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                  <text>Sunday•

Pomeroy,....Yiddleport, Ohio
IMINILY
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FORI I I I I I I . I I

V~J. 27, No. 29
Copyrighted 1992

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PHILLIP
ALDER

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If you have read Allan Falk's "Spin·
gold Challenge," you will know what
to expect from his latest book, 'Team
Trial' !Zookeeper Publishing, $9.95,
212·866-5860). You are faced with 64
difficult problems covering all facets
of the game. After each set of 16, you
lind out the results of your teammates
and "!!n see how you scored.
The book has drawbacks. You al·
ways know when the key play has to be
made, whi~h makes finding it easier;
and if you read a lot of bridge literature, you will recognize most of the
deals. However, If you study the deals
and review the analyses, your game
will improve.
Today's deal, taken from a 19'H artide by Terence RA!ese in The Bridge
World magazine, is one of the ·easiest
in the book. Against your conLra&lt;:t of
four hearts, West leads the heart 10.
You win with the queen and cash the
heart king, East discarding a low
spade. How sbotild you continue•

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Pass
Pass

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'--------------'
choice of games; you "'lected four
hearts.
You have 10 tricks: one spade, live
'hearts, three diamonds and one club.
But you must retain control while
drawing trumps and knocking out the
diamood ace. The answer is to duck a
club after cashing the heart jack. II
East wins and returns a spade, you II·
nesse the jack. Later, you ruff your
second low club In the dummy, draw
West's final trwnp and play on dia·
monds. You have all aults under controland muat end with 10 tricl&lt;s.

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MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
1

THIS I~ 'rQ..JR OWN
PERSONAL- [;lAI L-'Y

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IT...

HOROSCOPE.

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BARNEY
WHAR'S THAT
CHICKEN-THIEVIN'
HUSBAND OF
YOR'N?

HE RAN
THAT·A·WAY,
SHERIFF tt

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12 ActOf J110n

ESTHER ALLEN GREER .
RIO GRANDE - The public is
invited to the dedication of the
Esther Allen Greer Museum on the
· University of Rio Grande campus
on Saturday, SepL 12 at 2:30p.m.,
the first activity scheduled in a
weekend celebration of the opening
of the newest addition to the University scene.

OUT TH'
BACK DOOR!!

which signs are romantically perfect lor PI8CEI (,..,. 20-llarch :10) 11 negoUatyou. Mall $2 plus a long. self-ad· Jng a deal with another today, keep your
dre0800,
stamped envelope 10 Match· expectations
within
reasonable
BERNICE
maker.
c/o
this
"'"""aper,
P.O.
Bo•
bounda.
Each
time
you
get
IOITI01hlng,
BEDEOSOL 91~28, Cleveland, OH ~~101-3~28.
you'll have to give a lillie In return.
UIRA (hpt. 2J.Oc1, 2S) Ac11vl1les that ARIEl (lllrch 21-Aprll It) In order 10
please you today might not be as equal· achieve Jmpo~ont objecll-1odoy,-you
Jy appealing to your companion. Yet might have to di-Jata youroalf
neither ol you will have a good time If from co-worl&lt;trs who can't omulato
you try to foist things upon your partnor. your ambition and drive.
SCORPIO (Oct. IM-IIov. 22) Spend time TAUIIUI (April 20-Mer :10) You 11touk1
relaxing and enJoying IHe today, but do rather welt Jn competitive Jnvotv.- ·
don't do so In 1 man-1ha1 wtll cauoe .. men1a.today, provldtd the game 11 :
you to negloct reoponelbiiJUas and du- greater tllgnlflcance 10 you than
ties to which you should attend.
tcOrt. Play It Jooaely.
IAGmAIUIII (IIIII. ZS.O.C. 21) Per· . Gl- (IIIJ 11-.luM :10) Joint vtn·
sonal golno "" poulble today; you'll be tureo look promlllng lor y'ou
,
1ept. 1,1112
both Jnduotrlouo and clever. Yet you· therolo olso a pooalblllty lor 00::'~:;1
hoi mlghl ytold to u1ravagan1 whims which tiona. Try to mllnllln per11y ol
vwr circle ol tiOCIII contocta could ;;,;1 could dlmlnllh your retuma.
with w h - you 1111lnvolved.
IUbllanllolly expanded In liM yoar·•CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. 22....... It) Try to ·CAIICIII (~1111111-.lulr 22) Unleoa
lhtld. However, 11 might b e - natto! k- tmotlono on an even koel today,· and your malo oreln accord on both
_,.Involved In bu- doallngo l · aa that you don't make sudden mood : ·major ond minor palnlolodoy, 'JJHie
w!lh your .-.round frtondl.
swtngs1ha1 could cauae lrlondl to fool ' mutual vllue wiN be ~. ·Each
V11Q0 (Alii. II lapL Zl) Hyou're,..! uncomlo~able In your pr-.
' ;must be 1o1111y supportlvt ol thl-.
· quiNtllomiiiUt:floiOelOdlybltwUn j AGUAIIUI (.1111. 20-ftll.1t) II you're' LIO (""" 11-Aug. 2S) H you•,. wtlh
· Ill lllttlll• -lndMdulll you lllco or lorlhrlght when r-1Jng lavarolrom · ..,_,.,odoy who lln'1u rnal-'1~ : 1
. wlllt -you 1011 ;tllg taG 10. choOM' lrltndo todoy, what you Uk lor will bel ·fortunata u you .,., be vwy
:11M rom-. KIIOW - . t o look ~ ro-, granted. However, n you're coy and how you ..,_ yourMII. Thougtttleoa
,and you'N lind n. Tlto Allro-j o1hlrl1hlnk they aro being manipulated romarkt could -.nd _,.._
GriiPfl MI1CIIImll&lt;er Jnstanlly reveala or uttod 1 you'N be denied.
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SHOULDER TO SHOULDER - More than
4,000 football faos packed the stands at River
Valley High School Friday night for the season

opener against Point Pleasant. (Times-Sentinel
photo by Kevin Pinson)
\

vinced. Sieve Johnson, whose chil·
dren auended Southwestern last
year, called the consolidation "fool·
ishness."
He criticized the board for not

Laking more time to study lhe issue
before making a move. "They don't
know how 10 spend lheir money,"
he said.
Johnson had nothing but praise

During the dedication, Mrs.
Greer will be recognized for her
contributions and commitment to
Rio Grande, Dr. Barry M. Dorsey,
Rio Grande's president, said. At the
same time, the University will for·
maily accqll the building.
Follow10g the dedication, an
afternoon tea will be held on the
Campus Green. At 8 p.m.. a special
presentation of "Russian Cabaret"
will be shown in the Christensen
Theal!e of the Fine and Perfonning
Arts Center. The performance is
free and open to the public.
The museum will officially open
to the public on Sunday, SepL 13 at
2 p.m. A display of works by artists
from southern Ohio and West Virginia will be the first show in the
museum's two-floor gallery and
can be seen until OcL 9.
The museum's regular hours
following'the,grand opening will be
1-5 p.m. daily, except Monday.
Mrs. Greer and her first husband, Don Allen, maintained a lifelong interest in Rio Grande. Don
Allen, a Rio Grande native and successful businessman, served as a
member of the University's lloRrd
of Trustees until his death in 1959.
His seat on the board was mled by

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ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs planted on innocent people's prop·
County Sheriff's Department erl)', making it hard to l!ace the
burned marijuana plants near the growers.
However, Soulsby added, "Even
Meigs County highway garage at
Rock Springs on Friday, the result though you don't make a lot of
of lhe county's marijuana eradica· arrests, at least you Jake (the marijuana) off the streets."
tion efforts.
With the help of the Ohio · The sheriff's department made
National Guard, the Bureau of an arrest earlier thts year that did
Criminal Identification and Investi- not result from eradication efforts,
gation, the Ohio Attorney Gener- but sheriff's deputies seized
al's office, the Ohio Division of $200,000 and nine pounds of mariNatural Resources and the Meigs juana, according to Soulsby. The
County Sheriff's Department, case is currently J.l!'nding in coUrt.
Friday's martjuana burning is
6,425 marijuana plants with a street
value of between $6.4 million and lhe fourlh or fifth of its kind this
$19.2 million have been destroyed year, said Soulsby. The sheriff's
this year, according to Meigs department destroys plants when
there is no arrest made, leaving no
County Sheriff James Soulsby.
Soulsby said the sheriff's reason to store plants for use as
department has not made any evidence in coUrt.
Eradication programs are funded
anests as a result of the eradication
program, because most of the by a federal grant, and Ohio, which
plants are found in remote areas or
(Continued 011 A-2)

~

for football coach Jack James,
however.
"They do have a good football
team, I'll ~ve lhem that," he said.
(Continued on A·2)

Accident
at mine
kills area
resident
Officials stumped
on mishap's cause
GOING ON DISPLAY ·- One of the art·
works to be displayed In the grand opening of
the Esther Allen Greer Museum is bung in the
gallery by Jim Allen, left, assistant professor of
art at the University of Rio Grande, and Stan
his wife, who became a trustee
emeritus in 1985 and later a Fellow
of the University.
Artists whose work will be featured in the gallery include William
Kortlander, Marilyn Poeppelmeyer,
Donald Roberts, Mary Manusos,
Robert E. Lazuka, Eva Enderlein,
Daniel S. Williams and Brad
Schweiger, all of Athens; Earline

Sporny or the Marshall University art department. The public is invited to a dedication of the
museum on Saturday, Sept. 12 at 2:30 p.m.
(Times-Sentinel pholo).

Allen, Peter Massing, Robert Rowe
and Stan Sporny, all of Huntington,
W.Va.; Linda Einfalt and Frank
Herrmann, both of Cincinnati;
Keith Williams, New Concord;
Gaile Gallatin, Zanesville; Philip
Gearherut, Wheelersburg; and Ron
Wright, Marietta.
Saturday's presentation of "Rus·
sian Cabaret" will feature three

professional actors from the fonner
Soviet Union in an evening of song
and entertainment drawn directly
from the Russian nighJclub scene.
The museum, which also houses
offices, classrooms and the University Archives, was fonnerly known
as Allen House. Buill in 1884, it is
the oldest existing building on campus.

Eradication effort taking
marijuana off the streets

.ASTRO-GRAPH

.

"I lhink everyone should be
proud of them," he said. "They did
an excellent job. The county really
came together."
RVHS Vice Principal Tim Scar·
berry was pleased with lhe turnout
and saw it as an acceptance of the
consolidation.
"!think lhis is a great sign about .
how they feel," he said. "This is the
place for the county to get togelher
for lhe first time and see what's
going to happen. Win or lose,
we're going to stay."
At half time, with the Raiders
leading 16-8, Southwestern High
School graduate Adam Simpson
said he was definitely a Ratders
fan.
"We're looking good, we' re
looking solid," he said. ''Truthfully,
I was against-it (COtlSOlidation) a1 •
first, but llik~ il now. It will be a
lot better sports program for the
kids."
But not everyone was con-

Museum dedication
slated for Saturday

48 Actor Bruct

18 u.. lllrtl1lly

MAI&lt;E SURE NC:l8CC1Y'S
READII'4G OYER 'IQJR

TOUCHDOWN :_ RVHS football fans jump to their feet after
the Raiders score their second touchdown In the second quarter of
play Friday night against Point Pleasant. Pictured are, from left,
Adam SimpsOtt, Jimmy Massie and Kevin Staten. (Times-Sentinel
photo by Kevin Pinson)

40 ~ lnd olmullc
43-lntMpan
45 European

cHitriM

Whether for or against consolidation, over 4,000 people turned
out to see how the new school
would perform in its first public
appearance.
They ftlled the stands on both
sides. People were also sitting on
the grassy banks rather than try to
find a cramped seat in lhe tiers.
Board member Steve Jagers said
after the game thai RVHS had
passed its ftrst test with "flying col-

ors."

The World Almanac:" Crossword Puzzle
ACIIOII

cars parked in the field across from
the school. And they were still
coming.
Gallia County Local School
Board President David Woodall
said he arrived at ten minutes
before 6 o'clock and all of the
choice seats were Jaken.
"I think it's great," he said. "It's
nice to see everyone sitting on the
same side of the field for once."

Opening lead: • 10

fer bid. Three no-trump offered a

80s.

14 S.ctlon1, 92 Pages
A lluHimodll Inc. Nowspapor

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, September 6, 1n2

Vulnerable: North·So··th
Dealer: South
Soutla
2NT

P•rtly cloudy. Highs In Jhelower

The first time
By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
CHESillRE - It was 45 minutes until kick off, but it still took
over 20 minutes to crawl through
the Little Kyger Road traffic from
Route 7 to River Valley High
School.
About ten minutes before game
time, Gallia County ~heriff's
deputies reported more than I ,200

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llusiness/Farm ............... DI·H
Classified .......................1)2-7
Deaths .............................. A-3
Editorai ............................ A-4
.Sports ............................. Cl-6
Wealher ..........................A-2

Thousands greet RVHS grid debut

NORTH
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BR_ID_G_E_ _ _ , .

Inside

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FOOTBA£.L
6AME
TICICET

UMWA chief Richard Trumka extolls
health care breakthroughs- A-4
James Sands traces the history of an
institution: Kanauga's Drive-In- A-5

Caddie • Tempt • Ebony • Ossify • SPEED
The teen had ~tten savaral traffic tickets so when
he came home w~h one more his Irate father scolded,
"There is more to life than Increasing ~·s SPEED."

VIIFE!

Bucks edge Louisville 20-19- C-1

Have a safe
and happy
Labor Day
holiday

by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWBS

YOU LOOK JU~f Ll K~

'

A famous author arrived in
court and was swom In by the
court bailiff, 'Do you solemnly
swear to tell as much of the
truth in court as you would in

l Y0 A R

I WASN'T

75 cents

MARIJUANA BURNING - Marijuana
plants burn near tht Ohio Dtp1111111ent or Transportation garage In Pomeroy, tbe result of marijuana eradication efforts by the Ohio National
Guard, the Ohio Attilrney General's office, the

Obki Division or Natural Resources, the Bureau
of Crlmlnalldendflcadon and Investigadon and
the Meigs County Sberifrs DepartmenL ffimesSentinel photo by Jim Glauner)

By AP, Staff Reports
WHARNCLIFFE, W.Va.- An
Ohio man was killed when a heavy
sheet or metal fell on him, a Slate
official said Saturday.
David A. White, 38, Gallipolis,
was the 12th worker to die at a
West Virginia mine this year,
according to the state Office of
Mine Health, Safety and Training.
The accident happened Friday at
a Mingo Logan Coal Co. Mine near
Wharncliffe, said Terry Farley, a
spokesman for the Slate mine safety
office.
The accidenl occurred just out·
side lhe mine as workers tried to
unload and move longwall shields
he said. The shields are used to
protect miners from rock falls
inside the mine.
White was a longwall foreman
atlhe mine, Farley said.
"Somehow, we don't know
how, one of those shields crushed
Mr. White," Farley said.
Calls to Mingo Logan Coal Co.
went unanswered Saturday.
No o~r injuries were reported,
Farley sa1d. The U.S . Mine Safety
and Health Administration and the
slate mine safety office were investigatin~ lhe accident.
Wh1Le, the son of James A.
White, a coach at Kyger Creek and
Point Pleasant high schools who
died in 1967, and Jennie White
Ashley of Cheshire, was well-'
known locally as the owner-openi.:
tor of White's Karate School in
Gallipolis. He was a member or the
First Baptist Church of Gallipolis
and had a~parently relocated to
Chapmanville, W.Va. He and his
wife, the former Lu Ann Folden,
were the parents of four children.
Services will be conducted
Monday in the Willis Funeral
Home, Gallipolis. For more details,
see A-3 of today's edition.
.·

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�Alertness helps solve theft-arson case

Three dead
:I in weekend
accidents

.,

September 6, 1992

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

Page-A2-5unday Times-Sentinel

POMER.OY - The importance
of residents obtaining license plate
numbers of suspicious vehicles was
clearly demonstrated Friday,
according 10 Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Soulsby.
Slleriff Soulsby reports the alert·
By The Associated Press
ness of a Columbia Township resiAt leasJ three people died in
dent in obtaining lhe license plate
traffic accidents on Ohio highways
number of a vehicle seen in the
thts Labor Day weekend; the State
area has resulted in the arrest of
Highway Patrol said ~allitday,
two subjects for the breaking and
The patrol counts holiday traffic
entering, theft of chain saws, and
fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday to
arson to a house discovered burned
midnight Monday.
Friday morning. The house was
The dead:
owned by Scott Nelson and was
FRIDAY
· being remodeled.
LIMA - Jeffrey L. Gordan, 26,
Albert D. Lee, 32, Albauy, and
Delphos, in a two-vehicle crash in
Dennis G. Hummel, 30, Shade, are
Allen County on State Route 65.
being held on charges of arson,
RAVENNA - Gregory L.
breaking and entering and theft.
Black, 10, Euclid, pedestrian hit by
Similar charges are expected 10 be
a car in Portage County on State
filed against a third suspect pend·
LEADER OF THE BAND - Sbana Ferrell, field commander
Route 14.
ing completion of the investigation.
for the Gallia Academy High School Marching Band, took charge
SATURDAY
According to a rep(lrt from
during the halrtime of Friday's Gallipolis-Meigs football game.
COLUMBUS - Gary Swartz·
Sheriff Soulsby, around 5 p.m. a
Gridiron action throughout tbe area began this weekend and
lander, 32, Madison, in a one-vehi·
vehicle in a ditch was pulled out by
detaUs
or Friday games will be round in today's C section. (Timescle crash on J. 71 in Franklin Counthe Columbia Township resident.
Sentinel photo).
ty.'
Around 7:15 a.m. the house being
remodeled by Scott Nelson on
nearby Darst Road was discovered
burned. The Columbia Township
Fire DeparUnent was called as was
COLUMBUS (AP) - Advo· office said cliecks by county elec· qualify.
an
investigator for the State Fire
The group had turned in peti· Marshal's
cates of term limits for politicians lion boards of petitions submitted
Office.
have cleared a final hurdle that will by Ohioans for Term Limits result· lions with 585,881 names on behalf
Later
Friday
afternoon, Scott
assure their proposal appears on lhe ed in at least 4!9,044 valid signa· of the proposed constitutional
amendment. The Ohio Ballot
lUres of registered voters.
Nov. 3 ballot.
The group needed 34 7, 765 to Board subsequently divided the
Secretary of State Bob Taft's
proposal into three issues that will
appear on statewide ballots.
John Jazwa, treasurer of
Ohioans for Term Limits, said Fri·
day he does not know what effect
the split may have.
GALLIPOLIS - United Way
"A lot of people say it 4oesn't of Gallia County will be hosting its
matter. I think it would be better if !992-92 campaign kickoff breakit was one, but I think we can get fast on Thursday, Sept. 17 at 8 am.
people 10 pass three just as well," at the Gallia County Senior Citi·
Jazwa said
zens Center, according to Wayne
No opposition group has sur· Benson, president.
faced, but Jazwa expects one will
Wilh a goal of $75,000, volunbe formed.
teers will be looking to top their
Issue 2 would limit U.S. sena· 1991-92total of $65,000.
tors from Ohio to two consecutive
Panicipating agencies include
six-year tenns. U.S. representatives Serenity House, Outreach Center,
would be limited to eight years of Gallia County Council on Aging,
·successive tenns.
Big Brothers/Big Sisters, GalliaMeigs Corporation for Community
CHARGE - River Valley High School Band members pep up
Action, Arthritis Foundation,
the audience with "Charge" during Friday night's football game
American Red Cross, Gallia Coun·
against Point Pleasant. (Times-Sentinel photo by Kevin Pinson)
ty
Chapter.
GALLIPOLIS - The Daily
Scouts has been added to
Sentinel and the Gallipolis Daily theGirl
&lt;Continued rrom A·l)
list
of agencies for 1992-93,
Tribune will not be published Monaccording
to Benson.
day so that its employees may
Jack Parsons and his wife Vick• dren. It's time for the parents to observe the Labor Day holiday.
"All the money stays in Gallia
ie are alumni of two of the old quit fighting and work for the
Regular publication and busi- County," said Benson. "Not one
kids."
cent goes 10 national dues." UWGC
COUJity schools, Kyger Creek and
ness hours resume Tuesday.
Perched
in
slands
at
the
east
end
only pays administrative costs to
Hannan Trace.
River Cities, to· whi~h the local
Their children attend Gallioolius of lhe field, in the shadow of the
City Schools, but like many other goal post, band members said they
organization is affiliated to.
people, they gave in to lheir curios- were excited about the change.
Cost for the kickoff breakfast, to
"All the schools are togelher and
ity and came out to have a look.
be
served by Bob Evans Restau·
By The Associated Press
rant,
is $2. Those wanting to attend
Mr. Parsons said he feels con· you get 10 meet new people," fresh·
Sunday, panty cloudy. Slight
solidation would be better 'with a man Wendy Belville said. "It's chance for showers and thunder- should contact the Gallia County
centrally located high school, but really imeresting."
storms west. Highs in the lower Chamber of Commerce for reserva·
. Freshman Melissa Hapney 80s.
tions.
he believes it is for the best.
"I'm really for it now," he said. added, "More sports, more acaExtended forecast
"I think it's really best for the chil· demics and a better education."
Labor Day-Wednesday:
RVHS cheerleaders seemed to
A chance of showers and thun·
be in love with the change.
derstorms Labor Day and Tuesday.
"I love it," said Maureen Kelly, Fair and cooler Wednesday. Lows
(Continued from A·l)
ranks eighth in the nation in mari- a junior.
in the lower 10 middle 60s Labor
"We love our football team," Day and Tuesday and in the middle
juana cultivation, receives
$190.000 per year for such opera- said junior Jessica White.
to upper 50s Wednesday. Highs 80
"We love River Valley," said to 85 Labor Day and Tuesday and
tions, according to Soulsby. Meigs
County was the fiTst county in Ohio Sally Saunders, a senior.
in the lower to middle 70s Wednes·
Despite the fact that RVHS lost · day.
to become involved in the eradication program, which began in the their season opener 31-22, many
Raiders fans left the stadium look·
carly 1980s.
ing pleased with their new team.
'"It's a great night for foothall,"
Principal Pat Stout said.
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Superintendem Roben Lanning Friday night's Ohio Lottery selec(USPS 525-800)
said the evening was a real eye- tions:
Pabliahed each Sunday, 825 'lbird Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio, by thl! Ohio Valley
ope~ for lhe county.
Pick 3
PubliahinJ CompanyfMuJtimedia, Inc.
"I
think
the
county
people
are
7-8-4
Second cia .. po1tapr.id at Callipotil,
Ohio 4563 t. EnteR! u 1ecand cla11
enlightened .by the fasc_inating
Pick 4
mailing matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Poat
things
that
are
taking
place
in
the
8-0-4-9
Office.
county schools," he said.
BuckeyeS
Member: 'I'he A11ociated Pre~~, and the
He added that he received many
8-9-14-18-24
Ohio New1paper Auociatioh, National
favorable comments on the team,
The Super Lotto jackpot was $4
Advertiaing Repruentalive, Branham
miltion.
the
band
and
the
school
and
Newa paper Sale1 , 133 Thin:l Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
believes the evening was a good
omen.
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"I think the enthusiasm of the
By Carrier or Motor Ro\lte
crowd
spoke for itself," he said.
One Week .....................................••....... 90t!
After the game, Woodall stood
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near
the
press
box
and
looked
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Friday
admissions - Georgia
PHlCE
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Wchrung, Middleport; Audrey
Sunday..........................................75 Cent.
"We should have named this Gaffney, Massilon.
No tuhscriptiona by mail pennltted in
Friday discharges - Bobby
school The Phoenix," he said. "It
areu where motor carrier tervic:e i1
really rose from its own ashes."
Stanley.
available .

