, :·~ alow answer. Artistic
'lhOrtCt oae·llb Goldt11 Girll?·IiccDse, I 'IU!iPOee. Wlioever creat-.
R:FD., SliD Oty, Ariz.
ed tball, ill tbe first place, created
·.A. The ntle-of-tbumb, around them tllat way. I doubt !bat tbe
fiqUy,wooclatiiCIIos, is tb~ unless artist deliberately said, ''I' II just
11M bappms. tbey try to give tbem black spots, instead of
12 to IS mmutes of film a eyea." That was simply the way be
dly So • bour illow, wbicb, ~ saw t!lem..
·
1
' ; , ''atNi"tK 50 ..Unutea of film, takea '· :_,Q. I read lblll W~ a DenfQIII' 01 live clays to lboot. A balf. · nis Hopper arc related. In wbat
· ~~c~ur filtned ibow is doGe In three
way? And what did William Hopor:l'olrda)'l. . ·
·t
, per die of? -M.D., Amarillq,
.,;Q Aqulck~-wlayare Texas
.
"aat.tJM, cbarlcletl In T1lt Flitllstones
A: They are, ~·m told, dis~ I
~
the; an~a,l~y dra~ . COUIIDJ. Hopper died of.pneumorua
· ·'·'"·
·
'
•··
I
;.
H ;q' ,,,, '·· '/ .. 'when
55.
~ ·-,~ ·~~.n 1,If
· be was only
•
"

"Let' a give aedit to the guards
Williams said. "BeflrC, our
style was to let the opponents get
by and give me or Larry a chance
to block their shot. Now the guards
arc bolding up guys a lot more.
They're playing great.· ·
Tbe last minute Friday night
proved to be a showcase for
Fratello's style. With 38 seconds
left and Ocveland leading by three,
guard Bobby Pbills snuck in beblnd
Armon Gilliam in tbe lane and
swatted the ball away.
At the other end, tbe Cavs used
up most of tbe shot clock before
Pbl1ls passed to Tyrone Hill for a
resounding dunk !bat clinched it
wilb 12 seconds left
"Yeah, I mishandled tbe ball
late in tbe game, and tbat would
bavc put us within one witb 12 seconds Ief~" Gilliam said. "A guy
came from bebind me and knocked
tbe ball loose. I didn't see bim
cooting. It was nothing tbat we did
wrong. It was just a great play by
DOW,"

gei peOple to uDder-

6m£L

:·How long does it take to film a

.

Arkansas beats Tulsa; Maryland reaches milestone with win

stand wbat these wil411fe agents
do," Goddard said. "Wbeil I.ga Oil ·
bookl(ours I find people bWe llule
idea what a wildlife special agellt
is. It's an FBI· agent who dOesn't
wear a three-piece suit He wears
jeans and boots."
Dressed in his going-to-work
clothes of lilue jeans and a chamois
sb~ Goddard explained that wltbout bis regular contact witb bis
agency's 220 special agents, be
would have a lot harder time coming up witb stories, as well as characters.
"These guys are inventive,"
Goddard
said. "They have to be.
&amp;. • "
.au.
We have seven agents for all of
As director of the wildlife·foren- Alaska."
sics lab, Goddard can be found
Bravo Team is based loosely oo
burning bis clothes on the frozen a ieal-life team Irno\vn as !be GorilAlaska coast before a pilot will let
bim board a plane after cutting up a la Boat Crew. Among tbem is a
rotting walrus carcass, attending !bird-degree black belt in karate, a
the annual meeting of tbe Conven- recon .Marine and a rormer
tion on International Trade in Iioebackcr for !.be Baltimore Colts.
Goddard bas learned to make '
Endangered Species, or offering to
bis
characters composites of real
Pa., Uvlng room. Moorehead said tbe town's true affection for
let bis staff dump animal carcasses people,
rather than basing tbem on
Stewart Is because be is very down-tci-eartb and bumble. (AP)
in bis backyard so !bey can mea- one person.
One time be did, tbe
sure the rates of decomposition.
man's
daughter
called and said abc
His latest novel is "Wildfire."
rerognized
ber
father
as the dlaJac·
A covert operations team of
ter
wbo
shot
bis
family's
cat.
U.S . Fish and Wildlife Service
"Sbe
said,
'We
were
agents get diverted from their fisb wondering wbat happenedalways
to our
markenting onto the trails of a cat,' .. Goddard said.
.
secret cabal of. indusbialists bent
Goddard, 46, was born in San
on destroying tbe environmental Diego
calls, a,!ot ~f fax.es: a lot of have," be~d.
and earned a bachelor's .
research, Kaiser, ~d ,m a recent
It hasn t been all tbat far off movemen~ and a crazed group of
degree
in biochemistry fro~ tbe
phone mterytew. We ~ _find one from tbe type or adventures real- environmental terrorists wbo want
University
o( California at Rtver-•·
person then:: who was willmg to ~o ized by a lcid wbo grew up going to to set tbe world on ftre.
side.
It;s bis fourth novel and the sec·
to a record store, buy 50 CDs, hs- concerts by people like Lindley and
ten to tbem all, then e&amp;!l all of _tbe tbe Grateful Dead, tben years later ond to follow the exploits of Henry
people wbo sounded mtere_stmg found himself sharing the stage and Ligbtstone, a former San Dieso
~ as~ them who else was mter- stu~!o ~itb them.
.
surfer and homicide detective wbo
esung.
I JUSt really started playmg bas become part of Bravo Team,
J.·'~1895
Among ~ose tbey found_ was guitar for fun and tbeil people start- laying bis life on tbe line to protl:ct
Halvard T. BJorgum, tbe acclauned ed paying me to '·do it,V· said wildlife.
master of ~e fid~le in a nallOn Kaiser, who earned an economics
''Wbat I'm b.o.tli.!!&amp;. to do out. of
whose pnd!: m !.be mstrument goes degree from Harvard University.
COLONY THEATRE
backcentunes. ·
.
He didn't pick .up tbe guitar
BEGIN JAN. 3
SUN. THRU THUA~.
Bjorgum w~s so gract~us h_e until be was 20, but when be did;
WALT DIIJUY PICTUaU
stayed up all mgbt performmg b1,5 be knew exactly. wbat be wanted to
repertoire so that the two could bet- play. The Grateful Dead were tbe
ter deci~e ~bat tbey wanted to perfect menton.
BEGIN JAI. 9 &amp;10
record Wllb·htm. .
.
"Tbey were always very ecclec"That's not llie kind of expen- tic, very open, very fair, very sbarMorrill I Dorothy Healdna
ence you buy, or normally even ing," be said.
Arlol T - . 421 2nd. A... Gnl'l'olll,
.'
C•IW~AIIS

........

-

December 25, 1994 :

In Top, 25 college hoops,

'Music lnakers: Guitarist H~nry Kaiser
travels the globe seeking .new sounds
.,JOBNROGERS
.
Aaocltlted rn. Wrlkr
· NEW YORK (AP)- To understind wby Henry Kaiser travels tbe
World recording music p~
uiibeard of outside its native
oilc mut travel back to ()akhmd,
Qtilf., to 30 years ago, to a time
wbcn the San Francisco music
' scene anlt alternative radio were
blilssoming almost as one.
... "Non-commercial radio was
really great in tbe early '60s,' •
ICiliser 44 says, sounding nostalgrc •• :And.l was exposed to all
ldpds of millie through i~ 10 avantg8rde, .0 classical, to jazz. Those
were my roots as a teen-ager."
..In 1991, after two decades of
~orming, of winning some criti~. praisc and a small but Ioy31 fol-

Section C~

Cavaliers beat Nets; Spurs edge Rockets

Shakespeare Company since 1967,
Stewart bas played such roles as
,!bylock, Titus Andronicus, King
Jobn and Henry IV.
Referriog to a one-mao play
be's done tided "Uneasy Lies the
Head," in which be plays kings,
prime ministers, generals, tradeunion leaders and tbe like, be
allows !.bat be's cenainly filled a
lot of authority figure roles.
"Tbere're just been an awful lot
of tbem In my career," says Stewart, whose biggest such role of
course is Jean-Luc Picard, commander of lbe Starsbip Fnterprise.
"I bad a pretty good role model
in my father," wbo was a military
man, be continues. "There is a
good deal of bim in Capt. Picard.
He would bave rerognized a good
deal of what tbe good captain
does."
Stewart recently finished mak·
ing tbe film of Paul Rudnick's
Broadway play, "Jeffrey," in
wbicb be bas bis first overtly
homosexual role, as tbe title character's best friend. And lie's film·
ing tbe romantic comedy "Let It
Be Me,'' in which be plays wbat be
describes as a dancing coacb who's
a bit of a bustier.
During the seven-year iuo of the
syndicaled 1V series, "Star Trek:
The Next Gencratioo," be continued worlriog on siage "to remind
tbe world out there tbat I was an
actor, I was more tban just captain
of a sp;u:esbip."
·
Those passionate fans should be
happy to know tbat Stewart is willing to go full ahead witb a sequel to
"Star Trek Generations," wbicb
grossed $57.6 million in its first
three weeks of release.
''I was ambivalent about tbe
movie," be says. "Now tbat I've
seen i~ and seen the kllld of thing
!bat we can do, I tbink lt~d be an
excellent idea to start planning yet
another 'Next Generation' . movie.
... I think another two or three are
certainly possible."

Director of wildlife crime
lab also best-selling author
By JEFF BARNAKU
Associated Press Writer
ASHI,.ANO, Ore. (AP) - Ke!.l
Got!dard sometimes thinks about
quW~ng ·his day job to devote fui(
tin!¢ .10 Wfi!illg rock-'em-sock-'em
novels about federal agents fighting
wildlife crime.
He's director of the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service Forensics
Labomtory, tbe only crime lab in
the world devoted exclusively to.
wildlife.
"The government likes tbe idea
of me using my book job to sell tbt;
government," Goddanl said. "But.
!can't use my government job to
sell my books. That's completely

.

.1tintts- ientintl

---·

·.{,'

"Of course, tbe players have

sible for Michigan's move into tbe
big time of Division I haskethall,"
bad 10 make adjustments. Corning Strack said.
from a professional level, I think
The New York Knicks chose
be expected the players would bim first in tbe 1966 NBA draft
know more fundamentals !ban !bey· and be went on to earn a cbampido."
ousbip ring witb them in 1970. He
The team, witb only one return- averaged 15.1 points per game In a .
ing letterman, lost its first five 12-year pro career tbat included
games.
Stops lvitb tbe Knicks, tbe Golden
"Tbis team was depleted by State Warriors. the Los Angeles
graduation; so all I'm doing right Lakers and tbe Chicago Bulls.
now is teaching basics and hoping
Russell won a C~A cbampitbe players will listen," Russell onsbip with the Lancaster
said. "If they do, tbe wins will Ugbming in 1981-82, his first year
ctme."
.
in the league.
·
His coach at Michigan, Dave
The experience convinced him
Strack, said be's not surprised be was meant for a coaching
Russell bas cootioued coaching.
career.
"Cazzie bas a real dedication to
"I bad my reservations about
the sport of basketball and be is a · coaching when I was offered tbe
fme teacher. Anyone wbo bas bim 'job, but decided I'd try it and we
as a coach is real lucky. That's bis ended up winning tbe leagutl that
gift," Straclc said from bis home in year witb eigbt rookies. That first
Prescou.-Ariz~
. _.J
- - - year-changed-my-mind and I~ ve·
Russell. the only Michigan felt committed to being a coach
player to have his number retired, · ever since," be said..
averaged 27 .I points per game, still
"This job is giving me a cbance
a school record, from 1964 to 1966 to give something back in terms of
with tbe Wolverines. He led them what I learned fn:m bim and what
to a pair of NCAA Final Four God bas given to me."
appearances.
'
"Cazzie is tbe one man respon.
bad to adjust to Cazzie, but be also

'

�-.....
.

'

P1191 C2-$unday nmes Sentlnei

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnl Pleeant wv

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

:GAHS to battle
Tigers on ·rot~d. ·

SCENES FROM THE
NAIL-BITER - In the left·
bud pboto, River Valley center Cllldy AI'IIIIlead (45) gets
between Southern Tornadoes
Brlanne Proffitt (left) and
SIIJIIIIll Sisson to shoo( for two
of her game-high 13 points In
tbe ftnt quarter of Friday's
game at Charles W. Hayman
Gymnasium. Armstead, who
at sb: feet wiiS the tallest player In tbe game, was one of
oaly two double-ftgure scoren
shooting at laast 50% for the
game. In the rlgbt-hand
photo, Sisson keeps her eyes
on tbe prize after getting
between - Raiders Nickle
Meade (left) and Vanessa
Short. Sisson led her mates Ia
scoring en route to helping
push the Tornadoes to a 51-50
win that was their nnt over
the Raiders after four straight
losses to the Gallla County
club. (Times-Sentinel photos
by G. Spencer Osborne)

Southern·girls to-p RVHS 51-50
:to get season's second win
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tla 1 S.tlael Stair

: RACINE- Soudlem' s Toma·
doea, after breaking a four-point
defidt iD lbe fourth quaner, gOl the
break they needed wben senior
'Cindy Armstead's missed an in. the·painl book shot at tbe buzzer
belped diem get a S1-SO wiD over
the Raidcn Friday afternoon at
Squthem "lJb School's Cbar
. les
;w. Hayman Gymnasium.
The ClOIIIIelt, tbe final 1994 game
;cor both ~Ubi and tbe second in a
four-game cagerest tbal ended wilb
the Ross Soutbeastem-Southern
boys' iuerve-vanity twinbill (see
:c -3), mdled lbe sealOd win or lbe
season in cipl tries for Jennifer
Rousb' s Tornadoes. "It got the
monkey off our back." sbe said,
referring to the Raiders • beating
·them four times in tbe last two sea-

sons.

.

9; River Vatiey 2-8
As a result, tbe charity stripe
was a much frieDdlier spot for both
teams, especially in prime time.
when Soutbem made five or iiS 10
chances and River Valley made
two out of six.
But it was tbe Tornadoes, wbo
couldn't afford to do lbe basket
trading IIIey wen: doing in lbe first
2:30 of the final act, wbo got tbem
to drop wbeo they needed tbem.
Sophomore forward Renee Turley, whose two free throws halved
the 48·44 lead created by Arm·
stead's fmallayup 33 seconds earlier, missed two made necessary by
Ward's intentiooal foul 011 a Toma·
do fast break witb 4:48left.
When Raider forward Nickie
Meade made the second free throw
after missing tbe ftnt 011 a two-sbot
foul situation made necessary by
Brianne Proffiu' s tbird foul witb
4:06left, Manuel's layup - Turley
gOllbe assist- CUI River Valley's
lead to 49-48 with 3:33lefl
On anolber twG-sbot foul situa·
tion made necessary by Jessika
Codner's third fouL Meade missed
tbe first free throw but made tbe
second. wbicb gave River Valley a
S0-48lead with 2:30 left
Nine sec011ds later, tbe Tornadoes missed a cbaDce to casb in on
Armstead's fourth foul wben Proffitt missed botb free tbrows. But

: David Moore' s Raiden (4-5),
losers of lbelr last three games. fell
bebind 6-1 011 tbe sttengtb of three·
pointers by junior lonna Manuel
and Samml Sisson in lhe game's
fmt 2:30. But tbe Raiders' 4-for-8
·foul sbooting iD tbe period helped
tbem overalllle their 3-for-12 f~eld­
:goal sbooli11B and put them in position to usc freshman guard Sarab
Ward's riJ.bt-wing jumper in the
.Jast 30 seamds to lake a 10-8 lead
.into lbe seamd quarter.
The Tornadoes. living up to tbe
,speedy adjective painted below tbe- stage beyond the coon's west end,
'refused to allow tbeir guests 10 get
jnore lhan tbe six-point lead tbey
:g01 on Ward's layup witb 6:07 left
•in act two. But botb teams busded
:so tbat after Ward dropped ber
' lhn:e-pointer from tbe rigbt wing at
:we S:04 mark, no one led by more
than three.
• The Raiders, living witbout tbe
:six-foot Armstead in Ibis frame
. because of her two fouls, found
:tbemselves having to overcome tbe
·Tornadoes' 10-for-12 foul shooting
·.wilh three-pointers. The last or tbe
: Rlliders' twMreyil in tbe period fell
. when freshman guard Vanessa
: Short sank it wilb 40 seconds left
· · to brush aside Southern's 27-26
· lead. But Manuel drove doWIICOUil
: and got inside for tbe layup with 12
: seconds left to en: ate a 29-29 tie
: tbal stood at halftime.
• Witb Raider small fon'iards
• Heidi Hasb and Fzio Conley on tbe
: bench witb' three fouls, Soulbern
: g01 ahead by four 011 two occasions
: early in lbe tbird quarter before tbe
• RaKJers weot 011 a 9-2 run tbal con·
: sumed 2:1S in lbe period's middle
: and put diem ahead 40-37 follow·
: inl Conley' s layup. But Sissoo
• drilled a trey frpm .ifle,ript wing
~ with 2:27 left .to fubiOD a -40-40
lie.

River Valley aot lay ups by
Wild llld Armllad pve it a~
lead It die qulller'. CODdusion.
. . GOlDa to tile IIDe
All« lbe aec:OIId quarter, neither
tam allot die ball effectively from
lbe field. • lhowo by tbese statistics:
nJrd q...-ter- River Valley
7-17; Soutbali 4-16
. FiiUI'dl quuta- - Soulban 3-

the Raiders, wbo after Proffitt' s
final misses played keep-away
from Soulbern for more than a
minute, missed their chance to
extend their lead when Cooley,
stepping to ibe line for a one-andone situation made necessary by
Bea Lisle's first foul, missed the
front end.
Wilb 29 seconds lef~ Codner, at
tbe line for tbe one-and-one
because Conley fouled out, made
botb shots to tie the game at 50.
Tbe Raiders' ensuing possession
lasted a mere eigbt seconds
because junior point guard Amber
Staton accidentally bounced lbe
ball off ber right foot while dribbling downcourt. At that point,
Codner called lime out.
Wilb 14 seconds left, Manuel, at
tbe line for lbe one-and-one made
necessary by Staton's fourth foul,
sank tbe ftnt point to put Soutbern
ahead 51 -50, but missed the secODd. One secoad later, Armstead,
fouled by Codner after Armstead
.came down witb tbe rebound, went
to tbe line foc die one-and-oDe.
Armstead missed tbe one-andone but rebounded her own shot.
Then lbe time-011ts qme.
After River Valley was whistled
for a three-second violation wilb
five seconds left, Manuel called
time. Wbco tbat delay was expend(See TORNADOES on C-3)

%ere is 1UJ time ftUJre appropriate
tlian this to say

TJIJL9£1Crou
and to wisli you .a
:Happg :Houtfay Season
and a
9\[f,w ~ear of:Heafth and Prosperity

THE MOTOR PARTS COMPANY, INC~
446-2962

992-2131

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.•fls
FDJftna

....

earalla

canllfti#Mlllfl
.e ~ IUIIII=M
,C4 if RIIe

......,.,.,..,,..,on
.,_,
,.
.,., ..,..,

• " " • Spealrers

n .• •

-~

Scoring leaders - Jennifer
ed, MO¥Je called lime. Wben tbat
Reserve ·contest - River Val- Martin (River Valley)- 14; Cynthia
IwD
:W L Il ill delay expired, tbe Raiders sef up a ley 46, Southern 19
Caldwell (So·uthern \ - R ..
Logan ....................6 1 506 419 . for a quick-shot play on the in·
Fairland .......... .....4 I 356 332 l!Qunds pass. But Soutbern got its
Point Pleasant.. ......4 I 297 272 bands on the ball in traffic and
Warren Local ........5 2 422 405 immediately lost it, taking three •·
Greenfield ............ .5 2 458 391 seconds off tbe clock.
Athens ................ :..4 2 412 391
Then senior forWard Heidi. Hasb
Chesapeake .......... .4 2 366 281 tossed the ball to Armstead in tbe
, Wheelersburg ........3 2 377 335 paint. Armstead's book shot
Marieua ................. 3 3 409 319 bounced off the rim and away fmn
Portsmoutb ............3 3 420 418 its target, saving the day for the
Soutbern ............... J 3 406 391 Tornadoes.
River Valley .......... 3 4 454 485
Sisson finished wilb ~ team·bigb
Meigs .................... 2 4 417 423 12 points coming mainly·on 4-forGallipolis............ ...2 4 327 383 12 field -goal shooting, while
Vinton County ...... 1 4 298 373 Manuel's 3-for-7 field-goal shootJackson .................. ! 5 383 431 ing was pardy responsible for her
Soutb Point... ..... ,...O 3 190 208 11 poiniS.
Armstead finished witb a gamebigb 13 points coming mosdy fmn
(Varsity)
6-for-10 field-goal shooting. Ward
lum
WLilQl finished witb 12 points coming·
Logan ....................4 0 295 245 mainly from S-for-8 field-goal
Warren Local ........ 2 1 163 162 shooting.
Marieua .................2 2 2(1) 217
Atbens .................. .1 2 193 226
Soutbem will return to lhe court
~verValley .......... l
2 190 225 on Wednesday, Jan. 4 against
Gallipolis ............... l 2 133 165 Symmes Valley at1,.id. River Val' ....
Jiickson~ .. ~ ............ l 3 264 '11J7 ley·will return to action on Tburs·
TOTALS
1l 12 1507 1507 day, Jan. 5 at bome against Warren

SALE

WE,, WILL DEAL

'Local .

lum

New
TtiVIItll
4Jt4

Piekup

--·- -

•

• TDritlng Paelrage
• POwer Steering

By SCOTT WOLFE
Tlmu-Sentlnel Cotrapondent
RACINE - The Ross Southeastern Panthers bave again
returned to basketball's elite, utilizing a run·and·gun, sharp-shooting
offense that blew tbe Soutbem Tornadoes away 88-72 Friday night at
Soutbem Higb School's Charles
W. Hayman Gymnasium.
In reality, it wasn't really tbat
close.
Soutbeastern placed four men in
double figures, led by John Bennett's 21 points. Travis Hal~'s 12,
Rod Jones' 11 and Cbad Ragland's
10. The Pantbers placed 10 men in
tbe scoring column.
Southern was led by seniOr Jeremy Hill' s 18 poiniS, while senior
point guard Ryan Williams netted
IS.
·
Soutbern came out of the gate
with mucb intensity, but several
missed layups and tbe blistering of
- lbe nets by lobo Bennett and 00111·
pany took tbe zap rigbt out tbe Tornadoes' sails. At lbe end of lbe rust
period, SE led 23-14.
Southern cut it to 23-16 on a
Kevin lble baclc-door basket, but
Rod Jones drilled a three-pointer
for a 26-16 tally. Hill canned a
jumper for a 26-18 tally, but Josh

Sturley drove baseline for a 28- 18
score. That's as close as SHS came
tbe rest of tbe game as Bennett
drilled a three. M ter a Southern
turnover, Tad Carrico drove the
lane for a 33-18 score.
Williams drove lbe lane, scoring
lbe bucket and bringing bome lbe
free tbrow, then Jamie Evans drew
a foul at the 4:40 mark of tbe sec·
ond quarter, where be hit tbe second of two, Southern went ice oold
blUing 0-14 in one stretch and 1037 for lbe balf. Southern did not
~re lbe remainder of the half, suffenng through a nearly live minute
drought.
Meanwhile, Ross blitzed to a
46-22 halftime lead.
Tl)e rest of the game was academic . Soutbern once fell behind
by 35 points, but did not give up.
The bometown boys trailed 74-46
after tbree rounds. Southern's second five proved to ~ better than
tbe Ross bench, as Southern cut the
lead to 82-66 and 84-70 at one
point in lbe waning minutes, com·
pliments of Jay McKelvey' s free
!brows, Jesse Maynard 's treys ·and
two Ryan Martin drives.
Soutbern bit 22-69 overall, had
5-1 2 treys, and was 13-22 at the
(See SOUTHERN on C-4)

NO PAYMENTS UNTIL MARCH 1995

INVENTORY
REDUCTION
SALE.

