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\I
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Suntla'.

OSU smashes Pitt 63-28- C-1

Hats of
dramatic
design

Along the river ... _ ..... 81-8
Business/Farm •••.• - ••.D1-8
Classified .......................DZ·7

Reporter has more respect for
Roy Rogers-Kevin Pinson-Page -B-6

B-1

•
•

Inside

Outdoor activities are diversified
in the early 1900s • Sands • Page • B-4

Deaths .................- ............A-2
Editoral ...................- •••••..A-4

Portly cloucly.lflah Ill 70s.

,._ Sports ..........- ..........- ••..•Cl-6
Wtatber ...........................A·l

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

•
nn:es-

1993 TOYOTA TERCELS

.Vol. 21, No. :Ill

Copyrtghted 11188

'

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Galllpoll~olnt

15 S.CIIon 124 Pagee
A llultlmodllo Inc. n_,.per

Pleasant, September 19, 1993

• Driver's Side Air Bag
• V6

• Tilt, Cruise

Butler chooses not
to fill vacancy as
consumer·counsel

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Loaded I

By AP, s._n Reporll
COLUMBUS - A utility regu·
lator who was recommended as the
state's consumer advocate for utili~
ty cases sllid she will not llike the
job for fear she might be accused
of conflict of intmst.
Jolynn Butler, a member· of the
Public Utilities Commission of
. Ohio since 1989, said in a letter
released Friday that she would not
accept the job as consumers' counsel.
William Spratley, who has hel4
the job since the position was mat·
ed m 1977. resigned, effective
Sept. 30.
The board of the Office of the
Consumers' Counsel last month
recommended Ms. Butler for the
job, which pays $89,000 !I year.
However, the board asked the Ohio
Ethics Commission whetlier a utility regulator would have a conflict
by becoming a defender of con·
.sumer rights in rate cases. The
PUCO sets utility I8leS in Ohio.
The commission bas said·state
ethics laws prohibit a PUCO mem·
ber from going before a public
agency on any matter in which he
or she "personally participated"
for on'e year after the member
leaves the commission.
"As the. ethics commission has
not seen fit to reconsider imporWit
parts of their opinion-... which
could have cleared the ethical ques·
lions, I believe a cloud is left over
my appointment," Ms. Butler
wrote to Harold Erdos. chainnan of
the OCC governing board.
Erdos · also had asked Ohio
Attorney General Lee Fisher' s
offict to decide whether the board
could hire a replacement counsel in
utility cases in which Ms. Butler
would have been required lo step

93
,_,~~~G~RA~ND PRIX LE

SHARING THE SPOTLIGHT -Former Gov. James A.
Rhodes and HOUR Speaker Vernal G. Riffe were named Fellows of
the University or Rio Gnnde In a Friday ceremony. Above at left,
Rlodes Is conll"(lltulated after hli Induction by Roger D. ':Villiams,

president oftbe U"lverslty Board of Trusteesiwblle Riffe, In photo
at right, a~cepted a citation from Dr. Janet M. Byers, Rio
Grande's acting vice president tor AcadeJIIIC Atralrs. (T·S photos
by Kevin Pinson) .
·

Honoring the legends
J?.ho~es, Riffe hailed while receiving Rio Grande's top honor

'93 FORD RANGER

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Chrome Bumpers • Loaded!

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.
'
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88 Ford Conversilln ..... $8995 ·
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91 Buick Regal . .. .. . ... $9999
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90 Mercury Cougar ..... . $9995
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90 Chevy Lumlu . .. .... $4995
85 Mercury MIJ11UiS . . . .. $4995
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88 Chevy Biretta GT : .. .$4995

· ~ . 9V'.t. with approved emit . .A.tl prlc ee lnc:lude rebates and Incentives Offa e
1
or ommtaalona.
·.
r kp r~a

s ept. 25th . Unite aublect to

0

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00

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• Ford, Lincoln, Mercury

• Toyota
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593-6641

. East Stair Simi
Athrns .. · ·.
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1

County since 1959, bas served
in the Hous41lon~r than anyone
in the state's legllllative history.
He is serving his lOth term as
speaker, another record in that
be bas held that position longer
than any of his predecessors. .
The two were formally
installed as Fellows following a
luncbeon with Rio. Grande offi·
cials, faculty and students. and
community political and business leaders.
The instaiiation was conduct·
ed by Dr. Dorsey, with each of
the candidates presented a
medallion by Roger D.
Williams, president of the Uni·
versity Board of Trustees. In
addition, a citation was present·
ed to each by Dr. Janet M.

Byers, acting vice president for
Academic Affairs.
Prior· to the presentation, Dr.
Dorsey lauded the two as legends in southern Ohio, noting
that Rhodes is "a man of milny
talents and hundreds of ideas."
Riffe is said to be "the most
powerful man in the state," Dr.
Dorsey aclded· "If Ibis is true, he
used his considemble influence
to improve the lives of all who
reside in this area."
In accepting the Fellow des·
ignation, Rhodes re-emphasized
one of his key beliefs as one of
the key political figures in modem Obio bistc:ry - educalion .is
vital to earning one's way in the
world.
(Continued on A·S)

Cruise, races mark .
~te~f!Jf/J,~~l festiv.al

New program offers linkage
between RG, Eastern Europe
RIO GRANDE- A new scbol·
: , arship marks the first step in :What
. is envisioned 10 be an educational
and cultural link between the Uni·
· versity and Rio Grande ind Eastern .

.

.

The Louis Kossuth Memorial
Ex.cbange Program Scholarship .
will allow a Rio Grande Sllldent to
attend tbe Debroceni Nyari
Egyetem (Debm:CII Summer Uni·
vcnity) at lhe Kossuth Lajos Tudomanyegyetem in Hungary.
explaiJWd Samuel J. Wilson, Ph.D.,
•aistant profcsa of history at Rio
Grande and the program'• director.
"The conlrll ~or lhia program is mutu&amp;l understanding
Pilled tluoulh inrmc.don ~
American and fore1gn paruc•_,,. " Wilsoa said. "It is our goal
broadCII the intanalionai
scope and miulon of the Univorsi·
ty of Rio Grande with this pro·
gram.•
~
~
Tho exchange bas been estab·
lished in eooperation wldl .the Stu·

:;;r;;;..

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dents in Free Enterprisll (SIFE) Berry Centel" for Economic Educa·
·
chapter at Rio Grande, a student lion.
Starling next winter, a SIFE
organization under lhe direction of
Jerry Gust. director of the Loren M member will be chosen to study
langual!e at Debrccen during the
followmg summer. Besides Ian·
guage classes. lectures and seminars, the student will be exposed to
the nation •s culture through visits
. to libraries and museums. Wilson
said the program also allows the
student 10 participate in excursions,
concerts, literary evenings, film
shows, receptians, and displays of
folk songs and dance.
The Debreceni Nyari Egyetem
was established in 1927 and has
since been widely recognized for
the, inslrilction of Hungarian as a
foreign language and forihe dis,
semination of the cOuntry's arts, lit·
erature and culture. ·
Tho scholarship, which is pri·
vatelf. fUnded. coven lhe cost of air
trave , 100m and board, excunlons
and related propams, Wilson said.
DR. SAMUEL J. WILSON
(l:ontlnued on A·5)

( .

aside.
"I believe a ruling from the
attorney general ... will not teSOive
the revolving-door question and
m.ay serve to create additional
questions regarding the expenditure
of public funds. •' Ms. Buder wrote.
"The Office of Consumers'
Counsel is too important to allow
any lingerina doubts to affect its
public credibility: her lellet said,
Ms. Butler be$an a legal practice in Gallipohs in 1978 wilb
attorney Douglas M. Cowles, cur·
rently Gallipolis' city solicitor and
chairman of the Gallia County
Democratic organization. She was
elected state representative of the
then-94th House Disuict of Gallia,
Meigs and· Athens counties in
1982. She won more consecutive
terms in the House before resigning
in 1989 to become a PUCO memI

ber.

.

'Erdos could nol be reached lo
comment. He did not return a
phone message left at the OCC
office, and there is no residential
phoqe listing for Erdos in Columbus.

Projected
industrial_
park to be
study topic
'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
levee and take part in the race
Times-Sentinel Staff
which is scheduled for 2 p.m. that .
POMEROY- Stemwheel boat Saturday.
·
races and cruises on the P.A.
Five two-hour cruises on the P.
Denny win highlight the Founb A.· Denny have been planned and
Annual Big BCIId Stemwbeel Festi· tickets ·are now on sale at Clark's
val to be held OcL 7-9 in Pomeroy. Jewelry, Banks Construction and
Jane Banks. active With the fes- the Meigs County Chamber Offi~e
tival committee, says that a 5-K in Pomeroy; Valley Lumber m
run. an herb fest. craft, flowers and Middleport, and Bob•s Market in
Tlckell, whleh are $10 for adults and $8 for ebB·
quilt shows, and a variety of enter- Mason. Cheryl Thomas· is cruise
FESnVAL FUN- Five two-hour cruises on
dren, went on sale this week.
tainment wHI also be presented chairman and can be contacted for
the P.A. Denny will be orfered at the fourth
during the three-day event which group reservations or other accomannual Sternwbeel Festival in Pomeroy Oct. 7-9.
will conclude Saturday night With a modations.
rrOm 2-4 p.m. and the second from
fireworks display.
·The rust cruise will take place per pef9011 and the tickets are avail· with the boat to move out at noon.
Between [5 and 20 stemwbeel- on Thursday and has been dcsig~ able through the Senior Citizens
Afternoon and evening cruises 7·9 p.m. Boardin~ is a half hour
(Continued on A·5l
ers are expected to moor near the nated for senior citizens. Cost is $8 Centel". Boarlling time is 11:30 a.m. Will take place on Friday, the first

Europe.
prior sale. Not reaponalble tor mlatalcea

• Buick, Olds. P011tiac, Cadillac, GMC Truck
I

IUO GRANDE - The two
Riffe win receive all privileges
·· men whose political and social
of tbe institution, explained Dr.
,clr~B have been devoted 10
Barry M. Dorsey, lUo Grande's .
improving southeastem.Obio,
president. In additiO!l. they will
, and In assisting the University serve as advisors to Rio Grande
of Rio G!Ude and Rio Grande
in its future decisions.
Community College, were the
"And when these two men
recipients of Rio .Grande's top
give advice, you'd bellet believe
hO!lor in a ceremony Friday in._ _ I'll take it," Dr. Dorsey said.
the Fine and Performing Arts
Rhodes, who was born· in
· Cent«.
'
Jackson County, is tbeDnly man
Former Gov . James A.
in Ohio's history to have stZVed
Rhodes and Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
a quartet of four-year terms as ·
governor in 1963-71 and 1975·
speaker of the Ohio House of
Representatives, each took the
83. He s'erves as state auditor
opportunity to express their
from 1953 until 1962 and was
beliefs oil education and its
mar.or of Columbus from 1943
imponance to the area after
untill952.
~e•!'&amp; _named Fellows of the
Riffe, who _has represented
mstJtution.
the 92nd District of Scioto
As Fellows, Rhodes and
County and part of Lawrence

JOLYNN BUTLEa

!'rn";

•

EMANCIPATION QUEEN- J::;:;yae, leh, crowaed
QDea
eeremoUel Saturday
at 1M Emlllclpatlpa Celellndollat tile
CIIUIItJ Jnnlor Plir·
~Ddl. AIIO pattldpatbla m the ceremoa;y wu Emuclpatlon
enl James Keels. ff·S photo lly James Loq),

Tuuil;y Ma.. EllaadNdola

.v
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By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff .
POMEROY - Meigs County
will use $15,000, earlier committed
by the Ohio DeparUnent of Devcl·
opmenl, to determine the feasibility
of placing a proposed industrial
park near Great Bend.
The. decision to use lhe money
was made at a meeting between
local, state and business representa·
lives a\ the Meigs County Ouunbet
of Commerce Friday.
John Dowler, deputy director of
District 10 of the Ohio Department
of Transportation, updated the
group on the proposed route for the
U.S. 33n7 connector road, which
is planned to connect U.S. Routes
33 and 77 and to be located near
the proposed industrial park.
Using a map of the Great Bend
area prepared by URS Consultants
of Columbus, Dowler pointed out
wetlands and areas which need to
be examined for archaeological
sites.
It will be four to five monlhs
before the toad site is submitted for
final review, Dowler said.
Pans of the proposed road and
the industrial park lie on propeny
owned by American Electric
Power. which has not indicated in
writing that the propeny will be
available. ·
"It astOunds me that we are con·
sidering re-routing a major highway on something that has not been
commill.ed," said Pomeroy attorney
Steve Story. ·
"This is the logical place for a
road; we have to study it," said
Dowler.
While discussing bow much it
would cost 10 SUPPlY the site with
.
(Continued OD A·S)
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OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

•

Issue gives voters voice
POMEROY - Willha M. Brysoo, 91, Pomeroy, died SBIUrday, Sept
18, 199311 Vetallls Memorial Hospital.
Born Mlrch 3, 1902 in Pomeroy, daupter of die late F.rank and Kade
Smith Orlrler, she wu a hanemaker and a member of die Calvay Bible
Cbllltb of l'cmeroj.
.
In aMitim to her. parents, She. was~ in death by her husband,
Charles H. Bryson, m 1973: a SISter, Edith Cuckler; a brother, Clifford
Cuckl«; ~grandson, Mart.Bryson; and a daughter-in-law, Allene Bryson.
Sum~g are a son, Cliffooi H. Bryson ol Pittsburgh, Pa.; a daughter
~ SOO·ID·Iaw, Betty and Vcmal Blackwood of MinenYille; dwe gl'811d·
children, Jani~e Bryson of Philadelphi~, Pa., Ann Quigg of Malden,
Mass., and Clifford Charles Brysoo of Pittsburgh; and four great·gl'811d·
chilcben.
Services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday in lhe Fuber Funeral Home, Middle·
pen, witb lhe Rev. Alan Blackwood officialing. Burial win be in the
WeDs Cemelay. Friends 1111)' call at lhe funeral home Matday from 7-9
pm. and from 9 a.m. Tuesday unlil die hour of die service.

Ralph E. Gillilan

l

Sunday, Sept.19

in~~?!~!cti~!J!t?L~~!~ts

Wiltha M. Bryson

· POMEROY • Ralph B. Gillilan, 72, of Canton, died Wednesday
September 15, 1993 after an extended illness.
'
Born .in Racine he was a veteran of World Warn having served in tbe
U.S. ~Y ~Force, He was a retired employee of lbe Timpken Company, retmng m 1983 after 37 years of service.
SlllYivors are his wife Katherine Kinch Gillilan· three children Linda
Johnson, Lilburn, Oa. and Dennis and Gina Gillilmi Kirsch bolb ~f Canton; sister, Freda Holsinger, Chester; brolbers, Ftancis anci Joe, bolb of
Canton; Roy, Chester and Jack, Reedsville; six lll!llldchildren and tbree
step pdchildren.
. ~e is preceded in death by his parents, EberS. and Deborah A. Beaver
Gillilan; brotbcrs, George and Wilbur and sons Ralph and George.
Funeral services were conducted Friday at tbe Reed Fatnily Funeral
Home in Canton with burial at the Norlb Lawn Cemetery.

Chester Sbppkins
POim' PLEAS~ - Chester Simpkins, 67, Gallipolis Ferry, died
Friday, SepL 17, 1993 in Cabell·Huntington Hospiral, Huntington, W.Va. ·
Arrangements will be announced by the Wilcoxen Funeral Home.

Alloclatcd Press Writer
CQLUMBUS -Voters will
have a rare opportunity this fall to
tell political leaders how to spend
taxpayer money for state construe·
tion projects. •
A proposed constitutional
amendment on the Nov. 2
statewide ballot would let lhe state
borrow $200 million for Sll!te and
local paries and natural resources.
Money would be used to repair
aaing buildin.&amp;s in state paries, reba·
bilitate detcnorating dams, control
pollution and help local govern·
ments pay for local park improve·
ments.

News
anal"Sis
.
'J

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In some cases, park VISitors
migllt first notice the upgrade
through tb~ installation of modem
restrooms m areas where old·fash·
ioned vault latrines slil! are in use:
The state could ra1se $50 mtllion a year by selling bonds. No
more than $200 •l_lillion of debt
c_ould be outstandmg at any one
tune.
.
.
Bon.d~ would be paid of~ ~ith
$20 m1lhon a year from ex1sting
~evenue generated by the sales,
mcome and other~ tax~.
'l_'hc procedure ~not unlike bor·
ro~g ~oney to buy. a house and
setting 8Side part of each paycheck
to pay off the loan . In the end,
homeowners pay more than the
house alone cost because they also
pay tbc cost of borroWing the cash.
State debt payments grew in
recent years as .legis!&amp;lbrs ~wed
money for umversny, pnson and
construction projects. But

Accu· Wealher• forecast for

MICH.
to
no more than S percent of the
state's $13 billion general revenue
fund into which tax reveoue flows.
Advocates of the ballot issue·
contend ll8fks borrowing would be
affordabfe within existing revenue,
emphasizing that no new taxes
would be required.
IND.
The Office of Budget and Man·
agement said that when debt payments for paiks bonds reached a
maximum of $20 million annually,
71"
• lcolumbusl72"
the amount would represent 0.8
percent of the $706 million to~
spent by tbc state for paying off all
its bonds.
·
Opponents object to long-term
borrowing that keeps debt paymcnts near that S percent cap. They
contend palk improvements should
be financed by boOsting fees paid
by concessionaires and patrons, or
by using money now spent on otbcr
construction projects•.
Taxpayers can be certain that
the $20 million proposed annually
to pay off part bonds will be spent
on sotnctbing else if lhe proposal is
rejected NoV. 2. .
·
we
. The amendment gives votczs the
opportUnity to impose their spend·
ing priorities on legislators, a rarity
when dealin11 with state building
programs.
Usually, tbe $1 billions~ capBy Tbe Alloclated Press
Platte, Neb.
1
iral improvement budget is crafted · Rain, clouds and fog covered · The Northeastern rain gave way
in virtual secrecy every two years much of the Bast and parts of lhe later Saturday to drizzly fog. ·
by tbe governor and top legislative Midwest Saturday while the West
Cbilly au pusbed across the
leaders. Then the bilf is enacted was mostly fair.
Great Lakes states with scattered
quickly with little or no public
Rain and drizzle fell all along showers giving way to winds. A
inpur about the merits of individual the East Coast; thundemorms bat· cold Jain fell across IWlS of Soutli·
projects.
. .
tered Hatteras,' N.C. In the Mid- Dakota, Wyoming and Nebraska.
Gov. George Voinovich is cam- west, showers drenched Kansas Strong thUlldeistorms were report··
for tbe
while thunderstorms hit Norih ed in
. and Texaa. '

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Rain, fog cover much of
·East, Midwest Saturday .

Getting off public
assistance not easy
STEUBENVl~LJ:',

9hio (AP)
- Not everyo!IC s life IS a .SlO!Y·
b9o!l·@lld,happily ever~ lSD t a
pllli:otbii s happy all tbc tune.
In today's society, families
headed by one parent or parents
who have lost their jobs may need
th~ he!P of a fairy godmother. In ·
this filii)' rale, she. bears the n_ames
of General ~snstance! ~1d to
Dependent Cliildren, Medicmd and
f~ stamps.

I never ~ough~ I woul~ have
go on pubbc ass1stance, says
Lmda Alexander of ~oronto, ~e
mo.tber .of fo~r children,-, I
believed m happily ever after.
One look at the cool and self·
assured coordinator of teen-age
P!'"'nt s~pport sys!Cms ~,co~II·
rut};' Acoon Council and 11 shard to
~hev~ Ms. Alexander was on pu'!he ISSI~ce from Ma~ 1984 un!ll
she recetved a bachelors de~ IQ
~enral health and human semces
ID ~y 1992.
When I ~~ to apply for ben·
~fits, the !ft ~g l was told was,
Y~ don tlook like you n~ wei·
fare. ~ut that was a I~ urnc ago
and atntudes do change.' .
t~

After being iln welfare for the

better part of tbe 80s, Barbara and
Rodney Brown of Bergholz decld·

ed to return to school in 1989
Unlike MS. Alexander, who was
divorced after being a stay·at-bome
mother .for 12 years when she went
on welfare, the Browns were newly
married when Rodney lost the job
tbat was promised to him. Having a
baby on the way didn't make things
any easier.
"Our family helped when they
could," said Mrs. Brown. "As a
matter of fact, we were living witb
his parents and weren't on welfare
until after the baby was born. But
Michael was a Pft!emie and we had
8 lot of medical bills.''
After their second son, Jcrcmi·
ah, was bom in 1984, her husband
lost another job. She talked her
husband into returning to school ·
. with her and they both studied
nursing. She graduated from Ohio
Valley Hospiral Schoo~ of Nursing
in Decem her 1992 and began
working at the hospiral in January.
Her busband works for a nursing
home in Parma Heights.

CABLE TV IS CHANGING •••
Cable Fees Going Up? Can't Get Local Channels?

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

New TV legislation is changing the face ol cable. The bottom
line? You could pay more to keep getting the stations you have
now, or lose some of the local channels you've been getting
for free.

Dllilllltlll:
Simple as A and B. A-installa Radio Shack TV antenna.
B-add a Radio Shack AlB switch, starting at $4.99, and enjoy
the best ol both-cable TV and local broadcasts. Stop by and
we'Ushow you a system lo fit your needs .. . aHordably.

Weather
South-Central Obio
Sunday, increasing cloudiness.
Highs 70 to 75. Chance of rain 20
percenL
Extended forecast: '
. Fair Monday through Wednes·
day. HiBhs throughout the period
will be Iii the 70s and lows will be
in the 50s.

Hospital news
Veterans Meomorbl
Friday admissions: Mary Kauff,
Pomeroy and William E. Kennedy,

Pomeroy.

Friday discharges: Roy Fox,
Pomeroy.

(USPS 515-IH)

Publllhed

e~&lt;:h ~ullday, 825 Third Ave .•
Oollipolil. Ol!lo, by lhe Ohio Volley PllblilhiDI
Co-y/Multimedia. loc. Secoacl cilia poll·
.,. pold at Oolllpolw, Oilio 4.5631 . I!Dtered ..
1«0Dd CIMI Oldlina maAer .t Pomeloy, Ohio,

Poot Olf~«.
Member: 1be A.uociated Pre., aDd the Ohio
Newtpaprr AUocilllioD, NadoDil Mvtrt&amp;aiua
lteprete.Dtll.lve, Brutwn Newap.- Salea,
133 Third Avenue, New Yort. New Yort
10017.
SVIIDAY ONLY

SUBSCIIIPI1Cfi RATU
IJ c.rier at Mellor IOIIlt

Ole w.k-.................................................. .!10¢
011e Yw.................................._
-.$16.10
Sll'iGLE COPY
PRICI:
Sulldoy..................... _.............

1.00

Nci aubleriptiou by IDiil pmnitled Ia '.,..,
'fll'bww motor C*rier ~«Vice II aWIUiblt.
The Suadoy11.....Sedlnel will ...... .....,.,..
1ible far ld'IIDCI paymeull nllde to Cllrien.

MAILSUBSCIIPI1011S

..... o.IJ

011e Y. .................... - ......... :................$47.14
SlxMoao.... ..........................................$24.1!1
Dolly ... . . . . .

MAILSIJBSCIIPI10118
IMido~

u w..a..............................................Jl1.14
26Woeb................................................. ..$43.16
n -.................................................$14.76

·-o.wldo eo-,
13 Weoil. ................................................ JllAO
·26 - ................................................. ..$45.50

Sl -

.................................................$11.40

·'

aimed at creating a cap1tat comdor
between Columbus and Charleston,
W. Va., is scheduled for Wednes·
day at2p.m.
The interchange is the fust project in what Gov. George
Voinovich and officials of tbe Ohio
Department of Transportation hope
will be a continued upgrading of
US-33.
"I hope citizens from Hocking
County and other counties along
the US-33 corridor attend the
ground breaking," says John
Dowler, deputy director of District
IOofODOT.
The $4.2 million conuact for the
interchange was sold in July to B.S.
WaB'!er ~·· Inc. of Oregon, Ohio.
Completion date for the interchange is Aug. 31, 1994.
The US-33/SR-180 interchange
has a long accident history. However, when traffic lights were
installed at the intersection, it
appeared tbat an interchange might
never be constructed. The
Voinovich Administration's com·
mitmcnt to improving highways in
Southeastern Ohio was key to tbe
revival of lhe interchange project,
Dowler said.
The vr_oject has also been a priority w1th the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council's Highway
Users' CornmitleC, headed by Kenncr Bush of Athens. Projects to
upgrade US-33 through Fairfield,
Hocking, Athens and Meigs Coun·
tics meet witb approval of govern·
ment, business and community
leaders up and down the US-33
corrida, no matter in which county
the improvement is located,
according to Dowler's office.
Support for improvements to
US-33 also cross state boundaries
to I-77 in Jackson and Kanawha
Counties in West Virginia, it was
reported.
In addition to lhe SR-180 lntet·

change, District tO's other priority
projects for US-33 include the
Haydenville B~~ and SR-595
lnterchanle in Hoc:ting County, a
four-lane 1rom Alhcns to Imwin in
Athens and Melp Coantiea; and a
four-lane connector road from
Pomeroy in Mei&amp;s County to the
Ohio River Bridge and J. 77 at
Ravenswood, W.Va.
,j

Pomeroy's revitalization
plan will be updated

: ~0 ~RANDB - A Gallipolis
wtth a b~kground in th~
education of young children baa
be~n naJI!ed the director of the
~d Care Centet 11 the Uni-.ity
Gf Rio Gr.ande and Rio Grande
~auve

Community College. .
1 Elizabeth B. Walker, who holds
bachelor's and master's degrees
from tbe University of Cincinnati,
SUcCI'ed• Sharon Price in the position. Mrs. Price accepted a teaching
job in the Cabell County (W.Va.)
~hoot system.
• In her new position, Walker will
Qvers.eee the operation of Rio
Orande' s Child DeveloDment facil.
lty, which opened in 1!192 and profides services to children of Rio
~rande faculty, staff and students
is well as members of the sur·
rounding communities.
"Witb tbe resources we have here,
I anticipate attracting more children
to the center,K she said. "It's an
outstanding facility. We even have
computers for the children to use in
the preschool classroom.
The center is open Monday
ft •

through Friday from 7:30am. unlil cation • the Univenity..or Cinc:in·
S pm. and tiCCOIIIliiOdal up t.Q 47 · nati, and through 1 poat-blic&lt;:alanchildrcn. The facility is currendy reate program she was certified in
stiffed by five tcachen and five elementary edtiCition, s~ received
student teachers enrolled in the her master's degree in
child·
CODIDluni=ege•s Early Child· ·hood edu.cation earlier thts year. ,
IioodDev
· tprogram. .
receiving certificates in kinder"Our IIUiin direction, when we ~ and pre-kindergarten educa·
get maximum capacity, is to estab- uon.
lish prograina tbat meet tbc social.
Walker was a graduate assistant
physical and intellectual develop· in UC's ~ollege . of E.ducation's
mental needs of the children," Early Childhood Department and
Walker said. "We encotirage the s_upcrvised early childhood educa·
public to tour the center and sec bon undergraduate college JIIUdcnta.
what we have to offer."
in ccnten throughout the greater
Walker said die center is avail· Cincinnati area. While completing
able to parents seeking care for her graduate work, Walter con·
their children on a full or part-time ducted her field experience in
basis.
Cincinnati elementary achools and
"We really want to reach out to in the Arlitt Child and Family
pBI'C!Its and let tllf!lll know tbe ser· Research and Dcveloplllent Catter,
vice is available, even if they which is recognized as one of the
choose·to use it one morning a top centers in the country.
~eek." she said.
She was also a resoarcher for
A graduate of Gallia Academy the university in conjunction with
High School, Walker is lhe daugh· the Cincinntlti public achoolays·
ter or James and Beverly Walker of tem, analyzing assessment tools
OQ.Uipolis. She completed her used to identify children for qualify
undergraduate work in special edu· for ESEA-Chspter One programs.

earlt

Ma·n injured in DUI accident
CADMUS - A Patriot man
was cited for driving under the
influence Friday afternoon follow·
lng an accident which left him
istjured, the Oallia-Meigs Post of
tbe State Highway Patrol reported.
•· Rodney J. Collins, 2.6, 164 Har·
'(ey Rqad, was transported by
Southeastern Ohio Emergency
&gt;Ikcdical Service to Holm' Medical
:tenter where he was treated for
3itcerations and released
-~ According to the accident
~tt. Collins wu westbound on
lttatc Route 141 in Walnut Town~ip when he lost control·on a rigbt
b!rve. The vehicle ran off tbe left
~de of lhe road, cros!led the ~­
/tay, stnK:k a ditch on the right side
t!lnd overturned. The vehicle !ben
~ tbe ditch and eatne to rest on a
fnall embankment. ·
'..t Collins was also cited for driv·
~g under suspension and failure to
,;ontrol. The vehicle sustained
damage and was towed from
ilhe scene.
:·
Man cited
$ A Bidwell man was cited for
4ilurc to control Friday afternoon
~· his vehicle struck a guatd rail,
flte patrol reported.
.
·~ Anthony S. Huffman, 18, Route
was eastbound on S.R. 5S4 what
:lite lost control on the wet pave..
tt\cnt, .ran off the right side or tbe
1'oad and struck a guard rail. The
patrol listed unsafe speed as the
(!llltrlbuting factor.
~· No injuries were reported. The
;{chicle sustained moderate, dis~g damage and was towed from

vehicles ·suatained moderate dam·
age and . were driven from the

scene.

Deer-vehicle 'l'lftl!k

In another vehicle-animal crash

report filed with tho sheriff's
department, a Gallipolis woman
ran into a ~ on Caltonary Road
near the intersection of Graham
School Road Friday nighL
Katba L. Wachs, 17, 3452
Bulaville Pike, hit the deer, causing
moderate damage to her vehicle.
Wachs drove from the scene; no
injuries or citalions waciepoited.
Veblcles collide
A Gallipolis ~oman's vehicle
sustained light damage in a crash

..

on Eastern Avenue early Saturday
morning, Gallipolis pollee report·
ed.
Ikis C. Cox, 70, 1089 Sunset
Drive was northbound when
Stephen J. Rocchi, 33, 567 Rodney
Pike, Bidwell, Dulled into her path.
Cox tben struck Rocchi in the rear
when tbe vehicles were in front of
1715 Eastern Ave.
Rocchi's vehicle was not dam·
aged and both vehicles were driven
from die scene. No injuries or citations were reported.
Editor's note: Names, ages
and addresses are prli!ted as they
appear on omcial reports.

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Bridget L. Davis, 16, 31685
Noble Summit Road, was south·
Jlound on County Road 34 in Sut·
ton Township when she lost conJ;rol, ran off die left side of the road
t-nd struck the fence. The ~trol
cited unsafe speed as the contnbutIJig factor.
: No injuries w~e reported an~
no citations were ISSued. The vehi·
l:le was driven from the scene.
•
Vehlelelstrlke animals
: In two separate incidents early
Saturday morning, vehicles collid·
I'd with farm animals on State
Route 7 in Clay Township, Oallia
County sheriff's deputies reported.
t Donald C. Rau:fiff Jr., 19, 2553
a&gt;wan Creek, Crown City, struek a
~nkcy and B!Uy M. Johnson, 49,
J6960 S.R. 7 S., Crown City,
a mule.
f The lheriff's department did not
know whom tbe anim8ll belonged
6:1. but tbe accident report indlcaled
t!lat both c:OlHiiona occumd less
~ a mUe 1011tb ~mile po81l7':'
No injuries were reported. Both

Moel ~

W.._ -,_c.-.

I

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UIUUII\.H ,.oi.Uilo

allllltest of all .. w•~···•~ •·••tltl
Ill Vlllll' JtJ:IIJiiiiiii'II!JIIII

••
'·

.

Good thru Sat. Sept. 25

I

25% off
STOREWIDE SALE
(Except Shaq's by Reebok)
Monday &amp; Friday
til8pm •

[art's

Tues. Wed. Thur
tll6pm

Saturday til 5
Sunday 1to 5

SIHH' Sto re

Midas is bringing
a franchise opportunity
to Gallipolis
•

Midas has targeted a handful of
attractive markets for Midas
Muffter and Brake Shops, and your
town is one of them. We're coming
your way, and we'd like person
like you to be our new franchisee.
With MidaS, you join the
leader in the autOmotive
aftermarket. You get the name
people know, the products people
want, the warranty people !rust. .
Automotive experience is helpful
but it's not required.

of the Health De[llll'tlllent's free immwrlzatioD program are .Jef·
fery Pope (left), DoiiDa Pclpe, Debbie Stamp, Kristin Stamp, Cara

Cuey, Xyle· Cuey, KlaCuey, Alldrlanna Beers, Jonnle Beers,
Heleu Beei'lud RIWIIIary Been.

1-800-365-0007

.2.

BEFORE ITS TOO LATE VACCINATE- TaklnJ advantage

a

conversion, call Richard J&gt;ope at

Health Department offers free
immunizations for children
GALLIPOLIS • "Before its tOO
late, vaccinate" is the slogan for tbe
national campaign to increase tbe
public's awareness on the need to
vaccinate children in a timely manner.
By tbe time they are 2 )UfS old,
children should have completed
their primary series of immuniza·
tions, which include four DPT,
three polio, 4 HB, 1 MMR and 1
TB skin tesL
The Gallia County Health
Department's goal is to sec tbat all
area children are properly immunized. Free immun1zauons are
given each Tuesday and Friday
from 8 to 11:30 a.m. and 1 to 3:30
p.m. in the Health DcpartmcnL
In addition, a nurse will be
available to give immunizations at

the following sires:
• University of Rio Grande child
care center, 9 to 11:30 a.m., Mon·
day.
• Rio Grande Estates, 725 Pine
SL, Rio Grande, l to 3 p.m., Mon·
day.
• Courthouse lobby, 4 to 6 p.m.,
Tuesday.
· • Vinton Town Hall, Main
Street, Vinton, 9 to 11 :30 a.m.,
Sept 27.
• Gallia Met EStates, 325 Buck
Ridge Ro8d, Bidwell, 1 to 3 p.m.,
Sept 27.
..
Children must be accompanied
by a psrent or legal guardian and
must present shot records. For fur·
tber information, please call 4464!&gt;12, extension 292.

8

THE SHOE CAFE
Lafayette Mall
446 4222

AWhilman Company

"The School that

means Bustneea•
Open M·F 8:30 • 8:30
Sat. 10·1

Conmmlcatlona I

Partact

Rtcords Management

Medical Terminology

lnti'oduction to Computera

I Accounting

Political Science
OFPEilENDS
DEC. 6. tm.

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

Small Business Management
Sociology

Coat Accounting

OTHER CLASSES AVAILABLE
UPON REQUEST!

o1Q.t

~ECONO ttNr. '

GALLII)(jU S, 0 1110 4663 1

MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIEI V

'·

'·

FALL SPECIAL

ed.

The agreement was reached
after three hours of talks Friday,
WTOL-TV said.
United Food &amp; Commercial
Workers Local 9S4 had said members might strike Sunday if nego·
tiators could not agree on a pact
A three-year contract expired
June 2.6, but about 2,000 employees of the Cincinnati·baicd Kroger
continued working under the old
terms. The workers are employed
in 19 stores in northwest Ohio.
Kroger spokesman Dale
Holli~:~gsworth saijl early today he
had not been notified of an agree·
menL Union offrials cwld not be
reached to comment.
A woman answering the phone
at the home of union President
Gene Kolkman said he was asleep
and could not be disturbed. No one
answered the phone at the union
off-cc.
·

serve cornbread and soup beans in
the park. Anyone interested in
doing that is asked to contact Bobbie Karr who will be in tbe puk
that weekend holding an herb fest.
. Merchant advertising for the
weekend of tbe festival was discussed and it was noted that Jim
Anderson is working on thaL
Anderson is again promoting
lights around every building for lhe
holiday season. The possibility of
hiring someone to put up and take
down the lights was discussed.
Joe Clsrk presided at die meet·
ing held at the Bank One conference room. Vicki Ferrell gave tbe
treasurer's report and informed
~embers of the increase in liability
msurance. Present coverage will be
maintained, it was decided.
Next meeting was set for Oct.
13 at the same place, 8:30a.m.

There are two ways to join
the Midas family. You can develop
an all new Midas Shop (you'll need
a minimum net worth of $250,000
with $75,000 cash available for
investment). Or, if you already
own a repair shop, you may be able
to convert to Midas.
Uyou're an aggressive
entrepreneur and your target is a
nationally respected busUiess to
call your own, give us a call today.
We'll gladly discuss the possibilities.
For details on a new slw/J or a

lhe Rev.John Jackson will hike tbe

•

POMEROY · Plans for resub·
mitting an application for downtown revitalization funds to the
Ohio Department of Economic
Development were made at last
week's meeting of the Pomeroy
Merchants Association.
It was noted tbat the application
prepared last year asking for
$4SO,POO in assistance will be
updated and !hen resubmitted. The
committee is planning to conduct
some public meetings again this
year to gairi suppon for tbe program geared to improving the
downtown area of Pomeroy.
Stemwheel Festival plans were
noted and plans made for a work
party to do some cleanup work.
The association was asked to provide 20 items for the sternwheeler
captain's bags. It was noted that
th1s year no one has offered to

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Nego·
tiator$ averted a possible strike by
approving a tentative contract that
would increase wages and safeguard health benefits for Kroger
workers, a television station report-

106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy
992-8454

Correction
' GALLIPOLIS - A photo capIdon
in Thunday's Trtbunc fCI)OI1ed

future Gallla County Hl~e lll!d
Bikeway rrt~esday beglnn101 10
Minersville. The trail actually
llegin• In Minerton. The Tribune
resrculhe error.
·

Agreement reached
on Kroger contract

POMEROY .
FlOWER SHOP

'truclt

l

=. . . . . . . . . . . .

2~ :•
84UICUIIIIII
. l10G·c' I IIIICaDIP
e KIWi 11J RIIIIIQ® ! ._. •·Mill 1111111
..... 99.99 H$-131

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•

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tile 1'1111111
Rog. 111.99 012-182

m -1112

•'!.
Brakes cause wreck ·
.;. A Gallipolis man escaped injury
friday when his vehicle's brat~
Oiled and the vehicle overturn~
lite patrol reported.
• Brian K. Williams, 20, 49 Yin·
Street, was eastbound on a wet
· wngrade on Left Fork Road
ISpringfield Township Road 403).
:the driver applied his brakes,
,)!thich were defective, and the vchi·
Fie went off the right side of the
toad, up an embankment and over'iurnCd onto ils left side.
J Williams was ~ited for an
~xpircd operator's license. The
wehicle sustained heavy damage
lmd was towed from tbc scene.
:
Vehlelestrlkelleuce .
J A Middleport youth's vehicle
~ustained moderate damage Mon·
jlay morning when it ran off the
' toad and struck a fence, the patrol

ELIZA:IIE'IliWALJ(El

Flowars For All Occasions

:t.

SUPERCOLOR SPECIAl

Sunday Times-Sentinel IA3

Walker takes up reins at RG's
Child Care development center

1Pvy

Ground breaking ceremony ,
for interchange set Wednesday
POMEROY • A ground break·
ing ceremony for the interchange at
US-33 and SR-180 in Hocking
County, being billed as the first of
several US·3.3 priori!Y .proj~~ts

Local

September 19, 1993 .

�Commentary

September '19, 1993

September 19, 1993

\

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A4
I

U.S. will pay large portion .of aid
W TlllrdA•e., GaDipolll, Ohio
(614) 446-Dfl

Ul Coart St., Pomeroy, Olllo
(614) 99l-ll56

ROBERT l,.. WINGETt'
hN' 'er
HOBART WILSON JR,
m:s-11.. Edllor

MARGARET LEHEW
Cootroller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the American
N~pcr Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are weloome. lbcy should be less than
300 words. All letters arc subject to editing and must be signed with
Dillie, ad~ss and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
published. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
pcrsooalitic .

The environmental turf war
Editor'~ Dote • Tbe loUowhi1 editorial appeared iD tbe Friday,
Sept. 3, 1993 edltioD o1 Tle Choduud Polt.
•

Ohio Gov. Geage Voioovich, a Republican, and Speaker Vem Riffe, a
Democrat, seldom see eye 10 eye. Yet they tecendy teamed up to send a
Ieder to President Clintoa, asking him to call off federal bureaucrats who
want to intemJpt the pumping of a flooded coal mine in southeasrern
Ohio.
The governor and the speaker are right There's no compelling reason
to Slllp pumpina at this pomt, and no rason to substimre the judgment of
the U.S. EPAforthatofrqulators employed by the stare.
The issue arose July 11, when a 20-foot-thick' seal broke on an abandoned mine in Meigs County owned by a subsidiary of the American
Eleclric Power Co., a utility which operares in Ohio and six other stares.
About 1 billion gaUons of wau:r rushed into AEP' s adjacent Meigs Mine
No. 31, one of the largest Jonpall mines in the nation.
The flooded mine jXimarily supplies AEP's huge Gavin power plant
on the Ohio Ri-. Ironically, die company had recently considered shutting down its Meigs C~ mines, after concluding the mo~ economical
way 10 meet .1990 Clean Ail A£t~equirements was to buy low-sldrur coal
from out of SIBle. It was only under pressure from tbe Voinovich adminis·
ttation, and after the stare legislature approved incentives for burning
Ohio coal, that AEP decided to install $800 million wOrth of scn~bbers at
Gavin. The decision saved 1,200 mining jobs, including about 800 in
Meip County- where the unemployment rate is 12 percent and one peeson m four lives in povmy.
It was against that backdrop the comf11111y contacled slate and federal
regulators when the flooding was discovered, seekin~ permission to
imn&gt;ediarely begin pillnpq. The company said quick acbon was essential
to minimize damage to equipment and reduce chances that clay surround·
ing the coal seams would absorb wau:r ilnd rmder the mine structurally
unstable.
The req~ raised environmenlal concerns, however. Some mine warer
was acidic, and much had bigh concentrations of iron which forms a
sludge when exposed to oxygen.
The Ohio EPA, with the pudging consent of other stare agencies, on
July 26 issued a directive setting forth conditions under which pumping
cQ\IId take place. But the U.S. Office of Surface Mining and later the U.S.
EPA sought to block pumpin~, ~uing that rwo receiving streams and
perhaps aquatic life in the Ohio Rtver would be pennanently dsmaged.
U.S. Dislrict Judge Sandra Beckwith denied the federal ~equests on July
30, and pumping began. Initially, m11ch of the watec was untrealed. But by
laic August the company .had built a new se.ttling lagoon and otherwise
increased its trealment capactty, and as of this week nearly all the water
being discharged is in compliance with federal water quality standanls.
On Monday, with about 700 miU_ion gallons of wau:r pumped from the.
mine, a three-judge panel in Cincinniti ruled the U.S. EPA could inrecvene, but only after it had studied the environmenJal impact o( the pumping. On Thursday, the U.S. EPA told American Eleclric Power to shut off
the pillilps within 24 hours, setting the stage for yet another court battle.
Clearly, there has been some environmenlll damage. Parts of Leading
Creek have been coated with a coffee-&lt;:alored residue, and most aqualic
life along its 20-mile run from the discharge sire to the Ohio River has
been ldlled. Raccoon Creek has seen some, but considerably lesser, damage. The Ohio River, however, has been relatively unscathed. Officials at
the Ohio River Valley Sanitation Commission (ORSANCO) report that a
poUution plume exrends for about two miles below Leading Creek, but
that five miles dowliSireaiTI from Leading Crtek containing at least one
endangered species • does not appear lhrearened.
The U.S. EPA's move to stop pumping, at this juncture, appears pointless on environmenlal grounds. But there is a very real risk that, if the
plimping delayed for a substantial period of time, the mine will never
recpen, and 800 people will be out of work. For that to happen because of
a blrfbatde would be a ttavcsty.
There''s an art to choosing wbich fights to pick. This is OIIC' the president and his EPA administrator, Carol Browner, should sidesrep.

Letters to the editor
National Life Chain Sunday
Dear Editor,

Once again it is time for National Life Chain Sunday -the largest
chwth event in our nation's history. Niuional Life Chain Sunday '93
will be held throughout America on
Sunday, Oct. 3 from 2:30 to 3:30
p.m.
According to reports from the
Plesse Let Me Live headquarrers,
numerous women canceled their
abortio'!s after seein~ the Ll~
CHAIN m the past If JUS! one life
. is saved by all of us standing in
prayer together, then the hour we
give is wen worth Ibis small sacrifice.
.
I would like to invire you to join
other Christians llld !'"":lifers from
this area to make a VISual Slalement
of solidarity to the connnunity that
abonion is grievously wrong and
that we oppose the killing of
unborn children.
As last year, the Life Chain will
be lawful and peaceful. It will not
block driveways, alleys or
enttances to any buildings. Participants will stand quietly on both
sides of Second Avenue holding
signs bearin~ the messages, "Abortion kills children," "Jesus forgives
and heals," "Adoption, the loving
answer" and "Lord, forgive us and

our nation."

As signs are being held, prayers

are asked io be given that aslc that

WASHINGTON - An early
position staked out by the Clinton
Whire House with American allies
suggests the United Stares may foot
a fifth of the bill for aid to Palestinians in Israeli-occupied territories - which will be a minimum of
$4 billion.
·
As first word of the breakJhrouj!h between the Israelis and
Palesbnians that occurred in Norway reached the While ilotise, the
National Security Council began
putting together an immediate
package of aid to the impoverished
Palestil)ians in .the soon-to-beautonomous Gaza Strip and Jericho.
.
The NSC and Stare Department
envisioned an "Empowerment
fund" to give a real boost to the
Palestinians in the near-future. The
amount was $250 million, a small
ponion of what will eventually be
needed to assist the Palestinians.
What 'o\'as striking about these
esrly effons, according 10 some
officials, was the share of responsibility the While House inherently
assigned to the United Stares and
other countries. America would
anle up $50 minion, or one-fifth of

the amount, in the CliniOII administration reckoning. The Gulf stares
- including Saudi Arabia and
Kuwait - were requ~ to anre

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
up $100 minion, essentially assigning the richer part of the Arab
world two-fifths of the buildup
costs on Palestinian autonomous
lerritory.
The fmal $100 million, adminisUation officials believed, should be
pledged by the so-called G-7 countries, most notably Gennany and
Japan. This meant the While House
thought that the rest of the industrial " First World" should come ·up
with two-fifths of the bill for the
Palestinians.
·Over the last year, the Palestine
Liberation Organization has been
drafting its own inremal estimares
of what it would cost to transfonn
the occupied rerritories of the Gaza
Strip and the West Bank into an

economically self-sufficient, viable
Palestinian stare. The archirect of
the plan is Abu Ala, direcla'-general of the PLO's Economic Affairs
and Planning Department, and one
of the key ne,otiators during the
seaet Norwegum talks that devel·
oped into the recent accord. He
relied on 67 Palestinian experts
inside the occupied rerritories and
20outside.
The upshot, say PLO sources,
was that some $13 billion would be
needed in the first five years to
transfonn both the Gaza Strip and
the West Bank into a viable market
economy. PLO officials told us that
this didn't seem so expensive when
considering that the wodd, and particularly the United States, has
spent .lens of billions of dollars for
more than 40 years trying to get
· Israel to stand on its own economically.
In fact, the PLO estimate may
be too rosy. When considering all
Jhst is needed for ·those two occupied lerritories to.become a productive state, the bill will lifely be
much higher. Internal U.S. estimates su~gest that the PLO's $13
billion ft11ure would be l{ty cost

A $\:\0~ \-\1$1'0~"'( OF TE~ISION VIOLENCE

-

err...

CJI..I - - _.,_,..,....,,.
.., •....z:ftU~

'I

••
'
'

.

-

alone for the social and physic%
infrasii'Ucture _. the roads, hosp
ta1s and schools needed to suppo
emerging industrial, agriculturljl
and commercial sectors.
1
The Marshall Plan for the Mi(jdle East m~ begin with inftas~
ture. One source estimates that ih
the ftrst 10 to IS years, I!Jlproxt:
marely 200,000 houslnJ units wi~
be needed in the Gaze Strip ana·
West Banlc. The good news ts ~
forei~ aid for construction mig .
alleviate some of tho unemplo ment, which, in Gaza, is alread
well over 60 percent
.
,
The Gaza Slrip and West B~
are currently home to. about 2.p
million people, or 376 people PlJ
square kilometer. Expalliare
tinians allowed by Israel to ret
wou'ld increase that density. I
Gaza, there are already 2,034 ~
pie per square kilometer. In Israe ,,
a small arid relatively crowde
country, the population density
only 233 people per square kilomtJ.
ter.
I
· Gaza is currently without L
sewage sysrem. Health care is al~
poor in the occupieilterritorie .
There are 34 hospitals and 55
clinics, with a ratio of 13 beds pdr
10,000 population. This comp~·
with 50 beds per 10,000 in lsrae .
Paved roads in Gaza are scarce.
small portion of its single main
route, a major north-south roail
connecting Khan Yunis with G~
City, is a four-lane divided higl'f.
way. The remainder are two-waY.,
two-lane macadam roads.
;
None of this addresses·the neeil
to jump-start businesses and ind~­
try in an atea Jhst the PLO, in their
private meetings, are dreaming will
be "a Singapore, not a Somalia.;·
U.S. government estimate's ran~
from $20 billion to more than $3~
billion that would be needed in oufside assistance over the next
decade to make the occupied lerri·
toties economically viable.
. ·
If the White House's initial onofiflh eslimare of U.S. responsibility
for the cost of the peace acco{d
holds, then American raxpayers are
going to find Middle East peace 10
be as expensive as it has beQJI
exhiliuating:
·
2
Jack Auderson and Micba~l
Blostein are wtiters for Uuited
· 1
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Pal;

,,

Tabloid mentality pervades media
I'd have a far easier chance of
finding the Holy Grail and Ponce
de Leon's fountain of youth than
convincing readers of this column
of the merits of two starJiing
improbabilities: 1) Mark Twain
was gay, and 2) Notre Dame's
football coach Lou Holtz abused
his players, tolerated steroid use
and recruited academically unqualified players.
.
Is nothing sacred? In today' s
cnxldy tabloid environment, no.
The allegation about Twain's
reputed homosexuality was reponed in a 37-inch story in last week's
Chronicle of Higher Education. For
several weeks, the media had rightly ignored this Alice-in-Wonderland speculation from last month's
conference at Elmira College Center for Marie Twain StUdies.
The paper's author, Andy Hoffman, conceded; as the Chronicle
reponed, that "he has no proof for
his thesis (that Twain was gay),
and he doubts that any will ever be
found"
When one critic at the conference proposed a homoerotic tie
between Huck and Jim in "Hucldebcrry Finn," Hoffman said with a
straight face: "I felt it was important to bring out something that

couldn't be proved because it
seems to open some imponant crit·
ical avenues." So does Moses
coriting down from Mt Sinai with

Chuck Stone
the Ten Commandmel)ts.
After the participants had discussed all of Ibis hearsay gobbledygook, one member of the group
whacked them with a reality check:
"Don't you aCI!demic yobbos have
anything else to occupy yourself
with besides such trivial specula·
tion?"

If Twain had been gay, I think
that would have been very bip. He
would have joined the pantheon of
other great gay wrirers. But his sexual preference deserves authenticated respect, not the pipe dreams
of some ivory-towered fanrasizer.
On the other hand, Notre
Dame's football coach Lou Holtz
was the unfortunate target of a
story with putative documentation
- mterviews with ex-football
players.
According to Don Yaeger and
Doug Looney, authors of a new
~ook , . : '_l!nder the Tarnished

Dome,." ' Notre Dame reportedly
overlooked alleged excesses that
would have brought down administrative wrath on Holtz's elfm golden loclcs at another university.
But the authors offer a logical
speculation for the reason Notre
Dame tolerated Holtz's alle~ed
abuses - its obsession with being
No. I. Bring back the mylhic days
of Knute Rocke; let America wallow again in Ronald Reagan's
lachrymose Performance as " the
gipper."
If the Chronicle's story about
Twain's undocumentable homosexuality repearedly used the word
"suggested," the us~ Today Story
about Holtz's alle~ed excesses used
the contraction. ' might've," four
times. Not "did," but might have
done.
'
. So• much for
accuracy
and fair.
ness m reporting.
Looney does sink to a stygian
low when he dismisses Notre
Dame without foocball, as "simply
a Catholic institution with a great
chemistry department in a small
northern Indiana 10wn with iousy
weather.''
That's like saying that without
its $5.1 billion endowment and cor·
nucopia of the world's greatest

·.
-

Ji

scholars, Harvard would be, " silJlply a privare institution with a great
English department in a small ~­
sachusetts city' with som.e of tl!e
coldest weather this side of tlje
North Pole."
. ;
But all of Ibis revisionism suffers from a more pervasive sic~­
ness - the practice of subStituting
hard, unimpeachable facts wiih
specuhuion and possible ln!Dsgressrons.
·'
Joe McGinniss' lugubrious bQO.):
on Ted Kennedy is a classic case.Jt
is so poorly written - and reportell
- that it is reduced to tin irresponsible exercise in delu sional
onanism.
And yet, McGinniss plays the ,
tallc-show cii'cuit like 111! electronic
Elmer Gantry. One of tile nation's
best written magazines, circulationhungry Vanity Fair, even ran a
cover bar, "Chappaquidick,"
announcing excerpts from McGinniss' fanrasyland
In the national craze for titillation, we are diminishing journalistic and schobirly standanls. Eventually, students and readezs wiU pay a
terrible price for our loss of values.
Cbuck Stone Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Euterprise
Assoclatiou.