Term limit proposal makes ballot

Nelson notified ·me sherifr s depart·
ment that he believed there had
been a breaking and entering and
theft of items from his house prior
10 it being set fire. He reported he
could not locate traces of several
chainsaws and other items in the
ruins of the burned house.
Deputy Ralph Trussell made the
initial report and obtained the
license tag number from the
Columbia Township resident.
Checking the area where the vehi·
cle had been in the ditch at 5 a.m. ,
several items were found that connected the vehicle to the bouse.
Friday evening, Investigator
Roben Beegle and special deputy
Kenny Hayes went to the Shade
area !0 locate the owner of the suspicious vehicle. The female owner
was located and it was learned that
the vehicle had been borrowed the
night before by a friend and it had
not been returned. She reported that
her neighbor told her the vehicle
and suspects had come to the trailer
shortly after she had gone to work.
Deputies obtained permission to
lnok around the area. After seeing
tire tracks across the yard going to.

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Manufactured Housing Industry.

set Thursday

Thousands greet. ..

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Virginia Barret, Langsville,
reponed Friday that someone had
taken speakers from her son's 1986
S 10 pickup truck. It was thought
that the speakers were taken while
the ouck was parked in Pomeroy.

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UW kickoff

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a brushy area, deputies discovered
four chain saws, a skill saw, a !able
saw and a welder lying hidden in
brush behind the bouse.
While getting information at the
Fossil Roell; Road residence, two
suspects returned in the vehicle and
were taken into custody.
Deputy Manning Mohler was
called to the scene to transport one
of the prisoners. Later, Deputy
Mohler went to Athens and picked
up the third suspect implicated in
the incident.
Sheriff Soulsby reported that
Assistant Prosecutor George
McCarthy assisted the officers in
the investigation.
The suspects are expected to
appear in Meigs County Coun on
Tuesday for a bond hearing. There
will be no coun Monday due to the
holiday.

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'
OPEN LABOR DAY
,,

1,1

By D;\. VE SKIDMORE
As5oclated Press Writer
. RUTLAND - Roben Burdell Black, 59, New Lima Road, Rutland,
WASHINGTON - When the
died on Tuesday, Sept I, 1992 at St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington
Labor Department reported an
W.Va., following a brief iUness.
·
'
unexpected decline in jobs during
He was born on April II, 1933 in Middlepo~ son of Burdell J. Black. · August, lhe 'Federal Reserve duti·
Pomeroy and the late Helen Howell Black. He was a mill operator at fully nudged interest rates lower 10
Ravenswood Alummum Corp., was affiliated with the Rutland Church of stimulate the economy.
the Nazarene, was a veteran of the U.S. Navy during the Korean Conflict
But analysts increasingly are
and was a member of the United Steelworkers of America. Local5668.
questioning whether the central
Besides hiS father, he is survived by his wife of 40 yearS, Connie Staats bank's easy-money policy can do
Black of Rutland; three sons, Lonme R. Black of Huntington, W.Va., much good. After all, the Fed has
Jason R. Black of Rutland, and Robert L. (Shellie) Greyhavens of Athens; cut rates 24 times since 1989 and
a brother, Warren Black of Rutland; a sister, Emmogene Dewees of Vero the economy remains sluggish.
Beach, Fla.; three grandchildren: Leslie of Bradenton, Fla., and Nicole
The Fed on Friday reduced the
and Nathan of Danville; SteJ)'mother, Effie Arnold Black; step-brothers, benchmark federal funds rate for
interbank loans by one-quarter perL~dy, S!3CY and Dale; step-sisters, Ruby Jones and Alice Bowling; and
several rueces and nephews.
centage point to 3 percent, a 29Besides his mother, he was preceded in death by a brother, BiU Black, year low, after the Labor Depart·
and a granddsughter, Mallory Black.
ment said employers slashed pay·
_Services were held Saturday at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene, rolls by 83,000jobs.
The unemployment rate edged
with Rev. Samuel Basye officiating. Burial will be in Miles Cemetery.
down to 7.6 percent in Augus~ but
Arrangements were under the direction of Birchfield Funeral Home.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made 10 the United Steelworkers
of America or the American Hean Association.

Lena Criner

. GALLIPOUS -Lena Walker Criner, 86, 14 Crozet St. , Gallipolis, ·
died Fnday, Sept. 4, 1992, at her residence.
She was a homemaker.
By STEVEN KOMAR OW
She was born Oct. 20, 1905 in Henderson, daughter of the late Charles
As5ociated Press Writer
Walker and Iva Henry Walker Lee.
President
Bush and Bill Clinton
Survivors include one daughter, Mrs. Herbert (Phyllis) Rowland of
roll
toward
the
traditional start of
Gallipolis; two sons, Odell Criner of Columbus, and Ervin Criner of
the
fall
campaign
with unwanted
Hilliard; two brothers, Lee Walker of Gallipolis Ferry, and Forrest Lee of
baggage: Bush is saddled with a
Pomeroy; three grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Rudy Criner, on Jan. 1, weak economy, while Clin10n deals
with lingering questions about his
1991; three infant children; three sisters; and one brother.
draft
record.
Graveside services will be held 2 p.m. Sunday at Pine S~Cemetery,
Bush
on Friday touted what he
with the Rev. Leland Allman and the Rev. Everett Delaney officiating.
said
was
a pro-business disposition
Burial will be in Pine Street Cemetery.
not found in his Democratic opponent.
"When it comes to renewing the
American economy, my loyalty lies
with small business," he said in an
GALLIPOLIS- D'avid Alan White, 38, 51 Hidden Valley, Chapappearance in Fredericksburg, Va.
manville, W.Va., died Friday, Sept. 4, !992 in lhe Charleston (W.Va.)
"I've actually held a job in the
Area Medical Center.
private sector - something my
Born July 3, 1954, in Huntington, W.Va., so~ of the late James A. opponent has not done,'' said
White, coach at Kyger Creek and Point Pleasant hag!! schools who di~ m Bush, who once ran an oil explo1967 and Jennie White Ashley of Cheshire, he was a longwall superviSOr ration business in Texas. "I know
forthe Mingo-Logan Coal Co.,Wharncliffe, W.V~. .
what it's like to sweat out a tough
A member of the First Bapust Church of Gallipolis, he was the owner deal."
and operator of White's Karate School in Galli~lis.
.
The latest news about the econo·
Surviving in addition to his mother are hiS Wife, Lu Ann Folden White, my also proved to be a tough deal
whom he married Dec. 30, 1983 in Rich Creek, Va.; four children, Nikki,
for the incumbent
Brandon,
and Secelia; a brother, Jim (Kris) White. of Pomeroy; a
Unemployment remains high,
niece Marlo White of Pomeroy; and a nephew, James White of Pom~y.
especially in lhe Midwest industrial
Se;..,ices will be 1 p.m. Monday in the First Baptist Church of Galhpo· states both candidates see as key to
lis with Pastor Archie CoM, Pastor Alvis Pollard and P~!!itor Bob J_en- the election; poveny is at a 27-year
ni~gs officiating. Burial will be in Gmvel Hill Cemetery. Fnends may call
high; and the household income of
at the Willis Funeral Home Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m., aud from noon the typical American family went
until I p.m. Monday at the church.
3.5 percent last year.
Pallbearers wiU be Danny Maynard, Billy McCreedy, Jon Rothgeb, down
In Little Rock, Ark., on Friday,
Mike Fitzgerald, RQger Hoops, Dale Adkins, Bill Wray and Jimmy Jew- Clinton and running mate AI Gore
accepted the endorsement of the
ea.Honorary pallbearers will be .~onnie Bea~h. Greg Dixon, Rick Sierra Club, the nation's oldest
McDaniel, Mark Simmons, Mike Zmlle, Fred Willtarns, Tom Gooch and environmental organization. ClinChip Haggerty.
ton took theopportunity to take

David Alan White

matic. The central bank does not
announce changes in its targe~ but
instead influences it by adding or
withdrawing reserves from the
banking system.
The Fed chose not to cut its
more influential discount rate,
which it charges on its own loans
to banks. The rate was reduced 10 3
percentJuly2.
Jones and other analysts believe
the Fed avoided the more dramatic
discount rate reduction for fear of
roiling foreign exchange markets.
For two weeks, the value of the
dollar has bounced off post-World
War II lows against the German
mark.
Lower U.S. rates, by making the
higher German interest rates look
even more attractive, tend to drive
the dollar even lower. But in the
end, economists said, the central

swipes at Bush's record.
But, after days of insisting he
had told all on the subject. Clinton
also confirmed news reports thai he
had known for months that his late
uncle obtained a Naval Reserve
position for Clinton 23 years ~o to
keep him out of Vietnam. Clinton
never took advantage of the opportunity.
Clinton said his comments from
earlier in the week were meant to
convey thai he had not been aware
of the lobbying campaign when it
occurred in the late 1960s.
"I think it was just a misunder·
standing," he said.
Torie Clarke, spokeswoman for
Bush'scampaign, said the develoJ)'
ments raised "very serious ques·
tions about Bill Clinton's outhfulness, honesty and integrity."
The Clinton campaign Friday
raised questions about Bush's sud·
den reluctance to join in debates
this fall . The Democrats long ago
agreed to take part in the debates
and said lhey weren't surprised that
Bush was trying to avoid them.
"It's no mystery," said Gore.
"If you were George Bush, would
you want to try to defend the worst
economic performance since the
Great Depression? They're trying
to figure out some way to get out of
it 1t
The Commission on Presidential
Debates, a bipartisan group, proposed three matchups between
Bush and CliniOn, starting Sept 22.

and one between Vice President
Dan Quayle and Gore. Clinton '
announced he would show up
regardless of whether Bush attend·
ed.
Bu sh planned to spend the
Labor Day weekend in the Mid·
west and border South, beginning
with appearances Saturday in
Painesville and Hendersonville,
N.C., and an overnight stay in
Louisville, Ky.
Clinton was sending Gore to the
traditional Labor Day rally for
Democrats in Detroit, while he was
paying visits to Harry Truman' s
hometown of Independence, Mo.,
and Cincinnati.
Quayle was attending the Southern 500 stock car race Saturday in
Darlington, S.C., and visiting Col·
orado and California on Labor Day.

Fear keeps immigrants away from hurricane aid
Guatemala. "They associate heli·
By ARTHUR ALLEN
Associated Press Writer
copters with strafing.
HOMESTEAD, Fla. - Despite
"And nobody will go to the tent
the aid flooding into south Flori- city because they're afraid of the
da's hurricane-flattened communi· Army. The army in Guatemala
ties, hundreds of immigrants are razed their houses and moved them
missing out because of language into camps."
barriers and fear, community
The Central Americans aren't
activists say.
the only ones reluctant to enter the
More than 24,000 soldiers, camps, even though up to 80 per·
police and volunteers had arrived cent of the buildings in Homestead,
in the area by Friday night, ,Passing a city of 20,000, have been
out everything from flashlights to declared unsafe.
chocolate and insulin.
Only about 300 people were liv·
But community activists said
fear of immigration and military
authorities was keeping some
Haitians and Central Americans
away, while others hadn't gotten
word of 1elief efforts in a language
they could understand.
On Friday, the U.S . Border
Patrol, responding to unconfirmed
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy .
repons of harassment, pulled out
Buttered Limas
18 agents who had been bringing
Hot Roll
supplies to labor camps.
Small Drink or Coffee
The measure was meant to reassure immigrants whose homes and
jobs were destroyed by Hurricane
Andrew, but some orficials believe
it could backfire because Border
- Pau·ol officers are knowledgeable
about the isolated camps where the
workers live.
"These people need ice, juice
and food. and we were gettin$ it to
them. I don't know who is gomg to
take our place," said Tony Hender·
son of the South Florida Border
Patrol.
Attorney General William Barr,
on a visit to the area. said undocu·
...
mented workers would not be ·
detained, and urged them to come
fotward for llClp.
·
But authorities were trying to
battle rumors that spread through
the immigrant community of lmmi·
gration and Natwalization Service
agents pursuin' illegal aliens.
South Flonda's nurseries and
orchards had employed thousands
of Haitians, Salvadorans,
Guatemalans, Mexicans. Most are
unaccustomed to seeking govern·
ment help, and some are pondering
moving on.
"What's the pay like in New
York?" Jose Pablo Ramirez, 26, of
Guatemala asked a visitor Friday.
Ramirez had earned $4.25 an hour
at a fruit-packing company
destroyed by the hurricane. He
never ~ot his last paycheck.
Relief wod:ers say lhe devasta·
tion in Homestead and Florida City
- and the military troopS called in
to clean up and restore onler - are
an uncomfortable reminder of the
Day
war and unrest that many immi·
grants fled.
"The helicopters scare lhe hell
out of people," said Jack T.
Pl11a •
Leonard, who works wilh a community of I ,200 Maya Indians from

ing Friday in Army-built camps
that have the capacity to hold nearly 4,000. Soine say they want to
stay and defend what's left of their
propeny, despite military assurances that looting will not occur.
To add to the woes, more rain
was forecast for Saturday - normal for this time of year.
The American Red Cross said
preliminary estimates show the
hurricane damaged or destroyed
97,000 homes in Florida and
14,000 in Louisiana.

Dade County officials said Fri·
day they would discipline builders
and inspectors whose negligence
contributed 10 s10rm damage.

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~-

bank had"! give greater weight to
the domesuc economy than 10 the
dollar.
_
But because lhe ~ed's mo-:e Fn· ~
day ~as relatively llmid,
economists srud the effect on bor·
rowers would be mmimal. They do
not believe banks will lower their
prime rate from 6 percem, which
servesasabaseformanyconsumer
rates.
However, banks may well pass
on the federal funds rate cut to
deJ!'!Sitors. . _
.
I thmk this 1s an opportumty
for the banks to once more lower
the rates on small-denomination
certificates of deposit and money
market accounts. They're already
below 3 percent in many cases and
they will go lower," said Elliott
Piau of Donaldson, Lufkin and lenreue.

To each his own ...

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only because'of a temporary Ceder·
al jobs program for teen-agers.
When lhe latest cycle of easing
began lhree years ago, the federal
funds rate was 9.75 percent
"The amazing part of the story
is lhat all of lhat easing has barely
kept the economy out (If reces·
sion," said economist David Jones
of Aubrey G. Lanston &amp; Co., a
government securities dealer in
New York.
"It's the first time since the
1930s thai J?orrowers have been so
unresponstve to lower Interest
rates," he said. "The reason, of
course, is too much debt and not
enough jobs."
Of the Fed's two major 1001s for
stimulating the economy, lo~ring
the federal funds rate -lite toter·
est banks charge each other for
overnight loans - is the less dra·

sunday nmes--Sentlnei-Page--Aa:

Unwanted baggage finds space
in opening of fall campaigning

FALL
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CARDINAL
__________

Southern Auto Sales
701 Second Ave., Gallipolis

Experts question Fed's easy money policy

SUNDAY,SEPTEMBER 6, 1992
BAKED SWISS STEAK DINNER

The Sunday Timt•-Sentine1 wtll not be
reapon~ible ror advance payment. made
LoeaJTien.

--Area deaths--

SUNDAY SPECIAL

Hospital news

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

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Eradication...

September 6, 1992

Offer Explr• 8-30-02

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�1992

•

'Commentary and perspective
lll5 Thlnl Aw, Galllpolll, Ohio

111 Court St., Pomeny, Ohio
(614) m-:U!6

(614) 4#-1341

ROBERTL. WINGETT

Poblllhet'
HOBART WILSON JR.
Esecudn Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assbtaot PubU.ho...C..atnJIIer

A MEMBER of The A"ociatod Pren, and tbe Americao
Newspaper Publisbcn Assooialion.
LETTI!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They should bo less tbao
300 words. All lcttcn are subject to editing and must bo signed witb
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned Jetton will be
pobUshed. Letton should be in good tAste, addressing issues, not
personalities.

:·For UMWA families,
-a reason to celebrate
•

: In her 73 years, Dixie Woolum's seen a lot of La~r I?ays from her
• home in Cinderella, W. Va., but chances are thiS year s mtght be one of
: the best ever. That was hardly the case, though, up until a few weeks ago.
· Dixie· s like a lot of people you might meet in the coal fields. Her hus: band, Jimmy, worked in the mines for 45 years before he died of black
'· lung and cancer. Since then, life hasn't been easy for Dixie, but at least
·:she didn' t have to worry about her medical care. Thanks to a promise
:·made to the UMW A by .the federal government back in 1946 neither
&lt;Dixil&gt;-{)r 120,00 other retired coal miners or widows-would ever have
to worry about who'd pay the doctor or druggist once they retired.
For years the promise was kept: coal operators lived up to their com• mitment and contributed to the UMWA Health and Rebrement Funds und
·:folks lilce Dixie and Jimmy could rest easy knowing that· even if their
· health was failing, at least a trip to the hospital wouldn't send them to the
, poor house.
: But, as any coal field family will tell you, that aU began to change a
; few years back. Companies that once paid in to the health care funds
;:began to go broke. Others shrugged off their obligation and walked away
• leaving a shrinking nwn ber of coal operators to keep the promise made a
: generation before.
·
• If you read the newspapers you know that retired workers facing the
; loss of their health care has become as commonplace as it is ouuageous.
:· One survey of 72 major US. employers found that 6 percent are plun· .
ning to cut retiree benefitS. What's more, when the federal government's
own General Accounting Office looked at 40 companies which went
bankrupt what they discovered was that half of those bankruptcies wiped
'
•
A'
out ,,
,...ear• ~~"J":'C

8

I ~~salllC-m-·
• •••
,;,..

..., ..

M,

every 167 years in Nebraska. AFL·
CIO safety expert Jim EUenberger
notes that while some of the gov·
ernment's statistics-gathering is

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
flawed and controversial, the pic·
ture cum:ntly points to an upswing
in injuries and illnesses since 1984.
"It is clear that the plant that
wants to operate in a way that jeep.
ardizes the lives and the health of
its workers has a very, very good
chance of gettin~ away with it and
never having un mspection," AFLCIO President Lane Kirtland told
our associate Dale Vun Aua. "His·
tory has proven that if employers
think they have a pretty damn good
chance to do it, they'll do it. And
that's the word that's being sent out
by all this talk about deregulation
and getting govemm~nt off the
backs of business and so forth.''
American insurance companies
are emerging as unlikely allies of

workers in the crusade for work·
place safety - even if it is driven
more by checkbook than by con·
science. Fewer accidents mean
fewer payouts on workers' com·
pensauon insurance. Most of the
top insurers offer safety experts
and programs for the companies
they insure, which may well do
more for -worker safety than
OSHA.
DuPont usually ranks ator near
tlte top for safety programs, and it
was one of the earliest American
companies manufacturing explo·
sives. Amflng DuPont's 100,000
employees, they average a mere 30
lost-time claims each year. This is
a lost workday incidence rate of
just .04 in 1990 when the national
average was 78.7.
Sometimes safety is as simple as
re-inventing the way a pole is
climbed. When 100 muny workers
were getting injured on the job,
AT&amp;T formed a school for pole·
climbing in Valley Forge, Pa., to
develop a safer way to shinny up
t~e pole. The "three-point con·
tact" method was devised, which
means that lhree limbs should be
touching the pole at all times. The
number of accidents among pole
climbers plummeted.

--i

•

But this L8bor Day, Dixie Woofum"doesn't have lo worry about join·
ing the victims of the retiree health care crisis because the health care ben·
efits promised her-and every other retired coal mining family are weU.
on their way to being protected by law.
And the reason why has nothing 10 do with any Washington power
brokers, but the simple truth that UMWA families, were wiUing to mobi·
lize and mount the kind of grass-roots campaign it talces for working peo·
pie to win in the 1990s.
Coupled with the unique courage and leadership of U.S. Sen. Jay
Rockefeller. coal mining families wielded clout seldom seen when orga·
nized labor goes to Capitol Hill. We rallied in Utah und Virginia, made
phone calls in Illinois and Indiana, lobbied in. Ohio and KentuCky, wrote
letters in West Vtrgml3 and Alabama and buolt strong commumty coati·
tions from Pennsylvunia to Now Mexico and more.
The fact is that by mobilizing as labor seldom is expected to, coal min·
ing families won a battle many expected us to lose. The result is that,
today, for the first time ever, legislation putting t!'e UMW~ Health and
Retirement Funds back on sound financial footmg os making ots way to he
White House with both Democratic and Republican backing.
Are there new lessons working people can learn from the UMWA's
breakthrough in protecting retire health care? Plenty, but they aren't so
much new lessons as they are ones which have been forgotten. One is that
when a union understands that its pensioners are a source of strength-not
a weakness-its power is magnified a thousand fold Another is that when
you elect people to office like Jay Rockefel\er-leaders with courage who
are willing to stick their necks out for working people-even thiS govern·
mcnt can do the right thing.
,
This Labor Day the Dixie Woolum's all over America can rest a liule
easier and. because of that, every UMWA family has something to cele·
brate.
Submitted by Richard L. Trumka, president, United Mine Work·
ers of America

September 6, 1992:
I

Patrol plans fly-in breakfast

Page-M
'

POINT PLEASANT - The Point Pleasant Composite
~guadron-Civil Air Patrol will hold the 19th Annual Labor Day fly.
m on Monday at the Mason County Airport on Route 62 two miles
north of Pomt Pleasant.
Breakfast will be served from 8·11 a.m., and lunch will be
served fr~m , 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Plane rides wiU be available from
Raven Avoatoon. Everyone os welcome.