(8-:Zl-11-10=51)
Sisson 2-2-212&gt;:12, Manuel 2-1416=11, Turley 4-0-2/4;10, Proffitt
3-0-4/8=10, Codner 1-0-4/4=6,
Moore 1-0-0/0=2. Totals: 13/36·
l/10-1tll24=51
Total FG -16-46 (34.8%)
Rebounds - 34 (Codner &amp;
Sisson 8 each)
Assists - 9 (Turley 4)
Steals -16 (Manuel4)
Turnovers - 25
.Fouls - 15
River Valley
(10-19-15-6=50)
Armstead 6-0-1/2=13, Ward 41-1/2=12, Meade 2-0-4/11=8, Cooley 3-0-115=7 , Staton 2-1-0/0=7,
Sbort 0· 1-0/0=3. 'Jotals: 17141·
l/9-7/23=50
Total FG .!... 20-50 (40%)
Rebounds- 29 (Meade 16)
Assists- 12 (Staton 6)
Steals - 21 (Armstead, Heidi
Hash &amp; Ward 4 eacb)
Turnovers - 14
Fouls-17

SpKialists in obstetrics and gynecology.
Left to right are Jack Chan, D.O., Kenneth
Glinrer, D.O. (.rented) , Catherine Coats. D.O. ,
and Jack Ramey, D.O. For more
information pi~ call

(614) 593-239R.
Olio

linivenity
Ollufr'tic
Mldicll
CliiJjj

· -"

East State Street
Athens, Ohio

ANYTHING IN'
INVENTORY
WILL BE SOLD FOR
0

'ONLY •94°

PROFIT.
94 IS ALMOSt OVER - SO
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS

s94oo SALE
SEE: Mike Northup, Dwight Stevers, Pete
Somerville, tom Sprague, Morris Sheets, AI
Durst, Eric Blackburn, Bob Stanley.
252 Upper River Road, Gallipolis, OH. PH. 446-0842

SUNDANCE, 14760, blue, 1uto.; 11r,
. AM/FN Clasette, lilt, cloth Interior ......................... $5665
1990 CHEV. CAVAUER, 14689, blue, air, auto., AM/FM,
cloth Interior ............................................................. $5495
1989 DODGE ARIES, 14763, elr, auto., AM/FM, cloth
Interior, rear delroater ................... .......................... $3995
19!11 DODGE SHADOW, 14766, burgundy, auto., air,
AM/FM, cloth Interior ............................................... $5995
1992 GEO METRO, 14747, AM/FM, 4 door, cloth
lntlrior......,..........................................................:.....$4595
1988 FORD TEMPO GL. 14749, reel, air, auto., AM/FM,
cloth lnterlor ..;.......................................................... $3495
1990 MAZDA PROTEGE, 14753, 4 door, AM/FM eaaa.,
cloth Interior, rear defrost ..... :................................. $5764
19!12 MERCURY TOPAZ, #4762, air, auto., AM/FM
Clli&amp;et11e, power loc:ks, cruise, cloth interior ......... $6915
1989 CHEV. CORSICA, #4m, air,luto., AM/FM, cloth
....................................................................... $4995

1989 NISSAN PULSAR NX, 14618, low miles, T·tops,
AM/FM, cloth Interior ............................................... $5995
1990 FORD RANGER XLT - Long Bed, 14729, biiCk, air,
sport wheels, AM/FM, rear slide, center stripe ...... $6800
1990 TOYOTA TRUCK, N4727, AM/FM cassette, air, tool
box, rear bumper .............. ........................................ $6995
19!13 DODGE SHADOW, #4754, white, 2 Dr., AM/FM,
sport wheels,.cloth Interior ..................................... $7924
1993 FORD TEMPO GL, #4604, red, air, auto., AM/FM
cassette, P. locks, cust. wheel.. .............................. $7295
19!12 PONTIAC SUNBIRD, #4096, 4 door, air,auto.,
AM/FM, cloth Interior .............................................., $8174
19!11 NISSAN SENTRA SE, 14728, 2 door, AM/FM
cassette, rear defrost , alloy wheels ...................... $7495
19!12 DODGE DYNASTY, #4693, white, air, auto., air
bag, tilt, cruise, cloth interlor.................................. $7995
1990 MAZDA EXTRA CAB TRUCK, 14740, rear seats,
AM/FMcass., Rallye wheels, low miles ,................ $7995
19!13 NISSAN TRUCK, #4758, reel, aport wheels, back
bumper, cloth Interior, 26,000 mll11 ....................... $8224
1989 c·HEV. BERETTA GTU , N4717, reel, sun roof, air,
. AM/FM cess., tllt, cruise, alloy wheela, PW ........... $7450
19!13 FORD MUSTANG, I4695, green, auto., alr, AM/FM
cassette, cruise, PW, 25,000 mllea ......................... $8830
1993 NIS.SAN SENTRA, 14759, white, 4 door, auto., air,
AM/FM, tilt, rear defroster ..........................,............ $8980
19!12 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN, 14734, air, auto.,
AM/FM cassette, cloth Interior, crule ................... $9420
19!13 FORD TEMPO GL, 14774, white, auto., air, AM/FM
cass., tilt, P. loc:kl, V~ cyl ....................................... $8630
1992 OLDS CIERA, 14773, blue, AM/F.II cu utte, tilt,
cruise, auto., air, rear defroster .............................. $787'4
19!12 DODGE DAKOTA, 14772, white, AM/FMClllette,
Toneau cover, aport wheels, cloth Interior ............ $7975
1992 DODGE CARAVAN, 14778, 7 pan., tilt, crulae, air,
auto., AM!FMcess., power equlpment ...................$9520
1993 DODGE DYNASTY, 14652, burgundy, 1uto., alr,
AMIF!II. tilt, cruise, P. windows, 1lr big ................. SMJS
19!13 PONTIAC GRAN AM, 14757, tilt, cruise, AM/FM
cassette, elr, auto. , aport wheela .................. ,......... $9385

-,

Soutbero Sl, RIVER VALLEY
50 .

l'Wiftek'•llita
Wtd1 . I .J .
Milford vs. Loaao Ia Loaan
~yCIIIIic.8:1Sp.m: .
.
':
Tbunday

-·-·-·Soulbem

W . r e. ple-m ro announce our

• AMJI=M Stereo
e Gllfl Sllfldrs
• eltrtllfle Ptxllage
e 111111 MUCII tflll'fll

li L li L

J'rtday'•-

WLil$

Warren Local ........3 0 136
Marieua ................J 1 246 168
1~ .................. 3 1 168 134
Atbens ................... 2 1 118 104
Gallipolis ............... l 2 105 145
RiverValley ..........O 3 103 164
Logan ..... .............. .0 4 133 185
TOTALS .
1l U 10091009
Friday's results:
CbillicOlbe 63 Logan 59
Ross Soutbeastem 88 Soulbern 72
Cbe:sapealte S4 Ceredo-Kenova 44
Tuesday's games:
Gallipolis at Greenfield
Marlena tournament
Jackson at Oak Hill
Coal Grove at Southern
Pl. PleaSant tourney
Wednesday's games:
Marietta tourney
Pl. Pleasant tourney
Col~bus Briggs at Portsmouth
T,tiursday's games:
Logan at Dover
Frld11y's games:
Fairland at Wheelersburg
. Greenfield at Fairfield
Dayton Pattetson at Portsmouth
at Southern ,

·

DON

Southern.88-72

STOP IN AND

LapeOvenD
'GAU:IPOLIS ..........5 0 8 0
Lopn .......................4 1 7 1
. WllrRIII.ol:al ...........3 2 5 3
Atbella ......................2 3 5 . 3
Mlrieua ................... .2 3 4 3
RIVER VALLEY.....2 3 4 S
Jactsoo .....................0 6 0 8

NO BIG ADS
NO HASSLE

SEC standings

SEOAL girls'
cage standings
Iall

Tornadoes edge Raiders ...

(Reserves)

AUI'OMOD\'E

'alwe

Ross SE defeats

qALLIPOLIS ·. Jim Osbome's 72-63, Warren LocallS0-44 and
GaJl!a Academy H1gh School Blue Marietta 60-28 . Tbe Devils lone
J?evils will clo~ out tbe 1994 por· non-league win was 77 -61 over
t10il of tb1s year s hardwood scbed· Vinton County 011 Dec. 10.
ule witb a ROD,ieague holiday conGreenfield's two losses wen: to
test at G!eeofield Tuesday oiJ.bt.
Probable Bloe Devil starters will
Coach Ridt VanMatte' s Tigers be Josh Cook and Ryan Barnes at
own a spaiklina 5-2 record, having the forward posts; Terry Qualls,
recorded impressive 70-47, 70-62 center; Dave Rucker and Setb
and 63-45 wins over Miami Trace, Davis guards. Firsr off the bencb
Hillsboro and Adena lbeir last lhn:e will be Ricbard Kuhn and Mark
limt4 out
,
Clark.
"They're not a big -ball club, but
Gallipolis is averaging 54.4
, lbey will press you from 011e end !lf points a game and giving up 63.8.
, lbe court to lbe otber, ttap, play a
Greenfield starters will be Andy
: 1-3-1 matcbup and balf·court Smith, 6-3 senior and Troy Seely,
: defense. They .an: real scrappy on 5-8 senior at the guard positions;
Osborne. "Offen· Richie Price, 5-10 junior and Matt
, tbe boards,"
: stvely, lbey don t make very many Johnson 5-11 senior at the forward
: mislake;;."~added.
.
posts a~d Brad Badgley , 5-11
. Galhpohs, 2-4 on tbe year, 1s senior at center.
MAKING A STAND .- Southern's Kevin ,lble (4l) makes bls
: coming· off a 61 -55 Southeastern
Fust off tbe bench will be Jason
• Ohio League victory over Jackson. . Eubanks, 5-1 J. junior, followed by stand South~m's Travb Hale while waiting for the rebound dur·
Friday night's game In Racine, where the Panthers won 88-72.
:The Blue Devils will have to show Blain Bergsuam, 6-0 junior and lng
; a vast improvement in their ball Robbie Pearson, 6-0 senior for - Moving Into tbe paint Is Tornado Ryan Martin (12). (ScoU Wolfe
photo)
·
·. handling and shooting if tbey ; wards.
· 15
and · · · '55 8
..
expect to compete witb tbe Tigers,
Smitb is averaging 24 poiniS a
g1vmg up . .
ltgers own ~ 6-5 advantage over
Osborne ,said. "If we don' t play game wbile Seely is the Tigers' porn a game
Tuesday's game will be the 12th
the Blue Devils.
well, it could be very nasty," be playmak:er.
between
the
two
schools
since
the
VanMatre owns a ~26-79 wonadded.
Seely was a swter on last year's
series
was
revived
in
1983.
The
loss
mark at GHS dunng lbe past
GAHS is averaging about 2S 18-3 squad which downed lhe Blue
Greenview
76-72
in
overtime
and
11
and
one-half years.
turnovers a game and shooting 33 Devils 49-45 on the GAHS planks.
55
-42
10
Zane
Trace.
The
Tigers
Tuesday
' s reserve game will
percent from tbe field.
. Smitb sat out lbe GAHS game witb
otber
victory
tbis
winter
was
67-49
begm
at
6
p.m.
The varsity contest
The Gallians. have lost to _Day- an injury.
over
Vinton
County
on
Dec.
3.
ts
set
for
7:30.
~on Colonel Wbuge 85-54, Fauland
Greenfield is av eragin~ 65.4
2
(Continued from C- )

Cage
standings
.
AIIGamea

'Sunday nmes Sentinel Page C3 .

.

In finale of day-long cagefest,

sail!

-From the DON WOOD

.,.,.,
• 1111-

'

.

"Where Better Really Matters"
~4 m~n.th

dosed end le~se, $90Q ~h or trade dowo, 1st payment &amp;refundable security deposit due at in_ception, plus tax al')d
title with approved credit! 12,000 mile~ per year. Corolla M$RP $14,242; option to purchase $9078. 4x4 P.U. MSRP $16,212;
option to purchase $11095.91. .
·

Meigs at Gallipolia, 7 p.m.
'
•J

r

I

I\

�..

C4 Sunday Times-Sentinel

P1g1

~

...
' 'I
' .,
~

•

21;1894

Pomeroy-Middleport-GIIIIpolls, ~oint Pleasant, WV

-~ Fort Frye grounds

In the., Open ·

:Eastern in 69-46 rout

' '

chances. Eastan beld on for a Ti18 balrtime score and clung close
in the third round 41-28, but sharpshooting Fon Frye turned up the
wide for a 28-point linale.
·
Easrem bit 1946, was 8-11 at
tbe line, bad 26 rebounds led by
Bissell's eight. 23 turnovers, seven
srea1s and 18 fouls.
Fon Frye bit 24-48, 6-12 treys,
was 15-21 at the line. Fort Frye bad
20 rebounds, led by Hayes' five,
bad 16 turnovers, 10 steals and 19
fouls.
Easrem will play North Adams
in the Federal Hoelting CbristiJiaS
Tournament next Tburaday night at
6 p.m. The winner will advance to
the championship game to play tbe
winner of tbe Federal HockingWarerford game Friday at 8 p.m.,
while the loser will play in the consollllion game at 6 p.m.
WHO'S OPEN? - Wltb Fort Frye'• Troy FoaJe (35) abadowiDg
Reserve notes: Eastan dropped blm, Eutem's Eric HUI~eeb 1111 aiJIWer to Utat quesdon durlna Frl·
the reserve game, but no statistics day night's contest, wblcb tbe Cadets won 69-46. HOI Onkbecl wltb 111x
(See EASTERN on C-5)
point&amp;

EAST MEIGS - Tbe Fort
. Frye Cadetll:s defealed Eastern 69: 46 Friday nigbt in a boys • bigb
sdlool vanity basketball contest at
. Eastan.
Eastern put up an inteDse effort
, at the start, but again backside
· defense and eatly offensive miscues spelled defeat for the Eaalca.
. Fat Frye, wbo sbot a sizzling 'i 1'I&gt;
from lbe floor on Tuesday against
· Sbenendoab, cooled off Friday 10
'. 50%, hammering home 24-48 from
. the floor.
· Eastan was Jed, by another good
· effort from Charlie Bissen witb 16
: points and eigbt rebounds, wbile
. Micah 0110 bad 15 points and live
: CatOD'lS.

: Clint Hayes led FF witb 1~
· points and five rebounds, wbile
: Scott Heiss added 12.
_ Fon Frye 18-6 as EHS couldn~t
: get the early drop, then EHS cut It
· back to 21-14 before three straight
:·turnovers killed the Eagles early

Bvannille 95, South Alabama61
Maryland 138, Morpn St. 72 .
Me"l'hiiHIO, NE Loulolana79

NBAstandings

Midwest

All.,tlc III.Uim

l::::oo.. . .. .. . J~ II~ .!22
tali

!lew York... ........ 12

N.wJ...y ............l1
Bootoa ....................ID
l'hllodelphla .............9
Miami ...................... !
Waohlqtoa ... ...........1

16 .•29
IS .400
16 .360

ll .341
16 .304

Ill

7
9.S '
10
II
II
12

Ccatral Dfyblon
Clooolllld ............... l7 I .680

lldlau ............. ..... ll I .6ll
011r1oue ....... ........ 14 11 .560
Ollcqo................. 12 12 .500

Allallll ...... ............. ll IS .423
lldroiL ..................... 9 14 .391
Mllwautoe ...............1 17 .292

·I
l
4.!
6.5
.7
9.5

llllb .......................18

8 .692
................. 14 9 .609
Su AII10Dio ........... l3 9 .!91
Dollao ..................... l2 10 .l4l
Ooowr ................... 12 11 .522
MillDelda ............... .l 19 .201
-

Southern loses ... &lt;co_ntinued from &lt;i:-3)
line. SHS bad 26 rebounds, led by

ROSS SOUTHEASTERN

Mason Fisher's seve11 and
Williams' five. Southern bad 14
sleals, 19 turnovers and 13 fouls.
Ross bit 34-64, bad 8-IS treys, '
was 5-9 at tbe line and bad 44 .
rebound• led by Hale's 12, Sturley's eigbt and Tad Carrico's seven. SE bad 13 steals, 22
turnovers and 25 fouls.
Southern hosts Coal Grove

(:3-:3-ZI-14=811)

Tucsda~-

Reserve notes: Ross won the
reserve game 43-33 led by Jemny
Fercym' s 13 points and John
Dancbl's 14.
Adam Roush led Southern with
11.

.

-·-·-·-

Dale McWhorter 3-0-0c6, Tad
Carrico 4-0-0=8, Rod Jones 1-3Omll, Durick Francis 0-0-2=2,
Tony Carrico 2-0-2=6, Chad
Ragland 3-1-1m10, Josh Sturley 4_0-0=8, Bob Lalumonduer 2-0-0=4,
Travis Hale 6-0-0=12, Iobn Benneu 9-1-0=21. TotO: lf-5·519--88
SOUTHERN
(14-111-21-29=72)
Jeremy Hill 7- l-h•18, Ryan
Williams 5-0-5•15, Ryan Manin 31-0=9,Jamie EvBIIS 0-1-1=4,Jesse
~aynard 1-2-0=8, Jay M'Kelvey
1-0-4=6, Mason Fisber 2-0-0=4,
John Harmon 1-0-:z.-4, Kevin lble
2-0-0=4. Totals: 22·5·1ll'l2=71

PaellkDI-riolcoo
l'hoeola ..................t9 6 .760
Soallle ................... .l6 7 .696
LA. Ltllen ............l5 I .6ll
IU!Iaod .................l2 10 .!45
Sacramulo ............ l3 II .l42
Ooldoo StJU ............9 15 .m
L.A. alppon ........... 3 22 .!2D

Loyola, IlL 72. Drat. 60
Mwqueue 82, Crelahtoa SO
Minoeaotlll5, Su JouSt. 61

on wltb Fort Frye'• Clint Hayes.

ao. Oleoville 73, Moulllon 66
a~ St !pill,. 72, Porma Vol.
58

a~

Albnw 82, Tulu63
Tennessee 14, Houston Sl

61

l'.llllat.N. 77, WIIIouahbY 5. 119
J!claewood 77, LebiiOI 76
Elyrioo 17 ,N. Rldpvlllo 6S
Elyrioo Mld•low 'f4, Awa ~
Euclld 6l, L,....... Bruoll 60
Folrlidd 12, Umoll (OT)
Fairtnootl3, Folrllom 41
Fort Fryo 69.R-&gt;ille EMtao-46

Iowa 61, BYU·Hawa1157
San PranciiC_O 90, Cal SL·AIIIaton 82

Atron 0.-fleld 79. Atron Hoban 61

3

4
4.5

12

2

3
l.l
5.5
9.5

16

Frld•y'• li&lt;Ores

Philadelphlall, BoltOn 77
ClevdOIId 10. New Ieney 75
OriMdo 123, Milnuk« 91
Miami 116, Charlolle 93
AlWU 97. llolrolt 77
&lt;llleaao116. ladlua9l
Su Allloalo !ll,llouttoa 96
l'hoellll 126, Oollv• 110
Ill, Dollao 92
W - o lOS, L.A. Cllj&gt;pen 102
LA. Loken 100, Sacnmeoto 19

Today'IIIIDHI

Sellde ll Denver, 4 p.m.
New Yorltal Otleaao.6:30p.m.