~~e'E:2.l:~t~:so-mi How the walls came tumbling down

your prayers the doctors·who per·
form this terrible act - that their
hearts be touched and that their
God given talents be used to save
Jhe unborn instead of killinjl them.
Our bold, prayerful wttness is
scheduled for Oct. 3 from 2:30 to
3:30 p.m. We will have a central
meeting plAce at the Gallipolis City
Park where signs will be distribut·
ed slarting at 2 p.m.
From the park, we will send out
groups to spei:ified locations along
Second Avenue We hope for sunny
skies Oct 3, but the Life Chain will
go forward regardless of weather
conditions. Any sacrifice on our
parts will be minor compared 10
that ofabortion victims.
Elderly and disabled pro-lifers
should arrange for chairs and.
umbrellas if needed. Children
under close supervision are weicome. Please jom us on Oct. 3. The
hour that you give can save a life·
time.
Patty Hays
Gallipolis

Tension - for some, even palpable fear - gripped the West
Wirig of the While House and seventh floor of the Stare Department
as America's leaders awailed word
of the fate of their ally, Israel,
which was fighting to survive. "
It was June 1967.
General Yitzhak Rabin was
becoming a hero of the Six Day
War, In a pre-emptive strike, Israel
· vanquished the much larger force
of Gamal Abdel Nasser~s Egypt,
captured the Golan Heights from
Syria, seized theW~ Bank, which
was the safe haven of Palestinian
terrorists - and forcibly sealed its
right to survive forever.
Yassir Arafat was establishing
himself as the leader of the ai-Fatah
guerrillas who would rain terror,
vowing to destroy Israel - there
could be no other solu.tion - to
regain a Palestinian homeland.
Bill Clinton was embarking
upon a job in Washington as a
you,ng go-fer for Chairman J.
William Fulbri~ht! D-Ark., of the

Senate Foreign Relations Commit-

Fast-forward 10 Monday, Sept. leaders of the Arab world (Egypt,
tee.
13, 1993. Twenty-six years of Saudi Arabia, and even Syria)
And I was covering my first cri- images blur before our eyeil; sud· . joined with the West in opposing
sis as a Washington correspondent, denly we see scenes once' unimag- the forces of Islamic fundamenJalinable.
i'sm and extremism (Iraq and Libya,
There is Rabin, now Israel's pius the extremists in Iran).
prime minister, and a burnoose·
Yet doubters and doomsayers
topped Arafat - walking in peace remain on all sides. Hear ex-Reaacross the South Lawn of the While gan ambassador Jo the United
shuttling between Lyndon John~ House with BiD Clinton, now pres!· ·Nations Jeane Kirkpatrick. She
son's White House and State dent.
notes that the PLO had been creatDepartment. I was seeking answers
Yitzhak and Yassir (al)d Bill). ed to destroy Israel and that Ararat
from officials who, in an era of They climbed four small steps to a is opposed by extremists in bis own
uncertain global communications, makeshift ceremonial platform ranks. She asks: "Why did (Israel)
knew little more than 1 about and reached unprecedented. heights. choose Ararat - of all ~pie events on battlefields halfway There were speeches of measured · as its negotiating panner'l '
·
around the world. There was a brief eloquence. Rabin spoke directly to
Answer: Because one makes
explosion of confusion when a 1 the Palestinians: ''ilnough of blood peace with enemies, not friends.
Stare Department spokesman said, and rears .. Enough!... We have no And the ever-shrewd Rabin has
in an unthinking response to a desire for revenge .... We are today Sf:renglhened Ararat just in time 10 .
reponer, that, yes, the United Stares giving peace a chance. And we are g~.ve peace a chance.
·
was officially neutral "in word, saying to you: Enoughl"
. So it was that the secret Israeitthought, and deed.' • But the
Arafat embraced the theme of PLO agree~ent was built upon a
spokesman dashtid back to say that, the day: ''Our rwo peoples ... want fmn foundation not of mutual trus~
of course, he'd misspoken. Israel to give peace a real chance." And but distrust - the clear-eyed reaJl.
was America's ally. The United Arafat exrended bis hand to Rabin, i%1!tion that laraeli$ and PaleatinialQ
States wasn' t even on speaking · who
puped it - the audience of cannot be expected to blindly lrU$t i
rerms with Egypt, a Soviet client
dignitaries
~ and ooohed.
· each other, so there must be signed
The Isras:if-iatestinian break- agreements, internationally gu&amp;ral!&gt;
-=-On-:-:this-=-date-=::. . - - - - - - - through was born in the days when reed, lcadi~ step-by-step to peaco;l
On Monday, Sept. 13, 1993, ll(c
tbe Berlin Wall crombled 11nd the
In 1777, American soldiers in the Revolutionary War w~li the ftrst
new
age of satellite comrnunica1
Soviet Union rollapsed . No lonjler
Battle of sararoga·over the Briiish.
lions
carried news images of~
could the Palestinian Liberauon
ln 1881, tho 20th president of the United 'stares, James A. Garfield
making
live from the Wliire House
Organization's ¥~fat be a cliint of
died of wounds inflicled by an assassin eleven weeks earlier.
'
to
Jerusalem
and Jerictio. And tli!
the Kmmlin. Nor, of course, could
In 1934, Bruno Hauptmann was arrested in New Yolk and charged, Syria's
walls
came
tumbling
down.
~'
Hafez ai-Assad. The war in .
with the kidnal&gt;-murder of the Lindbergh baby.
Mardn
Sc:bram
Is
a
a}'lld~ca~
the Persian Gulf forged a' new
.In 1945, Nazi propagandist William Joyce, knoWn as "Lord Hawcoslition
that was oilco unlhinkable writer for Ne~aper Eliterpnu
Haw," was senrencecl 10 desJh by a British court
·.;
but bccani'e unshibble: Traditional ·AIIodadon.

Martin Schram

Today in history-- --=-By Tile Allodated Pre.
Today is Sunday, Sept. 19, the 262nd day of 1993. There are 103 days
left in tbe year.
Today'• Highlight in Histoly:
On Sept. 19, 1796, President Washington's fareweU address was pubJllhed. In il, the first chief executive of the United Stares advued,
"OblerVe ~ faith and justice toward all nations. Cultivare peace and
hlrmoiiY w11b aD."

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"'

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pleuant, WV

Sunday nmea Sentlnei--Page-A5

-Tri-county briefs- Settlements, walk~uts hit Ohio schools
Patrol jails two for DUI

. GALLJ?&lt;?US - Two ~_~~Cn were arresled early Saturday mom. mg for .drivmg under the influence, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Stare Hillhway Palrol retiOrled.
.
Jailed' were Gregory W. Richards, 29, 271 N. F'trst Ave., Middleport, for DUI and left of center, and Fred Miller 11 38 Roure 2
Racin~. for DUI, driving under suspension, fictitio~ ~gistration
and left of cenrer.
In addition: Miller was wanled on a municipal court bench warrant for a prevtous charge of DUI. .
Authorities took three others into custody between Friday night
and early Saturday morning.·
. Ja!Jed w~ JosephS. White, 18, Third Ave., Gallipolis, by Gal·
hpohs JX?h.ce on a common pless court warrant for delinquent
youth; Wilham M. Harvey, 36, 43 Green Terrilce Court, Gallipolis
by GallipoliJ police for fleeing and eluding, reckless operation of
motor vehicle, and resistin&amp; arrest; iUJd Janet D. Massie, 29,42 Get- ·
man Hollow Road, Patriot, on a municipal court ordered 3-day commirment for a previous charge of DUI.

a

Tricycle' stolen from yard·

.

GALLIPOLIS ~ A bicycle was stolen from the yard in fiall of
a BidweU apartmenl Friday nigh!, Gallia County sheriff's dctluties
reported.
Linda L. Williams, Gallia Met EsJares, 381 Buck Ridge Road,
told deP,uties she noticed the toy missing afrer dark. Accolding to
the repon, it was worth $55.

Poli~e

cite one

. GALLIPOLIS -Jimmie C. Shorter Jr., 24, Roule 4, Gallipoli$,

was cited by 9aJlipolis police early Samrday morning for driving
under suspenston.

Gavin work to blockS. R. 7
GALLIPOLIS - The section of State Roure 7 in front of the
·Gavin Plant in Cheshire will close for about one-half hour starting
at 8 a.m. today, Ohio Department of Transportation officials
alinounced Joday.
.
The road will be closed so that Gavin worlcers can construct a
conveyor over the roadway.
Local drivers should plan to lake an altemare roure. Trucks wiD
. have to wait until the road reopens, but emergency vehicles will be
1
allowed to pass through, Disb'ict 10 Public Information Officer
: Nancy Yoacham said.
Editor's note: Names, ages and addresses are printed as they
appear on olfidal reports.
.

By The Alloclated Pras
Striting bns dri_, in a Summit
COunty school dislrict agreed Friday to return to work, wfiile negoliaton met in the strike by SwitzeJland pf Ohio reachers in Monroe
County.
Meanwhile, a Mahoning Collnty
Judge limited the number of strikmg reachers who can picket ou11ide
Youngstown city ' schools, and
teachers in the Troy School DiSirict
tentatively agreed on 11 new con'Inlet.
.
Tucker Self, superinrendent of
the Springfield Local schools in
southern Summit County, said
striking bus drivers and mechanics
would return to wiD: Monday.
The district will proceed with
plans to aubconlraCt busing service
toaprivarecompany, Self said. But·
the company offcml jobs to all 24
members of Public School Employees Local 530. A neaotiatinl session between the school board and
the wiion oil economic and work- ·
ing condition issues was set for
next week, be said.
Union spokesman Mark Beallor
said the return was on a day-to-day
basis. He said another !OW of the
Ohio Aasociation of Public School
Employees, which represents
cooks, custodians, educational
ass~ts. secretaries iUJd mainrenance woQ:ers, rescl!ed a tentative
agreement with thedistri~t

School officials could not be
reached.for com111ent. Calls to
school offices and the home or
Superinrendent Richard Edge went
unanswered.
Teachers in the 3,300-student
district called another half-day
walkout Friday. School officials
have canceled classes all day on
days of the half'&lt;lay slrikes.
The 235 teachers have been
.striking on aiJemating days but said
they would begin d8lly walkouts
Monday. Teachers and the board
disagree on how long a medical
insurance plan should remain in
effect
In Youngstown, Mahoning
County· Common Pleas Judge R.
Scott Kricbbaum said the 950member ,Youngstown Education
Association must limit pickets to
two people on each side of driveways or sidewalks.
The judge also ordered Jhe

New p~ogram...

_&lt;c_on_tiD_ued_rrom_A_
-n _ _

· Should a SIFE member decline
or be unable to participare, another
candidare will be chosen by Wilson, who joined Rio Grande's raeulty in 1991. Wilson went to Hungary twice in the 1980s as a graduate student, first at Debrecen and
laJa: in Budapest.
Participauns students are obligated to g~.ve a presentation on their
experiences upon return to Rio

clopt.dia of 1848 Revo/IIIWru, to be
published Ibis year by tho Ohio
Univmity Press.
He is a member of the Gallia
County Historical Society, the
Ohio Academy of History, the
American Historical Association,
the Hungarian Cultural Associa·
lion, and the Alpha Kappa chapJer
of Phi Delta Gamma, the graduale
student honorary society at Rio

Sternwheel jestival...,_,_&lt;c_o_nt_m_ue_drr_o_m_A_-•&gt; G~Iio~~~ialty ~is
befoie depaiture tiiite.
There will be Saturday morning
cruises from 9-11 a.m: and a race
cruise at 2 p.m. Boarding time for ·
the race cruise js 1 p.m. Tickets for
all of the cruitel except the one for
senior citiZe!IS are $10 for adults
and S8 for children.
There will again this year be
live entertainment on the barge
stage near the levee. Dee and Dallas, Crossover Band, the Shady
·
Sh ffl
Meigs High
R tver
u ers, .
.
S~hool B~. MalkWood F~ 's~w
wtth a magtc, comedy .and Juggling
act, and Denver Rtce will be
,among the ente~;
.
An herb fesuval will be held m
the large mini-park by Bobbie
Karr.ln previous years a bean soup
·and cornbrea.d dinner has b~en
served, but this year no. organ~·
lion has offered to do 1t. Karr tsasking tha.t anyone wining to take
:onJheproJectc:ontact her.
.
At the Metgs County Pubhc
· h
Library,Jlower 11nd qwlt_ s ows
will be held Friday and Saturday.

Craft and food concessions will be
in operation on .Jhe parlring lot both
days.
.
Other features
be a chili
cookoff on the parlrin$ lot Jay and
Sherrie Warner are 1n charge of
lhat Afler the chili has been judged
and the prizes awarded, saJDples
will be sold.
Leading off the 5-K walk/run
wiD be the firetruck parade. Trucks
from around the area, 30 or more
'
wiU parade from the old Pomeroy
Junior High School to the Mason
bridge. Their arrival at the ~
levee will kick off the walk/run.
Participants who have lefttheir
cars at the Mason levee will be
taken back across tbe river on a
boat Prizes will.SO tO the race win·
ners. Mike and Carrie I&lt;Moedy are
chainnan of the walt/run. .
- Several other activities are being
planned i.ncludincr kid face paint·
"
mg, games forchildren, ·andapup·
pet show at Jho· United Methodi~
Church.
'
(Coutlnued lrom A-l)

will

·R
· h0des, .R"Iue...
H
.
"There is no philosorhy in
.
· y
·
ed
wo~!l~~·sa:. getll an go to
· Echoing his own experience
as working individual since the
age of 9, delivering newspapers
in and around his birthplace of
Coalton, Rhodes said youths
must have ambition if they are
to accomplish anything in life.
"It's an honor for me to be
here tciday," Riffe said, "to be
honored on Ibis same platform
with this man and receive the
highest honor from this university."
Both of the new Fellows
- were complimentary of each
other's efforts during their
lengthy careers. Because Riffe
was committed 10 the area and
its welfare, "we've distributed
education to withiti 30 miles of
eve~ boy and girl who lives
: .here, Rhodes said.
· "I don't know of anyone in
this sJare who's done more for
education than Jim Rhodes,"
Riffe said. "They talk about
education governors, but he's
,the-education governor. No one
has done more for education.
''We've never forgotten
where we came from, and we
have attempted to re{lay that
· debt," he added. "Jim joins me
in making tbe statement, we are
very proud of this honor."
In addition to a number of
·ipvited guests, the ceremony's
audience drew from the campus
and the community. Several area

Projected .•.

(l:ODtiDued lrom A·l)
utilities, it was c!9Cided 10 conduct
an actual fessibility study to determine If the sire should be further
considered.
;, Present were Elizabeth Schaad
and, Nancy Hollister, ODOD:
Chuck Corbett and Rick Evans,
AEP; Jolm D. Dowler and George
Collins; ODOT; Melas County
Commiuioner Janet Howard:
1'homas A. aou., Budccye HillsHoc~ Valley Relionll Qcvelopment Dtllrict; Racine Mayor Jeff
Thornton; Debbie Clay IDd Miry
Powell, Moil• County Park Disdiet; Horace Karr, Mciga County
Cbimber, and Paula Thacker,
Meiga County Economic Development'otriCC., ,

..

Local 530 walked off the job
Tuesday over the board's plan to
subconlnlet. Clanes in the 3,300student dislrict continQed.
A federal rl'ediator assisted 1a1ks
Friday in the Switzerland of Obio
dislrict, but they ended without an
agreement Negotiators met for six
hours at a hotel in St C1airsville.
The Switzerland reachers said
they were disappointed but would
meet today to discuss board pro-

posats.

.

union not to use mass protests to
block movement to and from
schOOI!*opUty.
,Demonstrators this week
blocked buses ihat were to carry
adminislr8tors from a high school
to a building where classes for
seniors were to resume.
The union sttuck the 14,000-student dislricl Sept. 8 over salaries,
seniority and job security. Substiture reachers worked the fust day
of the strike. but classes have been
canceled since then.
About 350 people atrended a
parents' meeting Thursday night at
a chu~ch on the city' s east side.
Several parents demanded that

Units respond · to six calls
POMEROY - Units of the McDaniel and Marshall McDaniel
Meigs County Emergency Medical were transported to VMH; 4:54
Services responded to six calls for p.m. Skymed transponed Connie
assistance Friday and early Satur· Scholderer from VMH to OSU
day morning.
.
· Hospilal; 10:56 p.m. Middleport to
Units responding were II :04 Overoiook for Ruby DiU who was
a.m. Racine squad and fire to Stare transported to VMH; 4:10 a.m .
Roure 124 and Third Street for an Pomeroy to Pomeroy Nursing and
automobile accident Sarah Doss Rehabilitation Cenrer for Mary Gee
was transporred to Vererans Memo· who was transporred to O'Bfeness
rial Hospilll and Blyth Theiss was Memorial Hospital; 4:57 am. Midtreated at the scene; 3:08p.m. Rut· dlepon and Pomeroy ftre to Shady
land to White Hill
for an , Cove for a structure fire.
•
automobile
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4

GLIDER
ROCKER

Grande.

Hun,arian and Easrern European
studtes, said he initiated the
excl)ange idea because of Rio
Grande's inrernational outreach,
P~
, in Japanby. i~ studen
.rwo b=:g~
is available between the main cam-'
pus and the Tokyo branches.
"We intend to hopefully build
upon Ibis for exchanges to other
uniVersities in EaStern Europe," he
said. "It's something we can build
upon to expose our students to
multi-culturalism; the opportunity .
to e"""'""nce life in anothei coun-.-1 lth
d
try and to rning e w stu ents
othors~:J:is in nan;,tdar,.
"''
, ,- ~~
'this prol!l'am will be stgnificant
because 11 allows them to wimess
the birth of democracy and the
establishment of a free mll!'ket
economy," Wilsondnored.d W'lso
Over the past eca e, 1 n
has become known as an authority
E
E
h'st
d
on asrern uropean 1 ory an
culture. The 1981 graduate of lndiana University was a teaching
assistant and instructor at IU, from
which he received his doctorare in
199l,andlheUniversityoflliinois,
where be conducted his studies for
a master's degree, prior 10 coming
10 Rio Grande.
Wilson has authored numerous
scholarly papers and has been
ext!llnsively published in the
Budapest-based journal HIUigariQII
Studies. His work has focused on
the careers and times of Hungarian
nationalists Louis Kossuth and
Oscar Jaszi. His article, "The
Danubian Confederation," will
appear in the bistorical study Ency·

Jesehers and the school board settle
the strike.
The school board called a meet·
ing lare Friday to discuss resuming
negotiations and having a parent
serve as an observer.
The YoungSIOWD chaprers of the
National Assoc iation for the
Advancement of Co~oted People,
the Urban League and other groups
Friday issu¢ a starement del!umding that both sides mov11 to setde
the strike quickly.
" Youngstown stlillents are
already performing below national
norms in too many academic
areas," .the sJarement read. "They
can not afford to be hindered in
their academic progress.''

DUWER
CHEST
Sug: Rll.'Mll.95

.s449s
8 Eut llrolld ......
. SulleiOO
Columbua, Ohio .

1-800 •• OLAW

tram,

.
.
.
!eg~.slatQrS were on hancl_. mclud-

mg U.S. Rep. Ted Stl'lckland,
State Sen. Jan Michael Long
and Stare Reps. Mark Malone
and MBrY. ~1. Local so:vern!Dent ofltclal~ who attended
m~l'!ded Galha County CommiSII!OI!Cr Kenneth Farmer, Centervtlle Mayor Ted ~cr.roud,
Jackson County Co~oners
Dale ~e~l, Lloyd. Whtte and
Bob V,:•li.IS, and ~cto~o County
Commtsstoner Skip Riffe.

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Ohio/W.Va.

September 19, 1993

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Sunday Times-Sentinel/A6

•

s·ection B

..Along the River

.. ;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;s;e;p;~;m;be;;r;1;9,;1;~;;

State Auditor Ferguson announces retirement
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Wbellllllle Audilor Tboinu B. Per1111011 eleded in 1974 to take
av« Ire post from hil 82-yar-old
fathei, JCJteph, lhe Democrat !hen
blown as YOUII&amp; Tom said 1he two
did DOt IIways tjpee.
"I don't even agree wilh my
wife llllhe time,'' Ferguson said at
1he time.
Wilen be announced on Friday
IIIII be would DOt seek any political
office nut ~. FergQSOn said his ·
wife, Helen, had llippOilCd a possible run for govc:mor.
He is in his fiftb four-year 1trn1
as auditor.
"Helen said. 'If you want to run
for governor do it," Ferguson said
He decided apinst entering 1he
race because of 1he lilcelibood of a
coorared primarY and a costly general elecbon campaign, Ferguson'
said in a news re• .
He did DOl meniioo fallout from
a ~c:lll(!al wilh a fonnc:r employee.
EliSibelh TICbaDIZ filed a $1.25
million lawsuit six years ago claiming lhat Ferguson forced her to
have SCll and 10 preiSW"C colleagues
for cunpaign contribulions.
His cieparture Jives Republicans
and olher Democrats their first
clear shot at an office in which he
set a record for the longest coosecutive tenure.
"It makes for opponuilities for
other Democrats. It opens up
another office that people thought
might not be available to seek. It
brings you a chance, maybe, to
bring in a new perspective," said
Harry Meshel, slate Democratic
chairman.
·

Ohio Republican. Chairman
Robert BenneU, 1 vocal Ferguson
crilic, wants a bouse cleaning.
"I think you need·sorneone who
clin depoliticize 1he offJCC and have
it opetating as 1he chec:ts and bal·
ances office that it should," Bennett said. "I lhink it's an office that
requires a high def.C: of pr&lt;ifes·
sionalism and 1hat s what s been
lacking in 1he
..
The only Cocrat 10 express

interest in :lhe job prior to Fergu- ·
son's announcement was Lucas
CountY Treasurer Ray Kest. Kest is
to formally announce his candidacy
this month.
Republican Cuyahoga County
Commissioner James Petro almost
upset Ferguson in 1990 and plans
to run for the office next year.
Petro left no doubt that Ferguson's'record will remain an issue.
Ferguson's current term runs

tluoilgh 1994. (
"There is much wort to be done
lifting the dark cloud of scandal
which has shadowed the auditor's
office for m8ny years," Petro said.
"The chaUenge of a campaign
for auditor of slate and the oppo.1U·
nicy 10 clean up the legacy of the
current occupant is as appealing to
me now as it was in 1990," he
said
Slate Sen. Robert Burch, D-New

Philadelphh, lhe only Democratic
candidate for governor thus far,
said Ferguson's decision would not
affect his candidacy. .
"Tom Ferguson has been a very
good Democrat over the years.
More imponantly, he's been a very
good slate auditor, deSDite some .of
the diffiCulties that &amp;ave developed," Bwch said.
.·
Ms. Tschantz could not be
,reached for comment. Her &amp;ele-

'
•
phone number is not published. A:.
telephone message was left for her,
lawyer, John Duds.
Ferguson admitttd be had a COD·•

sensual sexual relationship with'
Ms. TscbaniZ but said It ended in :
1985. He denied that be forced her·
to pressure others for campaign:
contributions.
:
Ms. TIChantz reaigned her job in;
1986 and later was ~ on per-•
manent mental disability leave.
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MODEUNG -Attractive Yvonne Roush
Richardson modeled 38 of her Jack McConnell
originals in a hat show staged last week in Pomeroy. The show was sponsored by Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of the
American Revolution and held at Grace Episcopal Parish House. Above, Yvonne takes a final
.look before opening the show in a dramatic creation of red feathers. At left she models a stunning
strq.w picture hat decorated with yellow silk flow. ers and streamers of pearls.

,.

Cars, Trucks

Court news
Common Pleas
GALLIPOLIS -The following
case was recently orocessed in the
Gallia County Common Pleas
Court of Judge Joseph L. Cain:
Richard D. McDonald,
Cheshire, was fined $250 plus
coun costs for forgery. He was 11so
sentenced to 12 monlhs in jail, suspended. and ihree years probation
ilnd ordered 10 pay $1,00! in restitution.
A divorce was gr&amp;nted to Joyce
A. Woods, Gallipolis, and John E.
Woods, Sr., no address available.
A divorce was granted to Ran·
dati F. James. 1936 Bladen Road,
Gallipolis, and Christina M. James,
423 1/l Second Ave., Gallipolis.
A divorce was granted to
Stephen Massie, 20424 Stale Route
141, J&gt;alriot, and Sbauna Massie,- .
187S Clay BlllllCI Road, Oak Hill.
Munldpal
The following ~ ~v~ been
processed by the G'atlia Councy
Municipal Conn of Judge William
S.Medley:
David L. McCormick, 20,
Columbus, was fined $4SO plus
conn costs for driving under the
influence. He was also sentenced ID
30 days in jail, with all but lhree
days suspended. one year probation
and a one year license suspension.
James L. Nonhup, 24, 4023 Mt.
Tabor Road, Vinton, was fined
$450 plus court costs for DUI. He
was also sentenced 10 10 days in
jail, with all but three days sus·
pcnded, one year probation and a
90-day license suspension.
Michael L. Rossiter, Crown
City, was fined $100 plus court
costs for contributing ID the delinquency of a minor. He was also
sentenced to 10 dsys in jail, with
all but two days suspended, and
one year probation.
Jane F. Gilbert, 3899 State
Route 218. Gallipolis was fined
$50 plus court costs for passing a

•

Fund-raiser earns tip of the hat
,,
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'"' '

·'

....... ........
2 Dr. Hatcllback. Custom Clo1h Bucket Seals AMJI'M
Stereo Radio wilh Seek/scan, Rear Window Deiroster
Power Brakes. Body Side MoldillQS.
'

... ~. 8

7,218

Anti-lock brakes, Steel BeHed Radial Tires, AM!fM
Stereo, Power Door Locks, Well Equipped.

sw..!10,888

Ill
Clllll-11
1111 . .

'

481

bad cbeck,

CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Fridsy night's Ohio l..ottely selections:
Pickl Numbers
2-7-3
(two, seven, three)
Pick 4 Nambers
2.().().S
(two, zero, zero, five)
Buckeye 5
4-11·13-16-21 .
(four, eleven, thirteen, sixteen,
twenty-one)
The Super Lotto jackpot is $4
million. •

lion; and their guests, gathered in
the Parish House of Grace Episcopal Church for the show.
-·
The daughter of Mary Kay
Roush of Forest Run and lhe late
Kearns Roush, Yvonne has had
professional mod~li.ng experien~e
with enables her io model the stunning ruits with a much of class.
While working at her husband's
side in a smaU manufacturing busi· ·
ness in Columbus and raisin!' lhree
children, Yvonne found t1me to
model and through that became
involved in charity work.
Her modeling career made her a
"natural" for the hat shows she now
presents several ti111fS a year for
various charities. ,j
Starting her collection of
McConnell origin~ls in 1968
Yvonne now has 70 of his ereations, many valued at hundreds of
doUars.
Her intense interest in chapeaus
began. when she and a couple of
friends decided to take in the Ulliputian Fashion Show, an annual

when she was selected for the
honor at that show and went on to
win the best dressed award for lhe
next six years. It was then that
Brace IV created a hall of fame for
Yvonne. This meant lhst she could
no longer win the best dressed
award, but it didn't exclude her
from participating in the benefit.
Each year she wears a Jack
McConneU original bat ID lhe benefit show and has caine ID believe
that his hats are a "good omen" in
her life.
A friendship between the artist
and the model who wears his creatidps, and her family has developed over the years. In facl
McConneU came ID Columbus and
commenlated a fashion show for
Yvonne in 1987J
Through the years McConne.ll,
in New York, has des1gned specllll
hats for Yvonne. "Sometimes I
send him a pictnre of an .outfit or I
call him and tell him I want a hat in
a particular color and what I want it
10 go with, and he deSigns a hat for
me," Yvqnne states.
.
.
"And sometimes he just creates
something that he knows is right
forme."
For the Lillipuchian Fashion
Show each year, Yvonne com ments she always gets a new hat ID
go with a specific ensemble. She
slates that a trend of the McConnell
hats is toward an "overpowering
design" which means that the outfit
must be somewhat under stated or
the look can be too much.
During the show which she
staged here last week, Yvonne
wore a plain white suit which
blended weU with the 38 beautiful
hats of various styles and colors
which she modeled.
The show was narrated by
Yvonne's vivacious daughter,
Machelle Kline, an elementary
school principal in the Columbus

benefit for crippled children spon·
sored by Brace IV of Columbus.
The early shows, now held at the
Hyatt Regency or Hyatt on Capilal
Square, were held at the Neil
House, torn down many years ago,
in downrnwn Columbus.
Looking .at a display of some of
McConnell's hats JUSt days before
the show, Yvonne found and "feU
in love" with a bouffant bat created
of silk lilies of the valley. "II was
so expensive," she says. She
walked away only to return. and
buy her first McConneU original.
She then got together an ensemble to complement 1he hat and went
to her first Lilliputian fashion
show. "Just to go to the show is
really somelhing", says Yvonne,
who describes it as an event where
"everyone is so dressed up".
What she didl!'t know when she
went ID that first show, however,
was that there were judges who
scanned the audience and selected
the best dressed.
You can imagine her surprise

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Editor's note: Names, a1es,
adclresset and other Information
are reported 11 available on :
court records. All newsworthy
actlona wiD be published wilhont
exception.

Lottery numbers

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times·Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - A fascination with
fashion and a desire to help olhers,
particularly children, ·led a native
Meigs Countian into staging shows
to entertain and raise funds for
charity.
'
·
Not ordinary shows of song and
daDce- but har shows.
·
And not otdinary hats, mind
you, bu~ hats of ~amatic and dar- .
mg des1~n, soph•sucated styles;· ·
simplisuc creations, unique and
unusual, each one an original of
Jack McConnell, New York ha.t
designer and first recipient of the
coveted Cody Award for Design.
It was part of her extensive hat
collection accumulated over 1he
past 25 years that Yvonne Roush .
Richardson brought to .Meigs
County a week ago.
And it was her modeling of
those exquisite creations that capti·
vated the 40 or so members of
Return I onathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolu-

lUll

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••

••,..-u
2--

P/S, P/B SDOn Minors, Tinted Glass, AM/FM Stereo
Reclining Bucket Seals, Well Equipped I
'

... ~8,188**

'•'

····
·
·~at;J~~

area.
Yvonne's concern for those less
fonunate is expressed in her orga·
nizational work. She serves on lhe
Women's Service Board at Grant
Medical Center, and it was there
that she staged her fust .f~d mi5e!'·
Her church and other ~1v1c organizations have also benefited from
the hat coUectioo.
. Supportive of his wife's hobby,
Yvonne's husband, Hiram, has
built special sto~e spaces for the
hats, each of wh1ch has a special
box. When she takes them out for a
show they are careffJY packed in a
van.
The value of a collection such as .
Yvonne has is difficult to determine. But it does have significant
value. The designer·in-residcnce at
Ohio Stale University has suggest··
ed that perhaps someday Yvonne
might donate it to•the university.
' Yvonne is thinking about that.
But for the time being you can '
bet that sbe wiU continue talking
about her hat-not lhrough ii-ID
raise funds for crippled children
and o1her worthwhile causes.
So the tip of a hat to anolher former Meigs Countian ~ho is ,out
there making the world JUSt a little
bit better.

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418

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WVA lotte.ry
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Here are 1he winning numben
selected Friday in the West Vir·

=sre

Loaery:
9-6-8
(nine, six, eight)

DIDJ4

6-6-7.0

(six, six, ~even, zero)
c.ll25 '
4-10-12-18-22-25
(four, ten, twelve, eighteen,
twentytwo, twentyfive)

lflt.,., #I

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lnJ, M,
. . ,_Ill,. fll
Ill ,.,......11 • fll-llfl•lll·llff •lff-llfl

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BOXES OF' BEAUTIES - Macllelle Kline,
daughter of Yvonne Roush Richardson, checks out
the38 hats selected for the Meigs County show. She

FLAMBOYANT • Yvonne Roush Richardson's hat collection
reatures .many or tbe flamboyant creations of desigller Jack
McConnell. Hats with turned-up brims and colorful silk flowers,
like the one she wears here, are among ber favorites.

, SOPHISTICAT,ED- This black straw with bow and side drape was
perhaps one or the most classic hats modeled by Yvonne Roush
Richardsonat her show in Pomeroy last week.

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�~tember 19, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-.-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleal8nt,

wv

Sunday nmes sentlnei-Page--83

·Gallia Community Calendar
·cemetery Church Grove at noon
with a potluck.

Sunday, Sept. 19

MERCERVILLE - Missionary
BIDWELL • Mark Marrow to
Baptist Church Homecoming will
be held at 10:30 a.m. with Charles pre11ch at Springfield Baptist
Lusher and Michelle Ours and Bud Church in 7 p.m. service. Glory·
Ours and Gospel Sounds Trio at land Grass to sing.
afternoon service.
GALLIPOLIS • Miles Trout
will
present the sennon at the Faith
GALLIPOLIS • The Gallia
Valley
Church witll the Taylor
county Historical Society Board
Family
performing.
Services begin
meeting will be held at 1 p.m. at
430 Second Ave. with Cameron atlO a.m.
.Allen speaking at 2:30 p.m. Public
Monday, SepL 20
invited.

•I

WUey, SuzaDDe Bentz aod her aoo, a member or
the preschool class, Jarrod Beatz. (T·S photo)

"'
JENART OPENS - Pictured from left are
: , JENART preschool teacber ·Mary Carolyo

Realizing a long-time dream
Educator
.
:open~, doors of
...
new area
;preschool

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CHAltDON (AP) - A IIJmi.J.
IMtrJ: TOWII.Ibip 11W1 who JIOli(S

giant Yqeubles bas a wllo!JIJiDI
6S8-puuLd 11J1111b be bop5 WID tiC
a RJCOIIkeuet.
,

'ftCJa C.4&amp;J ill

.._.dDJIIIS.iiEtEUTII.E

Carter-White

Silver anniversary celebrated

Jeay Rose says his ~
govd is iW inebes bigb, 4 feet
wide., and 128 iDcbcs in c:ilcunfd·
enc.e. Tire cmreut state record is
640p••wh
"The coly wa.r. I won't act the
Slale record it 1f someone else
mows up a the Ohio J&gt;unptM Pdlivll in Barnesville tbiJ 1ll &gt;x'

a

Anniversary to be celebrated
Mr. and

Mrs. Camp{Jell bave

t1t10 cbiJdren:

David ol C.allipol.is

-

High P.rescripdon
Costs
-.

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and Mls. R.alph (.Arm} Fawagli
of Bdpr'e, Obio. They abo b:aYe

Stone Moore reunion is held
.JlACINI! · The~~~ at
Jame• C. and l!thel.inda Stone
l'•b:n jllhctt4 • rile Sauon United Mt thodist Ciloreh , Su nday,
Stplember I Z.
Tllblt gtat:ll was
by PJo.
rtnu Circle. A buJ1n«J mutins
wil call to order by Paul Moore,
praldc:nt.
Oifll wert given to the oldttl
man, George Oenheimer; oldell
womt11, Floren« Circ~; yOUIIgeA
drl, Amy Belh 1..«; youngeit boy,
Tolrn Roberi Bentz and traveling
lltlbo1. Clillton smilh from lthlca.

pven

of th il area and relation to tile
Moore: ramily. Sut Hager had a
qu iz on what we know about our
ancestors. John arid ~ry ·Role
were vitii«J.

Pretcnt were: 'Paul Mo!Jre, Dou·
glas Circle, Florence Circle, larry
and Pauy Crrcle, Sue J:faF, Betty
Lou Dean, Oeorge Cmheimer, Bob
and Martha Lee. l!dlc:l Orr, Becky
Bentz, John R. Benizand Amy 1.ee
and Clinton Smith.
Douala• Circle dit miut4 the
reunion with prayer, nut year's
reunion will be held on the ICCOnd
Sunday
of September at Portbnd
N.Y.
Smith spoke of hiJ fam ily bdng Patk.

.UMW unit reviews opportunities
.

CHESTHR · "A ll Women
Wamtd Wlllrln" WM
Iitle r11e
annual pledge IICJViu prumted by
Ruth K.wr and Kadttyn 8111111 at rile
recent meeting or the Che1ter
United MtthodiJt Women.
·roo purpo8e of the program wu
to inform United Methoditt
Women or the opponuoltlea undt~
lgnated giving provldcl and to eel·
ebrau: Urolt&lt;:d Melhodi!t Women of
all ag.es and from all walkl of life.
The g.roup latl)! the hymn "Liv: lng ((,. Jcawl'' · w1th Detty Dean a..
piani st. l'he scripture read wu
Luke 10: 3K-42.
.
United Mcthod hll Women has
gr&lt;Jwn to a membership or over I .2
million, with a budget of over $20'
million, it wa.. reported.
Pro(lramt t ponJored through
. undesignated giving include the
· f)lly Carn Center in Cincinnati, and
· the Moore Community House in
DIIOli , Mlu. wh ic h serves a varied
group o.r people of all race!. The
fund addresses Issues such as
poverty and racism by promotion
of 84!ff·eltum Dlld sclf-suflicicncv.

me

or

u well u day care, adult literacy,
tutoring, wmmer camp and chureh
ll:hool prograrnJ.
e ach member filled out her
pledac card. carried it up front and
fonned a circle with the others. The
group joined handl and sang "Bleil
Be the Tie that Binds. • Rev.
Sharon Hausman closed with
prayer. .
Kathryn Mora presided at the
blainu• muting with eight mem·
ber1 pretent and 14 sick and lhut·in
calJJ reported.
Hau1man will send out letten
abolltlhe Ptltival of Sharing. Each
member will be responsible for
buyingtchoolaupplies for one bag.
The group voted to di!COIItinue
July and Auguat and to have a pic·
nic in June.
Dean asked asked about new
rug1 for the kitchen and it was
decided to get two long ones.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regMdJ wedding~ ol Gallia. Meip
and Mason Coo!llies u news and is
happy to publish wedding swnes
and~ without cllarge.
However; wedding news mast
meet general 1ta11dardt of timeli· ·
neu. The newspaper prdeu to
publitb accoanl.l of weddings as
10011 as possible arrer lhe event.
To be published in the Sonday
edition, the wedding mull have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Matc:rial for
Along the Rivu mOll be received
by the edi torial depanment by
Thursday, 4 p.m . prior to the dale
ur publication.
Those not mak.ing the 60 day
deadline will be publi.,ed during
the daily paper u space allows.
Photographs of either the bride

OES chapter ·
honors member
HARRISONVD..U! • A 40 year
pin wu presented to Carrie Shetll
at the recenl meeting of Har·
riJonville Chapttr, Order oC Eattem Star, held at the hall. Pauline
Atkins, worthy mauon, made the
presentation. She and Robert Reed,
worthy patron pro tern, Jn!idtd at
rile meeling.
Twelve put matrons and eight
pall )l8lrODJ were welcome.
The table bleasing was giva~ by
Norman Will before the group
entered the dining area where they
were served refrelhmm!l by SteUa
Atkins, Ruby Diehl, Gloria Kloes
and Audra Well.

FAMILY PRAC'IlCE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

'

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25TH A JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT
. . 304 675-1675

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GALLIPOLIS • A revival will
be held at Bulaville Church FridAy
and Saturday. Services begin at 7

each evening. Rick Weaver, evan·
gelisL Homecoming held Sunday: ·
Cany in clinnCr in Fellowship room
at! p.m.
GALLIPOUS • A homecoming
revival will be held at Church of
Christ in Christian Union, 2173
Eastern Ave., Sept. 14-19 with
Rev. David Hopkins presenting the
sermon and the Crystalaires
singing. Services are 7 p.m. nightly
with Sunday evening service at 6
p.m.
BARBOURSVllLE - The Spir·
it of Victory 1993 Campmeeting
will be held Sept 19 through 23 .
Special guest speakers .-e Bishop
Thtxnas JJII&lt;e.o~, Dr. fletcher Wright,
Dr. TL. Lowery and Rev. Billy Joe
Grandstaff. For more inConnatlon
call (304)736-6345 .
Homecomiog servic.es
VINTON • Annual Vinton Baptist homecoming services will be
held Sunday, Sept. 19, at 10:30
a.m .. Chicken bar-b-que to follow.
Dedication sen'lces
BIDWElL • Dedication service
for On Fire for God Crusade
Chwch, 3003 ML Olive Road, Bid·
~ell! 6:30p.m., Saturday. Special
smgmg.

·t

Commuolty Calendar Items
two ~ys before .aD eyeot
$1Dd the day of that event. Items
p!USI be received In advance to
essure publication io the cale!l·
ilar.
.
·
:
SUNDAY
:
.
.
! PqMEROY • ~he ~ev. ~ddia}luffmgton, Galhpohs, w11l be
pest speaker at the Naomi Baptist
(::hwch Sunday at 10:45 a.m. The
public is invited to attend.
~ppear

WITHOl!f PUITING
A LrD ON VUUE:!

...

Charles Hysell and Oscar Hysell
will' hold a reunion at the Rutland
Fireman Pari!; at 12:30 p.m. Bring
own table service and lawn chairs.

1UESDAY

POMEROY • The regular
monthly meeting of the Meigs
County Library Board of TrusiCCS
will be at 1 p.m. at lhe library.

80th birthday to
be celebrated

ROCK SPRINGS • The River
Valley ·Boys will perform at the
REEDSVILLE · The Olive
Rock Springs United Methodist
GALLIPOLIS • A birthday cele·
Township
Zoning Commission ~
· ChQ!Ch at 2 p.m. Rev. Keith Rader
bration
will be held to recognize
hold a regular meeting at the Olive
invites the public
John
C.
Wickline's
80th birthday.
Township Fire Station at 8 p.m.
·
The pany will be held Sept 26
RACINE • A reunion of the
from 1 to 3 p.m. at the home of
DARWIN · The Bedford Town·
Gideon and Artemesia Roush fami·
Griff and Deanna Cook, 101 Lewis
ly will take place at I p.m. at Star ship Volunteer Fire Department
Ave., Rio Grande.
, POMEROY • Meeting of Ohio Mill Park. Bring and covered dish Committee will meet at 7 p.m. at
All family, friends, colleagues,
Valley Area Ostomy Assn., 2:30 and place setting. Relatives and the Bedford Town Hall.
former students and former athletes
p.m. Sunday atVeterans Memotial friends are welcome.
are encouraged to celebrate Jon's
POMEROY • Drew Webster
Hospital Cafeteria in Pomeroy ,
years as a .resident of Rio Grande,
Sob Rabinowitz, state representa·
ALF~E • Alfred United Post 39 will have its regular l)leet·
teacher
and coach at Rio Grande
live of United Ostomy ASfn., will Methodi Church will have its ing at 8 p.m. Dinner will be served · High School
and Kyger Creek
speak on new mauers on the homeco mg starting will regular at7p.m.
High
School.
It
is requested that
national level and Pat Barnett will momi!l service followed by a basgifts
to
be
omitted.
JACKSON • South District
display new products representillg ket dinner at 12:30 p.m. and an
the Hollister Co. All members and artemoon program featuring Ange- Health Conference at the South
interested healthcare persons invit· laires at 2 p.m. Everyone is wei-' District Extension Center from
8:45 a.m. to 2 p.m. The tlleme is
ed.
come.
"Women's Heallll: You do Have a
RACINE • Morse Chapel
POMEROY · Mount Hermon Choice." Registration is $4 and
Church of Racine will have its United Bre!)Jem Chwch will have provides morning refreshments,
homecom1ng starting with a its homecoming starting with a fel· lunch and a packet of materials.
potluck dimiel at noon foUowed by lowship diMer at noon followed by Pre·registtation is requested with
a song serviu at 1:30 p:m. Every· afternoon singing by Kim Herd· Deanna Tribe at the South District
one is welcome.
mllll. There will be no evening ser· Center in Jackson at 286-2177 or
Cindy Oliveri at the Meigs County
vice.
Extension Office at 992-6696.
SALEM CENTER • Star
MONDAY
Grange 11778 will hold a Chicken
BBQ at the Grange Hall from II
. RACINE • Racine Village
4,m. to 2 p.m. It will consist of all
WEDNESDAY
you can eat chicken dinner for Council will meet in recessed ses$4 .50 including chicken, baked sion Monday at 7 p.m. at Star Mill
RACINE · Evanj~elist David
l)eans, potato salad, cole slaw and Park.
Crowell will be~ at the Fel~II. Drinks and dessen will be
lowship Chun:h m Racine Wcdnes·
LETART • Big Bend Farm day, 7 p.m. The public is invited to
extra.
i
Antique meeting at 7:30 p.m. at auend by pastor Charles Bush.
~ RUTLAND · Descendants of Dale and Jo Kautz's residence.

Sales ...;. Rental - Seroice
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We BID Medicare, Medkald, etc., for the patient. ·
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1'0 ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
Wit AU OPEN 'TIL !I P.M. ON TUESDAYS ~

l

.
.

~179

mm

./

published with wWding ~!Dries is
dtsm1 l'lxllograpM may be eitheE
black and whitt or JOOd quality
color, billfold Jiu or r.gu.
Poor quality photographs will '
not be accepted. Gmerally. silapshou or inttant.developing pbotas
are not of acceptable quality.
All maJerial submiuod Cor blicruion is subject to editing. pu
Questions may be directed to
the editorial department from 1·5
p.m. Monday through Friday at
446-2342.

Alwood,2x8

GALLII'OLffl • Robert Collins
and J, nn~
were united in ·
marfiagt s~~·· JO, The couple
ruides :It fSI)' Te'll'as 1M., O•lllpo.
lis.

'Tour of church

or the bride and groom may be

away from the caretaker, and gives
the opportunity for social interac·
lion while at the same time provid·
ing
skills,. she said.
The sk1lls children work on
while Ill JENART include reading
readiness, math, science, writing,
language development, social, self.
help and physical.
JENART is designed for small
groups. Wiley said she will take no
more than 16 in one class. The ratio
of children to teachers will not
exceed 16 to two. Her current aide
is Mandy Blessing. Volunteers are
~ccepted any time.
·
The cost of the preschool is $60
per child per month. Three-year·
olds nieet from 9l0 11:30 a.m. and
4 and 5-year-olds meet from 12:30
to 3 p.m. A child is eligible for
enrollment the day h6 or she .turns
3. JENART does not discriminate.
The school is open from September
until the end of May. •
A child can be registered at any
time by caJJing Wiley at 992·5779
or (304) 882·2318.
The Episcopal Church Women
will hold an open house for the
preschool on Saturday, Sept 25
from 2 to 4 p.m. Wiley will be
there .to DIISwer any questions.

.

call4464404.

~---M_e....lig~s-·C_o_n_,_m_u_n_it4
y_C_a_le_n_d_a_r_ _..

offM Pal1dng (VIdeo Touch Lot)
-Fast a Fri.ndly Service
&gt;Sioq Ctwge Accounls
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(Cbeialtire, Bradbury,
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Wedding policy

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

.

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Table Lamp Sets

·collins,
united
..Darst
.
.·tn marr1age,
.

~

ljWJ 111~1ions?

our
Tlic' couple's Wn»y will IJonot
them wkb a rt• ejlOon from 2 p.m.
10 4 p.m. Oct.. 3 at Mr. md ~
David Canpbell's raidelli:C, 245
Ann Dr~ Gallipolis. FrietJds and
relaliva a illviled. II is RqtiCIICd
!hal giftJ be omiued.

&amp;y-waii~J.

-

··

Do &gt;W feel ljW are !JiiVin&amp; too mueh for
Tllen you sl'IOUld lie
sJJcwillg: wilh us. iVilh Ute cost of JDedica.
!lollS CO!I51illltly o:n the rise, we feel ills
our ICSIJODSlbllilY to offer our·
cmtotne.s everr "dvantage posslb:e.
Yoo see, we've made it a point to know
w1len ~~tneJic equivalenrs are available.
Tben. worklllgllan&lt;l-11\-hand wtth your
doctor, we fill your prescription. exiiCIJy
as orden:d; ~ 1/flU &lt;ave In the process.

Ill'~

WAH. Ull&lt;IUJ1
Slew •llded ICMJwha County
Bc:boob and il tdl-cmploycd at a

''laid

dren Jennifer and Arthur.
Wiley said that one of the main
pilints of her •bing philosOphy is
that children learn thrOugh play. As
she walked aroond the room point·
ing to variou~ !OYS she exp!ained
what skills a child could gain by
plar,ing with the toys.
·
'All the toys I have are toys that
the child has to do something
By CHERYL KULAGA
with," she said.
Tlmes-Seotloel Sta"
In 'order to receive the license,
:. POMEROY- A new local pre· Wiley bad to hav.e the building
school is the realization of a 32- inspected by a building inspector,
year-okl dream.
an electrical inspector, the state fire
._-. JENART, 326 E. Main St., marshal and the Meigs County
which opened its doors to Health DepartmenL On top of that,
jlreschoolets ages 3 to 5 on Sept. she had to meet with someone from
;13, is the long-lime dream. of Mary the county's Department of Human
iCarolyn Wiley. She said opening a Services, which grants the licenses,
:preschool was somethmg she who Interviewed ber about teaChing
•always wanted to do but her father, methods and did an on-sile inspec· ,
:the late David Chase Miller, lion.
:advised her to teach in the· public
The Department of Human Ser·
:schools and open a preschool after · vices will visit the center twice in
•she retired from teaching. ·
the next year, unannounced, to see
: She has observed her father's how the center is running.
·
;advice and after retiring from
· Wiley said that there• are ben~·
;teaching•kindergarten at Pomeroy fits to children who attend
•Elementary she found a place, got a preschool rather than stay at home
:license and is now in operation.
or be in day care.
: In naming the center, Wiley
. "Preschool that is just preschool
;combined the names of her chi!· gives the child 2-1/2 hours_a .daY
;

GALLIPOliS - American Can·
GALLIPOLIS • Grace United
cer
Society Suppon Group meet·
Methodist Women's Tea will be
ing,
2 p.m. at New Life Lutheran
. held at 2 p.m. in the dining room
Church
on Routt 160 across from
with·!I general meeting.
emergency Medical Service. For
GALLIPOLIS · Evangelist, Paul more information call 446-3538,
Chapman _will present the sei'IIIOn 446-4895 or 446-8657.
at the White Road church of God
GALLIPOLIS • The Episcopal
of Prophecy with Twin Rivers
Church Women of Gallipolis will
singing at 7 p.m. Public invited.
meet for a salad luncheon at noon
. PORTER • Manna with LL Pre- at SL Peter's with a Longaberger
ston will be singing with Rev. . basket pany.
Keith Eblin wesenting the sermon
at Clatk Chapel at 9:30 a.m.
' GALLIPOLIS · Narcotics
A~nymous Just for Today Group
GALLIPOLIS • Bill Banks will will meet at Grace United
present the sennon. at 11 a.m. ser- Methodisi Chwch at 7 p.m..
vice and Keith Eblin will be
pr~hing at the 7 p.m. service at
Tuesday, Sept.ll
Debbie Drive Chapel.
GALLIPOLIS • Gallia County
District Library Board of Trustees
CROWN CITY • The Taylor to meet in Bossard Memorial
Family will he singing at Libeny Library, 5 p.m.
Chapel Church at 7 p.m.
VINTON · Vinton Garden Club
CENTENARY • Centenary will meet at I p.m ~ for installation
Untied Christian Church will pre- ofoffiars.
sent the Dillian Family singers and
Rev. Jack Holley presenting the
GALLIPOLIS • American
sermon at 7 p.m.
Legio'! Auxiliary Unit 27 will hold
a meeting at 7:30p.m.
ASBURY ·The Asbury Church
will hold a reunion in the White

ReYl.-;1

· GAU.IPOUS • A IIIVival meet·
ing is in progreas until Wt4. at the
First Church of God. Svangelist
Steve Carney will be spealdng at 7
p.m. through Wed. Tile Sissons
will be singing Monday throuah
Wednesday. For mDR lnformatioll

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992-2192

WORLD WIDE
OSTOMY ·DAY
.
OCTOBER 2, 1993

,j

'

·'

..
'.

