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                  <text>Sund:n.

$1.00

Michigan, Alabama post easy ~_ins - C-1 .

Welsh
heritage
kept alive

Inside

Missionary Society work began
in the late 1920s • Sands • Page • B-5

Along the river ..............B1-8
Business/Farm ...............D1-8
Classified. ........................D2· 7
Entertainment ........ ;........B-8
Deaths ...............................A-7
Editoral --·······-··............A -6
Sports .............................Cl -8
Weather. ...- ..................... A-2

Fanny · McFudgeca~e . makes

B-1

life
interesting-Fred Crow-Page -A-6

Vol. 28, No. 31
Copyrighted 1983

r.rtlf cloudy. Hlch In 70s.

13 Sectlon.1se P•ae•
AMultimedia Inc. n-paper

Mtddleport-Pomeroy....;.GaiiiPoii&amp;-Polnt Pleasant, September 26, 1993

• OriYOr's Side Air Bag

• ve

SOCCO evaluating order

• Till, Crulae ·
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Loadodl

I

STILL WORKING - Even though FridaJ
was her last day official day at work, to Meigs
County Economic Development Director Paula

~~=!!o;liOgg.r;!:::':.=~ Overdrive

• Power Windows •
peerance Package

Tilt • Cruise •

Thacker It was just another day on the job.
Here, Thacker pays the bills prior to resigning
the post. (T-S photo by Jim Freeman)

.

·

'93 GMC SIERRA PICKUP

• Automatic • Air Conditioning •
Af-1/FM Cassella • Bed Uner •

iia,111 $11,111
93 Ford Tempos . .... . .. $9999
93 Mercury Topaz ... .. :$9999
93 Ford Taurus ..... .. $13,999
93 Ford Escort ..... .... $9999
93 Ford Aerostars .. .. .$16,995
93 Ford Ecenollne Van .$16,995
91 Ford f·150 P.U •. .. .$10,995
91 Ford Taurus .. ... . .. $9995
93 Ford Mustang Canv . .
. ·: .. $12,995 93 Llnclln Continental .. ;~",na 1

93 Pontiac SuRblrds ..... $9995
93 Pantlac Rreblrd ... .$10,999
91 Acura Legend LS . . .$23,995
93 Dlds Clera ... ..... $12,995
93 Plllllac Grand Am .. $11,995
90 Pontiac Transport SE . .$12,995
91 Cadllac Eldorado ... $19,995
93 Pontiac Grand Pllx . .$12,995

Buick

TRUCKS
92 Chevy S·10, V&amp; .... .$9995
14 Cllevy C·10, autt. .... .$6995
16 Chevy 4x4 K20 ... . .. $6995
18 Ford Bronco I 4x4 .... .$5995
18 Ford f·150 4x4 . . ..·.$8995
90 Ftld • m, 1111., 4.0 .. $9995
92 Nlssan 4x4 .. .. . .. $11,995
15 Chevy S·10 4x4 ... . .$6995
88 Ford Conversion .... .$8995
86 Ford Conversion ..... $6995

UNDER $10,000

UNDER $7,000

UNDER $5,000

91 Buick Regal . .. .. .. .. $9919
88 Buick Riviera . . .. . .. . $8915
88 Cadllac Brougham .. . •$9995
91 Lumina APV Van . . . . . $9995
88 llssan Pathllllder .. : .$9915
90 Mercury Caugar : . .. .. $9995
91 Ford Mustq GT .... .$9915
90 llan!la Accanl .... . .. $8915
91 Honda Accanl •.. . .. .$9995
89 Ponuac Grand Prix. : . .S8415

11 POtlllc 6000 LE . .. .• $6195
91 Pontiac Grand Pllx ...• $6995
10 Pontiac Grand Am .... $6995
18 Cadlllc lllvllle ... .. . $6995
18 Buick ParkAve. .. . .. $6915
89 Chrysler New Yortcer .•$6995
86 Olds Cutlm .. . .. . .. $6995
91 Pontile Sunblrd .. .. .. $8995
81
. .. . .. ... $5915
89
Topaz .. .. .. $6995

90 Chevy Lumina •. . .. . .$4995
85 Mercury Marquis . ... .$4995
87 Chevy Celebrity ... . . .$4995
89 Chevy Clvaler ..... .$4995
II Suzuki Sa1111ral . .. ... $4995
87 Nlssan Sent11 •. . .... $3995
85 Chrsyter 5lb Ave .. . .. $3995
87 Mercury Grand Marq •.. $4995
89 Ford Es~rt .....• , .. $4496
88 Chevy lllltiiJ QT : . . .$4995

•5.99•/• with approved credit. All prt ees lnchlde rebatea and Incentives. Offer Expire• Sept. 25th . Untte subJect to prior sale. Not reeponalble for mlltekee

or ommtselons.

said.
She explained that the Ohio
EPA modified thai order requiring
that all of the remaining water
being pumped from \he mine be
treated.
"We have reached the stage in
lhe water removal proce$s where
all the water can be treated and this
is possible due to lhe reduction in
lhe qUIII\tity of water remaining in·
lhe mine and from the upglllding of
water treatment facilities," said
Smith.
"As we continue to pump, all
fully treated wa1er, the company is
now moving into the next stage
which is helping to speed up the
natural restoration of the affected
stieams. During the course of the
. water removal process, we took
many actions to minimize environmental effects. Now ecolo'gical
experts, AEP and Southern Ohio
Coal Co. (SOCCo) environmental
specialists, and agencies such as
the Ohio EPA and Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Divi·
source wd.
He added that people ~on ' t sion of Wildlife, are working
s~m to kno.w that such a .stmple together to detennine further meathmg as havmg a gravel driveway sures to be taken," Smith added.
may not be allowed m some zoned .
The AEP spokeswoman said
areas.
.
.
that extensive monitoring has
Not everyo~e m Ohve Town- shown that Raccoon Creek has
ship is for z~mg. ~re are some experiencC:d minimal effect from ·
who are aga1~st bc!ng told what the pumping. "Most of the water
they can do With lbett own ~per- we are currently pumping at the .
ty. ('&lt;t the Sopllelllbetctl4 mee~g. a Sugar. Run site is water generated
res1dcnt .of L:Dn' Bottom S81.d her naturally in the mine," she said.
collll?uruty ~dn t wunt anythmg to
'The water is being fully treated '
do wtli! zonl_ll!!·
.
and it will be released into Sugar
While cnucs of d!e. zomng and Run only as needed every few days
of the. Concerned Ctllzens of the to help speed up the natural restora~colville Af!'8 say they are thwart- tion of the stream," Smith said.
!ng. economtc devel~pm.ent- the
She said that SOCCo is working
mct~rator would bnng m at least to re-establish ventilation in the
3da9 J~bs . and a~ esttandmatthede Scos500
1 oaf mine and toward getting lhe elecuiY m ppmg .ees
industry that can't come into the cal distribution system underar~ because ·o f zoning is immea- ground repaired.
A9,uatic life began returning to
bl
Sh lbume disagreed
Leading
Creek within a few days
sur;h ~ ~'It 1·sn'tlhat we don't
e
'
after pumping of any water which
want new growth •. b~;~t maybe w~ was not fully treated stopped being
can ~ve s:?me sa.Ym1tt andd. make tt released into that stream, Smith
a postllve .or 811mvo ve
reported.
.

The decision made Thunday by
the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals
cancels the disuict court's temporacy stay of lbe U.S. EPA's administnltive order and allows it to take
effect. That adminisuative order
would only have affected water
being released into Sugar Run, a
tributary of Raccoon which at that
time was being parpally ~
Now, however, according to B.
J. Smith, ~P public affairs, all
water being discharged is now fully
treated.
Smith said Saturday morning
that the· company is still evaluating
the Sixth Circuit Court' s' order.
"We continue to follow all of the
guidelines set down.by Ohio EPA
in its order which allowed the ·
water fl:moval from the mine," slie ·

Thacker·resigns Reedsville residents push zoning
·M. • · . • •
elgs POSition

AMIFM Cassette • Sport Ap·
·

SPECIAL PURCHASE USED CARS

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - While the Sixth
Circuit Court of Appeals ruled
Thursday to vacate the Sept. 10
ordec from the U. S. Disuict Court
which temporarily prohibited the
U. S. EnVIronmental Protection
Agency from enforcing a halt to
pumping partially treated water
from Meigs Mine 31, that ruling
ap~ to have little relevan~e .at
this ume except, perhaps, as a JunsdictionallllBW:r.
Since Sept. 22, all water being
released from Meigs 31 by the
Southern Ohio Coal Co. into Raccoon and Leading Creeks and their
tribuwies has been fully treated
and meets applicable water quality
standards.

r

'

I

0

~

• -

•Buick, Olds, Pondac, Cadillac, GMC Truck
• F01d, Uncoln, Mercury
• Toyota

593-6641
Easl ~l01te Simi
Athens

•

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
, POMEROY -Even though Friday was her last official day of
· work, Paula Thacker, like the Energizer bunny, just seems to keep on
going, and going, and going...
Thacket, who recently resigoed
as Meigs County Econ.omic Development Director. was in her office
Friday morning conducting business as usual. Conspiciously absent
were boxes stuffed run of personal
items. Instead, 'fhas:ker was at her
desk with checkbook in hand, payina bills and working to the last
mFnute.
· Thacker, who is moving to
Ciarksville, Tenn., with her busband, Greg, said she plans 10 auend
·some committee meetings afler Friday ... without pay.
• "Someone has to go to represent
Meigs County," she said.
A Gallia County native and
Hi h
. A de
graduate o fGall18 ca my g
School, Thacker is no strange!~' to
Oallia and Meigs counties . She
received an associate degree and a
bachelor's degree in political scicnce from Austin Peay State Uni vcrsity in Clarksville.
Upon returning to Gallia County, she was eventually named executive direcwr of the GaUia County
Chamber of Commerce and played
a role in developing the county's
Unitcd Way campaign which, as
she poinied out, rais ed about
$138,000 in emergency funds during the last two years.
She became Meig s County
Director of Economic Develop·
ment in February, 1992, and almost
immediately became involved in
the counly's bid for a state prison.
Even though the county wasn't
selected as the site for the new
prison, Thacker said working on
the P.roject was not a total loss.
• If you don ' t try, you'll never
get anylhing," she coinme!'ted. It
established the framework for
cooperation between state agencies,
the county and villages, she said.
Thacker serves .on 23 separate
committees
including the
AI?palachian Task Force and the
Private Industry Council.

In addition, she cooperateo '"
forming the 1993 Manufactqring,
Wage, Benefit and Labor Survey
for the Southeastern Ohio Regional
Council and served on the Five
County Cbalitioil which fought to
have flue-gas scrubbers installed at
the General James M. Gavin Plant
in Cheshire which will allow it to
use high-sulfur Ohio coal.
She has alSo devoted much time
to studying economic development
sites in Meigs County, work which
involved forming a site book identifying induslfial sit.es. potential
1'ndustrial parks, building sites and
office space.
The site book will be a great
h 'd
as~~ t!:h.ing has been workin.g
wilh the coal miners, she said. "I .
enjoy working with the working
pcofle; if !.can't help them, what
am here for"
Thacker offered this advice to
hersu••essor,whomeverl'tmaybe. :
~
.
"Try to stay neutral. and be posllive... Me1gs County IS gomg to~
some developmenL Cooperale wtth
other counties ... support them."
"Meigs County I~ a great pl~c~
to live and I am gomg to miSS 11,
she commented.
"No regrets," she said. "I've
learned a lot and have beeome a
better person for it." ·
Thacker also commended the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce.
"The chamber board has been
super to work for. The chamber
took the initiative three years ago
to take on the economic development office."
"The local business people have
accomplished a lot," she said. "I
encourage lbe Meigs County Board
of Commissioners to keep them
involved."
Thacker was treated to lunch
Friday by several county officials
including Auditor Nancy Campbell, Commissioner Janet Howard
Tackett, Prosecutor John Lentes
and Park District Director Mary
Powell·. In add1'u'on, Thacker was
also presented a certificate from
Tackelt in appreciation for her service to the county.

Leaders turn empty prison
into Halloween adventure

By CHERYL KULAGA
Times-Sentinel Starr
REEDSVILLE - Some residents
of Reedsville are taking action to
assure that their fale doesn't para!lei that of neighboring Coolville.
The Marietta-based Environmental Services lnc. .is currently
awaiting an Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency permit to build
an infectious Waste incinerator in
Coolville.
The Coolville Community
seems split over supporting or not
sapporting the Incinerator. Athens
County Commissioner Broc Irwin
summed up the mixed feelings.
He said, "The problem with this
type of thing is that lhere 's doctors
and scientists on both side of iL"
hI ·
'd h h h'
Thoug rwm. sat e ~s .1s
own pehrsorealnal.feelmthags bon the 101cm1 e was e ecterator. e
tzes
10
ed serve the public and said, " If
the people of Coolville don't want
it, I don't want iL..
At the same time, the Olive
Township zoning Commission
finalized
·
1an ·
I
a zonmg p alliS regularmeetingonSeptember21. ·
A zoning plan takes a map or a
certain area and divides that area
up according to use. In the city of
Athens, the only part of Athens
County which is zoned, for exampie, there are places zoned for res~dential use only. In an area that IS
zoned residential, no business or
industry is allowed without a special variance.
Currently, no part of Meigs
County is zoned.
ESI could have just as easily
chosen ReedsviUe as the site for the
incinerator. Athens County Commissioner Broc Irwin· said one of
the largest factors in choosing the
Coolville site was its proximity to
State Route 7.
Ellen Shelburne, a member of
the Olive Township Zoning Commission said, "News of Coolville
was definitely a motivating factor
for us to zone.
general feeling
was that they (the residents of
Coolville) woke up one morning
and this was knocking on their
door."
Shelburne added that is was not
· ·
tor which led
1Y 1he mcmera
on
Olive
Township to consider zoning
but a number of things over the
years. o.ne of these is the fact that

the state is currently looking for a
site to dispose of low-level nuclear
waste.
''There are possible and poten-·
tial dangers in having no control
over lnd.ustry in the area," she sll;id.
Gettmg the proposed zonmg
into effect may be a diffi~ult chalJenge. Stale Representative Mark
Mall)ne, D-94th district-South
Point, who visited Reedsville to
meet wilh iesidents on September
14, said.the cour.t usually vie~s
spot zonmg negauvely. The Olive
TownshlJI
. plan does not include all
of Olive Township.
Before the plan ever gets 10 the
courts though, it must be approved
by the Olive Townshii? Trustees,
the Meigs County Re tonal Plan11
ning Commission an eventua Y
go up for a vote by ~e people who
would be affected by tL
Malone thinks that zoning
should have happened 40 years ago
and that its a good idea but one that
has to be weighed very carefully, a
source in his office said.
·
"Zoning could make it impoSSIble to move economically," the

Tlie

J

0

Sarajevans
prepare for ·
long winter
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - Mila Kovacevic spent
a horrible winter last year in an
apartment blown open by a tank
shell. With the first freeze of the
new winter approaching, the hole
remains - there's little to fix it
with.
A prewar supply of wood saved
Ivan Krdelj last Y~· Now his shed
is empty and wood is more pr~cious than gold, and the asthmauc
62-year-old awaits the cold stoically: "I'll cover myself wiih a blanketand wait until spring."
Days are still warm and fighting ·
has dted down around Sarajevo.
U.N. negotiators say the Muslim-led government is closer than
ever to accepting an accord with its
Serb and Croat enemies .

OVP OFFICE GETTING A FACELIFT - Linda Lute, or
Linda's Painting Company, Pomeroy, is shown be!e Kivl.ng ~he
Ohio VilUey Publishing Company's composing room m G"alllpolls a
fresh coat of paint Saturday. An open house will be held at the
newspaper plant on Sunday, Oct. 10, from 1 unti14 p.m. In observance of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune's tOOth anniversary. (T-S
photo)
.

RG plays host to economic development center

RIO GRANDE - A new community service center designed to
The city is using a local compa- foster economic development
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) ny
that makes special -effects for lhroughout the region of southeastCity officials are hopiqg ghos~;S ~f
Universal
Studios to create " Night- em Ohio and northwestern West ·
the stale's most dangerous 'cnmlmare
on
Sp,ring Street - the Virginia has been established at the
nals still are haunting their old
Demon Pen.'
University of Rio Grande. ·
prison.
"This is a facility that has had a
The center, which was recently
The Ohio Penitentiary , which
l~gacy
for
a
lot
of
years,"
said
approved by the university's board
closed in 1972, is being turned into
a $iant haunted house for Hal- Mayor Greg Lashutka said. "The of trustees, is designed to provide
horrific factor is fairly high."
service to the region in which highloween this year.
.
er education, local governmeniS
and the private sector ally and
direct their strengths· to stimulate
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegov- Mostar, and some 500 Muslim pris- cooperation and economic developmenL
ina (AP) - Small signs of hope oners-of-war were freed.
" As our area approaches the
But soldiers fought on elsewere reported today amid the bitter
year
2000, the link between higher
blOo&lt;lshed of Bosnili's civil war: where, battling over the borders of
education
and economic developwounded people were evacuated Croat and predominantly Muslim
from a Croat-held tl&gt;wn. relief sup- mini-states that are likely to be ment at the local level is direct and
pointed," said Dr . Barry M.
plies reached the be§ieged city of . formed in a peace dell). · · ·

U.N. reports evacua·tion, fighting

3

Dorsey, Rio Grande's president. ·
"Higher educat.ion must ~ ~
integral elementm our reg10n s
efforts to creau: and retain jobs and
to stem the 'brain-drain' from the
area," he added. "In fact. a broadly
educated citizenry is the necessary
base from which these challenges
can be met."
Rio Grande's Center for Reo nomic Development will serve as a
neuual liaison between - and a
central meeting place for - loc;~li­
ties and business leaders in the
area. The university will provide
physical and .profession~! a~sistance for rcg1onal orgamzauons
that are dedicated to improving the
economic development and quality
·0 r life in the region.

Both the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council (SEORC) and the
newly-formed Regional Economic
Development Association (REDA)
have approached the university
concerning utilization of services
offered through the center.
A central focus of Rio Grande's
Center for Economic Development
will be to promole regionalism.
"Communilies in soulhem Ohio
and northwestern West Virginia
must overcome political, parochial
and geographical barriers and func . tion as a unit in order to achieve
success in retaining and recruiting
business and industry," Dr. Dorsey
5l!id. "These neighboring co!'lmunilies share the same economtc and
social problems.

"Given the relatively small population and political bases of these
individual communities, it is
unlikely that anythinl! short of a
collaborative effon w1ll succeed,"
he added.
. Services to be offered through
the university's economic development center include the development of a centrallibnuy on emerging business ttends, use of the institution's ~tswriting professionals
to pinpotnt infonnalion on new and
exiSting sources of public and private: funding for locally signifu:ant
projects, and assistance in promoting the region through the development of literature and advertising
pieces focusing on the region.

�11m•

Sentinel

11113

. September 26, 1993

OHIO Weather
Sunday, Sept. 24i

r--

Accu-Weatber• forecast for

conditiODJ and

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Plea81lnt, WV

Tri-County Briefs·.--- Crash on _160 sends tw~ area people to hospital ·

City police plllce 2 in jail

MICH.

GALUPOLlS - Gallipolis police jailed two men Friday.

. Arrested were Joseph S. White, 18, RL 2, McAnbur, for mcnac-

mg, an~ B_rian S. King , 22, 39 Chillicothe Road, Gallipolis, for
domesnc vtOicnce.

e
!Mansfield ls7"

PA.

Area woman ticketed for DUI

I•

GALLIPOLIS - Debra L. Jeffers, 35, Racine, was cited early
Saturday for driving under the influence, driving left of center and
no ~t belt, lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol

IND.

. reported.

71°

• lcolumbusl71•

•

'HOMECOMING ROYALTY · Carrie Zerkle, daughter or
Sharon Zerkle and the late Paul Zerkle or New Haven, was
crowDed 1993 Walaama Homecoming Queen during halftime cere·
!llonles Friday night. Zerkle Is belag Ci'qwned by 1992 homecom1n11 queen Leab OhliDaer. Others pletnred, left to right, Jessi
W.VA.

Fields, seniOr candidate; Danny Edwards, Zerkle's acort; Chris
Knapp, acort; and Beth McDermitt, sealor eandldate. Not pictured - Matt Benson, Field's escort. Miss Zerkle w11 pretenled a
Tiara, courtesy of K&amp;C. (OVP photo by G,ary Clark)

GAU.IPOLIS - Mill Creek Road will re-open Tuesday, City
Manager Glenn Smith announced. Traffic h.ad been blocked from
going over Mill Creek Bridge, which. was replaced by a Iandftll in
recent construction.
nie contrac!Qr, Belville Construction, has completed work ahead
of schedule, Smilh said, and lhe city and county should finish lheir
parts of the job Monday.
·
The roadway will be double sealed and allowed to stand over the
winter. Hot mix pavement will be poured over the road in the summer of 1994.
·

Rain soaks

Midwest
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

Weather .
Soulh·Cenlral Ohio
Sunday, cloudy with a chance of
showers. Highs in the mid-70s.
Chance of rain is 40 percent.
Extended forecast: .
Monday through Wednesday
There will be ·a chance of showers Monday. Highs will be 65 to

75. Lows will be in the 50s. Tuesday, there is .a slight chance of
showers. Highs will be in lhe 60s.
Lows will be in the upper 40s to
lower 50s. Fair Wednesday. Highs
will be in the 60s. Lows will be
mostly in lhe 40s.

Tourism showcase
scheduled Oct. 15-17
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Stan
POMEROY - "Showcase,
Meigs County". a program geared
to promOie festivals, activities, talent and craftspeople of Meigs
County, and identify lhe county as
a destination for tourists will be
- staJed Oct. 15-17 at the Rock
Spnngs Fairg!'ounds.
"It promises something for
everyone" said Cindy Oliveri,
Extension Agent, Home Economics/CRD/Chairman of the
Meigs County Extension Office
and Mary Powell, Meigs County
Park District director, c~Xhairmen
of the event.
. Powell and Oliveri are working
~ilh a group of volunteers to coordinate the showcase.
• Oliveri said Friday that disttict
and state officials h.ave been invited and several are expected to
attend the opening ceremonies
scheduled for Friday, Oct. 15 at 2
p.m. Prior to the opening ceremonies which will include a ribbon
cutting, the Eastern and Meigs
Bands will perform.
A reception and entertainme'nt
will immediatelr, follow lhe opening. Catering w1ll be by Gilmores
assisted by the Meigs High School
Future Homemakers of America
and the bands. .
Among the dignitaries invited
are Gov. George Voinovich, Congressman Ted Strickland, Rep.
Mark Malone, Sen. Jan. Michael
Long, Nancy Hollister of lhe Governor's Office on Appalachia, and
Donald Jakeway, director of the
Ohio Deparunent of Development.
An emph.asis of lhe commiuee,
according to Oliveri, has been to
get publicity on not only th e
upcom ing showcase but other
things which serve to enhance
Meigs County as a tourist place. To
that end information about the
showcase is being pubUshed in several Ohio magazines, in brochures
of lhc Ohio Department of Development brochures, and in local and
regional newspapers.
A part of the publicity budget
has come from an Innovative Grant
from the Ohio State University
Extension Service.
The emphasis now. according 10
Oliveri, is toward developing displays and exhibits at the fairJ!lOunds. The educational displays

(USPS SlS-800)
Pub lished el ch Sund a y, I! H

Th ird Ave.,

Gallipo lis, Ohio, by the Oh io Val ley Pl.lb lishing
Company/Multimedia, Ioc. Second clau post8QC Pllid at Galllpolis, Ohio 4563 1. Entered as

lOCODd chw mailing matter at Pomeroy, Ohio,
~t Offict:.
Member: The Auoc ialed Pru., and th e Ohio
NewspapeJ Anociation, National Adllen.isi og

Represe.ntali ve, Branha m Newspaper Sa l e~
733 Third Avenue , New York, New Yor t:'
10017.
SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier w Motor Roule
One Week.. ....................... .............................90,
One Year...... ....... ..................... _
_ .. $46.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICE

Sunday..................... _,, ...... ..... _ _ _ st.oo

No subscriptions by mail permitted in areas
where motor carrier aervict il availtble.
The Sunday nmea:-Sentinel will not be reapon·
aible for adva.Dce payments made to carrien.

MAIL SVBSCRIP110NS
Sund.,. Onl1

One Ye."........... ,... _,,, .................... _........ $47.84
Six Monlhs .............. ............................ - .. 124.79
D•Ut and Sund•y

MAILSUBSCRIP110NS
lntide County
13 Wceb...................... ....................... .. ,.$2 1.84

will include anti'lue and classic
cars and model trams. Demonslrations of pioneer sldlls will be featured, and a kiddie traciOr pull is
scheduled for 4 p.m. daily in the
show arena.
Representatives from the 91st
Ohio Volunteer Infantry Company
B will present a Civil War living
history at a camp site on lhe fairgrounds over the weekend.
VisiiOrs will h.ave the opportunity to view and purchase crafts by
local artists including basket makers, creators of walkh1g sticks,
dried flower arrangements, and
herbal creations, and to sample
homenwle apple butter.
Hunting and fishing displays
will provide information for lhe
outdoor sportsman just in time for
the fall hUI)ting season.
For those who love .the outdoors
there will be a map for a self-guided fall foUage tour along lhe river."
Anolher feature of the weekend
will be a Meigs County Flower
Show. The lheme of tile show will
be based on lhe Meigs County song
"Heart of lhe Valley". This show
will be coordinated by representatives of Meigs Garden Clubs and
the public is invited to exhibit.
Janet BoUn, an accredited judge of
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs and past president of that
association, is coordinating the
show.
A petting zoo wiU be handled by
Soulhern FFA members to high- ·
light youlh programs and livestock
production in the county.
Meigs County l;msinesses
including vegetable, flower and
fruit producers will display lhe latest in technology for the growing
horticulture industry in Meigs
County on Friday.
Food will be served and entertainment provided all three days,
Oliveri reports.
The showcase is open to the
pubUc and is free of charge

Woman loses battle
to preserve house
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A
house on the National Register of
Historic Places and one of lhe few
documented Underground Railroad
outposts in Ohio was demolished to
make room for an office park.
Bonne McDannald, whose late
husband's family built the McDannald Pioneer Homestead on what is
now lhe city's northeast side, had
wanted it preserved for future generations.

By The Assoelated Press
Rain soaked lhe Midwest Satur.
day, bringing renewed flooding to
an already water-weary region.
The Southeast was expecting to
cook again today, while snow was
forecast in lhe northern Rockies.
The storm system responsible
for the deluge ~hit pans _of·eastem Kansas and western Missouri
on Friday moved toward lhe North·
east today, although scattered
showers should linger. Aash flood
watches were posted overnight
Some areas have received a foot
or more of rain since Thursday
night, sending rivers and creeks
over their banks again and into
homes. Cow Creek flooding caused
the Pittsburg, Kan., water treatment
plant to shut down Friday afternoon, affecting some 20,000 peo.
ple.
Clouds from the storm front
were expected 10 cover lhe Northeast by tonight, with rain reaching
lhe Appalacfi~s by midnight
The Southeast weather remains
stuck in summer: sunny, hot and
humid.' Record highs were tied or
broken Friday from Miami to
Houston. Temperatures today were
expected to reach the 90s again.
A surge of colder temperatures
headed toward northern Wyoming
Saturday, lhreatening snow in the
mountains and snow mixed with
rain in the lower elevations by
tonight
Clear skies and warm weather
was forecast across most of the
West.
Most of lhe country was expecting highs in lhe 60s or 70s Saturday. with some 80s in the South
and along the West Coast. The
desert Southwest was expecting
90s and I OOs.
The high. temperature for the
nation Friday was 101 degrees at
bolh Palm Springs and Thermal in
California.

Homeless
veterans offered
•
services
CINCINNATI (AP)- A civilian stand down is being staged this
weekend as a way of offering food,
showers and legal and social services 10 homeless veterans.
Stand down is a military term
describing time taken by a soldier
for rest before returning to banle.
"We're going to take lhe burden ·
of looking for food and shelter off
them for a three-day weekend,''
said Bill Boettcher, administrator
of the Hamilton County Veterans
Service Commission.
" At rest and cleaned up, wearing new clolhes and with food in
their stomachs, lhey should lhen be
able 10 devote some time 10 lhinking about what we have to offer
them in social services.' '
The Greater Cincinnati Coalition for the Homeless estimates
that a lhird of tbe estimated 20,000
homeless people in the area are- veterans.
"We' re not going to whip
homelessness in three days,'' said
Laura Sutton, stand down coordinaiOr and associate chief of social
work services at lhe Cincinnati VA
Medical Center.

Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2

released. .
.
Accordmg to the acc1dent
report, Russell was soulhbound on
State Route 169 when she stopped
to make a left tum ~ was struck
from behm~ by a vehicle driven by
Glen E. CUne, ,22, 660 Wells Run
Road, Crown C!ty.
Cline was cited for failure to
mamtam an assured clear distance
ahead. Russell 's vehicle sustained
heavy, disabling damage. Cline's

GALLIA COUNTY
JUNIOR FAIRGROUNDS

4

One Day Only-4:30 &amp; 7:30 P.M.

MONDAY, OCTOBER

vehiCle sustained moderate dam age. Both were towed from the
scene
·
Three .penple were injured but
refused treaunent Friday afternoon
fo llowing a two-vehicle accident in
Addison Township, GaiUa County,
lhe patrol reported.
Injured were drivers Paul a M.
Kemper, 17, 588 Georges Creek
Road, Gallipolis, and Richard s.
Manl ey Jr., 17, 151 Mo unt Tabor
Road, Vinton, and Bradley S. Kernper, 14, 588 Georges Creek Road,
Gallipolis, who was a passenger in
Ms. Kemper's vehicle.
Ms. Kemper and Manley were
southbound on Little Kyger Road
(County Road 15) when Manley

slOpped for a school bus and wail
struck from behind by Ms. Kemper
Ms. Kemper was cited for failure to maintain an assured clear
dis tance. }Ier vehicle sustained
heavy, disabling damage and was
towed from the scene Manley's
vehicle sustained light damage and
was driven away
•
A Patriot youth was cited for
failure to control Friday night fo!.
lowing a one-vehicle accident in
Green Township, Gallia County,
lhe patrol reported.
·
Chris!Qphcr W. Queen, 16, 3790
Little Bullskin Road, was northbound on Stale Route 775 when he
· (Continued oa A·7)
·

Gallipolis Jaycees &amp; Galha Co. Fair Board

Articles of incorporation filed

Saturday
lcs

GALLIPOLIS - A Vm to n
:"?man a~ d her pa_ssenger we~e
IDJured Friday mommg when thetr
vchi~le was .struck from behind, lhe
G~ Iha -Metgs Post of th e State
Hi~way Patrol reported.
eggy I. Russell, 27, 97 Dave
Lane, and Kyle S. Ru ss ell, 3
months, were transported by .the
Oallta County Emergency Medical
Service to Holzer Medical Center,
where they were treated and

Mill Creek Bridge reopens Tuesday

I

Sunday Times sentlnei-Pa~A3

t

GAU.IPOLIS - A local company recently filed for articles of
incorporation in Secretary of State Bob Taft's office.
Filing was D. L. Martin Trucking Co., David L. and Jolynn Martin. The inco!)!Orating agent is David L. Martin, 5885 State Route
218, GaiUpolis. '

·oF

, 9 s,

Free immunizations are offered
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Health Department will
give free immunizations Sept. 27 to children aged 2 months to
kindergarten.
The immunizations will be given at lhe Vinton Village Hall from
9-11:30 a.m., and at lhe Gallia Metropolitan Estates, 325 Buck
Ridge ~oad, Bidwell, from 1 to 3 p.m.
Children must be accompanied by their parents and each child
must h.ave a shot record.

ANNIVERSARY

NEVER
BEFORE
SUCH A VAST ARRAY OF
WORLD-RENOWNED
CIRCUS MARVElS AND
FEATURES IN ONE MIGHTY
PROGRAM .

Malone to speak at Gallia board
. FALCONS DE-STRIPE TIGERS •
Wahama High School hosted its annual bome·
coming parade through New Haven, Hartford
and Muon Friday afternoon. Pictured above Is
the seventh grade ftoat, tbe .Class of '99's "Fal-

Proposal would
ban weapons
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The state should be able 10 prosecute people who take to schools
weapons th.at are fake but' look real,
a lawmaker said.
Rep. Pat Tiberi, R-Cblumbus,
proposed legislation that makes
~arrying a knife or look-alike
weapon a fourth-degree felony on
the ftrst offense and a lhird-degree
felony for second-time offenders.
. "£ th!nk it is outrageous you can
bnng this mto a classroom, point it
at lhe teacher and you are not going
to get prosecuted under Ohio law,"
Tiberi said Thursday.
During a news conference, he
displayed plastic cap guns, BB pistols and olher fake or toy weapons.
Some had been altered to look like
a real weapon.

.*
- HUGE*ZOO*

GALLIPOLIS - State Rep. Mark Malone, D-Soulh Point, is
scheduled 10 speak at the Gallia County Local Board of Education's
regular meeting 6:30p.m. Monday at lhe administrative office, 230
Shliwnee Lane.
·
Superintendent Robert Lanning said Malone will discuss lhe possibility of obtaining financial assistance from the state to build a
cenlralized high school for the district.

cons De-Stripe Tigers," as it travels througb
Mason. ·First place ftoat was won by the freshmen, second place juniors, t hird place sopho·
mores, fourth place eighth grade and rtllh place,
seventh lll'ade. (OVP Photo by Mindy Kerns)

AT NO EXTRA CHARGE

.YOUR YOUNGSTERS SHOULD SEE
AN OLD- STYLE AMERICAN CIRCUS

Arthritis self-help course set
POMEROY- An arthritis self-help course will' be offered at lhe
Meigs County Health Department on the next ftve week§. The program will begin on Oct. I and continue from 1-3 p.m. on Fridays
through Nov. 5.
The course is being sponsored by the Ohio University College of
Osteopalhic Medicine and lhe Arthritis Foundation wilh funds from
lhe Oftio Department of Heal lb.
Instructors will be Norma Torres, R.N. and T.C. Ervin, R.N.,
bolh on lhe local heallh department staff.
The enurse is open to not only those with arthritis but also lhc
family of victims.
Emphasis will be on o/)lCS of arthritis, coping with arthritis, protecting your joints, workmg with your doctor, pain management,
.relaxation techniques, exercises, and arthritis medications.

In celebration of our 5th year anniversary
there will be. an

ARTS &amp; CRAFTS SHOW
OPEN HOUSE
Overbrook Center
Middleport, Ohio

Saturday, October 2, 1993
11' a.m. to 6 p.m • .
Arts and Crafts by Area Craftlimen:

EMS units answer 5 calls for help .

r; .

POMEROY - Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services responded to ftve calls for assistance Friday and early Sat·
urday morning. .
·
.
· Friday: 2:37p.m. Pomeroy to lhe county garage for Ted Warner
who was transported 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital; 4:21 p.m.
Pomeroy to State Route 7 and Union Avenue for Clara PuUins and
Pattick Steel, who bolh refused treatment; 7:58 p.m. Tuppers Plains
to Mount OUve for Elizabeth Barto who was transported 10 VMH.
Saturday: 1:26 a.m. Columbia ftre to County Road 27 for a car
ftre involving a vehicle belonging to Bob Wessels and 3:55 a.m.
Rutland to Depot StrjlCt for Iva Cremeans who was transported to

;;.:

VMH.

Free Table Space Available
For More Information Please
Contact Terri Stotts at Overbrook Center
at 992-6472 betwe.en 9·4 M-F
;1'

.

.

20

ELEPHANTS

20

GENERAL ADMISSION - Adult $7.00 ; 11 &amp; younger $4.00 if
purchased before sh·ow day: on show day, adult $8.00 ; 11 &amp; •
younger $5.!)0.
(Limited number of Preferred Seats , additional charge, ticket
upgraded only in the Big Top on Show Day.)

·

ADVANCE TICKETS ON SALE NOW

Big Bear, Hills, Carl's Shoe Store, Kroger,
Ohio Valley Bank, Gallipolis Chamber of
·Commerce and W. Va. Electric

i•

HOLZER CLINIC
Welcomes

·:Pomeroy man
[~held in jewelry
:;store break-in
: ~ POMEROY- A Pomeroy
:"man charged with breaking and
&lt;entering the K &amp; C Jewelry Store
&gt;on East Main Street, Pomeroy,
: early Saturday is confined to lhe
·'Middleport jail.
:: Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald
:-Rought said that Ronnie Coates,
&lt;34. of Pomeroy was apprehended
&gt;by Pomeroy Patrolman Dave Hud.illeston about 3:25 a.m.
:,- Huddleston, while on patrol,
; &amp;ow Coates run from the jewelry
•store toward the levee , and then
&gt;along the river where he was
.i:augh~ by lhe offtcer, Rought said.
l11e had no jewelry in his possession
1ill the time he was apprehended.
1
•: The chief said that an undeter:.JDined amount of jewelry was taken
: from lhe s!Qre. The alarm at K &amp; C
•alerted offtcers to lhe breaking and
:entering.
:: Coates allegedly gained entry to
·lhe establishment by b~ing out
: lhe glass in the front doof,.Tile jew. elry taken was from a sho\vcase
----..._
:jns1de, Rought said.

ARNOLD SATTLER, M.D.
Internist

:Couples receive
:~arriage licenses ·

to the

--·-Internal Medicine Dep-artment
Those wishing to continue their medical care with Dr. Sattler should call (4469620) the Medical Plaza to arrange a transfer of medical and x-ray records to
Holzer Clinic.
·

For an appointment call:
446-5131

: POMEROY - The following
~pi~ were recently granted maraage licenses m the Meigs County
~rob ate Court of Judge Robert
!&gt;UCk:
: . T~rry Eugen~ Hysell, 28, and
'(1ck1 Lynne M1ller, 35, both of
Pomeroy; Mark Martin Markh-am
49, and Patricia Ann Stanley,
!Jl&gt;th of Plantation, Fla.; Keith
Henry White, 25 , Racine , and
V!clti Lou Ctrter, 27, Pomeroy.

23:

.Dissolutions filed

An estimated 28 miUion {l.mericans suffer heoring wss.
Most don 't wear hearing aids. Why?

industry survey showed that 42 percent&lt;&gt;f those who purchased
hearing aids were less than fully satisfied with the experience. And, as
recent reports and studies point out, for many bearing aid consumers
negative emotions run much deeper.
The sad truth Is that many consumers are still uncertain where to
obtain competent, professional help with their hearing. Recent Food
and Drug Administration (F..D.A.) actions against several hearing aid
companies accused of misleading advertising is further evidence of an
Industry problem: too often, seUi!lg bas taken precedence over heal.thcare
in the dispensing or bearing aids.

u.....;..., aids themselves are 1at the problem

Th,ere's no doubt about it: the capab!Ulles of bearing aids bave been o.. rsold. But bearing aids
themselves are not the problem.
Hearing aids- if}it-and worn properly· can have a profoundly positive effect on people's Jives. Hearing
aids help people, but those seeking amplification need to be told the truth about what to expect from
hearing aids and they need to be appropriately evaluated. It bas been estimated that over balf of all
Americans who wear bearlng11!ds did not receive a proper medical evaluation before the Instruments
were fit. Little wonder, then, that success rates with ~oaring aids are so unsalisfactory.

CHnkal audiologist hearing care professionals

26 Woe b ....................................... ,..........$43.16
52 Weets.................................................. $14.76
Ratti Oullide CounfJ
13 Weeb .................................................. $23.40

26 Weeb ......................... ,. ...................... .$45.50
l2 Woeb... ........ .. ,. .. ,................................SI8.40

- s~.

•

.

Where do you go for the appropriate testing, counseling and filling necessary for success with hearing
aids? You'll be in safe bands with a reputable clinical audiologist. Ask/or one.
Your clinical audiologist should bave at least a master's degree in bearing disorders, and post.graduate
clinical training in diagnostic testing and bearing rehabilitation. He or sbe can provide all the necessary
hearing care you need, rrom ~ thorough dlagnoslk examination lo bearing aid fitting and usage training,
as well as counseUng in hearing and communication techniques. Clinical audiologists are not trained
merely to sell hearing aids, buy to give complete and accurate Information.
Before you buy, make sure your bearing aid provider has a master's degree in audiology from an
accredited nro-om.

Lisa Kod, M.S., CCC/A

~ POMEROY - The following Lisa Koch bas been In the audiology profession since 1979. Sbe received her

petitions for dissolution were ftled
recently in the Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Cowt of Judge Fred W.
Crow III:
~ Richard Douglas Darst Jr.,
Cheshire, and Dorolhy Alma Ihjrst,
f~ddleport; Emmogene Hamilton
.:111d Charles D. Hamilton, bolh of

Lisa Koch
M.S., CCC-A

master's degree In audiology from Gallaudet University. She is certified by the
American Speech-Language-Hearing Association and Is a fellow of the
American Academy of Audiology, as well as other professional organizations.
She Is active In bearing care issues on the local, stale and national levels.
For more.lnfotmatlon or an appointment, call her at 446·7619•

IN HEARING
Usa M. Koch
M.S., CCC·A
435 21111 Ave.
Galllpols
(614)446-7619

L-------------------------------------~----------~

DEAR TRAVEUN' FRIENDS,
WHAT A WONDERFUL SUMMER
OFTRAVELWE'VEHADANDNOW
WE'RE READY TO PACK UP OUR
WESTERN GEAR AND HEAD FOR
BRANSON,MO.FORAWEEKOFFUNANDACHANCETOENJOYTHE
BEAUTIFUL FALL COLORS ALONG THEW AY. THE OZARK MOUN.
TAIN PEOPLE OFFER THE BEST IN HOMESPUN HOSPITALITY AND
TOGETHER WITH THE GREAT MUSIC. RX&gt;D AND CRAfTS, MAKES
AWONDERFULCOMBINATION.WE WILLBESTA YINGOVERNIGIIT
INST.LOUISANDVJEWINGTHECITYFROMTHETOPOFTHEARCH,
OUR NATION'S TALLEST MONUMENT. ON THEWAYlBACK HOME
WE WILL STAY OVERNIGHT IN LOUISVILLE AT THE EXECUTIVE
INN AND ATIEND THE DERBY DINNER THEATER FOR l'HE PRODUcnON OF GUYS AND OOLLS. NEXT MORNING WE WILL TOUR
THE TRACK AND STABLES AT CHURCHILL OOWNS AND HAVE
BREAKFAST WITH THE JOCKEYS. WHAT A WAY TO HORSE
AROUND, HUH? IN BRANSON, WE'LL ENJOY PERroRMANCES AT
THE ANDY WILUAMS THEATER, THE MOUNTAIN MUSIC JUBILEE
AND THE TOP-RATED SHOll TABUSHI SHOW. WE'LL ALSO BE
SPENDING A DAY AT SILVER DOLLAR CITY. OUR BUS IS FILLED
AND WE'RE READY TO ROLL!
WEHADAFANTASTICTRIPTOCAPECODLASTMONTH.DURING
OUR THREE DAY STAY IN HYANNIS, MASS., WE ATIENDED THE
OUTDOOR CONCERT BY THE SEA GIVEN BY THE BOSTON POPS
ORCHESTRA. JUUA CHILD WAS mE HONORARY CHAIRMAN AND
AS WE OONNEDOUR CHEFS HATS, SHE CONDUCTED A"STIRRING"
MARCH WITH A LARGE WOODEN SPOON. OVER IQ,OOO PEOPLE
ATIENDED THE EVENT AND WE HAD GREAT SEATS. FOLLOWING
THE CONCERT WE HAD A LOBSTERBAKE AT THE BEAUI1FUL
DENNIS INN. WHILE IN HYANNIS, WE HAD AGORGEOUS DAy FOR
OUR 4 HOUR WHALE WATCHING CRUISE AND WERE LUCKY
ENOUGH TO SEE 14 WHALES WHO SEEMED TO PERFORM JUST FOR
US. A BEAUTIFUL SIGHT TO BEHOLD - HOW GRACEFUL THESE
LARGE ANIMALS ARE. WE ALSO SAW THE KENNEDY HOMES,
TOURED THE CHURCH THE FAMILY A'ITENDS WHEN ON THE
CAPE, MAILED POSTCARDS FROM THE POSTOFFICETHATFORMER
PRESIDENT KENNEDY VISITED DAILY WITH HIS CHILDREN WHEN
TilEY WERE SMALL AND AT HOME ON THE CAPE AND WE ALSO
STOPPED IN AT THEIR FAVORITE PENNY CANDY STORE AS WELL.
WE TOURED BOSTON ONE DAY WITH A STOP IN Pl.YMOUTH TO
VIEW THE PLYMOUTH ROCK AND THE MAYFLOWER. WEATHER
WASGREATANDTHEGENTLEOCEANBREEZESALONGWITHTHE
WARM SUNSHINE WAS SUCH A TREAT AFTER THE HEAT AND
HUMIDITY WE HAD AT HOME. OH,YES . WHILE AT THE BOSTON
POPS CONCERT, GOOD MORNING HOST CHARUE GffiSON AND
MICHAEL AND KlTIY DUKAKIS SAT IN FRONT OF US. WHAT FUN
TIMES.
OUR TRIP ONBOARD THE MISSISSIPPI QUEEN WAS ANOTHER
GREAT EXPERIENCE. THE BOAT IS BIG ENOUGH TO BE COMFORT,.
ABLE AND YET SMALL ENOUGH TO GET TO KNOW THE CREW AND
OTHER PASSENGERS. YOUR EVERY IIEED IS CATERED TO AND
THE BOAT IS CLEAN AND BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED. ARRIVING
ON BOARD. WE WERE GREETED BY THE UPBEAT SOUNDS OF
DIXIELAND AND RAGTIME MUSIC PROVIDED ALMOST CONSTANTLY BY THE GREAT MUSICIANS. THE DANCERS, SINGERS
AND ENTERTAINMENT STAFF WAS TOP-NOTCH. THE FOOD WAS
NON-STOP. AND CAN'T BE SURPASSED ANYWHERE. WE WERE
FORTUNATETOGET A LONGER TRIPDUETOTHESWIFfCURRENT
ON THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER AND THE FLOODING, SO WE WERE
TAKEN FROM CINCINNATI WHERE WE WERE SCHEDULED TO
BOARD TO LOUISVILLE FOR BOARDING, SO THEREFORE WE GOT
INTO THE GOOD OLD SUMMERTIME CRUISE THEME. WE WERE
GIVENSTRAW HATS, TREATED TO ICE CREAM, LEMONADE, POP.
CORN AND OTHER SUMMERTIME TREATS WHILE A'ITENDING A
CARNJVAL ON THE TOP DECK COMPLETE WITH GAMES AND
PRIZES. IN THE MAIN LOUNGE. FORMER BIG LEAGUE BASEBALL
PLAYERS INCLUDING LEW BURDEITE AND BOB FRIEND,
AUTOGRAPHED PICfURES AND DISCUSSED THEIR BASEBALL
EXPERIENCES.
IT WAS SO RELAXING JUST TO SIT IN THE ROCKING CHAIRS
ALONG THE DECKS AND ENJOY THE FRESH AIR. SUNSHINE AND
SCENERY IF YOU DIDN'T WANT TO PARTICIPATE IN THE MANY
ACTIVITIES PLANNED. WE DOCKED IN MADISON, INDIANA, AND
MAYSVILLE, KY. AND VISITED THE MAIN STREET SHOPS WHILE
SOME OF OUR GROUP TOURED HISTORIC SITES. FOLLOWING DINNER EACH EVENING WE lilANCED THE NlGIIT AWAY BEFORE
ENDING THE DAY WITH THE GORGEOUS MIDN!Giff BUFFET. WE
CELEBRATEDTHEANNIVERSARJES OF GARY AND SUE MILLER OF
NEW HAYEN AND BOB AND JEAN GILMORE OF MIDDLEPORT.
BOB WAS FACING HEART SURGER 'Y AT THE CLEVELAND CLINIC
THE WEEK AFTER THE CRUISE SO WE WERE HAPPY TO SPEND
THIS SPECIAL TIME WITH THEM (AND WHAT SPECIAL PEOPLE
THEY ARE). WE ARE NOW HAPPY TO HEAR THAT ALL IS GOING
WELL FOR BOB AND ARE LOOKING FORWARD TO HAVING THEM