Major men's
college scores
Eut
CoDBec:tieul 85 , Fllrfield 61

Oarawly 69, Mewc:omcntowa 43

(Of)

2.5

Alleo E. 67, Lima "'""·59
Alliance 52, N. Canlon 47
Anlooia II. Franklin.·Moruoe SS ·
Azoaown 83, Brlldford 69
Arlinaton 90, Rldt;emont 31
Aahtabula. Edaewood «i , Painesville
RiYetsidc-41
Ashtahllalllrbor 62, Albtahulal2
• Aultiotown· Aich 54, Youn1. Wilaon
37
Beavercreek 10, SJrioa. So.-!&gt; 68
Bedford 61, Moplo H~ . l4
Belllire76, SL Clalra&gt;ille11
BellefoDialoe 53, llldilrl!Me52 (an
Bellewo 72, Shelby 60
Berea 70, Cloverleaf 59
Berlin Hiland 53, W. Holrneo 44
Bells ville 66, Tiffin Calvert 65
Bluffloa 55, Pouldlnall (2 01)
8rcelclville 12, BruniWict 76
Briltol12, Maplewood 46
Canal Fulton NorUtwet182 , W. Branct1

'65

eaunc:ld 80, wriren O.mpion 72 1
Cantoa S. 68, CarroUton 41
c.diaaton 70. Mt. Gilead 67
Celina77, Dly. Colooel White68
CIDterville 72, Xeal• S9
011De177, Cle. Catholic 64
Clurdoa6t, Py-.ninaVal. 34
Cheupeake 54, Ceredo·KenoVI,
W.Va. 44
Olill!c:olbo 63, Lopn 59
Cla. Colerain 58, Cia. Nordlw.t J6
CiD. Lakota 74, Hlmlltcn 62
Cio. Mo:Nidlolao 64, CIL ~ ll
Cia. S_..,.l7, CIL Pli-oa 54 a

See Puzzler on Page D-2

Mew Kto1ville 74, UDOOiaview 61
N'"' Phllllddphla 69, UoloaiD'n LID

61

Newark CMII. 73, Utica lO

Oarfield IIU. Trtally 1l, Panna Holy
Nome6&lt;1
Oirlni63,NII0155
Onblm93, flltllwDll
IUUiard 62, Mlllllold Mldlloa l6
Hopewell Loudoa 52. Fottoril St.
WeDdell• 49
Hudoon !IS,I&gt;IorloD 79
Jocaon57, Mlallloll"""' 35
Je(feno. SO, OeDeva 37
John GleDD 61, W. Multhaaum 63
KCDtoa RJdat 51, Btajanln Lopa 46
Labwood !2, Lonla 49
Lakewood Sl. Bdward 1S, War·
rmsvillc,.l

Lcipiic 48, PIDdofa.OIIboa 40
U1111 Calh. ID, Botk!Dill
Lorala Adm. Kloa 62, Clo. EMI Ted!
46

Loralo Calll. 65, Lonln Cloorviewl2
Louisville 69, Alton Sprtna. 57
MalwtD 61, Lltelllld !7 ·
Mwfield 91. Cle. llellodldlne 83
Manarield Sl. Pe1er1 69, ZIDeJVille
Roaeemuo62
Mlriao Cath. 62, Buckeye Ccntn160
Morion Elaln 12. Rldaodolo 43
Marioa Local S7, ADDI ,-4
Morioa Rlv• Vol. 66, Sporta IUaJ&gt;1111d
44
MIOI!IIon lotllloD $7, MoooiiiOil Pwry
3l
MlyaviUe5l, Tri·Volloy 52
Medloa 74. Mldofi ll
Me-10, Cle. lteaDody79

rrunds

N-1 64. Tri·VUIQe l9
Nonlolil 69, Mayftelil51

D'""' 61, Meodowl&gt;loot SO
E. U•erpool Cllr. 61, Solem R&lt;ll Ufe

FrciDO St 86, Nevlda 75

Ohio U.S. boys! scor~

58

Dcllance 67. flldlly "'

ldlho St. 89, SIIC!OIIICIIIO St. S9

UC lr&gt;ine 69. St. Mary'o, Cal. 66
Utah 7l, UlahSt.71
Wyomlnl58, Weber Sl. 56

.

vAISI90. Soloa 67

Coovoycn.Mew74,S~Iel0

N. llliool• 86, Moreh.t St. 69

Mlddleto.,.l6, Mtlronl49
M~a«va 75, Morll...., 74 (an
Mlnol« 59, Part Loilmle 56
•
MioolalnlWI Val. 76, Tr\.Volloy S. 72
MoruoH:OIIInl 72, Belloln St .klh•

Fora•

Col. Al:lldemy 61. Ucldq IIU. 63
Col. Millllal3, Col. Wolalll RldiC 74
ColumbUJ Grove 59 , Delpbolfeft•·
10Dl7
Co.._t16, Albllllula SI. IOIID 49

WiJcooaiD 1S, Loyola M-tmouat 60

Soutbwal

wor"lng its way between two
more and more mountain ranges, crystal clear
are coming to see water gurgling over polished roclts
GaUia and M_eigs counties as mec- and flowing tbrougb placid pools.
cas of buntmg in tbe Buckeye
A Holler on the other band is
State.
. .
generally an impenetrable mass of
In .~ realization that sonic peo- thorns and briars of the type more
pie, perucularly ~from flatrer, appropriate to repel an amphibious
more atlklent pontons of the state, - invasion. The sty over a HoUer is
are Ulifimlllar with the cmvolu~ always overcast and any water
tma1n typical of soutbeastan ~o , found within fights Its way downthe foJlowing geograpby_Iesson is stream tbrougb junked Studebakpreseqled as_ a pubHc semce to out· ers, discarded tires and plastic jugs
of-area visitors (nauve or trans- with the finesse of a freshly
·plan red Appalacbian_-Amerlcans mugged tourist
can probably stop reading. ~w).: .
If a valley is Grey Poupon, a
Most people are fam1l!ar w1th holler is just plain, old mustard.
the most t;ommon geolog1cal_and Incidentally, Dante wrote 'Tbe
,s_eograpb1c-type features: b1lls, Inferno' after accidentally stumnvers, e.tc. However, tn southeast- bling tbrougb a Holler.
ern. Ob10, there are only_three
Continuing our journey downmaJor land features: R1dges, bill, we discover another item: lbe
,:Hollers and Cri~ts.
·
CRICK. Some people say a Crick
;; Tbe RIOO~ as perhaps the m~t is the same thing as a CREEK.
.~on 1J?m11D feature. It Is bast- Tbey are wrong.
:i:aiiY a senes of connected biDs or
Simp!~ put, tbe relationship
.lnountalns.
between Cncks and Creeks is tbe
., Tbe. top of a Ridge _is usually same as that between Hollers and
•£ODductve to easy w~ng, unfor- yalleys. Tbe stream flowing
iunately a bun.ter fool~b enool!!' to tbrnugh our imaginary Valley men~oot at an animal wbtle on a ridge tioned above would most certainly
w1U soon ~about an~er com- be labeled as a Creek. A Crick is
01
. on terraan feature as ~~~£arry
what flows behind tbe bam _ utito safe~: the .H~
li7.ed as a bathroom forlivestoclc.
, The word b~ller ts not fou'!4
A Criclt is bome to rusted cars
any geolo$1cal text and, IS and discarded household applitned appt~ately ell?"gh as 'to ances. A Crick is usually surround~~ut, _yell, wblcb gtvcs some ed by a swamp inhabited by creaqtdicati~n as to tbe true nature of tures bailing from lbe Jurassic Perithis partiCular feature.
od
: . A Holler sbould n~ he: confused
·Despite tbe IIIIJICDteel sbortcom·
\Y'th ~ VAllEY wb1cb IS defmed ings ol our w.pe4 geography, we ·
as a l~wlan~ between rabges of prefer it to other, more consistent
J!!Ountain~, bills. or o!her uplands, places... like Kansas or Nebraska.
o~ten havmg a nver or ..stream ':OnI hope tbls brief inUoduction to
rung ~onj tbe bottom. There as a terrain features comes in bandy.
real differen~. .
Meanwhile, bave a Merry Cbrist. A Valley 1s a tinder, gentler rer- mas. And bope Santa 0aus brings
ram feat~ of tbe type us.ually por- you a pair of Cordura gaiters to
traye~ 10 bee~ a~verusements belp negotiate the Ridges Hollers
sbowmg a pnsune, snow-fed and Cricks
'
stream (full of trout we assume)
·

u:

Far West

WESTERN CONFERENCE
MWwal DITlllo•
r.,.
.It L bl. ga

CBIARGE. :FOUL OR ACTING? - One can't be 111n hiD thll
capt•red moment. from Frld•y nlallt'a soutbeastern·Soatbern
-tdt•p, btat one tllia&amp; uppened ·- SOIIdlem'• Ryau Mut1n (left)
went down sb0111y after tile Pantllen' Travis Hale (center) wne bb
way wltll tbe Torn8doa' Muon Flllaer In bot p~~nalt. lillie ud a
team-lllab U polnll to llelp pull tbe a-tlto auiiii-7Z victory. (Scott
Wolle plloto)

As
es In
iJOOPie

South

Basketball

tr.

NO!Ihmollll6,Troy~

Norwalk 78. Tlllln Colu- 73
Oalt lllrbor 76.11uro1159
Olioville 61, - . , 64
Paln,.ville U..., 14, Madlooo 60
Parma P.dua 71, Mearor Lake Cltll.

6&lt;1

Plymouth 61, Co \lid' Wttteil ReNne

57

Ponamoulh E. 6&lt;1, Lucoo•llle Vol. 36
Richmoad Dale Soulboaatera II,
RtciDD Southern 7l
Rlda'"'ood lll,lewcll·s.lo.ll

Rivenide63, Hlldla Nottbcn157

RoolltoWII 90, RIYeDfll 61

S. W-67,CooiCJro,.l2
S111dulky PalliDO 71,Mar,..... 67

Sidoey 71, Oreeavme 41
Sprint. North ll. Hub« HIS. WIJIO
63
.
St. Helr'y 66, lalidt 6S
St Marys SO,N'"' llreno 30
srow II, W.-renllardiaa72
Tot Catholic 73, Tot
44
Tol. S~ Jobu 74, !Joy. Duallor 54
ToroDlo 70, Stcubeavllle Cadl. 6&amp;
Tri.Coulty N.ll,NIIIloooJTrlllllO

WI&gt;-

Ohio U.S. girls' scores

Ohio beaver stock still healthy
revealed a3% increase io tbe popu·
By JOHN WISSE

Burtoo Bri:ahire ll, Wickliffe 34
tbilllcothe 7-4,l.aacMier 56
Col. n.tley 67, Col. Ftankllai!U. 61
Col. Ready l4, Clllll WI-• 42
Dly. CfuuDiudc..Julienne 45 , Col. [»
Saleti39
Eaotlake N. 82, WilloUJhby S. «J
Fairview 69, naora 46
,
LyndiiWII BNih 45, 1!u&lt;Ud 41
Mople Hll. 49, Bedford 33

DIYklon of WlldHfe

OAK HARBOR, Ohio (AP) A recent survey by tbe Division of
Wildlife sbowed Obio's beaver
pppulation continues to thrive.
' Beaven live in ibout two-thirds
of Ohio, primarily in tbe southeast
_and northeast regions. An estimated 2,700 colonies support 13,000 to
14.000 beavers. ...
Not bad for a rodent that could ·
not be found in Ohio by 1830,
because of habitat destruction and
unregulated bunting and trapping.
· Tbe beaver is North America's
largest rodent. and an industrious
one. Through its elaborate construction of dams, !be beaver creates wetland habitats that also are
used by otber species; socb as
docks, songbirds and fish.
Following a 100-year absence
from Ohio, beavers from neighboring states established colonies in
Ashtabula and Belmont counties in
1936. 'Prorection and Division of
Wildlife relocation projects led to a
steady increase in population. In
1958, the agency be8JIIl to monitor
the beaver's status in Ohio for various reasons, including tbe establishment of regulaled trapping sea- ·
sons.
"The beaver is an important fur
bearer and one of the few animals
that modifies habitats and creates
wetlands. The beaver survey we do
is conducted to monitor the population so we can adjust tbe trapping
seasons to strike balance with protectio,n and harvest," said state
wildlife biologist Jack Weeks.
Tbis year's beaver survey

New Leliuatoa !I, Trini11t 31
Newbury 19. LO!laemoDIIO
'
Pmv 41, Albtabull M
RadDe South era .S I, Cbubire Riwer

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TUESDAY, DEC. 27,
11:30 ·1:30 P,lt.
RT. 31&amp; 180 GAWPOUS, OHIO

.

Freeman

By

OUT OF TREIR REACH- Eastern po1trun Cbarlle B...
(left) stretch• bill 6-foot-3 nlf to pt tbe beD oat of tile rtacla ol For
Frye's Scott Helu (25) nd Troy FoaJe (35) on tblllbot dlll'lna Frldlly ,
nJabt's game at Eutem Hlp Scboo~ where tile Cadetl - ""'"- ·
BlsseU's team-blab l6 polntsaot blm to sbare tbe aune'•ICOI'Ina lion- :

TUESDAY, QEC. 27,
2:30-4:30PM
786 N. 2ND; AVE., MIDDLEPORT, Ott

lation compared with last year.
The Division of Wildlife offers
two trapping seasons. South of
Interstate 70, trapping is allowed
Dec. 31-Feb. 28. North of the freeway, trapping is permitted Jan. 21Feb. 28.
. There are no restrictions on
bours and no bag limit, but traps
must be checked eacb day.

CO·
DIVIS JON
LEADERS
The
Wolves captured a firstplace · tie in Galli a
County Division III
youth soccer action this
past fall. Kneeling are
(L·R) Tim Fisk, Clinton
Nickels, Traci Eddy,
Tiffany Frazee, Jeremy
Johnson and D.J .
Frazee. Standing team·
mates are Brandon
Rocchi, Josh Perry,
Ryan Matura, Forrest
Elliott,
Crystal
Lawrence and John
Gill. Behind them is
bead
coach
Ray
Matura.

EaStern loses...

(Continued from C-4l
were available.

-·-·-·EASTERN

(6-12-10-18=46)

Ryan Buckley 1-0-0=2, Eddie
Friend 0..()..1= 1, Jeff Stethem 2-02=6, Eric Hill 2-0-2=6, Charlie
Bissell 7-0-2=16, Micah Otto 7-01=15. Totals: 19..0.8111=46

tl Now Accepting New Accounts
·tl We Deliver Only Clean B.P. Fuels
tl Courteous Dependable Deliveries
tl We Accept HEAP Vouchers

:FORT FRYE
(18-9-14-28=69)

Clint Hayes 4-1-5=16, Scott
Heiss 3-2-0=12. Jim Archer 1-11=6, Karl Butler 2-0-0=4, Troy
Fogle 3..()..2=8, Aaron Flemming 00-2-2, Dustin Handscbwnacber 11-2=7, Jason Dustey 1-0-2=4.
Jason Sturgell 1-0-0=2. Totals: 176-15/Zl::69

Sports brief
Foothllll
ATLANTA (AP) - Tbe
Atlanta Falcons signed running
back Craig Heyward, wllo is having the best year of bis career, to a
new two-yw contract.
Heyward has 1,041 combined
yards this season, the highest total
of bis seven-year career. He also
bas career bigbs with 746 rushing
yards, eight touchdowns and 30
m:eptions for 295 yards.
His rushing average of 4.5 yards
is !bird in the NFL and bis eight
1Ds are the most by a Falrons running back since Gerald Riggs in
1986.

BP OIL CO.

NEW 1995 NISSAN ALTIMA G).(E

!?ports briefs

Air, Cass., Power Windows &amp; Locks, Tilt, Cruise.
NO PAYMENTS
FOR90DAYSI

Jo"ootbaU
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Penn .
State. offensive line CQacb Craig :
Clrbus was named bead coacb at
Buffalo.
Cirbus, with Penn State since
1984, helped shape the nation's
No. 1 offense, which averaged 47.8
points this season.
.
While at Penn State, be bas
COIIcbed in seven bowl games and ,• ·
two nllliooal championship games. .
Clrbus, wbo played collegiately
at Buffalo, began bis coaching
career iit Buffalo in 1982.
Footb8U
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) - A

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MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Jennifer ~ advanced to the semifmals of tbe Orange Bowl Intema·tiooal junior tennis tournament
·The unseeded Hall, 17, stunned
t!Urd.-aeeded- Sreplly Halsell. 6-1, 6-

-4.:-.-::..

4

'
•

.

Today, Hall will play 13-yearold pn)digy, No. 9 Anna K~ ·
vi, In a seinlflnal. Tbe Ruaslan
Ollllell ,!Op-lceded Miriam D' Agostini of Bratil, 3-6, 7-6 (7-S), 6-4.
T~ otlier semlflnll pill fourth- '
seeded s'pulard Marian Ramon
aplia~t' l,lllleeded Aartbi Venkalc- ·
saD Of .ll•• -11•
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eiiiiNIIItn#C

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&amp;om DON WOOD
AUI'OMOD\'E COMPLEX

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Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Consolidated flealth Systems,
Holzer Clinic discuss affiliation
lhC

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GALLIPOLIS • Four employees · moving iniO lhe collections depart·
:_of Ohio Valley Bank have been ment He is currently lhe item pro..aelected as 1994 winners of tbe cessing manager of tbe manage:Joycelyn M. Barlow Award of mentinfonnationservicesdivision.
:~ltCcllence. The award was created
Johnson bas been with OVB
•.!Jst year to honor outs tanding since '1985. He worked as a c&lt;iurier
e_mployees in memory of Mrs. Bar- and mail' cleric with !he administra·low: wbo was an assistant vice live services departmel).t prior to
:jlresident of training and retailllllll'- .. moving over to the collections
. ~g services.
dep3ftmen(. He now serves as the
• The 1994 recipients are: Darren collections 11Wl3ger for tJ!e bank in
lt Blake, Keilh A. Johnson, carla lhe loan administratioo division.
t. Mink and Tirnolhy V. Stevens.
· Mink joined OVB in 1975 as a
Candidates were judged on their commercial teller. She also has
:.9~ality_ of work, planning skills,
worked in data processing and
•professionalism, and ability 10 get served as bead teller at lhe Jackson
'lllong wilh cus!Omers and co-work· Pike Office. Currenliy, sbe is secre;ers. OVB president and cbief exec- tary for two different divisions of
. utive officer James L. Dailey said: tbe bank: support services and
"Jbis year's winners represent all branch administration.
;the gQOd qualities of Joy Barlow,
Stevens began bis banking
while maintaining the level of career as a commercial teller at lhe
excellence this award deserves. Mini Bank before transferring to
:These were outstanding choices."
the Jackson Pike Office. Later, he
. Blake started bis career with
was promoted to collections man·
Ohio Valley Bank in 1989 as a ager prior to being named bead
commercial teller: where he also teller of lhe Jackson Office. Earlier
worked in tbc vault area, before Ibis monlh, he was chosen 10 man·~

~

~
'
(

1991 CHEVY
ASTRO VAN- - r

'1992 FORD
TEMPO GL

1992 OLDS
CIEU 4 DR.

BUI'NOWFOR

BUI'NOWFOR

.

,

SAW2694
OLDS CIERA
4 DR. SEDAN

Fully equipped, burgundy,
low mlltl.
$11,995

SAlfl

BUYNOWFOR

BUY NOW I'OR

1993TOYOTA
CAMRY LE

1986 CHEVROLET .
CAMARI) tllOC . .
WAS $3485 '

Burgundy

1991 CHEVROLET
S·10
Lon!! bed, ~3 v.e,
Tahoe, two-to111 paint, 311~11101

Burguncty,one lOCal o\rirller,
aunroof, onlY 17,000 mltel. ·
WAS $17,H5

mllea. WAS...,

· '

s.s

SAifY 1

1993
CAMAROI·28

onlY e,ooo mHH. New B l - · trade. , Locally
11M more ean '"' aay. owniCI, fuUy equipped with 111
$19,115 .
power OJIII9M. Aluf!llnum
wheel e.

SALE

1994 CHEVROLET
CORSICA

v.e, 11r, power wtndowa,
powtr,IOcka.

SPECIALLY PRICED AT

2 Or. Extralharp.
WAS ..... '

. wl8594
1993 CHEVROLET
'
'
LUMINA EURO

4 or., Speeldy Priced.

19.90 OLDS
ROYALE 4 DR.

Loeally owned. We aold It
new. Muat -•·
WAS-$8t15

1992 CHEVROLET
LUMINA 2 DR.

V_., alr,llito., only 19,900

muea. Juat trlcletl.
WAS$10,481

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

i

l! '• ~
•.•

&gt;-•

·&gt;; ···-"'~;:"~ •
·~

"

~~:!!== or
·"Pict.Jred at
slgnln&amp; of tile
anclentandlllg
,:SI!Ii.l'll

tor, !Old state bankers during a ses·
sion in Columbus recently that
despite continuing slippage of mar·
gins, Ohio's banks as a group con·
tinue io beaDle stronger.
Thomas, a native of Gallipolis
and son of Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
B. Thomas, Gallipolis, said that
lbrough tbe third quarter, 96 percent of Ohio's 138 state-chartered
banks were profitable according to
an article printed in lhe Columbus
Dispatch on Dec. 15.
"Remarkably dean loan portfolios have conlributed 10 the strong
earnings performance of banks
across most of lhe nation." Thomas
said. The risk profile of Ohio's
state-chartered banks "is the besl
it's been in many years ," be added.
Tbe percentage of Ohio statechartered banlcs tbat have received
lhe top. or "I" - mtiogs resulting
from examinations by state regulators bas grown to 51 percent Ibis
year frum 44 percent in 1993 and
39" percent in 1992. .
"'Ibis is lhe first ume lhe nom·

Must See To .
Appredatel
1994 OLDS 98
REGENCY ·

Full power, leather Interior,
only 11,000 milia.
WAS$21,8115

New car tnlde.
WAS114111

Locally owned, . . lOki It neW.
· Qood~n~.

WAS$28111

Alit, auto., AM1F11 atereo,
. . crulle.

..r.,.., ...

GALLIPOLIS • David W.
Thomas, a lOp state banking regula·

OLDS
DELTA 88 4 DR.