�OH-Polnt

Showboats led the numerous
outside diversions of yesterday

Elks Lodge
past rulers'
scholarship
goes to 3

•
\

He got up and renewed the fight regular 42 foot ·circus ring, and !his
which act started all the patients and water pan10mime is so new, atttacau.endants in a free for all fight.
live and interesting that pleased pa"The disagreeable affair lasted II'Onsandauditorsarenotonlyloudin
In 1904 there were a lot of outfor
about10 minuteS when fin~lly their,Praiseoftheskillfulmeritofthe
door activities ftJ: Gllllipolitans to
the
patients
and their would-be pun- waterperformers,butinvariab1y they
.attend starting in
ishers ·were separated, the attendants are lhe fii'StiO again be ptesent at the
May and ending
gelling decidedly the worst of the next show."
with October.
encounter."
It appears from ·the ads that this
Among the
The circus that year was theSeUs show was performed inside a circus
number would
and Downs United "Shows and the , tentonabargesoarrangediOaccomhave included
day was June 22. This circus then •modate a swiii)IOing pool.
sever11l showhad over IOOactsand featured WinWe also mightaddthat1904 was
boats, baseball
sron'
s
trained
seals,
the
Martell
farnfii'St year that a motorized bus apgames, a
ily
and
the
Garcineua
family.
peared
in Gallipolis forregularbusiand a poverty soHowever
1904
saw
at
least
four
ness
so
people had good tranSponacial put on by thePresbyterian Church
in which a prize was given to the showboats that we know of come to lion 10 gctiO all of these activities·.
10wn. The picture accompanying The street car did not operate beworst dressed person there.
Food served included, per their tod;ly'sanicleisoftheGreatAmeri- tween 1901 and 1907.
ad, gingerbread,"punkin" pie and can Water Circus, which was mostly
GREAT AMERICAN WATER SHOW.
base was Charleston. In 1904, till$ show was one
an equestrian circus that operated out James Sands is a special corresponukofee...
.
The
Great
American
Water
Show,
pushed
by
or
many events on the GaUipolis entertlllnment ·
dent of the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
As t.O baseball games, there were of CharlesiOn, W.Va., from 190110
the Cricket, Is seen docked somewhere on the
schedule. The photo Is used by permission or '
His address is: liS WiDow Drive,
a number of barnstorming outfits to 1905.
Ohio River. The picture above dates to 1901The Cincinnati PubUc LlbriiJ'Y.
.
Springboro
OH 45066
The boat carried 40 horses and 14
1905 when this horse circus operated. Its home
stop in the Old French City in 1904
including the Cherokee Indians, the wagons and could set 800 people.
St. Louis Stars and the Nebraska This show was closed because of
Indians.Thefirsttwoteamshad both obj~tions from the S.P.C.A.
Around Memorial bay, two boats
men and women players.
In fact, the star of the Cherokee came in the same week. There was
During preliminary competiteam for several years was pitcher Price's Water Queen which per·This year;s $3 million producATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) rejected by pageant officials after
formed
vaudeviUeacts
and
then
there
tions
· in swimsuit, talent and
Maude Nelson. About1911 , Maude
. - Miss America wears combat m1ssing the application deadline. tion was modified to include a ban
was
French's
New
Sensation
which
formed an all-girls team called the
boots!
They marched behind Cornell in a on hair and makeup stylists. leav- evening wear, the hair was big and
Western Bloomer girls who regu- was much higher class vaudeville
Leanza Cornett's novel choice float that bore a giant red AIDS ing the contestants to do their own immobile, the dresses were the
than Price.
larly defeated male teams.
of footwear complemented her ribbon.
beautifying; a relaxation in the for- beaded. baubled and bangled variIronically, Price sold out in Gal- white, beaded full-length gown
The original Bloomer Girls team
That float and another carrying mality or what the women may ety of yesteryear, and the set had·
lipolis
and
French
did
not
A.B.
and
with cutout shoulders, as she parad- drag queens were emblematic of wear in the evenin$ wear competi- the glitz of a Liberace j~~Cket.
was organized in the early 1900s in
Cornett, who promoted AIDS'
Callie
French
were
quite
weU
known
ed with the pageant's SO contes- the chljnges in the pageant that tion; and streamlining of the show
Wapakoneta. Some of the patrons at
awareness
during her reign, plissed
in
Gallipolis.
Callie
was
born
in
tants on a rainy, chilly Friday have taken place since 1921, when itself.
the Cherokee-Gallipolis game were
the
crown
to
the next Miss America
Still, don't look for the girl next
it was started by city leaders hopdisappointed when an indoor soft Jackson and Mr. French ran a general evening.
Saturday
night.
door to walk down the runway.
store in Waterloo before going into
The parade featured a band of ing to prolong the tourist season.
cover baseball was used.
'
.
disabled
you!l_gsters
showboating.
•
Earlierthatsummertherehadbeen
By
1904;Mr.French
had
died
and
an interesting game played at the
Epileptic Hospital between the the showboat was run by Callie and
county's two best teams- the Hem- John McNair. Gallipolis' Fred Friend
played in the orchestra on French's
locks and O.H.E.
boats
for sevefal years.
It was a close game and it was in
Perhaps the most unusual showthe ninth inning. There was a huge
boat
in 1904 was the Rice-and Dore
crowd kept off the field by a rope.
Water
Show. The show included "the
One of the attendants tried to move
most
daring high divers, Jog
one patient back away from the
rollers,fancy and .nick swimmers,
GOODS TO BE
field.
'
HOURS ONlY
acrobatic
water feats and water
The Gallipolis Bulletin reponed
SUNDAY 1 P.M.
EXPEDITED TO
what next occurred: "The patient clowns."
According
to
the
Journal's
ad'l'll7 P.M.
gave the attendant a vicious punch
behind his right ear, which sent the vance ad: "The aquatic story of
~~T••- ol (vents
: attendant sprawling on the ground. Neptune's daughter is given in a
FREE DEliVERY
Situotlon
by Jim Sands
Special Correspondent

GAlliPOLIS -The Gallipolis
Elks Lodge Past Exalted Ruler
Association announces recipients
of the &lt;rganization's scholarslrip.
Three local area high school students have been awarded $500
scholarships. The students selected
are Luciana L. Scott, Deborah
Alkire and Lucinda Landis.
· Scott, a gtaduate of River Valley High School, plans to attend
. Marshall University in the fall and
major in Pharmacy.
·
. Alkire, a graduate of Meigs
Local High School, plans to anend
the University of RIO Grande and
major in psychology.
Landis is a graduate of Hannan

me

s700,000 INVENTORY

Sofranko to speak at
Alzheimers meeting
GALLIPOLIS- The slcills need- from Ball State University.
His wife, Judy, is Executive
ed in coping with an Alzhcimers
patient will be addressed at a sup- Director or Big Brothers/Big Sisport group meetmg.
ters of Gallia, Jackson, Meigs, and
Dr. Edward R. Sofranko will be Mason counties. Together they
the guest speaker for the · O)Je,tat~ the C,:en~er Fo~ Healthy
Alzheimers Support Group at Livmg m Gallipolis offenng a v~­
Pinecrest Care Center on Sept. 2A, ety of counseling and consultation
at 2 p.m.
services. . . . .
He is senior Professor of PsyThe pubhc IS 1~v1ted to auend . .
chology at the University of Rto For more mformanon contact Gall
Grande, where he has taught for Hamilton at (614) 446-7112.
more than 20 years. He is also
founder and director of the Universit y Honors Program and the REAP
program.
Dr. Sofranko obtained a Bachelor's Degree from the University of
Detroit and a masters and doctorate

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DR. MEL SIMON

..

my Day. The day is recognized to
increase awareness of osromy and
related surgeries, the quality of life
after ostomy surgery and the mle or
the local rehabilitation support
group.
Dr. Simon, a native of the
Philippines and a graduate of the
University of Santo Tomas, Mani·
la, completed his rotating internship at Cook County Hospital in
Chicago and his residency in area
hospitals in Chicago.
Dr. Simon has been in private
practice since 1966 in our area. He
is a frequent speaker on a variety or
topics not only to the local ostomy
association but also to other
groups.
For the past seven years Dr.
Simon has returned to the Philippines taking ostomy supplies to
·patients and sharing his knowledge
with his colleagues. This is done
' through the Society Qf Phillipino
Surgeons in the United States.
An ostomy is a change in one's
personal plumbing or a different
way of gomg to the bathroom. Area
ostomates are encouraged to attend
the luncheon given in their honor.
For more information call Phyllis
Brown, RN, CETN, 446-5080.

r

t_ -~-

I

•

At 11 a.m. Denise Arnold will
give a demonstration on making
potpourri, at 12:30 p.m. Connie
Hill will show the way to m~e
swags. Sheila Curtis will make
fresh herb wreaths at 2, and at 3
Nava Couch will demonstrate
tussie mussies.
The entertainment will include
Sharon and Jack Yencha on dul·
cimer and guitar at 10:30 a.m.,
Rick Boring on the mandolin at
11:30 a.m ., the Shady River Shufflers at 1:30 p.m., the band Zucchini Pickers at 2:30 and Linda Yencha, country singer, at 3:30p.m.
Numerous door prizes will be
awarded during-the day.

'.'

-- . --

tlon Is asaurld with Rock of Agea.

Hours: 9:~4:00 M-T·Th-F. Others by appointment•

.STUDENTS PLACE - Students of White's rae Kwon Do
rec:ently competed in the elgbt annual Battle or W.Va. Karate
tournament. Those placing are, left, Allen Sowards rrrst place
fighting, Paul Searles second place rlJihtlng and Michael Belville
fifth plac:e fighting.

593-158&amp;

or 446-2327

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
352 Third Ave.

Ph. 446·2327

Gallipolis, OH.

.

TaeKwonDo students
receive recogniti~·n

ARE YOU PREPARED?!
Do you know what to do in an

Cloist Teaford, Second Degree
Black Belt. Those placing were
Allen Sowards fii'St place fighting,
Paul Searles secbnd place fighting
and Michael BeJ{iiJe fightin·g.
Whites Tae Kwon Do is located
at 61 Court St., Gallipolis. For
more information call446-7433 .

GALLIPOLIS - Students of
White's Tae Kwon Do recently
traveled to Barboursville, W.Va. to
compete in the eighth Annual Battle of W.VA. Karate Tournament
The tournament is sponsored by
Danny Lane of Huntington, W.Va.
Students were accompanied by

EMERGENCY?
Get prepared!
Complete CPR and First Aid Training.
Register to attend a clas1 starUn1

1/lrleo T;OJf~fo~"~

Area herb festival is set
for Ravenswood Park
POI\1l'ROY- The 1993 Herb
Fest of the Meigs and Jackson
County. W.Va., River Valley
Herbalists will be held at Riverfront Park in Ra'ofenswood Saturday, Sept. 25 from 10 a.m., to 5
p.m. . . .
While many or the acthdties
will center around herbs ·and their
uses, there will also be a variety of
entertainment
Demonstrations will take place
at the guest tent where there will
also be herbal food samples. Tours
of the Sayre log cabin and herb
garden will be offered, and se~or
citizens will be d'e monsuaung
qui~ting and serving food at the
Semor Center.
.

_..,.......,-- ··

Rock of Ages offers you a choice of 6 diHerent coiOI'Id granites. Whatever your requlrsm111ts may be, complate satllfac·

I

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CLOTI IICLIIEIS
GENERAL ADWSSION - AM
I
yo~~Vtt
14 00 ~ pun::t.* IM!ore thYN a.y, on ehOw dly,

\

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Mel P.
Simon, Diplomat of American
Board of Urology, is scheduled to
speak~t a luncheon given by Holz- ·
er Medical Center in honor of area
ostomates.
This luncheon is to recognize
Oct. 2, 1993 as World Wide Osto-

97

SUNDAY ONLY
INOJNIHG LOVISEAT

•••

·~·

.

5

LARIIIILICftDN

Simon slated as speaker
at ostmates' luncheon

S.. IEDROOM SUm

Gallia County
Fair Board

· BALLET OFFERED -The-French Art Colony, 530 .
Gallipolis, is offering the opportunity to study with a w()rJd-class
instructor, Christine DIMario. She has danced in more than 15
companies. The FAC wUI offer a 10-week ballet class ror both children and adults at the Lupton Building startin~ Monday, Sept. 27.
Cali the FAC at 446-3834 to reJ:Bter. ScholarshipS are available.

•
"

Clotrry FWIIo

Jaycees &amp;

Black, Gold, &amp; Red

SPECIAL
ORDERS

HERE'S THE
NEWS

.NEW

Sponsored by

Purple, Forest green,

CAFE

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ALL

Gallipolis

.

Inventory

Glittering ·
Golden
Spec

-FAIRGROUNDS

ATHENS - School districts in
southeastern Ohio will again be
undertaking an intensive effort this
faD to identify all children with disabilities in their districts.
Identifying all children in the
region with suspected or confiiiiied
disabilities is the first of a threepart effort aimed at ensuring that
children with disabilities receive
the be~t possible education in the
· most appropriate program. the
other two steps in the effort are
assessment and placement. ·
The identification processes
required under the 1975 federal law
entitled, "The Education for All
Handicapped Children Act," (now
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act), which states that each
district nationwide must conduct an
"Intensive Awareness Campaign"
to locate children with disabilities

are to fully respond to the educa- gram. This may mean integrating
tional needs of our children with tbe child into the regular classdisabilities," he added, "we need to room, or into regular school activiidentify them and determine what ties as much as possible, or placing
educational program will best serve the child in special classes or other
their needs. Our goal is to ensure educational programs. Parents who
that all children are receiving an disagree with the school district's
decision have due process rights to
appropriate education."
To identify all children with dis- pres~nt complaints and have hearing conducted by an impartial hearabilitie~th health and social service agencies will be surveyed to ing officer. Parents wiU be notified
determine if children they serve specifically or these rights by the
may be disabled. Households in the school districts. ·
Children in need of special eduten counties may also be contaCted.
All information coUected will be cation may include: hearing
confidential and parents have rights impaired, orthopedically handi·
to review this information. Resi- capped, other health impaired,
dents who have a child or know of visually impaired, severe 'or multia child they believe may be dis- ply•impaired, learning di"sab1ed,
abled will be asked to call their severe behaviorally handicapped,
mentally retarded, s~h and Janlocal school districts.
All children identified as poten- gu&amp;(!e impa!red, auustic, and trautially disabled may then be matic brain injured.
The identification process, curobserved and tested to more fully
rently
underway, will tun through
evaluate their learning problems.
December
of this year. The assessThen, with parental or guardian
ment
and
placement Co!llponents
approval, children (ages 21) wiU be
will
follow,
placed in the most appropriate pro-

·, OlD GOODS

..... .._,. loot

GALL lA
COUNTY

every three years.
As part or a statewide project,
the effon will be coordinated in the
area by the Southeastern Ohio Special Education Regional Resource
Center (SEO-SERRC), which has
provided special education program assistance ftl the 27 school
districts in Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs, Monroe,
Perry, Vinton and Washington
counties since 1968.
The step-by-step procedures
planned for the region's area
statewide child search, will be similar to these implemented during
the last campaign in 1990,
'"'Our efforts," said SESERRC
Director, David Roach, "are aimed
at locating children, birth through
21 years of age, whq reside in the
ten-county area served by SEOSERRC. These children may be in
need of special education programs
or related services, and are not currently in public schools or served
by a private or other non-public
agency.
"If southeastern Ohio schools

Intensive effort is
launched to identify
disabled students

The SHOE

•••••• ••• .... ,... Jaclllllll

4:30&amp;
7:30p.m.
Monday
Oct.4

Scholarship Fund should contact
the Elk's Lodge and ask for a Past
Exalted Ruler. Donations to the
PER Scholarship Fund are always
greaUy appreciated.

Uquklatlol of

lUll liDS

COLUMBUS (AP) - The lead
singer of the rock group Ugly Kid
Joe headed for a weekend performance in Dallas after being fined
$100 and court costs on charges
related to a performance last month
at Cooper Stadium.
William W. Crane IV, 25, of
-ventura, Calif., pleaded no contest
Friday to a reduced charge of disorderly conduct
Crane appeared for about 15
minutes before Franklin County
Municipal Judge Bruce Jenkins.
Crane had been charj!ed with
felonious assault and inc1ting violence. Those charges were dropped
Friday, said Art Geier, a
spokesman for county Prosecutor
Michael Miller.
Defense lawyers had a videotape of the Aug. 27 concert that
conflicted with evidence supporting the original charges, Geier said.
Witnesses told authorities that
Crane·taunted a security guard who
· was barricading the stage.
:
Sheriffs detectives said Crane
: urged a crowd of about I 0,000 peo. pie to attack security personnel.
: They said he jumped off the stage,
landing on top on the unarmed
guard.

County areit.' iheltical ElkS LOdge
jurisdiction. Students were ranked
on scholastic ability, financial need
and leadership qualities.
Persons interested in or having
questions concerning the PER

Requires

64" off• SUNDAY ONLY
Se t 19 1993

Singer offers
no contest plea

LUCINDA LANDIS

. FREE SET UP
FREE DISPOSAl

COMING

DR. EDWARD SOFRANKO

. GOSPEL GROUP TO PERFORM - The Son-Sblne aroup, In
rront, l'rom left, Kent and L!Jia W Biker, and back, Rhonda and
Marty Glassburn, will be slnalng at Kyger United Methodist
Chnrch, State Route 554, Kyger, on Saturday, Sept. 25. There wiD
be a potluck supper at li p.m. In the Community Bulldlna, with
singing to start at 7:30. The Bell Choir l'rom Christ Academy or
Point Pleasant will also perrorm. The public Is invited.

E~pire Has Been

UNPRECENDENTED

High School, planning to attend
Marshall University and major in
medicine.
These three students were
selected from a field of applicants
from the Meigs, Gallia and Mllson

LUCIANA SCOTI

Regiol)'s school districts pledge best possible job

Outgoing Miss America dons boots for parade

PUBLIC NOTICE

DEBORAH ALKIRE

Monday, October 4, 1993
0

at Holzer Clinic RehabiUtatlon Center
4tb and Sycamore Streets; Gallipolis.

Your Complet~ Video Taping Service
-Weddings
-House Contents for
-Farrilly Reunions HomeOwners Insurance
-:Graduatlona 1
-School Events
Transfer Smm; Super 8, 16n'lm, Slides Pictures
to VHS Tape •
Also mass prOduce VHS tape to.VHS Tape
· can for More Information
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T1111111 ...toni: Octablr 4, 11,111l1181rom 6:311 p.m. to ap.m

+Ctl1tlk:ltlin CPR llld F1nt Aid
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To reglater call Terri Bartee
81446-5244

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'

Be Sunday nmet sentinel

RIO GRANDE - II is the
kind of setting one would expect
to see Dale Evans and Roy
Rogers at home in, a stable
brimming with anxious hones,
acres upon acres of11enlly slOping hiUs and forests, and a group
of riders with a yearning for the

TASTING THE WESTovenJabt trail
rides !:0 be scbeduled from Memorial Day through Labor l)ay,
Tuesday, Friday aDd Saturday even~gs.
sausage and tlippiilg holeakes in
a pari the size or a spare tirO.
Pol~~ off the true Bob
Evans
ast, riders and leaders packed, saddled the horses
and ,were leisurely making their
way back to the farm by 9 a.m.
Under majestic spans of
evergreens, the line of riders
weaved through brambles and
skirted ponds. Riding for two
hours, the ride concluded with a
pass by of the log cabin village
and saw mill.
Arriving back at the stables
at 11:30 a.m., riders thanked the
leaders, appreciatively stroked
their equestrian guides, and with
reluctance, turned back to the
harsh concrete civilization.
The ttail ride may not have
been the setting for John Wayne
or even Dale Evans, but Bob
Evans' trail ride is a refuge of
serenity and charm in a world
where there are few left.
The weekend ttail rides ate
filled for the remainder of the
season, but can be reserved for
the next season beginning
Memorial Day.
For more information call
245-5305.

·Year's sojourn in sealed dome
:nears endfor experimenters
. By ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN
Associated Press Writer
. ORACLE, Ariz. - Two years
ago Jane Poynter vowed she'd
hav~ to be dragged out of Biosphere 2, the sealed world she was
entering with seven other people to
live an experiment in ecological
5elf-sufficiency.
· But when the airlocks open

SepL 26, Poynter says ~e and ihe·
others will be more than ready .to
rejoin the world after a stay punctu·
ated by controversy, occasional
hun~ and achievement.
• This bas been a long haul ,"
Poynter said in a recent telephone
interview from inside the dome.
"For sure, we all suffered from
cabin fever."

Cedarville chosen as location
.for electric, fuel car project

Reg.2o.oo ••••••••• s16.00
Reg. 16.00 ••••••••• s12.00 .
'
Reg. 25.00 ••••••••• 20.001
Reg. 20.00 ••••••••• SJ6.00

HAIR HIGHLIGHTS
453 St. Rt. 7 North
446-4597

'

'

. I was deiermined to not present
myself as lhe bumbling fool that I .
am, so I carefully planned my
mounting style.
I first made sure the correct foot
was in the stirrup (so I wouldn't
end up facing south on a northbound horse) ~d then kicked \he
other leg over the horse's back,
careful not to land on the saddle
hom.
If I hadn't ripped the crotch out
of my j~s. it would almost have
been a John Wayne-quality mounL
Good thing I grabbed hold of the
saddle hom - I was laughing so
hard I almost fell off.
Once the hysterics subsided,
John showed me the rapes. Er,
reins. There was no steering wheel
or handlebar. No pedals and no
clutch.
And, as I would soon find out,
there is one other important difference between a horse and other
modes of ttansportation.
A horse has a mind of its own.
My faithful steed Faith was not
having a good afternoon.
She had been enjoying a peaceful day in the shade, munching
grass and pooping at her leisure,
when she was pulled out into the
warm sun, saddled and put to work .
as a kid carrier.
Faith just wasn't enjoying her
situation.
She seemed to know that you're
supposed to celebrate Labor Day
by not working and she didn't
Appreciate being drafted into service.
. Faith was .perfectly gentle with
the kids, but you could tell her
heart wasn't into it.
She performed what was asked
of her, cartying the kids from one
end of the field to the other. Back
and forth. Back and forih. And then
the last kid was lifted from her

back and set on the ground.
"Great," she probably thought.
"Now I can slip out of this saddle,
let my mane down and get back to
manufacturing fertilizer for the pasture"
.
•
And then my 200-pound butt
landed on her back.
. ,
;
. That would be enough to ruht
JUSt about anybody's day.
Horses are pretty smart critters
and it didn'.t take Faith long to real-;
ize she was carrying a greenhorn ·
Maybe she had heard my pants rip:
Maybe hones can smeU Ignorance. ,
Faith decided she had had
enough. Being a well-ttalned horse,
it was against her nature to take
advantage of the fact that saddles
don't come with seat belts, so she
just tried to ~ back to the barn
and hoped I wouldn't notice.
The incident reminded me of a
former relationship with a night·
mare of a girl back home.
The.Je I was, trying to be diplomatic with a stubborn, big-butted
creature which always wanted to
do the exact·opposite of what l
asked.
A funny sif!Jt I'm sure, as I tried
to keep Faith s nose pointed away
from the barn. But, unlike the .
aforementioned ex, the horse and I
eveniUally came to an understanding.
_ - -- · _
I lead her back to the bam and
she pretended it was my idea.
.
Faith and I rode together again ·
later that week without any prob-·
terns.
Looking back, learning to ride a
horse really wasn't all that bad. As
my father will attest, learning to
drive stick shift had a lot more
headaches.

Kevin Pinson is a saddle sore
stair writer for Ohio Valley Pub~
lisbing.

Ohioan gives Russia a chance to hear

Sunday Times-Sentinel /B7

.

ARTS &amp; CRAFTS SHOW
OPEN HOUSE

ARRESTED FOR SOLICITING IN CITY
BUILDING - Gallipolis Pollee Chief Roger
B~andeber(y (left) puts the cuffs on City Commission President Carol O'Rourke, wbo was
accepting a donation from City Manager. Glenn
Smith toward ber bid for "Maestro or the
Moment.'' Tbe "Maestro" competition is a
fundraising effort of tbe Ariel Tbeat_re with

Maestro contestants pull out all
the stops as conc~rt draws near_
By EDNA WHITELEY
GALLIPOLIS - The moment of
truth fast approaches for Maj. Gen.
George Bush, the Rev. John Jack·
son and Gallipolis City Commission President Carol 0 'Rourke.
, They are candidates in "Maei!lt'O
for a Moment," a fund-raiser the
Ariel Board of Direc10rs organized
to benefit the Ohio Valley Symphony. Each. bas about one week to
raise funds for the competition. The
winner will the win the nod to conduct "Stars and Suipes Forever" at
the OVS fourth-season opening
concert SepL 25.
In spite of the campaign
rhetoric, the trio is a team with a
commort goal. When it's all over,
they
proudly hand over their
combined coffers to the OVS. In
the meantime, t!tere 's the matter of
.which one will conduct the symphony..
Fact is, there's no way any one
of them can know for sure. Since
"poll remain open through intermission, a donation made then
could decide it. So, each must prepare to be "The One."
It's anybody's guess what the
preparations amount to. They're
probablr listening 10 the "Stars and
l!tripes' tape given them and whipOing the' air wilh pseudo batons
fetched from watshop or kitchen.
they may be condittoning their
~rms, .resting them, massaging
tttem or wondering if they'll be of
any use.
.
· Close to concert fune, each will
have a private lesson with OVS

ByMATTWOLF
Associated Press Writer
, LONDON (AP) - In "Prime
Suspect," her best-known TV
series, Lynda La Plante created a
policewoman whose sleuthing
often outpaced that of the men on
her beat
So is it any surprise that La
Plante herself could be said tO have
done the same, as a television writer?
For her new series "Framed,''
La Plante traveled to a secret destination on a fake passport to spend
two weeks in a remote villa where
she was locked in her room each
night.
The goal? To witness the workingS or a "supt;rgrass," an English
term for an mformer or someone
who turns state's evidence, so that
"Framed" would have that rippedfrom -the-headlines look.
·
The four-hour movie, starring
Timothy Da.lton as a reclusive
"supergrass" and David Morrissey
as the ardent police officer who
tracks him down, will b!: shown
Sunday an\i Monday at .8 p.m. EDT
on the Arts &amp; Entertamment network.
LaPlante's method writing
•

..'.

1.-.

•I

.tiAiJi.vii~ciRi! IN
SON IN LAW PG13
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMIIIION 11.10
Ut 0121

Also register on the Meigs County Bookmobile at Its designated stops.
For any additional Information, Call 992-2697, 'or stop by our office at 112
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio.

,.

INSPECTING 'I'HE DAMAGE- Rock star Gnee SUck walb ·

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Dean
Martin checked into a hospital
because of kidney problems, but a
spokesman says it's nothing serious.
The 76-year-old performer
walked into Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center without assistance Thursday
for several days of tests and treatment for a longtime kidney ailment, said hospital spokesman Ron
Wise.
"He- was talking with hospital
staff and seemed alert and in good
spirits," Wise said.
In 1988, Martin was forced ·to
drop out of the "Rat Pack" tour
with old friends Frank Sinatta and
Sammy Davis Jr. because of a ldd·
ney problem.
·

·

liE PREP,\RED • General {ret) Gecirge E. BUill, right, says be
beUeves ftrmly In the Boy Scout motto. Tbat Is wby be asked Rod
Tolliver, Gallia Academy Hlgb Sebool bmd director, to pve him
some pointers on lbe art or musical direction because Busb is one
or three local candidates sponsCH'ing lbe current drive in support or
lbe Ariel Theater. "Tbe Dorothy md Morris Haskins Memori'al
Theater is one of tbe area's finest civic centers and Is highly
deserving of local support," Bush said. Above, Bush is taking
"baton direction" Instruction to be prepared in case be wins lbe
"Maestro For a Moment" contest or tbe Ohio Valley Symphony
season's opening concert on Sept. 25 at 8 p.m. at the Ariel Theater.
maestm; Ray Fowler. He ·will disuibute pracbee batons, review conducting basics and tty to quell jitters.
When the\ winner takes the
stage, Fowler may linger to adjust

'

Board office will also be open on Monday, October 4,1993 from 9:00a.m. till 9:00
p.m. You may also register at our permanent branch location:

....., ,.,. FrhiiJ 9:00
till 9:00 p.a
S1turtl1y 9:00 1.a till 5:00 p.a
s....., 1:00 .... tlll5:00 p.m.

are to take parL

the stand, sttaighten a tie or offer
.an encouraging pat But, then he'U
retire to the wings and the "Maestro for a Moment" will face the
music. Alone.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Kellie
Martin earned an Emmy nomination playing a modern teen-ager
whose troubles include a boyfriend
dying of AIDS. Next up for her: a
tum-of-the-century teacher with a
whole different set of problems.
Martin, who played Becca
Thatcher in the ABC program
"Life Goes On,'' will star in a
CBS television movie base on the
1967 Catherine Marshall novel,
"Christy," ber publi.c ist said
Thursday.
Martin will porttay a well-bred
Southern woman who becomes a
schoolteacher in a poverty-stricken
Tennessee mountain town in the
early 1900s.
Martin will tearn this Sunday
whether she has won the best sup-

down a stairway with 1 Mill Valley ftreflabler as she vlewt dam~ge
·to ber home after an out..of-coatro1 ftre destroyed lbe lib uctw'e In

MID Valley In Marin Couly north of Sm Frmclaco Tllanday.
Slick, 53, was llle lead sillger ill the psycbedellc rock IJ'OUP Jefferson Airplane in the I.9'0s. (AP)
porting acttess Em my for her performance in "Life Goes On." The
series is now off the air.

which has studied lbe stars sin~.&lt;.
1984.
Bergen, who does her pin-dropping bit for telephone carrier
Sprint, became the fiTS I woman to
hold the top spot in the annual
study by Video Storyboard Tests. :
Right behind her is perennial
favorite Cosby, pitchman for Jell.
0. Although his "Cosby Show"
lives only in reruns, it hasn't
dimmed his abilitY to sell, the study
found.
Behind them in the top 10 are
Cher, Cindy Crawford, Burt
Reynolds, Reals Philbin, Susan
Lucci, Sally Struthers, Ray
Charles (last year's No. 1) and
Kathie Lee Gifford.
The results are based on the
responses of 3,000 people polled
by telephone and by mail, said
Video Storyboard.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Heidi
Fleiss, the alleged Hollywood
madam, is geainJ into a new nocturnal business line: "very sexy"
sleepwear.
In a telephone conversation
Thursday with talk show host Joan
Rivers, Fleiss said she's been busy
working on designs for the past10
months.
"Every woman will feel good
sleeping in them," Reiss said.
"Well, if there's anyone who
knows what men like to see women
sl~ in, it would be you," Rivers
replied.
F1eiss faces pandering and drug
charges for allegedly running a
prostitution ring. Her list of clients
ts said to include some prominent
entertainment industry figures.
Fleiss said she plans to sell the
sleenwear through a TV "infomerci&amp;i" and an international mail cat-

.

alogue.

NEW YORK (AP) - Which
celebrity pitch-folk do Americans
believe the most? Candice Bergen,
TV's irascible Morphy Brown, and
Bill Cosby, the loveable Dr.
Hux·table, according to a firm

Writer LaPlante dives into research for TV series

The Board of Elections Is open Monday thru Friday, 8:30.12:00, 1:D0-4:30. The

Melp Cou1ty Pu.Uc u•r•ry

. three people in tbe running. W!Joever rallies the
most money wDI conduct the Ohio Valley S:rm·
phony during "Stars and: Stripes Fqrever" during lbe Sept. 25 perfCH'mmce. Donations cm be
mailed to O'Rourke (prior to Sept. 25) at 718
St11le Route 588, Gallipolis (Times-Sentinel
pbot'! by James Long).

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
team of comedians including Jerry
Seinfeld and Dennis Miller will
"say hey" to Willie -Mays in a
comedy TV show to beneftl borneless children. ,.,
'
"Baseball Relief: An Ali-Sw
Comedy Salute" is to air 'Oct. 15
on Fox. Money raised by ticket
sales and a broadcast apPeal will go
to Comic Relief's Nauonal Pediatric Care Program.
-Comic Relief events since 1986,
including the annual Home Box
Office cable TV specials, have
raised more than $20 million for
charities for the homeless.
Scheduled entertainers include
Sharon Stone, Boyz II Men, Rita
Rudner, ·lames Earl Jones and
Harry Shearer. Matk Langston of
the California Angels, Los Angeles
Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda
and Dodgers catcher Milce Piazza

LOS ANGELES (AP)
Whoop! Goldberg learned the old
lesson: if you.can't beat 'em, joiri
'em- especially if one of 'em is a
large dinosaur.
Miss Goldberg agreed to star in
a buddy-cop movie that would pair
her with a dinosaur partner. She
avoids going to trial Sept. 27 on a
$20 million lawsuit that accused .
her of reneging on a promise to be
in the film.

'

Vote at your own precinct and avoid long lines at the Board on Election Day by
changing your address (If you have moved within the c:Ounty) or if you have
changed your name, by updating your registration by October 4, 1993.

Houn:

-

will

••

..

Let Terri Add Some Color
And Luster To Your Hair!

.•

It was a good thing I was wearing underwear on Labor Day.
I learned a valuable lesson:
Don't wear tight jeaDs to go borse. backTi.ding.
.
But, to defend myself, 1 have to
report that I dido 't know I was
going horseback riding when I got
dressed thai morning.
I spent the afternoon at my girlfriend Amy's house because, weD,
that's where the food was. Her parents were having a little family get·
together to which I waa invited..
I make it a rule to accept all free
meals where the food will be better
than what I can. fix at home (I
haven't turned down an invitation
yet).
•
To entertain the children in
attendance, Amy's dad, the Rev.
John "Tex" Jackson saddled up the
family's three.horses and let the
kids take turns riding. Once the
kids were finished, John offered to
. give me my fust riding lesson.
Although I am a proud
Appalachian-American who has
never lived more than a country
mile from the nearest horse, I had
never taken the time to learn how
tO drive one.
Although I had ridden those
pony rides at the fair and taken the
back seat when my cousin rode his
horSe, this was to become the ftrst
time I actuaUy got to steer.
I had hoped to learn in front of a
much smaller audience, but John
reminded me it might be my only
chance to learn without Amy the.Je
to witness my potentially embarrassing attempL
She had , left earlier for
Charleston to do some power shopping with her friend Ras;hel (the
niall's stock went up six points the
next day) and I had stayed at the
homestead to watch-over the leftovecfood.
I quickly reached the conclusion
that humiliation in front of 20 people I had just mel would be slightly
less degrading than looking foolish
in front of Amy. (It's one of those
macho man things; blame it on
testosterone.) .
So .there I was facing a beautiful, majestic animal whose ancestors had helped tame the west and
carry families across the frontier. I
also reslirnll was facing an animal
with enough musculature to kick
the crap out of me and· not even
break a sweat.

,
COLUMBUS (AP) A and lecwre on hearing aid technol- eyes brighten,'' she said.
woman who specializes in hearing ogy. They will have computerized
Education seminars will teach
impairments is ttaveling in Russia equipment that sbows the benefits pare~ IS how to i~entify_ hear!ni
tmpaument early 10 a chlld 's bfe:
The futuristic, privately to give deaf.children in the countty of a hearing aid.
Russian children will be intto- The use of sign language also will
financed project has been accused a chance to hear.
Mary Lou Luebbe-Gearhart of duced to modern behind-the-ear be discussed.
of hucksterism, scientific ama"We're bringing informatiOfl
teurism and outright deception in Luebbe Hearing Services volun- hearing aids that pick up more
and
technology to share. It win be
teered
to
travel
to
three
Russian
·
the much-publicized test of a protosounds than older models, Luebbean
exchanging
experience," shC:
cities.
She
left
on
Sept.
13
for
two
type space colony.
Gearhart said.
said.
weeks.
"We hope to put modem hearLuebbe-Gearhart ls one of about ing aids on children to see their
· ·But backers and some outside
scientists say the $150 million 15 hearing specialists wbo will
experiment succeeded in its main assess where Russia slllllds on edumission - keeping eight people cating hearing-impaired children in
In celebration of our Stb year annivenary
alive for two years, growing most Moscow, St. Petersburg and
there will be an
of their own food and recycling Stovrapol.
"Russia
is
vet}'
open
to
new
water, waste and moot of the air.
ideas and technology. The timing
"We really dido 't know if it for this trip is right," Luebbewas going to work," said Poynter, Gearhart said before leaving. "But
who managed the half-acre farm. Russia has been a closed society
"It wasn't imtil we sealed .this up for so long, it's difficult to know
entirely~ we lived in here for a
what we will encounter."
Overbrook Center
while and we saw, 'Boy, this does
The group includes representawork!'"
Middleport, Ohio
tives from the Washington, D.C.Biosphere 2's glass-and-steel based Alexander Graham Bell
dome encloses a tiny rain forest, Association for the Deaf, directors
Saturday, October 2, 1993
desert, ocean and savannah in a of schools for the deaf and speech
3.15-acre replica of Bio~here I 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
pathologists.
the Earth. The varied ' biomes."
Luebbe-Gearhart and other audiArts and Crafts by Area Craftsmen
stocked with 3,800 species of ologists took a similar uip to China
plants and animals, are supposed to last year.
Free Table Space Available
work together to create a self-conMembers of the group will visit
tained, balanced atmosphere like schools for the deaf and observe
For More Information Please
that in the real world.
·
classroom instruction and make
Contact Terri Stotts at Overbrook Center
The four women and four men suggestions for improvements.
of the crew had unlimited phone
at 992-6472 between 9-4 M-F
They also will visit universities
contact with the outside world but
said in recent telephone interviews
that they can 'I wait to see family
and friends and sample some longdenied food and drink.
Are You AResident Of Meigs Count.y?
"I would never go out into
space without my friends," said
Mark Van Thillo, the team's techIn order to vote In the November 2, 1993 General
nical manager and co-captain.
"That's something I've learned in
El•ctlon you must be re,lsterld by October 4, 1993

communications ·majors.
CEDARVILLE (AP)
"You're planting seed com,"
Cedarville College has been tapped Allport
said. "It's possible someto take part in an international conthing
revolutionary
will come our
test to build a combination elecuic,
this.
But
it's
more
probable that
of
fuel-powered car designed to boost
people
will
come
out
of
this who in
mileage and reduce pollution.
the
future
will
conuibute."
Cedarville is among 12 schools
Robert Larsen, of the Energy
..in the United States and Canada
Department's
Argonne National
taking part in the hybrid electtic
hrbrid electric
Laboratory,
said
vehicle (HEY) competition sponvehicles
could
be
m production
sored by the U.S. Deparunent of
within.lO
years.
' Energy, Canada's energy depart·
Cedarville, a private Christian
: ment, the Society of Automotive liberal
arts school in southwestern
. Engineers and Saturn Corp.
Ohio
with
about 2,300 students,
· Chuck Allport, director of engiwas
the
only
school in the state
:neering programs at Cedarville,
selected
for
the
competition.
:;said the challenge of building such
The
other
schools
are Alfred
·a car will put the students in the
':.. real world" and give them University, California State Uni;knowledge they could not get from versity at Chico, California State
University at Fresno , Ecole de
·books.
; ·'These are not trivial prob- TechnoloR!~ Superisure, GMI
·tems,' ' Allport said last Thursday. Engineering &amp;. Menagement Insti::•'They are right up there with what tute, lllinois Institute of Techilolo)be major automobile manufactur- gy, University of Maryland, University of Texas at Austin, Univerers are trying to get a handle on."
sity
of Western Ontario, Went·
Saturn has donated cars to each
worth
Instirute of Technology and
of the schools, which must convert
Western
Mi~higan University.
them 10 hybrid elecuic vehicles.
here.''
Under the rules, the students
must create d vehicle with a small
combustion engine that powers an
electrical system which provides
extta power for acceleration and
high speeds.
The combustion engine can then
be kept at a constant speed, reducing the added fuel consumption and
pollution that comes from constant
acceleration.
"If you can take an engine and
set it at a constant speed ... then
$
you get drastically improved performance,'' Allport said.
He said the car must drive normally, meet pollution requirements
and have good engineering quality.
The student teams will compete
in Detmit in June and- after making improvements in their cars .again in 1995 and 1996.
Allport said work on the project
will become part of engineering
Gallipolis, ,Ohi~
classes at Cedarville. He estimated
that about 200 students will be
Call Taday, Ask For Terri, Offers gooclt~rovgh 10·2-93
involved, including business and

TINTS
RETOUCHES
FROSTHIGHLIGHTS

Entertainment

.

By LISA PETERSON
Times Smtllld'Std

riding experience; Assuming the ·
roles of tour guides, they gave
entertained wjth ghost stories,
narrations of previous rides and
background on the ttails.
Mter three hours in the saddle the sun began slipping out of
sight and the riders came upon
the camp. Met by Tom, the
"bellhop" turn'ed camp counselor for the evening, their
belongings were unpacked, and
the exquisite camp cuisine of
baked beans was bubbling in a
pot on the fli'C.
Selecting a hut for the night,
the riders unpacked and stationed themselves aroun~ the
roaring camp fire.
Savoring beans and roasting
sausages, the campers were
compliments of yarnspinner
Kirt, and enchanted with the
peacefulness of a starry night in
the wilderness.
Rising early the next morning, the groups was greeted with
the smell of pancakes, sausage
and the ttail specialty, sock coffee - a knee-high of java
steaming in boiling water. Tom
was perche«!_on a l~g, f!yi~g

September 19,1893

Riding lesson gives reporter ·
n~w respect for Roy
Rogers
.

Bob -Evans Farm·'s trail ride
offers a glimpse of old west

saddle.
Bob Evans Farm's overnight
trail ride contains an the - sary ingredients for an adventure in the wild west - with an
added benefit: you .can return
home.
Arriving at the stables, ridels
lert their ovemi§hl provisions
with Tom, the 'bellhop" for
transportation to the camp site.
They were then faced with the
difficult task of selecting a rid·
ing companion for the trip.
As the horses we.Je led out of .
the barn, the riders - a mixwre ·
ofcowpokes and urbanites measured the horses. Each wanted the reincarnate of Silver with
the temperment of Mr. Ed.
. With the horse pageant ~on­
eluded and the final selecuons
made, the leaders made last
minute adjustments to slrapS and
stirrups, and mounted to begin
the procession.
Twenty "city slickers" with
adventure in their hearts were
trotting off onto Bob Evans
Farm.
Wilh 1,100 acres of wooded
ttails at their disposal, the two
trail leaders led riders through
an open field and into an
expanse of wilderness unbeknownst to many in this day and
age.
The group ttaversed through
canopied forests that seemed
virgin territory, far removed
from any civilization.
Atop confident horses they
climbed shale cliffs and
descended into gullies housing
fresh creek beds, choosing paths ·
as they wenL
The trails were cautiously
challenging to both the horses
and riders with but not so
tteacherous to endanger greenhorns. The leaders were stationed at the head and end of the
line as a precaution and provided tips for a safe and painless

wv

OH Point

·-

"Framed," as usual, was "to find
the character" - to seek out an
actual person, or persons, as the
basis for a fictionalirnl program.
Such has been her approach
from her first hit series "Widows"
(1983), in which she ttawled the
world of prostitutes and prisons to
tell of several East End women
who turn to crime, to "Red Mercury," her as-yet-unfilmed first
Hollywood script about the Russian
mafia, for which she spent two
weeks in Moscow.
The impetus for "Framed"
came from a headline in a British
tabloid newspaper about a supergrass, presumed dead, who had
been sighted in Spain.

Concerts
TEARS FOR FEARS
Tears for Fears will perl'orm at
the Columbus Palace Theatre Oct.
22 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are available at the Palace Box Office, all
Ticketmaster locations or charge by
phone at (216)431-3600.

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MRGAIN MATINIII SAT. aiUN.
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7

few hours a day, but I tlon't want it
lobe taped. I don't wal\t you to
make any notes,' " she said.
"'The run of the villa is yours,
but you can't leave,' " she recalled
Myers saying. "I was locked in my
room at night."
'
With "Prime Suspect" sold to
Hollywood and "Prime Suspect 3"
ready to shoot in the fall, La Plante
is turning her attention to what for
her is virgin territory: a stage musi·
cal.
At her urging, Mark Knopfler of
the group Dire Straits has agreed to
write music and- lyrics to La
Plante's book, but the subject
remains tightly guarded.
•'If 30,000 people can pay to see
Dire Straits on tour," she said,
"there's a bulle market which is
untapPed. It'S' JUS! getting them in,
putung something on stage they
want to see."

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Tickets Atatilel
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La Plante's OWn sleuthing in the
summer of 1989 led her back and
forth between London and Miami
until $500 brought her a forged
passport for further ttavel, and the
promise of meeting the real Eddie
Myers.
"It was totally journalism and
detective work," she said. "It's
nice beCause it alleviates hours in
front of a word processor to go out
and be a supersleulh."
But why would an informer
ttust her?
·
.
"I was on an illegal passport ...
(and) could have been in trouble,
so I was not likely to go to the
police," said La Plante, 47, an animated redhead whose north of England directoess jl¥5 amusingly with
a posh accent cultivated during her
erstwhile career as an acttess.
LaPlante recaUed a period easily
· summarized as Kafka-esque.
"He said to me, 'I'll give you a

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,

Sports

Section

I

C.

September 19, 1993

•

In Top 25 college football ·action,

Parkersburg, Boaz, Fairplai'n September 1993

· Family Carpet Warehouse Outlet Showrooms

• •

.No. 11 Ohio State bo.mbs Pittsburgh in 63-28. ~_out
PITI'S.BURGH (AP) - No. 11 Ohio Swe opened
followmg 16 years 81 Tennessee.
a.35-poi1!t lead early in. ~ second period and dealt
~hi~ ~tate took a 28·0 lead~ !he fust quarter.on
~ttsburgh another hunuliattng defeat at home, beat- By not e s rellJ!D, Ra~mont Harris four-yard sconng
mg the Panthers 63-28 Saturday.
run, Tom Hoymg's stx-yard throw to Galloway and
Rand.Y.Galloway turned a series of acr~ba~c
the first of George's two one-yard touch.down tw:~s.
catches mto three touchdowns, and Buder By not e
The Buckeyes, 42-10 losers tn theu .last tnp to
· returned ~e open_ing kickoff 89 yards f~r a touchPitisbur~ll in 1988, turned Dielri~. Jells' fu.mble into
do~n, while Eddie George scored on hiS fust two · George s second 011e-yard sconng run and a 3.5-0
cames for the Buckeyes {3-0).
lead at 14:07 of the second quarter !lefore Cooper
went '!I his be?ch.
.
Pitt (1-2), a .63-21 loser to Virginia T~h in its
home opener, .hils been outscored 126-49 m 1ts two
Ohio State s starters returned for the third quarter
home nmes smce Johnny
returned as coach
after Panther reserve Quarterback John Ryan threw

two of his four second-half touchdown p&amp;sses and
Galloway added a fi ve-yard touchdown run 'on a
reverse and a leaping nine-yard reception in the end
zone
Galloway, who said beforehand that no team in
the country could beat the Buckeyes right now set up
bis reverse with an leaping, 22-yard eaten o~er Jay
Jones to the Pitt six.
.
OSU reserve quarterback Tom Powers who
played most of .the second and fourth. q~. conUibuted a nine-yard touchdown pass to third· team
tight end Eric Moss. Keith Wilkerson added a 24yard touchdown nm to ?USh Ohio Sl8te over the 6():
point mark for the firSt bme since a 64-6 victory over
Utah in 1986.
Ryan, who started Pitt's firSt two games, played
the second half and threw touchdown passes of 35
and 17 yards to Diettich Jells, 60 yards to Junior
Green and 21 yards to BiUy Davis.
Ohio State, which accounted for about 60 percent
of the crowd of 41,511 in 56,500-seat Pitt Stadium,
outgained Pitt ·20048 in the firSt quarter. The Panthers have been outgained 401-77 in the fust quarter
of their two home games and have allowed 1,178
yards in their last two games: 675 to Virginia Tech
and 503 to Ohio State.
No. 2 Alabama 43, Arkansas 3 - ·At
Tuscaloosa, Ala .• Sherman Williams topped I 00
yards rushing for the third straight game, Antonio
Langham tied a school record for career intezceptions
and Jay Barker set a Southeastern Conference mark for most consecutive victories by a quarterback Sat·
urday as No. 2 Alabama routed Arkansas 43-3.
Alabama {3-0 overall, 2.{) SEC) extended its win·
ning streak to 26 games in an unpleasant homecoming for Arkansas coach Danny Ford, who played for
the Tide in the 1960s but now is trying to rebuild the
Razorbacks (2-1,1·1).
Staning in place of injured senior Chris Anderson,
Williams rushed for 148 yards on 24 carries, giving
him 374 yards for the season.
Langham picked off his fourth pass of the season
and 16th of his career, tying the Alabama record held
by three other players. The senior cornerback topped
it off by zig-zagging 43 yards for a .brilliant touch·
down return.
·
Ball Slllte 2.4, Ohio 16 - At Athens, Ohio, Mike
Blair and Tony Nibbs each gained more than 100.
yards and scored a touchdown as Ball State scored
the fmall7 points to beat Ohio University 24-16 in a
Mid-American Conference game Saturday.
Blair finished with 108 yards on 11 carries,
including a 48-yard touchdown run in the third quar-

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BREAKS THROUGH - BaD State nnnlng
back Mike Blair {27) breaks through the Oblo
University defensive lin as Bobcat defenders
Damlso Johnson {40) and Chris Ross (91) try to

stop him in tbe first quarter of Saturday's Mid·
American Conference game in Athens, Oblo,
· where the Cardinals won 2.4-16. {AP)

Dining Room

Bedroom

Typical 3-Room
Installation

co·liege scores
·

-.

By The Associated Press
East
Ohio St. 63, Pittsburgh 28
;south
Alabama 43, Arkansas 3
Duke 42, Army 21
Georgia 52, Texas Tech 37
Midwest
Wisconsin 28 Iowa Slate 7
Ball St. 24, Ohio 16
Indiana 24, Kentucky 8
Northwestern 22, Boston College 21
Notre Dame 36, Michigan St. 14
Penn Slate 31, Iowa 0
Syracuse 21 , Texas 21 (tie)
Utah 41, Kansas 10
W. Michigan 20, Akron 3
Southwest
Texas A&amp;M 73, Missouri 0
Far West
Nebraslca 14, UCLA 13

Giants get back on track with win over Reds; Indians beaten

CINCINNATI {AP)- The San gles in 6 2/3 innings, struck out
Francisco Giants stayed on the four and walked three as he won
rebound Saturday as Todd Ben· for the firSt time since he beat the
zinger homered twice and John Reds on Aug. 11. Mike Jackson
BurlcCtt, winless for the last month, pitched out of a two-on, two-out
pitChed six sttong innings for a 6-1 threat in the seventh and held the
victory over Cincinnati.
.
Reds hidess in the eighth before
The Giapts have emerged from yielding to Trevor Wilson, who
an eight-game losing streak that closed it.
. cost them first place. in. the ~ _ The Reds have provided leverWest to Atlanta by wmnmg then age for the two NL West confirst two from the downtrodden tenders. The first-place Braves
Reds, losers of a season-high eight swept them three games in Atlanta
straight and 13 of 1~.
·
earhet this week, and the ·Giants
Benzinger, a former Red who have gotten back in sync after just
grew up in nearby New Rich':flon~, two games 81 Riverfront Stadium.
drove 10 four runs while filling m ·
On Friday, Bill Swift ended a
once again for the injured Will month-long winless streak - his
Clark. Benzinger hit a solo homer last win also had been against
in the third and a three-run homer Cincinnati in mid-August- with a
in the fourth off Tim Pugh (8-15), 13.{) victory. It was Burkett's tum
his second two-homer game of the to end his slump Saturday against
season. He has six for the season..
an offense that has managed just
Ctm:k a~vated a stn:tched _lig- one run and 13 hilS - only one for
ament 10 hts nght knee Fnday mght extra bases - in the two games.
and was on the bench Saturday. He
Cincinnati's run scored without
hlid started the last five games after benefit of a hit in the fourth. Regbeing disabled for 18 days.
gie Sanders wallced, stole second,
Burkett (19-7) gave up silt sin·

went to third on a wild pitch and
scored on Juan Samuel's sacrifice

win with two-thirds of an inning. ing Mark Grace. One out later,
Rickey Henderson and Devon Detroit starter 1ohn Doherty lasted · Sosa put Chicago ahead to stay.
White had consecutive RBI sin~
Bill BreniUID (1-1) pitched two -. in the third inning off $.colt Erickjust 3 1/3 innings, allowing five
scoreless innings for his first major son (8-19), who allowed eight hits
runs on severi hits.
Jose Mesa (10-12) allowed league victory and -Randy Myers in 8 '1/3 innings.
Erickson, a 20-game winner in
Seven runs on 11 hits in six-plus worked the ninth for his 47th save.
Destrade
hit
two-run
homers
in
1991,
is closing in on the fust 20innings.
Danny Bautista scored the the third and fifth innings.
loss season in the major leagues
Tigers' first run after Mesa threw
The Cubs came back from a since Brian Kingman dropped 20
three-run deficit to tie on Dwight for Oakland in 1980. Erickson likeaway Lou Whitaker's grounder.
Whitaker scored on Felix Fer- Smith's pinch-hit RBI single in the ly will have two more starts this
min's error, and Scott Livingstone, sixth. Sosa started the sixth with a season.
Chad Kreuter and Skeeter Barnes triple and scored on Rick Wilkins'
Stewart ·struck: out five straight
followed with three straight RBI double.
• afte1· allowing Chip Hale' s leadoff
singles.
B~ue Jays~· Twins 1
sin$le in the second. Stewart was
Storm Davis pitched the last I
At Mmneap?hs, The .Toronto · reheved by Mike Timlin after
1/3 innings for his fourth save.
Blue 1ays conunued then strong allowing consecutive singles with
Cubs 6, Marlins 5
stretch run in the AL East Saturday two outs in the seventh Timlin
At Chicago, Sammy Sosa's run- with a 5-1 victory over the Min· struck out David McCarty to end
scoring single in the seventh inning nesota Twins behind the solid the threat and pitched 2 1/3 inings
broke a tie as the Chicago Cubs ral- pitching of Dave Stewart.
.
for his fust save.
·
·
lied for a 6· 5 victory against the
Stewart (10-8) allowed five hits
Toronto made it 5-1 in the ninth
Florida Marlins on Saturday in 6 '1/3 ~Dings and ~truck out five on a run-scoring single Spra'gue, an
despite .two homers by Orestes consecutive batters m one stretch RBI double by Pat Borders, and a ·
Destrade. .
as the ftrst-place Blue 1ays won fielding error on the double by left
In the seventh, Vizcaino singled their seventh straight game. Stew- fielder Pedro Munoz brought home
with one out and Rich Rodriguez art walked two and struck out Spmgue.
relieved Richie Lewis (6·2), wallc- seven.

fly.
The Giants' offense is back on
track. After scoring just 19 runs
during the eight-game losing
streak, San Francisco has rolled up
19 the last two days.
·
Even slumping Barry Bonds
drove in a run Saturday with rustinning single, his first RBI since
S~pt . 2. He'd gone 13 straighl
games without driving in a run.
J.R. Phillips drove in the Giants'
final run with a ninth-inning
groundout
Tigers 7, Indians 6
At Detroit, Eric Davis hit a tworun hom~r as the Detroit Tigers
beat the Cleveland Indians 7·6 Saturday.
Detroit led 5-0 after one inning
but squandered the lead, and trailed
6-5 before Davis' fourth homer
since being acquired from the Los
Angeles Dodgers on Aug. 31 in the
fourth inning.
Tom Bolton (6-5) picked up the

a

·

.

