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Community calendar
FRIDAY

Carry out is available. Everyone is
welcome.

LONG BOTTOM - The Faithful
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have a service at 7 p.m. Friday
with Evangelist David Dailey as
the speaker. Special music will be
provided by local singers. Pastor
Steve Reed invites the public. A
fellows hip will follow .

HEMLOCK GROVE · Hemlock Grove Church of Christ will
hold its annual ho=oming stan•
ing with former minister Hal
Dnester of Chambler, Ga. preaching at the 9:30 a.m. service followed by Sunday school ~t 10:30, a
baslcct dinner at noon and an afterTUPPERS PLAINS - A round noon service starting at I p.m . feaand square dance sponsored by · turing "The Born Again Believers"
Tuppers]'lains Veterans of Foreign of Galtipolis. Minister Chas DomlWars, P'bst 9053, Ladies Auxiliary gan and the congregation invites
will be held a1 the legion hall from the public.
8-11:30 p.m. Music will be by C.J.
RACINE . Descendants of
and the Country Gentlemen .
Edward and Anna Dill will hold
POMEROY - Grace Episcopal their third reunion at Star Mill Park
Churc h will be serving dinners at I p.m. Bring a covered dish. All
from 5:30-6:30 p.m. prior to the relliaves and friends are invited.
Mcig.'l High School Homecoming
SYRACUSE ·Syracuse First
Game agaim;t Alexander. Menu
includes soups, salads and desserts. Church of God will hold its homecoming starting with morning serAll welcome.
vices at 10:30 a.m. followed by a
lunch provided by the church at I
SATURDAY
p.m., an afternoon. service at 2:30
CHESTER ·The annual Chester p.m. with singing and preachmg
Elementary School carnival will be and outside games for children.
held Saturday at the school. Food Preachers wiU be Jewell Hosler and
will be served from 5 to 6 p.m. and David Russell . Everyone is wetthe games, haunted house, and come.
other activities will be held from 6
It ., [ ,-q .
ANTIQUITY - Descendants of
the late H.A. Fred Hayman and
HARRISONVILLE · Har- Garnet F. Polk Hayman will hold.
. risonville Lodge 411 stated meet- their 21st reunion at the home of
ing will be held. Dinner will stan at C.E. Hayman, Sr. The reunion will
6:30 p.m. followed by the meeting begin at 10 a.m. followed by dinner
at 7:30p.m. Past masons night will at noon and games in the afternoon.
be held to honor these distin - All relatives and friends of the
guished masons. Work on m~ster Hayman family are invited.
mason degree. All master masons
REEDSVILLE - South Bethel
arc welcome.
New Testament Church, Silver
RACINE - A family reunion for Ridge, will hold its homecoming
the descendants of Victor Lewis starting with Sunday School at 9
Neutzling, Sr. and Elizabeth Graber a.m. followed by worship service at
Neutzling will be held at Star Mill 10 a.m., dinner·at noon .and afterParle at 5 p.m. Table service will be noon services at 1:30 p.m. featurprovided. Bring a covered dish and ing The Jets, Andy English and
information about your farn1ly . If local singers. Pastor D.W. Sydenyou have any quesbons caU Nancy stricker invites the public.
Neutzting at 992-6052.
MONDAY
CLIFTON - Clifton Tabe~nacle
RACINE - Racine Village
Church will be having a yard sale
Council
will meet at 7 p.m. at Star
starting at 9 a.m.
Mill Park.
RACINE - Star Grange #778
RACINE · There will be a reguand Star Junior Grange will meet in
lar
meeting of Racine Chapter 134
regular session on at 8 p.m. at the
Order
of Eastern Star. Officers will
Grange Hall. Potluck refreshments
be
elected.
Refreshments will be
wiU follow the meeting. AU memserved
following
the meeting.
bers are urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT - Overbroolc
Center will be having an arts and
crafts show and open house from
II a.m. to 6 p.m. Arts and crafts by
many area craftsmen will be available for sale. The public is invited.
POINT PLEASANT - The West
Virginia State Farm Museum will
be holding its annual Country Festival, Antique, Steam and Gas
Engine Show and Mason County
Extension Quilt Show on Saturday
and Sunday.
'

I

MINERS VILLE - Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution will
meet for a luncheon at noon at the
home of Rae Reynolds.
SALISBURY · The Salisbury
Elementary Fall Festival wiU open
at 5 p.m. Garnes will stan at 6:30
p.m. There will be raffles. games,
food and entertainmenL Come join
the fun.
"'
CHESTER · The Chester Elementary School Fall Carnival will
start with dinner from 5 to 6 p.m.
There will also be door prizes,
games, bingo and a haunted house
from 6 to 8 p.m.

SYRACUSE , The Sutton
Township Trustees will meet at
7:30 p.m. in the Syracuse Municipal Building,
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Garden Club meeting scheduled for Monday, Oct. 4 has been
postponed until Nov. I.
POMEROY - Eagles class of
the Asbury Methodist Church of
Syracuse will have a bake sale at
Kroger starting at 9 a.m.
VALLEYFORD - TheBoardof
Trustees of Columbia T-ownship
will meet at the Columbia Township Fire Department at 7:30p.m.

Wyeth, by POA, 5.000A, to, Lee
A. Boggs and Darla L. Boggs, Bedford.
Wilbert J. McClain, 1.0109A, to
John Wayne Stobar.t, Sutton.
Robert K. Arms aka Robert D.,
Lynn~ Arms , Ronnie Arms, and
Brenda S. Anns, parcels, to Ronald
D. Anns and Brenda S. Anns. Salisbury.
Delbert F. Mitchell and Jutia K.
Mitchell, easement, to Ohio Power
Co., Rutland.
Gerald R. Douglas, dec'd, affid.,
to Eleanor J. Douglas, Bedford.
Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
parcels, to Elbert L. Williams and
Sharon L. Wiltiams, Salem.
Robert Ralph Wood and Catherine Anne Wood, 1.00 acres , to
Ronald H. Kinder, Chester.
John Foster and Debra Jean
Courtney Foster, parcels, to Meigs
Co. Parks District, Pom~roy Village.

.

Power Co .. Sutton.
:;
Frank Herald Jr., ease., to Ohio "
Power Co., Salisbury.
'!
Billy Lee Stoofe, Sr. and Naomi•;
R. Sroofe, ease., to Ohio Power •
Co., Salem.
,
Paul Walker and Rita Walli.er, ,
ease., to Ohio Power Co., Salem.

· Wanda R. Wyeth and Donald
Wyeth, parcel, to Paul E. Wellman
and Rosalee Wellman, Bedford.
Fred 0 . Riggs and Lutchie
Riggs, parcel, to Herbert 0. Rig&amp;s,
Edith Mae Heckert and Dav1d
Riggs, Bedford.
George Drmovan and Kathy
Short Donovan, ease., to Ohio

Ohio State routs Northwestern 51-3 • C-1

_Hunting,

•i

~shing day

:1

.

observed

Old Man's Cave namea for
Civil War era man • Sands • B-6

B-1

The male driving mentality
'By Kevin Pinson - Page B-8

•

Hartinger to speak at museum

•

•
The Meigs Cdunty Historical . gram will begin at.5:30 p.m .. fol- .:
Society will hold its annual meet- lowed by a resCI"'auon only dm~er ;~
ing at the Meigs County Museum at 6:30 p.m. The busmess meetmg :1
on Oct. 17
will stan at 7:30 p.m.
.:
The spealcer for this year's proThe cost of the dinner is $7 and ~
gram will be General James reservabonsmust be made ~y Oct. .,
Hartinger. Hartinger will share 8. Reservauons can be maJled to _
some early Temininiscenses of the Meigs County Museum, 144 :
Meigs County, as well as other Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy_or :•
experiences of his years in the mili- phoned in at 992-3810. ~nly ahm- ·~
tary.
•
ited number of reservauons "'!il be .,;
A receptioo to honor the general accepted due to seaun!llumtabons. ""
will be held at 5 p.m. and the pro"'
'

'•

Copyright.~

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff·
POMEROY - Two hearings for
public comment on the ·proposed
$01id waste management plan for
the Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and
Yinton Solid Waste Management
District have been scheduled for
:ruesday.
The flrst hearing will be at the
Wells10n City Building at 10 a.m.
and the second at th·e Jackson
.Cooperative Extension Center on
.

•

539997

59997 Set

5

· LOOAN- Representatives from
·Ohio's south-southeastern counties
helped make history last month as
they took part in the creation of
"Ohio's Appalachian Country," .a
consortium of 29 Southeastern
Ohio counties. The group met officially for the fl.rstlilne Sept. 10 in
Chillicothe.
·
, Although representatives from
... each county's respective
and visi1011 bureaus,

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All Wood Oak Finish
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SUNDAY

$99',ft95
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FLEXSTEEL RECLINING SOFA

All Wood by Bassett
Cherry or Antique Blue Finish.

NOT $1799.97

: WELLSTON - Bruce Kn.ox,
McArthur, and Jerry Gust, Gallipolis have been elected to the Southea~tem OHio Regional Council
·Board of Directors, according to
·Bob Evans, president of the
SEORC.
Evans said, "the two new direclOIS have been lcaderllln economic
development in their respective
·communities and southeastern
Ohio and will serve the SEORC
weD."
Knox is the Executive Vice
President of Unity Savings Bank,

Over

25

69995

. sa99"97,

'

SUNDAY

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MATCHING ROCKER RECLINER
Blue and Beige Plaid
Country Style.

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POMEROY - The BedfQ«&lt; Vol·
unteer Fire Department will hold a
bake sale at Kroger from 10 a.m. to

BOTH FOR

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5 PC. BEDROOM SUITE
. White finish, Bassett.
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~~~

noon.

Sullfi•Y

c~uri(y and its attractions; along
wtth a. fol~-out map that denotes
the mtlllJ·Ctty or county seat and the
name and telephone number of a
coniBC~ per!!on.
. .
.
MaJOr high~ays, ~vmg ~es,
and gateway ctUes w1ll also be listed. Sheets noted that a total of
50,000 brochures will be pri~ted
for use by the state at a tounsm
travel show.
As ~ar as travel. shows go, the
group IS already potsed and _ready
to attend three. As a consoruum u
~as been offered free fea~ure space
m the Oh10 Travel Pavtl10n at the
Columbus, Cleveland and Toronto
travel shows.
.
. ,
The n~xt meeung of Ohto s
Appalachtan Country wtll be held
at 10:3~ a.m . Fnday, Nov. 12, at
the Holiday Inn m Zanesvllle.

$119.9'~

MIDDLEPORT- The Middlepan Parks and Recreation Committee will have· an open yard sale at
Hartinger Park.

Savings and Loan_in 1988..
Knox, an av18Uon enthus18SI and
private pilot, is a past chainnan of
the Jackson .Vinton Economic
Development Board, Executive
Board member and Treasurer,
Chief Logan Coocil, Boy Scouts of
America and a member of the Yinton County Business Advisory
Council in addition to many other
activities.
Knox resides with his wife, the
former Doreen Kay Massay, and
son Conner David, in McArthur.
Gust has been associated with
the University of Rio Grande since
1988 as Director for Economic
Education for area high school
teachers and high school students
as weD as University level students.
Evans said thai Gust's work in
Continued on A-8

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - A former president or !he Leiding Creek Conservancy Distri~ Board must 8erve at
least 18 months . iii confinement
af~er the Ohio Court of Appeal's
Fo~ Appellate District upheld
his live convictions of receiving cr
. soliciting im~ compensation.
• , Jack
ertsp entered a plea of
no ·conrtst in November, 1991, to
five misdemeaRor counts of ~v· int Christmas bonuses totaling
$5,000 while serving en thC Leading Creek Con~~Crvancy District
Board of Direc10rs. He appeared
~fore Judse Roser Jones in the
. Mcia.' County Coun of Common
PI~.' Jones wu assigned to the
Crisp ease ~use Judge Fred W.

.w.

SUNDAY

FOR EVERYO!IIE- SarahSmltb,.7, ~l0rt1a

'

LOTIRIDGE - Lotlridge Community Centez will be sponsoring a
smorgasbord 4inner from noon
until1:308.m, Cost is $5 for adults
and $2.5 for children under 12.

. . Dialer at Oldo Valey Bank'• 11th annual new aar
tlhow oa
...a State Street II'C!iUid the city park Satur·
. dil)'. Satu~':' calsO PDblle Servlc:e-Da!; as law eaforc~~e~
; IJiil·atety
dllj)~yecl ~elr equlpmen' alODI the pll'~t OD
nnt
AveaH
&lt;T·S
. .
. p\Oto by James Lona).

I

I

This
process
Wiggins
explained, require~60 percent
approval vote by governing entities
(Commissioners, villages and
townshifs). Also required is
approva by three of the-four
largest populated eWes which are
Middlepon, Jackson, McArthur,
and Gallipolis. The district has 60
days in which to get the plan ratifl.ed.
The Plan
Wiggins said that the main goal

CAKE WALK - Visitors attending Crown
City'&amp;.fall festival Saturday participated in a
cake walk outside the fire station. The. day-lonJ!

through the waste management
plan will be to reduce solid was~e
disposal by 2S percent by 1995.
He said lhar at the present lime
there is only one landfill in the dislric~ Gallia County, but that a permit has been issued to MidAmerica
Waste Systems to build a landfill in
McArthur. A permit for Sands HiU
to build a landfill in Jackson County is still pending. AI the present
time. according to Wtggins,
Continued on A-2

•

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festival included a parade, an auctioo, food and
games. All proceeds will go to the v~lage's fire
department. (T -S photo by James Long)

$2 million foundation to
help local communities
POINT PLEASANT - The
establishment of a non-profit foundation, organized for charitable,
scientific and educational purposes
with initial assets or approximately
$2 million. has been announced by
a Ch~~rleston Bank and co-executors of the late couple's estate.
The United National Bank, Charleston, Charles B. Stacy and G.
Thomas Battle, eo-executors of the
Estate oC Mildred R. Jackson and
Co-'Iiustees oC 'liusts established
by Mrs. Jackson and her late husband, Gordon C. Jackson, an nounced the fonnation of the Gordon C. and Mildred R. Jaclcson
Foundation.
The foundation has been organized to receive the assets
remaining in Mrs. Jaelcson's estate
and the two Jaelcson uusts after
payment of · several specific
charitable ~ifts.
In addinon to the establishment
of the. foundation, Mrs. Jaclcson,
who died in early summer.

Crisp sentence affirmed
by Ohio appeals court

NOT $1699.95

5

119995

fomierly knoW!! is Unity ~aviD¥s
and loan, whtch has offtccs 10
McArthur, Gallipolis, Jackson and
Wellston. Active in community
affairs, Knox has served in a variely of capacities benefitins
McArthur and southeastern Ohio.
Since his graduation from
Miami (Ohio) University, in
finance, he has been associated
with Marathon Oil and Marathon
Petroleum Company in different
fl.nancial. positions mcluding two
assignments in London, England.
He became associated with Unity

Green and Beige Plaid
Country Style
Not $2099.95

5

SUNDAY.. 5 BIG HOURS

,

.Gust, Knox named to SEORC board

OPEN 5 BIG HOURS

Set ~

The period of time in which
written comments could be made
has now passed, but Tuesday's
public hearings will provid\l' a
forum for the public, a time and
place to discuss concerns, said
Wiggins. •
Ratification Process
After the policy committee
makes whatever revisions are necessary following the public hearings, and approves the P.lan, then
the ratiftcauon process w1ll begin.

secretary, while Pam Vander Ark
For _instancd, the .grou.P is
of Athens County was deemed already m lh_e process ?f creaung_a
treasurer.
brochure wtth the Ohm star ·qutlt
A membership committee was pattern to ser~e as tis logo. The
formed and divided into regions, brochure IS bemg parUally funded
with , thc following committee through a grant from t~e Goverregiotial chairs: Doc Householder, nor's Office of Al'palach18. .
Belmont County, northern region;
Sheets explamed that 11_1 1he
SheDy Horvalh, Marietta-Washing- brochure the 29 counues wtll be
ton County, central region; and brok.en up mto. segments ?f seven
Carper, soulhem region. Rita Jones or etght C?UnUes, e~h wit,h !herr
of Hocking County will serve as own~ m the mu!t!fold ~.1;111"~'•
publip. relatio,ns~rcorc,,.,
_.JJ1,9 ,~r~!l{g;~'!o\!3fi~:~n
't SeiUaii~ , . . ~,~ .
-~ ..~ .........~l~·';-t'·,... ~ ro~m . UCuua• IIJDL_
eacha

"in forming a gr~up we can
market ourselves as a regional destination," Ayers reponed.
She further noted that the orgaconsor- · nization would help create expotium "inc"lude:
Ross, sure for many counties thai would
normally not be able fuiance a proGueq~~~Cy. Belmont •. Tuscarawas,
motion
of their area
~ Cochoc10n, Columbl8na, Carroll,
"With
a format' ~oup we can
· Jefferson, Harrison, Holmes,
stand
up
10
gel the-tltings we need,"
M~. Monroe, Noble, MorSheets
added.
gail; Perry, Washington, Hocki'!&amp;·
According to the pair, the new
Athens, Meigs, Vinton, Jackson)
Pilce, Scioto, Highland, Adams, group is not intended to take the
Brown, Clermont and Lawrence.
place of ex"ting groups' such as
Immediately following the deci- the Ohio Travel AsSociation or the
sion 10 officially unite, the group Ohio Association of Convention
held its fust election of officers. and VisiiOrs Bureaus, but will work
Sue Ayers, of Guernse)' County, in conjunction with the organizawas elected chairperson, with Kim tioos.
Creation of the consortium will
Sheets, Gallia County, named to
serve as her vice-chair. Ross Coun- benefit the APJJalachian counties in
·
ty's Teresa Carper was selected a number of tither ways.

c

$9997

or to send the plan out for ratificabon.
.
,
Copies of the proposed plan
have been SU,PJ&gt;Iied to all political
subdivisions m all four counties, as
well as placed in several locations
for review by the public . As
explained by Kenny Wiggins,
director of Meigs County Litter and
Recycling \'fOgram and a member
of the district's executive committee, the plan is "out there for comment from the public".

Organization will help promote this part of Ohio

IS

SUNDAY

Stare Route 93 South at 7 p.m.
Residents of the four cotinties
with concerns or questions about
the solid waste management plan
are encouraged to attend the hearings which provide an opportunity
for offering suggestions for change
as the "district moves closer to a
solid waste management plan.
After the hearings, the district
policy ,committee will ."!eet to vote
either for further revt!llons to the
plan based on the public comment

·Gallia, Meigs included in
new 29 county consortium

.

TWIN
MAnRESS SET

17 Section 1110 PesiM
.o\..!ol!lldmedla Inc. n""'op11per

. Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, October 3, 1993

11183

Hearings set Tuesday for solid waste proposals

6 MONTH5-FREE FINANCING

FREE FINANCING • FREE SET-UP
FREE DISPOSAL OF OLD ITEMS

Along the river ~~~·~~-Bl-8
Busiaess/Farm..- .....~~.Dl-8
Clusifled -----·--- - ·.Dl-7
Entertaiament _ ...~ ..~--B-8
Deaths ....- ........................A-8
Editorai ............................A-6
Sports...- ....- ..................Cl-8
Weatber........................." ...:A·l

---. . '

SPRING AIR CHIRO COMFORT
NOT
SUNDAY
549997 Set
Full Size '999.95
Queen Size 1199.95

Inside

•
lmts

•

AT

r

BIG
HOURS

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

...., 1.00

•4-

FURNITURE LIQUIDAll8tJ
EMPI. RE FUR-NITURE
5

·~

Suuda\

·Vol. 21, No. 32

SUNDAY,.PNLY

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t~~::;~~;;~..

Meigs County property transfers

STUDENTS OF THE WEEK - The pictured students were
selected to be students of the week iD September at Meigs Junior
High School. Pictured from left are Sandra Young, Charles Tyree,
Jesse Eastman and Maridelb Fells.

,..

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

David Dowler and Anna L.
Dowler, p8ftels, to Yvonne Stover,
Salisbury.
Lyle W. Hy sell and Leona
Hysell, 2.000A, to, Matthew
Edward Riffle and Kristina Gail
Riffle, Salisbury.
Marcia M. Denison, affid, to
Lettie Grate and I.ellie Grate
Wood, Meigs.
Albert Roush, I 1{2A, to Geraldine Deloris Parsons, Alta Joan
Hudson, Judith Pauline Flowers,
Alben Dale Roush, Roger Wayne
Roush, Rebecca Elizabeth Tyree
and Kenneth Allen Roush, Salisbury.
Pat E. Mitchell and Marcella
Sue Mitchell, 56 i{2A, to Gregory .
Thacker and Paula Thacker. Rutland.
Gregory Thacker and Paula
Thacker, 56 I {2A, Charles W. Cundiff, Rutland.
Wanda R. Wyeth and Donald

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Crow III was was the prosecuting
attorney at ihe onset of the investi· galion of Crisp's activities at
LCCD.
.
In exchange for the plea, the
state agreed to dismiss seven
felony counts against Crisp,
charges
. ranging
engaging in a
pattern of COI1Upt ·vity to having
an unlawful ·interes in a public
contract and using a •
·c offlee
10 secure a public contract in which
the individual, family member of
business associate has an inllereSt.
Crisp was to make restitlllion to
the county of$7,875 for the Christmas bonuses he received, $20,000
of the prosecution costs, $24,000
.for future excess retirement benefits to be .ree&lt;eiv_ed by his wife,
Conbnued on A-2
j

•

provided for several substantial their lifetime," said G. Thomas Bat~
gifts to organizations that support tie, Charleston attorney.
charitable and other activities in . The foundation wiD primarily be
which she and Mr. Jaclcson had N or the benefit of residents of
particular interest.
Mason County and adjacent areas.
The gifts include: $700,000 10 It will be managed by a board of
Holzer Hospital Foundation of Gal- directors to be selected after a
lipolis; $350,000 to the Trustees of ruling is received from the Internal
the West Virginia Baptist Conven- Revenue Service, confirming the
tion for the benefit of the Main charitable status of the foundation
Street Baptist Church of Point and authorizing it to receive tax dePleasant; $250,000 to Pleasant Val- ductible contributions. Trustees esley Hospital Health Foundation, timate the initial assets should be
Inc., to estabtish the Gordon C. and approximately $2 million.
Mildred R. Jaclcson Fund; $500,000
Battle will be the initial directol'
to Alderson-Broaddus Endowment of the foundation until the organizaCorporation for the establishment lion is complete ana the ruling from
of the Gordon C. and Mildred R. the IRS is received. He stated the
Jackson Scholarship Fund, to assist executors will be selling the Jackneedy students of high character to son residence property on Main
aucnd Alderson-Broaddus College, Street in Point Plcasan~ as well as
with preference given to students the contents of the house. The
from Mason County; and $350,000 proceeds from these items will into AldeiSOn-Broaddus Endowment crease the foundation's assets.
Corporation, to be used for the • "The foundation will be govergeneral purposes of Alderson- ned by a board of directors that
Broaddus College, with preference should be made up of people
given to upgrading compensation ~owledgable of the community's
of faculty members.
n~ Battle stated. "The selee"The major gifts come out of a lion process will probably occur
uust the Jaclcsons set up during
Continued on A-J

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.
THE LATE GORDON AND MILDRED JACKSON
I

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OHIO Weather
Sunday, Oct. 3

October 3, 1893

GOP co1nmittmen
to meet Oct.
7
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Acx:u-Wealhet 0 forecast for
i MICH.

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W. VA

Continued from A-1

: Plans complete for
·~ stern wheel festival
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POMEROY - The schedule of
eveniS has been finalized for the
following weekend's Big Bend
Stemwheel Festival.
Festivities begin Thursday, Oct.
7,.at noon· with a senior citizens'
cmise on the ·P.A. Denny followed
by the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce Dance Cruise at 7:30
p.m. Dee and Dallas will perform
at 8 p.m.
Craftm and concessions will be
open F.riday and Saturday.
Friday, the Meigs H1gh School
Band and Flag Corp will perform at
I p.m. followed by bands Strange
Daze at 6 p.m. and Strange Brew at
8 p.m. P.A. Denny cruises wiD be
held at 2 and 1 p.m.
A flag raising ceremony wiD be
held Saturday at 9 a.m. with the
American Legion officiating, a fire
truck parade will follow at 9:30
a.m.
The 5K Run/Walk will also be
held Saturday morning starting in
Mason, W.Va., with the walk
beginning at 10 a.m. and the run at
10:30 a.m. An awards ceremony
will be held at 11:45 a.m.

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A whistle blowil:g contest follows at II a.m .. Also at II a.m., an
awards ceremony will be held in
the Pomeroy Elementary Art Contest and the chili cookoff slariS.
A herb fest and beans and combread will be offered at 11 a.m. in
the mini park.
The Mark Wood Fun Show
stariS at 11:30 a.m . and Denver
Rice will perform with his toilet
seat guitar at 12:30 p.m. The stemwheel boat parade will be held at
1:30 p.m. with sternwheel boat
races and awards ceremony starting
at 2 p.m.
The captain's dinner will be
held at5:30 p.m.
A puppet show at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church Parking
lot will be held at 6:30p.m. with
the Ohio Valley Two Steppers .performing at the same time.
The Shady River Shuffiers will
perform at 7 p.m. followed by the
Crossover Band IU 8 p.m. with a
fireworks display ending the
evening at9:30 P..m.
All events w1U take place on the
Pomeroy levee unless otherwise
specified.
Coatiaued from A-1

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Glenna R. Crisp, and to waive. for~: feit and release all ownership or
.. benefit tJuit he has in the retirement
: tunds owned by Leading Creek
:: Watershed Association, Inc., and
being held by Midland Insurance
Company, including the payment
of $120,000 to the county as his
share in those· funds.
Crisp's attorneys, William G.
McLane of New' Philadelphia and
William N. Eachus of Worthington,
appealed the convictions on the following assumptions:
First, the trial court abused its
disc:retion in sentencing Crisp to 18
months of incarceration in that it
,~

Cht•·W·jh1mn.d

(VSPSUS-)
Publithed each Sunday, 125 Third Ave.,
Gallipoltt, Ohio, by lbe Ohio Valley Pubhsluoa

CompoayiMuldmodla. lac. s....d clw pool·
,.. (11114 01 OoiiJpolll, Oblo 45631. lllll«od"
M(:Cm(l clMI mailiD.J miUer M Pomeroy, Ohio,

""' omc:e.
Mtmbtr: The ANoeilled Prell, ud the Oblo
N.. IIS rer AAoeildoa. Ntdioul Advatilinl

a...,.llllve, BraDham N'tWIPIP• Salu,
133 Third Aveaue, New Yort, New York

IOOtt

SUNDAY OPILY

SVUCIJPilOH IATU
1 7 c.n.r• Moll?" .....

ignored the plea agreement, the
presentence record, the recommendation of the special prosecutor ~dn
the statuatory criteria for sentencing. The trial court took part in the
plea negotiations and punished
Crisp for not pleading guilty to a
felony by imposing the same penally a felony would carry.
Second, the grand jury that
returned the indictment was not
properly summoned.
Third, the special prosecutor did
not have the authority to conduct
the grand jury that returned the
indictment m that he was not properly appointed.
.
The appeals court disagreed
-with all three assumptions and
agreed with !he decision reached in
the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas.

MidAmerica is awaiting final
approval frollj, the Environmental_,.
Protection Agency before begffining con.struction.
The goal, Wiggins said, is to
have the Vinton County landfill in
operation by January, 1995, and the
one in Jackson County in operation
by January, 1996.
The proposed management plan
includes several 'drop-off sites for
solid waste as well as a -transfer
plant in a cenlrallocation. Wiggins
said that empty trucks would be
stationed at the drop-bff sites and
that anyone could come, use the
facility, and pay a fee. It would be
taken from there to a landfilL Three
such drop-off sites have been proposed for Meigs County, according
to the Utter control officer.
Also the plan provides for two
recycling processing facilities within the district, one in Vinton County, and the other in the Meigs-Gallia area.
The Cost
Wiggins explained that the plan
calls for a·three-tiered district fee to
support the administrative costs of
the district .. He said the tiers have
been set by the Ohio Legislature
and include $1.25 a ton for trash
geherated in the district, $2.50 per
ton for trash generated outside the
district, but in Ohio, and $1.25 for
each ton generated outside Ohio.
By agreement of the district and
the landfill operators, the tipping
fees will remain at $13 a ton for the
next20 years.
Currently according to Roger
Manley, local hauler, the tipping
fee is $20 a ton, a $1.25 district fee,
a 50 cent state fee which goes
toward cleaning up existing hazardous waste dumps, and a local
township fee for maintaining roads
into the landfill. Put together, this
brings the total to about $23 a ton
to dump at the landfill in. Gallia
County, according to Manley.
While reduction in trash fees is
not expected despite reduced lipping fees, the proposed waste management plan tf adopted will stabilize fees, Manley said.
"If the plan isn' l ratified, we
could lose local control," said Wiggins, "and that could result in cost
explosion."
"What we have here is a very
workable plan taking into consideration the best interest of everyone.
It regulates disposal of waste, protects the water s~l'ply, creates recycling opportumues, educates our
children, and reduces waste."
When the Ohio General Assembly passed House 'Bill 592 it mandated that all counties, based on
population form either a single or
multi-county solid waste district to
establish plans for proper disposal
of solid waste for a 10-year period.
Meigs and Gallia Counties were
originally part of a six-county district. The plan developed for that
district twice failed the ratification
process . Athens and Hocking
Counties have since withdrawn
from the district and created a separate district
A new plan for !he four-county
district was completed by Lance
Wilson, executive direc tor SCS
Engineering Consultants, Ochenbein, Cole and Lewis, attorneys,
and local representatives of the
four counties.
Rep~esenting ~eigs County on
lhe pohcy com mmee are Manning
Roush, commissioner; Richard Bai·

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

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Accident iniuresfiour
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992-6736 or stopping by the County Board of Elections.
The meeting comes under
Ohio's Sunshine Law and ·will be
open to the public. '
Gerard added that he did not set
the da~or the meeting; thai was
determmed by the Central Commit·
tee Chairman, Bernard Gilkey.

GALLIPOLIS- Four people were injured in a one-vehicle accident on County Road 164 near the intersection of State Route 7
early Saturday morning, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway

Pa~~Arnold Noel, 39, 467 E. Ward St., Urbana, and Don-

aid Pork, 26, 1049 N. Russel SL, Urbana were transponed by the
Gallia County Emergency Medical Service to Cabell Huntington
Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
Noel was treated and releaoled and Purl&lt; was listed in fair condition at press time Saturday. Ora J. RusSel\, 32, 330 Southers Road,
Crown City, and Stanley Johnson, Paris, were injured but not treated.
The accident occurred when Joseph L. Engle, 3I, Gallia Street,
Crown City, was southbound on C.R. 164, lost control, and went
off the left side..Qf the road. The._ vehicle overturned in a ditch and
came to a rest on Its top.
.
Engle's vehicle sustained heavy, disabling damage and was
towed from the scene. No citations were IJlPOned.

Weather
Southern Ohio
Sunday: Partly cloudy with
highs in the mid.ffls.
Exteaded forecast:
Monday through Wednesday::
Fair Monday through Wednesday. Highs Monday in the 60s and
lows in the upper 30s. Highs TueS·
day in the mid-60s to mid· 70s and
lows in the 40s. Highs Wednesda~
in the 70s and lows in the mi4-4Qs
to lower 50s.

Man apprehended for DUI

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

tee.

Accountability
The advisory committee at a
meeting Monday night adopted a
rule outlining fiscal responsibility
measures.
Committee member and Gallia
County Commissioner Ken Fanner
who supported Jhe revised rule said
that it "represents the best interests
of the district and reflects the spirit
of compromise that can be reached
when people work together" . He
said it addresses concerns while
ensuring the plan can meet EPA
standards.
The rule calls for an annual public hearing to be held the last Saturday of October for review of the
district's financial report for the
ftrst three quarters of the calendar
year .And to review the district' s
bud'(et for the following year.
It limits the district's budget to
the amount outlined in the plan,
unless there is a compelling reason,
such as to meet mandates of state
laws or the Environmental Protection Agency.
It also says that all money collected and distributed in excess of
the budget would have to be S~&gt;lit
equally between the remediauon
fund for protection of the district
water supply and for the district
recycling program.

OCTOBER 8·9·1 0
HOURS: 8 A.M.·S P.M.
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SKYLINE LANES
St. Rt. 7 North Gallipolis, OH
446·3362

GALLIPOLIS - Mitchell W. Hannon, 34, 2762 Nebo Road,
Patriot, was jailed Friday night on a municipal court ordered 30-day
commitment for a previous charge of driving under !he influence.

Car catches fire ·
GALLIPOLIS - A fuel leak caused a car to cat oh fire Friday

The Shoe

C•fe

r~::,:Mall

The GVFD also responded to a false alarm Friday evening from
~ tfr~J:~~~ter, 3! 1 Buck Ridge Road. One.truclc
The calls were the 216th and 215th of the year, respectively.

T

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·• :W.til the first of next ')rear. I
: ;wouldn't anticipate that the founda: olion will be in a position to make
• :SOy grants until the following year
; ~1995)."
.
• Bailie further said Mrs. Jackson

provided thai if sometime in the future a community foundation was
established, the directors are
authorized to become a part of thaL
Until then, the foundation wiD
remain private.

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MEIGS HOMECOMING • Joy O'Brien, daughter of Pat aud
Mary O'Brien, Pomeroy, -'8 crowned the 1993 Meigs High School
homecomiDg cjueeo iD pre-came ceremoules at the Meigs-Ainandtr game oa Bob Roberts Field Friday nighL She was escorted by
Jared Stewart. Featon Taylor, principal, crowned the queea aDd
pretented ller with a bouquet or ro5e5. (Photo by Cbarleae Hoe-

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

Ridl)

GALLIPOLIS - Two men were cited by Galli is police Fnday at 8:30 p.m. for acts of disorderly conduct at M orial Field
during the Gallia Academy High School -River Valley High School
football game.
Ticketed were James W. Haislop, 26, 78 Lucas Road, Patriot
and Joshua H. Haislop, 21, S I 7 lfl Fourth Ave.
'
In another incident, Michael W. Blankenship, 381 Buck Ridge
Road, Bidwell, was ticketed by police early Saturday morning for
possession of marijuana.

One cited in crash on U.S. 35 ramp
GALLIPOLIS - A Patriot woman was cited for failure to yield
following an accident on S181C Route 1 within the intersection of the
U.S. 35 ramp Friday morning, the Gallia-Meigs Post of !he State
flighwayPatrol~rted.
.
Tonya L. Elliott, 28, 17809, S.R. 141, was injured but not treated The other driver, Ernestine F. Rhodes, 44, 1912 Chatham Ave ..
Gallipola, was also i~jured but DOl treated.
The wreck occwred when Elliott, northbound on S.R. 7 and
attempting to tum left from the tum lane onto the U.S. 35 ramp,
pulled into the path of Rhodes, who was southbound on S.R. t
Both vehicles sustained moderate damage and were towed from
the scene.

."Health Check" van to visit Vinton .
GALLIPOLIS - People age 55 and over can gel a free health
screening on the Bloomberg Eye Center "Health Check" van which
wiU visit Vinton Town Hall Tuesday, Oct 12 from 9:30a.m. to 2
p.m.
Screenings for cataracts, glaucoma, exte~~ ey~ _c

''The foundation obviously won't
be able 10 fulfill all charitable
needs, but it is a start, and that's
what I ihink the Jacksons were interested in," Battle concluded.
Gordon and Mildred Jacltson
were longtime residents of Point
Pleasant.
·Mr. Jackson, born May 27, I 897,
in Gallia County, was the son of the
pastor at Main Street Baptist
Church. He died Nov. 20, 1986.
A World Wu I U.S. Army "
veteran, he worked at West Virginia
Malleable Iron Company for 32
years, retiring as president in 1965.
He was a charter member of the
American Legion Post 23 of Point
Pleasant, Minturn Lodge No. 19 AF
&amp; AM, and charter member of
RAM. A 1916 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School, he was a
1921 graduate of Pace College in
New York.
Mrs. Jackson, the former
Mildred Rush, was born Dec. 25,
1901 in Pennsylvania, and died
June 13, 1993. She was a 1918
grad~
of Kingwood High
SchOOl, attended West Virginia
University, and taught school in
Point Pleasant from 191910 1921.
The Jacksons were married Aug.
6, 1924. Both were activ~ members
of Main Street Baptist Church and
were much concerned about the
education of young people from the
tri-county area. In 1988 Mrs. Jackson established the Gordon C.
Jackson Memorial Scholarship at
the Pleasant Valley Health Foundation for deserving students pursuing
a career in health care education.

PRICI

----fao..u.t&gt;Je.
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16 'Wieb. .......w....,..-........ ,_ ..,, .. ,"........... .$4,-JO
52---......................- ........................ JIIAO
I

tHO~E WORKING PEOPLE,
.. .o:on"".,OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUFSDAYS
(POINT PLEASANI'-MEDICAL CENTER)
lSTII &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT
(304) 675·1675

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Editor's note: Names, ages and addresses are printed as they
· appear on off"ICial reports.

HERBAL HARVEST
and

COUNTRY FAIR
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9th

,9:30 a.m.· 2:30-p.m.

HERBS•CRAFTS•REFRESHMENTS
In The Large Mini Park
On Court Street
SpoDl!ored by the

Pomeroy Merchanl!l Association

Our experience. more than twenty
years of delivenng oggress1ve cancer
treatment, is vita l to our pot1ent's
success. But understanding new tech nology IS no more 1mportont thon
unders tanding the emo t1ono1 suppor t
every pot1ent needs tn order to Wln their
personal fight ogo1nst cancer

614·446-8899
800-446·0226

New techn~ogi9S hove OHIV9C1. only
to be replaced by even newer and
more effechve methods of dJOQnosis and
treatment But the expenence. know ledge ond understanding that odd the
human touc h to cancer treatment l"1cMJ
remo1ned constant at your Community
Comprehensive Cancer Center

'

The Community
Comprehensive
Cancer Cen1er
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Member: NYSE, AMEX, SIPC
'

NELSONVll..LE - The newly formed Southeastern District
Democratic Club will meet 8 p.m. Thursday lit !he Quality Inn on
State Route 691 south of Nelsonville.
The club wiD adopt a constitution and discuss next year's agenda All Democrats are invited to au.end.

Modem'Ieclmology./
inthe ds ·
of Experience.

ollllo lbr""-'*1"~ will ... """""..
t.wJ;JUMCIJPilON

' . -.ro.~J ·
c:a..yw.
..., ... ~····-- ... --......_.._ ..$47.U
Sll..,.......... ".~~ ......,... ......................$24.79

Democratic club to meet

\

all

He 11 l 1 JptiOM byiMU permlaed II ....

G
IPOLIS - The Gallipolis Daily Tribune is seekiog memo · a to display at its !DOth anniversary open house October 10.
Anyone wilh old editions of the Tribune, pictures or other materials
covering the paper's history is encouraged to contact Executive Editor Hobart Wilson, Jr. at 446-2342.

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

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e seeking memorabilia

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GALLIPOLIS - Mill Creek Road (County Road 5) in Addison
township wiD be closed Monday at 8 a.m., Gallia 'County Engineer
Joseph Leach announced Friday.
The highway department wiU re[lace a structurally deficient onelane bridge which is located .2 mile north of Warehime Road and
1.1 lniies south of McCullY Road. Leach said Local traffic will need
to use othe~ county and township roads as detours.
Weather permitting, the road will re-open by 4 p.m . Tuesday,
according to Leach.

Mark Smith
Associate Vice President • Investments

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Road to be blocked M oifday

Bryce Smith
''
Associate Vice President ·.Investments

r,:,,

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Heallh Depanmeat will
4 to 6 p.m. Tuesday in the courthouse lobby.
Children must be accompanied by their parents and each child
must have a shot record.

GALLIPOLIS - Jeffrey E. Blumfield, 40, Bidwell, was cited
for his third driving IDider the influenee offense Thursday night, the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported. He was
also cited for no seat belt and driving outside marked lanes.

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416 Secohd Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Free immunizations offered
provide free immunizations and TB testing from

tiC ete for COndUCt ~me

Man cited for DUI

era! vision problems, and blood pressure will llC ottere4. A liccnJecl
optometrist will perform the free eye screenings on the 33-foot,
fully equipped "Health Check" van.
All of the screenings aie provided free of ch,arge as 1 community
service of the Bloomberg Eye Center. Registration is on a fllltcome, flTSI-serve lxlsis during the visit.

::$2 million;-.. __co_nt_in_ue_d_rrom_A_-1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

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night, resuhin~ in $200 damage, the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
DeJllll1lllmt n:pilrted.
Ten f~tefighters responded with one truck to the scene at 509
Possum Trot Road. The car was owned by Randall Clonch, 1813
LincoiD Pike.

1

From noon 11Jr3 pmRent a lane for 4 people for $10.00
3 pm to 6 pm - M.atinee Bowling$1.50 per person per game
6:30pm to 9 pm Sunday
9 pin fun night- Jackpot drawing.
9:00pm to 11:00 pmMoonlight Bowling- Win Free Games.

1

WELLSTON - Public hearings on lite draft plan of the Gallia·
Jackson-Meigs-Vinton Joint Solid Waste Management District will
be held Tuesday.
The hearings are scheduled for the following times and locations:
• 10 a.m., Wellston City Building, 203 East Broadway St, WeD- ·
ston.
~
• 7 p.m. The South DiSllict Extension Center, 17 Standpipe
Road, Jackson.
The GJMV district will meet at The South District Extension
Center immediately following the evening hearing.

Man jailed for commitment

-SUNDAY SPECIALS-

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•s3"
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GALLIPOLIS - A Bidwell man was taken inlo custody early
Saturday momin$ for driving under the influence and several other
charges, Gallipolis police reported.
Taken into custody was David E. Leaphart, 31, 216 Skidmore
Road, for DUI, fi~lious regislration, possession of marijuana and
no brake lighiS. He was later released on a rule 4 summons.
Authorities arrested three others between Friday night and early
Saturday morning.
Jailed were William L. Campbell, 32, Buck Ridge Road, Bidwell, by Gallia County Sheriff's Deputies for domestic violence and
William E. Mullins, 19, 414 Fourth Ave., by police for disorderly
conduct and resistin~ arrest Mullins was arrested in connection
with a disruption dunng Friday's football game at Memorial Field
(see related brief).
1· Taken into custody and released on a rule 4 summons was David
L. Drummond, 43, 936 Oil Hollow Road, by police for disorderly
conduct by intoxication and resisting arrest.

Solid waste hearings"'sc.heduled

Inside and Outside Dealer Spaces
largest Flea Market in Southem Ohio
Information - 245·5347

Caldera 3/4
Plus
llltdoor Shoe

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A3

r------------Tri-county briefs. -----...----____,

•

ONTRQL CLINIC
CONTROL

Coo - . ..............................................90¢
Coo-..~ ............................_
_:.~10
SINGUCOI'Y

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ley, trustee; Jon Jacobs, Meigs
County Health Deparunent; Fred
Hoffman, mayor of Middleport,
largest population area, and Wiggins.
Wiggins also serves on the executive committee. Jacobs and Manley have represented the public at
large on a special advisory commit-

POMEROY - The Republican
Central Committee will meet
Thursday, OCt. 7 at 7 p.m. at the
Rutland Civic Center to appoint a
successor to Manning K. Roush,
who has resigned as Meigs County
Commissioner, effective Oct. I,
County Chaimtan Paul Gerard said.
Any person who wishes to be
considered for the appointment
should make wri uen application,
by way of lettec, to membeiS of the
Republican Central Committee,
Gerard said
Those persons who wish to be
considered should be present at the
Oct. 7 meeting where they will,
have the opportunity to personally
meet and talk with the committee
members, the county chairman
said.
Names and address of members
of the Central Committee may be
obtained by contacting Gerard at

Local

October 3, 1993

""'!

CEIIIIFIED BY THE AMERICAN COllEGE Of SURGEONS

•'• •

800 Go~leld Avenue
PO Box718
PorltersbuJg , WV 26102

··Other Advest OH locations: Canton, Cincinnati, Columbus, Dublin; Fremont, Lancaster, Newark, ::
·
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Stetl(lenvllle, Springfi~ld, Washington Court House

304/424·CALM
(2256)

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camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital

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October 3, 1893

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

Sunday nmea SenUnel

Page AS

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Ohio/W.Va.

October 3, 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A4

Truckers- protest fuel tax increase
Truc:k dri~ tbn:atcned to clog
Ohio highways in a prorest over the
federal fuel tax increase. but only

f

minor problems were reported
throughout the stale.
Figures for the number of cita·
lions issued Friday were not available early today, but 89 truckers
were ticketed · for slowdowns
through midnight Thursday, said
Sgt. John Born, a spokesman for
the State Highway Patrol.
The charges included impeding
traffic flow, failure to SlOp, resisting arrest and one case of felonious
assault, he said.
"I don't think the wl&gt;lic even
noticed," said Bill T~. an independent driver from Cuyahoga
Falls.
Turner was pan or a convoy of
about a dozen trucks that traveled
in a single line at 45 mJ.lh on the
Ohio Turnpike in Summtt County
on Friday. The 15-minute protest
was the only major slowdown on
the turnpike. said LL Carney Matheny of the patrol's Hiram posL
Truckers caused major traffic
backups Tuesday night on the tumpike when they slowed or stopped
their trucks. Forty-six drivers were
ticketed.
"I think this means what happened on Tuesday was very sponta.. neous," Matheny said. "lbat pat·
ticulat day, somebody did a good
job of getting enough I!OOPie riled
up ...
The 4.3-cent per gallon fuel

inCiease that went into effect Frida)' is part of the Clinton administration's defiCit-reduction plan.
Truckers said the tax increase
would hurt the self-emrloyed
drivers most. Ed Jeanes o Memphis, Tenn., said lniCking companies willlikcly raise their rates.
•'Right now people don't realize
they're going to have to pass tHat
cost onto the consumer," he said.
Truckers said they would shut
down their rigs for three hours Friday in protest, but did noL
Some complained that they
could not slow down because they
would lose money for the loads
they were hauling. Others said they
were trying to get home soon to
their fatnilies for the weekend.
Helicopters circled over highways and state troopers parked
alongside the roads to discourage
slowdoWns.
About 55 truckers on Interstate
70 nonh of Dayton slowed their
vehicles to 40 mph early Friday,
and two of the drivers were cited
for impeding traffic, said LL Joe
Bla!:k of the State Highway Patrol.
Troopers broke up a mile-long
traffic backup on Interstate 75 near
Franklin in Butler County that
formed when 15 to 20 trucks traveled 40 .mph. The driver of the lead
truck was cited for impeding traffic, said Lt. Mike i(ing of the
patrol's Hamilton posL
''They made their point and we
did.our job," King said.

Police veteran.
investigated
for doughnut
shop visits
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A
43-ycar law enforcement veteran's
alleged frequent, on-duty ttips to i
doughaut shop have landed him in
hot oil.
~lice SgL Anhur Malloy, 69, is
being investigated for spending too
much time partaking in P.astry
while womn~ as a third-shift burglary superv1sor, The Columbus
DispatCh reported today.
Mall
who ranks second in
seniority m the division, is still on
the job during the investigation, the
newspaper said. Detective bureau
Cmdr. Nick Panzera transferred
MaUoy to the day shift last month. ··
Panzera defended the approxi,,
matcly $1,130 in ovenime pa1d two
lieutenants while they kept Malloy
under surveillance for two weeks.
The division has been trying to cui
down on ovenime pay, The Dis:
patch said.
uy es, they were on overtime,
and the ovenime money they did
use was well wonh ·it," Panzera
said.
The investigation turned up
other officers who stopped at thll
same shop to visit Malloy, Panzera
said. Some had called in sick or
were listed as disabled.
Veteran officers have dubbed
the case "Doughn_utgatc.'~

slipped from tbe tank while being liUed. Brown
is paying an additiona14.3 cent per gallon tax on
bis diesel fuel, lncludlnc the several gallons that
ran on the ground. (AP)

FUEL SPILL -

Arizona tracker Don Brown
reaches lo shut off a nozzle pouring diesel fuel
onto the V.'"md at a truck stop at I· 71 near Sunbury, Frtday. Tbe fuel spilled when the nozzle

~·

.