I

per:

.

says banks
are growing stronger

1

19940LDS
ACHIEVA 4 DR.

mlllity ~ Cenre.r is a 68 bed bealth .care decisions oo
local
facility in Oak Hill; lbe Jenkins level, an advanlage for all die reai· .
Memorial Heallb Clinic of the dents of die multi-communities we
Holzer Medical Cenler, providing serve."
ambula!Ory care in Wellston; the
Speaking on behalf of Holzer ·
Holzer Foundation for Tri-State Clinic, J. Craig Strafford, M.D., ·
Health Care and Holzer Vanguard.
Chairtnan of die Oinic Board said,
Holzer Clinic's main offices are :·Joining IOgether in a regionally
located on Jac:lcaon Pike, adjacent mtegmted health care system can
10 die Holzer Medical Center, with , a~sure appropriate access to spebranches on Sycamore Street i,n cialty care close 10 bome, with resi·
down!Own Gallipolis, as well as in dents of tbe area not baving to travPl. Pleasant and Charleston, W. el !!reat distances 10 urban areaa.
Va.. and in Jackson, Pri&gt;c!Orville This provides a financial as well as
and Middlepon. Holzer Oinic is an convenience advantage 10 all who
80 physician multi-specialty group, live in this valley, both for Ohio
practicing in 27 medical specialties and West Virginia. We can have
and sub-specialties.
the best of both worlds: a large
1boJDaJ E. Tope, Chairman of enough system with die capacity 10
the Board of Consolidated Health meet growing health care needs
Systems, Inc., crimmented on the yet providing at the same time,
proposed affiliation. "It is impor- sonalized, state-of-the-art medical
tant for residents o( the Southeast· · care for our patients. We loot for·
em Ohio Rivef Valley to have a ward enthusiastic3lly to our joint
quality, accessible and affordable affiliation with Veter.ms Memorial
system of beallh care. Combining Hospilal."
our opc:ntions will not only be ben·
Details of lhe proposed affilia.
eficial 10 Veterans Memorial Hos· ti&lt;D will be warted out by tbe three
pilal aDd Meigs County, it will also organizatioos, and when complete
strengthen our tolal organizarioo so will be announced.
'
that we may make appropriate

betwee11 Veterans Memorial •Hospital Ia
Pomeroy, and Couolltlated Healt11 Systems,
IDe., llllll Holzer Clinic, lac.. are, !lUted, left to
rlabt. Arthur R. "BIIF' N--., Jr.,. cbalrmm of
board of tnuteel, Veteru. Memorial BO!IpiTIIomas E. Tope, cbalnQan of the board of

RICI, loCIIIy OWMd.

uut4494
3 TO ChooM, ,,_,
WAS$8111 ·
·'

..

1993 FORD ESCORT
ST. WAGON

Locally owned.
PrlcedtoS.I.
WAS$114811

1993 CHEVROLET
CORSICA 4' DR.
v-e, air, alito.

~

s.S

SM.I$

SAIIll

1993 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER RS MODEL

'

•ly 43,000 low
•Ilos.

19891SUIU
IMPULSE

1992 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE U.

,. ..

....

.Very ••refwiOWHr,

$7,400 sa,200 $1,494

$7,500
Wblte. ~,to Gol•

Black, 2 Dr.

·

'

4 DR.

Prlcltl To Still
WAS $2195.00
Blue, 4Dr.

...

GAlliPOUS · AlmouncemCot
was made today of a memorandum
of Ulldentarldlng, signed by Vetu·
ans Memorial llospltal of
Pomeroy, with Consolidated Health
· Systems, Inc .. and Holzer Clinic,
-Inc;., 10 pursue discussioos regardIng a possible affillalion.
In makins the announcement,
W. Scott Lucas.. AdmiDiatrator of
Veterans Memorial Hospital said,
"The JlllliiOsed afftliatioo between
VMH, Consolidated and Holzer
Clinic, will provide a much broader
spectrum of medical servites to
Meigs County residents lhan is currently available. Our intent is 10 DOl
only preserve tbe excellent care we
already offer our patients, but fur·
Iller enbance and expand lbe quali·
ty and scope of health care in
Meigs County."
Vetemns Memorial Hospilal is a
69 bed faciHty located in P()IJieroy.
It currently employs 172 beallb
care workers. Consolidated
~ently includes lhe Holzer Med·
real Center in GalHpolis, a 249 bed
community oriented not-for-profit
acute tare hospital wilh a 20 bed
rehabilitation uDit; Oak Hill Com-

JOHNSON
age OVB' s new LQan Origination
Center in Point Pleasant, W. Va
Each recipient of tbe Bari!Jw
Award of Excellence received an
individual award at tbe emrloyee
Christmas dinner and wil have
lheir names insaibed on a perma·
nent plaque in the bank's main
office along wilh one day off wilh
pay.

1986· OLDS 1992 BUICK
CENTURY
DELTA 88
4 har, Sllw•r·

Blue Convti'SIOn

ty EltelllioD Oftlc&gt;rt ......... a S511paat to llelp
with tobacco proclactlo11 ec1-11on prop'llll!ll•
Plclund !'romleft an Ed Vollban, OSU EDe..
slon Apnt, Gdla Coaaty; Am)' CoriJin, Brlu
Corbin and Darid L. MJib)', ~a prealdent of
Leal, PlliWp Monil, USA.
·

:T·~-

ORDER YOURS

.

RECEIVES TOBACCO AWARD ~ Brian

::":'

7

COMPARE AT $13,995

1994 CHEVROLET S·l 0 ..,\._ Ba, Now For
Stock IPEP·5

PRieD I'JIOJII $1

Factory Program Rental, low mlln, fully
equipped.
·

1994 CHEVROLET S-1 0 PICKUP ..,"._ Ba, Now Fo.r

M.S.R~~~-~..~~:......~~~~.~~~~t~:;'a!·

18I ·494

::J" 1995 CHEVROLET
MO"TE CARLO 2 DR. 1._
JUST ARRIVED .
t

opa0111
PluaOptlou

1995 CHEV. S·l 0 4X4 PICKUP.. au, Now For

$

Stock IPEP-13 MINI VAN. Low mlln.
M.S.R.P........~ ................................$21,110
OUA DISCOUNT............................-3,318

Sectio

1988 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL 4 DR.
TrlcletL Black,

WA&amp;tu.-

~1

ber of '1' -mted state charters bas
been more than half in total,"
Thomas no~. The nom~ of topmted banks m the state s central
and soulheast region stands at 41
·percent. . .
·In addotoon, be stated that 92 .
perc em of Ohio's stale-chartered
banks have either a satisfactory or
superior rating, and none is in !he
lowest category rating. Also, no
state charters are undercapilalized.
Only one Ohio bank is in on tbe
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. ·
list of problem banks. Tbe Bank
Division bad seven banks under
PAT M . PLETCHER
some form of administrative action
m November, down from 17 a year
earlier.
Earnings among Ohio state·
chartered banks bave sbown some
deterioration as higher interest mtes
bave taused margins to shrink .
Thomas said lhat wbile a "sizable
number" of strong earnings banks
get stronger. 14 that were rated
high in Ibis category slipped a bit.
GALUPOLIS · Former Jacksoo
AI lhe same time, "a significant resident, Pal McCarty Pleleher bas
number of bot~m lines ~ere bol· been named deputy director of !he
stered by secunues gams.
Gallia-Jaclcson-Meigs Board or
Alcohol, Drug Addiction and MenIal Health Services. Ms. Pletcher, a
certified menial beallh adminislrator, bas more lhiln 20 years expmence in tbe m ~ ntal bealtb and
chemical dependency fields . In
addition 10 being a professiooal in
lhe field, she is a strong advocate.
Most recently, she was director
of human resources development
and coordinator of children's pro·
grams for the Athens, Hocking,
Vintoo 317 Board. She served on
the Medicaid task force for the
Ohio Department of Menial Health
and bas just finished working with
tbe hospilal inpatient futures group
for kids convene.. by ODMH. She
is finishing her second term as
chairpersoo of tbe Alhens County
Children's Cluster. Her educational
background includes def!ees in
publiC admiiiihlration and tsineis
administration.
Stlllle of the community activi-

Pletcher
named to
.area post

ties that Pletcher bas been involved

in include the League of Women
Voters, a founding member of My
SiSler's Place (a shelter f&lt;X' cklnea· •
tic violence victims), a board mcm-'
ber of the Southeastern Oblo
Regional Council on AlcohoU1111
Contltt'*ll on p111e D-1
· f -- - -· ..

I!

\

•

&lt;

�•

December 25, 1994
December25,19M

freedom
uncertain

SLEPTSOVSKOYE, Russia · surgery, and his doctors advised
(AP) - Ruasian forces closed in · him Friday to continue his COD\'11on the capital of separatist Checb- Iescence at his tountry boine. ~

. By PAUL ALEXANDER

Assocblted Pras Writer
SEOUL, South Korea - The
status of American pilot Bobby
Hall remained unclear Saturday, a
-week after his U.S. Army helicopter strayed into Nortb Korean
territory and went down.
South Korea's Yonhap News
Agency first reported Saturday lhat
a deal bad been reached under
which Nonh Korea would free Hall
on ChrislmaS Day.
But the government-funded
agency later backtracked, saying a
· meeting with the Nortb Koreans at
the truce village of Panmunjom
ret- of Bobby 111111, the U.S. Army llelkopter
RELEASE UNCERTAIN- U.S. Rep. Bill
yielded no agreement and tba,t a
Richardson, D-N.M., after briefing President 4pllot held by the Comm•nlat nation Iince bls
Christmas release was ljll!ikely.
craft went down on Dec. 17. (AP)
Clinton Friday, said the North Koreans have
U.N. officials said they could
made no commitment on a timetable for the
not confirm that a meeting _bad
taken place. They bad denied Yon"The KPA (Korean People's the Pentagon also cast doubts on nuclear accord two months ago.
. ba,p' s first report and said they still ·
Army)
has claimed that their inves- . Yonhap's first report that North The U.S. also is setting the return
: were seeking to talk with the North
tigation
into this incident is still Korea had agreed to free Hall on of the OH·S8C hellcopcer.
to " resolve issues" on the release.
North Korean officials have said
under
way
and Chief Warrant Offi- Sunday.
. Panmunjom, in the Demilitathe helicopter was on a spying mis"We
have
no
confirmation
of
cer
Hall
wiD
be
returned
once
it
is
. rized Zone that separates the two
: Koreas, was the site where tbe completed," said a statement Sat- that and we believe it to be wrong sion and was shot down. U.S. officials have insisted it was on an
:body of Hall' s colleague, Chief urday hy the U.N. Join't Forces at this stage," said a senior Pen- unarmed ttaining Dussion.
tagon
official,
speaking
on
condi·Warrant Officer David Hilemon, Command.
The last radio contact with the
The statement said the United tion of anonymity.
:was repatriated Thursday.
helicopter
indicated the pilot
Nations
bad
sent
a
message
to
Hall's wife, Donna, said from
. He was tilled wben·tbe U.S .
believed
be
was still in South
North
Korea
requesting
details
on
her
home
in
Brooksville,
Aa.,
lat£
. Army helicopter either crashed or
Korea, when in fact he was about
Hall's
condition
and
seeking
his
Friday
that
she
bad
beard
nothing
: was sbot down on Dec. 17. Hall
immediate release. It said a meet- about an agreement from U.S. offi- 3.5 miles into North Korean territo·was taken caplive..· .
ry, according to the Pentagon.
. U.S. Rep. BIU Richardson, who ing with the North bad · been cials.
U!S. officials say the pilots may
The release of the pilot would
:negotiated tbe repatriation deal, requested but there had been no
have
been disoriented by heavy
nearly wrap up an incident that
·said it also called for Hall to be reply.
snow
that covered navigational
Pyongyang has said Hall is in threatened to damage relations
:freed "very soon." Richardson
placards on the ground and made
good
health
.
No
contact
is
being
between
Washington
and
:said be was unable, however, to get
Pyongyang, wbich had been landmarks difficult to identify.
·a commitment for a release by allowed with him.
U.S.
officials
in
Korea
anJ
at
improving
since they signed a
:Christmas.

Scrooge's Wall Street visit sends Dow south
ket value index gained 1.26 to
428.78.
Advancing issues led decliners
by about 4 to 3 on the Big Board.
But volume was very light, as
many investors were absent on the
last trading day before Christmas.
About 196.54 million shares
c.hanged bands on tbe New York
Stock Exchange, down from
339.67 million on Thllf5day.
Tbe light volume strengthened
.the moves, In this case on tbe
upside. "In light volume, you
push stocks up.with facility,' ! _said
Larry Wachtel. Prudential Seeurities' market analyst
Equities were also aided by a
fuming in long-term bond prices,
traders said. The 30-year bond
ended a sh_ortened session up 7-32

point and yielding 7.82 percent.

The dollar ended mostly bigber.

can

·

WIOIIm S. MedleJ, Jndp.
DVI
Viclcey J. Johnson, 34, 2124
Hannln 1i1l:e Road, Palriot, $750
plua court costs, 90 days in jail' (80
\18YJsuspended),two)'CIII)I'Obllion
_...., I one-yw "--'....
.........., IIIIP"',..~
CbiQie of driving under llllpeMilt
dismlsrclinexchangeforguiltyplca.

PI
.
Commopeas
.._,11 L Caln,j...t-,

~

_..

awoilable, was granted shoclc probational\enavingonemonthofaoneyeauentence for drug abuse. He was
finedSI.SOOpluacourtoostsandgiYen
a six-month license suspension.
Dlssolutloa
KentonD. Adkins,I092Kiicber
Road, Gallipolis, and Teresa L.
• .....,__ y·
nuo..uu,

ICA slid 3/4to 19_318.

For the third consecutive seasion, the U.S. market benefitted ·
from this week's financial aisis in
Mexico, where tbe goyernment
allowed a sharp devaluation of the
peso earlier thi~ week. ~e resultmg sbarp drop m the Meucan currency and stock market sent
investors out of Mexican securities
ACROSS
and into U.S. stocks and bonds.
1 Speed contests
"The U.S market is really the
6 Agreement between
place to be rigbt now," said Bill
nations
&gt;ljiyn, director of listed equity trad10
S..rpents
log at Jefferies &amp;: Co. in Sbort
14 Scrape
HiUs, NJ. "Derivatives are caving
19Gravenin\Bges
in, Latin America and Mexico are
. 20 Wall hanging
caving in. Where do you go? You
Made a choice ·
go to tbe biggest market in tbe . 22
24
Furniture item
world- here."
25 Actor Clark On Friday, the Mexican balsa's
26 Jumped
IPCindexwaslessvolatilethanits
27 - ol the ball
seesaw behavior earlier in the
28 F
week. It ended up I.S4 percent.
29 Mon •.
Tbe American depositary shares
3Q Of an eas'"
"'on
·of Mexican and Latin American
32 Capital of 126
stocks, which were prominent
Across
losers earlier this week, recovered
34 Call .
some ground early in the session
35 Upbringing
but backed off in the afternoon. •
39 Travelers' stopover
41 Divides
Telefonos de Mexico's Ameri43 '- truly ...'
can depositary receipts ended
45 Fragrant wood
unchanged at 40-5/8 in leadin~ vol47 Sumn\Bry, for short
ume the New York
tock
48 Actress West
Exchange. The list of active Big
51 Perfect place
Board stocks was studded with the
53 Kind of milk
AmeriCan shares of other Mexican
55 Rodent
companies. Grupo Tribasa rose 1/4
56 Fiiting
to 19-7/8. Grupo Televisa fmished
59 Not doing anything
up 1/2 at 32-718, while Empresas
6I Before long
. 62 Wicked
64 Loom user
66 Bete68 Jagger of the
Stones
70 Picture cases
72 Weighing device
73 Characteristics
75 Of the moon
n Sunshine
79 - of passage
80 Avoid
82 Mechanical man
84 Chewy candies
AMBU'iiiER Riru!
86 Blue-pencil
88 A flower

IRIOn.