TRAVEL WITH US AGAIN SOON. CATHERINE CLEVELAND OF
POINT PLEASANT. JOINED BY MEMBERS OF HER FAMILY FROM
MARYLAND AND COLUMBUS. OHIO, WAS ALSO IN OUR PARTY
ANDWE CELEBRATEDHERBIRTHDAY AS WELL. WHAT AGREAT
TIME WE HAD · AND WE WILL DOIT AGAIN!!!
ON OCT. 9 WE HAVE A FULL MOTORCOACH FOR. THE W.V.U.
HOMECOMING GAME IN MORGANTOWN. WE ARE COLLECTING
OUR GOLD AND BLUE ITEMS OF DRESS AND DECORATION SO
WE'LL BE READY TO CHEER ON THE MOUNTAINEERS. (YES, WE
ARE PLANNING A FUTURE MARSHALL OUTING AS WELL).
BEFOREICLOSETHIS COLUMNIWOULDPERSONALLYLIKETO
TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO CONGRATULATEoOUR OFFICERS
AND BOARD OF DIRECfORS, BOTH PAST AND PRESENT, FOR
PASSING THE $100,000,00.00 MARK IN ASSETS.THE BANK ENJOYS
A GREAT REPUTATION FOR HELPING OUR LOCAL PEOPLE
ACHIEVE THEIR HOPES AND DREAMS AND THEY DO IT IN
OOWNHOME STYLE. I AM PLEASED TO BE A PART OF IT AND
THANK THE EMPLOYEES, BOARD OF DIRECTORS, PRESIDENT
JOE ELUSO
. N, AND ALL CONCERNED FOR THE SUPPORT "'lD·
ENCOURAGEMENT THEY HAVE GfVEN ME IN OUR BRAND N'I:W
PEOPLES CHOICE PROGRAM. IT IS BOTH AN ENJOY ABLE AND
REWARDING PROFESSION. I ALSO APPRECIATE THE COOPERATION AND PARTICIPATION OF OUR OVER 400 MEMBERS WHO
MAKE OUR EFFORTS WORK. THANKS TO ALL, AND

~~~OLL,

•

'

'

'

'

,
,

~

.• ..

.•

I .·,

.

MARY FOWLER, CO,ORDINATOR
PEOPLES CHOICE

�•

I

Ohio/W.Va.
Ex-W.Va. lottery
director convicted
on 2 fraud charges

September 26, 1993

By JENNIFER BUNDY
Associated Press Writer
C~~TON -Former .~ DirectorButc:h Bryan faces ,up to
25 yean m pnson and $1 .25 millioo mfines after bemg convicted of federal corruption charges.
SC!'tencing was scheduled for Dec. 6 in U.S. District Coon. Bryan
remamed free on a $10,000 bond.
A federal jury Friday convicted Bryan of wire fraud, mail tiaud lying to
a federal grand jury and insider trading. The jury had deliberated '1 1 hours
over two days.
··
.
"We think .(the ver~ct) Send~ a s1r0ng message to people who are llllgaged m pu~IJC con:upuon acnv1~. 1.t's always been a high priority of this
c~:k~u':r~l conunue to be a h1gh priority," said Acting U.S. Attorney
PROJECT FUNDED - Rio Grllllk Community Collere President Barry M. Doney, left, Is praented a cbeck by House 'Speaker
Venal G. Rl"e Jr. to rund the first-year operations of tbe Ohio
Appalacblu Center for Higher Edaeatlon.

Rio Grande joins other
area institutions to push
increase in college-going
RIO GRANDE - The presidents of Ohio's 10 Appalachian
state institutions of higher education met recently to launch an initiative to promote access to higher
edu cation for the people of the
region.
Rio Grande Community College
Presi dent Barry M. Dorsey is a
member of the group and a dll'ector
of the Ohio Appalachian Center for
Higher Education.
Funded by a two-year allocation
of $1 million from the legislature,
the Ohio Appalachian Center
res ulted from a study that found
high. school graduates in state's 29
Appalachian counties attend college at a significantly lower rate
than graduates in the rest of the
state.
As a result of the two-year
study, the Appalachian Center has
been created to su)lport the effons
of the 10 colleges m making a concerted effort to remedy the problem.
The center will be ho used at
Sha wnee State University in
PortSmouth and will be &lt;lirected by
Wayne White of Coal Grove, a former superintendent of schools.

Most of the funds granted by the
legislature will be "re-granted" to
participating colleges, universities
and public schools in the area to
create and implement local solutions to the low college-going rate
of Appalachian graduates.
"I expect that Rio Grande will
use part of its $35,000 grant to
expand its Better Information Program, a project using institutional
volunteers to encourage students at
l)le middle school level to consider
the benefits of college," Dr. Dorsey
said.
" I hope we will be able to
extend the tutoring services we
provide to local elementary and
secondary stud ents to eliminate
academic deficiencies and help
ensure th at they become high
school graduates," he added.
In addition to Rio Grande and
Shawnee State, participants in the
Appalachian Access Improvement
Project include Hocking, Belmont,
Jefferson and Muskingum Area
technical colleges; Southern State
and Washington State community
coll~ges; Ohio and Kent State universities; and the Ohio Board of
Regents.

The investigation will continue, MiUer said.
"I can't teD you it's pointed in any direction," he said.
~e would not say if Gov. Gaston Caperton was a target
It would be unfwr to the governor and unfair to the investigation to
make any predici!Ons about what we'Dcome up with," Miller said.
. Bryan testiJied Wednesday that Caperton was aware of some of his acllons.
" It has been a difficult time for Butch Bryan and his family. The jury
has spoken. !.believe it is important now to move forward," Caperton said
after the verdict was announced.
"More than ever, I re~n committed to ensuring the honesty and integnty of the West V~rg~rua Lottery, which I believe to be one of the best
m the nation," he said. ·
Bryan, 59, headed the state lottery from April 1990 until he resigned in
Febnuuy.
.
. In an interview in August, Bryan said his public service was in honor of
hiS late son, Timothy Bryan, 20, who died in 1988 while home from
sc~~l to attend his father's birthday party _and his sister's wedding.
When I was sworn mto office, I dedicated my public service to the
memory of my son. The most important thing to me is to serve with honor
and anyone who !hinks otherwise is crazy," Bryan had said.
.
'
Prosecutors S3ld Bryan steered the commission's advertising contract to
a Parkersburg firm, Fablgren Martin Inc. Bryan suppressed an evaluation
report that gave a more favorable rating on the advertising contract to the
Arnold Agen~y of Charleston, the federal indictment said.
Bryan testiJied that Capertoo had approved of his decision to give the
contract to Fahlgren Martin. He said Smoot Fahlgren, a part-owner of the
company, was a Caperton supporter.
Bryan also ri_gged bids so Video Lottery Consultants of a Bozeman,
Mont, would WI~ a contract to expand video louery statewide , prosecutors
satd. Bry~ testiJied ~hat he adv1sed Caperton of all his activities to
promote v1deo lottery and 11 was up to Caperton to decide when and how
to e~pand use of th.e machines throughout the state.
V1deo lottery IS legal only at Mountaineer Park in Chester a
thoroughbred horse racetrack where 165 machines have operated si~ce
June 1990 as an experiment.
·
The state announced plans last fall to expand the program statewide to
. 4,500 bru;s. clubs and resorts. Caperton canceled the expansion plans
earli~r thiS year. A day later, word of the federal investigation became
pubhc.
Bryan also was accused of buying Video Lottery Consultants stock in
September 1992.
Pro~utors said he lied to a federal grand jury about the timing of the
expansmn and about the mfluence the company had on the development of
the state's request for video lottery contract proposals,

·P rincipal defers assault charge for board member
No new talks slated
in Monroe County
district's job action
By The Associated Press
A Youngstown junior high princi pal sai d he would not press
assault charges agai nst a school
board member, while a Mahon ing
Co unty judge walked out of his
cJurtroom durin g negotiations.
Volney Rogers J unior Ji ig h
p-·r~ cipa l Richard Saul sa id Fri day
h! would not seck ~ssa u l t chwgcs
1 ·~i n s! Richard Hanni III. Sa ul
1cr·usctl J·l anni of ut t:H kint' him

during an argumen t on Sept. ~ . the
first day the district's 950 teachers
went on strike.
Hanni was charged with using
indecent language in a school, a
'" i~dcme an or. But Youn gstown
Prosecu tor Maureen Cronin said
Friday there was not enough cvilc.nce to fi le assa ult charges agru nst
Hanni.
Hann i acknowledged using
1mpropcr language but denied
1 .',tulting Saul,
'iaul said he would not appeal
•.r •. Croni n's decision but added
1r 1 he might pursue civ il a~t i011
.1g:11nst Hanni.
Ma ho ning County Commo n

Pleas Judge R. Scott Krichbaum
ordered school officials and teachers to repon to his court on Manday to begin intensive negotiations.
The judge criticized both sides
for not dealing with issues that
could settle the walkout. He read
his order, which stated that both
sides had failed to make much
progress, and left the courtroom
without hearing from either side.
Federal mediator David Thorley
scheduled a negotiating session for
Saturday.
Meanwhile, Switzerland or Ohio
teachers who met Friday said they
would distribute yeUow ribbons to
those who support the union. No
new negotiations were set.
Teachers in the 3,300-studcnt
Monroe County district, about I 00
mil es east of Columbus, had
planned half-day walkouts every
other day for two weeks. But the
school board closed classes those
days.
Schools closed again whim th e
union agreed Monday to extend its
walkouts to aft ernoons and
eve nings dail y. On Fr iday, th e
union authori zed daily walko uts
through Nov. I , if necessary.
In Cleve la nd, neg otiation s
between the Cleveland Teachers
Union an d the school board will
resume Monday . Talks broke off
Thursday.

The teachers voted 5,558-126
on Monday to reject a report of the
State Employee Relations Board,
which suggested as appropriate a
first-year wage freeze in a new
contract and cuts in health care
benefits.
Union President Richard DeCal·
ibus said there could be a strike
vote next week in the 72,000-stu·
dent district, Ohio's largest.
· In eastern Ohio's Belmont
County, the Barnesville Education
Association and the Barnesville
Association of Classified Employees voted Wednesday to reject
what was described as a final contract offer from the Barnesville
School Board.
There are 1,435 students in the
district. Members of the teachers'
union and the classified employees'
union will hold a meeting Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. No furth er talks

between the board and the unions
were schedqled before then. The
contracts for both unions expired
on June 30.

Hospital news
VEI'ERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - Albert
Martin, Pomeroy; Merle S. Davis,
Rutland.
Friday discharges - Jessie JarreD, Pomeroy.

COLUMBUS - A 16-year-old Asian boy lW been aenteneed to
18 yean to life in prison for killing a Laotian businessman in 1 robbery lasl year.
Chee Wo Yuen pleaded guilty Thunday to murdtz, kidnapping
and aggravated robbery with a IUD·
Yuen admitted to Franklin County Common Pleas JudjC John A.
Connor thai he shor Jack Kotinlavong on Aug. 27, 1992. whcl\ he
and three other Asian teens broke into K01mlavong'1 home.
Yuen was bound over from Juvenile Coun for trial as an adult
and will be eligible for parole in 13 years.
In exchange for his guilty plea, proteCutors reduced an agpavat~ !Dwder char~e and ~ four other counts. While the cx:iJinal
Indictment carried a possible death sentence, Yuen could rec:etve no
more than life in prison because he is a juvenile.
Yuen, a Chinese immigrant who four yean ago seuled with his
parents in Brooklyn, N.Y., is reportedly a member of the New Yorlt
gang GiiiJt Sing, or "Golden Star." He was the third teen convicted
in Kounlavong's slaying: A fourth suspect has not been found.

•

ByROBERTDVORCHAK
•

AP National Writer
SARALAND, Ala. - As the
• last three victims were pulled from
; the wreck of the Sunset Limited,
' investigators turned their attention
: to recovering the train's "black
: box" for help reconstructing
• Amtrak's worst crash.
: 'Ole device - a solid-state gad: get 4.5-by~ 11 inches wide and as
• thin as a credit card - was
~ removed from the locomotive and
r. sent Saturday to a laboratory in
~ RockviUe, Md., for swdy. The data
: could help resolve differences in
• re~rting times on Coast Guard and
logs.
.
• The 120-ton locomotive, pulled
: Friday from the lS-foor deep muck
: of Bayou Canot, contained the bod• ies of three Amtrak engineers,
: authorities said. The death toO from
: Wednesday morning's crash now
· stands at 47. Authorities said 163
: people survived.
. High-pressure water hoses
•removed silt and mud packed into
; the locomotive's cab. The engine's
•undercarriage was sheared off dur: ing impact, offiCials said.
: Two more engines and one
·cargo car have yet to be recovered,
:and that effort resumed Saturday,
according ..to CSX
Transportation
.
.

i

Grand jury indicts TV evangelist
COLUMBUS- A grand jury has indicted a television evangelist
on six counts of raping&gt;a boy when the boy was 10 and 11.
The Franldin County grand jury also mdicted William Wasmus
on Thursday on one count each of pandering obscenity and pandering sexuaUy oriented material, both involving a minor.
.
· The pandering charges stem from videotapes aUegedly showing
Wasmus, 38, engaging in sexual acts with the boy.
Wasmus, of the Chwch of the Uving Savior, was in the Franklin
County jail Thunday night on $200,000 bond.
The attacks aUegedly occurred between February and July 1990
when the boy was, lO and II. The boy told police the vi~
were made in the parish house next to lhe chwch, where televiSIOn
production ~uipment is housed.
Wasmus hved there until three years ago, said his mother, Patricia W8Sil)us-Pagnanelli. She is pastor of the 20-year-old independent miniStiy.

:rail

Shooting suspect pleads innocent
ATHENS - A woman indicted on charges she shot the man she
lived with plead«~ innocent Friday.
Teresa Rae Thomas, 28, was charged with aggravated murder.
She was accused of shooting Jerry W. Flowers, 40, on SepllS in
the couple's trailer near Sharpsburg, about 10 miles north of
Athens.
Common Pleas Judge Mike Ward set trial for Nov. 11.
Ms. Thomas was held in Athens County jail' on SSOO,OOO cash
bond.

Bond set in OU student's murder
ATHENS- A judge Fridliy set a $10 million bond for a fanner
Ohio University student charged with killing another for:mer student.
Athens County Municipal Judge Doug Bennetl set a preliminary
hearing for next Friday for Charlie Park, 26.
Park, who is from ~'~~san, South Korea, is charged with aggravated murder in the slaying of Andrew Jung, 24, of Seoul, South
Korea.
: Steven ArmSirOng, Park's at10rney, said his client plans to plead
mnocenL
Park was arrested in Maryland on Sept 16. He was returned to '
Athens Thursday.
Jung's body was found along U.S. Route 50 in Preston County,
W.Va., on Sept 4, two days after he was last seen in Athens.
'
.

~

~ Yeltsin

.

...

Foul play suspected in man's death
WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) - A man whose body was found
floating in a BeUaire creek last month suffered a blow to the head,
autopsy results show.
Dr. Irvin Sopher, chief medical examiner for West Virginia, had
ruled drowning as the cailse of death.
But Bellaire Police Chief Bob Wallace said Thursday that
Sopher's repon also showed David E. Lyle, 39, had head wounds.
Wallace said Lyle's injury included a se.vcre laceration to the left
ear and a half-inch-deep puncture wound behind the left ear.
"It is undetermined at this time whether the wound occurred
before or after death," Wallace said. "Although the official cause
of death is drowning, the autopsy has certainly kept open the possibility of foul play."
Police said Lyle had received threats prior to his death.

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The pilot, Andrew Stabler, was
interviewed earlier by the FBI.
Alcohol breath tests administered to the crew by the company
nine hours after the accident
Wec)nesday proved negative, Hammerschmidt said, although that
. length of time could compromise
the integrity of the tests.
The results of urine tests are not
in yet. Coast Guard Lt. Bob Kirk
said those results will not be
released until the investigation is
concluded.
The NTSB also has requested
background information on the four
crewmen, including training and
medical records, as well as the
company policy on drug testing.
Andrew Harris, spokesman for
the barge company, said Friday the
towboat had maneuvered into
Bayou Canol to " tie off" ~uring

fog, but he could not confirm the
barge hit the bridge. Earlier this
week, Harris said the towboat inadvertently entered the bayou because
of foggy conditions.
The NTSB 's chief investigator,
Russ Gober, said Friday that confusion exists over the accident reporting times, but he said such time differences are "quite common in
accident investigations.' '
The chief discrepancy is that the
NTSB put the accident at 2:50 a.m.
COT, based on the Sunset Limited's report when it passed its last
clear track signal, and Stabler's
mayday call to the Coast Guard
was handwritten into a log at 3: 18
a.m.
"Someone may have jotted
down a time, and his watch may
have been five minutes off," Gober
said.

lly ALAN COOPERMAN
Aslloclated Press Writer
, MOSCOW -Boris Yeltsin's
. riot police ringed the barricaded
; parliament building Saturday but
• made no attempt to disperse the
: htwd-Iine lawmaken and protes1m
; who have defied the president for
• five days. '
., • ·
·
: Yeltsin's tactic llllllCill'ed to be to
: keep pressure on ilie lawmakers,
• but not to risk violence. With the
: anny, police and public opinion on
• his side, Yeltsin seemed confident
~ of winning the waiting game.
: "It's quiet in Moscow - you
·see yourself,'' he said Friday.
: After a chilly night standing
•artllind bonfires, the crowd outside
:the barricaded parliament had
;dwindled to fewer than SOO pecple
•by Saturday morning. It was a mot-

ley assortment of diehard communists, extreme Russian nationalists,
monarchists and anti-Semites.
"You foreign turds, get off our
land!" an angry woman in a heavy.
wool coat bellowed at photographers. "Go buy land in Israel!"
Ar least 1()0 legislators
remained inside the 19-story parliament building, known a5 the White
House, where they have defied
Yeltsin since he dissolved parliament last Tuesday to break the
country's political stalemate.
Hundreds of Interior Ministry
riot police in steel helmets and flak
jackets held their positions about
I00 yards from the barricades of
concrete blocks, pipes, steel reinforcing rods, wooden planks and
other debris. ·
Police allowed tired or hungry

protesters to leave, but did not let
new arrivals cross to ihe parliament' s side. People leaving .were
searched for weapons if ihey carried bugs or bulky clothes.
On Friday, Yeltsin had ordered
his security forces to disarm th.e
protesters and authorized them to
shoot to kill if threatened. The
protesters then hid their weapons,
mcluding a .few .dozen AK-47 rifles
and some Molotov cocktails.
Reporters saw some of the
protesters carrying what appeared
to be guns in heavy canvas bags to
a separate building on the parli!lment grounds. When one reporter
tried to enter the building, he was
detained briefly by self-declared
Fascist guards.
Despite his orders to security
forces, Yeltsin has offered repeated

Police also were looking for
some of the gunmen who attacked
"We have not used force and a military headquarters Thunday in
are not planning to," he said. the first violent clash since
"There will be no storming of the Yeltsin's decree.
White House."
The attackers, clad in camouAlso. on Friday, about 30 men flage uniforms and armed with
'and women earrying religious icons assault rifles, tried to fight their
and singing hymns marched around way into the military communicathe parliament, led by a Russian . tions center of the Commonwealth
Orthodox priest in black robes, of IndejiCI_ldent States. A policeman
beseeching police not to auack the who tr1ed to stop them was shot
and a woman living nearby was
demonstrators.
Later, a column of about 200 !tiDed by a stray buUet, police said.
On Friday, authoriues arrested
riot police carrying machine guns
and batons jogged around the Sbmislav Terekhov, leader of the
perimeter in a show of force. There right-wing Union of Russian Offiwere unconfirmed reports that cers, an anti-Yeltsin group that
police used rubber batons against claims to have thousands of supdemonstrators uying to block a porters in the military. Terekhov
troop convoy in a nearby neighbor- was identified as one of the attackers by witnesses, police said.
hood.
assurances that he hoped to avoid
~iolence.

"' iThree
Americans dead in Somalia after helicopter shot down
.
.

We are pleased to announce the opening of our newest branch at:

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Inc., the nut company that owns the
track.
The investi~ation by the National Transportallon Safety Board has
been hampered because it has been
unable to interview the pilot and
three crew members of the towboat
MV Mauvilla, o~ by the Warrior &amp; Gulf Navigation Co. Officials have said a barge struck a rail·
road bridge siKxtly before the Sunset Limited hurtled off the span in
~wn darkness' about II miles
north or Mobile.
The pilOt, eapl8in and two deckhands have referred authorities to
their lawyers, who failed to return
NTSB phone calls, said John Ham·
merschmidt, the board member
hf,lding the investigation.
"The boaom line is we need to
talk to the crew," Hammerschmi&lt;lt
said. "They have the information."

· The train crashed Into the murky water early
Wednesday, klllili~ at least 44 people after the
bridge it was crossmg collapsed. (AP)

•

Please call or stop in to visit
for all your investment needs.

JACKSON

SURVEYING THE WRECKAGE - Tbe
Sunset Limited engine lay on its side on a barge
Friday as It was moved to the bank of a bayou
for clea~lng and inspection near Moblle, Ala.

Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - How can
the North American Free Trade
Agreement be good for the environment? Let the White House tell
you.
When they start the hard-sell on
Capitol Hill this fall, Clinton aides
wiD stress - as U.S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor did Friday
-that NAFTA will bring about
nothing less than the cleanup of the
U.S.-Mexican border.
Kantor called NAFTA "the
most important trade agreement in
history in terms of the environment. " And a congressional ally,
Sen. Max Baucus, picked up the
theme, saying that because of
NAFr A, "the high bar has been
raised " on environmental stan.
dards negotiated in trade agreements.
Nonsense, replied Joan Claybrook, president of Public Citizen,
one of three groups that sued the
trade representative's office
because it had failed to conduct an
.assessment of NAFTA's environmental impact.
~egotiated by the Bush administration, NAFTA would create a
massive three-nation free trade
zone that critics say could seriously
harm the environment in the United
States, where environmenw sbmdards are comparatively strict
Clinton promised to address
potential environmental problems,
but Claybrook did not have a favorable assessment of NAFTA side
agreements Clinton aides negotiated.
"Baloney and crumbs," she

tries to avoid bloQdshed in lengthy standoff.

.

OHIO

..

By PETE YOST

: (Bottom line' rests
~ with crew of tug,
.
:investigators say

By The Associated Press

PATIENT
CONFIDENTIALITY
PROTECTED

NAFTA1:ampaign
pushes environment
as key for approval

.

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Asian faces prison for shooting

Sunday Times-Sentinel /AS

Hunt on
.rror cause
~.of deadly
iaccident

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) _Somali gunmen shot down a U.S.
Blackhawk helicopter that was
patrolling Mogadishu Saturday
morning, killing three crewmen.
Three other American soldiers
,were wounded in fighting near the

Wood[and Centers, Inc.
'

Ohio News in Brief:-..

Friday state lotteries
Pick-3: 1-4-0
Pick-4: 4-3-6-7
Buckeye 5: 5-S-23-27-30
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 9-3-6
Daily 4: 3-0-1-1
Cash 25: 14 -5-15-17-19

Nation/World

September 26, 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A4

s. ''llfl tn

1 r •• . . . .,..

I~

Member. NVSE, AMEX, SIPC

Other Advest OH locations: Canton, Cincinnati, Coh.irribus, Dublin, Fremont, Lancaster, Newark, ;
Steuber)vi!le , Springfield, Washington Court House
' 1,
•

. It was the first downing of a
helicopter in the capital in the 10month-old multinational mission in
Somalia. The mission was be$Uf1 to
protect humanitarian efforts m the
starving country, but which has
become incteasingly bogged down
in fighting with the forces of warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid.
A crowd of jubilant Somalis
' gathered around the wreckage,
according to reporters who went to
tbe scene several hours after the
' shooting.
Maj .
David
Stockwell,
spokesman for the mission's United Nations command in
Mogadishu, told The Associated
Press that the helicopter was hit by
a rocket-propelled grenade as it circled an area held by Aidid's fighters, causing an explosion and a fll'e.
The pilot was able to 'bring the
Blackhawk in for a landing on a
street some distance away, near the
city's port.
" The aircraft was consumed by
fue after landing," Stockwell said.
He said the pilot and co-pilot,
both slightly wounded, determined
that their fellow crewmen were
dead and made their way on foot to
a nearby control point manned by
United Arab Emirates troops.
Pakistani troopS and a, company
from the U.S. Quick Reaction
Force also responded and came
under fire from militiamen; three
Pakistani soldim and three Americans were wounded, Stockwell
said.
The wounded Americans, whose
identities were not released, were
in good condition, he said. .
Stockwell said Mogadishu's air.
port had taken six rounds of mortar
fue around 2 a.m. and that the helicopter had observed the firing coming from a weapon near the former

Presidential Palace.

-- .

The palace, on 1 low hilfilear
the center
. . ... . of
. the. .city,
. . is. in. an .area
..

.

conttolled by A1d1d. As ihe helicopter circled the palace, it was hit

by what Stockwell described "a
very lucky shot."

All attacks on forces in the
U.N.-led mission in the past three

NEW CAR SHOW

OHIO VALLEY BANK
Saturday, October 2nd

Gene
Johnson

Smith
Buick

months have been blamed on
Aidid 's fighters.

said.
The White House went into high
gear Friday after a federal appeals
court ruled that the government
didn' t have to conduct an environmental impact statement on
NAFTA.
Preparing such a document
could have taken months or even
yean, and could have complicated
plans to submit the deal to
Congress for ~at this faD.
"I applaud the appeals court,
Clinton declared, and said NAFTA
will help clean up the U.S.-Mexican border.
But three environmental groups
disagreed, pointing to border locations like Maquilado{a, a limited
free trade zone that the groups call
a "virtual cesspool and breeding
ground for infectious diseases."
Claybrook outlined what she
sees as •· major problem.
Under NAFTA, federal, state
. and local environmental and health
standards are subject to having
complaints filed 'gainst them by
businessmen who ileem them to be
a trade banriet.
" '
A panel of "trade bureaucrats"
will rule on the t;emplaint, with no
appeal of their decisions, said Claybrook.
One of Clinton' s side agreements created a commission to
look at the ~. but it has no real
power, she added.
None of this is lost on the White
House, which watched with dismay
as Majority Leader Richard
Gephardt on Tuesday announced
his opposition to NAFTA, saying
Clinton's supplemental agreements
didn't go far enouah. They would
allow the United S"tates to impose
trade sanctions agains! Mexico for
failure to enforce its labor and
environmental laws.
"It doesn't help," Clinton conceded when asked about
Gephardt's decision.
With the White IJouse losing
people like Gephardt, Clinton aides
are stepping up their NAFTA campaign. Kantor said that the World
Bank on Tuesday will announce a
$3 billion loan commitment for
U.S.-Mexican horder cleanup.
Currently, the worldwide loan
commitment liy the World Bank
for environmental projects is $2
biUion a year.
Kantor's point: Even though
NAFTA still must be sent to a
di yided Congress, the agreement is
~y bringing benefits.
"NAFTA will be good fa( the
environment," Kantor insisted.
Public Citizen, the Sierra Club
and Friends of the Earth plan to ask
the Supreme Court in nud-October
to review the appeals court ruling.
"There are many claims and
counterclaims being made in this
hard-fought political battle," said
Claybrook. "Factual information,
rather than secrecy, could enlighten
the discussion." ·

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Commentary

September 26, 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A6

•

U1 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo
(614) 992-1156
ROBERTL WINGE'IT
Publisher

IIOBART WILSON JR.
Execufuo Editor

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBER of The Associ•ted Press, and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association.

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
published. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
personalities.

Lawyer's advice didn't
conflict with friendship
By JOHN NOLAN
Associated Praa Writer
CINCINNATI- A lawyer for Soulhern State Community College
wbo helped hire former school president Lewis Miller said there was not a
conflict of interest when he advised lhe college's trustees whether they
could forgive a debt Miller owed.
.
.
Ralph W. Phillips, who has served the Hillsboro colle~e for more dian
10 years, said !here was no conflict because he was appomted by the state
a110mey general to work for the college, not Miller, whom he considers a
friend.
''I think sometimes people misunderstand," Phillips said. "They think
I represent an individual. I represent an institution."
Phillips' friendship with Miller would raise questions about a conflict
of interesa, said Peter Geraghty, an American Bar Association lawyer, and
Geoffrey Stem, the Ohio Supreme Court's diseipJiruuY counsel.
But bolh Geraghty and Stem said they would have to review the facts
in a formal record before they could determine whether there was a con·
flicl
"Usually, what we recommend is for the lawyer to explain the situa·
lion to the client- normally in writing. That's prudent," Stem said
Southern State records did not indicate that Phillips had provided a
wriuen explanation.
AttOrney General Lee Fisher and his predecessor, Anthony Celebrezze
Jr., bolh require the outside lawyers they hire to represent state schools
and agencies to notify the attorney general of any conflict of in~rest.
Kate O'Malley, Fisher's chief of staff, said she did not think Phillips'
advice in the Miller matter amounted to a conflict because Philhps
worked for the college, not Miller.
Phillips, who also is an assistant Highland County prosecutOr, was a
member of the Southern State board of trustees that hired Miller. Phillips
left the board in 1976 and returned in 1983 as a lawyer for the school.
Miller retired from Southern State in 1988. His successor, George
McCormick, went 10 state and federal authorities in 1990 with allegations
that the college's money was misUsed during Miller's 13-year presidency.
A state investigation concluded in 1992 that Miller was among five
presidents of Ohio two-year colleges who had illegally contributed to
state IegislaiOrs through a lobbying association for the schools.
A court ordered the presidents to reimburse their schools for the costs
of a special state audit that found lhe improper contributions.
Miller paid 54,600, then asked Southern State's board of trustees to
forgive the last $5,174. After news stories about Miller's request,. he
changed his mind and paid Southern State the remaining mooey before
the board could acL
But prior to that, Phillips said he thou~ht the Southern State board had
the aulhority to forgive Miller's remainmg debt; even though Franklin
County Common Pleas Judge David Cain had onlered pa~ent;
."I believe they have the legal authority to do it, yes, ' Phillips said in
an Aug. 16 interview.
Cain said, "I doo't think the board of trustees would have lhe right to
say, 'We don't want !he restitution.' ~·
Highland County Prosecutor Rocky Coss said he thought Miller had to
repay all the moner,. under Miller'.s ~nt to a deal to avoid prosecution for the alleged tmproper contnbubon.
.
Phillips said this week that he now believes Miller would have ()ad to
obtain approval from bolh the trustees and Cain to have the debt forgiven.

JERSEY CITY, NJ. -This tough
city across the Hudson River from
New York City has become a .
natiooallaboratory for an issue that
will galvanize educaiors for years
to come: school choice.
It's an unlikely locale to be
fighting the education batlle or the
decade. It pits a young Republican
mayor against some of,the most
entrenched and powerful interests
in Democratic politics - teachers
and their ·unions. And if Bret
Schundler get his way, it mil!ht be
the new face of public education in
America.
The public school system here is
in shambles. The state of New Jer·
sey took a close loOk recently and
declared "total educational fail·
ure." Cronyism, corruption and
incompetence had hopelessly crip·
pled the system's ability 10 teach its
30,000 children. Although New
Jersey is a state that spends more
per public school pupil than any
other, only 40 percent of Jersey
City public school students make it
to graduation. That's one reason
why, in 1989, the city became one
of the ftrSt in the country to have its
public schools taken over by the
state for failing to run them JlfOI!Fr·
ly.
The ftrSt step by the state was to
clean house of unneccessary per-

sonnel. Until recently, ma~ here
had a long history of usmg their
conttol over the schools to demote
educators who had worked for their

public Schools -- yet graduate 90 for students the way private ones
percent of !heir students.
do.
·,
It is with this background that
The opponents of vouchers are
Jerse~ ~ity, led by its whiz-kid equally as eloquent in defending ·
Repubhcan Mayor Schundler, is the public school system. The aot·
likely 10 become the ftrSt American ing Jersey City superintendent,
city to have a wid11-9pen "school Victor Demming, believes public
voucher'' system. The idea of schools need reform, not abantloll·
vouchers--' state money given 10 ment. This school year, high
•
parents, who use them for privale schools here have begun a magnet
school tuition - is more than a program, where specialized schools
decade old and was endorsed by allow students to emphasize their
the last two Republican presidents. studies in fields such as science and
opponent. and promote those who But it is Schundler, who might · technology, transportation and
had donated to their campaigns. become-die first person to actually engineering, health professions,
The mayor previous to the state apply the concepL Vouchers are a ·communications media, business
takeover added a whopping 600 referendum on die city's November finance, or the legal profession. .
employees to the payroll while ballot, and Schundler expects to
Dr. Elena Scambio, New Jerenrollp~ent dropped by 5,500 stuuse it to get a law through the New sey's assistant commissioner of
dents. Among diOse employees was Jersey legislature allowing him to edu~tion, believ~ a voucher plan
a stepdaughter the mayor promoted shiftiO a voucher system.
would be "ill-advised'' because
three times in as many years In an interview with our associ- the funds would be siphoned off
although she only worked 12 days ate Dale' Van Atta, Schundler from school district funding, whic~
during that time.
explained why he believes vouch- would leave those left in public
Four years have now passed ers can cure. Jersey City's ailing schools even further behind their
since the takeover, and the state has schools: "I believe in school peers
poured $100 million into the Jersey vouchers partly because it takes the
Then there is Keith Geiget
City school system. Yet the money politician out of the loop .... With president of the National Educatiop
has failed to put the local schools school vouchers, you put power Association, America's largest
back together again - ·less dian over the system in the hands of the teacher's union. Geiger and those
half of local ninth-graders pass die parents. The school is now worlcing - he represents believe vouche~s
state proficiency exam despite the to keep the parent happy instead of would do little to help the ones
infuston of new funds. Local .pri· worktng to keep,the politician who need public education th):
vate schools, meanwhile, spend happy." It would, in essence, · mosL
less than half the money per pupil restore "accountab!jity" to public "Public schools ln .the United
- $3,500 compared to $9,200 for schools by forcing them to compete States have, and always will, edt(·
cate the.v~~&amp;t majority of our young
people," Geiger says. "They do
not discriminate. They do not
choose.their students like private
schools. I believe it's wrong to use
public· tax dollars for schools that
are going to continue. to discriminate against some students. ••
'
Just about the only thing Geiger
and Schundler agree oo is that pulilic schools are a mess. Maybe.
that's why 40 percent of public
school teachers nationwide send
their own children to privat'e
schools. Schundler believes the
answer 10 education lies in empowering parents. As for the segregation that opponents say would
occur, he argues that it's already
happening in Jersey City, where
two high schools are already 100
percent African-American . "We
have an apartheid system in Jersey
City today," Schundler says. "So
the worst thing that you could say
could possibly happen describes
the reality of our public system
today...
~
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

~r!~!.~~ ~~U!,~~!~I !l,~~!~,~.''"!!th,..',!,~nP,;~: '"'·

you why you haven't heard from oxygen level to its proper reiding
me recently. Here goes. For t~e then I will be for.ced to keep my
past several weeks I have had ad· hew companion with me forever.
~ents pertaining to my eyes, !e.gs, Man, does this cut down on my
h•g)l blood pressure and a co!'dinon
whtch the doctors say IS an I!ISUffi·
c1ent supply of oxygen m my
b!ood. Also, ~ere ha_ve been some activities.
ntghts when tt .w~ difficult for me
There are several events which
to get a good mght s sleep.
have occurred in the past three or
Two wee!ts ~go 1 was scheduled rour weeks which bother me. One
for 11!1 ~xammatton by~ pulmonary is that I cannot attend any football
spectaltSt at OSU Hosp•tal. He co~- games at this time and I love foot·
fmned the reg: that the oxygel_ll!l ball. Another is that I cannot climb
my blood .Is low normal and if 11 up or down stairs readily. Two
. does not mcrease I could have a weelcs ago, 1 was at my daughter,
stroke or a heart attack. So, I Linda Beegle's, home in Worthing·
By The Associated Press
became
engaged . to Fanny ton. I managed to go up the stairs
Today is Sunday, Sept 26, the 269th day of 1993. There are 96 days
McFudgecak~
who •s a porta~le without the railing. I d1d not dare
left in the year.
·
oxygen machme. Fanny goes With come down lhe stairs in a normal
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 26 1789, Thomas Jefferson was appointed America's ftrst me everywhere and I am not sup· way. So I sat down at the top of the
Secretary of Suue; John Jay the ftrSt chief justice of the United States; ~sed to leav~ her for. more t!J!m 1,5 stairs with Fanny and proceeded to
Samuel Osgood the first Postmaster-General; and Edmund Jennings Ran· mmutes a~~ ume. Th1s condiuon IS descend the stairs by sliding down
almost drivmg me nuts., but 5'? far I on my rear end one step at a time.
dolph die ftrSt Attorney General.
.
hav~ heeded the doctors advtce. It This is the ftrst time I have ever
On this date:
In 1777, British troops occupied Philadelphia during die American •s. dtflicult to go t&lt;_&gt; the bathroom done this act and I hope it is the
~tth ~anny at my Side. You cannot last. Believe me, it was frighlening
Revolution.
tmagme the. stares I get from other while it lasted.
In 1892 John Philip Sousa and his newly formed band performed pub·
occupants .m a. rest room when I
There are certain other lhings
licly for~ ftrSt time, at the Stillman Music Hall in Plainfield, N.J ..
cart Fanny mto tts ~fmes. I know that happened in this monlh which
In 1914, the Federal Trnde Commission was established.
In 1918, the Meuse-Argoime offensive against the Germans began dur· that people are ~lktng about me were not flattering.
and my com pan ton but, Rupe, tl
To explain my condition proper-' .
ing World War I.
In 1950, U.N. troops in the Korean Conflict recaptured the South
Korean capital of Seoul from the North Koreans.
In 1952, philosopher George Santayana died in Rome at age 88.
In 1957, the musicai"West Side Story" opened on Broadway.

Fred w. Crow

Today in history

times require assistance from others 10 dress PfO?..Tiy. Just the other
day, my son, Rick, put my left shoe
on my right foot which I noticed
would not work. This was correct·
ed immediately. I also have ttouble
with. my eyes and the color of
socks. If I am wearing lhe wrong
color my son, Carson, will let me
know. Anyhow, Rupe, all of this
will soon be over, I hope. If I can
get rid of my companion Fann I
will have it made.
'
y,
One noteworthy event h_appened
at the Meigs County Fair this year
For the rust time in many years j
attended a session of the M ·'
County Fair in which an· et,s
raised by 4-H club members''!::.!
auctioned to the public. My son,
Jud~c Frederick Crow, m and his
fam1ly bought a nice young lamb
raised by Matlhew Evans. This
young animal appeared to have
been given ftrst rate .treatment b
Matthew. After the fair was ov!r
we received a wonderful picture of
Matthew, his lamb and the Crow
family. Thanks for the picture and
for raising a nice lamb, Ma!thew. I
appreciated it a great deal and lhe
picture can be seen in my office.

did yoo 'M
where the Arabs and Jews have set·
tied their difficulties for the time
being? Did you also note that
Uncle Sam put up a great-deal of
money to assist in this peace
arrangement I will bet all the tea iii
China that when this money runs
out, you can expect some further
conflict between the Arabs and
Jews. Who was it that said you
can't buy friendship? It seems that
the U.S. will never learn to keep its
nose out of other country's affairs.
Rupe, I bope I am wrong but I carinot see it any other way.
Rupe, I resolved to make my
articles shorter which I know you
will appreciate. My word to you is
"don't look back, somelhing may
be ..gaining on you.~ (Sachtel
Patge.) Truer words were never
spoken. In God we1rusL
Carry on.
·
Edilor's note • Long-time
Attoraey Fred W. Crow is the
conlrlbutor or a weekly column
for The Sunday Tlmes-Seatinel.
R~ders wlsblag lo applaud, crlt•
laze or comment on any subject
(excepl religion or polltla) are
encoura1ed to write to Mr.
Crow,In care Ill tbls newspaper,

At Karl Marx's funeral, 110
years ago, Friedrich Engels
explained lhe reason for conflicts
between nations wilh more insight
than did last week's effusive analyses of that momentous peace
accord signed between Israel and
t!Je Palestine Liberation Organiza.
tiOn.
.
"(Marx)," said Engels, "discovered the simple fact that human
beings must have food and drink,
clothing and shelter, first of all,
before they can inlerest themselves
in politics, science, art, religion and
the like."
Or as the Grand Inquisitor
declared in Dostoyevsky's "The
Brothers Karamazov:" "Feed men
fust, then ask of them virtue.· •
Men have always fought .and
died valiantly over differences
between politics, religions and
races. They still do.
But the economics of life is
what drove East Germany to dismantle the Berlin Wall m I 989.
The economics of decline compelled Gorbachev to restructure the
Soviet Union's collapsing economy
wilh a 'massive shift of resources
from lhe military in 1990. In that
same year, the econoniics of sanctions forced President de Klerk to
release African National Congress
I

leader Nelson Mandela from prison
and. begin the process toward a
multiracial democracy.
In 1993, the economics of motu- ·

Chuck Stone
al survival nudged two historic
antagonists, Israel and the PLO, to
embrace peace.
But more than economic reality
was needed to bring Israel and the
PLO together. Although a religious
vision had inspired both, the pow·
erful narcotic of hatred had kept
them imprisoned in mutt,tal dun·
geons of isolation. A ·new vision
uncluttered by hate was needed.
As Time magazine's writer,
Johanna McCreary, so eloquently
recapitulated, "Statesmen preen
with the conceit !hat they can alter
lhe forces of history and cool the
passion of humanity with their bold
leadership or clever diplomacy, and
on OCCBSIOn they do."
For decades, PLO Chairman
Yasir Arafat has preened wilh one
of lhe biggest egos, believing that
terrorism could maintain him as th~:
balance of power in the Middle
East equation.
But his ego made one wretched
miscalculation, and it was the vic·

tim of ano,ther unanticipated calcu·
lation. Ararat widessly backed Iraq
in the 1991 Persian Gulf War,
thereby alienating his two primary
benefactors, Saudi Arabia and
Kuwait, both of whom are terrified
of extremists like Saddam Hussein.
And Gorbachcv's new policies of
perestroika and glasnost left Arafat
twisting in the wind Wilh no politi·
cal or economic support from the
communists.

POMEROY • Harold Kenneth Grnte, 59, Pomeroy, died Friday SepL
24, 1993 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born in Salem Center to the late Gerald and Hazel E. Gardner Grate he
~Was a member of the Presbyterian Church of Wilkesville and the Fraternal
Order of Eagles.
~. He was formerly employed by Western Elcclric, McNally PiiiSburgh
£o., Ben Tom Corp. and also worked as a self-employed truck driver and
for lhe Department of Human Services.
.
•. He is survived by sister and brother·in-law, Mary and Ray Birchfield;
..sister-in-law, Gladys Grate, Wilkesville; nieces, Louise Carsey, Middle·
port, and Judy McClelland, Ranson, Ky.; nephews, Kenneth Carsey, Mid·
•illeport, and Jeffrey Grl!te, Columbus; five great-nieces; two great·
:nephews ancl two great·great-nephews:
,
.,; He is preceded in death by his parent~ and. a brother, Harley Eugene
Grnte.
~~ Services will be Tuesday at 11 a.m. at .the Fisher Funeral Home in
·Middleport. AI Hartson will officiate and burial will be at Salem Center
.Cemetery.
·
; , Friends may call from 2 10 4 and 7 LO 9 p.m. Monday at the funeral
home.

:Henry K. Hoschar

WASHINGTON (AP) - A sin·
gle term in the U.S. Senate can
guarantee personal wealth - and a
cozy retirement - that far exceed
lhc compensation of averige Amer·
icans, an Associated Press analysis
of the freshmen Class of '86
shows.
In just six years, the nine Sena·
tors elected for the first time in
1986 and still serving have seen
their salaries nearly double to more
lhan $133,600 a year.
When they retire, their annual
pensions will probably exceed the
salaries of most working Ameri·

permitting him to repurchase
land worth between $500,000 and
$1 million.
"The most striking thing is the
comparison between members of
the Senate and average Americans," said Joshua Goldstein of the
Cenler for Responsive Politics, an
organization that scrutinizes the
links between money and politics.
The salary became too generous
for Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
after the Senate's last big pay raise,
in July 1991. He accepts the preraise pay of $101 ,900, and gtves
the rest to charity.
cans.
He said the senators' pension
Several members of the Class of plan should also be brought "more
'86 are also savvy investors.
in line with that of average Ameri·
At least three are millionaires cans." McCain was the only one of
Democrats Harry Reid .of Nevada, the nine senators willing to comRichard Shelby of Alabama, and ment about compensation.
Bob Graham of Florida, according
The AP reviewed the financial
to a review of their most recent disclosure statements, salary
financial disclosure forms . •
adjustments, campaign finance
Shelby bought an office build· reports and pension estimates to
ing worth between $250,000 and see how they have changed since
$500,000 while in office. Reid lhe nine senatorS ftrsttook office. ·
foreo lased on a note and deed of
In addition 10 McCain, Shelby,

' · POINT PLEASANT • Henry K. Hoschar, 75, of Point Pleasant died
Friday, September 24, 1993 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
.
Born October 9, 1917 in Point Pleasant, he was a son of the late Andrew
~- and Janie A. (McCoy) Hoschar. He was a former employee of the Mill·
leable Iron Company and Marietta Manufacturing Company and he retired
·ftom lhe Mountaineer Power Plant in New Haven, He was an electrician
"and a member ofl.B.E.W. Local317 in HuntingLOn.
.
·
•? He was also preceded in death by a sister and five brothers.
:•· Survivors include his wife, Evelyn Hoschar of Point Pleasant; three
'daughlers and sons-in·Jaw, Sally and Larry McComas of Apple Grove,
'l'byllis and Harrison Roe of Point Pleasant and Sandra and Jerry
WASHINGTON (AP) 'Montgomery ·of Parkersburg; four sisters, Mynle Barnette of Point Ohio's new national park isn't
f!easant, Dale Coleman and DoUie Schwanz both of Massillon, OH and ready to open, but already it's in
:({uby Lytle of Canal Fulton, OH; four grandchildren and three great- danger of becoming the last of a
· breed - a park created through
'grandchildren.
' Service will be held at 2 p.m. Monday, September 27 at the Wilcoxen sheer political force.
Assistant Interior Secretary
J;luneral Home with Rev. George Hoschar officiating. Burial will follow in
George Frampton Jr. says he would
·Lone Oak Cemetery.
·
like 10 take politics out of the pro·
:: Calling hours will he Sunday from 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
cess that decides what properties
ought to be preserved for America's next generations.
- Politics created the Dayton Avi·
ation Heritage National Historic
Park.
Community activists wanted to Yarborougn satd he was not
• :. AKRON, Ohio (AP) - A for·
protect
buildings that were signifi·
,mer Revco executive whose father aware of Dworkin's association cant to native sons Orvi lie and
founded the company has been with Revco. Defendants charged Wilbur WrighL They also wanted
charged in a $25 million operation with receiving stolen property to lure tourists to Dayton. So they
involving stblen drug store goods, planned to sell it, but there was no asked their congressman to make it
proof that o:-vorlcin sold any g?&lt;J&lt;is
an assistant U.S. attorney said..
happen.
, Elliott "Bud" Dworkin, 44, of shipped to hun, Yarborough smd.
Rep. Tony Hall and his staff
Dworkin had contact wilh the
Hudson, was one of 59 defendants a\leged
wrote
a bill, negotiated with com·
J. Russell
indicted in Greenville, S.C., after a Meares, ringleaders,
mittces,
worked with other Ohio
of. Pelzer, S.C., and
sting operation by the FBI and William 56,
lawmakers
and muscled the. new
Bailey, 51, of
Greenville County, S.C., authori· Anderson, Gene
national
park
through a reluctant
S.C., Yarborough said.
ties. They documented lhe move- .
Congress.
According io the 17 -count
ment of up to $25 million in indictment,
That's politics.
the defendants trans·
allegodly stolen merchandise in
That's not the way it ought to
ported stolen merc~andi~e! then
eight states over 18 months.
work,
Frampton said.
their ownershtp, ongt~ and
' Dworkin had not worked for altered
"It is a totally ad hoe, arbitrary,
price before repackaging the t~ms
Revco since 1984, when lhe com· and
political process.... We doo't have
distributing
them
at
pnces
pany' s boatd of directors forced
a set of criteria. There is no stan·
market values.
him to resign. His father, Sidney below
D'l)'orkin was released on a dard. There is no benchmark," he
Dworkin, founded the drug store $50,000 personal recognizance said.
chain.
Frampton, who is in charge of
Thursday before U.S. MagtS·
Assistant U.S. Attorney William bond
the
National Park Service and the
James Gallas.
Yarborough said Elliott Dworkin trate
Fish
and Wildlife Service, said he
could not be reached
was accused of receiving products for Dworkin
and
Interior
Secretary Bruce Bab·
early Saturday. Direc·
c.tlutt were among $10 million worth 10rycomment
bill
are
commilted
to developiJ1g
assistance said his home tele·
cf goods stolen from warehouses
·and stores in Greenville and phone number was unpublished.
,.f\tlanta.
~.,___" It's_a__conspjrac~:· Yarbor- - - -·ough said. "He was allegedly
:receiving goods s10len from ware·
MIDDLEPORT - Due to a
,houses or shoplifted from drug
lack
of quorum, Middleport Village CharHe Dunn
,stores, Kmarts and Wai-Marts. The
Council
will not meet Monday
·.Jlulk of the (stolen) stuff we've gotSMITHVILLE, Texas (AP) night,
Mayor
Fred Hoffman Custom boot maker Charlie Dunn,
:len is straight off the dock at the
aMounced.
whose footwear cost up to $3,000
~(jis!Jib~tion cen.ters. ~' ..
and became an elite status symbol,
died Thursday of complications
(Continued f'rom A·3)
from a sttolce. He was 95.
Dunn rose to fame as a boot
.Jittempted to turn left at the inter- Albany, was eastbound on Town·
maker when Austin's eJlergetic
music scene caught the nation's
$Ction of S~te Route 141, went ship Road 10 when he stopped at
attention in the 1970s. Jerry Jeff
eff the left stde of the road and the intersection of State Route 689
Walker wrote and recorded a song,
~truck an embankmenL
and pulled into the path of a south·
, Queen's passen!ler, MonicaL. bound vehicle driven by Stephene
"Charlie Dunn."
.
Celebrities such as Arnold
Ehman, 16; Patnot, sustained Adams, 22, 10613 State Route.l60,
Palmer, Mary Kay Place, Gene
minor injuries but refused treat· Vinton.
.
Autry, Slim Pickens, Harry Bela·
menl
Birchfield was cited for fmlure
fonte, Ernest Tubb, Peter Fonda
, The vehicle sustained light dam· to yield.
.
age and was towed from the scene.
Both vehicles sustained heavy,
and Carole King came 10 his shop
disabling damage and were LOwed
in Austin for a fiuing.
Dunn, whose father, grandfather
, Two drivers were injured but from the scene.
and great-grandfather were boot
refused treatment Friday afternoon
Editor's note: Names, ages
following an accid~nt in Columbia
makers, made his ftrSt pair or hoots
Township in Meigs County , the and addresses are printed as they at age 7 and was known for his
appear on ofrtcial reports.
leather inlaid roses.
patrol reported. '
Jeffrey A. Birchfield, 37,

&lt;

I!USI,

l{evco executive indicted
'after sting operation by FBI

Deaths
elsewhere

··crash on 160..•

criteria to establish federal park
lands anti historical sites.
Frampton said criteria could be
established in the same way a special commission worked to set
stan~ for the protection of Civil
War battlefields.
"They found a lot of battlefields
that could be preserved, but they
narrowed it down to a relatively
sinall number of priorities. I think
that kind of process is needed with
respect to the entire park system,"
he said.
That notion does not sit well
with Rep. Bruce Vento, D-Minn .•
who heads the House Natural
Resources Committee's subcom·
mittec on national parks and public
lands.
As he sees it, the problem wilh
the park system is not that
Congress is deciding what sites get
added. Rather, it is that the Park
Service does not tell Congress what
it wants.
· "When they make a study they
don't make a recommendatioo," he
said in an interview. "They have
four or five different options, and
make no indication of what the pre·
ferred alternative might be. So the
senaLOr and lhe representative usu·
ally propose the most extreme,
most expensive, the most they can
get for a national park."
· That's what happened when the
Day10n park was proposed, he said.
"Tony Hall took all the best and
came in asking for the most that
they could do,'' he said.
Over time and extensive negoti·
ations, the proposal was scaled
back until it met standards Vento's
panelseL
- He said !hat proves the political
system works.
"We don't do one thing for
(Senate Minority Leader) Bob
Dole's bill for a Brown vs. Board
of Education site and anolher thing
to Tony Hall's bill," Vento said.
"They're being judged on the same
standards.''

Hall, D..Qhio, said he is confi·
dent lhe Dayton park can meet any
criteria the experts come up wilh.
"We could probably pass," he
said. "We had a lot more historical
sites in our national park than prob·
ably half the parks put together."

•

l
'

.

•'

LeVI'S

LeVI'S

Levrs

••

relinquished their right to pocket
up 10 $23,000 annually in speslcing
fees. Subsequent raises have been
automatic cost-of-living increases.
The Senate's pension plan is
more generous than most offered
elsewhere in government or corpornte America.

As for the process the Ohio people used to get a park, " there's no
question that it was political."
"But !here was a tremendous
amount of scrutiny in Congress, in
committee, on the floor and in the
Senate. We had a heck of a time
passing it," Hall said.
Hall and Vento said they sus' peel the desire for a different park·
selection process was driven by
projects such as Steamtowr
National Historic Site, not the Day·
tQn site.
Frampton wouldo't discuss any
parks in particular.

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Senators who previously served
in the House will have especially
generous pensions - for example,
Breaux, Shelby and Mikulski. They
participate in the older of the Sen·
ate's two retirement programs: the
Civil Service Retirement System.
If they had retired or lost after a
single Senate term, they would
have been assured pensions of
$45,000 10 $52,000, according to
the National Taxpayers Union
Foundation, which regularly calc!!·
lates lawmakers' pensions.
By January 1999, at least six of
the senators will have estimated
pensions of at least $50,000 a year
and three could receive $78,000 to
$94,000.
The senators' offices did not
dispute the figures.
"While we could be in the
lifeboats, they're in the luxury lin·
ers of pension systems," said
David Keating, president of the
foundation.
A Money Magazine article on
the 10 best employee benefit plans
offered by large companies showed
just how well lawmakers are treat·
ed.
The June 1992 article said pe!l·
sions ranged from $16,000 at age
62 with 30 years of service to
$24,000 at age 65 wilh ~0 years of
service. One of the companies had
no pension plan at all.
The newer Senate pension program, the Federal Employees
Retirement System, gives sena10rs
the option of participating in a tax·
deferred savings plan with government matching funds more generous than those of private companies that offer 401-k plans.
Lawmakers and other federal
employees receive up to 5 percent
of salary in matching contributions.
But the government also makes a 1
percent automatic donation irrespective or any employee contribution - a benefit not usually available in the private sec lOr.

A.RE YOU PREPARED?!

Levrs

i

1

increaSe.
As part of the package, senators

For a superior sport boot.

t

I've got faith that the Palcstini- :
ans can pull it off. They are a •
proud, ind\lstrious people and '
above all, a historic people who go :
back 5,000 years. Back in 1957, I :
lived in the Oaza Strip for three ~
months while wolldng for an inler· •
national aid agency. There I spoke :
Only whe11 a distinguished Nor· with a Palestinian bpsincsJman :
wegian schohir with a vision of who told me, "The word '
peace furtuiiOusly offered his good maleesh,' (Arabic for "don't WorrY •
offiCeS was Arafat's face saved. · about it") is not in our vocabu· :
lary." After Palestinians lost their :
• But good offices are merely homeland, they survived and !
what former U.N. Ambasssador thrived as ·the bureaucracies for •
~ :;:
Arthur Goldberg once called the Jordan and KuwaiL
•
modalities of negotiation. The new
Palestinian sovereignty must be
With Soviet glasnost South
undergirded with massive econom· Africa's pending muliiracial j
ic aid and U.S. support. Coopera-' democracy and the Israei-PLO ·•
tion must take place between and peace agreement on tl)e eve of the .l
with the other Middle Easi "Big 5,753rd celebration of Rosh -~
Three": Syria, Jordan and Hashanah and Yom. Kippur, the •
Lebaoon.
world finally may be on the threshold w_hen, in the words of Job, "the
If the guarantee of secure bor- monung stars sang together and the
ders for Israel and Ibis first step soos of God shouted ror joy." .
toward a Palestinian nation are to
. Chuck Stoae Is a syndic•led I
succeed, both must enjoy the same writer for Newspaper Enlerpriae l
~
economi~ benefits of "food and Assoclatloa.

rjch quick

Wright brothers park could
be among the last of its kind

Council session off

drink and clothing and shelter" ~
that justified the decisions in East:
Germany, the Soviet Union and, :
.!he world hopes, in South Africa. ;

Sunday nmea Sentinel-Page A7

Graham and Reid, the class
includes: John Breaux, D-La:; Bar·
bam Milculslci, D-Md.; Ch'ristopher
Bond, R-Mo.; Ken,t..Conrad, D·
N.D. and Thomas A. Daschle, D·
S.D.
When they took office in 1987,
their salaries were $77,400. By
January, they had risen 10$133,600
- an increase of nearly 73 percenL
The U.S. Labor Department said
median wages for full-time workers
during the same period rose from
$369 a week, or $19,188 a year, to
5459 a week, or $23,868 a year, an
· increase of just 24.4 percent.
· The last time the Senate voted
itself a pay raise in July 1991, only
Breaux among the nine favored the

ROCKY®

Peace breaks out in the Middle East

Berryls World

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

llarold Grate

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School 'vouchers' tested .in New J.ersey
A Division of

---Area deaths --U.S. Senate: A place to get
September 26, 1993

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.~

�Along the River

Section B

September 26, 1993

Welsh-Americans keep heritage alive
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-~

By JAMES LONG
Tribune News Stall'
Eglwys Nebo.
That 's Welsh for " Nebo
Church."