Berris World

The Dallas-based Coca-Cola :
Bottling Group was struggling :
under the wei~t of workers' ~- :
pensation claims that were eaung .
up 79 percent of the budget. Many :
of the accidents wen: occurring on '
the lrailcrs that hauled the bottles. \
Employees' opinions were solicited i
and the result was more trailts hand ·
grips, lowering the entire trailers 2 ,
inches (which made it ~ to P_ull :
cases off) and improvmg mtenor •
lighting.
:
In addition, learning from their :
800 route drivers that most acci- •
dents nccuned in the morning, the i
company instituted warm-up exer· :
cises for the drivers, which slashed :
the accident rate.
·
•
On the other hand, too often •
American industry believes the :
price of a safe workplace is too :
high. Ed Welch, former workers' ·
compensation commissioner of !
Michigun, describes the two differ- :
ent approaches - one commend- :
able, the other condemnable - ·
undertaken by auto plants facing
safety threats.
:
The commendable example is ·
an automotive plant that found that .
a VfllY high portion of their work· :
ers' camp costs were related to ·
carpalllmnel syndrome (a painful, :
incapacillting wrist injury) - and
tnr;eable to the use of a specific air ·
gun throughout the plant. The
workers wanted all the air guns.
replaced, but the plant manager
balked. The total cost would be
$15 million, and he had no budget ;
for it. So a workers' committee :
regrouped and examined tl.e data. ·
~ discoYered lhaliKl pm:cnt
of the mjurics were altributable to
ail guns used on only 20 pen:ent of .
the jobs. The plant manager readily ·
tgleed he could alfOid that, and the :
new safety measure was imple- •
men ted.
The condemnable example :
comes rrom a Michigun plunt that ·
also found itself submerged under i
carpal tannel claims coming from :
one particularly strenuous opera- '
tion. Management's remedy was to ~
relocllc the flanl to Indiana, where :
the workers comp rates are sub- :
stantially lower.
:
"They are now able to continue,
to injure these workers withoutj
having to pay as much in compen- 1
sation benefits," Welch says.
;
Copyright 1992, United Featuw
.
Syndocate,lnc.
;'

Israel, PLO and Young's vindication
One thing is certain about
Andrew Young. The Baptist minis·
ter·civil rights leader-Southern
politican-U.N. diplomat turned
global businessman is interminably
patient. Job would have been
impressed.
It has talcen 13 years - not a
long time by biblical standards but
an enormous time span in Ameri.
cun politics. Now, bowever, Young
is on the verge of vindication paradoxically by the prime minister
of the nation whose American
allies ignominiously forced
Young's resignation as U.N.
ambassador.
Young's "transgression" when
he represented his country at the
United Nations is exactly what
Israel's modem-day Isaiah, Yitzhak
Rabin, is doing today - trying to
find a formula that will fulfill the
Palestinian historical imperative for
self-determination.
Rabin is offering the Palestinian
negotiating team an adminisuative
governing council with limited
authority. It's the best deal they've
ever received, said Rabin. He's
absolutelY. right.
But it s also a bit like someone
in the 1850s unnouncing that "'the

best deal'' for slaves was the aboli·
tion of the whipping PQ$L
The Palestinian delegates in
Washington are seeking a duly

between the Charybdis of a hanl·
line Palestinian Liberation Organi·
zation and the ScyUa of an agree·
ment with Israel that does not come
off as a sellout of Palestinian inter·
ests.
Rabin must walk a similar line
between the rock of guaranteeing
Israel secure borders and the hard
place of giving up something that
elected legislative body that would Palestiniuns view as significant
govern the two Israeli-occupied ter·
This may be why Rabin
ritories, the West Bunk and Gaza semaphores contradictory signals.
strip. Both sides acknowledge that "We will not budge one inch," he
such a move would be a fust Slep recently told a visiting group of
toward Palestinian independence.
East think tankers. But
Rabin has shown considerably Middle
when pressed by his strategic
more enlightened. statesmanship American ally, he has hedged.
than his truculent right-wing prede- •'That does not mean we have to
cessor, Yitzhak Shamir, in trying to cling
lo every single centimeter (of
budge the Israeli·Palestinian·Syriun . the Golan Heights)."
peace talks off of dead center.
To Golan Hei~hts settlers, such
Also, his fledgling administration rhetorical flexibility means handing
has already repaired the Shamir- over some centimeters of their land
inspired schism between Israel and as a sacrificial lamb b peace with
America.
.
In the current negotiations, both s~
Andy Young knows the feeling.
sides have been guilty of excessive He was basted as a saaifJCiallamb
rhetoric, roo many non-negotiable after siu:ing down in 1979 with the
stances ahd'recurring contradic· PLO representative, Zehdi Labib
lions.
Teni, at the Manhattan home of
The Palestiniun negotiators must the Kuwaiti ambassador to the
continually walk the thin line . United Nations.

Chuck Stone

GOP to open headquarters
GALLIPOLIS - A ribbon cutting ceremony for the Gallipolis
Republicun Headquaners will be held at 10 a.m. Sablrday, Sept. 12
at428 Second Ave., next to the Ariel Theatre.
A speaker will be announced later. Refreshments will be served.

Gallia board to meet
GALLIP9LIS - The Gallia County Local School Board has
called a special meetmg for Tuesday at 6:30p.m. at the administra·
uve offices, Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis. Items on the agenda include
bus driver certification, resignations und employment.

Hunter education course offered

GALLIPOLIS - ~ h~ter education course will be held 6 p.m.
Sept. 1~ at the Galhpo~os Gun Club, Buckridge Road, Gallipolis.
. Pre·regostrabon os requtred, For more information, or to register,
call the Park Offtee at 4464612 before 4 p.m. Sept. 14.

Planned parenthood closed

~ALLIPOLIS :Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio's patient
servoces offices wtll be closed Sept. 7 in observance of Labor Day.
Offices will reopen at 8:30a.m. Sept. 8.
\

RVHS student orientation set
GALLIPOLIS • Student orientation for River Valley High
School has been scheduled for the week of Sept. 8, said Principal
Patnck Stout.
Freshmen and sophomore orientation will be Sept. 8 and 9 und
junior und senior orientation will be Sept. 10 and 11. Orientation
will run the same times as regular school days, from 8:30 a.m. to
2:30p.m. Busses will run during orientation week.
Students need only attend the forst week of school on the days
they are scheduled for orientation. Regular classes at RVHS will
begin Sept 14.
Anyone who has questions concerning orientation may call
RVHS at 367-7377 or the superintendent's office at446-7917 .

RVHS visitation scheduled
GALLIPOLIS • Students and parents who wish to visit the new
River Valley High School before classes begin are invited to drop in
from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sept. 6, Principal Patrick Stout said. An open
house for the general public will be scheduled at a later date .

Blood drive scheduled for URG
GALLIPOLIS • The American red Cross Tri-State Region BI&lt;XX)
Services will conduct a blood drive from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sept 28 at
the University of Rio Grande's Rhodes Student Center. Anyone
between the ages of 17 and 80 who weighs at least 110 pounds and
has not given blood in the past 56 days is encouraged to donalc.

Police investigate robbery
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis Police Department is investigating un ~robbery.
. Patricl3 Bonilla, Gautensburg, Tenn., reported Friday morning
that while parking ber car in front of the Krogers store in Gallipolis
~ mun got out of a white Chevrolet Camaro, grabbed her purse and
left the scene.
The purse reportedly contained between $500 and $700 cash,
checks and identification.

Three jailed overnight

.

GALLIPOLIS - Three people were placed in the Gallia County
Jail Friday evening und Saturday morning.
Jailed were: Ricky A. Jones, 27, 1601 Clay Chapel Rd., Crown
City Friday evening for a driving under the influence commitmen~
Stanley 0. Wall, 30, 1747 Bob M~nnick Rd., Gallipolis, Fri'!ar
evening on a bench warrant for failure to appear for scheduled jail
time· Raymond G. Rhoades, 38, 2615 1/2 Jackson Avenue, Point
Pl~t. W.Va., Saturday morning by the Gallipolis Police Depart·
ment on a charge of driving under the influence.

'

When news of this confidential·'
meeting was leaked 10 the press.:
angry howls skyrocketed from an ;
anguished American Jewish com· ;
munity. Young, the fm black U.N. ;
ambassador in American history, :
was forced to n:sign.
,
Curiously, Young's detractors ;
ignored the identical negotiations '
that the U.S. ambassador to Aus- :
tria, Millllll Wolf, bad quietly been :
conducting wilh PLO represcnta- :
lives. As Presidenl Carter's wife, '
Rosalynn, dryly observed, the dou· '
blc standanl in the treatment of the :
two diplomats was based on the ·
fact that Wolfwas Jewish.
Thirteen years laler, the world is vaslly diffcn:nL Communism is no,
longer an "evil empire." South ' ·
African apartheid is crumbling. ,
Israelis, Palestinians and Syrians;
are playing tippy·toe in the watersi
of~
,
That combination of circum- ;
stances augers well for a lasting·
Middle East peace- where "they:
shall sit every man under his vine;
and fig tree; and none shall makej
them afraid" - one that would ,
completeJy vindicate Andy Young. '
(C}I992
NEWSPAPERl
ENJ'ERPRISE ASSN.
'

Five cited by police
GALLIPOLIS - Five people received citations or summonses ·
overnight from the Gallipolis Poti.ce Departmenc
JIIJ!les R. Meadows, 65, Henderson, W.Va., received a citation
and a summons to appear in coun on a charge of parking in a hand•·
capped zone: l..ar!ce C. T~ylor, 21, 18 Autumn HiU Rd., Bidwell,
citation for speeding: Davtd L Barnett, 25, 51 M31!ison Ave., Gal·
lipolis citation for open contatner; Donald L. Ratliff Jr., 17, 2553
Swan 'Creek Rd., Crown City, citation for fictitious re~istration:
Charles N. Cox, 22, Route 2. Gallipolis, citation for speeding.

Patrol probes bus-car collision
DARWIN - A Chester woman was cited after a bus-car colli·
sion on Cook Road in Bedford Township Fndar around 7:45a.m.
According to a report from ~ Gallia-Meogs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, a school bus driven by Leta L. Laudermtlt, 42,
37701 Wolfe Pen Rd., Pomeroy, was westbound on Cook Road. An
• eastbound car driven by Judy Schleifer, 37, 38883 Skinner Run
. Rd., Chester, ;.,as left of center in a curve and struck the bus headon.
Schleifer and 34 passengers on the bus were transported to ~et·
erans Memorial Hospital by the Meogs County Emergency Medical
Service where they were examined und relejlsed.
·
·
Damage to Laudermilt's 1990 International bus was listed as
moderated. Oam1J8e to Schleifer's 1980 AMC Pacer was listed as
hea and disabling.
;lhleifer was cited for left of center.

Disclosure laws target home sellers
By the Editors
or Consumer Reports
Home sellers lake note. A grow·
ing number of states now require
sellers to complete a fonn that dis·
closes any defects in their property.
So far this year, Kentucky, New
Hampshire, Virginia and Wisconsin have approved disclosure regulations put forth by the powerful
National Association of Realtors.
California and Maine already had
such rules on the books. The trade
group says that 20 other states are
considering disclosure law as a
result of its lobbying campaign.
What's in it for the real-estate

agents? Some protection from law· been required 10 complete a
suits, for one thing. The realtors detailed, two-page form since
want blame for any undisclosed 1986, the number of lawsuits
defects in a house to rest with the against agents has decreased,
accooling to Steve Sokal, associale
seller, not the agent.
This isn't the forst time the real· general counsel for the California
tors have tried 10 protect them· Association of Realtors. "Yes, it
selves w.hen trouble surrounds a benefits the realtors," says Sob!.
sale. A deca~e ago, th~ reaii!JrS "But it also benefits the 9CIIer and
began promoung home-mspecuon ~ bu~~ .~ ue fewer
programs and warranties on exist· mosun
.....
The
disclosure
forms we've
ing homes. They had lost court
seen
go
beyond
the
condition
of the
cases brought by angry home buy·
ers, who charged that the agent had furnace or the age of the roof.
misrepresented the condition of the Some Cllamples: California's form
includes questions ranging from the
houses.
In CaUfomia, where sellers have condition of appliances 10 neigh·
borhood noise problems. New
Hampshire's form asks if the·well
has ever gone dry, whether the
house contains lead-based paint, or
In 1836, Sam Houston was elected president of the ~bile of TeJUJS.
if lhe !!Cller has been in\'!llved in a
In 1882, the nation's first Labor Day parade was held m New York.
· property-line dispute. ~isconsin
In 1905, the Treaty of Portsli!Outh ending the Russo-Japanese War was sellels must answer qUCSIJOIIS about
asbeslos oo their poperty, lalllites
signed in New Hampshire.
.
In 1914, the First Battle of the Marne began dunngWorld War I.
or cupenlcr !lilts, or extraordinary·
"contemplated" property-tax
In 1939 the United States proclaimed its neutrality in World Warn. ·
In 197S, President Gerald R. Ford escaped un attempt on his life by Increases.
Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, a disciple of Charles Manson, in Sacramcn·
Even sellers who live in states
that don 'I require disclosure may
~Cali[
.
In 1977, West German industrialist HunnS·Mar!in Schleyer was kid· find themselves faced with a form.
napped in Cologne by members of the Baader-Memhof gung. (Schleyer That's because 33 states have vol·
unwy disclosure forms and some
was later killed by his captors.)
.

Today in history__·--~---By The Associaled Press

Today is Saturday, SepL 5, the 249th day of 1992. There are 117 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Twenty years ago, on Sept. 5, 1972, terror struck the summer Olympic
games in Munich, Wesl Germany, as five Arab ¥Uerrillas invaded the
quarters of !he Israeli delegation, ldlling two Isr'aelis and taking nine odJ.
ers hostage. The crisis culminated in an airport shootout tiuJI claimed the
lives of all the hostages, the hostage-lalcers and a German policeman.
On this date:
In 1698, Russia's Pcler the Great imposed a lalt on beards.
In 1774, the first Continental Congress assembled in Philadelphia.
''

''

real-eslate brokers require them .
For example, Coldwell Banker's
500 company-owned franchises
won't list a house until they n:ceive
a completed disclosure form from
the owner.
'
Despite the push 10 pass disclosure laws, our advice 10 hOme buy·
ers remains unchanged. A seller's
disclosiR form can't substiblte fot
a ®iled inspection by an irnpai'·
tial proCessional who will give you
a report in writing. That's still lhe
best way to fmd out if your dream
house is a nightmare waiting to

~·following

requi~

states
home sellers to fill our a form dis·
closing defec:u: California, Ken··
lucky, Maine, New Hampshire,
Virgtnia (effective July 1, 1993)
and Wi3consin.
Legislatures in these states may
consider ICiler-diJclosure biDs this
year or next Alaska, Connecticut,
Delaware, Hawaii,lllimis, Indiana;
Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan,
Mississippi, Mi110uri, Nebraska,
New Mexico, New York, Ohio·,
Otlahoma, Orqon, Rhode lslund,
Soulh c.oilna and Texas.
··
(C)1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-AS

Local News in Brief:·----. Gallipolis' original outdoor

I

OSHA not living up to its task
WASHINGTON - At least one
American worker is killed every
hour of every day on the job more than 10,000 workers a year.
Every five seconds another worker
. is injured on the job, or some 6
million a year.
More than 20 years after the
passage of the Iundmark Occupa·
tiona! Safety and Health Act, the
federal agency charged with pro·
tecting worker safety and health,
OSHA, receives $380 million a
year to carry out its mission of pro·
tecting nearly 100 million Ameri·
can workers - less than $4 per
worker.
In comparison, the federal government spends four times as
much, $1.1 billion, to prOtect fish
and wildlife. In the past decade,
OSHA's budget for safety training
amounts to 2 cents for each worker
· under its jurisdiction. Unemploy·
ment and safety are the double
whammy for the American water
this Labor Day.
The lack of funding means that
at OSHA's current level of inspec·
lions, it will talce them 84 years to
reach every workplace. The state·
by· state profile ranges from
inspecting each workplace once
every I I years in Nevada to once

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

Recycle Day slated
. POMEROY - Meigs High
School will hold Recycle Day on
Saturday, Sept. 26 from 9 a.m. to 1
p.m.
Items to be accepted include
used motor oil not mixed with
other substances, tires without
rims, old appliances. ex~ ~frig·
erators, freezers or atr condiuoners:
aluminum and other non-ferrous
materials, glass, batteries !Uid pi~·
tics. Newsprint and cardboard wtll
not be accepted.
Volunteers will be on hand to
help unload the reca,;~bles ..Items
frOm businesses or
ers wtll·not
be accepted.
Recycle Day is sponsored by
Meigs High School, Meigs VICA
Club, Meigs Co!JDty Litter Prcven· .
tion and n:cycJin&amp; Propn, Safety·
• · ~. lbler4WO atterios, Mid·
~~
Jisw ~, the

•

w.-

' Athe.ns~Gallla-Hocking~Jackson· '
Meigs· Vin10~ So_lid W~ District

· Informauon JS available from
the Meigs County Litter Prevention
and Recycling office at 992-6360.

theater, 'The Airdome'
By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS -The decade of
the 1950s probably contributed more
to "pop culture" than any othe( single
decade, what with its music, dance,
films and fads.
There were some .
great songs in the
decade like: "He's :· .
Got The Whole
World In His ·
Hands", "Climb
Every Mountain",
UF.rlelweiss",":Mona
Lisa", '"The Wayward Wind", und
"Shall We Dance". On the other hand
it also produced "Purple People
Eater", "See You Later AUigator",
"Yakety Yak", "Splish Splash" und
"Kookie, Kookie, Lend Me Your
Comb".
It was the decade that gave us the
Cha·Cha, the Calypso, the recycled
and "hipped up" Virginia Reel called
the Stroll and the various bops: slop,
pony, chicken, monkey und alligator.
The 1950s gave us Elvis', wiffle ball,
silly putty, slinky, harbie doU,legos,
hula hoop, frisbees, baseball cards
(as a serious hobby), Davy Crockeu,
credit cards, Scrabble, 3-D, and of
course all those early television
shows.
LaStly the 1950s gave us "cruisin"
and drive-in movies. While the forst
drive-in was builtin 1933 in Camden,
New Jersey ,the fad really didn 'tcatch
on until the 1950s.
Gallipolis' drive-in movie, the
Kanauga, opened on September 9,
1950. Admission was 50 cents for
adults with children 12 and under
admitted free.
The first movie shown on the 53
by 56-foot screen was "Colt45" with
Randolph Scou. The next two mov·
ies were also of the "shoot-em up"
variety. There was"Young Man With

A Horse" starring Kirk Douglas and
George Montgomery. in "Indian
Scout". Later that month one could
see "Mrs. Mike" with Dick Powell
and Evelyn ~eyes, '"The Great ~
Patch"withDennisO'KeefeundGatl
Russell, "Apartment For Peggy",
"Adventure Island" with Rory
Calhoun,and '1'hel..aSt Bandit" star·
ring William EUiou.
· The Kanauga was built by Fred
W. Wheeler who began in the movie
business here in 1919 when he rook
over the Gallipolis Theatre. In 1937
he built the Colony. Harry Wheeler
was the first manager of the drive-in
that was built on a 17-acre plot tiuJ1
accommodated 500 cars. Work on
the project began in May of1950 but
due to a wet summer the official
opening had to be put back about a
month.
While the Kanauga was the forst
drive-in forGaUia County, it was not
the first outdoor theatre. From 1911
to 1916, Ed Kuhn operated the Air·
dome in the backyard of 512 Second
Avenue. The Airdome had canvas
flaps about 10 feet high lhal fonned a
square. The top was ail. Of course.
pictures were only shown on clear
swnmer nights. When it rained pa·
trons were asked to go to the Greenland Theatre, then located in un old
building that preceded the Colony
Theatre.
In the summer, people would say
about the Greenlund "you put down a
nickel, but you get a 'scent' back." It
was in order to fmd a solution to
theatre heat that Kuhn invented the
Airdome. One night's entenainment
at the Airdome could be illustrated
by the following ad from the Tribune: ''The Victoria Cross. At the
famous charge of the Light Brigade
during theCrimeun War, noneamong
the gaUant600 was braver than Lieut.
Cholmonderly, who won the Victo-

DRIVF -IN - The Kanauga Drive-In was first opened Sept. 9,
1950, by the Wheeler ramily. The rtrst three movies shown were west·
ems. Gallipolis' rorst outdoor theater was the Airdome (1911·1916).
James Sands is a special Sunday
ria Cross and the Colonel's daughter
. The film is from Vitagraph . Also Times-Sentinel correspondent. His
from Kalem studios, "A Leap Year address is: James Sands, 65 Wil·
OK 431NI!I,
Elopement" (farce comedy) and a 3- low Drive,
reel western picture. Admission is 5
cents. Music will be provided by the
Airdome Orchestra."
In 1913, Charley Chaplin's ftlms
were quite popular at the Airdome.
The Gallipolis Theatre apparently
didn '1 think much of Chaplin's brand
of humor until 1915 when he ftrst
appeared on film on a regular basis
there. Ofcourse many of the shows at
the Airdome included illustrated
songs. In 1912, you could sing along
to "Moonlight Bay", " My Melun·
choly Baby", '"Be My Little Baby
Bumble Bee", "I Want a Girl, Just
Like the Girl that Married Dear Old
Dad." Then there were those "old"
songs of the previous decade: "Wait
Till the Sun Shines NeUie", "Glow
Worm" and "Take Me Out to the
Ballgame."

EMS units answer early weekend calls ·
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service responded to 12 calls for
assistance on Friday and early Sat·
urday morning.
On Friday at 10:14 a.m. the
Syracuse unit was called to Mount
Olive Road in Long Bottom for
Luella Driggs who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Racine unit at 1:40 p.m.
met Elizabeth Salser at the Racine
Fire Station. She was talcen to Veterans.
The Middleport unit went to
Overbrook Center at 4:21 p.m. for
Georgia Wehrung who was taken
to Veterans. The unit was called
again at 5:48 p.m. for Georgia
Wehrung wlio was again taken to
Veterans .
At 5:40p.m. the Middleport unit
went to Rutland Street for Helen

Williams who was talcen to Pleas· unit responded tii an auto accident
on East Main in which Keith Scott
ant Valley Hospital.
At 7:32 p.m. the Rutland unit ·was talcen to Veterans.
went to Noble Summit Road for --------------------~
Cassandra Morris who was trans·
ported to Veterans . .At 8:50p.m.
Busine.s-.r
she was transported by Lifeflight to
.
~0~
Childrens Hospital in Columbus.
The Middleport unit at 8:40
~
p.m. was called to South Second
for Audsi Daffney who was taken
to Veterans.
At 9:33 p.m. the Tuppers Plains
unit went to Eastern High School
"The
for Maggie Wayneright who was
treated but 001 transported.
The Racine unit, at 9:37 p.m., School that
transported Xffill, Turley from
means
Southern High Schocll to Veterans.
Business"
On Saturday at 1:27 a.m. the
Pomeroy unit transported Ricky
SPRING
Queen from Wolfe Drive to VeterVALLEY
ans and at 1:47 p.m. the Pomeroy
PLAZA

•

CALL TODAY

Group holds picnic
COOLVILLE - The Modern
Woodmen of America, Camp
10900, held a "Rest and Relax·
ation" picnic at the Hocking River
Campground.
The opening service included a
prayer by Jessie Brooks, the Wood·
men's Creed by Linda Frasier and
"America," led by Marjorie Mal·
one, CoolviUe. The Pledge of AUe·
glance was led by Roy Breedlove,
Belpre.
All Troy Township residents
were invited to attend a town meet·
ing at the Coolville Lions Club to
express their opinions and concerns
about county government to Athens
County Republican candidates for
political office.
The proceeds of the current
Matching Fund Drive will be pre·
sented to a representative of the
Athens County Historical Society
and Museum at a victory party,
held at Hocking River Camp·
ground, State Route 144, Coolville,
at 4 p.m. Monday, Sept. 7. A vol·
leyball game is scheduled for 5
p.m. Sandwiches, dessert and bev·
erages will be furnished by the
camp.