Edltor'suote:NIDies,aaes,ad·
dreaHs IUid other laformatlon are
lepoiled a aVIIlable OD enurt rec•
orda. AD aewswortb7 actions wiD
be Jlllblllbed without tllceptioll.

~~~\\e h'listmas

s pecia.ls

Black Powder

CHQUS DALY

Drilled and Tapped
for Scope
SO Cal
Caplock

a

Black
Finish

1

nya, while residents of the besieged
city, fearful ofnew air Slrilces, buddied in basements and sought sbel·
ter among the ruins.
On Friday, stunned civilians
clogged the roads trying to nee
iheir bumiog cil)' following a second fierce daytime blitz. Many
paused briefly to bury the dead.
Russian television continued
extensive coverage of the bloodshed. Russia's Independent Televisifi1n repeatedly showed footage of
a disb'augbt Russian woman pleading through tears for a halt to the
bombing.
Many of those remaining in
Grozny were terrified ethnic Russians with nowhere to go. The old
and the weak were also forced to
remain in the ruined city.
Only the deflaJit chose to stay.
"It's barbarism - it's barbaric
what they are doing,'' said Sergei
~vano~, 45, huddled with his family
m the1r apartment building.
The Kremlin said President
Boris Yeltsin continued to wOit on
a plan to end the bloody crisis
peacefully and was completely
mformed about developments in
Cheebnya.
But it remained unclear to what
extent he was in control of the troubled military operation . He has
been recuperating for 10 days in
the hospital after minor nose

The Duma, or lower bouse of
the Russian parliament, 3141pted a
resolution Friday urging Yeltsin to
stop the fighting and resume peace
talks. However, the lawmakers then
adjourned until January, and their
appeal was likely to go unlln·
swered.
The U.S. and other foreign governments, which bad initially said
Russia.' s in:vasion of separatist
Cbechnya was an internal affair,
began to state their worries over the ·
increasing number of civilian casualties of the indiscriminate bombing.
"Respect for fundamental
human rights bas been and will
continue to be a basic precept of
U.S. policy toward Russia," said
State Department spokesman
David Johnson.
Russia launched its offensive in
the republic in the Caucasus Mountains on Dec. II, attempting to
quash its separatist bid that could
encourage other regions of Russia
to.secede as well. Cbecheri 'President Dzbolcar Dudayev, a retired
Soviet air force general, declared
the mostly Muslim province of 1.2
mllhon mdependent in November
1991.
.
Yeltsin bas called Chechnya a
botbed of_crime, drug running lind
arms dealmg, and organized crime
groups are active there.
•

Mexico eyes new peace talks
SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS, Mexico (AP) - President
Emesto Zedillo ordered his interior miniSter Friday to try to revive peace
l8llcs with leftist rebels in the southern state of Cbiapas.
i
Interior Minister Estebali Moctezuma was expected to contact Rou
Catholic Bllllop Samuel Ruiz, according to a government statement
issued in Mexico City,
.
.
Ruiz leads the National Intermediation Commission, a church effort to
mediate between the Indian rebels and the government.
A 70-year-old diabetic, he bas·been on a liquids-ooly fll'lt for nearly a
week to pessure both sides to negotiate. Supporters around the country
have joined his hunger strllce.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

• County· · court News
'·GaII 18
9alljpoUs Mupjcjpal

Ex-police officer sentenced

in on rebels' capital ·

·tor pilot

By PATRICIA LAMIELL
AP Boa- Writer
NEW YORK - Santa Claus
visited Wall Street early Friday.
Scrooge came laler.
The Dow Jones industrial aver. age, up more than 34 points at its
highest level of the day, retreated
-on profit-taking to close at
3 833.43, up 18.51.
. ' Broader lll8lket indexes also fm.
:isbed off their highs for the day.
'SliD, they all ended the day ill llie
~live column.
. The NYSE's composite index
rose 0.24 to 250.95. The Standard
&amp; Poor's 500-stoclc index added
0.16 to 459.83.
The Nasdaq composite index
climbed 2.85 to 742.19. And the
American Stock Exchange's mar,

Ohio News in Brief:

·Russian .forces move

Christmas

Unmatched thing
91 Bold
95 Meek
97 Trouble
101 Succulent plant
102 Disprove
104 -B. DeMille
106 Approached
108 Tiny creatures
11 0 Railroad stations
112 Rounded ha'1_dle
114 Go by car
115 Like a bog
117 Desc.artes
118 Perpetually
120 Sharp
121 Poem
122 Dawn goddess
124 Earthy sediment
126 State west of Idaho
128 Cunning
129 Car type
131 Ascend
133 Beauty parlor
135 Blew a hom
139 Thrall
141 Nullilied
145 Make angry
146 Cod-oil
148 Decorates
150 Floor covering
t 51 Plant fiber
153 Speaks wildly
155 Chefs
157 -del Este
158 Parks and L.ahr
159 Minnesota city
160 External
161 Gaseous element
162 Rub out
163 'Thanks--!'
164 Stitches
165 Youthful time of life

3
4
5
6
7
8

DOWN
t Strictness
2 Saying

9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
21
23
31
33
36
37
38
40
42
44

46
48
49
50
52
54
o

56

57
58
60

63
65
67
69
70
71
74
76

Hooded snake
Sleuth - Queen
Dir. letters
Chum
Length times width
Kind of diet or
landing ·
Pudding variety
Hojle or Dylan
Uncloses,
poetically
Book ol maps
v,ndor
Rds.
Short sleep
WWII vessel: hyph.
wd. ··
Water channel'
Honors with a party
Say
More profound
Rorem and Beatty
Parrot
Promise to pay:
abbr.
Streisand film
Bride's partner
L.A. eager
Appraises
Go bad. as milk
Competitor
Atter·dinner candy
Like a lot
Inventor - Howe
Bring on oneseH
Imitate
Benefit
Animal skins
Sapling
Mr. Sevareid
Lawful
Land measure

An anesthetic
Tangle
Plays
Woody plant
Passover feast
Borderon

78
81
83
85
87
89
91
92
93

Claw
Dried
Duration
Toned down
Rome's river
Choose
Work by Homer
- Dame
Letters
94 Tricks
96 Restaurant of a
kind

Listen!
lroquoian Indians
100 Carouse
101 BuUets
1~ Quinine water
105 Adores
107 Gainsay
109 Ovine animals
111 Reveals
113 Started
1-16 Sing a certain way
119 Function
98
99

"''Urkey Gun"

123 Lampoon

125 Slant
126 Plain to see
127 Holiday drink
t 29 Edible fishes
130 Where 147 Down is
t32- Polo
134 Character
135 Social group
136 Staircase part
137 Nil plus 138 Satan
140 Overact
t 42 Faint trace or color
t 43 Rock star - John
144 College VIPs
147 Gambling center
149 Distort
152 Native of: suffix
154 Perched
I 56 Upperclassmen:
abbr.
157 Butter serving

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Supreme Court bas ordered Miami
University in Southwest Ohio to resume wa,ge and benefit conlnlct
negotiations with 650 of its maintenance and clerical employees.
The decision Friday ended a five-year court hattie between the
Oxford campus and the Americail Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees.
"It appeared that the university simply did not want union representation at Miami," said Andrew Love, the Columbus attorney for
!be union.
"This decision means that an employer cannot on its own make
a determination to refuse to bargain eveil if there is a questi&lt;in over
union representation, until and unless the State Employment Relations Board determines otherwise,'' Love said.
Miami spokeswoman Holly Wissing said the university had
wanted to give nonteaching employees a chan~ to vote on whether
to continue with the union.

CLEVELAND (AP) -Mayor
R. 'YJ!ite fired back Friday
~ pohce unaon leaders who quesu'?ned his .•c:_inunc:nt of Saf~ty
~tor y.'il
Denihan as acting
po~~ cb~f.
.
_This 11 not about whetba Bill
Deniban is able, or ca~~: or t!Je
~.~ for the Job, White
sud. ThiS IS about .Y~t.~ ll'?fC
attempt ... to stop ciVlhantzaUon
and to ~top ref~."
.
~te a.ppomted Dcniban to _the
posllto~ Mo~day afte~ accept!ng
tbe res1gnauon of Cbtef Patnck
Ohver, who QUit after 9-1/2 months
on the job.
Relations have been strained
between White and the 1,700-officer department over the mayor's
plans to take officers currently
working desk jobs or other nonpatrol duties, and replace them witb

civilian employees. The officers
then would be assigned to street
patro~.
..
Unaon. opposmon to the plan, as
weD as disputes '?ver demands that
untform regul_at1ons ~e follow~
exactly ~d a !1~~-fixmg probe_m
th~ parki_
ng di_vtston, soured Ohver s relauonsbip With rank-and-flle
of~';CfS·
.
Tbese pollee unions don · t
WBI;ll refo~" _White said. "~y
beh~ve havmg 250 _officers s1tuog
bebt~d desks, w~~g on cars, or
carrym~ around ~Da!&amp; 1s a perk
of the Job. We dido t hire them to
be secretaries, and we didn't hire
them to be $60,000 mailmen."
Tbe Cleveland lodge of the Fraternal Order of Police, citing the
city charter, protested Denihan's
appointment in a letter Thursday to

Mi~J

High court reverses
murder conviction
By JOHN CHALFANT
Assocblted Press Writer

COLUMBUS - Summit County Prosecutor Lynn Slaby wiD retry
an Akron man whose aggravated
murder conviction and death penalty were overturned in a 4-3 Ohio
Supreme Court decision.
But Randy Ashburn, the assistant state public defender who represented Michael Jeffrey Johnson,
doubts prosecutors can come close
to a conviction for lack of evidence.
''The coroner in ·this case
couldn't even give a cause of
death," Ashburn said. ·
In other action Friday, the
state's highest court:
• Declined to decide if local
governments could use their own
.workforce on a public project and
pay less tban prevailing union
wages rather than competitively bid
the work to outside contractors.
The court said the Ohio Contractors Association did not have legal
standing for a lawsuit it filed
against the village of South Point.
• Ruled that a public employer
may not unilaterally withdraw
recognition of or refuse to bargain
with a certified union despite any
good faith doubt the employer may
have about the union's continuing
majority status. The case involved
Miami University and the Ameri- ·
can Federation of State, County·
and Municipal Employees.
In the Akron case, the court said
thil evidence against Johnson In
· ·the death of his sister was not only
circumstantial, but far from overwhelming.
Justices said a previous conviction for second-degree murder in
Florida was improperly used as a
basis for a death penalty specification, and that the repeated inlroduction of evidence about Johnson's
prior acts and character bad denied
him a fair trial.
Tbe case was sent hack to Sum- .
mit County Common Pleas Court.
Slaby said he was surprised and
disappointed. .
"We will be seeking a new
indictment and retrying," he said
in an interview. He was uncertain

whether to again ask for the death
penalty.
.
" I certainly will be attempting
to try it again as a capital case. I'll
have to review the evidence in relation to tbe opinion and see if
there's anything new or different
we might be able to present to a
jury that would support the underlying felony," Slaby said.
Ashburn, an assistant state public defender, said calling the evidence circumstantial was a stretch.
' 'I am stunned that this case was
a capital case in the firSt place. It
should not bave been. This lcind of
evidence doesn't usually get you
even a manslaughter conviction,"
Ashburn said
Johnson is on death row at the
Southern Ohio Com:ctiooal Facility in Lucasville where be will
remain until the case is resolved. ·

Law Director Sharon Sobol Jordan.
The charter says the cllief "shall
have bad ttaining and experience in
law enforcement."
Police spokesman Alan SeifulIah said city lawyers believe Deniban's tenure as director of highway
safety under Gov. Richard Celeste
meets the test. Deniban served as
supervisor of the State Highway
Patrol.
But FOP President James Erne
said the experience required by the
charter "does not include merely
working alongside police officers,
which appears to be Mr. Denihan's

only exposure to law enforcement"
· .
Eme said the FOP wiD sue if lie
does not bear from the taw department by Tuesday.
.
Bob Beck, president of tile
Cleveland Police Patrolmen' s
Association, said his organization
might have an attorney took at the
situation as weD.
·
" I think it is a stretch to eq ate
law enforcement experience ;ith
several years as safety director.' ·
Beck said. " As head or highway
safety, 1 think be acted in lhe same
capacity_ as an administrator"
·

tud11\UI
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Lafayette .Mall
Gallipolis, Ohio

OPEN . MONDAY
December 26th, 1994
9:30 am til 5 pm
CLOSED MONDAY
January 2nd, 1995

Merry Christmas.our Entire
&amp;ta[

Wi~he~ .

You and
Your Family

•

•

A HAPPY
HOLIDAY

Trial delayed
for woman

·LANCASTER (AP)- The trial
of a woman accused of taking part
in the slayings of two Pataskala
teen-.agers has been postponed,
despite her objections.
Fairfield County Common Pleas
Judge Joseph Clark on Friday
granted a prosecution request to
postpone the Jan . 3 trial of Elsie
Sheets and tentatively rescheduled
DAYTON - Neal Gittleman, resident conductor of the Milwauit for Jan . 24.
kee Symphony, Sfid be felt a synergy with the Dayton Philharmonic
Sheets, 54, of Baltimore, Ohio,
from the opening beat during his November audition.
was charged in the slayings of
.Gittleman was selected as the new Dayton conducta- on ThursAbby Worrell and Jamie Kelley,
day. He assumes bis duties next fall.
both 16, whose bodies were found
· "You)lave a sense as you're performing about the emotion and
Oct. 2 inside a burning bam in Balthe dynamic between lhe conductor and orchestra, but you always
timore. The girls were shot to death
wonder if your judgment is right,'' Gittleman said.
Sept. 25.
,
"1Jut when I listened 10 the tape of the concert the next week, I
Sheets was one of two adults
Wl!S ~ally blown away by bow good it was.' '
and two juveniles charged in the
Gittleman, 39, is the fourth music director in the orcbesb'a's 62deaths.
year history. He succeeds Isaiah Jackson, who completes his 8-year
Also charged were Sheets' son,
tenure in May.
Robert Jr., 15; Sonya Hawkins, 19,
Giltleman is also music director of the Marion (Ind.) Philharof Baltimore; and Robert Daniel,
monic.
·
16, of Whitehall.
Tbe postponement resulted from
the court assigning another attorney
to represent Sheets. Curtis Griffith
. DAYTON -'- Investigators say a plane crash last year in Nortb
was assigned to the case afte{
Carolina ~~ killed two area couples resulted from improper preSheets' first attorney was dismissed
flight planmng, failure to retract the landing gear and the pilot's
because he also represented Sheets'
failure to maintain control. .
.
son.
Gerald and Barbara COol! of WaSbington Township and Fred and
Tbe ruling appeared to aggraVicki Everly of Union died Sept. 26, 1993, when their light plane
vate Sbeets because he had told the •
crasbe4 1!5 they were rc;llirning from vacation.
court he bad planned a family vaca·
Gerald Coon was in lbe pilot's seat of the single-engine alrplaJie.
Front Rdw: L-R: George Abate, Judy Clark, Debbie Call
lion for next week and would have
when it took·off from Boone-Blowing Rot:lc Airport in North Carto return early should the original
!Jiina. the National Transportation Safety Board reported. The board
trial date remain unchanged.
Second Rdw:
Bob Atwood
released a copy of its report this week.
. Jim Freeman, Charlene Hoeflich,
.
"Sure, we can't ruin bis ChristAlthough the airplane took off in the direction of a mountain
mas/ ' Sheets said. "I have spent
ridge, witnes~s told investigators the, airplane climbed no more
ThankSgiving in here, Halloween . ____:T
h!r_d Row_: p~vE3 Harris, Mike Jenkins
~~-1 Jban about100 feet above.tbe.grouod after it toot-off.. .;.- - --in-here.'
- - - --·- 1 c.:.:
Witnesses said the plane's wings meted beclc and fli'tb before it
Sbe was indicted in October on
pitched up nearly vertical as it approached the ridge, then dipped
three counts or complicity to comone wing and plunged to the ground.
mit aggravated murder with a guo
The board said the airplane was 112.3'pounds over the ID3llimiDII
specification, two counts each of
2,900 pounds listed in the airplane's pilot handbook. It also said the
gross abu'se of a corpse and tamperairplane's landing gear were not rettaCted after takeoff.
ing with evidence, three cOunts of
(j1-The Alsodated Pras
obstructing justice and one count
each of arson and complicity to
commit receiVing stolen property .

Orchestra selects new conductor

j'

NA170NAL Wi/d .Turk&lt;J f!_d_~r_arion

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

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. . . PMtt7•Jtllo &amp;ICIIIIIBJ IOMII CDSXII NN-111111!111
,

Miami told to renew bargaining

DAYTON - A judge who accepted a w0111an's innocent plea to
charg~ of murder and abuse of a corpse in the death of ber newborn baby has criticized news reports of the case.
Montgomery County Common Pleas Judge Jobn Meagher on
Thursday defended his decision to continue Rebecca Hopfer's
release on bond and remain on.electronic home detention.
"Somewhere in Ibis whole scenario there is ... supposed to be
compassion and understanding,'' be said.
.
~eagber's commen.ts were in response to a request by county
Ass1stant Prosecutor David Francescbelli that Hopfer's bond be
increased fian $50,000 to $100,000.
Francescbelli challenged Meagher's Nov. 23 decision to reduce
Hopfer's bond. from $500,000 to $50,000. She was required to pay
just 10 percent of the redUced bond amount
Francescbelli argued that there is an increased risk of flight now
that H~pfer, 18, of Washi11gton Township has been indicted by a
grand Jury on ~ne count each of murder and gross abuse of a corpse.
Meagher ~d Hopfer was not a danger to the community and has
met Ill! conditions of her release, including obtaining counseling and
reporting to pretrial services.

'' 12 lfdugeshorgun 'J 112 " ' 24 " bdrrel• Rtdllrte brown
Je~f 3D Ctlmo finim, with QD swivels dnd matching sling

'

DAYTON - A fire heavily damaged an apartment building,
leaving six families homeless. ;
The blaze Friday at Christopher Apartments caused an estimated
$150,000 damage. No one was hurt
The fire gutted the two upstairs floors and caused extensive
water damage to the firSt floor, said Mark Wllisman, district chief
for the Dayton Fire Department
· The cause was under investigation.
The building, a subsidized housing complex, is privately owned
by the Federal Property Management Corp. Property manager
Cathy Brewer said an electrical upgrade and inspection bad been
conducted within the past six months.
Spent fuecrackers were found in the basement two hours before
the ftre, maintenance supervisor John Pfister said. He said cbildren
in the building sometimes played with ftreworks.
Whisman declared the building uninhabitable and remaining
belongings unsalvageable.

Cleveland r:nayor defends choice of chief

Reasons for crash detailed

~359.99

~

Friday blaze damages building

fudge critical of news coverage

$159.99

'

He initially was indicted on two counts of rape and single counts
of felonious sexual penetration and gross sexual imposition . He
pleaded guilty Oct 25 to the lesser charges, for which he could have
received a maximum of 12 to 25 years in prison.

CINCINNATI- Security concerns have prompted a judge to
order a criminally insane patient to be transferred from a mental
center in Cincinnati to a more secure hospital in Dayton.
Benjamin Kinman is too dangerous to stay at the minimum-secu,
rity Pauline Warfield Lewis Center, Hamilton County Common
Pleas Judge John O'Connor ruled Friday.
,
Kinman was found innocent by reason of insanity in the 1979
stabbing deatlls ·o r 18-year-old itoa Kidd and ber father, Howtlrd
Sexton, 61, in suburban Milford Kinman slashed their throats after
they refused to give him money, police said.
After listening to testimony, reviewing medical reports and reading a threatening letter Kinman aUegedly wrote to a nurse, O'Connor determined that the Lewis Center.was not secure enough for
him.
Kinman, 35, is be moved as soon as possible to the maximumsecurity Dayton Mental Health Center.

1111111.11' I 111-\11!; SI.IIIF \('ri ll \

•

ber.

Inmate considered too dangerous

See Answer to Puzzler on Page C-4 .
90

DAYTON - A former police officer must serve three to 15
years in prison for the auempted rape and sexual battery of a 19year-old woman, a judge ordered.
.
. Michael Begley's attorney, Dennis Lieberman, had asked for
probation for his client. He said Begley, 34, was receiving dally
psychological treatment to deal with severe emotional problems.
But the victim told Mootgomery County Common Pleas Judge
lobo Meagher that Begley deserved to be punished.
"He burt me," the woman said Friday at Begley's sentencing
bearing. "He burt my family."
,
Meagher sentenced Begley t!Adlree to IS years for attempted
rape and three to 10 years for sexual battery with a specification of
causing physical harm. The sentences are to be served concurrently.
Begley was suspended without pay May 4 and resigned in Octo-

Sunday nmes-Sentlnel Page-D~

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

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tmav 'itint5 - ietdintl
Meigs County Office

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December.251 1~

l;l_ave A Very .
Merry ·Christmas,

Happy
Holidays
From The
Sunday TimesSentinel
Gallia County Office

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ott-Point Pl~nnt, wv

Page-04-Sunday nm....-sentlnel

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AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Ftb. 1tl Dealing
with intangible things might seem exceptionally dilficuH today. You will have more
fun Wyou focus on concrete reality today.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 Conditions
in general will be pleasant today with the
BEJOOCE
of one overcomplicated project.
BEDEOSOL exception
Remember the old adage : Too many
cooks spoil the broth.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) It is unfair to
judge everyone else today by the standards you set lor yourself . Just because
you feel like cooperating doesn't mean
others will follow suit
TAURUS (April 20-May 201 If you offer
encouragement and express enthuSiasm
today, others will, too. If you walk away,
Sunday,Dec. 25, 1994
IIley might do that instead.
GEMINI (May 21 .June 201 Someone in a
Your chart indicates that good fortune position to help you significantly might
might visit your home in the coming year. extend him/herself on your beha~ today.
De not take your luck for granted, though; Keep your greed In check.
it won't last forever.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You may
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) If you lavish your wit and charm on almost
are involved in an activity today that everyone you encounter today . Certain
everycne seems to be enjoyong, don't .let family members. however, might not be
a bossy individual spool the fun . privy to this treatment.
Capricorn, treat yourself to a birthday gift .
Send for your Astro-Graph predictions for
the year ahead by mailing $1 .25 to Astro·
Graph, c/o tl)is newspaper, P.O. Box
4465 , New York, NY 10163. Be sure to

••

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t.,t

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•"
•·
•

and A Safe a~d

•
•
•
•
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Joyous

•

()H-Polnt Pleannt, WV

25,1994

•
•
•
•
•

Q

New Year!
.• .

.
•

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) You are apt to
offer assistance today as long as it is
your idea. If someone asks for your
assistance, however, you may feel'it is an
imposnK&gt;n.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sapt. 22) You might
extend your friendship to someone today.
only to find him/her unresponsive. Before
you take offense, consider why this lndi·
vidual is withdrawn.
UBRA (Sapl. 23.Qct. 231 Your protective
instincts will be aroused today in ways
that many will admire. The object of your
concern, however, might be indifferent to
your gestures.
SCORPIO (~. 2._Nov. 221 Keep your
agenda flexible todey. Adhering to a rigid
schedute'could beCOme Irritating and lake
the pleasure out of socializing.
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dac. 211 You
might be reserved today around
strangers. but your family is likely to
make you feel like king of the mountain.
Spend your day with the ones who love
you.
0 1994 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

2.33 ACRES- Green Twp. Wooded,
excellant location for a beautiful
home. Make ua an offerl

5.66 ACRES. Buhl Morton Road.
Some woodland. Green Twp. Has
been surveyed!
EXCELLENT LOCAnON- St At 160
(Old At 35 W) .,.. 2 mlln from
city. Commercial pt oparty In excellent ccndltlon elaG cculd be uaad
aa reeldentlal. Call lor a private
ehowlng.

Gayland
Bush

Larry
Boyer

Paul
Barker

6

zod:i:ac~s:ig~n~.- - - . - - -....~~-...~---=:~:-""':~7:~~--:'~~'1
ANSWERS TO ~\tcijlA-4'f-fi-~2 .. 2S.-!Jit
DOCTOR
IDIOCY
THESIS
GABLED
ZODIAC
QUINSY
ERASED the DISC

•

•...
•

6

Jean
Davison

Donald
Coleman

A
U

Larry C.
Ewing

6

•
•
•

6

Margaret
Finnicum

Fovr

City Lota· Builders &amp;
1nvestors tatce advantage ot
Qelerred rew tor 15 yrs. Can see
together or separate.

BONNIE STUTES REIII.T!JRt

See Scram-Lets on Page D-7

state your

{

850 BUHL MORTON RD. - 446-4206
BONNIE STUTES!!i!'!!i!B!i!R~O,;,;,KE;,;R._~~~!!

· The computer era has put adifferent twist ,to the age old excuses for
students not having their homework.
My favorite one was given by a very ·
ingenious thinker. Instead of the dog
eating the papers, he told me the dog
ERASED the DISC .

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BULLETIN BOARD

.....
'

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'

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6Re-.G.
Green

A
·U

Edward E.
Howard

Crlstl R.
Hemphill

6
Michael
Jacks

-Isaac

Davldlee6

Diane
Hill

6·

Fred
Hoffman

Hill

Eloise
Juniper

A
U

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment
SR-22
Cancelled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior
.Insurance

Kevin
Kelly

Amy
Keefer

•

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance

6

Phone (614)446-6111

Gallipolis ·
Ok:l you know that. .. Planned ·Parenthood of
SO\ltheast Ohio In Gallipolis provides
confidenllal family planning services to 600
Galtla County residents each year. B!rth
Control Services Include a physician
examination, cancer screening, education
~

Margaret
Lehe_w

6

6

Geoffrey
Osborne

John
O'Neal

Kelll
May

Tommy
Long

birth control supplies. Women and men
,..Y·recetve tests and treatment for sexually
tfBnsn:ttned . disease and anonymous HIV
test~ : Sliding Fee Scale; Private Insurance
and Medicaid are; a~;X:epted. Planning
prevents .unlntonde&lt;l pregnancy. For an
appt. can (6t4) 44li·0166

.

The French Art Colony will be
closed Tuesday, Dec. 27th Tuesday, Jan. 10th. To speak
to someone concerning the
FAC, leave a message at
446-3834.

.,

Henry
Rayburn

:Kevin
Pinson

6

Keith

Kevin
Reiselt

Sanders

Hallmark Christmas Sale 50% qff
Christmas gift wrap, Hallmark
ornaments, boxed Christmas
cards and much, much more.
Starts Monday 26th
0/lio River ~laza

6

Patricia
Simpkins

Shinn

ATTENTION
L&amp;L Scrap Metal &amp; Recycling
will be closed
Dec. 23rd • Jan 2nd
Happy Holidays to E,veryonel

A
U

"

Ho~rt

Betty

Penn is
Taylor

Wilson, Jr.

Tope

6

c. · '

·', I

Paul Davies Jewelers
Will Be Open
Monday, Dec. 26
9:30 til 5 p.m.
Will Be Ciosed Monday,
Jan 2
Happy Holidays
from the Staff of
Paul Davies Jewelers

'

,I

·'·I
,.'

.I
'. !

... '

..., ·I

.,I

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Robert
Wingett

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Boors '-·
All leather Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
Engineer........................ $49.00
Wellington ...................... $49.00
Loggers ......................... $50·55
·Harness ........................$59.00
Carolina-Georgia-H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex
Swain Furniture 62 Olive St.
Gallipolis
All u.s. Made

2

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Youn~

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,

,.

Glenn Hensler

with

been
not

silent

Love Always
Forever from Your
and Fantilvl

EMPIRE