Browns, Raiders in Coliseum . again, but as unbeatens this time

Living ROC/m

No extra charge for the pad your carpet (up to 40 square
and no extra charge for labor. yards of it) and 'installing it in
·The $598 cost includes your home.
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ter. Ntbbs picked up 105. yards on 29 cames and
sc~ on a two-yard run in the fli'St _quarter as Ball
Slate IDlproved II? 2-1 ove~ and 1-0 ~~the MAC.
It was the thud game m a row thts season that
Ohio {0-3, 0-1 MAC) had allowed two backs to each
top 100 yards.
The Bo'!C&amp;ts piled up a 16-7 lead in the st£?nd
q~ behind a one-yard '?uchdown run b)' DWight
Pickens, Counney Burton s 62-yard sconng catch
and run from D.R. Robinson and a 22-yard field goal ·
by' Jeff Marchan~
.
.
.
Ball State gamed 1.42 of tts 235 ,rushing Y~ m
the second half to gnnd out the VICtory ..Robmson
completed 12 of 14 passes for 173 yards m the first
half, but he and ~~om Do~ hit )ust seven of
lS for 52 yards With two unen:epuons m the sccond
half.
.
.
The Cardmals, who have won eight of their last
nine meetings with the Bobcats, pulled to 16-14 at
the half on a 14-yard touchdown pass from Mike Neu
to Juan. Gonnan.
Blau's 48-yard run put them ahead and Mike
Swart ended the scoring with a 23-yard fourth-quarter field g_oal.
- - - - --· ....
•
~obn Ca~ro1Jl5, .C11pltal 0 - At University
HetghiS, Ohio, Gregg Genovese scored two toachdowns and John Carroll's defense tiinited Capital to
174 net yards in a 2S-O Ohio Conference victory Satr-urda....:Y~·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - .

In major league baseball action,

In today's AFC Central vs. West matchup,

PRICE INCLUDES FREE
PAD AND INSTALLATION

.
•

WE GOT THE CARPET, WE GOT THE PRICE!

By JOHN NADEL
LOS ANGELES (AP) _ For
the second consecutive year, the
Cleveland Browns and Los Ange·
tes Raiders play at the Los Angeles
Coliseum in the third game of the
season.
The circumstances, however, are
entirely different this time.
The Raiders hope the ouiCOme
is different, 100.
A year ago, both 1eams enlered
the game 0-2 and both finished 7-9
and missed the playoffs. This year,
both are 2-0 and have high hopes.
"Last year was last year," said
·Raiders head coach Art Shell. •'It
:was last year's team. It's a different
'group on both sides. I think they
are (better). Their 1eam right now is
playing very well."
: SoaretheRaiders.

"All through training camp I
kept telling you this was a team to
be reckoned with,'' Shell said .
"That has not changed."
The Raiders have beaten Minnesota 24 · 7 and Seattle 17-13
while the Browns have beaten
Cincinnati 27-14 and San Francisco
23-13.
"I think we're playing a much
better team than in 1992," Browns
head coach Bill Belichick said.
"Of course, I think we're better,
too.' '

Last year's Browns-Raiders
game was one of the strangest in
the NFL.
The Raiders dominated statisti,
cally with 27 first downs, 464
yards of total offense and an advan·
tage of nearly 2-to-1 in time of possession . The Browns had seven

fust downs and 231 yards or total said. "Thatrs the one stat !loot at. ever score four touchdowns
offense.
Turnover ratio is important to me, again."
But thanks to five Los Angeles that and the win column.''
Kosar is healthy right now, but a
turnovers (Cleveland had none), six
Metcalf stung L.A. on five lot of his teammates aren't. The
Cleveland sacks (Los Angeles had catches for 177 yards from Todd Browns have 11 players on the
none) and a four-touchdown per- Philcox , who was replacing the . NFL injury report and 10 others formance by Eric Metcalf, the injured Bernie Kosar. Three went including five defensive starters Browns won 28-16.
for touchdowns on plays measuring listed as questionable.
"Stats don't mean anything," four, 69 and 63 yards. Metcalf also
" We got banged up {in the win
Shell said. "It's the final score. We scored on a six-yard run.
over the 49ers Monday night),"
didn't play well enough to wiit.''
"I try not to remember him," Belichick said. "I'm worried about
Turnovers were a problem all Shell said of Metcalf. • 'I just it. You can't practice them. We're
season for the Raiders, who, at remember him streaking down the ~oing to need everybody out there
minus 19, had the worst turnover field."
m L.A.''
ratio in the NFL. This year, they're
Metcalf said the game was probKosar has completed 35 of 62
tied for third in the NFL at plus ably thebesthe'severha&lt;f.
passes for 368 yards and two
four. The Browns lead the league at
"At the same time, that was in touchdowns with no interceptions
plus seven and th~y're the only 1992 and their defense looks much while Raiders quarterback Jeff.
NFL team that hasn't committed a · better this year," Metcalf said. Hostetler is 41-of-60 for 420 yards
turnover.
"I'm not expecting anything like and two touchdowns with two
" Besides the won-lost column , that to happen this year. I may not interceptions.
I'm looking at turnovers," Shell

;In today's AFC Central bout,
By ALAN ROBINSON
· PITTSBURGH (AP) - Two
in dire need of qwckly tum: ing around their seasons are play· ing against the most likely eandi:date to help them do it - each ·
:other.
· Somebody will have to win ; unless, of course, they tie - when· the 0.2 Pittsburgh Steelers hosllhe
:0-2 Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday.
; In two games, die Bengals have
·scored only 20 points while the
: Steelers have scored only 13. Only
:Tampa Bay (10) has scored less.
· These two teams need to win
:anyway they can.
; •'If we lose this week at home to
•Cincinnati, we're really in trou:bte," said Sleelers comCJback Rod

:teams

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.
•

Hostetler is in his first season
with the Raiders after nine years
with the New York Giants.
Belichick, in his third year as the
Browns head coach, became famil·
iar with Hostetler as assistant coach
for the Giants from 1979-90.
"I've seen him take a team to
the championship in 1990,"
Belichick said. " There's no queslion Jeffs got a good arm. He can
throw the ball deep, they've got a
lot of speed out there."
One of those players with speed
is wide receiver-kick returner
Raghib "Rocket" Ismail, who wiU
probably make his NFL debut in
the game.
"We expect that Rocket will
play some this weekend," Shell
said. "He'll probably get a couple
shots in there."

.

\Bengals; Steelers in search of first victory in must-win contest

W. Va. Contractor's License #WV006198

Camden &amp; Division Streets
Parkersburg
304-485-7575

.

Woodson.
Second-year Sreelers coach Bill
Cowher isn't labeling this a must·
win. Neither is second-year Ben·
~als coach David Shula. But clearly
·at's almost certainly that for both
teams, neither of wbich can afford
an 0-3 start in the AFC Central.
A home win last year against the
Bengals turned the Steelers around.
They hope it works again.
·
Last year, the Steelers started 30 then lost on the road at Green .
B~y and Cleveland. The offense
was in disarray, their confidence
was shaken and their season was
teetering erecariously. with the
Houston Otters po~. to take over
the AFC Central Dtvunon lead.
·But the Steelers responded with

a 20-0 win over the iiengals and
went on to win six of their next
seven to clinch the division Iitle.
The Bengals, who started 2-0, won
just, three more times all season,
and lost again to the Sreelers 21-9
when. Pittsbur11h .sacked rookie
quarterback David Klingler a leamrecord 10 times.
Shula would like to return the
favor this year.
"A win would be a real jump
starter for us," Shula said. "We're
trying to compete now :-I' m not
going up there to lose Sunday. We
feel that we were in both ballgames
to this ·point, and, in fact, we had
several opponu,nities to win both
ballgames. We're competing right
now."

'•
,:

tI

.

'

'

"·

The Ben gals' problem has been
that Klingler is still 100 young and
his wide receivers are still too
enatic to function without a strong
running game. And Pro Bowl nmning back Harold Green, who
missed the opener in a contract dispute, managed only 25 yards on 12 .
carries in last week's 9·6 loss to ·
Indianapolis.
·
"I'm still trying to $el in 5Y!IC,
even on the handoffs With David,"
Green said. "We have 14 more
games, to I have time to work
things out."
The Steelers didn'tlook much
better last week in a 27·0 loss to
the Los Angeles Rams.
Quarterback Neil 0 ' Donnell
was unable to throw effectively and
· All-Pro runner Barry Foster - he

he were under center.
''We were flat and not ready to
play, but I guarantee you we'll be
ready to play Sunday," running
back Tim Worley said.
Shula had a similar reaction following the Bengals' 13th loss in his
18 games as coach, saying they're
tired of merely being competitive
and are anxious to start winning.
"We're competing right now."
he said. "We're not going up there
to do anything but win on Sundiy.' ' '
And if they don't...
.
"I would agree it's a criti~al
up.' '
So dreadful was the Steelers ' game for both of us," Klingler
offense that Pro Bowl center i&gt;er- said. "For us, we need .to instill \
montti DawsOn once forgot that some confidence in some of our
O'Donnell was in the shotgun for- young guys by getting a win in an
. -mation and snapped the ball as if NFL regular-season game."

of the new $10 million contract was held to SO yards.
The Steelers' offensive problems mirror Cincinnati's. The quar·
terbacking has been erratic, the
running game spotty and the wide
receivers have been so unproductive they abnost &amp;hould be charged
admission.
"I 'm certainly no one to talk
about anyone else's passing
game," Shula said after Klingler
was 16-for-37 for 146 yards and
one interCeption against Indianapolis. "We haven ' t been lighting it

�'
•

'

·september 1t, 1113
•.

'

i'lmee sentinel

Point Pleasant
fights back to beat
Gallipolis·l8·6

1993 grid standings
(OnraD)
Team
W L TP OP
Point Plemlant .......4 0 94 21
Gallipolis ...............2 1 74 18
Logan ....................2 1 62 32
Portsmoulh ........... .l 1 28 10
River Valley .......... 1 2 29 83
Jackson .................. ! 2 49 46
Warren Locai ........O 2 IS 40
Marieua .................o 3 40 91
Coal Grove ............O 3 13 93.
Athens ...................0 3 17 103
Meigs ....................0 3 22 104
Friday's resulls:
Pt. Pleasant 18 Gallipolis 6
Waverly 37 Athens 14
South Point 2S Jackson 14
Zanesville 14 Logan 7
Parkmburg 31 Marietta 20
River Valley 81 Meip
Warren Local81 Patts.South (Sat.)
Wheelersburg 33 Coal Grove 7
Porlsmouth 81 Dayton
Belmont(S81)
Sept. 24 'ames:
Portsmouth 81 Gallipolis
Coal Grove 81 Athens
Waverly 81 Jackson
Chillicothe at Logan
Marietta at Belpre
Meigs at Pt. Pleasant
River Valley at Warren Locai(Sal)

•

widC left though leaVing !hi score
816-6 after the 80 yard drive.
,
Gallia Academy moved tbe ball :
to Point's 44 yard line. On thhird :
and eight though a swarm of llig
Blaclt IIICklers, led by Shinn,
Robert Hall, and Joey warner,
caught Qad Barnes for a loa of
three and lhe Blue Devils wae for·
ced to punL
An
unnecessary . roughness
penalty on Gallia gave Point some
room to lmth, and they took ad·
vantage. On third and live from the
34. Will Gill's pass found a leaping
Ryan Roush 81 the 4S. Somdtow
Roush managed IQ keep his feet If.
Ia' being hit in midair. Roush then
almost ouii'8Ced the Blue Devil
secondary as he rambled 59 yards
to the seven yard line. Then oo first
and seven Salford banged behind
left tackle into the endzone to put
Point up 12-6.
Gallia seemed to have an answer
for Point as they steadily moved the
ball down to the Big Black 21.
Then Salford dragged down
Hulehinson, who bad platty of
daylight in frmt of him, for a gain
of two. After Barnes aiDPed on the
next play, Gallia Aclidemy was
faced with a fourth and IS on the
26. Point was up to the test Shinn
and Taylor burst through the line
immediately. After avoiding Shinn,
then Taylor, Barnes set to thrOw,
but the persistent Shinn finally
caught up with him for an 18 yard
loss.
Point went back to the attack. A
steady grinding drive concluded
when Brent Smith's hectic
scramble paid dividends as Ryan
Roush broke open in the back of
the end zone. Smith squeezed off a
bullet to Roush, who managed to
keep his feet in, and the game was
finally sealed. The Scoring ended 81
18-6 as the conversion was no
good.
''Was that a classic or what," said
smiling Point coach Steve Salford.
"I've never been prouder of a team
than I am IOnight We got our buus
ldckecl in the first half. They took it
to us. At. half we challenged the
kids and they IapODCied. We'Ve
won four games this year and were
behind in 11uee; he added.
""I think the key 10 this game
was containing Cbad Barnes,"
Coach Salford. "'We gave up some
big plays to their running backs,
but Chad Barnes scared us to
deBth."
· C!Jntain isn.'t the word for what
the Big Black defense did to Barnes. 'I'hey put an old fahioned
whoopin' on the Blue Devil
quarterback as Barnes lost SS yards
on the night
·
Shinn, Hall, Roush, Safford, and
Rizer led the Big Black defatsive
charges.
Point kicker Cory Hill was injured in the game. ''We:n: k~ing
our fingers crossed thattt ISII't bad.
We need ~ get him healthy again,"
Salford wd.
:
..
..
Next week Metgs vwts ~•.nt
PI~~ and Portsmouth VISits
GallipoliS.'
.
The Pomt Pleasant Btg Blacks
improved to a perfect 4.0 and Gal·
(See BIG BLACKS on C-3)

:

:

.

IIDI1 16 min.._ u Wahama iiDied
from a 7-6 deficit 10 pull the pmc

By GarJ Clll'k

SJ~Drt~ Com1111J"deet

out of111e lbe.

•

: MASON • Tammy Ma)'CI..aed

While the White Fak:on offenSe

•.

IJIUUCII!ld throughout muCh of the

• 30-yn toucbdowil . - 10 Jam
~~ .with=six tom::.~
~
Jr¥11
...., -

CMWI it WU the Bead Area
del_.;
tbat was the bighlifb': of

half rally by the
.
·
COICh Doa Yin·
Alea srlddcn a tlril-

Wfiltl! Falcons.

fi:Jr

• 'l1le
~··

q

12-7 come-fiOm.belli win
the =~Red
~bel~ a
Parents Night
lrOwd It the Bend
achool.
~ 1he vicfa'y iiiiiiiiPed I two pme
lplillg skid by tbC loc:al eleven as
Wahlima in)pioves .to 2-2 oo the
:1993 seeeoo, ·willie Ravfii\IWOOd
Ill· ·ICCOIJCI ltnlight at·
'lllWIIa' 10 flu 10 2·2 u well. The
;yiHs lriumph was also lhe ninlh
:Win in 11 ~ .over its Class AA .
1lvals, and. marked lhe second con•live year tbat Wahama
)IWChed VICtory away from the
'led Devils in tbe final quarter.
&gt; "This was a tota111ea111 effort and
:Was a ~ corne-from·behind win
·b us, . a relieved White Falcon
:~h VIIIIMder aaid fOllowing the
"tmmltional triumph. "We hail so
many people hurt and-playing out
of positjon. We even bad twO
Jieople &amp;om our be • Reid to 111cp in
11 cenla' of all places. and IIIey did
a terrillc job." Both J
May
and L~ Black . . . .
~ II
unfamiliar CCIIICr posttion a- the

•M

.opped

HILL GETS 15 :YARDS • Gallipolis klder ud baek1ap foB·
back Brudon HID (31) raced l'or lS yards OD tbll play Ia. Ia tbe
&amp;eCODCI.quarter ol Prlday's GAHS-PPHS IP'Id pme at PL J'leasaat.
Jesse Stacy (44) tbrowll key block. PL Ple1188nt won, 111-6. The loss
was GaiDa's first ot tbe year.

FIRST DOWN • Gdlpolls taDbaek Jamie Caldwell (21) piW ;
up a lint ilowD wltb a lllx-yard pin darln1 tblrd period action of
Friday's GAHS-PPHS IP'Id pme at Pt. Pleasant. The Big Blacks ·
rallied from a,_. halftime deRclt to win 18·6 and remain unbeaten after lour starts.
,.'

r=

Rest of SEOAL teams fall in Week 3 action
Football teams of the Southeast·
ern Ohio Athletic League went
winless in Friday night action
against non-league l_lllponents as
both Logan and Galhpolis tasted
defeat for the first time in the
YOIID8 season.
The Blue Devils lost to Point
Pleasant 18-6 and Logan dropped a
14-7 decision to the Zanesville
Blue Devils. In odler games, the
Parkersburg Big Red downed Marietta 31-20, Waverly pounded
Athens 37-14, and South Point
whippc:d Jackson 25-14. Warren
Local took on Parkersburg South in
a Saturday night game.
Zanesville 14, Logan 7
.At Logan's Bill Sauer Field,
Zanesville scored two touchdowns
in a span of four minutes in the
third period to raise their record to
2-1.
Coached by former Logan mentor Clarence Perry, the visitors fell
behind in the second quarter when
Chad Zimmerman scored from the
~ard line and Jordan Jackson
the extta point for a 7-0 lead
at halftime.
Zanesville's touchdowns came
in the third period when MaU Perry
threw a 10-yard scoring .pass to
Cory Newman. Tom Evans kicked
the first of his two conversions to
tie it 81 7·7. Less than four minllles
later Sid Hall raced 48 yards to
paydirL Evans toed the extra-point
kick.
Hall was the gaffie's top rusher
with 125 yards on 19 totes while
Tom Price led the Chiefs with 11
carries for 28 yards. Logan was
without the services of leading
rusher, John Cosgrove, out with an
ankle injury, resulting in only 85
rushing yards for the game.
Zanesville held a slight edge in
yardage (229-196) as Logan gained
113 yards in the air on 13 of 26
pass completions.
Quarter totals
Zanesville ..............o o 14 o= 14
~ ....................0

spotted the Ironmen a 14-0 lead in · men made it 14-0 in the second
the fii'St half and then unleashed a qWII'Ier when Geoff Matthews hit
powerful ground attack to raise Robbie Travis with an ll · yard
their record to 2·1 while Jackson touchdown strike. Woolum added
slip; to 1•2.
the conversion kick. ·
Kevin Wolford got Jackson on
South Point's ground game acthe board in the fttSt quarter on a counted for four touchdowns, with
one yllrd run and Greg Woolum Brian Leonard scoring on runs of
kicked the extra point. The· Iron- four, three and nine yards. Eric

SEOAL wrap •..

Conwell traveled 82 ·yards will!'

tho evening. Wlblma &amp;mited
Ravenswood 10 jua 61 }'11118 in
lOIII olrenle over tho liDal two
!ll*terl with a fourth pmiDd pi
line stand ~ying I
the WHS Vii:Qy. J.C.
. t llld
Doug Huff led the While
in
.tactles, Wl)ile Tommy Mayes_,
Rlndy Purkey and Shane Scott followed c:ble behind. Craig Weaver,
Madl: HiWI and 1Im Miller also
came up with big plays for the local
defensive chlage.
"We held them on the p i line
wilh ICVeral big plays defensive~
. and_ that gave us a big -boost,
VanMeter said. "The panting of
Joey and Tomm~
also
played a. big part m getting us in
1ielil posilion to ha~ a chance to
score the go.,ahead touchdown."
Ra~ took the opening
ijckoff and Jlll!l'Ched S6 yards in
just six plays to give the Red
Devils a surprisingly easy score on
iiS first plliSIISiOO. Ryail' Ward
picked up 22 yards oo a reverse and
Oq All:her added a 13-yard run to
set up Archer's ·duee yard burst for
die touc~ with 9:03 to play in
lhe opening quwr. All:her also
booted the PAT _II? give

At Parkersburg, the Big Red ral·
lied from a 14-7 halftime. deficit,
scorm'g 24 noints in. the second half
to pc)st theft-first win in t1uee outings while the Tigers remain win·
~~in tbree games.
· Marietta sCcnd twice in the first
period on a 13-yard run by Eric
Sauls and a two yird pass from

Parkersburg 31, Marietta 20

!Jig Blacks win ... _
fell to 2-1 on the

~ipolis coach Brent SaUnders

• Fast, easy installation .
• Goes directly over old roof
• Won't rust or corrode
• Reduces noise
• Provides added insulation
• Lifetime limited warranty

Mares

thought the game's key play came
when PPHS recovered its own
fumble in the endzone for its fltSt
touchdown of the ~e midway in
the third period. 'If we get. that
fumble, it could have been a diff~-

ent game." said Saunders, who
believed the play of his inexperienced line wai also a factor. Saun·
ders pointed out he staited two
sophomores and only one senior on
the offensive line.
Score by qnarters
Pl. Ploasant........ 0 0 6 12 •18
Gallipolis_...........6 0 0 0 • 6

593-8697
593-TOYS

'WHITE - 'IIROWN 'RED

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

.•

~

_

__ __,

_

.... . .

=

Red

SAVE

sasoo

in

Brad Kroft to ChriS Kni&amp;hL Darrell
Shuss kicked both conversions.
The next three IOUChdowns were
on P~burg runs, as Jason Weigle went siX yards, Ryan Norman
four yards 'and Kirk Oliver 55
yards, with Brad Johnson kicking
tJuee extra points.
In the fourth quarter Marietta's

Eric Sauls scored his second touch·
down on a10-yard run, but a twopoint conversion run was stoPPed
to make it 21·20 with 9:5lleft:'l'he
host team iced it in lhe fm$1 nine
minutes when Jason WeiJ1e raced
65 yards, Johnson ki~ked lhe e~tra
point and added a 20-yard field
(SEOAL ends on C-4)

2
&lt;Con
_ tin_ued_rrom
____c-_
&gt;_,----__..::::-=-----...;__~---------

..
'BLACK
_ GRAY 'QIIEEN
TAN · BLUE
'IN ITOCK COLORS

. . . .&amp;

ville for its next ou~.

5.99°/o

APR

NEW 1983
.NISSAN SENTRA
Automatic, power aturlno
Was $11 ,155

ued=
·

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

68 Academy
•

=in

Red Devils' next II'
•iQn llld ~wood ttavels to Chapman·~
fre!lh..• f~ pont bulpve RavcDiwood , , ·"...,... ............ wwo
.
new life after lllnlinl tbe bell over ·
man Dlle "SCIJOIICI• Jolllllon 011 the on 1 fumble II tbe 2:42 marL t.$e
OlllllinJ kicknff 11 1obom meed VanMMre quickly dirpeNed any
lbroqb tbe middle bel'~ breakinB thou&amp;bll m a RavCIIIWOOII comefml and down lhe IICllll' sideline for back however, by picking off a Pat·
an 89-yard kictoff reiUI'II for six 1tn011 aerial at tfi Wahama 37,111d
points. The extra point kick sailed lhe White Falc::ona 1111 out the clock
wide and Wabama lrailed by a 7-6 to secure die victory.
ICOI'C with 8:50 Jelllllining in the
1he
Devils led in mta1
lint period. .
. .
)'lll'llagle wilh 152 yards rushing and
The nmainder of the
38 pusin&amp; for, a net ~ of 190
stanza llld lhrou8hout the
· yards, while Wahama manqed just
and lbird quarU:n found the White 74 yards on the ground and 66
UP TO
Falcons continually having to tum through the air for 140 net yards.
Raveaswood acorina dlreals away. Each team collected t1uee bu'IIOVerS
Tommy Mayes pic:ted off a pair of wilh RavCIIIWOOII IOIBiinr: · eighl
David Pattenon ~ to keep the first downs to the White PalcoOs'
Red Devils from dl)lq fmther six.
damage in the first half wllh t.$e
Individually Rfan Ward led all
VanMatre also coming up with an ground gainers wtth 76 yardJ in 12
incen:eption in the waning minutes carries with Archer adding 46 yards
of the game to prevent any last in 14 b'ies. Wahlma ~ived 59
aecond heroics by the visiton.
yards rushing in 10 attcmpiB from
Wahama opated its game win- Tommy ·Mayes with Mayes also
ning scoring drive 81 the completing live of 11 paases for 66
Ravenswood 30 yard line following yards and a touchdown. Juon King
a 12 yard rewm by Johnson of a caught tJuee aerials for 47 yards
• NEW 1983
short Red Devil punt Mayes then and a score for · Wahama while ·
found King behind the secondary Ward was on the receiving end of
NISSAN PICKUP
Chrome Package Casaette
on the far sideline with King haul· all four Ravenswood passes for 38
Wul11 ,425
ing in the aerial and IIICing the final
.
20 yards for lhe score. The two ~ahama will try and. vault over
point conversion pass failed, and the .SOO lll8lk next week when the
Wahlma led for the first time in the White Falcons host V'mson the
game by a 12-7 III8IXin With six Bend Area
team's
annual
minutes to play.
homecoming
contest,
while
The White Falcons held on the

RavenswoOd a quick 7.0 advlll·

2&gt;~------:--:---::-------:--:-~&lt;eon:::an:::
· ~trom=.=C::!!·

Jackson's Geoff Matthews com·
~leted nine of 22 8aases for 80
yards and rushed l times for 73
rards in the loss.
Q rte totals
J~kson~
7 7 0 0" 14
south Poiilt............o 6 12 7 = 2S

four minutes left. Greg Bartrum' s
conversion kick accounted for the
fitlal point of the game.
__ ~
Led by Leo!wd's 186 yards ano
Conwell's 123, South Point fin;
isbed with 52 rushes for 387 ~
and a minus 10 yards passing.
(See SEOAL on C-3)

RE-ROOFING SALE

Statistics
Department
G
First downs .............. .12
Yards rusblng ..........212
Lost rushing .............. 56
Net rushina ............. 156
Pass attempts ..............8
Completions ...............2

pp
17
239
22
217
4
4

HURRY FOR THE BEST
SELECTION AND BEAT THE
'94 PRICE INCREASE
5.99%

APR for 48 m~. to ,qualified buyers. Sale ends 9/30193

0
78
295
48
Plays .................... 48
46
Return yards ............. 51
4
Fumbles. .....
l
1
Lost fumbles ...............0
3-15
Penalties
"'4-SO
Punts ................... 4·128 2-48

Intercepted by ............. 0
Yards passing............ ! 5
Total yardS .............. l71
u • • •

u

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

······u······

(01!--644 Richlllnd AvL
Athen•,Ohlo

•

•.

BIOO.BT AUTOMOTIVI! I!VI!NT TO HIT

engine Po- SIMrlng, Pow•
brHM, AlltoiNtlc t111n•m1Mion, AM1FM
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CMMtt., nn •net erv1-. PoWinctowe, •net Po- Locka, Duttl Air
Conclllonlng, . IIMr cWro ...r, c.t
•lumlnum .w'-1'• 14,000 mlln, Awiper .net 'riaher
Y-1

7 0 0= 7

South Point 25, Jackson 14
At South Point, the Pointers

Introductions
are in order:
'Ibis is the
newAccord
And you are?
\

.

Sunday Tlmea Sentinel- Page C3

pefense spurs WHS come-from-behind win

Belaind at halftime,

By DOUG HOST
Times-Sentinel Stan
POINT PLEASANT • With
more than S,OOO fans looking on
host Point Pleasant rallied from i
6-0 halftime deficit to inflict the
ftrBt grid lOlls of. the year oo Gallipolis, 18-6, on Sanders Memorial
F'leld Friday nighL
-- 'l1le game stance!'slowly Gal1ia
Aaldeniy picked up 11 yardl 011
SQC• mhe · rushes by Heath
Hutchinson (17-lal, 6.3 ava.) and
Jeae Stacy (7-53, 7.5 avg.). Then
quartcrbeac.t Cbad Bames' bomb
clown the leA sideline was just out
of the reach of a diving Jamie
CaJclwelL Then on a third down
play from the 26 yard line Point's
Slwmon Taylor busted through the
line and dragged Barnes down for
sac:lt and loss of 12 on the play.,
Point could not mUster anything
on its first possession though and
after a Brent Smith punt the Blue
Devils wen: trying to drive again.
On a third and four from their own
31 halfback Jesse Stacy toOk a han·
doff around the right end and had
plenty of ~ room had BJent
Smith not tri
the Blue Devil up
for only a seven yard gain.
Sec:oncls later though l'Julehinson
wu galloping through Point's
secondary thanks to · some beauti·
fully executed ttap blOcking by the
Blue Devil offenstve line. Hulehin·
son gained 23 on the run moving
the b&amp;ll the Big Black 39. Gallia ·
Academy moved lhe ball to the
Point 23 before Slalling, and facing
a fouth and live. Hal1back Jesse
Stacy took the ball on a quick hit·
ling reverse raced through the left
tackle hole, and down the left
sideline for a 23 yard touch down.
Brandon Hill's extra point sailed
wide right though and ·!he Blue
Devils had a 6-0 1ead after the nine
play 76 yard drive.
After Point and Gallia exchanged
possessions again, the Big Blacks
iinally began to. move. As Brent
Smith (3-4 for 18 yds., I TD) was
about to be dnlgged down for a
sac:1t he side-armed a pass to
fullback Jason Salford (23-120, 5.2
ava.) over the middle for a nine
yard gain and a first down. Then
three plays later Safford exploded
through a huge hole on t!l~ and .14
and gained 16 yards to gtve Pomt
another first
Wmgback Garry Peck (3-24, 8
avg.) contributed with two runs for
14 yardsa'couple of plays later and
the Big Blacks were suddenlydown to · lhe Blue ~vii 34 yard
line. But when Point got to the 20
after Smith's 10 yard quarterback
dlaw · a Salford fumble was
reco;~ by Chad Barnes and Gal·
lia Academy took over.
The Blue Devils started march·
ing again and got the ball to SO but
they would get no further, and after
a few unsuccessful plays by Point
the half was over with the Blue
Devils ahead 6-0.
Gallia Academy's kicker Brett
Cremeens boomed the opening
kickoff of the second half into the
end zone for a touchback. Then
Point came out firing. Smith missed
Ryan Roush (2-70) on a sbOrt.hook
pattern on firsL Twil plays later
though Smith scrambled around the
left end for a 17 yard pickup. Then
Safford picked up nine as he dragged a defen~ for the last four
yards of a toUgh run.
A roughing the passer penalty
moved the ball to the Blue bevils'
33. Then Point attacked the ends of
the Blue Devil defense with runs
from Peck and Jason Shinn. Then
on the 15th play of the drive Safford fumbled on fourth down from
the one yard line. This time,
however, luck was with the Big
Blacks. The ball bounced into the
endzone and an alen Ryan Roush
fell onto it giving Point its first
score. Hill's extra point try was

Pomeroy-Middleport OeUipolle, OH Point Pl••nt, wv

.,.
....
WAIOI

V-8 engine Power St•rlng, Power br.a.,
Autonwtlc
tranemlulon,
Air
CondHionlng, AMIFM Sterao c....tt.. nn
and Crul.., R- delro.ter with wiper ionet
w•her, .tyltld whee!. with trim rlnp HW
RWLtlrea.

WAS'8995

.• ,..

Payments Balld
On $1500.00 Down
PIUI Ta.x ·&amp; ntle.
See Salllperaon

IIIIFIID

'

v-e engine Po- s•lng, Power bl'll"-,
Autonwtlc
tl'lll'l•ml..lon,
Air
Concltlonlng, Du•l Air, AMIFM S t cMMlla, nn •net CruiM, IIMr delro.ter
with wiper. •net -her, Po- Wlndowe
•net Power locka, Luggege Illicit.

WAS '6486

IPICIIL

IU
302 V-8 Engine. Power SW.rtng, Po-

BrakM, A..oiM!Ic TI'IIMmiNion, Air
Conditioning, AMIFM eteno _....., Till
•net CruiM, 4 Cllptlln'e chlll111 with ... bed
In ,..r, two tllbiM can 1M IIHd In ,..r
Luggege rack. running bowde, local one
owner wHh 32,000 mil-.. Extra CIMn You
mu•t •• thl• one.

.••
.·

WAS•12,896 IPICIAL

•
•

•.

11,4.

•

BI'IDIIa ~OUI' hd deal OD a New Car or Truck and WI
wlU t17 to me.c: or
the DeaL

._t
FOB A GOOD DEAt.,,

SEE TOM MILSTEAD or IIOB BOSI
Our Service Dlplrtment 11 Open Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 1-12
Muffllr Shop Mon.-Fri. U; Sal. a-12

::!N!ew!!!~ln lain
.r

•

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All Vehicles
Subject To
Prior Sale

Sit. 8-3

!'

•

593·8887
.
'

Largest u~·Qr
$f~lon
.

MONDAY·FRIDAY 9 A.M.·9 P.M•
SATURDAY 10 A.M~·5 P.M.
SUNDAY 12 NOON·7 P.M. .

�"