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1992

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�Pomeroy-MiddlePQrt-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

:Along the River
~ Pomeroy

MT. DEW,

By JULIE E. DILLON
Tlmes·Seatlnel Starr

OR .

POMEROY • The centennial of
: the dedication of the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church will be
: celebrated this month aS'lhe church
. recalls its rich and unique iiistol')'.
A celebration wiU be held Sept,
· 20 with regular services at 10:~0
• a.m. Rev. James Waugh, district
· superintendent from Athens, wiU
have the celebration message. A
' chicken barbecue will follow at
' 12:30 p.m. and may possibly be
: held on the parking 'loL Rev. Eun·
hae Kee invites the public.
The centennial celebration Is
being coordinated through the
efforts or the centennial committee
. consisting of Allen Downie, chair·
man; Rev. Kee, Frank Vaughan,
: Dorothy Downie, Maxine Goe. glein, Bernice Carpenter, Dave
: Slater, Alice Wamsley and Charles
: Blakeslee.
· According to Blakeslee, who
. provided information for this arli·
: cle, Methodism came to Meigs
· Couniy about -1838 and the
: Pomezoy United Meth. Church
· had its beginning in the Methodist
· Episcopal Church that same year.
The Rev. Mighill Dustin began
. holding services on the Chester
Circuit at that time and moved on
to Pomeroy where he held other
services.
The first services in Pomeroy
: were beld in a cabinet shop where
: the people attending used the lwn·
·. ber for seating. Having outgrown
· these facilities they then moved to
a cooper shop where they remained
until the first building was con·
structed in back of the Rig and
Reel Manufacturing Company in
1850.
In 1856 the church body moved
again, this lime into Union Chapel.
However, because of a fire in the

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building, it was not dedicated until
1859. This was done under the
leadership of Rev. Samuel Bri~hL
The· church also beeame a station
rather than a circuit church at this
lime.
During the summers of 1890
and 1891, wi(h Rev..O.S. Porter the
minister, camp meetings were held
at the Rock Sprin~s Fairgrounds
and money was ratsed for a new
building. In 1891 Union Chapel
was also sold to raise the money
needed to build, and during this
time services were held in the
counhouse.
Plans to build a new building at
Sycamore and Main Streets were
altered by a flood. Then the build·
ing committee decided to change
the location to 112 East Second
Stm:) where it is presenUy located.
The construction of the new
building, at an apji'Oximate cost of
$15,000, was not without incident
however. As lhe lind for lhe build·
ing site was being excavated a
landslide occurred behind the
building. Rev. Poner and others
worked hard to clear this and in
APril1892 a newspaper article stat·
ed, "The Methodist people are
building their new church through
much tribulation. The latest and
most dangerous difficulty they
have to face is an enormous land·
slide, back of the buildin ."
On -Sept. 18, 1892, aespite all
sttbacks, the Simpson M.E. Church
was dedicated by Bishop Cyrus D.
Foss. Tbe church name was in
honor of Bishop Mallhew Simpson
of Cadiz and the baptismal font,
located in the front of the church
was donated by his wife, Ellen
Sim~M&lt;JD .

In 1888 the Christian Endeavor
Society was organized largely
through the efforts of a George H.
Geyer. It was Ibis organization that
presented to lhe church the beauti-

ful window in the front of the
church at a cost of $500. This
group reorganized into an Epworth
League Society in the spring of
1894.
In the spring of 1916 another
huge landslide oa:ll'l'ed behind the
building which caused coosiderable
damage. The trustees decided to
add a second floor as an educational unit, and this unit was dedicated
on June 3, 1916.
The bell in the church was taken
from the steamboat "The City of
Wheeling" which was wrec~ed in
front of the old theatre. It was first
put in Union Chapel and later was
moved to its present location.
In 1934 Bethany German
Methodist Church, now a part of
Trinity Church, united with Simpson M.E. Church and they became
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. The result of this union
brought not only strength to both
congregations but also resulted in
lhe acquisition of lhe present parsonage at 211 Mulberry Avenue
and the organ used every Sunday.
This organ was installed Jan. 12,
1955 wilh Miss Donna Wildermuth
playing for the fiiSt service. During
the next few years Miss Wilder·
muth and Miss Joy Smilh altemat·
ed as the organist or the church.
Tbe organ was finally dedicated on
Sept. 25, '1955 and was recondi·
tioned in 1981. Paula Welker is the
organist today.
Besides having the organ recon·
ditioned, several other major pro·
jects have been' accomplished in
recent years . The kitchen was
moved from upstairs to lhe present
location as a result of the efforts of
the women of the church. Also, the
old "Pomeroy Opera House," later
used as a ftre station and city build·
ing was purchased and removed to
make a parking lot. A ramp for the
handicapped was constructed in

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Section B
September 6, 1992

United Methodist Church observes ·1OOth yeaf

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~imts- ~entinel

....

CENTENNIAL BANNER • Joe Clark, pic·
lured bere witb Dorothy Downie, created tbe
drawing for Ibis banner of tbe beautiful stailled·
glass window at tbe Pomeroy Uuited Metbodist
Cburcb in observance of tbe centennial celebra·
1983 and dedicated m memory of
Rev. Robert McGee who served
five years as pastor from 1978·
1983.
Several other organized groups
are a part of the church. Among
these groups are the United
Methodist Women, the United
Methodist Men who meet every
monlh on the second Sunday for
breakfast. There is also a United
Methodist Youth Fellowship which
recently has been active with Rock
Springs ~~ited Methodist Church.
The chorr IS also aclive m smgmg
every Sunday with the exception of
several Sundays during the summer
months.
Over the years the church has
had several people go into full time
Cllristian ministry with John
Bryant of the Florida Conference
being the most recent. It has also
had a long list of pastors who have
served faithfully over the years.
Past ministers have been: on the
Chester Circuit, Mighill Dustin,
1838-41; Samuel Bateman, 1841·
42; on the Pomezoy Circuit, James
B. Austin, 1842-43; David Smith.

lion of the
After tbe design
was completed, Mrs.
and Alice Wamsley
decorated tbe banner witb !lOki metaiUc ribbon
and otber decorative features.

1843-45; Orville Shelton, 1845-46;
Joseph S. Brown, 1846-47; James
T. Holliday, 1847-48; Danial D.
Mathers, 1848-SO; James Given,
1850-52; Alanson Fleming, 1852·
54; Stephen FramptOn, 1854-56; on
the Pomeroy Charge, A.G. Byers,
1856-58; S.M. Bright, 1858-60;
A.C. Kelley, 1860-62; Levi Hall,
1862-64; H.R. Miller and J.D. Fry,
1864-65; C.M. Bethauser, 1865-66;
E.l. Jones, 1866-68; G. lsaminger
and W.W. Fellows, 1868-11; Frank
S. Davis, 1871-72; Stephen Framp·
ton, 1872-74; Albert J. Nast, 1874·
76; M.v: ·Evans, 1876· 77; R.D.
Morgan, 1877-79; T.G. Dickinson,
1879-82; R.H. Wallace, 1882-84;
T. Dewitt Peake, 1884-85; William
Rader, 1885-87; M.W. Hissey,
1887-89; D.S . Porter, 1889-94;
Joseph Clark, 1894-95; L.C.
Sparks, 1895-97; L.L. Magee,
1897·98; Thomas M. Leslie, 1898·
00; Burt D. Evans, 1900.03; Finley
R. Crooks, 1903-04: Francis M.
Evans, 1904..05; Edward R. Stan·
ford, 1905-08; William H.
Mitchell, 1908-10; C.W. Brady,
1910-15; L.E. Rothrock, 1915-17;

Lozier Cherrington, 1917-22; Fred'
0 . Weed, 1922-28; A.E. McCuJ;
Iough, 1928-29; P.A. Bright, 1929"
31; H.L. Heathome, 1931-33; T.E.:
Maness, 1933-36; C.H. Morrison,·
1936-37; Warren Bright, 1937-40;:
Nobel Rompel, 1940-44; Alben;
Bitters, 1944-48; Lewis Berger,
1948-51; Leslie Kunze, 1951-56;
Eugene Brown, 1956·61; Melvin
Alkire, 1961-67; Glenn Hiles~
1967-69; Roben Card, 1969-73;
Carl Hicks, 1973-75; Robert Hay·
den, 1975-78; Robert McGee,
1978-83; Louise Williams, lhrec
months in 1983; James Corbitt;
1983-88; Don Meadows, 1988-91.:
and Eunhae Kee, 1991-presenL .:
A booklet on lhe history of the
church is being prepared in con.c
junction wilh the centennial obser,
vance. Editors of the booklet are
Charles Blakeslee and Allen
Downie. Others assisting in prepa:
ration of the booklet are Cathy ant!
Jim Stacy, Nancy and Dale
Thoene, Joe Clark, Dean Bamitz,
Daisy Blakeslee, Hal Kneen,
Marge Reuter, Dorothy Downie
and Bernice Carpenter.

·

•

ROLL
OBSERVING CEN'I'ENNJAL ·The Pomeroy
United Methodist Churdl '11'111 obaerve tbe ctD·
tennial anniversary of Ita cledleatloa with 1pecill
servk:n on Sept. ZO. The cbarcb balldlna.wu

dedicated Sept. 18, 1892. There will be a guest
~ealler alld cbil:ken barbecue to whkb the pub·
he Ia Invited.

GALLON•REG. ONLY :

CLOROX BLEACH:•

CHURCHES UNITE • Th name of the
Pomeroy ·united Methodist Church came abottt
upon the union of tbe Bethany German
Methodist Cburcb and the SlmJIIOII Metbodlst

••
•

c•

••

••

•

:

••
:
•

~

GALLON
Limit pne with coupon and $10.00 lddltlonal
purehDH. Good lhru 9112192
·

•••
••

••
••

,

...•............................ •

EASTMAN'S ••• Your Community Minded,
LOW PRICED

Reearve the Right to Umh

o

'---~------------------------~,

Prlc.. EflectlvtJ thru Sill., Stpt. 12, 1812 • USDA Food Stampe and WIC Coupon• Acceptlid o Not Reeponelble for ~pographiCII or Pictorial Ertora.

ful window In the frOIIt of tbe cbiii'Cb at a COlt of
$500. Ia 1194 tbe aroap reoraaal1ed Into an
Epworth Ltape SodeiJ.

WINDOW • The Cbr...-n Eldt1var Soelely,
of what Ia now tbe Pomeroy Ualted Metboclllt
Church, wu OI'Jialzed In 1118. It Wll .._ orp·
nizatlon that praeated to tbe cburcb tblllleaud·

·-.

~

.. -·

"

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

-

.......

~

'

Episcopal Church In 193-'. The Betbanr Cburcl1
was later sold to Trinity Church and Is now a
pari or tbe congregation.

�,.

.·.

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------- ---····· -- ----·-·- -------· ------- -- - · . - - ----- --·- ··-----

--·

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7

-

-..

~

'.'

.,.;--,...

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! Page-82-Sunday nmes SenUnel

7

I

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-PolnfPieasant,

l

wv

September 6, 1992

---

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- ·· ·-- ·---•... - --- ------ ----

_,.

6, 1992

--- ----- --

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- ~ --

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-

Local student accepted into
O.U. pre-college program

'

\
MATI'HEW O'DONNELL

and THERESA SOBCZA~

Sobczak-O'Donnell
ERIC MORRIS and

LORI ANN CADE

Cade-Morris
•
WATERLOO- Mr. and Mrs.
• Lee Cade of Waterloo, announce
~· the engagement and forthcoming
~: marriage of their daughter, Lori
Ann, to Eric William Morris, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Morris of
Kius Hill.
Miss Cade is a graduate of
Symmes Valley High School and
the University of Rio Grande. She
is employed at Star Bank in Ironton.

Mr. Morris is a graduate of
Rock Hill High School and the
Huntington Barber College. He is
employed at Morris Barber Shop in
Ironton.
The wedding will take place
Saturday Oct. 10 at 6:30 p.m. at
Mamre Baptist Church in Kitts
Hill. An open reception at Grand·
view Inn in South Point, will
immediately follow the ceremony.

--People in the news-SEYMOUR, Ind. (AP) - John
Mellencamp will wed model Elaine
Irwin in a private ceremony Saturday at a rustic cabin ncar his south·
em Indiana hometown.
Mellencamp, 40, has been married twice before. It's Ms. Irwin's
fll'St marriage.
They met while shooting the
music video or Mellencamp's single, "Get A Leg Up," earlier this
'year. Ms. Irwin, 23, is featured in
~the video and appears on the cover
of his latest album, "Whenever We
Wanted."
She has appeared in Vogue,
:Glamour and MademoiseUe maga-zines, and in ads for Almay and
·Revlon cosmetics.
: The ceremony will be at Mellencamp's cabin along the White
River north of Seymour, where he

grew up. He lives in Bloomington,
60 miles south or Indianapolis. Ms.
Irwin is from the Philadelphia suburb of Gilbertsville.
"It's a private ceremony
between John and Elaine," said
publicist John Reilly in New Yark,
who declined to release further
details.
Mellencamp's eight-year marriage to his second wife, Victoria,
ended in divorce in !989. They
have two young children. He has
an adult daughter from his first
marriage; she gave birth to a child
in 1989.

PERRYSBURG • Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur M. Sobczak of Perrysburg,
Ohio, announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of their
daughttt, Theresa AM, to Malthew
T. O'Donnell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Francis B. (Odie) O'Donnell of
Gallipolis.
Miss Sobczak is a graduate of
the Ohio State University and is
employed as supervisor of the
microbiology laboratory at St.

Ann's Hospital in Westerville.
Mr. O'Donnell is a graduate of
the Ohio State University School of
Engineering and is employed as a
civil engineer with the KordaNemeth Engineering, Inc ., of
Columbus.
The wedding will take place
Saturday, Oct. 10 at the Clintonville Baptist Church in Columbus.

ADDISON· Jared Leach, son of
Chuck and Kalhi Leach, Addison,
was accepted into lhe lhinl annual
Pipeline program at !he Ohio University College of Engineering and
Technology.
· , The pre-college program
"Insights into Engineering and
Technology" summer topic was
Robotics. During lhe intensive oneweek on campus, students learned
lhe engineeriJJg principles underlying robotics and its im~ce to
the workplac~ and soctety. Selection was lilniled to 20 participants
in each of two sessions held during
!he summer.
During the week each fourmember team designed a robotic
scoop to be used by a robot to perform a specific task, and to interface the computer with a robotic
arm. Each team J;lrepan:d a technical report describmg their Wllrk and
gave a demonstration of their
scoop. Also, each team identified
problems they encountered in
designing and programing. All
classes and lab work was performed in Stocker Center.
During !he next school year, !he
eighth grader will attend Ohio University once a month, working-with
faculty on design projects that
involve math and science concepts,

Library lines

Aru£L
J. ~~ABI:ISHED

Have you ever thought what it
means 10 have a library card? or
course it means having access to
books, videos, magazines, etc .,
everything you need to stay
informed and entertained. But a
libmry card also represents something much more- protection of
your right to know.
Just as a voter registration card
protects your right to vote, a library
card prot«ts your right to the many
sources or knowledge free in your
libmry. '
You have a right to know, how
clean your environment is. Your
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) libmry provides access to !he EnviComedian Dennis Miller is still ronmental Protection Agency's
fuming at Jay Leno even though Toxic Release inventory, a key
the two are no longer rivals for source.of information on local pollate-night television audiences.
lutants.
You have a right to know what
services are available in your community. You have a right to know

RIO GRANDE - More than ISO
diabetes patients, their families and
friends and health care professionals from 14 southern Ohio counties
are expected 10 join the American
Diabetes Association, Ohio Affiliate (ADA), for the Consumer Education Program (CEP Ill) on Saturday. Oct. 31, at lhe University of
Rio Grande.
CEP III will feature a panel of
diabetes experts from Ohio medical
. centers, including the Ohio State
University College of Medicine
and the University or Cincinnati
Medical Center. The program will
present a comprehensive update on
diabetes care and research and is
the last of seven identical programs
scheduled throughout Ohio this
year.
Members of the CEP III faculty
include Nancy Casteel, nursing
manager of the pediatric unit at
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis; Thomas O'Dorisio, professor of

such as designing and building
bridges, or vehicles.
Program Director is Dr. Joseph
E. Essman, Associate Dean and
Professor of Electrical Engineering
at Ohio UnivCJSity. Dr. Essman initialed the annual Tests of Engineering Aptitude Mathematics, and Science which has numerous college
testing sites throughout Ohio.

You have a right to know
By RUTH POWERS

•

JARED LEACH

GALL! POLIS • Last August a cant changes in minimum standards
statewide Arts Education Advisory for elementary and secondary
Committee was created by the schools and teacher education and
Ohio Department of Education, certification, the arts education
Ohio Alliance for Arts Education, advisory commiuee )las been
and Ohio Arts Council.
examining assessment issues.
This ongoing committee. which developing advocacy strategies,
is composed of individuals from preparing a position statement with
the arts, education, and business supporting references, and defining
communities has been charged with education outcome statements.
the tasks of advising and directing
The French An Colony encourthe State Board of Education in ages artists, arts educators, and arts
policy matters related to arts educa- supporters to. keep abreast or protion in Ohio.
posed·changes in education in Ohio
This fust year, the Committee and to stand ready to insure that
has worked to prepare for the open- arts education is a pan or the eduing and revision of Minimum Slan- cation or all Ohio school children.
dards and subsequent educational
how to invest wisely. With a reform .
Recently, Ohio's legislature crelibrary card, you can check out perated
an Education Goals and Suatsonal finance books and peruse
egy
Commission
which is charged
invesbllent magazines.
with
reaching
consensus
on educaYou have a right to know even
tional
goals
and
creating
a
suategic
t895
if you can't read. Your library
plan
that
outlines
how
these
goals
offers tutors and materials to help
low-literate adults become readers. will be met. At the same time, the
Andree~
You have a right to know as legislature called for lhe establishmuch as anyone else. Libraries are ment of a 45 member Learners
one or lhe most , democratic insti- Outcomes panel which will contutions in the country. They offer duct specific tasks in support of the
Thurs., Sept. 10, 8 p.m.
free and eqllll access 10 informa- general edncllionaJ goals set by the
tion, regardless of a person's social commission. One of the fu:st tasks
Admisslo• Free
of the panel is to establish new peror economic starus. succeed.
~orrle
.nd Dorolhy Huklnt
Your children have a right to formance-based standards for eleAriel n.o1ro
know everything they need to learn mentary and secondary education.
421 2nd Avt., Golllpollo, Oh.
In anticipation of the panel's
C.ll448
r man info.
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IAIIGAIN IIATINUIIATUIIDAY, - y a -DAY
brighter future. If you've been foregoing your Right To Know, now is
the time 10 claim iL Sign up for a
library card today.

.

Dl

Grtgorlo
Cvlllst

A THEATER WITH A CHOICE!

Michelle Williams, a 1991 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School and the daughter of Mike
Williams and Linda Sager, recently
graduated from the Hair Experts
Barber School, 6322 East Livingston Avenue, Reynoldsburg,
Ohio. The Hai~ Experts Buber
School IS a nationally accredited
school, and is affiliated with Ohio's
largest cosmetology school, Ohio
:State School of Cosmetology with
locations in central Ohio.
: Michelle successfully completed
·an intensive program that consisted
!of personalized instruction in both

;s

.

theoretical and practical aspects of
barber styling. The program included advanced uaining in precision
haircuuing, razor haircutting, facial
shaving, hair coloring, ptrmanent
waving and barber law.
Michelle is also a licensed managing cosmetologist after graduating from the 300 hour manager
training program at Ohio State
School of Cosmetology. Michelle
is pursuing her career at Michael
and Friends 529 Jackson Pike. Gallipolis, Ohio, 446-0698. Congratu·
lations and best wishes for a successful and fulliUing future!

Ramsey-Dailey

Swisher attends conference
': DALLAS, Texas • Carla Swish-

er of Cheshire, recently returned
from BeautiControl Cosmetics '
annual national conference where
she anended business-building
'workshops and received training on
BeautiControl 's newest product
introductions.
' During the four-day conference,
BeautiControl launched "Herbal
Serenity." a new aromather~
)lady treatment line which inel
body oil, scrub, geiCI! and creme.'
The company also introduced "Colprs or Nature", a new collection or
shadows, blush, lip tints, lip colors
lmd powders created to achieve a
natural, ma~~e look.

Other highlights or the conference included the company's
awards dinner with special guest
erformer Gladys Knight, and a
uncheon showcasing BeautiControl's fall collection of color-coded
fashions and accessories.
Swisher, a BeautiControl Sldn
Oue and Image Consultant, offers
her clients a total image resouree
which includes complimentary services like Sldn Condition Analysis
with patented Skin Sensors TM,
color-analysis and makeup/ fashion
personality analysis, plus customized skin care, color-coded cos-metics, computer-assisted image
analysis and more!

r.

FRI~

TOM HANKS, GUNA DAVIS,
MADONNA
IN

EIR

~·

It•.

~

Rife-Thompson
MIDDLEPORT • Rebecca L.
Rife and Nathan C. Thompson
were married in a double ring ceremony on July 18 at the Middleport
Church of Christ, with Charles
RusseU of Kentucky officiating.
The bride is the daughter or Mr.
and Mrs. William B. (Ben) Rife,
Middleport. She is a graduate or
Meigs High School and owns and
operates Classic Cuts by Becky in
Middleport
~groom is the son or Mr. and
Mrs. Herschel C. Thomyson,
CoolviUe. He is a graduate o Federal Hocking High School. He is
employed at Middleton Doll Company.
The bride was escorted by her
father and was given in marriage
by her parents. She wore a white
satin gown with rosene-trimmed,
puffed sleeves worn off lhe shoulder. Sequins and pearls trimmed
the bodice and sleeve cuffs.
She carried a bouquet of flowers
, consisting of white silk carnations
and peach and teal sweetheart
roses. Peach, teal and white ribbiJI
' hung from the bouoot with a gold
. wedding ring knotted in the rib: bans.
The matron of honor was Debbie Pooler, Chester, best friend of
the bride. Bridesmaids were Kim
, Sigler, Columbus; Sheila McKin~ ney, Middleport, and carta Davis,
: Carpenter, sister of the bride.
: Bridesmaids peach satin tea-

7:00,t :JS MILl' ,

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SATJSUN &amp; IQOAY

PG 13

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MTIIIHS

SAMDAf / SdiDAY

9:00PM ~ILr .
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OIIUYIIIIIG SIIOW 7:30
UIISSIOI $1.50

-

446-M2!