Although their native tongue
was stamped out by British conquerors in the 18th century , the
Welsh (people of Wales, formerly a
country on the southeast border of
Great Britain, now a region of the
larger country) have struggled this
century to bring their language
back.
And a small Welsh church congregation in Gallia County is still
fighting to keep its heritage alive.
Many of the members of Nebo
Church , off State Route 325 on
Nebo Road, are descendants of the
area's original settlers, who emigrated to Southeastern Ohio in the
early 19th century when Gallia
County supported a large Welsh
population.
. ·
The settlers also brought a
strong Protestant worship tradition
and established several churches in
the area - including the one at
Nebo, which is the last in operation
these days. While Welsh churches
in Gallia County at the turn of the
cGntury boasted as many as I 00
members, Nebo' s congregation
today lists 14 or 15 regular members.
The church's pastor, Jackson
resident Rev. Gomer Jenkins, says
the small group is holding fast to
its Welsh-American i!lentity.
Except for a few details, one
would not guess that Nebo is distinctively Welsh. However, Jenkins
says preserving heritage is the idea
behind retaining the nationality as
part of the church name.
"In the same flavor as Roots, we
remember . our ancestry... he
explains. "We all idenyfy in one
way or another - that's why we
llave so many churclies."
Jenkins says lie feels that church
traditions are anchored in other
types of personafheritage.
"It's either nationality or familial tradition that causes one to
choose a certain church," he
explains.
Along with the designation of
being a Welsh church , Nebo has
retained several other traditions
from across the sea.
Men on left, women on right
Visitors notice one thing about
the Nebo Church right away: that

.

WELSH CHURCH WEDDING - The congregation c!Jats
leisurely outside tbe Nebo Church after the turn-of-the century .
its middle row of pews is divided
down the middle by e waist-high
wooden wall.
Since the church's early days in
the old country, men and women
have seated themselves on opposire
sides of the pew. .
Traditionally, fathers would sit
on the far left of their male children, who would be seated out to
the partition. Immediately on the
right side or the wall !WOuld sit the
mothers, followed by daughters
and other female family members
farther to the right.
"About every church that came
to America at that time had it,"
Jenkins says. "It's a European thing
that was also preserved in the
school sysrem."
·~
While the seating arrangement
creates a direct tie to the older
days, music in the church makes it
more distinctively Welsh.
Jenkins will occasionally sing
songs in Welsh to add a traditional
navor to his church services. He
explains that the nation's history of
beirig a conquered people provided
the right conditions for a musical
tradition .
"Poetry and singing seem to
come out of it - they're all kind of

.

wedding which united the Rev. M.G •.Jones and Minnie Davis·(Oak
HUI Museum photo).

At this point in his life, Jenkins
sad songs," Jenkins says.
"As they work6d westward, they
. . Singing is a special part of any says a strong upbringing in the found more country they liked,"
church made it natural for him to Jenkins says. "As they found a
traditional Welsh church service which is evident in the annual adopt its ways more seriously once place they liked, t~ey settled and
Gamanfa-Ganu (Ga-mahn-va-gah- he reached adulthood.
they made enough money to bring
In this way, he feels his own their families over. The rolling hills
nce), held this weekend in the Oak
Hill museum, which was also a children and grandchildren will here are not unlike those of
take up the ways of the faith and Wales."
church at one time.
The Nebo Church standing
The literal Welsh translation of family heritage - which may be
Gamanfa-Ganu is "preaching- essential to Nebo Church' s sur- today was built by Welsh farmers
singing service." The two-day vival, since its members are now in 1887. The congregation had
event is a colla~e of singing, feast- mostly senior citizens.
been active since 1854, when the
He says the time is coming for a area of worship was a log cabin
ing and preaching - and planners
will use language and traditional new generation to become interest- that has since beeri torn down . .
cuisine to make sure the weekend's ed in the ways of the past - and
Worshipers used th e church
dishes, songs and sermons have a he's confident they will.
from I887 until !960 when the ·
'There's always been that con- minister left. Nebo was closed until
good dose of Welsh flavor.
cern,"
Jenldns says. When he was Jenkins - currently its longest
Strong upbringing
While Nebo' s congregation is younger and n(,lt as committed to standing minister - became the
holding on to smne century -old religion, he said elders feared for church's leader in 1969.
Since then his small flock of
practices in order to keep its tradi- thefuture of the Welsh church.
"Now
they're
dead
and·
gone
believers
has held on to its religion
tion intact, members do.not worry
and
the
tradition
is
still
here,"
Jenkand
its
legacy.
They repeat the
that few younger people attend
struggle of their ancestors, the
ins says.
their weekly service.
Church history
Welsh pioneers of Gallia County,
Jenkins explains that even he
At the tum of the century, Jenk- and echo the language of a oncewas not always a devoted Welsh
ins says, Jackson 's CeiJ.SUS showed conquered people who have strived
preservationalist.
"In the 1960s when I found the that the town was 95 percent Welsh for their culture's revitalization.
- lord and gave my life to him was - Southeastern Ohio was a hub of
when an awareness of heritage Welsh-American activity.'
James Long is a sttJ.f/ writer for
He explains that many traveled
began to dawn," he says. "AHmy
Ohio
Valley Publishing. ·
to
the
area
in
order
to
fi
nd
work
on
life I was brought up m the diSCIthe
Chillicothe
Road.
pline of atrending church."

•

Dining Room

Bedroom

.

Living Room
Typical 3-Room
Installation

'

'
'

GYMANFA - Roy Moses (left), Paul Berridge, Gomer Jenk·
ins, John Owen, Rev. Barnett, Rev. Jones, Ben R. Evans and Roger
Williams sing at a Gymanfa held at Nebo Church. Tbe Gymanfa is
the annual celebration or the Welsh Church - a weekend filled
with preaching, singing and feasting. This year's Gymanfa is held
. this
. weekend at the Oak Hill Museum (011k Hill Museum photo). .

WE GOT THE CARPET, WE GOT THE PRICE! ·

.... ...'

Traditions of
Nebo Church
help preserve
Welsh identity

MID -CENTURY CONGREGATION Members of the Marvin Spencer, Wendell Rees,
Thomas Mossburger, George, David Jenkins,
John Gill and Evan Rees famUies pose in front
of the Nebo Church in 1946. Church member-

ship has nuctuated tbrough the years -from SO
regular worshipers in the mid·1800s, to about
100 at the turn or the century, and to about 15
now (Oak Hill Museum photo).

·~.

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"

'

NEBO VISITORS .- · Visitors to the 1965 Gymanfa talk on
benches and next to their line of cars outside the Nebo Chur~b.
The annual Gymanfa services rotate between three slt.es: the Oak
Hill Museum in Jackson County and the Nebo and Tin Rose
churches i·n Gallla County. Southeastern Ohio w111 settles heavily
by Welsh pioneers, who brought their religious traditions with
them (Oak Hill Museum photo).

COMING OUT OF SEPARATE DOORS Current members or the Nebo congregation
(from left) David Jenkins, Rev. Gomer Jenkins,
Freil Staurrer, visitor Wllliam Medley, Shirley
Jenkins, Kay Cooper, Bess Grace, Ruth Parkins
and Alma Staurrer leave the building through

·'

separate doors, which were made to .accommodate the practice or men and women sitting on
opposite sides or the church. Not pictured:
Lucille Rees, Madeline Rees, Carl Elliott and
Vergle Staufl'er (T-S photo by James Long).

Church a
means of
survival

Raised Catholic, my venture to a
congregational church last Sunday
evening was not exactly a groundbreaking event, as one might think.
But it was only about the fifth
time I have attended a Protestant
serv ice.
I became interested in the Welsh
church in Galli a Coun ty, oddly
enough, at a Chamber of Commerce meeting I attended over the
summer.
, For some reason, men were sitting on one side and women on the
other.
I thou gh t it wo uld be more
pleasant to sit with the ladies and
broke the tradition, as Mun icipal
Co.urt Judge William Medley did
when lie arrived.
And he launched into a story
about how the seating arrangement
resembled what he had observed in
a visit to the Nebo Church (see
related stor)&gt;).
I was amazed that such a tradition had persisted and immediately
the wheels started turning in my
writer's mind about how I could do
a good Sunday fea ture on the
Welsh church.
I arranged to make a trip with
Medley to Nebo. I had to see it for
inyself.
Sure enough, men and women
entered the church through separate
doors and sat on opposite sides of
the wooden partition.
Even at the end when 1
announced I wanted to take a photo
of the congregation as they exited
through doors on either side of the

side of

partition, one member genlly chided that "anyhow there's no other
way out." They are stuck in their
ways.
But I found there was more to
Nebo church than the novelty of
sex-separated seating.
·
I found living examples of pride
and grace..'I)Ie prid~ that brings t.Qe
congregauon together each week
and causes ·them to post their num.
ber in attendance - small as it may
seem -at the front of the churcn.
And the grace of Jenkins as he
tailored his sermon,
. it seemed to
my presence, makmg eye contact
as he drew parallels between the
Nebo Church's history and basic
truths of Christianity.
At times during the service I
felt very much "in the ' hoil ' ~f
thi~gs,. " as Jenkins would say,
wh1ch ts a Welsh way of saying (in
English) that one is filled with the
spirit. I was inspired by the congregation's example of strength and
gentility combined. This must be
what native Welsh folk - the
"lovely people" as Jenkins calls
them - are like.
Perhaps this was because I was
also able to identify with the congregation's sense of maintaining an
identity while away from the
homeland.
In a way that's what I've done
since I moved to GaUia County.
I even let my father keep the
title to my car in his name so that I
could hold on to my beauti ful West
Virginia license plate. I have a map
of the state on my bedroom wall.
Becau:;e of my own situation, I
understand that the members of
Ncbo Church do not regret that
th ey were liorn in Ameri ca. As
Jenkins told me, it becomes qu ite
natural to assume both a Welsh and
American identity.
It' s hard for me to im agine
being from both Ohio and West
Virginia, but I guess it's possible.
I was especially moved when
the reverend broke into a Welsh
song at one point in the service. He
sang "Aberystwyth" (which means
mouth of the river Ystwyth) entirely in his ancestral native tongue.
I f you have ever heard singing
in Welsh, you probably know it is
beautiful - even though the language has no vowels. But I was
struck more by the song's meaning
in English.
Basically, it portrayed a man
standing at the mouth o'f a river
crying for Christ to deliver his soul
to home.
How fitting, I thought, for Jenki!ls to sing that one to hi~ congregauon, a group of people sl!uated in a
county on the roaring Ohio and
down river from the mouth of the
mighty Kanawha.
I could imagine the original settlers, weary and anxious for news
of home, falling to their knees on
.~e banks of the river and singing
·Aberystwyth," longing for Wales
and hungry fo r a home in their
heaven.
This is what I have learned from
the J?COple of Nebo Church: those
who are far from home create these
songs and these poems. And that
way they survive.

.

�'Page B2 Sunct.y nmes-Senunet

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

September 26, 1993

: September 26, 1993

wv

OH--Polnt

Meigs community calendar ;

Hyse

coming starting with morning ser~
vice at 10 a.m. followed by a carry·
MIDQLEPORT • Hobson in dinner at noon and an afternoon
Church of Christ and Christian , service starting at I :30 p.m. with
Union wiD restart services at 7 p.m. special singing. Everyone is welwith preaching by Rev. Darrell come.
Doddrill. Everyone welcome.
MONDAY
RACINE - Descendants of John
LETART FALLS - Letart-Port·
R. and Clara Long Sellers will ~old
land
PTO will meet Monday at 7
a reunion at Star Mill Park at noon.
p.m.
at
the Letart Falls Elementary
Bring a covered dish, All relatives
School.
Officers will be elected and
and friends invited.
parents are encouraged to auend.
REEDSVILLE/LONG BOT·
RUTLAND • Rutland Garden
TOM· Rev. Lynette Arthur, disClub
will hold its regular meeting
trict director of Program Ministries
at7:30
p.m. in the home of Pauline
for the Athens District of the UnitAtkins
New Lima Road, with Steled Methodist Church will conduct
la
Atkins
and Cleotine Blackwood
the worship services at R~sville
as
co-hostesses.
and Long Bouom United Methodist
Churches. Worship service is at
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun9:30 a.m. at Reedsville aild 10:30
ty
Veterans Service Commission
p.m. at Long Bottom. Pastor PhiUip
will meet at 7:30p.m. in the VeterScarberry invites the public.
ans Service Office.
MIDDLEPORT • Mount MoriMIDDLEPORT • The OH KAN
ah Church of God will have its coin club will meet at Burket barhomecoming starting with Sunday ber shop. Social hour and strading
school at 9:45 a,m. Moses session will start at 7 p.m., the
.Chowdty, a missionary from India, meeting will follow. Refreshments
will speak from 11 a.m. to noon. A will be served. New members are
covered dish dinner will begin at welcome.
12:30 p.m. followed by afternoon
services. Everyone is invited.
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Local Chapter of the Ohio AssociaMINERSVILLE- There will be tion of Public School Employees
a homecoming at the MincrsviUe will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday in
United Methodist Church starting the high school cafeteria.
with regular morning services followed by dinner at noon and an
TIJESDAY
afternoon program beginning at
POMEROY • There will be a
I :30 p.m. Everybody is welcome.
support group meeting for social
workers conducted by Nancy ScarRACINE • Eagle Ridge Com- brough, LSW, at the Meigs County
muni!}' Church wili have its home- Health Department. Welcome will
begin at 7:30p.m. The meeting will
begin at 8 p.m.
SUNDAY

--•

TAMMIE DEBORD
LYNEITE CRUZ AND JOHN KEENAN

Cruz-Keenan

GALLIPOLIS • Dr. and Mrs.
: Moises B. Cruz, Jr. of Coud~.
• Pa. announce the engagement and
: approaching marriage of their
: daughter Lyneue Milligan Cruz to
• John Dennis Keenan. He is the son
: of Mr. ani! Mrs. Ronald M.
• Keenan, and grandson of Mrs. and
: Mrs. Walter D. Abblell and Mrs.
: and Mrs. Wilbur A. Dennis of Gal. lipolis.
; Cruz is a gmduate of CedarviUe

College, Cedarville where she
received a Bachelor's of Science in
nursing. She is employed as an
R.N. with Keuering Medical Ceo·
ter, Dayton. Keenan is a graduate
of Cedarville College with a Bachelor's of Art in accounting. He is
employed by Great American Life
Insurance Company in Cincinnati
Ohio.
The wedding is planned for
November.

DeBord-Feuer
POMEROY • Mr. and Mrs. Dal·
las DeBord, Pomeroy, announce
the engagement and approachi~g
marriage of their daughter Tamm1e
Lynn to Dr. Joel Evan Feuer, son
of Dr. and Mrs. Seymour Feuer,
Youngstown.
·
Tammie Lynn is a graduate of
Meigs High School an~ Hocld~g
Technical CoUege. She 1s a regis-

tered nurse and is employed as a
Home Care Resource Planner at
Docas Nursing Support Systems in
Youngstown.
Joel is a graduate of the Ohio
State CoUege, of Dentistry and has
a private practice in Youngstown.
The couple will be married on
October 3I at the Temple El Emeth
in Youngstown.

•,

.
"

Short-Johnson
CHESlER· Mr. and Mrs. Her- is the director ol a&lt;1m1ssions and
ber! Short, Chester, announce the social services at Pinecrest Care
· engagement of their daughter, Center, Gallipolis.
The prospective groom is a
_Amberly Kay to Larry Douglas
-(Pete) Johnson, son of Mr. and 1987 graduate of Southern High
Mrs. Larry G. (Butch) Johnson, School, auended DeVry Instilllte of
Technology, Columbus and is cur-.Racine.
- The bride-elect is a 1990 gmdu- rently employed as a leadworker
. ate of Eastern High School and a for Meigs Industries, Syracuse. A
· 1992 graduate of Washington State · November wedding is planned.
9ommunily Colle_ge,_ Marietta. She
.

POMEROY - Bernice Carpenter, vice president of the Athens
District United Methodist Women,
was a guest at the recent meeting of
the Forest Run United Methodist
Women held at the church.
Mrs. Qupenter reported on various district meetings. Edith Sisson,
president, opened the meeting with
a unison reading of the UMW pur~se. There was group s)nging of
'My Faith Looks Up to Thee."
Devotions were given by Evelyn
· Hollon who used the title "Life of
Faith Comi?ared to a Tree" referring to scnpture from Ephesians
. and closing with prayer.

During the business meeting,
orficers gave reports. It was reported that Sisson and Kathleen Scott
attended the a district meting in
Marlena. Thirty-one sick calls were
reported.
Mary Nease read two poems
entitled, "Have No Fear" and
"Stored in September."
Sisson read about her school
days which she has wriucn for her
granddaughter.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess, Mary K. Roush, to
seven members and jlUCSts, Abbey
Stratton, Wilma Re1ber and Mildred Arnold.

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RACINE • Lynn Shuler
lmnounces the upcoming wedding
JJf his daughter, Dina Christine, to
: ~ichard Kenneth Weiss, Jr.
Dina is a I 988 graduate of
· Southern High School and a gmduate of Associated Schools, Inc.,
North Miami Beach, Fla. She is
-employed at the Cooker Restaurant.

•'

Richard is a graduate of Lexington Senior High School, Lexington.
He attended The Ohio State Uni·
versity and North Central Techni·
cal College. He is employed by
Georgia Pacific.
The wedding will be held on
October 2 at the First Baptist
Church of Racine.

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MR. AND

ATLANTA (AP)- A family of
pigs livin~ in Biosphere 2 fell victim to their own large appetites and
became pork roast
The two pigs ·- which were
from Georgia - and the seven
piglets they had while in the Biosphere turned out to be too hard to
feed. They ended up on the dinner
table.
· "We killed them," Abigail

NICHOLAS JOHNSON

Pope-Johnson

MR. AND MRS. ROBERT ROCCHI

Graham-Rocchi
GALLIPOLIS - Shari Jean Graham and Robert Lido Rocchi were
united in marriage July 24 in a for·
mal ceremony. at the Ariel Theater
in GaUip&lt;?lis.
Shari is the daugh~r of Richard
and Carol Graham and Robert is .
the son of Remo and Helen Rocchi,
Minister Mike Smith officiated
the double ring ceremony with the
bride being escorted by hec father,
Richard Graham, and daughter,
)3randy Mullins.
,
· Attendants for the bnde were:
Bridget Harrell, Debbie Mink,

Mary Bea Sheets, and Meg Wells.

Jill graham, niece of the bride,
served as flower girl.
Best man for the groom was
Paul Gauze, friend of the groom.
Groomsmen were Mario Rocchi,
John Rocchi, and Mark Smith.
Dustin Mink, son of attendant Debbie Mink, served as ring bearer.
A reception followed the ceremony at the Elk's Lodge in Gallipolis.
The couple resides at 241
LeGrande Blvd. in Gallipolis.

GALLIPOLIS • Amy Dawn
Pope and Stoney Johnson were
united in marriage Aug. 14 in
Gatlinburg, Tenn. Amy is the
daughter of Don and Leota Pope of
Gallipolis. Stoney is the son of
Nicholas and Karen Johnson also
of Gallipolis.
An afternoon wedding was beld
at the Little Log Chapel in Gatlinburg in a private ceremony. Following the wedding the couple
spent their honeymoon in Gatlin-

Bill
Hysell, Mike, Joy, Silane, Billie Jo
and Josh Hysell, Dora Hysell,
Nancy Hysell, Clyde and Alice
Davis, Randy, Genia and Cody
Hysell, Rick, Mary, Jimmy and
Joanie Caruthers, Steve, Joyce,
Steve, Jr., Daniel and Stacy Hysell,
Charlotte an&lt;l Paul Hysell, David
Haggy, Sr., Janet, Kenny, Jr. and
Jesse McKnight,~. Linda and
Ron, Jr. Hysell, Dean, Karen, Rose,
Amy, Ben and Jason Schrock,
Mona Jean Jacks, Anna Frank,
Connie Hendri,x, Flossie Hysell,
Jamie Burris, Gary, Tammy and
Heather Hysell, Wendi and Todd
Daniels and Dennis and Rachel
Hysell.

ntfu

Alling of Biosphere told The
Atlanta Journal-Constitution. "We
hated to do it, bUt they just ate too
much. So they became holiday dinners."
The two-year Biosphere expermient in enclosed living ends Sunday. The pigs had been living in the
3.1-acre steel and glass enclosure
in the Arizona des'ert with eight
humans and 3,800 other species.

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burg following the wedding.
An open reception for family
and friends was held at the Moose
Lodge in Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Aug.-21.
Amy is completing her last year
at the Unversity of Rio Grande
where she is majoring in elementary education. Stoney is a graduate
of Hocking College is presently
employed with Carter's Plumbing.
The couple reside in Gallipolis.

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MR. AND MRS. RALPH HAMON

GALLIPOLIS - Pamela Jean
Trout and Ralph Randall Hamon
were united in matrimony Aug. 14
at Kennewick Baptist Church of
Kennewick, Washington.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
:and Mrs. James E. Trout of Ken;newick, WashingtOn and the grand·daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. S.
.Merlo Harrison of Gallipolis and
.the late Mr. and Mrs. Raymond G.
;Trout of Northup. The groom is the
"on pf Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C.
:Hamon of West Ric~land, Wash,ingtOn.
· The bride was given in marriage
:by her father and mother. Honored
~ttendants were: Maribeth Myers,
l, ynn Browning and Jeff Smith.
·Other attendants included: Wendy
:Trout, Julie Hamon, Jayne Phillips,
:Joe Hamon, Corky Hamon. Paul
:Trout and Tim Trout. The Junior
;Bridesmaid was Alisha ,Myers fol-

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Financial reimbursement, training, and
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Wedding policy

•
••
Those not making the 60 day
: The Sunday Times-Sentinel
deadline
will be published during
:regards· weddings of Gallia, Meigs
the
daily
paper
as space allows.
•and Mason Counties as news and is
Photographs
of either the bride
:happy to publish wedding stories
or
the
bride
and
groom may be
iand pbotogmphs withOilt charge.
published
with
wedding
stori~s is
l liowever, wedding news must
tmeet general standards of timeli· desired. Photo~phs may be e1ther .
•ness. The newspaper prefers to black and whue or good quality
:publish accounts of weddings as . color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
as possible after the event
: To be published in the Sunday not be accepted. Genemlly. $nap'edition, the wedding must have shots or instant-developing photes
:taken place within 60 days prior to are not of acceptable qualily.
All material submitted for publitthe publication, and may be up to
cation
is subject to editing.
words. in length. Material for
Questions
may be directed to
!Along the River must be received
the
editorial
department
from 1-5
lby the editorial department by
p.m.
Monday
through
Friday
at
•Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date
446-2342.
~of publication•

:soon

Help us make the most important
inve11tment we can- our ch,ildren! Call now
at 992-2117 for information.
.

lowed by the two flower girls
Stephanie and Nicole Myers.
The bride wore a white gown
with an A-Chaple satin train. The
bodiCe was detailed .with pearl and
lace sequence. Her veil was a wide
brim hat with matching lace and
pearls. She wore a pearl necklace
given to ber by her grandparents on
hec fifth Christmas.
The bride is a recent gmduate of
Central Washington University
with a degree in Elementary and
Special Education. She is
employed with Kennewick School
District as a High School Life
Skills teacher. The groom is an
employee of Safe way as a journeyman checker and attends Washington State University branch campus
pursuing a degree in Communications and Pastoral Ministry.
The couple live in west Richland, Washington.

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All fine jewelry is weighed, then priced,
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Appetite proves fatal for biosphere pigs

.'

Carpenter speaks at
Methodist meeting

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY

Shuler-Weiss

! ... ··~ .

\,

tions, the men's fancy war dance, cially arranged program for chilthe women's fancy shawl dance, dren on Friday, October I. ·
the men's traditional grass dance,
Times will be from 11:00 a.m.
the women's jingle dress dance, to dusk on October I, from 12 to
intertribal dances and songs and dusk on October 2, and from 12 to
friendship dance.
5 p.m. on October 3.
Special features will include the
For further information contact
eagle dance by Chief Bushyhead Daphne Bradshaw at (614') 894himself, storytelling by Delores 4228.
Santhe, a flute demo by Mark
The park is located across the
Hicks, and a weapon demo by east Huntington bridge and north of
David Little Hawk Soap. Also the Lawrence COunty Fair Grounds
available will be genuine native offRt. 243.
arts, crafts, foods, book, tapes, and

. MASON· The Ser.tember meet- fall recipes at this time.
mg of the Ageless 'Classmates"
Marjorie Walburn was named
was held at the Mason Family secretary for the group. All
Resti!urant, Mason, W.Va.
Wahama classmates are welcome
D!nner grace was prayed by to auend these meetings.
·
Sylv1a Sayre. Following dinner,
Attending were JoAnn Goulurt,
secret pals, cards, gifts and memen- Etta Mae Richardson Carol Proflos were exchanged. During the flu, Peggy Edwards, Carol Roush
business meeting the group decided Connie Smith, Charlene Frye, Mar:
to_ meet at Scans parking lot in jorie Walburn, Shirley Tucker, Sue
Middleport at 5 R-m. on October 5 Allensworth, June Maxey, Sylvia
to carpool to Bob
Rio Sayre, Peggy Reitmire and Bernice
Grande for their 6 p.m.
Clark.
will
their

·

(

((

GALLIPOLIS. An"Arthritis designedtogivepeoplewitharthriWarren, a 1992 graduate of
Self-Help Course" will be held for tis the knowledge and skiUs needed Central Ohio Technical CoUege,
six sessions from 6 to 8 p.m. Oct 5 to take a more active part in their has been employed for one year at
through Nov. 9, at the Holzer Med- arthritis care, and includes actions Holzer Clinic and resides in Logan.
ical Center.
he or she can take to help keep Both she and Strohm have special
Sponsored by the_Arthritis foun- arthritis under control and to stay interests in arthritis education,
dation the course addresses: arthri- as independent as possible," sports-related injuries, and aquatic
tis and related diseases, medica- - Strohm said.
therapy, a form of warm-water
tions, exercise and joint prolection,
''This course is just one of the therapy that is especially beneficial
coping with pain and faugue, prob- many local activities being planned for those who have arthritis.
!em-solving, nutrition, depression, for the month of October in conThe arthritis self-help course is
and doctor/patient relationship.
junction with National Physical limited to 20 perSons. The Arthritis
Leaders for the course are Lisa Therapy Month."
Foundation can provide financial
Strohm, Physical Therapist, and
Strohm, a gmduate of Ohio Uni- assistance to cover the cosi for
Mary Warren, Physical Therapist versity, is actively involved With those who want to auend.
Assistant, who have completed the the Fibrositis Support Group of the
Course registration may be
Arthritis Foundation's "Leader Gallia County ares. She has been made by calling the Holzer Hotline
Training Workshop."
employed at Holter Clinic for three atl-800-462-5255 between II a.m.
"The arthritis self-help course is years and resides in Rio Grande.
and 11 p.m.

Ageless classmates gather

DINA SHULER AND RJCHARD WEISS

$

/

Native
American
celebration
to
be
held
PROCTORVILLE • On October many women's "old style" tradi- more. Of special note is the spe-

AMBERLYSHORT AND LARRY JOHNSON

!_

RUTLAND • Descenclants of
Oscar and Charles Hysell held a
family reunion at Rutland Fireman's Park lut Sunday.
The f8Rlily members attending
were from Ohio, West Virginia and
North Carolina
Attending were Jim and Betty
1ohnson, Kay and Kyle Johnson,
Ann and Bill Carswell, Bill Carswell, Jr., Chris Davis, Mark Coy
and Melissa Johnson, Linda Lambert, Carol, Bobbie Jo, Angelia and
Ryan McClure, Roger, Kathy,
Buddy, Jessica and Kasey Roush,
Guy and Ruby Hysell. Janet Hysell
Roberts, Barb, Tom and Tommy
Varian. Roben E. Smith, Shirley
Marty, Cora and Mart Woodard,
Tonya, Jay and Amber Y.wson,

l

ArthritiS class focuses on self-help

1 through 3, 1993, a Native American Celebration and Festival, honoring the historical, cultural, and
educational roots of our country
and original indigenous peoples
here in this land will bC hosted at
Hideaway Park, Proctorville.
The event is coordinated by
Chief Fred Allen Bushy head, a
highly honored Chief of the Southern Cheyenne nation and an
enrolled member of the Cheyenne
and Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma.
The celebration will include

Sunday nmes Sentlnei--Page-83

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992-6250

151 2ND AVE. • GALLIPOLIS
446·2842

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.,

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�September 26, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

:-·September 26, 1993

wv

Sunday Times Sel'ltlnei--Page--85

Gallia community calendar
•

Tuesday, Sept. 28

Sunday, Sept. U

CENTENARY • The family of
RIO GRANDE - The buckeye
Pete and Margie Parsons will hold Hilis Ag. mechanics FFA Alumi
a reunion at Raccoon Creek County will hold its first meetin.ll of the
school year at 7 p.m. in the Ag.
Park Shelter House no. 5.
mechantcs classroom at Buckeye
POINT PLEASANT • Narcotics Hills.
Anonymous Tri County Group will
GALLIPOLIS • Alcoholic:s
meet at 611 Viand SL at 7:30p.m.
Use side entrance for baselllent.
Anonymous will meet at Woodlalld
Center, multi-purpose room at 8
CENTENARY - The family of p.m.
Lester Hunt and Laura and John
GALLIPOLIS
American .
Wood will hold a reunion at Raccoon Creek· County Park shelter- Legion Post 161 will hold a regular
house no. 4 at 10 a.m.
meeting at 7:30p.m.

. MR. AND MRS. GARY GIBBS

40th anniversary celebrated
REV. AND MRS. W.E. CURFMAN

50th anniversary celebrated
:
.
:
:
·
:
·
.

.

CHESHIRE- Rev. and Mrs.
W;E. Curfman of Cheshire will eelebrate their 50th anniversary Oct.
26.
Married in Cheshire Oct. 26,
1943, the~ are the parents of three
sons, Wtlliam Jr. of Cheshire,
Ricblwd of Columbus and David of
Jackson. They have six grandchildren BOd eight great grandchildren.

a

Mr. .Curfman is retired blacksmilh of 19 years from Kiser,
Ravenwood W.Va. and is a fonner
minister of forty-seven years .
They will be honored by an
open house reception given by their
children and griuidchijdren Oct. 24
at the Kyger Creek Club house
from 1 to 4 p.m. They request that
gifts be omitted.

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Gibbs, Racine, will celebrate their
40th wedding BMiversary on October 3 from 2 to 5 p.m. at the Senior
Citizens Building in Pomeroy.
United in marriage on Sept 19,
1953, they are the parents of five
children, Greg, South Depot,

GALLIPOLIS - Multiple Scle·
RJO GRANDE • The Open Gate
rosis Support Group will meet at Garden Club will meet at 7:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m. at New Life Lutheran at tlie home of Mary Jane Wolfe.
Church. For more inf0011ation call The program "Care of Common
Laura Eldridge at 446-6563.
House Plants" and installation of
officers.
·GALLIPOLIS - Gallia French
City Baptist will have Ralph WorkENO • Eno Grange no. 2080
man·as lhe guest speaker at the 11 will hqld an open meeting at 7:30
a.m. services.
p.m. at the Grange Hall. There will
be a potluck dinner with a special
GALLIPOLIS - Sonshine will program on safety and health.
be singing at the II a.m. service at
Debbie Drive Chapel.
CHESHIRE - Cheshire Chapter
450 OES will meet at 7:30p.m .
CROWN CITY • Charles Lusher will be speaking at the Good
POINT PLEASANT - Narcotics
Hope Baptist Church at the II a.m. Anonymous Clean and Free Group
services at Good Hope Baptist will meet at the Episcopal Church
Church.
at 8:30p.m.

W.Va.; Sondra Ohlinger, Cannonsburg, Ky.; S~erry Harris, Syracuse;
Tammy Spangler, Evans, W.Va.
and Julie Randolph, Racine. They
also have 13 grandchildren.
Friends and relatives are invited
to the reception: The couple
requests that gifts be omitted.

Wilson family reuni9n held
SYRACUSE - Descendants of
John and Maggie Wilson held a
family reunion recently at the park
in Syracuse behind the London
pool.
Dinner was served with grace
given by Paul VosS.
Attending were Jack Mowery,
Terri Mower, Rita McFarland,
Tony Brown, Kelly Alli:ire, Rhonda
Fetty, Davida Kearns; B.W.
Kearns, Philip Fetty, Jenny Burton,
Christy Buzzard, Kim Smith, John
Wilson, Donna Wilson, Betty Wilson, Walter Wilson, Thomas Wilson, Joshua Wilson, Joann Wears,
David Millian, David D. Dillard,
Mary Voss, Edward Voss, Chris
Freeman , Ephriana Herdman,

.

MR. AND MRS. JAMES CO)'IKLE

Silver anniversary recognized
POMEKOY - James and Betty
Conkle will celebrate their silver
wedding anniversary with an open

house at their home on October 3
1993. The couple requests that gifu
be omitted.

said.
He placed two papers on the
desk of clerk Connie Rinkes of
Flushing, pointed the shotgun at
her forehead and demanded she
sign the documents or "things ·
would be fmished in another way,"
a repmt filed with the sheriff's
office said.
Workley's daughter, Sonia
Workley of St. Clairsville, told
deputies her father had been under
a lot or pressure because his business was not doing well and his son
was getting married, said sheriffs
Capt. Dan Phillips.
Ms. Workley said her father
once was a minister at a church in
Quaker City.
Ms. Rinkes told officers she
moved the gun away. Worklcy continued holding the ~un but did not
point it at her agam as they discussed the rates and term·s of lhe
loan he was demanding, the report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) said.
Evangelist Billy Graham heard his
own message more clearly Thursday night - with the help of a
hearing aid.
Graham. 74, said his wife lalked
him into wearing the device for the
FAMILY PRACTICE
: second night of his five-night cru·
• sade in the city.
:
"I am doing something tonight I
: have never done before," Graham
· said. "I am wearin' it for the fust
· time ever to preach. •
In the distance came a wailing
1
sound.
.
"I can even hear lhe siren," he
said.
Graham spoke about his marriage and other personal issues to
an estimated 33,000 people at
Cooper Stadium. About 16,500
folding chairs and 15,000 bleacher
seats were full. Several hundred
: people stood.
'
TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
Graham, who has Parkinson's
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
disease, said he was taking medica(POINT PLEASANI' MEDICAL CENTER)
tioa that allowed him to continue
preaching.
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
"We take lhings every day on
POINT PLEASANT
failh," he said. "God has given us
(304) 675-1675
a prescription that must be
received, taken and applied.''

FLUSHING, Ohio (AP) - A
farmer and former minister
remained in jail Friday after he was
charged with aiming an unloaded
shotgun at a bank clerk and
demanding a $40,000 loan.
Kenneth Worldey, 61, of Rushing, was in the Belmont County jail
in St. Clairsville on a $125,000
bond, the sheriffs office said. He
was charged with aggravated robbery.
..
Workley, carrymg
a 12 -gauge
· shotgun. walked into the lo·an
office of Columbus National Bank
on Wednesday mornin~. deputies

Graham wears
hearing aid
· for first time

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

; GALLIPOLIS - The "1993
,Rotarian of the Year" was named at
a meeting installing new officers.
The meeting held at Holiday Inn
June 29 began with and On June 29
past president Bob Hood presenting
· Dr. Mel Simon with the distinguished award of "1993 Rotarian
of the Year" award. In presenting
l:&gt;r. Simon with a plaque, Hood
stated that "Mel's involvement in
·international service make him an
excellent candidate for this honor."
For several years Mel has taken

Mane Designers 760 1si Ave. of
Gallipolis would like to inform
.. the public that Rita Rogers has
· joined their staff. Rita brings to
: the Salon 10 years of
· . Cosmetology experience. She
will be working on Tues-- Wed.-. Fri.··&amp; Sat. She can be reached
at 446-2933.

EXPEDITED TO
PUBLIC SUNDAY!!

HERE'S THE
NEWS

,.

:: The Missionary Societies of rural
::churches have done sterling work for
·:many years and
::some churches
&gt;have such groups
::whose history
·.goesbackseveral
:;decades.
· One such
e xample is the
· SalemBaptistMis: sionary Society.
: According to the June 20,1929 edi· tion of ihe Gallia Times, the above
: organization was begun in 1929. .
: Tbe fustofficers were Ethel Price,
: president; Edith Morgan, vice president; Dorothy Steger, treasurer, and
: Roma Griffith, secretary. Other
: members included Leora Wright,
: Grace Wood, Nona Frye, Frieda
· Slagle, Elizabeth Wood, Sarah Jane
, Cook, Margetta Prose. Mary Davis,
: Hattie Keller and Linnie Price. .
: Oneofthcfirstprograms in 1929 had
' the following agenda:
·
: Song, "Stepping In The Light."
: Scripture,
Prayer,
: Reading,"Somcthing Good About
: You." Redtling, "A Little Patch of
' Blue." Solo, Reading,"! Was Sitting
: Aione In The Twilight." Victrola
. music and reading.
Actually, the program capped off
: a full day as the morning was spent
: quilting and dinner was enjoyed at
. : noon with the program taking up the
· afternoon.
Such was the pattern fOr most
: missionary societies in that era. The
: ladies established the second Thurs: day of every month as the meeting
' date.
: In later years the Salem Missionary
; Society helped to spearhead many of
: the building campaigns in the
· church's history.
·
: The Salem Baptist Church was
i organized in the 1840s and a burial
: ground was set aside next to a small
' log church erected about 1843. The
: pulpit was surrounded wilh a banilis; ter of boards placed in an upright
: positi.on thatcamealmosttothewaist
•of the minister.
: The present sanctuary was built in
' 1876 and the basement put under the
.1church in 1961. A new addition was
added in 1976 growing out ofa build·
1ing fund begun by the Missionary
1 Society in 1969.
' So far as we can tell most of the

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Phono on~ nllaloaul Community
llltllnp ••nat you.

30 M!NLITES EARLY FOR REGISTRATION .

GALLIPOLIS
ST. PETER'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
541 Second Avenue
Tue: 7:00p.m.
Wed: 9:30a.m.

,: Local missionaries active
;: in ·humanitarian effort
by Jim Sands
Special Correspondent

TAWNEY STUDIO

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THIS IS A PUBLK SALE AND SHALL IE
CONDUafD ON THE PlEMISES SUNDAY U

BUlLT IN 1840s • Salem Baptist Cburch dates back to the
1840s With the present sanctuary built in 1876. In 192.9, the Missionary Society was begun and in ensuing years, it became note.
.worlhy for its good work.

Let us copy your old
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Hlam. "Now my whole family is
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DOORS OPEN
NOON SUNDAY
FOR 5 BIG HOURS
TIL 6 P.&amp; SUNDAY
EVENING.

GOODS TO BE

GALLIPOLIS ·Weekend services will be held at White Oak
Baptist Church with Ed Mollohan
Friday, Don Saxton on Satur~Jay
and Rev. Paul Taylor Sunday.
LOG AN • Narcotics Anony- Evening services will begin at 7:30
mous Courage to Change Group p.m. and Sunday morning services
wiU m~t at First Church of Christ at 10:45 a.m. with special singing
at6:30 p.m.
nightly.

clothing will keep the executives
dry and warm, even in British
weather, as the drivers of the socalled "taxijet" whisk them to
their business-class seats.
But the carrier acknowledged
that a limit of one small suitcase
per passenger could deter some riders.
Virgin's airline rivals called the
free motorcycle trips a marli:eting
stunt similar to the free limo rides
Branson offers to some passengers.
·

Many
.O ther
Styles to
•
· Choose
From

Weekend services

GALLIPOLIS - Narcotics
Anonymous Just for today Group
will meet at Grace United
Methodist Church at 7 p.m . Use
Cedar Street entrance.

Man uses shotgun to demand bank loan
He then showed her the 'shotgtin
was not loaded.
Employees who witnessed the
event kept customers from entering
the bank and notified deputies.
Worltley was taken into custody
as he stood outside the bank,
Phillips said.
A preliminary hearing will be
held Sept. 30. Attorney Mark Costine, who represented Workley in
court, said Judge Harry White
ordered a psychological evaluation
of the man.
At Castine's request, White
lowered bond from $250,000 to
$125,000 on the condition that if
Workley was released, he would be
held under electronically monitored
house arrest
Ms. Rinkes did not return a tele·
phone message seeking further
comment Friday.
Flushing is in eastern Ohio
about 30 miles west of Wheeling,
W.Va.

Simon recognized for
· humanitarian-effort

GALLIPOLIS - Elizabelh
Chapel Church, S.R. 218, will hold
a revival Sept 26 through 29 at 7
p.m. nightly with evangelist Cal
Ray Evans and Pastor Alfred Holley.

GALLIPOLIS • A regular meet·
ing of the Gallipolis Chapter #283
OES Honorin~ Past Matrons and
Past Patrons w1th a dinner at 6 p.m.

Kathy Gardner, Amy Reynolds,
Myrna Swearingen, ' Tabby
Swearingen, Megan Swearingen,
Wanda Swearingen, Jesse Mowery,
Brean Kearns, Sarah Fetty, Alisia
Burton, Owen McFarllmd, Jessie
Burton, Lyndsey Buzzard, Brandy
Smith, Xantha Smith, David Dillard II, Abby Wilson, Jacob Wilson, Jessamyn Reynolds, Staesha
Herdman, Andrea Vosem Timothy
Vose, Jessica Matson and Heida
Matson.
Jenny Burton and Kathy Gardner will be in charge of next year's
reunion. Each person is to bring a
gift to the reunion which will be
held on Sept. 17, 1994 with dinner
at I p.m. at the same place.

Whizzing passengers to airline's
business class by motorcycle
L&lt;~N~ON (AP) -. I,f getting
stu~~ m ~rt ira_ff'IC IS a drag,_one
Brmsh earner will tuck you m!o
weatherproof gear and haul you m
by m?~ycle. F~ fr~.
.
Vugm Atlanu~ A~rways esum~ that by weavmg m and out of
traff1:, the motorcycles can. shave
30 l!IIDutes or more off the ume of
a tnp betwC!'" central London and
H~ro~ AlfporL
. We ve already had a lot of
mtere~t from. our passengers who
work m the City and who are keen
to cut down traveling time to the
airport," Vir~in chief Richard
Branson saidFnday.
Virgin said its weatherproof

: SERVICE REWARDED· Past president Bob· Hood presents
, Dr. Mel Simon with the "1993 Rotarian of the Year" at a recent
, meeting.

BIDWELL - Rev. Steve Rollins
Revival
will be preaching at Prospect BapBIDWELL - A tent revival will
tist Church; sel'Vices begin at 7:30 be held at Apostolic Faith Church,
p.m.
190 Vale Rd., until Oct. 1 at 7 :30
p.m. nightly. For more information
Monday, Sept. 27
call388-8868.
THURMAN - Thunnan Grange
will meet at 7:30p.m.

THE SHOE
TO WEIRI

JACKSON
JACKSON COUNTY YMCA
275 Portsmouth St.
Mon: 5:30p.m.", 6:30p.m.'

• Expreu Mealing

activities of this society went off
without incident. .There are episodes
related to other missionary societies
in the county that, while interesting,
are somewhat embarrassing. .
There was one church in Greenfield Township where the ladies gave
a social for the community. One of
the spinster ladies (spinster being, in .
the 1800s. any woman over 25 and
not married) had apparently been
seeing two fellows at the same time.
The pair took the occasion of lh~
church social to "duke it out'' and
detennine who was the "best beau."
Bolh of these men were widowers
wilh several kids at home, so getting
a woman to do all the necessary wodc
was probably the greatest motivation
for risking life and limb.
In !872 the ladies of Ohio Chapel
MethodistChurchorganizedapicnic
in a grove up the hill from the church.
Dinner was eaten and discussed,
addressesweremadeandkids' games
were played when about 15 "rowdies" showed up on the grounds.
Each had a revolver strapped to a
leg. Tbeir intention was to begin a
fight.
According to the Gallipolis Journal, "They found difficulty, however,
in getting up a row, until finally on11
of !heir number commenced abusing
and struck one of the scholars.
"This appeared to have the desired effect, as the balance of lhc
rowdies immediately drew their revolvers and would doubtless have
succeeded in driving the women and
· children away had not some of the
citizens interfered wilh the strong
ann of the law and gave the aggressors to understand that they would
not be pennitted to further disgrace
themselves."
Ironically, that same day a
Women •s Foreign Missionary Society was fonned in Gallipolis. That
organization helped support Melhodist missionaries across the world.
Its unspoken aim was to "civilize"
the "heathen savages" with the Gospel and western culture.
Whether the society ever considered sending missionaries to Clipper
Mill, we do not know but there were
obviously still some "savages"on the
Ohio River that needed converted.
James Sands is a special correspondent of the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
His address Is: 65 WiDow Drive,
Springboro OH 45066

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World ostom

GROUP TO PERFORM • Soatben Galpel
Mule Quartet "Etemlty" wiD he pertormillg at

tile Flnt Churth ~
Garfield Aveue, Sept.
26 at 7 p.m. The public is IDvited .to attend.

Informative cancer video
distributed to area schools
GALLIPOLIS • Breast selfpniCtieed at an early
age and on a monthly basis, can
make a tremendous impact on the
chances of derecting breas! cancer,
and staff from Holzer Medical
Center have have produced a 1001
for early detection.
· Marslia Rodgers, R.N., CPAN.
Ms. Rodgers and Sharon
Carmichael, R.N., nurses in .the
Post Anesthesia Care Unit (PACU)
haye produced a video tape,
explainmg both the proper method
and the importance of breast self
ell8lllination (BSE).
The videotape, entitled "Breast
Self Exam for Younger Women,"
. is being distributed to the area high
schools as a part of the observance
of Women's Health Month by the
Holzer Medical Center. Rodgers
stresses, "To educate young
_women in BSE will stan the process of making young women 'in
Gallia County responsible for their
ownheallh."
Carmichael and Rodgers are
both former Gallia County Nurses
of Hope. They recognize ftrst hand,
the importance of educating young
women i.n the correct BSE technique.
The incidence of breast cancer
in Gallia County is slowly rising
and affecting yonnger women. The
American Cancer Society estimates
that over 80 percent of breast
lumps are bemgn. However it is
vitally important to realize that 20
percent could be cancerous, and
early detection is the key to surQan~ination,

Chester Student
council defines
.
year 's proJects
VIDEO DONATED - A special videolape on Breast Self Exami,
aad011 has been produced at the Holzer Medical Ceater by Marsha
Rod1e~ R.N., CPAN, and Sharon Carmichael, R.N., staff' nurses
ia PACU at the Holzer Medical Center. Both are also paat AmerlCID Caacer SodettGallia County Unit Nurses of Hope. Presenting
copies of this tape for use In area bigh schools left, are ~odgers,
MtSSie Whaley, R.N., Gallia Academr Higb School Health Nurse;
Gall Poblman, R.N., River Valley H1gb School Health Nurse and
Carmichael.
vi val.
Carmichael emphasizes that
women who become familiar with
their breasts by perfonning BSE on
a monthly basis, increase their
chances of surviving breast cancer.

Although a rearly examination by
a physician IS recommended, waiting twelve months between breast
exams may lead to serious consequences.

Saunders family hosts reunion
GALLIPOLIS - The family of
Connie and Bertha Young-Saunders held ilS annual reunion at the
Big Run Park shelter house in
Columbus on Aug. 22.
•
' Rev. Bruce Unroe presented the
prayer for the reunion. Those
attending were Connie and Wanda
Saunders, Pete, Stacie, and Christi
Saunders, Jim, Linda, Trina and

.
Implosion marks
movie debut
LOUISVILLE, Ky . (AP) Sylvester Stallone and Wesley
Snipes should have a blast at the
party MTV has planned for next
month, but don't lhink of trying to
crash it.
The Oct. 3 " implosion party"
- during which two waterfront
warehouses wiU be demolished is a promotion for the duo's
upcoming action movie, "Demolition Man." Fifty winners of an
MTV contest will be flown to
Louisville to attend.
But city officials Friday warned
others to stay away. They're also
keeping the exact time of the blowup secret in hopes of discouraging
gawkers.

GARS receives
high honors
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Academy High School marching
band excelled at a recent band
competition.
.
The band placed ftrst in class
"B" at the Pickerington band contest and second in class "B" at the
Lancasler Band held SepL 18. The
band received an overall rating of
superior "!" at both conteslS.
As a result of lhe "I" rating, the
band has earned the right to atlend
the Ohio music education association state marching band fmals on
Oct. 30 at Cooper Stadium in
Columbus. This marks the twelfth
consecutive year for the band to
qualify for this event.
Field commander, Laura Linder
received a superior "I" rating at
both conteslS and was selected as
the best class "B" fteld commander
at the Pickerington contest. The
percqssion section received a rating
of superior "I" at the Lancaster
contest and a excellent "II" rating
at the Pickeringtofi contest.
The band auxiliary (flags and
feature twirler) received a rating of
excellent "II" at the Pickerington
COOleSt. The GAHS band's next
competition is at the Belpre contest
on Oct. I6.

GALLIPOLIS - The United
Ostomy Association, Inc. and ilS
member chapters have em barked
on a campaign to designale Oct. 2
World Ostomy Day throughout the
U.S. and Canada - and the Gallipolis Cit)' Commission passed a
proclamauon Tuesday making the
day official locally.
Ostomy signifies a type of
surgery required when a person has
lost the normal function of their
bowel or bladder because of birth
defeclS, injury or disease.
The United Ostomy Association
helps those who have undergone
the surgery to rehabilitate from it.
Because of its personal nature,
the UOA feels ostomy has become
a taboo subject. World Ostomy
Day was'establisbed as an effort to
counter fears of discussing the
surgery, promote ostomy awareness and publicize the services of
the UOA.
The UOA has over 600 local
suppon chapters with over 42,000
members. The Ohio Valley Osrom y
chapter is the local group and has
monthly suppon meetings held the
third Sunday .of the month in the
French 500 Room at Holzer Medical Center at 2:30 p.m. For information regarding the UOA please
call I ~800-826-0826 or for more
information on the local area call
Phyllis Brown, RN, CETN at Holzer Medical Center at 446-5080 or
Richard Vaughn, president at
(6I4)992-7822.

J.P. Saunders, Jan, Sara, Sheree
and Sadie, Seth, Jim and Dora
Saunders, Scott, Joann, Mathew
and Melanie Saunders, Bob and
Ginger Williams, John, Susan and
Nalalie Anne, Emily Christine and
Brian Michael Saunders, Bob and
Jean Saunders, Jack, Vivian and
Heather Saunders, Roger and
Sheila Saunders, Roger Jr., Lori,

CHESTER - This year's Chester
Student Advisory Council members have as their goals to resurface
th~ ~ketball court and to install
drmkmg fountains on the playgrounil.
Among lheir fund raisers will be
a fall carnival to be held at the
school on Oct. 2.
Council members are: Ross
Holter, Kenneth Amsbary, Justin
Coleman, Alyssa Holter, Brittany
Hauber, Jonathan Owen, Carrie
Crow, Cody Faulk, Andy Mora
Charlie Young, Sara Mansfield'
Whitney Karr, Josh Clark We;
Crow, Julie Bailey, Lesler Parker
Josh Broderick, Stephanie Young'
Jason Arix, Mendy Guess, Heathe;
Westfall and Robert Lawrence.

•

WORLD OSTOMY DAY- Gallipolis City Manager Glenn
Smith (left) signs a proclamadon designating Oct. 2 World Ostomy ..·
Day. Seated to Smith's right Is Commissioner BUI Davis, who bas ', .
undergoae ostomy surgery.
·
··

FALL FESTIVAL • These members of Chester's Student Advl-.'.:
sory Council, front row, from left, Jonatbaa Owen and RosS ·
Holter; second row from left, Carrie Crow, Whitney Karr and' :
Julie Bailey and third row, Jonatbaa Owen, have beea busy..
preparing for a fall carnival.
..

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m-2588

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VINTON
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165 Main SL- 388 8603

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develop standards of quality and stimulate health
care organl~ations to meet or exceed the
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With your physician's approval, Buckeye Home
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physical, speech, and occupational therapist~
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physicians. Services may Include assessment,
teaching, medication set up, administration of
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t:~
B1 RON WORD
;-•• Aaoclated Preu Writer
~..ORANGE PARK, Fla. (AP) q&amp;ary and Mary Jane Chancey
~idered II-year-old daughter
1\)!drca to be their " miracle child"
~a Sllllllky Girl Scout and straight
ttt ;student who triumphed over her
e!rebral palsy.
:-:wben Andrea felt herself
~ed out of a train car window
1Gto the murky Alabanla bayou,'she
1!!4ught it was her parents in one
laSt selfless gesture . But she'll
n1lver know for sure.
The Chanceys, formerly of Bremen, Ohio, 40 miles southeast of
Columbus, Ohio, were among 44
people killed Wednesday when
NPtrak's Sunset Limited hurtled
Qlf a bridge into the water. The
Grlanceys, 4S, had decided to take
16~ train so their daughter would
\Ql.Ve the experience of riding one.
, . Andy, who uses a wheelchair,
~ived and was hospitalized in
ltobile, Ala.
i;~'.' .(m!y thinks her parents put
~ through a wmdow , but she
~dn't see what happened to her
~ents," said Fred Fedorowich,
\Y~o has lived next do9r to the
GJ!anceys for more lhan fWo years
!~ Orange Park, a city 10 miles
$11j!thwest of Jacksonville.
·;•"Mary Jane called Andy her
111.iracle child. She definitely .is a
miracle child," said Pat Alban, a
teacher at Ridgeview Elementary
School, where Andy was a sixth
gt!lde srudent weU-Iiked by teachers and feUow students: Now she
wm move to Ohio to live with an
. aunt.
~- - · Andy's rescue was aided by Lil! lian Beech, a 67-year-old resident
-: of Chatom, Ala., who was traveling
:: in the same car.
:· · •'I reached down and grabbed a
~ yi&gt;ung girl. We picked her up and I
~ JI,ISI held her in my arms. She told
• me she couldn't walk," Mrs.
~ Ileech said, noting that people
~ u.nder water were pushing lhe child
; · "I just feel like the Lord sent
: me there to get little Andy. I was
~ the only one who heard her," Mrs.
: )Jeech said.
.
Andy's telichell note her abili: ties in school and her parents total
:: devotion. She's quick to laugh,
,, loves a good joke and is not shy
~ about talking about her illness.
~
"I feel like God put a ferson
~ there for her to hold onto, ' said
~ Kathleen .Fisher, Andy's math
~ teacher.
~
Linda Westmoreland, Andy's
: lllnguage arlS teacher, recalls when
the class read a story about a little
~ with cerebral palsy.
:· "Andy then shared her life with
the clasS. It took a lot of nerve,"
S.!aesaid.
:- Neighbors and teachers describe
the Chanceys as devoted parents,
~ho often helped out at school
activities and events. Mrs. Chancey
was the "Cookie Mom" for the
icoop last year and ·worked al the
khool store, Principal David Nix
~id. They expected Andy to do
l(ormal school work despite her
P.hysical problems and use of a
j\&gt;heelchair.
.
,: "She's a typical sixlh grader,"
Ni11: said.
~ Andy's withdrawal from
~id~view upset her teachers.
:· • It wasn't ~ntil yesterday that I ·
realized we wouldn't be seeing
~dy again," said Ms. Fisher, tears
weaming down her cheeks.
:: The teacliers hope And~'s relatives will bring her u. the school to
$ay goodbye. "The kids need to
'fay goodbye to Andy and the
~chers, 100,"
. Ms.
. FISher said.

Mon.-Thurs. 12·8 p.m.; Closed Fri.; Sat. 1G-5; Sun. 1·5
500 feet below Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
304-773-5001.
MASON, W.VA.

•

8 AM-10 PM
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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
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·

~ The Board approved the annual

salaries and beneftlS survey condUcted by OVAL of the member
ilbraries. They also approved the
19.92-I993 Annual report which
t&amp;is year will be reproduced as a
b):)okmark for use by the member
": ·In other action the board
apj,roved the printing of specialty
Catalogs for the Books By Mail
program with Liberty Press ol
Jflikson. Previously these catalogs
W been duplicated on the copying
aiiaehine, but Extension Services
C.j&amp;rarian Cynthia Pirtle estimated
thBt the printin~ will save $2,761.
·~ Director Enc S. Anderson1also
aQnounced the annual meeting to .
he held Sept. 25. Dan Cain, a
nltionally recognized expert on
npn-profit boards will address budgeting and finance issues.
~ OVAL is the ooly slale funded
ri:gional library system in O~io. It
wves the citizens and libraries of
Al.hens, Hocking, Jackson,
L11wrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross,
Seioto, and Vinton Counties with
of services developed by
libraries.
anda Eblin serves on the
AL Board u 1 representative of
~Meigs Cbunty Public Library.

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BROUGHTON'S

·' WELLSTON - The Board of
i!rustees of the Ohio Valley Atea
~ibraries (OVAL) held their regu~·r monthly meeting at System
Headquarters in Wellston on Sept.

-

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bvAL approves

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Monday thru Sunday

~a/aries, printing

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STORE HOURS

.

liltaries.

Authorized Builders of

The most qualified local staff provides the care
you need In the comfort of your home. Our
professional Meigs County staff Includes: Patricia
Amos, AN, BSN, RegiQnal Director; David Harter,
AN, Patient Care Coordinator; Kay Koehler, ART,
County Secretary; Paul Smith, AN; Regina Reed,
AN; Jean Swain, HHA; Connie Semelsberger,
HHA; Gary Smith, LPT; Bill Benton, LPTA; Rosalie
Secore, OT; and Tanya Huffman, MSWA.
Please mark your calendars for the open house
planned for September 28th from 1:OG-3:00 p.m. H
you have any questions regarding services,
please call1·800o322·1317 or 614-992-7995.

•

Sunday nmes

Girl loses
1garents in
lmtrak crash

~ up.

Brittyn and Ali Saunders, Rodney
Saunders, Frieda Myers, Ed and
Betty Hamilton, Tiffany McCoy,
Steve, Lori, Kyle and Rachel
Dorsey, Joe and Cynthia Dailey,
Reverend Bruce and Becky ,Unroe,
Gwen, Josh, apd Joe Hamilton and
Sally Musik.
·
The reunion was planned for
next year at the same location.

BUCKEYE
HOME HEALTH
.
PROVIDES SERVICE IN
MEIGS COUNTY

OH Point Pleuant, wv

1993

September 26, 1119)

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

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• ••••••••

J

�Entertainment

Sports

Sunday Times-Sentinel /B8

..

Bob Dylan:
a worki~g
• •
muszczan

CIRCUS TICKETS AVAILABLE - Tickets
tor the Carson &amp; Barnes Flve·Ring Circus,
sponsored by the Gallipolis Area Jaycees and
tb Gallia County Jun1or Fair Board, will be
made·available before the Od. 4 opening day by
Jaycees, fair board members, Carl's Shoe Store,
the GaiUpolls Chamber or Commerce office, Big

By JENNIFER BOWLES
Associated Press Writer
BEVERLY HJLLS, Calif. (AP)
- Forget the tributes, drop the
hero worship : Bob Dylan just
wants to be known as a working
musician.
"It's all about a livelihood....
It's all about ~oing out and playing," he sa1d , his blue eyes
sparkling. "That 's what every
musician who has ever crossed my
path snives for." ·
Yes, but Bob Dylan isn't just
.·. the Average Joe musici8!).
· He strolls into a small, stuffy
room at his manager's office, wearinf jeans and cowboy boots topped
of with a black Australian cowboy
hat. He sits down in a chair, leans
back and plucks the hat off his
head, propping it on his knee where
idests for nearly an hour.
Dylan, who rarely gives inter·
views, is clearly uncomfortable at
first, not divulging much and giving terae rqJiies. But it doesn't take
long for h•m to shed his elusive
facade, exhibiting annoyance at
today's music, bashfulness about
his own achievements and fervor
about taking his guitar and harmonica on the road again.
"To me it' s a ,dream come
true," he says.."What could be bad
about traveling places, seeing different things, moving? It keeps you

Bear, Oliio VaHey Bank locations, HIUs, Kroger
and West Virginia Electric Supply, Shown are
Lauren (lef't) and Timothy Kyger (right), both
children or Drs. Tim and Billie Sue Kyger or
Gallipolis, nanking Jaycees chairman Matt
Rodgers. (Tribune photo)

Circus to hit Gallipolis in October
GALLIPOLIS - If there's any~
thing as American as apple pieand even more delighlful-it's the
circus and the biggest tented circus
in America is on its way to Gallipolis.
Carson &amp; Barnes 5-Ring Big
Top will arrive at Gallia County
OcL Fairgrounds and be erected by
elephant power in one day. The
show travels with a staff of 200,
including 95 performers as well as
various cooks, electricians,
mechanics, wardrobe and property