The protest was peaceful and
there were no arrests.
1 One ppliCC officer Watched the
.1 ~. from a distance and
·only moved 'forwatd to alcn them
to the nooo deadline for ending the
'" march-under the court order. The
Iaan members complied and lefL
1be Demjanjuk family could not
be reached for commenL A phone
message was left at the DemJanjuk
DefenSe Fund.
·
The Israeli Supreme Court in
July overturned Demjanjuk's war
crimes conviction. Demi:!euk, 73,
has not been seen,al his
since
he returned to Ohio on Sept 22. He
has been in biding.
Klan members fOllowed an
order that ·Cuyaboga Common
Pleas Judge Daniel Gaul signed
Tuesday which prohibits compeling demonstrations and limits
proteSts to ~our h~ each weekd$y. No anti-DcmJIIIJuk pro(eStel'S
showed up Friday.
· · A Klan spokesman who identified himself only as Don, a 47year-old foundry worker from Mas·
sillon, said Friday's march was

intended to support Demjanjuk.
Most of Dim's comments to
reporters focused on the role of
Jewish protesters who have ~ath­
ered twice outside DemjanJuk's
home.
"They're chasing this man from
World Wor TI. Even if he did what
he did- why shonid the Jews get
better respect, to have any better
things happen for u.•em," the Klan
spokesman asked.
Last week, Rabbi Avi Weiss of
New York led Jewish protesters in
a ~ful march at the Demjanjuk
horne, They.~ .the U.S, s~etn•
ment to mauttalR tts ~uon to
~mjanj~'s bid to regam his U.S.
ctuzenship.
Ray Vasvari, an American Civil
Uberties Union attorney working
on behalf of the Jewish proresters,
. said Friday a challenge to the
judge's order would be ftled next
week. Weiss wants the right to
protest at any time in order to confront Demjanjuk if he relllrns to his
home.
The Israeli Supreme .Court on
July 29 overturned Demjanjuk's
conviction on charges he was
"Ivan the Terrible," a guard at the
Nazi death camp at Treblinka,
Poland, during World War TI.
The coun said evidence indicated another man might have been
Ivan. The justices said they
believed Demjanjuk worked at
Nazi death camps but refused to
order a new trial
Demjanjuk said he was a victim
of mistaken identity and spent most
of the war as a German POW.

UNITED NATIONS (AP)Libya's forei~n minister said his
government will not force two suspects in the bombing of Pan Am
Flight 103 to surrender and refused
to set a date for them to be turned
over for trial.
· However, Foreign Minister
Omar Mustafa al-Muntasaer 'said
on CNN that Libya is committed to

arranging for the suspects to be
tried in Scotland, where the jetliner
bleW up in Dec:embcr 1988, tilling
270people.
. In Cairo, Egypt's Middle East
News Agency today reported that
Libya has offered to let British officials go to Tripoli to try and persuatle the IWO suspects to stand trial
in Scotland.

'

, MOSCOW (AP) - Hundreds
lbe protesters then used metal
of hard-line protesters clashed with tubes from the stage to combat
police in central Moscow today, police officers, who mostly were
then batricaded a mail) street with armed with plastic or metal shields
wood, metal and burning tires. Sev- and rubber clubs, witnesses said.
eral police and at least one
Those who fired were wearing
protester were injured.
camouflage military uniforms from
Witnesses said several riot a special riot police squad known
police fired their pistols to disperse as OMON, they said.
·(he crowd during the afternoon
Police failed to disperse the
clash, about three blocks from the crowd completely, and several hunRussian parliament building which dred demonstrators stayed. Traffic
Is OCCUI'ied by lawmakers Opposed was halted as police sealed the road
to Prestdent Boris Yettsin's order at both ends of the crowd
Demonstrators then raided nearfo disband the parliament.
by
courtyards and construction
It was not immediately clear
sites,
bringing metal fences, wood
whether the· pistols contained
and
trash
for several barricades
blanks or live rounds, or whether
across
the
road.
The protesters set
I!RYbodY was shoL
tires
and
the
barricade
itself ablaze,
Several police officers were
sending
columns
of
thick black
injured in the riot. At least one
smoke
into
the
air.
protester appeared to have suffered
Severnl protesters climbed atop
a bean attack and others were trya
truck
brought to the barricade,
ing to resuscitate him.
waving
red flags of the former
The violence began when hun·
Soviet
Union.
Others hung czarist
dreds of demonstrators backing the
flags
on
nearby
~lectricity poles.
luutl-line legislawre began dismanBehind
the
barricade,
the street was
tling a metal stage set up for a ciry
littered
with
broken
bottles and
festival that Moscow authorities
smashed bricks.
planned for Saturday.

lflan demonstration
supports Demjanjuk
SEVEN HILLS, Ohio (AP) Five Ku Klux Klan members supporting John Demjanjuk marched
m front of his home largely unnoticed, coml'lying with a judicial
order lim1tmg the length of
protests.
1be road was closed during the
75-minute vigil on Friday, so only
occasional motorists who live on
the suburban Cleveland street saw
it. Reporters putnumbered tbe

_L ibya balks on setting ·surrender
date for Pan AID 103 suspects

liard-liners clash
with Moscow police

or,

Former congressman faces
prison term for racketeering
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Former congressman Albert Bustamante has been sentenced to federal prison, but it likely will be
months or years before he serves
time, if he ever does.
Bustamante was sentenced Friday to 3 1/2 years in prison for
racketeering and two years, to be
served at the same time, for accepting an illegal gifL Defense attorney
Tony Canales said Bustamante will
appeal.
Bustamante, 58, also was
ordered to pay $55,100 in fines and
coUrt costs and to serve two years'
supervised release after doing the

•

'"11

The inspirationltw
choice in ourhome ··

prison time.
The judge said Bustamante
probably will remain free on bond
pending appeal, which Canales
estimated could take six months to
a year.
Bustamante, a Democrat, lost
his congressional seat last year to.
Republican Henry Bonilla.
Jurors found that Bustamante
engaged in a pattern of corruption
while in Congress from 1985 to
1993. A key charge was that he
accepted a $35,000 bribe for helping a friend's food service company try to renew an Air Force contract

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-Here are the WlJIIIlll8 numbers
selected Friday in the West Vir, ; : Stale Lottery:

pects were not turned ov~. .
The motheJ of one vtcum was
incensed that the United States and
its allies were not more fmn.
"There is no excuse r~ playing
into the hands of {Libyan leader)
Moammar Gadhafi by pushing for
delays,'' Susan Cohen told The
Associated Press from her Cape
May, N.J., home. Her. dau~hter ,
Theodora Cohen, was killed Ill the
bombing.
Libyan intelligence a~ents
Abdel Basset Ali Megraht and
Lamen Khalifa Fhimah are charged
in Britain and the United States
witb carrying out the attack.

FURNITURE LIQUIDATION
E PIRE FU.RNITURE

One Day Only·4:30 &amp; 7:30P.M.

Fish and Wildlife Service.
Koonce said at a workshop during a conference sponsored by the
University of Toledo law school
this past week that he is concerned
about toxic discharges.
But he said zebra mussels
should be taken care of first,
hecJ!nse their 1ftSC11CC might fon:e
toxic chemicals to move up the
food chain to humans more rapidly
and in greater concentrations.
Susan Fisher, an Ohio State
University toxicologist, concluded
in 1991 that zebra mussels can
accumulate pesticides and other
chemicals in their tissues at levels
300,000 times greater th!ln that
found in the environment
Fish, especially botlom-feeders,
ished
eat
the mussels, and people eat the
Koonce is on ill 18-month leave
fish.
from Case Westm! in Cleveland to
Koonce criticized the SPA for
serve· as ecosystem pannership
p,ursuing
the initi,ative baeaua.e._
coordinator for the Great Lakes
•
chemical
loading is easiest from
Fishery Commission. The position
the
regulatory
standpoint.''
is funded by the fishery commission, the U.S. EPA, and the U.S.

· Friday night's Ofllo Lottery selec-

Fnmce arc

backpedaling on a deadline they
had set for Friday for toughening
·sanctions against Libya if the SUS·

GALLIA ·COUNTY
JUNIOR ·FAIRGROUNDS

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Zebra'
mussels in the Great Lakes are a
bigger threat to wildlife and people
than poUution the federal government is wgeting for cleanup, a
fisheries exJ)ett said.
Joseph Ic:oonce, associate pro" fessor of biology at Case Western
Rescnie Universi!¥, said the govel1ll1lent should eltminate mussels
and other troublemakers before
adopting the Great Lakes Initiative,
a l!.S. Environmental Protection
Agency proposal to curb chemical
discharBes.
But an EPA spokeswoman said
Fridar that once the government
~nd of contaminanll, the threat
zebra mussels will be dimin-

WVA lottery

The offer came in a letter that
ai-Muntasser delivered Friday
night to Secretary-GeaeraJ Boutros ,
BoUIJus.Ghali, the agency said.
"We are Jtady to receive a delegalion of Scottish jUdicial autOOrities to meet with the suspects and
to penuade them to stand trial,"
the letter said
AI-Muntasser also asked
Boutros-Ghali to arrange for him or
other Lil)yan officials to meet with
U.S., French and British representatives to discuss c!et•ils of the suspects' turnover, Middle East News
AgCIICy said.
He also wants to discuss how to
avoid additional sanctions it said
The United
Brltain and

the capital of MaharaJhtra. tbe
worst-bit stale, tlOI* said the offi.
cia! toU of idclitifteil bodi.es so r.
was 7,285.
,
But thousands of decomposing
bodies were being pulled from rubble and crernwd by their families,
and an IICCI!Illte casualty toU from ·
the worst quake in India in 50 years

KILLARI, India (AP) -. Relief
convoys clogged roads Saturday in
the eanhquake-stticken comer or
southwest India, where thousands
of people lack food and water and
are threatened with disease from
decaying corpses.
'
Estimates of tho! dead from
Thursday's devastating earthquake
ranged up 10 30,000. In Bombay,

5 HOURS

:. Mussels pose greater
:threat than pollution

Lottery numbers

Quake survivors now face disease

141 ~......
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Gotlipoll•

S•nday

$1199 97

�Commentary
Peace o~ the hQrizon for Mozamb-ique · .=
..

October 3, 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A6

WASHINGTON - The most

A DJvlaion ol

horrendous pogrom since lhe infamoos "killing f~elds" of Cambodia
i~ cnwing to a c~ ~ unno-

~INC.
825 Tllird Avo., GoWpoU., Ohio
(614)446-2342

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 991-2156

ROBERT L WlNGE'IT
Pobllobcr
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

brutal, wilh tortures and deaths lhlit
defr, imagination.
· ' We are speaking here of hundreds of thousands of people who

!Iced m a now -qutet corner of
Africa.
If the 16-year war in Mozam..le·•"on
bique is truly over as a result of an
IIU• ' '"
internationally brokered peace and
and
the presence of United Nations
troopS, it should provide infmitely
11;_.h
greater ~ for ~ding dozens of
lYI."" lU!
lRS eJn
other ethmc conflicts around the
globe. .
It would also give a real push to have been killed and kidnapped.
President _Ciinton's foreign poli~y We are not s~aking about small
ptllar, retterated last Monday tn numbe11," said Joaquim Chissano,
New, Yolk, of dCJ.ICndence o.n the -the normally dry tdozambiquan
U.N. s peace-keepmg effons m the president, in a recent interview
future.
.
.
.
wilh our associates Dale VanAtta
Mozambique IS a nauon of and Ed Henry. .
.
.
about 16 million people in southern
In fact, U.S. mtelhgence esllAfrica. It has an incredible wealth mates fig_ure more. than I. million
. of unlaPiled resources, so the coun- Mozambtquans dted dunng thts
try has !ail! v~y undeveloped rebel war, the vast m&amp;J!'J'llY .at the
smce wn.mmg independence from hands o_f Renamo. The mtelltgence
Portugal m 1_975.
.
reports mel~ among the war dead
Mozambique has known httle many who dted of stnrvauon or
peace sinc5·
· g independence. exhaustion when ~Y were fleeing
That's be au a ragtag band of persecuuon.
. .
rebel thugs, kn wn as Renamo,
Renatno. was ongu~ally created
waged a war against ~ populace by the while Rhodestan governand the nominally Marxist govern- m~t' s Cenual ~tel~gence Or~animent Their tactics were incredibly zanon to destabilize tiS newly mde-

'By Jack A-

1B • t •

MARGARET LEHEW
Controlltr

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE1TERS OF OPINION arc welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to ediling and must be sisned w ith
name, address and telephone number. No uns igned letters will be
pubhshed,- Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
personalities.

Crime lurks even
in state parks
ByJAMES~H

Alsodated PressWnter

DAYTON - You're hiking in your favorite state part.. The birds are
singing and the leaves are rusding when suddenly you're jabbed with a
gun - the victim o( an urban-like crime.
Unlikely? Yes.
Impossible? No.
Last week, a hiktr at Oifton Gorge State Reserve near Yellow Springs
reported that a man tried to rob him at gunpoint. .
The hiker, a 30-year-old Beavercreek man, said the man passed him on
the trail, then turned around und pressed a handgun to the hiker's side.
The man demanded his wallet, jacket and car keys, the hiker said.
When lhe hiker offered to go to a bank teller machine for money, the
gunman cocked the gun and pointed it at lhe victim's bead, lhe hiker said.
Several other hikers began coming down the uail, and the gunman ran.
"This is your lucky day," lhe gunman reportedly said just before he
fled.
The incident is a jarring reminder that crime is not confined to the
cities and suburbs. ·
·
Pat Enright, law enforcement administrator for the Ohio Division of
Parks and Recreation, said lll8ll8gCI'S of the state parks have not identified
any increase in repcrts of violent crime at the parlcs.
However, Enright said total crime figures for the 72 parts will not be
readily available until January, when the statistics will be comt&gt;uterized.
Enright said crimes increase wilh the number of part. viSitors, which
goes up with nicer wealher.
' 'The ml\iority of our incidents occur in the summer,'' ile said.
He said part. rangers are commissioned offiCerS with full atrest powers.
He said there are about 300 rangers at Ohio's parks, a figure that has
remained fairly stable.
Frances Pestello.-a University of Dayton sociology professor who
teaches a criminology course, said she does not believe the attempted
holdup of the hiker represc:niS a !rend.
.
"It's not the typical panern of a robbery," Ms. Pestello said. "But
crime in rural and suburban areas has been going up. It's no longer just
inner-city areas."
I
She said it can be a shock when crime occurs in a public part., where
people often feel safe.
"You're in a situation where people are probably less likelr. to expect
Today there are many people
crime," she said "Their guard, in a sense, may be down. You re not sus- .that want to lose weight, but really
picious of people."
do not know how to go about doing
this. Or Iiley know how but don't
have the will power. There are
many ~s about food which
complicate Ibis situation.
The fnt myth is about potatoes.
Most people feel that if they eat
polatoes they will gain weight. The
reality is that: French fries and hash
browns are very bigh in calories,
but the offending ingredient in
these dishes is not lhe polato. It is
the oil or beef fat in which the
potatoes are cooked. A medium
five ouncd&gt;potato contains 135'
calori~s and no fat of its own.
Eaten with its skin, a potato provides carbohydrates, protein and
fiber as well as vitamins and minerals. Potatoes are filling and can satisfy a dieter's hunger better than
many other vegetable. A tablespoon of butler adds 100 calories to
a powo. A generous dollop (two
tablespoons) of sour cream is 50
calories.
The second myth is about eggs.
Most people believe that brown
eggs are better than white eggs.
The experts say there is no nutritional difference between eggs that
come in brown shells and those tllat
come in white oliCll. (Nor is there
any difference in flavor.) The variety of hen that lays the egg determmes lhe color of lhe shell. It is
only this mylh that makes the price
~a·-.
of brown eggs higher.
Most people believe that honey
"Do you MIND? That's my coffee!"
is better than sugar because it contains B vitamins, iron and phospho-

~nt neighbor in the mid: I970s.
POiiiliie~~e malcoiltents and govern- .
ment defecun also buttressed the
rebels.
.
But the conversion of white
Rhodesia into a black-run Zimbabwe nearly ended.Renamo's run _
until the whire Soulh African milltary intelligence group picked up
the slack, funded and armed Renamo and gave them marching
orders. A 1984 accord between
South Africa and Mozambique was
supposed to have ended suppon for
the rebels but captured documents
show clear Soulh African suppon
throughout the 1980s.
. While U.S. aid brought Mozambtque firmly into the western
~phere during the 1980s, the
mcreasingly desperate Renamo
resorted to mutilations massacres
and, in dozens of insuU.ces, canni:
, balism. Their "tradernarlc' • became
using machetes and bayonets 10
chop off the noses, ears and breasts
of civilians who wouldn't join
them . They slaughtered so many
civilians that the government
stopped using the word "massacre" to describe an incident
unless at least 50 people were
killed at one time.
With this recent history, the
•

I

peace accord b~ last year ,
Italy between Chtssano and rebe
leaderS calls for a cease-fii'C to bt
m!'~itored by U.N. troops, for a
military made up of bolh rebel and
government troopS and new dem~
cratic electiQOS next year.
•
When Renamo and govemmen£
forces are gathered at 49 sites iq:
the c.oming months, the ne~
30,000-man anny will be selecttd.
and the rest demobm~ It w!ll be
costly because the mternauonafcommunity will need to pay off
more than 80,000 government
soliders who'll have to find neW:
work.
•
The greater question is how vii~
~ers terronzed by Renamo th~gs
will react to 15,000 ·of them bemt
selected for a new army . But
Chissano insists that peace cal\
work. •'We are introducing lhe coli
ture of peace, which is based oil
national reconciliation and forgivei
ness,'' he says.
:
Isn 't it a pipe dream to expecl
that people who've known nothini
but war for nearly two decades will
now drpp everything to forgive an4
forget? Chissano was quick tc1
interrupt and careful in his
response: :'The basis of this agree;
ment is that we put aside - Jet'~
not use the word 'forget' - we put
aside what divides and bring what
unites." That tneans no trials for
Renamo war criminals, or for gov:
emment soldiers who increasingl1
got out of hand in recent years. •
. If the peace holds, Chissano
knows that the world would flock
to Mozambique for answers te
other conflicts. "If this does not
happen, it means a ne:W war," h~
said. "If it does, we want Sout~
Africa and others to follow the
example. Then we will know that
we are doi'\1 this not just for our
country, but we are doing it for th~
entire world."
Banking on a brighter future, the
Clinton administration is extendinl
$120 million in economic and
humanitarian aid to help Mozam~
bique, and is paying one-third lhe
cost of 7,000 U.N. uoops in the
country. The prime question now is
whether the returning refugees and
population of Mozambiq~an 1J9
convinced to follow Chissano •1
shining example.
:
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binsteln are writers. lor United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
..•

October 3, 1993

Pomeroy Mldd,leport Galllpolla, OH-P.olnt Pleuant. wv

...

Sunday Times Sentinel Page A7

HURFRESH
'

'

2"% MIL
69

GAL

99C GAL.

TAMPICO
KLEENEX
SOFTIQUE as ct.

PEPSI

I

Calories do count __....___.;._____________ '~

Berry's World

e,,..., ........

rus. The problem is that · th~
amounts of these ingredients in
honey are so minuscule that they
are insignificant. To your body,

FredW. Crow
honey and sugar are the same. Bolh
give you calories, slighdy more for
honey than sugar, without ~utri ­
tional benefits. Both can cause
tooth decay. In bakinll• however,
honey can be helpful m reducing
fat. Honey, because of its liquid
consistency, when substituted for
sugar, allows you to decrease the
amount of oil in a recipe.
Does eating carrots improve
your eyesight? Many people
believe Iiley will. In reality, carrots
are an excellent source of carotene,
which is essential to heallhy eye
tissue and to lhe production of retinal, a compound that helps eyes
adapt to darlatess. People who suffer from a vitamin A deficiency can
have vis;on problems. However,
lhis condition is rarely found in the
United States. Eating extra vitamin
A, from carrots and many other
sources like leafy green vegetables
and milk, cannot make you see better.
Some people believe margarine
has fewer calories than butter.
Many margarines are better for you
than better because Iiley are made
from less-saturated fats, but Iiley
are not less caloric. Margarine and
buuer each have I 00 calories per
tablesJioon.

Rupe, are candy bars a good
energy source? According to the
experts lhe high amount of fat in
choeolare slows abs01ption of lhe
candy bat. The tired pelion looking
for a pick-me-up should opt for
fruit or a bagel.
·
How many of you have heard of
the Harvard Square Diet? This diet
is distinguished from others in its
acknowledgment of your.habits and
tastes. You are not aslced to give up
anything you like to eat or drink,
only to cut down your portions.
The change is to eat and drink
exacdy what you are accustomed to
having, but to eat less of your
choices and do it more slowly in
three regular meals. Brealtfast, as
long as you are not used to having
four jelly doughnuts, remains the
.same. At lunch and dinner you simplr halve your ponions of everylhmg.
If you must snack between
meals, confme the habil to twice a
day and halve your usUlil nmount of'
goodies. Dole yourself out a small
portion in a small container and
savor every crumb.
·
Always start your main meal
with a low calorie salad, greens,
not beans or pasta. It will make
your smaller servings of meat and
potatoes that come afterwards seem
more filling.
Take ndvantage of low calorie
foods and drinks that taste good to
you. Try reduced calorie dressings
on your salad. If you must have
somelhing sweet after dinner, try
an artificially sweetened dessert. '
Bum an extra 300 calories a day·

with exercise five days a wed:;
Walk briskly for an hour, play ten~
nis for 45 minutes or dance 30 min-·
utes. The choice is yours as long ti
you malce a point 10 do it. Exerci ~
has more benefits than simp! ~
allowing us to "tnjoy food and sta)i?
slim. It burn,s, off extra calories\
after a heavy meal and you can lit~
erally work off an indulgence:
Exercise decreases appetite, frrm!f
muscles, helps circulation an&lt;f
eases tension·.
:
Remember that calories d!i;.
count. If you take in more calori~
than you bum off, you will gaiqr
weight. If you bum off more calc{
ries than you take in you will lol .
weight.
~ope, you must think that I hav
lost my marbles in telling ~~;
about lhis weight problem. I n '
to lose about 20 pounds and started ·
to check wilh the experts on how ~q&gt;
do it. There are so many people!(
who, for a fee, will show you ho~
to do it. Even Tommy Lasord~
plugs a diet drink for a fee. Rupef'
you are the beneficiary of all lhiS:
advice wilhout costing you a cen~
Aren't you lhe lucky one?
~'
In God We Trust.
~:
Carry on.
.
:·.
Editor's note • Long~ lime:
Attorney Fred W. Crow is th~
contributor or a weekly colum~
for Tbe Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnef::
Readers wishing to applaud, crlt-;
lcize or comment on any subjecl
(except religion or politics) are:'
encouraged to write to M r::
Crow, In care of this newspaper. ~

Adiil's opponaits, including il general, all of whom IIUJlPOrl the U.N.
effort in Somalia.
In both exercises, one underly-

Chuck Stone
ing factor was in control: '"~i~~
- blact people - all look · '.
That economy of thought has
solved UIICOWIIable crimes, but the
resulting effort has also in.iiJred 10
limes as many imocent people. ·
The "they-all-look·alike" syndrome·.operated with deadly efficieocy in Philadelphia, which has
one of ·the highest conviction ._,
of innocent penons of any American city.
·
Several Yelll ago, a tall black
profesaor 11 oae of the universities
complained to my office that he
was freQuently bemg hassled as a
criminal suspect. Whenever he
took his evening waits ncar his
downtown apartment, he was
•I

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•'•'

.

'r•

Good ancl bad signs of our times--------------~~
All of us enjoy or are guilty of
making decisions on one oveniding
quality - the economy of lhoughl
Afll:t a series of eveniS on two continentS, 8.000 miles apart, I found it
economically easy to conclude that
lhese are the times that cry men's
souls, especially if thole souls are
black!'
But if they are suffering the
wont of tiriles, it was equally uue
that soine black women, also on
two continents 8,000 lhousands
miles aput, are revelin&amp; in the best
oftimes.
In Florida, dozens of black reenagecs in a small North ~da community wae ~ ~ m a dragnet
of GestapO-lib Clfic•ency, as the
sheriff' 1 dcplrtmenl .-rched for
the kiiiet of a Brilish IOUrisL
ln Mosadishu, Somalia, U.S.
Army ·Rangora led an airborne
asault on a Compolind believed to
be hiding the murderoUs warlord,
Mohammed Farrah Adid. lnstcld,
they ended liP arresting 39 of

....

•,
the
Civil
War
began
is
anolher
joy.:·
black
'
c
rime
waves
lhat
are
deciinvariably stopped and questioned pared with his silence over the
of our coming together as!lI
mating American ghettoes. In the ous sign
by police as a possible suspect for killings of 1,19 I Floridians ,
a
naoon.
f._.
South,
a
subliminal
racial
superiormonth-old crimes.
Barry Saunders still came down
As
lhat
~derly
black
man
tol~
Wben I conveyed the profes- hard on the ltillecs. Also a law-and- ity is still tbe J?ivotal critenon on
Martin Luther King Jr. when Kins;:'l
sor's complainll to a chief inspec- ordel hard-liner he Mole, "I hope which most deciSions are made. •
asked
If he had benefited from th6J:
tor who was an old friend, he they catch the killers.and string em
But racism can no longer hold
civil-n
.
·
gbts movement "I may no~
,4uipped. "Hey, Chuck, when a call up or fry em or feed em to the alii- the South hostage. One hundred
be
what
I wanna be, and I may no~
goes out for a llllpCCt described as gators or whatever they do down and thirtr-two years later, the
be
what
I oughta be. But thank
a tall bli1ck man, lhe only person there."
emancipal!On of the Soulh has folGod,
I
ain.'t
what I useta be."
.
who is safe is a short, wllite
While Florida sheriffs and U.S. lowed the emancipation of its
Chuck Stone is a syndicated
midget." Eventually, however, the Army .rangm were denigrating an slaves.
hltlsllng stopped,
entire· group, racial stereotypes
Kimberly Aiken's historic writer lor Newspapet Enterprise
As a law-and-order hard-liner; I were being buried on twd conti- achievement from the state where Alsodadon.
hartJor no Intolerance for massive nents, 10,000 miles apart. Miss .
police- efforts to apprehend crimi- South Carolina, doe-eyed, cafe-aunils. But I do harbor a prqfound Iait Kimberly Clairese Aiken, was
anlagOnism to the police mind-set crowned Miss All\erica. On the
that presumes ab initio that all other side of the world, Jacqui
blac~ men are pOtential criminal · Mo(okeng became the frrst black
By Tbe Aasoclaled Press
suspects and that the lives of for- woman to be crowned Miss South . Today is Sunday, OcL 3, the 276tb day of 1993. There are 89 days left'! .
eign IOUristB are fir more valuable Africa. She will compete in the m the year.
,
&lt;•
than a siate's own citizens.
Miss World Pageaint in November.
T&lt;xlay's Highlight in History:
· •:
A North Carolina columnist .
Neither triumph of ebony polOw Oct. 3, 186~ •.President Lincoln declared lhe last Thursday In ~
agrees wilh my moral dichotomy. · chrililde announces that the new NovemberThanksglVIng Day.
·
:'
Protesting Florida Gov, Chiles ' millen'nium has arrived. South
On this date:
. .
..
.•
breast-beating disuess over the Africa' s townships are still being
In 1226, SL FranciS of AssiSt, founder of the Franciscan order di'""· 11e·•
' ""' ,;
~gs of the ~ - · as com- savaged b~ the saine black-on- was canonized in 1228.

Today in history

:1

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81b
or more

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Page A8 Sunday nmea

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Plea&amp;af\t, WV.
•

October 3, 1ll93

--Area deaths-- Senior citizens ·urged to get flu shots ea~ly this year
WAS~GTON (AP) - Public

Mary Viola11ayles

health officmls appealed to older
, Americans Friday to get their flu
s~ots early,_befo~e an especially
stram of mfluenza begms
virulent
- MP)DLEPORT - Mary Viola Bayles, 87, Middleport, died Saturday,
.
spreading
. For the rust pme, the
October 2, 1993 at Holzer Medjcal Center.
gC?vemment
announced, Medicare
Among the surviYOI'S is daughter Virginia (Donald) Payne, Dayton.
will
plcl:
up
the
costs for the elderArrangements will be announced by Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.

ly ~d disabled
.
Today, we thmk of the flu
more as anuisance than a plague,' '
• said Health and Human Se~ic~s
Secretary Donna E. Shalala. This

outbreaks i~ Louisiana a~d is
expected to hit hard The strain has
been associated with more sickness
and death all!ong people 6~ and
older, according to Dr. Philip R.
misc~ncostslives."
Lec,assistantseaetaryforbealth. ·
!JUs yearls flu·-, ·tmown as A- _The cb~nically m,·includ.ing
BetJIIIg- has altea'dy c•nsed'lhret children· w1th asthma and people

•. t•IODS .
Board awards CoD t raet ,.accep t.S·· res1gna
·
·
1 ·

Bill Wilson was . idol to
Meigs little leaguers
By DAVE HARRIS
Times-Sentinel Starr
POMEROY - Billy Wilson, an
idol to former Meigs County little
leaguers now lhinysomelhing, died
last month at his home in Broken
Arrow, Okla (See related story on
C-8).
It was an everyday ritual to rush
to the local store and grab up packs
of baseball curds by the handful to
try and get the latest Bill Wilson
card.
Wilson, or "Wonn" as he was
called by friends was a 1960 graduate of Pomeroy High Sch018 where
he was a three spon All Southeastern Ohio League. performer and
attended ~hill University on a
football scholarship. The 6-2, 200
po011d righthander left Marsball to
sign with the Pbillies in 1961.
Wilson started out at Bakersfield and in first year in organized
ball he appeared in 32 Jiames posting a 7-10 marlt and an 4.64 ERA.
Wilson ba~tled arm problems
throughout his career, he had three
operations on his pitching arm in
1966 for a circulalion problem. He
rebounded to appear in 1I games
wilh Reading in 1967 posting.a 2-1
record with a 0.69 ERA.
After seven years in !he minor
leagues, Wilson finally made the
big time with the Phillies in 1969. I
wiD never forget the night of June
20, 1969 when I wimessed m1 fii'St
major league ball game in hiStoric

Gust...

RJO GRANDE - The Board of
Education of the Gallia-JacksonVinton Joint Vocational School
Board, in regular session recently,
awarded a one-year contract to
Kimberly Phillips as the assistant
treasurer/financial aid officer for
the 1993-94 school year.
In other matters. the board
accepted the following resignations: Sheryl Fallon, ABLE instructor; Linda Farley, ABLE aide;
James Lunsford, auto body instructor, and Brenda Owens, adult clerk
and keyboarding instructor.
The board also:
• Employed the following substitute teachers for 1993,94: Karen
Burns, Angela Caldwell, Philip
Claxon, Teawana Edington, Diane
Hamilton, Ml!ly Lou Henderson,
William Hoover, Todd Hudson,
Carl Jividen, Christine Lewis, Elizabeth Null, and Tom Ruth.
• Employed the following noncertified substitutes for 1993-94:
Bus Drivers: James McConnick,
Michell Steppe; Cafeteria: Angela
George; Custodians: Angela·
George, Timothy McGhee, Garland
Saxton; Educational Aides: Joan
Beman, Lisa Di~ttln, Amy flash,

Connie Mack Stadium in Philadelphia. That night Wilson ~arne on in
relief in the fifth and the Phillies
behind !he Pittsburgh Pirates 7-3.
Wilson proceeded to pitch four and
two-thirds innings giving up lhree
hits, no runs, two strike outs and
wallcing nobody. Philadelphia battled back to tie !he game and break
a 7 all tie in the seventh inning for
Wilson's first major league victory.
John Boozer came in to get the
final out of Bill's 8-7 milestone
victory.
Wilson's best year in the ml\iors
was in 1971 when he appeared in
38 games with a 4-6 record and an
excellent 3.05 ERA. Still the
injuries continued to haunt the
righthander. He missed the final
month and a half of his rookie season with a rib cage injury and
phlebitis of the left leg. In 1972 a
herniated disc in his upper back
kept him on the shelf until July
27th. When he was healthy baseball experts agreed the Wilson had
one of the game's best sliders.
For his major league career
WILSON appeared in l 05 games
posting a 9-15 record and an 4.24
ERA and 17 saves. After his playing days ended in 1973 he was
hired by the Phillies as their minor
league pitching instructor. He
joined the Milwaukee organization
in 1975 but left baseball for good io
1976.

Mel·gs EMS squ ads rna k e
11 runs for assistance
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services responded to l I calls for
assistance Friday and Saturday
morning.
Friday: 11:45 a.m. Pomeroy to
Vine Street for Dorothy Jenkinson
who was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 1:58 p.m.
Salem To\Vnship and Rutland Fire
Departments ot Salem School for a
brush rue on property belonging to
Danny Berrett; 7:25 p.m. Tuppers
Plains and ReedsviUe to ReedsviUe
for Bobby Scarbrough who was
transported to Q'Bieness Memorial
Hospital; 8:29 p.m. Middleport to
Overbrook Center for Verda Baily
who was transported to VMH; 9:28
Tuppers Plains .~. J?.aster'! High

Continued from A-1

the orgaaimtion and conduct of the Hocking experience included
Free Enterprise Workshops has supervision, production managebeen QU!slanding. His work in this ment, plant engineering and indusarea and work with Students in trial relations.
Free EntaPrlae h8s earned national
Gust and his wife Susanne
attention for the University of Rio reside in Gallipolis. Evans said,
Grande. In addition the University "the SEORC is most pleased to add
has been named to the John Tern- these two fine individuals to !he
~ Honor Roll for Free Enterbqard. ,They will compliment the
jlrise TeathinJ.
o~er directors who are Bernard
Gust, who is a gmduate o.f the FUltz, Mi~eport; G. Kenner Bush,
University of Delaware and of the Athens; Bruce Reed, Pomeroy;
Ohio University Executive Tom Wiseman, Gallipolis; Robert
MBA-program. has recently been Dalton, Chesapeake; Robert Morappointed to direct the Center Eco- ton, Portsmouth;Howard Thompnomic Development at Rio Grande son, Pilceton: Sam Rhodes, Waverby Dr. Barry Dorsey, presidenL
. Iy; Sam Crawford, Oak Hill;
Associated with Anchor Hock- John-Jones, Jacbon;Deanna Tribe,
ing for many years Gust has con- Albany and Carl Dahlberg, Wellducted mana~ement seminars for ston."
business and mdustry. His Anchor

Deputies investigate B and E
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported
that the department is investigating the breaking and entering on an
outbuilding and house owned by 'Waldo Bmgg, Cleveland. The
house is located on Tanner's Run.
· According to the report, the outbuilding was discovered entered
Friday by a neighbor. 'The house was ransacked The owner, who
arrived late Friday, reported several items missing.

Car strikes deer
POMEROY - A car received moderate ·dam&amp;ge Saturday morning when it hit a deer on State Route 248 early Saturday, a report
from the Meigs County Sheriff said.
Garcia L. Adams, Bashan Road, was traveling west when she
struck a deer that ran into the road No injuries were reported .and
the deer was not killed.

Hit-Skip reported at Big Wheel

POMEROY - A woman told Meigs County Sheriff's deputies
that her car had been bit white she was in the Big Wheel Friday
morning.
.
The car belonging to Mary Ann Shoults, Racine, had light dam' age to its right rear comer.

POMEROY - The following
cases were resolved Wednesday in
the Meigs County Court of Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: John Hollis, Racine,
criminal trespass, 30 days jail suspended to five days, one year probation, costs; criminal mischief, 60
days suspended tD five days, one
year probation, costs, restraining
order issued; Douglas Starcher,
Rutland, driving under suspension,
$500 plus costs, 60 days in j~us­
pended to 10 days, one year ~ba­
tion and 60-day immobilization of
vehicle; V. Wayne Siders, Gallipolis, speed, $30 plus costs; Larry
Parsons, Langsville, seat belt violation, $25 plus costs;
Brian Bass, Racine, no operator's license, $250 plus costs, six
months in jail suspended to 90
days, one year probation; Terry
Matthews, Middleport, domestic
violence, $100 plus costs, 10 days
jail suspended to three days, one
year probation, restraining order
issued; Larry R. Mees, Portland,
speed, $30 plus costs; Janet S.
Tyre, Morgantown, W.Va., speed,
$30 plus costs; L. Alan Goldsberry,
Athens, speed, $30 plus costs;
James T. Dingess, Point Pleasant,
, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Ellen
Gagliano, Athens, failure to display
proper re~tion, $20 plus costs;

with AIDS, are also particularly
vulnerable to complications from
the flu. ·
·
. ·:tt will strike suddenly,,sending
vtctuns to bed with very h1gb ternperatures and very low en~gy,"
Shalala said.
·
Because the flu season is
expected to begin earlier than
usual, .the ,ovemment is ur~g atnsk Amencans to get thetr shots
before the end of October, rather
than wailifl$ until mid-November.
"This IS a year when it's of
evehn greater importance than ever
to ave those flu shots," said Lee
who is 69 and plans tD get his fl~
shot soon. "I can't stress enough
the seriousness of this potential
epidemic, the urgency of getting
the immunizations, and getting
them in October-."

,.,

-

'

.. .

p4long th.e RilT:er

.section B

October 3, 1183

,

•

National Hunting and Fis.hing Day
obseryed September 25, i993 ..

H

?n~g. fishing and trapping were

·

Changes announced

..

POMEROY • Changes in the
days when shots will be given in
October and November have been
th
· c
announced by e Meigs ounty
~~e:; been necessitated by the olumbus physicians
schedules for local clinics. The
clinics will be held from 9 to 11
d1 3
T esc1a
a.m. an
to p.m. on u
ys,
Ocl 5 and Ocl 19, and Nov. 9 and

Healr:

John Young, prnldent of the Chester BOWhunters club, assists a youngster In archery.

.

JUSt a few of !he subjects introduced September 25 at the annual
National and Hunting and Fishing Day
observance by !he Ken Amsbary Chapter
of the Izaak Walton League of America.
Held at the Izaak Walton Farm near
Chester, !he event serves primarily to
initiate youngsters into the world of
hunting and fishing, said Don Cullums,
club president.
Following an indoors safety briefing,
youngsters were taken out and introduced
to various hunting and fishing activitie~
·such as fly fishing, archery and reloading.
For instance, during a 'coon dog exhibition, trained hounds pursued a raccoon
across a pond and then "treed" the animal
suspended in a wire cage suspended
safely above the hounds.

Olher activities were more· hands ~ in
n~ture. Youngsters were given an opportunity to test !heir aim wilh a bow and
arrow and were treated to a lunch of
"deerburgers" along wilh !he more traditional soda pop and chips.
Back indoors, !he children witnessed a
turkey calling demonstration and a
watched a videotape on hunting in Ohio
presented by Meigs County Game Protector Keilh Wood.
Although some activities, such as :
. muzzleloading, trap and .22-caliber rifle
shooting, were canceled due to the rain
that day, approximately 55 youngsters and
their parents turned out to ensure !hat
future generations received a safe, positive and entertaining introduction to
outdoor hunting and fishing sports.

.

fct~~~dsu~~~~~:~;~~e~~

nomic Education Coordination and
Dwight D. Eisenhower.
.
• Approved the tuition rate for
the 1993-94 school year.
.
. ' Granted permission for the
Gallia-Jackson-Vinton JVSD to
become a member of the Ohio
Coalition for ~uity and Adequacy
of School Funding for the 199394
school year.
• Approved the amendment of
Board Policy 5600.
• Approved the Advisory Committee members and their tenns.
• Accepted the, generous donation of ;m EpS!Jn 5000·Action Printer from the American Institute of
Banking.
,j'
• Accepted the generous dooalion of an Hewlett~Packard Deskjet ·
500 printer from the Federal-Mogul
Corporation in exchange for computer lnlining.
.

School for James wauace who w·as
transported to Pleasant Valley Hospitali 10:53 p.m. Middleport to
North Third Street for Shirley Herman who was treated on the scene.
Saturday: 1:18 a.m. Tuppers
Plains to State Route 7 for Mike
Sherdan who was treate.d at the
scene; 1:48 11-m. Pomeroy to State
Route 7 for Kevin Doogan who
was treated at the scene; '3:37 a.m.
Syracuse to Fourth Street for
Ernest Triplett who was transported
to VMH; 3:44 a.m. Rutland to
Brick, Street for Loretta Adkins
who was uansported to VMH; 4:29
a.m. Racine squad and fire to State
Route 124 for an auto accident,
patient was gone upon ¢vat.

Meigs·County Court n_ews

r--Tri-County Briefs:-

Women cited on charge

Mary .Lou Henderson, Patricia Firefighten: Association and Coaf.Skil{more; secretarial: · Dianna tor. Fire Department and EMT-A
Crabtree, Sharon Dalton, An'ela BILlie in participation witb PillsGeorge, Cathy Hammond, Lusa bury, Inc.
H'llllmond, Susan Looney, Barbara
. • Approved the following pan~
McKt&gt;e, Kathleen Nelson, Patricia 11me hourly ad 11 It appointments:
Sbdmore., Caryl Thompson, Ruby Ann Boyd, ABLE Instructor·
Weddingum; Switchboard: Tiffany Cindy Wilson and Juanita wOod.'
Brow a, Tawna Garnes, Cathy ABLE Aides ; Darrell Day Ai;
Hammond, Melinda Kruskamp, Conditioning/Refriger~tion; Bruce
Melissa Pearce, Caryl Thompson.
Reffet~ Auto Body; Marvin Deck,
• Granted supplemental con- R1chard Eubanks, Jimmie Shato
tracts to Marty Wallace and Jim and Steve Wallis, Basic Firefighter:
McCarley as mt'nitors for the Steve Wallis, Breathing Apparatus:
Alternative School Program for the Tim Bartee, CurricUlum Specialist:
1993-94 school year.
Sheila Whiteley, Elements o-f
• Granted a supplemem.al contract Mechanics; Gene Lyons,' EMT-A
to Phyllis Rose as Student Year- Basic; Roy Jones, First Aid
book Advisor for the 1993-94 Refresher; Barbara Lanier-Jones,
sc hool year.
Nurse Aide/Training; John Arnold,
• Approved the following added PACE/Job .Coach;· Darrell Detty,
to the list of students employed to Keyboardm"; Sherry Walker
work in·the Option IV Special Edu- Training Speclalistllob Coach.
'
cation Work Program during· the
• Approved the 1993-94 Practi1993-94: Gary Combs, Roy Fletch- cal Nursing Program Student
er, Jasm Haag, Carl Rinehart and Handbook.
"
Mark Siders.
• Approved the eslablishment of
In the Adult Education division, an hourly rate of pa;r for substitutes
the board:
in the Adult Divismn to be set at
• Approved the following pro- $12.50 per hour.
gram budgets: Basic Firefighter in
The board also:
pacticipation with Gallia County
• Gmnted pennission to contract
,
for physical thempy services.
Granted pennission to make
application for the following

·

.

Melinda S. Hasensur, Holland,
speed, $30 plus costs;

•

Clara K. Pullins, Pomeroy, left
of center, $40 plus costs; Kenneth
E. Smith, The Plains, speed, $30
plus costs; Lindll Kay Patterson,
Pomeroy, failure tD yield, $ZO plus
costs; Jeffrey A. Birchfield,
Albany, failure to yield, $20 plus
costs; Kellie J. Nease, Racine,
speed, $30 plus costs; Kenna K.
Bush, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus
costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Steve W. HyseU, Shade, seat bel~
$25 plus costs; Benjamin J. Fackler, Rutland, speed, $30 plus costs;
lack L. Pursley, Sandyville, W.Va.,
speed, $30 plus costs; Paul Van
Cooney, Racine, criminal dama~­
ing, $50 plus costs, 10 days in jail,
one year probation; Cathy Laudermilt, Reedsville, passing bad
checks, $25 plus costs and restitution; John J. Guinther, DUI and
driving under suspension, $500
plus costs, sill months in jail suspended to 30 days, one year license
suspension and one year probation,
same fine and sentence to run concurrent with DUI).
Forfeiting bonds were: Thomas
Lee, Albany, speed, $90; William
G. Anderson, Rutland, speed, $70;
Jacqueline Howell, Jacksonville,
Fla., speed, $70; Robert Willis,
Palestine, Texas, speed, $70.

[g .
'Ihe,V Feel Goocr

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John Hetzer explains to an attentiVe ~rowd of youngsters how to properly prepare and ha~dle traps. Hetzer also showell some of the wild pla.nts found In the area.
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new balance·¥"•
A more inteHigent approoch to building shoes.

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Mon.-Fri. 9:30-8:00; Tuea.-Thu111. 11:30-6:00
Sat. 9:30-5:00;
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Do you know what to do in an
EMERGENCY?

.

POMEROY • A woman was cited to Meigs County Court on
peny theft charges after being caught at Big Wheel for allegedly
shoplifting a pair of girl's boola.
Bobbi Jill Smith, 26, Ripley, W.Va., wiU appear in County Coon
Wednesday.

Get prep~red!

Truck stereo recovered

POMEROY - A stereo reponed stolen from Jamie Hubbard's
pickup truck on Sei&gt;L 28 has been returned to the owner.
.
The. owner told the Meiss &lt;;:ounty Sheriff's Office Friday that
they do not want any further acbon taken.
.

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Youngsters watch as Roy Test demonstrates the art of fly fishing.

Complete CPR and First Aid Training.
Register to attend a class starting

Stories, photo
and design by
Jim Freeman,
Times-Sentinel
•
Staff

Monday, October 4,1993
at Holzer Clinic RehabiUtatlon Center
4th and Sycamore Streets, GalUpolls.
Tlllte IHIIona: October 4, 11, and 18 from 6:30p.m. to11 p.m

Cost: $34.60 Including lllllnUII
+CoriHkalt In CPR llld·Flnl Aid
,_... upan =nplltk:u•

Sales - ,flental- Seroice
.'

HOME OXYGEN THERAPY

Rock of ~ often yoli • choice of I dlllliwlt colored ,....
nnM. wtwtewr your .............. mtJY·be, complete fldlaf~~e-

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.. STAilEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
352 111W Awe.
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hllipells, OH.

.!

Rts,lratory n..r.plst- 24 Hill' Emirg11cy Service
We Ill Medicare, MedlcC!Id, ttc.. for the patle•t. .Home Owned ond Operated

Gallipolis
446-7213
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Jackso1

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+l!xoltllnt - l o r belly-

... u- who ... tor atlln.

+Reglllrltlon llld ~mont
roquirld.

To register call Terri BartH
at446-5244

•
Game Protector Keith Wood discusses tur1&lt;ey hunting.

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GALLIPOLIS • Conrad .C oot
an'd the Calvary Echoes will be
sinsing with Jack Parsons preachin• at Debbie Drive Chapel, formerly Faith Temple Independent
Ch~m:h, at the 10 a.m. service.

•••

GALLIPOUS - Mina Chapel's
homecoming, helterhouse No. l ,
OOM Pllfk
!rieL Services will
begin at 11 .m. Grubb famiJy will
be sin · after lunch. There will
be no services at the chapel On
0cL3.

•••

POINT PLEASANT - Narcotics
Anonymous Tri County Group will
meet at 611 Viand St. at 7:30 p.m.
.V~,s.i~ ~ttanoc for basement.

CADMU~ - Cadmus 'High
School reumon, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Lunch catered. Call Clay Baker,
379-2746.
•••
CEN1l!NARY • The Gloryland
· Grass sing~ will be singing with
Rev. ,Donnie Johnson preaching at
~tenary United Christian Church
at 7 p.m..
•••

- EuREKA - A homecoming will

be held at E~ Omrch with the
End Times lllid Born 1\gajn Believers sinsmg. Dianer wifl be served
at noon. Bring a covered dish .
Th~e will be no Sunday evening
servJCC.

•••

CROWN CITY - A homecoming will be held at Good Hop BaP-

Workshop focuses on bed
.and brealifast business

U:S,SIE OSBORNE AND RYAN JEFFERS

Qsborne-Jeffers
An open church weeding will be
held at the Rutland Free Will Baptist Church on .OCt. 23 at 4:30 p.m.
A reception will follow at the
Kyger O'eek Clubhouse.

•

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:

1986

of

West Virgina University at Parkersburg, West Virgina Tech. and is
a graduate of the West Virginia
State Police Academy.
He is employed by Shell Chemi·
cal Plant.
The open church wedding will
on Oct. 23 at 2 p.m. at the First
Church of God in New Haven,
W.Va. A reception will follow at
the New Haven Community Center.

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will

•••

VINTON • Gallia CtiUI\1)'
Fomltn G~se will be hdd at 7:30
p.m. at Huntin1ton Grange HaiL
Potluck refreshments to follOw;

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...

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•••

at the Sjtamse
Ch~rch of the
Nazarene with
Evangelist ·
Warren Toler!
· Oct•.5th·1 Oth
7:00p.m.

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:;:

Hr!Uut II

Frierull

Samuel Michael, Will Poole, Mil-

dred Caldwell,.Gary, Kim and Matt
Michael. Jared Spencer, Peggy and

IMAGING

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HAIR HIGHLIGHTS
453 St. Rt. 1

Gaillpol!•

446-4597
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BIRNEY
·a.ORDERS

it

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s·9ts

Do you feel you are oaylng too much for
your prescnpttonsl th~n you should be
shopping with us. With the cost of medlca·
ttons constantly on the rtse, we feellt ls
our responslblllty to offer our
customers everp •dvantage possible.
You see. we've made It a point to know
wlien aenerlc equivalents are avallable.
. Then. )V'oltlng hand· In-hand with your
· .· · dOctor. we Qll your prescriptidn, exactly
· as ordered, and vou 1ave In the process.