446-ltU

.Another Gm~t Ploplts Choice W.klllcl G~
join us In October for a memorable evemg r:i lne dining
and great ente~rvnent at the LaCaneda Dmerlheatre
In Spdngboro, Ohio. The show Is "NWlSenSt", named
'Best Olf-Broadway Musical'. following the petfonnance,
we'D stay ovemlght at the Manchester Inn In Middletown.
But that'snotaJU We'll also dQa Dttle sight seeing OYer
the weelcend. visiting Cartlon Palllln Dayton, historic
South Main Street and the canal Muse\11\ In Middletown,
the Golden Turtle Olocolate Fadoly and Ohio's oldest Inn,
the Golden Lamb. We'D also browse the emrlliOUS
Trader's Wodd flea Malket (over 300 venclols).

l'dcel $140Doullle. suotdplet $125QIIIdn $180
5lnlle. A adcltlonal $19 fee v.tll be chaiJed ~non­
rnermeli For n=se~Vatlons or Information, please contact
MMy Fo&gt;Mer, Peoples~ Coordlhator, at 675-t.t 21 .
\

II_..,_,._ 50 IIIII -·
'S I

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'

I'Mplll CMq CbGic;e w'MIIIijlp UIWidu ... dMIIce lluncW
l'8lples Olalce II a llvlslon of
the Peciples link of l'dnt l'leas&amp;nt. Member FDIC. Members must
maintain a $10.000 mtnmiiYI balance In hoples llri deposit
ICXOIItts (evclildlng cheddng aca1U111s).

Best man was Timothy Lanier
of Rio Grande. Groomsmen were
Rick Dailey of Athens, Roger Dailey of Akron, brothers of the
groom; David Holstead of Mountain Rest. S.C., and Wylie Stephenson of Chapin, S.C., cousins or the
bride. Junior groomsman was Ryan
Dailey of Gallipolis , son of the
groom.
Kelly Hartsoe a11ended the
bridal register. Marsi Cyphers and
Holly Hartsoe served as program
auendants.
Following the ceremony, the ·
bride's parents entertained at a
reception in the fellowship hall.
Music was provided by Mrs.
Donna Hartsoe. Mrs. David Whit·
ley and Mrs. Harry Preslar, Mrs.
Marion Stephenson, Mrs. Pally
Evan, and Mrs. Ney Couick, served
as hostesses. Others assisting at the
reception were Mrs. H. Robert
Woods, Mrs. Raymond Bowers,
Carli Evan, and Samantha Evan.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin A. Ramsey of
Clover, Ind. She is a graduate of
Clover High School and Furman
University where she received a
bachelor's degree. She received an
MBA degree from the University
of South Carolina in 1990. She is
currently a systems engineer with
Electronic Data Systems, Delco
Electronics in Kokomo, Ind.
The bridegroom is the son or
Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. Dailey of
Gallipolis. He is a graduate of Gallia Academy High School and
received his B.A. degree from the
University of Rio Grande. He
received a Master's degree from
Miami University in 1990. He is
employed as systems engineer with
Electronic Data Systems Corporation, Ohio Technical Suppon Center, Dayton.
The couple reside in Dayton.

OPEN HOUSE SLATED· Washin&amp;ton Elementary PTO will
hold its annual "Meet the Teachers" open bouse on Tuesday, Sept.
8 at 7:30 p.m. All students and their parents are ur~ed to attend.
Pictured are new Washington teachers, (I to r) Jud1 Sheets, Lois Carter, Janet Baker, and Charlene Johnson.

State ad camp0;ign says tobacco
companies exploit women

ByEDSTYCH
AP Business Writer
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - For
years, tobacco companies have
uied 10 attract women smokers by
appealing to _!heir sense of independence. Now, a new state ad campaign is turning the tables, saying
women have been exploited long
enough.
One commercial sums up the
campaign's message: A billboard
model comes to life and stubs out
her cigarelte on an advertising
executive's balding scalp.
Kathy Hany, who helped create
the $321,000 campaign as chief of
the state Department of Public
Health's smoldng prevention program, said the ads send a message
that women can refuse to be manip·
ulated.
"We want you to think about it
twice. 'Do I really want this
cigarette? Do I really want to make
someone else rich and myself
sick?"' she said.
The ads, which don't name indi·
vidual tobacco companies, began
airing on Minnesota television and
radio stations this week. They are
aimed at active, healthy women
ages 18 to 30 who smoke occasion·
ally.
Martin-Williams Advertising
Inc., the Minneapolis agency that
and Holly Canaday; Scott and produced the ads, said this is the
Andrea Canaday; Ruth Jones nation's first anti-smoking camAldeth, Tom and Elaine Robinson; paign that uses the female-exploita·
Kent, Susan and Jared Miller; tion theme.
Terry, Kelli and Todd May; Pat
A spokesman for the tobacco
Thomas; Elizabeth Mary, Tom, industry agreed, but said the new
Martha, Mike and Bill Phillips; ads portray women as weak.
Bob and Mary Francis Thomas;
"The Minnesota ads make the
Bill and Sara Thomas, Eldon presumption !hilt women are in a
Thomas; Bonnie Arrowwood; second-class status that warrants
Glenn and Linda Crabtree; Adrah special protection, when in fact
Hutchins; Peg Thomas; Dave and they have the same abitity as men
to make the choice for them Beuy Rees.
The next reunion will be held on selves," said Tom Lauria of the
the third Sunday in August of 1993 Tobacco Institute, a Washingtonbased trade group.
atTyn Rhos.
Anti-smoking ads have been

Families hold annual reunion

(PG· l l)

~CD.I/Mr&lt;~IQWI

~

"

1 : 00 ,9 : 1~

TOM CRUISE
IN

.Seniors' schedule announced

GALLIPOLIS • The foUowing
II a.m. Bnthoay party; Dr .
life activities and menus for Sept. Covcnoo, Holzer Clinic dermatolo.?-11 at the Gallia County Senior gist. speaker.Citizen's Centtt, 220 Jackson Pike.
Menus coosist of:
Munday, Sept. 7
Monday: Closed for Labor Day.
Closed for Labor Day
Tuesday • Beef liver, whipped
•
Tuesday, Sept.R
potatoes, peas, corn bread, fruit
; 10 a.m. • STOP/Exercise
cup.
Wednesday - Port and dress·
; 10 a.m.I0.3 P·':'l· • Quil~g
• 12:30 p.m. • Vtcleo lllltmCC
ing, sweet potatoes, corn, cole
Wedllesday, Sept. 9
slaw, bread,'brownic.
10 a.m. • W•lking club
Thursday • Patty mel~ tat;er to:IS·
t I p.m. Garden Club
broccoli, bun, applesauce With CID·
' ~ 1 p.m. • Attorney
namon.
' Herb ciJss is canceled
Friday - Birthday party • ham,
Thursday, Sept. 10
scallo~ potatoes, green beans,
; 10:4S a.m. · Bible S!W!Y.
cole slaw, dinner rolls. ice cieam,
: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. · Quilting
' cake.
· 10 a,ill. to 3 p.m. Lawn chair
Make reservations by calling
weaving class (full) ·
446-7000 before 9 a.m. on the day
Friday, Sept.ll
you wish to attend.
I0 a.m. to noon • Art class

SAT., SUN.

KOKOMO, Ind . • The Clover
Presbyterian Church was the set·
ling on Saturday, July 18, for the
double ring ceremony of Rosemary
Ramsey of Kokomo, Ind ., and
length dresses with a triple bow Mark Randall Dailey of Dayton,
across the back. They carried white with Dr. Roben 0. McCaslin offifans covered with white, peach and ciating.
teal flowers, ivy, pearls and ribbon.
Esconed and given in marriage
The flower girl was Clarissa by her father, the bride wore a forDavis, niece of the bride. The ring mal gown of white bridal satin
hearer was Jessica Pooler, Chester.
embellished with re-embroidered
Both wore teal satin tea-length Schiffli lace studded with iridesdresses with lace overbodice. Both cent sequins and pearls. The fitted
wore hair wre~ths or white ~nd bodice featured a portrait neckline
peach sweetheart roses. Whue, bordered with scalloped Schiffli
peach and pearl ribbons hung from lace and long fined detachable
the back. The flower girl carried a gauntlets. The long skin and extra
hand-crocheted basket made by full chapel train were edged in a
Francis Davis. The ring bearer car- scalloped design of the Schiffli
ried a white heart pillow.
lace. The flowing train, appliqued
The groom wore a black tuxedo with beaded Schiffli lace, extended
with a white shirt, black tie and from a peplum bow in back. Her
cummerbund with a peach rosebud fingenip veil or imported illusion
boutonniere. Best man was Todd was caught in poufs to a tiara studCalc, Torch. Ushers were Rob ded with sequins and pearls. She
Morris, Torch, and Paul Powell, carried a cascading bouquet of pink
Nelsonville. They wore black tuxe- roses, white miniature carnations
dos with white shirts, teal lies and and stephanotis accented with
cummerbunds and peach bouton- baby's breath and springerie. She
wore a pearl necklace and earrings,
nieres.
The receptions was held in lhe a gift of the groom.
church social room. Sharon Stewart
Maid of honor was Carla Chrismade a four-layer cake with peach tian of Simpsonville, friend of the
and teal flowers between the layers. bride. She wore a midnight blue
Music was provided by Jane dress or iridescent taffeta featuring
Wise, Rutland, and Jared Stewart, shon pour sleev.es and a swcethean
· Middleport. Guests were registered neckline, which dipped to a deep V
by Becky Cole, Torch, and Amy in back. The JuU bouffant Sltirt fell
to the floor from a basque waistline
Taylor, Coolville.
designed
with a matching bow at
Following a honeymoon trip to
Myrtle Beach, S.C .. the couple the side. She carried a bouquet or
miniature pink carnations, cushion
resides in Rutland.
poms and star gazer lilies highlighted with baby's breath and varied greenery.
Junior bridesmaid was Jocelyn
Young or Concord, cousin of the
bride. She wore a white taffeta
dress, identical in style to that of
the maid of honor.

MR. and MRS. NATHAN (REBECCA) THOMPSON

COLONY THEATRE
Fll. THRU THURS.

internal medicine at !he OSU
lege of Medicine; Frank Collins, ·~
specialist in internal medicine all!i
endocrinology in Cincinnati; Janice ·
Kellogg, a diabetes edu~tor at lhe
UC Medical Center, and Jeanne
Kincaid, ADA coordinator of com- . · · ·_ •
munity and consumer programs. .
Casteel said CEP III will pro·
vide information about the nature -of diabetes, proper care teehniques. ··
complicatiQns warning signals and
means of monitoring control on a
daily basis.
According to the ADA, diabetes
is a disease in which the body does
not properly produce or usc insulin,
a hormone that helps convert sugar,
starches and other foods into energy needed for daily life.The resulting high blood sugar level can lead
to bean disease. kidney disease and
blindness. If left untreated, diabetes
can lead to death.
Information is available from
the ADA at I (800) 232-6366.

MRS. MARK (ROSEMARY) DAILEY

Cosmetology school grad
.

{

ADA to host program·!-:-&lt;
at the U. Rio Grande Coi-

'•

Committee supports the arts

.....

Sunday Times Sentlnei-Pa~~ · ·- --

OH-Polnt

MR. and MRS. RICK !CHERYL) SWAIN

Camburn-Swain
CROWN CITY • Cheryl A.
Cambwn and Rick A Swain were
united in marriage July 14 at Good
Hope Baptist Oturcb! Crown Ci~ ,
with the Rev. Ron NICholas OfriCI·
ating.
The bride is the daughter of
Shirley Camburn of Patriot and
Donald Camburn or florida, and
the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. ·
Claude Miller of Pattiot.
The groom is the son of Rick
and Carla Swain of Rio Grande,
and the grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Waugh of Crown City.
The bride, escorted by her
brother-in-law · Andrew Lasseter,
wore a white, satin, floor-length
gown with J&gt;C!UI and irri~escent
sequined appliques adornt~g ~
princess bodice and conunutng
across the back neckline.
Appliques adorned the puffed long
sleeves wilh pointed cuffs. A dou·
ble bow with simulated pearls
accented the asymmetrical waist.
with a continuation of a chapel

length train. The headpiece was
created with delicate lace pedals
with pearl sprays and a fmger-tip
length veil
Matron of honor was Sandra
I asseter, sister of the bride. flower
girls were Courtney Swain, daughter or the groom, and Brandi Lassettt, niece of the bride. AU wore
midnight blue irridescent tea-length
dresses with matChing hair pieces,
llowm. and rose pedals.
Best man was Matthew Swai.n,
brother of the groom. Jeremi Las·
seter served as ringbearer . .Carl
Waugh registered guests and
served as usher.
Randy and Sharon Shafer provided music.
Following the honeymoon, a
reception was held at Buckeye
Hills career Center. Hostesses
were Renee Hoke, Diana Grubb,
and Amy Bowden. Dave Hoke provided lhe music.
The couple re.side in Rio
Grande.
·'

.

CENTERVILLE. Thirty-five
family members and four guests
attended the 62nd reunion of the
descendants of Abraham and Elizabeth Jones Thomas. The picnic
lunch was held at Tyn Rhos on
August 16.
Blessings for the meal was
given by Marshall Canaday.
After a family business meeting
was held in the church, Bill
Thomas showed videos of past
reunions.
Two births were recorded thi s
year. They are Katherine Phillip
and Todd Phillips. Three marriages
were recorded this year; Betty
Jones to David Lincoln Rees, Joyce
Ann Canaday to Don Smith, Scott
Canaday to Andrea Rutan.
Traveling the ranhest was Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn Crabtree from
Louisville, Ky. The oldest member
auending was Aldeth Robinson
from Gallipolis. The youngest
member anending was Mike
Phillips.
.
Others attending were Marshall
and Helen Canaday; Joyce and Don
Smith; Pat, Betsy, Katy, Ginger

Engle-Brucker
families gather
GALLIPOLIS ·The 68th EngleBrucker reunion was held recently
at the 0.0. Mcintyre Park at shelterhouse 113.
Attendin!l were Edith Boster,
Julius and Hilda Janey, Awilda and
Charles Kemper from Gallipolis;
Luella Plymale from Columbus,
Harvey Brucker from Washington
Court House, Nelson and Clara
Mae Brucker, David, Bersy, Annie
and Steven Brucker and Jun Dodd
from St. Albans, W.Va .. Jeff,
Kathy, Jay'and Justin Hanf!8D from
Huntmgton, W.Va., and Kim, Darren and TJ . Clagg from Oak Hill.
The next reunion will be held
~ug. I, 1993 at OOM Park.

aimed at women before, but most
have been directed at pregnant
women or those who thi'* smo~­
ing is glamourous.

Support group
to hold meeting
ROCK SPRINGS • The Meigs
County Nursing Mothers Support
Group will meet Tuesday at noon
at the Meigs County Health
Department.
The meetings are sponsored by
the health deparrmen~ the prenatal
clinic and the Women, Infants and
Children program. Any interested
woman is welcome to attend, but it
is especially helpful for pregnant
women to learn about breast feeding before their babies are born.
The topic this month is "Good
Mothering Through Breast Feeding." Breast feeding a baby creates
a special bond between mother and
baby. This can help a woman feel
more confident in her new role as
mother. Learning the latest information about breast feeding helps
mothers have an enjoyable experience with her new baby. The baby
benefits too, since breast milk is
excellent food for infants.
For more information, please
call Elaine at the Meigs County
WIC office, 992~26.

BOB'S ELEaRONICS IS OFFERING
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WE HAVE QUALIFIED INSTALLERS AND SALES PERSONNEL.

Boh'1 Eleclronicl
435 UPPER liVER RD. • GALLIPOLIS
.446-45.17
•

•

�Page 84 Sunday Times Sentinel

September II, 1992

· Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleaaant, WV

'

Septamber 6, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pluunt, wv

Ohio Valley Symphony returns
-for third season at Ariel Theatre

Gallia County garden club reps attend
62nd annual convention; awards presented

By KEVJN l'JNSON
Times-Sentinel News Staff

very special to me and why I keep restoration of the theater because
the group needed a place to percoming !here."
Snow said concert goers find form, Snow said.
GALUPOLIS • Using an entire Fowler's style both pleasing and
The theater and the symphony
orcheslra as her army, Ariel The- educational. She said he has a man- bave been an important part of each
atre artistic director .Lora Snow is ner of introducing lhe music to the other's history ever since.
Fowler said he met Snow a few
bat.lling a misconception about audience so lhat it reaches the inex ·
years ago when he was the director
sy pho~ic music.
perienced as well as the expens.
now said that most people
"It seems to be real universal the of orchesttal activities at Ohio Uni: aaending a symphony perfor· way he explains the music," she versity. Snow, an oboe p)ayer,
m
is for !he upper class and not said. "Everyone has just fallen for approached him with her plan to
form a symphony in ·southeastern
a f rm Of entenainment for com- that." .
mon folic.
Snow's battle plan against the Ohio.
At flfSI, he said, it seemed like
"M.r goal is to erase those con- misconceptions of symphonic
an
"outlandish
idea," but eventually
cepts, she said.
music includes making it more
Her army is the Ohio Valley accessible by opening rehearsals to Snow talked him into conducting
the OVS. He said he was swprised
Symphony, which will begin its the public.
third season at the Ariel with Ctle·
The open rehearsals will provide a1 the symphony's popularity.
'The amount of community supb;ating tlu 500tlt Anniversary of people who can't afford concert
tlu New World Sept. 26.
tickets or can not fit the concerts pan has been amazing," he said.
In April !989, the OVS perThe 52-piece symphony consists into their schedules wid! a chance
of professional musicians from all to sit in on a performance, Snow formed in the incomplete theater as
a "sneak preview" to re-introduce
over the area, including band direc- said.
-Gallia
Countv to the Ariel. The
tors, freelancers and faculty memOpen rehearsals will also prosymphony
returned the following
beiS representing thirteen universi· vide parents wilh the opportunity to
summer
for
the restored theater's
lies. Snow said lhe symphony is lhe expose their children to symphonic
only professional orchestra in music without having to sit through fust performance.
"That's when lhings started hapsoutheast Ohio.
an entire performance, she said.
pening
for the theater," Snow said.
Commanding the musical troops
There is no charge to attend
This
season, for the first time,
is founding conductor Ray Fowler these sessions, she added, and peo·
the
Ariel
will open irs unfinished
of Charlouesville, Virginia. Fowler pie can come and go as lhey please
also works as the full-time music as long as lhey do n01 disturb the balcony to handle the symphony's
director for the Prince Georges rehearsal. Rehearsals will be held growing popularity.
Snow said the "adventurous"
Philharmonic in Washington, D.C.
on Fridays 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. and who are willing to sit ·in the balHe said he comes to Gallipolis Saturdays I p.m. to 4 p.m. at lhe
cony will be in for an additional
about four times a year to work Ariel prior to aconcert.
uea~ acoustically.
wilh the symphony, and it doesn't
"I think people ought to be
Although lhe entire building is
bother him to make such a long Dip pouring in and out of tllere all night
built
for great sound quality, she
to perform in a city the size of Gal· long," Snow said.
explained,
the balcony provides the
lipolis.
·
The symphony plays a very best sears in the house, from an
"(The city) is small," he said. irnponant role in the Ariel's recent
"But the hean is very big in Gal- history. It was actually the sympho- ear's point of view.
"When you go up in lhe balcony
lipolis and that is what is dear and ny's formation that led to the
it really blows you away," she said.

Meigs County calendar
Gallipolis. Relatives and friends
invited.

SUNDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Bahr
reunion for descendants of Abraham and Mary WiU Bahr, Sunday,
VFW post, Tuppers Plains, 10 a.m.
with lunch around noon. Fnends
and relatives invited.

POMEROY - AA meeting, Sunday, 7 p.m .. JTPA building,
Pomeroy.
MONDAY
RIPLEY, W.VA. · Liberty
Mountaineers perform Monday,
St.·
1 d Ri pey,
1 w.va.
...tean,

CHESHIRE · Fife family
reunion, Sunday, noon, Kyger
Creek Club House.

RUTLAND - Rutland Village
Council meets in regular session
Tuesday, 7 p.m., Rutland Civic
Center.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections meets Tuesdar.
4:30 p.m., board office, Mechan1c
S tree~ Pomeroy.
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Trustees meet Tuesday, 7:30
p.m., Shade River Stale Forestry
Building.

Carnahan Simpson, Gladys McMurray Brown,
Martha Lou Watterson Beegle, Maxine Clark
O'Brien, Betty O'Connor Manjimone and
George Holman; fourth row: Sam Curtis,
Robert M. Smith, Gilbert Hart, Carroll Balser
and Harry Rhodes. Following the banquet, a
more formal get·toaether was held in the base·
ment of the Racine United Methodist Church.
The dass fJI1942 bad 46 members, and 24 or the
35 living members attended the banquet.