people, animal handlers, box office
and concession personnel. This in
addition to the many animals, exot-

ic and ~Jomestic, including 20 ele·
phants that are on display with the
World's Only 5-Ring Circus.
As Amenca's last old-time traditional circus, the big top str~tches
the length of a football field, holds
five rings, a hippodrome track and
steel arena. The show's performers
present a vast array of acrobatic
and aerial displays that include
wire-walking, bareback riding, juggling, risley, perch pole, Spanish
web, balancing trapeze, flying
trapeze and more.
Carson &amp; Barnes is so big it
moves every 24 hours, performing
in a different town every day and

demand is such that it can sometimes only return to an area once
every three years. The Circus presents the same exciting show in the
Largest cities in America as well as .
the small towns that appreciate
quality entertainment
The public is invited out circus
morning to. watch the elephants
raise the big top and visit the circus' mammoth traveling zoo with
lions, ti~ers, zebras, camels, a
giraffe, htppo and rare white rhino,
all free circus morning.
The event is sponsored by Gallipolis Area Jaycees and Gallia
County Fair Board.

PERFORMING EQUESTRIAN FEATS ·Lucianna Loyal of
the world famous Loyai-Repensky family of Bareback riders is
featured wilh the Carson &amp; Barnes S-Ring Circus to perform Oct.
4 at the GaUia Coonty Fairgrounds.

Discover a small world with Riverby miniatures
GALLIPOLIS - Miniature ere·
ations by the Riverby Mini-Crafters
will fiJI the French An Colony Galleries Oct. 2 through 31. "It's a
small world," sponsored by Davis·
Quickie Agency, Inc., will feature
over f.Cty pieces, to include seveml
doll houses, individual rooms and
bOOk ranwies.
Among the individual rooms
that will be displayed l!l'e a modem
·day General Store, a modem day
Garden Shop, a bathroom from the
early 1900s a 'toy cupboard and a
colonial style front ~h.
Seveml of the mmi-crafrers have
created fanlaSy rooms and scenes.
Jackie Coonen, of Gallipolis, will
be displaying three of her book fantasies. In the Mouse's House,
Honey Bear, and Goldielocks and
the Three bears will all be accompanied by fantasy rooms. In the
Mouse's House and Honey Bear
are especially interesting because
the books are German, written in
!927. All thiee bOOks will new on
display with the fantasy room _so
viewers can see how the book come ides with the room.
Shelia Hope-Benson, of Point
Pleasant, has also created several
fanlaSy scenes. She will be displaying the Wizards Tower, Dragon's
Lair, the Tooth Fairies Box and a
Mermaid in a Bowl.
A group ~roject, just recently
completed w•ll also be on display.
The theme of the display is porch·
cs. The group designed several
pieces for either a front or back
doD house porch. One group member used her pieces and memory to
re-create her mother's front porch.
The design of many of the
miniatures depends on the creator.
Many of the members buy their
doD house frames from a kit, making changes in the assembly to fit
their styles.
Jennie Hudson, a mini-crafter

DOLL HOUSE DRAWING· The Riverby mlnl-cral'lers ot the
French Art Colony will be selling rame ticketl throughout the
month of October for this doll house to be displayed at FAC. A
drawing will take place on the last day ot the exhibit. Tickets can
be purchased at Carl's Sboe Store or at the French Art Colony.
club member, described a fellow
club member's doll house as, "an
extremely fascinating piece of
work." Richard Steffie, of Middleport, recycles cereal boxes for the
frame of his doU house. Laminating
the boxes together, Steffie cuts the
strips and builds his doll houses in
the same manner that homes are
built. From rafters to windows that
really work, Steffie's doll houses
arc truly the model of a home.
The Riverby Mini-Crafters
forming in 1990 with only three
members has grown and presently
has over 20 members. The group,

Allen lashes out at prosecu_tor
By SAMUEL MAULL
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - An angry
Woody Allen lashed out Friday at a
Connecticut prosecutor who said he
believes the filmmaker molested
his daughter but decided not to put
him on trial for the child's sake.
Allen said at a news conference
that his fonner lover, Mia Farrow,
the prosecutor and police formed
an "unwholesome alliance"
against him.
''Their cheap scheming reeks of
sleaze and deception,'' he Said.
Later, Farrow's lawyer said her
client agreed with the prosecutor's
decision to spare 8-yearo()Jd Dylan
from the trauma of a Dial.
Farrow felt the same way and
"everything that could possibly be
done was done to protect the
child," Alter said at a separate
news conference that Farrow did
not attend.
Earlier Friday, Litchfield,
Conn., State' s Attorney Frank
Maco said state police investigators
had drawn up an arrest warrant for
Allen but he decided there was no
"compelling interest" iri further
pursuing sexual abuse allegations.

Allen said the case was dropped
because .. there is no chance they
could possibly win."
Allen, who has not seen Dylan
in 14 months, read a rambling fivepage sta\Cment apologizing to her
for his lengthy absence.
"I want to send tl,lis message to
my little girl: I'm sorry I missed
your eighth birthday, but they just
wouldn't let me," Allen said.
"I love you, and I miss you,"
he continued. "And don 't worrythe dark forces will not prevail."
Allen called on Farrow, his former co-star, to engage in a truce in
their much publicized breakup and
battle for custody of their three
children.
"The only pre~uisite I have,"
Allen said m h•s only light
moment, "is that you stop sending
me bills from Alan Dershowitz."
The prominent lawyer had advised
Farrow.
"If the Arabs in Israel can do it,
· we can," Allen said.
Farrow's attorney said Allen'
had other requirements, mostly that
Farrow allow him immediate visitation rights to their children.

.

meeting regularly on the fourth
Sunday of every month, invites all
interested person to attend their
monthly meetings, held from I to 3
p.m. in the French Art Colony's
lower classroom.
The mini-crafters will kick-off

Concerts
ROBERT PLANT
Belkin Productions and the Budweiser Concert Series present
Robert Plant and Cry of Love at
Veterans memorial Auditorium
Nov. 12 at 8 p.m.
He is promoting his latest album

Fme o[Nmlons.
Tickets went on sale Sept. 25
and are available at all Ticketrnaster locations or charge at (216)431·

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - Tommie Frazier passed for two .touchdowns and ran for one on Saturday,
sparking sixth-ranked Nebraska to
a 48-13 victory over Colorado

State.

The Comhuskers (4-0) had a 283 halftime advantage over tlie
Rams (1·3).
Frazier, a sophomore, ran 11
times for 75 yards and was 7-of-13
for 79 yards.
Toby Wright put the Huskers on
the board before the game was a
minute old with a 32-yard.interception return off Anthoney HiU.
Freshman runnmg back
Lawrence Phillips added a 7-yard
scoring run. Frazier ran 16 yards
for a 1D and lofted a 1-yard pass to
tight end Gerald Armstrong from
another.
Frazier connected from 41 yards
out with Abdul Muhammad in the
third quarter, then left the game to
rest the right anlcle ·he sprained in
the season opener Sept. 4 against
North Texas.

WHEATLEY SCORES • Michigan's
Tyrone Wheatley (6) breaks through tbe line
·and heads for the end zone tor a nve-yard TD as
Houston free safety Donald Douglas (1) attempts

CONSTRUCTING A MINIATURE. Richard Steme and his
doll bouse that is currently under construction will give viewers
tbe chance to see the extreme detail Steffie puts Into is doll hou.ses.
The bouse will be on display throughout the month ot October at
The FrenchArt Colony.
!heir exhibit with a fair held in the Friday from 1 to 5 p.m. and SanirFrench Art colony' s lower class- , day and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m.
roOm Oct 2 aod 3, from I to 5 p.m. All FAC programming is offered
Miniature dealers from W.Va. , through support of the Ohio Arts
Ohio and Kentucky will be selling Council.
doll houses and miniature accessories. Several or the miniature
COLONY THEATRE
pieces on display in the g3lleries
FRI. THRU THURS.
will be for 'sale as well.
KIM BASINGER
The French Art Colony is locatIN
ed at 530 First Ave. iii Gallipolis.
THE REAL McCOY PG 13
Gallery hours are Tuesday through
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50
446-01123

KANAUGA DRIVE -IN

A!Y!!~

COMING SOON!
After School String
Instrument
Instruction
Morris and Dorothy Haskins
Ariel Theatre
426 2nd Ave~ Gallipolia, Oh.
Call446-ARTS for more info.

. FRI., SAT., SUN.
JASON GOES TO HELL
THE FINAL FRIDAY R
AND
JEAN·C LAUDE VAN DAMME IN
HARD TARGET R

3~~-================~~~~~!!4"!!-I!O!U!!!!!!~

BOBSLEDDERS?
Inspired

IARGAIN MATINEES SAT. A SUN.
IARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY
CirT C!R!IP1CATZ8 AVA1LABLEJ

A Comedy

WARlQCK

the tackle during Saturday' s non-conference
game at Ann Arbor, Micb. The Wolverines won
42-21. (AP)
.

Blue
Jays red~ce magic number to one
.

alive."

In his latest North American
tour, he's paired up with old pal
Carlos Santana, allowing concen·
goers to hear the contrasting
sounds of Dylan's folksy rock
music with the Santana's fusion or
Latin American, African and blues
rhythms.
It was Dylan who inspired Santana back in the 1960s with such
classics as "Blowin' in the Wind"
and "Like a Rolling Stone" songs that helped bring social consciousness to rock 'n' roll.
"Life to me is like light and
you're the projector, man. If you
don'tlilce what you're showing just
change the light. He (Dylan) made
me aware of that," Santana said.
As Dylan hears all this coming
from his friend seated on a nearby
couch, he stares off into the ·corner
as if he's not listening. When asked
about the adulation, he says simply:
"Well, my feelings arc the same
about Carlos' music. It's great to
be supported by your fellow musicians.'
·
At 52, Dylan's stature as rock
'n' roll sage is perhaps only rivaled
by the late John Lennon. Although
he has inspired everything from a
Grammy Lifetime Achievement
Award to an obsessed fan sifting
through his garbage, he tries not to
think about iL
He uses an analogy of two 'very
different German composers to
explain the difference between his
music and the songs that jam the
radio waves. ·
"My feeling is that the guy
who's taken up modem music is
what you hear in Wagner," Dylan
said.
·

Section C
Nebraska, Michigan
post easy grid wins
1timts-~~1

.

. TORONI'O (AP) -The Toronto Blue Jays moved to the brink of
their third straight AL East title,
beating the New York Yankees 3-1
Saturday behind A·l Leiter's six .
innings of one-hit ball.
. The Blue Jays reduced its magic
number over the Yankees to one.
Rickey Henderson doubled, singled, stole a base and scored twice.
Leiter (8·6) walked four and
$truck out two in six scoreless
innings.
Danny Cox pitched the seventh
_and left after Mattingly's RBI single in the eighth. Mike Timlin
relieved and Duane Ward pitched
the ninth for his 42nd save.
Frank Tanana (0-2) lost in his
second start since the Yankees got
him Sept. 17 in a trade with the
New YorkMets.
In the seventh, singles by Ed
Sprague and Henderson set up
Devon White's two-run single.
'

.

complete game came for the Cardi·
nals against San Diego on July 6,
!992.
Twins9,
Red Sox 7, 10 innings
BOSTON (AP)- Pedro Munoz
delivered a go-ahead RBI single
and Chip Hale's pinch-hit, two-run
double capped a four-run lOth
inning that lifted the Minnesota
Twins over the Boston Red Sox 9-7

..

.

Saturday.
With one out in the lOth, Kent
Hrbek and Dave Winfield drew
consecutive walks off reliever Greg
Harris (6-6). Munoz followed with
an RBI single, scoring pinch-run·
ner Denny Hocking to give the
Twins a 6-5 lead.
After Ken Ryan relieved, Dave
McCarty followed with an RBI single. One out later, Hale's double
scored two more runs.

Saturday's college scores
Army 31, VMI 9 .
Boston College 66, Temple 14
Navy 27, Bowling Green 20
West Virginia 35, Missouri 3
SOUTH
Miami 35 Colorado 29
Alabama 56 Louisana Tech 3
Auburn 35, Southern Miss. 24
Clemson 16, Georgia Tech 13
' North Carolina 35, N. Carolina St. 14
Tennessee 42, LSU 20
Virginia 35, Duke 0
Virginia Tech 55, Maryland 28
MIDWEST
Michigan 42, Houston 21
Oregon 13 Dlinois 7
Michigan St. 48, C~nt. Michigan 34
Northwestern 26, Wake Forest14
W. Michigan 17, Miami, Ohio 0
Wisconsin 27, Indiana IS .
SOUTHWEST
Baylor 28, Texas Tech 26
BYU 30 Air Force 3
Nebraska 48 Colorado State 13
Olclahoma 41 Tulsa 20
FAR WEST
Wyoming 28, Utah 12
UCLA 28 Stanford 25

-

for a touchdown.
Ernst threw TD passes of 6
yards to Ty Comacho and 21 yards .
to Judd Mintz. Mintz also carried
22 times for 136 yards, including a
10-yard touchdown run.
Tim Duvic added a 33-yard field
goal.

-.

Ohio Northern 41,
Otterbein 16
ADA, Ohio (AP) - .Tony Ben·
nett scored two touchdowns in the
first quarter and rushed for 149
yards to lead Ohio Northern to a
41-16 victory over Otterbein Satur·
day in the Ohio Conference.
Bennett had !-yard and 10-yard
runs as Ohio Northern led 14-0 at
the end of the first quarter.

No. 10 Oklahoma 41,
Tulsa 20
· '
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) - Calc
Gundy threw three touchdown
pas$CS and No. 10 Oklahoma used
a blocked punt and a fumble recov- .'
ery late in the game to fmally break Wittenberg 33,
away and beat Tulsa 41-20 Satur· Wooster6
day.
WOOSTER, Ohio (AP) Travis
Yost returned a kickoff 89
Other results
yards
for
one touchdown and WitDayton30,
tenberg
added
two more scores on
San Diego 7
fumble
recoveries
as the Tigers
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Tony beat Wooster 33,-6 Saturday
in the
Ernst set a Dayton record for con- North Coast Conference.
secuti.ve completions with 15,
includmg two for touchdowns, as Navy 27,
the Flyers beat San Diego 30· 7 on Bowling Green 20
Saturday in the inaugural game of
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) _
the Pioneer Football League.
Chris Hart intercepted Ryan
It was the 39th consecutive reg- Henry's pass at the Navy 5 with
ular season win for Dayton (3-0, 1- 1:08 left to play Saturday preserv.
0 in the PFL), the longest active ing the Midshipmen's 21:20 victostrcak in college football. '
ry over Bowling Green.
Ernst's 15 completions surThe Falcons (I-2) drove 42
passed the record of 11 by Kevin yards to the Navy 23 when Hart
Wilhelm (1981) and Frank Siggins P!ck~d off Henry's pass on the
(1952). He completed 16 of 19 s1dehne. The play helped improve
passes for 185 yards, with two Navy's record to 2-1 after consecu- .
interceptions, and also ran 3 yards live one-victory seasons.

Open race to highlig.h t 23rd
RG cross country invitational .
RIO GR~E ~ An open race
for all area runners will be one of
seveml highlights in the 23rd University of Rio Grande Cross Country Invitational at Stanley L. Evans
Athletic Field Saturday, Oct. 2,
sponsored by Bob E;vans Farms
Inc.
The open race, which has
attracted runners from central and
squthern Ohio, begins. at 10:50
a.m., one of a number of contests
featuring high school and collegiate
runners scheduled throughout the
day . .
"We have a lot of a new teams
coming in on both the college and
hi~h school level," explained Bob
Wtlley, Rio Grande's cross country
coach and the invitational's direc·
Lor. "We're expecting the largest
number of teams and athletes than
we've had to be here.''
Willey stressed that for fans of
the sport, the invitational is an
opportunity to view some of the
best athletes in the area, as well as
unattached runners who enter the
open race. The entry fee for the
open race is $5 per individual.
"Most road runners don't get the
opportunitr to run on grass, and
our invitauon31 is one of the few

By The Associated Press
EAST

Indians 6,
Drewersl
CLEVELAND (AP) - Mark
Clark won his third straight decision since coming off the disabled
list and Sam Hom homered Satur·
day as the Cleveland Indians beat
the Milwaukee Brewers 6-2.
Clark (7-4), acquired in the .
March trade that sent Mark Whiten
to St. Louis, improved to 3-0 with a
1.15 ERA in four starts since
returning from a torn back muscle
on Sept 9. The run began two days
after Whiten hit four home runs
and drove in 12 in a 'game at
Cincinnati.
·Clark yielded seven hits and two
runs -both on Greg Vaughn's
29th home run - in his second
career complete game, walking one
and striking out six. His only other

No. 8 Michigan 42,
Houston 21
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Tyrone Wheatley rushed for 171
yards and three .touchdowns as No.
8 Michigan punched out a 42-21
victory over mistake-plagued
Houston on Saturday.
The Wolverines (2·1) jumped
out to a 28·0 second-quarter lead
against the Cougars (0-3). Wheat,ley, who ran' 26 times and also
caught two passes for 13 yards,
scored on runs of 25, 5 and 9 yards.
Houston eventually closed with-

in 35·21, but the Wolverines
responded with an 87-yanl, eightplay drive in the fourth quarter for
the final SCOre.
, Lamar Smith carried 20 times
ror 119 yards and scored all three
touchdowns for HOUSIOn.
Chuck Clements, subbing for
injured Jimmy Klingler, completed
25 of 40 for 276 yards with one
interceptions. Michigan's Todd
CoUins completed 20 of 34 for 267
yards with no interceptions.

September 26, 1993

times they can get that chance," he
said. "We 31ways encourage having
runners come in for the open event,
if for nothing more than the sport

ofiL"

as to why the numbers have been
up is that we host the high school

district championships, so it gives
the teams an opportunity to see the

course."

The day's races begin with the
The invitational began in 1970
college
men's division at 9:30a.m.,
as part of the annual Bob Evans
followed
by the women's college
Farm Festival, held every second
contest
at
10:15. Following the
weekend in October. The growth of
open
race,
high
sebool competition
both events over the years has
caused the invitational to be begins aL 11':25 a.m. with the junior
switched to the first Saturday of the high girls race, with junior high
month, said Winey, who was a Rio and varsity races starting every 35
Grande student-athlete when the minutes afterwlird. The final race
event started and who is now in his junior var~ity boys in all classes'
'
13th season coaching the men's will be run at 3:30p.m. .
Awards presentations will be
and women's running program
made throughout the day and BEF
there.
Nevertheless, BEF has contin- will have a concession stand near
ued its support of the invitational, the starting line.
As of this week, 65 high school
and Willey expressed his appreciation to the compariy and the staff of and college teams had returned
the nearby Bob Evans Farm com- entry forms for the race, Willey
.
plex for the sponsorshi(l and assis- said.
Willey added that high school
tance with the eveat. .
who have run the invita·
athletes
Over the years, the event's partional
have
chosen Rio Grande for
ticipation rate has increased, a fact
·
their
college
careers.
Willey attributed to its longevity
"I
just
think
it's a great recruitand reputation.
ing
tool
for
the
university, to get
"You can see a lot of different
students
and
P-arents
on the camtalent not only from the immediate
pus,"
he
said.
'It's
one
of. the main
tri-state area, but from around
reasons
we
have
it
here
- for peoOhio," he said. "One or the reasons
ple to get to know Rio Grande."

In today's game,

Undefeated Browns odds-on pick to tame Indianapolis Colts
By HANK LOWENKRON
record I I times the .last time they start of the season alter receiving
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Their . met?
the starting nod while Jeff George
"We'll do whatever we can do was staging his 36-day boycou or
coaches say Jack Trudeau and
Bernie Kosar will start at quarter- to help us win," Belichick said.
the team.
back . when Indianapolis hosts
Kosar apparently understands.
l}ut after a bye week, manage·
Cleveland today. The question is if
·" Our team ·has gouen off to a ment seems anxious to make a
ther,'ll be playing at the end.
good start and that's the main switch.
'Bernie is our starting quarter- thing," he said. "I think it's been
"As far as I'm concerned, the
back," said Cleveland coach Bill pretty well stated here about how money I'm paying ($2 million this
Belichick, who replaced an ineffec- the quarterback situation and depth season) and the interest we have in
tive Kosar last Sunday with the chart shakes down."
Jeff, I was hoping he would stan
Browns trailing 13-0 in the fourth
The Browns are 3-0 for the first earlier in the season," owner
quarter and saw Vinny Testaverde time since 1979 and have opened Robert lrsay said this week.
lead the Browns to a 19·16 victory. an early two-game lead in the AFC
• 'Ted sees the players every
• It was only the third time in Central. Indianapolis, meanwhile, week and every day. Right now his
Kosar's nine-year NFL career that is 1·1 and seeking to win two feeling is going with some experi·
he had been pulled from a 'gal)le games in September for the first ence, but we'll see what happens in
without an injury.
time since the franchise moved the game," lrsaysaid. .
Would Belichick make the same from Baltimore in 1984.
The Colts have scored only one
move again against the Colts, a
Coach Ted Marchibroda has touchdown on offense in losing to
team that sacked Kosar a team- said Trudeau would make his third Miami 24-20 and defeating Cincin-

nati 9-6.
"We've got to score points. I've
brought a lot of offensive linemen.
I bought the offensive players that
we should be making points,"
lrsay said. "We've just got to work
on iL"
Marchibroda said he doesn't go
into a game thinking about replacing his q118f!Crback.
"It's best to go into a ballgame
with an open mind," said Marchibreda, who produced a temper
tantrum from George when. he
replaced him with Trudeau agmns\
the New York Jets last year.
"What people. don't \ln.derstl!"d is .
that a tot of the time 1t tsn t the
quarterback (making mistakes)
even though that's where the
change generally comes."

For second straight week,

·

•

Trudeau has· had a special distraction in preparing for the game.
His 54-year-old mother-in-law,
Clara Coulter, die in his home
Monday of an apparent cardiac
arrest.
"There's no question that! have
to be careful with how I spend my
time. I think the important thing is
that my family wants me to play
and gel ready to play," Trudeau
said. "I'll handle it, and if I feel
like I'm not doing a good job I'll
let Ted know. It's just something
you try to go with, and I've been
through it (the death of his father)
before so hopefully it won't be too
bad.''
Trudeau knows his hold on the
starting job is precarious.

" There's been a lot or speculation from the so-called experts,".
said Trudeau, who has been a back~
up for most of his career. "I don·~
think that I've played my best foot~
ball . ... As far as the speculation:
with Jeff, as I've said all along I'm)
going· to play until they tell me I'm)
not, and when I'm not I'll live with
that too."
The Browns hold a 12-6 advan-·
tage in the series after losing to
Indianapolis in last year's opening
game, 14·3.
Kosar describes that game as his
worst NFL memory.
"From when you saw us last
year . there's been quite a few
changes on the offens1ve line," he
said. "That's helped us."
"Thank God," Belichick.said.

Jlapless Bengals in 'must-win' situation, but Seahawks new foe

ltl' \K'1\(dlllli1'

~

Dllloi~ lUll llnl llffiiBDISIJJKOO\ II{ ©mEI!ll 011\ll COW~II
SPICIAL SlfDI PllBYID Dr "COOL RUifNINGS"
'I'OoAY AT 1 11 0 Pll.
AlfD St'AY AS ~ GU~ '1'0 II! '"u.)aCOVQ BWBB"

.
•

•

ByJOEKAY
' CINCINNATI (AP)- Rick
r.,irer can imagine what the Cincin·
nati Benl!als are going through.
No wms. No respect. The fans
are getting cranky, the locker room
is getting touchy.
. "It's discouraging," Mirer said.
' '·When you don't win, there's a lot
of pressure, a lot of tension. Guys
want to win real bad."
Wby would the former Notre
Dame quarterback know so much
about losing? His ftrst two weeks
with the Seattle Seahawks clued
him in.
The Seahawks' offense was
Stagll8lll as they lost their ftrSt two
games by a total of 10 points.
Mirer, a rookie, didn't throw a

.'

touchdown pass in either game.
He finally got one last week in a
17-14 win at New England that left
the Seahawks feeling good for the
ftrSt time tbis season. Now, they
head to Riverfront Stadium today
and an atru&lt;isphere 'they were glad
to give up.
·
"Getting one win adds confidence and/uts you more at ease,"
Mirer sai . "It's easier to go to
work when you can smile about
winning."
Literally.
"You can see the smiling
faces,'' coach Tom Flores said.
"It's nice to see. We need to build
confidence. We need to have ccinfldence in ourselveS and our ability
to win football games on the road.

We need to mature, and winning .
has to become habit"
They're taking a lot of confi·
dence into their next game. The 0.3
Bengais are the kind of team they
can beat- no defense, no offense,
1
no confidence.
The Bengals went to Pittsburgh
last Sunday expecting to give the
st.ruggling Steelers all they •could
handle. Instead, they were manhandled. The Steelers' previously inept
offense rolled up 404 yards - 223
· on the ground - and held the Bengals to 170 total yards in a 34,7
win.
·
The Bengals don't expect much
out of their olfense - quarterback
David Klingler .is essentially a
rookie playing behind a patched-up

line. But the defense had shown
improvement in the first two
games, allowing just 29 points.
The Steelers' offensive line
blew away their confidence and
wiped away the small amount of
enthusiasm they'd generated in
Cincinnati. The Seattle game
wasn't close to selling out at mid·
week, an indication it could be the
smallest Riverfront Stadium crowd
in at least six years.
"It's 'W to us to prove we're not
that bad,' defensive lineman Tim
Krumrie said.
. , the Seahawks showed a few
signs last Sunday that they're not
as bad as some people thought
There weren't many expe&lt;;ta·

lions on a team that was coming off
a 2-14 season and had a rookie
quarterback. But the defense has
kept the Seabawks close, and an
effective running game - Chris
Warren carried a club-record 36
times last Sunday for 174 yards . has taken the pressure off Mirer.
"We're trying to be a pretty
well•rounded offense," Mirer said.
"We're geLling closer. You've got
to do something good before you
can do everything righL
"I sure haven't perfected this
tiling yet, But for the most part, I'm
pretty, pleased with the way things
are gaing."
So is Flores, who likes the way
his team held on in the fourtll quar-

ter against the Patriots.

"We started to look like a foot-

ball team," he said. "That's one of
the things we couldn't do last year,

We were not strong enough to win
games in the fourth quarter. We
were strong enough to hang on for
three quarters, but we couldn't win
it in the fourth.".
There's no such optimism in
Cincinnati, where a loss today
would bring desperation. The Seattle game marks the end of the easi·
est pan of the Bengals' schedule. If
they lose, they might not be
favored to win a game until
December.
"This is .a 'must win' for us"
Krumrie said. .
•
•

'

�r-a•

C2-Sunday 11m• Sentinel

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

september 26,1993

Gallia Academy defeats talented Portsmouth team 27-14
: GALLIPOLIS • Glillia Academy
High School upset 18th-ranked
Division n, (Associated Press Poll)
Portsmouth 27-14 before 2,500
_g~Cetalors on Memorial Field Fri-

day nighl
It was the Blue Devils fli'St grid
viclOI')' over the Trojans since the
1985 squad turned the llickenroute
to the sblleplayoffs.

The triuinpb lifted Coach Brent
Saunders' crew to 3-1 ovendl, and
dropped Curt Clifford's talented
!llluld to 2·2 on the season.
After falling behind 7-0 early.
GAHS scored singled touchdowns
in each period to win going away.
"I thought our defense made
some real good plays tonight." said
Coach Saunders. He added, "We
worked hard on trying to keep them
from running the draw, their nun\·
ber one plBy. We got good pressure

1993 grid standings

KNOCKS DOWN PASS • Gallla's Heath Hutchinson (30)
knocks down a pass Intended for Portsmouth's Darnell Llsath (11)
durin&amp; Friday's grid game on Memorial Field. ~AHS won 27-14.

Ohio ,H.S. football scores
AAI&amp;21,l'lokliqll

A1aoa c.-my 26. Flillal7
A1aoa Oallold 6, Abm Budlld 0
Ama Ma:cl n- SO. TUIIaw 6
AJaoa-eW26,C.....S. I3
ADa J!."SI,Lima ....,. 0

~ lO, Bioan-Canoll 1
......... 4l,Nodona!Tnill4
Td-Cauny N. 32
Aldl1toW !5, J!vGjlWI 7

-!1.

_c-m..

27, --.;nolO

........... Halb« 25, Plinctville Rivraidc 6

, . _ 42, Btoe*lyn 0
A...,IOWII Fild&gt; 22, Llkowood SL Edwud 1
Avati9.J..oniaB..,.,u;de0
Aval I.Me 34. Amhalt 0
A,....W.49, Eds-10
Bubortat 27, K"" Rooocveh 11
B......W.l1.-eynTnil7
B111via 22,Now Milmi 18
B•r Va!Lop Boy 21, Weallb 12
B - 1 4 . o.r. Olkwood 1
BoiWGOIIino 49, Kalkln Rid&amp;" 1
Bollowo40, Cin. N. Collea• Hill7
Jlcblilio31,c-twood13
s-Volon 30, Uctina H~. 3
Bdhoi!O,CM&amp;kln0
Bdhoi·TI"l4, !lilllbon&gt; 14
it Wo1on• 8, WMhin&amp;kln CH 0
liaoh- 26, Twin VolleyS. 6
lldlcrd 56,~,., Vell. 13

§.

;;;:!!--

0011--43, Baa 40
!!)l...tliold 33, w
...... Fen. 6
0 19
. . ._ .... 39,
10; JlWc
Clcwa!W
ole.....,.Lo&lt;o141, Clev. K""'ody 0
""''~ 18,NotWIIk IS
~acU31,UnionLoca119

·

~hU Manoria126, Salem 0

WincliCit«20, Tuy1 Vall. 19
""'Con6&lt;ld 27. Clirud 1
'"Coooon Glmo.k 29, w...... 20
::Cadinpn 44, Pleuant 28 •
~c40,Madiaon~•1 4
-celinl34, w.po~&lt;-.7

""C"""'"'"a4t, Marion Celli. 12

~el4, SprinJ. North 0

~· 60, Looon 28
loeCin. 3:1,lluNon 10
,,.,.,Cia. CAPE 20, LoveJand 0
!!!&lt;:in. Deer Pork 2l,lnclian Hilll2
•en. Elder 31, Cin. Withrow 0
lllal Eeoc 23, Cin. 1Jka\ 8
&lt;&gt;&lt;Cin. l.eel&lt;lMd ll, c;.. c-~cy Doy 7
~ Muillm0d135, Cin. Tayl"' 14
!!!&lt;:in. Neowood 6S, Goob111 64
:-cin. ou. Hilh 214, esn. t..Sallc 22
-cin. Princaon 44. Uma Sr. 1:1
-cin. Ropr Btoan 6, Kc~.tain1 Altet 0
~ia. St. Xavicr29, Cia. Colc:nin 21
~ycamorc29, Yl!ord 6
.-cin. Taft. 55, Cin. Huaha~9

:::C1n.

Lop. Elm 33, a..1cviDe !4
Loodooll, OleniiJIIY ll
!main ClaMo• SS, Col Wellinp&gt;n 7
Louinille 34, Allilnee Morliq1an 29
LouinilleAquinu14,-...,19
Loeuvllle Vell. 47,
Vell. 0
MactilaD. 43, Alhlabui. Sl Jahn 0
Mlpolio, W.Vo. 42, Trimble7
Malvern 33, Strubwt. 0
Mmlfield Madilcm 1,, Newut 1
Mlplo ~. 34, WW..sJ&gt;by Saulh 27
!o!"J""" 31, Pal&lt;ino 6
Marieaall, Belpoo 19
Muian lludm~ 14,Fmdloy 13
Muion-Fnaklin 31, Cot Cernenltio17
Mulino Ferry 39, Bride

Nclloo~Ym:k

VASI21,AtJmHoban14

-CliniCII·Muao 13, Gtecncvic:w 3
.... Clydc47, Milan Ediac."~ 0
• Cool c;ro.. 36, Alheou 20
-Col Academy 31, Clcv. Univc:nity 26
~ CGl. BocdtcrofL 33, Col. East 14
-col Drigtll. Col Northland o
•cot. Broc&amp;havm 19, Col. West 14
-col. DcS&amp;lel39. Cin. Mt. Halthy 13
:col. Bulmoor B. Col. Independence 7
-coL lt§ldy :ZO,Col. SL Otarl~ 19 (01)
•cot. South 40. Col. Whc:utonc6
11 '"' Col Walnut Rid"o40. Col. Undcn·M9K.Wey 7

:coldwau:r34,LirnaC.th. l4
• Colonel Cn..!onl3l, Fn&gt;leriektown 0
•.., Colwnhian• 21, United 20
• Cclwnbian• Cr'CIIvicw 21. Seebring 6

:columbul 0rcwa 90,Amwcrp o

,... Caft1111Ut32. Geneva 13
- Copley 9, 0!oon1bwJ 0.... 7
- Cmy-ltl.-.oa 11, Vlnlue 0
: Crel\line 36,1tiVCildala 7
_ Cuyabop FUll 20, Ravenna 13
,. DonYille 49, NcriuidF 6
• Day. Canoll17, Ed&amp;ewood 10
: O.y. Sl&amp;bbiN 41, SprinJ. Catholic 27
..;, Defiance 41, Ottawa.Olandorf 0
• Delpllol Idfenon :!A, Blolllon 16
: Do1phol SL John'• 14, New Bmncn 7
., Dover 35, Coahoc1m 6
-E. Knoll 56, Lucu 0
• ~ 26, N. Union 16
: Flida 13, Van Wert 12
,.Elmwood lot, IWJa:u Lako&amp;a 8
• Elyria 32, Lorain Southview 21
•m,na Celli. :zo. CJev. Iobll illy 14
:ElyriA w. 41, Oberlin 12
• Euclid 35, Bedford 20
• Faididd Union 33,lhrn.ihan Twp. 8
• Fort Ftyo 'rl, z.n.vi11o R.-.ln.l 0
:FmttJria 41, Bedford, Mich. 6
.,FrWJin 3S, Olfcrd T.Uwuw!a 28 (Of)
•franklin Hw. 39, Dcl•w•~ 10
~rcrnonaiU.lll2loToL Whltmer 14
14, Boallni.Dc 13
..O.Uipolio 2 7 , - 14
O.O...woy 33, S...llling1on 0
-&lt;llrfleld au-.we 39, Moa•-14

:t:mnUcr

~ll• 39, Moaadorel4
~

25, Miltcm·Union 0

...o..ad Volley 34, Kirtland 0

!""'ra.me 31, New Albeey 0
!!1J,....., 14, T - 13
;g:m,. Oty 14. CD!. w....... 22
e.H=O•Jlldin 15, O.y. Ctamin•dc-Juliennc 1
..,._.,,,.ROll 21. J4np MiDI IS
:)laldln N - 1 0, Vanllwa! 0
~~ IP, Tmora 14
iflil]jaf 50.

a-_. 26

40,Rlmou6
Wo,..,.21,Doy.Paimu&gt;nt 8
21,11od Ciolon 0
Lito 51, Wor-field 0
-56,I!IT.......t0

. . 0..1"-Ri_\'"_6
&amp;ZIOn 30. OawMuw I

-Al-21,1J&amp;tlnJVell.l4

e

................... o
4.1Akooiew7

14, Dl,l;W rf wdaleO
•1, t'-swm f.wwiat 23
40, C... SobnAdllu I

19,1'iM6
C..21,DIIu ll
.,_,l,llolth14

.

~

·~

'

8 Ea.t· E!rolld sti'Mt,
SUite DOO

Columbus, Ohio .

Sunday 11mea Sentinel-Page C3

~

m~ .
th Gall. lis
1
.
wm.ners were e
1 po
Blue Devals, ~ho bounced the
Portsmouth TroJans 27-14, and the
Marieua Tigers, who recorded their
fli'SI win of the season with a 28-19

victory over neighboring Belpre.
Other games saw Chillicothe gr_ind
Logan 60-28, Waverly beatmg

Jackson 19·0 and Coal Grove
thumping Athens 36-20.
·
Warren Local hosted River Val-

ley in a Saturday nigh! contest
turned the opening kickoff 88 yards
Chillicothe 60, Logan 28 · for a 1ouchdown,Ma11 Mauge~
At Logan ShBDnon Brown re(See SEOAL on C-4)
·
•
•
(Continued from C-2)
·•
"
• ' • ----.,.-------------------------------first score. GAHS marched 54 malce· it 19-6 with 3:56 left in the downs and pennitted 12: The Tro- Ashland.
..
yards in seven plays with Chad period. A run for the two-point jBDs totaled 227 yards from scrim- Score by quarters
.;..
Barnes romping over from nine conversion failed.
·mage in 62 plays. GAHS finished Portsmouth ........ 7 0 0 7 al4:.
·yards out (6:03). Brandon Hill's
PHS marched 70 yards in 11 with 178 yards in 47 plays.
Gallipolis ...........7 6 6 8 • 21..
kick tied the score at 7-all. Big plays to cut the Gallians lead to 19For Portsmouth, Bruce Ward led
gainers in the drive were passes of 14. QB Nate Morris sneaked over all rushers wilh 91 yards on 19
12 yards and nine yards to Hutchin· from the one (11:06 left to play). trips. Ashley Underwood had 83 Statistics
G
Jt
son and Qualls.
Estep's kick split the uprights.
yards in 17 carries. Morris com- Department
After forcing a Portsmouth punt,
Ward intercepted a Barnes pass pleted six of 20 passes (two inler· First downs ............... 12·
IS:
GAHS marched six yards in 11 midway in the final period, but cepted) for 63 yards. Brian Bowen Yards rushing .......... 140 194:
plays with Hutchinson scoring PHS was unable to mke advantage had three .receptions for 36 yards Lost rushing .............. 46
from the one (11: 18 lefl in hall). A of the 1urnover. Evans rec11vered a and Riehle Chapman three for 27.
Nel rushing ...............94
bad snap killed chances for the Portsmouth fumble on the GAHS . Hutchinson led GARS runners Pass attempls ............ 10
2CJ:
pointafler.OAHS led 13·7.
43 four plays later lo set up the with 64 yards in 14 carries. Cald- Completions ............... 6
~
Portsmouth marched 57 yards game's final score.
well added 21 in four trips and Intercepted by ............. 1
~
Yards passing ............ 84
in 15 plays, but the Blue Devils
The Gallians moved 57 yards in Jesse Stacy 19 in six.
61:
held on !heir 15.
seven plays. Barnes hit Hutchinson
Barnes completed six of I 0 Total yards .............. 178 221:
62'
Afler an exchange of punts in again from 26 yards out (3:18). passes (one intercepted) for 84 Plays ....................... .47
the third, Caldwell set up the next Hutchinson ran the 1wo point con- yards and two touchdowns. Return yards ............. 74
9~
GAHS score with a pass intercep· version to make it 27-14.
Hutchinson caught five passes for Fumbles .......... ......... ,.. 3
Lost fumbles ............... 2
tion, running it out-of -bounds on
After an exchange of turnovers, 75 yards and two IDs.
c
the PHS 15. Barnes~promplly threw GAHS ran out the clock.
Gallipolis wiU host River Valley Penalties ................ 7-35 S-S'l:
a 15-yard strike to Hutchinson to
Portsmouth racked up 15 first Friday. Portsmouth will uavel to Punts ................... 3.. 120 3-8~

GAHS w•ns

-......

1~

~

Sales- Rental- Service

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ALL SIZES LIMESTONE

CAL'DWELL PICKS UP GAIN • Glllllpolls' Jamie Caldwell
(22) picks up yardaae aaainst Portsmouth FrldBy with teammate
Chad Barnes (ll) leading tbe play. Gallipolis won. 27-14~

FRENCH 500 FLEA MARKET
AND GUN SHOW
Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds
Gallipolis, Ohio

OCTOBER 8·9·1 0

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"We Denver and Spread Ulneato•ae"

IL DIRT &amp;t~~ERS

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7 8:00 P.M.
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POINT PLEASANT, WV
N

In Case Of Rain ·Will Be Held.Indoors at Point Pleasant Junior High

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Information - 245·5347

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Athena, Ohio

BIOOEST AUTOMOTIVE EVBNT TO HIT

Piqua 33, Grcenvillci 0

Prtble Sblwnc:c 14, Eatoo 7

~ '17, Hudloo 7
Reynoldsburg 23, Marysville 21
River Vell. 18, Ridgodole 14
Rock Hill 9, Portsmouth W. 7
S. Charleatm.SB 35, E. Clint.on 6
S. Eutem 35, E. Clinioo 6
S. Point 43, Fairview, Ky. 16
S. Range 36, Jackson-Milton 1
Sandusky 35, Lenin Sr. 0
Shelby 35, Upper Sandudty 6
Shenandoah 24, Waaerford 18 (2 OT)
Sheridan 31, Morpn 0
Sidney 36, Northmont 22
Smhhville 30, Norwaync 7
SpenccMllc 33, Upper Sci(J(o Vall. 13
SprinJ. Grc:c:non 14, Tecumseh 13
Spring. South 42, Flirbom 14
=~field Local 42, Berlin Center Western Re-

St Cltiftvillc 34, Indian CreU. 1
St. Henry 14, Muion lncal 7
St Maly•21, Lima Bath 0
SI.CLibenvillc 28, C1cv. Collinwood 0
Stow 21, Nordonia 6
Strc:cl.lboro 39, Ravenna SE 21
St.roogsville Zl, Mi4park 13
Thorn., Wonhingtoo 40, Mifflin 13
Thompson Ledgcmont 21, Newbury 6
Tdfm Columbian 10, Galion 3
Tipp City 34, Miami East 14
Tol. Cathollc,29, Tol.llowsher 2
Tol. Ragen 53, Tot. Woodward 14
Tol. Start 43, Clev. East 14
Tol. Waite 55, ToL Ubbeyl9
Tri· Valley 1S, New l.air1gton 12
Triad 29, Failbanks 0
Tmtwood·Madilon 40, West C•nollton 13
Troy 43, Vanddia Buller 0
Tulcanwu Vall. 13, Sandy Vall. 7
Tyler, W.Va. 14, HaMibJl River6
Uniontown Lake IS, Alliance 13
umana 41, S~J. Nor\hwc.a:tcm 6
Valley F&lt;qe 20, Panna 14
Valley View 63, MiddlelOwn MadU.on 0
Vamilion 33, N. Ridgeville 0
Vct~lillca 42, Sidnoy Lehman 13
Vinton Co. 2S, Grer.nficld Mc&lt;.1ain3
W. BmiCh 45, Carrollton 6
W. CtON:r Lakou. 35, Middletown 17
W. Hemal 14, Triw1y 6
W. Howland 30, Clev. E. Tcchnical8
W. 1e:ffc:J'IOII35, Utica 6
Wadlworth 13, Talln11dgc 0
Wllah JOI\Ii~ 27. Alhland 7
Wamn Chunpim 49, Uubbud 0
· WamnHardinS 10, Young. Doudman 6
WamniVllle Hll. 32, Clcv. Glenville 26 (2 OT)
Watcrloo45, Windham 26
WaU1001141, Patrick HCll.ry 21
Wavcdy 19, Jack~on. 0
Wtynu Tnce 26. Holg1tc 0
Wellftille 41, Toano 29
w~ Brown 41, NorthcancmO
WCilerVUle N. 48, O.hanna 26
WcotorvilleS. 31, Uppc&lt;Arl!nglon 21
WeotlelllS,PIUionl6
,
WheelonloluJ 5S, Day, loll011011 6
Whiteball42. Watkin~ Memorial 0
Williamlbwa 21, New Richmond 19
Wilmlnp&gt;n }7, Uale Miomi22
.
Waodridae 19, Hudlon Wa~wm Reeervc 12
Woodtfield 27, Cold ...U 8
W&lt;nllWo&amp;~on Kilboume I 0, Dublin 7
....-19
Y.,.... Ubeltrl9, t.Josodono FIC!d 6
Youna- Ultulinc 'D. Clev. John Manh•lll

x...,:zo,a•

Zane Tnce 22, Uni.oto 7

14.~0

...... -:16.B.IJwot&gt;ooll

ATTORNEY AT LAW

011IO

o&gt;VUU.......,.,~
League teams owmng

Athletic
an
8-15 record against non-league opponeniS following Fridsy's action
m which the SEOAL posted a 2-3

'

New London 46, Collinl Wmem Rcaervc 6
Ncwuk. Ca1h. 40, Col. Hartley 17
Norlhmor4S, Spu~~llithlond 0
Nonhridgc 2l,C&amp;d.i&amp;le 13
Northwood 29, Woodmore 6
Nor1a1 V. Medino llip.bnd 7
Norwllk S&lt; Pau132, ~lc:ton 13
Oak Gl~ •.W.Va. 13, EdiJm 12
Oberlin Fut:landa 32, Kc:ystone 7
Olmolod Felli 3S, FliMew 8
Onwio27,BuckeycCc:ttll4
Orcsm Clay 2S, Napoleon 3
Oucao 28, Eutwood 0
Palnc&amp;Yille H~y 14, Alhtabull Edgewood 0
Plinl Vell. 43,Richmond Dole SE 6
Puma Hu. Holy Nunc 42. Oev. Benedictine 19
Paon• P1dua JS, Oarlii:ld H11. Trinit)' 21
Peninsula Woodridge 19, Hud1on Western Re·
"""" 12
Pmy 48, Hub&lt;" Flirpon illrdinJlO ·

Pymatunina v.n. 33, Middlefield C~rdinal 14
RtcineSouthcm40,H&amp;nlllln, W.Va. 0
ReedMlle Eulem 34, Hemlook Miller 0

loOfi. Cle¥

~ 614-221~88
.:.&amp;: L. W. CENNAMO

SlliiSOII.

Muon 35, sp,;,•boro 1'1"
Muoillen S3, MWI'idd 22
Mulillon loobon 16. N.., Philodolphil 17
M.,lillon Pen)' 48, Canton Timkam 0
Mulillon Wuhinaton 53. Ma.nlfield Sr. 22
M•yMJ.Io 8, Croobville 7
McCcmb 40, Adinatm 0
Mcllonl1d 38~ Modi..., 13
Medina Bucltcyo 2S, Sullivan Black River 7
Mentor Lake C11h. 32, Bedford Chancll2
MiamUbwa 10, l.ernon·Mmroe 0
Midvicw 3f, Lorain Admiral Kin 7
Mia,... 3S, Cen.d Fultm NW ~
MWcrd 31, Fnnklia PumoceOtoen 6
MWter 29, Pamway 0
Mon1~ 34, Swanton 6
M01m1 Oilolci21S, Buckey. Vell. 6
Mount Vll'llat 21, PickcrinJtm 14
N. c.nton 56, Cl«V. Wc11 Tech 0
N. Olmolod 3S, RockT Ri,., 21
N. Royellan 3S, Medino 6

~Claymont 31, Meldowbmall XI
-Clev. Soulh 24,l.cRin Cath. B
lfo'loiC'let'. St.lantd.UII24, TaL Sl Francis 3

=~Fed 34,. Lowlonvillo ~

BIIKRDPICY

' Weeklin~dsourtheof r~-!??~..!_oo~1

scoreboard clock. Jason Estep's
kick from placement made it 7.0.
Caldwell returned the following
kickoff 26 yards to set op OalliB's
(See GAHS on C-3)

0

-cin. Turpin T/,Cin. Rolthwa~t 7
-ci.n. Walnut Hilll43, Amelia 11

• cin. W'U'Il.On Woodl19, Cin. Wood,.,.ard 13

kickoff with Andy Adkins recover·
ing on the GAHS 29. It look !he
Trojans sill plays to score. The tally
came when Bruce Ward blasled
over from the six with 9:31 on the

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, 0H Point Pleasant, WV

Marietta only other SEOAL victor; three other entries among fallen

s,......

Pleau.nt 44, Cudington 28 ·
Plymou1h 34. S. Central I
Point Pleasant (W.Va.. ) 36. Meigs 0
Polmd 11, Niles 0
PcmmO\Ith E. 33, Md)c:mott NW 7
Porumouth Notre Dame 35, Oak Hill 12

=Cln.

(OveraU)
Team
W L TP OP
Point Pleasant. .......5 0 130 27
Gallipolis .............. .3 1 101 32
Portsmouth ............2 2 77 60
Logan ....................2 2 90 92
River Valley .......... 1 2 29 83
Warren Local ....... .l 2 56 67
JBCkson ................. .l 3 49 65
Marietta ................ .l 3 68 110
Coal Grove ........... .l 3 49 113
Athens ...................0 4 37 139
Meigs ....................0 4 28 140
Friday's results:
Gallipolis 27 Portsmouth 14
Coal Grove 36 Athens 20
Waverly 19 Jackson 0
Chillicothe 60 Logan 28
Marietta 28 Belpre 19
Pl. PleasBDt 36 Meigs 6
River Valley at Warren Local (Sat)
Oct. 1 games:
River Valley at Gallipolis
Portsmouth ND at Athens
Jackson at Vinton County
Miami Trace at LogBD
Marietta at Hannibal River
Pl. Pleasant at Hurricane
Warren Local at Meadowbrook
Portsmouth at Ashland
Buf· Wayne at Coal Grove
Meigs at Alexander

from our defensive ends. "
The GAHS mentor !Xlinted out
the outstanding defenstve play of
Terry Qualls and Dylan Evans.
Troy Duncan and Jamie Caldwell,
along with Evans and Qualls recovered Portsmouth fumbles. Caldwell
and Ryan Barnes were credited
with pass interceptions while Burt
Wood, Heath Hutchinson, Seth
Davis, · Mall Wamsley. Chad
Barnes, and Mike Donnally all got
in several good licks during the
evening.
,
"We had good pursuit tonight
although we got in trouble a few
times when we didn't grab a hold
of them properly. Overall, I
thought the boys played a great
game against a talented Portsmouth ·
team," Saunders added.
.
Saunders felt the key of Friday's
win was Gallipolis' ability on
offense to exploit Portsmouth's
defense behind the quarterbacking
of Barnes and crafty ruiming of
Hutchinson.
Brett Cremeens kept the Trojans
bottled up with his punting and
booming kickoffs.
Gallipolis fumbl.ed the OJl\lning

•

September 26,1993

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

�Page C4 Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

September 28, 1~

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

·E astern Eagles sink claws into Miller Falcons in 34-0 rout

Big Blacks win ...

Point Pleasant bombs Meigs 36-6 to remain undefeated
some gambles I probably shouldn't
have taken, but I had confidence
that our defense could get the job
done," he added.
As usual the Big Black defense
did get the job done. For the fifth
straight game the defense did not
allow the opponent to reach double
figures. This game could've been a
shutout had Meigs not scored on
the last play of the first half.
The story of this night though
was the big play. Point exploded on
numerous occasions to put the
game out of reach.
On Point's second drive of the
game tailback Jason Shinn did most
of the damage. Shinn (20-I04, 5.2
avg.) rushed for 15 yards on the
short 36 yard drive before fullhaclc
Jason Safford (9-54, 6 avg.) ran
through the left tackle hole un-

By DOUG HOST
Tlmes-SenUnel Slaff
POINT PLEASANT - The
Meigs Marau(lers came to Sanders
Memorial Field Friday night with
something to prove, but it was the
Point Pleasant Big Blacks that did
the proving as mer rolled to a 36-6
victory on Parents Night.
Sighs of relief could practically
be hc;ud as the Big Blacks avoided
a letdown after last week's emotional win over rival Gallia
Academ y.
"I'm just glad to get this one
over with," said Point Pleasant
coach Steve Safford. "Traditionally
we've played poorly and fiat after
the Gallipolis game. Our emotion
wasn't what it was the last week or
two, but I lhink I wasn't as focussed either. I made some bad calls.

touched for the game's fillit score.
Garry Peck, subbing for injured
kicker Cory Hill, saw the extJa
point try sail wide left and the score
was 6.{).
After a couple of Jared Hil.l runs
and a fumbled exchange, Meigs
was punting again.
Shinn and Safford quickly went
to work again. Shinn took a firsL
down pitch around the left side and
raced 21 yards to the Meigs 46. On
the very next play Safford followed
with eight tough yards up the middle. Safford rattled off eight more
on second and two as the Big
Blacks marcbed to the Meigs 30.
Four plays later though the
Blacks were stopped on fourth
down.
An intentional grounding penalty
put Meigs in a deep hole as they

faced a third and 18 from their own
one. After a small gain of three by
Hill. Jake Kennedy came on to
punL
Enter big play number one.
Garry Peele receives the llall around
the Meigs 40 yard line. About 15
yards from the right sideline Peck
took two stepS backwards as he
avoided a diving tackler, and he
outraced the Meigs team to the left
sideline. There Peck weaved
through a tunnel of Big Black
blockers, bounced off a Meigs
defender at the five and spun iniO
the end zone for his second punt
return for a touchdown this year.
"We've got some kids there (on
return teams) that can make some
big plays. They really help us get
things set up," Coach Safford said.
the following convelliion
'' ,..On
-

will Gill .roiled right and found
Shinn in the comer of the end wne
to make the sca-e 14-0.
·
Meigs' next drive was a painful
one for the Mauders, esp:cially
Quarterback Brent HEsoo. On first
down Hamon roll~ left, but before
he could throw big Jeremy Rizer

·

Photo bJ Mark Georal

WATCH OUT • Point's Garry Peck, no. 23, races toward the
Point sideline. Jason Sbinn, no. 32, and Chad Roush, no. 44, make
room for Peck, wbo capilalized on the blocking on his 40 yard punt
return ror a touchdown. It was Peck's second return for a m this
year.
C-3)__
, ..;,p ••• ____:(Continued
_ _from_
SEQ'ft."L w•n
kicked the extta point, and the Cav- won their·flfSt game of the season
aliers were enroute to their fourth by overcoming a 19-14 halftime
victory in as many games. When deficit to send the Golden Eagles
the final whistle blew at Bill Sauer to their frrst loss after three wins.
Field, Chillicothe's OJ. Netter had
Marietta took advantage of a
carried the ball 13 times for 107 blocked punt in the first period that
yards and scpred three IOuchdowns, set up an ll-yard touchdown run
James Lee caught three touchdown by Eric Sauls. Darrell Shuss kicked
passes from Todd Valentine, and the EP. However, the bast team ralLamont Jessie rushed for 107 lied behind quarterback Todd
yards, and a pair of touchdowns.
Lorentz to take a 19·14 halftime
The Chieftains, playing for the lead, startinJt with Lorentz's onesecond week without the services yard run in the first quarter.
Marietta's Will Groves grabbed
of leading rusher,John Cos$rove
(he was out with a knee inJury), a nine-yard pass from Bill Binegar
turned to Chad Ricketts, who re- arid the Shuss kick gave MHS a 14sponded by scoring all four of Lo- 7lead early in the second quarter.
gan's touchdowns on short
Belpre then rallied on Jason
plunges. He finished with 53 yards Walker's three-yard run, followed
on 17 carries.
by a 39-yard pass from Lorentz to
Statistics show the Cavaliers Jamie Roberts for the five point
with 261 yards rushing and com- hafltime lead.
pteling seven of 13 passes for 157
The Tigers scored 14 points in
yards while Logan's offense netted
the third quarter on Binegar's
116 rushing yards and 181 through
three-yard toss to Jay Sauls; a 54the air. Chillicothe had to overyard run by John Gebczyk and two
come a rash of penalties that toconversion kicks by Shuss.
taled 12 for 151 yards in running
Quarter tolals
their record 10 4-0. Logan's record
Marietta ....... .........7 7 14' o= 28
drops to 2-2.
Belpre ...................7 12 0 0 =. 19
Quarter .totals
Chillicothe .... ...... 19 13 14 14 = 60 " r
Logan .................... O 6 14 8 " 28

Meigs quanabeck iniO the

Sallord !lew through the Meigs lint
and · steam rolled HlnSOII for a ·
seven yard loss.
BLACKS Oil

' Let

' contest

''

1

·

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OPEN SUNDAY

By SCOTT WOLFE
Times-Sentinel Correspondent
RACINE - The Southern Tornadoes, with a balanced, well-exeeuted offensive attack, defeated the
Hannan Wildcats 40-0 before a
large crowd at Adams Memorial
F'lcld in Racine Friday evening. .
Southern took the opening kickoff, marching deep into Wildcat
tm.itofY during their ftrSt offensive
drive. Trenton Clelllnd capped off
the drive with a five-yard touchdown pass to his M&gt;ther Cass Cleland. Travis Lisle's e~tra-point
Icicle was no good as Southern took
the early 6-0 lead. The Tornadoes'
good defensive play throughout the

Alter a tacemask penalty gave
the Marauders new life, Ryan
•Roush picked off a Hanson pass at
:t.is own 24.
~; Enter big play number two, from
•,lhe big play guy on this nighL On
~~t down tailback Chad Roush (2·
•04, avg. 47) took a handoff over the
;~ft side. Six steps later he was into
:a vacant secondary. After a couple
t6f head bobs !llld 76 yards later
~ltoush was in the end zone with
tpoint's third score of the game.
tteck's point after attempt was good
~ the Big Blacks led 21.{).
Finally Meigs found pay din. Af.
IQ:r a failed fake punt by Point, the
~uders took over at the 36.
:ney promptly moved the ball to
oOte Big Black 13, thanks in part to
=t_ facemasking penalty. Then on a
;ilanson roll right the cornerback
-came up, and Hanson lofted a pass
:tv
wide open end Chad Duncan,
1(#110 made a nice catch in the end
:cone. The extta point was a fiasco
:thou$h leaving the . score 21-6 at
;&amp;aifnme.
•; The second half brought more
~ominance by the Big Black
:•efense. On aa second and 10 play,
•loint's Brian Farrell busted through
:two blockers and hauled down
~ for a 10 yard loss.
·
•! A 17 yard burst by Shinn high~ted the next Point drive, but
•again theywere stopped on downs.
:'Jbis time they gave the ball back to
¥eigs at the Meigs' 20.
:;. Soon Point had the ball again.
&lt;in first quartetback Brent Smith
:lllllde an unbelievable fake before
:Pivoting left and finding a nice hole
\01 the tackle slot. Smith fumbled af.
;tter a gain of nine, but Point
•8lcovered. A Safford run to the ball
~j! f!te 18, and Roush went to work
1jgam.
t.l For the record this would be big
number three. Roush took a
r
side handoff skipped past a
pte of defenders. cut back
l::mst the grain and suddenly he
his second touchdown of the
~y. The run was good for 18 yards.
~back Will Gill faked a SafofOOI plunge, on the conversion, and
~t the ball as he raced around the
left side into the end zone. That
:llrought the seore 10 29-6.
·: Point's Robert Hall capped the
:&amp;arne's scoring. Hall grabbed a
,liandoff and burst through the line
-f)efore bowling over a Meigs
:defender at the goaline on his ten
yard touchdown run. Again Peck's
•lick was good and the scoring en·
4ed at36-6.
'" "We didn't throw the ball worth
•I dam tonight," Coach Safford said.
~~we didn't execute as well as we
·i.-ould've lilced either. Next week is
:P.urricane. It is a tough place to
:~lay. That game will prollably be.
'ane of the premier games in the
~ with Hurricane and us both
~~g in or around the top 10," he
~d.
.
,• '"!'he thing we've gotta look at1s
:;,e go on the road for four out of
·aur next five games. Now we have
whip more than 11," assistant
pch
Dave Rawson added.
1

f•

SALE

BASKETBALL SHOE

. les f!!Shing game proved effecuv_e dunng the opening moments.
Miller took the opening kickoff,
only to be forced to punt after a

'

i*'
,•

i_

1

STATISTICS

Point Pleaaanl Melp
16
4
)l'lllll Rushina
41-300 30-48
111111 Pusing
14
24
1foW Yords
314
72
1!'1111 Downs

E7~-YIIIII

·.-9

3-35
2-26

l'un!J.Averaae
letum Yardt

126

.ScORE
•
.
BY QUARTERS:
.•

tabu Pl-1111
~

•

".fl'·l
t--Qtr
PP -~

'

through much' of the quarter, but
the Eagles' offensive play was
manred by penalties until late in the
half. Eastern had four touchdowns
riuUified by penalties during a drive
around the 2:30 mark.
Miller retained ~ssession and
began a sustained drive, only to be
picked off at midfield by Eastern's
Sheets. With four seconds left in
the half, Brian Bowen hit Sheets on
a 53-yard touchdown strike for the
~les. Bowen'~ two-point convers1on pass fell mcomplete, as the
Eagles.took. a 21-0 lead at the half.
In the !hifd 9uar1er. Eastern took
the open~ng kickoff and marched
52 yar~ 10 seven plays 10 score on
a four-yard touchdown run by
Sheets, his second of the night.

Eastern's interior line opened up
big holes for the rush!ng attack ~1
evening long, espectally on thts
opening drive of the second half.
Jared Ridenour's extra-point kick
was good, and Eastern extended the
lead to 28-0.
In the fourth quarter, at the
11:54 tnarl&lt;, Ryan Bucldey scored
on a three-yard run for the Eagles
ftnaltouchdown of the night. Ailam
McDaniel's extra-point kick narrowly missed, and the Eagles fin·
ished the scoring with a 34-0 victory.
. '
.
"I was extremely pleased with
the effon. especially those of our
offensive and defensive lines. Our
entire team was focused throughout

the game. Assignments were flawless, and our team just blew people
off the ball," staled Barr.
Leading the rushinJI charge for
Eastern were Shee11 with 13 carries
for 129 yards and Arbaudl with 13
carries for 56 yards. Mlke .Smith
finished with four carries for 19
yards in a good effon late in the
game. Pat Newland didn't have his
normal impressive stats, but. was
again a key figure in the win. The
senior speedster had three touchdown runs called back due to
penalties. One was an 85-yard punt
return.
Newland was also a key defensive figure, being credited by Barr
as posting "tremendous man-toman coverage" on the Miller tight
end.
·
Brian Bowen finished 5 of 8
passing for 85 yards and one touchdown for the Eagles. .
Randy Kaylor had 10 tackles,
21.{).
down. Evans had three carries for
During the evening, terriffic 39 yards and a touchdown, Billy and Charlie Bissell tallied six and a
play by the Tornadoes' offensive Jones added two carries for 12 blocked punL ,Jared RidCnour eight.
tackles and a blocked punt, and
line set up big plays and sustained yards.
scoring drives. This point was well
Trenton Oeland racked up good Scott Golden had four t.acldes.
Interceptions were taken by
proven during the third quarter as passing numbers for the Tornadoes.
Ryan
Buckley, Newland and
Southern would find the end zone The senior quarterback ftnished the
.
on two more occassions.
evening with a 7 -of-15 effort for Sheets.
Leading
receiver
was Jason
With 10:10 remaininl! iri the 128 ya_r~s and tWC? touch~owns
Sheets
with
two
catches
for 68
third, a Tucker Williams 70-yard whtle gtv1ng up one mtercepuon.
yards
and
a
touchdown.
Charlie
punt return set up a three-play drive
Defen~i'!'ely, S~m Sha_in and
that would be solely earned out by Tucker Wilbams finished _w•th sev- Bissell carne with two catches for
Williams. Three carries later, en laclcles each. Paul Smtih added 22 yards, including a spectacular,
Williams hit paydirt on a seven- five tackles. Jamey Smith came up diving 12-yard catch for a first
yard touchdown scamper. Lisle's wit~ a f_umble recovery. Also. down during an Eagle scoring
drive.
extta-point kick failed, and South-· Crmg Kmght had four taclcles.
em led 27-0:
. Trenton Cleland. and Trav\s
Another Trenton Cleland pick- Ltsle played havoc wtth Hannan s
off started a Southern scoring drive passing game during the night. Clelate in the quarter. Two plays later, land came up with three (3) interDrummer rushed in from two yards ceP.tions, while Lisle picked off a
out for his second touchdown of Wildcat pass.
the evening. Lisle's extra-point
Southern (2-2) travels to Chesakick was gpod, as Southern led 34- peake to face the Panthers Friday.
o.
HanQnrtan droptolaslsto 0-5.
In the fourth quarter, Jamie
ua er
.
Evans found his way to the end Hannan ..................0 0 0 0 " 0
zone on a 24 yard run, for the final Southern .............. 13 · 8 13 6 " 40
Southern touchdown of the
evening. The extra-point Ieick was Statistics
no good. The Southern defense !lid
RS
H
an outstanding job of keeping the Department
12
Hannan offense in check all First downs ......................6
evening. Great execution ·on both Rushing yards ........30,107 33-205
128
sides of the ball led to the victory Passing yards ..................7
7-15
Comp.-atL ..................2-16
for the Tornadoes.
Some homes try to.separate
1
The leading rusher for Southern · Interceptions thrown ...... .4
was Aaron Drummer with 18 car- Total yards .................. 114
333
you from the environment
0.{)
ries for 107 yards and two touch- Fumbles-lost ................3-2
Ow- homes make you a
downs. Tucker Williams had 10 Penalties-yards ........... 3-35 7-100
. partofit
O.{)
carries for 62 yards and a touch- Punts.avg................... 3-30

quarter set up a scoring opportunity
late in the quarter. Trenton Cleland
went to the air again, this time finding Billy Jones on a 25-yard touchdown strike. Travis Lisle's extrapoint Ieick was good, and Southern
led 13-0.
After alternating possessions by
both squads, Miller committed a
cosdy turnover as Trenton Cleland
carne up with an interception for
the Tornadoes. This set up a scoring drive capped off by an Aaron
Drummer 10-yard touchdown run,
with 7:47 remaining in the third
quarter. Trenton Cleland's two·
point pass to Drummer was good,
as Southern increased its lead to

Garry Peck 40 yard punt return (pass
Gill to Shinn)
pp . 2
Chad Roush 76 yard run (Peck kick
good)

.

Meigs - 2
Chad Duncan 13 yard pss from Brent
Hanson (kick short)
PP-3
Chad Roush 18 yard run (Gill run)
PP-4

Robert Hall 10 yard run (Peck kick
good)

INDMDUAL STATISTICS

Rushing
POINT - Jason Shinn . 20-104: Chad
Roush 2-94; Jason Safford 9-54; Robert
Hall 2-15; Brent Smith 3-14; Garry
Peck; Jason Thompson 2-3; Mau Cotlrilll-5; Totals 41-300
Meigs - Heath Hudson 5-38; Jared Hill
13-19; Jasons Panons 2-13; Israel
Grimm 2-3; James White t-2; Tom
CremeiJ\S 1-1; Scotl Peterson 1-1;
Brent Hanson 5-(-5); Totals J.....a.

Rockies beat Reds 9-2 for 65th win

By MICHELLE ORTIZ RAY
Passing
DENVER (AP) - Who says
POINT - Brent Smith 6-1-14 yds.-1 int; the Colorado Rockies have nothing
William Gill 3-0-0 yds.: Totals 1-9-14 to play for?
The Rockies set a National
Brent Hanson 5-1-13 yds.-1 League record for victories by an
int-I td; Travis Abbclt 3-2-11 yds.; expansion team Friday night by
Totals 3-8-:14 yds.-11d.-llnt.
beating Cincinnati 9-2, sending the
Receiving
Reds
to their 13th loss in 14 games.
POINT- Ryon Roush 1-14; Totals 1-14
The
Rockies' 65th win of the
yds.
.
season
surpassed the 64 by the
MEIGS. Chad Duncan 2-8-1 td; Travis
Houston
Colt .45s in 1962. The Los
Curtis 1-6 Totals 3-14 yds.-1td.

L":gs -

3-~

.

Statistics
E
Deparhnent
M
12
F"nt downs.................... IO
Rushing yards ........26-103 41-210
Passing yards ................80
85
Comp.-att. ..................6-18·
S-8
lntmeptions thrown ...... ,3
0
295
Total yards ... ,............. .183
Fumbles-lost ................3-2
3-2
12-140
Penalties-yanls...........6-55
Punts-avg ................6-20.5 3·35.3

1916 Pont. flere Gl-'161J11-

Au~o :. 6 cyl. . air. sun rool, Low mileoil I

1989fon1Escort5WLLS114MAu!o .. air. 4 cyl .. Sharp!

1916 Doclgl Ram P.U- S115•6 cyl., aulo., Clean!

1988 Pont. 6000_ _..;s89•4

«.,4 cyl., aulD.. air

1986 Chevy Ctltbrlty_ sto•4 «.. 4 cyl .. air, aUIO .. Low Milas!

1981FordRangtrP.U-51011"5 speed, 4 cyl., Low Miles!

1991 Pont.SunbinlLE-s1511"4 G-., 4 cyl .. aulo., air. Low

Miles!

1990 Jttp Cheroktt-5200•2 «.. 6 cyl .. 4x4. 5 speed

1988 Fonl T-linf,__-~·­
e cyl .• 2 dr .• aulo., air

Monthly Payments Based

Upon 11,000.00 Down Or
Equal Value In Trade-In
and Balance Financed Thru

· Lending lnstHutlons.
Taxas &amp; Fees Not Included

T

Angeles Angels hold the record for
X1&gt;1&gt;J ....t.i~('l
most wins by a major league
1.J \J.thl~urcs,
expansion team, 70 _in 19~ 1.
l_ J Inc.
Kansas City is second With fb VIC·
More choiees rllllk for bolttr li•ing.
tories in 1969. The Rockies have
seven games left.
.
P.O. BOX 614
Rockies manager Don Baylor IS
RIPLEY, WV. 25271
glad his players are ~nally C~?ffiing L.--.....;1..;-6.;.00.;.-4.;.5..;8..;·9.;.99.;.0_ _ __.
to the ballpark expecnng to wm.

•