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.of'ral Parking (VIdeo TcSUeh Lot)

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Frtandly;S.rvlce
oStora Chlrga Ac:counlli

·.,,... Delivery to Home or Work

(Chaihlra, Bradbury,

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·· . R~D ~- Jayme .Rachelle N.Y.
•
' .T'tllil IIIII: Ba1 Ben,;,min BiCkford . The weddiag wiU !'C on OcL 16
anJI(IIUICe -S.eif eDIIS~.ment and at 2_:30 P:J;D· II Dav!lle Holin!'SI
· uv m~Da wcM~na- , . ,
Church With a recepllon f4111owmg
II 1M
Danny at the Rutland. Nazarine FeUo\vship
: IDd s-dla'Tilli-. ____mi. Earl is ' HaD.
'
• :die al!llooi- Bidduclllld '!"'
The grac~ c~ of an open
~~ 1
Llb_~id.· church wedding will be observed.
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BORDERS

-·. . oFaat •

•-..art, P,OiMroy; Maaon,.·

with pearl. centers. Her bouq'!et
was of white. roses accented w1th
pearls, na~ ribbon and lace. ·
The bride's ensemble was made
by her~,
, The ~d of hon~r was Angte
Hill •. cousm of the bnde. She wonl
a J?nncess style .calf len$th navy
~lin ~ ~catunng a white c;ollar
tnmmed w1th, lace. She earned a
smaller matchmg bouquet.
.
The groom. wore a black tall
c!'at tuxedo w1th a nave boutonmere.
.
Best man was Eddie Van Maire
of Mason, W.Va. He wore a black
tail C!'al tuxedo. with a smaller
matching ~utonmere.
.
A recepuon. was held foll!&gt;Wmg
the ~~n&gt;: 1n the ch~m:h s fellowship building. , .
.
The couple res1des 1n Racme.

GREENSBORO, N.C. • Theresa
Weaver (Vanmeter) and Randy
Pressley were united in marriage
on Sept. 10. The candle light double ring ceremony was performed
by the Rev. Don Shelton at the
Willomore Baptist Church, Greensboro, N.C.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Weaver. Bedford, Ky. The groom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. R.C. Pressley,
Greensboro, N.C.
Escorted to the alter by her son
Michael and given in marriage by
her children, the bride wore an
ivory lace overlay gown and carried a bouquet of silk flowers
designed by her daughters, Rebecca and Meh&lt;nie.
Bridemaids were Melanie,

Rebecca, Julie and Kara, the
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Prealcy.
Michai:l, son of the bride, served
as best man.
The alter was decorated "ith
ferns and candelabru with bouquets matching the Mdal bouqet. •
Soloist Joyce Harvell sans the
"Lord's Prayer."
Th~ couple resides with son
Mike m Graham. N.C.
·

PI 10 I CIIUAAPIIY
Senior PO/tralt Speclalista ·
(114} 4fH7DO
•

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depiubnent and she only knew her
own fitS! name.
"A tag such as this would have
ma~e !indio~ mom or dad much
easter, he SBid
The !Jigs can be obtained from
the pohce d1spatcber or records
clerk at 518 Second Ave.

TODDLER UNIVERSITY

lntro-Walking

The ·Shoe Cafe
L.tayette MaD
hi&amp;pel•

•

Unusual New Borders And
Wallpapers Now Available

DAUIATIONS

DISNEY CHARA~ERS .
NOW-_AVAILABLE

:.U,w Pra.Crlptlon Prlc•

=

pie ribbons.
The groom wore a black classio.
·" joined in marriage at Groce United cutaway tux~do with vest, sa'in
:~ Methodist Church Aug. 7, at 3:30 ascot tie, and:'\'ing collar shir;l. The
:: p.m.
. satip collar of the tuxedo matched
,;: The double ring ceremony was the satin leg stripe of the pants. The
;• officiated by Reverend Joseph groom,'s boutonniere. was a white
!Hefne~ with music provided by rosebud, lavender sweetheart ro8(1,
(' organist, Edie. Ross or Gallipolis · andI p·~-'
....uosa.
. •
and vocalist, Abril Bush of ColumThe ·best man, u·shers, and
bus.
acolytes all wore the black claSsic
. · Kelly-J o is the daushter of cutaway tuxedos identical to the
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
:-Steven and Linda Cha{ll11811 of Gal- grooln's. Their boutonnieres were
Police
Department has available a
lavender
roseblids
with
purple
sta;:-Jipolis, and granddaughter·of Curl.&gt;:
quantity
of "Lifesaver" identifies•: ·and Frances Caldwell and'Basll tus and plumosa.
lion
tags.
The reception was held at the
:: 'and Jane c~. all or HulitingMade from a cloth material
• ton, W.Va. John IS the son of Ken- Moose Lodge in PL Pleasant, W.
~ese
tags are designed to be laced
~. ton and Kay Adkins of Gallipolis Va., catered by Larry Bra1111 &amp; staff
mto
shoes
or sewn into clothing.
: ·:and the grandson of Harry and with music provided by George
They
contain
a place for name,
Thompson. The three tiered cake,
~ :Ruth Monk and Lonnie and Eva
baked by Jean Henderson, was address, phone number and medi~ Adkins all of Charleston, W.Va.
_
:: Amy Brumfield of Gallipolis, white trimmed with white icing, cal information.
According to Chief Roger Branstrinss of pearls, and each layer
~ read' the poem, "All I Want" from
r. Words of LOve. Elizabeth Chap- topll!'d with flower.1 to match the deberry, a lost three-year-old girl
" man, Huntington, W.Va., aunt of bridesmaids. There were four satel- recently came into the police
:: the bride, registered the guests.
lite cakes that were made from the
~:
The bride was escorted by her four grandmothers' favorite
l: ,f a- and presented in marriage by recipes. Servers for the reception
~ both.parents.
were Du-Wanna Kapinos of Ona,
.: . M11id. of honor was Shayna W. Va., Linda Lee Chapnian of
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
:: Chl~J)nw) of Lexinston, Ky.,Sister Barboursville, W. Va., Pamela and Gallipolis City D.A.R.E. will
:: of' tlle •bride; ,bridesmaids~ were Hun! .and Betty Knight, botb of l)ave a 'Halloween party Saliirdily,
., Teresa A. Adkins of Cape Coral, lf!l.ntinstPD, W. Va.; all were aunts Oct. 23, from 2 to 5 p.m. at the
:: Fla., !lnd T,eresa L. Aditios, of the. bride.. Jb(l we&lt;lding coordi- VFW Post 4464 Building, 134
:: Clartsville of Tenn., both sisters- IUIIOC"WIS Jeri Allie.
Third Ave.
•: in-law of, Stacy Bennett' of Gai- . The bride is a 1989 graduate of
Fourth through seventh grade
:· Jipolis, Kr!Sty Kapinos, Ona, (jallia· Ac8demy High School and students in the Gallipolis City and
:: W.Va., cousin of the bride and 1993 SIIDma cum laude gt'llduate of Gallia County School Systems are
.: Mayuko "Mikee" Ota of Yoko- Ohio University with a BachelOr of invited.
·.:·hama; Japan. Flower girls were Arts and Science in Elementlll)'
Sponsored by the VFW post, the
:: Kayla Adkins of_Clarbville, Tenn. Education. She is a sixth grade sc•· party will include hamburgers, hot
··.and S,hanna Adkins of Cape Coral, ence and ecology teacher at dogs, soft drinks and door prizes.
:: Fla., both nieces ol the groom.
Leesville Road Middle School in Costumes are optional, but the
:: Best man was Eric ;Saxon of Raleigh, N.C.
pany will include a coslltme ju'4·· Upper Marlaboro, Md.; grooms. The groom is a 1988 graduate of mg. A Walt Disney cartoon mov1e
: men and ushers were, Greg Adkins Gallia Academy High School and will also be shown.
:of Cape Coral, Fla., brother of the Hocking Technical College. He is
The party will be chaperoned
; groom, Dan Adkins of'Ciarbville, employed by Reeve-Smith Volvo and D.A.R.E. officers Wayne
~ Tenn., brother of the grooin, Randy
as an automotive technician in Sweeney and Richard Mudd will
~ Amsbury of Morfantown; W.Va., Raleigh; N.C.
.
' be present. Doors open at I :45 p.m.
~Terry Benne11 o Gallipolis and - - - - - - - - - - - -students may come early to sign
~Duane Chapman of Barboursville,
The state of Arizona would fit in.
';,W.Va., cousin of the bride. The inside the.boundaries of China's
Sponsors for the party include
•acolytes were Jeff Chapman ot Chang Tang Reserve in Tibet, the Bob Evans Restaurants, MeDon· Barboursville, W.Va., lllld Jeremy ...world's largest nature reserve after aid's Restaurant, Stowaway Bakery
.;-Hunt, Huntington, W.Va., both Greenland National Park, reports
·
Bob's Electronics, all
~ cousins of the bride. Ring bearer
National Geosraphic.
• was Chris Mohr of Vinton.
·
!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
.: The bride's gown was made of
:: white satin with a port(ait necld~
; pleating and appliqUe. It·featured
-: !inglis~ net sleeves with pearls,
• lace, and sequins. The fitted bodice
: of Engliah net with jewel encnisted
: mantel cascaded into ballroom skirt .
.: covered in lace and pearls wit"
·• cathe.dral train of applique and
': pleau. The veil was a tiara style
: headpiece of pearls and floral
: sjlray, two tier rolled edge, matinee
: lenslh. For something ofd the !!ride
•• carried her sreat-grandmother
; Knight's lavaliere of ruby and
: pearls.
•.
J, ·f
.• The bride bouquet consisted of
..: her mother's white lace bridal bible
·: adorned with a cascading bpuquet
: of white roses, lavender sweetheart
: roses, .English ivy and baby's
• breath.
;
The bride's attendants wore tea
: lensth,rqyal blue shan tuns 'silk.
~ The dresses featured a ·i!Ortrait
,. neckline with cabbase rose m front.
( lilted bodice, high-low hemline and ·
.-: bow with cabbage rose at-back.
.
::: The maid of honor carried a
·• white gathering basket filled with
= .purple larkspur, pink and lavender
;. .~wee,tbeart roses, brigb! pink
~ miniature!· carnations, conillowers
,t. and, At-.m
. accen"""'
·-~~a
'::r:':::-.:ana
,~
• purple satin bow. The · mai
·'
~ carried Euro~ l\an4 tied bou,
:; lqueu f~atunng. larpjlur, roses, . i
.. 'alstromllria. coriifiOweis. and status
;•. surrounded by greenery and tied
; :with royal blue satin ribbons.
.
: • The~ girls wore~
~· white satin . dresses wit,h \'fide '
· ~ applique collars and scalloped
:: hemlines trimmed in lace. They ·
: carried white pincess baskets dec~ rated with lavender and pint
!!sweetheart roses, purple s!ltus,
•: :liaby'a breath, and llnglisb ivy
~nted by white tulle bow -ten-

101

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GALLIPOUS - Kelly-Jo Chap-

VFW sponsors .
Halloween party

at

NOW

II

Chapman-Adkins

RACINE - Melissa Rainey and
James Grueser, Jr. were united in
llllll'ria8e on Aug. 7 at Hope Baptist
Church in Middleport.
Melissa is the daughter of Dennie and Janet Hill, Ra!:ine andJIICk
.Rainey of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
James is the son of James and
Donna Grueser, Middleport.
. Rev. Dave Bryan officiated the
ceremony with music and sin$ing
provided by Tracey Grueser, siSter
of the groom. Courtney Hill, sister
of the bride and Crissy Williams,
cousin of the groom, registered
suests
Th~ bride, who was escorted to
the alter by her stepfather, wore a .
princess style bridal gown of satin
featuring 8 drape with a rosette ih
the center. She wore an open crown
headpiece featuring silk flowers

Identification tags available

Billy Crane, Homer and Sarah
Parker and Brittany, Dellnis Parker,
Su:z;y Carpenter, Tom Hysell,
.Roger, Dorothy and Michael
, Leitbeit. Carolyn, Lou, Sherri and
Michael Sll\ith, Mary, Virgil and
Tom Hamm, Eileen Buck, Abbie
Stratton, Bernice Carpenter, Rosalie Story, Wilma and Howard '
Parker and Becky Zurcher.
Others present=ere Ann
and Howard Kay
, Sr., Denver, Colo.; Howard Ka Parker, Jr.
and Dawn, Kenvil, N.J.; Jan~ 1111d
Bob Parker, Marietta; Juanita Frazer, Hmllingt0n, W.Va., Betty, Mike
and Jennifer Sellards, Point .Pleasant, W.Va. and Willis Parker, Park-

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. MR. AND MRS. JOIIJOI ADKINS

:t man and John Kendal Adkins were

With Special SinA Nightly! .

POMEROY - Tbe wedding Ch~m:h with .Rev. Roland Wildman
plans of Angela Goody and officiatins. The ceremony will
Michael Mayer have been final - begin at 2:30 ,p.m. The custom of
ized. The weeding will be on Oct. an open church wedding and recep.
23 at the Trinity·C9ngreg11u_bnal ' lion will be 'observed.

.~

Weaver-Pressley

Rainey-Grueser .

Goody-Mayer

....

MR. AND MRS. RANDY PRESSLEY

MR. AND MRS. JAMES GRVESER

.I

· GALLlPOUS - The ability to To avoid-such reaclion, the aphasic
express our thoughts and iileas is · penon must be able 10 feel successsomethins many of us take for ful in commul!cating his o.wn
granted. A stroke may cause a 1011!1 thoughts through speech, gestunng,
or partial loss of one's ability to orwritins.
communicate, a diSQider known as
The Holzer Medical Center
"aphasia."
.
Rehabilitation Unit offers victims
, People may have varying stages of com~unication dis~rders a!!
of aphasia. Some can only say one opportumty to share theu expenor two words where others may just ences during the Aphasia Support
have an occasional probl~m in · Group. The next meeting w!U be
recalling cerraiD words. However, OcL 20 from 4 to S:30 p.m. m the
they usually have dif_fu:ulty ·under- Rehabilitation U!Jit at Hoi= Medisranding speeeh that IS,lcnslhy and cal Center. !DCCilDIIS. are ·held regucomplex. They may only be able 10 larly on the thirjl Wednesday of
read sin'\'ple words and their writing every month. The aphasia Support
may, be full of spelling errors or , Group is lead by Mel,inda Collen,
word substitulions.
M.S., CCP·SLP, Mitthew Johnson
Inabilities to communicate M.A., CCP-SLP, imd Ellen Gibson
effectively with others frequently MSW. For more information concause dep_re~ion an4 withdrawal. ract}!!elinda ~~lien at 446-5070.

"

tal'lllftil "I• 11

the Library will beet at J p.m. in
Bossard Memorial Ulirafy. The fall
book sale will be 'plans
'!&gt;e
fl~.
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Aphasia support group
to hold meeting at HMC
· Batey-Briles

.SUnday nmu

GALLIPQLlS - The Americpn
Cancer Society SupporCGroup
meeting has been canceled for this
. day·and has bee!J ~eschedilled for
MC!nday, Oct. 4
Oct. 18.
~· .... '
GALLIPOLIS - Narcotics
A. .• , I
Anonymous Just For Today Group
Tu~y, ua. 5. . ·
will meet at Grace United
POINT PLEASANT ' ·Narcotics
Methodist Church at 7 p.m.
Anonymous 'Clean and Free GrOup
•
will m~t at the EpiscOpaL 01$11,
LOGAN - Nnrcotics Anony- 804 Main St.,.at 8:30·p.nt .•'· ... ,·
~
• • • ••
•
.f
-'1'
mous Courage io Change Group
will meet ·at First Ch~m:h of Christ
GAI,LIPOLIS - The Lions c)l'ub
at 6:30p.m.
will meet at Holiday Innr at 6:30
p.m.
,
GALLIPoLIS - The Friends of

Party hOstesses were Sharon and
Louise Michael, Lenora Leifheit,
MarthaPOole and Jan Parker.
Guests from Meiss . County
included Irene Parker, Nancy
Campbell, Ryan Adams, Cora and ersburg.

BILLIE BATEY AND PAUL DKILL'!i

.,

- ---~---··

tist C~urcb , Morning services
begin at 10 a.m. with Larry Haley
presenting the sennon. Dinner will.
be at noon with Ronnie Nicholas
presenting the service after noon.
The Shafer and Queen family will
be singing.
.
:
"
•••
GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Jim
Brookover will be presenting the
sermon. at New Life Victory Cen- '
ter, 3773 Georgcis O'eek Rd., at 10
a.m. and 7 p.m.

Pomeroy news

fairpoundS.

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' 1193

CALDWELL - Starting a bed .6 at the Buckeye Lake Yacht aub
and breakfast' might sound like a located one ITii1e south of Interstate
pleasarit way to meet people and 70 on State Route 79. The seminar
make a little money on the side. will stan at 8:30 a.m. with regisBut it's a lot of work, says Ed lnltion an~ COI\Clude at4 p.m.
On Oct. 11 and 12 an apP.renSmith, district specialist with Ohio
State University Extension. Still, ticeship B &amp; B program w1ll he
the B &amp;; B busmess continues to offered in Woodsfield. This program starts at 11 a.m. on' Oct. 11
spur interest.
Smilll has organized three semi- and concludes at 10:30 a.m. on
nan this fall for anyone interested Oct. 12.
Anyone interested in more .
in starting a bed and breakfast or
for l)perators who think they need information or to register can conto brush up on some skills. tact their county Extension office
Advance reB;stration is required for or Ed Smith at the East District
all three seminars. space ia limited Extension Office at (614) 7322381.
so resister early.
.
The first seminar will be on Oct.

POMEROY -Jan andJ!ric Parleer, livermore, Calif., visited their
mothet,_Nellie ~.to,.ioin in the
celebrationofhel80thbirthday.
!her arrived on Sept. 22 and the
folloY"mg day vis!ted the Amish
. area m Eastern Obio. On Sept. 25
. they attended the. wedding of KeUi
Parker and Jeff Weber at New
.; Malamoras, and the following day,
Mrs. Parker's birthday, attended
Sunday School and worship services. After lunch at Dale's in Ghllipolis, they went to a surprise
b~y · ~ at the Rock Springs

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mn.
Andrew Baley. Middleport and Mr.
and Mrs. Dennis Briles, New
Haven announce the engagement
and appnw:bing marriage of their
children Billie Love Batey and
Paul Len Briles.
Miss Batey is a 1992 graduate
of Meigs High School and is cur...n,,lv employed by Holzer Medical

,,

Gallia community cal~ndar_

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Sunday, Oct. 3

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wv

Sentinel

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t's a small price to pay. And throughout the
month of October, it's the special price Pleasant
Valley Hospital is offering the women of our communityforascreeningbreast mammogTam. Why?
Because we know that when breast cancer is found
at the earliest possible stages, your chance for
survival increases dramatically. And mammography is an important part of the three-step early
detection program all women should follow .

NATIONAL
BREAST CANCER
AWARENESS MONTH

If you are age 35 or over - the age at which the
American Cancer Society recommends you have
a screening mammogram - you can takeadvantageofour$55 special with a physidan'sorder. We'll
honor orders from any physician licensed to practice in West Virginia or Ohio. And you should also
know that most insurance carriers, including Medicare, are now covering screening mammography.

Ask your doctor now to order a screening mammogram for you. Then sched ule an appointment at
Pleasant Valley Hospital by calling our Radiology Department at (304)675-4340, ext. 283. And if you
think you can't afford a mammogram, think again. Now you can't afford not to have one.
U you aon't have a personal physician, yet wish to take advantage of this special offer, call
PhyslcianMatch, our physician referral health line, at 675-lPVH (675-1784), or toll-free 1-80C).33J..
1PVH (1-800-333·1784), for the name of a doctor who can order a mammogram for you .

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PLEASANT -VA.LLEY HOSPITAL
The family of professionals
2520 Valley Drive, Point Pieasanl, WV 2sssq (304) 67~

�•
nmes-senttnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpoll•,

.

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Pleasant, WV

Circle-Harra

October3, 1

Compost .pile contents

KANSAS CITY, KANSAS • attending were aunts of the bride .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Blakeslee Jennifer Butcher, Rockport: Ind .
~this week li'om attending · and Joyce Circle, New Haven,
the W«&lt;dingoflheir granddaughter W.Va.; Cheryl Halley, cousin of
Mariaone Colleen Circle, the the bride and her daughters Ashley
daughter of Patricia Blakeslee Cir- and Megan, New Haven, W.Va.
cle and the .late Melvin Ci{cle. to also attended. Great Aunt Oral Rice
Lance Harra, son of Mr. and Mrs. and cousin Morris Holloway from
Ff8lll&lt; Ham! of Pllola, Kansas. The Michl also attended. ' .
weddi.ng was Sept. 25 at Grace
Foft:'wing the ceremony I SO
Covenant Presbyterian Church in people aaeoded the reception at the
Overland Park, Kansas City, YFW Hall. The couple left on their
~. ·
hpneymoon at Disney World Hotel
. Mr. Blakeslee had the honor of and the Disney World Cruise Ship
escorting his granddaughter down to the Bahamas.
the aisle. Other fll!llily members
The couple will return the their
perticipaling in the ceremony were work during the coming week.
Mart Circle, brother of the bride as Mrs. Ham! is a vocational rehabiligroomsman, nieces Julie Butcher, tation placement specialist at the
bridesmaid, Jessica Butcher, candle Rehabilitation Institute in Kansas
liB!'ter and Joanna Butcher, flower City and the groom is a computer
gtrl.
prohagrammMi~ ~r the JWS Corp. in
. Other locally lcnown people . S wnee ss1on, Kan~.

Harris-Brinker
MIDDLEPORT • Mindy K.
Harris and Scou W. Brinker were
united in marriage during a doublering ceremony on Aug . 7 at the
Victory Baptist Church in Middleport. The Rev. James Keese offici·
ated.
The bride is the daughter of
Vickie Harris of Middlepon and
William Harris of South Carolina.
The groom is the son of Harold and
Penny Brinker of Pomeroy.
.
The bride was given in marriage
by her parents and escorted toothe
alter by her father. The bride wore
a long ttailing satin gown featuring
sequents and pearls.
The bride carried a bou9.ue1 of
while l!nd blue roses highlighted
with beans, lace and ribbon.
Matron of honor was Kimberly
Eads, sister of the bride. Bridesmaids were Amanda Brinker, sister
of the groom; Julie Young, cousin
of the bride and Leslie Gilkey,
friend of the bride. Flowergirl was
Amorette Salser, cousin of the

~~ man

was Billy Morris,
friend of the groom. Groomsmen

were Carl Klaiber, friend of the
bride and groom; Rob Harrison ,
friend of the groom and Tony Van
Cooney, friend of the groom. Ring
bearer was Justin Brewer, cousin of
the bride.
Destiny Jenkins sang "The
Rose • and "Everything I Do."
Dawna Parsons played the piano.
Registering guests were Liza
Zahran, cousin of the bride and
Missy Morris, friend of the groom.
A ,reception followed the ceremony in the church recreation
room. A nine tier cake featuring
white and blue roses, stairsleps and
a blue water fountain was served to
the guests. Serving were Sally Holman and Lois Jenkins.
The bride is a 1992 graduate of
Meigs High School. She is
employed by the Video Touch,
Pomeroy and attends Parkersburg
Beauty College.
The groom is a 1~91 graduate of
Meigs High School and is
employed by Cellular One, Gallipolis.
The couple will reside · in
Pomeroy.

niture, and quilts will all be dis·
played at the museum. On October
22 and 23 applebutter wiU be made
and sold in the side yard of the
museum. Garden clubs of the city
and county will also hold a plant
sale. For more information contaCt
the museum at 532-1222.

STORE HOURS ·

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2 hter

MO!Hiay·tin s-.y

c

8 AM·lO PM
298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH,

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTitiES
PRICES
GOOD OCT. 3 THRU OCT. 9, 1993
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RC COLA

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PRODUCTS
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24 PK., 12 OZ. CANS

s

tjrl

99

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~

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason Counties as news and is
happy to publish wedding stories
and ohotographs without charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeliness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Malerial for
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date
of publication.
·
Those not making the ·60 day
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of either the .bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories is
desired. Pho~hs may be either
black and whtte or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or instant-developing photos
are not of acceptable quali~.
All malerial submitted for publication is subject to editing.

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Leg Quarters ........! ... 39

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sponsored by Davis-Quickie Agenture dealers from W.Va., Ohio and cy, Inc., will run through October
Ky. wiU be selling doU houses and 31. Gallery hours are Tuesday
miniature accessories. Several of through Friday from 10 a.m. to 3
the miniature pieces on display in . p.m. and Saturday and Sunday
the galleries will be for sale as from 1 to 5 p.m .. All FAC prowell.
gramming is offered lhrou$,h sup"It's a Small World" exhibit, pon of the OhioArts Council.

Gallla Cou-.,,y Fair
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room on Oct. 3, from I to 5. Minia·

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Steak
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OUTSIDE OF
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RESIDENT
PSYCHIATRISTS
PSYCHOLOGISTS &amp;
SOCI4L WORKERS
•MIIICom!TllnllyTruiirV
o&amp;uplrv~ HoUo1ng 10&lt;

&gt;24 Hr. Ernorgoncy Sal\llcel
IU1CIIor ru.P- TINtmonl
&amp; Fornty CounoollrV . oVIcllm'o Aallat"""" Program

Mini exhibitors start display with sale
GALLIPOLIS • The Riverby
mini-crafters of The French Art
Colony, 530 First Avenue in Gal·
lipolis, wiU fill the FAC galleries
wiih ·miliiature c~eations throughout tbe month of October. The
m'ini-crafteis will kick-off their ·
exhibit with a fair .held in the
French Art Colony's lower class-

'

REEDSVILLE ·Nancy Wachter · club .v01ed 19 have ihe s~=,~~;
gave a program on the correct way trimmed llX the histaieal n
to make a compost pile at the the ~lleville Locks and,Dam
S~pte'!lber meeting of the
·A, rcJIOi'l .was .given.
Riverv~ew Garden Club. ·
nOIIIJJiatlllg comnuuee Wlih
She said there are five things lowing orficers to serve
thai can be in acomiiost pile. These coming year,
Whitehead,
~gs are grass clippin~
. ,leaves, president; ~
frut~ and vegetable pee gs, egg 111Cnt; Marilyn·~urn. secretary;
sbells, shredded bark an ine nee- Delores Frank, assistant ·secretary;
dies.
Nancy Wachter, treasurer; Mary
A compost pjle needs to be Alice Bise, flo~er fund and Ella
. ,
watered down once every one or Osbof!!C, scrapbook.
two weelcs and can be sprinkled
Games were colljlucted tiy Jan- :A
with lime to keep lhe odor down. ice Young and prize~ were' given. •,
Compost can be put in a garden JB!'et Connolly recmv~d the door ~
once a year.
pnze. Plans were made to ea1 out in :,
_ The meeting was held at the October at the P!&gt;int of View.f
home of Mary AHce .Bice with Restaurant,Parlc~burg, W.Va.
· ~;
Ruth Anne Balderson servinll as
Refreshll'!ents and f11yors were •
co-hostes.s. Devotions, "Love ts a serve4 to guests Frankie Maxwell ,
Gi(t of God" and "Another Day• and IJa Ingram and· rpcmbers Mar- ,:
were read by Christi Young. Roll line Putman ~·Nel} WU~JI: qtadys :•
call was answered by members Thomas, MargaretJlrpssmckle, r~
telling a favorite school day memo- Pau!in~ MyeJ:S, Grace Weber, ~
ry. Frances Reed read a summary ChrtSit Young, F.ral]ces ·.R~ed;
of the program for next year.
Nancy Wach.tC&lt;r, JaJIICe Young,
Mrs. Whitehead and Mrs. Frnnk Janet Connolly, Marilyn, Hannum, ~~
reported on a recent trip 10 King- Ella ,O$bQI'I_Ie, 'Dolores Frank and t•
wood Center at Mansfield. The Maxme Wliltebead.
t=

Wedding policy
MR. AND MRS. SCOIT BRINKER

I!EPSI
. COLA
.PRODUCTS ·

coyer~d atineeting

Museum displays apple artifacts
IRONTON • Rome Beauty is
the October exhibit at the
Lawrence County Museum, 506
South Sixth St.,lronton.
The exhibit wiU spotlight four
townships in the couljty: Rome,
Mason, Windsor and tllnion. Artifacts lllid history of the awre industry, a child's playroom, dishes, fur-

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TICKET PRICES:•le~ Clro(la Djay ,Mu~ ft,po. 'Chlldr.n (•c.• 2·11~ SUO. On .
Clrcua Day: Adult $8.1J0 A Chlldrin (Agel 2·11) $5.00. Limited Number ollRIHI'YW! .
and Preferred Snta •valllble at •n llddltiOnal che9 on Clrcut JJ.Y. Tlckitt cen be .
upgradad to R_,ecl S.•tlng When the box ' ottloe ppenJ on . Olrcut · !llomlng.
Prefal'l'lld Slat upgl'llde• only IVIIIIbll l111ldl thl big top on Clrcut Day.
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Umii1PerCuatomer

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sentinel

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

'

October

Pometoy Middleport Ga'llpoll., OH Point Pleeaant,

Local history rich with_tales of hermits ·

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MR. AND MRS. LARRY QUEEN

-- Silver anniversary celebrate~
-: GALLIPOLIS . - Larry and
·- Sandy Queen will celebrate !heir
·: Silver Anniversary OcL 10 at Pro.v~ idence Missionary Baptist Church,
' · Teens run Road.
-: They were united in marriage at
~ Providence Missionary Baptist

Church Oct. 6, 1968 by .lhe Rev.
Casey Jones. They are lhe parents
of lhree children, Sherry, Jason and
Jeremy.
.
Friends and relatives are invited
10 a reception. OcL 10 from 2 10 4
p.m. at the church.
~.

~~Golden ,anniversary celebrated
They have lhree children Karen
Ann Jennings of Gallipolis: John
Daniel Jennings of Palo Alto,
Calif.; and Stephen Allen Jennings,
Oakhurst, Calif. They have two
grandchildren.
Dr. Jennings graduated from
The Ohio State University's Colle$e of Medicine in 1945. He
retired in January 1990 as a family
physician at Holzer Clinic and
. Holzer Medical Center.
The celebration, wilh a golden
flow&amp; theme, was held outdoors at
!heir home. Those attending lhe
celebration were close relatives of
the couple: Job~ Jennings and
Diane Richmond, Karen Jennings
and Jack Reese, S.ephen and Joan
Jennings and their daughters, Abi·
gail Louise and Allison Marie,
•
Lolly and Bernard Searles, Libby ·
:::MR. AND MRS. RAY JENNINGS anc:Vrom Brenner, _Melinda and
~DOn Hood and !heir children Evan,
:;; GALLIPOLIS - Dr. and Mrs. Abigail, Miles, and Nathan.
~: Raymond L. Jennings celebrated Richard Fields, Norma Erion, and
f: lheirgc)ldenanniversarySept.ll.
his daughter, Dcloras Fields,
-; They were married Scp1. Jl, -· Wilma and"Bob SHoup, lack and
:. 1943 by Helen's father in lhe back- Lois Shoup and their children,
·; yard of Otterbein's parsonage, Stacy and Patrie, Lois and Frazier
·
Reese, Leslie Reese and David
"'Westt.rville.
:; After moving from Westerville · Blakeman. Unable to attend were
; in 1970 'they lived in Athens for Dan Brenner, Jetty Brenner, Nan
.:: seven years and then Gallipolis for Wampler and Jeff Fields, Pam
~, years.
Wood, and their families.

by Jim Sailda '
·Special COIT,..delat
A boot I ~liteiOaee written
IOIIICday would lie lbola ~~~·
who have lived '
in the hills of
Ohio and w~
Virgin~. The
.coatents would
• surely include
G11Uia 's most
noted hermit,
JobiJ. Salgue, and
mjghtincludeAnn '
BaUCy and James Bwford.
Bailey and Burford might have
been coosidaed "borda' line hermits" because oJ iheir eccentricity.
Oilier subjects for sUch a book would
be GenCtal MCCilusland and his
family, Jackson Coonty' s "Hewitt
the Hermit" and LaWJence County's
Andrew Price. .
One could also add the "old man"
of Old Man's Cave fame.
$upposedly,OldMan'sCavewas
named for 11 Civil W'/11: era man who
enped from West Virginia and hid
in lhe Hocking Hills.
·Somebelievedlhe"oldman"was
wanted fc. some crime in his home
Slate, othets believed him 10 have
been a dcsener from lhe Confederate
Army. Anolher SIDI'y reports that he
had a nervous breakdown bec•use of
some family lragedy.
The~ arc many colorful tales of
olher hermits who lived in Hocking
HillscavessuchasDeadMan 's Cave
and BlackJack's Cave.
Early pioneers found this inscription dated in 1782:
"This is the road 10 hell."
Andrew Price lived in a cave near
Coal Grove in10 the 1920s. In 1929,

a similar episode. ·
.
Even though lhe McCauslands
amassed great wealth, they mostly
i
kept 10 lbemselves. The last one 10 ·
live in lhe farm house on Route 3S
wu McCausland's daughter, who
· SIUne regarded as a hef!llit up untjl
· her death in 1971.
John Salgue lived in lhe caves o!J
p~ which now belongs 10 ~
Gallipolis Developmental Center.
Salgue, who came here from France, ·
became a hermit when his wife left
him to become a prostiblte.
;
Eventually, Salgue built himself a
house of s10nes in Possum Hollow
where"he took up the occupation al
growing grnpes.
CAVES • Berore tbls former Gallipolis Slate InstiSomeofSalgue'svines'datedback
tute building (now GaUipolis Developmenlal Center) was put up in
10 lhe early 19th Century. They wert
1915, the are~~ was known as Salgue's Caves. John Salgue .was a
later propagated by the gardenera ¢
'hermiL This particular structure was torn down In the early 1980s.
the Ohio Hospital for Epileptics,
lasting
uhtil World War U.
•
a reporter for lhe GaUia Times visPreSident
Ulysses
S.
Grant
parJames
Burford
~as
a
noted
siOr}'
itedPriceandreported, "Price'sfront dolled McCausland and he returned teller' who, when bested in a s10ry•
yard has no grass, ~t !here arc a few 10 West Virginia .,;here lived until telling l:onteSt. became a ~rmi~ He
hills o( com, some flourishing tohis death in 1927. In 1873, lhe gen- had previously been a hlllltlng commaiO plants, some beans, and Indian
eral
shot 10 death a Gallia County pimion of Daniel B0011e. .
:
tuniips.
man
who
was
on'his
propeny.
Ann
1Jailey;
like
Daniel
Boone,
"The soil appears 10 be nothing
A big pi&gt;sse was forriled 10 bring believedifyoucould~sm6kefrom
but eroded shale. How anything could
McCauslandbackiOjusticewhich your neighbor's chimney, you were
grow there, even a lhislleor a dan(lesome Gallians considered to be:&amp;t the being crowded ouL
lion,isalhingiOponder. Thefrontof end
of along rope. The general was
lhe cave has been sealed, except for
found innocent when it was diltet- ' JamesSandslsaspecialcorrespon•
a door wilh a spring lock and a chim- mined lhat the victim was a Jbief.
d~ntof~e Su?day Tl~es-Sentlnel.
ney."
lronically,mc.ethapSOyearslater HJS _addras JS: 65 W1llow Drive,
Price, who was !hen 87, stated
McCausland~ssonwasconvictedfor Sprmaboro OH 45066
that he spent most of his time reading
lhe Bible. In 1929 he was on his 51st
trip through lhe entire Bible. Said
Price, "Ifit ain 'I in lhe Bible, it ain't
worth reading."
William Hewitt was born in Vir~
ginia in 1764 and came to live in a
Jackson Coooty cave in 1787, staying until 1820. It is said lhat Hewitt
had beoQroe discouraged wilh civjlization ana so concluded 10 live out
his days in seclusion.
It was said that he acted so strange
before a group oflndian hunters !hat
Purchase your P.A. Denny Boat Cruise Tickets now at th._
NELSONVILLE • Hocking word was passed lhrouBl1 Indian
College has recently released lhe society that Hewitt was under lhe Following:
·
·,
dean's list for summer quarter. providenlialcareoflhe''GreatSpirit" Clark'll Jewelry, Valley Lumber; Banks Construction, Bob's
Each student on lhe list bad at least
Market In Mason, Malga Co. Cluimber of Comm.
a 3.3 grade point average and com- and hence was not 10 be bothered.
•,
GeneraiMcCausland'shomewas
Adult•· 10.00 Children 8.110
pleted 12 or-more credit hours.
along
lhe
Kanawha
River
in
Mason
Several Crul•ea evellble
Local students on the list are County.lt was his burning of ChamCall Charyl Thomas at 1192-6763
Michael Weber, Pomeroy; Todd
Doczi, Middleport; Laurance bersburg, Pa. , as a Confederate genEbersbach, Syracuse; 'fara eral !hat led to the public's great
Humphreys, Pomero.y; Mehn.da haired of him for lhe rest of his life.
•
.In fact, after the Civil War lhe
Kuhn, Tup11ers Plams; She1la
Warner, Racilfe; Trod~ Wllhams, general lived in Europe because !here
Pomeroy and Lucy Wmebrenner, · was a warrant out for his arrest for the
burning.
Pomeroy.
....---...:..------,.......----------,

h.

Big Band :
Stainwhaal

Fadval

oet. 7, ·a,-lth

Hocking dean's
list announced

The (1;11~ e~aft

''Me.? B.ecomeI a fiOSter parent?•
N
. 0 Way!"
·•

Believe it or not, this was once the feeling
of many· people wh'o are now and have
been successful foster J).a!Cnts. Making the
commitme~t can. be difficult. But it can
lead to :many rewarding experiences- and
· the kliowledge that ~ou're doing something
that really matters.

Meigs County's Newest Florist
"A Breath'ofFreshAir"
2nd Annual Holiday Open House
Saturday, October 9, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday, October 10, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Door Prizes- Refreshments
'.

.
-Featuring- Hand crafted wooden items and clocks
-Distinctive flof!ll arrangements, · -Creative gift, food and fa;uit baskets;..
-Party, banquet and weddin~ catering-Fine homemade candies and confections- Thxedo and fonnal ware rental and sales"Contemporary Ideas With Old-Fashioned Charm"
·We specialize in your complete wedding pions

•

HOME HEALTH HEADQUARTERS

any

at

Yeteralls

.

. ... Hospital

1215 E. Memorial Drive
. Pomeroy

.....

•·

''

'

8.m.

d

HEMLOCK ROVE - Hemlock Grove Chun:h of Christ will
,hold
its allnual
homecoming
i rlg with
former
minis1er startHal
Doester of Chambler, Ga. preach-

.

.lowed
ing at by
theSunday
9:30a.m.
school
serv1ce
at10:30;
fol-a
·bastet dinner 81 noon and an afterlloon service starting at l p.m. fea.IWing ''Tbe Born Ag$ Believers"
of Gallipolis. Minister Chas'Domi·
.gao and the congregation invites
die public.

•

Hours: Monday-Saturday 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

(614)667-6607

State Route 681 Across from
Tuppers~lains Elementary
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Pamela A. Douthitt
Wood Crafter

..

B. Gala Douthitt
Floral Da•lgner

•
. ZALESKI· Alpha Omic ron
than four bill for lhe machines, · Chapta-, Delta Kappa Gemma, met
which grin&lt;! !he beans llld brew a at ~..ate Hope Lodge - dy for a
cup on thetpOt. Wbereanold-l'ash- buffetdinncrandmeeting.
ioned insrant-coflee or hot-cbocoPresident Sandra Nodmff had
late II1;IChine !Bight run $2.000. lhe charge of the business meeting.
ne~_Java .dispenser can reach Secretary N~Uie l'mr and Trea$8,000.
surer Del,lbie Hanunond gave their
But Ricci aid It's money well reports. Parker read a !hank-you
spent: When cons'u~ers realize card from Serellity House and a letthey ~ get cappucemo ou~ of a .ter from member Roj)erta Wilson .
II)IICfli!lc for_70 cents, a fraction of The IOCiety signed a get-well card
lhe pnce paid tt CSJR1S0 t.rs. lhe for Nan Moore and a fri endship
machine pays fo_r itself in shon card for Roberta Wilson oongraworder. _
•
lating her and her husband on their
. ~ EnglewOC&gt;d.: NJ., COIDI!BDY . 60th wedding anniversary. The
Is
to makeWllh amark
_on lhat
the presmted
society sang
"Happy
and
v~~g industry
deVJce
a red
rose 10Birthday"
Nellie Parkdistributes pantyhose.
c:r for her 80th birthday.

~mg_

~ts

Susan Will JRICDied ~ ~­
. dent's pin 10 Nodniff. It 11 to be
pa.ued on to eacb ...,..,..,~.
dent in her ~ yell' of
· Nodruff IOld lhe IOCiety JD be
alert to lhe IChool v~ system.
The society endors'l!a Vir,inill
Koch as Northeastern repo11.1l
~-

Initiation will be conducted at
the Oct. 2S meeting at Poner
House, Wellston.
Present from Meigs County
were Marjory Fetty, Fern Grimm,
Wendy Halar, Nedie Parlter, Sandra Tillis, Donna Jenkins, Rosalie
S10ry, Suzy Carpaut:r, Gay Perrin,
~Greenaway ·and Pam Crow.

s

·

1·••··~r=......_

' 'RACINE - Descendants of
Edward and Anna Dill will hold
their third reunion at Star Mill Park
~~ l p.m. Bring a covered dish. All
relatives and friends are invited. '
. '
SYRACUSE - Syracuse First
~urch of God will hold its home·
~oming starting wilh morning seryices at 10:30 a.m. followed by a ·
lunch provided by lhe church at l
p.m., an afternoon service at 2:30
.p.m. wilh singing and preaching
:and outside games for children.
·Preachers will be Jewett Hosler and
:David Russell. Bverytme is wei: come.
. ANTIQUITY - Descendants of
:the late H.A. Fred Hayman and
·Gamet F. Polk Hayman will bold
:their 21st reunion al lhe home of
; C.E. Hayman, Sr. The reunion will
·.begin at 10 a.m. followed by dinner
:at noon and games in lhe afternoon.
·All relatives and friends of the
:Hayman family arc invited.
: . REEDSVILLE - South Bethel
·New Testamenl Church, Silver
:Ridge, will hold its homecoming
·starting with Sunday School at 9
:a.m. followed by worship service a1
; 10 a.m., dinner at noon and afternoon services at 1:30 p.m. featuring The I ets, Andy English and
:local singers. Pas10r D.W. Syden:strick&amp; invites lhe public.
,
MONDAY
· RACINE - Racine Village
'council will meet at 7 p.m. at Star
Mill Park.
• RACINE - There will be a regu:tar meeting of Racine Chapter 134
Order Eastern Star. OffiCerS will
be elected. Refreshments will be
~erved following lhe meeting.

; MIDDLEPORT - The Mi4dle:pon Garden Club meeting sched·Uled for Monday, Oct. 4, has been
:postpOned until Nov. l.
. VALLEY FORD - The Board of
:Trustees of Columbia ~ownship
will meet at the Columblll Township Fire Deparunent at 7:30p.m.
'

: 'LETART FALLS - The Letan
tfownship Trustees will meet at 6
p.m. in the office building.

f·GODLAND
.•• Each year, we celebrate the
beginning of Fall with a
Festival of Food Savings.
Visit us for our biggest sale so
far this ye'a r. You'll enjoy savings
with HUNDREDS of hardworking, LOW PRICES.
Stop in and Haroest the Values!
' '\

- Coloring Contest!
Kids UP to 8 Years Oltl Could Win A..

s2soo

0KT ·
_

OBER

FEST

Just ask for a coloring
sheet a~ your local
.Foodland office, take il
home and color in the
picture, and return it to
Foodland by October 15.
1993 . No purchase
necessary, 8 years old or
younger, (1) winner per
Foodland to be drawn on
October 22. 1993.

HALLOWEEN

,.

PUMPKINS•

99

'

• RUTLAND - There will be a
PTO meeting at Rutland Elemen~ary at 7 p.m. All · parents .are
encouraged 10 attend .

AHD

EA.

UP

•

: POMEROY - Eajlles class of
ihe Ashbury Methodist Church of
Syrac'IJSe will have a bake sale at
JUoger starting lit 9 a.m.

..

WESDAY
, REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Trustees will ·meet at
17:30 p.m. at the Shade River State :
Forestry Building on Joppa Road.
: POMEROY - Fraternal Ord&amp; of
Eagles Auxiliary #2171 will meet
Jlt 7:30 p.m. A poduck dinner will
start at 7 p.m.
'
.
•
-+ POMEROY - Drew Wet&gt;eJ: Post
1139 will have its regular mectmg at
)! p.m. Dinner will be served at 7
p.m.
'
; MIDDLEPORT - Th&amp;e_will be ·
~ beginners ballroom dance classes ·
pt lhe Middlepon Arts Council at 7
p.m. Cost is $7 per couple. lnstruc.
lor will be Gerald Powell. For more
· ln!umation call992-26-7S.
I!

.

.

; MIDDLEPORT , TIJr:re ,.ui ~
• revival at Weslyan B1ble H«?li·
~·~urch on OcL S • 10 starnng
. at .7 :30p.m. nightly' with Rev . .
~andyNeville from New York.
Past.Ot Jo~ Neville welcomes all . . ·
: ' ""?'

· ·REEDSVILLE - ,The , OJive ·
WIIJhjp Zoning Conimission has
'e.'l.ceted ~ ~Julat nieellng due 10
lllllck, «;~uorum '

t

or

'

HN'S

.HI-LLSH E

Foodland Gift -Certificate.

: ''POMEROY - Meigs Band
j)oosters will lllljtt at 7 p.m. in lhe
Meigs High School Band Room.
All band parents are welcome.

: · DARWIN · The Bedfc.d Town.. ~ hip -~olunt~er Fire De,partmel)t
·.cnmouttee will meet 81 7:30 II !he ·
· ~hall. The public is inVited.

•

Omicron chapter meets

---------•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

··1

welcomeS paStOr

j

·
SUNDAY
:: LO'ITRIDOE - Lottridge Com·
. Jllunity Center will be sponsoring a
smorgasbord dinner from noon
.until 1:30
Cost is $5 for adults
~d $2.5 for children under .12.
~out is available. Everyooe is
·welcome.

$26billiol'l lailt yem:alone.
By SAilAH NORDGREN
. It's an !IPflelite lhat goes beyond
~liM ' tad ,.a Writer
j unk food.
-? .
•
CHICAGO (Af&gt;) - In .l07(i,
Wilh260 cxhibitorstt the.stiow,
vendinl ~--_.,., die~ Eskimo Pies ancf Twinkiea are
~up wilh 8 f!!!P~ COI)Oepl. Put joinell.by cappuccino, rice cakea
,
11 ~oln in a !!lachine, out pops a andplnolabeis.
il
,.
Loo~ing for a small/cup of .
'~ i993,1t's notjuJt pa\ciis.lt's treahly brewed~ coffee
pizza, p.tirro
o sbki, pan=e an4 wJih sugar substitilie? For SO cents.
mort behiDd the WSS
at thiS or .70 cents. for a large, Crane
year't vending machine trade National Vendors will serve it 10
sho
'
•
I)'OU.
~ricans spend a lot of ·time, ." We've elevated !he Status of .
and loose change, on an e$timated vende4 coffee, " said Richard
· 4.5 niillion vending uniiS in :the Ricqi, vice president of sales and
~5~T~b~e~N~~~~~ioin~alA~u~to~m~atic
marketing for lhe Bridgeton, Mo.,
Association esti- company.
lhan
VendOrs, Of course, pay more

: SYRACUSE - The Sutton
:Township Trustees will meet Mon:day at 7:30 p.m. in lhe Syracuse
'Municipal Building.

Flowe!" cfho;;Je

can-

t;

/

or

0.1(1

• •

.: Cale
' ndar

he

AN'S:wii:ltJliiG FIRE
• Gleuard Da.ts, Galllpollls
Deplll'llllent, uswen q!Ieltlons about nre safety
... ov~ru Blazer IUld EvelyW Bl111oa, Gallla Couty senlot-s. The Fire
Departmot pve a Fire Safety &amp;emlnar ror senlon and staff at the
Help us ~ake t.be most important
Gallll County Senior Center.
Revival
•
,
investment we
our children! Call now
GALLIPOLIS - Faith Valley
~ Fellows lp plCnlC Church will hold a revival from
at 992-2117 for information.
.- ·
Oc1. 3 through 9 at 7:30p.m. night~=
ly and 7 p.m. Su~day wilh Tom
;:: REEDSVILLE - Reedsville and Nogeisong presenung lhe sermon.
-:f. Long Bottom United Methodist li'""M'_ _ _...,......,...,....,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,._,_...,"""""""""-""''IIf""i'
~ Church joined togelher at Belle"!lle
•
"' Locks and Dam fc. a welcommg
picnicl.or ~ev. Phillip Scarberry
: - and hiS family.
.
.
~
Rev. Scarberry was appomted m
:- June 10 pastor bolh c~urches: Re~ ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital has been your headquarters for
--: Scarl1cnY and his wife ~em, !herr
:;; childitn, Anna Marie, Rac~l 3!'d
Home Health Service for 22 years.
(
;;:; Scotty and the Rev. Scarbeuy s SIS·
~ ter, Katie Scarberry, attended lhe
Established way back in 1971, our Home Health Service is
~ picnic.
. .
d
"·
Attending were _Dawm an
designed to provide quality health care in the comfort of your
": Emma Durst, Mall)Ie Buckley,
~; Charlotte Durst. Randy and Judy
own home.
'
:; Hall, Ron and Mardy' Coswdedry.
,; GtiCc Weber, Bema me ny .er,
Members of our capable, efficient staff are licensed in Ohio and
::; Joe and Eloise Connolly, Pearl
"' Osborne, Sally Brown, Dol Lance,
West Virginia
and have had vast experience
over the years in
.
\
~ Darlene Gross'nicklc aild son
·0: AdAm,~ and Barba(~ Saker,
dealing with home treatment and
care. You'll
fmd they will"care
.
.
::.: Fralit and PianC Jooes; Harold 11!"1
for you and about you", •
: • Betty l'futter, T~ ~dery aitd
,.
;: son Christopher,' .. Bisae~l. ·.~
"" McPeek, Janet Groeneveld, Kila
If ·you ~eed
i,n~ormation in regard to ,our Home Health
~ Fi-ank, 1aaice YOiing, Ruth Dillon,
Serviee, just call us 992-3231 or 992-2104.
i" Billllld Mary Price, ,Oii.cy llld Jan- .
.
'
~ Ice C\lm!OUY, ~hirley We..; Fred
:!; Hoyt,' Brioa lfoyt1 Floyd Hawk,
;.ot 'l)'aCy I "'0', Dllaidk ~ Katie
Evan;~ Cl!rilty Blrber, S~~i~
,.. Baitiet,.Pidlllp, Tell'!&gt;Anni'Mirie,
~ :Wwlllld Scotly ~. Katie
~ Scarberry, lim , Bu~tley, Judy
. ~ Hollei', Clieaer alid NIIICy BlicUly
~ llld Harold Soydet: · ·

·

. Ufi1'ty
Comm

-

The Meigs County Department of Human
Services needs caring adults to provide
temporary homes to children of all ages.
Financial reimbursement, training, and
case management are provided by tlte
Agency.