CLASS OF' '41 · Pictured above are the ·
members or lhe Racine High School dass of
1942 who attended their 50th alumni banquet
recently In the Charles W. Hayman Auditorium.
From left, first row: Delores Wolfe Casper,
Marian Simpson Bill, Mary Jane -Foster Carr,
Doris HUI Hunsler, Wilma McDade McGraw
and Beryl Wolfe; second row: Jack Kessler,
Paul Beegle, Opal Miller Diddle and Ruth John·
son Bradford; third row: Arthur Nease, Ruth

108 attend Denney family reunion
GALLIPOLIS ·The fourth Den·
ney reunion was held Sunday, Aug.
9, at 0.0. Mcintyre park, wilh 108
relatives and friends attending.
Prayer was given by Donnie
Shupe, Sr. and a basket dimer was
enjoyed wilh family and friends.
A business meeting was led by
Lois Stout. A moment of silent
prayer for deceased family members was held.
The oldest member attending
was Gilmer (Bill) Knotts. Youngest
member was Sam Blazer, 6
months, son of Jim and Barbara
Blazer, Columbus. Traveling the
farthest was John and Angela
Kurlich, Kentucky.
Officers for 1993 : President,
Lois Stout; Vice President, Harold
Denney; Secretary, Sandra Heister;
Treasurer, Ethel Dewitt; Assistant
Treasurer, John Kurlich; News
re_porter, Judy Me Cqlty; Recreauon, Vicki Mulholand and Geraldine Shupe. Marriages: Stephanie
Stout to Jeff Provens; Melissa Culp
to James Sheets.
Births: Samuel Blazer;
Deceased, Hollis Myers and Otis
Denney.
Attending were: John and Pearl
Denney; John M., Verna K., Marie
and Jared Denney; Chuck, Fran,
Heath, and Brandon Denney; John
and Angela Kurlich; Jim, Barbara

POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
RACINE - Johnson family · Western Square Dance Club, dance
reunion, Sunday, I p.m., Star Mill lessons beginning Monday at 7:30
Park.
p.m. Partner requested. Dale Eddy,
SYRACUSE • Syracuse Board
Marietta, insuuctor. Call 992-74 77, of Public Affairs meets Tuesday 7
RACINE • Racine Volunteer
985-4162 for informa- p.m.
Fire Department, chicken barbecue, 992-7261,
tion.
Sunday, II a.m. Homemade ice
RACINE · Big Bend Farm
cream available by ladies auxiliary.
CHESTER · Labor Day celebraAntique Club meets Tuesday, 8
tion, Chester. Barbecue at fire sta- p.m., Southern High School.
POMEROY - 42nd annual Ours tion, 11 :30 a.m . Parade at 1:30
reunion, Sunday, Pomeroy Senior p.m., antique tractor show, garden
NEW YORK (AP) - Clint
RACINE- · Racine Village
Citizens Building, noon. Carry-m tractor pull.
Eastwood
says "Unforgiven" may
Council meets Tuesday, 7 p.m.,
dinner at I p.m.
be
his
last
Western - and the last
council chambers, Star Mill Park.
lime
he
both
acts in and directs a
LETART FALLS- The Letart
RACINE - Gospel Laymen of Township
Trustees will meet MonREEDSVILLE - Riverview Ele- film.
Greenville will perform Sunday, II day at 7 p.m. at the office building.
"Unforgiven," Eastwood's 16111
mentary PTO meets Tuesday, 7
a.m., Sutton United Methodist
feature
mm as a director and 361h
p.m., school gym.
Church. Carry-in fellowship meal,
as a star, has been billed as an
TUESDAY
12:30 p.m. Rev . Kenny Baker
MIDDLEPORT· Middleport
PAGEVILLE • The Scipio "anti-Western Western" that does
invites the public.
Garden Club meetS Tuesday, 7:30 Township Trustees will meet Tues- not glorify the violence committed
p.m., social room of Middleport day at 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville by the hero Eastwood portrays.
POINT PLEASANT - Annual Presbyterian
"I was ... conscious lhroughout
Church. Members Townhall.
railroad picnic and reunion, Sun· bring any items related to the llistothe
film that lhis might be my last
day, II :01 a.m., picnic at 1:0 1 ry of the club.
Eastwood told Rolling
p.m., Krodel Park, Point Pleasant,
POMEROY · Meigs County Western,"
Stone
magazine.
"This was the
Showcase meeting, Tuesday, 5:30
W.Va. Present and former employRACINE
.
Southern
Junior
perfect
story
to
be
my.
last Western.
p.m., Meigs County Chamber of I also thought lhis mtght
ees of Hobson, Dickerson, invited. High Boosters will meet on Tuesbe the last
Commerce Office.
day
at
7
p.m.
at
the
junior
high
time
I
do
both
jobs
acting
and
. COOL VILLE - Coolville VFW
school.
directing.
Maybe
it's
time
to
do
WEDNESDAY
Post No. 3478, gun shoo~ Sunday,
POMEROY · Meigs Athletic one or lhe olher."
noon, Ralph's Gun Club, route 50.
The interview appears in the
HARRISONVILLE -· Har- Boosters meet Wednesday, 7:30
Shotgun and 22 rifles only.
risonville Senior Citizens will hold p.m., Meigs High School. Public magazine's Sep~ 17 issue.
a blood pressure clinic Tuesday, 10 invited.
LETART, W.VA.· Homer and a.m. to noon, at the townhouse.
TAHLEQUAH, Okla. (AP) Amanda Donahue family reunion. Potluck dinner followed by meetDavid
Letterman's choice of Table·
POMEROY - Pomeroy Mer·
Sunday, Community Center, Letart, ing. All members urged to attend.
quah
as
the latest "home office"
chants Association meets WednesW.Va. Potluck.
day, 8:30a.m., Bank One confer- for his television show has led stuSYRACUSE
·
Syracuse
Fire
lents at Northeastern State UniverLOTTRIDGE - Smorgasbord Depanmem Ladies Auxiliary, orga- ence room.
sity to adOptllim as their mascot.
dinner Sunday, noon to I :30 p.m., nizational meeting, Tuesday, 8 p.m.
The new student spirit section,
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
$5 for' adults, $2.50 for children. at the fire department. Anyone
the
Fighting Daves, was to make its
Amatuer Garden Club picnic,
Public invited.
interested. in joining the volunteer Wednesday,
debut
today a1 the football team's
p.m., Gladys Cumorganization is encouraged to mings, Route6 143.
opening
game.
Each member
DEXTER . David Garbutt will attend. Further information may be
Letterman picked the town of
be speaker at the Old Dexter obtained by calling 992-6505 or bring an old program book:. Roll 10,000 people in northeastern
call is a garden tip. Bring a birthChurch, Sunday. Public invited.
949-2238. Officers will be elected . . day card.
Oklahoma this summer as the place
from which his trademark ·'Top
RUTLAND - Grover family
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
POMEROY - Representative 10" lisrs supposedly come.
reunion, Sunday, noon, Firemen's Chapter, Beta Sigma Sorority, will
The suggestion came from a
Congressman Clarence
Park, Rutland.
hold its first meeting of the yeaR from
Northeastern
State drama student
Miller's office will conduct an
Tuesday with a picnic at 6:30 p.m. open
who
was
in
lhe
audience lhe night
door session Wednesday 11
GALLIPOLIS - Brice Beaver in lhe mini-parte on Court Street in
Letterman expressed dissatisfaction
reunion , Sunday, DAY Building, Pomeroy. Members encouraged to a.m. to I p.m. in the coon house in wilh the previous "home office,"
Pomeroy.
pay dues.
Lebanon, Pa.

and Sam Blazer; Helene and Gar- Jimmie, Charlorte and Jim Denney.
The 1993 reunion will be held at
land Lear; Emogene Burns; Elmore
and Mary Flowers; Jane Ann and 0.0. Mcintyre Park, shelterhouse
Don Burns; Harold and Betty Den- #I.
ney; Jerri Lynn, Sam, Charlie and
Katie Reffitt; Don and Lois Den·
ney; Leo, Debbie, Amanda and
Josh : Bill and Mildred George;
Chris, Robin, Nick and Megan
Wellington; Vicki,Erica,Tony,
Justin and Patrick Mulholand; Donnie and Ruth Ann Shupe; Donald,
Melody, Brent and Brandon Shupe;
Geraldine Shupe; Blaine, Donna
Jean, Valerie, Bryce, Dale and
Trilrm"'
Brooke Taylor; Paul and Karen
Closs Rlntls
Knicely; Bill and Ruth Knotts;
6yGolir.c.
Bob, Cheryl and Stevie Rocco;
Noel, Sandra Kay and Quo Heister;
Donna Pinter: Carrie Myers,
daughter Phyllis Hutcheson and
grandchildren; Hazel Wilcoxeq;
Garland, Susie and Nancy Lanier;
Bill, Judy and Julie McCulty; Virginia Wise; Shelle West; Wayne
McCulty; Danny, Laura, Grant and
free OplicN!s 011 AI Stylesl
Jessica Taylor; Lois and Mellayne
Onler Now-SGie Elllls Dec. lSI
Stout; Stephen, Pam, Stevie, Jay
and Jodie Stout; Christia Elliott;
Danny, Ruth, KeUy and Kyle Hively; Lauchey and Pauline McCoy
and nieces, Christine, Barbara,
422 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis
Julie, Margaret and Judy Denney;

TAWNEY
JEWELERS INC•

Names in
the news

Family Planning
lt 'Ma~es Sense•••

__ VPLANNED PAllENTHO~D
• ·~ . . . OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO .·
POMEROY

236 t Mail St., 2•d Floor
992-5912
8:30 to 5:00 Mo1day·Friday
Closed Tlllrsday

GALLIPOLIS

4I4 Seco1d Ave., 2nd Floor
446·0166
8:30 to 5:00 Monday·Fridoy
8:301012 Saturday
Closed Th•rsd11y

ALSO: Jack1011, Chesap111kt, Athens, Gllkotht, logan &amp;McArthur
,:---

.

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

I

Professional

RIO GRANDE • PERl annual
picnic a1 Bob Evans Farm at 3 p.m.
Bring covered dish.

'

We will i'esu•• regular hours
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER
.
. 8th

Bapp' Bolida,!

Gallia Girl Scout news

brand or m&lt;morials. As an
Authorizod Rock of Aj;es Dealer. we
1n: proud of OW' unmalchcd reputalion
for .avioe. You can trusl Rock of Ases
and their Autltoriz&lt;d lkalers.
known

WILL BE CLOSED
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 thru
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7
. FOR ,LABOR DAY

Rave A Safe and·

Dr. Harnish to speak
during WHM program

Reunion held

Yt Mile South of Tuppers Plains
on State Route 7

Sliding f• salt. No 0111 refused servkes because of lnabdlly to pay.

A officers receptim was held on all. New officers was installed for
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County mercia! photographer and a memThursday night. an special time for 92-94 on Friday.
Garden Clubs were represented her of OAGC.
recently lit Stouffers Dublin Hotel,
Dublin where the Association of
Garden Clubs held its 62 Annual
Convention.
"Discover America" was the
theme for the Convention and it
was carried out with a beautiful
historical events flower show.
Clinics were held on Wednes·
day and Fridar.. Thursday was
spent at AmenFlora - Franklin
REVIEW PLANS - Bonnie Simms, R.N., (right), who is chairing
Park. It was OAGC day at Arneri·
Tuesday evening's program at the Bossard Library in downtown
Flora celebrating Columbus' DisGallipolis, reaturing Dr. Margaret Harnish, reviews plans for the
covery of the New World 500 years
program with Edith Baker, R.N" (lef't), chair or Women's Health
ago, is a "Mirror of lhe Past" and a
Month observance for the Holzer Medital Center.
"Window to the Future". Plus the
Santa Maria replica in downtown
Columbus was on die agenda.
Awards given out at convention
to the Open Gate Garden Club
were: Outstanding Garden Club of
Region II. Publicity - Excellance,
Program - Superior, Flower Show·
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Margaret emphasis is on prevention, out- Superior.
Hamish will be the featured speak· reach, access to health services,
Gallipolis Garden Club - Amatonvention. Pictured are Clara Day, Karen
OUTSTANDING CLUB • Members of the
er aldie Bossard Memorial Library ~evelopment of positive role mod· ture Gardener · Lucy Earwood.
Thomas,
Jackie Davis, Carol Duricy, state secreOpen Gate Gardea Club were named the Outat 7 p.m., Tuesday, Sepl 8, during els for women and need-based Program • good.
tary;
Mary
Jo Dodson, and Barbara Allen.
standing Garden Club of Regiollll durillz tht
the second in a series of programs planning."
Those members attending con62nd annual Ohio Associatloo of Garden Ctub5
Dr. Harnish is a native of Cleve- vention were: Open Gate . Barbara
sponsored by the Holzer Medical
Center in observance of Women's land. She received her B.S. from Allen. Clara Day, Jackie Davis,
Baldwin Wallace College in Berea Mary Jo Dodson and Karen
Health Month.
in
1973, and graduated from Ihe
Her topic will be "Risk Taking
Gallipolis • Remy Simon,
Medical
College of Ohio in Toledo Thomas.
and Sexual Matters - A Concern to
Johnnie
Lou Gabrielli, Glenna
all Ages." The event is free and in 1977. Following her residency in Williams, Lucy Earwood and Lea
·open to lhe public, and women of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the Schoonover.
Medical College of Ohio, completall ages are urged to ancnd.
It was an honor to have Bob
ed
in 1981, she carne to Gallipolis
"The purpose of Women 's
Thomas,
premier designer of
Health Month (WHM) is to encour· as a member of the medical staff of our time, the
to
be
featured designer.
age continued and expanded educa- the Holzer Medical Center and the
Discovery" was topic for his
tion about women's health issues Holzer Clinic in the Department of "After
designs
on Wednesdya night and
Obstetrics
and
Gynecology.
She
and to persuade women to network
"Discovery
And Beyond" for Fribecame
a
Diplomat
of
the
Ameriwith each other. take an active role
day.
Mr.
Thomas
is from Lamont,
in their own health care, and to canBoardofOB-GYNin 1984.
Florida.
He
is
founder
and director
Following her presentation
have a positive impact on the
of
the
American
Guild
of Flower
health care system ," said Bonnie Tuesday evening, Dr. Harnish will
Simms, event chairman. "It is for respond to a question and answer Arrangers, has lectured and taught
these reasons that the Holzer Medi- session. Refreshments will be in forty states. He has authored
cal Center has taken such an active served a1 the conclusion of the pro- numerous publications is on the
editorial staff of Southern Ganlens
role in promoting a series of inter· gram.
Magazine and is a conbibuling ediThose
auending
are
asked
to
use
esting and informative programs
the
main
entrance
facing
Spruce
tor to the Brooklyn Botancial Gar·
for women of all ages lhroughout
dens Handbook. He is a member of
the month of September. The Street
the Monticello, Florida Garden
Club.
Bonnie Kutschenreuter of Loveland,
Ohio presented the program
Maria L. Kern
Amy Grube, Erica Hanning, Jenon
Thursday,
with her slide proGALLIPOLIS - Hello Gallia nifer Harmon, and Chloeanna Har·
County! I hope all of you had a mon and also to the foreign gram "The World Around Us".
won&lt;lerful summer. Now that exchange Girl Scout from Korea. Close up look at some familiar
school in back in session, a new The troop participated in the coun· things and some not so familiar,
Girl Scout year is upon us and it is ty fair, went to the Columbus Zoo with a message of stewardship. It
(ime once again for the Gallia and Ameriflora and they also saw begins with a pond, the metamorCounty Girl Scout News. The girls the laser light show and the replica phosis of a Monarch butterfly and
includes wildflowers, a spiders eye
had an .eventful summer and here of lhe Santa Maria.
are the highlights.
The girls certainly had a busy and many more camera revelations.
• Daisy Troop 1223 participated summer and now for some news Bonnie has been a volunteer teachin lhe fair lind had a pizza pany.
er of school groups at the Cincinfrom the service unit.
Brownie Troop 598 had a
Dean of Rutland, and Lucy Earwood, newly
The service unit is looking into nati Nature Center for many years,
AITEND CONVENTION· Pictured are area
potluck/cook-out at their leader's some exciting evenrs for the· new gi•e presentations and leads groups
eleded
state publitity chairperson. Not pittured
garden club members who attend the annul
home where they were presented year. Two of the possibilities are on photography walks for the
are Jonnie Lou Gabrielli and Remy Simon, who
Ohio Association of Gardea Clubs coaventioa in
the awards and Try-Its they earned the French Art Colony and the Nature Center. A part time comalso attended the convention.
Dublin. From leR, are Leal! SehOOIIOYer, Betty
iluring the year. After the awards Clowning Girl Scout Programs. If
presentation, the girls went to you would like to join us please
Spring Valley Cinema and saw call the Chillicothe Servie Center at
..Beethoven."
614{773-2146 or write to 165 W.
The Brownies of Troop 931 vis- Fourth Street, Chillicothe, 45601.
Baptist Church will hold an ice
Sunday, Sept. 6
Reunions
should bring a covered dish, drinks,
ited the police department where Don't forget the next service unit
cream
social
a1
4
p.m.
Singing
by
CROWN
CITY
Exodus
will
CHESHIRE
•
Annual
Fife
table service, and memorabilia.
they were fingerprinted and meeting Sept 29 at 6:30p.m.
the
Addison
Quartet,
New
City
reunion,
at
Kyger
be
singing
at
Liberty
Chapel
Creek
Club
-I
That is all for this time- sec you
j\'atched a police dog find drugs.
Singers,
The
Sight
of
Faith
Singm,
Church,
Swan
Creek
Rd.,
at
7
p.m.
House.
Dinner
a1
12
noon.
CENTERVILLE
• The 62nd
The troOp also toured McDonald's, next month.
Stover
Family,
atid
Bill
Warren
annual
Richards
reunion
at Tyn
E.M.S., and lhe fife department and
Family.
Bring
lawn
chairs.
EverySCOTTOWN
·
Revival
at
GALLIPOLIS
McCall
Rhos
Church
$unday,
Sept.
6.
Bas·
they participated in the Ohio River
one
is
welcome.
Guyan
Valley
Baptist
Church,
reunion,
Sunday,
Sept
6
at
Cente·
ket
dinner
at
noon.
Sweep and the Gallia County Fair.
Sept 6-11, at 7 p.m. with Evangenary United Methodist Church .
Brownie Troop 372 started the
The eleventh annual Lambert
GALLIPOLIS
Wekome
home Picnic h11Ch at noon.
list
Glen
Matthews.
COLUMBUS - Relatives and
summer with a swimming party
reunion, held in memory of Henry
pany for Stanley (Wayne) McGuire
friends
of the late Lester and Minand cook-out. The girls completed Lambert, took place at the country
wiD
be
held
from noon to 7 p.m. at
nie
Rupe
Drummond will hold a
CROWN
CITY
Revival
ser·
GAlliPOLIS
Lewis
reunion
the requirements for the Sports home of Earl and Mary Ann
0
.0.
Mcintyre
Park,
sheltedtouse
vices
with
Rev.
Kenny
Hamilton,
6
reunion
at
the home or Mr. and
Sunday,
Sept.
6
at
0
.0.
Mcintyre
Try-It, painted shirts and made McDonald on Saturday, Aug. 22.
#5.
Bring
covered
dish
and
drink.
p.m.
at
the
Crown
City
Wesleyan
Mrs
.
Walter
(Margaret) Smith,
Part;
shelterbouse
15.
Lunch
at
stars for the July 4 parade, which
Auending were: Lena Lambert; Church.
(No
alcohol).
4166
Marland
Dr.,
Columbus, Sun12:30
p.m.
Bring
covered
dish.
they marched in, also. In August, Les and Ruth Lambert; George,
day,
Sept
6.
Telephone
267-6018.
the troop participated in the fair Seth, and Kelly Lambert; Earl and
MASON COUNTY - Civil Air
BIDWELL
Annual
homecomGALLIPOLIS - Minnis, Miller
I
and hiked over 16 miles at Old Mary Ann McDonald; Gail, Earl Jr.
Patrol
will
be
serving
breakfast
ing
at
Prospect
Baptist
Church.
and
Jackson
families
to
hold
a
GALLIPOLIS
- Elliott reunion,
Man's Cave and Ash Cave.
James, and Miles McDonald; Sunday School at 10 a.m. Basket from 8-11 a.m. and lunch from II reunion Sunday, Sept. 6 at lhe Gal· Salurday, Sept. 12 at 4 p.m. at 0.0 .
Brownie Troop 526 had seven Dawn Moore; Bruce, Michelle, and dinner at noon. Rev. Wendell John- a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Mason County
lia Cowtty Junior Fairgrounds, II Mcintyre Park shelterhouse #3.
girls attend Day Camp in June at Ashley Thomas; Loren Lambert; son
Airpon, two miles north of Point a.m. to 7 p.m. Basket dinner at
will
preach
in
the
afternoon.
Mcintyre Park. The g1rls attended Bob and Vicky DeMao; Anna
Singing by the Short Family. Pleasant on Route 62. Plane rides noon.
WASIDNGTON, W.Va. · 56th
Mr. Cartoon and also took pan in Brown; Linda Davis; Jessica Har- Everyone
available from Raven Aviation.
welcome.
annual
Buckley reunion Sunday,
tbe fair, where they won several rington; Brian and Rachel Sallee;
Sponsored by the Point Pleasant
Sept.
13
at DuPont Park, WashingGALLIPOLIS - Cremeens
trophies and rosettes. Good job Larry and Clara Mac Folden; Tony
Composite
Squadron
47078
of
the
CROWN CITY - Copley Family
reunion Sunday. Sept. 6 at Raccoon ton, W.Va., beginning at I p.m .
girls!
and Amy Huffman; John and Ben to sing at Big Four Church, 7:30 Civil Air Patrol.
Creek
County Park shelterhouse with a poduck dinner.
Junior Troop 364 started the Folden.
p.m.
Rev.
Frank
Conners
to
preach.
16.
Basket
dinner a1 noon.
summer with Day Camp and by
Dinner began at noon with
Tuesday, Sept. 8
(Items for the community calearning the Water Fun Badge at a prayer by Brian Sallee. Afternoon
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
GAlLIPOLIS
·
Fellure
reunion
endar
two days prior 10 an
CADMUS
·
Homecoming
serpool pany. Kristen Harrison. Kelly activities included: volleyball, vices at McDaniel Cross-roads Homemakers Extension Group Sunday, Sept. 6 a1 Raccoon Creek event. apptar
They
must
be received by
Lambert, Kelli Elliott, and Becky bocci ball, ftshing, golfing, basketmeeting, I0:30 a.m. at the home of County PH shclterbouse Ill. Any tilt Gallipolis Daily Tribune in
Cadmus
Road,
10
a.m.
Church,
Ellis participated in the fair and ball, spoon relay, water fight, ball
Basket dinner at noon. Rev. Dorothy Toler, White Oak Rd. To family member wishing to attend advance far publicatian)
.received several trophies and toss,
gift
grab
bags, Lawrence Self will be preaching.
share rides,. meet at the parkfront at
:rosettes- congratulations! The troop reminiscing,and enjoying good
I 0 a.m. Potluck lunch. Every
·ended summer by earning the food.
homemaker
welcome. Program:
Monday, Sept. 7
·Troop Camper Badge on their first
Traveling the farthest were Bob
"Health
Living
For Women in the
VINTON - Pomona Grange,
overnight at Bob Evans Farms.
and Vicky DeMao. The youngest 7:30p.m. atlhe Huntington Grange 90s · Balancing Body, Mind, and
Senior Troop 1806 had a swim- attending was Ashley Thomas and Hall. Potluck refreshments.
Spirit."
ming party/cook-out. Farewells the oldest was Lena Lambert, surwere said to the
· seniors: viving wife of Henry Lamben.
GALLIPOLIS • Gallia County
Disuict Library Board of Trustees
.Rock or Aacs it ll&gt;e only nationally
meeting, 5 p.m. at Bossard Libnuy.

Gallia County calendar

THE CARD BOX

Confidential Services: ·
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

sunday nmea Sentlnei-.Page BS

....

Wednesday, Sept. 9
CHESHIRE · Revival at Poplar
Ridge Church wilh Evangelist Caudle Adkins, 7 p.m, nightly Wednesday: Terry Family. Thursday: G!()ryland Grass. Friday: Spiritual
Strings. Saturday: Grubb Family
Singers.

ccccccccc m
J.l0xl3, 4·1xl0., 4·Sx11,

20 ....n.t., 12 All-o.coliDn Caption
Porlra#ti)'l9 K..,....lra/ Mhtl.,..,lraifl
and a Porlralf hlertllffcfllion Card"'
SU&amp;JECT FEE Of $2 PER.PERSON, poyoble wh"" ,_.;.,are oaken, nol l
lri advtrtloed
price. No deposit required. Pose1 for advertiJtd portrait collection our selection - on your c~lct
of background. Your Favorite prop1 wak:omod. Up lo ~ve oddit!onol poses token for optionol · ·:
portrait collection with no obligarion for purchase. Not valid with on~ other offer. One adverhed
poekoge per family. Portrait sizes opp.-oximClte.

lito IKf ~ Mltlrl! Ally,._ flmd Cli'lr.