~~~~~~~~~~

SIGNATURE SERIES. VB eng., PS, PB,
auto. trans., air cond., Climate
Control, AMJFM slsreo can., tilt &amp;
cruiH, po-r win. &amp; power locks,
rear defroster, cut alum. wheels,
dual po-r -Is, local car, low
mllaaga. CHECK THIS ONE OUT AND
SAVEl

MARQUIS LS 4 DR.

rtloCo bJ Mark CtorP

TOUCHDOWN MACmNE • Point's Chad Roush bursts
through an openinR created by teammates Jeremy Waver, no. 74, and
Mike Sayre, no. 78, as Meigs' Adam Wyatt, no. 33, tries to catch
Roush. This 18 yard scamper was Roush's second touchdown on the
night. He carried tbe ball twice ror two TDs and 94 yards in Point's
36·6 win last night.

va eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., air
cond., AMIFM stereo canette, tilt &amp;
cruise, P. win. &amp; P. locks, dual power
seats, rear defroster, call alum.
wheels, luxury cloth Interior. This car
Is extra claan, low rnllaage.

SALE

II

•a
1181 FORD TEMPI BL 4 DR.
4 cyl. eng., PS, PB, auto. trana.,
AMIFM stereo cassette, tilt &amp; cruiH,
powsr windows and power door
locks, rear clafroster, air cond., extra
clean, 31,000 miles.

END OF SUMMER
CLEARANCE

1181 CIIIRILI'T CORSICA 4 DR.

SAVE ON ALL
93 WHEEL HORSE'S
IN STOCK

4 cyl. eng., power stHrlng, poMr
brakes, auto. trans., AMIFM stereo
cassette, air cond., tilt and c:rulsa,
powar windows and power locks, rear'
clefrc?ster, new tires, extra clNn.

Brinlln your best deal on a New Car or Truck and we
will try to meet or Beat the DeaL

71

SCORING

Quarter totals
Miller ....................o o o O= o
Eastern ..................8 13 7 6 ~ 34

ftiWI CAR

6-44
9-31

,_,_
1 l 3 4 ·~1
6 ·~ 8 7
36
0 60 0
6·

Eastern (2-2) plays Hannan (05) at home next Friday. Hannan
WU I 4()..() loser 10 Southcm Friday
night. MiUer (G-4) will play host to
Wells1011 (3·1).

Call today Cor more Information

E

J - Sllbd one yllld nm (kick wide)

At Belpre,, the Mariotla Tigers

.

:: Poz"nt... - (Continued rrom C-4)
-------

ltmnt.· Offit-es: Hloominguin. lllinoi~

Like a good neighbor. Stale Farm is there.

MASON, W.Va.- The Big
Bend Youth Football League will
hold a preview today at 2 p.m. at
Wabama High School.
All four teams in the league will
see action.

Atbens...... ~············o 1 1 6 :::1 20

•

Ol
.... 446-4290
H.o44HSII

HOT DEALS ON HOT WHEELS

BBYFL preview today

Quarter totalt
Coal Orove ...........7 6 16 7 = 36

,

c' ,,

DON TATE CHEVROLET·OlDSMOBILE·CADILLAC·GEO'S

yards.

Marleltll 28, Belpre 19

SNOWDEN

342~Aw.

1993 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC.........................s141 995

Coal Grove 36, Atbens 20
At The Plains, the Hornets
broke into the win column for the
fi rst time in four outings with a
thunderous rushing game that accounted for 366 yards on 55 carries, led by Dusty Smith 's 146
yards and two touchdowns.
.
Coal Grove took the opentng
kickoff and marched 81 yards on
17 plays with Don Honaker scoring
from tile two. Steve Shelton's kick
madeit7·0.
· Athens tied it in the second period on an 11-yard pass from Jason
Bolin 10 Jemny Caldwell and Josh
Lightle' conversion kick. Behind
touchdown runs from Smith the
Hornets led 29-14 after three quarters. Quarterback Nick Tc_&gt;th kept
the Bulldogs alive by sconng on a
10-yard run, kickmg the extra
point and later hit John Handley
with i 16-yard scoring strike.
Athens, now ·o-4, netted 117
yards rushing but saw Toth com·
plete nine of 23 passes for 194

•

CAROU

10 - David Finney, Gallipolis
(184-2); Mathew Bush, Gallipolis
(178-9)
. .
9 ..... Bobby Jones, Rio Grande
(146-I I); Tim Hunt, Gallipolis
(1 41 -9)
8 - Cliff Wheeler, Gallipolis
(110-5)
These participants will move on
to sectional competition on Oct. 23
at 1 p.m. in Athens. The Athens
winners will qualify for the team
championship competition to be
h.e ld at Riverfront Stadium in
Cincinnati during halftime of the
L.A. Raiders-Bengals game.

In the first quarter, Eastern

~ked up momentum early. The

fine effort by the defense.
Easlern took possession near
midfield !O start the Ea_gles ftrst
sconng drive of the everung. A six
play drive, keyed by a 24-yard Jason Sheets run, set up a three-yard
to~chdown ~n by Wes Arbaugh.
Bnan Bowen s two-point conversion pass to Sheets was good as
Eastern jumped out to an early 's-o
lead. ,
At. the 6:33 marie in the second
quarter, Eastern struck again as 8
19-yard Sheets run set up another
Arbaugh touchdown, a two-yard
r~n . Randy Kaylor's extra-point
k1ck spht the uprights, as Eastern
led 1S-0.
Eastern's defense held Miller

[.Southern po~ts 40-0 win over Hannan

Auto., air, V6, cassette, cruise, tilt.

UP TO

:
:
:
'
:
·

me anal)ze your
insurance needs with a free
Family Insurance Checkup.''

1993 OLDS CIERA.........................................~•• s121 999

SAVE

turf.,

That brou&amp;hlllP a second llld 13.
As 111n1on daopped blck Ibis time,

CHECK OUT THESE DEALS

Waverly 19, Jackson 0
At Jackson, the Waverly Tigers
won the annual Apple Bowl contest ·
behind Shane Holton's 122 yards
as the visitor&amp; rolled up 211 rushing
yards and were hit with 12 penalties for 150 yards.
The Tigers remain IIDdefeatea m
four games by scoring 13 points in
the first quarter and then holding
the Jackson runners to just 13 yards
rushing on 20 carries for the contest. The Ironmen managed to keep
it interesting on the arm of Geoff
Matthews, who completed eight of
26 passes for I 83 yards. ·
Tiger touchdowns were scored
by Jason Bolin on a two-yare run,
Isaac Ransdell on a one-yard
plunge and Jim George's fumbl e
recovery in the end zone.
Quarter tolals
Waverly .............. l 3 0 0 6= 19
Jackson .. ...............0 0 0 0 = 0

By TOM HUNTER
Tlmet-Seatbael C011trlbator
EAST MEIGS - Dave Bm's
~ Eagles, led by ouiSIIIIding
·ruslliDg efforts by $01lhomore Jason
_Sheets and sentor Wes Arbaugh,
~eated the Miller Falcons 34..() in
a non-league encounter for both
schools Friday night at Eastern.
The ~lea and Falcons will play
twice this season, with the second
, game to be counted as a league

chased him down and flung tile

Gallia Pass, Punt &amp; Kick sends
16 to mid-October sectional
GALLIPOLIS - Here are the
best performers out of a 50-participant field that took part in the
NFL/Gatorade Punt, Pass &amp;.Kick
competition held SIIDday at Gallia
Academy High School's Memorial
Field and hosted by the Gallipolis
Parks &amp; Recreation Department
and the 0.0. Mcintyre Park District
The P&amp;R and the OOMPD held
separate competitions, and as a
result, there are two winners in
each age group. Both are listed
below with their cumulative distances acquired by punts, passes
and kicks.
IS - Greg James, Bidwell
(304-5); Aaron Beaver, Gallipolis
(235-1)
14 - Tony Perroud, Gallipolis
(251-1); Ryan Perdue, Gallipolis
(227-5)
13 - Guy Guinther, Gallipolis
(272-3); Joey Dambrough, Gallipolis (232-5)
12 - Cody Lane, Gallipolis
(229-4); T.R. Rodgers, Gallipolis
(194-10)
11 - Jeremy Payton, Gallipolis
(229-7) ; Dusty Cox , Gallipolis
(194-5)

Sunday llmee sentinel Page C5

FOR A GOOD DEAL••
SEE TOM MD.STEAD or BOB ROSS

BAUM LUMBER
985-3301

Our Service Department Ia Open Mon.-Fri. a..s; Sat. 8-12
Muftler Shop Mon.-Fri. B-5; Sat. 8-12
New Houra In Salu Mon.-Fri. 8-7; Sit. 8-3 p.m.

,,

•

�•

'

Peg1 C6 Sunday nmee Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleuant, WV

September 26, 1911

WHS struggles in homecoming win over Vinson By Gary Cllrk
'1'11n..statbltl

Sparts'~deat

MASON - The Wahama Whire
Falcons ~led its lalesl Dr.
Jekyll llld Mr. Hyde imilalion
before • large bomecoming crowd
at the Bend Area school Friday
evening, in struggling 10 a 20-14
Southwes~em

Alhleci&lt;: Conference

victory over the visitiJlg Vmson

Tigeri.
Following the Whire Falcons' inspirllional 12-7 come-from-behind
win over 1 tough Ravenswood
eleven last week, it appeared Coach
Don· VanMettr's {ootball gridders
were well on tbeir way to a suong
finiah during the second llalf of the
1993 caml_l8ign, but after Friday
n~ht's performance qainst winless
VIDSOil, the doubts reappeared with
a vengence.

Wahama let a 20-0 third q__uarter

advan~a&amp;t

slip away, as the Tigers
scon:d 14 unanswered points to
make a serious run at lhe host
Whire Falcons.. The conrest
remained in doubt until Joey Mayes
picked off a Joe Rash pass at the
Falcon 23 yard line wilh I: 11
remaining, as Vmson was driving
for what could have been a game
winning touchdown in the SWAC
affair. The win improved the 171h

.

ranked White Falcons' .season slate .
to 3-2 On the year and 2-0 inside
the SWAC, while Vmton fell to 0-5
overall and 0-2 in the
"At times we looked lilte we
were ready to play, but for the most
part we ·just seemed to be going
through the motions," a disappointed WHS Coach VanMc:IC'Z
said. "Give Vinson credit though,
· they wouldn't quit We gave them
the opportunity to keep going and
they capitalized on il. Maybe we
got caught up in all the homecoming festivities and the thought of
Van ne11t week, but I do know one
thing and that is we can't look past
anybody, and one of these days,
we're going to learn !hal lesson."
Wahama was plagued by turnovers once again as the Bend Area
ream fumbled · five times and lost
four of those in addition to having
one pass intercepted by lhe Tiger
defensive uniL "Fumbles are just
killing us," commented VanMerer.
"We've worlced and worlced on
trying to solve the problem and I
. guess we still have to devote a
great deal more elfon in avoiding
this particular obstacle. Maybe its
just a lack of concentration, but
something has to be done or it will
be a long second half of the

conference..

season."

son. The White Falcons were as sure-banded in
their efforts to secure a 20-14 victory. (Photo by
Gary Clark)

LOOKS IT IN - Wahama tight end J.C.
the ball Into his bands durin&amp; Friday night's pme against visiting Huntington Vin·
Albrl~ht looks

Scoreboar(l
_........ _

--

~

NATIONALLEAGUE

:::r'·. . . . . .
T-

WL

....

94 59
_ ,_ ...........
&amp;5

.614
.!75
.542
.519
.451

S1. Lauia ......... ... .13 70

go..,...................IO

74

PlllllbJl ..... - -..70 n
- - ·-----..61 91
NowYadl ............. .52 101

w....

.&lt;105
.340

Dt-

Ailan..................... 91
Son ......... ........ 96
Lao Aa...............79
................. 79
CINCINNA11 ........70
Colondo ................ 65
Son Dtoso ............ ..59

56
57
74
75
15
90
95

.636
.627
.516
.513
.452
.419
.313

GI
6
II
14.5
:14
:12
42

II

MUwaukOe.""'''"'''66

.!39
.!36
.!16
.!16
.474
.429

6.!
7
10
10
16.5
23.5

Welltrn DIYIIIon

Chicoao..................al 65 .575
T,.. .....................11 . 72 .529
7
EMiu Oly ...........79 75 .513
95
S.llle ....................71 75 .510
10
CaUfomio ...............61 15 .444 . :10
l\linroooQu ..............64. 19 .411
24
OUhnd ................. 64 19 .411
:14

Frl!lay•s seores
Tmmto 7,NowYadl. 3
Dotroil 7, lk1limom 0
Bolton 7, MinnOIOla 4
Milwoukoo II, CLEVELAND I (10

P"'ledolfhi•l. Atlanta 0

Lnn.buc.F 5, Tau 4
KanW CitJ 7, Califcmia 2 (S 1!2 inn.,

-6,Ncwl'"od&lt;3
SL Louio 9, Flarido !
CA&gt;Iando 9, ONCINNA112
Loo Anaela 6, 3
Son.........., 4, s.. IMto 3 (10 inn.)

~5.S..ulo3

lloiciF l , l'illobaqb 3

Tbey played Saturday
-

(Smollz 15·10)" l'hilldc1pl!io

(l..U.:..Il·ll~ 3:05p.m.

Suo Dlooo (Aohl&gt;J' ].9)" Suo l'nn&lt;:ia·

... cr-1-3), ·~,....

hounon: (Swindcll10.13) ll 1M An·

~ (P.

-Ia..),4:05 p.m.

s,, Louia (Wauon 6·!1) at Florida

·

N-Yadl ..............l3 71
12 71
74
o.nm. ..._.............79 74
CU!VI!UND .......73 II

1.5
IIJ
19
21.5
33.5
39

Friday's JCOI'ft

-

a.-.
.. .....
B-. ...................79

9-16), 7:05p.m,
clilaao (frochHI C.. I)

cw._7·7)c;~c
MoiMII

"Piltlbo'Sh

1-1} at New Yczk

(lllllman
···~ 7:10J&gt;"'·
aNCNNATI
(1lijo Il-l) ll CA&gt;lcmodo
(llmio 11·15), 9:05p.m.

Today's games
Atlanta (Avery 16-6) at Philldtlphia

cSdolllin
1 tS-6),1:35 f""·
au..ao (M..... c..t3) "Pillobo'Sh

(Wokr&amp;ld4oll),l:35p.m.
St. Louis (Arocha 11-6) at florida
CW•Ih"' 2·1), 1:35 p.m.
Manno! (l!ill9-6) It New Yod&lt; Cfol·
atooder4-2~ I&gt;IOp.m.

CINClNNA11 (Lue.bben 2-4) at ColorMio (Rcynoeo 11· 10),3:0S p.m.
HW~Wn (Purwpl 164) alLot Ange!OI(R. Moninezl(i:I0),4:0S pm.
s.n Dle&amp;o (Broca.il 3-12) at San Fnn·
daco(Dclhaiesl-2), 4:05p.m.

Tbey played Saturday
Minne~ou.

(Brummett 1·1) at Bolton
(Dopooo 7·11). 1:05 p.m.
MUwau.kH (Navuro 10-U) at

CI.EVEI.AND (Clalt 6-4), I :l!l'm.
New Yodt {Tanana 0:.1) at Toronto
(l.oilcr7-6), 1:35 p.m.
Teuo (Ropn 15-9) ll Od01JO (B&lt;n
IM~3P"'·

DetrOit (OWlicbaa 12-9) at Baltimore
(Rhodoo 5-I~ 7'!15 p.m.

Califouua (Leftwich 3-6) at K.an1..

City (Ca. I Hl~ I~ p.m.

Oaklaad (Van Poppe) 6-5) at Seattle
(ll.ooooa 11·12), !O:OS p.m.

Today'IIIIDtl

MiMOI&lt;MI (fiGIIIbloy 5-5) 11 Boot1X1
(C!anono 11·14), I :05 p.m.
Milwoube (Bomo IC..I!) II a.EVI!·
LAND (Mli&lt;*!C..O), I :35J&gt;m.
Now Yoll&lt; (Al&gt;bou 10.13) II T......,
(Sialllanymii·IO~ 1:3!j&gt;.m.
Detroit (Moore 13·9) at Baltimore
(Vat.m.ta 'J-t0).1:3Sp.na.
Califomil (Furoll 3·11) ll K1n111
City ~ 1·2). 2:35p.m.
· .
Tex .. (Pavlik. 10.6) at ChicaiO {&amp;-·
Mndoz 17-8~ 2:35 p.m.
O•kltnd (Jimenez 0-0) n Seattle
{lolwiXI I 8-8), 4:35 p.m.

- • Transactions • Baseball

AMERICAN LEAGUE
l!utem Dlvillon
r....
w L .... os

To-. ..................19 64

A......._t.apo
BOSTON RI!D SOX: Sisncd On:&amp;
Hatril, pit.chet, to I Mo-yoat cednct with
a club Option for 199S.

.512

STATISTICS
Wabama Vinson
First Downs
10
7
Yards Rushing
43-179 38-137
Yards Passing
7
15
Total Yards
186
152
Passing
2-8
2-14
Inrerceptions Thrown 1
I
Fumbles Lost
54
4-3
Penalties/Yards
2-25 7-50
Punts/Avg
2-50.5 6-26.1
Off Plays
53
58
Store by Quarters:
1234Tot
Wahama
6 6 8 0 20
Vinson
0 0 6 8 14
Scoring:
WAH - Tommy VanMeter five yard
pass from Jason King (Ieick
blocked)
WAH - Jason King 11 yard run
(pass failed)
. WAH - Dale Johnson 15 yard run
(Jason King run)
VIN - Joe Rash one yard run
(pass failed)
VIN - John MyeJS 10 yard pass
from Joe Rash (Roben Shrader
pass from Joe Rash)

The lacldust,er exhibition by the
White Falcons put a damper .on the
101 yard rushmg perfonnance of
freshman running back Dale
Johnson, who tallied the last of
three Wahama touchdowns on the
nigh,, with a 15 yard Scamper.
Johnson, a' 5-8. 127-pound
speedster, totaled 101 yards in 14
carries to lead all ground gainers in
the game, while senior running
back Tommy Mayes added 64
yards in 17 tties for lhe White Falcons. Jason King also enjoyed a
memorable night in his.first varsity
slalt at quanerbaclc by tossing a
five yard scoring pass to Tommy
VanMerer, and running II yards for
anolher WHS six points. King also
added a two-point conversion run
for the local griddeJS.
Twnovers were directly involved
in one of the Wahama touchdowns,
and bolh of the Tigers' scores. Vinson fumbled a White Falcon punt in
the opening quarter with Johnson
recoverinJ( the loose pigskin for the

P DOLLARS
FOR
WILD
DRIED
GINSENG
ROOTS

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING·
Wabama - Dale Johnson 14-101;
Tommy Mayes 17-M; Chris Roach
3-13; J.C. Albright 1-1; Jason King
8-0; Totals 43-179.
Vinson - Nathan Beckett 9-54; Joe
Rash 1348; Roben Shrader 10-19;
Dan Ward 6-16; Totals 38-137.
PASSING
Wahama -Jason King 1-4-5 yards! TD -lin~ Thmmy Mayes 14-2
yards; Totals 2-8-7 yards- I TD- 1
int.
Vinson · Joe Rash 2-14-15 yards .
I TD- I int.
.
RECEIVING
Wahama - Tommy VanMeter 1-5
yards- I TD; Jason King 1-2 yards;
Tolals 2-7 yards- l TD
Vinson · John Myers 2-15 yards. I
TD

'.•

'

Direct Shipment
To The Orient ·
DIANA CHENG
{30.\) 675·4018 Point Pleosunt

White Filcons at the Vinton 27
yard line. Four plays larer, King
passed to ·VanMerer for a five yard
TD pass to give Wahama a 6-0 lead
at the 3:27 mark of the first period.
WHS added another touchdown
in the second stanza by going 31
yards in six plays wilh ·King going
11 yards for the score. Wahama
failed on both first half ·PAT tries,
and led by a 12-0 margin at the
half.
An impressive drive following
the second half kickoff resulted in
the host ream increasing its lead to
20-0 as Wahama marebed 55 yards
in six plays wilh Johnson culmioating the series wilb a 15 yard gallop.
King riln the two point conversion
to give the White Falcons a seemin~ly comfortable 20-0 advantage
wtlh 10:16 to play in the lhird
canto.
Vinson came roaring back
however, as Wahama fwttbled a
Tiger punt at the Wahama 26 yard
line. Vinson recovered lbe necessary yards in five plays, with Joe
Rash scoring on a one yard run at
the 1:36 marie of the lbird quarrer.
The conversion pass was unsuccessful, and Wahama led by 11 20-6
score.
Rash set uo another Vinson

touchdown witti an interception Jl{
a King aerial and a 65 yard re~
to the White Falcon 10 yard lme..
Two plays larer, Rash connected
with John Myers for a 10 yard 900!'~
ing toss wilh Rash also toSSing tbe
PAT pass to Robert Shrader, to p!!li ..
Vinson to wilhin six at 20-14 wilj)
7:08 remaining in the game.
'
The Tigers received one more
shot at lhe win after taking over 011
downs at its own 24 wilh 3:50 I~ft
.in the conteSL Vinson moved iq\9
Wahama territory, but 'Ibmmy
Mayes deflected a Rash aerial itii!&gt;
the waiting arms of Joey Mayes ,II&gt;
halt lhe Tigers upset bid.
,;
Defensively, Wahama was led IIX
senior linebacker Shane Scott, wl!Q
had anolber outslandil!g ooting m
leading lhe Wahama While Fali:Qn
defensive eleven. Senior linem~
John Smilhson alsO had an iinpresz
sive game upOn his return to action
after missing last week's contisl
due to an injury.
',.
Wahama must now take to the
road for two away dares in the nel!l
three weeks, with a touch SWAO
contest against the Van Bulldogs
awaiting the Bend Area team next
Friday night at the Boone County
school, while Vinson welcomes
Duval for its next encounrer.
'

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Outdoors

September 26, 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel /C7

Ohio fishing report

Spotted bass making_home in lower end of Lake ·vesuvius
':- COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) }.!'ere is lhe weekly fishing report as
p(ovided by the division of wildlife
(If lhe Ohio Depanment of Natural

R'esources:

Southeast
,:· VESUVnJS LAKE- Fish near
die feeder streams in the lower end
6f. the lake to take spotted bass
Which measure up to 20 inches.
U.5e traditional bans fished along
the bottom to take channel catfish
ilitd brown bullheads. Largemoulh
bass, bluegills and saugeyes also
provide good fall fishing opportuwlties.
.~.. D'ILLON RESERVOIR- As
l!oolet weather prevails, saugeye
l'tShing Opportunities in the tail
water will improve. Cast or drift
jigs tipped with minnows for best
tesults. Opponunities to take channel catfish remain excellent. Use
traditional baits fished along the
bottom near the shoreline. Largemouth bass al$0 provide good fall
opponunities lakewide;
~.:
Soothwest
··• . CAESAR CREEK LAKE -

were being caught on minnows and minnows, nigfit crawlers, plastic
night crawlers near the Foster wonns or top water baits in areas
ramp, Point Pleasant and New with submerged structure to take
Richmond.
largemouth bass. Shoreline cover
In the Markland pool. anglers also P.rovides good fishing for
were using Wheaties to take carp blueg~lls. Channel catfiSh up to 10
up to 27 inches. Good numbeJS of pounds can be taken dunn11 the
largemouth bass ranging in size evening when using traditional
from 12 to 22 inches were being b~ts fished along the bottom,
taken on black worms and
Northwest
chartreuse buzz baits. Striped bass
CHARLES MILLS RESERup to 23 inches were hitting on VOIR -:Use jigs tipped w!th minbass magnets and 'crank baits nows or cast small crank baits
around the ttibutary confluences.
wheh fishing in the lail water for
Central
saugeyes. Top water imilation baits
BUCKEYE LAKE - Fishing or night crawleJS work best for bass
·opportunities for channel catfish anglers. Use traditional baits ftshed
remain good during lhe fall. The at night to lake channel catfish and
best time to fish is during the bullheads.
FERGUSON RESERVOIR evening and early morning. Use
shrimp. soft craws, night crawlers Weight-forward spinners tipped
or chtcken livers flshed along the with night crawlers and dnfted
bottom for best results. Use dough along the bottom is a good melhod
balls fiShed at shallow deplhs near to use when ftshing for walleyes.
lhe shoreline to take carp. A num- Use larval baits slicb as mousies or
ber of small muskies Inhabit the wax wonns fiShed along the botlake and range in size up to 35 tom to take yellow perch. Soft
. craws and spinners used around
it~cbes.
.
·
KNOX LAKE - Fish with shoreline areas work best when

Fish with small worms or larval
baits at depths of five ta 15 feet
around deep points, drop-offs and .
submerged hwnps to take bluegills.
Use four·inch plastic worms or
other imilat,ioo baits fished near the
entrance of the wooded coves to
!ake largemouth bass. Try using
live worm rigs or crank baits
trolled at depths of I0 to 20 feet
along the wooded drop-offs and
mid-lake humps to take saugeyes.
LAKE LORAMlE ~Use larval
baits and small worms fished
around brushy shoreline or vegelat·
ed areas to take bluegills. Try the
upper end of the lake during
evening when fishing for brown
bullheads. Boat docks, shoreline
brush and areas with lily pads
the best spots to fish for largemouth bass.
Ohio River
In the Meldahl pool, anglers
were taldng flathead catfish up to
30 inches and channel catfish up to
19 inches on night crawleJS ftshed
around Rocky Bank near Foster.
Freshwater drum up to 20 inches

are

fishing for largemooth and small·
moulh bass.
Northeast
EAST BRANCH RESERVOIR
- BluegiUs can be taken through·
out the year by fishing near weed
beds and other i:over near drop-olfs
with larval baits or small night
crawlers. Fish with small crank
baits or live bait near submer~ed
humps, drop-offs and lhe origmal
sll'eam bed to lake largemouth bass.
MOSQUITO CREEK RESER- ·
VOIR - Bluegills ranging in size
from six to eight inches can be
taken during the fall on live bait
· fished in shallow water. A fair
opportunity exists for !hose anglers.
ftshing for c~annel catfish and
northern p.ilce. Try float-fishing
wilh small minnows or casting jigs
in areas with submerged structure
to lake crappies.
Lake Erie
In lhe c:entral basin, anglers are
now catching sreelhead ranging in
size from 21 to 25 inches. A good
location is the east pier of the
Grand River. Other beach and

stream locations along the northeast shoreline should offer good
steelhead fishing during the fall .
Anglers are using spoons, spinners,
and jigs and maggots suspended
benealh a bobber. Yellow perch hnt
spots include the areas one to lhree
miles off of Gordon Park in Oeveland and Fairport Harbor. Fish
along the bottom wilh spreadeJS at
depths of 40 to 50 feet. Waller.es
are still being taken 10 to 12 miles
off of the northeast shoreline at
deplhs of 55 to 65 feet
In the western basin, the best
opponunities to Jake yellow perch
are lbe northeast areas around San. dusky Bay, including the islands
and reef complex. A few walleyes
are being talcen, but action remains
slow. Perch anglers should use
spreaders tipped with minnows
fished along the bottom for best
results. Some smallmouth bass are
being laken on live bait from hardbottom areas at depths of 15 to 25
feet. A 12-inch minimum length
harvest Umit applies to smallmouth
bass.

allows residents of either state to
fish in the river and its embayments
to the first riffle or dam in Ohio
and West Virginia wilhout a nonrcsident·fishing license.
Ohio and Kentucky license
reciprocity is slightly different.

under the terms or an interim
agreement between lhe two states,
Kentucky and Ohio honor lhe olher
state's fishing license along their
common borders on lhe main stem
of the river, excluding tributaries
and embayments.

.
::tl lnified fishi~g laws· by Ohio River's five states expected soon
'

9f!

OVER
FACTORY
INVOICE

If you want to know how you can make toll free long distance calls
· In the 304 and 614 ares code,
call•.•

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By JOHN WJSSE
Divi&lt;llon of Wildlife
l"': COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) late wildlife officials expect unied Ohio River fishing regulations
be placed into effect early next
;!tear by Ohio and four other slares.
,.. The new daily bag and posses~on limils and minimum length
~uirements would be adopted by
~diana, Illinois, Kentucky, Ohio
~

•I

and West Virginia.
During a 1992 survey, an~leJS in
the five slates were asked tf they
were aware that Ohio, Kentucky
and West Virginia have different
fishing regulations. Fony-three percent of those responding said lhey
did not lcnow this. The survey also
showed that 47 perce~t of the
respondents bought theu ftshmg
license in Ohio.

. • 'Obv.iously, there's been a . ~d Gary. Is~ll of the Ohio Divi problem. m ~man~ ang.lers w~o ston of.Wtldhfe. .
.
are. buymg !herr flshmg lic_ense m
Durmg a heaJl!I~ ~n Au.g. 20m
Obi~ are not aware. that. ftshmg reg- Columbus, lhe divtston latd so~e
ulation~ ~ '!te p~10 Rtver Vl!fY. by of the f~nnal.~ndwork. to umfy
a s~te s Jurts~tctio~. By umfymg th~ Stale~ Ohto Raver ftshmg regufishmg regulations m ~IS man~er. lations -.y•~ J!tose of Kentucky and
we hope to resolve lhts confusion. West Vugama. Thol!C lhree slates
O!~f .survey shows most anglers~ have a~ on~ umfonn package
w1lhng to accept_the changes,
of fishm~ regulali!JJ!S: .
. In Ohio, lhe divtston ts proposmg to create eastern and western

way·s to address
bhio •DOW seeking
b.
if lJ
"l' ;_,fi
·~~• rowzng num .ers 0
By JOHN WJSSE
Division or Wlldlire
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) he ability of federal and state
ildlife a~:~encies to annually
mend hunting, trapping and fishg regulations us~lly is an e£fiient way to deal wtth changes m
'ldlife populations.
But what can't be easily con[ lied, eilbcr by regulation or pub~c acceptance, are some urba11
ildlife populations.
Ohio's .Division of Wildlife is
urrently addressing problems of
owing numbers of white-tailed
eer, raccoons and nonmigratory
anada geese lhrough changes in
unting regulations.
••

l.

l

U'F,

an

While some deer and geese have
become little more than an urban
wonder or nuisance, a growing raecoon population is viewed as an
increase lhreat to public safety.
Raccoon strain rabies, which
officials in Pennsylvania and West
Virginia say is spreading, is likely
to reach Ohio within the next severa! &gt;:ears. The Division of
Wildltfe's planned response is to
monitor the situation and seek a
more liberal raccoon hunting and
trapping season for 1994.
"As the demand for fur prod11cts declined, so did pelt prices.
Once valued around $30 each in
the 1970s, raccoon pelts are now
wonh about $3 each,'' said Panicle

Wl,

~l
U J

A good pair of hunting boots Vibram sole, or will· smaUer cleats
or a smoother crepe sole do the
;:i!c:J many options available today, job? Do you need a heel? Irish SetPow do yoo pick the right pair?
Jer has several models with a new,
-·John DePalma, marketing man· softer Vibram lug sole attached.
1ger for Irish Setter Spon Boots, According to the company. lhe new
t;iid the first step in selecting hunt- sole wears as long as the harder
i)!'g boots is to decide what the pri- Vibram, but provides bener trac·
1I'!IU"Y purpose of the boots will be. lion when wet or cold.
~ybe you need boots for upland
• Boot weight. ~ you w~t the
e bird hunting? Maybe you lightest boots posstble, or IS foot
to wear a boot lhat prov1d~s stability and ankle support more
mate traction on a mountam important'/ Light weight is great,
~pe?
.
. .
but don't sacrifice overall boot
j:; "Because needs differ wtlh each quality, foot comfon or suppon to
i,[lilividual, !here's no such lbing as achieve it
® all purpose boot." DePalma
• Boot materials: Basically,
:Mid. "Before buying boots, people boots are made of three material~;
Sli'ould try on several models .lhat leather, rubber or synthetic materiQave the features they need an a als, 1ike Cordura nylon. There are,
~n boot."
however. many combinati.ons of
'•" Features to consider when these materials that manufacturers
~e'cting hunting footwear include: use to produce outdoor footwear.
waterproof (either Gore-Tex or
Leather is brealhable, wann, and
waterproof leather), insulated/n.on- either waterproof or water-repelinsulated. boot height, sole. destgn, lent. Leather needs regular care
liOot weight and boot materaals.
wilh silicone or oil (depending on
~ • Waterproof: ~u should co~- the type of leather) to keep it from
~er waterproof ots not only 1f dryin~ out and cracking or losing
~qur activities take !YJ!Mthroug~ its ability to repel water. Proper fit·
s\reams and wet grass, ut"'~ 1f ting leather boots are the most
you hike long distances. Perspl!ll- comfortable to wear.
tiQn Js th~ number one c~us.e ~!,
Rubber provides excellenl
c',old feet. You want to .wtck waterproOfing and doesn't pick up
rnbisture away from the slcm, and . scents, but it is lhe poorest material
i$ it out of lhe boot
. · in terms of breathability. In the
::. Boots c~ be waterproof etther rtorthem climes, a popular winrer
lt)l. constructing lhem .from .water- footwear choice for ice fishing or
P!!!Of Iealher, by adding a water- stand hunting for deer is the rubber
Dl:ilof bootie, like Gore-Tex, or by .bottom/leather upper pac boot wtth
i-Aaking the boots out of rubber. thiCk wool felt liners. Once perspiL'eather and Gore-Tex breathe. ration is absorbed in the liners, they
Waterproof lealher boots and Gore~4" booties within boots allow persjiiration to escape through the
~
¢res oflhe marerial. Rubber boots
ate walerproof, but do not breathe,
Most anglers would ralher fish
nlaking your foot feel "clammy"
of¥:e it begins to perspire.
in deep, open water than in relaJj' }nsulated/non-insulated: Insu- tively shallow, weedy bays. Bul
IE boots, like Irish Setters, use deep water is not where all the
Bi400 Thinsulare insulation covered largest ftsh hang ooL
With a mareriallhat wicks moisture
Big game ftsh are ~tors. and
aluy from lhe fooL Insulared boots their style of huntmg involves
ale the choice of hunreJS in cool to "ambush" from some son of cover
c9lcJ climares.
.
_rocks, stumps, lily pw1s or thick
, • Boot height: Largely a matter submerged weeds. This is especialof- preference, hunting boots typi- ly true of big bass. nonhero pike
c~}ly are available in 6-12 inch and muskies. Here are some tips
h~ghiS,witheigbtinchesbeingthe from folks ' at Minn Kota to he!P ·
sbiiiclmd. Look for padded collars you catch bigger fish in the "slop:
on;the higher models.
• Find a weedy bay lhat"mlates
;., Sole design: Pick a sole that to• deeper water. That is,-where lbe ·
~I provide the right traction for water depth drops quickly and
1116 areas you'll be hunting. Will there is an. abrupt end to weed
vou need the deep cleats of a cover·as the warer gets deeper. This

;:can make or break a trip. But, with

Midas is bringing
a franchise opportunity
to Gallipolis

~d~;ti~~v~.![~~h~~r~~:::.~~ei:ul!~

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tions. The lme separatmg east from
west is found in the middle of

e

~wrenceCountynearSoulhPoint,

Ruble; the division's executive
wildlife management administrator.
"In a slate such as Ohio, which
traditionally has had a high abundance of raccoons, the lack of a
sufficient harvest by hunters and
trappers has caused our raccoon
population to grow much higher."
An open hunting season on raecoons in Ohio oould come in 1994.
Members of the Ohio Wildlife
Council must rule on recommendations of changes in hunting and
fishing rules proposed by lhe divtsion.
In response ~ .C!hio's gi'C/wi~g
~eer h~rd, lhe. divtston of W1ldlife
1s making avatlable about 1~0.000
bon ':Is antlerless. d.eer permtts for
· use m all 88 counties.

ficking right boots for specific task
~job requiring plenty of r~search
0

r-------- -·-.,......-------------.

can be removed and dried o·r
replaced with a spare set. ·
Synthetic marerials, lilte Cordu·
ra. are extremely durable and light
weight. They also are water-repellent, but not 100 percent waterproof. Cordura brealhes better than
rubber (which doe~n'l breathe at
all), but not nearly as well as
leather. Cordura is oflen built into
certain boot areas to act as a tough
shield against rocks, burrs, and
other cutting, gouging malerials. It
also is used to reduce the overall
weight of lhe boot.
Once a person has identified lhe
features lhey want in a spon boot,
DePalma said it's important to
have your feet properly fined by a
footwear expen.
"A lot of the font pain and dis·
comfort people complain about is a
result of ill-fitting footwear,"
DePalma said. "No two people
have lhe same shaped foot, and no
two boot models fit the same
either.Just having enough toe room
- or just ordering your loafer size
-doesn't mean the boots will fit"
First, decide what you want lhe
boots for. Then, decide lhe features
in a boot that are important to
Finally, go to a reputable sport
t
dealer to choose a boot model and
be properly fitted in lhat model. By
following these steps, you 'II have
hunting boots that match your
hunting style.
For a free Irish Setter product
catalog and a guide to outdoor
comfoncalii-800-359-BOOT.

duectly across from the mouth of
the Bi~ Sandy River, where West
Virgirita meets Kentucky along lhe
soulh banks of the Ohio River.
The Ohio Wildlife Council is
expected to vote on t!te regulations
paclcage on Wednesday in Columbus. If approved, the regulations
will take effect next March 1.
The package recently was
approved by lhe Kentucky Depanment of Fish and Wildlife and med
for state regulatory review. The
new regulations are expected to
Jake effect in Kentucky next March

Midas has targeted a handful of
attractive lll3rkets for Midas
Muffler'and Brake Shops, and your
tOWll is one of them. We're coming
your way, and we'd like a person
like you tp be our new franchisee.
With Midas, you join the
leader in the automotive
aftermarket. Yo.u get the name
people know, the products people
want, the warranty people trust.
Automotive experience is helpful
but it's not required.

I.

The West Virginia Division of
Nalural Resources also has
approved the package, which will
Jake effect in lhat state on Jan. I.
The move towan! unified regulations is pan of a larger multistate
effon to oblain some unifonnity in
management of fish resources
along the entire length of the river.
Indiana and Dlinois are in the process of adopting similar regulations.
The issue of fishing license
reciprocity among slates bordering
the Ohio River is not pan of the
regutations package and will be
addressed later.
Ohio and West Virginia cwrent·
ly share license reciprocity, which

· 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 converl to Midas.
If you're an aggressive
entrepreneur and your target is a
nationally respected business to
call your own, give us a call today.
We'll gladly discuss the possibilities.

For details on a new shop or a
conversion, call Richard Pope at

1-800-365-0007

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Sh allow, weedy areas top ar~·nas
to catch preuatory game jiJSh

·
tdenuttes a pnme ambush spot for
predator fish.
• Look for boles of open water
within the lily pads or emerging
weeds. These will be prime areas to
caSt spinnerbaits, a Burke frog or a
wee'dless Johnson Silver Minnow
wilh a lhree-inch Sizzler trlliler.
• To maneuver in the weeds,
you'll need a boat a ttolling motor
that can getlbrougb lhem. A Milm
Kota Turbo Pro trolling motor wilh
the Weedless Wedge propeller ·
stays weed tree even at slow ftshing speeds, and still 4elivers 4Wheel-Drive muscle. It sheds
weeds instead of cutting them, thus
avoiding destruction of fishing
habitat.
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September 26, 1993

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

Piii111 C8 Sundlly nm11 Sentinel

Rio soccer team defeats Shawnee .State 3-1 for first MOC vict~ry
RIO GRANDE - The Univer~
sity of Rio Grande soccer team
todt itt fmt sr.ep in the District 22
and Mid-Ohio Conference race
W...tnesday, and the result went all
Rio Gnode's way.
The Rcclmen won 3·1 over an
improved Shawnee SIBle club in a
P!!'e that featured some notable
mdividual performances from both
sides.
Benefiting from their experience
in last weekend's Rio Grande-

Lanzera Classic , the Redmen
scored their rust goa• around 20
minures into the oper~ing half on a
free kick from Dwain Allahar, on
assist froin Michael Bush. Bush
positioned the ballll!d moved it
over to Allahar, who booted it into
the top left corner Of Shawnee
State's net in what Coach Scott
Morrissey called a "great sl!ot"
The Bears recovered from the
blow and came back 10 minutes
.

later to pick up a potential save
from Rio Grande goalkeeper Jim
Egner and rush it past to· knot the
score at 1- , where it remained at
halftime.
"We did a lot of niCe things, and
everyone played hard and well,"
Morrissey commented, "but they
were so ea11er they got out of fQCus.
The impauence kind' of hun us in
the last third of the half."
The Redmen came back into the

Blue Angel harriers notch team, individual ·triumphs at Jackson Invitational
JACKSON _ Gallia Acade- lowed by Piketon (79), Waverly
Two Devils - eighth-grader
my's Blue Angels recorded team (89), Athens (104), Logan and Josue Davison
12:06) and
and uidividual victories in ·11\e var- Ironton (no team scores posled).
. seventh-grader
(ninth,
sity and junior high girls' races in
Thursday's Jackson Invitational at
Franklin Valley Golf Course.
FoUowing the Academy, which
scored 40, in the varsity guls' race
were Logan (52), Athens (57),
- Jac~n (101) and Waverly (105),
Wheelersburg, .Latham Western,
Ironton and Piketon (no team
scores posted).
Two Angels - juniQr Jessica
Strafford (rmt, 20:45) and ~ho­
moce Sara Walker (ninth, 22:29)made it aniong the top 10 in a 70runner field. Other GAHS varsity
rmishes carne from Becky Knight
(12th, 22:54), Andra Boggs (13th,
23:00), Carrie Miller (17th, 23:22),
Jencie Haner (18th, 23:24),
Michele Davison (27th, 24:26),
· Whitney Adkins (35th, 25:25),
Rachele LaBelle (36th, 25:36) and
Gennie Tucceri (55th, 28:53).
The junior high girls' race saw
the Angels outpace Portsmouth 3651. Logan, which took third with
65 points, was followed by Athens
(98), Piketon (Ill), Ironton, Latham Westem and Waverly (no team
scores pc)sted).
Erin Nehus, whose 12:40 finish
was the winning performance. was
one of ihree Angels posting top-1 0
finishes out of a 48-runner f1eld.
Susan Facemire (fourth, 13:37) and
Theresa Davison (seventh, 13:55)
were the others. Behind them were
teammates Angie Carter (14th,
14:50), Candy Sims (20th, 15:17),
Cortney Cromlish (23rd, 15:45)
and Jessica Walker (25th, 15:54).
Varsity Devils
middle or the pack
The' varsity boys' race saw
Waverly outdistance Piketon .3467. Logan, which recorded the
higltest Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League team finish with 92 points,
was followed by Wheelersburg
Dual Air Bags, ABS Brakes, Air, Rear Window
(97), GAHS (133), Athens (150),
Defroster, PIS, P/B, Cruise, Tilt, 16' Aluminum
Jackson (152), Ironton (181),
Wheels.
Fog Lamps, AMIFM Stereo, Well Equipped!
Meigs and Latham Western (no
team scores posted).
· ·
Placing for the Blue Devils were
Brett Baker (19th, 18:22), Eddie
Nehus (22nd, 18:46), Bo Davison
(27th, 18:54), Chris Rocttker (35th,
19:16), Matt Champlin (47th,
20:42) ·and Seth Thompson (55th,
21 :22). There were 6'3 runners in
thatrace.
.
GAHS runners in the junior varsity race were Aaron Salisbury
(lith, 20:3.5) and Richard Kuhn
(30th, 23:47).
The junior high boys' race saw
Latham Western beat Gallipolis 4866. Portsmouth, which showed up
in third with 71 points, was fol-

..

13:12),Jeremy Pratt (46th, 15:11) and Adam Greene
Walter Strafford (53rd,16:28).

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meigs County. lndividuals wishing to participate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your
guess to the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,

Farm Flashes

Cars,

Vans!

CARl

liAR IIW '13 PIIIIAC UM.IJII

'

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Meigs freshman
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8,488

Economics
Contributed by Stan Evans
In our view , the stunning move of
long bond yields to below 6 percent,
the sharp drop in
gold prices, and
weakness in commodity prices
largely reflect a
belated realization
that the U.S. economy and the world
· economy arc entering a new period of low inflation.
Unlike those who believe that low
inflation and economic growth arc
incompatible, we expect the U.S.
economy to grow at a moderate pace
for the foreseeable future. The business cycle has by no means been
repealed, but the next recession is not
in sight.
Recent interest-ratedevelopments
are primarily attributable to two
forces: reduced inflation expectations
and a shift in the supply-demand
balance for credit. In our view, both
forceli can be be sustained for some
time.
We therefore belieye that interest
rates will rcmairi near current levels
during the next 12 months and possibly beyond. We expect the Federal
Reserve to refrain from tightening
policy until well into 1994 and think
that any eventual move will be modest
,
. .
The 0.6 percent decline in the
August producer price index, even
though exaggerated by a 26 percent
plunge in tobacco prices, is one more
sign that inflation is under centro!.
We expect the consumer pnce
index to rise by only 2.5-to·3 percent

Date
Opponent
Sept 23 .........................at Wellston
Oct 2 ...................................Eastern
Oct. 7 ................................. Marietta
Oct 14 ................. NelsonviUe-York
Oct 21 ..............................at Belpre
Oct 28 ........................... Vinton Co.

....

Sports deadlines
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune .
The Daily Sentinel, the Point.
Pleasant Register and the Sunday
TifrUs-Senrine/ value the contributions their readers make to the
sports sections of these papers, and
they will continue to be published.
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed.
The deadline for submissions of
local baseball- and softball-related
photos and relaled articles, from Tball to the majors, as well as other
spring and summer _spons, is the
day of the last game of the World
Series.
The deadline for photos and
related articles for football and
other fall sports is the Satur~
before the Super Bowl. The d line for photos and related articles
for basketball (summer basketball
and related camps fall under the
spring and summer sports deadline)
and other winter spons is the last
day of the NBA finals.
These deadlines are in place to
allow contributors the time they
need 10 get 'their phOIOS back from •
tbe phoiOgJI!PhY studio/developer
of choice and 10 give the staffs the
chance 10 publish these items in the
appoptllte season for those sportS.

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•

•

cooducted by the Gallup Organization Inc. for the Beef Industry
Council found 79 . percent of
today's consumers think beef "can
be prepared quickly", up from 71
percent last year. Respondents
planning to eat beef for an average
3.58 of their next 10 dinners at
home increased 11 percent from
last year.
Fall dormancy ratings for alfalfa
have become common in the past
few years. According · to
agronomist at the University of
Kentucky the "FaU Dormancy" ratin~ is simply a measure of the
hctght of vegetative growth in
autumn under standard conditions.
The taller growth being of lower
dormancy. The U.K. specialist say
that until a "variety" has a long
term record of high yields and good
persistence the FD rating can provide a useful "guesstimate" of a
future performance following
severe winters or repeated spring
freezes.
~ There are e7;ceptions, but studies show that varieties with greater
fall dormancy (lower FD rating)
suffer less winter injury than less
dormant varieties. The concern
comes this time of year because of
the thumb rule of the need to make
the last regular harvest of alfalfa
before the September 10-15 time
period. The two issues of fall dormancy and late harvest are separate
but have the same long term goal
of plant survival. Late harvest is
risky because heaving and winter
kill may be increased, and root
reserves and plant vigor are lowered . If late harvest is made, it
should be delayed until the last
week in October or closer to the
final season dormancy.
Reminder of annual meeting
dates: Gallia County Farm Bureau,
September 30; Ohio Valley Sheep
Association, October 2; Gallia
County Pride in Tobacco, October
14; and Gallia SWCD, November
4.
Ed Vollborn is Galli&amp; County
Extension Agent, Agriculture.

Weekly observations

8

IAll . .