:-

Meigs·County Ven(jing nirvana: .pizza, ,piros~and more

·

-

wv

Great For
·Fall
ASS~RTED

COLORS

FALL MUM'S.

$
GAllON
POTS

LB.

.

�•

... ... -

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

--~.;....._-------~~--~-.....-~-~-.....;,~---~-------....-..

Entertainment
.

·t

October 3, 1993

Sunday Tlllles~Sentinel /B8

King's tales~
reproduced ,.
on stage

The Male Driving Mentality:
"Get the@&amp;%! outta my way!"

I

I'm about 10 release some vital
information which may get me
·hung for treason by Olher members
of my gender. I'm going 10 give
women a little peek in10 the male
:psyche - and maybe bridge the
gmder gap by making men a litde
less of a myslery.
But this infonnation will not be
free - I want to make a ttllde.
I need to know how some
women can pack enough supplies
into a tiny little purse to keep a
mountaineering team alive for a
week.
.
As an occasional backpaCker, I
would find this secret very. useful,
because I have trouble fitting the
same amount of gear in10 a fullsized pack.
Anyway, back 10 the male psyche. I offer for your consideration,
a look at the Male Driving Mentality.
The Male Driving Mentality
(MOM) is solely based on one doctrine - the goal is to get from
Point A 10 Point B in as short a
span of time as die laws of physics
will allow.
When a male gets behind the
wheel of a car, all of his efforts are
focused on getting there and getting out of the vehicle as soon as
possible - even if it means killing
a few pedestrians along the way.
Men are happiest on uncrowded
freeways were lh;ere are no obsta• cles to stand in the way of their
destipations. To .the male driver,
traffic lights, slow drivers and
troopers with radar guns are just
unnecessary delays between him
and his goal.
To heck with the scenery and
historical points of interest. And
God help the female passenger
With a small bladder.
To malce up for our small brain

HUNTIN010N · Ghost Sror1t1,

a

size, we me~ were blessed with
The fact that auto racing has a
bladders the size of a Hefty great effeci on the MOM can also
garbage bag.
be obs~rved in the male's obsesLike a camel's hump, the male sion to pass every single car in
bladder can store "water" for front of him. The male driver is not
extended periods of time. I person- happy Ullless he's,.n the lead, and
ally know men who haven't tinlded the other side o each horizon
since the Carter Administnllion.
offers a. whole new ,pack of cars to
This rule does not apply when a get ahead of.
'-.
man has been drinking beer, howAnother key rule to remember
ever.' When consuming alcohol, a when riding with a male driver is
man has to make as many potty pit that they never make any driving
stops as a woman - times three. errors.
This is because as a man imbibes,
Hence the friction which norhis bladder shrinks to make room mally occurs ~hen m~ Is placed
for his expanding libido.
in a car Withra- ~ ~~ driv.er.
Intelligent men don't drink
If the' rna e. drivel' early rear
while they're driving, however, and ends another vehicle·, it llecause
if pressed for time could drive that person's tail light aren't
around the world twice and only bright enough or he sto~ · too
fast. If he runs a red hght 1l's
have to stop for $as·
This is a senous point of con- because the back seat driver is nagtention between men and women ging too much and disrupting his
concentration.
on long car trips.
So sit back, keep quiet, hold it
The usual compromise is for the·
woman to dash into the restroom for Che next 100 miles and leave the
when the man stops for gas and . driving to us.
1\ope she gets back 10 the car before
Kevin Pinson, who once drove
he pays for the fillup and gets back
to Myrtle Beach with only one pit
on the freeway.
Men, who are often big auto rae~ · slop (and only because be drank
ing fans, see fueling up as a pit si• Mountain Dews), is a starr
stop. As soon as the pit crew (Le. writer ror Ohio Valley Publish·
station auendant) steps back from in g.
the car, its time to re-enter the race.

YEARS GONE BY • The release or Taylor's, first lin album, ·
the two·CD or two-cassette "James Taylor (Live)" on Columbia,
coincides with the 25th anniversary or Ilk first album, which was
called slniply "James Taylor.'' Taylor performs h~re at an October
1991 concert in New York. (AP Photo/Files)

an innovative pJaY showcasing
collection of short SIOries by master ·
novelist Stephen King will be pre·
sented by the Marshall Artists
Series two weeks before Halloween. The play will be shown at
the Keith-Aibee Theatre on Oct 17
at4 p.m.
1
Robert Pridham adapted six
chilling (ales by King for the stage. •
The prQduction uses five actors. a
sparse Set and eerie special effects ·
to recreate these tales. The emphasis is on a powerful storytelling
atmosphere, rather than traditional
drama
The first . story is the
Boo§eymtln, a ,tale of a small
child s fear of what comes frtim her
closet when her father shuts out the
light. It is told from · the father's
point of view; leaving the audience
wondering if perhaps· her boogey; man might be real after all.
· ·In Srrawberry Spring, "Springfield Jack" has retomed to a quiet
college town. Pretty female students are being mutilatl?d und~r
cover of the New En~limd fog.
This horrifying tale ts told by
· someone who knows a litdc more
than he should about the campus '
serial killer.
.
The dailger of drinking "bad"
beer are pointed out in the, bla~ ,
comedy, Grtly MlliiU. Accordhfg
to theatre critic Maureen Minter,
after this story it was difficult to
walk to her·car alone. ·
In these stories and,others, such
as the The Story of Timmy BalerUncle Olio's Truck, ~d The
Mtuste,.House, the actOrs shift the

lnllll,

narrative back and forth, keepinj!
the audience on the edge of the1r
seats.

Tickets for Ghost Stories may
be purchased at the Marshall
Artists Series box office, room
2W19 of the Memo'rial Student
- Center. Seats may be reserved in
advance with a MastetCard or Visa
By PAUL GEITNER
Innocence," based on the PU!ilzer etY homes.
Associated Press Writer
Prize-winning Edith Wharton
Day-Lewis says he enjoyed by calling the Marshall Artists
NEW YORK (AP) -Who says novel.
delving into the 19th century Series at (304) 696-6656.
all actOrs crave attention?
The movie, set in New York in milieu.
Daniel Day-Lewis, one of the · the 1870s, deals with the tyranny or
Although times have changed,
most talented and versatile leading society and the difficulties of non- Day-Lewis says l)e believes tflday's
· men of his generation, says he'd be conforqJity. Day-Lew.is. plays .a audiences will still be drawn to the
just as happy playing to an empty · young Jllw.yer who must choose emotions in the story. "Human
theater.
,
NEW YORK (AP) - Men are
between his simple, respectable beings can sort of understand each ~
"It is implicidy a public wOJk," fiancee (Winona Ryder) and his other a~ross vast expan~es of . "really gross," says "Beverly
the reticent star saya of hiS chosen consuming passion .for •her cousin u· me.'" ·
Hills 90210" star· Shannen -DobtJ.·
.
profession. "And that makes me (Michelle Pfeiffer), whose freety. who may or may nor have ·11181'Since winning raves for ·his
quite uneasy.· ... HI could do the thinking way' and scandalous past movie debut as a homosexual punk ried one anyway.
same work in a private way, I'd make her a social outcast.
"It seems to be the norm for me
in "My Beautiful L~undrene,"
probably be happier.
to
hook
up with really bad men,"
~~(,'LeWis says he was attracted Day-Lewis has. followed with sev"That's really why the prepara- ini y to ihe pt9ject by his desire .era! historical or period films,
the 22-year-old Doherty says in the
tion, whatever that en1llils, is very 10 work with Sconese.
· including "A Room With a November issue of Vanity Fair.
often $he most pleasurable part ·
"How do I 'find them? nuii's the
He then was drawn into the View," "The Unbearable Lightbecause it's the. most private J18I1. complexities of a character torn ness of Being" and "The Last of
true question. They just oome out
of the woodwork. They're really ·
and the most-intimate part ... of the between two-·worlds, yejln),ing to the Mohicans."
work."
·
gross."
break free of convention yet
He~ won ~ Academy Award in
Also on the list of Day-Lewis' trapped by his own sense of duty.
Her first boyfriend was a 351989 for his perfonnance as writer
ycar-old criminal. Her first ·fianceleast favorite things about being an
It was a privileged world that Christy Brown in ~My Left Foot,"
was Chris Foufas; she dumped him.
,.8Cwr.. interviews. A reluctant sex Scorsese went 10 ·great =ths to directed·by Jim Sheridan. ·
symbol if theu ever was one, he re-create. The ftlm repo
Her
second fiance was cosmetics
Y cost . Day-Lewis wept to stay with
avoids talking about his personal at least $30 million, much of it for Sheridan, a close friend, after heir Dean Factor; he got a restrainlife. "Don't ask, or he'll clam up," sets, costumes and food.
escaping the strictures of "The · ing order against her. Then,there
the Columbia publicists warn. No
The dir~tor also hired al) eti- Age qflanocence," hoping to relax was actor Judd Nelson, who went
photographers allowed, either.
queue' coach and a "visual research "or at the very least stare at the from "the most intelligent man .. to
ancient history this year.
But he's willing to suffer , consultant," who spent 1 1-2 years wallfora few weeks."
The· new man in her life is Ashthrough 20 minutes or so to talk looking into such topics as c~ina
Sheridan, however. began
ley
Hamilton, the 18-year-old son
about his role in Martin Scorsese's patterns. of the era and w~ patn!- telling the story of his next film,
of
actor
George.
poignant drama, "The Age of mgs graced the walls of htgh soct-• "In the Name of the Father "
'
about a group of people wrongly
YOUNG VIOLINIST • Gaylen Kelch the Ohio Valley Sym·
convicted of an IRA bombing who
phony IDstructs Ashley DaYIB of Washington Elementary on play·
spend years in prison before being
101 tbe vloUn. A quintet t'rom the"s(mph!IJul perlormed for several
proved
innocent , ·
schools to promote the Youtla Slring'Pt11gram.
.
,
WHEELING, W.VA.- Comedi- specials including: "Howie Man"So I felt m)'self irrevocably
11195
an Howie Ml!ndel will perform at del's North American Tour," a drawn to something that I really ...
Wheeling's Capital Music Hall Sliowtime special, "Howie Spent 'Please no ... I don't want to do
COMING
Nov. 12 at 8 p.m.
, Our Summer," a video, ·~Howie anything.' nut that's the way it
Familiar to a wide range of F.rom Maui," and Showtime con- ,happens," Day-Lewis says. The
audiences from his role of Dr. cert "Hooray for Howiewood."
film is due in late fall.
Howie explains his comedy :
Wayne Fiscus on the hit TV series
"St. Elsewhere," as well as his "Everything I've ever been punSRO concert performances comedy ished for, ex~lled for or hit for is .
specials, Man~! now combines his what I get patd for today."
Morrla and Dorothy Haaklna
'
By LISA PETERSON
tor of the Ariel Theatre. Lora acting skills and comedic talents
Tickets are available at the box
PHOTOGRAPHY
Ariel Theatre
Times-Sentinel Starr
Snow. But it has been planned for his mB)ly other ~iects includ- office, 1015 Main SL in Wheeling,
Professional
W6ddlng
Photogmp/ly
426 2nd Ave., Glllllpolla, Oh.
GALLIPOLIS -The reading since 1987, with the goal of an ing "Bobby's Word," FOX's #1, by phone at (304) 234.()()50 (lOllwrilin$ and arithmetic, were.given Ohio Valley Youth String Sympho- award-winning, Saturday morning free 800-624-5456), and at Ticket·
Call 448·ARTS for more Info.
(614) 4*6700
a musical tWist 81 Jocal .elementary ny in five years and a full Youth childre.n's program. Recently, he Master oudets.
schools this past week.
Orchestra in ten.
filmed a cameo role for cable,
A string quintet from the Ohio
With the response the program "And the Band Played On."
Valley BymJlii90Y1 under the direc• has received thus far, the tentative
Howies' unique comedy has
•,'
lion of ~stro Ray Fowler took plan for a youth oichestra will soon been showcasedin .several $0
their show on the road, visiting materialize.
,
eight schools in Gallla County.
~The response has been over''
Performing; several numbers of whelming," Snow .said.
KANAUGA DRIVE -IN
varying Jen,ths and styles to the
She attributes part of the interest
stodelits, their mission was to stim- to the excellent reputation of the
IS CLOSED FOR THE
One-ol~a~ki nd 1B1h &amp; 191h century
ulateinterest in a new progtam that Ohio Valley Symphony. "It gives
•'
heirlooms ol the future.
.
SEASON.
THANK
YOU
will be offered through the Morris people a lot or comfort knowing
FOR YOUR '
and Dorothy Haskins Ariel The- the symphony is on sure ground,"
.
atre.
she said.
PATRONAGE. SEE,'
•
The pro~ani is an eight weel!:
These tangible goals are only a ·
sessioo of violin lessons, instructed . po{lion of what the progi'ammers
by Ohio Valley Sym~t musi- ·hope,to achieve. Seeing. the chilc1811S. lhe lessons 10 be
81 the , dral having (un making music Will
fustJ.resbylC1ian
will ·lle bO a tremendous rew.d, said to Di
· openro thw!t:ms of: ~ ~ diegorjo. Snow feels the cXtCiided
..;;~...,•. Glial Kelcb ...... Bern$'d
effects will be lhe most valuable,
· Dini:gorio~·n"'~llisaes on lesaixls.
· " '
,.•,
3rd Ave., go .a
lli'Oc 26
''These children will have a life' ol 3rd avo. and Bth
T___ ..... be
~ 'Wrtl'~ yean o1 ~ expe•
appreciation, of the arts," sit~
.,Center on tho corner
rience, Di Gnlsorin is very excited
October 8 (Friday)
about ,the program and the · &gt;' The progwn cost is $80' with
,Apm·9pm
uniii!Pid pdtclldal in the youJh.
insauments available at BrutJ,icardi
·October · 9 (Saturday)
· ~It' a really·illlpoAIJit to keep rwlusic b)c.J;ruollrnent wiD be,Jiln•..
musie ali-ve," he said. "It adds to a ited to 80 sfildents. FOr more inforwell Jwor!ed «fnradon and I'd like ·mation call
· lo lie a pari of paiq It staited.
·Alit~~ CCIIDJ!IDDity,.ms ual

Lewis tries to avoid limelight

Dohe~

strikes
out with men ~

.

Mandel to hit Wheeling

Ariel ensues youth
string program

Section C

Sports

'

No. 7 Ohio, State, pounds ~urthwestern; qu def~ed·
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Ohio State intercepted five passes·and dominated the last
quarters
lb ~ NC?Mw~tern 51-~ Saturday for its 18th con~uuve VICtOry m the senes.
The margin of victory was the Jar est in Jo~n
Cooper's six seasons as head coach of~ BuckeYes
(4-0, 1_-0 Big Ten). Since 1971, Ohio Slate has beilen
theWildcatsbyanaveragescorcof45-10.
: Northwestern (2-2, 0-1) was seeking its first three~arne Winning streak since 1971. The Wildcats came
ID avemging 335 yards a game, but were limited to
162 yards - 86 rushing and 76 passing. It was the
!bird game in a row Jhat an opponent did not have
tOO yards rushing agamst Ohio State.
: The B~yes had428 yards of total offense.
: The game was tied 3-3 after one quarter, but Ohio
State's defense dominated the second quarter and the
Buckeyes led 20-3 at the half. The Wildcats had the
ball five times in the second 'quarter. Two drives
were ended on interceptions by Lorenzo Styles and
Chico Nelson, the other three ended in punts after
duee-and-ou~. ,
.
,.
.
.
. Buder By not e followed Styles mr.en:epuon wtth
• seven-)'l!'d .10uchdo~ run on the next play. Nelson
retomed hts 1ntercepuon 6~ yards 10 ~e N&lt;XIh~estern ~0. and ~ymont Harris then ~ four umes,
:;conngon a moe-yard run, to make u 20-_3.
.
. The Buc~eyes put the game aw~y 10 the thud
quarter, sconng on all three possess1ons. Joey Galjoway scored on a 9-yard reverse, Jeff Cothran had a
2-yard run and Cothran caught a 36-yard pass from
Bret Powers.
: Travis McGuire had Ohio State's last touchdown
~n a two-yard run D! the founh quarter.
.
, Galloway had SIX catches for a career-h1gh 119
yards.
·
.
.
.
.
. Walter Taylor added two mtercepUons and Ttm
Jla!illo one for the Buckeyes, who also recovered a
~ildc!'l fumble.
.
.; Ohio State quarterback Bob Hoyll)g completed 10
bf 23 passes for 180 yards with one interception,
~hiJePo:overscompleted5~f7 for 1f?4_yardswilbno
lllteiCCpUons. Northwestern s Len Williams, who had
IJOinPI,eted ov~ ?O percent of his passes in the ftrst
three ~es. htt JUSt 10 or 28 for 76 yards wtth four
inten:eptions.
: Northwestern wide receiver Lee Gissendaner, the
most valuable player in 'the Big Ten last year, was
limited to two receptions for 17 yards.
: No. 1 Florida St. 51, Georpa Tech 0 -At Tal-

three

.

lahassee, Fla., Charlie Ward threw four 10uchdown
passes and freshman Warrick Dunn scored
as ·
top-ranked Florida State s'¥&gt;?k off a sluggish start'
Saturday and defeated Oeotgia Tech 51-0 to set up
next weekend's showdown against Miami.
Florida State's defense, which has given up just
14 points, registered its third shutout, allowing just
IIOyardsandninefJrStdowns.
Ward threw two 10uchdown passes in the final
three minutes of the half to belp Florida State (S-0, 40 Atlantic Coast Conference) 10 a 16-0 lead.
The Seminoles then needed just 1:32 to take the
second half kickoff 65 yards, building a 23-0 lead on
Dunn's 14-yard scoring run. Dunn caught a seven· yard TD pass rrom Ward later in the period and
added a four-yard scoring run in the fourth quarter.
Marquette Smith went eight yards for a TD in the
final minute.
·
Tech (1-3, 0-3) spent most of the day in its own
territory crossing midfield just once in the second ,
half. '
No. S Florida 38, Mississippi St 24 - At
Gainesville, Fla., Danny Wuerffel threw for a schoolrecord 449 yards and Jack J!¥:kson returned a.kickoff
100 yards to put fifth-ranked Florida ahead to stay
Saturday in a 38-24 victory over Mississippi Slale.
Wuerffel completed 27 of 41 passes in his second
collej!e start and found his favorite target, Chris
Doenng, 12 times for 199 yards and three touchdowns. The Gators improved to 4-0. 3-0 in the
Southeastern Conference.
t,
The perfonnance, which helped Floridi extend the
nation's second.Jongest home winning streak to a
school-iecord 21 games, overshadowed an impressive passing day for Mississippi State's Todd Jordan.
The Bulldogs' quarterback fmished with 24 completions in 44 attempts for 416 yards and two TDs.
However, Mississippi State (1-3, ().2) didn't rebound
from a sequence in which the lead changed hands
three times in SS seconds midway through the third
quarter
,
.
No.·a Michl.an 24, Iowa 7- At Ann Arbor,
Mich .. Michigan s defense finally caught up with its
offense on Saturday.
Tyione Wheatley scored three touchdowns and
the defense came up With five sacks, a blocked field
goal and three turnovers as No. 8 Michigan defeated
Iowa 24-7 in its Big Ten opener.
Wheatley, with 202 all-purpose yards, ran 28
times for 113 yards, had three receptions for 60

three

: CLEVELAND (AP) - George the fifth time in club history.
Portugal (18-4), who hasn't lost
:Bell hit a tie-IX'eaking sacrifice fly
in
16
starts since July 7, gave up a
·lit the lOth inning Saturday as the
first-inning
run on Thomas
:Chicago White Sox beat the Cleveand Hal Morris'
Howard's
double
:land Indians 4-2 in the next-to-last
·baseball game in Cleveland Stadi- single, then allowed just three more
·um history,
hits as he pitched into the eighth.
• , TheJndi,ans,,wl!Q .will mo:oe .to a .• ,.Portugal didn't .walk a batter
new ballpark next season, sent a and struck out five to maintain the
\ ' sellout crowd home disappointed lon~est winning streak in the
for tbe ilecond straight day; Three Nat1onal League this season.
or the White Sox' four runs were Xavier Hemandez .got the last six
outs for his ninth save.
unearned.
Having clinched the AL West · Mike Brumley's two-run, pinchcbampionship.last Monday, the single in the eighth ~e"open a
White Sox are tiling the weekend tied game and gave the Astros their
series to tune up for Tuesday's sixth victory in seven games.
playoff opener against visiting Reliever Ross Powell (0-3) was the
Toronto.
loser.
Pirates 4, Expos 2
: Chris Howard (1-0) got his fJrSt
At Montreal, Jeff King'had three
big-league will, pitching one scarless inning. Brian Drahman pitched hits, including a twQ-run double in
the !lighth inning Saturday that liftlite lOth for his first career save.
ed
the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 4-2
Astros 3, Reds 1
At Cincinnati, Mark Portugal victory over the Montreal Expos.
..yon his 12th straight decision and
King, with nine home runs and
the Houston Astros beat Cincinnati 98 RBis, is trying 10 become the
3·1 Saturday, giving them a win- fifth major leal!ue player since
J!iilg road and home recon!Jor only 1945 to drive 10 I 00 runs with

SOON!
After Sch~ol String
Instrument
Instruction

·~-

'

··'I'

..:~

,., ' ' . , .

reliever Butch Henry (3-9) and
King doubled.
Jeff Ballard (4-1) pitched I 1/3
innings in relief of starter Steve
Cooke for the viGIOry. Mark Dewey
got five outs for his seventh save.
Cardinals 5, Phillij!s 4
At St Louis, ~Y Lankford singled, stole second and scored on
two errors on
same play in the

U.:

Rob Murphy (5-7) pitched one
lOth inning Saturday, giving the St
inning
for the victory.
Louis Cardinals a S-4 viciOry over
W
es
Chamberlain's second sacthe Philadelphia Phillies.
rifice
fly
put Philadelphia ahead 4Lankford singled with one out
3
in
the
eighth.
The Cardinals tied
off Mike Williams (1-3), stole secit
in
the
ninth
when
Rod Brewer
ond and continued to third on a
opened
with
a
double
off Roger
throwing error by catcher Todd
~Mason,.
Erik-Pappas
walked
~and
Pratt Lankford sc:ored wbell'11e pinch-hitter
Gregg
Jefferies
sinwas hit in the back by center ttelder
gled.
Ruben Amaro's thmw.

Cleveland's new ~- stadium ready on schedule
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) -If Richard E. Jacobs
has accomplished anything as a baseball
owner, it is this:
The Cleveland Indians' record no longer
speaks for itself.
For no matter what the standings say, the
Indians no longer feel like losers. Their new
stadium will be ready on schedule in April,
their roster is speckled with current and possibly future all-stars, and fans have been flocking
to the ballpark in numbers not seen since the
1940s. The team that for years had only a hislOry now has a future.
·
Yet the low-key businessman who has overseen this renaissance can still walk through the
crowds to the owner's box at Cleveland Stadium and draw SCarcely a glance.
Jacobs, 68, bought the Indians with his
brother, Davi&lt;t~;JI. Jacobs, for $35 million in
1986 with one major objective: keeping them
from moving out or 10wn. Richard bought a 75
percent interest; David, who died last year, left
his 25 percent share to his wife, Barbara.
"I love baseball. always have," Jacobs said
in a recent intervie¥~ . "I've been in this city
since 1955, and I came from pretty close by,

Akron, Ohio. I .;,ant to see this team stay here.
And I want 10 enjoy it and see what I can do to
make it better. It s taking time, but I think
we're on the right track."
The Jacobs brothers began building a real
estate.empire in the mid-1950s,just as the Indians' franchise was beginning a three-decade"
slump. They amassed a fortune ·by buying land
and developing shopping malls.
Forbes magazine, in its 1992 listing of the
400 richest Americans, estimated Richard
Jacobs' worth at $300 million. His company
owns and manages more than 40 enclosed
malls in 14 states, along wtth five hotels, SIX
office buildings, and IS Wendy's restaurants.
The Society Center in downtown Cleveland,
which' includes the ..tallest building between
New York and Chicago, is a Jacobs property.
When he bought the Indians, Jacobs realized
he had no more than a fan's knowledge of the
game. He made his business expertise available
to the front office, but left the day-to-day baseball operation in the hands of experts: veteran
baseball executive Hank Peters, who has stnce
retired, and Peters' hand-picked successor,
general manager John Hart
. .
At Peters' suggestion, Jacobs began rebu~ld­
ing the Indians from the ground up, by adding

Cairn teams and doubling the number of scouts
and instructors in the organization.
Hart then devised a plan for keeping the
Indians' most promising prospects happy by
signing them to multiyear, contracts - thus ,
avoiding the divisive and usu\llY expensive
arbitration.
As a result, the Indians are assured of long
relationships with some of baseball's best
young players, including Alben Belle, Kenny
Lofton and Carlos Baerga.
"I think it's a good p1an," Jacobs said .
•'It's worked out weU for us, and especially it's
worked out well for the players. They have
security. They're not Bedouins or nomads.
They become pan of the community."
The Indians have not been very active in the
free-agent market. partly because big -name
players have had no desire to play in rundown
Cleveland Stadium. That may change with the
completion of the new stadium, a project
Jacobs says was essential to the survival of the
team.
"We've had difficulty at times in signing
players that we were after, notwithstanding that
we were meeting or exceeding what other competitive salary offers were, because of the facil- "
ity," he said "It wasn't player-friendly ."

Soutb

Arkanllas 20, OC(I'gia 10
Clemson 20, N. Carolina St 14
Florida 38, Mississippi SL 24
-Florida St 51, Oe&lt;qta Tech 0
· Memphis St· 34, East Carolina 7
North Carolina 45, Texas-EI
Paso 39
Virginia 41, Ohio 7
Virginia SL 36, Livinpne 20
Midwest
Ball SL 20, Cent Michigan 17
Bowling Green 17;To1edo 10
B. Michigan 15, Miami, Ohio 7
Dlinois 28, Purdue 10
Kansas 24, Col&lt;ndo St. 6
Michigan 24, Iow.a 7
N. Ulinois 45, S. Illinois 15
Ohio St 51, Northwestern 3
Oklahoma 24, Iowa St 7
W. Michigan 27, Kent 21

. Di'OiloM
ibe,Aitet'JlWc~te
me. ·~ iidption
, . 9r·' ~~·'1~:~~~:Ci~rcli:;;
~ kiDd of e~ved" said •Dircc&gt;
.._.

fewer than 10 homers.
The Expos' loss stopped a fourgame winning streak and prevented
them from matching the franchise
record of 95 wins and 56 home
wins. both set in 1979. Montreal
bas 93 wins, 54 or them at Olympic
Stadium~
· ·
Jay Bell and Kevin Young
opened the seventh with singles off

'

13

~--~·
' , Oeldlli It ltlne4
·-" · llal beeptno
euy .-; die proJlllll lw been
__

.

East
Army-35, Aleron 14
Boston College 33, Syracuse 29
Boston U. 30, Villanova 1S
West Virginia 14, Virginia Tech

:J.

. ,(.

tackle in
first hair or Saturday's ~ game in
CharloHesville, Va~ where the Cavaliers woo 417. (AP)

College
football
scores

t.urch

... . . .

LOSES GRIP- Ohio University wide receiver
Otis St. Clair (right) loses the grip ou the pigskin
as VirRinla llhebacker Tom Burns makes the

three5

'

·. VolkS.how

'

touchdown pass play and scored on runs of five 3f!d
for the Wolverines (3-1 overall, 1-0 Btg
Ten).
. Elezovic added a 32-yard field goal.
lo a (2-2, 0-2) scored on a 12-yard pass from
Paul Burmeister to Kent Kahl. The Hawkeyes had
onepassinterceptedandlosttwofumbles.
Despite being unable to contain Wheadey . the
Hawkeres kept the game close. Four times, the
Wolvennes were inside Iowa's 20 and came away
without scorlng.
No. 10 Oklahoma 24, Iowa Sl. 7 .:.... At Ames,
Iowa. Dwayne Chandler scored two touchdowns and
Cale Gundy became Oklahoma's career tolal offense
leader as the lOth-ranked Sooners beat Iowa State
24-7 Saturday.
Gundy ran and passed for 224 yards to increase
his career total to 4,926, b~ng the school record
of 4,853 set by Jamelle Holieway. Although suffer-

ing his r~t two intdrceptions of the ~. Gundy
was 14-of-23 for 19d yards and added 34 yards rushing in 14 carries.
.
. .
Gundy ralhed oictahoma (4-0) m the Btl Etght
Conference opener after Iowa State (J-4) jumped 10 a
7.{) lead on freshman Rodney Guggenheim's 70-yanl
touchdown run.
No. 21 Virghtia 41, Ohio U. 7 - At Charlottesville, Va., Virginia's Symmibn Willis threw for
212 yards andiour touchdowns in the first half Saturday to send the 21st-ranked Cavaliers 10 a41-7 victory over hapless Ohio University.
Virginia wound up with a school-record six scaring passes jn moving 10 its second consecutive 5.{)
. start and third in four years.
·
The Bobcats (0-5) lost their 14th in a row, the
longest current string in Division I-A.
Ohio trailed 28.{) after a ftrst half in which it was
held to 97 yards and got no closer than the Virginia
38.

~

Art Craft,
'

..

~yards, and 29 yards on kickoff returns.
.
· Wbeadey teamed with Todd Collins on a 48-yard

Indians,
Reds
lose
in
base~all's final regular-season weekend
.
.
.

.t~A"liSHlD
~~ruEL~-·

e,-l'ire- ·

Qctobe; 3, 1883

'"

... "

.

Southwest
· Texas A&amp;M 31, Texas Tech 6

LIVING DANGEROUSLY.....; These fans
stlmdlng Delli' the left-lland corner or the south
end zone at Washlngtoa Eleme11tary's Memorial
neld are aettlaa an extremely persoaal view or
Friday nlglat's River Valley-GaDIB Academy root-

'

,,

ball 1ame; a ooutest that saw both te111111 visit that
end zone sb: times - five by the Blile Devils - en
route to a 53-6 GAHS victory. For tbe story, see
C-1. (Times·Seutlnel photo by G. Spenter
Osborne)
·

'
i

'

�wv

0H-Polnt pleasant,

October3,1993

-October 3, 1993

-

GAHS hammers
River Valley 53-6

By Doug Host
soon as they got the ball. On a third
The 14th-ranked Hurricane and six frol1l the 46 yard line
Rcdskins came out or !heir qlllll'lt2back Mike Vll'lg (8-12-114
prt:game tunnel smoking and Slayed yds.) fOIDld Olad Jones with a 15
that way as they shut out the yard complelion. Then Jeremy
seventh-ranked Big Blacks of Point Taylor (28-115, 4.1 avg.) found
Pleasant, 2(}.().
dayligbt through the left lllclde hole
It was a gala night for the and ran for 12 yards. After a
Redslrins as they celebrated penalty and a nice scramble by
homecoming with an impressive . Vll'lg. Hurricane went to the air
night on both the offCil81ve and again. This lime Vll'lg found
defensive sides of the ball.
StqJben Lucas fa- 12 _yards. That
-After receiving the opening lOOk the ball to the five yard line,
lrickoff, Point Pleasant had two in- and one play 1a1« Taylor burst
Clllllplete passes, and a nm for no lhrough the right side for a five
gain on their first possession. yard
touchdown run. Billy
Things would not get much better Malashevich's extra point made the
for the Big Blaclcs on this nighL
score 7-0.
Hurricane starred their march -as
"Murphy's Law. Everything that

Memorial Field, where the Blue
Devils got large and took charge
with double-digit offense in the
ftrSt three quarten en route to a S361cnockouL
· "We stopped the run an.~ tbey
killed us with the pass, sa1d
Raider boss Jack James of the Blue
(See GARS on C-3)

Sl:r••• -HC.rdllnru•iili•li•~·aft.fil___l
p ...•nl: Ulork•llop

S•l•-

Str.uts o f)Qit of rn:JCMn liVIng. n.e Is nD UUJ to "get
1kf' ol f"CCdefn llvtf19. TD lM healt:t\l ond pt~orurtM. we ftUI:
leotn ~~to~~~ ttw lb•nlnow
ltv.s .
s.lf•st•~~m Is tt. ·t~ ~v..trr of ou emodOnd
IIYH. By bulldlf'l9 Malthy s.rr...u.em. u. bewmlleu
vul,...obl. to tt. ll'*litobl• set bodiJ, ln¥*fedtons om
dl-1-olll~...
, Ph .D. and 'Olivia Zlvney, M.S . of Althof &amp;

Jam•s E.
Associates or• leading an adult education .gro~w~p to h•IP
you learn the~&amp;e skllltii ror your lite .

WE GOT YOU! - Gima Aeademy defenders Nathan Swindler .
(63) ud Adam' Clark (80) put the wraps on an unldentirled River
Valley rliiDllJII back during Friday night's contest in Gallipolis,
where the Blue Devils clainted their second straight victory and finIshed the noa-league portion or their schedule with a 4-1 mark.
(Photo by Bill ROllS)
J

GREAT CATCH, TERRY!- Gallla Academy tackle Dyla~ Ulhot.. A SO.U No o:g1Ntt: and Hlf·•stMm UJorillhop wttho limited errotkMntand
~ format. A Personal !itr•ss Assn51n.nt will b. don!~ In w..ks I &amp; i, u.llen ttw group will
Evans (70) congratulates teammate Terry Qualls (42.) on the lall!r s, snd
Ht thll top!.' OC)Mda. Topics 110 be COYifecllndl.dti detttllng Wllf--est..m. ~y. battling
second-quarter touchdown catch in Friday night's 11ame agamst MU-&lt;Weat~n; dtougtn, ...alws ..-nk'IQtlon, sans et:IOt:ld, bo../ildlng on postuw emotions, and
River Valley which the Blue Devils won 53-6. Evans mtercepted a mora. 112 hour o1 eod'l sesskln r.IAN btl dtv6t:ed to ptocticlng oct\.al strass
pass earlier the quarter to set up Qua!Js' touchdown catch, the Wh•n? n. ~p tM9InsMorttbJ .venin\), Octobt:r 18 first career scoring reception for the converted tackle and the rmt
or 1Mt be bad In the affair. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer U l h e r e .. Attlot &amp; Associates, S8 Covrt Saeet, Gallipolis
Osborne)
HDIU Much.. us.oo• tor dlnlc clients

in

S6Q,QO for 9IIMfOI

' In other SEOAL action,

~lit

• may be bllbble to certain Insurance

==

Colli Alhol &amp; Auo&lt;~!~ ~ 1_4}4&lt;1~280 ____________ _

:Athens
defeats Portsmouth Notre
.
:Dame for first win; four others lose
,

The six member Southeastern
·Ohio Athletic League wrapped up
the non-league portion of the 1993
· football schedule Friday night with
' two victories and four defeats, finishing with an overall record of 10,20 against non league Opponents.
In the win column; Friday the
GAHS Blue Devils defeared River
Valley 53-6 and the Athc;JJs Bulldogs notched their first victory in a
21-14 triumph over visiting
Portsmouth Notre Dame. In other
contests, Vinton County trounced
Jackson 50-14, Miami Trace
downed Logan 32-0, Hannibal River outscored Marietta 40-26, and
Meadowbrook edged Warren Local
8-7.
Ml1101l Trace 32, Logan 0
At Logan, the visitors rolled up
257 yards rushing while holding
the Chieftains to 72/.ards to run
their season record to -I while Logan dips to 2-3.
Travis Miller was the big gun
for Trace wirh 19 carries for 98
yards and one touchdown.
Other points came on a 23-yard
field goal by Kyle Butts, a 17-yard
run by Aaron Trai~er, Tyler
Hoppes' 38-yard poss mterce)ltlon
rerum and a 66- yard dash by Kevin

:~

Ratliff.

Chad Ricketts, who scored four
:; touchdowns lasf week for Logan,
- was denied the end zone and fin-· ished wid! SO yards on nine carries.
: Quarter totals
. ~ Miami Tnlce .........3 6 8 15 = 32
: Logan ....................o o o O= o

-

;:: H110nibal River 40, Marietta 26
:
At Hannibal, the host ream took
::": a 34-10 lead In the fU'St three quar.. rers and then saw the Tigers score
: 16 points in the founh period to
~ mate a game of it.
;
River (3-2) owned a 14-0 lead
• before Marietta's Darrell Shuss
': drilled a 45-yard field goal just he: fore halftime. In the second half
~ River's Rico Simonetti threw four
~ touchdown passes - throws of 22
: and 44 yards to Matt Snively, 2h to
~ Todd Blake and 23 to Keith Diet:rich.
• The Tigers (1-4), down 34-3,
: swted back in the third quarter
: when Brad Kroft connected with
: Shane Johnson on a 28-yard touch: down strike with Shuss kicking th~
: extra-j)Oint. In the founh quaner
• Benji Scbenlce1 scored on a three
: yard run and Kroft tJ!'SSed to ~n
: Sears for the two pomt convers1on,
: and with less then two minutes left,
· Kroft scored on a one-yard snealc.
: A rwo-point conversion run by Jay
: Cauls made the' final score.

Schenkel led the Tigen rushers
with 50 yards on 10 carries and
Brad Kroft completed 12 of 29
passes for 134 yards. but suffered
four interceptions.
Quarter totals
Marlena ............... .3 o 7 16 = 26
River .....................8 620 6= 40
Meadowbrook 8, Warren Local 7
At Byesville, the Warriors took
a 7..() lead in the second quarrer on
a 27 yard pass from Heath Graber
to Shane Perdue a'nd Briah Pinkerton's kick, and made it stand until
the host ream scored with less than
two minutes left .
Meadowbrook raised its' record
to 3-2 when Brett Treheme scored
from the one yare line and then
passed to Brett Mur latroyd for the
game winning two point conversion.
Warren drops to 1-4, but rushed
for 146 yards, led by Justin Frye
(51 yards) and Charlie Tillis (41
yards).

Quarter totals

warren Local ........o

7

o o=

7

Meadowbrook .......0 0 0 8 = 8
Vinton County 50, Jackson 14
At McArthur, Jason Snider rarl
for 177 yards and four touchdowns
as ~ Vikings remain ·Uildefeared
in five games while Jackson falls to
l-4.
The Vikings raced to a 37-7
halftime lead and then coasted to
their fifth victory. In addilion, reamate Ducky Spires ran fo.r 100
yards, and Andy Booth added 57 to
spark a ~97 yard rushing nighL
Snider scored the first three
touchdowns in the first quarter on
runs of 12, one and four yards. The
lronmen got on the board in the
second period when Geoff
Matthews teamed with Ryan Hall
on an eight-yard scoring pass and
Greg Woolum kicked the extra
point.
The V ilces added IS points in
the second quarter and Booth's

one-yard smash, Dusty Ward's 23
yard catch from Booth and Booth's'
conversion run.
Both teams scored in the fourth
quarrer, with Jackson's coming on
a five-yard run by Matthews and
Vinton County's on a 68-yard pass
from Booth to Dusty Ward with
9:371eft.
Vinton County finished with 48
rushes for 397 yards, while Booth
completed three of six passes for
Ill yards and two touchdowns.
Kevin Wolford led Jackson with 14
carries for 70 vards. Matthews
completed six of 14 passes for 74
yards.
Quarter totals
Jackson .................0 7 0 7 = 14
Vinton County .... 22 15 6 7 = 50

1992 GEO TRACKER

Athens 21, Portsmouth N.D. 14
AI The Plains, it was the
Kahieem Maxwell show as the
sophomore running back carried
the ball 25 times for 278 yards, including runs of 58 and 87 yards for
touchdowns. He also had a 64 yanl
scoring run nullified by a penalty
as the Bulldogs posted their first
vic lOry of the season.
The ftrSt half was aU Athens as
Maxwell scored in the flTSt imd second quarters and Mike Grippa
gathered in a 21 yard scoring pass
from Nick Toth, with Toth lriclring
all three extra points.
The Titans came back in the
third on a two yard run by Nick
Bukiewicz and Andy Saltsman's
Irick. They scored again in the final
period on Aaron Schmidt's one
yard run and Saltsman's extra-point
Ieick to reduce the score to 21-14
with four minutes left.
Notre Dame made it thrilling
when they took over on downs with
ju!ll 19 seconds left, and immediately passed 45 yards to the AHS
35 yard line, but ran out of time be·
fore scoring.
Quarter totals
Portsmouth N.D....O 0 7 7 = 14
Athens ...................? 14 0 0 = 21

4x4. 5 Speed, AM/FM. Power Brakes,

Soft Top

Trade
Price

I

l

Pia,_.

Meigs ...............:....o

s

THE

150
58 153
42 162

()!IllER

Of

Frlda.f's results:
Gallipolis S3 R1ver Valley 6
Athent 21 Portsmouth ND 14
VlniiiD County SO Jackson 14
Milmi Trac:e 32 Logan 0
. Hannibal River 40 Marietta 26
Home- 20 Pt. Pleasant 0
Meildowbroot 8 Warren~ 7

I

l

Pouaooudt 28 Albland 7
alii Grove 27 Buf·WI!YDC 2S
Ale:liander 22 MeW 14
.
. oetull« I pmes:

I

· AthcnutJICbon
Oillipolla II Mlrieaa
Loa1Jt at Wlmli ~
Poca at Pt. Pleaaant
E111t Bank II River Valley
Meiai II Wellsion
Fairland at Coal Grove
. Portsmouth II lroniOD

I

1'

(

(
•

HOMEOWNER
Fo' porcnase ot

.... .: ·-

................... ......... . , ..
·

$12,99~- • • •

Mo«o, NYJ.. ....... .l9
Sbarpe.ll&lt;n ......... 19
Oiviru, Hou ......... .11
Fryu, Mio ............. ll
Bladot, S.. ... ... ..... ll

Pia,..

a-s!

Curu!iftahlm.Plill.97
AWnon. DoL ... IOI

66
66

..

•

-

.................84 76

.lll

CINCINNA11 ........72 18
Colondo ............... .67 9l

.450

30

.419

Son!Mto--------------60 100

.37l

35
42

7.9

37
80
36
21

S73
698
116
761
845

~-1 $·,1 Q49*'
-

.: .

, I.,

~

·r

18

Z2

.....

..

X 71"

OU..ao (M"''on 10.14) "San Diego

(Bmcm 3-13~ IO:OS p.m.

Sunday's finales
Colondo (N'IOdl-1) ot AllanLo

(Olovino 21~, UOp.m.
New Yo:d!. (Schwnt 4-tl) at P1md.
(AnMnlas9o-16), 1:35 , ...
Pia.bwP (Hope.O.l) at Monueal
(MutinOI !3-9), I :3l p.m.
Pbil.tdolpbia (Ri•onll-9)" SL Louis
(Arochtll-1). "2:15~S.m .•
Houlton (Hamid llj.-:9) 1t CINCIN~
N,~.na. 11 •2-l),2,llpm.
Sanfnncioco(f-~)aiMAa-

'r

HS•JIOI

$9,999 OR
$199

With NO Money Down.
60 months.

With MQ Money Down.
60 months.

Milwl\lkeo (Bm• 10.11) at BoRon

(Sek 7-'l). l:Ol p.m.
Detmh (Kmiaer 5-4) at New Yut
(Abbou 11;13), f:30 p.m.
OU.C.&amp;~ua 1S·I)atCLEVBIAND · · 0.0). 1:35 p.m.

PerMo.

'

Xanlu City (Octdm~. 11-6) a1. TCX&amp;I

(BrQWn1.5-ll), 4:05p.m.
Colifomio (F'woy ll·l4l" Ooklond
(Wcll:b9-10),4 :0l p.m.
T&lt;xOnla (Hentpn 19-1) al Baltimo~
(Sutcliffe9-10), i.-M p.m.

,

Milwautee (Pldmd.l6-16) atBa.ton
(Mincboy f·l ), I :05 p.m.
Dctn.it(Wclll11· 9)•tNcwYolk
(lt.mi.,;ooti 10.7).1 :30 p.m .
Otic.IJO (Berc 11-.5) at C1.£VELAND
(OrinWoy ~~ I ,35 p.m.

T......,(Co• 7-6)01Bahimon(Mo-

Donald 13-13~ .,35 p.m.
Seoalo(La')'ll·I)OIMmnoow

(T'!""l 11-ll), 2-o!l p.m.

Emu~ City (Applllf 17-t) at Teu~
(Bcltonon ~).3:0:5 p.m.

PerMo.

1994 S10 PICKUP ~ 1993 CHEVY

. ~ SJ0,299
UpTo
00 Fi'st Time
_ _ _;:5::....:::....:::::
$9,799

Califom.i.1 (l.anptM IS. II) 11 OU(Oulingl-9), 4:05p.m.

CAPRICE
a.yer

SH Deotler for Detail•

Und

WAS$23,206
NOW 19,995

'

1993 CHIVY
BERETTA

1993
GEO STORM

$13,271
NOW 10,995

$9,999

'Paymante flguNd on 7.75% APR lor 10 month• with $1,000 caeh down or tl'8de equity.
'T~ tl1la !Me

not Included.

,-

·

DON. TATE CHiV.~OLDSe•CADe•GEO

Pier MIL

~ 'BROWN ,_D 'BLACK
GRAY · *GREEN -TAN
BluE

~
WAS

-..J ,....,.

AI-·-·-

CHISTIR

$8,999 OR
$199

(lbnb ll·ll), N.,...

Sunday'sllnales

BAUM lUMBER

1993 CHEVROLET
CORSICA

They played Saturday

•

Where America Goes 'il Relax-

1993 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER

Scaule (Ficmin&amp;ll·S) at h-tinne&amp;Ola

- ~ll98~~ .

"IN STOCK COLORI

:;

2A

Ouw.t 7, Colifoma 2

Sale

-

l3

I

Now Yodr. (l'equndez 4-6) 11 Florida .

®

POMEROY, OHIO
614·992·6614
1·800·837·1094

6
10
ll
22

Scatdc I, Minnceot~ 2
Texu 2, Kansas City 0

Pilubur&amp;h (Coote JQ-10) 11 Mmtrea.i
(FuRrO t:f-5),1 :lS pm.
'
Philadolphio (loW&lt;~! 12-ll) 01 SL
Lollil (Urbani 1-3), 2:ll p.m.
HOQitm (Portuaall7~) al ClNON·
NA11 (B,........ 1-7), 2,1S p.m.
· Colon.do c;RcynotO 12·10) ttAllanUI
(Ma..... 19-10), 3_p.m.
San Pn.nci.co (Hictmon 7-~ at U..
Altacloo (ll&lt;nlWcr 12-13),3:0:5 p.m.

Spa -the number one selling brand in America - ~ should
kilowwe're selling them by the yardfull at incredibly lowprtas.
Every Hot Spring is completely portable, there are DMr any
installation hassles to worry about. So if }'OU want to enjoy yean u
relaxation in the comfort of your
own backyard, come in and see
I~~·
the savmr;; mours.
•

DON TATE CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.•GEO

New Yodr: 9, Detroil 6
8altimcm17 TOIOClO 2

s. Sm DiCJO s

We've Got Any Kind Of Spa For Any lind Of Yard.
If you're looking for a great deal on a Hot Spring- Portable

River Valley Raiders
Rusbing- Haislop 7-87, 1 TO:
Denney 9-22; Cook 2-14; Jenkins
7-13.
• Passing_;_ Covey 3-12, 35 yds.,
2 inL; Kelley 1-2, 3 yds. Recelvlug- J. Belville 1-19;
Jenkins l-16; Stanley 1-3; Cook: I·
1.