1

••

Pomei'O)'-IIIddleporl GdUpolla, OH Point PleUant, WV

.... C4 ...... Tim II 1111111111

~~~~~~~==~=·~================~Po~me~~~y~t~~d~d~~~
· ~~Ga~ll~l~~~a,~.~OH~~P~o~ln~t~~~~~~-~n~~~wv~~==========~s~u~n~dl~y~n~m~..:;~s:•nU~ne=~I~P~~~a~•~C5~

In flnt ftuM of road tour,

Riye~ Valley

hands

'lh'rd
• • "taliODa1
~
I
lD IDVI

Lyne Center slate
Here is the remaining schedule
planned for the week of Sept. 1926 at the University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Centel.
Gymnasllun
Today- 1-3 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.
Monday- 10:30-a.m.-1:30
p.D!.IDII 3:30-9 p.m.
Tuesday - 10:30-a.m.-2 p.m.
and4-8p.m.
Weduesday - ·8 a.m.-9 p.m.
1'11araday - 10:30-a.m.-2 p.m.
and4-9p.m.
Friday- 10:30-a.m.-1:30 p.m.
and 3-5 p.m.
Saturday -1·3 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. :Zfi - 1-3 p.m.
and6-9 p.m.
F1toess Center

T~- I-3 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.

M ay- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday- 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Saturday -1-3 p.m;
Su•day, Sept. :Zfi- 1-3 p.m.
and6-9 p.m.
Racquetball courts
Today-1-3p.m.and6-9p.m.
Monday-8a.m.-9p.m.
Tuesday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday-Sa.m -9pm
Friday - 8 a.m.·S p.m.' ·
Saturday-I-3p.m.
Sunday, Sept. U - 1-3 p.m.
and 6-9 p.m,
Home athletic events
Today - Soccer tournament,
noon resumption (Rio Grande vs.
Lindsey Wilso. noon; Tiffin vs.
IUPUI. 3 p.m.)
Tuesday - Volleyball vs.
Urbana. 7p.m,
Wednesday - Soccer vs.
ShawneeState,4p.m.
_Saturday - Volleyball vs.
Mtdway (W.Va.) Wesleyan and
Point Pa_rk, I p.m.; soccer vs.
Salcm-Teikyo. 3 p.m.
Su.nday, Sept. lfi .- BasebaU
vs. Rio Grande al~ •. 11 p.m. at
Ross County Park 10 Chillicothe
Notes: The pool is closed until
furlher notice because of maintenance problems.
A Lync Center membership is
required to use the facilities.
Administration, faculty, staff and
students are admiued with appropriate I.D. cards. Call Rich Fabri,
diJeciOr of intramwals, at 245-5353
or I-800-282-7201 for more information.

10-yard li~ cia dicir first possession, but snuffed their 11-play
dri~~e wlm Covey's p1111 to junior
running biiCt Jasoo J~ fell in-

com~~

couicln't get Past
midfield on either drive in the
frame.
AU cold, there were three turns
of possession before the maroon
force, starting at its own 30 but
pushed back to its 25 because of a
penalty, got a 34-yard run from junior tailback Je!W Hill thai started
with a hole Cfel!le!l at left guard
and was prevented from being
stretched into a touchdown nm by
Raider inside linebacker Mike
Cook.
With the Marauders in Raider
terricory for the f1rst time, sophomore quarterback Brent Hanson
fired a 41-yard pass 10 wide, rcctiver Chad Duncan, wbo leaped over
!Wder safety Jeremy Belville in
the southern end zone to snag the
ball for t he touchdown. Jake
•
. ld
KennedY s extra-potnl ck gave
Meigs a 7.() lead wilh 7:40 left before halftime.
The Raiders sent the infantry
iniO the fray. and He the Mlnudera before them, drove 1S yards for
their firstwho
touchdown of the game.
Covey,
had a pair of incomplete passes in the first quarter,
came back with passes of 11 and
17 yards to junior tight end Tim
Campbell as well as a 13-yard run
that got the silver force within a
yard of mldfie1d.
Thar helped keep lhe Mamuders
on their heels, as Jenkins collected
7,7 yards on five plays to become
another of the spearheidjng forces
in the 12-P.laY cfrive. Covey's one- ·
yard keeper on second ~oal
WflllPCd up a march lhat
not
a second beyond six miDutes. Covey followed with 1 two-PQint conversion tun to put River VaUey
ahead 8-?.
The Marauders' deepest penetralion on their 1as1 drive of the half
was their first play, which was
Hill's 17-yard kickoff return to
their OW!I37. Overall, Meigs lost
six yards on the drive on 1 sack and .
two penalties (holdin~and clip· ) be~
·
·
· pmg
ore punung
m Its 31 ·

:::rco~~~t~~an incomplete

A sali'Ciess third quarter saw lhe
th red
h
c1osest-to- e- ·zone onors go
10 Meigs, which gotiO the Raiders'
32 on a drive that started from the
hosts' 30 in the last two minutes of
the period.
·
the St111 of prime time found
Meigs continue 10 go 10 Hill, who
·led .all rushen wilh 127 yards, ineluding 38 yards on this drive.
Meigs got 10 the Raiders' 10 but
the Raider defense nailed Hili for
no~ before a holding penalty
•gamst the Marauders pushed lhem
back·to the Raiders' 22. After Hanson's I3-yard run got the hosts 10
the Raiders' 12 and erased Hill's
being lakCn down for a three-yard
Joss on the previoos play, Kennedy
booted a 30-yard field goal through
the northern uprights 10 put Meigs
ahead 10-7 with 8:42 left in the
game.
As they had done the first time
the Marauders scorecl, River Valley
responded with score. Senior fullback Adam DenneAa~~llowed junior ha1lbaclt Abe · op's eightyard run from the Raiders' 29 With
a 58-yard run tbal DUlled his club to
the Meigs five. A benney one-yard

SEOAL action .•.

The

Compnny

as

.

S!ln[OSr

Ss[O~amlbar Sa~~ Dow.~

DON TATE
1993

• Winleri&amp;ing Kits

• Water Tubes

Chevrolet..Oidsmo~ile~dlllac-GEO

1{0~ 0.

'9,999

92 Geo Metro 4D
'5995
1992 Pontiac lansport '12,995
1985 Ford Bronco II
'4,995
.___ _ _-14x4

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1993 Chevy Corsica

SJ 0,495
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110,

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Pt.,.. Q'7:-.:...t Ydi.TDIBL
mwa ,o............
563 4 1
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(}&amp;plot_~~ (&amp;:.. 14-3) 01 _ .
at(Boocboil-0),7:35p.m.
~(;!&gt;•~h ~~;::;t:,:.-to) •• 51'
Sulll•ao cs..c~m :1-1) •• H"""""
(Dn~t':;!'1..!:d.o 12-1) 01 Colondo~•- . . :z.."9•05p.m.

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~"!''tf'.;:,~':':~.-":'o) •• Mon.
-'(R.-1·0),1:3Sr.'i
·
13
(W!::,~Jl: fff;.~ &gt;•• sc LolliJ

ands~?ti~~::~~olation game e;:::.~::::li :5 :m~ g Cln=.q=~l1f5~~~~.;
:~~ :~~=rsgoalbe
. :astfrRoomseHi~ll
·•

. -which came after Micah Lanier's
· firSt-half boot broke the scoreless
deadlock 23 minutes into the game.
OVCS led 1.()athalftinte.
~oDe, last yearf'us IOd~denedt
c hampt n, success u Y e.en
· its title with a 3-2 overtime win
overMariS'ettaChristian.
ports briefs
·rennIs
BORDEAUX, France (AP} Second-seeded Marc Rosse! of
Switzerland and No. 3 Arnaud
Boetsch of France advanced to the
semifinals of the $355,000 Bor·
dealix Passing Shot tennis cournamenL
Top-seeded Sergi Bruguera of
Spainwasrainedoutagain.
Olympics ·
MONTE CARLO, Monaco
(AP) - . Beijing's Olympic; bid,
already shadowed by questions on
human rights, became further
embroiled in controversy when a
'Chinese official raised the possibUity of boycotting the 1996 Atlanta
Games.

Ftou~oo;,CID ..... ... .12 103 1.6 40 o
NATIONAL CONFERENCE

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cw'::..'i&amp;:=!lo.~rt~:~o&gt;"

~ root Cfollltodor :1-2) •• Allanl.o
19-5), s:O! p.m.

(GlaYino

AMEUCAN LEAGUE

... . . . . . .:

~=~

-DI&gt;Iolt!ol

l; .~"i

NowYoot .............n ~ .550
Ballid1ono ...............IO fil u-....................76 11 .m
D,oMb ....................75 -n .510
~::::::~ : ~~
Wlllern

m'~1011

Konuas-~··- ru, .... ----·l~

---·-······-··-..·· 72
Cali!amia ......... ...66 so
M~nnooo~a ......... ...62 16
OUJond ............... ! 9 81

.S51 ~

·.452
.419
•404

a.J!'IELANDl,lltorolJ 1
New YootS.-4

:~~~

ClokoF ' OaklaMO ·

9

ig

Frlday•uccres

iru.:"..!;.~..!o

~

aa
3
4
1

~~:::: :::::: : : : : :~ 7~1 :~1;

:m ;

Cali!omii 2. r .... t
3
Kano~~CIIy6.S.IIIo
1

4.N

i·~

·
11
22
24

BEVERLY - The Southe.rn
roadTornadoebeafound-that life on the
can cough u they limped
out of Beverly on the short end of a
38.() score in a loss 10 non-league
Fort Frye.
B o bb Y c arney and Shane
Burchett each had. two touchdowns
for the Cadets (3-0) in the rout,
combing for 169groundyards.
Fort Frye's scoring was early
and often, while Southern's olfenae
spu...,_.,.
........ and its de'renseleftopen
gaping holes. Fort Frye's first score
c:ame on a 38-ya-d Chad Huck-toBobbk Carney pass play with a
PAT . ick by Darryl Brooker to
make the score 7-0 at the 8:23
m~ in the fii'SI quarter.
oments later, Brooker connected on a 36-yard field goal at
lhe 1:30 mark 10 put"FF up 10.(),
'?'hilc Southern again _sputtered
on ttl next two possesstons, the
ourcome of the gupe rested on the
battle in the trenches. Fort Frye
recorded 10 sacks against the Tornadoes. who hard pressed quarter-

~1994 S 10

Southern (1 -2) hosts Hannan,
W. Va. next Friday in Racine.
Quarter totals
Soulhem ..... ...........O 0 0 0= 0
Fort Frye ............. 10 14 7 7 = 38
Statistics

~=rment

R~

owns.................... ..
Rushing yards .............. -73
Passing yards ................ 36
37
Total yards ................... Comp.-au. ..................4-12
In•-~ti
__, ons thrown .... ;..0
Fumbles/lost ............... .4-3
~Jes........... ..........9 t204
avg . ............... - 1.

'15,995
'9,44'
1990 Oltls 98 Regency
1991 Chevy Beretta
'7,999
1990 GMC Safari
'12,999

CoiYtrllol Y11

114,999

.

Di1. 1981 Corvette
'8,999 ·
$ .
1988 Oltls Cutlass Supreme '5,999
.96
· 49 93ChevCaprke
'15,495

ISS

120
305
5-11
0
1-1
8-SO
141

Wellston gets 14-6
win
over
E.ast~~n
~e

WELLSTON- Statistically
WeUston, (now 2-1) dominated bui
the end result was one heck ~fa
footb811 game as the Golden Rockets sputtered by the ever-determined Eastern Eagles (1 . 2) 14_6
Friday night in Wellston.
Perhaps the tone of the game
was set.on an early special teams
breakdown,
when Rocket
Lawrence Ousley returned an East. at the
em leick 46 yards 10 paydirt
8:46 mark in lhe riTSI period. Ousley's lrlc1c was good for a 7.() Eastern lead . Just three minutes and
fourteen seconds into the arne,
d!at Big play lifted the We,Iston
Sidelines and on-field momentum
10 monumental pro~· oas· ,
StuMed somew t by the play
Eastern stumbled, but did not fall'
eventually rising back 10 the occa:
sion 10 play a good game of footbaD.
While both offenses were quiet
in the fiTSt frame. WeUston began a
somewhat controlled running game
between the Jines. Each time Eastem held until Troy Smith, who netted a whopping 208 yards on 29

carries for
game, jaunted into
the endzone on 21 yard run with
6:54 showing ori the clock in the
second frame.
Wilh 17 seconds before the half,
Pat Newland ran under a 23 .yard
fade pass from EHS quarterback
Robert Reed, pulling the Eagles to
14-6 at the half. The two-point coversionpassfailed.
The next half resulted in a
scoreIess deadcl
. ock. Eastern •soffense ~ever really got untracked,
mustenng only four fiTS! downs for
the ni~thL The second-half defense,
bending but not breslcing, held lhe
Rockets when they had to. WellsiOn gathered 11 fiTSI downs on lhe
niwht,
,,..
After a quiet third round, Eastern kept looking for a break and
nearly found it in the finale, when
with under seven minutes 10 play
Wellston tried a fake punt on their
own 25. Wellston fell a couple
yards short of the riTSI down on the
risky play and it appeared Eastern
had its chance, however, a face
mask gav~ Wellston the fiTS! down
and retenuon of the ball.

ldsn a0110tltlohan to3. Smith s 2011
yar • us ey d 1 of a team 10ta!t2h42.6W2e5s ~bahughdled Eastern
wt a - mg t, an teammate
Jason Sheets .went 4-19.
Jason_ Wed:md of ytellscon.was
0-hSilpassRmbertg
wRtlheedtwoftnEastercepbons,
0
w e 0
~ was
3-6 fo~ 30 yards and no m1scues
ana::!: B~en was .2-10 for 10
Y
onemterception: .
Newland
3-62 receiVIng
Eastern hwas
ts Mill F 'da ·
Quarte to~
er n Y·
Eastern r
0 6 0 0
6
..................
"'
Wellston ............... .? · 7 0 0 = 14
Statistics
E

Department

F ITSI downs......................4

w

11
Total plays ....................47
53
Rushes-yards ...........20-31 25-202
Passing yards ................69
0
Total yards .... .............. 100
242
Comp.-au. ..................5-16
0-8
Interceptions thrown .......1
2
Fumbles-lost .............. :.3-2
0-0
Penalties.....................3-45 12-140
Punts/avg................... 3-30
2-31

PRICES GOOD THRU SEPT. 30, 1993

TRU-FIRE
PRO-BEARING
POWER GRIP·'
. RELEASE
REG$59.09
SALF.

PRO-RELEASE
TROPHY HUNTER
BALL BEARING
RELEASE
REG $29.119
SALE

$44.99

24.99

NEW ARCHERY
'PHUNDERHEADI25
BROADHEADS
REG 31.99
SALE

NEW ARCHERY
THUNDERHEAD 100
BROADHEADS
6 PACK
REG $31.911

NEW ARCHERY
RAZORBACK V
BRQADHEADS
SPACK
REG.C27.GO

$19.99

TINK'S
.. 69
DEER
LURE

BROWNING
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STANDARD MODEL
STAINLESS F1NISH

$109.99

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BROWNING A-EIOLT
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DEER RIFLES
NOSIGHTS270

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$21.99

$21.99

BROWNING
SORTIE II
GOOSE DOWN ~KT
REG $159.9
SALE

REG. '499.99

*399.99

BROWNING 12ga
A-500 AUT
' SHOTGUN
· 26" OR 28" BRL
REG$5411.99
SAVE $100

SAI..E'249.99

$44"9.99

BROWNING UPLAND
HUNTING BOOTS
WATERPROOF.
THINSOLATE
REG $109.99
SALE PRICE

BROWNING BPS
12§11 PUMP
S OTGUN
26"0R 28" BRL
REG $470.99
SAVE $80.00

$79.99

$399.99

REMINGTON .22
GOLDEN BULLETS
SOLID POINT·
BRICK 500
SPECIAL

REMINGTON LOGO
T-SHIRTS
BLACK OR GREEN
SM-XLG
REG. $11.99
SALE

$15.99

$5.99

REMINGTON 870
EXPRESS COMBO
BOTH BARRELS
VENT RIB &amp; DEER
BARRELS t2&amp;Z0Qa
REG$359.99
SALE

REMINGTON 12
11-87 SEMI-AU 0
SATIN FINISH
28" BARREL
REG$5711.99
SALE

WINCHESTER 12§11
DEER GUN WIT
'RIFLED BARP.EL
AND RIFLE SIGHTS
INCLUDES SCOPE
MOUNTS &amp; RINGS
REG 5319.99
SALE

·

PSE
STARFIRE
CROSSBOW
1501b LIMBS

$219.99

DOSKOCIL
" SHOTGUN OR
RIFLE
HARD GUN CASE
10-520
REG $26.99
SALE

$279.99

TOP LINE C57
HIKING BOOTS
REGS29.99

SALE
$24.99

HUNTING BOOTS
C47 REG$34.99
SALE $29.99

'+' · .

$499.99

LOC- ON

LOC- ON
SPIRIT

WINCHESTER
DOVE &amp; QUAIL
OR
RABBIT &amp;
SQUIRREL LOADS
111( 25

WINCHESTER
12 GA.
1300WALNUT

VENT RIB

TREESTI\ND.•
PSIII
REG SIQQ.Q9
SALE

$3.99

REG . $339.99

$89.99

$89,&lt;}9

TASCO
4X32
RIFLE
SCOPE
$34.99

TASCO
3X9X32
RIFLE
SCOPE

SHOTGUNS

SAIE*299.99

TREESTAND
SALE
REG SI09.9Q

§i

"---------.,..--~ OneOwner
1989 Cadlac Eldorado 'I
0,495
·

F~

TRI.COUNTY· SPORTS SHOP·

Conversion VAn

PICKUP

1

once.

TARGET THESE SEASON
OPENER SPECIALS AT

REMINGTON IZga.
SPECIAL PURP SE
PUMP SHOTGUN
30"BARREL
REG $3911.1111
SALE

$359.99

•

REMINGTON 87()
"MARINE"
12rcPUMP
S OTGUN
STAINLESS STEEL
7SHOT SHORT BRL
REG$31111.99
SALE

$359.99

Chester

4 2
l

t?J

.51¥1

&amp;.:.:..::::1! : ::
31

.,.,..!'~·~~
9"..... Ml~Dolo:lllilralo.
. y , __ -.z_ '"--1•
......
- -~...
Tampoa.r&gt;

llf4

10 .»1
72

IMAqoioo ..... ..

- · - = I p.m.
w:
' lp.m.
_ ....I
r-I, '.-.U.-:;
aJ!VIIL\NDIILA.
4p.m.
~;:.s-eT~"'...

44
51

- ------1174

4

38-{) score.
Burchett had 21 carries for 114
yards, while Carney was 7·57 as
the team output was ISS yards.
Huck, 5-10 for 120 yards and Clint
Hayes, 0-1 , did the passing.
Carney was 3-60 and Kesselring
3-SO in the receivinR department
Cleland was 4-12 passing for 36
yards for Southern. Southern had 10
punt nine times for 3 1.4 yards,
while FF was forced to punt just

93 Olds Delta 88

......_---::---------11992 Chevy Astro

SALE

BAU LUMBER

•.

e:-..:.':ir~'l;'....

63
1
-NYJ .......73

U ::~

=-;--:::::~

P. 1p.m.

#.

~Sendllel Corre1p011dent

w....... DMM~o

lloodoJLiotoLU
aNaNMA.11•rutl

run.

Waverly fmished with 163 yards
rushing and 80 passing while
Athens mounted its best offensive
showing of the season with 142
l'ards on the ground and 72 passmg.
.
Qnarter totals
.
Athens .........,.........o 3 12 O= 15
· Waverly.... ;............? 7 021• 35

..

It,.,.,.,~,

Super Sharp

SAVE ON ALL
93
L HORSE'S
·IN STOCK

·z

• NFL •

Nut-11'•1-•

back Trenton Cleland and the rest
of the Tornado backfield en route
to the Cadets' most Impressive win
of the season. The same pile-driving FF defense forced Southern 10
lose three of four fumbles and limired Southern's net yardage to mi·
nus37yards.
After losing to Southern 16·7
last year, Fort Frye went all out for
revenge.
At the 6: 17 mark, Fort Frye
went up 16-0 when Shane Burchett
Klunged in on a one-yard run .
rooker'sldckfailed.
Less than three 111inutes later,
Cadet Jason Kesselring hauled in a
50-yard pass from Huck at the 3:47
mm:t in the second period. Huck's
PAT run was good for an 24-0
score.
Allbaugh Fort Frye didn't call
off the dogs in the second half,
Southern's defense played somewhat better in limiting the hosts to
only 14 second-halfpo1'niS.
Carney had a 38-yard run to
paydirt and Burchett had another
one-yard ~lunge, both followed by
Brooker icks to account for the

"'Ill

1988 Ford F-250 4x4

• Plugs • Gimno' s

•

At ..

308 East

END OF SUMMER
CLEARANCE

•
:
&lt;;E-NlENARY- Grace Chris• '!ian s soccer 1e1111 brdre a 1-1 halftime tie in the IIOCOIId half of Friday's game 14ainst tbe boat Ohio
: Valley Christian Def&lt;enders, who
1ost S·3.
Grace's goals came from Ben
Schelling, Mat Conger, Jeremy
Pygman and Ryan Conley. The
Defenders got goals from Dusty
Hill (two) and Josh Sebert.
Derendersthlrd
The Defenders lost !I fii'SI·round
. game and won the consolation contest during the Ohio VaUey Christian School InYitalional, held on
SepL 10 and il at Raccooi\ Creek
• County Park.
After Marietta Christian
knocked off Rose Hill Christian ·5in the opener, Rainelle Cliristian
. beat OVCS 2-1. Dusty Hill scored
• d •1
. th
e Dthe
eren
ers at one
tied
game
1-1 goal,
beforewhich
half, urn
.·
e. Goalie Tony Hughes recorded 24 saves, while fu!fbacks Jtison
Beaver and Andy Brumfield had 17

B.r SCOTr WOLJIE

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP RAP

In Stock

ll=~:.~ards.
Marieaa ............... l4 0 o 6 .. 20
Parkersburg ...........o 1 1410= 31
Waverly 35, Athens 15
At Waverly. the winless Athens
Bulldogs were shocking the host
Tigers with a 15-14 lead entering
the fourth quarter, but Waverly
scored 21 points in the final 10
minutes to remain undefeated in
three contests.
The Tigers scored 14 points in
the first half on a six yard run by
Jason Bolin and an 11 -yard pass
from Bolin to Jeremy Caldwell
with Josh Lightle kicking the extra
points. Athens got on the board in
the second quarter on Nick Toth' s
38 yard field goal.
.
Tne ISWJOOgs scored 12 points
in the third quarter when Kahieem
MaxweU raced 66 yards and then
added a 20-yard scamper to put
Athens on top 15-14 after three.
Waverly posted three touchdowns in the final quarter on a two
yard run. by Bolin, a 29-Y,ard pass
mtereepbOn rCDITD by Mike Westfall and Isaac Ransdell's 33-yard

· HOLDING ON - Tlla~'s what Meigs defensive back Rolblll«
GETITNG A HANDLE on the footbaU Is the objective of the
Wyatt
(33) Is trying to do to keep River VaDe7 rulllling back Jason
moment for Meigs punt returner Israel Grimm, who b seconds
JenkiDs
from gettiDII more yardqe in the third qnarter qf Friday
away from maklna hb move from the Marauden' 20-,..-d Une in
nl1ht's game In Pomeroy, where the Raiders won 21-10 In P~trt
the thlnl quarter of Friday night's game at Bob R,oberts Field Ill
hec:ause or Jeaklns' Infantry duty, which helped the Raiders move
Pomeroy, where the Raiders c:ame from beiiiDd twice to wiD 21-10.
the ball on their first touchdown drive. (Times-SentiDel photo by G.
Grimm cot 10 yards on the return. (Times-Sentinel photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)
·
·
Spencer Osborne) ·
·
.
ded c
·
·,
run prece · ovey's three-yard spot Scoring their first points in ihe
River VaUey: Covey l-yd. run
Statistical leaders
left-side swecl run 10 the end zone. first half despite stretching their ·(Covey 2-pL run), I :3S 2nd qtr.
Then Covey s two-point ·conver- club's losing slrel!k to seven conMeigs: Kennedy 30-yd. FG,
sion gave the Gallians a 14-10 lead secutive games. "I felt lhey gave it 8:40
River Valley Raiders
4th qtr.
with S:SHeft.
·
!lusblngDenney 15-120;
everylhing they had."
Riv~ Valley: Covey 3-yd. run
Meigs got five yards on a drive
Haislop
12-59;
Cook
6-35; Jenkins
(run failed}, 5:51 4th qtr.
that lasted three plays and 72 sec9-35;
Covey
7-27,3
TDs.
·J
The Raiders (1-2) will play
River Valley: Covey 4-yd run
onds before Hanson threw an inter- again Saturday when they become
PassiD,.Covey
4-10,
41
yds.
·
(Bradbury kick), I:SO 4th qtr.
ti
h
b
R
'd
·•
RecelvmgT.
Campbell3-38;
the
guests
of
Warten
Local's
Warcep on caug 1 y 11 er scuety
Jenkins 1-3.
;
Josh Penwell, who was shoved out riors. The Marauders (0-3) will Statistics
Interceptions
caught
d.
head downriver to play the unbeatof bounds at the Marauders' 34.
Belville
142;
Penweli1-0
"
The Raiders used 2:45 to drive en Point Pleasant Big Blacks Fri- Department
M
RV
34 yards in seven plays, with Den- day.
7
FITS!
downs.
.....
:
.............
1~
Meigs Marauders
ney 32 yards in the drive (some of Quarter totals
221
Total
yards
..................
317
Rushing17-127; Hud!hose. yards helped reclaim real es- River Valley ..........O 8 0 13 = 21 Rushing all -yds.... .49-276 24-145 son 1•14; DuncanHill
2-1;
Hanson 3;0.
tate lost because of a holding Meigs ,...................0 7 0 3 = 10 Passing yards ................41
76
Passing
Hanson
3-11, ·76
penalty) before Covey sprinted on
Comp.-att...................4-10
3-11 yds .• 1 TD, 2 int
&lt;
a sweep to the left side for the Scoring summary
Interceptions thrown .......0
2
Receiving
Duncan
2-6:Ji,
I
touchdown from four yards out.
Fumbles-lost ................0-0 · 0-0 TD; Wyatt 1-13
~
Mike Bradbury's extra-point kick
Meigs: Duncan 41-yd. TD pass Penalties-yards .......... .4-35
8-80
Interceptions caught- none
gave the guests a 21-10 lead with from Hanson (Ke~y Ieick), 7:40 Punting ........................ 145
I
151
1:50 left.
2nd qtr.
..
Belyille got revenge f()r the
touchdown scored over his head
when he Eicked off Hanson with 17
secoardsnds eftthanMd retudm~ the ball
42
10 8 arau ers 48.
Y
OlliO
Afterthoughts
Meigs' line was prelly good, but
our line was better," said Denney,
who drove his 5-foot-10, 210pound frame into the middle of the
Marauders' 5-2 defense en route to
OFFERING:
a team-high 120 yards rushing.
''They opened up the holes for us,"
• Slocks
he added.
• Corporate Bonds
Concerning his other persona
an inside linebacker, Denney said
• U.S. Treasury Securities
"We Denver and Spread Umertoae"
"their linemen doubled down on
•
Mutual
Funds
the inside linebackers" in his expla• Insured Tax-Free
•Mason Sand . _ .,Top Soil
nation of Hill's success on endsweep plays. "Once we were able
Municipal Bonds
•Concrete Sand
•Fill Dirt
to stop it (the Marauders' outside
• Insured Money Market
running attack), they couldn't do
•Pit Run
•Shr.edded
Accounts
anything."
Top Soli
· •Drainage Gravel
• IRA's
' "It was a nice fourth quarter
win," said Raider mentor Jack
•Pea Gravel
•Straw
James. "This brings up why we tell
Contact:
ot~rlrldsnevertoquiL"
•Drainage Tile ·
"I'm proud of my kids," said
Jay Caldwell
Marauder boss Mike Chancey,
•Culvert Tile {all sizes up to 5"}
Account Executive
whose troops claimed as a bright
441 Second
. Avenue
•Block and Mortar Mix
Bentley among local
Gallipolis, OH. 45631
winners in Huntington
tennis tournament
(614) 446-2125
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. -John
. 1-800-487-2129
Bentley of Syracuse and Jim
Osborne of GalliJ?Olis won In their
respective di vistons of the Dick
Griffilh Open Tennis Tournament,
held on Labor Day weekend in
Huntingron.
'til
Bentley and teammate Terry
-~ /Je"'
Yeager won the men's 35 doubles,
while Osborne won the men's 45
7
singles.

,n,,•r Covers

(Continued from C-3)
Boa! to conclude the scoring.
Weigle carried 16 times for 130
yards leading the PHS groun~ attack that netted 207 yards. Sauls
led the Tigers wilh S9 yards on II
tries and Kroft completed 12 of 27

FOrt F
. · rye hammerS S00 th ern 38•0

iGrace
beat
.;OVCS;kickers
Defenders

Meigs 21-10 d~fea_t
B7 G. SPENCER OSBORNE
n-111 S1111M1 SCIIf
POMBROY :.._Tiley couldn't
wait 10 aet on the lUid ipln.
Ri~ Vllley'a Raiders relebcd
the .SOO mark in all-time road
1111101 Friday night when they
c:rucd a pair of leads by the bost
Mei's Marauders with overall
dommance of the line of scrim·
111110 and a three-touchdoWn pcafotmance by senior quarterback
Paul Covey to claim a 21-10 victory - it was the club's first at the
season and fourth road triWIIPh in
eiaht tries - at Bob Roberti P'teld.
Both teama had lhe ball twice in
the first quarter, with the Raiders
numing 18 playiiO the Mmulcn'
10. The Raiders aot to the Meigs

•

BY MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
POINT PLEASANT, WV
Slcnltowa:
Monday-Friday, 11:30 am-I pm
Saturday, 1:30 am-5 pm
SUnday, 11 .m-e

.

PSE'NEW"
CARROLL
MARUDERBOW
&amp;:1/80 LB
REG$27,11.99
SALE

$199.99

PSE
FOXFIRE
CROSSBOW
150LB.
MASKCAMO

•179.99

$49.9~

�•

•

•

.

.•

Pg

C1

a. .. ' t nm•

Pomeroy Middleport Galllpolla, OH Point Plaunt, wv

Slnlluel

..

Farm/llusiness

'.

Septembei' 11, 111S
•

•

~im.es -

$entinel•

Section D
September 19, 1993

I
•

• •

een .

e've

Big companies wield a~

atttn

•

tnce
:•

ear
ree
II

.

ese

•

••

•••
•
•

•
•

•

~ttt

s ••

e
•

ne

. . . . .wn.

••
•
I

•
t

New Woodland interest group formed

•'
I

II

t
•
•
•I

I
•

•••
••
•
•

18 percent of Ohio's cor~
crop reported mature ·

•

•
•
••

•

as on,

•••
'
I
I

!

•
a 1a

•

•

•

•'

•

'

ounttes.

I

I

1

•
:
:

··ul
" .

oVe

•
•

PEOPLES

$ • 0 0

B A N K

'

'
I'
i

MILLION

USDA moves to allow
import of some potted plants

Farm Flashes

•

ou,
•

- By STEFAN FAfSir
1,000. DuPont: 4,500. · Cigna fallen 10 6.7 percent from 7.7 perAP Jgdneaa Writer
COIJI.' s health insurance unit: up to cent a year ago.
.
NEW YORK -The IIIUIOIIIICC· 1,000.
Anolher caveat when assessing
Each company had its own rea- resauc!IJrings is that every comt?amenta sure do sound bleak, callous
sons, which can be broken down ny is different. And the financial
even. All those corporate titans with their bolhersome jinslea, their into three broad categories: busi· markets tend to reward companies
environmentally incorrect products, ness downturn, increased competi- that restructure, demonSinlting their
their too-earnest newspaper adver- tion, economic and policy con- grave concern about controlling
lllriab -laying people off.
cerns.
costs. And doo't forget that hiring
The first category generally announcements are rarely made.
Big business spends tens of millions of.dollars eve:~ year trying 10 indicates a company reacting to a
But there's no doubt recent
persuade the pubhc that what it decline in business after it's political developments are giving
does is friendly and wholesome already begun. The second can companies pause , particularly
and community-oriented. So when reflect the changing shape of an health ~are. Some economists say ·
companies turn into job-slashers, industry. The third can reflect the that on top of an environment of
national economy and government • lackluster economic growth, the
the mood can tum ugly.
policy.
Thenec~~stscomealoogto
job cut announcements deepen pes"Even though these announce: simism among companies, and not
tell us that cutbacks are in the best
interest of companies and the econ- ments make headlines and are very a few economists.
omy. That unless businesses reduce visible signs that the labor market
Robert Brusca is one. The chief
costs, they can't make money and is far from robust, they also tend to economist at Nikko Securities Co .
evenwally hire more people to pro- give a misleadingly negative pic- International Inc. said that because
ture of the total employment situa- of general economic stagnation duce more products. .
So is the latest raft of job cuts tion," said Richard Rippe, chief and low consumer confidence by Fortune 500 companies reason economist at Prudential Securities companies can't pass on cost
to climb onto the window ledge or Inc.
increases to consumers. He cited a
So while big cuts generate big recent Federal Reserve Bank of
Serond Ave., GaUipolis. According to Director of
RIBBON CUTTING FOR ANTIQUE S.HOP
revel in lhe resuscitative powers of
gasps, macroeconomics says that Philadelphia survey lhat showed
Tourism Kim Sheets, who is pictured in the
- Owner~ Gaynelle Lynch and Ronnie Lynch,
American business?
daughter Susan Lyncb, Gallipolls Retail Mer·
background, Dove's Nest wUI be the city's first
Since the topic is economics, the even long-term reductions - such companies' input prices incr~ing
antique shop to be open regular hours every
chants Association President Robbie Jenkins
correct answer is: Both. And nei- as the 100 ,000-plus at IBM since more than their output prices.
1986 or 60,000-plus at the seven
day. Also pictured in the backgrpund Is City
and GaiHa County Chamber or Commerce Pres· Under pressure, companies large
ther.
Manager Glenn Smith (Times-Sentinel photo by
ident Jay Caldwell participate in a ribbon cilt·
First, the numbers. This past Baby Bells since 1988 - tend to and small therefore look to their
James Long).
ling ceremony for Dove's Nest Antiques, 336
biggest expense area 10 trim: labor.
week saw companies announce be overcome.
Government
statistics
can
be
., eno11gh job reductions to ftll MadiAs labor costs increase - and as
son Square Garden. American Air- fuzzy, but some back up lhe argu- fear mounts that they'll increase
lines: S,000 over the next year. U S menl In lhe fust eight months of further under Presij.\ent Clinton's
West Inc.: 9,000 over three years. the year, the economy.added nearly health-care plan - companies rend
GALLIPOLIS - A newly with the ·ohio Cooperative Exten- management, appreciation of .the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.: up to 1.2 million non-farm jobs. The to shift investment from labor 10
formed South~! Ohio Woodland sion Service. The topic wlll be woodla.nd resources, educauon
nation's unemploym_ent rate has capital.
Interest Group has been formed "Rights of Privat.e Landowners". con~em.mg forest values, and P~­
and will meet Sepl 21, at7 p. m. at This is becoming a very controver- mottng the natural resourc~, th1s
the city library in Athens. The sial situation as S()me landowners . group could be for. you. It ~~ not
library is located just off State Rt. feel their rights are ~ing viola!ed· necessary· that you be a pnvate
33 on Home SL behind Bob Evans There are some states m the United landowner. Remember, we~ o~
Restaurant and The Amerihost Inn. States who are ~eavily regulated ~ some woodlands. Every Oh10 c1b·
Anyone interested in wood- far as pro~ nghts go. There~ zen IS part owner of not on!~ our
· lands, forests or anything con~ect- be a quesuon an.d answer penod state forests, but also our nattonal
ed with forestry, whether 1t be afrer the presentation.
·
forests.
.
.
WASHINGTON - The Agri- public hearing ~should contact Md. 20782.
woodland ecology, limber harves~Refreshments will ~e served
For. more mf~rmatton, you may cUlture Department is proposing to Richard Kelly no later than OcL II
Comments will be accepted if
ing or wildlife and aesthetics. th1s before and afte~ lhe meeoog.
call Cmdy Jenkins, at 446-8687 or allow the importation of certain at 301-436-5455 or by writing to they are received by Dec . 6. An
group is for you.
, .
If you are 10terested 10 sound 988-2405 .
potted plants, including rhododen- him at Regulatory Analysis and original and three copies of written
dron, from all countries if they are Development, PPD, APHIS, comments should be sent to the
The. speaker will be Ed Sm1th
grown and imported in accoolance USDA, Room 804 Federal Build- Chief of RAD at the Hyattsville
ing, 6505 Belcrest Rd., Hyattsville, address.
with certain regulalioos.
"These plants are currently prohibited because the growing media
in which they are 'potted often contain exotic pests and diseases,''
..said B. Glen Lee, deputy adminisl!ator for plant protection and quarantine in USDA's Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service.
Bluestem and lndiangrass were
By EDWARD VOLLBORN · Big
"However, after ,conducting an
no-b'll
seeded
this
spn'ng
using
lhe
GALLIPOLIS - Early com harextensive
pest risk analysis, we
GALLIPOLIS - Lois J. Bosley, gnwuating in 1990.
vest began last week, but the O.D.N.R. Truax drill following a
have
derennined
lhat
lhese
species
D.O
., a local area naliv~. recently
Dr. Bosley served her internship
September 13 Ohio Crop report' fall "Roundup" application. The
can
be
imported
in
growing
media
the
Holzer
Clinic
Family
at
Logan
General Hospital, Logan,
joined
pegged the progress at only one seeding is located just west of the
with
little
risk
of
pest
or
disease
Practice
Department
WV,
in
1991.
'She completed her
percent. Most of the corn harvest new apple orchard in .!be con~aintroduction
if
certain
conditions
was
born
in
Meigs
residency
in
June
1993 at United
Dr.
Bosley
activity rook place in areas of Ross !ion area. To get to lh1s area. JJW'!IC·
County
and
raised
in
Masoo
CounHospital
Center,
Clarksburg,
WV.
met,"
he
said
·
·
are
and Pickaway Counties that we 1pants must take th.e ~onservatton
In
addition
to
rhododendron,
the
tY·
Sh~
is
a
1977
graduate
of
The
National
Board
of
Osteoseen on our way to Columbus. area shutt\e. but 1l IS proba~ly
plants are alstroemeria, ananas, Wahama High School, Mason, palhic Medical Examiners awarded
Some .J8 percent of the Ohio com· ·worth lhe ttme for those planrung
West Virginia. She is the daughter her Diplomate status in July, 1991.
and nidularium.
anthurium
crop was reported mature com - to plant~!~""' season ~ses.
Currently,
the
inspection
service
of Lewis and Carol Peters of
Dr. Bosley stays abreast of curpared to the ·five year average 13
Pubhcny for the Oh10 ~eeder
allows the importation of six Clifton, West Virginia.
rent trends in her profession as a
percent. In general, lhe Ohio Soy- Calf Roundup IS finally available.
species of potted plants if they are
Dr. Bosley brings lhe number of member of several organizationsbean crop condition is slightly bet- ~ere are new show.lll!d sale days
grown in greenhouses under certain physicians in the Holzer Clinic American Academy of Family
tee than lhe corn crop condition.
th1s year. The show WI~ be Sa~conditions and in approved grow- Family Practice Department to · Physicians, American College of
The USDA, September 1 crop day, September 25 starling at noon
ing media. For lhe five species pro- eleven. These primary health care General Practitioners, American
production report estimates com and the sale w1ll. be Sunday,
JOINS STAFF • R. Rosposed for entry, the agency would physicians provide service to Osteopathic Association, and the
harvested for grain 10 be 63.9 mil- September 26 ~tartmg at I p.m.
alee Walker recently joined
add further requirements 10 ensure patients lhroughout lhe Mid-Ohio West Virginia Society of Osteolion acres. That's down 8.2 million Both events w1ll be. held at t~e
the
starr
of
the
Gallia-Jacksonthat the plants are free from dan, River Valley. They serve patients pathic Medicine.
acres or 11 percent from last year. swme 1Jaf!1 on the Oh10 State FauMei~~S
Board
of
Alcohol,
Drug
gerous
pests.
who visit Holzer Clinic in GallipoDr. Bosley is residing in Point
Total production was estimated at groun4s 1~ Columbus .. The OS)..!
Add1ctlon
and
Mental
Healtb
These
requirements
address
lis,
and
at
the
Clinic's
branches
in
Pleasant
with her husband, Mark
7.229 billion bushels off 24 percent Extension 1s .no longer mvolved m
Services
as
tbe
business
seras
the
size
of
insectsuch
areas
Middleport,
Jackson
and
ProcGroves
of
Peoples Bank, and her
from the record crop of last year. puumg on thiS show and sale and I
vices
officer
according
to
proof
screening
in
greenhouses
and
torville,
and
Point
Pleasant
san,
Zachary.
According to Dr. Uhrig, Extension was not aware of the date changes.
Ronald A. Adkins, executive
inspections of plants prior to
Dr. Bosley will practice extenEconomist from Purdue University, We .apologiZe to those who ca!led
director.
Miss
Walker,
a
export.
sively at the Meigs County and
Jllinois has the highest state aver- earlier and we gave out the nght
native· of Gallia County,
The inspection service is also Point Pleasant Branches.::
. age corn yield of 140 bushels per weekend 3!1d the wrong date.
received
her
BS
degree
In
10 approve several new
proposing
''I'm looking forward to being
acre. The USDA also reduced the
~ special ~ants to the Taylor
accounting
from
the
Universigrowing
media
and to allow differ- home," said Dr. Bosley. "By comprojections for feed usc and export family for hostmg. a very successf!ll
ty of Rio Grande and bas 20
ent types .of approved media to be ing back to this area I am fulfilling
for corn. Dr. Uhrig believes that Farm C1ty Day thiS Y~· It IS a b1g
years
experience
in
accountmixed.
one of my goals- to practice
barring weather problems next effort for the host fam11ies to ma!&lt;e
ing,
computers
and
related
The
agency
has
received
medicine where I grew up."
year, the 1993 crops are large all the prep~ttons for F~ C~ty
to
allow
more
than
60
requests
fields.
"Dr. Bosley is a welcome addi •
enough to meet demand require- Day and sun keep up w1th da1ly
additional
plants
in
growing
media
lion
to lhe Holzer Clinic Medical
ments. He expects storage of com work load.
.
.
to
be
imported
into
the
United
Staff
and our Department," said
to be profitable and recommends
Tracy H~s, a representau~e
States.
It
is
studying
the
plants
in
Donald
A. Fisco, D.O., Department
farmers to consider CCC tow inter- for \'toche Ann~al Health was m
groups
of
five
to
15
and
is
publishChairman.
"Her familiarity with
est loans to reduce holding costs Gallia Coun~y thiS week to speak to
ing
any
regulatory
revisions
in
the
area.
her
training and her enthuand to provide cash.
OSU E~tenSion Agents from so~thphases.
This
is
the
fllSt
group
to
be
siasm
are
important
10 us."
The annual Ohio Farm Science ern Oh10. He used the fo~lowmg
published.
In
1980,
Dr.
Bosley
received her
Review is scheduled for their annu- story 10 de_monslrate the daily presA
public
hearing
to
give
interundergraduate
degree
from West
. al three day run starting Tuesday, sure that 1.s on farmers and other
ested
parties
an
opportllnity
to
preVirginia
Institute
of
Technology,
September 21 at the Molly Caren ~mall bus10ess .to be,successful.
sent lhcir views and ask questions Montgomery , WV. She attended
Every mo~ung m Afn.ca a Gazelle
Center near London, Ohio. Tickets
about
the proposal will be held in Beckley College, Beckley, WV
will be on sale at the Extension wakes up. It knows ~I mu~t r~n
Washington
on Oct. 26 from 10 from 1984-1985 and Concord ColOffice until 4:30p.m. Monday or faster than the fastest l,wn .or 1t ~ill
a.m.
to
5
p.m.
at the Jefferson lege, Athens, WV from 1985-1986.
until supply is exhausted. Advance be .killed. Every mommg 10. Africa
South
Building,
Auditorium,
In 1986, she enrolled in the
tickets are $4. Tickets at the gate a han wakes up. It knows 1t mu~t
USDA,
14th
Street
and
IndepenWest
Virginia School of Osteoare $6 each. A couple special o'!t ~n the slowest Gazelle or !'
LOIS J. BOSLEY
dence Avenue..
palhic Medicine. Lewisblirg, WV ,
things that you may want to attend w1ll starve. to death. It doesn t
People
wishing
10
speak
at
the
or see include: an International make ~Y difference whelher you
Trade Seminar on Thursday at 9 are a lion or a G~lle- when the
a.m. in the Vice President's Tent; sun ~mes up, you d better be runand a seeding of warm season mng.
•
. .
grasses. The warm season grasses,
Ed Vol!born 1s Gall!a County's extensiOn agent, agr~eulture.
··-

I

Burley requirements
I'' prior to marketing season

Dr. Bosley joins Holzer
Clinic family practice

'

'

The Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant
Celebrating 7olal SZlssels of$100,000,000
.

S

I

.

By LISA COLLINS,
Gallia
ASCS County,
I
Executive Director
GALLIPOLIS - The 1993 burley tobacco marketing season is
still a couple months away with
markets expected to open aro~nd
mid-November There are requrrements thin musi be met by producers before they can receive their
marketing cards for their 1993 buri ley crop:
I) Gallia county burley produc•, ers were recently mailed lhe ''Eligi( bility Statement.for, Burley Tobac'· co" Form MQ-38). This form must ·
i be completed by the farm operator
; or owner prior 10 issuance of mar• keting eards. If producers need help
: completing th8 form, they should

'I

.

er 8,1995
~YJXJC

.._
'
••

·-

•

stop by the ASCS office for assistance.
. . h
2) All persons shanng 10 t e
crop need to file lhe AD- lq.2~ sodbuster/swampb~ster form 1f It has
not been prev1ously updated for
1993.
,
PLEASE DON T WAIT UNTIL
YOU'RE READY TO GO TO
MARKET TO COMPLETE !HE
REQUIRED FORMS • Esp~ially
if you have d person shanng m the
crop that lives out of county·
Changes on sodbuster forms ~an
delay the is~uancc of the matken~g
card. Stop m the ~SCS &lt;?fflce m
the C. H. McKenz1e ~grtcultural
Center (446-8686) dunng ~{Jtem·
ber to insu~e that you w1l.l have
:~our markeoog card at sale ume.

CARLA KING

King promoted
MIDDLEPORT - Robert E.
Evans, president and chief executive officer, announced the recent
promotion of Carla King to assistant manager of the Middleport
Office of Peoples Bank. She
assumed the duties of Tarni Buck
who relocated 10 Chillicolhe.
King has been associated with
the bank for over three years having served as a customer and financial services represcntati~. She is
active in the Wahama High School
Academic and Athletic Boosters
and is a member of Faith Baptist
Church.
King resides in Mason, W. Va.
with her husband, Phillip, and two
soos, Carl and Jason .

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gllia Soil and Water Conservatloa District, Is located somewhere in Gallla Couaty, Indivlduala wisblng to partiCipate In-·
the weekly contest may do so by guessinl the
farm' s owner. Jut mall, or drop orr your pess
to the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
Third Ave., GallipoQs, Ohio, •5631, and you

may win a $!1 prize rrOiD the Ohio Valley Publisbillg Co. Leave your name, address aild telephone number with your card or letter. No tete·
phone calls will be accepted. All contest entries
sboold be turned in to the newspaper ofT~ee by 4
p.m. eacb Wednesday. In case or a tie, the win·
ner wiD be chosen by lottery. Next week, a Meigs
County flll'm wiD be featured by the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservatioo District.

•'

••

�-

Pomefoy-llddlepon &amp;!lpolll, Ott-Point Plnrrnt. wv

Pomeroy · llddleport GeUfpolla, Ott Point Plenunt, WV

Clinton tries to ease
·worries of elderly
over·· health ·reform

President standing
firm on keeping
troops in Somalia
By TERENCE tnJ1Iff
AP CCJI'I'tiPC)IIdent
WASHINGTON- President
Clinton is backing diplomatic
moves to restore 8 l!overnment in
Somalia while rcsisllllg calls for a
wi!)ldrawlll oC U.S. troops from lhe
beleaguered African nanon.
The United Sillies must maintain
a military preaence to keep Somalia
'-....
from reverting 10 8 state or anarchy
, "---, and mass starvation, Clinton said
" E'Tida .
' •~e certainly can't afford to do
anything ..that would permit the
. countty, after .jill the efforts the
United Nations liiis-made, to deteri·
orate to its former cOOdition where
hunllreds of thousands ofJlCOple
are ltillel) or starved 111 nuidom,"
Clinton said.
,
The Pent!lgon announced FridAy
that 40 Army combat engineers
would be sent to Somalia to help
the 4,800 U.S. uoops !here detect
and clear mines. In addition, a
25,000-strong peacekeeping fon:e
from 28 nations is supervised by
the United Nations.
Sentiment is growing in
Congress that American forces
should be withdrawn. Last week,
the Senate pas•ed a resolution urging Clinton to S:eek congressional
authority for continued U.S.
involvement The House may consider a similar measure next week.
Clinton said the United States
favors a political initiative to
restore a government that could
help stem the increasing violence
in the Somali capital of Mogadishu.
U.N. peacekeepers are entangled
there in near daily clashes with the

Proposals to be unveiled on · Wednesday

followers of fugitive warlord
Mohamed Farrah Aidid.

Any political initiative must
enable Somllls "to taltc control oC
their own affairs iD peace, in dignity arid without starvation and murder," Clinton said.

By NANCY BENAC

Clinton:

• Expressed caulious optimism
about a Slll)lrise peace agreement
between Bosnian Serbs and Muslims. "W~ are hopeful about this,
but also properlr wary.... There •s
been no territorial agreement and
that is the nub of the controversy."
• Said he was explorinp; the JIDSsibility of a "donors conference"
of major nations that would be
asked to enntribute billions of dollars needed for establishing a
Palestinian government in the
Israeli-occupied West Bank and

Gaza.

• Urged China to "step away"
from reported plans to resume
nuclear-weapons testing, saying
China has nothing to fear from any
of the world's other nuclear powers.
On Somalia, the Italians feel the
United Nations is moving too
aggressively against Aidid's fOJtes

alread'[

WE'RE STAYING- Praldent Cllllton IIIUWered a question
durln1a joint news conr~ce Friday with ltallan.Prlme Mlnlater
Carlo Ciampi at lbe White HoaR. CllatoD 8lld Ciampi dlaeu11ed
Somalia earUer ID lbe Oval Oftlee. Cllllton 111d lbe U.S. CIDDot
allow tbe East African nation to revert back to a state o f - starvation ~tnd lawlessness. (AP)

'"""'

and that the focus shoald be more
on humanitarian relief instead of
confronb!tion.
Acknowledging lingering differences with Italy, CHnton said,
"Both of us believe that some
renewed poHtical initiative in
Somalia is important, because in
the end there has to be a political
seUlement that leaves the Somalis
in control of their own 4estiny."
•'The trick is how to do it with·
out in any way rewarding the kind
of behavior that we have seen that
could spread among all the other
warlords who have been essentially
pla~g by the rules and ttying to

New peace plan may be facing
referendum vote by Israelis
By NICOLAS B. TATRO
Heights that Israel captured ,in the negotiations,'' he said on lsmel
Associated Press Writer
1967 Middle East war. .
radio. Elections are scheduled for
JERUSALEM - Prime MiDisFarm fields, sides of buildings, 1996.
ter Yitzhak Rabin's unlikely new car bumpers and balconies throujlhaUiance with Yasser Arafat and the out the countty have signs saymg
PLO wiU be tested in parliament . "Peace with the Golan" and
BRIDGE
next week.
"Don't Move From The Oolan."
Rabin will haVe to fmd a way to
Insiders suggest Rabin has been
mobilize public opinion behind his reluctant to pile too much change
efforts or lose the momentum on Israelis at once ·and wants the
toward the next brealr:through: an Golan issue not to be rushed until
PHILLIP
agreement with Syria.
there are clear indications of public
ALDER
The showdown comes Monday support
·Oeri, 33, is the protege of Rabbi
· when the Knesset, Israel's parliament, begins debate on the peace Ovadia Yosef, who is the spiritual
package signed in Washington with leader of the party and who has a
t!le Palestine Liberalion Organiza- vast following among Seph~di
uon.
·Jews from Middle East and North
NORTH
l·ll·tl
The proposal for a nonbinding, African countries.
+AKii4
.Q52
nationwide poll may be hard to
Yosef broke with the ullra-reli• 8643
refuse because it comes from Shas, gious Ash);enazi parties in backing
+QlD
the ultra-religious party of Labor after the 1992 elections and
Sep~c Jews that holds six ~ey has made an important religious
WEST
EAST
seats 10 the 120-member parlta· ruling that "pikuah nefesh," the
+9 z
+QJ765
• 98763
mC!',t . .
saving of life, justifies giving up
tQJl07
t K 9 52
Th1s IS the only ~tee that Israeli-held land for peace.
+&amp;532
+AI
The Iraqi-born Yosef, 73, is
future agree~ents wtll not be
a~k~ as haVIng bee~. ma_
de by a wavering in his support for the
SOUTH
tlO 3
mmonty govem~ent, S&amp;ld Shas government because Deri was
· ·A KJ 10 4
leader Aryeh Deri.
forced to resign as interior minister
tA
"If there's a majority in favor, this week
+KJ987
the right-wing and the seUlers can
Deri 'resigned after police
Vulnerable: Neither
no long~r shout that it's against the charged that he channeled
Dealer: South
people, he SBld.
$250 000 in government funds to
Oeri suggested a referenduiJ! be the c~ffers of the Shas Party and
Well
Eall
h~ld Nov._~· on the .daY of nabon- for his own J.lClSooal benefit Party
Pus
Pass
w1de ~uniClpal elecbons.
. , members claimed that bias against
Pass
Pass
Pus
Pass
W1thout S~s support, Rabm s Sephardim was behind the corrupLabor P~y will c~mmand a 56- tion investigations.
Opening lead: t Q
seat coal1W?n and will have to rely
A referendum might clear the
on the outside s~rt of five Arab way for Shas to. stay in the coalimembers of parliament to get a lion
fragile one-vote majority · of
Leaders of the opposition Likud
3Jlll"?V&amp;:J.
,.
blOC are against a referendum, with
NlSSun Zv1h, secre~·general . Binyamin "Bibi" Netanyahu sayof the Labor Party, dtd not close ing it could not be fair because the
the door on lhe referendum option government would be phrasing the
but said such a decision could put question.
By Pblilip Alder
the bFBices on the peace process just
Netanyahu proposed early elecas it was galherin~ steam.
lions.
One of my closest friends, Keith
"From one s1de, I would like
The Likud head argued that an McNeil of Adelaide, Australia, died on
very much to have. a v~. yte feel election now would test not only July t7. He was a big man in many
we have a very b1g maJOnty that Israeli support for the agreement, senses, weighing about 300 po11nds and
supports the agreement. From the but how negotiations are pursued having a busily beard. McNeil believed
other side, I would not like to stop on subjects like secumy for in speaking his mind, which made him
the process," said Zvili.
Israelis, the status of Jerusalem and some enemies, but he had one saving
grace: that he was usually right. He
A two-month .interlude for the right of return for Palestinians.
Israeli parli_es to c~mpa!~n could
"These qu~stions can be wrote colorful. bridge articles, sprinkled with a wicked sense of humor.
put a cnmp _m Rabm_ s abili~ to cut answered only m new elections, For
eumple, in answering a bidding
a deal with Syna, wh1ch · ts and the public should be able to problem,
l commented: 'Three clubs.
demanding the return of the Golan decide who will carry out the future Do you want me jump to four clubs?'
Moderator McNeil's riposte: 'Only if
it's through an open window." '
At the bridge table, he bated the
negative double and weak two-bid. He
won three national pair championships, but his main regret was that he
Sarajevo next never won the Australian Individual
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) Bosnian capital
- Serbia's powerful president said Tuesday to consider signing a title.
·
a Bosnian peace settlement was peace package.
McNeil played today's deal with
Two separate accords were considerable skill. North's five-heart
nearly home Friday, and an intern&amp;·
tiona! negotiator expressed hope it signed in Geneva this week by rebid wouldn't meet with 11nlversal
Bosnia's Muslim president, Alija approval, but six hearts is an excellent
could lie signed next week.
lzetbegovic,
with rival Serbs and contract.
there
are
no
more
"Practically,
McNeil won the diamond lead and
Croats.
serious obstacles," President Slo.
c
ashed
the heart ace, preparing to
In
accordAnce
with
one
accord,
bollan Milosevic of Serbia said
clalni
llDtll
Eut discarded a diamond.
commanders
of
the
Muslim-led
after talks with mediators Lord
Now
·
McNeil
made a fal"ligbted
Bo.snian
army
and
Croat
forces
Owen lllid Thorvald Stoltenberg.
play:
He
led
a
spade
to dummy's king.
agreed
in
Sarajevo
to
begin
a
He said agreement on borders
Then
be
played
on
clubl.
West won the
was the only problem and differ- cease-rue at noon Sltllnlay.
second
ro11nd
and
forced
declarer
Extremely heavy fighting a diamond. But McNeil just ranwith
ences were down to a few percent·
his
between government and Croat club winnen. U West luld ruffed, dumage points of territory.
Bosnia's Serbs, Croats anll the forces was reported in Mostar in my would bave overruffed, trwnpa
Muslim-led government have southwestern Bosnia.
would have been drawn ana the slam .
In Sarajevo, a 2-year-old boy claimed. When West dllcarded three
agreed on a three-way partition of
and at least one other person were times, dummy's remaining spades
Bosnia.
Europ .... Community mediator killed when a manet was sheUed. were thrown. Now a spade ruff with
Owen and U.N. envoy Stoltenberg Eight people were wounded, dummy's heart queen was declarer's
summoned Bosnia's Serb, Croat according to Dr. Faruk Kulenovic 12th trick.
I shall really miss you, McNeil.
and Muslim leaders to the besieged of the capital city's Kosevo Hospi•
(D ............APII'liNICd UIIAIM.
tal.

...

A big man
with a big heart

Negotiators rushing toward
peace agreement in Serbia
of

States could eventually fold
Medicare into regional health·~W ASHINGTON - President chasing alliances where other mdiCiinton Saturday previewed the viduals and businesses buy their
health-&lt;:are plan he'U present to .lhe coverage, but they would have to
nation on Wednesday and offen:d guarantee seniors benefits II$ good
assurances that it would result in or better than standard Medicare.
better benefits b older Americans
Clearly aware that som~ older
covered by Medicare.
people are nervous that health
•'I you're happy with Medi- reform could be a net loss for them, ·
care, you can stay in it " Clinton Clinton said in his radio address:
said in his weekly radi~ address "I want to say this to those oldet .
taped a day earlier. "And we're Americans listening today: Olif
&amp;?inS to increase your choices and ., Pl!ln ~ffers you more peace &lt;tf
gtve you the chance to join a less mind.
.
':
expenSive program. But it will be
And he stressed that for Ameri.
your choice."
cans overall, the plan would "pre'
Clin.ton unveils his health-care serve wh~t's right and fiX wh&amp;t~
wrong With our health care sys•
Plan in a nationally televised
.
tern"
I
...;
speech· to a joint session of
·
·Congress on Wednesday night.
The plan wiU offer a ~tandar!l
Although the president is putting set of benefits .to all Ameneans by
finishing touches on the plan many · 1997 and reqwre employers ·to pa)'
dmils already are known. '
80 perc.ent of average premium;
Under his proposal Medicare CQilts, With workers paymg the res(:
would operate separately, With new Small businesses ~tnd low·~wag~
drug and improved long-term care ":orkers would ge~ feder~l subsf.&gt;
benefits for the aged·and disabled.
dies to help pay thett prenuums. ~

A..,..J.w,,.._ Writer

CasM$~Mooany~m~

dation wuh Aidid, Clinton said,
"We don't want to do something
that rewards the very conduct we
went to Somalia to put an end to.''
Clinton discussed Somalia in an
Oval Office meetiilg with Italian •
Prime Minister Carlo Ciampi. The
two leaders later spoke at a news
conference in the East Roomof theWhite House.
On other foreign-policy issues,

sunav nm• senunel Pege D3

work out a peaceful life for the
people whom they represented
when everybody was fighting over
there," Clmlon said.

&lt;d

BULLETIN BOARD
.

'

.

.

'

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

•

American Legion Auxilary
Unit27
Monthly meeting
Sept 21 7:30
on Bob McCormick Rd.

Longaberger Basket
Dresden Bus Tour
October 5th $35 per person For
more details Call Becky Godwin
at 446-3427 First Come Basis

Arnie's
Pool Tournament
Every Sunday
Weekly Prize $50.00
304·675· 7115

3rd Annual Fall Festival Guyan
Twp. Vol. Fire Dept. Hog Roast
&amp; Bean Dinner Silver Eagle
Band at 3:00 p.m. Auction at
1:00 p.m. September 25

..

'

6

Lo$1&amp;Found

Droit Solid · W•t.t
NOnCE TO BIDDERS
LOll•
R-...1:
- · to
- Dole
lor
ntum
with _,.onto
PurohaM of (1) 8cltoof au. U.nag1ment PIM.

.

':

tor

The H_.,g wiH be held

.

··EAITERN LOCAL BOARD
;· OF EDUCATJOH

-

~utlond

Ch1le Contor, 114-

u

faiiOWll:

The \'Valleton City Loll: ol
- •
lloc:lrw,
black
20:1
Eut mano Run •cloa.
' 8elllad propollll wll be Building,
whlto,
heo
DOll..•
tog,
114-141r,.W~ by the Boord of Broadway 81raat, Welkton, 2135.
Education of the .E utern Ohio 45tl2, October I,
&amp;:onl School Dlatrlot of 11113, a110:00 a.m.
R_.vllle, Ohio, by 12:00 Jha Jackeon Ani!
17
~·olooll noon on Ootabn 11, Extenolon Conter,
UIU, and at that ti•• Standpipe Road, Jackeon,
opanacl by the T,_urar of Ohio, 45140, Oclobar 5,
ellid Board • provld1 d by 11113 lit 7:00 p.m. ·
IJ1W tor- (1) 72 pMIII I• lhe Droll Plan le ovolllbla'
oohool bue according to for review .at the Solid
.)lecHicationo of .... board Wut.t Dlolrlct Office, 213
E•t Broadway, Welllton,
ol aclucollon.
·: Speclflcotl!lne and Ohlo45612.
7
Yard Sale
iMiruol.ona Ia bldd1ra may (8) 181tc
~ oblalnacl.t the ofllce of

... T,_.., E•torn High
. ltohool Eltrllclng. A oar Iliad
dhook payable "to the
TrMoui'ar of the •bova
Boord of Education or •
..tlel•ctory ·bid bond
,...utacl by ... blcldar lllld
11M euraty company In ..
amount equel lo lhra per~~nl of lha bid ohall be
·eubmltiacl wilt IMh bid.
1taalcl Board of Educallon
r•..,• the right to wlllva
l~larmollti• lo aooapt or
~ 1111y and aH 04' parta Of
Iii¥ and 111 1t1c1a.
i:ialclllolrd of EducaUon
r~..,. the right Ia wlllva
lllformallti• lo •aept or
. rtjaot ..., and an 04' parta ol
..., .,d •I bicla. .
iNo.. bide may ba
wi..._n lor at .._t thirty
('0) daye altar the
lollaclulacl cloolng lima lor
~of bide.
t• IIOARDOFEDUCATION
OF EASTERN
~OCAL SCHOOL DIBTRICT
,
ELOISE BOlTON
TREASURER OF
EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOLS

fllallonol

Announcements

Gallipolis
a. VIcinity

3 AnnOuncements

Own

Moura. 1~100-,..~n4·

-·

--.. 11~21. ·

llln/11 Yro+J Or Wrfle:
E:13T, tel S. UncCIInny, N.Ailroro
IL IOSU.
·
Neodod: ExporionOed tloloe- Comoct: -..·o
~
hy 1.·
.rue._.
•-- Or ....... " ' = E - .•
-

Employment Serv1ces

1 Help wanted
p,~~- c:...!t..ltl.-ptlan
tollowa: Hourtv ,.._ U.IO, .11
,
AVONI All ar-. Noed extro
:Iff
............
oroxlmllolp
.....,.Y or want 1 c~{bellhlr lnctulfvo ol -ondo lnd
wow-eon Mll'fiYn. 3
·2645
hollclaye. Rnp: oolble lor the
or 1-IOO-H2-1351.
_.-ton lind - - of
AVON I All ArMo I Shirley
Span, 3()4.871-1421.
llot In 1M ou,...lolon or
..In the cltnlnt
NHC!ed lloture, Non- , _ ond wortdng
klt"'-.
Ateo 11olot1
MyHomeForA7 In holplng 0 dally --obllhJ
Coli Aftor 5 P.ll. 614- o1 lnventory=lnvoloM, -~~
-.
iono, dalfr per, LIIL chOaldlot,
Conlnol fnltlht CorrtoN-O.T.R. ~i"· ond malnto.....,.
Orlvero WOnted lor 1 . _. I«· - . AllltltJ to fllln lor"""""'
mtnel In Humcone, wv, muet _ . . . . ond oloUtr to peo1orm ·
haft 1Wf. O.T.R. -lel101 pu1o dutleo wlthollt oupervtllan to
lng o _, troller, good llo!!lntl -trod.
Minimum
poJ, lite model oqiilprl!elll, Blue quollflcot'- high eehool
CrDN BliNI Shlllld, Jnc., etop o1 d!ptomo or oqi.llvatont and ono
f'll'; loy GOer ,!"J• - - 11) weor ofllporienceln lnotltupoy, - - - pe-'- 401 loriot food •rvice.

You Wont A llojor CNdl
C.rcl? led Credit, NO Prolll•n•,

ALL Yonl Sola 111111 1e Pllld In
Acl¥onco. DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.01.
Puapprowed And Low .....,... lhe
clay ....... the ed le to NO.
....... -.0725.

....,., edHion • 2:00 p.m.
U..l Orto-OI&gt;Onel Coil - · ,_ Flfdow. - J edHion • 2:00
·
tOO Ill 1017 Ext. 3125 U.H Per p.m. Sotunky. ·
lin. Bo 11 Yra, Procoll Co, 2 llmiiY ~~~- •te: Roln,
lhlnt, ·lfon, 'Tuoii, 1-3~ Sl. Rt. 110
No ''-lng on O.notd t&gt;w North Gatno High lOOhoot. .
~·· property on Sondhllf
lid. Trooipe-. will
be
Pomeroy,
Middleport
4-'-=--:-:~G~I;..vea=w;:;a~y::--.,...,...­
&amp; VIcinity
2Cuto Cuddly Klttono For Adop- All Yard Solo! Muet Bo Paid In
tton, AJ&gt;prox. · 1o Wb. Old, 1 Acfvanco. IIMcltlno: 1:00Dm the
Onoy, 1Tortoln 114-441-2201.
daw bolore the ed to io non,
3 Smotl Mix B,.ed Pu- Sunclow edhlon· 1:OOpm Friday,
edMion 10:00o.m.
Good With Children, ~~ Mondoy
Soturdow.
11409.

K Ole

100-1-=-

11on1e . - ,·-•

Colt~ Adlltnt,

1:;:::;::;::::==::::::::::::~

I·

1

441-1700

BRUNICARDI
MUSIC
Join the Band
Instrument
Rentals

t would like to thank
all my frlenda and
family
for
their
pntyera, vlelta, phone
cale, flow.rs, food,
glfta, e•rde and help
during my rec.,t

~~=h~i:J~~::
1111 Collie, 1111 8

Public Sale
&amp;Auction
5 Acforoblo Oormon Sh ~:nl Rick,...,_ AuctlGn Compony,
a-Mix Pupplel, 114-4 1 17. full t1m1 tuctloneer, compa.t•· Eom Full-Tlnie Pay For Pll'f·
hoapltal~n
ud
Work ... A Chrletmu
ouctlon oorvlco. Uceillod Time
home
confinement.
I
I Mind Collie PuaD111, I 1111 ....
Around
Tho
World
•
Oh!a • w..t Vlrglnll, 304Wooke Old 114~41-Uiz.
Domonttrllor. F... 1500 Kit No am truly bleaaad to
ns.a785, ,
~
Cotleetlng Or Dotlvll'fng, Aleo h_.,e
•REEDSVILLE, OliO 45772 7 pupploe, - 80
IIIIIIY
...... &amp;
llooldng Portteo. eon 114-245.
fomolM, ~ -.thl, Vl Dorman
(~) 11, •• (10) 1,10, 11113
wonderful
frlenda.
5031.
lhort-holr polntors,l14-1'12-3177.
Janice Young ..
Expr- llodlell S.O..tory, .
PubliC Notice
No Woolloncla; Or Shift Wortco
!'
ApplY In Poroon, llodlcll Plue,
131 Stole R..-o 110, Gllllpotle,
P,IJBUC NOTICE FOR SALE
1:30-1,
·The Ohio Valley Bank
We wllh 1o !hank eo&lt;h
(;pmpMy, 420 Third
FLATBED DRIVERS-Conllnol
oud enryone for their
Avenue, Galllpollo, Ohio
Frwlatd Corrlono hd on tunlfw
for
flelbod
*'-thO!
te
Pt.
PlNunt
FIN
llorket,
2401
lol"ID&amp; kllldueu 1bowu to
~~tier lor .... the
Jac.._, Ave. Now • Ulod MCond to none! Do rou o.n
Ul
durlug lbe J&lt;. of our
htma, cratta apona card• ap- yow own f-01? HOve you
ifclfRc~· II.H.;
pllancei, clothing, tumlture, thought obout butllng your own buboud,
father,
s FilL 104-4U1410.
fishing l&gt;IH. Deller t-or? le bolng 1 compony graudfolhOI'o IODo IBd
drfwf
whit
you
o,.
lntoroolod
I le pr-'Y wfllbe lOki
F_. eduh cote ond I klttono, ell · ......
for rent, ilaw·••k· fn? Than call Conll1111l todaY et
monthly
at a· p.ubllo ·eala at the ootorw,ll4'114fl.2:115.
brother. A opedll tbeak
1-IQ0.~222 end alii lor Tim.
B
J•cklon Pika; Galllpollo,
WE HAVE IT ALLI
you · to the panomedla
Ohio at 10:00 a.m. on Freo KllleiJI, To Good Homel 9 y.'anted to uy
eJ...:
114-4441-2318.
=-'""""..,....~-.,....,.,.-:--::- The 011111 -llolgo c-munhy
of Holur
aad
.....,;.-.y, ..21-83.
Comlllelo HouM/Iold Or Ea- Action AIIOIICW'O Homo Enorgy
Medico!
Center.
A
•Tha
Wllllllbe eold , .... PuOlllee. .eau Aftor'.. 4 P.ll. totool Anw ~pe 01 FumHuro, Aal•anoa PrDgram H• An
WI
tq 1M blghalt.bltlilw "• II" 11W7Ni04.
··
Applla.-, Antlque'o, Etc. Aloo lmmedlatt 0~•·'1 For A tpeclallbouk you to KH.
wltllout any ellpnuacl or Klt-• 7., w- Old, 8110 - , . Appnlaol Avolloblel 114-245- Rocordll Clerk nntou Worlcor At ID''"'u Holley, Elizabeth
ho Contnl Ollf:e In Cholhlre.
lnjplled warranty. Thle Whlto &amp;tripod, Phone: 114-4* ::51:=52::.·- - - - - ' - - - Thle
Pceltlon Requ~M An lnChurc:b, oud
prOperty may be • .., by 2411.
Antlqueo ond uood tumHuro, no dlvlduol
Who-Well
Undor
•lllctfng The Ohio Volley Mole , ., etrl•--' kitten, to 1 hom too lar111 or too omall, will Pr-ure And Mllll Bo -ltlve Addiloa FnewW Baplilt
- ~•f
buy one plac8 or complat1
nk Com...,y, ·
._,...,..
•
good 1 loving.....home. 304-t7li- houiiMid. · call Oot&gt;w Martin, To The IiNdo 01 Tho Low Infor their prayer• aad
;J'he Ohio Valley Bank TNI.
114-112-"11141.
~- Computor And Booldlooplng Ex~ llequtrld. Mllll ot~~~~fortiDI warda. To the
Cem...,y reurv• Ito right Smollcollco kltt.,,lhtor trolned. Wanted: Boor Hogs, 2110 .:1110 Type
SO W- Per Mlnuto. Ex· Johuoa fomUy for the
~ accept or reject MY and 304..7M720.
Pdo, 10 Moo To AYNr Old, Coli perfonce With Foderll Progro.,.
a• bide, rrlor lo the oa... Sphl pupploo. 304-67!1-2440.
Anwtlmo, 114-3111'7184.
Dnlrod. Ability To Work Well beoutlful ain&amp;lnl. To
Term• o Sale: CASH or
With Othono A Mllll. Thto Pool- everyone who Hat cardo
Ct:RTIAED CHECK.
6
Lost a. Found
Decoratoci stoneware, woll tolo- lion to For AppfOII.·I Monthl/40 aud nowon oud tboto
&amp;+pr.n. bar 17, 11, 1 22
phonM, old llmpeL old tiler· Houro Per Woek. Minimum
Found: 1 Torrlor T\'pe Doa &amp;1 momelore, old cloeu, ontlquo EduaotlGn Requl,_nt k High who brour;ht rood.
•
Pomo.ranlln Mix, lf4'44~7.
tumhure. Rlvorlno Antlquea. Sc- Oroduato. No lllciCol
, PubliC Notice
Ruu llaare, ownor. 114-182· Bonofltl With Thlo Poeltlon. Speolal tboulte lo WUU.
Found: -rollin Shephard Or 21121. Wo buy oetatoo.
AppiJ At The Gallle -lloitll CAA Funeral Home for the
Office In Chelhlre, OhJo
NOTICE OF PUBUC
Clermon Pollee Light B,_n And Don~ Junk hi Setllll Your Non- centr-.1
No Liter Thon tlootomber 27, [ kl1udnea. God bleu each
HEARING
Derk Brown, Young, Noutorod, Wortdng Mojor Appllonceo, 11113.
For Funhar lnlamiotloQ,
;In accordance wllh tho Mole, Found In Canlonory A- Color TV'e._ Rotrtgerotoro, Cell tiM!
or you Ia • •pecial way.
Or (114! 1
1802
pfovleiono of aocllon - " ' ·
Froo..,., VCH'o, Mtc-oveo, 1121. An387·7141
Eqllll OpportunltJ Perhaps you oeat a lovely
3134.55 ~)ol the Ohio Found: black ond whlto .... Air Condhtonors, Guhar Ampe, Employer.
card,
..__ =
·coon mix, SA 181 Etc.l14-211-1231.
A,...
T'.'Hd
, The GaUl-, ....,
04' AI quietly In a ebalr.
Jeclteon, llotalp Mid Vlnlan .,.., 1
2e011.
J &amp; D-. Auto Peril ond Solvogo,
Jtlnt
Solid
W•te Found: Bleck Lob, Vlclnttw: Rt. ;::.~M~J.unk 01'" &amp; trucks.
Perbapl you seat 1
monegam.,t Dlolrlct will 14\ Pvolomouth Rd. Coli To
tuueralopny,
h~d~~lc
~on~l~r·~:~:nt:t:~:,I:14:~:•::311:4:7.::::::JL__________________l_________________~ If 10 we sow it lhore.
Perbap1 you spoke the
f1ke . Unfortunately, your behavior paltern
Monday, Sept. 20, 1993
could crate additional problems.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Usually you're kludeotwordJ
ASTRO-GRAPH
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc . 21) A practical and realislic. bul today you mighl AI ally frleud could aay,
grudge is a very ineffective tool and if you be a trifle too emotional and overreact to Perhlp• you were uot
hold one today, you're likely lo e•perience situations. Be sensitive. but be logical as thenohU
the greater anguish when embracjng this well when deal ing with developments. Just thought of us that
BERNICE
day
emotion.
Major changes are ahead for Virgo in the
BEDE OSOL
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) II might be coming year Send for your Aslro-Graph Wbalever you did to
necessary today for you to review your predictions today. Mail $1 .25 and a long,
coMOle our beorll,
financial situation to see if you can elimi· self-addressed, stamped envelope to
We tblilk yu so mueb.
nate some of your frivolOus expenditures. Astra-Graph. clo this newspaper, P.O. Box
Wholever
tbe pari.
Youcouldhavealottochoosefrom.
4465, New York, N.Y . 19163 Be sure to
The
r-oy
otEddie L.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Fib. 11) Strive lo be stata your zodiac sign.
Follllel
realistic regarding the goals and objectives LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Guard against
hllr, 114-185-

'.

Head/Quarters
by Juanita
313 3rd Ave. Gallipolis
446-2673 10% off Acrylic Nail,
perms &amp; color
Ask for Wendy Long.
Call now for appointment.

1-.

•••ff

:.t

48" White bathroom
Vanity. Good condition.
446-4658
B!rthrites
Child birth education classes will
begin Tuesday Sept. 21 6:30 p.m.
P.V.H. Downstairs Conference