By.EDWARD VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS ' Wheat production in Gallia County is limited, so
we usually don't spend a lot of
effon on that commodity. A recent
article in "Farm Journal" indicaled
that it would Lake about 101 acres
of wheat to replace one acre of
tobacco if we compare farm value
of the two crops. That probably
explains the reason why wheat
takes the back seat in, our county.
Whi,\Bt has made big yield gains in
recent years.
Some 37 varieties were tested
at the Research Farm near south
Charleston, Ohio this past year.
Average yield was 73.6 bushels per
acre for the 1993 crop. The top
three private varieties on a two year
average at that location were:
Agripro, Sawyer at 73 .8 bu/a'cre;
Pioneer, 2545 at 72.6 bu/acre; and
Pioneer 2510 at 71.1 bu/acre. The
top three cenified varieties were:
Dynasty (68.9 bu/acre); Cardinal
(68.1 bu/acrc); and Freedom (66.2
bu/acre) . Call for a copy of the
1993 Ohio Wheat Performance
Test results. Remember the "flysafe date" for Hession fly in wheat
for Gallia County is October 4.
Unusually short ears accounted
for most of the 200 million bushel
reduction in USDA's September
com production forecast. USDA
says the average ear length in the
10 major com belt states is the second shortest of the last I 0 years.
Iow a corn ears are the shortest
since the 1988 drought. "Doane's
Ag. Report" indicate that they are
wondering whether the shon com
cars might be an indicator of a disappointing soybean pod fill and
possibly small seed size as well.
-Doane's" believe that USDA
is currently overestimating the U.S.
Soybean crop and that futures arc
oversold. Since the beef industry's
"Beef. It's What for Dinner" advertising began last year, consumers
intent to purchase beef has
increased. Their perception of beef
as a convenient, contemporary
meal has also increased. A survey

Money Ideas

CIRY ~10 PICKUPS

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7,288

8

45631, and you may win a $5 prize' from the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone number with your card
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. AU
contest·entries should be tu~ned In to the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
of a tie, the winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Gallia County farm will be fea·
tured by the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
District.

Wheat makes big yield
gains in recent years

Meigs reserve
footbaU slate

'•

Section D
September 26, 1993

Now that the health
plan is out, it's. time
for number crunchhig

Kevin Walker (14th, 12:45). Bruce (44th, 15:00), Chrisuan Cassanova

12:24) - · rilade tbe 10p 10 in a 60runner field that ran a 1.9-mile
race. Behind tbem were

Tri·State·s

Date
Opponent
. Sept 27 ................................. Belpre
Oct 4 .............................. Alexander
Oct II .............................. Wellston
Oct 18 .............at NelsonviUe-York
Oct 25 ......................Point Pleasant
Nov. l ..................at Vinton County
'

Fartnlllusiness

lot of nice· things, playing a much
beuer game. I think Bill Hale is
doing a grea~ job coaching _the
team, and theu goalkeeper, Kitts,
had an outstanding game. I really
give them a lot of crediL"
Rio Grande's rust district and
Moe· win of the season rook its
overall record 10 3-3-2. The team
returns 10 non-district action Saturday at home against Salem-Teikyo
(W.Va.), starling at 3 p.m.

The Redmen took 211 shots on
goal tb Shawnee's three, and Egner
was credited wilh three saves. ,
"AI the half, I told them to settle
down, and we made some adjustments," Morrissey noted. "Going
back into the game, we were more
composed and had much better
movement off the ball. making the
ball wort for us."
Morrissey praised the visitors as
a mucl)-improved team "that did a

second period playing a more
relaxed game, resulting in lhei,r two
additional goals. Steve Nagy, on
assist from Greg Janke, beaded the
ball past Bears goalkeeper Shane
Kitts 10 make the score 2-1 at the
70-minute mark. Five minutes
later, in what Morrissey termed a
"really nice individual effort," Josh
Mauer beat several Shawnee
defenders and took it in for the
final goal.
-. -

=

for both 1993 and 1994 and would
not rule out a better performance.
Theinflation-adjustedyieldon 10year treasuries is currently about2.5
percent, its average during the 1950s
and 1960s. In other words, at current
· yields, the 10-year note appears to be
fairly valued. The 60-basis-point
spread between 10-year and 30-year
Treasuries is wide, and yields on longterm bonds could fall funher with
little additional movement elsewhere
along the yield curve.
Recent economic data remain
muddled, but we continue to think
that the economy is stronger than
many observers believe. Jobless
claims have dropped to the lowest
level in four years, suggesting that
. the labor market is improving despite
the unexpected declin~ in August
payrolls. ·
Mortgage applications have
jumped to record levels in recent
weeks. and housing activity is likely
to rise strongly within the next few
months.
We expect third-quaner GOP to
rise at around a 3 percent rate, and
faurth·quarter GOP should increase
even faster. We think that the economy will grow at a 2.5 to 3 percent
pace in 1994. Based on our latest
economic forecast, we think that
home furnishings, building materials, technology, and fmance will be
the best-performing sectors during
the next year.
Stan Evans Is a financial con·
sullant with Merrill Lyncli ia their
Gallipolis oiYice. He am be reached
'at 44fi-1176.

USDA sees
increased
farm export
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department sees
increasing sales potential for U.S.
farm products in Latin America,
·given the region's population
growth of nearly 2 percent annually
along with increasing incomes.
"ExJion opponunities are positive for U.S. farmers," said a
recent rcpon by the depanment's
Economic Research Service.
"For example, to bring diets up
to 1990 U.S. standards would
require an additional 2 million tons
of grain .per year. 5 million tons of
vegetable oil, and 31 million tons
of meat," the repon said.
In 1992, the United States
imported $12 billion in agricultural
goods from the rest of the Western
Hemisphere, and exported nearly
an equal value to the region.
"U.S. farm imports and exports
in the hemisphere are expected to
increase slightly in 1993 as regional ecooomies improve," the repon
said.
Current economic growth and
investor con(idence"in the r egion
are pulling Latin America out of a
decade-long debt crisis, it noted.
"However, Cuba, with the loss of
major suppon from former Eastern
bloc countries, may face further
belt tightening, it added.
Looking at Canada, the report
said its economic growth rate is
expected 10 rise in 1993, benefiting
from low inflation and increased
exports. .
Canadian grnin and oilseed production is expected to rebound in
1993-94 from last year's poor
growing conditions, with canola,
corn and soybeans having the
largest increases, it said.
"Policy reforms begun in the
Continued on D-8

Super 8 Motel
receives award
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Super 8 Motel, 321 Upper River
Road, was a warded a "Cenificate
of Excellence" by the chain's international headquarters for exceeding
company standards of cleanliness,
service and quality for the second
and third quarters of 1993. ·
The coveled quarterly inspection
award is based on physical inspec·
lion of the propeny and review of
Super 8 policies and procedures.
Dennis Shawd, vice president of
Quality Assurance for Super 8, pre·
sented the award to manager Lori
Hall and staff members.

Faulk retires from OVEC
CHESHIRE - Charles H. Faulk,
a laborer in the labor department at
Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's
Kyger Creek Plant, retired Sept. I,
according to Norman H. Tarr, plant
manager.
.
Faulk joined OVEC in 1956. In
1967, he _transferred to the mainte·
nance department where he
advanced 11\rough the various
mechanic classifications. Faulk had
served as a maintenance mechanicA since 1979. He went on leave of
absence due to iUness in 1988. He
and his wife, Betty, reside in
Pomeroy.

ByMARIANN CAPRINO
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Like
white smoke wafting from the Vatican, the final signal carne, for all
Americans, with the eruption of
aJllllause in the House of Representatives' chamber.
We have a universal health
reform plan - or at least th e
framework for one.
When President Clinton wc!nt
before Congress last week to offi. cially butline what had been insinuated; leaked and hinted at for
months, he made an impassioned
plea "to write a new chapter in the
American story" - to pen the
promise of health care for all.
Indeed, Clinton is well on his
way to~a place in history texts as
the president who accomplished
what many others before him failed
to accomplish. But now the questions tum to how it will be done.
"It's an opening bid in a bridge
game, and we've got a long way to
go before the game is over," said
John Erb, a principal with the
employee benefits consulting fum
A. Foster Higgins &amp; Co., referring
to the arduous political process
ahead. Senate Minority leader Bob
Dole, R-Kan ., predicted thin passage of whatever evolves into the
final health care bill could Lake 10
months, if not longer.
" I don't think anybody is taking
(the proposal) at face value," said
Gary Donner, a partner with the
health care consulting group at
Deloitte &amp; Touche. But that hasn't
stopped the number crunchers from
snickering at perceived flaws il\
Clinton's plan, a hybrid of free
market competition and government controls.
Forget cutting $238 billion from
Medicare and Medicaid over the
next seven years. Many think that's
a political impossibility. Another
area of hot debate wiU be the richness of the benefits package.
But for the employers who will
bear the brunt of responsibility for
providing medical coverage,
· experts are concerned that Clinton 's numbers are much too optimistic.

For one thing, the plan envisions
the annual cost for family medical ·
coverage at $4,200 a year, $1,800
for an individual. That means an
employer, who's responsible for 80
percent of the premium, would pay
$3,360 for a family plan and
$1,440 for an individual.
"Employers are really skeptical
of this, as we are," Erb said.
He figures that by 1995, the
average employer wiU have to pay
about $5,361 for family coverage
and $2,281 for an iodividual health
plan if all elements of Clinton's
benefits package are included.
In addition, Clinton says
em{lloyers who participate in
regtOnal health afliances - the
government-linked bodies that
negotiate health premiums and
sanction health plans - will have
10 pay no more.than 7.9 percent of
their payroll for health insurance.
According tO Erb 's poll of 2,500
companies of all sizes, employers
are now paying an average 10.8
percent of payroll to cover their
workers. At General Motors, the
cost can go as high as 20 percent of
payroll.
Something's got to give. The
theory is that the more people il)
the pool managed by the health
alliance, the cheaper the premiums
will be, since more people mean
more clout negottating with
providers. But it is likely that either
costs will go up or benefits will be
scaled back into the affordable
range.
"We're going to see the numbers rise," Erb predicled. "Either
(Clinton's) got some secret plan we
don't know about, or the numbers
arc unrealistically low."
The idea is to create an incentive for people to choose the cheapest plan. But Americans, who have
long enjoyed high~quality care of
their choosing, may well be willing
to pay more. When it comes to
health care, consumer behavior is
not motivated by price alone.
A recent survey of more than
1,400 employers conducted by
Coopers &amp; Lybrand showed about
half believe reform will diminish
the quality of care their employees

receive, and 64 percent believe
Clinton •s plan will hurt their own
efforts to manage costs.
Still, whatever the plan, whatever the price, Deloitte' s Donner said,
"It's amazing Clinton's been successful in getting everyone to agree
we should have universal access
and universal coverage." At least
he may be remembered for thaL
TICKER
_
Prlmerlca Corp. is acquiring
The Travelers Corp. for $4.2 bil·
lion deal ... Beer-maker AnheuserBusch Cos. will trim its salaried
workforce by 10 percent and lilke a
$565 million charge in a cost-cutting restructuring ... Value Health
Inc. will acquire
Preferred Health Care Ltd, in a
$425 million stock-swap deal, creating a major provider of mental
health and substance abuse services
.. .. The
Federal Communications Commission opened the floodgates for
a surge in wireless communi cations, announcing rules for an auction of the nation's airwaves ...
General Electric's
GE Capital offered $1.35 billion
for 45 jets from GPA Group PLC
of Ireland, the world's largest aircraft leasing operation , and offered
to manage GPA's assets ... Housing
starts bounced back in August from
an early summer slump to the highest level in 3 If). years :.. Viacom
Inc. sought to block QVC Network Inc. in its bid for medi aentertainment giant
Paramount Communications Inc.
COMING UP
The Conference Board releases
results of ·its monthly consumer
confidence survey. and the International Monetary Fund-World Bank
annual meeting opens on Tuesday;
second-quarter gross domestic
product and corporate profit figures
l'rom the Commerce Depanment on
Wednesday; week ly jobless
claims, new home sales and personal income for August on
Thursday; and the ~ational Association of Purchasing Management
reports its monthly survey of manufacturing strength Friday.

ASCS office releases additional details
on emergency livestock feed program
By LISA COLLINS,
Gallia ASCS County
Executive Director
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County ASC Committee requested
and was approved to implement the
Livestock Feed Program due to
drought conditions. Producers in
Gallia County or contiguous counties who have suffered at least a 40
percent loss of feed production
should apply at their local ASCS
office.
Eligible livestock are cattle,
sheep, horses (for production),
swine , goats, fish and poultry
which have been owned at least six
months; or, if owned less than six
months, arc either offspring of eli-

gible livestock or were purchased
as d normal operation. Elich eligible livestock type is divided into
weight ranges.
The total value of livestock feed
needs is reduced by the value of
current year feed production the
livestock owner has avaolable on
the date of application to determine
the value of additional feed needs.
The total benefits available to a
livestock owner are based on the
lessor of the value of additional
feed. needs or the value of feed production loss.
Benefits arc available under the
following programs:
• Emergency Feed Program feed cost-sharing program · pays

eligible livestock owners a ponion
of the cost of feed purchased to
replace that which normally produced on the farm . The doll·ar
amount of assistance is '10 percent
of the cost of feed purchased not to
exceed total benefits available.
Advance payments may be requested.
• Emergency Feed Assistance
Program - sale of Commodity
Credit Corporation owned grain at
50 percent of the average market
price in the county where the grain
is stored.
Livestock producers should contact their local ASCS office (Gallia
446-8686) for additional infonna tion.

Meigs has 10.2 percent out of
work in August, Gallia has 7.7
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Adams County's August unemployment rate of 14.9 percent was
the highest in the state for th e
month the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services said Friday.
Gallia County's figure was 7.7
percent and Meigs County's 10.2 .
Holmes County had the lowes t
jobless rate for the month at 2.5·
percent, bureau figures showed.
Among cities with populations
of more than 50,000, Youngstown
had the highest jobless rate in
August, 11.2 percent, while Ketteringhad the lowestat2.0percent.

The county and city rates are
. unadjusted , meaning they do. not
Lake into account seasonal adJustments in employmenL
The statewide unadjusted rate
for August was 5.1 percent. The
U.S. unadjusted rate was 6.5 percent. The adjusted rate for OhiO
was 5.6 percent and the nauon was
6.7 percent.
The county rates:
Adams, 14.9; Allen, 5.7; Ashland, 4.9; Ashtabula, 7.2; Athens,
5.5; Auglaizc, 6.1; Belmont, 5.7
Brown, 9.9; ~utler, 6.4; Carroll,
5.5; Champa1gn. 8.9:. Clark, 4.7;
Clermont, 4 .8; Clinton, 4. 7;
Columbiana, 6.3.
Coshocton, 4.8; Crawford, 7.7;

Cuyahoga, 5.0; Darke, 5. 1; Defi an~e. ?.6; Delaware, 3.5; Erie, 4.2;
Fatrf1eld, 4. 1; Fay ette, 5.2;
Franklm, 4.1; Fulton, 4.6; Galli a,
7.7; Geauga, 3.6; Greene, 3.4 ~
Guernsey, 9.4; Hamilton, 4.5; Hancock, 3.4; Hardm, 7.5; Hamson ,
9.2; ':lenry, 4.6.
.
. H1ghland, 6.5; Hockmg 7.3;
Holmes, 2.5; Huron , 8.6; Jackson,
6.9; Jefferson, 7.3, Knox, ~.5;
Lake, 5.1; Lawrence,6.5; L1cking,
4.6; Loga_n, 6.3; Loram, 5.9; Lucas
5.5; Mad1son, 6.0:. Mahonmg, ~.4;
Mar10n, 6.0; Medma, 3.7; Me1gs,
10.2; Mercer, 5.6; M1amt , 4.9 ;
Monroe, 9.2; Montgomery, 4.0.
Morg an, 7.5; Morrow , 4.8 :
Coniinued on D-8

Consumption up

Gallia park director Baker to
attend California conference

WASHINGlON (AP) - Americans are consuming more canota
and olive oil than in the past, but
the products slill make up a small
percentage of U.S. vegetable oil
consumption, the Agriculture
Department reports.
Health concerns about the quantity and composition of Americans'
dietary fat Intake have led to
aggressive m&amp;Iketing of such oils
as canola, from rapeseed, and qlive
oil, which contain far less than
palm oil's saturated fat contenL

GALLIPOLIS - Josette Baker,
Director of the 0 .0. Mcintyre Park
District, was recently awarded a
scholarship from the George Gund
Foundation through the Ohio Rails
to Trails Chapter to allend the
Fourth National Rails to Trails
Conference September 29 through
October 2 in Conconl, Calif.
On-site workshops include educational sessions on Design for
Multi-Use Trails, Trails as Economic Development Tools, Trail
Maintenance and Management.
Conference speakers include

JOSEITE BAKER

••

Gaylord Nel son, former Senator
and author of the National Trails
System Act: Stewan Udall, form er
Secretary of the Interior and instigator of the National Trails System
Act; and Roger Kennedy, Director
of the National Park Service.
The conference is sponsored by
the Rails to Trails Conservancy ,
National Park Service, Federal
Highway Admini stt~ j on, and the
Bureau of Land Management.
.
Baker was one of 10 scholarship
recipients in Ohio.

•

'

•

�'
11tn11 S1ntlnel

PubliC Notice
NOnCE TO BIDDERS
Pure'- of (I) lcohool flue
for

EASTERN LOCAL BOARD
. OFE~ATION
Se.-1 propooalo wNt lpe
by the Boord of
tile Eaatern
Dlatrlcl of
Ohio, by 12:00
on October 11,

S~BAGGING - John Dolo of Floreoce,
: N.J., left, DUs a bag held by his wife Anne, aod
· Shaun Mortlsoo of Chicago ·bolds a saodbag
open for Lars Carlson of Chicago as tbey fill
saodba25 along Mill Street io Kimmswkk, Mo.,

Friday.·The ton has put out a caU for volunteer
sandbaggers since an .eartbeo levee built 1!1 protect the town from MiSsissippi River ftoodwaters
during the summer bad beeo takeo down. (AP)

It is not over yet
Foot of rain renews flooding in soaked Midwest
By The Associated Press
With cleanup efforts from a
summer of flooding were still
under way, torrential rains across
parts of Missouri and Kansas sent
rivers out of their banks and into
roads, homes and at least one water
treabllent planL
"I guess we've been back in
business about three weeks and
now here it comes again," said
Juanita Ringer; who was forced to
close her inn and gift shop in
Kimmswick, Mo., during the summer flooding when the town was
evacuated.
Volunteers were called back to
sandbagging duties as the skies
opened and creeks and rivers
swelled. Parts of eastern Kansas
reported a foot or more of rain
since Th~y, while some places

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE

BEDE OSOL

-~
Sunday, Sept. 26, 1993

The year ahead can be a significant one for
you where your career is concern ed. Let
yo ur bosses kno w you're not af raid of
responsibilities. You 'll be given more and
1uslly compensa ted for it.

LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) Little things
mean a to t today wh ere loved ones are
conce rned. A thoughtful, mexpensi-ve token
of your affection will go a long way in build·
ing beautiful memories. Libra , treat yourself
to a birthda y g11t . Send lor your Astra Graph predictio ns lor th e year ahead by
mailing $1.25 and a tong, self-addressed.
stamped envelope to Astro·Graph. c/o this
newspaper. P .O. Box 4465 . New York .
N.Y. 10163 Be sure to state your zodiac
SIQn .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Even though
it might be 1nconvement. it could prove to
your ullimate bene f1t today to be helpful to
persons who need you . Your dividends will
far exceed your mvestment .

SAGmARtUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) A fnend
of yours as mismanaging someth1ng wh1ch
you'll recogn1ze from personal experience
Look for the r1ght opportunity today to show
h1m/her how to take correct1ve measures.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Your prob·
abllit1es tor personal acquasition a r~ excel lent today. yet your Initial y1eld.might not be
as large as you ant icipate. Don't despa1r .
the trackl1ng flow m1ght become a gusher

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You have
goad tea der s h1p qual1t 1e S to day . Yo u
should be ab le to get others to do th1ng s
they may !md disagreeable because of th e
wa y you 'll set the e ~tam p le

PISCES (Feb. 2Q-March 20) Wha t makes
your good deeds so admirable today 1s th e
way you·u go about ass1St1ng oth ers w1thout
seek1ng C1ed11 or rewa rd. Th1S is a lormul a
lor generattng abundance in return .

ARIES (March 21-April 19) Someth1ng
ne w 1n wh1ch you·re Inte reste d loo ks
pro m1smg . However . you may still have
some doub ts D1scuss it fra nkly with two
pals who lrequently have been your advi·
sors.

TAURUS (April 20.May

20)

Persons w1th

whom you ·re tnvolved today cou ld be divided 1nto two ca mps . One will share your
visiOns and expectaltons. the Other may be
a bit more pessim1stic. Hang t1ght with the
form er.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) II w111 be evi·
dent to persons in your charge today that
you mean bus1ness when you issue direcltves. However, your nice way of stating

be too perSistent regarding personal mat be extremely tenacious and conscientious in situations you

manage for others.

Public Notice

Truiotaeo ot Orange
Townahlp.
To view the loacW prior to
the mMUng conboct one of
the following trueteeo:
Roger Ritchie, Jameo
w.taon, Robert Marcinko.
Palrlclo Calaw.y, Clerk
48886 Guthrie Road
Coolvllla, Ohio 45723

PUBUc MEETIIG NOTICE
Village of Ylnlon
. ._ .... ColleolloiiT,..-tPJan .
NoUn Ia given ltl•t the
Vlllllll• of VInton will hold
•n ope11 forum Public
Meeting on Thuraday,

LOCALSCHOOL~S~CT

ELOISE BOSTON
TREASURER OF
EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOLS

HtC»-SR7

REEDSVILLE, OliO 45m
(8) Ul, 26, (10) 3, 10, 1n:l

'D, 21, 29, 30, (I 0). I,
IDle

PubliC Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Gallla-Melgo Community
Ac11on Agency hao lor oale
one (1) 1980 Dodge Maxi
Van to be dlopooed of
through competitive
bidding. Sealed bldo will be
received at the CAA Ofllce
In Ch..hlre until 4:00 p.m.,
October 5, 1993. Vehicle
may be ·examined e1 the
Cheohlre CAA office
between 1he houro of 8:00
a.m. and 4:00 p.m., Monday
through Frldoy. • Each btd
muat be oealed and
complete. The Gattla·Molga
CAA re..rvoa the right to
waive ony lnlormalltlea or to
relect any or all btdo. For
further Information con1acl
Ron Crawro;d at 614·367·
7341 or 614·992-6629.
Sep1..,ber 24, 26

· you want it ...
you·ve got it ...

Seplalnber SO, 1111 .. 7:00
PM at lhe T-n Hal! on Clay

Street In the Vlllag• of
Vinton. The purpoee ollhla
m•tlng Ia to .prMaoil and
d)acuao apeclftc planned
aolutlono · to
the
community'• waetawater
managioment naeda and
problema. The maeting will
be held In an Informal
manner and the public will
be glv.n the opportunity to
expreoa comment• and
queatlona.
The meeting will Include
pruentlilon
and
dlocuaaton olthe loUowlng
opeclllc toplca:

Public Notice

....

you 1n the year ahead to start an endeavor
you were never bold enough to attempt
previously It could be a lucky time frame to
be courageous.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Work or

s~ rvice

you've pe rfor med lo r another lo r wh1ch
you've not yet been paid CO!Jld be received
today. A payment 1s likely if this person is
g1ven a tactlul reri11nder. MaJOr changes are
ahead fo r Libra in the coming year. Send
for you r Astra -Graph prediction s today .
Ma il $1.25 and a tong, self -ad dre ssed .
stamped envelope to Astra-Graph. c/o thiS
news pape r. P.O. 8 0 )( 4465. Ne w York .
NY. 10163 Be sure to state your zod1ac
s1gn.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your leader·
sh1p qualit1es are ve ry pronounced today
and are likely to be brought inro play the
moment you're exposed 10 a challeng1ng
developm ent.

star: inits.

•z

EAST

WEST
.6 .5 3
•• 2
.964
.Qi0642

.KQ 10
.AJ10H2
.J87

SOUTH
.A4
• J865

.KQ 7 3
.K9 5
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West
Soul~

••z•

Pass
Pass

West

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

z•3. 2.

,.

Nortb
Pass
Pass

East
Pass

Db!.
Db!.

Opening lead: t 9

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Where
your c ar~e r 1s concerned today you could
be more ell ecllve by be mg the power
beh1nd the throne rather than the poan t per-·

son
CAPRICORN

(Dec . 22-Jan.

19)

Someth1ng exc1 tang m1ght develop tor you
today that could put you 1n a very hopeful
and expectant mood. ll"s a POSI!Ive cycle
you·u be able to sense
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) You II be
respons1ve to th e profit motive today and
where you'll see an opportunity for personal·ga•n. you 'll move effectively and swift ly.
Success •s and1cated.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Persons with
wh om yo u' ll be Involve d tod ay will be
mcl1ned to cooperate w1th you rath er than
oppose you. All they ask IS lor you to set
the course of act1on.

ARIES (March 21·April19) You're able to
st1mulare developments wh1ch others lnlh·
ate today. In the process you'll f1 nd a niche
lor you rself becau se your presence will
meet a real need .

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You'll be
1nchned to m1rror the behavaor of you r com·
pan1ons today. 11 behoovt~s you to associ·
ate w1 th act1ve fnends rather th an th ose
who feel no urgency an life.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Difi1CUII obiec·
t1ve s can be ac h1 eved to da y, prov 1ded
you·re properly motivated. If the rewards
are worthwhile. you'll g1ve th e endeavor
your max 1mum effort.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your greatest
asset today is your atlillly to reorganize sit·
uari ons that are beginning to fray at the
edges. You·u know· how to infuse new vitali·

ty.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Extra ella~

mig~t

be requared today to linalize a matter which

has been tell dangling. If you make it your
top priority, chances for a successful con clusion looks good.

someone you've recently met ~ho you'd

like to know better, il wil l be up to you to
in1t1ate the contact. ThiS person is equally
as interested in you , but is bashful.

From the mists
of time
By Phillip Alder
Over 40 years ago, before most of
you were born, I took a vacation in
Switzerland (the Senior Life Master
began, in his Saturday morning class).
One day I found this deal in the bridge
column of the Geneva Journal. It provides two praiseworthy principles.
The bidding follows the French lines
of those days. South's two-spade re·
sponse to his partner's strong, artificial and forcing two-club opening
showed the spade ace, nothing more.
Presilrnably North continued with
three hearts as a sort of trial bid, but a
simple three spades seems clearly
superior.
Now South, lost for a bid, made a
quantitative raise. I guess Roman Key
Card Blackwood would be the choice
of many of you. But that hadn't been
invented in those days.
East doubled contentedly. Normally, a double of a freely bid slam asks
partner to find an unusual lead. Yet
here East was on lead, so that couldn't
apply.
North, who guessed what was going
on, retreated to six spades, putting
West on lead;
The strategy succeeded. When West
led the diamond nine, declarer calmly
dlscarded a heart from the dummy.
East won with the ace and switched to
the heart king, but it -,vas too late.
Trumps were drawn and dummy's two
remaining heart losers were thrown
on the .K·Q of tllamont!J, the club king
giving accesa to the South hand.
East shouldn't have been so greedy
In doubling siz hearts. But West, given
hilt partner's first double, should have
worked out that he m~t lead a heart
«) .a. ..W.,ANIIIINIINI nJM AliN.

41 Frees
44 Braeden ID
46 FemaleruH
47 Negative prefix
48 Simian
49 Full-house: inits.
50 Morsel
51 Mideast org .
53 Hosp. attendant
54 Spielberg ID
55 Defaces
57 Actors' org.
59 Marsh
60 Blackbird
61 R-U linkup
62 A "Little Rascal"
64 Formal wear
66 Accumulated
68 Edible seed
70 Tally
72 Employ
73 "- By the Bell"
74 Guido 's high note
77 Sea eagle
78 Item of jewelry
80 Not 1rank
82 "A Few Good- "
83 Lane
85- valve
86 Shirley 87 Actor Dillon

ornament

96 Snare
99 Feral
101 Taper
104 Sul1able
105 Cover
107 Craf1y
108 Ginger109 Distant
110 Electrified
particle
111 Hawaiian wreath
112 Conduct
114 Cook on grill
116 "Under - "
117 Bow
118 O'Connor ID
120 Pintail duck
122 New1
123 "Heaven's -"
124 Silver symbol
125 Tll1on 10
127 Hebrew le1ter
129 Trades lor money
131 Floats In air
133 Spanish article
134 World org.
136 Sun god
137 Small child
139 Expire
140 Rubber tree
141 Wager
142 Neon symbol
143 Spanish queen
145 The sun
147- Braves
, 151 - de mer
152 Illuminated
153 Back of neck
155 Armed conflict
157 "- Recall"
158 Peruke
159 Ctef1; fissure
160 Natl. Guard
161 Widmark 10
163 Devout
165 Indispensable
167 Diph1hong
168 Faroe Islands
whirlwind
169 Eagle's nest
171 Soy -

172 Positive pole
173 Whiskers
175 Regre1s
176 Chemical
compound
177 Sufferer from
Hansen's disease

178

TV's Batman

DOWN
1 Second-ra1e
horses
2 Metal las1ener
3 Hebrew measure

4 Cushion
5 Latin conJunc1ion
6 Cincinnati 7 - Mans
8 Reply: abbr.
9 Thick
10 Stallone film
11 Summer cooler
12 Old pronoun
13- Minor
14 Compass poin1
15 SO·!!O grade
16 Kind of cheese
17 Niamey's country
18 Bank employees
19 Decisive moment
23 Soften In temper
26 Lubrlca1es
29 Trial
32 "An - Tall"
33 Male lilies
35 Teutonic deity
36 Gull-like bird
37 Postpone
40 Thinly scattered
42 "The Love - "
43 Pedal digits
45 Light-haired girl
48 Wine cup
52 Be In debt
56 Night sounds
58 Assess
59 Nation's vessels
60 Carps
62 Imaginary; unreal
63 Apprehend
65 "This - II"
66 Strained lor
breath
67 Requiring
68- rally
69 Baseball stat
71 Downy ducks

Help Wanted ·

11

arana. bllna 1

11112-7813.

rnMnbtr

11

Help Wanted

11

Help Wanted

Roof Eolalo ear-. Prolooolonol
trolnlna. EllA Town • Country
Root =:.a..~-·
Bocklo
Stain,
••

18

Wanted to Do

18 Wantld to Do

t...._._
.......,.............
_....
Will -

wtth

3703,

Ftn&lt;tlCtal

at our

Wontod To Buy: JWlk Autoo
With Or Without Motors. Coli
Lorry Uvely. 614-311&amp;-11303.
peoplo? A ptoooant paroonothy
Wontod To Buy: Standing nm- and
good phono akllla are o
bor &amp; Plno, Con Start fmAnpon8lbllhl-. Include
modlotly, Good Pricoo, 814-3118- mull.
actlvltlee rtllled to credh, .....,

·

11901.

manapm~nl

account

and ac-

Top Prtc. Pold: All Old U.S. counting. For lmmecflatt conColna, Gakl Rln,,, SIIHr C91ne, olderotlon conlocl Kovfn SmHh,
Gold Cot... II. .S. Coin Shop, 114-812·2111. EOE. 11/SM, Non151 Socond Avonuo, Oolllpolfo.
omoktng and dru; ~oo onWtnited lo buy: uMd mobl..

vlronment.

llflkor wontod, oxpari.,..
pnlorrod, but will trofn ropfy to
Pt. PI-nt .RogloiOI, ilcix R-23,
Employment Services 200 Mlln Straet, Pt. PIIU111t,
WV255SO.
No Expartoncol $5011 To sgoo
Woekty /Potontfof Procoulng
11 Help WBnted
FHA llortgaa- Rotundo. Own
AVON! All oroao. Hood olllro Houro. 1-60f.fl411-0044 Elll.111.
money or want 1 caraer, 11thlr 24 Houro.
way-call Marilyn. 304-882-2645
OVerbrook C.nt1r hal a pt~rl·
or 1-IIDO-IIH-6356,
limo S:OD-8:30 poohlon ovolfoblo
hornao. 114-4*017!1

Yard Sale

7
Announcements

0-

!3alllpolls
&amp; VIcinity

·3 Announcements

. =::..;;..;..:.~=-:::-:-:::::::-::­
:.
- -ard
lor , __
. -ion loading lo ""' ..tmellor prunuUon of the per·
-.(1) iMI&gt;oMfblo tor burning
I 1he lrollor on SliMly Covo. Coif
' t14-112-3114.

Uvet Ono-On-Qnat Call - 1 1·
1100-8116-1017 Elll. 31211 U.lt Per
Min. lluol Be 11 YN, ilftieiiff Co,
eo:l..l54-lll20.

IIAKE'S CONSTRIICJIOH

I

I

•

New Cona1rucllon •
Remodeling • Res«lradon
IISURID • filE ISIIIIA1IS •
IIFDIIIaS
IIIAN N. lUll
111M
o614--446-7321

Saturdly.

DD-214 Mult Accompany Apo

Rummage Sale, Oct. 4 &amp; 51
llondor l T-oy, Eptocopal
Ptrilh HouH, t-4pm.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

.,..f.

114-448~251

To

'

,...

'
'r
'

''•
'

A spadal lkanks to
McCoy Moore fu1tral
home, Rt¥. CJ.-Iu Lusher
tht palllteartrs lor being
thtra lor 11.
Dtar Molhtr and
Gr111dma, she has ltff us,
Ltfl us for a belter
Hera Oft eorlh she no
mort R"ds IS,
Htrt no mort wt'U sea

fact.

I

••s,whtrt there's

To 1
I

'r

•

'i•
I

•

pain;

Wh111 tht roll Is called up
yondtr,
May wt mttl with her

again.
Htre she sullerttl wllh
tiftlldlalls
And 11uch of htr strength

was gone;

Now her sufferings all

•••.w.

...

Ytt ktr soul Uvts on

Before our eyu ske
slowlyWtd
Gtlthtg weaker day

tla

••
I

'·l
•
''
I

.

~I God II lAs htaYtlly I

wisdom,

Calltd htr ptacefully

away.

Let 11 stt .., house II

ardtr,

For wt tlo Mt how

·•

wlttn;

I

That wt too, will
th--s.
Wiltll 01 tarth our

'

''

•
•

wiiiiHL

Mr.' Mrs.

coli

Ooby

Mon.w~~rw,

Manfn,

wall tel•

Moore, owner. 614·&amp;92·
2521. WI buy lltMII.
RUM

plou;

I

""""ohold.

114-;182-11141.

lumllwo. RI-IM Antlquoa.

calls.

Cali Boyd Aclklna, 800-128-6222.
Eom Full·nmo Poy For Po~·

Work AI A Chrt.tmaa
Around
Thl
Wortd.

Time

In Memory

ln Loving Memoty of
IIV. RORIE lllfll II.
who passed away 7
ago, Sept. 26, 1986

Domonotrotor. F- $!500 Kh No
Coltoclfng Or Dotlvorfng, Also
Booking Ponloo, Coli 614-245-

5031. -,-..,...,.--::--:-:-

ucaftd to noM! Do )'IDLI own
your own tractor? Kave you

phonoo, old tompa 1 old thOI·
rnomolon, old clocu, antiquo

Evaryoat who stnl
flowers, food, cards

2

Wanted to Buy
lhoughl about buying yO\Ir awn
troctOr? " bofng o company
Ant:lq•• 1nd uud furniture, no driver what lou are Interested
hem too large or too small, wlU In? Thon co Conllnol today ol
bur one pWce or complete 1.S00-~22:Z and aak for
o.cor.tM

grt~~dmother.

hove 1yr. O.T.R. oxparl11101 puf~

lng a van trailer, good atanlng
pay, lat• modtl equipment, Btua
Croae Blue Shltld, Inc., wtk1a:"
pay, lay onr pay, brea
n
pay, company paid penofon, 401
K ·plan, homt moM WHkenda.

FLATBED DRIVERS-Cordlnol
Freight C.rrterw h• an oppor·
doy--k· !unify
lor llotbod drlvera 1hol to

rOn!,

9

''"'"""'"" who
during tht death
mother,
sl st tr

Cardinal Frolghl Corrfora.O.T.R.

Ploaoo Coli 1-81J0.933-76114
WMkdlyo 10-12 Noon Only. Aok
For X1lll.

1e:rw,..•ffohtng
ctolhlng, lumhuro,
'bah. Doolor
nlonlhtyrotoo.

slnctn thanks to

SpNra, 304-075-1429.

ki-Stora l .. rchandlalng, lnvan·
tory Control And Ordertna.
Flexible WMk Day Hours. Excel·
lent Pay. MuM Hava A car.

Eaay Work! Excttttnt Pay! A•
Hmble Products At Home. Call
J1ckson Ave. New &amp; uNCI Toll F100, 1-&amp;G0-417-6586, Ext.
hlrM, cr1ft1, eports cards, •P. 313.
•

-

I Crctmtr wlshts lo express

~p;:llco=""llo::.n;:..'-:·,.,-.,----,-.,-~
AVON I All Aroaa I Shirley
Dr11111rs wantid for • naw ter·
mlnal In Hurriclnt, WV, must

2 Fornalo Kill- Freo To Good Rick Pea.- Auction Company,
Homo. 1 Llahl Oroy~ Charcoal
time 1uctlon..r. complete
With Whho ltri- I - k Old, tun
1uctlon
11rvlce.
Ucenaed
814-448-2318.
M,Ohlo I Wnt VIrginia, 3C?42 t.m.ha whb CIIW, 'I WHU T13-1781.
old; t.m~a. pllow cat; 5 monlt•
Wecte~er·e Auction 81rvln,
old; 111-2-1351.
Rio Orondo, Ohio 814-2.S.5152.
8 WHk Old KfttaM, Yoltow
Auctlono ovary Fri-Sot, 7:00 P1! 1
. /Whlto Malo Knton, 814-446- Mt.
AHa AucUon Center Rt. 2 1\1
2383• .
&amp; Rt. 33, "on tor, of tho hill". Oil·
doo ano
nightly.
Abondonod h 'f~~ doa . . - ..,...
Grocerln,
loti
of
Flu
good - · • 1
l.. rkM1r1 IPKIII. Ed Frazier
-rollon -ord I 1/4 Chow 130 .
Pupploe, Vory Good Whh Colllo,
Pt. Ploooont Floo Morkot, 2401
ChlldNn, 1114-317-11113.
Calico C.t,
Good Homo.

for CNA'1. For more Informa-

tion, ptoooo colt Robyn Holton
No Cottoctf~ Or Dollvoring, 'at 614-11112-11472.
ALL Yord Solos 111101 Bo Pold In $500 KH Sup .od Call Mary 814REAL ESTATE CORRESPON·
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. 446 .. 2184.. .II.
DENCE COURSE: compfoto WV
the d1y befortl the 1d 11 to run.
Apptlcoliona
Aro
Bolng
AccopSunday odiUon • 2:00 p.m. tod For Tho Polhlon Of Oolllo requlrtmanla at your owft pt!Ca.
Friday. llondoy odhlon - 2:00 County v.tran• Strvlce Officer. No Umo loot off job. Fully OC•
p.m. Saturdly.
APPRiiiSAL
Appllconta lluot Bo An crodhad.BASIC
CLASSES:C
..
r1ooton Oct. 4Honorably Diachlrgld V.ttnln 1511ortlnoburg O.t 18-21l-8D0Pomeroy,
And Be A H.S. Oroij Or EctulvCol·
olont. Appllcollono ShO\IId Hovo 71e.4477Nonhuatam
Middleport
togo.tockKofty
Admlnlolro!fvo Experlonco And
Have Knowledge Of Vetran1
&amp; VIcinity
RETAILIIERCHANOISER
Program• And Btnetha. ApSERVICE REPRESENTATIVE
AII Yord &amp;!too lluol Bo Paid In plfcilfono May Bo Plckod Up AI Notional Jowolry /Acconorioo
Advonco. Doocllna: 1:00pm the Tho Votro,. Sorvlco Ofllco, Got- ·s.rvlca Company Ia Staking A
day belen the ad la to run, lia Caunty Coun Hou.e, Gal- Pan·Time RepreMntatlva "For
Sunday odhlon- 1:OOpm Friday, II polio, Ohio And Bo Rolumod Portamouth And Surrounding
Monday odHion 10:00o.m. By 4:00 P.M. O.t~bor 1, 1993. Aroo. RHponolblthln Include

8

·Giveaway .

4

10 Demonlfrllore NMded To
S.ll Top l Oltta For Chrtatrnaa,

Don, Junk Ill Sell Ut Vour Non·

WOftdng

Color

llojor

Applloncoa,

TV'e,
Rtfrlgtrttors,
frMJM8 VCA'e, Mk:rowav..,

Air COiidltonoro, Ouhor Amps,
Etc. 114-211t-1UI.
Grill ond bumper for •aa Ford
Branco II, 1114-lt2-5053.

1

card of Thanks

The

family of Weltha

M. Bryson would like to
express
slnurt
appreciation to all wha
extended sympathy and
prayers during the loss
of
their
mother,
grandmother, and aunt.
A spedal thanks to the
Pomeroy Nll'slng
and staff lor their

~:~s~~:!~~:'!l.l

care, Dr.
her services,
Memorial Hospital staff,
and Dr. Gaillard,
Alan llackwood and
Calvary Blblt Church.
who sent fla~tterl. TDDI!t,l
cards, and called, laurtll
(IJII Free Methodist
Church for foo• and
servers Kathy Pullins
and Betty Sayre, Rev•
Trtm.lay for his
ICOIISOilng words and
suge,
Kenny
Mary Ientz for
I sptKial musk, pallbeartn
Fisher funeral Home.
acts of kl1dness

long .. l'lllltmbered.
Bless all of you.
Son Cllffonl and

clauaht.,. Ietty lou

Boyd. WE HAVE rr ALLI

In Memory

A• EtJIJh Day Pa111s By
W• think of you ar
ltJI)ft day [HilliS by,.
Knowing we can~ rvr11
pick up tht phont, ju1t
to say hi.
There are •o many
things tlrat wt 11ill need
to share,
We're Thankful for a
family that always
could show how much
they do care.

In Memory of

We

For 1 pr.CIIcal, no-nonHnH
.ctucatlon and Job r..dlnHI In

Ina than one ynr, consider

training at The Adult EdUCitlon
Center. Choolt from lnduatrlll
maintenance, auto mec:hanlca,
office a.vlcta, at.ctronlca,
ctrpentry,
accountlngfcomputlng,
pa.-.legal,
altalrichy, fOod management
welding, end dlverwiUed

medical

occupationa. ()ptnlnga atlll
available In fl.lllwlntar umiBIIr
atoning Oc1 . 11th. Coli 1-800637-6!508 or 614-753-3511.

2

FLOREIICI MARIE
SPIRES
September 25, 1949June 24, 1991
No one can imagine
just how much we miss
you. We'd give up this
whole world
to once more have you
near.
It's just beyond us,
why God look you from
us,
and Ws even harder this
year.
From children with love,
Denise. Julie, Steve and
Cindy

In loving memory of
Hazel Cremeens_,
who was kdlea
Se_pten,er 26,
1978, fifteen years
ago today. Yo• are
not forgotten, loved
one. Nor wil you
ever be. As lang as
life 1111d memory
last. We will
reme.-er thee.
Sadly llissed by
daugLters, Carol
and Dana&amp;
rtllldchlldren.

remember your

laugh, we rrmembrr
your tears,
Most of all we nmemMr
your faith, and how
you showed no fears.
Through good times and
bad, w• always did gel
along,
Maybe tlrat '1 whal k11p1
our family so strong.

Lo••

We'd
to be able to
knock on Htavtnf' big

door,
To su that smil• wlr•n
we toiJ youJ you were
going tp be an Unci•
once more. We Love
you 10 much and mi11
b1ing ab/1 ju1t to say
H~

Somehow I'm sure you
know, w• think of you,
'" eaclr day [Hillel by.
Dtarly loYed and never
. /org.,tt•n by parentr;
Gtorg• &amp; Phyllir
Lusllr, sisltr Tammy,
brother-in-law K1nny
S•arl,., ni•" Angie,
and Neph1w Bradl•y
S•ar/,., a/10 family
mr,.hrrr and rnan1
lrL•""'• "God Bleu"

IWriii!An by hlaolat.r

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY
Mary Kay Consultant
Kim Christopher
Inventory in Stock!

441-1700

CHEF'S GALLEY'S
LOUNGE
Male Review
Tues. Sept. 28th 9 pm
Female Review
Wed. Sept. 29th 9 pm
Tickets on sale now

Coming Soon!
Hey- Dominos Pizza has
been awarded a contract for
a new sit dawn sBrvice. We
will be located next to Spring ·
Valley Cinema on Jackson
Pike. Delivery areas havB not
changed-we will also be
delivering to Quail Creek and
Rodney II.
Same Phone 446-4040

For Sale
Plain and Painted
Pumpkins
Wood Halloween
Yard Decorations
Indian Corn • Fodder .
2 miles W. of Gallipolis
on Route 141
Phone 446-1 080

lAYNE FURNITURE
LARGE SELECTION OF
LIVING ROOM SUITES
SOFA&amp; CHAIR
PRICED FROM
s450 TO s1195
MON. THRU SAT. 9-5 PH 446-0322
3 MILES OUT BULAVILLE PIKE
Bingo Hard Cards
Am Vets
Kanauga, Ohio
s4o games

'175 cover all
6:45
Wed. &amp; Thurs.

Arnie's
Pool Tournament
Sunday
at7 pm

Call 446·2342
or 992·2156
FOR MORE INFORMATIOH

to

to go out ol - .
o.nto or 11o1g1 Countr, ,,.._

thol . -

coneumar llnancee INm meana
hevlng o good ptooo to olort.
Alw you Mlt-meilvatld, u ......
tlvo and onjoy doolfng with

•Exlotlng water quality
problema and go..•
•Wootewotel quality and
objectives
•Planned collection and
treo1JII.nt focllill•
•Preliminary project caalo
•Projecled user rat. .
•Siepo lor lmplemWIIIIUon
The Village of Ylnton
encourage• the public to.
become dlroclfy involved ln ..
the Implementation prac••
by participation In the:
public meeting.
Brenclo Burrlo, Clerk'
Sepl 26, 29, 1!1113

73 Specimen
75 Allow
76 Picnic pest
79 Baseball org.
81 Brother of Odin
84 Towel Insignia
87 - of the world
89 Narra1e
92 Peel
93 Hindu cymbals
94 Simian
95 Falsehoods
97 Priest's vestment
98 Funeral piles
99 Lingers
100 Sick
10 1 Solicitude
102 Game a1 cards
103 Finish
106 Obs1rucls
109 Suits
113 Ac1
115 "-Thee I Sing"
116 Journey forth
119 Choose
121 Lamb's pen name
123 Festive
124 In music, high
125 TV's Luke McCoy
126 Sqngblrd
128 Dawn goddess
130 Salad ingredient
132 Contour
133 Conger
134 Not varying
135 Profited
138 Haul
141 Con1alner
144 Paclno ID
146 Fall Into disuse
148 One defeated
149 Near
150 Pertaining to
the navy
151 Marathon runner
152 Roman 51
154 Great Lake
156 Inlets
158 Walk In water
159 Rex or Willis
l62 NBA's - Unseld
164 Away
166 Lid
167 Arabian garmen1
170 Urich 10
174 Cooled lava

Wanted to Buy

loiN] Any 'JIIpo 01 FumHuro, Ia loll - y In I montho. Troln
Apptlo-, Antlquo'o, Etc. Alto In vatioua forme of waktlrij,.
AppnfiOI Avofllbtof 114-245- OJryOCOiyf~ bnt•, molollic,
MIG, TTO. o;;la• boalno Oct.
5152.
nth. Coil T.. Atlun Education
J l D'o Auto Pono ond Salvor., Cantor, 1-&amp;G0-637-6508 ., 814·
oloo buying Junk CON I true 1. 753-3511. .
304-773-5343.
JOIN A WINNING TEAM 01 o
Junk Clrl, any condition, 614- loodor In tho llnonc:lol oortlcoo

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page A-2
88 River Island
90 Opp. of NNW
91 Footlike part
92 Shallow vessel
93 Pendent

.._4_.....:G:.:.Iv:.:ea=w.::ay!--~ 19

ComDiel• ttouttholcl Or E.-

SUNDAY PUZZLER

them takes out the sting.
CANCER (Ju• !).July 22) You might not VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) II there is

ters today, but you will

olllld8. '
OFEDUCAllON
OF EASTERN

at that lime
T,...urarol
Public Notice
.. provided by
low for OM (1) 72 pMoenger
ochool buo according to
PUBUCNOnCE
opeclflootlena of uld I&gt;o.d
INDUSTRIAL LOADER
of ...ocollon.
FOR BALE
Speolllcoliono and
The Board of T11111- of
lnatructlona to bidden mov Orange Townahlp, Melga
be.obtained at tho olllco of County, Ohio, offer lor aale
tho Troaaurer, Eaotern High by oeillad bid on• (1j
lnternoilonol tnduatrla
S~hool Building. A certlltad
check payable to the loader, Model 2424. Serial
TrMaurer of the above number 03732.
Board of Education _or 1
Sooted bldo will be
ulloloctory bid · bond occeplod until Oclabw I,
1n:l at7:30 p.m, w!.! bide
e~ecutod by the bidder and
the ourety company In an will ba opened ot the
omounl equol to five par- regul• tnt~~tlng.
·
The loader wU be oold •_.
cent of 1he bid aholl be
Ia" with no warrantl• or
aubmllted with oach bid.
Sold Boord of Education guarantees expreaaed or
the right to waive• implied.
.
The Board of TruoiHo of
to accept or
all or parll ol1 Orange Townohlp reoerve
the right to wolve any
I rreg u larllleo and/or
Inlormllltloo and to reject
any and oil bide,
By order .altha Board of

moy .be
in western Missouri got4 to 7 inch-' 'dents along the Missouri and Misat leutthlrty
es of rain. More heavy rain was sissippi rivers started sandbaf!ging
er tho
forecast in the area into the week· in some areas, including Ktmm- Iiclhioclluled' cf,oaln,g time lor
swick, where an earthen levee built
end.
An 80-year-old Liberal, Mo., to protect the town from summer
man died Friday morning when his floods had been taken down.
car was washed orr a flooded road
"We're just trying to keep it
in. southwestern Missouri, the state out," Ringer said after a chilly,
Highway Patrol said. Two women soggy day of sandbagging. "I don't
drowned Wednesday night in east- think it's going to be quite as bad
em Missouri when the new bout of as it was before. I keep telling
flooding began. Floods during the myself that" .
·
summer were blamed for 48 deaths
About 80 people were evacuated ACROSS
in the Midwest
from homes along the Big River
1 Correct
About400 people were evacuat- south of St. Louis. and the Missouri
7 Young boy
ed from three trailer courts and a River was flowing through levees
10 Low island or
housing subdivi$ion near Pittsburg, · breached months ago in St. Charles
reel
Kan., and the three main roads County, said emergency manage13 Upward slope
leading into town were closed by ment gpokeswoman Petra Haws.
19 Atmospheric
high water. Many other roads in
Crawford County were closed.
·
conditions
BRIDGE
20 Opp. of WSW
In Missouri, flood-weary resi21 Lyric poem
22 Shabbier: colloq.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In relationshipS you
24 Ranted
value make it a point today to let these
25 Fulfill
perso~s know how much you care . Loving
27 Tin symbol
PHILLIP
words solidifies bonds and links.
28 Exist
ALDER
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) Today you
29 Agave plant
might have to work a bit.harder t~an ~sual
30 - Scout
tO grat ify your ambitiOUS ObjeC IIVBS .
31 Roman road
However . don 't dismay, because your
32 Sales condition :
rewards will be proportionate to the efforts
2 wds.
you expend.
34
Indian
weight
NORTH
1-!S-13
36
Rip
.KQJ10987
Monday, Sept. 27, 1993
38 Pell- - (disorder)
• A 973
39 "Desk -"
The ways and means might be available to
.A3
40 "The Jerk"

Public Notice

PubliC NotiCe

EmpirB" LP Gas Ventless
Heater on SaiB!
Comfortable heat at an
affordable price.
Burlile Oil Co.

446-4119

Finished Office Space
-Available after 10-1-93
Up to 1500 Sq. Ft.
Call 446-9445

26 acre farm in
Addison Township
Formally Johnson Property
$13,000 Firm
Call Evenings 388-9235

Swain Furniture
62 Olive St. Gallipolis
We have enlarged our Shoe
Depart. over 1,QOO pr. on display.
All U.S. made Several brands
Western Boots ....... ..... '45 &amp; '55
Harness Boots ........... ...... ... .. '50
Logger Boots ... ....... .... '45 &amp; '55
Wellington ...... ... ........... .. ... ...'49
Engineer ............. ............. .....'49
Insulated &amp; Safety

For Sale
Indian corn, pumpkins. gourds
Jewel Evans Family Mill
Bidwell, Oh
Mill: 245·5654
Open 8- 5 M. lhru F.
10-5 Sat and Sun.
Yard Sale
Mon. Tue-Wed. 9 :00-5:00
Jackson Skidmore Harrison
Rain Canceles Everything.

Young's Fencing
Free Estimates
446-2845
For Sale
Pumpkins , munchkins, gourds,
indian corn, yellow squash,
zucchini , turnips. mustard,
cucumbers. beans
McKean ·Farm 446-9442

�•

'
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Plea. .rit,

21

Bualneea

- --.-.31 Homes for Sale

Opportunity

-In
....
1M llllngs,__liilowo61o
• . ,,.

~-"'"'
A
P-I

11,200
w.......,
,_To

.... 1 . . . . . - .

I

32 Mobile Homn

~TAaroo,-

- ·~:-~WMJ Aftw I
H.M.c.
P-!1.

OIIIJNTJI'I HOIIEBIACIIUGI!

Local . . .

~-,...Ohlo--

2e. -'
- r1111
In 01
Oponllon,
Con
Appnta.
• . - - h 01 .........
Wllloh Ale ...... Fer .lOt
• On n. Dolor. " " - -

• CUll...,_ A 10,01lo k

· •· :: a.. c

Fl

a..

, :·

Witt
• Link - . OW.... Will T -

. -TlloluOi-lOMV...
Tho

~

Fer- Buvtna

·
- 01~
'11111 ....
, _ ...
, ......
Ill~
WOJO. Purchuo Tho,..,_
• &amp;.eo. 1 Q&gt; lalh

Or Tho
Whole •
Ill. Slliourl . .
qulrloli Only Fer "-~-·
...... I@

I

1-414211xiNI.

23

&lt;

•

ProfessiOnal.
SeJVIceS

Real Estate
31

Homes tor Sele

tt0u.u for Rent

Household

~..":.~WJ /:....... 2 Pondt, " = . 4 •'='

=:;~:~~-~='f.
,,
...... , ~

..... --lllng.llllml.
lid. Pl. - " '· wv,
0111:!04-lll-1410.

1M11t
• • TUb.
-3 lt,FOCN. O.rden
AJ!
rw~ lat.Up, Col 114-241-1122

SWAIN
·
AUCTION ' FUAHITUAE. 112
Olivo •• Oalllpotlo. • Utod
tumMuro, llolloro, Wltlom •

Allor I P.ll.

•

10 Acrooii/L 110,000; All OITIIO
Wllhln 3 lllloo 01 Rio
Orondo • PI- Cel hi C....

1H4 flrd. . n 14r7U, ·· '"'
cludot
llllrllng,nocutscaneft
...... - ·1ft..
·
lfr.
w.-ranty.
ourwnao, ond 1 yeor of lrM lol
rwro 111 lor oniJ 11771mo. c.oll 1·
I00-437-3231
'
;::==~=-·
:sbr., tolol-rle ........ homo, 2
tun botho, CA, ..-pinning,
muot Mil. 114-381-MOI:

F«
11251.11oro lntormotlon. 114-

33 Fanns for Sale

u--- .;
i 1 ...
~•.., • 112
. .,.rgo
Polly Room, AI On 4 IIIL
1140,000; 111 Aarw 11/L F.,.
Wllh ...... Tllloblt. 1111 000;

-

noll AI Donno lklm...,. R":.".l

,. .....

.