Friday's stores

· They played Saturday

6 2
3 I
.s I
5 4
2 2

Gallia Academy Blue Devils
Rusbing - Donnally 1-64, 1
TD; Dailey 5-45; Stacy 7-37;
Barnes 5-36; Hutchinson 8-16, 2
IDs.
Passing- C. Barnes 12-13,
206 yds., 4 TDs; Humphreys 2-2.
48 yds.
Receiving - Hutchinson 4-58,
I TD; Qualls 2-35, 2 TDs; Cremeens 2-40, 1 TO; Stacy 2-48; R.
Barnes 1-16; Donnally 1-16; Caldwelll-9.
Iuterceplions eaught - Evans
1-4; R. Barnes l-0
Fumble recoveries - R.
Barnes (I)

Milwauiac 8, Boaon 4

(Ropp 4-l), 7,Q! pm.

(See POINT oa C-4)

Statistics

cu..,. 4, CIEVElANIJ 2

Philadolphio 4, SL IAuU 2

40 o
2!1 0

Sale

&gt;

~

,'

.506
.431
.431
.425

• Fast, easy installation
• Goes dircctl)! ov~r old roof
• Won't rust or corrode
• Reduces noise
• Provides added insulation
• Lifetime limit~ warranty

~

·
.

SCIIU. .......... .......... Bl 79
MinnCII(lh .............. 70 90
Calilomil ............... ~ 91
Olkllnd ........ ......... 68 92
t.·clinchod division title

RE-ROOFING SALE

·.
.·.·.

·

.538
.l l 3

Allsnu 7, Colondo 4

'

!•:

'

.638
.638

...

FOR A GOOD DEAL...
.
SEE TOM MP.IUD or BOB ROSS,

Our Servlee ~nt Ia Open ~n;':frl. Wi Set:-a-12
· MuMtir Shop Mon•.Prl.
Slit. 8-12 , . ··
New Houts Ins...- Mon•.Prl. 8-7; Sat:
p.m. ·

AtlMta ... ....
r
s.n Francilco ...... 102 ll

18

V

.419

Tau ............. _...... 86 74

, K.wu O.y ...........12 71

Friday's srores

..

.
Brlnlln your best deal on.a New C.ar or TruCk and we
will try to. m.,et or 'hat the De•i

Wtlllem Dh'lllon
x·OUc:aso .............. 92 68 ..57.5

14

New Yodr. 4, Flori41 I
H_,., 2, CINCINNATI 0
M&lt;m.... 6, PiutbwJh 3

Pla)'el'
AIL Ydo. A"11.l.GTD
Sandon, Dol. ....... .97 404
4.2 35 I
Wauon. S.F. .........71 376
!5.3 2S I
Bnnm. N.O..........76 347 4.6 24 2
Hamptc&gt;n,NY0 ... .92 344
3.7 llJ 2
Popm. AIL .........43 230 S.3 29 I

-

""'

·'

49
l7
61

·.
.

23
33
40

J.o(llinched' diviaon title

Quarter._cb
AU.C.... Vola. TDloL

Hehal, All. ...... .....IO
SUnma,NYG ........ 87
W.._N.O....... ll3

•,

-~
....

2.69
242
116
142

.......

•

.
I~
.

I
0
I
I
I

lo.9
14.9
13.4
10.3
· 7.9

14

.463

.Sl9

1M AaooJoo ...........BO 10 .lOll

NFC!eaders

•

CHESTER 1-600-767-4223
POINT PLEASANT 675-7254

304 16.0 ll

10
10

Boatc~t ........... ......... BO

•

SUI .......... I, LoO Anael.. 7

W

Fauw, cm ........... u
WUlil.m•, SCI ...... .II 142

.... .·... ........ .

'

0
I
2
2

3
l
l
6

..525
.525

.400
.356

No. Yolo. A ...LGTD
Slau~. Hou......23 302 13.1 41
I

·.·.

-

519
709
163
804

7

Blltimdre ............... 84 76
o..nnt. ................... 84 76

16

Recelwen

--

WARNER IIEATING AND COOLING

2

.588
.544

Florido .......... .........64 96
New Yod: ............. .S7 103

77

.m

towards the right sideline before
being cut down by Point's Ryan
Roush. The gain was aooct for 14. It
was Taylor on the IIQt play as he
went for seven IIIIR 10 the Big
Black 43. The- Point defense
seemed to sitffcn as Jineblclren
Safford and J11011 Shinn pounded
Taylor on backfidcl mix up brina·
ing up a third llld ICVCII. Vuag
found Lucas in the right 11811 for
what~ into_a 17~
Fmally, With nmc
Malashevich came on llld nailed. a
31 yardct to Illite the score 10-0
going into halflime.

08

:t·TOJOnl0..... .......... 94 66
New Yodl: ......... ..... 87 73

.SOO

Pla7ft'

'

Offer not available to contntcto1'111 11nd builder-a .

,

909 l

Eutern DIYWon
W L Pd.

.47l

75

~~

Yda.TDIAL

3S
66
7l
61

Tum

80

aue~ao

.•.,

lbatcan give you a oozier feeling lban a durable,
bigb-efficiency, energy-&lt;:Onservlng 'll-1111e heal pump: a Trane beal pump
wilb a cub rebate. And remember, a beal pump cools _u well u it beJts. So
1alk 10 your participali!lg Tnne doaler and
seta nice. ·warm feelllig. In more ways than one.
_ It~ Haid To StopA r,..,._. rw

c....68

AMERICAN LEAGUE

CU!VEIANIL .... 76 84
Milwlukoe .............67 93

RWihm
,..,_.
AIL Ydo. A ...LGTD
4.2 17 2
C. W oren, Sea ..... 87 363
l'omot, PiL ............75 291 4.0 30 4
Vardell. CloY........S4 245 4.S l4 I
Thcmu, But.........61 235
3.9 21 0
White., Hou...........71 22.11
3.2 12 I

•

~..-Jc_ ~ . 1C...··~..,_

~··only one lbing

AU.

cu..,. (Had&lt;oy 10.10) .. s.. Dlooo

(W.....n 2-7), 4,0S pm.

12

L

01

AFC leaders
1!aiuab, NYJ.. ......M
Moa&amp;aal, K.C. ......57
O'Donnell. Pill. ....99
Elway,Den. .. ...... I08
Muino, Mia........ lOt

ael• (E.,;. O....Jl-13), ~:Os....,.

.m

PilbbUrJb ..............74

Qtwlorbatb

I

GAHS: Hutchinson 15-yd. pass
from C. Barnes (Irick failed), 7:30
lsL qtr.
GAHS: Cremeens 19-yd. pass
from C. Barnes (Hutchinson 2-pt.
run), 3:49 I st qtr.
GAHS: Hutchinson 17-yd. run
(Irick failed), 10:04 2nd qtr.
GAHS: Hutchinson 4-yd. run
(run failed), 5:19 2nd qtr.
GAHS: Qualls 19-yd. pass from
C. Barnes (Cremeens Ieick), 3:15
2nd qtr.
.
. .. .

GB

s. Louis ................15
Clliooao..................!3

Wuhiaswn ., Miami. 9 p.m.

•

•

:..,.]

Scoring summary

Pd.
.606

W

s-Philadolphia ........97 63
M....... ........ ........93 61

anyone to throw to as he was
sacked for a loss of five, and the
Big Blacks were forced to punt.
After an unsuccesful Hurricane
possession the Big Blacks were on
the move again. Will Gil came on
to Quarterback, and on first down
his option keepct went for 34 yards
down the left sideline to the Hurricane 25. On secOOd and nine from
the 24 Peck lid a handoff around
the right side, but when- he saw a
waU of ~urricane defenden waiting
for him. Peck tried to reverse the
field. He was caught and dragged
down for a 20 yard loss.' That was
the end to the scoring threat.

Statistical leaders

• Baseball • -

Ttalft

Gi\Hs: Qualls 26-yd. pass from
C. Barnes (Cremeens Ieick), 5:30
3rd qtr.
GAHS: Donnally 64-yd. run
(Hill kick), ·I :15 3rd qtr.
GAHS: Hill 6-yd. run (kick
failed), 8:38 4th qtr.
River Valley: Haislop 70-yd.
run (pass failed), 7:20 4th qtr.

Malashevich and Joey Weaver for a lhllt was good for nine )'IIIII and a
IJJSs of nine. That brouRht a third first down. Then · Taylor raced
and 18. Again Smith couldn't find through a big .hole IIICI bou!lced

Department
RV
GA
F'IJ'St downs ......................9
19
Plays from scrimmage .. 46
47
Academy (4-1) beginning the sec447
ond half of its campaign with its • Total yards .................. 174
Rushing att.-yds.....32-135 34-241
first Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Passing yards ................ 39
206
League contest at Marietta. River
Comp.-atl
..... ............ .4-14 12-13
Valley (2-3) will have East Bank
0
f.:'N .Va.) as its homecoming-game Interceptions thrown .......2
Fumbles-lost
................
2-1
2-0
guest.
Penalties-yards ............. I-S 13-89
Qua~ter totals
2-75
River Valley .........0 0 0 6 = 6 Punts-yds.................6-178
Gallia Academy ..14 19 14 6 = 53

l:uloniDt......

MendaJ,

1112

p-.vTO

NATIONAL LEAGUE

lmd.PhoaUJ.

14

1lS

MlnnetOCa 1t Sm Fnncl.oo. 4 p.rrl.
4 p.m.
New Orleu. 1t L.A.

San Dlooo II s..wc, ~ P"'N.Y. 01An111t Buffalo. 8 p.m.

Now 8

()0

-

0... dll&lt;' CINCJNNA 11, CLEVELANb. Hou.ton, PhubwJb, New Ena-

4 cyl. ang., PS, PB, auto. trans.,
AWFM stereo ca~a~tta, tilt &amp; cruls•,
P: wlndows &amp; P. door locks, P. driver
seat, rear defroster cast alum.
wheels, 24,000 miles, local car.
WAS$8995

The Redskins tried to ~ up the
pressw-e afler Malashevich s interception, but Garry Peck inten:epted
a Virag puss at his own IS. Peck's
big play gave Point field position at
the 27, and they S1arted to move.
On first down, tailback Chad
Roush (10-37, 3.7 avg.) bro~ three
tackles on a tough run that gained
five yards. Second down brought
another seven yanls by Roush, and
the Big Blacks seemed to come to
life. Fullbaclc Jason Safford (10-46,
4.6 avJ(.) butted ahead for eight

-This week's agenda has Gallia

A'I-WTD
120 26 2
9.2 21 I
14.2 91 2
13.3 32 4
13.9 12 o

LA. R - a&lt;K.wu O.y, I p.m.
Indim•pnlilu Deaver, • p.m.

a.m.,

•
•

rn

I.Mn,Dti....... ...... .20

Pbilt«Wpbb• at N.Y. Jec~, 4 p.m.

V-6 eng., power steering, power
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Dat!oit tt T~.np~__Bty, 1 p.m.
am:a
DUiu. t ~rn.

1112 FORD CROWl VICTORIA

l'

NO:' Yck.
Rico, S.F............. -24 211
Prildwd, All. ..... .23 212
Ha)'r*, All. ..........22 ]12
RiJon. AtL .......... .22 292

·T. .

a.,.,

.........

~,...

This week's NFL action

•

BUYA

OP
47
38
67
138
124
143
89

~

- • Football • -

••

WAS

six-foot, 160-pound seiJior replaced
Chad Barnes at quarterback. Donnslly may have 5e!!n plenty of long
faces during his sprint along the
Raiders' sideline on his way to the
south end zone.
• Abe Haislop's 70-yard run on
third and four in the last quarter.
The longest run of the night allowed the Raiders to avoid their
second shutout of the year - they
feU 29-0 to Point Pleasant in their
season opener.

Sco11&gt;eboard

•

-

TP
130
154
lOS
76
90
49
70
63

Qualls - the 6-foot-5, 230-pound
junior sat out his sophomore season
on doctor's orders because of the
possibility of permanent knee inJury- put Gallipolis ahead 33-0.
"We ran a waggle, and 1 went
up the middle because. there was no
one there," said Qualls of the catch,
the first of two scoring receplions
he had. "It was all end zone after
that." The second, a 26-yard strike
in the third quaner, "was on the
same play," he said.
W1th plenty of help from people
such as taclde Dylan Evans - the
6-foot-2, 280-pound junior intercepted a pass in traffic to' set up
Barnes' first touchdown pass to
Qualls - controlling the line of
scrimmage on both sides of the
ball, the Raiden had little chance
to establish their running game or
to give quarterbacks Paul Covey
and David Kelley time to· set up a
passing attack.
With the blue force entering the
third quarter with a shutout in
mind, on-the-field eltcirernent was
largely confined to:
• Hutchinson and Raider
lineliacker Mike Coole recording a
rare simultaneous catch of a Chad
&gt;o.
Barnes pass at the Academy's 46,
• : "1 went to the right, got pressure which caused a stir among the
:: and got away from a c~lUple of crowd of many hundreds who won: · guys," said Barnes of h1s touch· dered if it was a reception or an in-: down pass, the second of four. terception. The joint possession
: • "Cremeens was waving his hands, meant that the hosts retained pos·: and 1 threw iL He did the resl"
session and a first down.
: : Second-quarter touchdown runs
• Mike Donnally's 64 -yard
: • of 17 and four yards by Hutchinson touchdown later in the frame,
:: that ~ a 19-yard touchdown which came on a k~.eper after the
: : pass from Dames to tight end Terry

•

.•: 1993 grid standings
:
(O~eraU)
, Te11m
W. L
: PointPJeasant....... .s 1
• GaJiipolis ...............4 1
Portsmouth ............3 2
: Coal Grove ............2 3
' Logan ..: ................. 2 3
Riur Valley ..........2 3
Warren Local ....... .I 4
Jackson .................. ! 4
Marieaa .................l 4
AtbeDS ................... l 4

who won their second
'"'""'ht contest to sweep their
borne stand.
The French City battalion wasted little time getting to the
prolnised land, as a seven-play, 71yard drive that consumed the
game's first 4:20 ended with senior
quarterback Chad Barnes' brokenplay pass for IS yards to j!lnior
fullback Heath Hutchinsmi. With
several Raider linemen on his
heels, Barnes scrambled to his left
and fired to Hutchinson, who was
in the middle third of the field inside the Raiders' five-yard line.
Hutchinson, who discovered no
• Raider defensive backs or lineback• : ers staying home in their coverage
: • areas, caught the pass and lOOk two
:: sreps before enrering the end zone.
•: Brett Cremeens' extra-point kick
: • was off the mark
•: After the Raiders got rwo yards
~: on their {US!- series before punting,
: • Gallipolis went back to work on
·: another touchdown drive, a seven:· play, 52-yard match that used up
-: 3:44 and ended with a 19-yard
: ; scoring pass to Cremeens that pre~- ceded Hutchinson's two-point con•~ version run thal put GAHS up 14-

·.

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gleton. "We've got 1110re than foiir yards aiKI five yanls on consei:utive
The Redslrins lOOk over with
or five people. We've got peaple plays, mowing the ball to the Hur- 5:58 left in the ICCOIId quur. On
that step up, and I think that is the ricane 48. On second down though third and eight rrom !bell' own 26,
~f a good football ream.~ he Brent Smith was hauled down by Virag found Malalhevich on a hook

· &lt;Continued front c-2&gt;
GAHS Wl. ·ns ···~--~~--------------------------

..•• •.
*:l
:.•

•aaaa~

could go wrong, did,• said 'Point
Pleasant coach Sreve Saffcrd.
"We dido't get many breaks, but
in a game like this you've got to
make your own, and we didn't
make any. We aren't going to let
this decimare us though. 1 still have
a lot of confidence in these kids;
Safford said.
The Big Blacks looked to respond on their next drive, but on
their third play front scrimmage
qlllllterback Brent Smith's pass to
tight end ~vin Craft was intercepted by Malashevich, who ran the
ball l}!lck ~ yards to the Big Black
30 yard line.
''We established a tone early;
said Hurricane roach Gary Eg-

I

·..-..

Reduted To

No

RED- SHARP!

C3

·Hurricane·continues shutout streak with 20-0 win·over Point

In second 'Battle ofGallia County,'

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS -Full moon and
empty arms.
Those were the conditions under
wl!ich River Valley's Raiders
worked in Friday mght's battle
wid! Gallia Academy's Blue .Devils
at Washington Elementary's

Sunday -Tim• Sentinel · P~Qt

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

I

11

w. Main 8t.114115 3301~.Ohio
_.

HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9:00-8:00
Sat. 9:00-4:00; Sun. 1:00..5:00

OPEN SUNDAY

�Pea•

C4

Pomerqy-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Plaaunt, WV

Su.nday llmea Sentinel

Octo.,er

October 3, 1993 ·

•

1993

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Van Bulldogs top White Falcons, 29~13
B7 Gary Clark
.
Sports Correspondent

The van Bulldogs vaulted back
into the Class A playoff pic~ and
took sole possession of the lOP spot
in the Southwestern Athletic Con·
fercnc:e by Utilizing a eleva~
JII'OIIIId auaclt 10 blteze past
flon VanMeter's visiting Wahama
Wbire Falcoos Friday evening by a
29-13 tnaJgin.
Ricky Myers, a convened tight
end, and TOI;llie Rowe led the
BuUdogs sncx:essful running game
with 100 yard efforts. van piled up
3(l() yards on the ground while adding 65 yards through the air 10
finish with an impressive 425 yards
in tola1 offense.
The Boone County eleven scored
23 second half points 10 pu0 away
from the White Falcons after leading by a slim 6-0 score at the conelusion of the lint half 10 improve
10 3-2 overaU and 3-0 inside the
Sw. C
· A •

Wahama saw its post season
playoff chances jeopardized aftec
losing its third straight road game
of the 1993 season to fall to 3-3 and
2-1 in c:cnfaence play. The White
Falcons ran for 84 )Tds and passed
for 193 to finish with a net IO_tal of

l.i

I

2nYanlsoli'Wively on the nighL
"We showed up but we forgot 10
play," a dejected WHS coach Don
VanMeter said foUowin~t the Van
vie10ry. Wahama had difficulty in
oonlining the elusive Van running
backs as Rowe ran for 128 yards in
19 canies while Myers added 144
yards in 20 tries.
The Bulldogs also picked off five
of the 31 aerials Wahama put in the
air during the everung and
recovered one Falcon fiunble Ill
keep the local eleven out of the end
ziJne until the final quaner when
Tommy Mayes connected with
Jason .King an a 48 yard scoring
pass with 10:43 10 play. Mayes also
tossed a 21 yard touchdown pass to
Gabe Scott with 1:59 remaining to
account for the White FalCons lone
two scores on the night
· }USt
· SlX
·
Van moved 88 yards tn
plays on its first possesSion for
what would be the only score of the
first half when Rowe capped the
.
'th fi yard
the
senes
WI in
a the
ve opening
run period.
at
7:49 mark
Wahama dodged the bUIIet on
· numerous occasions throughout the •
remainder of the half following the
BuUdoss early touChdown, but
came up with the big play defensively to keep it 6-0 after two
periods.

Ohio H.S. football scores
" " ' - :10, w. Ooaua• •
Kmt R.oo.veb 21. NOrdoni.l 2:0
Kmlal22, O..w..o!andod7
........ P.-l6,X..U.7
Lakewood 35, Parma 1

~ 34. o,;l!jeo!}xo

33

Ldlaa 2l, llnllom 14
Lapoic ~. Ubaty-Ban"' 6

l.anCII·~ 31, Tala wand. 29
Loxlnpo 2l, Clo. s..... 12
Liberty c.... 34,Potridl """' 21
Libaty U...., $2, Now-.,, 7
u.tiu Vall. 34, lleWY 7
Uma fr. 21, H.nUton 14
u.~ooa 20. s.m.at3 .
l.ocilald 63, Cio.I.Wolut l2

!A&gt;nh\Ciouviow 21.t.oron 8-.;.!o 0

l.ouinm. oil. Canollloa 0
LoailvilleMuiau21,Ravaw 8
t....w.d 22."D-PIIlt 0
Lucuvlllo Volloy 2l, Mdloanoa NW 0
Lu....... W. 36, Otyohop H11. 9
,
Madiloa 33, PaU.villo Havey 7
. Mansfield Mldilcm 21, Co. Collittwood 6
M.w6ol4 Sr. 45, Alhlancl7
Mlrlall'!ouont 35, ML Clilood 0
Mmoo Ri- v.u. ol6, s~ IDahlorul•
Mutiao F"'Yl3. St. ClUmillo If
43. c.n... l1mkeo 7
2l,
Alliaoc&lt; 14
M.uolllaa W..bin.... 34, ~-Fitd&gt; 1$
Mlumeol$,Rouford0
.
Mlysvillo 21,John Glenn 11

-

Myers addcid a nine yard run for
the tiost team as second half action
bcpn 10 make it 14-0 before Jamie
Beard scored on a IS yard scamper
midway through the third stanza 10
increaSe van's advantage to 20-0.
Wahama closed the gap foUowing Mayes' 48 yard bomb 10 a
streaking King across the middle as
fourth quarter action got underway.
Mayes also booted the PAT to cut
the deficitiO 20-7.
Van made it 22-7 after recording
a safety when DJ. Jarrell sacked
Mayes in the WHS end zone.

'They made the big plays. I'm
not going 10 blame the officials but
they certainly didn't help us," Paint ·
coach Steve Safford said A controversial call 81 the beginning of
the second half really hun the Big
Blacks. Safford said the ream was
unable to get back thrpugh the
crowd 10 u,.;
-~- field, and by the um·e
they did Point was penalized for
deJa Yof game•
After an exchange of possessions
Hurricane looked 10 put the game
out of reach. A leaping catch by
Hurricane tight end Mike Williams
highlighted the drive. That receplion was good for 28 yards and put
the ball on the five yard line. Two
plays later Taylor lowered his
shoulder and banged in for his
second touchdown. Malshevich 's
point after was good and the score
stood at 17-0.
A couple of possessions later
Hurricane capitalized on a Chad
Roush fumble. They took the baD
4I yards in six plays. Then
Malashevich 's 21 yard field goal attempt split the uprights to end the
scoring at 20-0.
"I'm not going 10 say we're the
grearest team in the state, but Poiru
Pleasant is a pretty do88011C good
football team," said Coach Eg·
gleton.
So are the Hurricane Redskins.
STATISTICS
Yards Rushing
Yards Possing
Total Yards
Passing
Inter. Thrown
Penalties-Yards
Punu-Average
Relllrn Yards

M&lt;C.mb41, v..u..o

Mdlooald 4 2 , - Ridp :10
Meadmrbrook 8, Wamn local?
Modwlioobwo 35, Foirt&gt;mU 6
MilnU Tnca :f:Z.l.cJiMI 0
Miomiobwo 21, O.y.lluabu 14

.

1&gt;lidpo*
6
Mid- 15;
21,Lanin
Sr. 19
Miltoo·Unioa 15, Miami Rut 7

12 29 aerials Cot 193 yards 11!1~
two touChdowns. The venan
5e!'ior's favorite tarFts were JMOD
Kins,woo.caugl!tfivepassesfor84
yards, while Todd Roach snared
two _P.SS:CS for SO Y~ and 1.C.
,(o,right had~ J«qJttiDS for~
yards. Def~vely for the 'l_Vhile
Craig Weavu turned m .an
tm~tve per{ormance wtdt
several key tac!dei and sacks.
~ahamedwee
a kwtffU 0 !"N take mdauchte
o wt 111 an open
giving_the Ben~~ -~ time 10
heal tts nsggmg lDJurtes before
o
.
f

falcons.

Poz•nt l0 seS • • • ---~----...:.:..----:::::-:---::-----(Continued from C- 3)

Point Pleasant Hurrleane
First Downs
7
14

"'*""'

My~ struck once again a couple
of mmutes later for Van when be
n:cumcd an interception ~5 yards
forthetouchdowntomaku.29-7.
Wahama ~e the pass111g ~f
Mayes 10 drive 57 yards m Sill
plays for the final score of the evenmg. ~yes completed_four of five
passes m the march wtth a ~I Y~
strike 10 Gabe Scott culminaling
the series 10 make the final count
29-13.
paced . fti .
Wahama was
o enstve1Y
by Ma~es _with 64 yards rushing_in
14 camcs m addtnon 10 completing

27·79 39-120
22
114
101 ~· . " 234
2·1¥,' 8-12
2
I
2-30
10-95
5-27
3-30
55
44

SCORE BY QUARTERS:
1 2 3 4

Point Pleuanl
Hwric~~~~e

().
70 30 7 30

200

SCORING
Team- Qtr
HUR · 1
Jeremy Taylor five yard run (Billy
Malashevich kick)
HUR . 2
Billy Mal as he••'ch
. 31 Yard fi• ld go a!
HUR-3
J(Malashevich
..emy Taylor
yard run
kick) two
HUR •

IIURR ·Mike V~r~~g 12·8·1·114 yds.;

'rotaJJ 8-ll-114 yds.

.

ReceM111
POINI' · Ryan Rouoh 1-24; Gary Peck
).(-2); Tbllll
~22'-J&amp;.
HURR
. Stephen
Lucas S-38; Chad
Jones 2-31; M'oke WdliiJ!I! 1-25; Totals

Putnam.

STATISTICS
Firol Downs

Yards Rwhinj
Yards Possins
Total Yards
Pusin.ft.ro

Wabama Van
14
20
24-84 56-360

193
277
12-3J
~:Oiries2-30
_
3 363
Punts-Average
SCORE BY QUARTERS:
(See wAHAMA on C-5)

'

'

65

4~
7· 1
0
9-85
• .
4 26 2

t:u

Department
H
RE
Fint downs ........ ..............6
19
Rushing yards ....... .33-(-5) 36-241
Passing yards ............. .102
144
Total yards ....................97
385
Comp.·alt ........... ....... 5·14
7-14
Interceptions .................... 2
0
Fumbles-lost ................4-4
3.()
Penalties-yds .............. 4-30 10-95
Pums-avg................... 5·20
3-30

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90 FORD ESCORT

4

Malashevich 21 yard field goal
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Rushing
POINI' • Juon Safford 10-46; Chad ..._
Roush 10.37; William Oill 2-27; Brent
Smith 3-(-13); Garry Peck 2-(-8);

Air, automatic, blue, stereo.

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$189

Totals 7.7·79

HURR · Jeremy Taylor 28-llS; Gary
Stanley 6-8; Milce V'11ag 3-4; Brian
Bennett I· (·3); Jonathon Petry I · (-4);
Tolals 39-ll0.

clo~ng out the 1993 campaign
apmst four tou8h oppopcnL!
beginning with a trip to Buffalo

CAROU SHOWD£N
99
•
•

EIER'S

Passing

Hunting l Fishing Supplies
Sl Rt. 124 Racine OH ·

POINT . Brent Smith 3·0-0 yds.·l int;
William0ill9·1·1 yds.; Gary Peck 1·1·
o24; Tbtala 2-13-22 ydL

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'

MARINE SERVICES

MA'KES·CATCH -This unldentllied Eastern receiver pulls in ii

p- In the open r~eld during Friday Difbl's game against the visit·

tog Hannan Wlldcats,'wbo fell 52-6 to gtve Dave Barr's Eagles a 3-2
record, best among Meigs County varsity arldlron battalions.

'

WINTERIZATIDN~ sPECIALS
CERTIFIED MECHANIC

OUTBOftD MOTOR $3 200

Waha'!'af_alls ...

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Wahama
Van

sa9· PerMo.

INBOARD/OUTBOARD $80°0

Team·Qlr

1 2 3 4
0 0 0 13

Total
13

6 0 14 9

.29

SCORING

VAN - I

Servicflll aii.Ma••• (I JIH•b1

'

1;12200 SE-5 PICKUP

·..·•
..

Jamie Beard 15 y111d run (pass failed)
WAHAMA-4
Jasen King 48 yard pass frcm Tcmmy
Mayes (Tcmmy Mayes kick)
VAN -4

saiety

VAN .4

Ricky Myers 65 yard interception

VAN -3

return

VAN -3

•ALL GRADES LIMESTONE •AGRICULtURAL LIME
oNON-MASONARY SAND

Tootie Rowe five yard nm (run failed)
Ricky Myers nine yard nm (Tootie
Rcwerun)

II MAZDA

Total

(Continued froiD C-4)

Y. mile west of Rodney on Rt. 588

WAHAMA - 4
Oabe Scou 21 yard oass from Tommy
Mayes (Icicle wi~e)INDMDUAL

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ML
l6, Roynol&lt;lobwJ l 3
N. B&lt;M To,W 39, Fiano,.,.., 6
N. Camon 21 Can.taD CJleaOak 0
N. O!motod29, Weolloko7
N.llidpillo 2l, E1,.u l7
N. RoyolO&gt;n 21, ClcMol..r 'rl

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SoronpWJe 31, B...Uvillo 3l ((71')
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33, Sprin'- - - I
TU"IOft S9, Ot.UIWI HUll 0
Tipp Chy Bodtd 47, N. Col!... Hill6
To!. Car.ltll 28, Tol Waite 6
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Tot Woodwud 43, Tol.libboy 24
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1Win V.U.y S. 21, Bnclfonll4
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UNM LoCal26, Conou.:. V.U. 0
Unioawwa Like 41, WOOf* 14
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u- Arlin&amp;m 21. o.tw..7
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uu.. "·VD-41,
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Von W•l4. Una Bllh I •
Vontollo-Bulla 20, TJOiwood-ModUoa 16
V.....w.iol l4, ~Saudi,..,. 7
v-:u.o.1.s-..o
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W. Bnnob u; Ca1!too S. 6
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Woodmcn39,1lutwood 12

w-.w t6, Pt. JIJJo6

y--~Aa..Hoboel3

Z..Tnot20,''±m fDIItS«n'=rt ... 0

(

I

.

•

.Payments figured wJtti talc &amp; liHa
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, POINT PLEASAN:t', WV ·
PHONE 675-2988 ·

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.SATURDAY 10 A.M.·S P.M.
SUNDAY 12 NOON·7 P.M.

�•

&lt;

Page .ce Sunday nm.. sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galll~lla,

oetober3,1993

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV •

..

Chesapeake erases Southern's
second-half
lead
to
win
29-20
.
..
.

-

By TOM HUNTER
for his second touchdown of the
Tillea-5ftlillel Coatrlbutor
night, a ttree-yard quarterback
CHESAPEAKE - Tbe Divi- sneak. Jones' kick was no good, as
sion IV Cbcsapealce Panlhers de· the Pantbcrs led 13-0.
Cealed the Southern Tmnacloes 29Southern established a sustain20 on what proved to be a perfect ing drive late in the half. The Tore~ning for f~ll!l Cbcsapeake nadaes marched 71 yards in 13
High School.Fric!&amp;Y rught.
plays, depending on eight carries
Scott Wtckhnc's Torn~does ' . from senior back Aaron Drummer,
squad pla&gt;-:cd a run -dommate;d setting up their first score of the
game, as did the Panthers. Th1s night. W11h 59 seconds left in the
proved for a very physical11181Chup half, Tucker Williams marched in
between the two schools.
from 10 yards out for the touchIn the first quarte~, ~ke down. The PAT run failed as the
(3-2) won the o~mng ~om toss Tornadoes headed to the locker
and elecled to rece1ve. This proved room aailin$ 13~.
to be a great move for tile Panthers, · In the third quarter lhe· Tornaas Steven Alley broke throug.h does defense bcld theU: own. After
Southern coverage to return TraviS stopping the PantherS early SouthLisle's opening kickoff 94 yards em retained possession, driving 60
for a ~hesapeake touchdown. Man yards in 12 plays. The drive,
!,anes ,t1ck was good, and the capped orr by a one-yard touchPeake led 7-0.
,
down run by Williams at the 6: 1~
At the 6:21 marie m the second marie, was the second scoring drive
quarter. Alley found the end zone of the night for Southern. Drum-

.

mer's PAT run was good, as the
Tmnacloes' tocik a 14-l31ead.
Steven Alley brought the Panther's back quickly, as he scored on
a 4().yard touchdown scamper with
3:08 left in the tllird qWI!fer. Jeremy Perry's PAT run was good, and
Chesapeake regained the lead. 2114.
Southern retained possession
and began a quick drive, in hopes
of scoring before the C114 of the
quarter. This would give Southern
plenty of lime to set up a polential
game-winning drive. The Tornadoes liJolt the drive into the opening moments of the fourth quarter.
At the ll: 16 mark in the fourth
qJJarter, Southern capped off an
eight-play, 47-yard drive on a oneyard touchdown run by Drummer.
T~enton Cleland's two-point conversion pass was no good, and
Soulhern uailed 21-20.
It appeared that the ~ornadoes

\

may pull orfthe victory, but Chess·
pealce fought back late to hold the
Southern rally. Tbc Panthers struck
payditt at the 6:07 mark in the
quaner. Eric Johnson ~ off a
nine-play, 62 -yard dr1ve with a
seven yard touchdown run. Jamie
Copley's two-point conversion
pass ,from Alley was good, as
Chesapeake came away with the
29-20win.
Wi.ckline said, ''Two turnovers
or mental mistakes were cosily to
us. Tbc kick-off return and a fum.
bled punt were big momentum
swings, but I give out kids crediL
We played hard and came back.
Things are starling to come ·together. We just needed a break."
"We stopped them a couple
times when we needed. They ran
the option and controlled the ball
the fJJSt half, but· at the end of the
half and parts of the second we
playe(\ some control football and

put IOilether ·a couple sustained

drives.~~"··

Southern turned in their best
rushing effort of lhe year, gaining
226 rushing yards as a team. Rushing leader fqt the Tornadoes was
Drummer wkb 29 carries for I 57
yards. Williams came up wilh lJ
carries for 73 yards.
Rushing leader for the Panthers
was the quarterback, Steven Alley.
1\lley had 20 carries for 121 yards.
Perry added 17 carries for 96 yards.
Trenton Cleland fmished up 1-7
passing, completin,B a seven-yard
pass to Tucker Willwns.
For Chesapeake, Steven Alley
finished up 2-7 passing. He complered a 13 yard strike to Eric Johnson, and a 15 yard pass to Travis
BJ;Own.
Southern defensive slats showed
Trenton Cleland on top with .13
tackles, Drummer and Jamie Evans
each had 12, while Jamey Smith

In the

;

made seven and Cass Cleland, SBRI
Shain, Craig Knight and Bill ~
Jones had five each.
•
Southern (2-3) and prepares 10
face archrival Eastern m a home~
coming contest next 'Saturdali!
night, at Racine. Chesapeake im•
proves to 3·2 on the year.
Quarter totals
SOuthern ...............o 6 8 6 .. 20
Chesapeake ...........7 6 8 8 =

By Jim Freeman
Times-Sentinel Staff

l nsensitive.men des erie

29

occassional male·bashing

,
e

Statistics

.

, We men are constantly bornit seems, by male-bashing,
ion talk shows and colom, . accusing us of being insensitive, heartless louts who are
tGaspl) simply unable to get in
Jouch with our fellliniqe sj~.
• But ncca"'ionally we ..-.erve it.
Take this case'in point.
· ·
· Last Subd!ly, I took my wife,
Marv, and a 1leighbor's youngster
out for.a liUle Jeep ride. Mary, I'm
sore, brought along the girl for
some fedtale comPllJly, but I had
other ideas. T~ to 'male fashion, I
had already developed ulterior
motives for the choice in passengers: Mary to take photos, the
neighbor girl to help wash the Jeep
pflerwards. Hell, heh, heh.
At one point, Mary got out to
iake a picture of another Jeep blast·
1ng through· a big mud hole. After
~he slogged around the quagmire
and took the photos, I, ever the
. polite, gentlemanly sort, drove
!around 10 retteive my camera. .. err,
' Mary
~ At this point it is important that
stopped the Jeep on a moderate
:,slope, smack· in the middle of a
:;smooth spot covered by about one
!'inch of watery mud which com;bined to create a surface rivaled
~nly by teflon submer(led in synfthetic motor oil - a htlle on the
!f!lippery side with a few rocks,
ilwigs and blades of grass thrown in
:r&lt;!!' texture and color. Add to this
xture Mary's relatively slick·
ttomed shoes and you have lhe
akings for disaster.
·
~ Sure enough, Mary's feet slid
'Out from underneath her on this
pearly frictionless surface and she
fell (splat) into the mud, all the
:While tightly, politely, protectively
arasping my faithful, dependable

c
Department
RS
First downs .................... l6
1~
Rusbcs yards ..........44-226 46-2~
Passiitg yards ............... .15
282
Total yards ..................241
2-1
Comp.-atl .................... l-7
. 0
Interceptions lhmwn .......0
3-2
Fumbles' lost ................2-2
Penalties-yds..............5-40 10-70
1 -3~ .
Punts-avg ................... 1-32

At Marauders' homecoming game,

Alexander breaks prime-time tie to hand Meigs 22-4 defeat
By DAVE HARRIS
wide 10 the left. Fetty handed off to
Times~Sentinel Correspondent
Hanson as he circled back into lhe
POMEROY - Quarterback Marauder backfield. Hanson then
E ric Wagner's nine-yard run fired a strike tlfat Wa$00r fought
around left end with 3:591eft in the off the Marauder rcce1ver for the
game broke a 14-14 tie and gave inten:eption at the Spartan 10. The
the Alexander Spartans a 22-14 play seemed to fake out lhe entire
win over Meigs Friday evening be- Alexander team, except for Wagnfore a large homecoming crowd at er. Wagnrr's pass on first down af. ·
Bob Roberts Field in Pomeroy.
ter lhe inten:e,{ltion was picked off
Wagner's run against his former · by Travis curus as lhe half ended
teammaleS ovenbadowed an excelThe Marauders came out in the
tent second-half comeback by the tllird period and drove right down &lt;&gt;
Marauders. Alexander held a 14-0 the field. On second and 15 from
lead at the half but Meigs seemed their own 37, Hanson booked up
to control the second half until the with Travis Curtis for a short pass
Spartans started their winning that Curtis turned into a 63-yard
touchdown drive.
touchdown _play. But the MaraudAfter an exchange of punts to ers were guilty of clipping to nullistart the game, Alexander put to- fy the six points. On the flfSl play
gother a 13-play, 84-yard drive and after the penalty Hanson came right
took a 6-0 lead when 225-pound back and hooked up with Hudson
fullback Matt :jtosler scored from for a 26-yard gain to the Alexander
lhJee yards ouL The drive was kept 25-yard line. Four plays later Hanalive twice on third down when son hit Chad Duncan at the three·
Wagner hooked up with Fred yard line, Duncan slipped out of a
Boggess, once for 11 yards and an- Spartan tackle and into the end
other for 13. Matt Ross was zone for the touchdown. Tbc kick
stopped shon on the extra points was no good, but Meigs cut the
but Alexander was on top 6-0 with Alexander lead to 14~ with 7:54
2:58 left in the flfSl period.
left in the period.
After the Spartan touchdown,
The fourth period starled with
Meigs put together.a 12-play, 77- the Marauders on the drive. Meigs
yard drive to the Alexander 20. But took over late in the third period af.
a fourth down pass from Brent ter a 311-yard punt by Wagner, givHanson to Travis Curtis was bro- ing Meigs the ball at their own 28.
ken up.
Thirteen plays later, the Marauder
After the Spartans took over on had a third and six at the Spartan
downs, Alex put together a picture six. Hanson fued a pass to Hudson
perfect 17-play, 80-yard drive, with de(lp in the end zone. Hudson
Wagner scoring from two yards oot leaped hjgh in the air, tipped the
at the I :02 marie. Wagner hooked ball and made a diving caich 10 cut
up wilh Fred Boggess for the extra the S~ lead to 14-12 with 7:17
points to give Alexander a 14-0 ad· remaming. Meigs went for the tie
vantag~.
- QD the extra points, and Hanson
Marauder head coach Mike fired a strike to Duncan to lie the
Chancey reached into his bag of sco~e at 14.
tricks after the Spartan kickoff.
Man Ross Jetumed the ensuinJI
Heath Hudson broke free on fJrSt kickoff 22 yards before being hit
down with an 18-yard scamper on a hard and coughing off the football.
counter play givmg Meigs a fJrSt Bobby Meeks recovered thC fumble
down at the Spartan 42-yard line. for Alexander, giving 11\e Spartans
Meigs then slipped David Fetty in the hall at their own 26-yard line.
at quarterback and split Hanson out From there Matt.Roslrr did most of

Meigs golfers' top finishes
get them closer to TVC title
Hocking (2·18).
Once apin Hart continued his
outstanding play by shooting a
course record lor a higb school
pla~er at The Elm with a 33.
EWJ118, wbo IIJided a 42, was followed by Pran (:.3), Krawsczyn
(44), Anderson (47) and Taylor
(49).
McKelvey, who led Southern
wilh a 41, was followed by Shuler
(43), Orueser (44), Fields (45),
Northlip llld Williams (47 each).
Meip (90-15) will play in the
fiM1 TVC nBdl of the year Monday evening at Flirgrcens Country
Club in Iacbon.

the damage as Alexander drove to
yards. Ross had 18 canies for 103
the Marauder nine-yard line. With
yards. Wagner completed five of
Alexander facing a fourth and sev10 through the air for 58 yards and
en, Wagner scored the winning
an interception. Boggess pulled in
points on the quarterback keeper.
two passes for 24 yards, while
Nicholson pulled in two for 22
Rosier added the extra points and
yards.
Alexander held on for the win.
Jered Hill led Meigs with 16
"I'm proud of the way the kids
carries for 79 yards, while learn·
came back in the second half,"
mate Tommy Cremeans added sevChancey said after th~ game. "Yle
played hard and gave 1t everything en carries for 36 yards and Hudson
added thtee for 3o. B~ent Hanson
we hill!. Alexander made the plays
had
an "outstandinj! PJ:!Ie, hitting 11·
when 11 matt~re~. They are w~,ll
of
16
through the 1111' for 114 yards
coached and didn t hiD1 themself.
and
an
interception. Chad Duncan
Roster _led Alexa~der on the .
11ulled
in six for. 62 yards, and
ground wnh 17 carnes for 122

Travis Cunis added two for 23
while Hudsoi) hail two for 31.
'
Meigs (0-5) will travel to WeUston to play the Golden Rockets.
Alexander ( 1-4) will host Trimble
next week.
Quarter totals
Alexander .............6 8 0 8 = 20
Meigs ....................o o 6 8 = 14

'

Rushmg yards ........44-235 30-145
114
Passing yards ................ 58
Comp.-atl ..................S-10 11-16
Interceptions lhmwn ....... 1
I
Penalties-yds...... ;..... l0-55
~
2~1
Punts-yds. ..................2-70

• The

Statistics
Department
A
F'JJSt downs..... ................. 3
Total yards ..................293

9
259

---------.
WANTED
MAN
Momenlllfter eatehing a pass,
Meigs receiver Chad ·Duncan
(12) find• hlmsetr a wanted
man by Aln•ncJer'• Eric Wagner during Friday night's
homecomln1 pme in Pomeroy,.
wbere the Spuuns won 22·14
after craddn'g a 14-14 tie late in
the contest. (Photo by Rick

:1

Ol1i()
Com puny
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Lewis needs to defeat Morrison
before he gets title shot at Bowe

By ED SCHUYLER JR.
CARDIFF, Wales (AP)
Lennox Lewis, unimpressive but
successful in bis second WBC
heavyweight title defense, might be
only one fight away from a chance
· at the undisputed championship.
Seth Abraham, president of
sports for Time Warner which .
operateS HBO cable televison and
its pay-per-view arm TVKO, said
Satorday the title could be unified
in September or November 1994.
The matchup is ~sed to be
Lewis against Ridd1ck Bowe,
which became The Fight after
Bowe won the undisputed tille by
outpointing Evander Holyfield
Nov. 13, 1992, and Lewis knocked
out Razor Ruddock in the second
round Oct. 31, 1992.
That fllht l&gt;ecame even bigger
wbcn Lewis gained championship
recognition from the WBC after
Bowe refused to sign for a first
defense against Lewis. Bowe is
recognized as champion by the
WBAandmF.
There are some stumbling
blocks to the match.
Lewis is scheduled to defend
against Tommy Morrison March 5
at the n~w MOM Orand in Las

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE'
. PLUS RIP RAP

Ve~.

'I can't wait to fight Tommy
Morrison," Lewis said. "It will be
a great fight."
·
It alSo looks to be a tougbcr one
for Lewis !han milny people in boxing at fu:st thought, in the wake of
his unimpressive seventh-round
victory over Frank Bruno early Saturday morning at Cardiff Arms
Park.
The unbeaten Lewis again
exhibited punching power, but he
also looked amateurish several
limes against Bruno, who dictated
the fight until he,was stopped in the
seventh round.
Morrison and Bowe also are set
to fJiht wilhin the next five weeks.
Morrison will fight Michael
Bent Oct. 29 at Tulsa, Okla. Bowe
will make a title defense in a
rematch against Holyfield Nov. 6 at
Caesars Palace in_L!JS '{egas.

"We DeUYer aad Spread Umertone"
.~Mason

Sand . .... ......uop.SoU ..
.Concrete Sand
!Fill Dirt
.•Pit Run
•Shredded
•Drainage Gravel Top Soil
.•Pea Gravel
•Straw
•Drainage Tile
•Culvert Tile (all sizes up to 5")
•Block and Mortar Mix

DON'T IE LI"IOft IN !BE.
NOW TAKING APPOIIITMEIITS FOR WINTERIZATIOII
.
FOR OCTOBER 'AND NOVEMBER!

........_
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CALL TDIAYI

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WE WILL BEAT THE. HUNTINGTON
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WE WILL BEAt THE COLUMBUS DEAL!
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Gene .Joh~son says: "Kick off the New Model Year
with.the Best Deals in the Tri·County Area!"

Sunday, October 3

.

s1sI ·soo·
...
.

Annual membership dues for lhe
Ken Amsbary Chapter of the lzaak
Walton Club are du.e at the clt~b's
Oct. 25 (Monday)&gt;meeting. The
club is cum:nlly open for membership and members a.n: encouraged
to bring guests or potential new
members 10 the October meeting at
the l7,aak Walton Farm. Club directors will meet on Monday, _Ocl ll .

· First Baptist ChurCh

. 1994 ARIES 180 TP.RO "'·-·'·'·.:..•..
WITH 1994 JOHNSON
Ft.ff FASTSTRIKE
1~0 -HP• .·

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Jay Caldwell

. SuJteiOO
Colu~ilue, Ohio
1-800-811o0LAW

.

Roger Durst, owner/operator of
Twin Brooks Bait and Tackle
localed approximately l l/4 m~
below the locks on State Route
338, reports that stripers and
saugers are hitting sporadically
while the big catfish are biting
heavily. ·
Tbc big cats have been bitingfor
abou. t a mo~and a.half, Durst
said. One 38- . onder, some. 20-to: 30-poundels
pJenty of 8-to-12·
pounders have been caught, many
on lead spoons, be adlled.
Stripers have been·hitting surface lures or minnows, for the most
part avoiding twisters, while
saugers have been hitting minnows
and twisters.
For those who don't know .yet,
Durst opened his shop about.two
months ago and plans to be open
every day, year-round, from 1 am.
to 9 p.m.
I want to become as fuU service
as possible, Durst said. His plans
include applying to he an official
weighing station for the Fish Ohio
program. He also plans to stock
hunting items in the near future.

Tbc Racine Gun Club will Sl8l1
its annual shotgun shoots today at 1
p.m. Tbc shoots will he held every
Sunday at l p.m. thereafter until
further notice.
According to club treast~rer
Dennie
Hill, the shoots arc for 12Nikno.
gauge
shotguns
wid1 factory chokes
: Wearing Army boots cusonly.
Slug
matches
are also being
mized with heavy, Vibram soles,
planned
for
the
ful:llll:,
Hill said.
jumped from th~, flew
6round the front and
toward
A trapper's education course is
tlie spot where the object of my
lentalively
slated for Saturday, Oct.
Clesire lay.
30
at
the
lzaak
Walton Farm"near
; After ensuring my camera and
Chesler.
•ttached flash were safe, I did what
Joy typical male would do in this . The course is required for first
fitualiOII. I Jllepared 10 take a photo time trappers. For more informaef my wife lying supine in the mud, tion or to register, call instructor
4rm and hand outstretched in an John Hetzer atl-378-6228.
appeal for aid - truly the sturf of
Meigs County Game Protector
which Pulitzer Prize winning phoKeith Wood 1eporled hunters who
tos arcmade.
.
Instead I discqvercd a new off- forgot to apply for a special anllerroad hazard far worse than any less deer pennit earlirr this summer
~ve until Friday, Oct. 15 to apply
sliJ!IIp or mud pit: the estrogen pit.
Mary seemed unable to under- for a permit 4uring the second
stand my view concerning the round of applications.
If your favorite licensing a~ent
potential photo and lhrough the use
of curses and lhinly veiled tl!rcats doesn't have one of the apphcato my masculinity made her own tions, contact Wood at 9854400.
viewpoints known.
.
Sports briefs
Convincing myself lhe Kodak
.
TeDDis
moment had already passed and
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia
seeing as to how I currenlly spend
most of my available lime witli my (AP)-•Micliael Chang and J~
the onl&amp;enseeds left in Ill!
wife, I eventually (in about two Svensson,
Malaysia
Salem
, advanced to
seeonds) came to see her side of the 9Clllifmals with straight
set victhings and proceeded to extracted tories.
her from tbe mud, most likely
Second-seeded Chang defealed
averting a literal male bashing
Jonas Bjorkman 7-5, 6-l
Sweden's
episode.
·
and
seventh-seeded
Svensson beat
After this event, we continued
Jacco
Ellingh
of
the
Netherlands
6on with our adventure, Mary taking
3,
6-2:
occassional action photos and
Grant StarfQill of South Africa
eventually using up the en~ desbeat
Austrian Alex Antonitsch 6-4,
ignated roll of film , and flmshed
7-5
in
another quarterfmal match,
the event with the aforementioned
w
bile
Neil
Borwick of Australia
Jeep batli.
defealed
Briton
Jeremy Bates 6-3,
Unfortunately, needless to say. I
6-2.
probably won't win the Puli~er
sAPPORO, Japan (AP) - Irina
Prize for photography anytime
Spirlea
of Romania, who upset topsoon.
seeded Amanda Coetzer in the secHybrid striped bass and saug~ ond round, eliminaled fifth-seeded
seem to biting again at the Racme Mana Endo 7-6 (7-4), 3-6, 6-2 in
the quarterfinals of the Sapporo
Locks and Dam.
Ladies Open.