Room 304-675·4340 ext . .232 to
register or more information

446-0687
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

BRUNICARDI MUSIC
Clearance Sale
PIANOS fROM $795
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

Holzer Medical Center Rehabilitation
Annual Homecommlng Reunion
The Holzer Medical Center
Rehabilitation Unit would like to
invite all former patients to their
Annual Homecoming Reunion.
Gathering will be September 18,
1993 from 1:OCl-4:00 pm at the
S_E!nior Chizen's Center, 1167 State
Route 160, Gallipolis, Ohio. Reunion
will feature an Ice Cream Social,
Mucical Entertainment, Talent Show
and Carnival Games. Two guests
only please
Un~·s

Big Bend Cloggers
sponsoring beginners workshop
Pomeroy Municipal Building
Wednesday, Sept 29 6:()().. 7:00 piT
992·7853 for more info.

Call 446·2342
or 992·21'56

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Reunion for the family &amp;
friends of Charles and Mora
Walters will be held at 0.0.
Mcintire Park Sheller #2 on
Sept . 26, 1993 at12:30
NOTICE
Gallia Lodge 469 F &amp;AM
meeting night"changed from
2nd Tuesday to 2nll Friday.
Bill Angell, Sec.

,

•

you set for yourself today. If they are

Clark's Jewelry
We Buy Old Gold
Class Ring , Wedding Rings,
Chains, Bracelets, Watches any
condition Highest Prices Paid
Clark's Jewelry Pomeroy

card of Thanks

.

Empire• LP Gas Ventless
Heater on Sale!
Comfortable heat at an
!!ffOrdable rrice.
Burlile Oi Co.
446-4119

owl-

_, ....., be ..,
to
,..... _ . Ohio a . . .u or
~ . . &lt;leu offlco.
PoOling to Oot- 1,
~-~or;r•w

toliloct 11om -

p.r o p e r t y

Mary Kay Consultant
Kim Christopher
Inventory in Stock!

-ton TnoatAll=
(SEPTA)
7 W. -~lne 0r1ve
NetoonYitloltOh 45'114
(114) 71- ·

lout-om

-IOU.---..;;;....

Do

---_....

Pulollohlng Rna N-

=;::=:::;=;::-:=--:-:--::--::--··1!'ecpto
To Llbol Poelcolds
,,_Homo.~ Sol Your

Business
QpportunHy
2 bodt-11 homo wtth \ 7 -lbte opening lor ICIIDOl ...
lnotruetor
to
......
ot
CllletOn ....... Pey luliJ
fumlehod with Route:
fi,2oo
1o-.Muet- ....- YIIW A WNk Pelontlot. Pof:od To - - dleh end .......
ohio Dtp·"'"*· .........
low 20'1. Good 114-T-..a CartHiel!io ond have or Sell. UOO IM1t32.
1210 :r 311-8457.
be oll8lble to •abloln Ohio
3 lied,_ , homo In Rutlend,
Ooplrtment of Edueotlan Mu~l
lol, aordon, ..U.r, Hlndtcappod eortlftcetton. Stnd
bulldlll!lll, tmlllldlllo ~­
,
.
_
~- 20th to
lion, $1~,500 080,.,... Cartolon
; P,O. BOK 307,
S
OH 45771 ~•nn. K
S Boclr-, 2 IJotho, 2 Cot At·
Devle, Ol...tor of Educotlon.
~-:.~:~~~'1!:
R'lll Extol• Coreor. Profnolonol
:117-7104.
lnolntng. ERA T-n &amp;CouniT)'
Rill ~~~o~ .!J.roltor, Bocklo
COUNTRY HOIIEIIACAEAOE
Sloin, 304-611HMI.
Extro Lorge Contompory Homo
On 17.1 ..._ IIIL With 2· BoRocoptlonlot, Phono
Poot, 2 . . - . 1110}100; 4 .....
Poroonoilty,
Good Organlzo.
"""" !lome, 2 112 ....... Ll~rgo
tlonol Skflle, AbliHW To Work
Penw "-· All On 4 ...,.. ~n
Cfolltw wtth Another Shoring
~.000; 110 A&lt;ro IIIL F...,
RooponolbliHioe 40 Hn Per
With Bam· 30 Tltlabto. IIJ!I 000;
Wook. Sind R11umo To: CLA
10 ..,_ MIL 130,000; All ur1 ThO
255 o/o Oalllpolla Doll~ Trlbu~
Abon Within 3 MIIM 01 Rio
825 Third Avtnua, Gal poll•,
Oronclo • P t - ·CaN 1• Con4ll:lt.
At Oonno. Summero R";a'7
Real Estate
;;llea:::;:llot::.,::ed:7-:,..,..=;:· -:w-;.h:-h-:h,-ooo_m_•
For llano In-Ion. 11412151.
heilth e o n = - · lor 0
,__
~-~·For .... or renl· one bedroom
- o n - - !11roet, $7100
Domlno'e Plzz.o In~·­
POI!IIIOW to
or l1501mo.; 2 lledraom now a-,.tlng opplleotlcno.
In t..lart, Olllo, ~.OI!i.~l Crow
&amp; Crow AMity, 11040Z-2720 or
Train lor llll!lfDYmont In lhe
IM-Itl241111.
. . llltd. OppoltunltlN
Incl... l.. hnf:lon In etiCII&lt;IIIIc
.. petr, - - ~-....
commu~lon ond eomputor
All ntlliUiale ~~~~tentsng In
·nopolr. a-tngo ovalllbloln the
IIIII I I I - I o IUbjoct to
OCt. 111~ olaoo. Coil ,__ Tile
AduH Educetl:n Canter, 1-IQO.
theF-Fil&lt;HouslngAd
13U108 or 114-75:1-3811.
of 1968 wt1lcn maiiiiiKIIogal
Wanted: .- . . . wltlme
to advorllle "I!Tf prelorenee,
Doni 1 1 rldo
2 lied-., houH, lull bolmltatlan or -nation
birt~ M 0 0 ve
I II 1Ciyl, old
mont. 304-6711-141111.
hdow pe~y. w111 11e 1-7 I 1&gt;1-on raeo, - r. rolglon,
chlklroOL 304-6711-21111.
eex famlllllltllus or national
Lind Cant-; 3 ...._
origin. or qlntonllon to
HouN On Comor Lot In Mlllor
16 Wanted to Do
Ohio, m.ooo •.ooo o...:
mat&lt;o I!Tf oucll prel"""""',
S400.tto. FrM Fi(llnclnt, I
lmltatlan or cb&lt;mllnatlon."
Corllfled chUd cono provldor wll
YNrt, lMn IIUit Ren g a ; Ill•
to'- eon of ahlldron In 1ttJ
Or Fellnon:e N Bonk. Ciltlt4homl Chell:• .,.., p6lul cal
21145110 Or 114-1181-4500.
TID no"'''aper wll not
114-liit 1212 llory.
knowingly accopt
Corlltlad nurolng oMiotont wll
uu New 2 a•• 04IM'I
advertilamanla lor raaiBIIala
caro fofloN whh - . , In their
Homell•••wnt.
•·ooo-·500.
..,, .-. UIC1.21 ·M-h~,
home. outMandlng ,...,._••
to In violation of iho
law.
Our
raadera
.,..
hanlby
304-137-2123.
=~14:441-11~ N, Or
Aftor7P.• .
Informed 11111 all -llngl
Chitatlln woman wanting to
advariBed In UU newspaper
Ciel!ll homee, 114-112·7030.
are avdable on an equal
5
Happy Ada
E&amp;R TREE 8ERYICI;. ~~.
opponuNty bulo.
Trlmml.. , TrM AemaYII,
Trimming. Fr• Extlmataol 1
3111'715TAhr 4p.m.
- .1 Mo..._...., ~!'"!ng, _s__H_a...:pp..:...:.y_A_d_s_ _
Yanl Work Wlndowo .....,..
Outtore Cleonld Light Houllng,
eo-~!~ IIMiclontlll, Stovo:

w-. .

.

•w

'

114-4441-1....

Oat- POIIoble Sowmlll1_clon,
IIJUI~o: loao to the """ IIIII
. call
'111-1ll7.
Home .... for,_ loved ..... In
lamllv aero hooM In llldd...,.,
114-6:1-11042.
lntlilorlextortor pelntlng, roo1
pelntlng, IIJndwuh hoioooa •
mobil llomoe, odd Jobe. 15JII
oxp., oxc. rota. Fr• oltl..304-t71-4133.

LPN work In ..._, or
0.1111 County. Will do tomporory
or hornt core, day ., _,lng

lhffto. 304·773-1317.
11111 P111ll'e OIY Core Cantor 1
Block w... 01 HMC On Jo.Piu

~

1 A.M. .a::10 P.M.

n

...

Sunday, Sept. 19, 1993

lhoughls through your cerebral video.
In the year ahead you're likely 10 be very ARIES (llllrch 21-Aprtl 19) If you feel life
effective at relinquishing situations that has lei you doWn talely, remember we usu·
have proven lo be unproductive. These will ally reap what we sow. Check your fields to
1 ed weeds or fru1t.
· PI ow the
be replaced by endeavors whose yields ful· see 1·f you pant
unproductive
under.
fills your expectations.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today you may TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Try to avoid
haye· to redo or repair careless worl&lt; you pessimislic individuals today. Their nega·
did yesterdey. Don'llook for someone else live anitudes could affect you and cause
to b1a111e this on, just lry to pe~onn more you to see problems where you should see ·
eHectively lhe next time. Virgo, treat your- possibilities.
se~ lo a birthday gih. Send for your AslroGEMINI (M1y 21.Jurtll 201 This could be a
Graph prediclions for lhe year ahead by very produclive day for you. provided you
malting $1 .25 and a tong, self-addressed, deal wilh developments realistically. If you
sta)nped envelope to Aslro·liraph. c/o lhis make mountains from molehills, all bets are
nel"spaper. P.O. Box 4465. New York, oH.
N.Y. 10163, Be sure to state your zodiac . CAIICER (Ju011 2t.July 22) Someone you
know socially might cause you financial
sign.
LlljiiA (Sept 23-0ct 23) If you go on a problem~ today. If you can't change what Is
shopping binge today. you could later sui· already done. let n serve lo guide you in
ler one ot the most severe cases of buyef s lhe future.
renlorse you've ever had from being fool· LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Dealing with your
mate could be a sore sj)ot today. He/she
ilh,
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·NOY. 22) You're nol might not be the easiest persons with
likel\t to disguise your feelings todaw il you whom to get along. bul then again you may
~~aYe to deal direclfy wilh someone you dis· not be either.

JOIU'

male,

Love,

/T-Ie.. 814-41MW. , _
chGaler. /School Age •~
8224.

Will blbplt In mJ home, • echool. have ,..twencee.
before I oftor ochoot I lull time.

to

304..7W784.

Financial

21

Business ·
OpportunHy

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING

CO.
ro......-ndo thot you do - .
nea wtth pMpta you Know 1nd
NOT to sond money througt tho
mall until you h1ve lnw...fgllld
the offorlng.
Loco! V.ncltng Routo: 11.200 A
Weill Polonttat. Muot Soli. 1-IICIG1153-8363.

MEDICAL BILUNG
..._ A Local Licon- For
Notlonol Clllmo Ssrvlce.
EIICIIOf!lc Ctalmo Procoulng.
Exeollont lnco..,. Polontlol lo
Com~ny Trwlnlng. $1,11115.00
tFtnc·g Avoll). 1-800-1111·15tltl
Ext. II (24 Houre).

We ware told by a
little birdie,
Today

Karl Jr' s Thirty!
GOTCHAI

Look Alive
You Are Only

25

HAPPY BIRTHDAY
ANDY MILES
From Pomeroy Ch'"'"l'l
of Christ

Used to be curls
Now its just girls

Happy 17th
Birthday
Joey!

inclinations today to give new friends pref·
Disparity where affections are concerned

PISCES (Fib. :ZO.Morch 20) In life you can could invite complications.
3 Announcements
accomplish lhal which you're capable of SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your image ~=:;:======J!========~
visualizing. Failure is the by-product of a trine fragile today. so you must be carEifutJ NOna· OF RIGHT TO NOMIN"'~'E ay·PETITION

negative pictures . Instead run positive

Love Mom, Dtlll,
Michelle

11
CGncem
For v- Chlld'e,
OueiHy
And Exporfonoo
to Tile ~~~=~~~===:::
Coro. Coli
U. For AVIII. lnllnt

beyond your grasp. they could severely erential treatment you may deny old pals.
lessen your feelings of self-esteem.

boy Turned Elghlean
Happy Birthday J. R.

Your ago is .~ifty Eight
We neHr /rQd a iiiiU
Happy Blrllrday from

how yo u conduct yourself in public .

AI

Beliavior previously 1goored might now be : The Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) is
severely criticized.
aecepting nominations for County Committee elections
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) One
for Athens, Meigs and Vinton counties. This notice is
your most charming assets is your
voters of the rightto "'
nornim1tel
tiable curiosity about almost everything. issued to inform el..,;bla
-r
However. today if you ask probing ques- candidates by pethlon. Copies of the pethion
tions, you could be told to bun oul.
lnalructionl on ill completion can be obtained
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jon. 19) 11 a misun· your local FmHA oftice.
derstanding arises today between you and . Persons nominated should have an Interest in a
a valued lriend over something material. a1 an owner, tenant, or sharecropper within the co1Jn~1 1
nip il in the bud and don't lei it get out of or area In which actlv~iaa o1 the county or
hand. Unresolved, it could leave a scar
committee are carled out. They ·must be cklzens of
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. t9) Someone of Unhed Slates or aliena lawfully admitted to the Unhed
whom you think very highly might disappoinl you today. Don't let lhis aflect
States for permanent reeidence, and be well qualHied
relationship. EMcuse it as you wanl
for committee w9rk. Spou111 of those persons who
frailties excused.
meet the eligibility crheria are also elegible lor
PISCES (Fob. 20.March 20) The res1111S 1 nomination lor election lo the County Committee.
aren't likely to be very sallsfaciory today
Nomination• mual be received In the Athens County
you resent doing certain assignmenls
Office no later than October 17, 1993. FrnHA
.tasks. Pul your heart in your work, not
committee electiont are open to all elegible voters
temperament
d
ARIES (Morch 21 ·Aprll 19) 11 you are not without ragar . to race, color, religion, national origin,
mindtul of lhe social graces today, lhere is age, polhical affiliation, marital status, sex, and/or
a possibility you might do something olhers handicap.

Wanted

FISCAL ASSISTANT /DATA OPERATIONS
Bachelors or Associates Degree in Accounting or
Business Management or related experience plus
five (5) years financial experience including
knowledge of fiscal maHers. Assisl with
bookkeeping operations; assist whh internal and
external financial reports; responsible for all
aspects of the PASSPORT Home Care Division
fiscal operations: assist with all Agency audits;
provide technical assistnce to contractors.
All qualified persons should submit a resume and
relerances to:
Joyce Shong, Personnel OHicer
Area Agency on Aging District 7, Inc.
P.O. Box 978
URG, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
No later !han 4:30p.m. on September 24, 1g93.
Minorities and handicapped urged to apply.

will find offensive or out of line.

'
•

'·

�OH

Sentinel

Point Pleasant,

WV

·:September

1883

18, 1893

OH

Point Pleaeant,

WV

Sunday

~

.....

....... .,, ........, ••• , bllh.

44

Apanment
tor Rent

.-•• ,....._~""Jll-lo

bath,---

•: - .

-

=. - -·

·: Aanctt~ty~e....._
•_ 1

• • .F. . . I I , -

77WIIO.

: . ...... ' •• ~r-• In Country '
• • Mho , _ - · $11,000, 114• : 441-132S.

&gt;. 32

,.,.._Apia..

Bod3 b 1 J 001 i-, ,~or~~~~o

..., ....:ot"ntrol olr,

Mobile Homes·

tor Sale
. h-•• ~
h
bl
• • ••••·" per mont , , _ 010 141
- • hDIM llic:ludoo dl.lh•- ond
- • gorboge dllpoool, ol&lt;lrtlng 1
• ot::Q cornploto ootup •na
• dol1very, I moniiMI 1o1 rent, I·
- --·
'
PUC
bl
ho
.. :._ 1.u.mo ._
me, 2 bed.
• • ,_, - hMt, f3000, 114-Mi: • 2301oftor 4pm.
.-: tm 120&lt;65 mobll.l homo, 2 bod·
•.. room, an Nntad lat, $2500, 614-

8

==-

Ea.-.
tal;-...,c::- - --.-Ron ~=!rat~

r-.

Ill
s;ht",

~J~artO*It In -roy

l ~~~~~14~182~-11~111~.~=~

~

211-1bl. or,

52 Sponlng

owsue.

114-

:it:;.•d •=
c...

Goode

Counlry

'

1111ng

BuY or Mil. Rlvwfne Antiqutl,

5pm

·

FOr Sat. new oompact diK8,
nav. bMn GPeft!d.~.!!!» NCh or

- • 11188 Shun. mobil homo, 21&gt;1', 2

qulrod. 614-448.0331.

148-2101.

$85 Ill •II, 114-14-rL

:

Furnished, 3 Roome a Bath,

1185 lui'ck Le Sabtw llmh.d I
110. cond., $2000i •II powor.
Mltchlng w.aher
dry• Ml,
$100. 304-I7I-UI2.
2 LMoe 01111 Dltplty c.... 1
Mad. blaplay CIH; 1 Smtll i)l.:.

onty. 304-675-1883 oftor

: r 1194 Radm~n

14x70, 3bdrm.• In' cludM Nlrtlng1 atapil, blocka,
· 5yr. warrant~, nomeownara In·
• ~ aur~nca, and 1 yur of frH lot

· ., nmt, all tor onJy S1771ma., call
: - 800-837-3238.

1-

- 5-6 acru, fenced, 70x12 mobile
: "" home. large poll barn, root eel·
.. · lar, tool thed, many new Item•,
_ - $3000 down, $23,000 Rrm, 10%.
~ .. $265/mo., land contract, can
- Polly, 814-992-5042 for dlt1ll1.

·· For aala or rtnt• 1989 14x70
tra IIor, 3bd rm., 2 bath, now car·
~

g:. new

h.w. hlatar, $12,000.

- '" ront lot. Froo gu, 614·985, - 3979.
Must 1111- 14x74 GovernOr,
3brdm., front kitchen, carpet
throughout, porch, outbuilding,
ranted lot, Middleport, $15,000i
614-992·'lll10.
.
35 Lots

&amp; Acreaga

2 lota For Sale: Approximately
1 Acre lot, &amp; 112 Acre Lot, 4110
mile out Neighborhood Road
Off St Rt 141. 614-446-3438 for
more

information.

CaMpsite, Bigfoot Park, Racoon
Creek, equipped w/ •lectrlc
haat, AC, TV, microwave, patio,
utility building, covered deck,
boat doc:k, accn1 to crMk,

_.

~

.~

..... 25, 1993· .... 6:00 , ...
Dwt to lotlre•••

:rOOia

1-

,,.rwo; 4-1
11"' Sharp color TV, $50, &amp;14-

Clnn, No Poto1 Ror.renoo l

Deposh Requlrta. 614-44&amp;.151!1.
GrKiou• living. 1 and 2 Hdroom apartrMntt It Vllltlga
Manor

and

Rlvtl'11de

ADI.rtm1nt1 In' Mkldl1port. Fram
$2o2. Call 614-182-5859. EOH.
North 4th, Middleport, 2 room,
efficiency apartment·, dep l r.t.
304-882·2508.

bedroom apartment•,
$225/mo. lncludu utllllln, $100
MCurlty de~lt, no IM'Ii 81411112·2218.
45
Furnished
One

Rooms
Room• tor rent .. w.ek or month.
Starting Ill $120/mo. Cotllo Hotol.
614.-446'9580.
SIMplng rooma whh cooking.
Also trollor apaco. All hook-upa.
C1ll attar 2:00 p.m., 304-7735651, Maaon WV.

46

Space for Rent

2 bay gar1g1 wl office apace tor
Nnl. 304..ti75-65~ .
Spaeaa for nnt atar11ng If
$85/mo., 614·992·2167.

47 Wanted to Rent

$15,500. 304-875-449Z
SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS:
Meigs County, Salam TWp.,
$6501 acre. Remote, beautiful
land; woodt, paalure and hlll1.
Call for good mop. 1-814·5938545, Athono,QH.

5·

,

Gr~vel Hau~ Up

Load, 814-24~8227.

To 10 Ton A

2 Wolll scAF
· t 1 •·• 24
·
annorna~75-1762.
u.ul,
bulb. 304-875-1448
F50,000 BIIOTU HRolt ~,u!5ol SGioo
umace, • eg. ••• • ' • e:
$1.058, lnltallallon Available,
814 448-8308.
55 Gallon 011 Druma, $5 Eleh
UM Ae Bum Barrala Or Gat 011,
Etc, 114-318-9700.
8 Pc. Living Room Suite, Ukt
N ••75 8,. •••
ow,- • ~-··
• PI
s.ttl
PI
It Dl
let
ng,Art "altz.gra
n·
ntrware
..Four
With Complete PilCH, $8!5 Sit, BNutitul
Gift, 814-258.t445,
B'H 10' W Wooden Garagt Door
And Hardwarw, Exctllt~ Condltlon, "00, 614-446--31;86.

8&lt;11 waoclon llorogo bldg,
$NS. dollvory ,.. $55. Sldoro E·
qulpmont Co, Hondoroon, WY
304-875-11421.
I Pair Whhe Aluminum Shutttra, All For Only $75, can 614448.f74l
Antique galvanlud (Gem) wall
pump, beautiful lawn or flower
bed ornament, $40, 614·8854401 Nrly momlng1.

Merchandise

Rentals

fl.-od oil •ouonod roody tor

wlnter$35.-304-175-6521. ·
·

Do• a......,.. o.....
Not NlfGIIiltlo for accltlo•ts or
loss of property
Lo• Neal AuctloiHr-614-367·7101

Fl.-od Prepore For Wlntor.
Will Sa s-011011 Wllon Cold
WNthor ~~· ~ O.llnrod, 114281·1318,1 ·
·702S Evonng~~.
Flohor "M•m.1 Boar" Woodburnlng Stove $300, 114-448-3101.

3

2 Bedrooma Furnlahld, Deposit
l Reflrance Required, No Pets,

614-4415-4879.
3-4br., 1 112 balh, bas1mint,
garago, · fenced yard, near
schools, $375 plue dtposlt. 304675-1242.
3br., 2306 Jelferton Ave.,
deposit &amp; 1'8farance. 304-8753034.

..
-

42

Mobile Homes
tor Rent
10x60 mobile home, 2 bedroom,
920 Fourth Ave, GaiiiPQIIs. $325
water end truh paid 814-4464416aher 7 p.m.
14x70, 2 bedroom, air cond,
reference required, Sandhill Ad,
304-875-3834.
14x70, 3bdrm., 2 bllh, n•w carpet,·on private lot, free gu, 8x10
outbuilding near Chaster, 614·
985·1!179.
1974 Kirkwood 12165 Total Elec.,
CA, &amp; H11t, Two Add Ons, 112
kr• Mil Country Sitting, 614389·9700.
2 Bedroom Mobile Homt In Gallla County, $250/Mo., Plu1
Utilities , On 218, Aetarence•,

Dodge, fl80j Dvnamartc r dlr
mower, 1250, 814-Ns-4384.
Fuel oil furnace, tank and air
duct, S200, 814-IU.eo35.

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
CONSIGNMENT AUaiON
SUNDAY SEPT. 26 AT 10:00 A.M.
ALIANYOHIO
Located 11 mllea weet of Athent Ohio. Take US 50

and 32 _ , and ult onto 50 _ , towardt
McArthur. Auction Ia • quarter mile an left.
auction will con1llt of 50-75 plecu of •
9 H" 1
...
r, n 1tock,
orri1 Eqult.
lla11ncl
furniture; kitchen cabinet; oak chlfferabe;
mant, 814-1112·24•• or 814·114 •
dl'llllur baeet; oak 2 door boakcaee; flmwllll
2580.
Golf Ctubo Ellcollont Condition, ~~~0:~~ rope bed; w..hetand; dinning room
1 5 M I Wood p
and &amp; chairs; bookCIIH w/8pooli CIII'Ying In
• eta
~~L -21rona, cu ... It
tomlzod Sot, With Bog, $275.
counter out of old confectlnary; drt~~~Hr
814-148-1503.
min..... and yokee; rockers; Ht of 4 pi'IIIIBbllc:k
Good Ulld Phlleo clothn dryer,
Ml of 8 prnabllc:k chalre; oddchalrs;
$50, 614-992-3272.
dalllea; gl111eware. To Include alao
GrHn uay chair, $30, 814-1'12·
1800
Nlan
equip. about 2 yre. old, 2 ahllmpoo
~:.:·-,,-------Haatar fuel oil, 50,000 BTU,
chairs;
2 hydl'llullc atyllng chaiN; 2
and
uHd vtry lhtft, hoo blowor,
I
rubboor
mala!
2
llletlona
wfdrawera; hair dryer.
s.. ,. brand, $65, 814-849-2526.
Hobart commarclll ov.n, 208, ITamu" Caeh or check w~ltlve ID.Out of
good cand. 304-675-3908.
lchecka require bank letter. Food IIYSIIIIble. Thla
Kanmort SwHper Wlth Beater
will be a 3-4 hour auction. Walch far our upcoming
Bruah Canister Type With At•
auction
an Sunclay Oct 24.
tochmonto $40, 814-148-8547 A~
tor 5:00 P.M.
Klmb•ll Org~~n, $550; D•vld
Whit• Bulldars Lovol, $175; 2
01"'' Coat• Size 10 &amp; 12, On•
Never Worn, Color Pink, Tan,
$10 415, 114-446-2380.
Go Kart•· 3 HP a ~· 1 ~ 111 on

AuctioRHr M1rk Hutc•i•so•
614-698·6706
Uc8•sod ••• lo•dtcl i• o•io
lusi1e11 Part•or Fra•k Hutc•l•on
614-592·4349

Ton Engine Jack, $175; BNr
Compound Bow, 614-446-93S5.
King Silt Watarlad Dartt Color,
614-446-7081, L.uve Mn11a•
Anytime.

King Sin Watarbed, $150, 614441·1008 Between 10 A.M. &amp; 2

Paving Bricks, Excel· P.M.
51
Household
lent Condhlon, 1,400 To 1,500, King size waterbed, bookCIH
Goods
614-446-8221.
h11dboard, 2 llght1, 1 mirror,
Attend~,
Medium
Dlapoaable
full
mattr111,
$125;
Antique oak dlnln~":" tebll With Continent Briefa 01 To A G1n1111lwave
Electric wa1hlr, h11~y
wlfl chal,.., butfiiL 3
75-2210.
Bor Cool $85, Soli $60 614-251- duty, l•rgo c•poclty, woru
8155.
·
good, $125; Whlrpoot dryer,
VI'RA FURNITURE
fieavy duty, ltrge capacity, ••·
614-448.-3158 Or 814--446-4421
Bahama CruiM, 5 dayl/4 nlghta. cellent condition, $275; 614-MSJ.
'90 DAY SAME AS CASH
Muot
Hill 2660 ovonlngo.
OR RENT-2.0WN (NO DEPOSIT) Undorbookodl
3279/couplo. Llmftod tlckOio. l::---'..:..:..:':'77----:-407-787-8100 ext. &amp;588. Mon..S.t,
"~.·~_u"V_ 'cage, barely
loll for S45,
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS: 8:00AII·IO:OOPM.
Wrought Iron Table W/4 Chalraj BanJo nsonator and rim, $50,
Fan Back Rocking Chair 158; t14-!ae?-7721aher 3pm.
Large plec:ea of 1late for paintGordon Arch Woy'o $129.00
Ing, $2/M.; Wlnnl.l tho Pooh
Big round kii'OHnl hntlf, chilnglng t1~1, $20; cut Iron
Bidding ·TWin Matt SOl $81, FuN goOd condhlon, · workl good, bath tub wlllnk &amp;. commode,
$99 SOt, Quoon $149 Sot; 4 325 firm, 614-1112·284.!.
$100; 614-992·3196.
Drawer Chest $44.95; Car Bed'a.
Bunk Bod'o, Pootor Bodo. Ful Block ond whHo RCA 19" TV, Lift Chair, Elactrlc, Like New,
Line Of SoulhwaMem 'IIIII good condition, $100, 114-114i- Nice Upholstery, New Cost:
$700; Will Socrlflco: $400. 814St1rtln;g At $20.00; lndlan•l..ny 2354.
Shapo • &amp; Slzoo Stortlng At Buck Fireplace' lnHrl, Wlth 446-3622.
$5.00. 2 l.ocltlono ' Booldo J.uto Blower, Pi11N Call 814-446--,..35. Llkl new living room chair, gold
Auction Or 4 Mlloo Out 141.
ond rod uphOiotory, 325, 1114Opon 9 A.II. To I P.M. lion -SOt. CI:blnet Modemage aiKtrlc 992-5135.
Bedroom group: Bed, mahriH •wing machine, excellent con- Lova Hat, excellent condhlon,
and box 1prlng1, dreaar and dHion, tiOO, 614-112-5'155 for brown floworod, $15, 614-742·
mirror. Vory tiood condition. appolntmant.
2852.
$350 S14-448-1155.

Dapoall Required, 614..G83-4607
After 6 P.M.

aoo-a99-3491.

Compllle

home

turniahlnga.

Furnish~

Sears

614-388-8000.

Small MobUa Home Upper
Route 7, Ga1UpoU1, Reference &amp;

Deposit Required, 814-44&amp;.3760.

Three bedroom, 111 electric, one
. child, no pet1, $240/mo., New
- Haven, 304--882-2466.

Two bedroom mobile home for
rent In country, dtpolh 1nd
rafarencee required, 614-04~

2833,
Two bedroom trailer In Aaelne,

: ca ll 614-992-5858.

PUBLIE AUOION
THURSDAY, SEPT. 23, 1993
5:30P.M.
This auction will be held at the Larry Kidd
rasidence, 630 Durgan Rd., Ewington, OH Take 160
north to Ewington, (coming from Gallipolis) IUrn left
on Ewington Rd. cross RR tracks to first road to your
right (about1112 mi.) watch for auction signs.
Power Craft Belt Sander 3", Black &amp; Decker t/2'
drill, rat traps, Brigg &amp; Stratton Lawn Mower Motor,
.Stanley Mttre box, Skill Jig saw, 2 bug lights, pruners
box drill bits, box asst' d tools, box assl'd nails &amp;
screws, 2 6.' step ladders, 8' ext. ladder, 3 bicycles,
bask~tball nm, Kraapar, weadeatar w/string &amp; blade,
canmng jars, rollaway tool box, kerosene healer
Black &amp; Decker 71/2' circular saw, gas cans lifi
weight, fence charger, weed sprayer, 2 wheellr~iler
7', porta·pol, log chains, barrels, hay wagon, small
hog feeder, w.heel barrow, homemade bench, picnic
table, yard swtng. Kerschner piano, coffee table, 3 dr.
chest, 4 dr. chest, 2 living room suites, 2 end tables
6 dr. dresser w/mirror, 2 twin beds, dinnatte set w/4
chairs, black &amp; white TV, miscellaneous kitchen
utensils.

GRADED FEEDER CATTLE SALES
Wed. Sept. 22 at 7:00 P.M .•
OHIO APPROVED GRADED SALE
Wed. Oct. 6 at 7:00 P.M. CharolalsCharolals-X &amp; Exotic Breeds

AUCTIONEER: FINIS UIKE" ISAAC
PHONE: 614·388·9370 and 388·8880
LICENSED AND BONDED
OHIO, INDIANA, W.VA. 11030
TERMS: CASH OR APPROVED CHECK

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

675-1 076.
2 Blldrooms, CA, Rentor Sale
On Land Contract. 2 Blocu
From Big Bur. 814-446-1401 After 4 P.M:
Exceptionally CINn,
2 bedroom trailer In Porter arN

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

Couch and chair

Hourw: MoJt-Sat 1 9-5. 11~60322, 3 mll11 out Bula'411111 Rd.
FrH Delivery.
PICKENS FURNITURE
New/Used
Houuhold tuml•hfng. 112 mi.
Jerricho Ad. Pl PIIINnt, WV,
coll304-875-1450.

2 bedroom INlier, ref &amp; d•p, Rl.
82 N. Locust Rd on right, 304-

:
-

tor Nil good
condition ••king $100. 114-441484•.
Gae cook 1tove, fair cond., 1100.
304.ji7S-4933.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washer~,_ dryar1, retrigeratora,
nngea. :::~kagg~~ Appllanen, 71
Vlno Stroot, Coli 614-446-7398, 1-

Coldapot

·frolt1111

reklgorator, $75, 304-875-2052.
Sears Relrlgerator, $20. 304882·2755.
Side by 1ktl refrigerator, 1225;
ga• range, $200 or $400Jpr. &amp;14-

992-2075.

I

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Otlvo St., Cslllpollo. Now &amp; Uood
furniture, heattra, Wntem &amp;

Work bootL S14-441-3151.
Watl'ler &amp;. Dryer Fo.r Sale1 114379-2351
It No
Maauge Will
CaRAnew•
Back.

LAIIVI

Donnie Everetts, Manager
(513)·393-,3118
•
Weldon Taulbee, Cattle Salesman
(513)-876-2238
Don Knore, Cattle Salesman
(513)-393-2840

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR LOST ITEMS.

AISOLUrE AUCTION
ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTIBLES
IIPI.EY, WV
SAT. SEPt 2S 2 P.M.

Producers Livestock Assn
P.O. Box 757
Hillsboro, Oh 45133
(513)-393-3424

Sale held at An11qua Junction, 11 Railroad St., Ripley,
W.Va.
Mahogany hl·boy, pie sales, spool cabinal, kitchen
cupboard, oak dressers, oak Ice box, oak wash stands,
Murphy bed, early 1900's Lovell hand crank washer,
meal bin, Iron beds, lamps with glass shades, ladles
slant top desk, library tables, wall &amp; mantle clocks,
ornata oak bad, 8' slanted glass front showcase, claw
feel piano stool, spinning wheal, yam winder, quiRa,
black memorabilia, "Baby Asleep" painting, mahogany
dinette w/6 chairs, buffet, Edison Victrola, vary omala
oak lovesaal frame, Enterprise counter coffee grinder,
sleigh bells, old accordlan, salesman case, Blue Island
brass steam whistle, Donaghho &amp; HamiRon Jonas
stone jars, brown stone pRcher w/ grapa det1lgn, Indian
artHacts, caboose lantern, old Elgin pockal watches,
old toys, baskets, advertising ~ems, BB gun, Benjamin
cartridge BB gun,
black porcelain doll, Nippon 12
doll, socket head doll, sawdust ' Nursa' doll plus other
old dolls In various slzea, prlmRive doll bad, metal doll
bad, movie star collector plates.
GLASSWARE: 60 places of "Spade" china, lots of Hull,
Roseville, McCoy, Wan and Shawnee, Northwood and
Millersburg carnival, "Baby Face" milk bollia, Chllracler
·cookie jars, Vaseline, Depression, Fanton, Indian Tree
laapot, sugar &amp; creamer, Franciscan, Cambridge. This
Is a partial listing of a fine collacllon of nostalgia from
yesteryear lo sail to lhe highest bidder, Bring lawn
chair, sale will be held ouldoonl. Tel'ltls: Cash or
current bank lellar of cradR guaranteeing amount of
purchase. Local checks accepted H known by us.

-:-------------.J

IL.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1-

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

s·

More or Less
Buhl Morton Rd.
'
850
Buhl Morton Rd

446-4206

SurveyedCity Schools~
Wooded

••

More or Less
Wooded- Lg cave
on property
Excellent·hunting
grounds Reduced
to $15,000 owner
needs to settle ·

AUCTIONEEI1 EDWIN WIIITEI WV tU4
For more information call Rod Reynolds, sales
manager after 5PM at (304) 372·4533.

....................................J

&amp;::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:.~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~_..__._._._._._._._._._._._.._., L

~":"=1~=•

. ."·

55

1422.
Floh T•'*. 2413

llrd c1oa. Rlgi111Nrd ....... -

·-.-....114411'"'·

::r~
,..

lrolo\tng,

Real

Building
Supplies

'*"- Ayo.
P-nt, 104-875-21011,

lutl 11M Troploal lloh - .
emiiiii\IIMll lnd .... ptlll

Estate Gene1111

BLACKBURN
REALTY

Pete lor 5ale

Julie Wllib. Cll au ttl

aft.

T.......,a .,_,. Pnporlyofh Weald

3 Molo Roalotorod H~o~';'
Kittens, I \f11kl Old, I
3181.
AKC Booton Torrlorl, I Woou
Old, ,200, 114-251-1354.
1 AKC o ......n 8hlllho~ · 1 Ful
Bloodod Sablo Collfo, $17/s Beth,
Wilt Soli Soponto,S14-041-1t1t

I

I

Dou1 &amp; C•rrol lllktd"
Auctioneer: Col. W. Keith MoiHn
614·742·2041

I

B I G N0 B

Grandpa took notice of how
many people were in the restaurant we were having dinner
in. He says that people have
.nothing against home CQOking
as long as it doesn't involve
---- at ----.

~~p
.........,...--R~PZ~~
·
O

·..·.:.,

VIICitnl land- 3.30 a~1111 with two gao well•. TVIO
walla . Peaceful Nlting. live v•IY
ineipansivaly.
ASKING ONLY $1,500.00

AKC P-....n, Sp!tz.-,
R•llon G~
o ...t b•M, Shetlle. lwlon Tw. rier, Chow, Mlnlatu,. Plnlchlr,
Colllo, S l - ldllon. 0404 or 304-5711-2201

"~.,ti· r.,vacanl

Po......_

J::~~~ ~rhome.
ONLY 110.111111
Syrac•• 1958 frame 3 bed100m, 1 bath home.
-~~oqpiu.m~ &amp; electric heat. Full basement. 1 112 car
,.
City waler. City sewer. V01yl coveriftv. wlllher
hook-up.
ASKING 42,500.00
INI:ED A NEW OFFICE + a rental apartment? 250
Ave. Nice· office downstairs and apartment and
1
lst,oracle up. Convenient to bank&amp; and shopping.

I· I 'I I I I . IAT I I I I I
54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

WootlnghoConoolo
HumldHior, Net A DohUI)IIdlllor
12 O•llon 1Wo Spood, $10, 114448-31118.
Wootlnahouoo Eloctrlc Dryor
·Avococfo, Runo $25, 814-4483811.

WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Now Commorcl•l, Homo UnHo,
From $1911.00. LomiL LDtlono,
Acc:noorloo. llonlh ~-onto
Low Ao $11.00, Call odor FREE
NEW Color Catolog. t-8CJC1.482,
1197.

Suhl $400i Nlca Oak O..k,

_$150; Nlco Upright Froozor f175.
814-245-5152 Aftor 6 P.M.
.;Muot
SOli:
Frlgldolro
: •Rolrlgorotorl Coppor Tono, leo
.• Maklf, AI JWihllnlnt canter,
. · Woflla Orootl $150 Firm, 614·' 381-6387.
•. lluot Soli: Frlgldolro Stovo,
• Whho With 01111 Door,
· Ctunlng, Worka Porfoct $100
'. Flrrn,l*388-8387
•: NES game• Jaw1, FaXInlldU,
~. Willow, Pro Racing, Wh•l For·
. · lun., mor-., $1Drll., 614-112.. 328hftot4:00.
• Old Slngor ofoctrlc oowlng m..
• : china, portable, still run1, $10.

Raal Estate General

lend-A.ano• in Ai.cine ArM. Good
land or QOOCIIIWI'IIlit8. ONLY $1.,t00.00

n•

,_,,

1 I· I. I . I

, llovlng: Hollvy Duty Whl~_.
, W••hor &amp; Dryor 2 Ynre Old,
1300; Rool Nlco 4 Po. Bodroom

PUBLIC
AUCTION

• .., two bathe. located In Middleport. Convienonl
8110 Ill IIIDrao.
ONLY$12,5GO

GO

Complete the chuckle quoted
11
by filling In the missing words
L-...1..-.L.-..1.-..J.L......L.--..1. you develop from atep No.3 below.

Ownars:

Poa.ID

Thl• home Ia ellordUiell It noooda ftnllhed but

fini~hia
· u that ia done looks gi'M~IIthu • bed1001111

-

HomoPflono:

(t14)18MJ21i

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Rusnll D. Wood, Broker .. 44S 4618
Phyllis Mmer'...................... 256-1136
J. Merrill Certer .................. 379-2184
Tammie Dewltt ................... 441·1514

1-800-585-71 01
(614) 446-7101

IR

I,

R!ALrOA

0

YOU WANT IT SOLD,
WE WANT TO lEU. IT
CALL US TODAYI

BRUCE TEAFORO SHERRY

. RAN NY BLACKBURN, BROKER 446 0008
. RUTH GOODY, ASSOC. 3711-2684

Co Nair engine, pa'rta &amp; hub c1p1 Inc. :::~~~:I
generators,.blocke, 2 pc. Lr. aufte, bible l 4
(wood), coffee &amp; end blblee plua Iota al
Items l bunchee of mite.

J&amp;.ldy Dewltt........................ 441-G282
Manha Smlth ..................... 379-2651

iii.s

Cathy Wray ........................ 448-4255.
Cindy Drongowskl ............ 245-9697

Sot"

THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER23, 1993-10:00A.M.
LOCATED AT 25 WARWICK DRIVE
I.N POINT PLEASANT, WV.
MRS. THOMPSON IS MOVING AND
WILL BE SELLING THE FOLLOWING:

' 114·182·5221

: ;O::LD;::._U~SE::D===-BR:::I'::CK:::S::-:-;(A:7L'::REA=D::Y
;, CLEANED), lZOO BRICKS, $180.
' 304-875-3S.7.
; One 220 electric hHtlf, seo,
· 114-112-28'11 oftof 5pm.
• Perfection Qaa Heating fil.tove,
• 15,000 ITU $50, 114-448-3600,
: ·~3648.
.
; PO&lt;Iocrlb, IIIIo brand now, $11.
' 304-875-2180.
:. Proctor ~lelf toAater oveR,
•· brand now nevor uaod, 320. 304• 175-11110.
RHIIIt~ car .tereo power amp.
1 eo watta, Uke naw, $45, e14-912-

Beautiful wrought iron dinelle with roses and leaves - musl
see! Broyhil dininjj rocm suiiB, Montgomllr)l Wan! ~
wave, Whillpool refrigera!Qr, Quality hide.ll-bed, beauliful
carved spinel desk. 19' Sears color TV, cocktalllable1 and
others, antique
rack, d1airo, rocker,rediner, B&amp;W
portable TV, 3 pc. be&lt;toom suiiB, 3 drawer Oriental marble
top chest, metal w81drobe, Kenmare washer &amp; dryer, old
Singer sewing mad1ine,s1Breo, ercellenlappliqued IUiipquil~
green and while and four other quits, doiies, 8 day wood
clock, 6 place selling of fine China Dream pattern, Orienlal
vase, teapot, figurines, Fenton, Comingware, antique doll,
round gilted bevel mirror, gilted bevel mirror, wall plaquH,
beautiful paintings (Delta Queen by Charles Hooper, Fals
Mill by Burton Dye), bird pictures and others, baskets, Christ·
mas deoorations, crafts, Gliswald Wagner skillets, pols,
pans, pocl&lt;el knives, movie screen, books, RemlngiDn typewriter, Sears vacuum ~leaner, milk eans, ginger jars, hand
IDOls, Craftsman socket s81, drills, saws. nuts, bolts, drop
cards, floor jack, slap ladder, wheelbarrow and morel

maVa.zine

, 2354.
·- Rocking Ctiair, Earty American
~

$125, 114-44&amp;-t212.
Rollaway bed &amp; 2.5H color

t

c..,.

f oolo TV, both ,.od, 114-1112·21114.
~ Ronco tood dehydrator, new
to complete with ICCIIIorill and
:.·reolpoo $70. 614-441-1240.
~ Skill Clrcuaar Saw 7 1f4 ln. 2 111
: HorN Power $40, 614-U&amp;-:za5l
~ Sph Fll'l Fireplace lnurt, New,
• 114-31'!1.2425.
'
· Stockmatk: S1ove, 814-441-0527.
: Sword, ollf)IOr. 3 foot long,
blodo.l with cooo reol
-·
condft on, $75, Clll1 114-

..

AUCnON CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
MASON, WV
773-5785 .
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
OWNER: HELEN THOMPSON

LUNCH

_..... "'-

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH I. D.
~

114-t-.

olcl,

Groom •nd luDDIY 111\op Pot
Grooming. All llioido, olyi.IL

MODERI &amp; AUTOMOTIVE

....

tao •

Wood ., _, -

56

Frakoma Esater plate, Grindley Chlcna,
Swl.., Carnival Candy dlah, Bleeding
gobleta, peach bloaaom, rallnHid bullllllne, ola,wl
teat, advertlelng pea, (poii!ICIII). old plctu,.,
harpoon, dreaaer tray wlmlnor, wicker anflnm1l
b"keta, caatume jewelery, old fountain pent,
german nii!IIYI!y ut, mantle, hall tiM, COUntw top
ehow c.. e, regal 1212 conveltable caat Iron perlor
etove, bllfret, rope bid, weah eland, (nelde NP~Ir),
old Xmll8 Decol'lltlana. Bulbe, heta, clothing.
deco dining table.
1

Cash

.....10W754071.

245-812\

•

ANTIQUE &amp; COLLICTAILES
Fleata, McCoy, Iria c11111m &amp; au~. Rockwlll~~~::~

Pets tor Slle

c--l!!!gloo.-

Woodburnlna FII'IPIACI lntlrt
wnh
Z.nlth Chu• r:lor 27'" Clblnlt
- T.V. WofllaiiO,- Solll
114-2118-1321 (LNvo M-go).

I

DDKAMI

56

Pets tor Sale

Block, b&lt;lcll. plpo.. win, lntolo, .... Cleudo Win,.... Rio OrOndo, OH Call 114-

· I 0:00 AM S.tunlay
SoptomHr 25, 1993
Salem Sti'Ht, lutla•d, o•lo
be offering 1he following for ule .t 1111ctlcln.

700111 8-ply fho Foid, Cllov.l or

I

I--.e'•

Aa Mr. &amp; Mre. BlakMI• have moved to Egypt,

Four bud WhMII Wfth tlraa,

Rearronge the 6 ~~:rambled
words , below to make · 6
llmple words. Print letters of
eoch· In Its line of squares •

388-8730
388 8880

Cllblneta,

Antique

41 Houses for Rant
2 badroorn, Firat Ave. Galllpoflo-$210/mOn., doposlt ond
ratarancn r~:qulrtd 614-2561529.

no

vehlciM-11116 Ford Bronco, 4x4,
with snow blade with hyd lift &amp; angle. 1173
Ford Bronco V411Uto 4X4

&amp;

play caM· 3 Fl'· Cabl ~- 2
DeSk· 1 u,'rgo Wod~ 01 n~ 1 . 011111)9111. Ant laue bedroom
'
on op-,;
ouMo. Rotory puoh m....r. Bl~
CUll R1•tw: 1 Llrlll' Counter- cage. Plant stand. Ponable
1
topj
ed. Countertop With •ctr5c heater. 814-256-e855.

Drlwerw. lt1m1 C.n 81 S.ttn In
Galllpoll•, 814-388-88.10.
2 Ton Truck Lc.d Of Firewood

&amp; complete ln-mry will be sold.
Conelallng of. eo.ta 20-20 ..... IINIChN, COlli
twin air lira machine, 2 bllltery charg«a, motor
m811U111a, ilrg8I1IHr cabinet, 8 , _ tlrM pwtl,
cl1..., tank, floor &amp; misc. jacks, mise hind
too.., alucl gun, ,._ elllcb IC holat lor plow, ljl11dy klein c.- wiSh complete wllh
rack, other Items to num_,. to list. Inc. desk

Notlca: There will be
auction at
Auctlo,n HouH Set., S.pt, 26, 111t3 lt'a our
way or showing our appreciation to our
Dealers .. Buyers. We will be celebrating our 8
.years In business. Everyone le Welcome to
come &amp; enjoy the Music or The Sliver Wings
Band &amp; dance the night 11way.
Fin II ~Ike • luac

a::..-·

ccc.:c_---,-----

mQ~tl•. can&amp;14-441-2588. EOH.

hiR,.a.,o•a.

a

56

54 MIIC8111MOUI
Merchandise

lollt.tl b, CLAY R. POlLAN ----......,,....-

O

•

Sliver Wlnga Band
Sat. Sept. 25, 1993 8 pm • ?
Isaac's Auction House
VInton, Ohio

ExorlcO Moclllile NO,

1br, nalt to Ubrary, parking,
cent1111 hNI, air, ,..,.,.nee ,..

~•1141
· : ~pm.

lntr;~uing

lsaac'sluctlon Celebrates

hn1wort• hlf. Jnl a Plu st....t

And

· ~ Porch, Extra CINn, 61~48· - 1352.

•

·
S©\\cillA-~~tfs·
That
Word Game .with Chuckle

Public s.le

&amp;Auction

AIM tie•

4":....~
1314.
'
Condiiloft; t17!1,
1S7 A~ Due! ollclrlc 120,
room tadlltlel cloM to echool 1 1 P: M
114-lltl 3011 mom
beffft
In town. AOC&gt;tlcotlono ••olloblo
or • •
taom
Ill: Ylll.lgo ·croon ApiL 1141 or lQ SIIYer Howl&lt; htlllllng - ·
•
..11114-182·3711. EOH.
oa1or1 111a1D. llh, IIMoOM bonoh, oollw•h wood,
••~&gt;~lzor
~c~ qli~Yer, .... .
- 114 Ill1n 4411.
- · • _..
Furnlohod
Eltlcleney: 107 lllb.
30W7W470.
old,Ill,
Socond, GolllpoiJ!,.~re ..th,
Utii~IM Pold, fl..,_, 114-441Dulclmor Ellcellont Condftlon,
53
4411 Aft or 1 P.M.
c.;;._ _;A.;:nt.;:::;lq::;u::;e~s:;___ Noodo Two ltrl'!11• Wlh eaoo,
SUi CaU 4 To I P.ll. 114-441ADIUimord tao ront In Pt. Anllauo plono, 1100 080, 114- 0111 .
Pl..- . 114-11112·58$8 ·~·r 111124111.
5pm.
•~1quo -1 ..-,, lllol-~E"'llne
210 Cummlnao lAw
.....
"'1111•~ 40 R. Loa Trauer 11Ft
BE~UTIFUL APARTMENTS AT modol, otlll -L~ orlalnot Alum. DUmp, 1144411 103i.
.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ow,... ....,uol, """'· ~
ESTATES, 531 .l.lcuon Plko 2841 OYOnlnp.
Flroplo"" ond
hom f201/mo. Wolk 1o ohop &amp;
bruo, 150, 114-IIHm •ftor
2bd.... . .,..., lclol oloclrlc, ""'
plio.- fumlol!od, loundry

~i!;.

,._
....-.OIIIol

.,:-...;.'----~---

bath, liking $14,000, HriOUI

8

II ......... COHCIIITI -"I1'1C TAN!il,
.Y. ,....., Ni Cart-

1124 E. Moln - · on Ill. 12..4.,
Fumlohod Aportmont 1 Bod- Pomoror· Houre: II.T.~. 10:101
· 1a72 New lloon, 12 • 65, 614- room, 120 Fourth Avenue, Gal- • .m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundly 1:00
: 11112-3141.
llpollo 3250/llo. Utllltloo Paid, to 1:00 p.m. IM-tt2-2521.
614 .446 4411 Aftor 7 P.M.
: ttllll Homotto tr•llor, 121165, 3br,
54 Mlscelianeous
• • cia•~. tOial oloc:tnc. 304-875- Fumlohod Aportm•nl 2 Bod. - 1724.
rooms, M1 SOcond Avonuo, Oo~
Merchandise
·
b
llpollo, 3295/llo, Utllltloo Pold,
• 1132 Oakbrook 14&lt;51 llo llo 814 441 441Uftor 7 P.M.
11,000 BTU 220 Ropor AC, 1 112
. : Home W!th Washer, Dryer,
month old, ..~'1 ~100·, color.
· • Centnl Air, 2 Bodroomo, &amp; Nlcoly Fumlohod Apartmont, Tu 11 4
: • 1112-2357.

PUbiiCSIII
&amp; Auction

Wo-'r. Drwr,

benk;

.. l:::l ·- ...__ ....
:• -

51

-.

. 1:?'

onciBonclld ~ 0!\lo,

·2583.

: Two tlrw1 with wh•l•, S20 each,

• 114-1112·2311Z

PUBLIC
AUCTION

• TWo Wtldld Wire Cag• 3'11'
". Hanging Wlth Feeders Water
' Troughs For Chickens 1Aabblt1,
, $15 EK h, 114-388-flt 64. .

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, ,1993
10:00 A.M.

FARM- Sl141· Wil ..uwith approx. 1- - •
and home, home and over 11 acree. Home

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
RACINE· Awlegrova Do.eus Road- approx. 53 acres of land
with 2 ..ptic oystams, 2 wella and one water tap. A glUt
ptace k&gt; build or pul your mobila home on.
will accept
Land Contract $&lt;4,000 do.wn 10% interaal 10 YMI'I wilh
payments of $343.60 a month.
$30,000

p..,.,

~UCnON CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO. ••
LUNCH
MASON, WV
773·5785
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
OWNERS: DON and MARY DUNCAN
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH 1.0.
1
Not Rfii)ORIIblo IOf occldonto or looo of propony
.ll•u•.~
..
Md
. .~
. .~
...
~.m~Oh·o•.•Ka•n•~~··'•w•~;t•v••g;lnlo~~~. .

•

.l "

._

. ~~
.

NEW USTINGI EXTREMELY
THAT HAS LOTS OF CAREl 3 Bedrooms, 2
t/2 baths, family room, livinJ! mom, kitchen,
dining room, 2 firoplacao, 2 car allached
ganga end emontilias galora. CaN todayl1587

POMEROY· Commerciai Property· Fonnat1y the Excelsior
Sail WOlke. A V&amp;l'f large building with over 20,000 equara
feet of work space. Lola ol pal1cing apaoe with this property.
Included is a 2 bedroom home and approx. 3 acrat olland.
$300,000

OWNER'S
PRICEIII WANTS
Ideal location. Roomy 3 bed100m
style
home. Large family room, cining aroo, kild1en,
bath, laundl'f. Nice sized levol lawn. Wllhin
. seconds or New 35
1117

POMEROY· Wright St111at· Alway• wanled an A·fnma ·
horne? Well we have just the one for you. II has over 3,000
aquara IIHII and Is 3 stories tall. Has 5 bedrooms, 2 balht,
gigantic family 100m and mastar bed100m. Decks on oach
level, 2 car gerag&lt;l with VIOrkshop above, pavod drive and io
nesUed in the hollow.
JUST $85,000
SYRACUSE· A large lot with 150 feet of frontage on Rte
124, and a ranch type house with 3 bedrooma, 1 112 balhl,
dining al8a, ocreened~n pord1, ca1p0rt, and one car garage.
Has vinyl oiling for exterior maintanance.
$38,100
RACINE- A 1991 2 bedroom 14 x80 mobilo home with extra
Insulation, raised lining room, gacden tub, and skyligh~ plut
NOW $11,000
lois of exbaa.
HARRISONVlLL£- Rl. 68o1- Thlo approximately 5 yNr old
24x36 building has praviously baen a chu!Ch but oould ba
used for many other PUIJ&gt;OMI. With a 1973 14x70 mobile
home with a 70 ft. addition. Thi'N or posoible • bed100m1, 3
window air conditioners, 2 po""'-•· sitting on 2.6 acraa •
$34,100
POMEROY· Mulbeny Avenue· This 8 100m home has 4
bedrooms, dining room, family 100m, and pratty kllchen. Has
some beautiful woodwork, fronch dooro, firoplace with
bookshelves on either lido, and a
window. Aloo has a
1 t/3
and
I
$&lt;41,000
lull

3 Bedrooms, Nving room wilh "'!~IHidlral.ceill!nR
and h&amp;ni)YOOd ftoo.ring. 1 112 batho,
baMment, bam and 2 bulldingo. AMity nice .
Call today! $&lt;40's.
1527
4.2 ACRES.. Uving 100111, kitchen and dining
100m, bath, central air conditioning, 24'X24'
garage, two bamo.
1576
PRIVATE, SMALL MINI FARM WITH AN
AFFORDABLE BUDGET!· 8 112 a~ret mora
or less, bam &amp; other buildings. t Slol'f home
could be used as 2-3 bedrooms, ki~hon, living
room &amp; m6ra, Needs soma TLC. Call today!

1512

• Undorcountor Whl~pool dloho
: washer $45. a..h 81nk, Vlnlty
• •nd Nucot t40. 11112 now corpot
• .$40. LoHico $5.114-3117-l'IOt.
• Want to buy: tape of TV thow-

LOTS OF LANDI 216 acres, mora or less,
mobile horne pad, ~r bam, 5-6 acraa bollom
land. Call for mora details!
1577

•• 8119, will poy $20 plu~ ts tor
: dllllv•ry. 304-882-2431. 1
' ' WATER LINE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
: 200 P8t $18.95; 1 Inch 200 PSI

FARM- Over 41 a~llls, remodeled 1 112 IIOIY
home with 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, living room.
ki~hen, sc111oned In ba~k porch. Deta~hed 2
car garage, 2 ponds, bam, newer fencing.
1578

I

• .. Wir G1m1 Wrestling", Sunday

LOCATED OFF LAYNE STREET AT THE
NEW RECREATION BUILDING NEXT TO
THE SWIMMING POOL IN NEW HAVEN, WV.
MR. AND MRS. DUNCAN HAVE SOLD •
THEIR HOME AND WILL BE SELLING
THE FOLLOWING:
Flexs18el sola like new, 9 pc. coffee table se~ recliner, maple
coud1 and 2 chairs, mah. rocker with dolphin head anna,
Sony color 13' TV, VICtOrian table, msh. end tables, book·
case, spinning wheel, mah. kidney desk, BroyhW 8 pc. lining
room suile (table, 6 chairs, and 2 pc. hutch), early tea can.
dinette set, Magic Chef microwave, 3 pc. Drew bedi'OOftt -1
sulle, 2 pc. Drew bedroom suile, Depression dresser and
chest, oak hi boy with mi!TOI', day bad, beautiful oadar chell
nighl stand, Iaiiie CIJI glass slam bowl, .Fostoria swiri patt~
slem cake plate, Pink Depression cancla holders and others,8 place setting Wedgewood (countoy side paiiBml 1964
proof mini set, old bread plate, hens on nests, old Fenton
boltles, punch bowl set, swag lamp, oil lamps, lamps, BiVI!r
plale ~· Commodorecomputarboanl, large old marilla,
ftatwB/8, pictures, wooden stage carriaga and horse,
collection, linens, doilies. golf clubs, rugs, jewell'(
.
parll, Chrislmal deoorations, old post cards, old slide
M.W. slide projector, apple peeler, coffee grinder, 2 old
Irons, brown &amp; while chum, stone jan, wagon jack, 2cutand '
1r0nlaclas, poll, pMs, fans, sweeper, size 40 men's leather
ll'onCh coa11, women's lealher coat size 8, picnic table and . ,
bend1es. lawn lumitura, hand 1Dols1B&amp;D edgers, yard tools,
B,!oD hedge trimmers and more ~

consists of living rocm, dining aroo, kilch111,
den, 3 bed100ma, 2 baths, laundl'f aroo. Bam
&amp; other buildings. Callloday for mora delllilol

• $32.50i Ron Evan• EnterprtMt,
. Jackaon, Ohio, 1..aG0-537-t528.

• WATER STORAGE TANKS
•· Abovo And Solow Ground FDA
• Approvod For Pet- Wotor.
• .Ron Evan• Entorprloo~J JIICII' eon, Ohio, 1..aoo-637-15211.
; Whlto Jonny Lind lull IIIlo bod,
.·' 325,114-tl2·2475.
:' WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
. Ron Allloon, 1210 Soc:ond
Avenue, O.lllpolll, Ohio, 114441-1338.

MIDDLEPORT· Hudson St • Feel rir,tltat home in any room
of this I 112 Slol'f house, from lh• ki~hen thel has baautHul
tongue and g100ve walla, to the Mghl and all'f living room,
dining room area. Selling on 2 ots, ~ has 3 bedrooms, 1 112
baths, and a FANG furnace.
PRICED AT $37,100

DYER 38 ACRES (OWNER WILL DIVIDE
INTO LOTS) within minute• from lawn. level
trailer 'pad exislo wilh waler end eleclricily &amp;
Mwage on oila, lots of nice building sites. Call
today for complete listing!
1575

1-800-585-7101

.

·:

•

PH. 614·256·1633

'•·
;.
.:
·,
,
':
'

~

,•

CITY UVING- On a lciw traffic ati'Nt. VoiY nico
kitchen complele wilh applianceo, living 100m,
family room, 3 badroorno, 2 balho, laundl'(
room. Ona bedroom apartment indudad. 1557
WOODED PRIVATE SEmNG I ALMOST
NEW BRICK RANCH with lola of oxtra room, 4
baths 3 bed100ms (+3 rooms in basement
which' ~ould be used as bedrooms), living
100m, dining al8a, kitchen complel~ wilh
applian~es, 2 car garage, large patio and
fn~nd1 doors that load to a nice sized dock.
Calllodayl
1573
OWNER SAYS MAKE AN OFFERf
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION I Just waiting for
you, 3 bedroom rand1alyl~ home, living room.
family room, car 11811111" With aula. opener and
mo111. Excallantlocationl
1488
S1V 1100- Whether stalling out or 111tiring thio is
the 'home for you! 2 bedrooms, living room,
kitchen, bath, alum. tiding. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!
MB7

GRANDE· 50S Redga Ave. One block
lmm Univorlily. Nice 1 llol'f home, living room,·
dining room, kitchen, basement Newer FA gas
fumaoe.
1588
247 EVERGIREEN ROADI· IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!· Stall packing today. This 3
bedroom homli with bath, kilchen, Nving room
needs a family! Owner hao rerla~ed roof,
fum-, water hootar and mora Within the pall
couple of yoora. Come and - · Priced $20'._
1515
KERR ROAD- Beautiful ranch home with
dining 100m living 100m, 3 badrooms, kitchen
and bath. Extra nice lawn approx. 2.88 acras,
one car atteched gerage. Clo.. ID Hospital I

1511
14x70 MOBILE HOME AND LOTI Priced in
the lower '20's. Call for mora details! Won'l
lalllongl
1565
OWNER lAYS THIS IS SERIOUS BUSINESS,
WANTS HER FARM SOLDII (NEW PRICE)
$143,000.00. One of Gallia Counly's better
farms, Approx. 115 acraa, bam; silo, unlaoder
elevator, mod. feeding oyatam. Super 4
bedroom ramodaled, 2 stoiY home with nice
family 100m. Over 13,000 lb.lobacco allobnonl.
MAKE HER AN OFFERI
N4&amp;

MEIGS C

Cheryl Lemlay....................................742-317~

HOME &amp; 80 ACRES - Salem TWp. - 2 SIOI'f
home wHh 5 bedrooms, balh, living 1oom. dining
room, kitchen , bern &amp; misc. olher buildings.
$40's.
1580

Cannelbut~, Inc. 45719

Specializmg In Pole
Buildings.
Designed lo meal your
needs. Any size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
· Post Buildings and
Package Dears. Save
Hundreds, even Thousands
ol Dollars.
local Sales Representative
DONNA CRISENBERY
11366 5. 51. AI. 7
Gallipolis, OH.

...

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! 40'x40' 3 ~ar
detached metal galllgll with concreto ftooring.
One stol'( 3 bedroom home with wuhar/dl)'8r,
some lumitura, appliance• includod. Tractor
with blade, plow, bush hog Included. Call
today!
1536

EAGILE RIDGE ROAD - 4 bedroom, extra nice
1'/• sloiY home two car oversized garage. Plus
mobile home hook-up. Call for more Information. ·
1558

&gt; D. c....., Slits. IIC.
·'

•

PRICED REDUCED TO "~~~~':A::~:
INTO IMMEDIATELY! 852
Excellent repair, 2 bedrooms·, living room,
dining 100m, kitchen, baMmen~ la~g~~ lot. Off
stiNt pal1cing.
1512

'

MIDDL£PORT• Broadway Sl. • You'll nNd to this
gorgeous home in lown but on 11 la~ge lot having 4 spacious
bedroomo, 2 batho, family room, dining room, built-In
diohWIIsher, 314 baNmanl, deck, garden opot, carpol1,
otorage buildinQ and low maintenance aluminum aiding. AI
of lhls priced ri(;lt to •II.
.
DDmE TURNER, Broker...........- ....................... 112-MG
BRENDA JEFFEA8 ..........................._, ••••••••••••••••112-3058
DAALIIIE STEWART ............................................. 112-4315
SANDY BlJTCHER......-·--·-···..•••••................. _ ••112-1371
JERRY 8PRADUNG ................................... (304) • Ull

OFFICE ...................................................................IIJ.2. .

Liimiiii RIGGI CIIIIT- This home has
had lots of carel Three bedroom ranch with lull
basement SO% finishes. Deta~hed 24'x24'
garage and basement garage aloo. A must seel
Asking $85,000.00.
1579 ·
111.75 ACRES- 131,000.00 ·Well &amp; septl~ on
property. Pasture &amp; wooded hind. Older dwelling.
Call tor more detallsl
1511

RIVER FRONTAGIEI Over 2 acres and ran~h
style home. 3 bedrooms, bath, laundl'f 100m, liV·
lng room &amp; kllcnen. Paved driveway. Immediate

Possession.

-

ON FRANK ROAD - A partial ranch Oil 1,034
ac., more cr less, with 3 bedrooms, 1'/• baths,
living room, dining room and kitchen. One car
garage attached. Asking only $52,000. Call
today
1523

---.....
Discov'er

OWNER HAD
BUILT! 1984 14'x70'
2
bedroom• 2 belhl, living room, dining ai'M, •
kilchon . Fiont oncloiiOd po!Ch, ganlan tub in
ma•ter bath. Detachad 111111!08 with overhood
•IDfllllll· Plenly of apaoe with 3.8 IIICIM moro or
lau and plonly of lrui!IIMS.
11552
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!
RIVER
FRONTAGE! - $25,000, 2 bad100m home with
balh, living room, kilchen &amp; approx. 1 acre laW..

1543
MAIN STREET - RUTLAND - $22,000.00 Ranch home with newer cerpet In 2 BAs, living
room. dining room. One bath, 1 car detached
garage, outbuilding, lot approx. 48'x183.5'. 1513·

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

the Power Of Number 1."'

EACH OFFICEIS INOEPfNDENTLYOI'INEO AND OPERATED. ~ ..........., CJtlponlnlty. lil
·
eand ""' -tlidlio••kiotc.uy:lt AIIIERIItCcwW*''·
.

�OH Point Pleuant, WV
&amp;1 Fann Equipment

1993

Autos for Sale

71

WostorSIJe

Ill w.l

tton.,

1Mt Horizon Runo Good, -

llr-.1410, 114 441 1040.

1181 Odt Cutla• SuJ)!'eme, Hat
No Motor Or Trono, t500, 114258-11144.

"Conn

Tl'omllone good lor
s;;'.inn.r 140. 114-311 1001 ...... . Doll T - BlJclca, ohlrpoMd,
;j:ill p.m.
~··Form, Rt. :15, 304wflute, $300, .._ tt.n one ,..,

:saoo.

"'Od; QE
·
.....
1 112
,.... aid,lor
.,.._
,11113, ovenlngo, Borb o r .For Bolo: Uoocf Bundy Clonllll,
Elcollonl CondKion, 1170, Allor
~:00 114o441-71111.

Klrnbol .................. 304182o31811.

L.-, Dnlm 811nd, lllclca,

r,:'~ Wllh

c-.

MO.

lol..,.. Ciorlllll, uc -.c~, sao.
I1t Ul 0134 or .,.._381 till.

POLE BUILDING SPECIAL
30'1411'1'. Pointed Still Sldlo1
- - SIMI Roof, 15'11
IIIII Slldo• 3' Min Door.
ta,IM. ERECTED. Iron HorN
lu-1-o3U-1045.

1ta Iuick Century, PS, PI,
autom~odo,
blown
englna,
t500.0B0,304-675-zaotl or 675-

1114 Doclgo Omnl, lrokoo,
•- .~~-·~!'.J
,,........
...3,Runa Good, Auto,

1114

lloroury

..;.63.;......--..L;;;.Iv...;e;,::st~O:..:C..;.;k_ _ •allonWigon, 199.5 11

'"'

VM, 'l'MI11ngl,} Y. .r Oldl AU

Marqula
11,

runt

good, 114-14V.21111.
1g14 Pt,mouth Col, 4dr.. runa
good, At;, hSO or tl'lldl for

II-

~~'17~~s:~~l!r::.~

EVERYTHING YOU COULD WANT, AT A
PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD...3 bedrooms, 1
bath vinyl aided ranch on a large .lot. Offers
large livtng room &amp; kitchen. Full unfinished
basement with a 2nd bath that you can finish to
suit your lltlllds. Fn~shly pointed on the lnsldo.
Just listed at $49,000, don't mlsa out! Call
~m~.

~

donko,. 304-'113-5878.

19r7 Oldo Calais; 11192 Chow,
WT Plok.Ui!J 5 Spoad; 1989 Nl•
un 240 Sk; 814-448·7770 Bet•
w-v.s.
1187 Shelby Llneer lnrwr
Coolld, Turbo 1257 And 0111100
5 Spood, AJC, 200 HP,

AMIFM/CD, 120 Watt• Ptr Channot, Rod $2,895, 114-388oll151.
19r7 To~ota Callca, Looded.
1981 Dodgo Von. Both In good

Transportation

INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY ON 10
ACRES! Buy lor investment and building lot
potential. Close to town. Small pond. Duplex
typo unit provides good income. $29,000

Autos for Sale

304-675-11711.

Auto, Air,

1176 lllvaric, 4 door 23,000 AMIFM TUt, Cooh Prlco: $2,499
With This Ad. John'a Auto
mlill, 2aO IV, IIIIo.,
axool· SliM,
Below Holiday Inn,
lint ocndhlon, $2900 OuO, 614- Kanouga,
Gallipolis.
1112-6710.

P*"

0 B0, 814-i85-311711.
19111 Mltzublohl Ecllpoo, AMIFM
C.11ttt1, Air, CruiH, Tin, Pow.r
$~00

Wood !RJ,afty, Inc.

Window.,

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis
Allan C. Wood, Reakor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, ReakoriBroka~-446~971
Mose Canterbury, Reakor-446-340B
Jeanene Moore, Reahor-256· 17-45

Motor Homes

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

A chamlng I room 3
IIYie of luCing
q.&amp;lllly. The home you and your t.mly w11 find ~I Ill)
oomlo!totbla wlti!M moclam ldlchan for Mom ID adoN,
. . 2 car garage anachad, J.rge flont pon:h, lltd ounny
rooma with that oxlnli opaclel comfort ltat mllkM a
hot• • home. Apptvx. 10 mlea from tit, on TMno IVt

~ ........,.-....JfW-ZRQ.

111711 CheiY Pick-Up, Runo Good
$350, 114-+tMl25.

Ad. Phone Toc~~tr.
1701
IIUSINEIS OFFICES AIALEIAOOII FOR LEA1E

Real

12 Ac- juot off ol Jacbon Pika. Located
jull bayond Spring Valley 8 ,. 8 , Llya nicely,
mollfy p~lu,. gtowtd. $29,900
1203
.

tDt12 Chov..- Bllvwado atop-

mlip&gt;o. 304-1111-3713.
Chrnalol, Ford, Dod!ll" plakup
· 8ltorl or long. No ruat.
304..7M2tl.
Cond~

Moe Tractor R-600, A·1
tlon, Aloo, 111'1
Whlll 8111 Tandarn
8031.

Doell'

Wooded 8aranlty can ba all yount, when Y'"'
make this houN your horne. Beautiful brick
ranch loooted on B.B acraa, mil, oilers 4
bedrooma, 2 112 baUts, formal living room ·&amp;
dining room, family aize kitchen with dining
area, large family mom wllh flraplace lnMit
Overiii!Oed 2 car attached garage, 2 honoo atal,
largo wort&lt;shop, storage building, fenced
prnpe11y. A hidden treaaure lodgad in a
naturaly wooded Mtting. $88,900
K1 0

n

Loa

~

814-256-1411

after

Mult Sell: 1191 . Chevrolet
Bereta, V-8, Automatic, Ag,
Loodedl $7,500. 814-446-41605.

QjJ [/'./

r-j /

PROFESSIOIW. SIRVICE MAKES 1HE DIFFEIEIKE

lumj&gt;or tralllr hhch ..,.. far
9mr!l but lila ooro tts.
304-675-2311.
.How oak truck rockl, I' 4", liS,
114-ll92·71fl.

~

\_/(/~ ~
~

if" ~

11-.

IUiomatlol.__ overdrive,

ll92-1137.

Fun SID 111711 Bronco, 114-258·

1881.

74

MAKE AN OFFER I VA aaoumable, home
located on Rl 218. Has new roof, abedrooma
fam1ty room, living room wiUt lin~placa and
plent)l of room to expand.
1701

bt&lt;AUIJlFI~L SETTING,
LOCATED to
four lane, this vary nice home offers -4 BRa, 2
lbatths, LR,

DR.

kKchen, alae. heat, cent.

air. 1.75 A.

Motorcycles

1110 Suzuki t$114, ohal driva,

31,(100m1, $850. 304-1711-1311.

Rial Eatate General

Real Estati General

-...

HENRY E. CLELAND...... 992-6191

.•
...•,
•

TRACY BRI~IAGE:R ......... SI

'

.
•

114, REDUCED SUIURIAN

HENRY E. CLELAND 111 .. 992-6191

, equip. klichan,

stereo

Wasch·441·1 007
Sonny Garnes•446·2707

lpeakm

more. 2 c:.

KATHY CLELAND ...........992-6191

Ca~olyn

a•&amp;u·rv.

Tht remarkable apacloua home
view of the county. Italian tile foyer,
Ill, 2'/• bltha, IMflli

ThisIt Wiu dii;;; ;;;;,;;;• . Make your

•
••

•

•

nm Y,!~t.ltO,~;}~~'~:;~~;,~~~,~. ~

Capa Cod ... Brick cope codo IIIUitad on 2
aaoa overlooking Ohio Rlvor. Homo footuraa 4
bedroom, 2 lull balha, llvtna ....., with I
1922 aq. ~ living spaca. 38&gt;&lt;11 molal bulking ond
t4ll24 ~- bulldW1g. El. hi pump ond con olr. Coli
lor price and location ot thla baautllul oopo cod

lr"'".,. .

homt.

RACINE· Beau~fut I floor BricK home. 3
Bedrooms, 2 batha , ona car garag11,
enclosed rear porch. nice wood work. buill
In China cabinet, tots of ctoaetapace. Full
basement, fn.l~ cellar, fireplace, NGFA heal
Owner may sell on land contract with
down parmenl. ASKING

, _ , NIW USTIItQ - Spllllllnto 1ho pool, 18'1&lt;32'
lngrooni. a..ot loclllon, Green Twp. 3 lalgo - . . . .•
1'/• baths, COZJ LR, equipped kKchon ,_ range l
ror..
fuii'IIICO a h o i - ilrlk. Brick oxtarior, 2 car gorogo, bldg., &amp; dog oun. Much _,. 11aa

LOG HOME· located on Btumllold Road 3 bechoom, bath,
on 2 acraa mora or leu. Call to-·

d-.......

VACANT LAND· appmxima,.ly 10 acnts located on Bob
McCotmick Rd. Call for motw infotmalion.

gone lrlo

lhlo'""""' -· ... qulclcl

FARM FOR SALE· 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room,
kitchen, dining room, and a summer kitchen and bath in
basement. 47 acn~s mora or less, a bam and outbuilding,
and a trailer hockup. Call to Seall
HOME ON RACCOON CREEK FOR SALE· 2 bedrooms,
1 bath, 2 decks, 1 112 acras more or less. Water &amp;
Electric available . Located on Buclcridge Ftoad.
Pnce $6,000.00

$6,000.00.

NEW USTING· 4 bad moms, 2 baths, 2.25 acres mora or
lass, coty schools, county water, 2 car garaga and central
air. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.

1112 SKYLAHE REBEL MOBILE HOME 1072 sq. fl., approx. 2 baths, Wx15 LR,
171&lt;15 kitchen, equipped, cent. air. Call lor
more details.

NEW USTINGt OWNER ·WANTS TO
RELOCATE - Wall kept horne with 3.820
acres. nice buildings on prope11y lor - kkitchen , LR, OR, foyer, enclosed

NEW USTING -End your summer with a
splash, 3 BR' ranch overlooking river,
'16'lC32' pool, oversized garage could be
shop,
4 mi. from town. Call
tor

30 ACRES, MIL FARM HOUSE - Fenced
with pond. Affordable . Call Ruth lor
appointment.

275 LONGBOTTOM·. 2 story frame
with 1·' acre. baY W1ndowa, creened
. shed, new implement shed, newer
bath &amp; laundr)' roo~. newer
wiring. Include• appltancea, 4
baths. newer roof on home.
ASKING $49,900

IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONII 2 story frame
home with cere free siding, 3 Badrooma,
bath panel-carpel interior, basement,
ca•pOrt. utility room. 3-4 acres of ground,
FOR
storage buildings, READY
OCCUPANCY! CALL TODAY! ASKING
$35,000
MAKE AN OFFERI

tiM - - · 4 bedroom 2 atory. Haa ,_
roof, olding and hnlaoo.

$29,000 - Five minutes 10 town. Cape Cod
style home w/3 BRs, baUt. LR. kKchen, gas
heal, lull basement.

ATTENTION FIRST TIME HOME OWNER
- 121 Gavan Street - Nice home oilers 3
BRs, LR, kitchen, FR, bath &amp; laundry room,
alum. siding, nice yard.

FOR FIRST
OWNERS- • BRa, 2 baths, LR, FR. kilch·
en, lull'balernent, gu hea1/cent air.

NEW LISTING - Fl•er-upper, nice large
lot, river view, 3 BR, bath, priced at
$25,000. Cail Ruth lor appointment.
with 2 .., -

GARAELD AVENUE· 3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen
and balh , within walking diatonca of 11om end schools.

RACCOON CREEK ROAD- 3 BRS, 2
LR. kitchen, gas heat, cent. air. Clfl for

details.

71 ACRES mit.. Up Cratk Road, Morgan lWp.
3 BR home with bath. LR &amp; kKcltan. 4 buildings
on property.

·'
SR 338 Appro1. 55 aaes of v-nt ground
with ·great view of the Ohio river. Good
buifdinq lite, could be subdivided or uaed
11 hunKng lancl. ASKING $22,000

'

•

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE USTINOS PICK UP
THEFREEOUAUTYHOMESBROCHUREATIOMEOF
THE LOCAL BANKS, RETAIL 8TOIIE8, IUPERMARKETS,
MOTELS AND REITAURANTt.

11121 SECOND AVENUE-Very nice home
ollars 3 BRa, LR, DR. kKcltan w/renge, ralrlg.,
414 THIRD AVENUE· 4/5 BRa, 2 baths, washer &amp; dryer, bath, gas host, cent. air, 2
kHc:han. OR, LR. alum. siding, gas haat, cent. fireplaces, some new carpet, unattachecl
air, new carpet. (903)
garage. Shade trees. Call today.
CARMEL ROAD - 4 mi. N. of Rl.o Grande.
Approx. 24 acres ol ourvayed vacant land.
Ideal lor new home. $19,000.

t ACRES,

MIL. DAVIS ROAD -

county water available. $15,900.

Ohio Twp..

r::

LOOKING FOR Y~U:
P~~AND
QUIET· This could
, 4 . acras,
rewa
Rd., 8 year old home wllh 3 BRs, 2 1/2 baths,
LR, DR, FR, heat pump, 2 car garage plua
2h4x48 detached garage. Approx. 43 acres In
ay.
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS _ FIIISIB
Grande
Rt. 35: WeiiiiSillbiiShed,laun-

wfUtbualnesa.

Ulllnt. 5 bedroom oanch on 10.5 ..,..
and olorgo bUkllng. Houao )uat t

11118 -

CLOER HOME· 4 bedrooms, living room, dining room,
kitchen, family mom, located on 1.8 acres. PRICE IS
REDUCED. CALL SOONI

1ir

lnvoatmonl cloao ., tho

'"'"tmenl

HOME FOR SALE· Located at Rodney. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, living room, dining room, kitchen. Call for mort
information.
VACANT LAND· 111/2 acres mora or less. Water &amp;
Electric available. Located on Buckridge Road. Price

1105 ElcaiiMt

city. Pra-a~ known •• tho wood allop with an
apor~m~m lbovo tho ahop and twO IIIObllo homH.
Dan"l helitate mlook at lhil great opportunity for an

HOME with above gtound pool, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
cenbal air, garage, two olll buildings, city school, located
on State Rou,. 141 . ~It lo - ·

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE mY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1·100-1114-1 OH

\::/mdt

446-6806

· outo, p.a., p.b.,
clolar
wlpo,. ft:IOO 114-441·7132.
1111 Chovy Aatro Van, good
runnlna cond. 304-875-S.70.
1110 Aatro Chov)o Convorolon
van, lcodld, _.," ••ootllnl
ocndKion, 114-1192..,.2.
•
1g10 Dadao Carovan, loaded
wH!'.11,~ mltoo. 814-318-1210
or_....7.
.
1112 Fotd E1ptoNr XLT, 4WO,
poiwor lolclod. 25,..., mllll,l14-

~- ~-

LOCUST ST.

Vans &amp; 4 WD'S

1m Ford flronco 4 wheel clr.,

4dr.,

446-3644

loretta McDade· 446·7729
· Patrick Cochran· 446·8655
Dan Thomas·379·2902

Generll

.... undw warr1nty, 1000

air, 48,300 mile•,

6:00

446•1066

COOKING at HOME

LEIDIIIGHIMIEIL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER - 446·9555

1t81 Pontiac LtM1n.. 2 door,
autorn~tlc

CLOSE TO GAVIN &amp; RIVER VALLEY HIGH
BCHOOLI 3.114 acr. lot, mn, located on a
blacktop road. Water available. Perfect for
mobile home. Lot haa been autveyed. Nice
country view. $12,000.
1214

.

1981 Buick t..Sabrt Elcelllnl
Condition, 814-446-8380 After
5:30P.M.

Real Estale General

Campers&amp;

GIBBON
ZIPPER

DOWNTOWN, 2111 AYE., ClDSE TO COURT HOUlE

WE NEED LISTINGS!!!
WISEMAN REAL
ESTATE
.
'

condltlqn and run well. 814-245-

5885 call eher 5 p.m.

1981 Ford Tempo

Gratia you ovarywhara axoapt your
pocketbook. Bi·level on. large fenced lot in
lriendlr neighborhood offera 3 badmo'ma, 1
bath,· living mom/dining room combo, lull
ba11811tent lo finish for elba living opac., 1 car
garage. A amprt move for $45,900.
11608

~2

1981 Chavr Borotto ar, $3,000.

71

•'

ATTENTION INYI!STORSII Hera's an
opportunity In town rou ahouldn't pass up.
Located on First and Second Avenue 3
building., ~ rental urilta In good condition.
Good "'ntallncome. Call lor more infotmation.
$94,900
$:112

2a0·1!11g,

u_..ln bull, 114-i92-26INI.
One MW, a.. bollr a mlnatu,.

ace. Di R~l-ar..
372-Sfss..,
, :m:s . 304-

'

Grandpa took notice of how many
people _,. In the restaurant we
were having dlllrW ln. He says that
people have nollllng egalnat home
cooking as long as It doeen't Involve
COOKING at HOME.

1m Hon truck, duol -11,
111.000 actual mlill, 11500, 114IIZo3ML
tm Chevy Pick-Up. Slop-Sido1
Air, Till ~1 ~~!!!. _'!~

ma1orcycie of equal vtlue. 614-

1192-2329.
19110 Buick

INide. Coftll To II II'O!IIIhl In
Slcrfark, arnnm
Dar Of Sail. Trucklna Sarvlce
441-11183.
Avalllbll. MARlETT~ UVES. radio, buek.t . .t,new water
lOCK SALE COMPANYP.O. Box pump, naw brali•. 614·245-5585
Ui&gt;rlght plano, t500, 114-Nf. , 333, lllrlllla, Ohio, Located On
4120.
Wlllvlow.
Phone
114-373- 1g116 Fotd Thundorblrd, Cllan,
Uood lrumpol, ~ concltlon, 011711on.ald L Horl, Jr. !!gr.
Looded, $3,000. 114-251-1540.
11110 Oldomobllo DoKa II,
Brougham, PS, PI, PW, Power
:ao
Fruits &amp;
Saptombtr 23,1113, At I P.M. AU Saato,
Cllmoto Contlol, P-r
F
Catv11
Accoplocks, Elc. AMIFM Star.a Ca•
'•
Vegetables
ted. CoHto Aoc:opted &amp;11nlna At eet:ta.
Loaded! One Owntr:
J!ocoptlonoliJ nlco-. Mora 4 P.M. On Wodnoodoy. All Con- Bought Now Car, Hood To Sonl
tilue 1 1111 a blue- or while alanmentt Welcome, 514-512- Excalllrt Condhlonl
Looko
-dld lor J'!UI' wiM lob or 2322,0ri1WII-353l.
Good, Alklng: $4,115. Ot4-446·
Julco, 110t par lb. ~7's.SIIS7.
Cattle
Hauling:
Anytime, 4223Aftar 5:00 P.M.
~- PLA Rllllbon&gt; Ohio, 1gr7 Moroury L~n1, Bilek With
Hal po_., 151 buohol. Mar· Evar, Monday. Chuck Wllllo,..
lnter&amp;Gr, $1,200, If No
=~ Crook Trucking, 114-245- Gray
'!hill Adomo, 1114-20-:101111.
An~tr LHve MtaNge, 814-

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

NUANCE
HEROIC
OMELET

- ... ,_, - tc•• truck

111711 ~112 Ton 310 4 llbl. 4
- · AT,
P!, AC, 3.l'S Pool
$2,200, 0
114-4412301.

INVEST IN INCOME Supplement your income
with lteaa two already nonllld mobla homea.
One 2 bedroom with woodbumer, lange and
=~,rrator and ona 3 bedroom with
um.r. Each hu Ita own Mptic, wa,.r tap
' and lllactric. located on .92 acra on blacktop
road. Priced at $25,400.
1100

low millage, looded. 114-317·

FALL SPECIAL SALE
Tuoodoy • SEPT 21- 1:00 P.M.
Alone WKh "--or loll: CoJ.

Lift,

4323.

0101 afttr J p.m . . . .kdliya.

•

'Jioombono, uu - . Col 114o

:···- .

St. At. 554...0var 2 acr.a of vacant land
uni'Hirictacl with electric end wa,.r available.
Good for building or mobile home. Only
$10,000.
t301

1884 Dodge, 250 cuatom vtn,

_,nlu:IZII_!h
I Fl. Blldo t4,uw,
114 448 1321.

1182 VW Aabbft, ~~~ attndard,
PS, PI, $500. 08u, 304-1712101 or 304-175-4323.

MIKADO

1oal