:-;-----,:-;:-:- .,-:

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

polo. ~10111.

mobile honw

tor

rwrt, ell ...anc, 1 chlki, no
poto, U40 por mo., New Hov.,,
=FO=R~S:-:•-:-L£:--c:-:-,~-,---:-hoo-,.
-1
21
Aero
Voconl
Lond
With
2
Qu
:104-IIZ-24M.
1
• l 011 Wollo, Sectudod, Hunlon
· ~ • 2 -room
'112 ecre In country, Racine INI, Par.diM. Formally The John~ Sbdrm., oil oloctrle dotlblo wide,
· ._ double """' 11n-m ·win- "--nr In Add loon l. ownohlp ~ nolgh-. I~ Roclno,
- . W • - 1 Olilbulld- c•..,..
1ng, ~f to luOi o11 tur- l13,aao Firm, Coli E-lngt: 1M dllpoah, UOO/ma., ln.
n.ae. AI,OOO, ei4-....2MO i~ 114-1R 1231.
'"".:..'5:;::;30:,:P:;·m::·==-.,-,,..,--:---::: I 41.71 ·Acrooil 2 StOfJ Form - • ·
·
For Rant: 1 Bodroom
Trollor
Solo Aonl. 2 bedroom 11 - · Lg. orn, 2 111M From (CIOin) 1200/lllo. tiOO Dopooll,
Mil• Dol!rn St•t• Route 7. 814- Mercet will•. Toblcco Bae, COli,
441-11171110..- 5 p,m.
Out Building 135,aao, 114-251· No Polo, 114-148-1848.
~~~~~~--~~~1~~~~
· ------------­ Trallw For Aont, 114-388-8030.
In lloon, WV, Horton St.
3 bodroomo, 1112 botho, 1u11 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1Wo bedroom trollor In Aoclnoi,
be......- wlflmlly room, houM
coii114-H2·5858.
cornp1o1o1r corpolod, IOK200 lot.
garag~, carport, Pll~, •~ hut
Apanment
pp .l olr eond, 304-773-588S.
for Rent
Aonch otyle honw, 3 bedrooms, 2 Lott For Sat.: Approximately
1 both, ltlochod g._, New 1 Acrw Jot, I 112 Ac:re lot, 4110 1bdrm. aP.rtment In Pomeroy
Anclwwon wlndowa: central air, milo out Nllgh- Rood lor ,.,., 114-tH...II.
Foot or St, llloon ..304-773-5150, 011 Sl Ill 141. 114-148-3438 tor
-lnlormoolon
1bdrm. aponment down1own
~··~--~.:;:.::;::=:~·
lllddloport, oonlrol hoot I olr, ttl
SEVERAL 7- ACRE PARCELS: lftllltloolncludod._!ZSOimo .• IIOO
11o1ao CcNI,.r, Solom 1Wp. ._., 114-Mt-""'7.
saaGI IGre. Remota, bleullfu1
lind; wooclo, pooturo ond hlllo. 1bdrm.
oportmonl,
Spring
Call !or gooc1 mop. t.e14-5113- Aven.., Pomoroy. $175/mo.,
1545, AII!Ono,QH.
. tiOO/dop., no polo, 814-ell7~
after 5prn.
12x55 lrolltr wi 12xl0 oddhlon, Trolltr Lot For Solo, 814-:zsl.
Vtry aood cond., mull Mil. 304- 81148 Allor 5 P.ll.
1br. gorogo oportmonl, con882-3197.
.
venle.- toe.tlon, refar~ncn &amp;
-lrod, 1200/mo. pluo
12x55 lrolltr WI 12xl0 tddhlon,
Rentals
utllhiH. 304-4175-1038 oftor 5pm.
very aood cond •• mu• ull. 304B82-3W7.
2Wrm. apta., total el~etrlc, appl&amp;ancea furnished, laundry
12x711 rnobllo homo lrw
room focllhiM clooo lo ochool
bedroom, an llectrlc,
,
In town. APDI(catlona available
304-112·24811.
ol: vtllego ·c....,. Aplo. Mi or
eon 114-lli2·3711. EOH.
FumlEHicii!'Cr:
107
Soconcl, Clllllpotlo . Bhilrw Both,
UIIIHI• Pold, IIBWo. 114-1414411Aftoe7 P.ll.

-

••'"t.drbl;o •

-~

=-===

1:0:

NA 1N1 ootole odvertlalng In
. . . . . Wjlap4rls ..bled to
b F - Folr HouslngAcl

al1911whlch ...... lllagal
IO -lloo "any p~al.....,.,
-

APIIImont lrw ronl In Pt.
Pl-nl, 114-tll2·5858 oftor

.. ciiCI'Imlnallon

bUOd on -a, color, religion,

5pm.

HX famllaf SIIIUI or national ·
origin, 0&lt; Oll)llnlonllon IO
mol&lt;o ony ouch prelerence,

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTA1'J.!1 538 Jocklon Plko
from ...,./mo. Wolk lo ohop I
movloo. CoM 814-141·ZS68. EOH.

lmlllllon or discrimination."
This newspaper wll not
lcnowlngty.ocoepl
acMJrtlsemenlslor real estale
loin Yiolallon of lho
low. OU&lt; roodors.,. heNIIV

Worrrll&lt;llhal alldwollngs
.t.lertlsed In this newspaper
.,. avdabfe on an equal
CflPO'IUnlty basis.

2bdnn., untumlthed, no pMa,

downtown New Hl.v•n, WV. Al.o
commercial _apace, HUD ap-

r-----=11;~H:::e;l~p;;W:::~an;:;t:;ed;;:::=;~~~--~ ~':.':"'·
DIREOOR OF NURSING needed for

.

3114-773-8348, 614·992-

116 nursing =~~~~~'on~ '~t

care facllty providing skilled and intermediate long

gr;=~~

Wa- Drvoe ~.....
~ 'r.v. FNt.or, Air car..
clltlonlr, lla calve, 1...._2M-

::::':ir ¥W~:"

Pold,

2153 or 114-11:2-17117.
lllrod FI-llS And Up ...

FroM
., ,..
Aolrlgoitlor WMh Ice lllkor l
lla!!f\l!lg 10" Eloolrle llove
aaoo· FOt lalh Wll Soporoto,
1'14-245-1101.

Lumber For Hay Bailer; $500,

114-3117·7031.
Now Chain

lng lloelllno, 11•'-•r Dook,
Flohormon'o Wodln, 114-381-

P.S.E.

For FIN C..Obow
· Quiver~ l Arrowo tl501• Slmmone ...,... Bow Scope, now In
Box,
STI,
114-245-6047

1403.

11

IIUIIDIATE OPlNIIIGS
AT liMIT PORIIAII
STUDIOS
fll.lflllt posllloos. No

eiqlori- -iary. Paid
_... ,....,.. Fasttnodl
,, ......... wub

P11l110f11c wter.o rack eyat1m
32 .. 1pe1kera, turntable,
tuntr, comp.c dl8c, dual ·_..

:E':::""::::;'":!!:~~'::.·~~~----

_,......,. lational company.
bllleatbasos*ywlth
~w

.... _.,..

"o llllllity; Coc~prehoaslvt
HMftt pldlDgL Paid

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

•tMlallk. Olljoy working
w1t1o diiWr• .t be alolo to

....,•.,.....,,,..

-': ...-gs •d wttktntls.
AH(y 11 person tllmart:

'lfs ..,..Riv•Rol.

... t......~.

161414411'6455
Apply Nowl

175-29117 oftor S:OO·PII.

••II.

Buy 01
Riverine An1ique1,
1124 E. Main StrMt, on Rt. 124,

Size SmaU S.ioul luytrt Only,

Pamoror. Houro: II.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 8:QO p.m., Sundly 1 :DO
lo 1:00 p.m. l14-tt2·2521.

114 448 1241.

'

Reallltlc car .ter10 f10¥WIF amp,
80 wane, like new, $41, 814-102·
2354,

Sam Somerville"• new annr tree
bark aamtlauga, betide $an.

54 Miscellaneous

dyvlllo Peel Olllco, Fri-Sli·Sun,
noon-8pm , oth1r dip &amp; hour~.
304-213..5855,

· Merchandise
1 Bodroom lklho, lloplo ColiN
Toblo, 2 End Tobloo, Bluo Corpot, 10 112x14 Ft. 114-441-1542.
ltH 5hp pomlvo trocllon Go
Con, Wlloon HI~IJ · Dovldoon
·luther Jack.., qu•n lizl
Wlllirt.d on pedettal. 304ol75a
8183.

S.1111 molorlud treadmill; $250,

014·949-2571.
Six 25 ft. rollrood rollo, 814·182·
lll73.
Sofa &amp; Chair, Almoel NIW $250;

Dlnolto Sal Wllh 4 Chllro,
814-44&amp;-1137.

$~ ;

2 Ton Truck Lcod Of Flrowood
Gravel Hauled Up To 10 Ton A 5 Pc. Qak Dinette, Pll.ttorm
l.aad, 114-245-11227,
Roclcer. Sofa, Recliner, l O..k,
·Snyder Fumltutw, 114-2 lwln bor oprlngo • monrose .Corbin
446·1171.
utt, IKC. concf.; 2 twin -'11
comtott• .... w/d..l ruffiN &amp; Stockmillc Btov•, 1'14-446.0527.
•h•m•: twin tlu brl11
hotdboonl; obo" ground pool Stroller, blbybedt walkir, high-w/pump, needa IIMr; IU..~ chair, car Mit, swing, playpen.
1524 oltor tpm.
304-e71-4548.
20HP s..,. tractor, dllt blade, Tondy 1000 SL With Dook, Print·
whMI welghtt, m1ny extraa, • And Moniter: Wlndlor Aock12800 nog., .....lll2·2577.
1~ ~:e"'MondAMor
Fl,.plec. ScrHn.
81
SP.ll.
314 hOI'II tlectrlc n1otor, $35, ·
614-tH-11282.
Toohlbo 35" big ocrotn TV, Cer·
ver eurround aound, all remote,
4 Whtller 4x4, 2 Aluminum $1,100. 3044711-2925 or 675-7222
loelo I Trolloro, 2 Trolling Ilk lor Katwn.
•
llotoro; 1 Trorbln Aalor Tiller,
114·258-1827.
Utility lruck bed, 8115, good
50,CIGO BTU Hoil Nolurol Goo ah1pe, llkl $250, 8M·-2·1700.
Fumoco, to + Rog. tt,8115, Solo: Want to buy: t1pe of TV lhow$1.051, lnltallaJion Available,
"W•r Game Wrntllng", SUnday
114 ... 8301.
t/18, Will poy $20 piUI $S for
dollvory. 304-882·2436.
8r18 - . , . olt111GI bldg,
$7115. dillvory too $SS. ~doro E·

co, Henc:J..-.on. wv

304-e75-ll121.

B1h1ma CruiM. 5 d1y.,. nlght1.

UndiNbookldl

Mutt
oelll
$2711/couple. Llmhed Uck1t1.
407-~1'8100 ort. 858i, lion-Sot,
t:OOAM · !O:OOPM.

Fumlohod Efflcl•nor $185/llo.
Bodroom Coli 814-148-2857.
Suko,
Rockor
IRC,
Ulllhloo
Pold, t20
Fourth Aocllnor,
Avon..PGolllpollo,
84-441-4416
Complolo Cl booo olltlon wHh
Can~elbu1g, Inc. 45719
Anor 7 .11.
ompllflor; oloo pull blhlnd cornSpecializing in Pole
Fuml-.
3
Roomo
&amp; Bath, por, oiMpo 4; two compound
Buildings.
c1oon, No Poto, Aotoronco •
bowo·
814-t112·33lll.
loovo
m...
Designed
lo meel your
and current Ohio license Is required. Send resume Dopooh Aoqulroo. 114"'4B-15'18.
oogolf no •n•-·
needs. Any size.
and salary history to Karen Jannl•gs,
:::::;:ou:~~~~ •;,d ~11\':'f. ~~c~~.J:r~c;_J:~~:~
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
Mainor
and
Alveralde
Ad
FREE ESTIMATES ON
strator, Pin ecrest are enter,
Aportmonlo 1n lllddlopon. From cl~o· Sond F1nor Roqulrocll
t1,4i5;
Ron
Evono
EnlorpHoeo,
Posl Buildings and
537 11528
1
Ploecrest Drive, Gallipolis, OH
EOE
' 202· c.11814-ill 2•1115•· EoH.
Jocklon,Ohlo
-80CI·
'
Package
Deals. Save
L_______.;__..:,.~,;_-~~~---.J C:Omplttly Fumlohod mobllo
Cumbuotlon
olr
cool
·
llovo,
Hundreds,
even
Thousands
home, 1 mile below GaiiiPQIIe, GOOd. concfRion, $600, 814-7C2·
ov.looklng river. O.poaH, No
!lo64.
ol Dollars.
Poll, CA, Hoot. 614-448-0338.
Dloh
With
New
Aocolvor
a
Local
Sales
Aepresenlalive
PART·TIME INSTRUCTORS MATHEMAnCS
North 41h; lllddltport, 2 ._.., Porto,l14-245-5243.
DONNA
CAISENBERY
llfflcltncy 'apartment, dip &amp; r.t.
:104'1182·25418.
Eloclrle ooncrwto vlbrolor, $10;
11366 S. Sl. AI. 7
Gallipolis, OH.
The University of Rio Grande announces One bedroorrt aparlmenta_ 8' olum. broko, tli5• Konmoro
olftomollc woeher, $1o; 304-e75PH. 614·256·1633
$225/mo. lncludel utlllliH, $100
openings for par~·tlme mathematics
..curlly deposit, no pil1; 611\. ~5H~··~-----:::::::::~:::::::::
instructors In the College of Math/Science. tH-2218.
8
Public Sale
Part-time Instructors are needed for the Stonowood Aportmonlo, Mid·
dleport, Ohio &amp;. now accepting
&amp; Auction
Winter and Spring Quarter to teach morning appOcatlont
end
renllng
apartment• tor the tld~rly ana
and afternoon classes.
handlcoppod. EOH.
Part-time Instructors would be required to
45
Furnished
teach courses ranging from arithmetic
Rooms
through calculus Including business
Room• tor rent • w.. k or month.
calculus and statistics.
Starting 1t $120/mo. GaUl• Hotel.
Interested persons should send a letter of 114 44f.t580.
application, resume, Including the names, SIHplng room• whh cooking.
Alao tralllr apace. All hook"\\ps,
.addressel[l and telephone numbers of three Call after 2:00 p.m., 304·773Located 8 miles from Ironton on State Route
5651, M11on WV.
references and a copy of their most recent
93 North at Cannons Creek Rd.
transcripts before the deadline of September
30, 1993 to:
The Auction Will Include:

D. (, Mtfll Salts,

C C
170
45631.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1993

10:00 A.M.

•

~fHICit

tor rent llartlng at

585/mo., 114.t92-2167.

Ms. Phyllis Mason, PHR,
Personnel Officer
University of Rio Grande
P.O. Box969
Rio Grande, OH 45674

47 Wanted to Rent
Wanting to rent- 2 or 3 bedroom
house,ln c,_n and good concU·

tlon, prwter private aelllngl ,,...

gg2-2428, If no answer p IIH
leave m... age on machine.

K~chen cabinets, wash stand, 2 library lables,
buggy seal, beds, trunks, stoneware, victrola,
dishes, wood coo~ stoves, and olher household
and antiques as well as some !ann machinery
and hand tools.

•

Term•: Caah
Concession Stand
Auction by Request of Ralph &amp; Earl Malone

Merchandise
AAIEEO Employer

51

Household
Goods

VI'AA FURNITURE
8t4-448-3158 Or 814-441-4428
'90 OAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT-2-0WN (NO DEPOSIT)
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrought Iron Table W/4 Chllra;
Fan Back Rocking Chair $58:
Gordon Arch Woy'o $129.00

Jom The Newest Team
In Point Pleasant! &lt;tJ
Immediate Opportunities·
Full &amp; Part-Time
If you ~rc 01 hi t;h ly-motivutcd. sc ~ it: c · ori cn t c d indiviUuallno king for a part·
timcjohtulil intoynur schetJulc.ora full ·timc joh with u future. Wendy's

. . . has th e opponunity you seck!
We will be opening our newest unit in Point Pleasant , und arc cutTcn!ly
enthusiastic pwpl c to hel p us lill oil shift s.

~ eking

Selected indi vidual s will receive cornretitivc compcnsation, mcul dis;
(:OUni S unifonns. medical bene tits opportunities, sc.:hola~r s hip opr ortuni tics and the chance to worlr; in a friendly, enjoyable atmos phere ami have
the nrronunity fnr udvanccmem .
If you'd like to ~· 11 fllll1 of our opening team, upply in person,
Wendy's ReNiaurunl, 390 l'iilvrr Hridgr Plu1.a, Gullipulis.
We arc an equal nppon unit y employe r, 11"1/f/h.

Bidding -Twin Mott Sot Ul, Full
$118 Sot, OuNn S14i Sot; 4
Drawer Chest $44.95; Car 8td'1,
Bunk Bed't, Poster Blda. Full
Line Of Southwfl11ern Vatu
Stan!~ At $20.00; Indiana Man.,
Shape 1 &amp; Slz" Starting At
$5.00. 2 Location• · Betide "luto
Auction Or 4 ' Mllea Out 141.

Opon I A.M. To I P.M. IIon -Sol.
Bedroom group: Bed, manreu

and box eptlnge, d,...., end

mirror. Vorr GOOd condlllon . .
$350 114-046-11111.
Chorrr Bod"""" 8!/lto, 2 Ploce
Living Room lklhoil lrQJhll
Dining Room S!llto, loc •. omo,
114-U...7!13.
Froottrw rolrlgorot«, 175. !104175-117!1,

Full Size Will- Wlih Poddtcl
Rollo, 1_,4111.
GOOQ USED APPiJANcES
w•
drron, rolrigorot"'!.
rongeo. Noggo Appll- 10
vtno St-, CoM 114-148-73il, 1·
800-1111-3418.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comploto ' - tumlohlngo,

....,.L.

HOUI'I: Moft.llt, 1-t. 1'14o446-

0322, 3 mlloo 01i1 BuloYIIIo Ad.
Froo llollvorr.
llolloloon Fumfturo l C.rpooo,
Rt. 7, N. 1~41-11144 h12 Cor·
pol 180, VInyl M.4t.

Farm Equipment Auction
Sat. Oct. 2, 1993
10:00 A.M.
Loc.ted on St. RL 338 In Letart, Ohio. Walch for
auction eigne.
·

•Tractor &amp; Equipmeat"
Farrnall H, End lolldar for h, N.H. 851 round baler.
Excellent ~:ondltlon, N.H. 352 grinder mixer,
Klllabro gravity bed, N.l. grouild drlvan manure
tpruder, 12' I.H. dlac harrow, N.H. 455 mower,
3pt. hay ladder/rake, I.H. blower, 10' lime tpreeder,
N.l. hay conditioner, bale thrower for N.H. baler,
high Jacker for bsle tplke, 3 pt. 9 prong ood buster
8', I.H. 1501 loader for I.H. 444, 8' A. C. transport
dlac:, and 2 flat bed wagona.

•Misc.•
12" Saara redial arm HW, Heed gale, pick up truck
IOol box &amp;·fuel tank, alectrlc welder, 8' pick up
truck recka, Cub Cadet tilt trailer, 3pt. platform,
topper, paint, Iron bed, cycle grinder an~ Iota of
mlac. Item..
OWMr· lollert Mont1••ry •
Ten111 Calh Poaltlwe ID lefrelh•enfa
Dan S•lth•IIC.t1111Mr Ohio 11144 W.Va. 515
lheH Mllhoaa· lppreatlce Ohio 15926
"Not reeponalble for eccldente or
loaa of property"

s.

'·•

lilAC'S IUCTIOIIOUSI
AIITIQUI 01 ~OLLICliiLIIUCTIOII
VlliTOII, OHIO 41616

Qualhy Women C~thee, COIIta}

OCTOID 2111, 1ftl, 7 P.M.

..'

•

!"

The following Ia • par!lol llo!l~g. More Item• will
oomlngln.
·
"
FURNITURE: 12 tin pie cupboard, walnut knockdo'l'n
w1rdrobo, moll 1nd flour chotl with punched In, two
ochool dooka, wqon bench ooa!, McCormick Doering
cream oopar1tor, polmltlve church pow, protood ba~k
chair, oak child'• high chair, bod otend oH lamp, -1111
oil lamp, Iron b•• oil lamp, karooone
lamp lhfll[io,
tin oil temp bMot, old radio, Bentwood choolra, dook, rocker, cut Iron laundry olovo, RIICing Greyhounda TV

tl••

.

~~

GLASS: Fenton, Deprotolon, JapM llama, Etched ~.
ShoowiiH, Occupied Jo,_, Plocot.
·
COLLECnBLES: Rollrood oplko hemmer, plcturelr~,
pictur• tldvortlolng ltamo, doz- of old paat carda lljicl
valentln;.., h...,od pootcord, 1150'o plrHip art, 1~• \WI
Nortwick homed print titled "Love'• Meditation , oilier
fromod prlnte, old 45 reeordo, Pr•WWII Anlerloan FlyW
troln cora end ..,g~,... (rough condition), Wagnoe b~
ond egg oklttol, unuouol Odorloto pie ekllle!, o•t lr~
w/wood Wap1konota churn lid, oornbr- eklllete, ~
Iron a, oppro•lm.otaly 25-30 oa.or name eldAote.
;,
ANYONE HAVING FURNITURE OR COLLECnBLE ITEM.&amp;
THAT YOU WOULD UKE TO PUT IN OUR ANT10UE S/1~,
PLEASE CONTACT US.
'•
AUCTIONEER: FINIE "IKE" l~c;
·:
PHONE: 814-388-11370 or 388 8WO
••
Licenood and bondod Ohio, lnchna, W. VL 11030 ~~
Termo: C.h or approved Checll
.,
Not R•ponoiblo for Accldonte or L.oet 1 -

Building
Supplies

'Block, brick, ..wer plpea, win·
,dowt, llntela, etc. Claud• Wlnter:a, .Alo Gr1nde, OH Call 614-·2115-8!2t

..

CO otorogo, B monlho old, 304-

PUBLIC AUCTION

CEU'S for AN'S &amp;
LPN'S
Eight contact hOurs
approved by Ohio
Nurses Association
In: "Social and Legal
Aspects of Elder
Care In American
Homes" on October
6th from 8 am-4:30
pm at Holiday Inn,
Gallipolis. For
information and
application 441·
1633. Deadline for
preregistration Is
October :1 at.

New Commllrelal , Home Unite,

From $1118.00. Lompo l.otlono,
Aocuoorlu. llonthlr Pormonto
tow As $18.00, Coli Todoy FREE
. NEW Color C.tolog. 14110-46:1• 9197.

· 55

: 56

Pets for Ssle

ond Supply Shop-Pol
• Grooming. All broodo, ttyloo.
Julio Wo6b. Coli 114-148-0231.
3 M11tt Regimeracl Hlm•laylnt,
814-441-3188.
AKC CMw pupo, h11 1ot ohoto
and worm.C., altw and dam on
proml-. $150 or trodo, 814-84315273,oftor 4pm.
AKC Rog. Booglo pup8 ond ol·
der doge, miiH and temalts,
. j:oll814'742·17110.
.
:AKC Roglttered Rottwelloro,
Tall1 DOcked, Dew CIIWI
R•moved, Shott I Wormed
$200, 114-251-1887.
Ffottwollor pupplu, AKC roaloter.d Germ11n &amp; champ1on
wko old, only ·3 maloo I

1

female left, had puppy ahots,

podlgroo Included. 114-448-37115

a~er lpm

8Nutltul
P~pplee,

or enytlme WHki~a.

Raalotorod

Boaglo

$50, d'14-25~406.

Oalmollon PuppiH, AKC Rogloterld, 5 WMkl Old, Daya: 614388-8422, 614-3118-8402 Aftor 5
P.M.
l=emalfl CoiUt, 3 y•ar• old,
epayid, haa all ahota, no ·
p1pe,., very good temperament, PO, 114--7't2-3802.

Fish Tonk, 2413 Joolloon Avo.

Point PINunl, 304-675-2063,

lull llno Troplcol ftoh blrdo,

emallanlm•l••nd •uppi\n.

Jloalttorod Colllo puppiM, 1150.
304'47U410.
Slam1n

Klttons,

814-441-11730 Aftor 4 P.M.
Schnauzer mlnlaturn, pupp(n
ond oduno, oloo Poodlo pup-

CAX 81, _ , ounroof,
progr•rrnn.a fueling,
Plonoer tloroo, Alloyod -10,
Sop, bloc!k, ortro nlco, $SUO,
12,000 - · 114-tH-2594 ollor
lpm·wookd•JO·
1tll' -

Wholoollo, Wholooolo: LorrJ'o
Auto - · 11187 Oklo C.lllo
ChoVJ WIT Pick·
~'! C.marC!z. red1 .Y_-e-, automatic, 13,~.,!.t12
Up, I
d .,,tt5; Nl10111
...oo, 114·,.2·2:101.
240 SX $7,3115; 11111 Pontloc
'84 Camero, atandird, aunroot, Sunblrd 11 aes· 114-148-7770
Botw- N ; Ahor 5: 114-1484 cylinder, run~ 1nd looka good, 0813.
lrodburr Ad., 114-tl2-7158.
C.volltr VL PS, PB, Air,
ltea Buick Spoclol Covortoblo. lite
Rair DlfrOitlr, Stereo C.lllltte.
R•or..ble,
natd1
motor, Clolh
lnlorlor, Ercollont Condlpaint, and new lop. aaklng llon, 13,500, S14-241-i247 Aftor
S900.00 814-446-1754
6.
liH Muollng, &amp;cyl., auto PS,
tXC.Interfor, 54000. 1939· chevy,
2 door, Sedan. body &amp; frame,
$800. 'IO&lt;H711-31110,

MORBID
BEDECK
PONDER
VOLUME
JUNKER
LODGER
LOOKED LIKE

~~~~w.--~~~~----"1

S&lt;!:~lw\-&amp;'E~

Real Estate Ge~~~r~l
91.2 &amp;/ tJ

"Television is a great invention,"
the not so bright fellow said to his
pal. "Before I owned one, I didn't
even know what a headache
LOOKED LIKE."

,
1i8t Grond Am, 2dr., 4 on~!IJ air, liM:, cr•~.
amlfm. 58,uuu mllee, · 114-182·
7528 or 114-1'12·2840.

tiM. PS,

.,,
A LOT OF PRiVACY
•
Bi-levol, !ike now, a roomo, 3 bodrooms, large family
room wilh a nice mOO.m kitchen, ond tocatad on tho
country. Dining room with French dool1 10 a14'XIA'
Redwood Sundock, ;2 car gamge, Andoroen windowa.
lnsido now!y c:tecoratad. You muot·- lhio homo. Phone
now lor on appoinbnont.
1705.

1i72 Chryolor Now Yorkor, 4dr.,
h1rd top, 82,000 miles, lookl
dooc:l , very little ruat, 614-941-

BUSINESS OFFICES l SALESROOM FOR LEASE .
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

2808.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

1m Buick l.iSibl'll A-1 Running Condhloni New . Tlr1a &amp;

PH.

11178 Plymouoh Volero, S750, 614448-7149 A~or.3 P.ll.
1m Buick Eloclro, vorr good ·
cond.l..... ele1n, one ow1111r, mu.~.000 . O.B.O. 304·67&amp;.1834
after 6:00PM.
.
. ·

1il2 Oldo Doho 88, IUIO.L 4dr.;

aood runn!ng condition, :ao1000,

614·843-5453.
1983 C1m1ro With T-Tops, Ex~
cellent Condition, Must Su To
ApprocloiO. 114-3118-11268.
1983 Sh1dow 500, mutt Hll,
tharp, $750. 304o87S.5063.
1984 S-10, auto., thort bid,

Flr.blrd T·Topa, Air,
CfUi11, Navy BIUI, lOw Ullil,

1186

Good Condftlon, Muot Soli, Aoklng ~~.100, llokt Ollor, 114446'1458.
1986 Handa Preludl 51, 1 awn1r.

Have you ever looked at a c~•:,i~·~'b:,~t,:~

~~~i~~~ youosall owning it? Watching tho
ld
play qula~y on tho oidewall&lt;s. 14
IHI:Mt.OCK GROVE· One floor plan, 3 BR, 2 baths, LR, DR,
locatad on 1 acre in counlry setting, $34,900.

~~~[~~·~; Block commercial building with 4,000 sq. It

1:

concreto floor, extra storage bldg., 10 minUios from

1988 Otdomoblll DoHo 16,
Brougham, PS, PB, PW, Pow.r
Slate, Climate Control, Power

bl1ck,

euto.,

11r.

power

lronomloolon, PS, PB, PWI
otoroolta.. dock, new rodlo

III'M, curTIInt lnapectlon •• le to

Nllll
2810

112000. 304475-

Musical
Instruments
' "B,_ICh..,..,.,;T.:.;,...=..,:.::.:.;:IIk,_o.:.:.:;n:..ow_,-,...-c

IRC&gt;CK SPRINGS RD· Locatad on .8 acre mn. 3 BR, lg, oat~n
LR bath bsmt. w/garago. BGIFA fumaco and
lwc&gt;O&lt;II&gt;u!T'ior. En~loMd carpolld sunporclt. P"':" reduced.
Mulberry Hgts. 1 floor plan 2 BR, LR, biHmon~
1;•:;~~~~:~~;
kitchen wlbirch cabinets, large garage. lnsulatad. Lot
is 90x145 &amp; fenced . Low 50's,

IP&lt;lMIER&lt;lV- Brick mnch home, LR, eat-in kitchen, 2 BR,
w/parlial bath, 1 car gamge. Appliances. ONLY

· cond, $300. :Jo.t-112-3307.

: ~'a:;un.::,d:;.:.:ro71o.::ri,::.nol
.,-;l:-f:-o"ld;::ln"g-:m::uo=lo

LOCATED AT THE YOUTH CENTER ON
CAMDEN AVE . IN POINT PLEASANT, WV
THE ESTATE OF THE LATE MINA JEWELL .
AND ITEMS FROM THE KITIY MCDE~MIIT '
ESTATE WILL BE SOLD.
Hide-a-bod (like.-), 3 pc. mah. end table set. 2 pc. living;
room suite, 3 pc. hard rock maple end tabla set, mah. come&lt;
whal•nolstand,la·Z·Boy ruc:liner, color console TV, Zenitf'!·
color TV, desk and chair, comer cabinet, old prim. rocker, '
sewing rocker. maple hutch, 5 pc. anette, table and 2 cllairs ,
wood kitchen booth table and 2 benclles: ladder·backcllairs ,
Whirlpool relrigeralor. GE 30" range ,Amana radarange, Golq
Star microwave, wash stand, oak dresser, walnut bod, maple·
twin bedroom suite, metal cabinet, antique hi-chair, 2match;
ing wicker planters, lam stand, oak sewing maclline, Maytag
washer, GE dryer, Magic Chef washer and cllyer set (5
months old), lots ol glassware, 8 pc. serving sel Currier&amp;·,
lves, honey dish , several occupied Japan figurines and
others, large decorated statue ofgi~ with roses on base, large ·
gilled mirror, lamps, laney floor lamp, bfass candle/lolclers,
bells , sewing maclline, 78 records. M&amp;W sweeper, ian, mink
stole, linens, small kitchen appliances , pots, pans, granitl{c
pol, crock with lid, Stoflll jars, blue jars, tewhandiOOis, old tool·
box, f!lis Chelmer push mower; plus much more.
;

. CONDUCTED BY
AUCnON

' allncf, IXC. cond., $185. 3()4.675-

: 11588 oftor 5pm.

' Conn Trumpet, lor blglnnwe,

:sao. 304-773-111114 boforo 9om.
:Conn trumpotl_good condhlon,
'$250, 114-t82-:&lt;u7l
~ Spinet~ conaolt plano tor &amp;all.

. NEW USnNG- VACANT LANDII 6.382 approx.
to put your new homo on. Water and oi!ICtric
availabl8. Has southern view aettlng. ·ONLY $10,000·
Hancfymon'o Speciol· This older 4 bedroom, 2 full
homo with partial basement nollds finothod. Haa
rooms oamodollld. Metal l shingle roof. City watar,
sewar. G111al price !I
ONLY
QUALITY AND FRIENDLV SERVICE IS SOIIIETHING
YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO COMPROMISE.
BRUCE TEAFORD SHERRY RIFFLE
Br_.........,,.

--:
(t141 Mz-3325

HomoPIIont:
(8141 1141-2540

Jill HILL
SalooAe-·
HomoPIIono:
(1141 182-1157

IR

5s

ADDISON· Honeysuckle Drive· Could be used !or a renlal or
a nice starter home. Two bedrooms, 1 bath, new septiC, and

new wiring .
WAS$24,500

N'OW $ I,OOO
1

HARRISONVILLE· A very well maintains~ mobile heme. A
1984 throe bedroom Nashua home. Sits on a 1.42 acres and
comes with an equipped kitchen .
CAN BE YOURS FOR ONLY $25,800
MIDDLEPORT· Brownell Ave.· A home to grow in is lhis 2
stOry older home with 3 bedrooms, living room, dining roo'm,
kitchen and a beaulllul open slairway. If you want a house in
town at an affordable price, check this one out.
ONLY $24,900
POMEROY· Brick Slreet • In town is this cute and cozy t ·2
bedroom home with 2 baths, beautiful deck, and nice ceHing
fans : Could be a great rental or starter home.
$25,000
WILLS HILL RD• • A large-modular, with an addition on lhe
rear. Has 9 rooms, 4 bedrooms, and 2 baths. Has a heat
pump, 2 acres of nice laying land, and an older gerage. Has
a spectacular view of the golf course.
$40,000
MIDDLEPORT· Sycamore Streel· A 2 story home thai has 3
bedrooms, aluminum siding, part basement, new wiring, and
storage building.
$25,000
POMEROY· Old Union Ave.· Two big lots with a liHie over
1/3 acre. At lhe end of the road sits a 1983 Clayton double
wide with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room , dining room,
and a new front porch . Kitchen is equipped, including a new
dishwasher. Has central air, and a water softner. All in good

~ :::1'-11::;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

cond~ion

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

$34,000

MINERSVILLE· One story home with 2 bedrooms , 1 t/2
baths , FANG furnace, TPC water. situated on approx. 1.16
acres. Also included is a small older home at
same

: ~ppiM-Jtat off Rt 143, one mil•
eouth of Clrpenter. Red and
· Golden O.ilcloua appl11. Open

'' •SaiUrdoJO
only.
.

NEW USTINGI GREAT ' FOR HUNTING
LODGE OR PEACEFUL PLACE TO LIVEI
Ovor 25 ecros and 1976 Schultz Mobile home
with 2 bedrooms. 8'x12' declt CAll todayl
1590

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
t1 Fann Equipment
. DuMz round bllar, $6500. Duetz

$ciUf1ro blylor wl klckor, $7500.
·DUttz 11talta r•ke, $1500. Ouetz

:•

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON

17ft. ttddar, $1500. New Holland

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH I.D.

'411 dloc blno, $71100. John

Not R&amp;sponslbla lor accidents or loss ol property
Licensed and Bonded in Ohio, Kentucky , &amp; West Virginia 166

,560 dl-1, $3500. 8 Poquoo 8·11

FARM· Over 41 acres, ramodelad 1 .112 story
home with 4 badrooms, .2 baths, hv1ng room,
kitchen, screened in back porch . Detached 2
car garaga 2 ponds, bem, newar lancing.
'
1578

:DMre 110 dlac, $1000. Farmall
kicker

'wagon~~,

Mrs. Ora Hoffman will offer the following farm equiP,
and tools belonging to her late husband Raymoun4
HoHman. The auction will be conducted al her farnt
just inside the Wilkesville co1p lim~s.
;.
Take US 50 &amp; 32 west of Athens and exit onto 160
towards Wilkesville. The fann is on 160 just inside the
co1p. lim~s· of Wilke.sville.
•
Diesel Ag 5000 4 wd tractor w/586 hrs: Case inloader
and backhoe; Power Pro log splitter like new; Alis.
chalmers tractor wlbelly mower: 1984 Caprice Classlo
car w/no rust and like new Interior t20,000 miles: sid&amp;
delivery rake; Argic 6 ft. tractor tiller: old international
160 aeries truck; dump bed epprox. 7x9; 5 ft . brush
hog; lark skooter like new, used 2 limes cost 2,900
has reserve bid; 2 cement mixers one \¥/plaster mix.
tub; . 3 pl. backhoe for tractor w/2 buckets; 16 in. ·2c
bottom plow internal; 16 in. 3 bottom plow: troybui"·
junior rotto tiller; 1 Oin . chicago elect. saw; centr~
mach. double sander on table; 10 ln. craftsman table·
saw; 10 in. craftsman radial arm saw; 14 in. cut qff
8aw; elect. miter saw; elect. hack saw; salamander4
boom lift for fractor; 6 in. jointer; lincoln elect. weldeii .
drill press: small air compressor; lift gate for van;
tractor trailer; axles and tires ; acetylene tor&lt;:hes; work
benches; shelving; 12 ton hydraulic jacks; garage
doors w!track; elect. motors; log chains; field tile; nails:
bo~s. and nuts of all types; brick and block; 2'75 gal,
fuel oil tank; post; lg. chain hoist; husqvarus and slihJ.
chain saws; miller fuel oil furnace; barrel slove; 30·40'
pes. of perforated pipe; lap and dye sets; man~:
unliated hand tools and miac. nama; 22 Ruger Barecal·
plsfol: 16 ga. Remlngfon semi aulomatic shotgu.n•
w/acope.
, ,:
Terms: Cash or check w/positive 10. OUI of statll'
checks need bank letter. Food provided by Salem'
:·
Center 4·H club.
Auctioneer Mark HUichinson 614·698-670~
Licensed and Bonded in Ohio
Business Par1nar Frank Hutchinson 614-592-4349 ; ..

Real Estate Genaral

Ruasell D. Wood, Broker .. 446-4618
Phyllis Mlller ...................... 256-1136
J. Merrill Carter.................. 379-21 B4
Tsmmle Dewltt ................... 441·1514
Judy Dewltt ........................ 441-0262
Martha Smith ..................... 379-2651
Cathy Wray ........................ 446-4255
Cindy Drongowskl ............ 245·9697
Cheryl Lemley.................... 742-3171

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

: locollr. 1-800-343-8494.
,
liplnoi-Conoolo Plono For Salo.
:Take On Small Payments . SM
, Locolly. l-800-343-84114.
Uood Snoro Drum, Slond I
: Prrctlco Pod, Vorr Good Condl·
, tlon, 114-446-1279 Coli Aftor 6

'

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
FARM AUCTION
SATURDAY OCT. 2 AT 10:00 •·•·

Real Estate General

s..

•Take , on 1m111 payments.

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO. ·
713·5785

Real Estate General

205 North Second Ave .
Middlepor1, OH

1123.RIV'or Fronte~ Two.Jnid\llGbath home
approx. Acou. -131101ft':eonvienentlocation.
~
ASKING $25,000.

SR 338. Older typo homo has 3 bedrooms,
kitchen , LA. Located in quiet, good
is also an extra kll with this lhat could
buih~ng lot. Country location.

773-5808.

Lockl, Elc. AIIIFII Storoo CooMilo. Loododl Ono OWntrj
Bouahl Now_eer, Hood To Soli
ErcOIIo,. ...,..Hionr .._...
Good1 Aoklng: $:'.,7115. 114ol484223 Allor I:GO P.M.
1888 Ponlloc Grond Am SE,

.
kitchln you personally oamOO.Illd to your specific
. This homo is a channor. And ~ is one of thON
or possibly three bedroom homoa you daydream of.
ONLY $35,000

pi•, ch. .,oodlln11, blat lfn11,

51

446·9539
Real Eatate General

....

CoolviHo, 614-867-3404.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1993
10:00 A.M.

MASON, WV

Dodai Dalrt drag car, rune
g,..~ lf4-tl2-3171 aoyo or 114848-2534 evening•.
71

bk,Odu,.., 1xc. ••mpeflm•nt, 8 $1850. 30&lt;H75-294i.

Regltt•ed

LUNCH

Transport&lt;Jt 10n

------ 71 Autos for Sale

..

-----.r~w.~~~~~~~

Autos tor. Sale

WV

Bouorr, $800 Or Looo, 614-4414i5i.

• Groom

·•

ESTATE
AUCTION

71

ANSWERS TO

' WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
• .Ron All-, 1210 Socond
• Avonuo, Golllpollo, Ohio, 114·448-13311.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS

Spaces inside 25.00
Outside 15.00
Anliques, collectibles, 2 new
couches, used furniture
and items of all types.

Pomeroy-Middleport-GaUl polls, OH-Polnt PleeNnt,

64

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

WATER UNE SI'ICIAL: 314 Inch
• • 200 PSI t1U5; 1 lneh 200 PSI
132.50; Ron Evono Enlorprl-,
• • Jrcklon, Ofllo, 1-I00-537-M28.
• • WATER STORAGE TANKS
• Abovo And Ground FDA
• Approwod For Potoblo Wator.
• • Ron Evo.. Enlo-o, Joel!. '""'· Ohio, 1«10-U'74S21.

Hit• &amp; 1t1blllur, GIIM front &amp;

Antiques

term care. ExceUeat communkation sklls, a team
pIoyer perspect •1ve, an d pat"len t · vocacy are
essentlol for this position. Ma1agement experie.ce
• d esI r elf• RN gra duat e
I a a nursI ng home set t •1ng IS

mInI

•

wJtwo

ad

Help Wanted

Sow, Cornploto

Flther Muelc Snt ..... AnSwer·

52 Spontng Goods

qulpm~nl

•

Good ...._lor ..... 114-tt2·

WMiingttoUie

53

54

Public Sllle
&amp; .A uction

Flea Market
at Hutchinson Audion Inc.
Oct. 1, 2, and 3 9 am- 5 pm

ZSIO.

1231.

2 Bod-. CA, Alnlor Sole
On Lond Conlrld. 2 Blockl
From Bla lttr. f14.441-140i A~
tor4 P.IC
3 lzadroom

F - .... Ouleor With
lllnx 111 ,.V Amp, 1300; F·
250 Ford PU 4 lpold, 102,
~zoo. 114-IIMN.
Fl,_ Ploporw Fer Wlnlor.
Will le lveatled When Cold
Woothor - · Dolw.,od, 114aM-1111, 111417-11121 E"nl"ll".
Go Karto- 3 HP l up, _.o. on
t HP, In _.., I I - Equip.
mont, l14-lll2·2451 or 114-lii:I-

Worll boola. 1~11.

2 bod- lroll!"l ............ Ill.
112 N. Locuot "" on rlghl, no

8

Merchsndlte

PICKENS FUANITUA£

A,September 28, 1993

September 28, 1993 .

54 Miscellaneous

Goods.

........
110 - · 111011, ._.2210
-.lft-010,-Ja-.
-~--.
Ranolt,
J ......,_a: 1112
......
Full 1I • f ,.It,
C.r A«
c_ar,ogo . . _ - . . llg '

... .. t•lhM

41

forSele
llullonol, 1m-....._ 141119,-

WV

wagons,

also

fndtr

cap. 25-head, $850.

Morgail'a Farm, AI. 35, 304·937·
2018.
' Fall Ford New Holllnd Salt. 408
: Dlso blno, $10,500. 411 Disc blno
• wJ 1wive1 hitch demo, $11,500.
• 5711 Souoro boylor, $10,500. 140
~

Round bayler, auto wrap,
' $12,200. 850 Round bayollr, IUIO

' wiar. demo., $13,300. 848 Round

REDUCEO TO $47;000.00- 40 ACRE FARM· 2
Story homo and bam. Not lar from town. Make
owner an ofar she can't refuoel
1526

Priced in
I for mora details! Won't
1565

: bay er, h'td. wrap, $10,500. 40

, Forage

btower,

1000

) ractor,

55hp,

8x2

RPMt

• S3500. 305 Slurry oprudor
• 1CIGOgol., $6500. Bollllon 81
"pacHrJuedtr, $5500. 4630 Ford
trans.,

~ 118,500. K•f•r S1rvlce Cenltr,

•Slooo Ill. 87. 304-e95-3847.
: Farguaon T0-20 tractor with
·3pt. hllch, vorr good condlllon,
•!!Ut. buah hog, Itt. bl1d1, rear
•utility rack, $2900 tor all, 614·
: lli~.e115.

: John Dwre 4020 Tractor Cream

,Puff $?._9~; 1520 J.D. S5,950;
2020 J.u. "llh Modol 47 Loodor,
·h,500,
814-288-8522.
,.
•Ma111y Ferguaon 180 Tr1c:tor
·$2,1185· M.F. 40 $2,200; Ford
'2000 $2,400; 240 lnlornoiJonol
~ 12,200; 1800 Oliver $3,750, 614.2-522.
: M~tl 12 Mas1ty Ferguson h1y

,baler, $1700; Ca1 350 dozer
wllh trailer, t1klng $8500;
•Hollteln tt11r, w.lghl approx.
~ toolba.i
Umou1in1Herwford
~ cr011

butl approx. 13001bl..i
, li4-lii2·20H or 614-lll2·2421.
;NeW ldMI 2 row com ~ckir,
I

tXc. DOnd., 14000. 304-67U850.
'

,Ook Tobocco SUoko, ohe._...t,
':!Of:; llorsen'o Form, Rt. 35, 304'831'·2011.
ii&gt;OLE BUILDING SPECIAL
::W•40'1'. Polnlod Steel S,.o1
~1110110 Stool Roo!, 15'x8
~eel sn•r 3' Mon D-.
4$;158. EAECrED. Iron Hor11
9ul"*- 1-800-352·1045.
Shlnnlu 225 e Ft. "Finlah Mow.r
! Ft. Blodo M,OOO, 114·3874ti2,
•• 4-441-1321.

lNi,.od: s . - To Do lr\loh
I.:'!'GGing In Ctroonorr. Coli 114~-tfl32 Evonln!lf., 114-44t·
0200 Daya, LN.ve a...•o•.

63

"i.lveatock

Block Anguo Bull. :104-e75-2130
oltor lpm.

CUTE AS A BUTTON· RODNEY vtLLAGEII·
3 bedroom mnch, living room, kitchen wllh
buih·in dishwashor, lamily room, bath. Neat &amp;
1574
tidy I Low $40'a.
OVER 39 ACRES (OWNER WILL DIVIDE
INTO LOTS) within minutes from town .. Level
treilor pad axists with water and el~tnc1ty &amp;
sewage on site, lots of nica buold1ng Sites. Call
today lor complete listing!
1575
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! 40'x40' 3 car
datached molal garage with concmte ftooring.
Ono story 3 bedroom. home with washer/dryer,
some tumiture , appliances Included. Tractor
wilh blade , plow, bush hog included . Call
lodeyl
1536
PRICED REDUCED TO $42,500.00. MOVE
INTO IMMEDIATELY! 652 Second Avanua .
Excellent repair, 2 badrooms , hvong room,
dining room, kilchen, baseman!, large lo~~:
streat parking.
RIO GRANDE· 506 Redge Ave. ~~e block
from University. Nicco I story homa, hvlng room ,
dining room, kilchln, ba..,..nt. Newer FA gas
fumecco.
1568
WOODED PRIVATE SETTING l ALMOST
NEW BRICK RANCH wilh lots of oxtm room, 4
balhs, 3 badrooms (+3 rooms in baae~~nt
which could bo used as bedrooms), hv1ng
room, dining area, kitchen comple1~ With
appllancas 2 car garage, largo patoo and
lrench doo;s that laad to a nice sizlld deck.
Call today!
1573
LOTS OF LANDI 216 acres, moro or lass,
mobile home pad, older bam, 5~ acros bo:.J;
land. can for more details!
OWfiER'S RELOCATED! REDUCED
PRICEIII WANTS SOLD IMMEDIATELVIII
Ideal location. Roomy 3 bedroom ranch style
homo. Largo family room, dining aon, kitcllon,
bath, laund!Y. Nlco slzlld level lawn. W1thln
eeconds of Now 35 by-pa••:
1587

OWNER SAYS MAKE AN OFFERI
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! Just waiting for
you, 3 badroom ranch style homo, living room,
family room , car ga~ge w1lh auto. opener and
mora. Excellant location I
1488
NEW LFSTINGI L 0 0 K $15,000 Or maka an
offer. Vinyl sided homo consistinp of 2
bedrooms, living room. bath, kitchen . N~ee front
·porch. Level lawn.
1588
247 EVERGREEN ROADI· IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!· Start packing today, This 3
badroom homo woth bath. kitchen, l1v1ng room
needs a lamilyl Owner has reelacod roof,
fumace, water hootar and moro wolhin the east
couple ol yea . Come and """· Pricad $2D s.
•
' 1515
$19 900- Whalhar slarling oul or mtiring lhis is
lho 'homo for youl 2 bedrooms, living room,
kitchen, bath, alum. siding. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!
N87
CITY LIVING· On a low traffic stmot. Very.nicco
kitchen complete with appliances, living room,
family room, 3 &lt;tdrooms, 2 baths, laundiY
room. One bedrc. on apartment included. 1557

4.2 ACRES. Living room, kitchen and dining
room, bath.• central air conditioning, 24'x24'
gerage, two barns.
1576

OUT OF A
G,~:~:~~ log
MAGAZINEII
Take ono peak at lhia a
homa and
you'll bo lsoldl 3 bedroom, 1 112 balhs, fully
equipped kitchen, living ·room wilh cathodr~l
coiling. Electric hoot pump wilh cantral a1r
conditioning. Slorege building. Warranty loft on
homo. Call today. You'll be impressed!
1553
RIGGS CREST • This home has had lots of
carel Thraa bedroom ranch wilh ful basement
50% finiahos. Delachlld 24'x24' garage and
basomant garage also. A must sao! Asking
$65,000.00
1571
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!
RIVER
FRONTAGE!· $25,000, 2 bedroom home With
balh , living room , kitchen &amp; approx. t aero
lawn.
1543

square feet and 3 apartments above that
just been
remodeled and all have new furnaces. The upstairs has a

MAIN STREET RUTLAND- Ranch homo with
newer carpal in 2 bedrooms, liv1ng room,
dining room . One balh, 1 car detached garage,
oulbuilding, lot approx. 46'x183.5
1563

FLATWOODS ROAD· Approx. 4 1/2 acres with a great
laying building site . TPC ~ater available and electric

EAGLE RIDGE ROAD· 4 bedroom, extra nice
1 112 SIOI)I homo two car ovorsizod garage.
Plus mob1lo home hook-up. Call for moro
information.
1558
NEW USTINGI HOME &amp; 10 ACRES· Salem
Twp. • 2 sto!}' homo with 5 bedrooms. b~th,
living room, dining room, kitchen , bam &amp; m1sc.
1580
othlr buildinga. $40's.
RIVER FRONTAGE I· Ovor .2 acms and rancll
style homo. 3 bedrooms, balh. laundoy room.
living room l kitchen. Paved drtveway.
Immediate Ponession.
1544
ON FRANK ROAD· A partial ranch on 1.034
ac. more or leu, with 3 badrooms, 1 t/2
batho, living room, dining ~m end kitchen .
Ono car (lllrege attached. Asking only $52,000.
1523
Callloday.
. NEW USTINGI· 119.75 ACRES· $38,000.00.
Woll &amp; septic on property. Pasture &amp; .wooded
land. Older dwelling. Call lor more detaolsl
1581

$775 a month income. Great place for a business, and an
income from the apa~menls to pay the bills.
$58,000

available. Almost ready to go, 1ust needs you .

$12,000

SYRACUSE· Close in, but secluded· An older 2 story home
with a newer heat pump , newer roof, and completely redone
inside. Home has 3 bedrooms, sun room, dining room ,
wraparound porch , patio, and a new deck. Two of the
bedrooms are huge.
ASKING $45,000
STFVERSVILLE· Bald Knob Rd .· Approx. 1/2 acre lot with a
6 room , 4 bedroom home. Has a large living room and
kilchen . Has a 46 foot long front porch, carpo~ and a full
basement
ONLY $15,000
POMEROY· Sl. Rt. 33· Private back yard· A 2 bedroom
home with equipped kilchen including dishwasher .and
disposal. Has cenlral air, 2 metal buildings, and newer
windows. Make appointment to see.
$41,900
RACINE· A 1 112 sto!Y. 3 bed room home with full basement.
. .
ONLY $12,900
MIDDLEPORT· Hobart Stree:- A 2 bedroom, 1 bath , one
story house with vinyl siding.
PRICED TO SELL AT JUST $10,800

•

DOmE TURNER, Brokor .....................................m-5692
BRENDA JEFFERS ............................................... m-305&amp;
DAAUNE STEWART ............................................. 812-$365
SANDY BUTCHER .................................................n2·5371
JERRY SP,RADUNG .................................... 1.304! 182-34111
OFFICE.............. ,.................................................... Qe2.2118f1

'

�OH Point Pluunt, wv

PIIQ• D6 SUncta¥ nm• Sentinel

-----=---:-:::-:--:-::--:------171 Autos for Sale

Real Ettate Genenal

:r.'

~····l

.

~-

Real Eltata General

~~-

~

-------

-----

1Ht Plymouth ~000
dft..,.$3,200~... I
Aoloo,
ccnct.,.uto,alr,~

.

Canaday

.....

13•000 mil•. t1,100. ....
Cha..y
Caprice.
Full
-r,runo -,IIIO.OO .,...
441~172or11'14--

Realty

446•3636
1800 Orond Am 2' Door, Auto,
Elcollllnl CondHion. 35,000
1111•. Sl,ltll, 114-44t-1114 0.
1-1·1111.
1811 Pontiac ..-na, hbl&lt;, AJC
Iota olort~-~~ mllao, il
mpg, SI,IOO .
57311.
llutt Soli: 11111 Chavrolol
Sorota, '1:!1.. AOI-:':.O.,AQ,
loadadl fT,ow. · -

....,.,11..

-

~ptember 28, 1183

=&gt;:"

September 26, 191!:3.

73 Vena &amp; 4 WD'a

..........

lor Sale

372·3833'or t~&amp;.

·

camping
- ~h
~1. .·-So"'!',
Tfallllr, SWith
HP 78
1112 Ford Exp!Mw XLT, 4WD, 13'
4dr.,
IIA.OI'ftllk:,
overdrive, Outboonl _.,, Trolling llotor,
Equipment
2 Oorw • 2 Ut. Jacka&amp; 3400,
=r.:r toecled, 21,000 mu.., 114- 114-311-tln.
-1137.
.
38' travtl trallllr, Nl~ contalllld,
triu._,
N:.,
awni1g,
wMherldryer,
74 Motorcycles
.....,.
I,
~n~nr .
HOUSE BOAT HARBOUR
:::--:;::-:;:;:--:':~~=-.­ 1987
ollrot, muot aoll~lol I, RfiiOh
MASTER
3'1
Ft.
lWin
Englna,
1111 All Zlll33eruM arcol•·~. GtnorOtor FlyiHidgo, L.oiilad, Motol I RV Par Rt.7 Nort •
·
- IM-182
_,.
.....,,
I.
Uko Now Coridltlori1 157,500, 1· Maolotta, Rano, Oh • No ~
IOO-ll3'1-4128
Or o14 ...7-337i c•ll• piNt ..
11111 CR 125 Bought Now In H
For Sa'- 111,200, Call 114-387- Mike.
0433 Evanlngo.
79 Campers &amp;
76 Auto Parts &amp;
1811 Hanay 883 Sportotar
Motor Homes
Daluxa, 114-387.ot42.
Acceasorlea
1!173 21 Ft. Dodgo Motor ~.
ludgat Tranamlaolono; Uaod &amp; FullY Loodod. 43,000 llllllo,
_,,., oil
ollrtlng ot '"' $3,IIOCI. 114o44ti.OOU.
•
75 .Boats &amp; Motors
DWMr

for Sale

ty""·

114-245-1177, "114--379--

1m c•._

23 Ft., ~h
Bathroom, Air, AwnlngoJ.. l!lj:.

2135.

Ywr Good CondiUon, ..-,100,

814-:IN-2138.

•

Real Estate General

Real Estate Genenal

seoo.

·-o04...

t~on

tnoek, duol -11,

11,000 achlll
112-3148.

YOU DON'T GIVE UP CONVENIENCE FOR PRIVACY
HEREI ROOMY TRI LEVEL..HAS Q ROOMS .. 3
BEDROOMS .. 2 112 BATHS.. COTS OF KITCHEN
CABINET SPACE .. DININil ROOM .. FAMILY ROOM,
OFFICE OR DEN .. WOODED LOT.. APPROX. 5 MILES
.FROM CITY.. RIVER VALLEY SCHOOLS .. ADDAVILLE
ELEMENTARY.. OWNER IS RELOCATING AND HAS
PRICED THIS HOME FOR QUICK SALEI

RI~113 ·0D

II II I II
KE B c E D
t. I I I I

ml•, SIIOO, 114-

1m, ton Chavv truck, 4r4, !lot·

bad. tllW 314 fon ~ truck,

12

loaded, •king SISOO, mual Mil.

304-571·2473 aftor Bpm.

1001 CMvY &amp;-10, 4.3 Lh•r, V.e,

Ercolllro Condition, 114-44111614.

•

.•

.,

-.

E

J E K r1 U R
8

9

I I I I I

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Everythl~,

81

114-441-1il75

Or

Home
·: Improvements

CondHion.