Contact:

I Ent Ill )lllld Stt Nt,

Op~n

GfllfJOHNSON
'

'

CHEVROLET
• OLDSMOBILE • GEO
.
'

1616 EISTERIIIYE. • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO e 446·3672

EVERYONE .IS .WELCOME!
N.URSERY &amp; TRANSPORTATION
PROVIDED

'
••
}

�' _,

•

PIG~

~

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,

Sunday llmea SenUnel

•

october 3, 1193

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Strong work ethic, ~ hunii·Iity Wilson's legacy
O'lle foiJowlq story Wlli Writ·
tell by Lyu JIM1' T I sporll-edi·
tor ~ die B,...-prow Lftlgtr

o/Bro.ba Arrow, Oils., dout
Al•lp Couty 11111iN BIU WUson,
wlul INdiMrt oa Aug. 11, 1993. )
TIID biggest influence Billy Wilson had on his son Scott wasn't the
fact that he was a major league
'II anball player. After all, Scon was
but .a year old when his dad bung
ap the spikes.

'

No, ibe biggesl influence was in
the lessons he taught his son. Billy
Wilson leaves behind a legacy of
hard work that followed him
throuabout his 12-year career with
the Pliiladelphia Phillies. But that
lepcy extends beyond the baseball
into the everyday life Scott, his
father and mother, Susan Wilsiln,
had in their 16 years in the metro

Scott said his father never
J)resse4 him to play "the game" and
althougl! Scott says he enjoys baseball a lot, he has never played.
"I liked the sport bul he was
never one to press me 10 do something," Scott said. "My dad wanted ·
IIJC 10 do what I wanted, what my
goals were.".
·scon, who graduated from Broken Arrow High School in 1993,
admits hb doesn't know e~actly
what he would like to pursue but he
is e¥91ld in classes at Tulsa
Juni6r College. After two years
there he plans to attend either OSU
or NSU l!fld possible study some
type or therapy.

Susan points to her outlook on
life as a special tn'bure to him.
·
"Bill loved basllball but he WI!
very humble abuut the fact that he
played,~ Susan said'\ "He never
used th;~t 10 get a job. In filet, he
never even talked abtiul it until
someone asked. He loved the ~arne
but he was very humble about 1t"
Wilson would decline offers 10
coaclt but would work one-on-one
with an aspiring player.
"Bill felt the youth leagues put
too much P.ressure on kids to excel
in sports, ' Susan. continued. "He
felt very strongly that sports should
be enjoyed for what it was sports. Thai's all. He fell there was

OCtober 3, 1183

Forecasting gauge record_s stronpest gain in August .

Economic·jndicators
signal
.Improvement; not boom
WASHJNGTO~ {AP)-

"Farm Flash

·

. .-·.corn Y.Ie ' e_ar_·y ma urity

Here is the remaining schedule
planned for the week of Sept. 1926 at the University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Center.
G:J11111Mium
Today -1-3 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.
MODday - 12:30-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 12:30-9 p.m.
Wecbiesday - 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday- 12:30-9 p.m.
Friday- 12:3()..5 p.m.
Saturday- 1·3 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 10- 1-3 p.m.
and6-9p.m.

.

ByEDWARDVOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS • Recent corn
yield ,expectation in Ohio has tum"bled from the August first esti·
mates. With about 5 """'Cllt of the
1993
h
d- h
crop arveste t e most
recent yield estimate is 115 bushels
per acre. ~~is down from th~ 128
bushe! esti~JU!~e on August 1. Lack
of -taiDfall ID AuguSI .not !lnly
reduced :yield bu! also b_rought_
about e&amp;J"her matunty. Earlier than,

· .ny
~ormalmawritylessenedtheseverof an early freeze.
,

. The September 27 Ohio Crop
_re~&gt;rt showed 45 percent of the
Obio com crop mature, comp.ved
to the five year average of 36 percent. Silage harvest for Ohio was
rated at 65 pc:rccnt complete com·
pared lo "nonnal" of 44 percent.
.LocaJ silage harvest is well behind
the statewide av_er~~e. Several
IOCB;I farmers are wwttng 10 chop ·
late. planted com_ ~hicb may not
mature before a killing frost rather
_than earlier com that is drying
down for sbeUed or ear ha{VesL'
The _Se)ll!:tQ~, .~S '()hio Fljl'lll ,
Report, showed 1111
tobac
·
ld
f
1
2
ds •
co y•e o on Y •
poun per
acre The total tobacco 0 tp 1 ~
u u 20
or
Offif. is ex~tc~ ~~~ at;::.ut
:ucti: :Ohio stood at ~1.8 ~';t
.
lion pounds. Any change m
tobacco bas a ripple ~(feet through _the
whole commumty. Informauon
orovided in the October issue of
!op~ Journal" indicates that Fed.
.
.
era! rate tax collecuons on tobacco products from one acre of tobacco production is $62,685 dollars.
That would ,total to more than $75
milliOI) dollars &lt;!f annual tax gener_ated from Galha County produclion.
A reminder of the 11th Annual

Pool
Today- closed
MODday- 6-9 p.m. ·
Taelday - 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday- 6-9 p.m.
Friday - closed
Saturday-1-3 p.m.
Sunday, O~:t. 10- 1-3 p.m.
and6-9 p.m.

--

Fitness Center

Today- 1-3 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.
Monday r- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tiiaday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday- 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Saturday- 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 10- 1-3 p.m.
and6-9 p.m.

:,ruled

--

BtaPIIIIICIN..
2 Dr. Haletlba'i:k CUSIOm Cloth BUCIUII Seats .I\IM'M
Stereo-RadiO Willi ~~ 1 jlear Window Defroster,
Power lkakes,lkxt{ Side MUIOings.

IAIUIII

No"'""' _,...

8

lift '1111

. . . . '1111-2 Dr. SPQrt CoupekP/8, 5 Sp. Manual Transmission,
Custom Cloth Buc et Seats, Steel Belted Tires.

-·t3

-18181

Auto. Air, PIS, P/B, Driver Side Air Bag, AWFM Cassene,
Rear Window, Oefoooer, P/Ooor Locks, Till, Cruise, Luxury
Packtoe. Loaded!

•att ... fHICII

TMl-Dist. ............... ·$1112

\'

$111trado EQuipment Group, Air Condition, Split Bench Recllnino

Seats, ~IS, M!,lll~ Ciulse,TacllOmefer, Stainless Steel Below~­
llne tJlllriOr MirrOB, AMIFM Ca!setta, Chr.orned Rear Stltl

815 I8

Bumper, uoolp llnled Glass, R-ly Wheels, Loaded!
LI!I,
Ptlct.......,....................$19,031
lkl/1011 Pig Disc.. ....... .. ...... -$850
fMl-Oisc.. ................. -11399

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
The Daily SentiNel, the Point
Ple/ISIIIIt Register and the S~
Timfs-SeiiiiMI value the contnbulions their readers make to the
sports sections of these papers, and
thcy will continue to be published.
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed.
The deadline for submissions of
local baseball· and softbilf-related
J)holos and relaled anicles, from T•
ball to the majors, as well as other
spring and summer sports, is the
day of the last game of the World
Series.
The deadline for photos and
related articles for football and
other 'fall 1ports is the Saturday
~fore the So¢ Bowl. The ~­
line for photos and related irticl,es
for b&amp;Wtball (summer baskelb811
and related camps fall under the
sprin&amp; and summer sports deadline)
and other winter spans is the last
·day of the NBA finals.
·
1'belc deadlines are in place to
allow contributors the time they
need 10 ptlheir piiOIIls biclr. fro~~~
· the pbotol1'81)hy studio/developer
or cbok:e inc[ to give the staffs the
c!U:e to publilh these ilel!lS in the
li!i*iJiiiiale ason for tho9e ~·

.

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I

011'1141
'·

. . . . . . . . . . .llfl 41111

.,-

increase, following slight gains of

avat·lable·

Gallia County Pride-In-Tobacco
Association· Annual Meeting
scheduled for Thursday, October
By USA COLUNS
14, 7 ·p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Gallia ASCS
Center. Advance reservations are County Executive Director
d d
GALLIPOLIS - Small and
re,~ueste an may be made by medium-scale commercial tree
cal ing 446-7007 by-next Friday. . f
. h uf' ed . .fi
Dl!e to se:veral reasons ijlc'iuding armers w 0 s •er s•gm •cant
bad weather for the winter meeting uee or seedling losses because of
and, address changes', the mailed damaging weather during l993
out mvitations may not bave got to may be reimbursed 10 replant,
everyone. Please CQj\Siller this 'Your reseed and repair damage under
invitation mem~ip
to att4d. The
meal
Probgramy
the
cosl/annUlll
dues of
$5 · u(TkTbeDA):sTAPTreeisAssadmistaniru'steredce
per person', will be'lilollected at the
door. Early call i~. reservations I~ o!fice of the Agricult~ Stamake the planning's lol easier. Mr. b•hzauon and ConservatiOn SerJim· Wells, retfred Extension vice.
Tobacco ·specialist, will be the reaTo the extent that funds are
lured speaker. He will discuss sev- available, the TAP authorizes 65
era! topics .of cutre~:t concern 10 the pen:ent
.
tobacco indnslzy.
of the replanting or repairing costs
F~l f~er calf marketing sea· beyond any loss that exceeds 35
son IS movmg ,p!ong with an air of percent, ufter adjustolent for noruncertainty. The September 22, mal mortality.
Graded Feeder Calf Sale at HillsThe T.AP covers orchard trees
boro Pn)!lucers ,fCijlllrcd !!Ollie 106S :~has fruit and nut trees, and forh~ of hornless stcers,and-lleifers.
seed! '
lan ed
od
.
BU)'CQl were Willilitto pay,~-~ ··-·- •e:mgs Por ~,._, 8!'&gt;101Pasr ~ -umtha
, -t
·
•01 thiif
._..~
· ·""'•
•' '"m'
u""l
mulm ' At some
ty points
cross u'""
calves
theresteer
was were
· 1 d'ost due'to
n · ddamaging
d dr Weather
h ·'
·
.
me u mg oo s an
oug t m
1 tdl
20centsormoredifferenceonthe
1993 El'~f 1'bTt.
same
weight cattle.
own~rs
5M ~c~~:e~rtr'i~;s
o~
headThef-toCharop
steerlaipen was a setcalof 19
o
s cross steer- ves
weighing 443 pounds and selling
for $l02.SO. A group of 19 head of
Angus heifers weighing 449 pound
avera•e sold for $88 per hundred.
Mark"t
· the fe•
e wea1cness m
"" ca til e
sector, reluctance of farmer feeders
to start catlle during peak harvest
and fear of higher feed cost are
causing a very unpredictable next
few weeks for feeder cattle price.
Edward Vollborn is Gallia
County's Extension Agent, agri·
culture.

Window Oetoouer. Enhanci!d-4.3 Liter Enulne, Locl&lt;lno Clfferentlal,

Aluminum Wheels, Deep llnll!d Glass, Rear Window Wiper/
Washer, P/Coor Locks, PNiindows loaded!

·

""""-· llll-·2

orchatd trees and l,oOo acres: or
less of forest trees
T.
·
·
·
ree growers requesung assJstanc~ und~~ the p~o~r~~ may
obtam a~dmon~l ehg•blllty and
cost-shanng
ASCS office.dewls from the local
the ASCS ffi
1.n Gall'•a c
. ounty
'! ce
•s lo;cated 10 the C.H. McKenz•e
· ~cul~ural~~Js: Ill Jackson
e, P one
·

Monopoly
airline route, or make that next conContributed by Stan Evans
struction loan soon left him in hls
One of the more enduring board competitor's dusL
games over the
Success identified with size and
., ~ has been-the
market dominance.
money game, .
Thesedynamicsareintheprocess
• MONOPOLY.
of reversal. The 1990s are clearly
Each player is is·
behaving differently. As the econsued a bankroll of
omy enters its thiriJ year of cxpancash and the
sion, deHationary forces conlinue 10
game's object, of
hull:.
course, is to conDespite unprecedented fiscal
fiScate your opponents' banlcroll stimulusandalltimelowmoneyrates,
before yours is lost
the forces of debt reduction conlinue
/
The key is to control as many to constrain burrowing and spendRECOGNIZED • Debra
PfOpenies on the board as possible, ing.
AdkinS, Gallipolis, was rec:og·
acquiring the right to charge rent
Ostentatious consumption is _out.
uized tor her sales efforts
whenever an _opponent's piece .un- frowned upop, rejected. AI this point
recenOy by The Lougalierger
liappily lar!ds ,on y'our ~· ' ' .
in the l983 recovery, P,rivate nonfiCompany during the ftrm's
. 1 .'l'hC rental charges mcrease With . nanc:ialdeblbadincrwed20perccnt . national coDvention in Colum·
cbus. Sbe bas been a consultant
tl,le ~tty's value, so players race off ttW: ~sion low: in the 1975
with tbe company since 1987,
toaddhousesandhotelstomaximize recovery, it had moved up 17 per-. aad was promoted to branch
the wOrth of the spa~;es they control. cent This time it is up 5 percent
advisor In 1992. Sbe is respooThe game often climaxes when
We think rhe rules of MONOPslble ror ror the management
someone unluclcy lands on Board- OLY bave changed. The reckless and tralaing or 17 associates
walk.
.
.
acquisition of productive assets and
In Obio, West Virginia and
. lfthespace1s grac~ w1tha bote~. relentlesspursuitofgrowthnowentail Indiana.
11 fO{CCS a play!:!' ~llcally to hqn•· distressingly low returns.
~~IO~nmthegame_. ~ ,
Growdlretailersfin\lcompetition
wmnmg strategy IS to turn casJj mto omnipresent as . retail inventories
propcities as quickly as possible.
consistently dulpa!:e sales, airlines .
; Wltoev~r~ '~epoug~tobold f~relentlesspricewarsand .bankMARIETTA· Robert E.
c!asb sees It disslpalC away 111 rental ers bavc difficulty fmiling a· good Evans, president and chief execuc~ e.uition iS a.Iqller, the sure- loan. '
· · 1 •
live officer of Peoples Bancorp Inc.
6re''f!IY,IO losing. ·.
.
'
Inrhecqrren~world,c;onsumption announced· thai the directors bave
· · The long postwar buSiness cycle pauemsarechanging,C(ilpol'lllcproflt authorized the repurchase from
~bled, in reb'!lSpeCt, a vast growthisslowing,returnsonirivest- .time to·time in the market up to
. MONOPOLY game.
mentaredcclining,andthepressures 5,000 shares of outstandin' com: Den111nd Went in one direction, to downsize, improve asset utiliza- mon stock for the company s treaup, and investment. Often financed lion and increase P'OIIuctivity are sury account, not to exceed iii price
With the house!s money, debt, fol- unrelenting.
·
$41 per share, effective Oct. 1,
lowed. Recessions were b~f invenInstead of scrambling 10 owrl the 1993. The qtors have not made
1!WY coneetions that began when the MONOPOLY board, the ~ strat· any detcrmina'iinn ai!Qut additional
. ~~Jiitelled.crediL. .
e~, is to sett,lc for rhe.utililies an_d ~~beyond the cur" •OD¢ ,the mventones were gone raill'cllk1s.· In the 1990s, IIDallet IS
'B om- 1 · .
th
'
die
better "''ft"' ..........._.•.. the ' ·
•
""'''llhcorp
DC IS a SOU •
' ·~the Fed cased, . ~~y re-\ . , ,,..._sgo~r·"l~ mCck\ • eastern Ohio binldaoldlng COIIIpil·
' ciworeduifoncue. WiserbUSIIICIS- inherit ~elrtl!. · .
' ny'wlth b~uarters in Marietta
Jjlen •&amp;hl on.to tbe rule that hesita· , -Stan Evans Is a financial ooD• . Banking offices are also in Athens·
·lion to build tbat~obileorcbeini,~ . sultant with Merrill Lyucb ln_their Belpte, Caldwell, Che$terbill; Low:
cal plant; franchiSe that restaurant, Gallljlollajlflke. He~ be reached ell. McConnelsville, Middl,eport,
extend t!lal bland franc~. add !bat at +411·1176. ,
. ,
. The Plains and Nelscinville.

ren:!!..••

MII~IJ ·llllrHJ 1:11111:11

Will ril'f/1/1'1 # f ftlfJ,. 111011, llirk, IIi Ill &amp;IIIII fll Mllr.
Tlllllll J.lll·ll2·1f11 • 422-1151 • 812-llff • Hf-1141 .
• Taxes. Taos. Title Fees extra. Rebate lnclude(J In

Of new v«)lcle li$1ed

·

. '

·~
~~ - -

. ·-ez·

. •••••, 1:11111:11 '

i ~~

apptol'8d credit". Not responsible tor typogr~hk:al errors.

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-

.,

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important Christm~s season," cent. Excluding the volatile
' ....ft.,
Zandi said.
portation sect_or, orders ~;e
The economy. as measured by unchanged.
the gross domestic product, tile
1n the first look at manufacturtotal of soods and services pro , ing in September, the National
duced in the United States, grew at Association of Purchasing Mlmagea lackluster 1.4 pacent annual rate ment said its index of economic
during rhe first half of this year.
activity rose from 49.3 percent in
Zandi and most other analysis August 10 49.7 percent in Sepwnare expecting a growth rate ber, A subindex on employment
between 2.5 percent and 3 percent indicated jobs were declining in
during the second half. But they manufaciUring, although at a slowwarn that won't be good enough to er rate than in August
produce a rapid increase in
The government's leading index
employment
is intended 10 forecast economic
New orders to factories activity six to nine months in
increased 9 percent in August 10 a advance. The positive indicators, in
seasonally adjusted $252.8 billion. order of their effect, were: a rise in
But the backlog of unfilled orders building permits, a drop in applica- .
slipped 0.6 percenl to the lowest tions for unemployment benefits,
level since July 1988. II was the an increase in contracts and orders
sixth consecutive drop and the 21st for new commercial buildings and
in 24 months.
business equipment, a lengt)lening
That's a bad sign for employ- of business delivery times, an

mer::~~~~iitird consecutive r;~~ a~::~:ri:Ni~~~ ~~:,~~;~: ~:~':v~~~;l)t:!k~r1a:!

·
asst·s-ta· nee

R
epUrCh8Se Of
stocks authorized

LT Packaae; Auto, loll, PIS, PIS, AM/fM Cassette, Cruise, Til~ Rear

.Spotts briefs

noaht68.

1 Ill:'

Weekly observations

r,.Bcyer

CLl!MMONS, N.C. (AP) - .
Lee TreViuo and Jim Denl mardled
IK!gey-frco 6Si l!ld shlted the firstround jcad in the richest ~~ on
the $fliior POA TOlD', !he Sl.S mil·
lloa VIIIIIIO OllniPloilshlll:
·
, Jim Alfltil held &amp;eeOnil with a
67, •d llio Aoti of Japan was

1993 t"PLJe

'

The
govc:rnment's economic forecasling
giUge recorded its strongest ~ of
the year in .August, 2esling an
im~g though h
Y booming
finish for 1993.
.
Meanwhile, factory orders
..., increased during the month, pulled
hiF by aircraft and autos. And a
pnvat.e survey of corporate purchasing managers showed continued, albeit slow, improvement in
manufacturing in September.
"We're moving from v~ slow
growth 10 moderate growth.' said
economist Mark Zandi of Regional
Economic Associates )n West
Chester • Pa. "The economy's
expanding, but not at a rate thai
will make us feel good."
'The Index of Leading Indicators
~umJ!ed 1 percent!'! Au&amp;!'St, flash·
IDg ItS most pOSIUVe Sign since
December, the Commerce Depart-

Money Ide,as

G/MC Flnt
NloOIIlCB (if OUII/ff!(f).. ... ·S4IXI

Sports deadlines_

District.

es

. .
·.L ack of
-rainfallI reduces
.. ld
- t .

Lyne Center slate

, Notes: A Lyne Center member·
ship is required to use the facilities.
Administration, faculty, staff and
students are admitted with appropriate J.D. cards.
Racquetball reservations can
now be made one day in advance
by calling Rich Fabn, director of
intramurals, at 245-5353 or 1·800282-7201 for more infoonation.

and you may win
prize from the
. Publishing Co.
;rour name,
addreu
telephone number with your card
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. All
coolest entries sllould be turned In to the news·
paper otr'JCe by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. 1n case
or a tie, the winner will be cbo~en by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County rarm '!Viii be rea·
lured by tbe Meigs SoU and Water Conservation

.

. .

.

.
.
week's mJI(ery
by t.be
Soil aiad 'Water
District, Is· located somewhere In
Gal!la County. Individuals wishing to partlcl·
" pate In tbe weekly contest .may dn so by gueiiSIDII
the farm's _owuer. ;JUst .·mall, or drop orr your
guess to tbe Daily Sentinel, 111 €ourt St.,
" Pomeroy, Objo, AS769, or the Gallipolis Daily
• Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,

llllPm

''

Section I)

too much emphasis placed on win·
ning and com~ lion."
,
Susan sa1d her husband &gt;ball"· ·
many friends in baseball. Some of
the closest were his Phillies tea~n,
mates. Steve Carlton, LaJry Bowa
and Mike Schmidt were some of
the closer ones.
For Scou, his memories .begin
with the post-baseball era of his
father . Their close association,
Scott admits, has made this ·Week
tough. ·
"I wish he were here right now.
I'd tell him he was the best dad I
could have hoped for. I would tell
him I love h1m very much and
always will."

William Harlan "Billy" Wilson
died Tuesday, Aug. 11. Wilson was
born Sept. 21, 1942 in Pomeroy.
He is also. survived by a daughter,
Kim Davis, of Minorsville, Pa.
Funcnl services for the elder Wil·
son were Saturday afternoon under
tbe direction of Floral Haven
Funeral Home.
'
Billy Wilson wanted only one
thing for his son - to go to college:
"The most important thing to
him was for me to go to college,"

',

-

•

area.

Racquetball courts
Today- 1·3 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.
Monday- 10:30 a.ln.-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 8 Lm.-9 p.m.
Thursday- 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday- 10:30 a.m.-5 p.m.
Saturday -1·3 p.m.
Suuday, Oct. 10- 1-3 p.m.
and 6-9-p.m.
. Home athletic events
Thursday - voUeyball vs. Mt.
vcmoo Nazarene, 7 p.m.

.

;FarQl!Uusiness
..

'

Scott said. "He wanted me 10 ·do
whatever I wanted to · do. The
imJii'irtlmt thing he said was that I
•be bappy at what I was doing. He
always told me·if I worked bard, I
would gel what I wanted out of
.life."
·· "He was a very positive person:
He was always putting others
before himself. He was one of the
nicest men I knew."' · ' ·
After his playinJ. dllys, Wjlson
was hired by the Phillies as a piu:hing coach in rhe· minor leagues bul
left the organization in September
1975. He joined the Milwaukee
organization in 197S but left baseball for good in 1976._

·.

' ('

O. ITpeenrceofnlthinebo•'nthdeJx~snelanl~oJrwularY
· d•'

looking indicators rose, the .first
ume that many were up smce
December 1986.
"The broad-based nature of the
increase and the fact that it was rei. I lar .
.
.
alive y ge IS an encouragmg SJgn
and indicates the economy is set to
accelerate as we move into the very

'

BanCOlpOfl..osAngeles.
"It looks from the backlog like
companies aren't having very much
difficulty completing orders with
their existing workforce," she said.
"There's not much of a cushion if
orders were to fall off."
Much of the strength in orders
was concentrated in aircraft, up
23.9 percenl, and autos, up 5.9 per-

ry employees, an increase in the
backlog of unfilled orders for
durable goods, a small rise in consomers' confidence, a gain in new
orders to factories for consumer
goods and-an increase in ihe pn'ces.
of raw materials.
on1
·
The Ynegative indicator was
decline in the inflation-adjusted
money supply.

Jia COunty with 1ocally raised beef
and vegetables. being served at the
banquet.
The Goodyear Outstanding
Cooperator, Outstanding Farm
Family and Outstand_i ng Farm
Woman will be recogmzed. Both
Ag and Urban Soil Judging Teams
and Top Individual high scorers
will also be recognirul.
The Conservation Poster Contest County Winners will be awarded their prizes and the top county
AA!l. ~~ll_Qol posters will be dis-

will be recognized. Their c:onbibulions are very important to the district if! carrying out conservation
educauon programs
The_Big "Sycamore" Tree winner will b~ announced and_the
nommee will be presented w1th a
plaque_from the 0.0. Mcintyre
Park D1stnct and the Gatlia SWCD.
Banquet tickets are $5 and will
be available at the Gallia SWCD
office at 111 Jackson Pike, Suite
1569 or call 446-8687 for more
information. Banqu~ tickets must
be purchased by Fnday, October
29 ..

a

H orne .grown. prod nets WI.,, be
promoted at 49th sw CD ban._quet
By Co~nce S. White,
GaU•a SWCD
GALLIPOLIS - 'The Galli~ Soil
and Water ConservatiOn D1stnct
announ&lt;;es the annual meeting and
awards banquet IS set for Thursday,
November 4, at 7 p.m. The ban'luet
will be held at Buckeye Hills
Career Center in Rio Grande.
Two supervisors will be elected
10 the board during the meeting .
Candidates this year are Mike
Hughes, Mark Jividen, Dale Lamphier,_and,\1_[\;to•)'May. .. , . .
1bis year the we will be pnlmot-..
ing agn'cultural producu'on in Gal-

pil!)'C!I.· .,

The D•'stn'ct Affiliate Members

Farmers may be eii·g.·ble 1!-or
loans
II
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COLUMBUS - Farmers in
AugJaize, Meigs, Mercer, and
Miami Countres, who suffered
severe physical and production
losses due to damages caused by
tornadoes, excessive rain and hail,
which occurred on June 27,
through July 16, 1993, may be eligibJe for emergency loan assistance
from the Farmers Home Administration (FmHA), the rural credit
service of the United States Depanment o'f Agriculture, Linda K.
Page, State Director of FmHA in
Ohio said.
In addition to these four counties, 12 other Ohio counties are
named as contiguous counties.
Those counties are: Allen. AtheJIS,
Cbampaign, Clark. Darke, Galha,

Hanlin, Logan, Montgomery, Shelby, VanWert and Vinton.
FmHA emergency loans to eligible farmer, ranchers. and aquiculture operators are to enable them to
return to their normal operations
after having sustained losses resulting from natural disasters.
Applicants will not be eligible
for EM loans to cover damages and
losses to any crops planted which
were not insured, but could have
been insured with FCJC crop insurance. FmHA emergency loans for
physical property losses may be
made to repair or replace essential
farm buildings, liv estock, and
equipment.
Offices serving the above counties. Interested farmers unable to

Peoples Bank flier earns award
~TIA- A Peoples Bank
flier headlined '.'Santa Drops Bundle-on Southeastern Ohio" earned a
merit award at a recent Ohio
Bankers Association (OBA) convention and marketing conference.
The piupose of the Hier was to support local merchants and encourage
local holiday shopping.
The publication, entitled North
Pole News featured an illustration
of Santa flying over the community. A short article explained that
Peoples Bank would be sending OUI
over $-1.6 million in Christmas
Club accounts.
Vi~e president in marketing,
Kay Brown, convinced Santa him·
self to help her and other bank staff
members hand-deliver the message
to merchants in southeastern Ohio.
~ newspapers seRl photographers to cover the event and. in

some cases, published color pictures of Santa making an early
appearance.
Independent judges evaluated
enbies in a variety of categories for
OBA. Criteria for judging included
research and planning, cost-effi ciency, creativity, message, execu-

tion and results.
According to Mrs. Brown, "In
many ways, this project is 11 texl·
book marketing success. The
objective was specific, the message
was targeted, execution was time! y
and inexpensive. It shows the
power of thinking ahead, grass
roots research and enthusiastic
teamwork."
11it_ flier was designed and wrillen by Pyles Communications, a
Marieua marketing communications firm.

Voinovich designates
Oct. 2-9 as Shelter
Ohio Week
churches anll_organizations such as
GALLIPOLIS • Governor
George Voinovich bas designated
OciOber 3-9 as Shelter Ohio. During this ollservancc, .Ohioans are
asked by the Ohio Association of
Realtors (OAR), its 73 Local
Boards of Realtors-and 35,000
Rctltor - memj)ers to illustrate their
continued support for available
houSing for all ~tizens.
Shelter Ohio • Realtors aiding
the homeless • is a statewide communiJ:Y ·service program that links
Realtor Boards with homeless
orgailizations in their own communities to assist each community
with ~ individual housing needs.
Duri.ng ·Shelter Ohio Week,
rilllny Local Boards of Realtors will
be tollecling food, clothing,.coats,
blankets and money to donate to
local homeless-help groups,

Habitat for Humanity, which rebabilitates and ·constructs affordable
housing for low-income individuals. 'These efforts are in addition to
the many diversified Shelter Ohio
efforts that Local Boards have been
undertaking throughout the year.
According to Philip 0. Morrical,
Jr., GRI, LTG, president of the
Ohip Association of Realtors, ''The
goal behil!d Shelter Ohio WeeJc Is
10 get as many Realtor Boards liS
possible to sponsor some type of
homeless-help effort Realtors are
concerned about tho availability of
affordable and decent housing for
all Americans.~

Morrical went on 10 explain that
OAR bas coordinated the Shelter
Oh_io program with much suetess
since 1988.

locate their local County FmHA
Office may contact the State Office
at telephone number 614-469-5402.
Benefits of FmHA programs arc
available without regard to race,
col~r. religion, sex, national origin,
manral status, age or physical/mental handicap.
Applications for physical and
production losses will be received
until May 9, 1994.
Banquet tickets are $5 and will
be available at lhe Gallia SWCD
office at 111 Jackson Pike, Suite
1569 or call 446-8687 for more
information. Banquet tickets must
be purchased by Friday, October
29.

Rhodes promoted
by Ban~ One
GALLIPOLIS - Deborah
Rhodes has been promoted 10 assistant branch manager of Bank Orie's
Gallipolis office. Rhodes will be
responsible for branch operations
in addition to her currem cu~
service and lending responsibilities.
Rhodes has been with the bank
for 2 t years. During that time she
has worked in the bookkeeping,
teller, customer service and loan
departments. She was supervisor of
the drive-thru facility for several
years. She has been a lender since
1986.
A 19"12 Graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, Rhodes has
also received a diploma from the
American Institute of Banking's
Foundation of Banking Program
and The Ohio School of Consumer
Credit She is a member of the Gallipolis Business and Professional
Women 's Club and attends the
First Church of God where she is
the church organist
Rhodes res:id~~s
with her husband
·, ~~ ­
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· PJICII D2 .Sunday llm11 Sentinel

POtneroy--ftlldd~port

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October 3, 1993

C'..elllpolle, OH Point Pleasant, WV

I

-GRAPH

prove best today notlo do things for others
you resent doing. II your neart isn't in your
deeqs . tney"ll be displeased and so will
· you.

.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 2bl Don "t be
BERNICE
afraid tq ask questrons today if you are
dealing, wrth criti&lt;;f! Information '!'&amp;' anects
BEDEOSOL
• others as ~ell as Yourself. No one wiN think
less of you rf you say you d6n't understand.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 191 A lrierid of
23-IJet. 23)-Caulron and pruyours you often ten never treated yoo with
dence aie required today in joint 'entures. the sSme generosity. you ~how~red on
espetlally of a commercial nature. Proceed· hirT\Iher might give yiru more cause today
aiOtig t~aditional lin&amp;s and avpid big risks

Major changes are ahead for Libra in the
coming ·year. Send fo r your Astro-Graph
predictions today . Mail $1 .25 and a long.
sell-addressed . stamped enve lope to
•Astro-Graph. c/o this newspaper. ~ .0 . Box
4465, New Ydrk, NY 10163 Be sure to
sta,te your zodiac sign.
SCORIIIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Don"t put
yourself in 3. P,OSitjon today that WOUI_fj permit someone to make a decision lor you
who might not have your best Interests at

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·.
• Olaio Valley Ba_nk recently recoplz~
, three employees and a director for their years of service. Pictured
; above, f'ront row, left to right are Linda Plymale and Katie Massie,
· 15 yean ea_ch. Rear • Jeff Smith, 10 years; OVB president and
, chiet executive oiYicer James L. DaDey and director Keith Brande·
berry, 25 years.
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HONORED FOR SERVICE • Employees honored. for-their
years or senke at Ohio Valley Bank ~ntly were, rU"st row, left
to _right, Michelle Hammond, 5 years; Sharon Cremeens and
CU.dy Johnson, 15 years each. Rear • Richard Speirs, President
Daney and Dorothy Rodgers, 5 years.

.

Stocks buoyed by
rising bond prices,
falling rates

J
. I

Public Notice.

By MARYBETH .NIBLEY
AP Business Writer
NBW YORK (AP) - Stocks
bounded ahead Friday after a baU:h
of mixed, economic data eased
inflation anxieties in the bond market, allowin-g interest rates to
recede slightly.
Stocks tracked bonds throughout the session and shifted into a
positive gear once'bond prices
: reversed course and turned higher.
· · 1be Dow Jones induslrial avecage'rose 25.99 10 3,581.11, giving
it a ~8-poinl gain for the week.
• 'Advancing iiiSDCs oublumbered
. declines by about llto 9 in the late .
eouill on the New York Stock
Exchange. Volume oo the floor of
the Big Board came to 256.83 mil·
liOO ·shares as of 4 p.m., down from
280.99 millioo in the previous session.
- Among broad 1118Ikel measures.
the NYSE composite rose 1.06 to
256.29, carrying it 2.11 higher in
the week. The Standard &amp; Poor's
500 stock index increased 2.36 to
461.29 and rose 3.66 in the week.
The Nasdaq Stock Market's composite index inched up 0.45 to
763.23,1ifiin(l it 8.~8 in the week.

. 10 YEARS SEJlVICE • Ohio Valley Bank employees with 10
years serviCe are p~red above. F1rst row, lert to right are Steve
Newberry and Pam Wiseman. Rear • Linda Roe, President Dailey
and Randy Hammond.

NOTICE TO IIIDOERI
PurchitM of (1) 8chool Buo
for
EAmRN LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATIOft
8eolod propoolllo wUI lit
r~lvod by the Boltrd ol
Educlllon of the Eeotern
Loool School Dlolrlot of
L
12 00
A -'-rll.. Ohlo, •Y
o'clock noon on Oolabor :11,
1993, and 1 1 ihot limo
openod by the,.,._,., of
.oalcl_Boord .• provldod by

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HIAI,'f'B

ACROSS

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As a part of your Health Team,
our goal is'to provide you with ··
The answers you need •..
as close as your phone!

Woody plani
TWirl
Army dlvllkln •
FallehOOda
.. _ 109''
ObserveS
Bible bk.
Fat
Filet of -

60 "-Law"
82 Do wrong
84 llemaln
88 Babylonian dally
88 Diller 10 .
89 Conspiracy
70 Write
71 eouns
73 Flight of steps
75 World77 Ktnd Of cheese
78 Declare
..
80 Decree
81 Baseball stat
82 Mos1 uncanny
84 Drains

'1·800·462·5255

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.......
to ·llolr:-......._11'1 ttl D171
.

157
158
159
180

Licensed RN'a
3 to 11 full Md
Part llme MCI11-7
Relief naadlclet

yourself from unprodu cti ve procedures

today ·,! they aren "t producing anticipated
results. In order to be fruitful , you must be
creative and llexible.
'

Overbrook Center

J'ubllc Notice

New Competlllwe

No bldo
IBIY
be
wllhdr.wa for al .... tlhlny
(30) day a oflor · thJ
ochodulod cloalng limo lor
r-lpt of bide.

Wage Package

--Ina·drllto,

ELOISE BOiTON

TREASURER OF
EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOLS
~IRT

Adun c... To OIYNwoy, WI)Ho
Lana Hlirod Or Bloek. -114-251-

77 Clenches wl1h
Ieath
79 Female Sheep
83 Free
85 More uncanny
86 Surfel1
87 Heating ointment
68 One of HOMES
89 Stephen King
novel
90 Retreat
91 Preparea for print
92 Three: prefix
93 Purify
94 Exls1a
96.Sirlke
97 "Dellre Under
the-"
100 Faroe Islands
whirlwind
102 Ptat1omi
105 Escaped.
109 Javanese tree
112 Declare
113 Fondles
114-Abe
116 Cincinnati 118 Fireplace part
120 Manage
121 Free tiCket
122 Cuddles up
123 Permits
125 Law
126 Occupied a chair
127 Strikes ·
. _,
129 Secluded valley
131 Saved wedding
expen132 Look ftxadty
133 Brick oven
134 Lanes
136 Edibletl4!8dl
138 Ia ctofeatod
140 Brozlllan estuary
141 Young girl
142"Withered
144 1\tlractod
147 Drunken
loafer:
,.
slang
146 Regret
149 NOise
151 Map abbr.
153 Landau 10
155 R-U linkup

I Booglo pu.. to aood " - • ·
11 wlai okf, ~:11=2511.

c-

Col 3
C.od Home OntyiiM-318 I 711.
BlOCk fWIIHo -

----·

114-211-1154.
" - I moto klllono, block I

Hal-

Klt1yo, Block I
am-; Oood Homo Onlyl 114-

441-0111.

'tell'
_ Cuto ~ 1 IIIIo, 1

Forilole.l14

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Kathryn Sponaael

Loo1: I l l - Hould, Block
fWhlto /Ton, II Found: 114-31702111.
Loo1: Block Lab Ftm11lo,
IIHchtt On Laft Loa, Loo1
VlclnHy 01 WI, PINM COli 114-

witt pcisHII NIIJ I•
Jatnii'Octo1Mr3, 19U
A..... OH - . .

Is,..
.Awalcallowad 10M
Apl•t Is
II 11J

44f.7130.

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Yard Sale
GaiHpolls
&amp; VlclnHy

S fomty Yllrd .hlo: .(ln 1o_!1 ~
I Snl at Oct. AI: Rodney ""'' '
41h, · 1111, lth, On A~ Filii
-Polrllltehotf
_ ,N.
AU Yonl loiN MUll Ia Pilei In
- - DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m
1ht day lltlonr tho od li 1o run:

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

Michael Ann Florist
Moved
614-446-4206
614-446-2885

HARDY MUMS
'2.50 each or
5 for '1 0.00 plus tax

Neal's Greenhouse
3 miles~ff St. Rt. 775 at
Mudsock. Watch for signs

urvlce.

UcenNd

o-.

W11hn.eyar't Auction s.ntc•,
RIO
Cillo ~14-245-~tU.

Pl. -

-

lillrtlol, 2401

.toclrMn ,.... • UMd
loino, crofto, cordo. op,..._., clollilna, lumkrn,
~ro,

flohin9

lioN. Doolor
· 1or ...-., clay-.
-hiJ'niM.

9

~eom;;;;;;-;..~Hoo;;;,.~.h;;..W~~er;EEe-;

Fomlfy: lnfonla ·To l T Adult; lilac, 1 Milo On Gootee'•
CNMOIIOI-.tiL
.

o.r- . .:~41h,Thru

hoi•ohold, coil Oob\1 lllf11n,

.

1o1•1

or_,....

IIWII2·l'l41.
Dlconlled ttonMre, wan ,.....
...,.._, old llm..L old thor·
- old
aloe..,
ontlquo
tum•un.
.......
. AnllquH.

Pollyanna Ceramics
S.R. 7, Tuppers Plains
614-667·0045
Classes held Tuesday and
Thursday, 10 am-1 pm and
6:30 p.m. - 9 p.m.
G.W. and Bisque

Moore, owner. 114-IU-

••

Owner-Unda Fitch

Monday-Saturday

F'OR ANY.'"
'INFORMATION
ON tHE'T11EFT
OF HONDA AX·

' iooTAKI:N

FROM YARD IN
' : RORlLAND
,. 843-5189

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Yard Sale
4186 Bulaville Pike
Beside Shrine Club
Oct. 5th 9·5

Nifty Nifty
Guess who is 50
Jim O'Dell
Happy Birthday
Your Loving Daughter

:z&amp;aWobuyoototu.

$50 REWARD

Thank you Dr. Harry Nehus
and Attorney Bill Conley for
buying my 1993 Market
Steer.
Brian Shadle

•'

Wanted to Buy

Arrr ~po 01 ""mMuro,
Applla-. Arillquo'a, Etc. Allo
Appntlial AYIIoblol 114-24611152.
Anllq- ond . - fwnttur., no
1om ., too ""'""· wiU
bur _ tergo
_piool

111. SolurdiY Zncl, i

FULL OR TWIN SIZE
REGULAR . ... ........ .... ......... '78
FIRM .... .. ........... ............. .... '88
EXTRAFIRM ..... ...... .... .. ....... '98
ORTHOPEDIC
KING SIZE SETS ... ... '350 &amp; UP
QUEEN SIZE SETS ..'275 &amp; UP
BUNK MATIRESS .. ....'48 &amp; '89
BED FRAMES ... .... .. '25·'35·'50
MON. THRU SAT. 9·5 PH 446--0_322
3 MILES OUT BULAVILLE PIKE

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Rick -non Auction Compony,
lui time tuatlaneer, oamplll•

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

We have enlarged our Shoe
Depart. over 1,000 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; Safely

Unda'o Beouty Shop
Chester, Ohio wHI hove , _ hours
beginning Oct. 4lh 8:30 am-9 pm

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Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Awe

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Oct ...... t-?