THIS AREA K MART HAS A PERMANENT STUDIO OPEN:
Wld.·Sat 10 AM-7 PM.
On Sund!IY from Store Opening to One Hour Before Closing

-·.
.
·- ------ .,
..

GALLIPOLIS

-- ~-----·-----.;_

FAC CHANGES FACES· Tile French Art
Colony offered tree face palntln1 at botb Gallia
and Mason County Fairs in Aupst. Voluntieers
Mary and Art Sktnn:er, Krystal Cbarles, Jen·
niter Carpeoter, Tracy Mahoney, and Pall
McLaughlin painted rainbows, Ninja Turtles,
achy-breaky hearts, teddy bears, and more on :

_ ___.11----

over five bundred chllcireo. All French Art
Colony programming is offered through tbe
support of the Oblo Arts Council. Pictured are
Kathryn Gettles and Cindy Swisher as they
paint faces at the Gallia County Junior Fair for
lhe youth.

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

- - -·

GALLIPOLIS - Mid-Ohio Val·
ley Chapter of the Society for
Human Resource Management
meeting, noon at the Stowaway
Restaurant. Randy Headley of Con·
suiting Inc., will address the group
on the topic of "HR Stress - Just a
Pan of lhe Job." For information or
reservations call Art Fulks at 304882·2126 or Phyllis Mason a1 245·
5353.

IEIGS COUIITY

DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POIEAOY-IIAIOH BRIDGE
JAIEU. IIUSH, llgr.
I'I«&lt;HE IIIINSII
VlNlON, 0110,

DISKAYYAAD
STATERt 110
JAMES A.IIUSII, llgr.
PHONESM MGCI
(

LOGAN MONUMENT COlt

· ·-· • .- ·w- -.,•·-·---- •... ------..,------- -·-·-- ...
'•

- - ·-

�··.-.. .,. .,

Papa 86-Sunday 11mes . ~ntlnel

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

Reader doesn't understand
why neighbors baby their dogs
Dear Ann Landers: Occasion·
ally, you run a letter that has
appeared before. I'm hoping you
will print the enclos~ column
again. It appeared in The Miami
Herald on July 20, 1972. Thanks,
Ann. - MINNIE IN MIAMI
DEAR MINNIE: That you would
hang on to a column for 20 years is
pretty amazing. Since you think so
bighly of it, others migh~ 100. Here .~[i~;i~:-;~~
~ou accouiu
such - ;;;;;~
••
it is:
THE RUGS IN MY HOME ARE
Dear Ann: I'm middle-aged and BEAUTIFUL
DEAR BEAUTIFUL RUGS:
middle-class. I was born and raised
in a small town, but now I five in Some behavioral authorities say
Cincinnati. I'm what you'd call Mrs. that a dog offas middle-aged l!nd
older people permanent parenthood.
Middle America.
My husband and I live in a No maaer how old the dog gets he
townhouse complex. There are eight still needs td lib fed, bathed, combed
families in this compound, and six and petled.
Children grow up and become
of them have dogs. We do not. independent,
and sometimes rebelNeither my husband nor I had a dog
wllen we wen: children. Perhaps this lious, but when a dog is trained
explains my ignorance, but! can't he is obedient and respectful and
figure out why people go to so much stays that way.
Best of all, when you come home
troUble, not to mention the expense. from
a hard day's work, some
During the winter, ow neighbors members of the family may bade at
slog through the snow in below-zero
weather to walk their muus. All you, but your dog wags his tail and
you know he's glad you're home.
summer, I see these same idiots letsDear
Ann Landers: While visit·
driving pets 10 the veterinarian for ing in Washington, D.C., my wife
~ing and shots. When a dog is and 1 engaged a taxi driver
10
sick, its family members treat it like show us the sights and give us some
a child. They stay up aU night to history of our nation's capital.
: give it medicine.
We passed a statue of a sOldier
Our neighbor went to the expense
mounted
on his horse. The taxi
. or having her dog driven to Florida driver asked
if we knew the signifi: because he had ear trouble and
· all
· couldn't Oy. That dog had a mink cance 0 r a horse scuIp!W'C wtth
fow of the horse's hooves on the
coat and hat Fifty miUion Ameri- ground, compared with one hoof
cans can't be crazy. How do lifted nr the horse reared with two