And

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Frao

Real Estate General

For . Those .Who Can't Compromise
P~ a.nd won't compromise on space,
th1s bl·level m a family oriented
neighborhood is tor you. Otters 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, living room/dining
ro_,m combination, lull basement to
finish for extra living space. Back deck
overlooking a large lanced lot and 1 car
garage. Better act quick. Priced at
$45,900.
#608

Don't Make Another Move ... Without
seeing this hame lirstll Located in a
quiet family oriented neighborhood, this
3 bedroam home oilers a lot without
asking lor a lot. Large kitchen/family
roam area with cathedral ceiling and
skylighls, living roam, 2 lull baths,
screened in porch, attached garage.
Large lot. City schools $59,900
#200

Brick Ranch with a
contemporary flair, located in Charolais
Lake Estate oHering lull advantage ol
the 460 ft. lake frontage. Other leatures
include 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, lovely
oak kitchen, open to family room with
vaulted ceiling &amp; brick fireplace
overlooking the lake, extra large formal
LRIDR area. Full unfinished basement
could double yuur living area 1f needed .
Call Carolyn tor additional information
and to schedule your private viewing.
$149,000 Serious Buyers Only I #609

Surrounded by Nalure Large mature
stands of oak, hickory and other
hardwoods along with beautilul
flowering dogwood trees help make this
homesite off Rt. 588 outstanding. 2
acret lot otters seclusion from
neighbors (while slill having some) but is
located only a mile or two on good roads
to Spring Valley area. Ideal location for
that dream home you've been wanting
#502
to build. $27,900

pool,

16'&gt;32'

lnground. Great location, Green Twp. 3 large bedrm.,
1'/J baths, cozy LA, equipped kitchen new range &amp;
ref., dishwasher, furnace&amp;: hot water tank Brick exterior, 2 car garage, bklg .. &amp; dog run. Much work has
gone Into this love!~ home, call quick!

Home
Improvements

Curtl1 Hom• lmproVamanta. No
Job Too Big Or Small, Years Ex·
...n.nce On Older INIJY!flir
Hom... Addltlbna, Foundationt,
Rooting, Khchlnt /Baths. lnaurM. 1=',.. E1tlmat11. 6t4·36'7-

0511.

~

t883 Comer lolln clly. 1931 Chesl:nut St. Cornfortat:ikl
3 bedrm., 2 baths wffull basement Lot 150'x180',
O.R., Huge LR, wiHreplace new Insulated windows,
central aJr, kH. w/dlshwasher, trash compactor and
cellng tans. Den or office ""-· frutl trees, strawberry
palch, grapao, garden spot &amp; baskolbal ccurt In lhe
yard. Owner anxious to sell. Mid •o•s.

1913 SUPER BUY· $11,(100. 2 badrm., rnoble hcma

TV Sorvlca, opaclallzlng

atao 11rvlclng most
...!~~~:. Hauu calla, also
aome appliance repairs. WV

on renlallot. {$65.00mo) Cozy Iron! porch, acid on
makes lhls a opaclous l.R, poct&lt;at doorO lo clooa oH
~.....
,R-.COO.MMII~hW.

Will build patio covors, dacb,
ecrHned rooms, put up vinyl

82
Estate General

HNtlng And Cooling.

lnttalladon And Service. RSES

:; /·Wood" 9?Ja{ty, Inc.
•
RUN '

WATCH
VER
BACKWARDSII From the large porch,
you can see lor yourseH how the river
flows the opposite direction you've been
toldl Beautiful ranch style home in
exclusive, secluded neighborhood w~hin
city limits. Home features a beautiful
cherry kitchen, large living room/dining
room combination taking lull advantage,
view, den and 2 lull baths. 2 car carport.
A MUST SEE HOME. Priced to sell at
$89,900.
#500

Motel For Sale R~sidence &amp; 12 unit
motel lor sale. Located in Rio Grande
Great opportunHy. Be your own boss I
Call David Wiseman tor del ails
#218

1".. .-' .
HERE IS A HOME WITH ELBOW ROOM·
Localed In Middleport, lhere II no cramped
space hera jualluxurlous roomlnHSI Fealures 5
bedrooms, 2 112 balhs, unl~ue kitchen
w-urner, large living room wlbeauliful
fireplace. N.G. Heal, family room, play room,
anacllad one car garage wlbulil In workshop,

.·

"•

are
most
.consicieratlons In buying real .'!.~~~..!.·~7
LOCATION. LOCATION. LOCATION.
This is especially important in
canmercial property. I AVAILABLE •
BEST LOCATION in town. Corner of
State Street (Rt. 588) &amp; 2nd Avenue (Rt.
7). Great exposure from stop light.
Corner display windows. (Great
condition. Over 2,000 sq. 11. of
remodeled retail space). Plus office
space &amp; slorage. Rental space on
second floor: 3 room apartment &amp; 4
room office set up overlooking the park.
Call Dave Wiseman tor more
information.
#209

REDUCED AGAIN I Owner has dropped
lhe price another $5,000. Very secluded
hunting cabin with 125+ acres. AU
mineral rights, pond, outbu11ilings and
more. Can tor location. $60,000 #700

looking for a Lot? Well this could be ~I
2·3 bedroom home is there now. It could
be fixed up lo renl or live in or could be
torn down to make room tor your new
home. City location. Call for more
details.
#705

WE NEED LISTINGS!!!
WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.

84

Electrtcal &amp;

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

Refrlgerallon

446·1066

R•ldlntlal
or
eommerelat
wlrtng, MW HrYica or rapalrt.
M11tar Ucensed elactrlclan.
AIMnour Electrical, WV000308,

Allen C. Wood, Rea~or/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Rea~or/Broker-446·0971
Mose Canterbury, Rea~or·446·3408
Jeanette Moore; Rea~or-256·1745
Tim Watson, Rea~or·446·2027

1825. VACANT LAND - ClOse 1n. 5 acres rolling
land.

.

Mill. VACANT LAND- Springfield Twp 59 ocr·
es mA across from Holzer Hospital. Great locatiOn for large homes on a hill.

H311. LAKEviEW SUBDIVISION - A CHOICE

PLACE TO BUILD - 2 to 5 acres more or less.
Dt'lve to White Rd. to Charolais Lake Or. 10

Lakeview Ct. Offering 2 nat to rolling tots . a varIety ot trees and beautifuf view of tne lake. All
amenities available. Rural water, underground
electncity,
aerator
systems
acceptable.
Restnct1ve convenants apply Close to Holzer
and shopping

187ot Ranch Home with full baaement, app. 1710
living space. gas heat, cent a1r, 2 fireplaces. 3
bedroom, 2 baths. 2 car detached garage , 30X16
shed, 2 small outbuildings, small frame home with 2
br. and 1 bath. 2 homes and buildings situated on 5
acres mD!'e or less priced in the $70's.

1872. STATE ROUTE 110 • 3 ac 101 m/1.
$15,000 00. Charolais Hills.

1873. PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND - Lard
lays well Older 2 story hOme wilh 4 bedrooms
and bulldings. Home in r1eed of repair, 117 ac.
m/1. Call for Jocat10n

lam o~

1671. POINTS OF PERFECTION SURROUND this
gracious home located in an exclusive area. Eleven
total rooms with three bathrooms, foyer entry with
open stairway, large living rm ·wJwbtp, formal dining
rm., gourmet kit , family and game rm. share an open
tlreplace, solarium, 4 oversized bedrooms. Master
bedroom has cathedral ceiling, whirlpool bath and
beautiful arched windows First floor laundry, basement. enclosed porch and 2 car attached garage .

1886- WHITE OAK RD. locat:lon. 30 acres m/1
vacant land with limber. mtneral rights, good

road 1rontage Some cleared land $26,000.
1886- WHITE OAK RO.·Iocollon. 30 ..... mil vacant
lard wllh llrOOor, mlnOral rtgt'ls, good road lrontago.
Some Cleated land. $26,000.

Appointment PRICE REDUCED.
1886 New LIMing. 5 bedroom ranch.on 10.5 acres
wilh ,2 car garage and a large build1ng. House JUSI1

year old.

1123. MRS. CLEAN UVES HERE- 3 BR home with
small acreage. Close In, LA, eat-In kitchen, lq FR,
bath, 1 c. garage on 5 acres m/1 . This home IS just
right for a ~oung tamlly or a retired couple also. Make
an appl.. to see. Call Eunice Nlehm uxtay 448-1697.

1885. OLD FASHION CHARM - In town locatiOn for

U15·

SPLIT LEVEL WMILLTOP VIEW·

4

bedrooms, 2 baths, LA, DR, kit., utlltty basement,
attached garage . Patio and wooded lot. Choice
location In the ely. $73,000

1907 Nice Building Area. build thai dream home
IOday on thiS 7 acres that 1s Wlthtn tho c1ty lim1ts, call
Wilma.

11111• OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS ONCE· 5 bednn, 2

srv. hOme wl enc6os9d porch, fenced lot, 3 carports. 2

bulldlngs,.olflce or sales buRdng, blacktop &amp; cement
d~vowavs.

Bosl garden spolln Virion $17,700

1896 Building loti. Addison area. Ca\1.

11906- Lol Imide The CIIY Unils. prk:Od to sell Call

Wima a1245·8070. $2,000.00

lSi)- Building Lot Clo~Je to town. Old house on
property In need of repair. $10,000

1841 REDUCED SUBURBAN BEAUTY·
The remarkable spacious home with
view of the county . llallan ille to~er,
cathedral C81ilngs with balcony, 3 eA. 2'(, baths, liVing
room with woodburnmg tir':'place, equip. kitChen,
breakfast room has a lg. wmdow, stereo speakers
throughout, brass light fixtures a!'ld much more 2 car
at1ached garage, attic storage, 2 acres m/1. This house
is maintenance free of best quality. Make your
appointment and see tl you don't agree
1905 Exc1llant Bualnesa investment close 10 the
c1ty. Presendy known as the wood shop wilh an
apartment above the shop and two mobile hOmes
Dan't hesitate to look at this great opportunity lor an
investment.
1908 New '-'sting In the Rio Granda area, 4
bedroom ranch 4 years old With 2 acres in a nice
area w1th new homes going up avery day. call today
245·9070.
1814 Addison Area, 4 bedroom 2 story. Has new
roof, s1ding and furnace

1877 owner Wants Sold . Make offer today,
spacious 3 bedroom 2 bath doublewide on an acre
lot. Close to the new 35 bypass.
I!IOi. CATTLE RANCH WITH PANORAMIC VIEW 62 acres m/1 featuring 8 rms., lovely LR, formal OR,
oak cabinets in kit, break1ast rm. With windOw view,
fireplace in family rm ., 2 baths, master w/heart shaped
tub, walk-In closets, 2 decks. Farm Is being used as a
canle tarm . New fence, 2 pondS &amp; stream. Large bam
is arranged for easy feeding. Frontage on 3 roads.
Detached 2-car garage. Just too many features to list.
ca ll VIrginia 388-8826 or 446-6806.

304-ll75-1786.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate Genenal

sloraga shed, large rear patio area with

furniture. THIS IS A MUST SEE HOMEI
ASKING $89,900

KOllE ON WATSON RO.Al). 2 bedrooms, 1 balh, living
room, dining room, kitchen, approx. 1 112 acras, CALL
F0R APPOINTMENT.

COUNTRY? . THIS HOME SAYS "WELCOME" THE SECOND'
... HERE YOU AREI 3+ acres
a 1988 14 1 YOU WALK IN THE DOOR·'Yoo'l foelalltomel.
76 Flellwood home. Features 3 bedrooms, 2 Localed In Chesler lhls 7 room ranch slyle honfe.
balhs. cenlral air. newer elec. heat pump, bll.in o«ers 3 bedrooms. 2 balhs, fireplace,
slerio &amp; hulch, covered palio area, slorage Bppliances, air, F.A.N.G. heating, TPC water.
building, fenced yard, good driUed well waler. auached garage, 2 lois. Very nice... $67.500·
CHECK IT OUTI ASKING $27,000
"Welcome Homer

LOG HOME·IocaiAid on Brumfield Rood 3 bedroom, belh,
dri 2 acraa mora or leu. Cal to 188.
JIEDMAN DOUILEWIDE IN QUAIL CREEK· 6 yellS old
3·•bedroom, 2 baths, living room, dining room, kitchen
utilily room. Pricad at 1211.900.00

LONGBOTTOM· Oewills Run Ad.· I acre 'l'ilh POMEROY· Flalwoods &amp; Rocksprings Rd. 1.24·
one floor frame home 3-4 bedrooms, bath, acres with 26 1 51 modular. large ulillly room;
newer gaslurnance. drilled well, sheds. ASKING garden tub, walk In closet, 3 bedrooms, 2 balhil.,
oul building, eleclric F.A. heal, decking, TPC
$21,900
waler. ASKING $41!,500
',

•!

VACANT LANI). approrimatoly ID acros locaiAid on Bob
McConni~ Rd. Call lor mora information.

.. ,

Log
t 65 Acres - Peace &amp; Quieti
Thai's how you spell rel1 ell Quiet
relaxing lifestyle in this attractive home
overlooking rolling Gallia County
hiUsides. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, large
hvmg room with beautiful stone
li~eplace. Outstanding, newly remodeled
k~chen Will please the cook in the family.
Extras also include hot tub, 2 car
garage, new heat pump. $104,900
#216
INVESTORS Good commercial location
with river frontage. Three bedroom, 2
bath home could be rented or adapted
to your business. Call for more
information and appointment to see.
Priced at $45,000.
#503

Certified. Reeldentlal, Comm•r·
clal. 114-211-1811.

heat pump cent air. sltul\led on ac ml1 . H~me Is 5
miles from town, hospitat , and app. a f!'l les from
shopping center. app 15 minute dnve to R1ver Valley
High SchoOl
t878 Oidar hrm Housa with 4 bedrooms and
plenty of apace , ready to start farming with all the
equipment on 45.69 acres. Bam only 4 years old .
nice pond with fish.
18$8. REDUCED - 148,000 - Owner IS anxious to
sell this 3 bedrm. ranch. Very nice hOme and location.
Large LA wJdining area. Fu!l basement, an eKtra large
• garagEJ. 2 k)ts, CitY water &amp; sewer &amp; schools.

1110 New Llatlng, Owner Wants Sold Due To
Moving From The Area. located close to tllo
Universiry, Excellant ranch just 4 years old, on a nice
street. Has beau1tful landscappmg, won't last long
call today to see lhls beaUltful home that has been
well maintained. 245-9070.

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Fr~~mln'a

1813 Ranch Homo with lamlly room. 3 br. 2 bath,

room w1th fireplace , large liv1ng room with Qt\S
fireplace, d1ning room, kitchen, utility r()om,
basement, front porch, screened 20x10 s1de porch,
patio , and 1 car garage situated on 1 acre nV1 app. 1
mile tram town. Th1s home 111 designed lor il~t~1ng
space and in home business. Call lor price and
,location. App. 2300 sq. ft.

HAVE A BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY ESTATE

- Build your dream home overtooking a large
lake. 73 acres m/1 of roRing land, clean and
mowed, wtth a bit of WOOdland, 8 ac. Of lakes
rnA. Th i~ property has many oppOrtuni1kJs. Its
present use is a paid fishing lake. Gteat fof a
church camp, campii'IQ groundS or subdivide.
Long Road tronlage.

~Mr. AM 11". Large 2 story home, 3 bedrooms, LA , formal dining room, kl1chen, bath Attached garage and
comer lot Walk to school and shopping
' 1879. SMALL FARM CLOSE IN - Neat , clean and
cozy is what this 2·3 BA home 1s with LA, DR. kitchen,
bath, 1 car garage, one oulbuildmg. fuel oil furnace,
CIA and new roof. 48JC32' bam for animals, hayloft and
workshop Call Eunice Nlehm for appt

Ohlc114-441-2454.
Safllc Tonk Pumping SID, Gollla
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jackocn, OH 1-800~37-9528 .
304~78-2398

skiing or · lraller skirting. 614·

MIDDLEPORT· Brick cape cod slyle home wllh
3 bedrooms, bali, gas heal, slorago shed. Very.
CUIO homel ASKING $29,900

front porch, bam, shed, and 35+ acres. Oule\--

privalo seiUng. ASKING $29,500

·

~

SR 124 in Racine· Large 2 story home withmaintenance fraa siding, nawar roof, 4-5

bedrooms, 3 fireplaoas, wrap around porch, part
A BEAUTIFUL TWIST IN COUNTRY basement, garage, shad, barn, fruit treee;LIVING !Modern conlemporary home wilh a addillonal 1971 12 1 65 mobile homo currenlly·
down-home leell Feautures 3 bedrooms, rwo rented (181 rerllal malta your paymenl) Very nice,

'

HOME wilh above ground pool, 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs,
central air, garage, two out buildings, city school, located
Slat&amp; Route 141 . Call to ~" ,

NEW LISnNGI OWNER WANTS TO
RELOCATE - Well kept home with 3.620
acres. nice buildings on property lor work·
kitchen, LR, OR, Ioyer, enclosed

NEW USTING -End your summer with a
splash, 3

overlooking river,
16'x32' pool. oversized garage could be

IHCIIE

30 ACRES, M/L FARM HOIJSE
wilh pond . Affordable . Call
appointment.

shop, approx. 4 mi. from town . Call

FOR SALE· Located at Rodney. 3 bedrooms. 2
room, dining room, kitchen. Call lor mora
$28,000- Five minutes to town . Cape Cod
slyle home w/3 BAs, bath, LR, kitchen, gas
heat, full basement.

I

BR ranch

for appointment

FOR SALE· 4 bedrooms, 2 balhs, family room,
I1t~~~~;,;d•ining
room and a summer kitchen and bath in
. 47 act11S ;,,. or less, a bam and outbuilding,
hookup. Call to Saall

balhs, wrap around deck, enclosed sun porch, very un""e home approx. I+ acre. $46,000

appliances, Hraplace, waodlelectric
heat, on five lovely acres lhal Includes a spring VACANT GAOUNDI SA 684 In Harrisonvilla
led pool. II you enjoy nalure &amp; lhe ouidoofs... lhjs building or hunling area. ASKING $18,000
is lor ycul $79,000
A REMOTE LITTLE CABIN IN
POMEROY· Mulberry Sl.· Lovely 2 slory frame Localed on Sharon Hollow Includes
home with care free siding, 3 bedrooms, 1 112 lhal has boen known lo conlaln lois of
baths, woodwor~. gas heat, appliances, cenlral
II your nollnto hunllng, parhaps '\siKiliiG
air, handcarved 1n closets, full basement. large doer.
a quiol gel away place. This Is Ill ,
front porch, block garage wlcement floor &amp; $17,000
opener. This home has many unique fearures
lhal you MUST seel ASKING $42,500
RACINE· 2.72 acres wilh I floor frame
wllh 3 badrooms, bath. enclosad fronl
MIDDLEPORT· one floor frame homo with 3 Properly also lndudes 2 oldor mobile
bedrooms. 1 1/2 balh, F.A.N .G. heal, lol od
up and ready to rent TPC wator, fruit '"'" ·''' I~
approx. SOx 100, nlc:&amp; lronl porch, cellar space, berry
vines, outbuildings. ASKING $45,000
cenlral air, pat10, dedUng, fenced yard. ASKING
$45,000

1992 SKYLANE REBEL MOBILE HOME1072 sq. n., approx. 2 balhs, 18x15 LA,
17•15 kitchen, equipped. cent. air. Call lor
more details.

ATTENnON FIRST nME HOME OWNER
- 121 Gaven Stroot - Nice home oners 3
BRs, LR, kitchen, FR, bath &amp; laundry room,
alum. siding, nice yard.

PRICED
DWIIERS - 4 BAs, 2 baths, LR,
en, lull basement, gas heaVcent. air.

NEW LISTING - Fixer-upper. nice large
lot. river view, 3 BR, bath, priced at
$25.000. Call Ruth lor appointment.

~~~~H~OME· 4 bedrooms, living room, dining room,

fam~y 100111, located on 1.8 acrws. PRICE IS

CALL SOONI

1• •GAI~FIELDwilhin
AVENUE· 3 ~~. living room, kitchen
walking distance of IIDraa and !IChools.
to-.
RACCOON CREEK ROAD· 3 BRS, 2
l.R, k~chen, gas heat, cent. air. Call lor
details.

FALLIS HEREI
IT'SABEAUTIFUL TIMEOFVEARTO
PURCHASE ANEW HOME I LET US SHOW
VOU ONE TODAY I

MEET OUR AGENTS!

446-3644
'

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER - 446-9555

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

1904. NEW USTING - Splash Into lhe

245-9152.

OFF SA 143 on Wolle Pen Rd.· 1975 12 x SS"
mobile homo wllh 2 bedrooms, appliances, largo.

GO FISHII Anytime you wantl 14.77
acres, mil, with stocked pen~. There is
also a 1992, 3 bedroom mob1le home to
live in while building your dream home.
Call today. Priced at $32,500.
#504

l·

Home
Improvements

OFFICE: 992-2259
Become One With Nature Nestle your
home among the trees on this 24.672
wooded lot, m~. A 32 x 32 barn wHh loft
has already been built lor you, electric
and water tap. ll .you want privacy, here
is where you need to build. $24,000
#607
WEiek·end Retreatl You don't have to
for miles to get away. You can
your own camping spot among tall
trees in a peaceful setti ng and have
' acc:es.s to Raccoon Creek tor boating
and fishing. This lot in a private
campground is priced at $7,000. #505

Brick cape code situated on 2
acres overlooking Ohio R1~t~er. Home features 4
bedroom, 2 full baths. living room with fireplace .
1922 sq. ft living space. 36K48 metal building and
14x24 lrame building. EL ht pump and cent air. Call
for price and location of this beautiful cape cod
home.

3r-'11T'-"
· "lt"'"r-rrl'.....,.l',......,..-1'.,....,,.....,;rillo

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncondHional lllollmo guaron·
IM. Local referencM tumiahld.
ea11 1-.w.o5lt er 814-2370481 Rogaro Wototproollng. E•
labllohad 1175.

Serv1ces

114 41878 18,700, Exc4ment

1803 Ca~ Cod ...

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling In the missing words
you develop from srep No. 3 below.

VACAN,LAID

1878.

LOcated on Cherry Ridge Road.

11912 NEW USTING.,.. 4 bd. 2 baths. largo

NEW LISTINGS

.• • Motor Homes
.

HENRY E. CLELAND 111..992·61

IO,too Mn... loadad POMr

18i7 Farm W/20 Acres mJ1 located on SA 568.
Home offers ~ bedrooms; 2 baths, LR, kit, enclosed
porch, barn ahd outbuildings, milk house, com crib,
chicken nouse and cellar. Call V~rg i nia 388-8826.

~

SHERRI HART·..................742·23

1989 Dodge Grand C.rav1n LE

$29,900.

G)

-nl

Dump, 114-441-8038.

tmEAWAY - BEAUTIFUL WOODED AREA,
SURROUNDS THIS PROPERTY. 1984 SCHULT
MOBILE HOME. 14'X85', 1'/• BATHS. DECK. 24'X24'
GARAGE. APPROX. 18 ACRES. 129,000.

"Television is a great invention," the not so bright fellow
said to his pal. "Before I owned
one, I didn't even know what
a headache ------ -·--."

~ : :._,e'TII'~~~m.-;ieR-;ED---rr-1'.....
,,

HENRY E. CLELAND...... 992·61

bedrooms , 2 full baths, kitchen and dining area, 2
bedrooms, utility room, family room, krtchen in base-ment , 3 car garage and a a car detact'led garage. Call
tormore Information .
, _, COMMERCIAL. CITY WATER, SEWER &amp; GAS
- 1 ac. mtl. building w/2 baths, store rm , garage has
holst and compressor. Owner wants offer.
IIB48 Gr..t Location For That Bu•lneu At Hom•.
Beauitful white brick 3 bedroom on 4.13 acres wilh a
4000 sq. ft. commencal building with 3 phase
electric.
t100 Bungalow witt\ 2 bedrooms,· LR., kit., din .,
area uliliry rm. overlooking the Beautiful Ohio R1~t~er

L 0 UV

t'§.• Cl!llpers &amp;

dem 2tiO Cummlnge E~lne 40
Ft Log Trailer, 11 ~~ Aluminum

3 BEDROOMS, 1 1/2 BATHS, FAMILY ROOM IN
BASEMENT HAS FIREPLACE, DOOR FROM FAMILY
OPENS ONTO LARGE WOODED LAWN. CARPORT. IN
THE COUNTRY, BUT NOT TOO FAR OUT! $-47,900.

1-1

7

6

Real Estate General

Mack Trodor 111l't Dodgo Ta"'

17113. BRICK RANCH - Slluated on 1 ac. rn/1 Upper
Rt. 7, close to Shopping Center. This home features 3

'

: j0
: ,

room. full basement wtth family room, 2 car garage,
181C36 tngrouna pool. You need to see this one.

..!..

•

·

$710, 114-441-4713.

1710 Ranch home In town. 2 of 3 br. 1 bath, family
room, Yinly siding, new gas turn S yr. old roof. new
cabinets, satelme dish. Pnoe reduced .

home, with 3 bedrooms. 1'1• baths, living room, dining

I

•

Real Estate General

1133. SPRING VAL.LEV AREA In lhls spac10ua brick

N0 RP E D
s
'

Chnroflt, Ford, Dodg• pickup
bado. Short or long. No ruot.

304.a7H2SI.
·
For 8ala: 1flll Fonl 112 Ton
Trliclc, .8 Cyllndor, Autoonatlc,

13

~ ~,...
: _D_E_G_R_O_L_,,

More or less.
Wooded, lg. cave on
property. Excellent
hunting grounds.
Reduced to $15,000.
Owner needs to settle.

1910. SUPER BRICK &amp; VINYL RANCH- NEW
LISTING- Six years old . beautiful location, close to
the untvetSity of Rio Grande. 3 bedrooms. 1'/a bath.

1

•
• •
•
• '

62 ACRE ESTATE

414, 111711 Oklo par11. llcdol120
RlnVO!J 12 gaugo Wlnchaotllt.
304-ll7!1-2130 oftorlpm.
1987 Toyota Pldt.Up WHh
FlbaJvluo T-, 114-:117-0142.
1900 Ford Rangar XLT wAoppor,

1801 Reduced lor Quick 8111 - One or tile
beSt things in life Is nome ownei'ship 3 badrm- ranch •
cnarmlng LR, aat· ln klt., 1'f• bath, full divided basement w{offlce room and outside entry. 24'x32' garage
w/1 0' doors. ~ake tNs yours now. FHA or VA.

"

•
•• '
• •
•
• •
•• '

More or Less
Buhl Morton Rd.
Surveyed, city schools,
wooded.

PROFt~SIOIIAl SERYICillWS 111 DIFERDKE

with a Chuckle

!he 6 scrambled
words below lo make 6
· ·~mple words. Print leHers ol
• 'each In Irs line of squores.

..•

5.66ACRES

Real Ettatl Genenal

. ·9

•

1m F-100 Ford Plcllu~ ~;':
IIH- Carburotor,
HNtor COil I llulfl!!t lad Ruo-

Raal Eatate General

:.ft Rearrange

•

2301.

Game

sunday nmes Sentinel Page 07

- - - - - - - Edited lty CLAY lt. POIJ.AN - - - - - -

••

1172 Chav~ 112 Ton ii50 4 bbl. 4
BoH, AT, PS.L P!!, AC, 3.72 Pool
32,100, OBu 11i11daa 114-446-

lad,
11117

That Intriguing W ora

•

72 Trucks for Sale

CO©\\ci}}A-~ttfSe

:.

......

=·~ tanU. - ,..,
oto. D RAulo. Ripley, WV. 304-

75 Boals &amp; Motors

Pome:oy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pl....nt, wv

..

Carolyn Wasch·441·1 007
Sonny Garnes·446·2707
•

This week moel Tracy L. BrlnaQorl Tracy hu
been afnllakld wllh Cleland Reali)', Inc. for e
years. She 1'11C81wd hor Aaal Estall Trolnlng 11
Ohio Unlvorslly, Soulh-m Buslno• COllege
&amp; Hondroo Career Cenlor In Columbus. Trocy
residee In Racine wtlh her husband, Tlm, ond
sons COnly, BID!on &amp; Scottie.
Slcp in and"'" or call TI'IIC'f, lha'M w happy
to help you wllh all yoor Ae~ Etlall-1
UITINOS PICK UP
AT lOME OF

1021 SECOND AVENUE-Very nice horne
ollors 3 BAs, LR, DR, kitchen w/range, retl'ig..
414 THIRD · AVENUE· 4/5 BRs, 2 baths, washtr &amp; dryer, bath, gas heat, cent air, 2
kijchen, DR, LR, alum. siding, gas heat. cent. fireplaces, some new carpet, unattached
garage. Shade trees. Call today.
arpat (903)
al
~~c

.

CARMEL ROAD - 4 mi. N. of, Rio Grande.
Appro~. 24 acres of surveyed vacant land.
Ideal lor new home. $19,000.

8 ACRES, MIL, DAVIS ROAD- Ohio Twp.,
county water available. $15,900.

·
LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN
QUIET· This could be it•. 49.66 acres, Andrews
Rd.. 6 year old home with 3 BAs, 2 112 bathss
LR, DR, FA, heat pump, 2 car garage pi~
24x48 detached garage. Approx. 43 acres 1n

-

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS _ Fiesta
Grenda on St. Rt. 35 . Well established,laun·
dromat also
with business.

38.50 ACRES· mn near Tycoon Lake. 2B.5
In Raccoon Twp and approx 10 A.
Huntington Two. Home on pro'*'v ollors
BRs. bath, LR, kitchen, new
woodburning stove, siding, some new
Barn on pro""""
~~

FOR SALE· COAL TIPPLE with all
faalitieo. t,6B7 It rivortronl. Call for
dalails.

�Page DB Sunday Tlmn Sentinel

Oilseed sales expected

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

Tobacco production expected to fallll percent

to boost U. S. exports
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
agricultural exports to the Euro·
peen Com"::~ are expected to
•ncrease in
1993 because of
more sales of oilseeds and their
products,
say
agriculture

e&lt;:onomists.

"U.S. imports from the EC are
growing more rapidly lhan exports,
led by high-value products," said a
recent situation and outlook summary on Europe by the AgriculiUre
Department's Economic Research
Service.
In fiscal 1992, U.S. exports to
the EC totaled $7.2 billion, compared with imports of $4.7 billion.
Crop production is expected to
decline in 1993, it said.
"Production of wheat and
coarse grains will fall only slightly,
despite CAP (Common Agricultur·
a! Policy) reform price cuts and the
set-aside program,'' the report said
"Smaller cereal area will be
partially offset by the recovery of
yields from last year's drought·
depressed levels,'' it said.
On oi!seeds, the report said
changing competitive conditions
and poor wealher at planting time
should redu&lt;;e EC outpuL
Sugar production is expect.ed _to
returrt to normal levels in the EC
after a record crop in 1992, it said,
adcjing that "reform in the sugar
sector was put off for another
year."
.
The EC is implementing its
CAP reform, changin~ the way
domestic support is provtded to EC
farmers, the report noted. It affects
most agricultural sectors, with the
biggest change in cereals, where
support prices will be cut 33 per·
cent.
The reform will lower feed
prices for livestock producers, the
report said.

•

WASHINGTON (AP) Tobacco production in the 1993-94
"With lower feed costs, con- crop year is expected to be about
sumer prices for pork and poultry 11 pen:ent lower than .the previous
should fall, increasing consump- level because of smaller acreage
tion. Hi~her pork and poultry pro- and yields, the Agriculture Departduction m 1993 should boost subsi- ment says.
"The likelihood of a large feddized exports that compete with
era!
excis~ tax increase, to help
U.S. products," it said
finance
nanonal health care reform,
Beef support prices in the EC
is
lowering
future cigarette producwiD fall15 percent by 1996, it said.
lion
prospectS,"
USDA's Econom"Lower CAP prices, combined
i~
Re.!!earch
Service
said in a recent
with expecled reductions in arable
stblatlon
and
outlook
summary on
crop production, could contribute
.
to a decline in EC farm income in to~cco.
Flue-cured tobacco ou~ut ts
1993," it said. "However, significantly hi~her direct payments and down this vear," it s!lld. • Even
reduced mput costs for livestock
producers will offset all or part of
the lower value of crop produc~ ASHINGT&lt;?N (AP) - The
tion.''
•
.
the report noted that negotia- Umt~d States W_Ill donate 1,800
tions on EC membership with Aus- metnc tons of agncultural products,
. tria, Finland, Sweden and Norway · including nonfat dry milk, rice and
started earlier this year and said vegetable oil ~ n~y children in
support for arctic and Alpine farm- . the former SoVIet.U!llon.
.
ers was the main agricultural issue.
!,he_ $1.6 mtlhon donauon,
''Accession could occur as early as whtch mclu~ ocean and overland
1995," it said.
.
tr~nsporll!llOn C«?Sts, w~ll be dtstnbuted, directly _m Russ•~ and the
WASHINGTON (AP) - The other former S~VIet republics.
Agricu!IUre Department will donate .
The donauon w•ll be made
about $27 million worlh of farm under the _Food for ~gress Act of
products to the Russian Federation
~983, whtch authonze~ ~e donaunder the Food for Progress pro- non of surplus commodi~es owned
gram.
by the '7ommodity Credit Corp. to
The commodities include developmg ~tt:tes· .
.
29,400 metric tons of vegetable oil
The donanon IS bemg provtded
and 2,200 metric tons of pork. The through~ the Children, a l!.S.donation will be distributed or sold ~d pnvate v~luntarr orgamza·
by the Russian government to help non. The food wtU be ~tnbuted to
develop a~cultural and economic about120,000 needy children for a
reforms wtthin the Russian Federaperiod of three months in a food
lion.
All transportation costs for the
commodities to be delivered to of Education.
Russian ports will be paid by the
United States. Russia will pay for
all inland transportation, handling,
deficient diets, residing in chi!~torage and distribution costs withdren's homes, o~hana~es, handi· 10 the country.
capped children s factli ties and
children living in large families.

=~.:n!!:'~~si:~i~~t;
It~:u~~t"~~~~:~i~rili

The AgricultUre Department is

WASHINGTON (AP)
August, following a 2.8 percent
Orders to U.S. factories for big- drop in July and a 4.3 percent gain
ticket items such as cars and com· in June, the Commerce Department
·
puters rose in August for the sec- said.
ond time in three months, the govBefore that, new orders had
declined for three consecutive
ernment said Friday.
Economists took the report as months, from March through May,
evidence American manufacturing and factories had to struggle to
is starting to recover from a slump bring their production in line with a
earlier this year, but said the stall in consumer demand.
rebound isn't fast enough to pro·
The latest gain · ' 'is just one
more
piece of evidence the manuduce significant new hiring.
facturing
base is slowly picking up
Orders rose 2 percent to a seathe
pieces
from the dismal perforsonally adjusted $131.2 billion in
mance it had in the first half.
T
A
Continued from D-1

TSDI~ ••• - - - - - - u,

Meigs ...

governmental support, good harvests and a realistic exchange rate
policy."
It said the United States will
continue 10 face strong competition
from Brazilian exports of poultry
and soybeans.
Brazil is becoming Argentina's
most important market for grain,
and close commercial ties are
developing between the two
nations, the report noted.
"Soybeans and derivatives are
Argentina's leading agricultural
cxpons," ii said . "The expansion
of the Argentine farm sector will
depend upon private investment,
reduction of marketing costs from
'privatization' of storage and transportation and prices in the world
market.''

Conlinued from D-1

Muskingum, 5.7; Noble, 6.5;
Ottawa, 4.7; Paulding, 4.8; Perry,
8.7; Pickaway, 4.6; Pike, 12.7;
Portage, 3.9; Preble, 4 .4; Putnam,
4.7; Richland, 6.0; Ross, 5.7; Sandusky, 4.5; Scioto, 7 .5; Seneca,
7.2; Shelby, 7.3; Stark, 5.2; Summit, 4.6; TrumbuU, 6.4.
Tuscarawas, 5.0; Union, 3.4;
Van Wert, 4.7; Vinton, 10.5: Warren, 4.5; Washington, 5.5; Wayne,
3.8; Williams, 4.9; Wood, 3. 7;
Wyandot, 6.5.

The rales for cities of more than
50,000:
Hamihon, 9.5 Springfield, 6.0;
Cleveland, 9.5; Cleveland Heights,
3.2; Euclid, 3.9; Lakewood, 3.2;
Parma, 2.4; Columbus, 4.7; Cincinnati, 6.5; Elyria, 6.4; Lorain, 8.7;
Toledo, 6.5; Youngstown, 11.2;
Dayton, 6.9; Keuering, 2.0; Mansfield, 7.5; Canton, 8.2; Akron, 6.4;
Warren, 9.8.

PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
September 18, 1993
STOCK STEERS:
300-under
90.00-115.00
80.00-110.00
300-500
70.00-98.00
500-700
800-over
60.00-79.00
STOCK HEIFERS:
300-under
78.00-105.00
70.00-103.00
300-500
60.00-78.00
500-700
800-over
55.00-68.00
STOCK BULLS:
75.00-110.00
300-under
300-500
70.00-100.00
500-700
64.00-83.00
Slaughter BuUs
53.00-66.00
Cows &amp; Calves BH
475.00-950.00
Bred Cows By#
350.00-650.00
Slaughter Cows:
47.00-51.00
Hi~h Dressing
42.00-47.00
Utility
Canner &amp; Cutter
35.00-41.00
70.00-80.00
Medium
SHEEP-Ewes
18.00-25.00
45.00-60.00
Feeders
40.00-120.00
Baby Calves BH
45.00-61.00
HORSEScwt
35.00-40.00
Ponies
HOGS :
30.00-38 .00
300-500
25.00-30.00
Male Hogs
23.00-30.00
Pigs
15.00-50.00
Goats
ial
~~~~~~~~~~~----~

s

with legislation requiring increased
use of U.S.-grown leaf in cigareaes
manuf!'Ctured ~the United SlateS
and 1\tgher pnce suppotls, fluecured prices are below a year earlier."
Reduced quality for much of
this season's crop, large world supplies and lhe probable decline m
ctgarette producnon are respoRSible
for the lower average price.
After the 1993-94 crop year,
bolh domestic use and exports of
flue-cured an4 burley leaf a.re
expected to decl_me, ~e report SBid.
Because of the limttations on use of

I

imported leaf it said cisarette
manufaciUrers have an ~olive 10
shiftsomeoftheirproductionover-

seas.

Exports are likely to decline lhe
repon said, because foreign~wn
leaf is less expensive and linlitalions on the use of foreign leaf in
the United States will increase
quantities available for use in'other
countries.
·
U.S. cigarette consumption for
1993 is expected to fall about 1.5
pen:ent "due to smoking bans and
restrictions, health concerns and
declining acceptability of smok-

ing,"the report said.
Consumption was reduc~d in
ea.rly 1_993 bec~.use of h1gh~r
pnces, It noted. But starting m
April manufacturers lowered prices
!l"d this will_mode~te the dechne
m consumption dunng the second
half of 1993," it added.
The per capita smoki~g rate _for
people 18 and older wtll dechne
from last yem:'s 2,640 cigarettes,
thereportpredicled.
. While cigarette exports have
mcreased because of growmg
d~mand for Amen.can-made
ctgarettes, the rate of mcrease IS
slowing, it said.

Ohio Lottery

Toronto,
Chicago.get
slice of titles

Pick 3:
677
Pick 4:

0954
Super Lotto:

2-17-29-32-45-47
Kicker:

089442

Page4

Low toolgbtln mld-405, dear.
Tuesday, sunny, blgh In mid
60s.

•

U.S. to donate prqducts to former Soviet Republics

Orders for durable goods up
second time in three months

1960s have had a major impact on
Chile's farm sector and its agricultural and nonagricultural trade,"
the report said. "By the early
1980s, these reforms had created
what is today one o.f the most open
market-driven economies in the
world."
Mexican population growth and
higher per capita income are
expected to expand the marke~ for
U.S. exports. At the s~me ume,
Mexican exports of htgh-valuc
farm products, including fruits,
vegetables and livestoCk products
to the United Stales are expected to
rise.
"Increasing political and economic uncertainties have slow~d
Brazil.' s growth," the report said.
"However, the agricultural outlook
remains stable due to conJ.inued

September 26, 1993

inviting dairy farmers_. milk dealers
Proponents of the mer~er say a
and ~ons'!"'ers to tesnfy at a public larger o~er would provtde for a
heanng m Atlanta ·OR Nov. 1 on more eqmtable sharing among propropo~als to merge federal milk
ducers of the higher-valued fluid
orders m the South.
milk:, or drinking milk, sales in
The_ proposal would merge .the what h~ become a c?mmon milk
Georgta, Alabai_Ra_-~es! Flonda, producuonandmarketiRgarea.
Ne": &lt;?rleans-MisstSSIPPI, Greater
The hearmg will begi~ at 1 p.m.
Louts13na and the recently term•· on !'lov. 1 at the Hohday Innnated ~ashvtlle, Tenn., federal Pen meter Dunwooody, 4386
111arkenng orders.
Chamblee-Dunwoody Road,
They would become a Gulf Atlanta.
States federal milk marketing
~der. Another cooper~nve assoc13U.S. poultry producers can sup~on, the ~"!msas Drury Coopera- ply the Chinese market at a very
nve.Association Inc., has proposed _low cost because the Chinese prefer
addmg the Central Arkansas mtlk "moving parts" such as legs and
order to the merged order. An~ a wings, which is the opposite of
pnvate fum has proposed addmg U.S. preference, trade specialists
the temtory th~t was part of t~e say.
recently term mated Memphts,
"The strong performance of
Tenn., order to lhe merger.
China's economy i~ at!fllct!~!\ sub-

stantial interest m the c.:nmese
poultry market, •• said a recent
report in the Foreign Agricultural
Service's AgExponer magazine.
U.S. breeding stock .dominates
commercial production in China, it
said, thus exposing consumers
there to the taste of American birds.
"Market development opporbl·
nities now need to focus on
expanding consumer awareness of
the versatility of broiler products "
the report said.
·'
"Broiler pans should fit easily
into the Chinese food scene.
Because Chinese preferences are
for moving parts, such as paws, .
legs and wings_ just the opposite
of the U.S. market_ U.S. traders
can supply broiler products at a
very low cost to the Chinese market"

Lawsutt
• chaII enges labeling
· •
date .eor
m·eat p.oultr· y
1
.

·

1

WASHINGTON • (AP)
Claill)ipg the, Agriculture Department i!Cted with undue haste, food
industry groups are suing to block
the agency from requiring safe handling labels on uncooked meat and
poultry products by Oct. 15.
The department set the deadline
last month for adding labels that
give instructions on safe cooking,
handling, refrigerating and thawing
meat products that are not fully
cooked when purchased.
The labels also must warn about
possible bacterial contamination U
the product is mishandled or
cooked improperly.
The requirement was one of several moves by USDA after a fatal
outbreak of food poisoning linked
to meat contaminated with E. coli
bacteria, and a subsequent lawsuit

.

'

.

.

demanding warning labels.
Two children died and hundreds
of other people became ill in Washington state last January after eating undercooked hamburgers from
the Jack-in-the-Box restaurant
chain. A third child died of illness
caused by the same E. coli strain,
although the death could not be
traced directly to ham burgers.
The lawsuit was filed Thursday
in U.S. District Court in Austin,
Texas, by the National-American
Wholesale Grocers' Association,
the National Grocers Association
and the Texas Food Industry Association.
The Texas association was the
lead plaintiff in the suit, which
enabled it to be filed in that cattleproducing state. The two national
groups represent food distribution
· companies and independent whole-

sate and retail grocers.
The lawsuit contends the ·Agriculture Department violated laws
requiring timely notice of new regulations, depriving affected groups
a chance tn comment on a requirement that will have a serious economic impact.
It says food stores "will be
required to make extensive changes
i~ pac~ag_i~g and labeling, incur,
rmg s•gntftcant costs associated
with the development of new
labels, printing new labels and discarding existing inventories of
packaging and labels.· •
USDA spokesman Steve Kinsella said he could not comment on
the lawsuit because officials had
not seen it. Th~ department has
defended the urgent need for the
regulations, however.

CYNTHIA SEXTON

Sexton·chosen
for position
GALLIPOLIS • Cynthia Sexton,
oWiler of Mane Designers FuU Service Hairstyling Salon in Gallipolis, has been chosen as a Redken
Regional Performing Artist.
Sexton auditioned for the position in Cincinnati, and was selected
by a panel of judges; on her haircolor and cutting abilities and also
for her knowledge of Redken products and perms.
As a Redken RPA, Sexton has
received training in color, perms
and Redken products.
Sexton's duties with her new
position will be to travel throughout Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky. educating other salons about
Redken products and updating
them on perms and color techniques. Sexton will also be assisting in aU major hair show conventions.
Sexton has been involved in the
beauty industry for 22 years. She is
a member of the State and National
Cosmetology Association,a substilute cosmetology instructor, and a
member on the advisory board at
GaUia, Jackson, Vinton Vocational
School.

TO SAV'IIfQa
AT SMITH BUICK·PONTIAC

I

MODEL
CLOSEOUTS!

Racine Fall Festival
is successful despite
persistent ·fall showers
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Would southeastern Ohioans let
a little rain ruin their parade?
Noway.
Despite contrary weather requiring a move to Southern High
School and moisture causing tech·
nical difficulties with sound equipment, several hundred turned out to
experience the annual Racine Fall
Festival held Saturday.
·
trophy for Stacy Black who submitted a 64PUMPKIN .
-Richard Cummins,
Persistent fall showers, which
pound entry. Also shown is 1993 Fall Festival
· center, holding Dalton Cummins, won first place
began soon after the parade passed
Queen Aimee Mills. Not present was second·
in tbe pumpkin growing contest at the RHine
through
downtown, ruined opportu·
place winner Perry HiU witb a 122-pound entry.
Fall Festival Saturday witb a 205-pound pump·
nities for fun in the sun and man'
kin. Agnes Sellers, left, accepted the third place
dated moving the festival to Southem High School.
Southern J{igh School Cheerleaders won first place in the
parade followed by Cub Scout
Pack 241 and area Girl Scout and
Brownie troops 1004, 1290 and
1261.
Aimee Mills, a senior at South·
em
High School, was named 1993
The Vehicle was lisled as a total
According ·to a sheriff's depart·
Three people were kiUed on
Fall
Festival Queen. Daughter of
county roadways over the weekend, ment spokesman, Rollins was loss.
Randy
and Redenith Mills of Syra- ·
The driver and passenger were
according to a spokesman for the traveling south on S.R. 2 and
cuse,
Mills
is involved in basketMason County Sheriff's Depart- · proceeded into the passing lane to killed in a single vehicle accident ball and softball.
overtake another vehicle. While Saturday evening on S.R. 62, near
menL
She was crowned by last year's
A Point Pleasant woman was kil- overtaking the vehicle, the 1988 Lakin. according to the sherifi's queen, Amber Ohlinger, who is the
led and two people injured in a Toyota RoUins was driving, regis- spokesman.
daughter of Les and ·Carolyn
Joyce A. Kingery, 45, of Ripley
single v eliiCie··wreck oil-s.R. !, . tered to Sonya Bateman, apparently
Ohlinger,
Racine.
near Gallipolis Ferry, Saturday af- began to hydro-plane, causing Rol- and Howard C. McCormick, 53, of
Candidates
were Mills, Bridget
lins to lose control. The vehicle Milton, were both killed in the 5:38 Leanne Davis-Powell,
ternoon.
Jennifer
Rebecca D. Bateman, 51, of traveled off the left side of the road p.m. wreck.
Cummins lind Amber Thomas.
The spokesman said Kingery
Point Pleasant, died following the wilh the rear sliding to the left for
Mills' tiara was donated by
1:10 p.m. wreck on S.R. 2. She was aP.l?roximately 130 feet and struck a was traveling south on S.R. 62 at a Middleport Trophies while her tro·
a passenger in a vehicle driven by utility pole. The impact apparently high rate of speed. As ~he rounded phy was donated by Larry Wolfe of
ejected Rebecca Bateman, who was a sharp right curve. the rear of her Racine. Mills also received a $50
David H. RoUins, 18, of Leon.
Rollins and Sandra D. Bateman, sitting in the rear seaL The car spun 1987 Ford started to slide to the left savings bond and a floral bouquet
17, of Point Pleasant were injured. around or continued past the pole into a spin. The vehicle traveled off from the Fall Festival Committee.
A Pleasant Valley Hospital spokes- for approximately 30 feet and came the right side of the road and struck
Richard Cummins won first
man said both were treated and to rest approximately 12 feet in the a large tree.
place in the pumpkin growing conroadway.
released.
test with a 205-pound entry. Perry
Hill Farms won second place with
a 122-pound J&gt;Umpkin while Stacy

Three people killed in two
Mason County accidents

Varney gets maximum sentence

'BUICK·PONTIAC
1900 EASTERN AVE.
GAlliPOliS, OHIO

"Where Snviee .Ma•es l'he Difference"

QUEEN CROWNED - Aimee Mills, left, was crowned Racine
Fall Festival Queen at the Racine Fall Festival Saturday. Mills,
daughter or Randy and Redenllll Mills of Syracuse, was crowned
byl992 Fall Festival Qileen Amber Ohlinger.
.
Black won third place with a 64pound entry.
Providing entertainment were
One Way Street, Silver Wings, C.J.
and the County Gentlemen, Out of
the Blue, Born Again Believers,
Middlebranch Bluegrass and River
Valley Boys. Also performing were
Southern Hi~h School and Southem Junior High School cheerlead·
ers.
Announcer for the day was
James Winchester.

Festival organizer Kathryn Hart
commended the Fall Festival Committee for "hanging in there" and
also thanked anyone who helped
wilh the festival.
Hart also commended Principal
Gordon Fisher and Mary Smith,
custodian, for allowing the festival
to be moved to the high school.
"We've done something and
people came out and attended,"
Hart said.

One of two men accused of on the attempted murder charge. ing her in the second ·vehicle
She was then raped and taken to
abducting a Jackson County which will run consecutively to the
woman, raping her and shooting ' other ·sentences. The defendant was Vinton County, lead from the vehi·
her three times received the maxi- also fined $250, suspended, plus cle and shot three limes.
The victim was able to escape
mum sentence for each of three court costs.
after
the shooting and sought help
Prosecuting
Attorney
Brent
char~es this morning.
Vmcent H. Varney, 23, Route I, Saunders said he was pleased with at a nearby residence.
A second suspect, Gregory S.
was sentenced this morning by the sentencing.
Pickens,
27, 12283 State Route
Gallia County Common Pleas
"The judge did give the maxi160.
Vinton,
is accused of particimum, which we asked for," he
Judge Joseph L. Cain.
pating
in
the
incident but has not
Varney, who pleaded guilty said. "And in a crime such as this,
yet
gone
to
trial.
A hearing was
Wedne.sday to rape, kidnapping that" s what he deserved was the
scheduled
for
last
Friday
to considand attempted murder last Wednes- maximum sentence."
er
the
suppression
of
evidence
in
day, was sentenced to 10 to 25
Vamey was accused of pulling
his
case,
but
his
attorney
withdrew
years in jail for each charge. The the victim's vehicle over by using a
terms are to run concurrentl.y.
flashi~g emergency light, ordering , the motion and the hearing was
He was also sen~enced to three out of her car at gunpoint and plac- canceled.
years in jail for a gun specification

A Vinton man was killed Sunday night in an apparent alcoholrelated accident, lhe Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported.
Billy Maynard, 43, Mt. Carmel
Road was transported by Gallia
County Emergency Medical Service to Holzer Medical Center
where he was pronounced dead on
arrival.
A spokesman for the patrol said
.this morning that blood-alcohol
tests indicate Maynard's driving
ability was impaired by alcohol.
Coroner Edward Berkich said
this morning the victim died of a
head injilry. He also conftrmed that
there was-alcohol in Maynard's
blood.
According to the accident
report, ~aynard was northbound

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1 Section. 10 Pagea 35 conta
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 27,1993

Gallia County man killed
when vehicle overturns

Livestock
report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Friday by
the Ohio Department of Agriculture .
.
Barrows and gilts: steady to
mostly 50 cents lower; demand
light.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 45.50-46.50; plants 47.2548.25, a few 48.75.
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
country points 46.50-47.50.
Recetpts Thursday 8,300. Estimated receipts Friday 9,000.
Prices from The Producers Live- ,
stock Associatioo:
Cattle: 2.00 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 66.0072.00; select 60.00-68.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 64.0072.00; select 59.00-66.00.
Cows: steady; all cows 55.50
and down.
Bulls: steady; aU bulls 65.00 and
down.
SI:teep and lambs: steady; choice
wools 62.00-64.50; choice clips
61.00-64.00; feeder lambs 71.00
and down; aged sheep 29.00 and
down.

Vol. 44, NO. 107
llultiiiHidialnc.

on Mt. Carmel Road (County Road struck a fence and a ditch Sunday.
89) in Raccoon Township, Gallia
Randy K. Lee, 27, Wore hester
County, at a high rate of speed Street, was transported from the
when his vehicle went off the left scene by LifeFiight emergency
side of the road and struck an medical helicopter service and
admitted to the hospital for treatembankment.
The vehicle then crossed to the ment of lacerations and abrasions.
right side of the road, struck a secAccording to a report from the
ond embankment and overturned. Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Maynard, who was not wearing a Highway Pairol, Lee was eastscat belt, was partially ejected from bound on County Road 30 when he
the vehicle. The body was turned drove off the right side of the road
over to Willis Funeral Home.
and struck a fence.
The vehicle sustained heavy,
The vehicle continued on
disabling damage and was towed through the fence.and struck a ditch
from the scene. The accident is still before coming to a stop. The patrol
listed unsafe speed as the contributunder investigation.
Mannown
ing factor.
No citations were issued. The
to Columbus
A Syracuse man is in fair condi- vehicle sustained heavy, disabling
tion this morning at Grant Medical damage and was towed from the
Center's trauma unit after his truck scene.
·

Radon crisis may ~e worse than thoug._t
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Levels
of radioactive radon gas in Ohio
homes may be higher than health
officials thought, said a spokesman
for an environmental group.
"It appears that radon is far
more widespread in Ohio... and a
much bigger potential problem than

anyone had realized_.-' said Stuart
Greenberg, executive director of
Environmental Health Watch,
based in Cleveland.
Half of Ohio falls in the U.S.
Environmental Protection A~en­
cy's highest-risk "category, wtth a
medium risk in the rest of the state,

said Ohio Department of Health
spokesman Bob Owen. . .
.
The potential radon risk m Ohto
is the seventh hi~hest in the country - with the '!Jteli~ that «?ne
in fiVe houses will fall federal hmits, Owen ~d.
·

PARADE WINNERS - Parade winners in
the 1993 Racine Fall Festival Parade held Satur·
day were witb representatives from left: second
place J~ey Manuel representing Cub Scout
Pack i41; first place, Brandy Roush and Sherri

Frederick representing Southern High School
Cheerleaders; third place, Anna Norman repre:
senting Girl Scout and Brownie troops 1004,
i290 and 1261.

Demjanjuk adjusting slowly
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
suburban city of Seven Hills filed .
suit today to block protests outside
the home of John Demjanjuk.
· Seven Hills Prosecutor Steven
Sackett filed the 'suit in Cuyahoga
County Commons Pleas Court,
asking Judge Daniel Gaul to issue a
temporary restraining order blocking further demonstrations.
Sackeu said the ~rotesters are
violating a Seven Htlls ordinance
passed Sept. 13 that prohibits picketing against an individual in residential neighborhoods.
On ·Saturday, a small group of
hooded Ku Klux Klan members
marched outside the home, carrying signs in support of Demjanjuk.
No one was home at the time.
Jewish groups demonstrated
outside Demjan)uk's home last
week to protest hts release from an
Israeli prison. The Israeli Supreme
Court ordered Demjanjuk freed
after overturning his conviction on
cbarges he was a brutal Nazi death

camp guard during World War II.
The Jewish groups, led by Rabbi
Avi Weiss of New York, marched
Wednesday and Thursday but did
not demonstrate over the weekend.
Yom Kippur, lhe Jewish holy day
of atonement, began at sundown
Friday.
An anti-Demjanjuk rally sponsored by several area Jewish
groups was planned for noon today
on Cleveland's Public Square.
City police watched the demonstrations against Demjanjuk last
week but did not enforce the ordinance. Sackett said last week the
law would not be enforced unless
there was a disturbance or neighbors complained.
In 3ffidavits filed with the suit,
Seven Hills Police Chief John
Fcchko, an officer and two Demjanjuk neighbors said they feared
the demonatrations posed a risk to
public safety.
A lawyer for the Ohio chapter of
the American Civil Liberties

Union, which said. it would defend
protesters arrested under the ordinance, appeared today to argue
against the city's request. .
Lawyer Raymond Vasvari was
in Gaul's chambers and could not
immediately be reached for commenL
Gaul did not immediately rule
on the request.
Meanwhile, Demjanjuk's sonin-law said Demjanjuk was slowly
adjusting to being back in the Unit·
cd States.
"The family is around him," Ed
Nishnic said Sunday after anending
services at the family's church in
suburban Parma. "I won't conftrm
or deny that the family is with him
or is not with him, but what I can
say is the adjustments are going

slow."

Nishnic was surrounded by
members of St. Vladimir's Ukraini- ·
· an Orthodox Church who wanted
to send messages of support to his
father-in-law.

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