FURNITURE CO.
OPEN
1-4 pm
Monday Dec. 26th
Gallipolis, OH

1

Card of Thanks

all who brought food,
cards and words of
I ~vmn,orh• were greatly
God Bless

ENJOY THE
HOLIDAYS

In Memory of
Opal Martin

WAYNE'S PLACE
Middleport, Ohio

ROCK IN THE

This year there •
an
empty
beneath

NEW YEAR
BAD HABIT
"Hot Roc~ &amp; Roll"
Food Provided
Cover Charge
$10.00 per person
$15.00 per couple

'·

·~

Call 446-2342
or 992-2156

'I
'·,'

,rFOR MORE INFORMATION .,
,·..

,,

,. I'

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(,

I

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spot
the

Christmas tree. For
only wish for
Christmas, Mom, is
your lovely face (o

In Memoryol
DAVE and DAN
TALBOTI
Christmas nme is here
once more
for all to share in gifts
galore.
Chtistmas begins with
Christ our Father
His gift to you your
earthly Father
To relive only Joy and
Gladness
Although our hearts are
fiNed w~h sadness.
Fathers Two, you now
hold True for all
eternity.
God contorts us in
knowing best Your
together is n0w to rest.
Meny Christmas, Dad
and Dave
We Love You and Miss
you,
Your Family and Friends

(

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~·Found

-...---~

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.......... lllllln ..... ....
dloon I144IJ.7al.

1

YardSale

Gallpolll

&amp;VIcinity
ALL Yonl . . . . . . . . Polllln
" " - . DEADliNE: 2:t11 ,..._
tho., ........ 1111 IIID - .

......, ....... 2:01 .......

~ ...... ·2:GD .

8

PWIIc:Sale
&amp;Auction

llloll ,__, ........ 0
ful tiMe Wwt'
I IIICil ~:=
MICtion
.......
,., ...

•.Cirlo
'P7W1II. a wJ

V1tJ1n11. -

. ,.........

~

a "ftalt,Ohlo~

9

Wanted to Buy

Cotn!llte '"'oil 11hoM 0' . .
.... ""' """ 01 ~

•rr' -

d

;,;, I

Altltquo'w,

a.. Allli

--

.,.._.

c.ra Or
iiiil
-h-~

Cloan Ul8 'Truob, 1111 Or II
E.ulom Aoioriuo,lldlpol

.............
-.......
.......
.......... ......
.............
_.,....
D ccM1ed-..

"_....._

2fl2t. . . ...., ......

lre~1son for Christmas
We miss your
your laugh

If
'

r-==--:~
1421-...

,

~­

This year you
ill
celebrate
different in a very
special way for
're with our
who is the

and love. We can't
In Loving Memory of
believe you're gone,
ERMEL, ELSA, BUB,
we just have the
JOAN AND
lovely ·memories to
KATHRYN
us to go on.
Tit~ tlloNgltt co_,
•~,.- __k_~e._ r s
F r_~u.."t ,_
h 1_111 Mel
-Chri IIDiiS-1~ 1-1~~'-'''~ CllristMtJs
,
er
We Love
day willl mftllliltx dup
Heinz, Derek Stump
true How "''""joy
and
friends ·, &amp;
alo11g lifer WilY tlwn
neigh~ors; • Special
was beclltu~ ofyoN
thanks to the pall
YoN an diJimNCII
bearers.
Peggy and David,
IINIIIOI/~11•.
Dave&amp;Diana
' Julie an'd Mark,
L.ovlnaiY miNed by
Thomas; Michel,
&amp;
Family
Judy and the family
Debra &amp; Aaron Rose

'

~.

The · family
of
Margaret
Rose
wish~s to express
their appreciation and
gratitude for food,
cards, visitations,
prayers, flowers
medical care during
her Illness and death.
Special thanks to
Smead,
hospital;
Golkewski, St.
Hospital; Dr.
staff;
Physician
Choice
Kenny
lmdoden · &amp; Joe
Struble; Home •Health
Care Nurses; Fisher
Funeral Home
&amp; Tony; Co·

osu

~~' ' I

... 'i

Memory
CARL J. JANEY
Days of sadness still
come o'er us
Tears ol silence often
flow
For memory keeps you
otten near us
Though you leh us years
ago.
:
You will always be tn our
hearts
Along with beaut~ul
memories.
Missed and remembered
by all the Janey !amity

,.=

••arlllllt Clllc

--llaA"--

6

In Loving Memory of

Pets Plus Pet Shop
(inside G.C. Murphys)
Year-end Sale
20% off all Pet Supplies.·

.,I
'•I

2

In Memory

Dad· you've
gone 5 year's,
But
your

lnMamory

{Mom) Ruth Warren
It's been I 0 months
since you were here
Christmas will be sad
without you this year. But
we know that where your
at God has filled your
heart with cheer. Mom we
feel your presence near.
Sadly missed by:
Daughters: Cheryl,
Karen, Connie;
. Granddaughter&gt;:
Stephanie &amp; Keshia

••led

.,

Chip

~-.--

"·

2

PUBUC NOnCE
The VIllage of Middleport
will offer lor aale, a 187~
Ford F2S pickup truck to the
hfghel1 bidder.
.
All
blda muat be In
the offtce of the Middleport
Pollca Capt. by 3:00 p.m. on
Dec. 27,1tlt4.
Minimum bid accepted •
$200.00
(121 18, 25; 2TC

WITH

,,

.

•.

Public Notice

AT

•'

Rob

!'lew company coming into area.
We are a . F~ness Center
dedicated to the needs of todays
woman. We provide tanning
beds, aerobics, weight loss
training, physical fitness training.
Group and private instruction
available, also child care faciHty·
this facility Is open for women
only. For more information call
446·3401. Scheduled to open
October 1st.

' I

..

'·
11

Help 'J.Yatl&amp;d

•

�.....

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page-06--Sunday Tlmea-Sentlnel
11

Help Wanlecl

......

for Sale

.. , (111~11-'fl.'f t:M 1"1~1' Ml''&gt;
ANO

. Business

'lo

Al-l-

A

t"

A H ·,
qooo 1\11"'~1!

~c.Mir.

INCJTICEI
OHIO VALlEY PUBUSHINQ CO.

ond

thol,..., clo .....
...h ........ , ... k.-,
NOflo..ndiiiDMJI-.ghthe
.... J!llll J!IU ..... -lgolod

,.__.._Md4,2Bod- , Toll! IIIOIM, Uoidorplnl!inl- lloody To Into On

eomor
Coull.-.--.
-.rm

54 MIIC8IIIneoua

1.a1 Park Lono 11o1r111

Real Estate

Cattle ** Farm Equipment** 1.

~,N.le.,-..,...

Opponunlty

tho_..:

Merchancl..

114-

Now 1... Mx'IO, .......... oldrt1 ,..,
hom
IMUranDe. llricl •
FREE 1at rent. Only
~14 por 1110.

!na. ....... - .

a:.,...

f::O

All real estate adventslng In
lhla newspaper Is subjactto
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1968 which makes II Illegal
to advenlse ·any preference,

=~· CIJdo ._,Jr.

tlmltallon or dlscnmlnaloo

lenlo Volley, Apple · - · ·
....... ~ 2oc. lato; aood - ·

based on race, color, raliglon,
sex tamUiel status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or dlscrimlnatlon.•

This newspaper will not
knowttngly accept

·'

advertlsaments lor raal-te

Rentals

Auction wU be held atlhe Jac:l&lt;lon County LMIIkx:k
•
Market due to lnCOIMinleniiOcallon. NOTE: Cllltll will Mil at
10 a.m. wllh farm machlrwy to follow. 8uyela niJmber will be
used lor all purdl-. No amallllema.
·
CATILE: (35 HEAD) lncfudel2 llulls • 1 Chat'OIUI, 1
Angus X; 19 x Bred COW&amp;, 14 calvel. some WIH I l l .
cow/call pairs. This Ia a good aet ol rnoetly young catl!t·
Trucking will be available.
·
,
FARM EQUIPMENT: Case 980 Tractor, Dlalel, P..S., wllh
581 case loadeer; NH. 847 Roond Bailer; N.H. 258 pull !'Ike;
N. H. 451 rear mower; 3 pt. post hold digger; A. C. 3 pt. 18' 3
bottom plow; 3 pt cone fer1111ze epreader; 3 pt. eub eoller; 3
pl. round bale spear; 8' blade; 6' brush hog, rough; M.F. 3 pt.
Disc, rough; 16' 3 lllCie farm !Taller.
TRUCK: 1982 Ford 1 ton truel&lt;, 8 cyt., 14' bed wllh cattle
racks.
SALE BY ORDER OF FARMERS HOME ADMINISTRATION

Winter &amp; Associates
Auction Service

------44

Apanment

for Rent

45

114.

42 Mobile Homu
for Rent

1110

. . . . . . , . _ . .h _ _

, . . tnillor ............. Q
._..,PL
Col
304-77lolllll.
...-_

Is In violation ot the law.
Our reeders are hereby
lniQrmad that all dWellings

&amp;00 p.lll.,
wv.

atlvenlsed In this newspaper

r.1erch andt se

are available on an equal

opponunlty basts.

....~~AIIo
1'18¥81
~Ex·
Ollflltl Conclllonl I'IUO, IIW7tmo AFTER I P.ll.
~~ a PIUIIc ll!lllc
T-. 100 T1tru 2,111111 Cl8llilnl

-·~~·-·

-,OH

Hom• tor Sale
'M'll84' On 111 ..... 2 ldr., 2
8111. lloiMn PO!oh, Awnlnp,
Old! I A -.over. Clnhl

IP

r:e.Ani f«

WID. COmlr Lol1
Dt'INM. Cllln WON C.IWD
For. • • oe, tcM ••• 4m.

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lERIP.II.

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

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nod. .....,._,_ .. • ......... flcl. ~. Ohio
' 41711;101.
. ........ enol pi!ININ ~
.

---to-12hr.

LAYIE'SI'URNITUIE

•11 IIIII ooldl 1fl2 \'lriodoll

CCOIDIIIII,i
holM tumiiil-.ae.ilitkta~
_ l l1111.........
,N..,...

wlt!ltr, oldrtlng, Wllhor, 2 -

-.1.-lloluplndudld.SIGOD. 304-77NIII.

0122, I mloo out -~~~ lid.

FtwDolhforr,

'rt nt paelllrsw ..UIIIIIL

lhlllalluoilll--~

5

Happy Ads

.........

-lkll-~
COniMI ..- ~
llunl.. ~..
. ......

PICICENB I'URNITUAE

_
---ondtlml

He EPf'lftlll 1 tloullhold fur.
!!lohlfti. 1/Z 1111. ........ lid. Pl.

UHAAIEOE
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MIC1ION I I'UIINI1UAE. 12
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homo, no _lip fiellt """"" lo
. . . on. Col lloyd,
2421.

411... 0111111. M1
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11

=:::;•., ...,~ I';====R:ea:I:E:IItll::e:Ge::n:era::l::::::::::::;
._,~

WESLEY MULLET
141 Barlow Ad.
Patriot, Ohio 45658
814·256·6031

PH.
SENIOR PROGRAMS SPECIALIST

OFFICE 992·2886

8

3

I

Si N U.Q I Y
, I I 11 0 I

~-G• -Complete
-

llonlo Colto, IIIII, olr, PI,

-

...-T·-.,.-.,.;._.,~.,r---1

the chuckle quoted
by filling In the missing words
L-...L-..1.-..1.~...1-~..L.-J. you develop from step t~~p ~ fgi~J·It

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llopd..::a

2

-Font T-.
=~~gOod,

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II IIa
10

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lllle modll ..... - · WI phil

See Answer to Scram-Lets on Page D-5-

54 MIIIC81111180U8

Merchandl88

56

'

Pets for Sale

Mt:Y-IAbPuol. ~. Pun fiNid llblllln H,.kr
I Flnl - . , t300. _ . ,
I1CIO.OO 7 ...... old.
hloro I A.ll. Or Allor l:to
P.ll.

...........
Pllllllloei'

-.
= :::::.:.
Mlnue ~a&amp;ol I

58 Pels tor Sale

1

I

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...........

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Hlullltft

lfiDI

ait==
,.,..,...., Alia, ..........
cacl ~ota.I'IIIITniPII
llrop,
,._ Point
PI
•• toMJWDIS,

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•

--nl

lludlllllf'lal .. Dr.
........ L
.l llmorlll
Llllnfy, 111111 Ill 11 YIIN of
111111 Dul. .Ennlnal
-~~~~ ll1d
1t111dlng.
ll1d
Willi. . . . II lh. Wk. ..... EOE. Coii~'M-44~-

:P:i

We've gathered round to thank you
for your valued patronage.
Have a joyous holiday season!

_....,......., _ _ 1111111
....... atoHrllilld. only ttiO,
1;1M11:1411or~

. - -. ......... M,11
_.....,_~

Will EtiiDII W

'

toe).

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

ROY JONES ROAD- Syracuse-Approx. 1/2 acre ol ground
and a 12&gt;&lt;60 Windsor with 2 bedrooms, a bedroom additiOn,
large living room. equipped kHchen. deck. and outbuilding.
.JUST $12,000

Y•ahaWave
I:RumHI' II w/tr• .
13,000
90 Fori TMderltlrhl ,

'·

·CREW ) lOAD - Just minutes from
.LONG BOTTOM · Post Office Road,
Pomeroy! 1126+ acres with nice split toyer
.nice 1 floor frame .home features
· bedrooms, 1 bath, beautiful river fronta_ge, horrte. ol bedrooms. 2 baths, appliances.
carpeting throughout, range &amp; hood, T.V. newer siding, electric B.B heat, patio, TPC
attanna, lull basilment with garage and 112 water: located on paved street, very nice
tiath.J:.A.B.G. hea.~ Monogahefla electric location and quiet neighborhood. ASKING
$54,900.
.
and r r-C water, AS"tNG $50,000.

1

Give UsA Call ...

1...:..

'

POMEROY • 41999 Seneca Drive,
Pomeroy location Brick horne. spin Ioyer,
. 3' bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, 1 1/2 upstalijl,
.furnace with heat pump, drywall walls,
ca.rpet flooring, In basement garage,
remgerato!! range Included. Cement
drivliway. l'&amp;mlly room down stairs, storm
windows, air conditioning, and has a full
basement with Fireplace!! ASKING
PRICE $65,000.
,.,/,
MIDDLEPORT • Hartinger Pkwy. · This
nice one floor frame home features 2
bedrooms, 1 bath, utility room, 2'
flreplacea, newer FAN.G. furnace, parma.
payne windows, paneling carpet &amp; vinyl
·flooring, front sitting porch and shed.
A$KING $35,000.

!

.

SIPIOSI 124
~~ . ,
94f.21'11
.·Hf~26'oo
~

j. ~

POMEROY - Condor St. - 3 bedrooms
· Ranch Style Home,'ori amaH tot naar town.
Included full basement, central air
woodburnlng fireplace, 1 car garage.
AGENT OWNED! ASKING $35,000.

CHESHIRE· Third Street· A 2 story frame with 3·4
bedrooms. finished basement, one balh front and side
porch, storage building and big lot
$38,900
MIDOLEPORT· Corner of S. Third and General Hartinger. A
raally large living room, 2·3 bedrooms. newer windows, vinyl
siding, several rooms freshly drywalled. large lot $29.900

RACINE - Just out of town! This property
combines the best of both worlds. Nice
country setting yet jusl minutes from tow.
This lovely, well taken care of property
includes :f bedrooms. 2 full baths, large
family ·room, equipped kitchen, ulilijy
room &amp; dining room. There's also a full
basement w/one care garage all sitting on
112 acre.' $44,900.
.

HEMLOCK GROVE· Approx. 6 acres with two 1970
campers· one 16ft. and one 19ft. and 2 more hook ups.
Also has concrete block john. electric on site and witched
for well.
$9,900

CHESTER • Located on SR 248. This 1
1/2 story lra.me home features 2
bedrooms, 1 bath, hardwood flooring,
N.G.FA heat, TPC water. New part rool.
some new Siding, lull basement, attic
space, small garage, large rear yard.
FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM I ASKING
,29,900 AFFORDABLE.

style home wilh heat pump, attached·one car garage. above

MIDDLEPORT .. Bradbury Rd. • 1977
Doublewide on 2 acres +. Horne has 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, perma payne
windows paneling carpet, electric neat
pump • 3 years old, P!llio, refrigerate~
range, storm doors &amp; wmdows. A/C, ana
also an above ground JKlOII Nice location
ciosP to town &amp; not too far away. ASKING
$39,900.
.

RUTLAND- A recenlly remodeled home "ilh newer vinyl
siding, newer roof, and lextuned walls . Has 2 bedrooms. and
one bath wllh attic spece lhal could ba used lor more room.
Comes with equipped kitchen and washer and df\'er. ·
REDUCED $21,000
.
·

MIDDLEPORT • Bradbury Road • 2 story
frame home on 5 acres. Home Includes 3
bedroOms, 1 bath, double hung windows
~ wood flooring, N.G.F.A.-heet, 'G
&amp; S
LCCO water, partially

.-~' tit~~~~~~~t~~!~~~-i-~:~

-- -~

J

POMEROY· Beech Street· A 2 story 15 year old colonial
home wilh a fantastic VIew. Has 3·4 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces.
3 1/2 baths. lamily room. formal. dining room. finished
basement, in-ground swimming pool, solar heal. satellite
dish, 2 car garage, and lois of privacy. sitting on 25 acres.
$133,000

car garage with a one bedroom apartment over the garage
all sitting on approx. 5 acres.
$85,000

tja.Ula. &amp; ;ltei7s eountl(
"8l7 Bend ~ealtl(, jnc.

I

General

RACINE· SA 124- Wait lill you see this 3 bedroom home
with beautiful hardwood ftoors .in liVIng room, a detached 2

Ain9o,

··~

Reel Estate

446-1066

Hank Cleland 111 ...... 992-6191

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

~!2X!C.....JI

._

Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Reahor/Broker-446-0971
Mose Canterbury. Reattor-446·3408 .
Jeanette Moore, Reattor· 256-1745
Tim Watson. Realtor-446-2027

Sherri Hart .................742-2357

M25
Tmto ...z, tcil
1
.......... 2,325
Porsdre 944, LR.
14,500
. . . . ._
Porsdle928

LEIDIRHA;II Rill ESTAtE

,l;iol

Carolyn Wasch - 441-1007

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

Tracy Brinager ...........949-2439

-.r(ll rcougar,

Russell D. Wood, Bro~er.......... ,..............................446c4618
Phyllis Miller .....................
256-1136 Martha Sniith .............. 379-2651
J. Merrill Carter ................ :... :.... 379-2184 Cathy Wray ................. 446-4255
Tammie Dewitt ...... :................... .245..0022 Cindy Drongowski ..... ,245•9697
Judy Dewilt .......... .,................. :.. 441-0262 O!eryl Lemley ............ 742-3171
Barr
446-0722
• ·

David Wiseman, Broker 446-9555
446
. •
·~

·.·· :m:====
Loretta McDade •
7729
~ Sonny Games - 446-2707

Wood Realty, Inc.

Henry E. Cleland ...... ~Z-2259

1

a-w.c------.--·- ~446-1101-or-1-800-S85;.7-101

446-3644

Real Eatate General

-~~~-.. 3,225

frail el~~rly. Travel required with IRS rate
reimburumenf,
··
All Interested qualified persons should submit ·.
a resume, three letters of references, and proof
of licensur~ to Human Resoutces Office, Area
Agency. on Aging Disttict 7, Inc., P.O. Sox F32,
URG, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674 no later than
4:30 p.m. on January 6, 1995:

REAL ESTATE,

MIDDLEPORT- Broadway Street- You need lo see lhis
gorgeous home in town tiut on a large lot having 4 spaciOus
bedrooms. 2 baths. family ·room. dining room. buin·in
dishwasher, 3/4 basement. deck. garden spot. carport.
storage building, and low maintenance aluminum siding.

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

·LICENSED SOCIA,L
Due to continued growth, positions are
available in .Pike County and Scioto County
offices with PASSPORT in·home care program
for the frail elderly in southern Ohio. NO
WEEKI;II!DS. NQ tiOI.,IQAYS, M_ONDAY •
FRIDAY, 40 HOURS PER WEEK. Salary
$21,000 with FULLY PAID HOSPITALIZATION,
DENTAL, VISION PLANS, 15 DAYS PAID
VACATION FIRST·· YEAR. Applicants mu&amp;t be
licensed in the State .of Ohio as a Registered
Nurse or Ueen$8d Socrat Worker. Experience In
long-term care, home health care encouraged.
Position involves in-home assessments and

· MUST SEE TO APPRECIATE! Very nicee ranch .
· home on 1/2 acre lot. 3 bedrooms, baths, living
· room, family room, dining room. kitChen and tun
·: basement. Priced in lhe 50's.
11300 .

RACINE· Pine Grove Road· 11 you have always wanted a
nice home and mini farm. Here il isl The house has 2-3
bedrooms, Central I&gt;Jr, Heal pump, and equipped kitchen.
Approximately 5 1/2 acres with mosl ol it fenced and a nice
barn and other buildings.
ASKING $55,~

- ..........
Ill lor
....
ll
CI'A
_ Chrlool
.......
,...

IIEAD.

ll!llrl'l I - . 212
T11W A - . Qllllpalll, 011

2 baths, one car attched garage, and a 2 car detached
garage sitting on appr&lt;&gt;x. 1 acre of land.
$54,900

JU.L:.Ilunn

Farm Suppltes
&amp; Lt vesloc k

A""1:·Lege111d, W

18 wanted to Do

POMEROY· Naylor's Run 'Road· Close to lawn bul oul of

.,

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

Merry
Chris.t masl

N503 ..

town, approx. 7 yrs. old, 1 1/2 story home wllh 3 bedrooms,

;,".\
--~
lllor
:J:!:J:r...

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY
. AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
EXCUTRIX; VIRGINIA ROSE .
LUNCH
MASON, WV
n3·5785
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH I.D. OUT OF ·
STATE BUYERS MUST HAVE A BANK LETIER OF .
CREDIT UNLESS KNOWN BY AUCTION CO.
Not reaponelblelot •acldentl or lou of property
Llcenud end bonded In Ohio, Kentucky •
Wnt vtrglnlot 166
·

POMEROY· Willow Creek Road- Pret1y ·setting for this 2
bedroom ranch home wnh full basement and approx. one
acre ol.land, wllh central air and newer furnace, equipped
kitchen and class 10 town.
$36,000

"JUST RIGHT" HOME This brick ranch with 2 car ·
· attached garage on Martin Drive features a lovely ·.&gt;
.• new room addHion lor entertaining or juat enjoying •.
. lhe openness and easy access to private decl&lt; and .·
·. brick patio. The 3 bedrooms, 1·'1/2 bathe and full .·
·: basement with family room will alford private space
· lo several family members. Don' wait to make an ··.·
·
. • appointmenllo see this one. Priced at $95,000.

1

1

Associate's degree or Bacl)elor's of Science
Degree in Health, Human Services, Public
Administration or other related field required.
Broad knowledge of social and/or
nutrition/dietetics services and experience in
working with the elderly preferred .
Responsibilities include: assisting Agency
Planner in preparation of reports to AAA7 and/or
state and federal agencies; assist Agency
Planner with technical assistance to agencies
providing social and nutritional -services to the
elderly in a ten county area; quality assurance
and/or Implementation of service standards.
All interested qualified persons should submit
a resume, references, and verification of
licensure to Human Resources Office, Area
Agency on Aging District 7, Inc., P.O. Box 978,
URG, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674 no later than
4:30 p.m. on December 30, 1994.
"An Equal
Employer''

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

, _ - -pup· ....

Me Not pattern; Heisey punch bowl set; No.li~~~l
Eye pitcher wlblue band; cranberry glass;
glass; cobalt blue; sev. pes. cut glass;
Fenton; Depression &amp; pressed glass; No. 1345
Bach Kanstporcllne china Lady Godiva 8' high,
long on running horse; sev. art glass pape!Weights. 1
sgnd. L.C. Tiffany Favrile; 2 1~re German beer RIAin&lt;·l
Watt pottery platter; blue &amp; white stone pitcher;
jade pc.; stone jugs &amp; crocks.
.
LAMPS
Pr. overlay lustres sgnd. Moser: case glass ovEiriBII•
lamp sgnd. Moser; Tiffany style tamp; lg. art gla:&amp;af
tamp sgnd. Tiffany Favrile; 2 reverse painted
leaded. glass lamps: 2 caboose lamps; oil lamps:
wicker floor lamp; marble tamps.
COLLECTIBLES
Clocks; old steel banks, rabbit; 3 banks, horse, Indian
&amp; others; old pedal tractor; gray granite; Standard
Model A talking machine w/lg. morning glory
horn; miner's hat &amp; light; old painting sgnd. "-··•-•
Helstrom; fancy picture frames; 3 fancy Coket cr~:~~;:f
Jumbo Peanut Butter jars; &amp; more.
p
colle.ctlon of toy-trucks &amp; cars (late 20's
SonneyAnti air craft truck, structo truck "'"'Am-ioho&gt;vA1"1
&amp; 1960 Buddy L Flretruck &amp; others.
Auc:tlonear note: Dealers bring your trucks, as aiV.'IIYlll
thti building Is full. Large all day auc:tion. Come
spend the dey.

Cannelburg, Inc. 45719
Specializing in Pole
Buildings .
Designed to m~et your
needs. Any size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post Buildings and
Package Deals. Sa~e
Hundreds. e~en Thousands
of . Dollars.
Local Sales Representati~e

Elltlle General
- ....................Real
--....................
~~.....-----

c

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1994
10:00 A.M.

•1111 Illes, 111.

~

Transporlat 1011

The computer era has put a

J..• ....,~.....--r---r"!~--l different twist to the age old

J

lllolorcyc188

m:o ""

excuses for students not hav. _ L........._..J_L.-..a..---L.-L..--1.. ing their homework. My favorite one was given by a very
0 zAI D
..
ingenious thinker. Instead of
! g
the dog eating the papers, he
..
'
told me the dog - - - - - - the

china~~~·r:o~~a~;k~f~~~~

Ritwbllb-

. tloll~

Ortw•,oao11~~e._-.

curio
cab.;ofQueen
Annesgnd.
w/etching
girl &amp; dog
glass secretary; early flat wall
cab.; 4·pc. mah. parlor suite; beautiful round
banquet table wneaves plus other round oak
wal. turtle top table; lg. fancy base VIet. ma.rbiEt-toipl
table; fancy oak sideboard wlcurved drooor. o:
carved crank Victrotas; Oriental carved
I table;;fancy pump organ; oak hall tree; oak lo~~~i:~
highboy; early wal. Viet. doll bed; Viet. k
wardrobe; Viet. dresser; oak washstand;
tatile; set of 6 oak chairs; set of 6 fancy
chairs; rose back V'ICI. rocker; rocker w/c:arvM 'letdy':sj
head on back; sev. press back rockers &amp; others;
child's rocker' custom·made child's buckboard W&amp;f~
nice ice-cream table &amp; 6 heart back chairs; oak
trunks; mah. vanity; 1g. claw feet oak sewing machlrte]J
3-dwr. oak file cab.; 4·dwr. mah. file cab. &amp; more.
GLASSWARE
30 pc. American Fostoria dinner plates, valtes,,J
candleholders, flat &amp; footed tumblers, bowl &amp;
pitcher; 55 pc. Haviland Limoges china, Blue F&lt;&gt;m8tl

Floor llalntlnlinol ...........

: PcNu--.

1111 GIIC ......., SLI 4 Wholl

6

'located at the auc:tlon center on Rt. 33ln Mallon,
West . VIrginia. · (On Ohio River batwaan
Parkersburg a Huntington).
·
FURNITURE
Beautiful tall Chippendale style highboy w/carvlng,
broken arch top &amp; claw &amp; ball feet; early blind
corner cpbd; highly carved mah. china cab.;
carved mah. hall seat; outstanding 4-pc. waterfall
suite; 3-dr. oak icebox; curved glass Chippendale

=..:
Cl:olDln!':!hlAooJr..:
I'MIIIili. some rk;wd 1111..

2

· . I Is 1 I I .

ANTIQUE
AUCTION

~iia:n.=..=

,ll

:.· ~.· · ~-Sr-·-Hr.::I_E~Tr-S-r-tl

lloome lor .......... monlh.

IIMIIIIIIIMno. 011111 Halll.

c R0 D

;:

Rt.. 1 , Millwood, WV
Phone (304) 273·3447
Ucensed &amp; Bonded in West Virginia &amp; Ohio
Not responsible for accidents or toss of property.
We appreciate your attendance.

Furnished
Rooma

..
·· 0 T
'

...

Auctioneer: Edwin Winter 1334

&gt;Ml~h

a ..... _. -

·Truck

Sat. December 31, 10 a.m. ·

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
4 - Oil Adell- PIU. Cor-~.
01tM,OOO,IM-MJ.'IItt.
- - Trot And Blear

Sunday Tlm..-Sentfnei-Page-07

52 Sparling Good8

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

32 Mobile Hom•

OH-Polnt Plea11n~ WV

and free gas. ASKING

IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF A HOME
OR PROPERTY TO BUILD A HOME
OR BUSINESS ON, CALL CLELAND
REALTY AND WE WILL TAKE CARE
OF ALL YOUR NEEDS11 LIST WITH
US IF YOU1NEED TO SELL YqlJR
PROPERTYS. OR IF YOU ARE •
BUYING, C~ TODAYIII

groond pool and storage building on nice laying lol
ONLY $45,000

. . FOR SALE- 3 bedroom home , hardwood floors ,
celltng fans, fire place with insert. 20 x 24 garage and
much mora, cfly SChools. CALL TODAY
NEW US11NG- 2 homes lOcated on approximately 1 112
acres. One horne has 8 rooms. 3 bedrooms, 1 i 12 balhs,
living room, dining room, family, kitchen. One horne has
8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 balhs, living room kitchen
lamlly room. Both have rural water. LP gas Fu,;,ace. and
more. Call lor appointment to see.
·

IIIDDLEPORT- N. 41~- A 2 story frame home wilh 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, some remodeling a~eady done. 70x130
lot
NOW $10,000

HOME ON RACCOON. CREEK- 3 bedrooms 2 baths
living room, dining room, kildlen, 2 car garage located
on approxomately 1 1/2 acres more or less. City
Schools. CALL TO SEEt
·

IIIODLEPORT· Uncolri Street· Needing rental property or' a
flxer uppe•? Here II is, a 3 bedroom 2 story hme with a
fenced lot, and a storage building.
$14,000
LANGSVILLE· Crouser Road· A nice 3 bedroom ranch

POIIEROY· Always wanted lo won your own business? A
bar business Includes all slack and fixtures. Has an older
back bar lhal is beautiful. Has a 0·3 licen~e uniil 1 AM.
Business Only.
S27.50p
SALEII TOWNSHIP· Approx. 321 acres laying on Co.Rd.
45, Twp. Rd. 234 and Twp. Rd. 363. Approx. 60 acres
tillable and 260 In woods. Has a 1972 Fleelwood 2 bedroom
mobile home, ·30x50 Red Morton Building, and 2 older
homes one habitable and wllh 3,4 ~rooms •.and no bai!L.
Has a smal pond.
$150,000
POMEROY- Mulbelry Heights- A nice 4 bedroorri 1 1/2 story
home with full basement, breez-ay and one car garage.

HOME ON RACCOON CREEK FOR SALE· 2
bedrooms, a belh, 2 decks, new rool, electric heat. 1 112
acres. mora or less. CAll FOR APPOINTMENT.
HOUSE, 8 ACRES MORE OR LESS, located in
Lawrence Co., 2 bedrooms, living room. dining room,
kttchen. bath. lg. garage 24x40. CALL FOR
APPOINTMENTIII
LOT IN GREEN lWP. FOR SALE· 156X100 city water
and sewer, electric to pole level. Priced $14 000. CALL
FOR INFORMATION. ·
'
. HOME FOR SALE · 3 bedrooms, bath, living room,
family room , kitchen. lenced In bactc yard. PRICED AJ
$45,000.00
. .
VACANT LAND ,~1\j)proxtmareti 10 acres located-on
Bob McCormick Rd. Call lor more Information.
FOR YOUR CONVEIIIENCE TRY

II

Comes with equipped kHchen. heat pump. CA, and large
llol.
ONLY $57,500

OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER

DOmE TURNER, Brokar..........................ll92-5882
BRENDA JEFFERS .....................................II92-3056
JERRY SPRADUNG ....................,.....(304) 11!12-3411
CHARMELE SPRADUNG ................. (304)-812-3488.

FOR INFORIIATION ON OUR ENTIRE US'TIIIGS
PICK UP TI'IE FREE QUAIJTV HOMES ·
BROCHURE AT.IIOIE OF lHE LOCAL IIAHKS,
RETAIL STORES, IUPIRIWIKETS, MOTELS
;;;;;;;;;A;;N;;D RESTAURANTS.

OFFICE......... :.............................................. Il92·21811

·1~·41066

�·.

~

•

-.

December
11m--Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midd~port~alllpolla, OH-Point Pleaunt, WV

1994

Daily Special In Our Bakery
10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
Hot Dogs 21s1.00
~~~ce 3fS1.00.plain