~~~-

72 Trucks tor Sale

OWNER 8EIIOUSI Now'a lha time to make
thla Raccoon Craak propa11y yourw. Taka •
breather from work end fish, boat or ewlm in
Raccoon Creek from your own ralll. Older.
nlcaty ramodeled home litualed on t3 IIJCNI,
m'l, with 4 bedrooms, 2 baUto, living room,
ldlchan, ait11ng room - alba room 1o fit your
RM!I•· Y111 can Jka In lha WDOCII or ftah in . .
c!Hk, but ba IUIVID co4Caralyn lor dollthloo
many ID mention. Prloed atM8,809.
,_

I1GO.

'SCC'P-41\A-4!." ,.,

-· .

Full abo truck . - 1oa1 box

~orl75-4323.

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY,- located corMr
of Rl 7 &amp; R~ 564 in Cltaohlra. Thia pR&gt;fM11y
haa lola of potential, with ., office, two bay
garage, large IIUfdna a,.., heavv traffic flow.
Can ba pun:flaoad-with or wilhoul mobile
- home. Cal Pallor mora delaia.
13113

ANSWRS TO

T...- ..- . - ...,.
.

, _ fonl f.11ruok- tilt
I , - - wlporta 1780. 080.
1110 corv.tte Lit hwbo 400,
mirror t-tope, 13,000 mi-. 304175-21'14 or 304-675-1577.

Auto Perta &amp;

71

Ace n urlea

FAMILY NEICIHIOAHOODI Coma thlo
bllclc ranch conveniently located In lown.
F -... ....,.. 3 bedRIOitla, 1 112 bdlt. ••·
In ldld1en &amp; lull buement with fMiily room.
GAl I.a. hell lltd cantr.llllr. 1 cor~ lltd
aiDrag, building. Situllled on a aox100 tol
Priced at $77,500. CaiiD&lt;Iey 1D - 1
1201

wv

Ott Point

:~.::~T~. n:;.Ty=~~O ~5
Huntington Two Homi on propeny ofllra
BRs bath LA kHc:hen new
woodbumlng stove aiding soma
Bern on prope11y. •
•

new

FOR SALE· COAL TIPPLE with 81 loading
laciNtiea. 1,687 It riverftonl. Cal lor 1

' dolalla.

POMEROY· otder home with 3 loll. HonJ8
Includes 3 BR. BA. Home in noed of rapalr.
ASKING $9,500

RACINE· 2 story lrame home with newer
roof &amp; vinyl sidinQ. 3 ,Bedrooma, bath,
FANG heat, built tn dishwaaher, newer
bath, carpeting &amp; drywall, hont &amp; rear
porches, attic space, garage, garden area.
ASKING $38,500

U01 Roducad for Quick So if· Ono of tho
boll thlngo In IIIIlS home owntllhlp. 3 bednn. ranch ,
channing LR, oat·ln ktr., 1'/• balh, full dMdod blaO·
mont w/oftlce room and outside B(llry. 24'1&lt;32' w/10' dclor&gt;. Mako thiS )'OUII now. FHA 01 VA

SYRACUSE· Lee Circle- ranch style home
with 3 Bedrooms. carport, storage space,
appliancel , nice locauon. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION I $34,900

room, full basement with family room, 2 car gorogo,
tlx381nground pool. You ,_lo 1111h11 one.
11t3. BRICK RANCH - Snuoted on 1 sc. mil Upper
Rt. 7. close to Shopping Center. ThiS home floiU18S 3
bedrooms, 2 lull baths, kHchan and dining area. 2
bedrooms, onlllty room, family room, knchln In 1&gt;118·
mont. 3 c a r - and a 8 car detaohod gorago. Call
lor more lnlormallon.

MIDDLEPORT· Storr frame home with 2
BRo, bath. now oountar, newer gulum-.
fireplace. HW floors , lull baaement,
sunroom, nice home for $24,000 (Make an
Offer) Could make a lovely homel
IMM~DIATE POSSESSION!
TR 240· Bedford Township· 115- acraa
vacant ground with 3-4 oiUgas welts, AI
mineral rights ara reserved. Thera ere no
buildings &amp; no mineral rights but thla II a
nice piece of ground. ASKING $29,900

1133. II'RINQ VALLEY AREA In thiS apaclous brick
homo, with 3 bodlooma, 1'/• batho, llvlng room, dining

- - COMMERCW., CITY WATER, SEWER. OA8

- t ac. mil. building W/2 balha, lloro rm .. gorage has
hoist and compressor. ~wants offer.

1117. MAKE A DEAL - 24&gt;85 mOblll homa. 2.4 ac:
rnA. 2 "r garage. Immediate poaaeuiOn or make an

otter.

1895 Building Lota. Acldloon area. can.

BASHAN RD • 8+1· acres with ~2 X 65
PERRY RUN ROAD· 27+1· aCI'tl with 3 Mobile home &amp; older hoUIII, 2 seplics, TPC
room hunUng cabin . Electric a watar on • watar, FANG ..leclric B8 heat $23,000
ana woodburner 16. 20 addtion, shutl8rl, :
ateGI doors, insulation, a•cellent remota WE FEEL YOU DESERVE THE BEST IN
hunting/camping aita. ASKING $29,900
SERVICE WHEN BUYING/SELLING

Lollnalclo Tho Ch~ LlmRo. prlcod to 10U Call
Wima 11245-1070.

r~ME~:TE

1183 Building Lot Clcoo To Town. Old houoe
onproporty In nood ol ~poir $2,000.

POMERO\~~~~~ 1lh~~~d~~~:~::. rie~t~~~ :=~ 0~E,!-~~L
5,000

POSSESSION I

ASKING

WE'RE HERE TO SERVE YOUUI

1813 Ownor Wm Land Controot. Conviononoo ol
downlr&gt;wn shopping In lhla 3 bedroom homo wlih 2
•••• city loll.

re01 old.

VICII' LIIID

1M71. HAYI! A IIEAIJTIFIIL COUNTIIY ESTATE
- Build yolK home ovortooklng • largo
lol&lt;o. 73 acres mil ot R&gt;IHng land, ctoan and
. . -. with a bit ot - . c l, I ac. ollakas
mil. Thla propot1y hao many - " " " " " '· Ill
_ . . use Ia a pakl llahlng lake. Groot tor a
churoh camp, camping grounds or · - ·
Long Road frontage.
1126. VACANT LAND - Close ln. 5 acres lOlling

lind.
-

VACANT LAND - Sprlng1111&lt;! Twp. 58 ocr·

ea mil IIOI!lU lrom Holzer Hospital. Groot
lion tor largo homes on a hill.

toea·

11131. LAKEVIEW IUIDIVISION - A CHOICE
PLACE TO IUILD - 2 10 5 ....,. mont or loss.
Drive 1o While Rd. to Charolalt Lake Or. to
Lal&lt;IVIOw Ct. Oltorlng 2 lilt to rolling Iota, a WI'·
1aty ot """" ond booutlful vtaw of 1ho lake. AI
- lVII-.
- · undor1JOund
etedrlclty,
....... Rural
IYI*M
~

ReatrlciMo ~ oppty. Cloll to . _
ancllhopplng.

1123. MRI. CLEAN UYES HERE - 3 BR homa with
smotl acreoge. Clole In, Ul. oat·ln khellin, lg. FR.
bath, t c. garogo on 5 acros m11. This 1a )ult
right tor a rauno tam~ or a rotlnlll COUple atao. Malle
an appl. lo 111. Coli Eunice Nlehm to&lt;tar 446-1187 .

- - OLD FASHION CHARM - In town toco11on tor
"Mr. Fix It'. Largo 2 atory · 3 bodmoma, LR , lor·
mat dining room, kHchon, bath. Altached- aNI
comer lot. Walk 10 llchool and ohopplng.
11711. SMALL FARM CLOSE IN - Noot cilln and
cozy Ia -lhll2-3 BR homa II With LR DR. kllchon

fumoce:

bath, I cor garoge, one outbuilding, tuOt o11 '
• CIA and now roof. 411132' bam tor an1ma1a hlylott anc1
WOO&lt;Ihop. Call ELKllco Nlehm lor appt, '
H10 Now Lilting, OWnor Wonta lloid Duo To
Movlnv From Tho ArM. Locoto&lt;l close to tho
Unl....ny, E•c:e...t ronch jUSt • - · old, on I riCO
atrMt. Hu boaullful iandacepplna, won't ill! long
coil l&gt;dly 10 - thil buullful homo lhot haa boon
""'' molntatnod. 245-9010.
1107 Nlcio luHIIna Ar~~. build lllot droom homo
l&gt;dly on lhla 7 ooroa lhatla Within tho c1~
Wlma.
., limlta• -·"
_..

1172. STATE ROUTE 110 - 3 ac. lot mil.
$1 MOO.OO. Charolall Hils.
1173. PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND - Land
llys ...... Older 2 atooy with 4 i&gt;odiOOIIII
and bulldlnga. Home In , _ ot rapak, 1t7 ac.

mil. Cell tor IOC8IIon.

i8IIL WHITE OAK RD. 10Ca11on. 30 acres mil

froriago.---·

VICini land with limber, minerai rights, good

road

$26,000.

tm

dou-

OWner Wanto llold. Mako oiler todar,
on ., ooro

apacioul 3 bedroom 2 bath
lot. Clcoo ., tho - 35 bypou.

....

1101 Now Llollnv In tho Rio Orando area 4
bedroom ronch ~ JMrl old With 2 1Cr01 In 1
=~
homH going up ...ry c~~v. cal -~

nlco

�Pomeroy-Middleport Gllllpolla, OH Point Pleaunt, wv

Page DB Sunday nmee Sentinel

.,

September 19, 1993
I

Small drop forecast in
world oilseed production

... NATIONAL WINNER· Erie Gryszka, cap·
tain of tbe Meigs 31 mine specialized exploration
team, bas won tbe title or National Champion
Bencbman. Here be is pictured at one of tbe
briermgs of rescue team workers as tbey prepare
to go underground for initial exploration or the
flooded Meigs Mine 31. From the Iefture Grysz-

ka, section supervisor .I; Dwight Kreiser1 seDior .
minlng engineer; John Merrlfteld, ma::Jer·
safety and health; Jim Tompkins, viee pr
elt
and general manager; John O•Green, AEP Fuel
Supply safety aDd health director; Bill Starkey, .
outside supervisor I; and Carl Curry, section
supervisor-safety.