auction ·

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W1a..2 , large men-. eome 10011,
diohooL amoll ropplioneoo. ole.

~~~s'!J..Goor~ *·Ohio
I w• Vlrglnll, :10477W71S.
Chtto1iMo Doc., Diltiiiii;\itoo.

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Yord S.lo- Lavondor'o, Second

Sl., S'/.racu.e. Soma clolhlll

8

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Swain Furniture
62 Olive St. Gallipolis

MATIRESS OR BOX SPRINGS

7

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Yord ..... Oct 1, 2, I 4, tho
Moro Form an SA ~ mon•a,
w01n1n'a tnd chlldrwn'e clotlwa.
boob, Mo.. wlnt1r
oorltllo.

Loved .d lOlly

frldaY

I

botry Hta., P.......,.

I

LAYNE FURNITURE
1

Porn•"'l· Rowonl.

........._~i"I ~o

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mil• up 'M3, fDitow· a&amp;g,., &amp;..
Rd. Curtolno, clothinG, rnloc.,
uto111e dloh, hyd111uHe .,_
Jeep.
MoYine- l•gor oiDd mono,
wome.. ck»thhe, mtac. 101mlpm. Roln "' thine. 521 Mu~

"'IIIII ..... Clll . .

LDit: c.~r Un, 1 blue key, 1 h11
In "X•, flU Uncoln Hill,

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~-Ocl-4-l.ono

-lor

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Olhtr~~lo.....tlonl,
,_.,...

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South Third,

11112·11111•

2

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4 llmlly, Oct. ~-~-e._. 1:00S:OCIAfn, - . _,.,. ftulo,

Two Cillo ~· 1ypo block
and
ond
_ , ,whit.
_- "'"""'·
..... friOildly
- . 114-

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Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
children ond odUR clothOI, _..
Iaine. Brinker r11ld1~1 227M
lllltoy Run, Pemoroy, una.

Empire• LP Gas Ventless
Heater on Sale!
Comfortable heat at an
affordable price.
Burlile Oil Co.
446-4119

Mary Kay Consultant
Kim Christopher
Inventory in Stock!
441-1700

Pomeroy,

iii6c"'11iii;.;:..;;;;,: 1~1'11:!

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junk car.

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Corport- ~,.....·SUndar 1~tDJ!..10 --.&lt;1 A - CJol.

'ifijtilers in change, as we continue the Holzer Tradition" ·

wy

-...na.-n
Shophord PupSht"""rd

au~ ldftlan • 2:00 p.m.
,_,_. frlo!ldoy odltlon • 2:00
p.m•. _ ,,.....

.

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

Yord S.lo: Box 308 Pelootlnt
Rkleo. Olonwood, 1 F~ I Sol,
Oct. 1 a 2, I:OD-4:w, clotho~,
ml8c., boel, trtvel trtllar, ota

llathW, Vory O.ntlo, Any Or All,

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BULLETIN BOARD

VOid Solie, 4 lomllloo, ,F.~, Sol,
sun. 11 Vine 81, Clifton, .... .

Ill·• Allo

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Wllllo Kilt- Ut1or Trot;.;! to

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Overbrook Center
333PageSl
Middleport

Wonlod To • .,, llllndlnt Tim1 Pint, Con Slort lm- l y , Good PrieM, 114-31a-

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Oct- 411H11h1 H, JN. AI
Rod~, K., IIIICWV. . . . . .
Clot- lion,
tntanto
To TOddlon, Elor:trlc Stove.

wanted to Buy

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Mit; "f.2 MIIH Out 211, lillttoly 01

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•Illness or injury
•Physician Referr,al
•Health Care Eve_nts
·•Support Groups ·

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Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Linda Briggle
Admlnlatrator

M..,..,Bigne.

(91 18, 26, (101 3, 10, 1113

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To

"With this miner's helmet, you'll be able to
' play evan alter the sun goes down."

"'.;limloc., :no E.Toolo,
Main, .

REEDSVILLE, OHIO 41772

HOLZER MEDICAL ~ENTER
. .

· Apply In Person

W.nlod: - o d limo lor
Fra1'dam AoiMIRM,ouroe c.n..r

SOARD OF EDUCATION
OFEAiiEAN
LOCAL SCHOOL DISTAtcr

laf.

DOWN
1 Build
2 Whips
3 Painters
4 Hyeon
5 Princely Italian
family
6 Tantalum symbol
, 7 High mountain
8·Emporlum
9 Gilt
10 Wide-awake
11 Makes Into
leather
12 Choose
13 Presley 10
14- chowder
15 Chapeau
16 Thoroughfares
17 Calm
18 Ancient chariot
20 Guii-Nke bird
23· Nartow,_flat
boerd
25 Chimney carbon
27 Servant
28 Urge on
31 Pierce
33 Scheme
36 The Four38 Ardor
40 Lump of ctay
41 Uberale
43 Baker's products
45 Aqua11c mammals
46 Steel beam
47 Tip
49 N.J. cagers
51 Small error
52 Less constrained
53 Church benches
5-4 Jog
56 Greve; gloomy
59 Having no rest
60 Hawalion wreatha
61 DIIISM&lt;I
63 Fresh - peanuts
85 Allen oxen
37 Peer Gynt'a
mother
69 Math term '
711 smoothed the
feothers of
72 Cooks slowly .
74 Cedar Rapids st.
76 Sun god

Dropay
.. ..:_ Than Zero"
Olapatehad
Nick Nolte film

Employm enl Servtces

Announcements

associates 1n the process. ~e a go·getti,

'

156 Sofa

Help Wanted

but also try to be a decent gliy.
•
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Disengage

I

89 Anger
92 Teat
95 Thick
98Wargod
99 Created a
dtalurbance
101 Remained at ea119
103 Trade--lor money
104 Cover
105 Monetary penalty
108 Agave ptont
t07 Supposing tltat
108 Brother of Jacob
110 Hoover 111 Myself
112 Toward shelter
113 Vigor; aubltence
115 Negative p,..rtx
117 Drlnkaalowty
119 swayza 10
120 Above
121 Office .stall
124 Weakens
126 Hurried
127 Deteat
128 Wantod
130 Location
132 Prophet
133 Occulate
134 Footllke pan
135 Walk
137 High
139 Sailor: colloq.
140 Frutt s.ds
141 Endures
143"Winter .vehicle
145 Alao ·
146 Kettledrums
148 Dlec:oncertod:
colloq. ·
150 Beats soundly:
colloq.
152 Come back
153 Anything -soft
end thick
154 Goddeaa.ol
discord

11

I ~
· All Qld u.l_.
·--.
. Gold
Ccllnl. II. • Coin ......
. ....... AtiMII, 0 S\ 81

with a close· frien d in a commercial

.

87 "Torn - Two
. Lovers"

Wented to Buy

~:I

alrangement If a mrsunderslandif19 arise&amp;.
it oould cause hard leelings;on both sldl!s:
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 When --striVing tor
personal objectives today you might bruise

1- for- (11 72 pwnngor lhe ourety comp.ny In on
och-1 buo oooardlng to amount equlll to five peropeolllalll!Qne of ...1c1 lloard cent of tho bid ohotl be
. oubmlttod with -.It bid.
of ..tucotlon.
· Sold Boord of Educodon
Bp . . lfloollon •
ond
lna1ruallano Ill b~ m~ r-..,. tho right Ill wolve•
be obllllnod ollho olllce of lnformolldoe to oeoopt or
the T.......,, Eni.tn High reject ony ond oH or fllrla of
· School Bulkltng. A certified onyondllllbldo.
Said Boord of Educollon
check Plflble to lhe
L
rnervn tho right to wolve
Treeouror of ·the ouovo
Board of EdUNtlon or a lnlormolltile to oecepl or
. .tlofootory bid bond roltct ony and all or ...,.. of
oxecutod by lho b~ and any ond all bldo.
. '·

\ '

9

make the most of a bad deveklpment.
CANCER (Juno 21-July ~l u _mjght not
be wise tod~y to get too deeply inyolli ~d

PubliC Notice

86 Ell; fairy

1 Gladden
6 ~ound down
10 Above and
touching
14 Chevy19 Scarcest
21 Winglike
22 Scandinavian
23 Tolls
24 Landed
proper11ea
211 Foneetall
28 Inferior roce
horaes
29 Tal30 God of love
32 Former Ruaalan

47
48
50
52
53
55
57
58
59

BOTUNE

PubliC Notice

might be inclined to compound your mistakes . To offset this. errorS should be
promptly corrected instead of trying to

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page C-6

41 Merry

'

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 191 It mighl

' .

33 BrtUih baby
carriage
34 Born
35 Trial
37 "Memorandum
39.N.Y. time
40 Agglomeration
41 The Freah Air 42 Halt
44 Claws

BOI.ZER ·-

dent in your dealings.

'

,S-U NDAY PUZZLER

Nlerl

_...._.

·heart. Do your&lt;:rwn thing.
· SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee. 21) Be very
careful regarding how you talk about ,others
today , becau.se unkind comm'ents will be
trace~ble. Additionally, you could be openinS your&amp;~lf up for criticism as well.
CAPRICORN ·(Dee. 22-Jan. 19) Usually
you're a reasonably good manager or your
resources and you know how to get good
mileage from the dollars you spend . Today.
however. . none of the above might be evi-

to oontinue to think so.

TA.URUS (April 20·May 201 fimlhg Is of
imml!!"se importa nce tOday. so don't try to
prematurely push projects if they aren't
ready. 11 you do, ~n endeavor trial ~as PaS·
sibilities_might never come tq lfl!iliop. • .
GEMINI (May 21 -June 201 Today yo u

Naw O!Jtl110f·M@fYPerdas
Operator-Sii Riddle 614-985-3348

Call44612342
or 992·2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

•

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

•

~

•

-

--~

'

~

~

�OH Point Pleasant, WV
11

Help w.ntld

HtlpWintld

11

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

32 Mobile Homes

41 Hou... tot Rant

' tor Sale

.

1993

=,....,,. . . . . .
!IIM!no -

44

44

Apartm1111
for Rent

Pleaaant, wv
51

Apartment' .

!Or Rent

-

54. MISC.IIaniO\It

FIOUHhold
Goods

· Morchlndlae

__;;:.:~::::.:;;;..::;.;..__1...._
AI1JJ - - Pl.-a, IOWII4444.

• Slor.f!llok 1 liZ

bMM:; tl11'114nl. -~ 1100

·

. 'ILACKIURN REALTY

•

0001 .

42

.

Mobl~ Homes

_ for Rant

2''
..._.._ tlomo.
You Poy Utllllloo, Dopooli 111-

Real Estate

q~lrod

1112.

In Po!lor ANI.
I

~ Monor? 1111,

-

0

SHuatiOn

12

- ·Coll-.•f4.31Hm.

Wantld

lloodool I doorMwbotooo. Eom
..,. cuh, win trtp 10 Howell.
I - - o r lor
awlllliaw
Ataund It• Wand.

Slato A-od NUllO Aide,
Looldna For C.N Worlo,

No
ooa '""" ., c1o11vorr. Cott
lltwroniOW'II-Ntl.

18

.. ..

..

0

Wanted to DO .

1

card of Thanks

We wish to extend •
~11rtfelt thanks to all
our frloalls and dearest
fo•llr 111mbers who
assisted ••ring t~t

riCtllt loss of our loving
Mltlltr, Hel tft f.
Sttn1.
A special

Thank You
atts to Dr. Breton
Morgan, Dr. Young I.
C~el, Pleasant Valey
Hospital East Wing Staff,
and tile entire staff of
Care Hevn of Pt.
Pleuaat.
On
gracious
appreciation ef thanks
B".s to Rev. Iennie
Steve111, for ~Is words
of . fallli . during her
extlnded Illness ciacl tile
coaselln1 trlb1ne he
11n at her funeral

WYke; ,. Dnlcl Doalol
tile Foglesang funeral
11itnt for his asslstHCe
wltk our Fore·Tho,ht
Amngements and Is
e•ciiiHt llandhna o1 the
ftaal nrvlcni· To

llleo Poulll'o 0., c... Conlor
loi-F I A.M. ..:30 P.M. QuoiRy
Lovtna ·c:.. ""' All etllldo... 11 OooL .PIIt•Tllilo, Ful~
limo• Foci. - n a o AvoiiC.II ror lnlormotlon Or Vlolt. fn.
flnt /Todcllr 114 ... 1221. p,..
Sc'-1, · Sc'-1000.
B&amp;A
Prlnlo llwM Wllh Room I

Avolloblo. Fun

Diolblod Or lldorty.

c...
For
1S Y•ro

Eopo'lf:i Exc- Rofwon.

CM,I

•

,

1071.

Trt IIIII Troo Sorvlco- topolna,
lrlmmlna, !no '"""""'· olump

rwrnov•r

Ff'M Mtlm~t•

e'M-

1124312. H no 1newu, luve
m .. ugeori IMOhlne.

Will . Dol .......hold Choreo,
Cllonlng, Duollna, !lOOPing
Flow; f!iclul,. AI: Bo• 100; o/o
...._
Dolly Trlbuno, 125

8

ThiniAYenu., Galllpalll, OH
411131.

F111anctal
21 · · auslnHI
Opportunity

33
AIIINI-tlldYOfllllng In '
naullfl~ IIIUbfad lo
tho Fedolll Folr HouslngAc:l •

t*

&lt;111968 which- lllogol

to _,110 ·.,.y,.-r....,..,
lmlllllon or clacltmlrilllon

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PI!IUSHINO CO.
ri :c a1111Nnde lhll ~ do bual0111 wlh poopto you k.-1 and
NOT to ooild ft!OOIY thfough tho
moll ulliN you how ln-lgatod

baed on r.ca, color, ralglon,

t.oc.l Poy Phono Routo: $1,200

llmllollon "'dscrtmlnallon."

tho olfwlnt.

.

11811amllal status or nat5onal
~n,

makeeny IUd1 poatorence,

t.oc.l 'o11ndlna Routo: $1,200 A
Wool&lt; PotontiOI.IIuat Soli. 1-IOC).

11&amp;3-Vond.

This newop"'"' wll not
lvlowlngly accept
~d¥ertlsemanls1or

raa.l estate
Wllldl IS i1 Ylolallon ol tho
law. Our readers .,.. hereby
i1101011&lt;1dthat Ill dwollngl

IMtiertlled In lhll newspaper

n avdable on an equal

.....,., special · rlend,

8

I••,
iyalpltby.

t•

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

A~ tllaak yoa to Fred WaHs ad Ws '-lv
far M~ urfaa Olr tllle of grief, ... to

,.,lr
Aliill Holey,

ocroe, 2 hou111, hoy

Sl:l-214......

f-.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
12 ,..,_ 2 lodooom

Trailer, Tl'lll, Wlldllto, 135,000,
8...-:t113, 114311 11101.
Nlca Conw Lot, P&lt;lrt Chorlolto
Florida, Near Ocu.n, Will Trade
For Plclo.IJp Truck Or T10vol
Troller, Oood Condition, 114211-1431.
.
SEVERAL 7- ACRE PARCELS:
Molal County, Salom 'IWp.,
Sl.lill .,,., Romoto, booutllul
llndj wooda, puturw •nd hlll1.
~

mop. 1-1114-513-

18411, Alhlno,OH.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

woaderfal so~gs also
Rev. Gtae Ha......_, lev• .lolt1

Thad yO. •d God Bless yat
1M ,_, Ktrwootl , ••.,

McDonald's Watch for Slgne
Air lift Jack, eevarel floor Jacka, motor puller
houu, 8 exheuet roof vento, 14 H.P. boet motor,
ierge air compreeeor, 1075 v -..nmotorcycllt,
MVeral new ehocke, 2 Mil of n - retreeda, mlec.
handtoola
Cera-Trucke-Vene
1982-1983·1880 Bulcka, 1072·1877 Cadlllace,
1871-1883-11181·188().11178·11180.11184 Chevorlete,
1871- 11178·1878 Chryelere, 11186-1071-1976-11178Dodgt'e, 1984-1977·1973·1078·11184-11180.11111·
11171-Forda, 11186,1883-1978-1979-11182·Mercury'a,
11183-11178-0idemoblle, 1Dfi3.11180-Piymouth, 11181·
1877·11176·111711·Pontlec, 1982 Mazda, 1881·
Subaru, 11175-Toyota, 1872·VW Bug, 1979 Deteun

I

lro.nna. microwave, Hoover Vacuum, new etalnleaa
amell epplee, 2 electric gerege door openere,
blfol.d doora, Humidifier, alent d . .k; Jelly
cupboard, boue &amp; boxu &amp; boxee of mlac. Pota &amp;
pana, llghte, bataketbell backboetd.
TOOLS· New Seere turning lethe w/cople crafter
never out of box, new router teble, router form Jig,
6" teble belt nnder, - r • belt nnder, S•r• bah
aender, 10~ Rockwell table uw, hefl4 under, jig
awe, 318 drill, ecroiJ. eew, ~rk bench, paint eprey
gune, meter NW, &amp; much more hand toole.
Bring your lawn chel.-. end come out • Nice clean
afternoon nle
RalrHhmente available
Terma C•h or Check WI Poa.ID

luctio•Hr lodHy Howery
691·7231 Eve•l•1•

sw

Door open at 3:30
Trade lna-Repo'•Parte Cere
Not Reaponelble for Accldente or Joea of Property

LI.IIIIIQUE IUCTIOI
FIIIIT, OCT. I, I ttl
111111100 1.&amp;

luctio... r Lo• 11••1

The 40 YMf pereonel l j : l : ' collection of the Jete
Harold "Berney" a Au
Bernhart Win be eold
on locatiOn locatlld on t. Rt. 7 at the lOUth lldge ot
TUpper• Plaine, Ohio (epprox. 20 mi.· north .of
Pomeroy a approx. 25 mi. •·•· of Athena).
ANTIQUES A COLLECnBLES: Over 200 pee. of
fumhure to lncld. over 20 wellhatendt: 8 bioeia

ESTATE
AUCTION
LOCATED OFF SAND HILL ROAD AT
2919 BIRCH AVENUE IN POINT PLEASANT

THE ESTATE OF THE LATE HATTIE MASON
WILL BE SOLD
Outatanclng 4 pc. poaltrbedroom auilil - must...,; beautiful
oakdtinecabtnetwithrope twiatcolumi\S all carved, Bassett
hidH-bed like,_, 3 pc. Oue,en AMe iving ooom suite, 3pc,
Oeprellliim ond table 181, oval Vtetorian table, new ~fi chair
3 mt¥1. boOkcases. RCA Xl 100 reinote cOntrol TV, marbkl
top lobi... 4 mople c:haira, 2 bentwood bar stools. molal
eabintt, KMC mlclowava. Kenmore relrlgaralor, G.E. float
free ralrlg-. oadw chell, nice but1 tintah w.drobe cedar
Nnacl. 1830'1 cheat metal youfl bod, 2 drawer lila cabinet,
antique Singoo HWing machine, l&lt;om!ora -hor. G.E,
dryer, 81*8 MllingCennonlburgdllna,llllrviog pc.,WoJCiold
Want, han on _,., !!Ink OePf8aaion bowie. Royol Copely
vue, ~•••ic:k gobltct, '-'Ge MleCtilin of u1t ond pepper
lhWro, pair habnail bedtaom limps; lampt, Paden City
.poaery dilhal, McCoy 111118, enliqua rocking horM, smoke
allnd, 1ma1 ~ appll-, poll, pitna, Iron lkillall,

Wegnerli!llll. - -~. golddtain, bl8,~tat•.
pictlno, Hooywf IW,Np8t, llldleholjlbl bed, niclo ial&lt;iM·
wiMieldtolr, bath Ul chelr, laddtri, metal gilder and
lawn iurnitura, llrmoy ~n .mower lnd mora.
AucnON CONDI.ICTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO CO.
LUNCH

MABON, WV

77U78S

lor-·

TI:&lt;IU&lt;&gt;·: CASH OR CIECK WITH I.D.

Not~
of lola of fii!POII.UcoenMd..., ..,.....In OhiO, ~.l Wilt VlrQinlll811

F-.

W•-L Drvor, - ........ Fill Clooro,..l - Wottol look
Air eon- Encvckp1dl1 PIUI 2 Volume
dh'-r. lltcrowo.., 114-2!1· Dlctlor\ol')'a 1411 s...: $2411
•
Spocoo tor ..., llo~lna on 1231.
Eooy Tormo. llllollll Plln:o,
1811mo,l14..112·2117.
WNIInghouoo F - FNI 304-17W771.
Aolrtatii'otO.. WHh lea llokor I
f1 wanted to Renl
,llolcfil[ll· :Ill" Etactllc· Slo¥1 F l , _ For Bole: Plak-Uto
Or
W.
07, 114-4*
'fo'o,.lna 1o llnl• 2 ., 3 bedroom MOO Fcir llolh WIU Soporoto, · Dolivw, I
Color . T.V.

-n . .

~, H n0 .,.... piMM
~- n~geonmachlne.

Merchandise
Household

Goods
2. Roome 01 ONin C.rpoL 2

a.- Cholra, Ulo8 Now 114-441·
10711.

VI'RA FURNITURE
114-44141!580r--21
: "10 DAY SAllE A8 CASH
OR RENT.:I.QWN (NO DEPOSIT)

•

~-hi I""'

FURNISHINOS:

Fl,..,ood P_,. F"' WI ntor. For
Etactllc t.oo;':Ol1?'11n,
- S.lo:
·' Phono:
B
1-:fiat,
Wll Bo S.oonod When Cold
WOlf.... ~".!!, Doll-ed::=! ::;E•::""::'';:!ngo!::~l14-=211~1-:;.1512~.c:::-:;::251-1318,
e..~ Ut&gt;l'fghl ptono, 1500, 114-811Fot liato- Unldon UST 11100 4120.
.. .
ootolllto ,_,_ with lon fool
58
dloh,lf4.112-617!1.
Fruits &amp;

A500R 12·Cito. Now In

53

Antiques

Buy ar ••II. Riverine Anl:lqutl,

1124 E. Moln Sl- on RL 124, 0o Ko~.. 3 liP 1 ~ opoclol on
Pomaoy. Hou..: M.T.W. 10:00
~'1..!k~~85 ~ ~~~t.
o.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundoy 1:00
2580.
'
to 1:00 p.m.lf4.112·21211.
Clube Eocotlonl Condition,
54 Mlscellarieous
-llhlol
P.:llrona, C..
Merchandise
tomlzod SoL With Bog, saG.
114
ue 411DS.
2 iCing wood I cool burnono,

Vegetables
"'A-pp"""to_o..:.Juot:::!o;n;RI::.14:;:3::,---mt""ll
lOUth of Corpo,.or. Rod aftd
Goldon DollciOua oppllo. ~
Sotunloyo only.
For •II- -~no ono mile
h oI
PI• Ino.
oout
u
Howonl C.- I, $1.50/M. for
•atn llrge, $'1.G0111. for t'NI,
., 114-112-1707.
hundrodootlhom.
In Cltoiiii!OIIe: Couch I llolchlna Oroon boono, you pick, HIH
Choir, $171i. ~mp Tobll $!If; Runnen, Blue Lake, tc.ftlucky
Hoolor $10; 0 or 125; 114-251- Wondors,l14-2414013.
1855.
Pumpldno For Sole: Anr SID
Lowo S.t, Cho!r1 $200; Dlnotto Fnom 200 lb. 2 Klndo Ollndlon
Sol $150· PoriiD&lt;O Sowlt~J~ Ill" Com, Whno Pumoltlno, Gounll
chino MS; 10 Spood llcyclo. Of All Kind, lllnloluro Pumpldow
111 441 3224.
I. , _ 1 IIIII BiloW .,...._.
I:::::::::=:::::.-....,.,--- vlllo On Btolo - 211, John C.

J

..

NEW
SHOWING IIEARI.Y ALL
LOCAL REAL
IN COLOR, II NOW
AVAILABLE. PLEASE STOP BY OUR OFFICE FOR YOUR
FREE COPY.

:.0:;
?.oil

~15-7113.
24'x32'x10'· oM 3' entry door,
001 11 • 10 olldlna ~ guttor,
oroctod pr1oo, 14100; -4lll10.
001 3' oonll')' - . 001 121110
olldlng - · gult.a, .........
prloo, ..SOli; olhor and

ovol-.

Proololon

Poll F - BuUdoro, 114-IIIIZ3541 Bob Of !104-713-1341.1111.
Hoborl 300

=loy!. -

rob

~ Choln - · Comptoto

Farm Supp ltb
&amp; Ltvestock

F - lluole Syatom, -

I[IJI: llaohlno, llohoglny Dook,
Flihornoon'a
11403.

w-. ·-

YOU DON'T GIVE UP CONVENIENCE FOR PRIVACY '
HEREI ROOMY TAl LEVEL.. HAS II ROOMS .. 3
BEDROOMS.. 2 112 BATHS.. LOTS OF KITCHEN
CABINET SPACE .. DININI:l ROOM .. FAMILY ROOM,
OFFICE OR DEN .. WOODED LOT. , APPROX. 5 MILES
. FROM CITY.. RIVER VAllEY SCHOOLS.. ADO,t,VILLE
ELEMENTARY.. OWNER IS RELOCATING AND HAS
PRICED THIS HOME FOR QUICK SALEI

.

Ponooonlc 41" T.v. 114-25161 Fann Equipment

1338.

-nil -===·-I
f"''

:================::;-!

r

w-.

Fullut Form.

Rootlallc cor • 1110 _ . . omp,
10 wotto, lllo8 - . $41, 114-112-··
~.
Som Sonwvtllo'o - onny troo
borl&lt; comflougo, ,._ eo..
dyvllto Pool Olfloo. Frt.sot-8un,
~"" ...,. • houro.

IFatl Font Now Hotllnd Bill. 401
Dloc
blno, $10,500.411
blno
WI owlvot
hMch•domo,Dloc
$11,!00,
1711 aq..,. bolllr, $10,500. 1140
Roundbolor,outo-.$12,2110.

IIO Round belor, Oulo wrop

=::· ~~·:::, '::i.~~
f~

Sot of llcOrogor gotf clubo with .3500. 301
Stu,.,1000
oRPM,
-.
1/oll bot~,llb now, 80 bello fn. 1009gol., NSOO. Brillion a·1
' 'ludod, "21, 1-t.zm:
~soo. - Fanl
So•ollll, bobybod, wolkar, high·
J:,"!;

304.

choir,111-4001 1111, owtna,

3 BEDROOMS 1 112 BATHS-'_':;AMILY ROOM IN
BASEMENT HAS FIREPLACE, uuuR FROM FAMILY
OPENS ONTO LARGE WOODED LAWN. CARPORT. IN
THE COUNTRY, BUT NO'l' TOO FAR OUTl s-47.~,

=·
=
,.=.
ploypon.(ll~ll~o~RI~.n~-~304~11~1-38l11~~-~~~;:========;::::;;;:::;~=~=====:::;;=::;==;:::=::;:=====
r,:u-.

I·

205
Middleport, OH
MIDDLEPORT· North Second-Nice hardwood floors,
beautiful fireplace with leaded glass bookcases on each
side. Huge IMng room, dining room, and kitchen on first floor
and lull basement. Three bedrooms and bath on the second
lloor. Blg90X120 lot and a front porch.
ONLY 138,500

Firat AwnU. Pluo •
Lolli
your family or for tho Investor, this
property has unllmHed possibilities. Main house
offers large oat-In-kitchen, living room,slttlng
room, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath , basement otters
storage , laundry, family room and bedroom .
Also attached Is a 1,000 sq. It store room you

can use for a business or convert to more
family living area, Nice 2 car garage with a 2

bedroom apartment to help pay your mortgage,

Enjoy this summer on your private river lot

fishing, boating&amp; cooking out All this priced at
only $100,000,
11615

I

55 ·ACRES PLUS.COUNTI!Y HOME APPROX.·1 MILE
FROM CHEIIHIRE QRADE 8CHOOII A 3 MILES 10 .
RIVER VALLEY HIGH ICHOOL ' .
Localld on, St Hwy. 554 oppiVX. 2 m). from Rl. 7 at
Cheohlra. VInyl aiding, a nna., 4 BRo. IOiid coootry home
.In good conclltlon. Ful baH., ClfPOit. Hu 2 i!'• Mlo qn·
property. 1'/o ,tory wifl bolm' I otwr bif:19- 'Thllltomt off•
era • bHulllul ~. block from the hillttMY. BE THE
FIRST 10 SEE TRISl'A(Il( PHONE NOW, .
11M

. LEADINIHAII
Pl.

Has central air, 2 metal buildings, and newer
Make appoln\mentto see.
s-41,900

r' I

JoOMEROY PIKE· Approx . 1 mile from Slate Route 7· A 2
Jere home or mobile home site with water and electroc
IIVallable. A great location and a groat building site.
•
ASKING 18,000
l

•

.•

f!UTL.AND5Unlon Street· Close to school and in a nice
i18i!lhborh0od Is this 3 bedroom home with somo·new carpal
large living room and a 24X32 garage. Sitting on approx.
65xt80 lot.
ASKING $32,000

••
•

R1. 325- Sprotman's Paladiso·Fish, deer and turkey hunt on
lippro&gt;i. 95 acres. Gorgeous Underground home with 3
bedrooms. largo living room. 2 baths, and a larga 2 car
~elached garage with loft. H~ge alumonum building. A must
- ·
$110,000

II;~~~~~!~~~J; Main
Street· A two story victorian home with
on front perch, loaded glass, open staiiWay.

I
(

bedrooms 3 baautllul fireplaces, breakfast room,
~~~~~ in porch, tor mal dining room . and silting on a latga
lot
185,000

Owner Wants • SOidll Very nice ranch
style home In family oriented
neighborhood. 3 bedrooms, l~e family
room, 2 car garage. located 1n Green
school district. Large covered patio to
u11joy. Fenctd in yard. Outbuilding.
$69,900
#20 1

.

Family Neighborhood· Come see this brick
ranch conveniently located In town. Features
include 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, oat-In k~chen
&amp; full basement with family room. Gas FA
heat and central air. 1 car garage and storage
building, Situated on a 90&lt;100 lot Priced at
$77,500. Call today to seel
1205

~OIIEROY· Lincoln Heights· Need a largo yard or garden
traa, then this Is the place for you , Also has a one story
!lome wllh most of basement finished . Two to 3 bedrooms,
lots of largo closets, Iorge utility area, and storage room.
' ·'
ONLY $2t,900

' ESTATE

Real Eltalo Gfntral

;E~~~~St.with Rt.equipped
33· Private
back yard·
A 2
kitchen Including
dishwasher

55

Building
Supplies

Smoll Wonder· There's
home for the money.

room, large kitchen with new floor. Full

Hlo Ottondo, OH C.ll 11424U121
-ll!dvo. Olllf!nllo Su-lo.
Hugo Soiilnoo On 1111 Sq. Ft.
!-.gh 1!00 Sq. Fl. Will ,
Dollvlf · C.n
C..NC1.
lila,

INVESTORS Good commercial location
with river frontage. Three bedroom, 2 bath
home could be rent!ld or adapted to your
business. Call for mora information and
appointment to see. Priced at $45,000.
1503

unfinished basement with 2nd bath,. 1 car

carport on a Iorge lot tor only $49,000. Call
Carolyn todayl
Something V.ntuNd, Somathlng Golnodl

Workman Cont~~r.I'M 311 1120.

Own your own body shop and towing business

56

Pet8 tor Sale
, 112 v.. Old Coon Doao 1
lluo llck IIIII, 1 Watlcof
Fainolo, 1 Wolloor llolo, Running

a T,_.ng. 114 441 3411.

1023.

o place like this
inyl sided on the

outside, freshly painted on the inside, all you
have to do is move. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, living

~~~- wlndowo,_llntolto, otc. Cloudo WinBlock, brick, -

Groom ond S u = : i Oroomlng. All
• oly~eo.
.Julie w- C.lll ·
:ft.
2 AI1JJ Roglatorod Toy P - ,
2• lloleo, ...,h Block, 114-441·

17 Acroe, ~ . Vacant land located in Green &amp;
Springfield Townships, JUSt on u.s. At 35.
Fronts on township toad and old U.S, 35.
water and gas available. Land lays mostly
rolling with excellent building locations. Has
high hill area with nice view. City school
system. Bast location In Gallla County to buold
and live. Priced at $67,500.
123&amp;

plus family rental unlls. Body shop offets 28x34
bay, t8x34 bay and 12x26 officenobby with
bath, plus 6 car catpOrt. Owner states AAA
towing contract will go wrth tho property. 14 x
60 family rental units include 1985 Redman
offering 2 bedrooms. 1 1/2 baths, nice kitchen
and living room. Another 14 x 70 1985 Redman
offering 2 bedioojms, 2 bath (master balh has
whirlpool lub), large tully equifted kitchen with
island, double ovens, dishwasher, range,

central air. 47 wooded acres ·overlooking the
river lust 2 miles south of tho dam .. The
possibilities for this propetly are limitless.
Priced at $74,900. Call Ca10lyn lor additional
information.
1100

GO FISH!! Anytime you want! 14.77
acres, mi l, with stocked pond. There is
also a 1992, 3 bedroom mobile home to
live in while building your dream home.
Call today. Priced at $32,500.
#504

'

INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY ON tO
ACRES! Buy lor investm ent and building lot
potential. Clo_sa to town. Smell pond. Duple•
typo unit provides good n1eome . $29.000
'

1222

20 At:rea on Rodney Hill Localed on Jackson
Pike just bey,ond Spring Valley. Pnme building

location. Trees, VIew. $27.500

1204

WE NEED LISTINGS!!!
. ".FOR ' SALE.BY OWNER

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.

I

Located 5 ~locks fro• ,., city
walkllt -dlsta~(t to 1rocny ••ts ,lttr·icllvti
VIctoria• offers 4 apartiDaafs ·' ready_
atcar-t•y.

1

•

•

.

.

,

. .. • .

446-3644
.
.

.

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER - 446-9555

WJt• toditystow mottlalt rate avi•llte, 11w ·

Is ... time ta' taka atiYaatagt of "'• taco,.-~ ·
,,.... fllfll'proparty.

'. .

•

For •ora lnfot'llltiOil call-446·142_3 Dr i446·

3672

Jll!llt •
1

Catolyn Wasch·441·1007
. Sonny Gar•••·446·2707

Loretta McDade· 446·7729
' Patrick Cochr•n-;. 446·8655

',

..•
•

•

'·

•

'

'

1.37 Acroo with 30x56 2 story framed
structure. Good start on apartment building,
commercial building or residence. Located on
Jackson Pike just past Spring Valley ~rea .
Priced at $26,900.
).
1202

a

•

.

.,._,.JOa

8o1,IIIOO,I~

a

LG. AD.

$25D,I14-tll2·2o17.

52 Sporting Goods
~-~Ina

LOCKS AND OHIO RIVER AREA. OV!SF,I AN
LOT WITH INGAOUND POOL. LARGE PATIO
. 3 BEDROOMS, 2'/, BATHS, MASTER BED·
HAS PRIVATE BATH AND DRESSING AREA.
LIVING ROOM W/FIREPLACE; FAMILY
W/FIAEPLACE, RECREATION ROOM,
EQUIPPED KITCHEN , NICE FORMAL DINING AREA,
CEN, AIR CONO., ATTACHED GARAGE, MUCH MOREl
CALL SOON FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE THIS
EXCEPTIONAL HOlME.

Blondo1 __B_!IIdwln ~~ OCJOd
cond., NVQ, JOW'7S-3W111.
Conn tnornpol aood condition,

01158.

Toblo W/4 ChoiN;
Fon lock Roold!lt Choir PI;
~Arch W.,'o $121.00
dor,
, f\000 wMh trolllf• 3
..L~__. 1 ....._._ 11111 111 ·- F 11 ton cheln ..... IZOOi new YIO"
-~··•.,
"
tor aulllna torch • rogutllo..,
~
Ouoon ...,, -·•
Sol; 4 $175; Ullil Vlclaf coml&gt;lnollori
$44.!11; C... Bod'o, t· h wllh
UIIIOII 1•• Bio'* Bod'o, Pollor Bodo. Full ~rog .
: ~·
Uno Of Southwoootom Sllrl!'l! At m.oo; lndl,...llony 80,- BTU Hill Noturol Goo
Shope 1 I .._ Sll~lna Al Fu,_, 10 + Rog; $1,181, Solo:
"-00. 2 Loootlono •lnldo ~ulo $1.011, lnotoRotton AnNabll,
Ailc:llon Or 4 lllleo Out 141. 114 4tl 1301.
~ U.M. To I P.ll. lion -sot. Alllnllon: Huntoro I
8
Futi -~- -~· Wlbo &gt; ~ngo, ~·
,~,_., - ·"Wh"" 0 Ouall .
~.o wtml,..,., $200..
75- Rln~ For Solo,
30 11
3
:::..,..:::·=======£C.:I:A:•:-:':
' :P::·::·::"::'::
Real Estate General

Llldy Kenmore waeher, Weetlnghou• dryer,
.waahar, table, refrigerator, flehlng equipment, Mac'
35 cahln eaw, wood alep laddtrl, Shop
Maytag wringer waeher, lumber, hand &amp; lhop IOOti,·L
3 HP mower, Stlhl 041 chain nw, air compreaur,
anvil, log chaine, galea, 325 gel. wter tank, 3 Surge ·
S.S. milker palle, S.S. bucket, Surge vac, putnp,
platform ace lea, ahd loll more found on a farm.
O~er- Clerenc~ (Tommy) Htitderaon
Unda S. Wllllame P.O.A.
Auctioneer note• Mr. Henderson Ia no longer
to farm. Thle equipment hae been carlld lor
kept lnelde.
ha l•lt..ladlosMr Olllo ,11344
••H Mil..... Appro•tlco Olllo 15926
Caeh PoalilveiD
Relreahmente by Eietem Band Booetera
Conelgned by Nelghbore1800 Oliver w/rnoLmtttdj
picker 2 row N.l. wide row llheller pull type
J.D. .
combine w/3 row heed and 13' grain table LolldttrJ
for Ford tractor

Instruments

114-241 I tal.

optlono

OIITSIDE

Mualcal

ff7

LMd D:'l"ftl':"' .._,

~11oft, ......., prtvlto Nlllng,
114{lo&lt;.oH, 1n

"Mise"

,ont.,

check wt1D. Lunch. AUCTIONEER; .MIKE ClUII
INC~ RUSHVILLI!, OH. 8j41538-7421. (Min GJum, .l
John Clum, Larty Wateon). lllle by on:1tr 01
Jattn Mugr~ge. Ce~ for' If• more detelled IIIGIIOil
tlyar. SEE ANTIQUE WEEK OF MON.SEPr. . FOR

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
EXECUTRIX: ISABELLE YODER

Space for Rent

~114.

Ford F 600, w/greln &amp; Stock bed
"I!Jalp-•f"
323 N. I. corn picker, Dearborn corn picker,
Table blower, corn box rubber tlree, J. D. ma11uro..,
epreadr, 5' 3 pt. bruah cutter, N.H. 258 reka, Kulltt~
ttdder, Ford scraper blade, three 16' flat
wegona, J.D. running gttr, J.D. 494A corn platllter·;&lt;l
530 Ford hay baler, J.D. 1 '-·7 grain drill, 477 N.H•
hayblne, A.C. dlec harrow, 3 pt. blade, J.O.
bottom plow, M.F. 3x4 plow, 3 pt. cultlv·atcof!(:
w/fend1re,- eub Ioiiar, one arm Ford loader, cutter I
bar mower.
"lati!JIO or CoUectors. Ita••"
Flat top trunk, one cylinder Meytag motor, fiat
cabinet, egg p..klit, amen bra11 kettle, do&amp;tbltoic
achool eeet, Oak gl111 triple gleQ door cabinet,
gel. atone Jere &amp; amaller onee, Wlaeman Dairy miiiU'
carriere, wood llltrrel, chllde wagon, tricycle &amp;
laUHIIegrlnder end ICL

28 trunke; many \'!ct. furn. pee.; (dreuwe, '-bile,
etende, rocllsre, chit Ire, library tablte, etc.)f m1ny
..rly &amp; coutry !urn. pea.; cpbd'e; plut gobe ·of ·
other fum. that Ilea been tteckatl'&amp; burled for over
40 .,_,.; allo e very ~· amt. of FU~NmiRE PARTS
&amp; PIECES of every type lmaglneblei' llne LAMP
COLL to lncld. ltlded floral Handel table type; 4
tine reverie pelnftd ecanlc ahede Jtffereon &amp;
l'lllrpoll)l typea; 3 Art Nouveau curved paM! eleg &amp;
filigree titbit typea; Hv. VIet. 14" oil hng. typee
lncld: blue Brlatol; owrw·e lncld. lg. i'od lltln;
other VlcL lampe; 38 fine ALADDIN LAMf!S In all
Dltttrne, colora &amp; atylea lncld. cobalt Unooln
bnlp,; other flnt oil etem lempjt; plua many other
fine lampe! 1110 Jg. eml of old LAMP PARTS Dt'lll
typee cthadtte,
~·~i.~~~~r~ .
81J11. ol fine ANTIQUE fixture•.
GLASS &amp; I
(HIIeey, gd. Fenton, VIet. colored,
pettern, much good dep., Northwood,
goba
typM;
more); pottery; ANTIQUE SMALLS of
windup IICI'Obet toy; vlolltie &amp; bantoe; prlmltlvte a
- l y 11111111; ,lronwere; copper
brill kettlel;
,booke; plcturae; qu,lle; email collactlblee;
ea.were; old toola; plue gova or cplhal: old lteme;
HOUSEHOLD GOODS; TOOLS; GRAVELY; . ETC.~
LR. lielj recllneri rocliere; 3 pe. BR 1181; 3d" elec•
renge; Frlg. rtfrlg.; other turn.; Jdtchen llama;
trlnllele; Gntvaly tractor wlm-r; !fllrd. gardeli ;,

hiM toolt; jtlue niuch, much more. NOTE: A Jg. tUH
dey eele w/2 auction rlnge, Be th- fO, 1 fun
IUCIJon. GObt or go adlee. In ecidltlon to the hOI!•;
the Jg. .,..,. .. NV. buld!nll* ere llllcked, pecked •
pllatf wlltame lhet bavWI'f been 18111 for ,....._ A ·
fine limp coli. Thle Hie 1o a. muet tor Olibl!)lt
makere &amp; Woodworkere. TERMS: Clall··or llood

RNl Eetata GeMral

Furnished

--•-forNnl.

51

bade; fine Iron a brue bllde; rope ~e; VIet. ·beclt;

SATURDAY, OCTOBE.R 9,1993
10:00 A.M.

I

Direction•· Teke 681 Eut (South) from Albttny,
to 3rd County Rd to left (168) then one mile to
Pugh Rd end tat. houee on left. (Signa Poated)
Due to death of huabend M.-.. Shirley whom will
llquldetlngu:c- from home, femlly end batm.
Many line entlqll88, toole, furniture etc.
ANTIQUES. Welnut comer cupboard, primitive flllt
well cupboard, oek dryalnk, 2 oak weahetenda,
large Dutch Nepenee kitchen cabinet wlroll
48"x7'1" high, oak drop lee! leble wneet, oek
lletwall, lg. cheet of drewere, 8 ·dJnnlng room
chelre, 4 bentwood chalre, 2 Mwlng rciC:kere, tee
"""" •tande, glaeewere &amp; mlec. Including Flow
B.Jue Bowl, 2 Flow Blue Pletea, egg cup, aet of 8
Blue deeeit dlehee, ruby gl..a cernlvel,
Bohttmltln gl..a, Afford Meakin plet• gravy bo1•l·l
end platter, Weal Morlln Cleer Turkey, etched
etemwl!lre and more, 3 old CMt Iron .toya trucke
1827, tin were, beeket, ud lrone, atone Jere, Juga,
crocke, 2 dinner buckete, old kitchen gedgeta, 1
112" chine nnta end more.
·

I ::~~~~~j~ &amp; TOOLS. Dlnett Hllttblo &amp; 6 chelre,
I•
coffee teble &amp; end tab lea, chelre, alec.

Poor Boys Cars INVENTORY REDUCTION
Henderaon, W. Va. • Fenced lot by

We w..W lio -ttt111ow atr mt.an
• tH lo11 tiH!t was aowa atr
1m ... ~~t~~v.. 101, fa .....,
lHik yo• for IH btaatlfll Rowers, foacl tH
visits, canis 1M •st oH.al JOII' prayers, t11trt are
Jl?t to . ., to
•11 aa.. •11 yo•
W.. yat ara aad we IH1k eack of y01, fra

fw

Dllllor, 01t1o, llotaa Couf!!y1
llle by owner, II .,_UIRUI

SIT. 5:00PM GaOlER 9, 1993

God lless yau,
Dorothy, Karen,
Jim &amp;Ro h

sl!!l•rs

lilA, 11/L Llrgo Born 8omo llol·
tom Ground -~~ A&lt;roo Cool,
ldool Hunlln ANI, 114-zee.e788.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

IUCIIOI
HouN...il W"dh lntlt~ue•
Sunil~ 10/10/93 1:00 , ...

Fams for Sale

Coli for

""""""""' bU..

Ronald Chesser, who
prewlded her favorite
•sic selections on the
~· aad to all who
Slid florallli'rlngeriltnts,
aad cards of

-tla•

or 111)1 lnlontlon IO

A Wook Potontlol. Prlood To

Sell. , 100 188 1'132.

.

Public Sala
&amp; Auction

"l'ruck'"

School, 114 441 • ••

-

411

I

Locatlld from Tupper• Plaine, Ohio. Take St. ~t.
W. approx. 4.5 mil•• to Mud80Ck Rd. T 304. Wetch' f
for eigne dey.of auction.
"''r1etors"
5000 Forci Dleael, 881 Ford 1111 wide front,
Ford Jubilee, Ford LGT 120 riding mower

coii:JOW'II-1117.

..

5Ut;lla-WV.

Farm
Sat. Od.

to tho milt Juol

yow -

304.e,. ., u.
8

.....,EIIoloc.r-.
Proloollonll
OR TREE SIRYICE. l~
,
_
,.__ !r!mmlng,
Troo ·~
lnlnlna. ERA Town I -~• TrimminG. Froo Ld lo I 1
lillie, - · - • :lll-71!11"Abr4p.m.
.....
~1.

haul

llldo&lt;

811 11!;: nrc1ino whh clioklna.
- · - . _ . A l l hook-upo.
Clll 1a.t 2:00 p.m.. 304·'773-

Effiolonoy oporlmont,
!!!"!"nco,
poll.

~.no

Onrv- Portable 81Wft'llll don"l

-

.......
E,.AECrio:~.u;·,N;
8ulldar• 1~

-lor-·-otmonth.

·
··-·-~--A~

~AIIorZPJI.

---

......

llllti!IG ......... Cltolllo Hqtol.
114 44J.IIIG

tor4P.IC

D

~

~ .............tlo! •. -

Rooms

2
Mobile Homo,
441-4257, 114-4441-G722..
2 ...._
.CA, Ronlor loll
On Lind Controcl. 2 lloolo8

0

_

45

•*

••o:oom

--

Real am.

~

"

_

1'01.1 ~~~~~
:111 grlndormor..... :tlll'lwt', Polnlool
Holtlnd
711,
lily bind. 1211.

,....._,_, ..... a.nl .... ' .....

121- ltll·
.....1 .-Roo
RUMina Goo&lt;
Com pQo, iiie; liW!W711.
bOIIIei'll Cot dill in, 21 i
,.,_ I1WlW272.

111

Fann

111 Fann Equipment

"

.•
.••
'

�..
.•

llmee Santlnel

-

·~

wv

OH-Polnt

C0@\t~1!J\-l£tlrSs

71

Autos lor sale

71

1883

~·
PJI.

72- Truc:kllor

'Autos for sale

73 Vana••wD'a

AIIISWIISTO

::
O Rearrange
the 6 tc:rambled
:.
wards be law to make 6
·"' simple words. Print leiters of
* . each In Its lfne of squares.

fj
I
~ I I I f I

Estata General·

Real Estate Gene1111

ttYHTAS

1
_

~-·_:_; 11--,.....E

.....,N,....R.....,....A_c,....K.;_,.._,I

RUIIIII D. Wood, Brokar .. 446 4618
Phfllla Miller ........,............. 258--1136 ,
J. Merrill Carter.................. 379-2184 .
Tammie Dewltt ................... 441·1~14
Judy Dewitt........................441.(1262
Martha Smith ..................... 379-2651
Cathy Wray ........................ 446 4255
Cindy Drongowskl ............ 245-9697 •.
Cheryl Lemley....................742-3171 ' ,

1·800·585·71 01
(614) 446-7101

IR

~"!

I I I I Is .:

= .

.. ~--------------~~
1

~-: I ~~ ~~ y 1~ 1
- .
-

.

~;.,

~~ 7

.

IN
.

.

.

NEW USTINGI GREAT FOR HUNTING
LODGE OR PEACEFUL PLACE TO UVEI
Over 25 IICJ8s and 1978 Schultz Mobile home
with2 bedrooms. 8'x12' dock. CAll todllyl
15110

The young fellow """""' lor

FARM- Over 41 acrao, remodeled 1 112 otory
homo with 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room,
kltchon, ocnooned In back pordo. O.t.ched 2
_ga,_, 2 ponds, bam, n-rtanclng.
1578

REOIJCEO TO f47,000.00. 40 ACRE FARM- 2
Story home and bam. Not far from town. Make

f t Complete lfle chuckle quoted

V

by filling In the miSsing words
&amp;........L.--..1.---L.-.1..--..L......J. you develop lrom. step No. 3 below.

owner.., oftar lhe can't "''"""'

__.....,___

; 63

LlvMtoc:k

Livestock

==.;::~ boiM, I $1.10

·===-=--1ia
FALL IPlaAI.IIALE
Ool 1- f:IICI P.ll.
I Alana Will Aoaulor : Col-

&amp; up.

'

For '81to- l r o d - -

Transpo rtat 1011

. .h oolf, oloo lnlo. old H-fonl
..._ 114-112·11151.

! vee, .,_,.1....._ 'J 'YMr otdl: All
. ...._aul-~ad. 64 H &amp;G I
71 Aut f sa
: c.~ro To 11 ~ o.y 01 :::::~:::a::-:y~:::-ra~n::--=oa or le

=

!.. IALI ~.
,u'ri!Sf::C:
COIIMNYWwlu....

Allolf.ICIIuo Hay ro11~
Moraln'a F1nn, Rt. 35.

•-

2011:

~~~~
jllool, Jr. llgr.
·

L

. -··

.

Hay &amp; Grain

64

: 1 billy ...... 2 - old, 114-141• 3017 ollrllp.lil.

,

.

OVER 38 ACRES (OWNER WILL DIVIDE
INTO LOTI) willlln minutu from lawn. Lovol
trailer pod uloto with watar and oiiiCirlclly &amp;
sewage on lila, lots of ni"" building sitn cal!
today for complotallatingl
t!i75

63

I ~ •

1521

CU'IE AI A ·BUTTON- RODNEY VIUAGEJI3 bed1110m ranch, living room, kitchen with
buiH-In &lt;iohwuhor family room b-~ Neat &amp;
tidy'
.....
1574

Low......

,

IAI-£· 1fll C"-"r ~~r·
-

truck; -

'

'

·

114-

ZIIIII, "'tot IIIII 1118 Ply.
•, Horizon $1,311; 1117 DodGe

.~1117 a-.tto Alio
rt1,2N;
Llnllotn 14_...;
11117
Doclao
- Auto
t1117 .!'trb¥oltt
;
, 1. . ~ Cloen, Wo
·,1.. ....,.Aulofl,ll5;
.a-. - $1,3115; 1114 ....
·ourr -lllont•ll- fl,lll;

==·
12;:

4 ~5.

'f.

111711 PontloG Grond Pill. 304175-4140 lfter 4pm.
1177 - · Rune Good,
C'-, Coli Alor 5 P.ll. 114-141·

Com bumlag polloi oto.., - ·
•I Colr.... Appro~. 400 2000 "!I, I, 101111 $17110, ooklng 0243. '
: 111. EACII 2 Hoilira, 4 Stooro, flOOD. -von Form, Rt. 31. :104' · 111711 Comoro, T~- -

c~M~~·~~~-~-~~~~~~117-21111~~-~~~~~~~·~lnor

~'00- ~.

Real

1m Conti111111
v Gvi!ICY
body _..,
"""'
-'·

:::.~.~~...,.~

llroo, _ , op4Jan, 114-112-1711.

Wooa !RJ,a(ty, Inc.
32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

'

IMMEDIATE f'OSSESSIONI 40'x40' 3 car
detac:hed ntatal garoge with concrato flooring.
One otory 3 bedroom homo with walher~r.
some furniture, appHancaa Included. T..ctor
with blade, plow, bush hog included. Call

todoiyt

'

1631

PRICED REDUCED TO $42,500.00. MOVE
INTO IMMEDIA'IELYI 652 Second AveniHI.
Excollont repair, 2 bedrooms, living room
dining room, kltclien, ballllrJI8nt, laoge lot. Off
....t p&amp;rldng.
1512
RIO GRANDE· soe Rodge Ave. One block
from Univel'lily. Nice 1 story home, living RlOIII
dining room, kitchen, basement Newer FA ~

HU

fu~ce.

WOODED PRIVATE SEmNG • ALMOST
NEW BRICK RANCH with loll of llldra room 4
baths, 3 bed100ma (+3 roomo In haooment
which could be uood as bedrooms), living
roo"!, dining aroo, kitchen complete with
apphanceo, 2 car garage, laoge paUo and
tranch doors that lead 1o a nice lized deck.
Calllodayl
1573
liVER FRONTAGE 1- Over .2 101111 and ranc:h
otyle home. 3 bodroomo, bath, loundry room,
living .rocim &amp; kitchen . Paved driveway.
ts«
Immediate Po'lrrtlon.

44t·1066
Allen C. Wood, Rtlltor/Broker-446-4623

PRIVATE, SMALL MINI FARM WITH AN
AFFORDABLE BUDGETI· 8 112 acrea more
or lass, bam &amp; other bundings. 1 story home
could be used aa 2-3 bedrooms, kitchon, living .
room &amp; mo~e . Needs oomo TLC. Cal tod!Jyl
.
1582
14x70 MOBILE HOME AND LOTI Priced in
the lower S20'o. Call for moro detailol Won't
last long!
1585
OWNER SAY!! MAKE AN' OFFERI
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! Just w.lting for
you, 3 bedroom ranch otylo homo, living room,
family room. C&lt;lr garaga with auto. opener ond
mo111. Excollonllocationl
1488
NEW USTINGI L 0 0 K $15,oo0 Or make wt
offer. Vinyl aided home consistin!l of 2
bedroomo, living room, bath, kitchen. Noce front
pordo. Lovollawn.
1588

247 EVERGREEN AOADI· IMMEDIATE
P088EISIONI- Start paclcing today. Thio 3
bodroom home woth bath, kitchen, fiving room·
noedo a famltyt Owner hao ra~lacod roof
fumoce, IVa!"• heater and mora 'Mthln the paoi
couple of yea,..Como and - · Prlcod $20'a.
liStS
$11,1100- Whether starting out or 111tiring tllisls
the home tor you! 2 bedrooms, living room,
k1tchon, bath, alum. siding. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!
1417

a

CITY LIVING- On low traffic straot. Very nloo
kitchen complata with applianC~~s, living room,
family room, 3 bedrooms, 2 batha, laundry
room. Ono bedroom apartment induded. 1557
4.2 ACRES.. Uving room, kitchen .nd dininR
room, bath, central air conditioning, 24'x24
garaga, two barns.
IIS76

A HOlE .OF THE PAITI Beautiful older 2
atory home, 4 laoge bedrooma, den,. dining,
room llvllg 100m 2 baths, laundry arid morel
Wful oalfwoodwolk throughoutl Nice view
of river. Stockad pond IMust Mt hi
•
1582

;.l..oHo' fl,211• 1tiM

tli.Hii;

1114

-

$65,000.00

&amp;-

Doclao Lonoor

' 1111 FMI Wrockor Wfth Winch,

: Good , CondHion, tli,JQO, 114~ 31J.7758.