Ott-Point Pleaunt, WV

:· Holzer Clinic provides clinical rotation for residents

GALLIPOUS • Holzer Clinic in&amp; 10 Dr. Linder, "~.~ of
.m:ondy announced its establiah- lfJiidellcy · · is
clini':lllent as part of the internal cal
'lion to unimecliclne residency training pro- 'lellily lllining, the midents rowe
I!IIDI of the University of Cincin- 'lhrough affiliated residency crainlllliandthcOhio.SIBteUnivmlty.
in&amp;li~IUChaslfolzcr."
.. An intcmal medicine resident
'lbe phylicians participating ill
.from the Ohio Slate University and die Dober JliOlllllll are secOJd IUid
a .~den~ (f!lR1 the Univemty of . dllrd ~ ~~~- According to
CIIICIDDIII wiD spCIIId acne-month Dr. Linder, th11 means they have
·I'OIItion at Holzer. The IMRs are completed four years of medical
.MDI or 00s
mcdi· ICbaOIIIId
now in lbcir sec:oad
.cal nining by spec' · gin the or dllrd year of 'l)eCialty trainina.
field olinlemal medicine.
Wbilo at Holzer ihe I'CSidents will
Hown Linder, M.D., JJU1mo. wuvlde CII'C to palienls in tbc mec1noloP,stand chairman of llolzer li:al center and clinic under the
CliDlc's internal medici~ aapo"lalon of Holzer Clinic 'a
.ment was inJinunental in ea ·
inll!nlal modicine physicians.
in&amp; dlis rcaidcncy rotation. AccoidApril Magnussen, M.D,, gcnersl

·.

oxpcricllc:e~

eontinU::ft!:r

ere

inttrilia1, is wortin~ ~ Dr. Linder as midency trallling coonlinator. "We .are really excited about
having them (residents~ heie. This
offers a great opportumty for them
and for us. The Clinic physicians
now have an opportunity 10 interact
(with the residents), teach and
learn," said I?r· Magnussen.
Dr. Cnilg Strafford, Holzer
Clinic r_resident, echoes Dr. Magnussen s sentiments. Dr. Strafford
ad~s. "Most importantly, the
pattcnts have the advantage of
additional thinking and the most
current practice techniques providcd to them in tenns of acute care,
chronic care, and, increasingly
more imponant, preventive health

c:arc servil:es." '

Residenc rolations are not new
10 Holur Clkic. An affiliation was
~~lish~ with .the University ~f
Cineimau's sUIIIical deputment m
19S4 by Dr. Charles liolzer,]r.
Over lhe last 40 years, Holzer has
been host to nearly 200 surgical
residents.
.
.
The effccuve'!ess of this program IS evtdcnt 1D that three of
Holze! .Clinic's aeneral sur11eons

ByHALKNEEN
the soil would help. -Many a winter
POMERY · After tbc avallmdle hour wiD be spent paring down my
·of holiday cards in the mail this wish list to an affordable number of
·Past week. I am looking fCXWlld 10 new plants to try in the backyard
the arrival of spring garden cala- tllis year.
.
logs. The new plant varieties, tbc
."in" colon for the backyard flower • Farm Worker Protection Stan·sarden, fruit trees and the latest dards or WPS - Farmers, just a
.ganlen equipment come right to our ·reminder that the 1992 federal law
door via these siossy cataloss. mandates compliance of the revised
Each catalog attemprs to.make us worker protection standards as of
believe that we too, can srow all January I, 1995. The goal of the
JOrts or plants witb very little WPS is to reduce the number of
effort.
pesticide-related illnesses. This is
10 be accomplisbed through crainingleducating your workers on pes·
I pour over each des~ptive ticide risk, posting &amp; notification
pbrase noting all tbe superlatives of workers when pesticides are
psed and then wonder why my applied and the need for emergency
plantings doa't look as good. Per- wash stations &amp; transportation.
haps pulling a few more weeds, a Teach the teachers classes have
little more watering or Jllllparing

Extension Comer ·

been held over the past year in the
county. However, if additional help
is needed to comply please call our
office at992·6696.
'

The 35th Annual Ohio Roadside
Marketing Conference • Join hundreds or roadside marketers from
around the country at the Dayton
Convention Center on January J3.
14, 1995. Greenhouse and vegetable growers learn about what die
public Is demanding from the roadside marketers. Talk to th~ salespeople who meet the changing
demands of the retail public. Registration material can he obtained
from the extertsion office.

Pesticide Recertification - For
those certified private pesticide
applicators who need additional

2LITER

Monday thr..Sunday
• 8AM·IO PM

c

298 SECOND ST•
POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT T~ LIMIT -QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD DEC•.25 THRU DEC. 31, 1994.

~ ~ Hol~.cus ~~of

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

WE NOW .CCEPT WIC COUPONS

· Closed Christmas Day so employees
ca•
Holiday

Linder.

refresher class hours to renew your
mtification, put a hold on January
24, 1995. You have two opportunities that day to attend training at
The Obio State University-Meigs
County office located in the basement of the County Home Building, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy
Ohio. Identical three hour classes
will be held at both I :00 to 4:00
p.m. and 6:30 to 9:30p.m. Please
call our office (992-6696) to confirm the class time you plan to
attend and allow us to prepare sufficient handouts.
Happy Holidays to all and to all
a successful New Year!
Harold Kneen Is the Agrlcaltural Agent for the Ohio State
University E~tenslon, Meigs
County.

24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

REVIEWS CHART· Hcnrard Llllder, M.D., pubaollflkllllt
and chalrmu of Holzer CUDic•• IDternal medldae departaeat
reviews a padmt dw1 wltlli Kelll Cawley, M. D IDternalmed~
resident from Oltlo State UaiYcnlty.
"

Business briefs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The New York investment firm
Koblberg Kravls Robens &amp; Co. is
ready to stamp its brand on Elsie
the Cow.
The fum said Wednesday it has
acquired more than enough sharebolder support to force a merger

with Borden Inc. Rival suitor Paul
Kaz.arian, meanwhile, bowed out of
the competidon;
KKR needed at least 40 perCent
of Borden stock to cement the S1.8
billion deal. It has more than 90
million shares - or 63.5 percent
- of Borden stock.
·

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Ch11ck Roe~st ~••••••••L!~•••

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Rump Roast •••••••••••~~

·m

Management not only ·aims to
reduce exposure to crop loss, hut
also to price decline.

Farm Flashes
A Wisconsin milk marketing
coop is trying a new concept. Normally, dairy coops or companies
purchase mink from producers at
tbe current price, manufacture dairy
products, and sell the finished
products at prices based off the current f.rice. The Wisconsin firm
•Alto ' Dairy Cooperative in tbeir
pilot progiam establisbcs price for
milk for futiiRI delivery and hedges

:Announce dividends
~ · CINCINNATI • s..- BIIIC ·Corti
IIIICed Tuada the
'&amp;~:C.. vorec1 a re~

C::.S

quarterly dlvldeDcl of $0.35" per
shiR to (2MI811o1D IIDI:k ~ ­

holden wu also declared. 'Ibese
dividends are payable January 13,
1995, to shareholders of record
Dec. 30, 1994.

the milk on the· cheddar cheese
futures market in New York. The
hedge protects "Alto" from price
fluctuations between the time the
milk is conuacted witb the producer and the time the milk actually is
produced and delivered. Producers
can plan their level or production
based upon a bid price for future
delivery. Based upon one-year of
data, this .Program would have
increased ibe price of milk by 50
cents per hundred in Wisconsin
during 1993 and would have made
a $23 miUion impact in that state
alone.
A new faCt sheet "Stockpiling
Tall Fescue for Winter Grazing" is
now available.
The fact sheet discusses: When
to begin Stockpiling; Nitrogen
Application Date; Nitrogen Ra!e;
PastiiRI Legume Density; and Graz.
ing Management. Sense of tbe local

"stockpiled" fescue resembles
spring grazing. A few local fanners
tried demeostratieo plots of Marion
Lespedeza last year and had good
success of frost seeding in heavy
fescue sod. The need wiU again be
available this year. If you have au
interest in trying some please call.
Mark your calendars for Thursday evening, Jaouary 5. Glenn Ora·
ham will be hosting an "Income
Tax" informational session for
farmers. The class will be held in
room 155 of the Human Resouices:
Building at Buckeye Hills Career
Center starting at 7 p.m. Mr. Ora·
ham will involve several resource
persons .,in the training session.
Reminder that free copies of the
"Farmers Tax Guide" are now
available at tbe Ex~sion Office.
Edward Vollborn Is Gallla
County's extension agent, agrl·
culture.

QUARTER PORK

M .9l.T'19-lE 9vl'E/JJIC!Jl.L SJlaJPE

Loin ••••••,..

WOV.Dll£11C£, W IIJ{.o/m 'JOV.
W sri0P IIJ{.Mo('D SE/E OV.!l{
C!Jl$JST.M5t5 (j I:PI 1'1J'E.9l.S 109{

J •••••••

~~......

!;...... 1

Cheese •••••••••••••••

.

LB. BOX

Steak

TJl£ !Jl09vll£ P.9l.TI'£9'ff,

I Ina limellimal lln81DII•
1480, Jackson Pike, ~lllpolla, Ohio 45631
% mile - t of Holzer Holpltal)

·~CARMTiON ,

99(
Sausage·•••••~~............. .

HOT COCOA

HOMEMADE PORK

MIX
10 ENV..

c

ly FRED J, DEEL
.
., GALLIPOLIS - All 4-H and
·f FA members wanting to exhibit a
steer at the 1995 Ohio State Fair
ire reminded that noseprint cards
your your animal must be aubmit·
·ted by Jan. 1, 199S, to state fair
offiCials.
All noseprints carts. must be
·readable. the prints will be
reviewed by a col)lmittee and
retumcd if they are UllllCCCPtable.
All exhibitorS providing Unii(UIJk
iible
priJU
will be askfd to' aubmit
l
..A.-..
,,.,.

GALA PAPER
TOWELS

·ss lilulclt

.US #1 ~USSETT .

i.esabre

.., ; ,:... ~_',,

anew~-.

Each nosepnnt must exactly
matdl the steer you edlibit. You
ilay -inate up 10 four steers.
•· If the tard docsn' t matcb the
·~~Dim~~ exactly, the animal will be
clJaqiJillftcd. __..
ailabl
.1 Nosepjnt ""'"" are av
e at
the Gaiiia County ExtenSion Office
juring regular office hours. A~ter
the noseprint card is complete,
please send it to Virgil Strickler, ·
.Supervisor of Livestock, Ohio
· State Fair. 717 East 17th Avenue,
Columbus, Obio, 43211.
.
· · Remember, this is not your offi.C:ial eQ.try. Other paperworl\ must
fie completed at a later dati: this
summer.
If you any any questions, feel
6ee to c:mtact tbc exlflnsion office

New

·•s

99(
Spree~d ••••••••••••••• ~~~·.... .
29( PIZZCI •••••••••••••••l~~;. 3 $s.
KrCIIJI ••••••••••••••••••••••••
6
. 9( Ice .(ream••••••. ;.~·r........' $2,99.
KRAFT PARKAY JUMBO

OIIISBB

14 oz.,••

·

.,.