Southern Ohio Coal employee .
is national champion henchman ·
WILKESVILLE- Eric Gryszka
is a veteran coal miner at Southern
Ohio Coal Company, a 15-year
member of the company's mine
rescue team, and the team's captain. On September 16, he added a

new title to his resume: National
Champion Beochman.
Gryszka earned tbe title at the
National Mine Rescue, First ~id
and Benchmen' s Contest wh1ch
was held September 13 • 16 at the

Local K-mart to take
part in promotion
· GALLIPOLIS ' - The Gallipolis
Kmart will participate in the launch
of a CBS/Kmart promotion on
September 19 by holding a star
studded Premiere Party.
Kmart customers will be weicorned by a store greeter dressed in
formal attire. The Gallipolis Kmart
store will extend Sunday hours to 8
p.m. to celebrate the event with
free refreshments and special sales.
For $1.00 to benefit the American Cancer Society, customers also
will have the opportunity to have
their pictures taken with a lifelike
stand-up of Jane Seymour and Joe
Lando from the CBS series "Dr.
Quinn, Medicine Woman."
Kmart CEO, Joe Antonini and
ac tress Jaclyn Smith will host the
Westbury, NY Premiere Party
whic h will celebrate its •grand
opening. TV watchers wiU see thisPremiere Party first hand on
September 19 when CBS arrs highlights of the star-studded event.
The CBS/Kmart Premiere Party
is the kick-off of a two week pro-

motion which includes two consumer sweepslakes celebrating the
launch of new CBS fall shows.
Kmart customers will have the
opportunity to win up to $25 miilion in cash and prizes.
In the first game, Watch, Match
and Wino, customers will obtain
game cards from their Kmart circular September 19 and 26. Each
night, from September 19 to Octobcr 2, CBS will announce a fourdigit winning number. If the first
two, three or four digits of the
numbers broadcast on CBS match
the Kmart game card, the viewer is
an instant prize winner:
Customers will have a second
chance to win Kmart gift certificates with "Kmart Bonus Letter
Match-Up". Every game card distributed through the Kmart circular
· will-also include a box with three
letters of the alphabet. _If all three
letters in the box match the letters
displayed in Kmart stores on a
daily basis, the customer will win a
$100 Kmart gift certificate.

JACKSON COUNTY LIVESTOCK
Ripley, W.Va.
September 9, 1993
SLAUGHTER STEERS:
Good &amp; choice
63.00-65.00
SLAUGHTER HEIFERS:
Good &amp; Choice
62.00-64.00
SLAUGHTER COWS:
Commercial
44.00-48.00
Utility
43.00-45.00
Canner &amp; cutter
36.00-41.00
BuUs, over 1,000 lb.
50.00-57.75
VEAL:
Choice &amp; prime
80.00-90.00
226-2651b.
80.00-92.50
YEARLING STEERS:
Good &amp; choice
80.00-90.00
600-700 lbs.
75.00-82.50
700&amp;up
70.00-81.00
Feeder Bulls
60.00-69.00
YEARLING HEIFERS:
Choice &amp; good
75.00-82.50
600-750lb.
70.00-77.00
STEER CALVES:
Good &amp; choice
90.00-104.00
300-400 lbs.
85.00-101.00
400-500Ib.
80.00-92.50
500-600lb.
75.00-87.50
BUll CALVES:
Good &amp; choice
80.00-97.50
400-500lb.
80.00-92.50
500-6001b.
75.00-86.00
HEIFER CALVES:
Good &amp; choice
80.00-95.00
300-4001b.
80.00-104.00
400-500lb.
75.00-92.50
Cows &amp; calves by head
550.00-1040.00
Cows by head
325.00-610.00
BABY CALVES (by head):
Beef
·80.00-165.00
D '
45.00-130.00

KentuckyFarrandExpositionCen·
te.r in Louisville. His eff!"'l topped
that of 46 other competitors from
10 ~tes., . . ,
.
"
. I don t think 11 s ~unk m yet,
satd Gryszka, who IS an outby
supervisor at Southern Ohio COal's
Meigs No. 31 Mine. "I guess it
means that American Electric
Power has some of the top mine
rescue people in the country. It's a
great feeling."
"I think we've known that all
along," added Jim Tompkins, vice
-president and general manager of
Southern Ohio Coal's Meigs Divi·
sion, "but now we bave a national
champion to prove it"
Tomkins also noted that Gryszka is leading the efforts of one of
the specialized teams that is performing the underground exploration at Meigs No. 31. ·
·
In mine rescue competition, the
henchman is the squad member
who has extensive knowledge of
the self-contained breathing appaf!ituS used by the team. In competiuon, each contestant must complete
a 20-question written e:wninal'ion,
then conduct a thorough, timed
"bench" examination of the apparatus. Judges plug in several malfunctions which each competitor
mush identify and repair.
At the nationai.contest, Gryszka
had a perfect score on his written
test, and just two penalty points
during the bench competition. His
working time was 27 minutes 31
seconds.
"I thought I had worked a good
problem," said Grxszka, who
resides in Athens, • but I didn't
know it was good enough to win
the contest. As I talked to other
henchmen, though, I realized that I
might have a shot."
Although others ·have come
close before, Gryszka is the frrst
national henchmen's champion
from an AEP-affiliated mining
opemtion.
"Eric has always been a leader
in safety at the Meigs Mine. To
now receive national recognition,
durin~ what has been a very difficult Ume at Meigs, is great for all
em,ployees. It is a real moral booster, said B. J. Smith, spokeswoman
for Soulhem Ohio Coal Co.

"Slow gains in prospective
WASHINGTON (AP)- World
oilseed production is projected at global use and expanded supplies
226 minion tons for the 199,3-94 of soybeans and rapeseed in key
season, down less than 1 percent exporting counuies are reducing
from the previous season, accord- 1993-94 U.S. export prospects for
ing to the Fcxeign Agriculture Ser- · soybeans and soybean meal,'' the
repon said.
vice.
U.S. soybean exports were pro"Production prospects are high·
er for India's soybeans and Cana- jected at 17.6 milhon tons, down
da's rapeseed, but lower for coaon- 17 percent from last year. Soybean
seed in China and 11eanuts in meal exports were forecast to be
India," said a report Ibis month on nearly 13 percent less than a year
earlier.
'the w~Ild oilseed outlook.
"Season-average prices for soy"Favorable growing conditions
beans
and soybean meal are profor summer crops in India conjected
slightly lower this month,
uibuted to a significant jump in
while
soybean
oil priees are slillhlprospective soybean yields, comly
higher
because
of tightenmg
plementing larger area estimates,"
soybean
oil
inventorit:S,"
the repon_
II Said.
said.
Dry weather has hurt peanut and
cotton crop yields in the United
Effective Oct. 8
s~. the repon noted.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
"In the United States, oilseed
Agriculture
Department is decreascrop production is cut slightly to
ing
assessments
on imported pork
61.6 million tons," it said. It said
U.S. soybean production was fore- and pork products to reflect the
decrease in hog prices paid at
cast at 52 million tons.
·
Foreign pioduction was forecast major U.S: markets last year.
The decreas.e amounts to threeto be up 4 percent from last year, to
164.4 million tons.

.

Research Semc~.
Bea.rd d.escnbe~ t~e chicken
hou~ ~ this nwnth s 1ssue of the
serv1ce s Agncultural Research
magazine.
"We call the system FAPP (filtered-air positive pressure) housing," he said. It has been widely
adopted by companies that produce
el!gs for use in growing vaccine
Vll'IISeS in germ-free embr-yonating
eggs or cell cultures.
"The most important camponents of'the FAPP system are clean
air. and p~sitive pressure,'' said
Ba1!ey M1tche!l, ~e agricultural
engmeer who 'des1gned and built
the computer control system that
runs the facility.
.
· "Air entering the chiclren house
is filtered twice - first by a 35percent-efficient_filter and then by

a

.

. most curreni for Gallia County,
nationally, July Savings Bonds
sales closed at $755 million, a
decrease of 33 percent from July
1992 sales of $l.l3 billion. July
sales brought the fiscal year-to-date
. totals to $15.697 billion, an
increase of 55 percent over the
same periOd last year. The value of
U.S. Sav;ngs Bonds held by Americans at the. end of July reached a
record $167.40 billion, an increase
of 14 pel'f.ent over a year ago.

Mexico importing
inore ·:vs turkey meat
WASHINGTON (AP) - Mexico imported seven times as much
turkey meat from the United S~
in 1992 as it did in 1990.
"Mexico's turkey meat imports,
mostly from the United States, contin ue to increase because of the
high quality and lower prict:S of the
U.S. product," said a recent repon
in AgExporter magazine.
Turkey meat imports. from the·

United States grew fi'om just under
$9 million worth in 1990 to $64
· million in 1992. .
"Advertising campaigns for
imported uncooked and processed
meat products have helped to
increase domestic consumption,"
the repon said. "Although new to
the Mexican market, U.S. turkey
meat products have found a strong
market rtiche."

H03's:

Sows 300-500 lb.
Boars 300-500
Pigs_{l&gt;y head)

28.00-33 .00
28.00-30.00
15.00-21.00

Livestock report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Friday by
the Ohio Department of Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: mostly 25 to
50 cents higher; demand moderate
to lighL
U.S. 1· 3, 230-260 Jbs., COUI)tl'y
points 47 .00-48.00; plants 48.5049.50, a few 50.00.
Sorted U.S. 1·2, 230-260 lbs.,
country points 48.00-49.00.
.
Rece1pts Thursday 9,300. Esumated receipts Friday 7,500.
Prices from The Producers Live-

'

.)

stock Association:
Cattle: 2.00 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 68.5074.00; select62.00-69.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 66.5073.75; select60.0&lt;Hi7.00.
Cows: 1.00 lower; all cows
53.00 and down.
Bulls: 1.00 lower; all bulls
64.00 and down.
Sheep and lambs: 6.00 to 7.50
lower; choice wools 61. 75-64.25;
choice clips 61.00-64.00; feeder
lambs 69.50 and down; aged sheep
29.50 and down.

REMEMBRANCE ••• LOVE'S GREATEST GIFT
Let us erect a beautiful monument to your loved one that will
properly perpetuate sacred memories.
10%

Dopollt ond lol.,., In Conwtnlent Low Monlhly Poymonto

CHOOSE FROM rHE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN CENTRAL .nd SOUTHEAStERN OHIO
CONVENIENT CR~Dij TERMS AVAILABLE- WE CARRY OUR OWN ACCOUNTS

LOGAN MONUMENT CO.

POMEROY
Melgo County DlljQy Y•d NNr
Pom«oy lleeon ~
..._A. Buah,llgr.

11112-2111

....

VINTON
Glolllo! County DIIIIIIIY Yard
111Meln.L.Ill)' " ..... Moore, .....

,

PHIL DIRT AND THE DOZERS
IN CONCERT SEPT. 25TH
GALLIA COUm JR. FAIRGROUNDS
SHOW TIME: 7:30 P.-M.
INCLUDES TWO SHOWS
TICKETS $5.00 ADVANCE; $6.00 AT THE GATE

Bring Your Family and
Your Lawn Chairs
For More lnfocnWion Phone 446-7007
Gallla ~unty 4-H office
P~llllds go to: Gallla County 4-H
Endow~

'

•
•

..

Pittsburgh, Friday. Lanra, from Mancliester
England, underwent a seven organ transplant
operation at the hospital Thursday. (AP)

RESPOND TO QUESTIONS- Fran and
Les Davis, left, respond to questions about the
condition or tb~ir five-year-old daufhter Laura
at a news conference In Children s

Bear watching tickets
are hard to come by
at Alaska sanctuary

U• S• Savings
•
Bon d.s campaign
• ·
•
,
off to successful start ID Galha

Fund

September 19, 1993

Doctor provides free
medical care for street
people in ·P ittsburgh

•
•
•

a 95-percent-efficient one. This
ensures that no getm-bearing dust
particles get in," he said.
~
·

Section E

ews

hundredths to five-hundredths of
cent per pound and reflects a 13
percent decrease in hog prices. . ,
•'The rate of assessment, whicJi
was increased from 0.25 of 1 percent to 0.35 of 1 percent of nwket
price effective Dec . 1, 1991,
remains unchanged,." said the
announcement by L.P. Massaro,,
acting adminisuator of USDA's
Agricultural Marketing Service. :
"This change will bring
importer assessments more in line .
with those being paid by domestic
producers,'' Massaro said.
_..
Assessments on imported pork
~d pork: products are established:
by formula each year, based ori
U.S . market prices for hogs.
Assessments on domestic and ·
imported pork are auihori~ed by
the Pork Promotion, Research and
Consumer Information Act of
1985.
, The assessments pay for
research and promotional activities
designed to strengthen the marketing of pork.
The decrease is effective Oct. 8.

'Clean' Chicken house
,
d.
h
b
·
d
pro zce s re searc ~~ s
WASHINGTON (AP)- Wbat
ar~ probably ~e clea~est little
chiclren houses m t!Je U~ted States
bave been pi:oducmg diSease-free
birds fOI" research..
The super-clean chicken housing was developed 111 the Southeast
Poultry Research Laboratory in
Athens, Ga., to supply poultry and
fertile eggs fill; research on New- ·
castle disease, avian influenza, and
infectious bronchitis, which cause
heavy loss in infected flocks.
''This housing concept was
developed at the Athens facility ·
more than 20 years ago and is still
evolving, as more sophisticated
equiPJ11ent and techniques become
available,'' said Charles W. Beard,
the retired head of tbe laboratory,
which is part of the Agriculture
Department's
Agricultural

eneral

EDITOR'S NOTE - Can biJ· freSh face and slim build. The look Grampa still likes to talk particle
city medicine accommodate is patt Boy Scout. part Green BereL physics when he's not running
It is not yet dusk as he parks his from imaginary radio wavt:S.
small-town values? Dr. James
Withers, an inter..lst, tblnka so. van outside a men's shelter and
Withers spent Father's Day in
By day, he sees patients and meets up with the rest of tonight's the emergency room with Grampa.
trains residents at an inaer-city team: Mike Sallows, a gregarious stripping dead flesh and maggots
hospital. By night, he provides outreach worker, and Chris from the old man's gan~renous
free medical care to tbe street Laemmle, a thoughtful psychiatric legs. Seven-year-old Chnstopher
people or Pittsburgh.
nurse. Together, they set off at a Withers came too, having ftrst 'been
brisk pace fOI" downtown's Mellon prepared for how Grampa might
By NANCY SHULINS
Square Park.
smell. He later drew a picblre of his
AP Sf:ilal Correspondent
Traveling on foot sends a mes- day with Daddy: a smiling maggot
Pm BURGH - At rrrst. no sage.
in yeUow marker and blue ink.
one believed he was really a doc"Instead of bringing our world
Withers has similar memories.
tor. Real doctors see patients in with us, we're inserting ourselves As a child, he went on house calls
offices by appointment. They do into theirs," says the doctor. "We with his father, Donald, a geaeral
not roam bad neighborhoods late at listen, listen, listen. The patient practitioner who still sees 30
night, giving haircuts and dispens- becomes the driver of the response. patients a day in Hanov~r. populaing Mylanta.
You erid up with a health care sys- tion 20,000. His mother, June;
Real doctors wear white coats tern that looks very different."
teaches nursing.
and expensive watches they're forIn 1987, he worked with batThe family took humanitarian
ever consulting. TheY. do not wear tered women, an experience that trips instead of vacations. When
ratty T-shirts and chew the fat in underscored the value of trust. Jim was 12, they went to
dark aUeys, with derelicts, psy- Patients who trust their doctors are Guatemala His parents left him in
chotics and drunlcs.
more apt to tell them the uuth. charge of giving fluids to .a starving
James Withers, M.D., has .a the· Doctors who know the uuth are 4-year-old for a day. "1 knew she
ory about that.
better able to help their patients. . was going to die, but I still had an
"Doctors hold a privileged posiInside the pari!:, Mike goes on important job to do." He watched
tion in society," he says. "If you ahead to determine who's safe to her die, then told thenurses. He did
don 'I shake your rattle or wear approach. Though Pittsburgh bas so, he recalls, without·crying.
your witch-doctor mask properly. tess crack cocaine and IV drug use
"I always pictured myselhs •Y
you lose that. The irony is, only than some cities, roughly l)alf its father, a doctor in a loyal, rural
when you give that up, that unspo- 2,500 homeless have alcohol, drug world. To be really useful. Someken mystique, do you connect with · or mental nmblems.
one ~ople could rely on to trlllt
people and establish truSt"
One n[ght, a dope-sick young and respect."
And so, one night last year, man pinned Withers to a wall and
But fashions change, even in
Withers gave it up.
demanded narcotics. Withers, who medicine. By the time he started
He put on tom pants, stuffed a doesn't carry narcotics, feigned his training, kindly GPs were out.
backpack with antibiotics, and concern about a scratch on tlie Dispassionate specialists were in.
embarked on a mission: to meet the man's nose. Instantly, the would-be
Along with anatomy and J)bysimarginal on their own turf and their mugger turned into a patienL Such ology, he learned something else:
own ~erms, and to minister to them is the power of medicine.
Sterile surroundings aren't always
any way that he could.
Now, Withers sometimes wears · conducive to trust and ~L
He's been providing free medi- a bulletprOOf vest. AtS-feet-7, 147
"We objectify people,' he says.
cal care - along with the occa- pounds, he has no delusions !'bout "We're forced to, in ways the pubsional haircut - ·to the street peo- his physical prowess, and no mten- lie doesn't understand: by the
pie of Pittsburgh ever since, via tion of becoming a~·
paperwork, the billing, the educaodysseys that lake him and a handMike leads him to Donna, a tion process, by the defensive posful of others 10 the city's ro.ughest 50isb woman curled up on a )lench. iure we learn to take . with
neighborhoods one or two rughts a With her tweed blazer and tasteful humans."
week.
makeun, she looks every inch the
Medicat. scfragmhool taught li~im to
The homeless get warm socks doctor~ s wife she says she once see peop1e 1D
ents: a ver, a
and cold sandwiches, free medicine was. Only her strong body odor kidney, a spleen. Late at night on
and more. The doctor gets some- belies that irn~on.
the sueets, he is piecing them back
thing less tangible but no less
She is W81ting for the women's together.
.
momentous: safe passage to a place shelter to open for the night. WithHe has the blessing of bis wife,
where his mask has no Jneaning.
ers introduces himself and offers Gyathri, a pensive Ph.D. chemist
On this sultry Monday, just as her vitamins. "I don't much care from India, who teaches at the Unimost families are sitting down to for Centrum," she says. "I prefer versity of Pittsburgh and who finds
supper, Withers is preparing for his Thcragran. ••
American attitudes toward homenight on the streel The 35-,Year-old
"That's good stuff,'· he agrees. lessness strange.
"In India ;.. people live in cuiinternist has already put 1D a full "How do you feel about One-Aday seeing patients a:nd uaining Day?" He listens as intently as if verts. It's very acceptable residents at Mercy Hospital, a she were a colleague. The effect is there's no stigma," she says.
Catholic teaching hospital over- immediate. Her face grows more "Here, I see so much polarization.
looking the gritty neighborhood animated. Her posture improves.
. Here, when you're homeless,
that inspired television's Hill Street
Mike offers her a "hygiene you've lost more than just a
Blues.
pack" - toothpaste, toothbrush, home."
Into the backpack go antibiotics, deodorant; and tiny soaps and
So far, the program her husband
vitamins, saline. snlints. scissors, shampoos scrounged from hotels. .calls Operation Safety Net has
gauze, gloves, oinbnents, eyedrops, "Do you have any Camay?" No. made contact with 355 people,
and medicines for heart disease,
"That's good soap," she says, manyofthemmorethanonce.
Richie, 65, is- a regular. He is
tuberculosis, epilepsy, diabetes, frowning. ''I alwa)(s carry
alleigies and ulcers. He also packs Camay."
also a drunk. But tonight he is
· a blood pressure cuff, cellular
Chris calls her fussiness "pride sober, resting comfortably on a bed
phone, stethoscope, headlamp, bat· of identity, For us, all our identity of Congoleum and rubble on an
teries, prescription pads, and sched- hinges on our jobs. our social life, abandoned loading dock outside a
ules for the hospital's walk-in clin- where we live. But these people are vacant warehouse.
ic I)Dd Alcoholics Anonymous.
still hanging on to those things that
The scrap of floor was a gift
from Withers, part of an eight·
He's swapped the tom pants for they.can."
the poclcet-studded khakis he
Clay, a one-time computer month home improvement project
favors for mountain climbing. The expert. lives in a box under a high- that began with his hauling 30 bags
pants, along with the black !c~ way overpass. He still reads the of trash to the dump and ended
and backpack, have a quasJ-mtli· newspapers every day, just as the with his cutting Richie's hair.
tary air that doesn't qw~'te:.,::m:a:IC:h~his~':_~~~~~
withers calls
Continued on E-2

camera gear are highly recomEDITOR'S NOTE- It's a it the premiere -location to get mended. MQSquitoes also can be a
wild and wooDy show at Alaska's close-up shots of brown bears in problem.
McNeil River State Game Sanc- the wild. Browns - the coastal
Aumiller spends much of his
tuary, tbe world's largest concen· equivalent of grizzlies - normally time
treating a pervasive human
tration or bears at a single site in are loom. But more than 80 bave affliction he terms "bearanoia."
tbe wild. But only a select few been counted congregating at the
"It's normal. innate, natural
can get tickets .and those that do falls.
.
behavior
be fearful of big fuiTy
The "falls" actually are a senes things thattocan
must be prepared to rough it.
hurt you,'' he says.
Those tbat make it are rewarded of rapids formed by large rocks "But bears are much more willing
..w.ilh-.an. e¥p_erien.ce, that proves about a. mile up from the river's to gel alohg with us than we are to
mouth at KamiSbak'Bay. The calipeople and bears can coexist.
along with them."
co·colored chums gather in pools getPart
of the problem is bad presS,
By BRIAN S. AKRE
_ . between the rapids. Together ~he . Aumiller
says. About the only time
Associated Pre:is Writer
rocks and bears pose the maJOr bears make news is when they
McNEIL RIVER, Alaska obstacle to the chums: upstream maul or kill someone; and those
Deep in the wilderness, we stood migration to spawn.
.
horrific stories stick in people's
atop a windswept bluff, surrounded
"It's a fish's nightmare," says minds.
by 34 brown bears. Big, lumbering Larry Aumiller, McNeil's veteran
Aumiller proudly notes that
boars. Protective sows with their guide-biologist with the Alaska there bas been no attack on a
cubs.
Department of Fish and Game ..
human and no bear shot in defense
Every Alaska hiker's worst
The bears come from m1Ies of life at McNeil River since the
nightmare.
awar. to spend the long summer state began requiring permits and
But as long as we stayed put on days 'fishing, eating, sleeping and guiding visitors to the falls in 1973.
that little bluff overlooking McNeil mating in the tall grasses above the
That does not mean McNeil's
River Falls the bears tolerated our banks. The fish fatten tbe bears for bears are tame.
intrusion o~ their feeding grounds. winter hibernation. Some · increase
If provoked or threatened, they
In surprisingly little time, our fear their weight by as much as 50 per-. could easily maim or kill a person.
was transformed into pure wonder. cent. The biggest can ge~ up to What makes them different from
·Bears were everywhere we 1,200 pounds.
.
most wild bears is that they are
By season's end, tbe satiated used to humans and don't consider
turned at the McNeil River State
Game Sanctuary. The falls are bears can get downright picky. them a threat or food source,
home to the world's largest known Feeling for a salmon's egg sack, Aumiller says.
concentration of bears at a single some bears will keep only the
Visitors also are comforted by
site in the wild.
females, eat the raw caviar .and
the
fact that brown bears. though
Indeed, it's a wild and woolly leave the earcas~s for the brrds. unpredictable,
are not known to
show at the sanctuary, 200 miles Male salmon are JUst dropped back attack groups of more than a few
southwest of Anchorage and just in the water..
.
north of Katmai National Park on
The dommant bears bave therr people. Ten permit holders at a
are·escorted to the falls.
the Alaska Peninsula. And tickets pick of the bes,t fishmg spots at the timeAumiller
or another guide
are hard 10 come by.
upper rapi~s, while YO!l.Oier and
with a 12-gauge shotgun
the sanctuary is the best-known less aurcss1ve ont:S po~bon them- armed
leads
the
group on the two-mile
and most restricted of Alaska's selves downstream.
·
hike
from
the camp to the bluff.
bear-viewing sites. The coveted
_Dllf!ng oo,r visit, a group of 8!'JI· The relatively
easy trail crosses
permits to visit the ·rem~te camp gl~ng Juyemle bears played like sedge flats, thigh-deep
Mikfik
and nearby falls are distributed by children m die large pool belo~ the Creek and a grassy, alpine meadow
loucry every April. .
bluff, lunging through the ~~~ to
· This year the state received just perform belly-flops and dtvmg flecked with wild iris, lupine and
parsley.
over 2 000 applications from underwater to chase schools of cowWhile
walking through the tall
around ihe world for 185 permits salmon in circlt:S.
grass.
the
guide occasionally claps
for the June-through-August viewAumiller, 49, knows these~ his hands and
"Hey, bear!
· ing season.
better than anyone. He bas gtven Whoa, bear!" shouts,
That's inten&lt;led to
The bears come here each sum- them names, such as "Motley" alert any napping bears to the
mer to feast on a run of chum and "Scratchbutt " and can recite gr~up's prese~ce and avoid sursalmon. And ·as with people, their their distinct
'
confrontanons.
fishing techniques and success
For 18 years, this soft-spoken pnse
When the group reache.s the
vary.
biologist has managed the sanctu- bluff, it is insuucted on the do's
. Most of the bears perch '!tern- ary and, more significantly, the vis- and don'ts of bear viewing: Stay on
selves on large rocks or stand m the itors.
the gravel bluff. When a bear
glacier-fed river, scanning the
"The real value of McNeil is it approaches, stand your ground.
. swirling water for easy prey. ~- shows that bears and people can Don't scream. And, of course,
sionally one snags a ~moo .w1th live together," he sar,s..
feed the animals.
its mouth as the fish tnes to Jump
To get to McNetl Rtver, most don't
Problems can arise when visithe rapids.
visitors drive or fly to Anchorage tors get too relaxed. The permits
More often a bear suddenly and charter a float plane to travel ·are for four consecutive days, and
dives into the water and uaps a ftsh the IOQ miles across Cook Inlet to by the second or third day some
with its front. paws aga1.nst 1he the camp. A rnaxim11m 100 pounds folks bave to be reminded that this
rocks. Grabbtng the wngghng of geal is allowed.
isn't a petting zoo.
.
chum in its saw-toothed jaw, the
Hip boots are mandatory for
The state declared McNeil River
bear cmwls out of the river and sets crossmg the creek on the way to a sanctuary · in 196?. But by tbe
about dining.
the viewing area. Food. a weather- early 1970s, when access to the
One bear - a guide named her proof tent, sleeping bag and cook· falls was still unrestrict.cd, photogTeddy - regularly carne up the ing equipment and utensils also raphers often oumumbered bears.
~th next to our bluff, fell into the
must be brought in.
People put themselves in danger ·
grass and ate her catch as we
There are no concessions or and the bears began to avoid the
~\
tourists, just a few feet away, fired modem amenities at the camp.
area.
our cameras like automatic
Tbe camp includes a small
"One photographer actually
weapons.
cookhouse, where all the food is built a blind on tbe rock in the midThe bears frequently charged s~ and meals are eaten. Freeze- dle of the river, if you can believe
and intimidated one another for dried food is lighter and easier to that," Aumiller says.
• Wlnlletd and Mar·
conuol of the best fishing spots. pack, and visitors are urged to
jorle
Power
Grand
JIDctiOII,
Colo., (seated)
The state began restncung
Salmon thievery was rampant. bring some extra in case they get access and imposed some commonparents of anti-war rualtive Katllerlne Ann
Occasionally two ~ would rise weathered in.
Power, and tbelr cbllclren aDd son·ln·la'WI talk
sense rules. Today the bears' wel9n th~. hind legs foi: a brief ftght
The weather at McNeil often is fare comt:S ftrst in. what is considto tbe media at a newl conference In Denver Frl·'
over 'II spot or a fish, their deep windy, rainy and cold .in summer. ered a model wildlife-viewing pro'day. Power, who pleaded pllty last Wednesday
growls p1cn:ing the river's din.
Rain gear, a warm jacket and a day
of
udanned
Wildlife pbotojlraphers consider pack to carrv extra clothes and gram.
1\i

fora
-••~'~~"-lfl
policeman wu JIMt te
identity and lived In several
tbe last 13 in Oregon. The robbery wu BD effort
to get money to finance anti-Vietnam War
efforts. (AP)

,,

�Page-;-E2-sunday Times Sentinel

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

September 19, 1993

World War II heroes.h~ve fascinating tales to tell at reunion
•

B;p GORDON SAKAMOTO
6,000 by war's end, served as inlerAlloc:illted Press Writer
prews, ttanslators, spies and inrelHONOLUL- At a time when ligence specialists. They int=t{llanti-Japanese sentiment was at its ed and moniton:d radio transmts·
peak during World War~. a small sions and communiques, ttanslaled
group of Jf!P!JIIese-Am~ncan vol· captured maps, journals, letters and
u~rec;:rs parttctpated m highly ~t other documents which often dismiSSIOns that helped turn the bde m · closed critical enemy tactics, operthe fight against the land of their ations and troop dispositions.
ancestors. .
On the battlefron~ they intenoSecond-generation Japanese- gated captured Japaneae Jlrls!?ners.
Americans, or nisei, were taken served as translators ror military
into .the Military Intelligence Ser- officers and even crawl~d into
vice and were considered a secret caves and tunnels to coax enemy
weapon in the war against Japan.
soldiers and civilians to surrender
While historians have chroni- without bloodshed.
Eventually their services were
cled the exploits of another
Japanese-American group, the deemed so valuable thlll MIS permuch-honored 442nd Regimental sonnet were attached to all branch·
Combat Team, the effons of those es of the U.S. military, inCluding
in the MIS, who worked covertly to the Office of Strategic Services and
bring an end to the war in the the Counrer-llitelligence Co1ps, as
Pacific Theater, have-only n:cently well as forces from Great Britain,
come to light.
Australia, Canada and China.
The missions of Japanese-AmerSeveral dozen MIS members
icans in the MIS were so sensitive recently ·held the group's 50th
that official documents remained · reuniQn in Hawaii and many of
sealeli until a few years ago. Few their ultrasecret missions were
knew that many in the MIS were revealed.
Americans who looked mon: like
One of the more human stories
the enemy they were fighting.
of war was related by Ralph Yem. Even the War Department was puku, who was involved in a
at first leery of using the nisei unique drama which he didn'tleam
because of uncertainty ~bout their about Until after he had returned to
loyallies. But their loyalty and his forward post in China.
know-how proved to be important
It occurred during the Japanese
factors in the AUies' triumph in the surrender of the Hong Kong garriPacific Theater.
son to British forces in 1944.
Beginning with the Battle of
While the official declaration
Guadalcanal, members of the MIS, was being signed, Yem~uku failed
working alone or in small teams, to notice that it was hts younger
participated in every major batde brother, Donald, bedecked in his
launched against the Japanese- Japanese officer's uniform, who
from Alaska's frozen tundra, to was inte~preting the ceremonial
Australia, to tinY Pacific atolls and proceedings to the Japanese comthe dense jungles of Burma. .
manding general.
Their contributions led G~n.
"He saw me, but he didn't dare
?,ouglas_MII~~rthur ~o proc!atm, say a word," Yempuku said. "We
Never m milttary htstory dtd an . were only about 20 yards apart, but
army know so much about the I guess I was too busy watching the
enemy prior to actual engage- ceremony that I didn't notice the
ment"
.
individuals involved.
Other Allied leaders were con"I was really disappointed when
vinced the work of the ~S saved I found out about my brother after I
hundreds of thousands of lives and got back to Kunming (several hunshortened the war.
dred miles northwest of Hong
The MIS volunteers- original Kong). I hadn't seen him in 11
members Qf the 442nd and IOOth years and, because of the repalrillInfantry Battalion - received no lion process, it was another couple
public acclaim. During their se~- of years before we caught up with ·
vice they were cut off from thetr each other."
Donald, who had returned to
families and friends, unable to
write to explain their duties in the Japan with his parents before the
war effort.
war, explained he did not attempt
The MIS, which totaled nearly to contact his brother because it

.was a surrender to the British, not to see me because the Japanese thing lhat the Japanese in Hawaii murals of the Pacicic war battlCs.
the Americans . He wasn't sure JlfOIJIIganda machine said all niseis w= mistrusted.
The n:verie of the moment was
what the Britons' reaction would had been used as cannon fodder.
"Otherwise, we'd never done shaltercd · when a tou.rist
have been had he saluted his broth- So, they assumed I was dead."
what we did," he said. "We'd stiU approached and asked, "Which
side did you fight on?"
er wearing an American officer's
It was then he learned that two he secood-class citizens."
uniform. Donald Yempuku died other brothers had been conscripted
But SO years later, the citizenSurrounded by the graves of the
last year in Japan.
by the Japanese military. A fourth ship question n:mains.
dead from four wars, particularly
After the Japanese attack on brother was too young for military
Several months ago, Ted those of his faUen Japanese-AmeriPearl Harbor, Yempuku. who held duty.
TSUkiyama, an MIS veteran, stood ~.an comra~es, Tsukiyama said,
an ROTC commiSSion, and several
In looking back, Yempuku ar the National Memorial Cemetery
That quesbon hurt deeply, right to
Japanese-American friends volun- thinks it might have been a good of the PacifiC quietly studying the the core."
teered for the Hawaii Territorial
Guard. They patrolled beaches,
QC/QT. __c_o_ntiD:--u_ed_rro_m_E-_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....:,__ _ _ _ __
guarded utility installations and
•••
enforced blackouts throughou~
Tonigh~ Withers brings ~ord of doesn't matter. Jack's need to talk
may only get foilr hoilrs' ~leep."
Honolulu.
a bed at St. Joseph's House of Hos- about them is real enough.
Wet feet get crammed into wet
But it wasn'tibng thereafter that pitality. Richie can stay there, proLast winter, the team found an sneakers. Skin molders. Legs sweU.
all the Japanese-Americans were vided he stays sober.
old sock nailed to a tree by the Veins deteriorate. Skirt ulcers,
summarily discharged because of
The doctor picks his way over river: Jack's .Christmas stocking. frostbite, blisters, gangn:ne- all
the uncertainty of their loyalty. To the rubble, an old friend dropping "Lots of these people had a poor an: common.
.
show that they could be trusted, by for a visit He even brings- pn:· family structure. We're recon"The aroma can be overwhelmhowevCf; the Hawaii nisei formed sents: McDonald's gift certificates. strucung it,' • says Withers, who ing, but you learn early on never to
the Varsity Victory Volunteers.
Richie reaches for them eagerly in • stuffed it with McDonald's gilt cer- show disgust on your face. They'n:
Yempuku later beca·me one. of the dark.
tificates and new socks.
watching your face all the time,"
the frrst volunteers for the fanied
His sobriety is young yet and
On the grates outside Trinity says the nurse, ~ho distributes,
442nd Regimental Combat Tewn ·fragile, but Withers commends Church, the team finds Sonya and homemade ham and cheese sandand was sent to Camp Shelby, him. Mike mentions he could P.ve Richard, a couple in their 20s wiches along with her ointments
Miss . It was there that he was him a ride to St. Joseph's, provtded whose sole asset appears to be a and salves.
tapped for duty with the Office of he chooses to go. Richie agrees.
cardboard sign thar says,"Jlelp the
"I bring a feminine quality the .
Strategic Services, which was the
Given the options - a loading Homeless Eat. God Bless."
·
doctor can't.. Men talk to me about . ·
forerunner of the Central Intelli- dock or a bed - the decision
Witliers gives Sonya inhalers fof wives and mothers. Sometimes
gence Agency.
seems easy. It isn't "There an: lots ·her asthma, but she's more excited ther, break down and cry.
The volunteers were taken to of levels of hon\elessness," Chris by the new comb Mike hands her,
'You learn a lot about yourself.
Camp Savage, Minn., where they says. "Not everyone's willing to along with a blanket, a hygiene You team you can do these things.
recetved training in sending and come in off the street"
pack and several new pairs of I'm not a very n:ligious person. But
receiving Morse Code and then
Jack, the next patient, lives in a socks.
' after you've taken can: of one of
shipped to a secret base on Catalina lean-to beside the Allegheny River.
Why all the socks? GaroJc Ober- these people, they say, I'm praying
Island, off the California coas~ for "Some guys need to live out· le, a soft-spoken s1dn cate special- for you. And you feel like you
hand-to-hand and unorthodox com- doors," Mike says. "Who are we ist who spends two nijlhiS a week should be the one saying it to
bat training. •
to tell them they've got to work for on the street with Wtlhers' pro- them."
"A$ we went through the train- IBM and drive a BMW'?"
gram, says foot problems plague .
If Carole Oberle is the bean of
ing, I figured we were in for an
Still, yearnings for the 9-to-5 these patients.
Operation Safety Net, a tattooed
assignment that would be differ- world sometimes surface. Jack
"People who are homeless are ex-con and a recovering alcoholic
en~" YemP.uku said.
talks vaguely of a house and a dog. on their feet continuously, and the~ an: its soul.
It wasn tlong before Yempuku, Are they real or imagined? It
given a Chinese~sounding surname
while crisscrossing the U.S. mainland, was dropped into North
Burma - behind the ·Japanese
lines - and assigned with two
other Americans and a British officer to work with the Kachins, a
fierce Burmese guerriUa group that
Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page D-8
Iutted the Japanese.
After the war, Yempuku set out ACROSS
92 Edges
82 Narrow, nat
to rmd his family by extending his
DOWN
94 Tidy
boards
stay for a year with the Counter1 Motor
95 Sufficient
1 Olherwlsa
83- board
Intelligence Co1ps in Japan. •
7 "Dead96 Make amends
2 Cozy corner
84 S1T1all stores
After a month of searching, he
Society"
97 Tell
3
Proceed
86 Wine cup
found them living on an island off
12 Sun-dried brick
99 Depot: abbr.
4 Doctrine
Hiroshima, which had been devas88 Roman bronze
17 Aroma
100 Difficult
5 Close
tated by the atomic bomb.
21 Less restrained
89 Strikes
101 Weakens
6 Mistake
"When they first saw me, they
22 Fragment
90
Washbowl
102 Insect eggs
7 SwayzeiD
23 Automobile style
thought they were seeing a ghost,"
91
Babylonian hero
103 Corded cloth
8 Follows Sept.
24 -Straits
be said. "They were really shocked
93
Buildings
105 Charlie Brawn's
9 Julia Roberts'

D

.

September 19, 1993

p
-MI 1e
~---------------. .-•om•e•ro.;.y....;;d;d~po~n~Ga;;ll;lpo;l;;la,;;.O;;;H;..Po;l~nt~P~'•;;•:n:t,~WV:.;._ _ _ _ _. .~s:u:n:day Tlmes Sentinel Page E3

STORE HOURS

Moaday thrt Sunday

·

• S17-GIHI1T

8 AM·lO PM

:

298 SECOND ST. ·
POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SEPT. 19 THRU SEPT. 25, 1993

1994 Plymouth Duster
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25
26
28
30
32
33
35
37

Therefore
Clayey earth
Shy
Abaurd story
That thing
Piece out
''Up On the - "
Goddess of
vegetation
39 Suifelt
40 Mohammedan
noble
41 Brother of Odin
43 Highway
45 Strains
47 Neon symbol
48 Mix
49 Wide-awake
52 Mud
54 Island in
Pacific Ocean
56 Squander
57 Architectural
ornament
. 59 Cylinder
61 Man
62 Meadows
63 Make lace
64 United States
-America
66- ala mode
67 Devoured
68 Native Egyptian
69 Jill - John
71 Abstract being
72 ClcatriK
7 4 Baker or Bryant
76 "Das - "
77 Article
78 Sun god
79 Chief
81 Three: preliK
82 Narrow opening
83 Periods of time
84 Classify
85 Tibetan gazelle
87 Australian
marsupials
89 Smsll fish
90 Follow orders

dog
107 Smits role: lnlts.
109 Those In power
110 Young boys
Ill Hockey's Bobby
and family
113 Containers
114 Cal's loot
115 Sodium symbol
116 Supplicates
117 Dry, as wine
118 Suitable
120- Mans
121 Story
122 Church service
123 Capricorn symbol
124 Gained
possession of
126 Looked fixedly
128 Begin
130- quo
132 Pitch
134 Angry
135 Merit
136 " - 109"
137 Danger
139 The Four 141 Dukakls tD
142 Nothing
143 Thailand's old
name
145 Hesitate
147 Tie
149 Hearing organ
152 Negative prefix
153 Long, heavy wave
155 Small shoot
15 7 Duck like bird
159 Exist
160 Solitary
162 Uncanny
164 Citrus fruita
166 Wandered
aimlessly
168 God of love
169 Vision
170 Dropsy
171 "The- of
Rosie O'Neill"

brother
10 Domesticates
11 Enthusiasm
12 Equally
13 Xmea mo.
14 Harem rooms
15 -split
16 Related on
mother's side
17 Unusual
18 Roman gods
19 Beginning
20 Hold back
27 Weaving machine
29 Calumny;
asperSion
31 Concerning
34 Occurrences
36 Bazaar
38 Layers
40The-sop
42 Goddeta Of
discord
44 Let fan
46 Transaction
48 Quarrel
49 Letor
50 Climbing plant
51 Tantalum symbol
53 Lamb's pen name
55 " - the People"
56 Clan
58 Dealgnate the
site ot
60 Fasting period
62 Booty
65 Novelty
68 Dove crieS
69 Old auxiliary
verb
70 lrasc:lble
72 Walt on
73Rues
75 Irritate
76 Brawtlng; noisy
77 Inclination
79 Bank
transactions
60 Irritates

95 Comm.
Instruments:
colloq.
97Fr98 Conger
102 Scolds
104 Real estate map
106 Castor107 Manservant
108 European
110 For lear that
111 Warmed
112 Blemlah
114 March
116 Farm building
117-opera ·
119 Sound a horn
121 Hawaiian
rootstock
122 Clayey earth
123 Tierney ID
125 Isolated hill
127 Agave plant
128 Pertaining to
old age
129 Clotht111111alcer
130 More vapid
131 Easy
133 Heroic event
136 Reaped
138 Ghastly
140 Expel air
forcibly through
nosa
143 Therefore
144 Simple
146 Hoarfrost
148 Entrance
150 Cain's Ylcllm
151 Cincinnati 153 legal matter
154 Inlet
156 Precious stone
158 Ms. Babllonla
161 Bond nemesis
163 Printer's measure
165 Allen ID
167 Mother

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19,1993

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I

Vol. 44, NO, 102

1 Section. 10 P..., 35 a.,lll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 20, 1993

Multimech Ina.

A Multim..ti•lnc. Now•~

·Penny Aeik~.r . croWned
Catfish Festival Queen

1993 TOYOTA TERCELS
• Driver's Side Air Bag

•V6

Hundreds on hand for weekend tictivitie$

• Tilt, Cru.ise
• Power Windows &amp; Locks

• Loaded I

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
· Music ranging from the golden
oldies to gospel, craft demonstrations, children's activities, and bar-

gains galore in sidewalk sales,
made for a delightful outing for the''
hundreds of Bend area residents
attending Middleport's Catfish Fes. tivill.

Sponsored by the Middleport
Community Association, Saturday's celebration kicked off with a
pet parade down North Second
Street just before noon. About 25
pets, an kinds and sizes with maiiy
m costume, were judged and
rosettes were awarded in several
categories.
.
The winners were Megan and
Harrison with Shihtzus in the
category of most original. Both the
girls and their dogs were in clown
costuming. Mike Smith who
brought his Basset hound in pirate
costume won the best costumed
category, and John Davidson took
the top award for cat costume.
Capturing the award for the
most unusual was Clara Saunders
with her goat. The other rosettes
went to Carol Southern for her
J;loxer, the biggest dog, while Jessica Cale and Yalerie Conde won the
most unusual transporlation award
(or their entry of Samantha, a collie, traveling in a little red wagon.
A highlight of the afternoon was
the crowning of Penny Aeiker,
daughter of Pat and Cindy Aeiker,
Pomeroy, a senior at Eastern High
School, as 1993 Catfish Festival
Queen. First runner-up was Angela
Searls, daughter of Tammy and
Kenneth Seatls, Middleport, a
senior at Meigs. The Miss Congeniality award was won by Angie
· Whilc;'dilughter of Bill·and Judy
White, Middleport, also a Meigs
studenl
Other contestants were Robin
Gardner, Middleport, daughter of
James Gardener and Jacqueline
Hartman, Heather Knight,
Pomeroy, daughter of Vincent and
Susan Knight, and Sandy Vance,
daughter of Rex Vance, Har-

Laura

ALL DRESSED UP- Chelsea WaUace got "Sugar", II Sbibtzu
and Beegle breed, aU dressed up for Middleport's pet parade at
tbe Catfish Festival Saturday.

bratioa. First runner-up was Angela Searles, left
l'ront, and Miss Congenia6ty was Angle White,
l'roat right. Other contestants were, standing, 1
to r, Robin Gardner, Heather Knight, and
Sandy Vance. (See additional pictures on page

FESTIVAL QUEEN - Penny Aeiker, daughter of Pat aad Cindy Aeiker, Pomeroy, seated
center, was crowned 1993 Catfish Festival
Queen Ia ceremonies held at noon Saturday at
the Middleport Community Association's celerisonville.
Flowers and gifts were presented 10 the contestants and the gueen
was a1so given a .$200- savings
bond

6).

.

music, the Middleport Church of
Christ with gospel and barbershop,
Blj~~ wi!IJ~k musi~ , clogging by tfie Midnight and B1g Bend
Cloggers and dancing by Slltin N'

Amy Roush, the 1992 queen, Lace.
'
was on hand to assist in the cereUp and down Nortl1 Second
monies. Chuck Kitchen was emcee. were children's games and ~tivi­
Afiemodn entertainment all well ties, craft displays and fO(Jd booths.
received by the large crowd includ- Games for the children, like wg-oed Denver Rice on his guitar; Dee war, sack,Dces and billloon toss.
and Dallas and CJ and The Country were helain Dave Diles Park by
Gentlemen with country-western employees of Farmers Bank. A

pizza eating contest was also held ·
in the part/
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
the Meigs County Health Department were on had to do health
checks. and during the afternoon
several craft demonstrations took
place.
Mary Wise showed how to cane
chairs, ?vfari!yn Meier, demonstrated tole painting, Susan Baker created bears, Shirley Huston did basket
(Continued on Page 3)

Poll reveals Ohioans want change in health c~re system

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CLEVELAND (AP) - Most
Ohioans questioned in a newspaper's survey said the health care
system must be changed to control
COlliS and they were willing to pay
more taxes to reform. the health
care system.
· Eighty-one percent of the
respondents said they would accept
a I percent increase· in federal
income tax to improve national
health care, The Plain Dealer poll
said Sunday.
Ninety percent of Ohioans who
responded in survey results
released Saturday said the health
care system must also provide
health insurance for everyone.
More than 80 percent of the
respondents favored higher !axes
on cigarettes and alcohol, while 63
\ percent favored higher t;txes on
health insurance companies,
according to the poll.

Seventy-five percent of the
respondents said every citizen ,
despite income or ability to pay,
should be able to· get adequate
medical treatment.
Regardless of what President
ClinJon proP.oses when he
announces details of his health care
refonn plan, 57 percent of those
polled doubted the pian would be
enacted before the 1996 election.
"Vfe an know what we need,"
said Albert Baum of Lorain, a 32year employee of East Ohio Gas.
" The problem is the politicians.
They'll do what the lobbyists want
10 do.
•
"I kn ow what it' s going to
come down to: 'I've only had four
years; give me four more and I'll
·dO it." '

. Gordon S. Black Corp. conducted the survey for the newspaper.
The company surveyed 1,000 Ohio

residents by· phone ·from Aug. 12- specialist they ·want, and that's
22. The margin of error was 3 per· unfair," said Ms. Sottile, 44, whose
own insurance limits her ability 10
cent.
Democrats and those describing use specialists.
More than three-fourths of those
themselves as liberals were most
likely to favor federal involvement polled did not like the idea of waitin the health care system, the poll ing longer for routine care, and
said. But ReP,ublicans and conser- more than 60 percent opposed limvatives favored higher taxes and a its on their choice of doctors of
larger role for the government to hospitals.
''I'm not going to a doctor I
improve health care, the newspaper
don't
know just because an insur·
said.
ance
company
tells me," said Sally
More than two-thirds of the conservatives, for example, said they Boehnlem of Cleveland. "I've
could handle a 1 percent increase in known my doctor for 22 years and I
income taxes; more than half said have confidence in him."
Vice President AI Gore told the
they would go as high as 5 percent,
·newspaper in a recent interview
according to the poll.
Jane S.ottile, who lives near that the Clinton plan would not
Cincinnati, said uni versa! health deprive the public of iiS freedom of
choice,
care would be abused.
"We're certainly going to retain
"I work in a doctor's office and
see Medicaid people get whatever the element of choice so that peohealth care they want, see whatever ple will be able to chose their own
health care providers," Gore said.

Way cleared for Demjanjuk's return to US
JERUSALEM (AP) - John
Demjanjuk, extradited to Israel in

1986 to stand trial as " Ivan the
Terrible," will rerum to the United

~-Local briefs-----.
Snow money to be distributed .
Meigs County's political subdivisions will be $49 ,254 richer
Wednesday following distribution of the snow emergency cheeks
according 10 Robert E. Byer, director the county's Emergency Management/Emergency Services Agency.
· Byer announced todar. he would hold a press conference at I
p.m. Wednesday to distnbute th7 checks. The checks will "«: distributed at the emergency serv1ces offiCe on Mulberry He1ghts
located behind Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
· All townships and village representatives are asked to attend 10
receive their reimbursements for expenses during the S!IOW emer·
gency from March 13-17.
:rhose 10 receive reimbursements are all townships, the viUages
of Pomeroy, Middlepon, Racine and Syracuse, the Meigs ,Cilounty
Highway Department and the Meigs County EMS. All county officials are invited 10 attend.
•

Woman injured in one-car crash
A Gallipolis woman was listed in serious condition this morning
· in the inrensive care unit at Grant Medical Center in Columbus following a one-car crash at the junction of Forest Run and Minersville
Hill roads in Suaon Township Sunday around 1 a.m.
According to a report from the Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment, James B. Paaerson, 32, 32414 Pleasant View Road, Racine,
was eastbound on Minersville Hill Road .and
- failed to stop fot SIOJl
(Continued on Page 3)
.~

States after Israel's top court
cleared the way for his release, a
congressman says.
The Supreme Court on Sunday
set aside appeals for a new Nazi
war crimes trial, ending the long
saga involving the retired Ohio
autoworker. His departure from
Israel had been delayed five times.
Demjanjuk was acquitted July
29 oi being "Ivan the Terrible," ·a
Nazi guard who operated gas
chlmbers at Treblinka death camp
in Poland during World War II .
With the new raling, he is free to
leave the country immediately.
In Cleveland, ~:uk's sonin-law, Ed Nishnic,
the deci- .
sion "definitely good news." But
citing J,liiSt delays, he added: " We
are gom' to approach this thing
very caubously, very carefully."
Nishnic and U.S . Rep. James
Tlaficant, D-Ohio, planned to leave
today to escort the 73·year-old
Demjanjuk, who stayed in protective custody. Traftcant'"'said he
expected Demjanjuk to be back in
the United States before Friday.
The ruling by Justice Theodore
Orr was the sixth time the court has
aealt with Demjanjuk's case since
his acquittal, when a five-member

panel said there was reasonable
doubt about his identity as Ivan the
Terrible but found that he had beeri
~nt at other Nazi camps.
Orr rejected appeals by Holocaust survivors and Nazi hunters
who sought to have Demjanjuk
retried on charges that he was at the
Sobibor death camp as well as concentration camps.
They had mounted an international search for Sobihor survivors
who could identify him. Demjanjuk
has said he spent World War II as a
German prisoner of war and
claimed. he was the victim of mistaken identity.
Israel's Attorney General Yosef
Harish already had decided not to
prosecute Demjanjuk further, saymg the evidence was too Wll8k and
there was risk of double jeopardy,
or trying him twice on the same
charges.
The Supreme Court needed
~ccptional circumstances to overtum the aaomey general's decision.
Orr's ruling meant those circumstances did not exist
Nazi hunters and Jewish ocganizations criticized the ruling, arguing that Israel was letting.a war
criminal go on a technicality.

1994 MISS AMERICA • Kimberly Aiken, Miss South Carolina, kicks the surf toward photographers during her annual photo
session oa the beach In Atlantic ·City Sunday. She was crowned
1994 Miss America Saturday night. (AP)

Crews clean up
after coal truck fires
EVANSVILLE, Ind,, (AP) Cleanup crews plan to spend much
of this week trying to remove an
undetermined amount of fuel from
a drainage ditch at MSC Trucking,
Inc. following a Sunday morning
fue at the Evansville facility.
The fuel flowed from the MSC
parking lot after 18 tri-axlt; dump
trucks were set on fire about 2 am.
in w~at officials say might be an
1.1

arson attempt linked to the longrunning coal strike.
· The firm has hauled coal for
area mining companies affected by
the strike.
It is not certain how the fuel was
spread around the parking lot, but
Cpl. Eric Williams of the Vanderhurgh County Sherifrs Department
said arsonists could have used a
fuel dispenser that remains active
ill all hours.

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