Real Estate General

...........,,304' ... "'·
75 'aoata &amp; Motors
'
··forSale

AMidiMIII

Home

.

MAIN STREET RUTLAND- Ranch homo wi1h
n•~•r ce~l In 2 bedrooms, living room.
dln01g room. On. bath, 1 cer detached garage,
outbuilding, lot approx. 41l'x183.5

~1711 .

.

Acceasortea
Budaot Tronomlollono, UNCI &amp;

robuln, ·~=· otort'"\ ot bl;
;::.r
·. •am, 14-:m.

Prlcocl

Wontld to buY· grtft ond bumpor
lor 'II Ford 1 - II, 114-IH·
1053.
goo ...,.._ ton truck
Whooll. roclot- 1'- - · ·
ate. D i. R .t,":o:IDIIY. WV. 304-

372-31133 or 1

BEAUTIFUUY KEPT . RAtjCH
OVERLOOKING OHIO
minutea to town. 3
BRS, kitchen, DR, FA, Florida room, cent. air,
attached garage garden spot. Over an acre ol land.
Call for appointment.

273-1321.

Real Estate General

Will butkl polio -

.

--~up
oldlng "' trollor ioklrtlng.

Real

Estate General

~RGI~III~.::::.~.~~- ~~:.~ENa n~
tl'U/, , , ·'
EUNICE IIIEHII, REALTOII ...................... -11117
"-..,.../
RUTH BARR, REALTOR ..........- ................ 111 D722 ~
DEIIORAH8CITES,IIIALTOR ............... 441 Ill
LYNDA FRALEY, REAI.TOR .......--........... 441 IIIII

-

PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOfi ...................... 241-8S71

·&gt;li'oi!ES WILLIAIIIION. REALTOR ............241«170

Salam

Twp. • 2 otory home with 5 bedroom•. bath,
living room, dining room, kitchen, bam &amp; mlac.
othor buiklngo. $-40's.
1580

calllnoll, aalolina dloh. Price10duced.

•

1iR
RUN AD. •
SEASON IS
UPON YOU! Why trawl here &amp; lhenl when
you can own tills h:,u;Jb,!lte?l 27+ acres
with 3 room cabin,
mer, wat&amp;r wea
on sire, t6x20 addition, lnsultlltld, gravel
dn)I8Way. ASKING $29,900
NEW LISTING - loca1ecl on Tackenille Rd.
in Racine 1989 modul• with 3 bed'ooms.
2'-' baths, t.ge lamily room with fireplace
built on additional room also an extra rental
mobile ho.., on 2+ acres, 2 TPC wa....
1\ook-upo, largo pole bam . Very nice
location, nloe yard. ASKING $84,500.
REDUCED! RACINE- Energy effieientl989
24 x 40 sectional with lot of 72 x 72 . 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, Tappan appliailces,
ceiling fans, lots of cabinet spoce. Those
folks relocating arid anxiouse to SELLI Now
asking '31,500 CHECK IT OUT!

RED11AN DOUBLEWIOE II OUAIL CREEK- 6 yo8ra old
3 bedroom, 2 batho, living room, dining room, kitchen
uUty room. Priced .r $29,800.00
VACAiff I.ANI). apflfOXimately 10 'acraalocatod on Bob

McConnldl Rd. Call lor motw intonnation.

se,DC!il.oo.

Jk&gt;or fiBIIIa home wilh 2
on 2 lots with ;orne new
·, J •• .i.... plumbing. 'Newer porch.
~nierii location, close to shopping.
'18,000 MAKE AN OFFER!

,

,_ii;;;ftiiji

'":~~

Twp. and 11PP1QX. tO A. In

Wo()dbtinillli

LR, ldtd1en, new funace,
Jlt&gt;Ve. siding, some new carpel

H

Two. Home ' on prOperly o1lera 5

11112111\lruu•t!.IIIEiiEL MOISt~,~:
1072 sq.
ft., -:~:~~17xt5
kitchen,
'
more d81alla.

•.

NEED A NEW OFFICE + a rental· a.,&amp;it.
ment? 250 Sec. Ava. Nice olltce downstalra
and apartment and storage up. Convanlont
to banks lind ohopplng.

JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD - ADDISON
TWP. - 386 acre farm, 3 ponda, tobacco
base, 44X1 00 barn with conaeta ftoano. May
c:onaklar tpllt. (578).
•
\

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS - Fiesta
Grande on St. Rt. 35. Wall established
laundromat also goaa with buslneoa.
'

111m on propeily.

- . LAKEV1EW SUiiDMsloN - A CHOICE
PLACE TO IIUtiJI - 2 10 5 ocroo moro 0t - DI1vo .. Ad. 10 ~ ....... Dr. 10
L.aluiVIew Ct. Otlarlng 2 lilt 10 lOlling 1011, I var·
lety d t1001 nl b8auliful Ylow al the lalle. AI

an""""

Calflo ....

VACANT LAND- 11112 actwo mo,. or .leu. W.ter &amp;
EleCtric •vailable. Loctotad on Buckrid9t Road. Price

plenty of 1pace , reedy to llart !arming with all the
equipment on 45.11 acres. Bam onl~ 4 yeara old .

nkiiPQIIdlllillloh.
'
nM. lltEDucm - ...000 - Owner 11 anx~us to
selllhla 3 beclrm. ranch. Very nk:&amp; hOme and location.
largo LA w/dlnlng area FIM bolomont,
large
garage, 2lotl, city water &amp; &amp; schOols.

MIDDLEPORT- This home just needs a
loving lamilyl II offero 2 bedrooms, large
front It just nee. This home just naeds a
loving family! It offers fireplace, hardood
floors. tuN basement. ·sunroom. a location
cl~e to shopping. to C&lt;~re lor it. ASKING
. '24,000 Make an olferl

lnlonitoobl.

,_VACANT LAND - SpringflelcllWp, 511 ocr·
es mil ..,... lrom Holzar Hoopllal Groat toea·
lion lor lorQI homes on a""·

1871 Older F•rm HouH wilh • bedrooms and

ment w/o1flce room and outside entry. 24'x32 garage
w/.10' doOrs. Make this yours now FHA or VA.

ON FRANK ROAD- A partial ranch on t .034
ac., mora or la11, with 3 bedrooms, 1 112
baths, living 100111, dining room and kitcheri.
On. cer garage atlacMd. Aoklng only $52,000.
Callloday.
15ft

11133.
AREA In thla Spac!OtJS brick
homo. wtth 3 bedrooms. 1'/, bath&amp;, living room. dining
room, full basement with family room , 2 car garage,
tiiX361nground .,00. You need 10 see this one.
1713. BRICK RANCH - Sttuated on 1 ac mJI Uppe1
Rt. 7, ~elo ShOpping center. Till s home features 3

~

omanltlos
- - - b l e.
oloctriclty, - - - Runll
' ~
AeatrlctNe convenanta apply. ca. 10 Ho1zar

1174 Rench Ho.,. with full boHment, opp, 1710
living opaco. gu Ilea~ conL air, 2 fireplaceo, 3
bedroom, 2 batho. 2 car detached Qaraga, 30Xt6
ohod. 2 omoll outbuUdlngs, omall tro.. home wllh 2
br. ond 1 111111. 2 hom" and bulldinga ~llJatod on 5
11trn more or leu priced in "• $70".
_

and """""""

1872. 8TA11! ROU1£ 110 - 3
$15,000.00. Charolala Hila.

ac.

lal mil,

18'13. PAillE DEVELOPIIENT LNtD - Lond
lays wotl. Older 2 otor( horne with • bedrooms
and 11&lt;-.gs Homo In noec1 o1 ropalr, 111 ac.
m/1. Call far location

- · COMMERCIAL, CITY WA11!R, SEWER &amp; GAS
- 1 ac m/1, building w/2 baths, store rm ., garage has
MISI and compressor Owner wants offer.

lal8. WHITE OAK RD. location. 30 """" 111/1
vacant land with timber, mineral lighll. good
IOOd lrontage. Some cloalodland. $:!8,000.

30_,.._
,_,..,I

bedrooms , 2 full baths, kitchen and dining area, 2
bedraom s, utility room, family room. kitchen in basement, 3 car garage and a e car detached garage. can
for more Information.

-WHITEOAKRD.- -.
lind wllll_,, - . . l1glllo, good

g •

. . . . - -· $26,000.
1111 Building Lal:a. AddiSOn area Call.

1848 O...at Location For That Bueln. . . At Home.

Beaultful white brick 3 bedroom on 4.13 BCI9S wilh a

4000 1q. 11. commerlcal building with 3 phase
eleclric.
1117 Form W/20 Acreo mil localed on SR 588.

,_. t.o1 llllkto Tho City Llmlls. Plleod 10 Ml Cd

Home offers • bedrooms; 2 balh1, LR, kit, encl01ed
porch. bam and outbulldlngo, mil~ llouoo. c:om crib,
chlc:lwn rouoa and cellar. Call VIrginia 388-8828.

-

.. 245-11070. $2,000.00

..,_

su•c~ng

LOI CIOM to lown. Okl hDuM on

pfqiOrly In noed d repair. $10,000

1171 . POINTS OF PERFECTION SURROUND this

gracloua home kx:ated In an exclusive area E~n
total room• with three bathrooms , foyer entry with
open lltalrwoy, large living rm. w/Wblp, lormal dining
nn., gourmet kit, family and game rm. share an open
fireplace, solarium, 4 over~lzed bedrooms Master
bedroom has cathedral ceiling, wh irlpool batn and
beauttfuf arcl'\ed windows. Fl111 floor laundry. basement. enclosed porch and 2 ear attached garage.
Appointment. F'RICE REDUCED

1103 Copo Cod ... Brick capo coda airuorad on 2
acres overlooking Ohio River. Home features 4
bedroom, 2 full balha. llvinQ room will I lroplaco .
1922 sq . n living opoce. 36•48 molal building dnd
14x24 ~ama bulldln9. El. ht pump and cant II•. COli
tor prk:.e •nd }oc.~tion of thla betNtirul cape cod

ft12 NEW LISTING .... &lt; bd 2 ba1hs, largo fam!lr
r?O"' with fl_
re_Pl.ce. large livmu room with gu
flltplace. dmmg room, k1tehen, utility room
b,U ifMiil, front porch, screened 20x10 Side IX&gt;fl:h'
patio, lind 1 car garage Situated on 1 acre nv1 app. 1'
mtle from town . Th1s home is des1gned for livii'IQ
apace and in home bus1ness. Call for price and
locallon. App. 2300 sq. h.

. . New Uetlng. 5 bedroom rancl'\ on 10.5 aerea
with 2 car garage and allt'gt building Ha· ; e jusc 1
roorold.

POMEROY- 3 bedroom Ranch Style homo
with lull , baaement, c.ntral air, W.B.
fiteplace, I car garage on small lot. '25,000

1141 REDUCED SUBURBAN BEAUTY·
Tht remar ka ble spa ci ous h o me with
view ot the counry . Italia n t ile to,er,
- . , , ceilings with balcony, 3 BR, 2'/o baths ll-ilng
room with WOOdbummg fireplace, equip. ktief'len,
breakfasl room has a lg. window, stereo speakera
throughout, brass H9flt fixtures and much mere. 2 ctr
anactMK:I garage, attiC storago, 2 acres m/1. This t.ot.

CLEAN LIVES HERE - 3 BR homo wHh
sMall acreage, Ctose In, LA, eat-In kitchen, lg. FR.
balh, t c. garage on 5 acras m/1 This home Is Just
rigtlt b a ~ family Of a ref ired couple also. Make
an appt to see. Call Eunice Nlehm tOday 446·1897
1123. liAS.

POMEROY- UNION TERRACE - 1 floor
frame home wltll 3 bedroqms, F.A. electric
heat, central air, port basement, large front
porch, nit~~~ kitchen ·ceblnetl . Nk:o location
clooe to town yet 1.86+ acres to move
·around (nloe yard). ASKING 129,500

1115. OLD FASHION CHARM - In town location lor
"Mr. Fix It'. large 2 IIOf'l hOme, 3 bedrooms. LR, for .
mal dining room, kRchon, bath Attached ga~age and
..,_lot, Walk 10 oc11oo1 and ohopping.

CHESHIRE- ROUSH LANE- 1+ aae with
1970 2 bedroom mobile . home &amp; block
efficiency apartment also 2' additiOnal hoOkups. ~ood rental investmentl ASKING
'24,900

1871. SMALL FAIIII CLO&amp;l IN • Neat, clean and
ctJl:'i iS what this 2-3 BR home Is wnh LR. DR, klk:hen,
bath, 1 car garage, ona outbuilding, ~ oU furnace,
CIA and -root. 48x32' bam for animals, haylotland
woncstoop. Call Eunice Nlohm for appt.

WE NEED USTINGSI WE HAVE BUYERS!
WE NEED USTINGS FOR AU AREAS OF
MEIGS COUNTYf .IF YOUR SERIOUS
' ABOUT SELUNG CONTACT US TODAYI
WE'LL OET A BAlE GOING rOA YOUI
NOW IS.THE 11111; TO sELL. NOW IS THE
1111E TO IUYI CliVE US A CAUl

·

1125. VACANT LAND - Clole ln. 5 &amp;cnlll -.g
land

HlghScllool

chafl~Hng LA, ea1-ip kit. , 1'1• balh, full Cllv~d base-

GARFIELD AVENUE· 3 baclroomo, living room, kitchen
8lld bato, within wolking ciatanC&lt;I of otoru and ochoolo.

HoME FOR SALE· LOCIMCI at Ro&lt;tley. 3 bodrooma, 2
balha, wing room, dining 100m, kilchon. Call for more

heat pump cent air. situated on ac nv1 , Home 1a 5
mllas from town, hospital, and app. 6 m1les !rom
shopping cenier. app 15 minute drive to River Valley

1101 Aeduaed far Quick Sale - One or the
belllhlngs In IHels home ownerShip. 3. bednn. ranch •

HOlE ON WATSON ROAD- 2 bedroomo, 1 both, 1vina
room, dining room, kitchen, opprox. 1 112 acres, CAL[
FOR APPOINTMENT.

SALE· 4 bedrooma, 2 balha, family room,
""""• and a aummor kilchan ancf belli In
••·c --~ ~ ITKIN or looo, a bam ond outbuilding,
Call lo Sooll

church camp, camping ground~ or Long Road frontage

1813 Ronch Helma wHh tomlly room. 3 br. 2 bath,

UCit . . . . . ·~--NIDCiflblriD. . . . . . . . ~

NEW USTING -End your aummer
a
aplash, 3 BR ranch averlo,oklng river,
18'x32' pool, ~ garage could be •
·body shop, approx. 4 mi. from town . can
Ruth tor appointment

1171. HAVE A IIEAIITIFIIL COIIN1RY ESTATE
- Build your di8MI horne overtool&lt;lng a 1orgo
lake 73 acres mJI of lOlling land. _ , and
mowed. • bit ol · 8 ... d . . .
m~. TillS pmporty has many ~ Ita
p,...nt usa Is a paid ftohlng lalle. Groat lor a

1780 Ranch home In town. 2 or 3 br. 1 baltl, family
room, vlnly lldlng, now au tum. 5 11. old root, new

LOTS OF LANDI 216 acreo, mo~e or laas
mobile homo pod, oldor bam, 5-6 ac~aa bollo,;
land. Call for mo111 details!
IIS77
OWf,IER'S RELOCATED! REDUCED
PRICEIII WANTS SOLD IMMEDIATELYIII
Ideal location. Roomy 3 bedroom ranch otyle
homo. Looge lamily room, dining a~~~a, kitchen,
bath, laundry. Nice sized level lawn. Within
seconds of New 35 by-pass.
1567

VACin'LIID

1110. SUPER BRICK l VINYL RANCH- NEW
USnNG- Sbc reara Old, beautiful location, close to
the UniY&amp;Bity of Rio Grande. 3 bed100111s. 1'I• bath
located on Chany Ridge Road.

Real Estate General

HOllE with IIbov• ground pool, 3 bedrooms, 2 batha,
central lllr, goraga, , _ out buildings, city ochool, localld
on Stllla ~ 141 . Calllo ....

LOCUST ST.
446-6806

.iWIIJ'A WIWAMION, REALTOR ............. 215 1070

EAGLE RIDGE ROAD- 4 bed100111, extra nice
I 112 atorr. home two c.r overoir~d garage.
Pluo mobile home hook-up. Call for more
inlonnation.
1558

Discover The Power Of Number l.nt

Realtor-258-1745
Tm Wa1aon, Relllof-4146-:!027

Jeanette Moore,

.

MICHAEL MILLER, REALTOA .........~ ......... 111 1101
8TEVEN -IGT. IW~, REALTOR ........24H101

11563

a 110 ACRES-

OOIIIIIWIII

Auto Pans&amp;

HENRY E. CLELAND..-992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER.--949-2439
SH~RRI HART " __ ..;,742-2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111"992-6191
KATHY CLELAND.--.992·6191
OFFICE--'""-·"-·992·2259

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
RIVER
FRONTAGE!· $25,000, 2 bedroom home with
bath, living room, kitchen &amp; approx. 1 acre
lawn.
1543

NEW USTINGI HOME

Of

llllllit Unnud 11t
,
~.--or=
Rld1now IIICitrtoll, 'NVOOO:M,

Improvements

Ktn Morgin, Rtdor/9roklr-441Hl971

Moae CaJ\tettKny, Realtor-418-3408

Refl'lgtrltlon

2411-8152.

t57t

'

1H3 Y11111ha lla - · otlll ,...

81

Electrical •

ct.y.

.: 1~ TruCkS tor sale

LOOK&amp; UKE SOMETHING OUT OF A
BETTER HOMES • GARDEN MAG~NEII
Tllke on. paolc at thio auractivo log hOlM and'
you,l be ooldl 3 bedroom, t 112 batho, fully
equlppoil kitcloen, living room with cathedral
C&lt;lil!ng, Eleclric heat pump wilh ""nlral 'air
conditioning. Storage buildng. Wamonly left OIJ
homo. Call today. You'll ba imp~eoaedl
1553
RIGGS CREST - This homo has had Iota of
carat Th,.. bedroom ranch with ful b a - t
60% finlohao. Detached 24'x24' garage and
ba-nt garogo aloo. A must ..., Aoklng

1H3 lkmlld ICal.... 100 Only
1123 llile!L IJka Newt Will 8oft
For Pay """• 114-2U-t101.

Plumbing&amp;
Heating

~ tli,ZII;

• 1117 Chev. -

: fl,'lll; 1ii:l Oklo • $\ltl!.i. 1117
,a-. CMobritr Nice ..,,111; · .
111t %-14 Co11allor -rpt "Wo
;:In Doolltl" BID AUio - . ,
· ~ 1ICI N, ft4 441 1111.

Meigs County

~.

~

Serv;ces

~ ~1.

1HG YI. .M rT
.......
,...,..,.,110,

The young fellow appli~ for a new
job. The office f1llll808I' esked him
if he waa t'll8l'l'led. "N&lt;&gt; I'm not; he
laughed, "but I •-" know how to
TAKE ORDERS."
.

! 1. ...111r. CoR tt.INdJ-114 Chry.

.•..., . . . . . 1...

,- ...._.&amp;..-....lo.-...1-..L....L..-J

. I I' I I

•

• Lollron ll\1f!!lj_1. . -

. a new job. The office manager
asked him if he was married.
"No I'm not," he laughed, "but
still know how to··········."

::_;_:: ~__,V,;....;A..:.,.;;R~R..:.....:E~G:...,.,s-rl
~·

&gt;a

..

•8hlrP

I
I I'

TE KE L T

Ia I I

I

.,

Real Estate General

10/1/IJ

SHANTY
ATTEND
CANKER
NOTIFY
KETILE
GRAVER •
TAKE ORDERS

241l•fttt3

Eolitell by 'ClAY R. POLlAN

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

wv

OH Point

1N4 -·~t:.:J, Air, Good

§ that Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle
:.

_october

Is maintenance tree of be st Quality. Make )'OUr
appointment and see If )'OU don, agree.

' U811Na - SjiiUIIIntO till f1091, 18'1C32'
~"9~•~:· Groat location, Groan :I'Np. 3 'Iorge bedrm.,

new

cozy LR, equipped kitchen
ronge &amp;
' dlshwuhar, """""". hot- link. lllld&lt; - rlor. 2 car garage, bldg., &amp; Gog run. Much wonc nu

gone Into tlllltbiotv home, "'Ii qulcjd
NEW LISTINGS
:
flU
lolln ely, 1831 ChootM St. Comfortlblo
3 IJO&lt;Irm.. 2 bitliS wnu11 boltrr*W LGt t50'x160'.
O.R., Huge LA, wlfftplaoe niW nlu~ Mi:do I,
control air, kit. - - · trooh ......,...., ltld
cellng tano. Don or Dlllce rm., 1ru1t - · - n y
polch, g -. gardon opal &amp; b - 1 -rt In the
ylnl. &lt;&gt;M*I-10 HI. Mld40'o.

comor

- - Uotlng In lho' Rio Oro,. 1180 •4
bedroom ranch. 4 yur• old with 2 acrtt 1n a
area with new hOmes going up every da.y cal 'klday

,..·a

2&lt;5-9070.

lt01 Nice lulldlng build 111at d1eam homo
IOdey on lhlo 7 n t ilwilhln tho city li mits, call

IUILDINCJ'FOR IALE .:. ApP'iJx. 8,900 sq.
ft. located, on Uncoln Pike at Cemenary.

'

IBM Addloon AIM, 4 bedroom 2 &amp;IDoy. Hu now
1001. oiding and ........,.,

lVII....

Callfordetallt.

11n Owner W.nlo sOtd. · Mok* offer loci~·
opoCiouo 3 bedroom 2 b&amp;1h dou-ldo on on

1o1. Ck&gt;M 10.,. now 35 ~

-~ ICNOCICI ONCE· &amp;,..,, 2
..,_ laMwllil I lpi1dl.-tat,S-'"'!
lhiiJIIIII,_Cf . . . ~~·-

...

'

&gt;l

.. :

,.

.

'

.

-e

�..,

.'

r

,...

'

'J,

\

'

•

OH POint Pleasant, WV .

'

Octotier

1993 •

Braves
capture
NLWest
crown

Scientists Will combat
~.
Caribbean screwworm
.

.

.

.

.

'

.

.
NEW LICENSE - OMo Ambulance Licensing Board Executive Director Robert Feiltberlnabam presents Gallia County emergency MedIcal Center Director Robert Bailey wilb its new licensure from the Ohio Ambulance Licensing ·
Board for Advance Lite Support level service.
Also pictured, to Bailey's left, is Gania County
Commission President Harold Montgomery,
and to Featheringham 's rigbt, Commissioner

Kennelb Farmer. Started by tbe state lbls year,
!be 11ew llcenllna procedure requires services to
be Inspected l!y a state ambulance Inspector anjl
the highway patrol. According to Bailey, the .
EMS has met and exceeded tbe requirements set
fortb by the new state licensln&amp; board. Bailey
said lbe state Inspected vebldes, equipment, general record keeping,.drug and medlcatioDS, cardiac beart monitoring equipment, and personnel
records.
·

Feed grain acreage reduced
sorghum. The reductions for barley
and oats were zero in 1993, with
the zero reduction requifed by law
for barley.
·
USDA lowered. the acreage
reduction for corn because com
stocks entering the 1994-95 marketing year are expected to. be
about 810 million bushels lower.
That is due to reduced yields and
lower harvested acreage caused
largely by flooding in the Midwest.
Stocks for grain sorj!hum were
expected to be 84 milhon bushels
lower.
Despite the projected shorter
supplies, some had sought a higher
reduction for com. Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb., had ur~ed no less than
a 7.5 percent reducuon.

WASHINGTON (AP)
Prospects of a lower com harvest
. this year prompted the Agriculture
Department to reduce the acreage
that fanners must remove from
production in order to qUalify for
farm program benefits.
The department announced on
• Thursday
a 5 percent acreage
reduction program for com but no
reductions for other feed grains in

1994.

The nwnbers represent the percentage of acres that growers must
take out of production to receive
benefits. The program is intended
to manage feed grain supplies.
The 1994 percentage is down
from 10 pen:ent this year for com
and down from 5 pen:ent for grain

)

Despite concerns about a shorter
crop and frost damage, com prices
are still low because demand for
com, espeeially in the expon market, remains sluggish.
Other interests, including lbe
National Grain aild Feed Association, argued for no reduction, say-·
ing the grain could be sold overseas
if the government did not,prop up
the price.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Departtnent has accepted an additional I million acres of
highly erodible and other environmentally sensitive land into the
Conservation Reserve Program, or
CRP, bringing the total to :!'6.4 million acres.

Grain producers to put additional
95.4 million bushels in reserve
pledge 1992-crop feed grains
intended for the reserve as collateral for a nine-month Commodity
Credit Corp. price support loan.
During the inilinl signup period
that ended April 30, producers signaled intentions to plAce 374.5 million bushels of feed grains in the
reserve.
Because the intentions from
both the original and additional
signups are below the 900-millionbushel authorization, producers
may place the entire quantity of
1992-crop com,. grain sorghwn and
barley they designated in the
reserve. However, a producer's
stated intention does not obligate
the producer to place the feed
grains in the re8e!Ve.
·
The FOR loan rate will be the
same rate as the nine-month loan

WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.
feed grain producers intend to
place an additional 95.4 million
bushels of 1992-crop corn, grain
sorghum and barley in the FannerOWned Reserve, or FOR, the Agriculture Departnient says.
The produc;ers w~ required to
me lbetr additional intentions to
enter those three commodities in
the neserve with their local office of
USDA's Agricultural Stabilization
and· Cqnservation Service by Aug.
31.
Producers also were required to

U. S. catfish ·

net down
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
catfish producers had 149,440
. acres in production on July I, down
6 percent from a year earlier and 10 .
percent lower than in 1991.
"The reduction in acreage is
mostly aitributable to an extended
period of low grower prices." said
a recent repon on aquaculwre by
!be Agriculrure Departtnent" s· Economic Research Service.
However, it said, processor
inventories are down from the previous year and grower inventories
at the beginning of the third quarter
were estimated to be lower in
almost every size.class.
"This is expected.to.put up'Vllfd
pressure on prices 'at the farm and
~r levels,'' the report said.
'Prices also !'{ill be suP,P.Ofled by a
pi&amp;up in the economy ;• ··

WASHINGTON (AP) -The
government's chief barometer of
future economic activity leapt I
percent in August, the best gajn of
the year, signaling a pickup from
the disinal fii'SI half.
The lndex .of Leading Indicators
flashed its most positive sign since
December, when it rose 1.7 percent, the Commerce Department
said today. It was the third consecutive increase, foll9wing slight
gains of 0.1 perce111 in both.June
and July.
·
July had previOusly been reported as a 0.1 percent drop. And the
Augus\ advance .was slighlly better
than the 0.8 perCent rise anucipated
by economists.
Ten of the index's 11 forwardlooking indicators rose, the first
time that many were up since
December 1986.
,
The various changes. left the

Mound Plant
pays back

saJ.es ·taxes
"

J

rm:

year because be · satd _the U.S.
. Deputment of Energy wanted to
do die right tbing.
'
' . EG&amp;:G ~tes the Miamisburg
;p18nt for the Energy Depanment,
,inaki.ng 'triggers · for nuclear
weapons and power s~urces . for ·
spili:e pobol. )' • , _ _:.
'J'he IIJ "ymcnll IOIIUw"" Stale
~=
M6uiMI in !9116 arid 1990
· lba
'tldd lbe facility 'owed ·
· ·taM~, · •BCmle JohDII!lD of the

.

1'111 ~..U•....,..'s office. · .

.-. , . 1'be lllte' .,cei\1d, $J2 .milliDlt
· o£ the beck laltes, while Mol)t·

·

coup
· tr and the county's
Trldsit MchCritY $« 11\e .
'. '
.

Stain

Release

'·sau
'I
'Yd.

$595,._
'

·· NEW CO.ERCIAJ.

TOLL FREE
1-1100-543-4814

~-2518

VINTON
Gallia County lllaplay Ywd
Jay a Joe Moore, Mgra.
165 lolaln St. - 388-8603

LEATH.E R *RECLINERS

BY I~BERKLINE

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~~no. Juml!o '!lifl ~1¥-!tUiile . , ·
tho d~op paddod pll~WI and ,
ll!odiliod Uphoillll8d wlngi: Wide TClJihion comlorl ChOoto flrlgortip, .
Tciuc.'.i.lotiont Walowaye Roclintr
or TouchMolionl Roei&lt;-A-I.ou'9or.e

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Recr........ SmoochActiOn Wolowaye ·
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1 S ctlon.10 " - 35 _ ..
A Multlmtclllno. ,._.,..,...

High speed
chase ends in
•
river rescue

JOHNNY APPLESEEDS - Pomeroy Elementary was swarming wltb little Johnny
Appleseeds Frlclay as klndergarteners and rwstgraders finished up a lengthy section on apples.
Yoangsters•dressed like Johnny Appleseed, wore

pans on their beads and ate arplesauce prepared tile day before as part o a cooperative
learning activity involvin&amp; Jamie Blaettnar's
ftrst grade class and Becky Trents kindergarten

class.

Bob Evans Farms to host
23rd festival this weekend
Craftdem()nstrations to highlight event
'Live-eniertainment 'wid nearly
140 craftpl:rsons in colonial dress
.demonstrating early American
crafts will come rogether on DeL 8,
. ~ and 10 at the 23rd Annual Bob
Evans Farm Festival in Rio
Grallde.
Open .daily from 9 a.m . to 5
p.m., the festival is held on the
grounds of lbe 1,100-acre Bob
Evans Farm in the rolling hills of
southeastern Ohio. Continuous
country, bluegrass and gospel
entertainment add to the old-time
atmosP.here.
Slc1lled craftspeople, demonstrating tools and techniques devel-

.. -

·-*·~.

/&gt;':11:

•

A Licking County man was rescued from the Ohio River and
arrested early Sunday morning following an Eastern Avenue high
speed chase which damaged a
police cruiser.
Stephen W. Divis U, 22, Warsaw, faces charges of felony fleeing
and eludinJI. driving under the
influence, driving under suspension
and improper passing.
According to Chief ROj!CJ Brandeberry of the Gallipohs Police
Departmeni, officer Greg Frazier
saw the suspect's vehicle use the
center tum lane to pass anolber
vehicle on Easlem Avenue near the
Ohio River Plaza.
.
Suspecting the driver was under
the influence, Frazier began following Davis' vehicle and attempted to pull him over.
The suspect reportedly refused'
to stop and Frazier began pursuing
Davis at a high rate of speed. Other
offtcers and Galli&amp; County sheriffs
deputies joined the pursuit and
auempted 10 block in the fleeing
suspect's vehicle. Frazier estimated
lbe minimum speed of lbe chase
was 65 miles per hour.
The chase continued ended near
the )li-Lo Oil Company, wbere the
suspect suddenly Stopped, shifted

- ... ,.._ •••••

into reverse and struck the front of
Frazier's cruiser.
Davis ' vehicle then went over
an embankment and came to rest
near the river. Davis and his passenger, Chris Himebrick, 19, Jackson, then fled on foot.
The Jl8S$Cnger was captured first
and taken into custody. Davis
auempted to escape by jumping
into lbe river but suffered from
hypothermia and was unable to
return to shore uDder his own
power.
Three officers rescued Davis
from lhc river and he was taken by
Gallia County Emergency Medical Service to lfolzer Medical Center
wbere he was treated for hyjlotbet- ·
mia and released to police n1stody.
Himebrick was not.. charged and
was later released.
Frazier sustained minor injuries
in the collision, but did not seek
treatment. The cruiser sustain'ed
modcnue damage.
Thirteen officers and deputies
assisted in the incident.
Brandeberry credited the cooperation of the two law enforcement
agencies with the anessful anest.
.. We're glad 10 see that (cooperation)," he said. "We seem to act
thinJ!S done when we wade -~

~" '
oped more !ban' a hundred years own mi!SCOIS. Biscuit 'n' Gravy. '
ago, offer their handmade wares for
A!imission is $5 per car, and
sale;
primitive camping is available for
Demonstrations and exhibits are the entire weekend for $20 .
a part of the festival, too. Tijere is a Campers who arrive after 3 p.m. on
lumberjack show. border collies Saturday will be charged only $10.
herding sheep and ducks, team pen- Friday. Oct. 8, is Bus Day.
ning and sorting, horseshoe pitchTour groups are encourag~ to
ing and more. Several contests add come that day, but buses will be
An anonymous tip to Gallipolis Brandeberry said this morning 'that
fun to the Festival including hog admitted free throughout the week- police Sunday evening led to the police responded to Mottnd Hill
calling, com shelling, an egg toss enc_I. The Bob Evans Farm is open seizure of several baggies of marl- Cemetery on an anonymous tip. As .
and the International Chicken. Fly- datly from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., joana and some stolen street signs. they aJ?proach_ed, the suspects
mgMeeL
Memorial Day through Labor Day. No arrestS were made, but one man attempUng to hide some items as
The children's area will feature For more information on the Farm was issued a summons to appe8! in they approached, he said.
a ~ay bale maze, a story teller, a or Fann Festival, write:
cowt and three others were c1ted.
· The off'Icers conlllcted the Gallia
}lC(Ial llliCtor pull contest, a pettin~
Matt
D.
Oxyer,
18,
Honeysuckle
County 'Sherifrs Oepanment and
The Bob Evans Farm, Route
zoo and visits from Bob Evans
588, P.O. Box 330, Rio Grande, Drive, Cheshire, was issued a sum- received assistance from ·s heriff
mons to appear in coun for posses- James D. Taylor and deputy Shawn
45674, or call (614) 245-5305.
sion of stolen property.
Burton, who handles the drug dog
Ciled were Cindy C. Burton, 24, Gamblec.
'
39 Chillicothe Road, Gallipolis, for
The dog reacled while searching
possession of marijuana; Patricia the outside of the suspects' vehiM. Oxyer, 33, Route 1 Cheshire, cles, giving the officers probable
for possession of marijuana and cause to conduct a SC~Weh.
on a Green Township road, accord- by a car in a three-vehicle accident improper transportation of a fire . Officers recovaed several stRet
ing 10 the county sheriffs off~ce.
on Int.erslale 71 at Interstate 670 in arm and Lucas B. Oxyer, 21, 2122 s1gns stolen from Cheshire TownBOWLING GREEN - Driver Franldin County.
Addison Pike, Gallipolis, for pos- ship, drug panphema1ia, a fire ann
Celina E. Davis, 71, and her husFINDLAY- Paul G. Sams, 50, session of marijuana and posses- and about eight sandwich bags of
band, Chester P. Davis, 72, both of of Wayne. motorcyclist struck by a sion of drug paraphernalia.
manjuana.
Findlay, when their car was hit by a train on a Hancock County road . .,r- Gallipolis Police Chief Roger
.
train at a crossing in Wood County.
GEORGETOWN- Bradle~c
•
TOLEOO - Robert H. Sexton Hensley, 3 months, o~Cincinnati,
II, 22, of Liberty Center, in a two- passenger m a two-vehiCle BCCident
'J
'r.
car collision on a Lucas County on Ohio 32 in Brown County.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The for 12 killings that occurred after
road.
.
HILLSBORO - Dylan Wilson, Supreme Court today refused to lift Illinois enacted its death penalt
WEST JEFFERSON - Scolt 18, of Georgetown, passenger in a ml;Ss murderer John Wayne Gacy law.
Y
Henderson, 25, of Columbus, when one-car crash on a Highland Coon- k s death sentences for the sex
The Supreme Coun refused to
the stolen car he was driving went ty road. .
lcillm_gs .of 33 young men and boys hear two previous appeals by Gacy
out of control on U.S. 40 in Madi- FRIDAY NIGHT
10 llitDOts.
.
in 1985 and 1989.
'
son County while being chased by
COLUMBUS _ Alander Sim.The court., wnhout commen_t,
In !he appeal acted on toda ,
a State Highway Pattol cruiser.
!DOOS, 18, of Ashville, Tenn.. driver rejecled. GII!=Y s argument that h1s Gacy ~ lawyers said the ·u'/
SATURDAY
10 a one-car accident on Interstaftl sente_ncm~ jury ~as given unconmstrucnons were unlawful ~~
COLUMBUS - Lori Wright, 71 in Franldin County.
suruUonallnstrucbons. .
they c~ted a reasonable -chance
28, of Columbus, pedestrian struck
Gacy, aform~ hoilding contrac- jurors mtght not realize that a sintor,_was convtcted m 1980 of gle juror could bloclt Imposition f
0
k1lhng 33 young males between the death jJenalty.
1972 and 1978. Twenty-seven bodlhe jurors returned all 12 death
1es were found buried in a crawl sentences within two hours the
space under his home in suburban appeals court noted, adding "They
Ch~o.
mliSt have been in agree~nt from
A JUry sentenced him to death the outset."

Tip leads to seizure
of marijuana, signs

Fifteen people killed on Ohio roads over
Perot decries weekend, including six in Cincinnati crash

LOWEST PRICES

F..,.l''d•

All
Remnants'

MOSCOW (AP) - Hard-liners
surrendered today and left lbe Russian \)IU'Iiament with their hands in
the au after a full-scale assault by
tanks and commandos loyal to
President Boris Yeltsin.
More !ban 300 lawmakers and
supporters marched out of the
.burning building in single ftle and
· were loaded onlll waiting buses.
. Sniper fire ran$ out from inside
the so-called Whtte House as the
· hard-liners gave up their 14-day
defiance of Yeltsin 's decree dissolving parliament lind caiiing new
elections.
·
The surrender of the Yeltsin
opponents, some wearing militarystyle fatigues, ended a 10-hour
8S88ult by army infantrymen. para,troope.ls and and Interior Ministry
troops backed by tanks and
armOIN personnel carriers.
During the seige, ·streaks of
orange flame erupted from the barrels of the T -72 tanks as they
pounded the white marble office
building. Papers came floating out
of the shauered windows, followed
by hea-ry black smoke.
Soldiers dragged away bodies
while machine guns blasled from a
neighboring hotel and apartment
house . No accurate count was
·available, but Yeltsin's military
adviser, Gen. Dmitry Volkogonov,
told reporters that hundreds may
have been killed inside. He did not
give the source of his information.
A U.S. Marine was bit by a
stray bullet at the American
Embassy, across the street from the
White ~- He I'{BS repor_ted in
stabli)coltt 't · Oft.l .aJCn•IIJI~~
tal. AboUt 400 ~ employ!lCS
took shelter undergroiDid.
The hard-line leaders, Vice
President Alexander Rutskoi and
parliamel)t speak« Ruslan Kbasbulatov, remained inside the burning
building.
.
Yeltsin's defense minister,
Pavel Grachev, arrived in a limousine during a lull in lite fighting
and began negoliatiitg on a bridge
over the Moscow River with a
group of hard-liners who came out
of the White House waving a white
flag.
Russian TV said Grachev hand·
ed the parliament supporters a
piece of paper that was believed to
be an ulumatum Ill give up or face
destructioo.

c.n

•

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 4, 1993

Hard-liners
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sugar-producing and exporting
countries,'' it said.
Australia is down 6 percent to
4.1 million. tons; South Africa is
down 19 percent to 1.3 miUion
tons; and Brazil is off 2.0 percent
to 9.4 million tons.

·POMEROY
Mel go County .Dioplay Ywd Nelor
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globall992-93 crop but 1.4 million
tons below consumption expected
for 1993-94, the repon said.
"The production outlook indicates a deterioration in the Southern Hemisphere due largely to
drought affecting several leading

Corilfon Rest ·

·F~ r.r. SA J.E

Endless
Wonder

cal entomology ~h for ARS.
By flooding an area with sterile
males, S(;ientists can· suppress Hy
populalio.ns because lbe eggs subseqlienlly released by females don't
hatch into larvae. That strategy,
~eloped byARS scientists it)·the
1950s, led to eradication ·or the
screwworm in this country in 1966.
. Tiie screwworm forecasting systern will build on similar models
developed by ARS researchers for .
the lone star tick and mosquitoes
that transmit malaria, Bram said.
. Sublethal doses of radiation are
given to &amp;exually srerilize millions
of adult male screwworm flies.
They are then released to breed
with wild females. Eventually, the
population dies out as more and
more wild females lay sterile eggs
that fail to hatCh..
,
That strategy also wiped out the
screwworm in Mexico by 1991 and
wits used to halt a Libyan outbreak
several years ago.

Thai. In Stock... Speclal Order Colors

MEIGS ~.RPET .&amp; ."

.,.

., ·DA.,YTON, ~hio (AP.) ~ The
operator of die Mound nuclear·
W't!81J0ill pl_anf ,h8s paid OhiO and .
1~ gov&lt;m~ment agencies $15.7
million in ~k saleS taxes.
Jim Walton, ·spokesman for
EG&amp;G Mound Applied TechnOlogies Inc., said Wednesday !bat '!P
until about a year ago Mound patd
no sales taxes on equipme[lt and
Olher iJems.
.
Mound argued that. ·it was
eUnlpt from state and local taxes
t I d!' it WU buyinti .limn lhc fee!· 1

feial ~
',. ';
' ' IWalton-..............
JOaJ -:• '-"-•""' ball llladil
1.
.
y
t ~ die SaleS IIUS IIIORilban a

By MARGARET SCHERF
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Global consumption of sugar will outpace production in the 1993'94
crop year anti cut stocks to their
lowest level in four years, the Agriculture DeparUnent says.
''However, world raw sugar
prices are relatively slable as harvests begin this month in Europe,"
a recent report by the Economic
Research Service added.
.
Global consumption is forecast
at 112.9 million metric tons, up
marginally· from the revised esttmate 'for 1992-93.
"The lack of substantinl yearto-year growth is due 10 a significant drop in sugar use in the Russian Federation and elsewhere in
the former Soviet Union and CeniralEurope, as well as slower consumption growth in China and
India." the report said~
.
. • 'These developments offset
strong conSUOII!tion growth in
many populo,us developing countries such as Pakistan, up 4.4 percent to 3.8 million;· Indonesia, up
4.4 percent to 2.6 million tons;
Brazil, up 2.7 percent to 7.6 ~~til~
· lion; and Mexico, up 2.8 percent to
4.5 million."
World sugar production for
1993-94 is forecast at 11 1.5 million
metric tons, about the same as the

index at a seasonally adjusted
153.1. up 3 percent from a year ago
and up I. f percent from three
months ago.
The report, intended give a
sense of the economy's direction
six to nine months in advance, fits
with anal_)!sts' belief that the economy, whtle not exactly roaring
ahead, is clearly expanding at a
faster pace than the anemic 1.4 per- •
cent annual rate regis1ered from
January through June,
Most believe-the economy now
is gro)Ving somewhere betw~n a,·
2.5 percent and 3 percent rate· as
measured by the fros, domestic
product, the total o gocids and secvices produced in the United
States. Th!lt's slow by historical
standards for the early s1ages of llfl
expansion\ but about double the
. rate of the fust half.

,.

(AP) -

I

World sugar stocks dipping to four-year
low as consumption outpaces production,

Leading ind~x makes best
gain of year in August

Oper~tor of .

T,_

rate. The FOR loans will mature 27
months from the date the regular
loans mature, but producers may
repay FOR loans any time before
maturity without penalty.
· Randy Weber, acting executive
vice president of the Commodity
Credit Corp., said producers will
earn -storage payments for feed
grain~ pledged as collateral for
FOR loans at an annual rate of 26.5
cents pei- bushel.
Stoq~ge payments will be earried
until .marli:et prices equal 91' exceed
95 percent of the current established target P.rice.
Interest will accrue when market
prices equal or exceed JOS·percent
of lbe current target price.
The current target prices per
bushel are $2.75 for corn, $2.61 for
gmin sorghum and $2.36 for bar. ley.

.

'
Hqp- screwworm in tlie Caribbean. Other
ing to ICJCW up the mating actiYi- · research included in the project:
ties of !be screwworm, scientists
- A new type of trap to· moniare working on a computer model tor screwworm infestations on
to predict outbreaks of the.pest that Caribbean islands or native populacould lbreaten 'livestock in the lions in nearby countries. The. sciCaribbean.
enlists want to increase the effecThe computer m9del wil,lllliCk tiveness and lower the cost of the
and forecast screiVWOilll population existing standard trap.
densities, ba$ed on the weather, the
- An attractant, called an artifipest's life cycle, animal popula- cial wound, that could be usj:.d to
tions and other data, say the Agri- - lure screwworm flies to traps.
culture De~t scientists.
ResearcherS say they alread)' have
That will help them determine determined the basic chemical
how many sterile male flies need to cm.nponents for an attractant.
be released to eradicate !he pest, . · - Genetic studies at the agensays an article in the September cy ' s Lincoln, Neb., lab that will
issue of Agricultural Research characterize sc.rewworm populamagazine, published by USDA's lions in the Caribbean, Central and
Agricultural Research Service.
~oulb America.
The computer model , which
Open wounds in warmblooded
developers expect to complete mammals attract screwworm flies.
early next year, is part of a cooper- When larvae merge, they feed
ative effon between ARS and the inside the wounds and can cause
Food and Agriculture Organizanon the mammal 10 die, ·said Ralph A.
of the United Nations tri conttol the Bram, head of veterinary and 'mediWASHINGTO~

~

Ohio LQttery

Puah-IIIIIIGIIIIocllnlng

J

5c011tn • .
.sttck,'

&amp;Up.

•

By The Associated Press
A fiery CincJnnati-area crash
that lcilled six young men increased
Ohio's weekend IJafiic death toll to
15, according to the Slate Highway
Patrol and local law enforcement
agencies.
,,
The traffic deaths were tallied
from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
CINCINNA11 -. Keith Doyle,
19. and James Wessler, 17, of
Crosby Township; and Kevin Coulter, 18, James Luken, 18, Aaron
Lewis, 20, and James Smith, 19, of
Whitewater Township, all in
Hamilton
when their car
sauck a
and
ftre

CLEVELAND (AP) - Ross
Perot urged supporters in three
Ohio cities to continue their fight
against the Nonh American Free
Trade Agreement and do everything they can.to defeat it.
The 63-year-old Texas billionaire visited Cleveland, Columbus
and Oxford over the weekend, promoting his United We Stand America group and criticizing American
trade policies.
He told a crowd of about 2,500
at a rally Sunday night in ~leve­
land that the proposed trade paet,
. which would remove tariffs on
ROOds traded between the United
l:tates, Mexico and Canada, will
result in American jobs going south
of the bolder.
"Our big companies want to go
south to make more money," Perot
told the cheering crowd at the
!nremationalEiposition Center.
He said lifting the tariffs on
Mexican good.s will only m~ke
low-w114e MexiCO more attractive
· 10 American companies.
Perot said lbere is not enough
support now in Congress 10 pass NAFI'A.
"That sucker's dead ·i f they got
10 Vole Monday," Perot said.
Perot said' he wasn't bothefed by
criticiSm le~led at him by ·fanner
U.S • .presidents who support
. NAFI'A.
·
"I've been call¢ ev«Ything but
a drive-by .shooter,'' Perot said,
adding !bat criticism of hil anlj... MEIGS HOMECOMJNtrROYAi:rY ·The
NAFTA'crusade has driven up
sales of His book ·about the pro1993 MI.IP HlJb Sdloal ha••coml•l queen, Jb)'
O'Brleti, ce•fer, erowne- 1t PrJday _!l_lc~t's
poeednde piCI. ' .
.
Diet Pior, 69, attended the
MeJai-Aieapcler pme 01 Bob RobertiJIIeiA Is
Cleveland rally and said he does
pletund lien ~ IHr CQUit Staii!Jinl front are
not iiuclealllltlid why anY American bower alrl. AIJioa· Woods, daapter ~ Mr. and
Mrs.'C'hrls. Woodl, and crown burer, Dru
would itipJIOtl
NAFI'A.
'
..

.

·~-

.

ourt re•ects Gacy's anpeal

r---""-Local briefs--Residents report UFO
Several residents reported seeing an unidentified flying object in
the skies above Tuooers Plains Sunday evening.
"A lot of people were out loolcing at the object," said Sheriff
James M. Soulsby who described it as having red, green, blue and
white lights. Some people reported seeing objects falling from the
floating object, be said.
The sheriffs otftce checked it out and determined the object was
a variable star, Slid Soulsby.

Eastern board to meet

""

The llast.em Local Board of Education will meet in speeial session Wednesday &amp;I 5:30 p.m. at the high school library to approve
cootracts for l gas line tie in.

.tteed, - ol Mr. and Mn. Tom iteed. Tile attendulllllld tMir fiCOI'II, pictured left to rl&amp;bt are
Brld Aadenotl whq eseorted Danlelle Crow,
Jeff Tracy wbo escorted Lee HeDderson; the
qaeea -'ed by Jared Stewart; H~tber Hud_tiWI ted b;p Kevil! WJaobrey, IDd Tracy Fife
eiCGl ted by Juon WitherelL

Man cited for DUI
Jef&amp;ey E. Brumfield, 40, Route I Bidwell, was ciled Thursday
night for driving under the influence. failure 10 drive within marked
lanes and no seat belt, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
. Patrol reported. It was his third DUI offense.

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