•

:1

~·

j . (.

..

.
j.

~~

}

'

I

OOD

Street
Ohio

. !

•'

• • • • • • • • • • • • • •

"
. :m:. u-.st-:t-ak-:e-d-:e-: li-ve_ry. . :·~fr-o~m-=d~e-a~le:_r_:st:oc~k:,:m~u_::s_:t:m_:e:nt~io_:n:_a_d~t-o~'b::e=e~li~gi~b:::le==a;..;t~ti:m:_e~~~J

,/'Where Better~eally Mattei'S"
L_I.P:-r-e-.vi-ou_s_p-:u-r-.ch_a_s-es-no-:t-e:li-:gi:-b:-le-,
purchase.
Offer •good from 12/2612/311994.
·
.
.
,
• ,;1{1

-=====-

593~.6641

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • II! • • • • • • • • • !".. '! !".'! .•.
•i
______ COUPON------~: ~~-------COUPO~
:.

.:: . NORTHERN : i NINE LIVES . :. ::
DOMINO
:i TOILE~T TISSUE :: : : · CAT FOOD :: :i
SUGAR
~-229-- -~:
!--.-$-~- ::::
5~. $- ~-3·9-.
,l2RaLL
. • ••55oz
.
~• •'
::
1

.

·: .
I

I

I

1
1

I

•

I

1

PK

~

Good OniJ At POMII'a Super Valu

-: s;-

•

'•• I I .

. ••

I

I

OllwOood Dec. Z5tllru Dec. 31,18114 , ol I

I

1
1

.

.

Good QoVJ AI Pllftll'a Super.Yalu

I
,a

••

1

II'
'

11

OllwOood Dec. ZB IIIN Dec. 31,18114 ,1 lo

Good Only At POWIII'a Super Valu
Ollar Good Dec. 25
Dec. 31,18114

, 1'---- _1.!'! • -P!'P~'!'---- ~ ~· 1:---- _u_"'!'!~~ • · -r--' 1 1'----11 2

ROLL

2 $1
PRINGLES
POTATO
CHIPS
6.7SOZ. CAN

(

46oz.

~~-------COUPON·------:•

..·.iff(etche~.~
.
. . Continued hili . . . D-1

......-

•

JIJICe ••• .-.......................

;+HApat-

'

KEMPS

STOLELY T()MATO

J'nd Deel II GaUta County's
.

· (two years as president), and a
•
JQember of tbe Vinton County
C::Nm&amp;er of COiniilerce.- CiirreniJy, '
tlic IS presideot of tbc Alexander
I:
~· Boostcn Ouh.
ll ' ;:
Pletcller is' ~ dauaJ!Iet or .,
•'• •. 1M Plneos of JackSon llld tbc late
.. ~y McCarty. Her brothers, Rick
r.1iCarty and Bob McCarty, reside ~
i![ Jactsoa. Her husband, Mike, Is
s~neral manager of ATCO in
Athens and they have two dllldren
' . .. " ·i•,!troy,
I7 and Kelli, 12. ' ; ;
•..,

TO~Y'S FROZEN

SNOW FLOSS SHREDDED OR.BAVARIAN

~ it446-7007.

.;
,,r,

$ )99

.

Potatoes ••••••••••••••~~~~:g
B02~~ENM
.
•lk
$
]99
10 · I •••••••••••••• ~~~ ••

'!

I.

$ 79

LONGHORN COLBY

$ ]39

ZESTA
CRACKERS

Noseprint
cards due
pyJan. 1

\

'

1.

59

BUCKET CUBED

The quartedy clvldead of $1.50
10 Series B l'ielliiicd 11i1fk sb11e-

F

$

20LB.

Stee1k or Roe1st ••:.~~ •••••

m.

l

$ ]49

SUNSHINE
DOG FOOD

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF RIBEYS4 99

Producers must find ways to manage risk
· JlyEDWARDVOLLBORN
.. GALLIPOLIS • Risk Manase·
·inent is an impoi'tant responsibility
tor people in agriculture.
: Producers must seek ways to
manage risk inherent in their operations. That can be confusing and
sometimes a terrifying process for
farmers who are normally not
accustomed to futures, options,
crop insurana:, and forwud contractina. Crop itisurance will be a
must for farmers who Want to pariicipate in "Government" JXII8IBI1lS
1995. We will hear a lot about
: this in the coming weeks. Risk

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

STORE HOURS

CIDCillnsll surgical resadents. We
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Page E2-Sunday nmes--S4m~inel

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

· December 25, 11194

A tale of boy's devotion to his beloved cat
(EDITOR'S NOTE- Tbll Is
My mental computer did not
a quiet drama with -a cast of come up with anything obvious
lllree, a lad o/16, a wterlnarlan from Ibis history, so I petted and
and the boy's eat. Tbe cat, the stroked Tigress and told her bow
doctor dilcovered, had cancer beautiful sbe was while I examined
and would surely die. What ro1- ber ey~ and mouth, listened to her
Iowi, In the words of the doctor heart and lungs, and palpated her
who studied animal medkine at abdomen.
lllree major unlversiUes, involves
My fingers found it. A tubular
love, doubt and quclt.lons of lire mass in ber midalidomen. Tigress
and cleat••)
politely tried to slip from my
searching fmgers. She did not like
By JUDITH S. JOHNESSEE
tbe mass being handled. She had
For Tbt Associated Press
also lost a pound, which is a lot
MAMARONECK, N.Y. - I am wben you only weigh 6 pounds.
.not sure bow be got 10 my clinic.
1 looked at the fresh-faced
He didn't really lode old enough to youngster and back at tbe cat be
drive, although his child's body bad probably bad all his life. 1 was
had begun to broaden and be going to have 10 tell h1m that his .
moved with the heavy grace of most beloved companion had a
young manhood.
mass, probably a cancer, in her
His face was direct and open, abdomen. Even if her mass were
and when I walked into the waiting
'call
sectabl b
b bl
Y
re
e,
s
e
pro
room my fl·rst vt'ew was of ht'm surgt
would survive less than a year, aandY
unselfcoosciously and lovingly pet· sbe might need weekly chemolber- .
ling his cat through tbe open door apy 10 get even that.
·
of tbe carrier on bis lap. Wilb a
It would all be very difficult and
.schoolchild's faith in authority, be expensive. So 1 was going 10 have
had brought his sick cat in for me to tell Ibis child that his cat was
to fu and sat waiting with patience likely going 10 die. And there he
and confidence.
all a1
Tbe cat was about the boy's ~Death ~
is something that is
own age, give or take a year, but pushed 10 the background and .
she was a tiny thing. I could see ignored as long as possible, but in
bow her spots and stripes and her reality every single living thing one
fterce, bright face had evoked the loves will die. It is an omnipresent
image of a tiger in a child's mind, part of life. How the ftrst death is
and Tigress she bad become. '
experienced can be life-forming.
She was an exquisitely formed . Death can be an unbearable thing
cat with a delicate skull and beauti- of horror and suffering, or a peace·
ful markings. Age had dimmed !be ful release.
bright green fire of ber eyes into
1 wondered why Ibis child was
faded lace but she was still elegant here alone. 1 would have to guide
and self-possessed and sbe greered him through this myself. 1was tired
me with a friendly rub against my from ~e _Jon¥ m~ming. 1 did not
I began to ask quesiions, trying
hand.

to determine wh11t had brought this
charming pair to see me, and the
boy answered lbein simply, directly
and honestly, unlike most adults
who dissemble, ra,mble or tell you
·everything but tbe answer to !be
question you actuaiiy asked.
In a matter of minutes I learned
tbat Tigress bad bad a normal
appetite until recendy, that several
days ago sbe had begun 10 vomit a
couple of times a day; and now was
.not eating at all and bad become
withdrawn from her human family.

'Gump' nets
nominations
. By JOHN HORN
.
AP Entertainment Writer
BEVERLY HILLS; Calif. Wben Oscar ballots are mailed in
tbe coming weeks, f 'Forrest
Gump" will be riding a Golden. _
Globe wave.
· Tbe Tom Hanks movie collecled
a leading seven ~lnations for !be
prize ceremony !bat precedes and often parallels - Academy
Award nominations.
.
Tbe Globes will be awarded Jan.
21; Oscar nominations are set for
Feb. 14.
Unlike Oscar's, Golden Globe
voiers make nominations in two
categories - dramatic films and
canic: or musical movies.
In addition 10 "Forrest Gump,"
!be Golden Globe nominees for
best dramatic movie were "heg~ of !be Fall," "Nell," "Quiz
Sbow" and "Pulp Fiction," wbicb
received six nominations.
• For best musical or comic

2!I'P.

dlcDaat''

I

my task. It caine to me ~uddenly
!bat !bough I bad asked him to
become a man instandy, and be bad
done so with grace and strength,
that in essence be was still a child.
I held out my arms and asked
him if be needed a bug. He did
indeed, and in truth, so did I.

The animal itself always looked
quiet and at rest. Tbe owner now
bore all the suffering. This was the
finest gift you could give to 501111l·
thing you loved, to assume their
pain that they ~ht rest
He nodded. He understood.
Something was missing though. I
did not feel like I bad completed

°

May your
· holidays~

filled with Joy...
· andmay
the coming year bring
you health &amp;happiness
CAROU
SNOWDEN
342Stc... Avt.
~s,Oitlt

nan

IAIM

A

INSUIANC\

PL 446-4290
Ho• 446·4511

State Farm Insurance Companies
Home Offices: Bloomington, Illinois

-

~rnber25,1994

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

College •sexual co~s~nt• policy has backers, detractors .

: ~LLO~ SPRING~ •. Ohio (AP) - Anti~h. Colle~e·~ se~ual-conseni from studen~ intere~ted in attending Antioch arc up. She thinks that's due, in
" I do it, and I still find myself nervous at times," ~ said "People feel
1
,pohcy conllQues 10 divtde tbe students, but n tsn't bUr110g tbe school 's part, to media anenuon about tbe policy.
' vulnerable. People say no, and you have to.get~ to tt."
:recruiting efforts.
"We've talked to students who have applied and said we 've heard about it . Abrams said some students oppose the'policy.
• Marian Jensen, Antiocb's dean ofstudents, said applications and inquiries and think it's neat," said Ms. Jensen.
~ One of them is Greg Powers, 27, of Dayton.
·
·
·
Under tbe policy adopted in January 1993, students must obtain affirmative "It's the most ridiculous thing I've ever seen in my life," ssid Powers.
~erllal qmsen~ from their partner at each level of intimacy- from lcissing to "Absolutely nobody on this campus uses it; not every step of the way. No
tntercoui'Se; Vtolaton can be ex_pelled from the southwestern Ohio liberal arts way.''
.
school, Wbtth has about 600 students- 70 percent of them women.
Powers said the policy does nothmg to protect a man accused of a sexual
So far, only two cases have gone before the school 's bearing board. In one offense.
_.
.
case, the offender was suspended from school and required to make a public " It's just a tool to get men in trouble," he ,said. "1bese femtntsls are gomg
a119logy. No violation was-found in the second case.
wacky out here. "
Karen Hall, director.of Antioch's Sexual-Offense Prevention and Survivors But Tex Clark, a 21-year-old female student from San Antonio, Teus,
Advocacy Program, satd there have been several dozen other alleged violations thinks that •s bunk.
handled at lower lev~ls of enforcement. Most ended in mediated agreements College students d?n't talk about sexual.issues enough, she said.
,
between the two parttes.
" I think that it's made students at Anttoch hyper-aware of each oilier s
llle poli~y was aimed at. date rape. llle school adopted a strict policy against sexual' boundaries and respecting those. I've seen it wor.k.' '
. .,
date rape ID 1990 tn w~tch students accused of sexual offenses could be
Ren Smith, 21, of Philadelphia, also favors the pohcy. But he satd tt s
removed from ca~pus wtthm 24 hours . It was revised with the addition of the thinking about the policy rather than the policy itself that makes tbe real
sexual~nsent ~!ctu~, whtch was destgned to clearly establish what, if any , difference.
.
romanltc acts were bemg agreed to.
•
"It is a reflection of the way the college and the students thmk about
The policy .states that verbal consent ''should be obtained with each new sexuality, •• said Smith. •'And it 's become a statement outside of the conimulevel of pbystcal and-.or se~~~l contact or conduct in any given interaction, nity _"
. .
.
.
regardless of who tntttates tt.
.
•
llle school is no stranger to soctal mnovatton. It was the hberal-arts college
Asking, ' Do you want to have sex with me?' is not enough.llle request for to offer a work-study program.ln 1971, it opened a law school in Washington,
consent must be spectfic for each act.
D.C., to train lawyers in social activism. In 1987, it banned Peace Corps
Newstudentsatthecolleg_ethatopenedin 1853withapledgeofworkingfor recruiters because the school said the agency did not at the time ban sexual
equal rights for women are required to attend workshops on the policy.
discrimination.
But Andy Abrams, a recent graduate who now wprks for Antioch 's housing
department, still gets questions about the policy from incoming students.
---"""':~~:::"':':"::':::':=:::~::-;:;:;=:m'""i\i:
The questions range from whether written consent forins must be secured to
Whetber " kissing police" prowl the campus in search of violations. In both
cases, the answer is no.
Extensive media coverage of the policy in the last two years has made it
generally well known, he said.
"There is not a student on this campus who can say they don't think about
it at one time or another."
Abrams, 25, supports the policy.
"If you 're going to be sexually intimate with someone, it's really important
to talk about it before you ever even take any steps toward that intimacy, " he
said.
·
"And it's real important to check in as you 're going along."
He acknowledged It can be difficult to follow the policy because of fear of

Like a good neighbor, State !=arm is there.®

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DIVIDED POUCV • Karen Hall, left, director of Antioch College's
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Jensen, Antioch's dean ohtudents, JMlse Monday, Dec. 19, on the Yellow
Springs campus in a room used for meetings of supJNJrt groups for
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modon Piaure. lbe nominees were

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Wood," "Four Weddings -and a
Funeral," "The Lion King" and
''Ready 10 Wear."
"Forrest Gump" also was nomInated for best dramatic actor
(Hanks), best supporting actress
(Robin Wright), best director
(Robert L.emeclcis), best screenplay
(Eric Roth), best supporting actor
(Gary Sinise) and best scoce.
"Pulp Fiction" collecred nominations for, best dramatic actor for
John Travolta and best director and
. screenplay for Quentin Tarantino.
Uma lllwman and Samuel Jackson
were nominated for their support·
ing roles.
Tbe nominat~ons for .best draQil!lic actress were Jodie Foster for
"Nell," Jessica Lange for "Blue
Sky," Jennifer Jason Leigh for
"Mrs. Parli:er and the Vicious Circle,'' Miranda Richardson for
"Tom &amp;: Viv" and Meryl Streep
for ''1be River Wild.''
Best dramatic actor selections,
in addition 10 Hanks and Travolta,
· were Morgan Freeman for ''The
Sbawshank Redemption,'' Paul
Newman for "Nobody' s Fool" and
Brad Pitt Cor "Legends of lbe
Fall."
Nominated for best musical or
canic accress were Geena DaVis in
"Speochless," Andie MacDowell
in "Four Weddings and a Fulieral," Sbirl~y MacLaine for "Guardin&amp; Tess," Jamie Lee Curtis for
"True Lies" and Eouna Thompson
for "Juniot."
1-~-~--lBellt-tnu:llcai or-comic acto!' ,
nominees
were
Arnold
SdiW~~Za~e~~er for "Juoinr.'' Jim
Caney for "Tbe Mask," Johnny
for "Ed Wood," Hu&amp;b Gnmt
fOr ~Our Weddings and a Funer81~' ·and Terrence Stamp for "The
Adventures of Priscilla: Queen of

want thiS blll'llen. It had to be done his father' s number in !be city. I
perfectly or this child, who was not went over everything again with
even mine, might end up emotion- the father while !be boy stood and
· ally scarred.
listened and petred his cat. lllen I
It would have been so easy just Jet father speak to son. ne child
to leave the room and call a parent paced and gestured and bis voice
and discuss this all with them and broke a few times, but when be bad
shirk this onerous task. But wben I bung up he tume4 to me again with
looked at his direct and open face, I dry eyes and said only that they
could not do it. I bad spent too long bad decided to pui ber to sleep.
palpating lbe horror tjlat was eating
· No rage, no denial, no hysteria,
away at Tigress's life and he knew just rational acceptance of the
something was wrong. I could not inevitable. I could see, though, bow
just ignore him and call his parents much it was costing him. I asked
and have them explain it all to hint him if be wanred to take her borne
It would have been cruel.
ovemigbt to say goodbye. I thougbt
So I talked to him as Tigress's she was stable enough to give him
rightful owner and told him as gen- , Ibis time to get used to the awful
tly as I could what I bad found and news I had given him so suddenly.
what it meant. As l. talked be jedced But be just said no, he just wanted
convulsively away from me, proba- 10 be alone with her for a few min·
hly so I could not see his face, but I utes.
bad seen it begin to twist even as
I left them alone and went to
be tumed · I sa t down and tum'ed t stgn
· out the barbiturate I would use
Tigress, to give him some privacy, 10 ease her into a painless sleep. 1
and stroked her beautiful old face could not control the tears that
with my fingers while I discussed were streaming down my face, or
his alternatives with him.
the grief I felt welling up inside of
They are the same old unchang- me for Ibis child who had had to
ing options for bad disease - put become an adult so quickly and so
her through lbe extensive presurgi· alone
. .
cal workup and then attempt to
I waited outside tbe exam room.
remove and biopsy the mass, let In a few minutes he came out and
ber continue to fade away at home simply said that be was ready. I
or give ber an injection and put ber asked him if be Wl)llted to stay with
to sleep.
.
her. He looked surprised, but I
He listened carefully ani! nod- explained that it was often easier to
ded gravely . He said be didn't see bow peaceful it was than to forthink she was very comfortable ever wonder how it actually hapanymore and he didn't want her to pened.
suffer. He was trying very hard.
Immediately seeing the logic of
The pair of them broke my heart. I !bat, he held ber head and reassured
offered to call a parent to explain her while I administered tile injecwhat was going on.
lion and she drifred off to sleep, her
Somewhat relieved, be gave me bead cradled in his band.

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SEE: Mike Northup, Dwight Stevers, Pete
SomerviUe, Tom Sprague, Morris Sheets, AI
Durst, Eric Blackburn, Bob Stanley.'

1·800·THE·SHACK'"

,r.

PROFIT.
94 IS ALMOST OVER •
TAKE ADVANtAGE OF THIS

,988

MeiiUr·F:-~1•·1.-

Cimr::.Y=~

,.,, hit 1-D822-D411• 312·2844 • U4·5!U1• 422.0756
..

-

�.,

.

1994 TEMPO GL

1994 MUSTANG CONV.

1994 MUSTANG ~T

1994 ESCORT WAGON

AM/FM Cass., Air Cond., Tilt,
. Power Locks.
Total before discount $11,910

GT, Loaded!

Mach 460, GT, loaded!
Keyless Entry.
Total before discount $20,520

Air, Rear Defrost.

Total before discount $25,025

~21 ,495°

$17~995°

0

'

Total before discount $12,935

0

ALL VEHICLES

ARE

ff

NOT FACTORY CARS!!!
NEVER TITLED!!!

• •

1994 RANGER ·SUPERCAB

PRE-0\lNJ~I)

XLT, 4.0l, Air, Loaded!
Total before discount $14,830

1

SI ECI:\tS

1994 ASPIRE 3 DR •

.

.

AC, Dual Air Bags, AM/FM Cass.
Total before discount $10,090

1992 SABLE, loaded, only 25,000 miles ..................... '10,995
1 93 COUGAR XR7, V8, Spoiler, ground effects ...... '13,995
Only 14,000 miles. ·
1992 SUN BIRD SPORT, air, super clean .................... '7,995
1992 RANGER SUPERCAB XLT, auto .......................'9,995
1993 DODGE CARAVAN, auto., air, clean ................ '13,995
1992 CHRYSLER LEBARON, auto., air ..................... '6,895
1993 RANGER SPLASH, V-6, air..............................'10,800

·1995 BRONCO XLT

1992AEROSTAR EXT, auto., air, power .................. '10,995

5.8l, Auto. , Trailer Pkg., Loaded!
Total before discount $29,330

s23' 995
.

1994 THUNDERBIRD LX
V-8, Loaded!
Total before discount $19,105 .

1994 AEROSTAR EXT, auto., air, loaded ................. '14,995

00

I

1994 TEMPO or TOPAZ, loaded ................................. '9,495

..

1994 TAURUS or SABLE, loaded .... :...................... .."13,995
1990 C20 MK Ill Conversion Van ............................. '9,995
I

1988 OLDS CIERA, auto., V6, loaded ......................... '2,995
1985 CHEV. C1500 SILVERADO, V8, auto, clean .....'4,995
1991 TOPAZ, 4Dr., auto., air .............................. :........ '5,995

1994 AEROSTAR XL PLUS
Air, Cruise, Tilt, Alum. Wheels!
Total before discount $20,217 ·

1989 MUST. GT, auto., air, low miles ............................'6,995

· 1995 CROWN VIC

1989 GRAND PRIX, auto., air ...................................... '3,995

Air, Cruise, Power Seats, AM/FM Cass.
Total before discount $22,280

1993 COUGAR XR7, only 8,000 miles ...................... '13,995

'

$18,495°

0

•

1995 TAURUS GL .
Auto., Air, Loaded!
Total before discount $20,190

All Vehicles Listed Above
*Dealer Retains Rebates. Tax &amp; Title Extra

1995 WINDSTAR WAGONS

i994 F-SERIES TRUCKS
ENTIRE INVENTORY
REDUCED FOR
QUICK SALE

'

Auto., Air, Power Windows, Locks.
Total before discount $22,340

SAVE THOUSANDS!!!

2. 9%APR

SAVE
.THOUSANDS

FOR

48

MTHS.

ON

ON

·'

..
'

I

•

1-

- ·f·SERIES

'

\,

..

'

._

�</text>
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