Ann

hooves off the ground. Wben we said
we dido'~ he went on to tell us that
four hooves on the ground meant
the soldier died a natural death, one
lifted meant the soldier was wounded
in combat, and the. hone reared
meant the soldier wiS ki1lcd in blttle.
I've asked several friends lbout
this and no one has ever heanl the
story. Is this
is it with
1 talc
concocted
by atrue
taxiordriver
I
lively imagination? •• JACK IN

~~~A~Accommg 10 the
U.S. Army Military History Jnsti.
tute in Carlisle, Pa., these stories
ha
bas' · • 1•
the
ve no 18 1R •act. 1s up to
sculptor to do as he pleases with
the horse's hooves. Incidentally,
.
.
that tale has been waggmg S111CC
the Civil War. The Library of
Congress auributes it to the lively
imagination of tour guides dating
back to Gettysburg. Civil War buffs
will have a ball with this one.
Gem of the Day: Doesn't it
seem Sllllllge that we have 50,000
~;!~~enforce th~ Ten
_,
,
An "'coho/ probl~m. How C/UI )'OM
lrl/p )'OIU'S~/f or someone youlov~?
"Alcoholism: How to Rtcogllizt It,
How to Deal With Ir, How to
CoNqu~r Ir" will give you the
answers. Send a self-addressed,
long, bii.Silltss·sizt eNvelope aNi a
clrlckor mo~ttyordtrfor $3.65 (rhis
illCiudts postage aNi handling) w:
Alcohol, clo AM Landers, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago, IU. 60611-C562. (In
CtlMda. send $4.45.)

September 6, 1992

Shopping
center to
ban smoking

opportunity to tour American Electric Power's
River Transportation Division in Lakin, W.Va.,
to learn about towboats and barges.

.

speakers came from other AEP
operations. A representative from
Central Ohio Coal Company joined
the group the rtrsLday for a presentation on surface mining and land
reclamation.
Representatives from the Athens
Divi sion of Columbus Southern
Power Company and AEP's Fuel
Supply Department discussed
learning resources that are avail·
able to schools.
The seminar participants represented 16 schools from Athens,
Gallia, Meigs, Hocking and Fair·
field counties in Ohio as well as
Mason County in West Virginia,
according to Jim Tompkins, vice
president and general manager of
the Meigs Division. The educato~ ·
taught a variety of subjects in high
schools, junior highs and elementary schools.
"I was very impressed with this
inservice," said one teacher at the
conclusion of the seminar. "I
enjoyed the hospitality and have a
much better overview of the entire
process."
The seminar also helped to clear
up some common misconceptions
about coal mining and provide a
·flfSI·hand look at how the industry
operates. .
The last portion of the seminar

?

Stilting Sept. 14, smokers 81 the
Town &amp; County Shopping Center
will be asked to step outside if they
want to light up.
The sfiopP.JDg center is .warily
blazing a trail by outlawing smok·
in~. according to manager Robin
Phillips, adding th81 smoking bans
in shopping maUs are rare.
"We just don't .want to .wait f&lt;r
a law to force us to do it,'' PhiUips
said.
The center is ~ng to deflect
opposition with posters emphasizing the health dangers of smoking.
Stores and restaurants at the
shopping center .will decide if
smoking is permitted on their
premises. Most of the stores
already forbid smoking, while
restaurants set aside areas for
smokers.
Town &amp; Country opened in
1952 and is owned by the Don M.
Casto Organization of Columbus. It
has 55 stores on the concourse plus
17 shops in separate buildings.
The ban was prompted by COm·
plaints from non-smoking customers and store owners.
"We get caUs on a daily basis,"
Phillips said. "One woman said
she was in a restroom and some
lady blew smoke in her face.
Another said: 'I was at a bench try·
ing to ea1 and some man was smok-

,,

1&lt;11·

ing."'

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) State highway officials showcased
accident victims to promote the use
of Se81 belts and child safety seats.
The Ohio Depanment of Health
said only 58 pen:ent of children in
cars are seated in child restraints.
Officials said Friday they'd like
th81 number to gn up.
"I don't care how far we're
going, we always wear a seat belt,"
said Mary Jo Rohner, 23, of London.
She was seven months pregnant
with her third child when she was
driving home from work and was,
hit by an~ car.
Mrs. Rohnerwas wearing a seat
belt. Neither she nor the baby were
injured.
LL Col. Richard Curtis, assistant
State Highway Patrol superintendent, said troopers would be alerted
to the problem.
Lawa Ludwig, deputy director
of the Ohio Department of Highwar Safety, said many people think
silbng children in thea lap will protect them.
But she said unrestrained chi!·
dren can become "flying missiles"
in an accident.

Between 1800-1840, the United
States experienced heavy immigra·
tion and exploitation of ample nat·
ural resources, which fueled rapid
economic growth. In addition, the
spread of the franchise, public
schools and antislavery sentiment
we~ si~s of a widespread democrauc ethic.

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Pomeroy-Middlaport-Galllpolla, OH,Polnt Pleasant, WV

GALLIPOLIS •
individual
nr tesm sale., records were broken,
but 40 members of the Gallipolis
Lions Oub sold $13,974.61 worth
of light bulbs during the three day
sales blitz that ended Thursday
night.
Bob Hennesy led all salesmen
with a total of $5,031.41 for the
winning Nonh Blue team, which
fmished with $8,823.61 with Buzz
Call in the ·runner up slot with
$520.
The losing South Gold tesm was
led by An Lund's $1,940 with tesm
Co-captain Norm Snyder selling
$386.50 of the team total of
$5,151.00.

?

••

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•

Residents compete to be
'Maestro for a Minute'
By EDNA WIDTELEY
GALLIPOLIS • Many would
pale at the thought of taking Mae·
stro Ray Fowler's place as conductor of the Ohio Valley Symphony.
But Gallia Countians Charles
Adkins, Dr. Barry Dorsey, Bob
Easunan and Attorneys Bill Med·
ley and Barbara Wallen are com·
peting to do just that. They are can·
didates for a symphony fund raiser
called Maestro for a Moment.
According to Karen Berkich,
head of the Ariel Board fund-raising committee, the rules are simple.
"Each candidate collects $500 to
qualify. The one who raises the
most over that wins. The winner
conducts Srars and Stripes Forever
when the OVS be~ins its third season at the Morns and Dorothy
Haskins Ariel The81re Sept. 26.•
Berkich says the candidates are
not divulging their campaign Strate·
gies "but it's a good bet they'll tum
to family and friends first." She
~ suppon a
wai1ting to be

contacted. 'The Ariel Board apprectates the willingness of the candidates to get behind the OVS and
simultaneously create what should
be a fun evening for alL Let's make
their 1iob easier by getting behind
them. '
The candidates will make their
final bids for donations during
intermission Sept. 26. "Those last
dollars could be crucial," Berkich
says, "so activity promises to be
lively." Members of the Ariel
Board will serve as registrars and
are sworn to secrecy. 'The winner
and the audience will learn the
result together," Hettich added.
Fowler plans a conductor's cram
cowse the day of the event. He 'II
cover the basics which he confides
are '"up, down, right,lefL"
When it's time to pass the baton,
Fowler may straighten a tie, pat a
shoulder or offer a word of encouragemen~ but then he'll retire to the
wings and the Maestro for a
Moment will face the music.
Alone.

'

I'M FRAMED - Amy Wall
of Camarillo, Calif., does wbat
her friends call "glass face" or
what she called "I'm Framed"
during a taped audition for
"America's Funniest People" at a
maU Ia Ventura Friday. (AP)

HUBBARD'S
SYUCUSE, OH,

L-----------'

SALE

FURTHER REDUCTION ON
SUMMER MERCHANDISE
30%oFF

ON THE "T'IN MIDDLEPORT

.Lofoyettt. Maa
(jallipolis, CYJ£
446·4222

992-3148
I

Sunday 11mea Sentlntl=f'age . 87

A total of $9,314.61 was turned
in Thursday night by team members, most of whom reported a
complete sell-out of the three-way
bulbs that became pan of the annual sale four years ago.
BLUE TEAM (North)- Jim
Cochran, cc, $87.50; Dan Thomas,
cc, $133; Bob Hennesy $5,031.41;
Buzz Call $520; Ron Carmichael
$4 76. iO; Willis Leadingham
$375.50; Ron Noe $330; Gene
Wood $298; Dave Tawney $268;
Herman Dillon $215; Brent John·
son $208; Bob Pettins $166; Odie
O'Donnell $151; Ron Canaday
$126.50: Bill Shondel $125; Ron
Calhoun $124; Norm Tarr $64;
Larry Beebe $56: Jack
- Bailes $52;

Fred Wood $40; and Dan Hender·
son $0. TOTALS$ 8,823.61.
GOLD TEAM (South)- Guy
Morrow, cc, $153; Nonn Snyder,
cc, $386.50; Art Lund $1.940;
Gene Gloss $285; George Pope
$269; Jim Clark $249.50; Dick
Brown $232; Kent Shawver
$216.50; Harold Thompson $205;
Bill Medley $196.50; Jun Bennett
$155; Jeff Snedaker $151; Todd
Johnson $136; Hobart Wilson
$114; Jay Caldwell $104; Jeff
Fowler $100; Max Tawney $80.00;
Marvin Boxdorfer $78; Jack Hud·
son $77; Bobby Clark $0; Richard
Smith, Zone 6 chairman, $28.
TOTALS $S,ISI.

_Videotape documents abortion before Roe v. Wade
By WENDY fiUNDLEY
Daytou Dally News
DAYTON, Ohio - Watching
"Back Alley Detroit: Abortion ·
Before Roe vs. Wade,',' you might
~et the eerie feeling you're peering
mto the futwe.
The documentary recal)s a time
when women risked ending up i.n
PERFECT SCORE • Eric J, Carsten, 17, of
more thaD a million test takers, received a perjail or in the morgue to end therr
Brookfield, Wis., silli in his bedroom Friday. He
fect score on the SAT. He is a senior at Catholic
pregnancies. With the Sqpreme
reteived a perfect score on the SAT, a national
Memorial High School in Waukesha, Wis. (AP
Court in June upholding Roe vs.
photo)
· college entrance exam which be took this year.
Wade by a 5-4 margin, the teeterNationally last year, only 10 students out of
ing fate of legalized abortion hovers. like an unspoken presence
throughout the vtdeo, lending it a
powerful timeliness.
Ironically. Yellow Springs film ·
maker Dante! Friedman says it's a
bad time to find outlets for a documentary that's sure to fan the
flames of this politically charged
issue.
By ED MORENO
it's happening all over the country. trayal of them as less-than-human
•'Any film about abortion would
Associated Press Writer
We're trying to correct history," savages.
have
a hard tiine now,'' laments
SANTA FE, N.M. -The 300th said Joe Sa villa, director of the
"If Fiesta is going to continue, Friedrhan, an assistant professor of
anniversary of the Spanish recon- Archdiocese of Santa Fe's Office it needs to be his~rically I;Ol'rCCI,"
psychology at Antioch College
quest of New Mexico has set off an oflndian Ministry.
said Herman Agoyo, governor of who took a yearlong sabbatical in
uproar among Hispanics and
The changes were prompted by San Juan Pueblo and past chairman
Pueblo Indians over how that event controversy over a documentary, of the All Indian Pueblo Council. 1988 to pursue his interest in film·
should be remembered and por- filmed during the 1990 Fiesta and "If Fiesta is a celebration of the making.
Still, "Back Alley Detroit" is
trayed.
'
released this year, that showed reconquest ·or Santa Fe and the sure to fmd an audience.
The quarrer centers around the Pueblo participants reacting angrily Pueblo people, I think of it in total·
Last month, it was selected
annual Santa Fe Fiesta, which as Pueblos were portrayed by non- ly different terms."
"Best
Public Awareness Documixes refigion with secular celebra- Indians wearing costumes of Plains
The Spanish flfSt settled what is mentary" in the 1992 Hometown
tions and a pageant ponraying the Indians. The costumes have since now New Mexico in the late 1500s, USA Video Festival.
been changed.
Spanish return to the area in 1692.
and established their capital at
The New Our Bodies, OurAt the urging of Indian leaders
But the review of tradition has Santa Fe in 1610. The setders tried selves, a kind of feminist manifes~
and Roberto Sanchez, the Roman prompted some controversy of its to quash native religions and treat· of women's health care, calls the
Catholic archbishop of Santa Fe, own.
ed the Pueblos like serfs.
documentary ''a must for everyone
. the fiesta's militaristic aspects have
Many Hispanics objected to
The Indians rebelled in 1680, who cares about the reproductive
·• been toned down for this year's renaming the saint, saying the IeiDing many Spaniards and sending rights of women.''
:: edition, which begins Sept. II.
name La ·Conquistadora was never the rest fleeing to what is now El
Friedman says the documentary.
:
In July, Sanchez renamed the used in a militaristic way, but to Paso, TeltliS.
which is being marketed by a New
·~ ·pa111iness of Santa Fe, a small stat· signify the conquest and unification
In 1692, de Vargas approached York.film distributor, has anracted
: ·tie of the Virgin Mary that the of hearts.
Santa Fe, hoping to persuade the the interest of Planned Parenthood
:;.Spanish brought here in 1693,
"I've talked to a lot or Spanish Pueblos to let the settlers return groups. He hopes it wiD be used in
-. -·~ our Lady of Peace." It had been people,'' said Johnny Vaides, who peacefully. Thinking a deal had college classrooms.
· called "La Conquistadors,'' literal- portrayed Spanish leader Gen. Don been struck, he returned the next
He's tryirig, without much luck,
ly "Lady Conqueror."
Diego de Vargas in the 1943 year with 70 families, only to find to drum up interest in Public
The Spanish platoon this year pageant. "They say they wiU call hostile Pueblos had not vac81ed the Broadcasting System affiliates, par·
will enter the cay plaza on foot her the Lady of Peace, or whatever, city.
ticularly iri the Deunit area, where
rather than horseback and will not but it will always be La Conquista·
More than 20 Spanish settlers the documentary is set.
wear heavy armor or sabers. And dora.''
The work is the result of a col·
died th81 cold winter before de :Var·
the conquistadors will be greeted
Pueblo Indians from the Rio gas fmally snacked Santa Fe. After labor81ion between Friedman and
by a company of Pueblo dancers.
Grande VaUey, meanwhile, say the a bloody battle, de Vargas hanged Sharon Grimberg, whom he met
" 1992 has been the year for changes didn't go far enough to dozens of Indians.
when both were studying filmmaksuch changes to take place because erase the pageant's traditional poring at the Ann Arbor campus of the
University of Michigan. Grimberg
now lives in Atlanta.
Friedman, who grew up in
Columbus and graduated from
Antioch College in 1969, chose this
disquieting subject out of a personal interesL
"My mother told me my ~d­
mother
had an illegal abonton in
that were received at home well her brother but ignored them until
By THOMAS J, SHEERAN
1930.
She
contracted septicemia
after the writers were killed.
Associated Press Writer
she saw news reports about"the
(blood
poisoning)
and was in a
"It's almost impossible (for the US Air mailing to Mould.
CLEVELAND- The heartache
from the death of a relative, partic- post office) to screen anything lilce
"You would think the Navy's coma for a month. My mother was
that"
Smeraldi
said.
"Obviously,
ularly under tragic circumstances,
record:keeping would be better," 12 (at the time),'' said Friedman,
sitting in his office at Antioch's
ow
'service
is
to
handle
mail.
The
can return weeks or months later
she said.
name
and
list
are
out
of
our
when "junk mail" addressed to the
The Navy appointed a commit· McGregor Hall.
Friedman doesn't know why his
hands."
victim shows up in the mailbox:
tee to look into the matter. A
USAir spokeswoman Agnes spokesman did not return repeated grandmother had an abortiou, and
Michael Mould, 21, was among
he purposely. avoided delving into
27 people killed in the crash of a Huff said the airline immediately calls seeking comment.
that
question .with any of the
USAir jetliner in New York last deletes the names of crash victims
Record company and other
women
interviewed in "Back
from
any
mailing
lists.
Mould's
March. He had inquired about a
mailings to her brother stopped Alley DetroiL"
"frequent flyer" program two days application may have reached when the family wrote "deceased"
"We didn't dwell into the reaUSAir's Winston-Salem, N.C., on the items and returned them,
before the crash.
sons
why . ... We wanted to draw
Three weeks later, Mould's girl- processing center after such an Ms. Kubicina said.
attention
to the consequences.
·
friend got a letter inviting Mould~ attempt, she said.
en)oy the benefits of frequent travel
"There is a procedure followed
once an accident has occurred with
wnh USAir.
·; The family of a sailor whom the passenger lists," she said. "The
U.S. Navy hll\1 blamed fnr the fatal company tries ~ be very sensitive
• tl h . - •10 IMI WIWII'I
explosion aboard the US S Iowa got to the needs of families.'
•
WID ALIIII Hartwig's sister, Kathy Kubici~ letter inviting him to join the
•IIIIIIIIAIIC-&amp;11111111
Navy Reserve. The sailor, Clayton na, had fought to clear his name
• YACUWI mill
• SOIAI COVII
Hanwig, and 46 shipmates died in ever since the Navy initially con•OUKAI!IIImT
cluded that he caused the explo·
tile blasL
• RLIII WID
• 20 &amp;&amp;. wm Lllflll
· The lener arrived the week of sion. The Navy apologized when
Aprill9, the third anniversary of follow-up investigations were
ALLONLT *850.00
unable to pinpoint a cause for the
the explosion.
The mailings often involve blast
Ms. Kubicina said her family
bureaucracies. A South Carolina
agency wrote to a dead man to tell occasionally .received recruiting
him his food stamps had been cut calls and servit:ll questionnaires for
off but might be resumed if his .
condition changed.
•'
"Nobody wants to send a piece
of mail to a dead person. None of
this is intentional,'' said Denny
Hatch of Stamford, Conn., who
II you are planning a weddinp, then you should
publishes a direct-mail industry
come see us at Hask1ns·Tanner.
newsleuer.
Hatch says such mailings can be
averted but deletions can take
You will have over 190 styles of tuxedos to choose
months: particularly i.f catalog
from. We have a large selection of !he latest siyles
companies and mass mwlers share
and complimentary accessories for this special
lists.
.
·
6ccasion.
Stephen Patrick· of Trtplex
'
Direct Marketing Corp. in Novato,
Quill~
Fol'llalirear at
Calif., said it's up to co!"p~n~es,
AfhN..Ie Prices
not families, to take the tnt~Uve.
His company culls lis\s for the
GROOM TUX fREE WITH 6 OR MORE
t\ames of the dead and unmterested.
IN WEDDING PARTY
• "It's just good business sense~
collect these names and make sure
you don't mail to them again,'~ he
said.
· Don Smeraldi, a U.S. Postal
Service spokesman in Cleveland,
slid the USAlr and Navy mailings
l(t similar to World War n leum

Cultures collide in conflict over
reconquest of New Mexico

Dead people on receiving end of
'junk mail' snafu; survivors suffer

rJIUSfwe Cafe
'

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, 111 ,, ' I 1 o' 11l l il l l ,l h lt • &lt;ll I ,H fl'l"

I

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LIDO

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made for an informative and enjoy- gram. It's a great way to educate
able evenin$. An AEP River Trans- the public about our company and
portation Dtvision towboat met the its operations."
Auending from Gallia County
teachers at the Gavin Plant dock.
then toOk the group across the Ohio were:
Donna DeWitt -Washington
River to the division's headqu&amp;ner.i
Elementary
School; Henry DiDion •
in Lakin, W. Va.
North
Gallia
High School; ChrisThe teachers toured the facilitine
Napier
-Cheshire-Kyger
Eleties, hosted by Gale Rhodes, manmentary;
Rebecca
Woodyard
•
ager of River Division, and several
Cheshire-Kyger
Elementary
members of his staff.
School.
Meigs County: Kathy Ann
"This is the fourth year that
Southern Ohio Coal Company has Baker • Hartford Elementary
offered this seminar to area teach- School; Barbara Mathews Crow •
ers and once again it was a Salisbury Elementary School; and
resounding success," said Tomp- Patricia Shrivers • Chester Elemenkins. "We plan to continue the pro- tary School.

f

September 6, 1992 .

'

No

SOCC sponsors seminar for tri-state teachers
ALBANY - For most students
and teachers, summer vacation is a
time for relaxing and taking a break
from school and studying. But for
26 teachers from southeastern
Ohio, and parts of West Virginia
summer offered a chance to go
back to school and learn about coal
mining, coal transportation and the
generation of electricity.
These teachers took part in
"Spotlight On Coal," a three-day
seminar sponsored by Southern
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Division. The program featured sessions on geology, surface mining
and reclamation, underground mining, environmental concerns and
safety. In addition to classroom
presentations, the teachers towed
the Meigs Division's underground
coal mines, its coal preparation
plant and the American Electric
Power (AEP) Fuel Supply Coal
Lab.
The underground mine tour was
a highlight for many of the teach·
ers. The group also toured Ohio
Power's General James M. Gavin
Plant located at Cheshire, Ohio,
.
and the AEP River Transportauon
Division in Lakin, W. Va.
Most of the speakers and tour
guides were specialists from the
Meigs Division. However, some

..

owners.

News notes

TAKE TOUR ·The "Spotlight on Coal"
teachers seminar, hosted by Southern Ohio Coal
Company Meigs Division, gave teachers an

-~-

Herinesy top salesman in Gallipolis
Lions Club annuallightbulb sale

State officials urge
using safety seats

schedule lucludes meeting on Sept 9 and Oct. 21
at the Stowaway; and Nov. 18 (semiuar) at tbe
Holiday Inn. Pictured (I tor) are: Mike Harring·
ton, treasurer (Goodyear); Pllyllis Mason, secre·
tary (University or Rio Grande); LuAnn Rich,
vice president (Fruth Pharmacy); and Art Fulks,
president (Appalachian Power).

·----· ·-

?

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Operators of a suburban Kettering shopping ce~ter have decided to ban
smoking inside the center's
enclosed concourse foUowing complaints from non·smokels and store

Many merchants don't want
smoke drifting in liom public areas
and leaving odors on their merchandise, Phillips said.
"Consumers are more willing to
accept this kind of a policy now
than they would have been even
five, I 0 years ago," said Wayne
W. Tai.BJZyk, a marketing professor
at Ohio State University. "A big
part of th81 is related 10 research on
secondhand smoke and its dangers."

CHAPTER OFFICERS • Tbe Mld·Obio Val·
ley Chapter of the Society for Human Resources
Management is planning programs for the 1992·
9J year. The chapter meets monthly to learn
about current issues in human resources and to
share professional experiences. The program

... .... ,_. -- •-;-·····

Occasion.

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"I was interested in what it was
like back then ... this abortion
underworld that my grandmother
got involved in." ,
Using borrowed equipment and
working on a budset of $1,500 to
$2,000 out of thetr own pockets,
the independent mmmakers set out
to portray what rich and poor
women did when faced with
unwanted pregnancies.
But along the way, they encountered remnants of the underground
allonion network that operated in
Detroit and other cities throughout
the United States.
Of the people who performed
illegal abortions, Friedman believes
"some did it out of humanitarian
impulses and some were exploiting

dimension: the resistance that
included the clergy and the Jane
Collective.
In Dettoit and other large cities,
Clergy Counseling Services were
formed to assist women in finding
ways~getsafea~~

"We see it as a fJ!m for people
who have come of age since Roe
vs. Wade," he said.

women.''

But they weren't alone in the
shadowy abortion underworld.
Friedman said that as the story
developed he began to see l!JlOther

PASSPORT
AND I.D.
PHOTOS
Ready_I•

5 MINUTES

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, 01.

·LARGE SILECDON

Rock of Ages offers you 1 choice of 6 different colored
granites. Whatever your requirement• may be, complete
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yard touchdown run. Williams' kick made it17-13.
Herbstreit completed 16 of 20 passes for 180
yards with two interceptions.
Attendance was 89,653, the second year in a row
that these teams failed to sell out Ohio Stadium. The
Buckeyes' only non-sellouts in the last 59 games
were against Louisville.
No. 9 Alabama lS, Vanderbilt 8 - At
Tuscaloosa, Ala., freshman Michael Proctor kicked
four field goals in his college debut as No. 9 Alabama, playing without the suspended David Palmer,
continued its domination of Vanderbilt with a 25-8
victory Saturday.
Proctor kicked three field goals from beyond 40
yards and was just short from 52 yards. He also made
a 32-yarder in the fourth quaner to seal the victory
and set a school rccoo:l for the most field goals by a
freshman.
.
~bama {1·0) defeall:d Vandy (0-1) for the eighth
· year m a row and tmproved its record against the
Commodores to 30-2 since 1960.
Palmer, a sophomore receiver and kick returner
who accounted for 1,113 total yards in 1991, was
held out of the game by head coach Gene Stallings
because he was arrested for drunken driving during
the off-season.
The kicking gwne was a problem for Alabama last
season, as the Crimson Tide got only one field goal
longer than 40 yards during an 11-1 year. Proctor
exceeded that total in the first quarter, capping the
Tide's first three drives with kicks of 46, 43 and 42
yards.
Denison 28, Brockport St. 21 - At Granville,
Ohio, Scott Lane's 23-yard touchdown run with
10:16 to play Saturday gave Denison a 28-21 vicrory
over Brockpon State in the opening game for both
schools.
Lane also scored on a one-yard run in the third
quaner. Jason Cooperider ran 14 yards for one touch·
down and passed 20 yards 10 Mike Foley for another
score for the Big Red, both in the second quaner.
Greg Smith scored on runs of two yards and one
yard in the third quaner and Dennis Dwyer's 14-yard
run early in the fourth quarter tied the score at 21-21
for the Eagles.
. Lane ran for 77 yards in IS carries and completed
ftve of stx pass attempts for 81 yards. Cooperider
picked up 73 yards in 14 attempts and was four for
six for 63 yards passing. Smith led Brockpon State
with 116 yards in 281ries.

STEALS TmRD- Cleveland's Albert Belle
slides into third base ror the steal in front or
Seattle third sacker Mike Blowers and third

base umpire AI Clark in the fourth inning or
Saturday's Americaa League contest in Cleveland, which tbe Indians won 54. (AP)

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Dan Wilkinson disrupted a two-point conversion attempt inside the last
mmute il!ld !Ill encroachment penalty spoiled another
late Lomsvdle sconng opponunity as No. 17 Ohio
State escaped with a 20·19 victory over the Cardinals
on Saturday.
Trailing 20-13, Louisville drove 67 yards for a
touchdown, which came on Ralph Dawkins' twoyard run with 33 seconds to play.
On the conversion, quarterback Jeff Brohm rolled
left but came under h~vy p~ssure from Wilkinson,
a tackle who broke into the Louisville backfield vir·
tually at the snap of the ball. Brohm threw to the end
zone just as Wilkinson hit him, and the ball floated
beyond Dawkins' reach in the end zone.
· On the ensuing on-side kick, Louisville's Ray
Buchanan picked up the bouncing ball and ran depp
into Ohio State territory. But the play was nullified
because Buchanan picked up the ball befo~ it had
gone the necessary 10 yards.
Oh~o State took possession and ran out the clock.
Ohw State, a 17-point favorite in this season
opener, got what proved to be the winning points
with 3:09 to play on Tim Williams' 26-yard field
goal.
Ohio State beat Louisville 23-15 a year ago under
similar circumstances when a late Cardinals attempt
to tie came up shon.
The Buckeyes, 88-11-4 in openers, jumped to a
10-0 lead on a 30-yard field goal by Williams and a
50-yard run off a reverse by llanker Joey Galloway.
Brohm, who completed 22 of 30 passes for 230
yards without an interception, found his brother,
Greg, on a three-yard touchdown pass to make it 106 at the half. Ken Harnden, who missed a 25-yard
field goal on Louisville's first possession, had his
extra-point kick blocked by Raben Smith.
Smith, who two years ago broke Archie Griffm's
school rushing record for freshmen, made his ftrSt
appearance since quitting the team just before the
stan of the 1991 season. He gained 47 yards on II
carries before leaving the game in the third quaner
with bruised ribs.
. Louisville went ahead 13-10 midway through the
third quarter when Dawkins, who. gained 125 yards
on 19 carries, scored from the five and Harnden
kicked the extra poinl
Ohio State then went 60 yards in just 42 seconds
to regain the lead for good. Quarterback Kirk Herbsueit completed passes of 9, 27 and 20 yards on the
five-play drive before fullback Jeff Cothran's nine-

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Section C
September 6, 199:t

No. 17 Ohio State slips
past Louisville 20-19

LUNCH MEAT
STORE HOURS
MoRday ~ Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

1rinwi - ~entind

Sports

ARMOUR

CLEVELAND (AP) - Albert
Belle grounded an RBI single past
a drawn-in infield with one out in
the ninth inning Saturday, giving
the Cleveland Indians a 5-4 victory
over the Seatde Mariners.
Felix Fermin drew his fourth
wall: of the game with one out in
the ninth against Russ Swan (3·10)
and Carlos Baerga singled Fennin
to third. Belle then greeted Mike
Schooler with his third hit, a
grounder to the right or shortstop
Omar Vizquel. ·The hit gave Belle
three RBis in the game.
Eric Plunk (6-3) worlced a hitless ninth for Cleveland.
Seattle starter Randy Johnson,
unbeaten in his last six starts, lasted
7 2/3 innings, allowing four runs
and eight hits, .striking out eight
and walking seven.
The Indians S&lt;:Ored four runs in
the fifth inning, when Johnson
appeared distracted by a military
jet doing acrobatic maneuvers•
above Cleveland Stadium. The jet
was pan of an air show being beld
at adjacent Burke Lakefront Airport.
Cleveland loaded the bases on a
walk, a single, a forceout and
another wall:. Johnson stepped off
the rubber momentarlly as the jet
roared by, and Baerga hit the next
pileh for a two-run single.
Belle then. lined a two-run double down the left-field line that the
Mariners lllllled was foul.
The Mariners took a 2-0 lead on
solo home runs in the second by
Ken Griffey Jr., his 25th, and in the

.,

fifth by Dave Valle, his ninth. They
tied it at 4 in the sixth on four con·
secutive walks - two issued by
starter Charles Nagy and two by
Kevin Wickander - alid Jay Bohner's sacrifice fly off Power.
Blue Jays 7, TW!os 3
At Toronto. Ont., Joe Carter
drove in his IOOth run as the
Toronto Blue Jays again broke
loose on a hit barrage and beat the
Minnesota Twins 7-3 Saturday.
Carter, who has reached 100
RBis in six of his last seven sea·
sons, singled home a run in the
. fourth. The Blue Jays hit five
straight singles in the innin,g and
scored five times.
On Friday night, Toronto tied an
AL record with 10 consecutive hits
during an eight-run second inning.
The Blue Jays went on to beat the
Twins 16-5, and Saturday's victory
gave the AL East leaders seven victories in I0 games.
Winner Juan Guzman (13-3)
gave up two runs on five hits in
five innings. He walked four and
struck out nine.
John Smiter (14-7) was perlect
through three mnings, but 1'oronto
erupll:d in the founh.
Rangers 7, Yankees 3
At New York, Jose Canseco got
his fmt hit for Texas, an RBI double during a five-run ninth inning,
helping the Rangers beat the New
York Yankees 7-3 Sawrday.
Cariseeo had popped out, fouled
out and walked twice before his
double. In his first game slnce
being trad~d from Oakland to

Texas, he went 0 for 4 Friday
night.
Rafael Palmeiro hit a two-run
double in the fifth inning and a
two-run homer in the ninth, giving
him 17 for the season.
Rookie Roger Pavlik (3-2) shut
out the Yankees until the eighth,
when New York scored on Robeno
Kelly's single. Pavlik allowed
seven hits in 7 1/3 innings and
Kenny Rogers got his sixth save.
Palmeiro homered off Sam
Militello (3·2) for a 2~ lead.
.Bernie Williams hit a two-run
single in the New York ninth .
Padres 5, Cubs 3
At Chicago, Ill., Jerald Clarlc hit
a two-run homer after Greg Mad·
dux was ejected with two outs in
the eighth inning Saturday, lifting
the San Diego Padres to a 5-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
Maddux (16·11) was ejected by
home plate umpire Ed Montague
when he hit Dan Walters, who
started for the mound but slOpped.
The confrontation came an inning
after Jose Melendez threw over the
head of Ryne Sandberg.
Jeff Robinson relieved for the
Cubs and immediately surrendered
Clark's lOth home run, the Padres'
third of the game. Earlier, Fred
McGriff hit his National Leagueleading 33rd with a man on and
Tony Fernandez added a solo shot
-his ftrst home run in 352 at-bats.
Melendez (6· 7) worked I 1/3
innings for the victory ll!ld Randy
Myers pitched the ninth for his 31st
save in 37 opporrunities.

BACK ON THE RUN - Ohio State running
back Robert Smith (26), playing in his first
game since quittin~ the team last vear, tries to

get pB$1 Louisville defender Rod Striekiand (Ji)'
during the first quarter of Saturday's SeasO!I,.
opener in Columbus, which the Buckeyes
20-19. (AP) ·

won

In today's AFC Central bout,

Houston looking to old game
films to unveil Pittsburgh plans
By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
HOUSTON (AP) - It appears
the Houston Ollers are playing four
teams in today's opener in the
Astrodome.
While the Pittsburgh Steelers
will be the only opponent on the
field, film canisters labeled Pittsburgh, Kansas City, New Orleans
and New York Giants littered the
Oilers meeting rooms all week.
Head coach Jack Pardee and his
staff were 1rying io figure out what
the Steelers' melting pot of coaches
wiU throw at them.
"We're guessing," quanerback
Warren Moon admitted. "They
have a secondary coach that was
with Cincinnati. They have a coordinaror that was with New Orleans
and then they have a coordinator
for a head coach who was with
Kansas City."
The Oilers, 4-1 in the exhibition
season and favorites to win their
second straight AFC Central title,
expect to solve the mystery by
today's kickoff.
"We're getting a litde combination of all three of those, so we're
seeing how those three teams
played us and then try to prepare
that way," Moon said.
It's a sign of the changing times
in Pittsburgh.

Gone is trap-happy Chuck Nou prepare for now with Detroit and
and in his place is Bill Cowher, Atlanta also running the four wide
Kansas City's defensive coordina- recetvers. ••
The. ~teeters won't have any
tor last year.
Cowher has assembled a staff recogmuon problems with the Oilthat includes defensive coordina!Or ers offense or defense.
Dom Capers, former defensive
Moon established NFL records
backs coach at New Orleans, and with 404 completions on 655 passdefensive backs coach Dick ing attempts last year and he led
LeBeau, Cincinnati 's defensive the NFL with 4,690 passing yards,
the third time in NFL history a
coordinator the past eight seasons.
The new offensive coordinator quanerback had consecutive 4,000.
is Ron Erhardt, assistant head yard P.erformances. He joins
Miamt' s Dan Marino and San
coach for the Giants last season.
Cowher will give the Oilers a Diego's Dan Fouts.
Haywood Jeffires became the
hint. He'll do something different
from 1990, when he lried 10 slow fifth receiver in NFL history to
the Oilers' run-and-shoot as the caleh 100 passes last season. He's
joined by Ernest Givins and Curtis
Chiefs' defensive coordinator.
"We won't use the same Duncan, while Leonard Harris will
scheme we did two years ago when replace Drew Hill, a Plan B losa to
Warren was passing for 500 Atlanta.
••
Houston's defense is missing
yards," Cowher said.
Moon threw for 527 yards in a some key parts. End William Fuller
27 -I0 victory that IY3S the second and cornerback Cris Dishman, both
best passing performance in NFL Pro Bowlers, are contract holdouts
hisrory behind Los Angeles' Norm and end Sean Jones has retired.
" Our offense is very similar
Van Brocklin's554 yards in 1951.
If the Steelers are causing the with Ron Erhardt here as to what
Oilers problems, the Oilers' run- the Giants have done· in recent
and-shoot is giving Cowher years," Cowher said. "We still
have a long way to go. We havJ:
headaches.
" It's become a part of the NFL; young players who are being asked
it's a different identity," Cowher to do some things they hadn't done
said. "It's an offense you have 10 before that takes time and repetition."

Cleveland to commence season
as Indianapolis Colts' guest team
By HANK LOWENKRON
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Mark
Herrmann has learned to live with
inactivity, patience and confidence
in II years as an NFL quanerback.
He gets a rare opportunity to
demonstrate his confidence today,
filling in for an injured Jeff George
when· his Indianapolis Colts meet
Cleveland in the season-opener for
both teamS.
It will be Herrmann's firSt start
since Dec. 27, 1987, and only the
12th in a career that began when
Denver selected him in the fourth
round of the 1981 draft.
And it will be the firSt time Hernnann starts in a season opener.
" In my heart I know I can do
it," he said.
His coaches haven 't always
agreed. He's played in only 37 regular-season games since ending his
career at nearby Purdue, whete he
set nine NCAA passing records.
" Maybe I have to go out and
convince some other people that ·1
can play. Any opporrunity is great
and I appreciate the chance," said
Herrmann.
Hemnann, who grew up in suburban cannel, is in his third stint
with the Colts after having been
traded once and released another
time.
"Each time I've left a club,
someone else has wanted me,'' said
Herrmann, who has also played for
Denver, San Diego and the Los
Angeles Rams. "In that respect,
I've been forrunate. I've had to batde to stay around so long."
.
George is expected to be out for
at least the first three gwnes with a
streu:nea ugament on nts passing

hand.
"It's a tough deal," Herrmann
said. "A lot of people are probably
not expecting much out of me, but I
expect a lot out of myself. If I don't
play well, I'll be' very disappoint-

field, on injured reserve. Rookie
Tommy Vbrdell will fill in for
Mack, who led the Browns in rushing with 726 yards and 10 touchdowns last year.
Also, Bernie Kosar will be
ed.''
throwing to mainly untested
He hopes to produce the first receivers with Webster Slaughter a
Indianapolis victory in a season- holdout and Reggie Langhorne on
opener since the team arrived from the Indianapolis side of the field
Baltimore in 1984.
after having been left unprotected
Herrmann goes into the game by the Browns.
having completed 318 of 537
Only two of the club's four wide
career passes (59.4 percent) for receivers - Michael Jackson and
3,838 yards with 15 touchdowns Jamie Holland - were with the
and 35 interceptions.
Browns last year. Holland never
"It's not easy spending most of caught a pass and Jackson had 17
your career on the sideline. You receptions. They ' re joined by
want to get out there and get into a Bruce Hill, who spent most of last
rhythm . It's hard to do when you're year on Tampa Bay's injured
standing on the side," he said. reserve list after having surgery on
"I've kind of learned that you go his left knee, and sixth-round draft
with the reps (in practice) that pick Rico Smith.
Vardell, Cleveland's pick in the
you've gol I've come in at differ·
draft's first round and the ninth
ent times without a lot of work.
"This weelc has been a bonus to selection overall, finished the preseason with 87 yards on 21 carries
me, getting all this work."
He's been effective adjusting 10 with a long gain or 15 yards. He
the offense brought in by coach also caught three passes for 12
Ted Marchibroda, completing 23 of yards.
"I wasn't totally disappointed
34 passes in the preseason for 282
yards and two touchdowns .wtthout with my preseason performance,
but it wasn't anythin$ to write
an interception.
"I like the situation I'm facins. home about either," S81d Vardell.
We're all fresh in the system at thts He rushed for 1,084 yards and 20
touchdown as a senior 111 Stanford
time" Herrmann said "We're not
.
last
r,ear.
;
coming off a losing sll1:alc o~ a wm'
He's
had
a
good
preseason,"
ning streak. Everythmg ts new
said head coach Bill Belichick.
starting on Sunday."
Both teams begin the season "~icked up our system. He's
well, run well.... But, he's
with a lot of questions after posting bl
stiU
a
rookie
and has a lot of thinp
2-2 preseason marks.
to
learn.
I'm
sure he'll see things
The Browns have two of their
starting
Sunday
that he hasn't seen
projected staners, fullback Kevin
Mack and cornerback Frank MiMi- before."
•,

.

..

.

~

�Pomeroy-Middleport~alllpoll8, . OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Page C2-Sunclay nmee SenUI\el ,

OVERFLOW lNG CROWD- Football fans
gather on the bank next to the stands at River
Valley High School to watch the Raiders play

In Raiders' first-ever battle,

Point Pleasant The stands were filled to capacity with an estimated crowd of more than 4,000.
(Times-SeDtinel photo by Kevin Pinson)

wv

SIDELINE SUPPORT - River VaOey Higll
School football players, cheerleaders aDd fans
react as tailback Charles Peck returns a kick for
94-yards for a touchdOWD Friday night dllling

STRIP SHOW- Gallia Academy's Jerermy
Clay (15) strips the ball from Meigs ruaDiDg
back Matt Craddock (20) iD tbe opea field during the Friday night season opener for both

the-third quarter of Friday night's game apiast
Point Pleasaat, which the Big Blacks held OD to
win 31-22. (Times-Sentinel pboto by Kevin Pin·
son)

.

the scoring thrust with a 10-yard
run up the middle from the visitors'
II on the preceding play, went up
the middle from the Knights' one
for the game's first touchdown.
Quarterback Aaron McCarty's twopoint conversion run gave River
Valley an 8-0 lead with II :28 left
The Raiders' defense, fired up
as a result of the touchdown, held
Point to nine yards and 2:58 of pos·
session on a series·that ended at the
Big Blacks' 43 . However, Brent
Smith's fourth-and-15 punt landed
in the arms of Peck , who was
nailed almost immediately by Big
Black gazelles Donnie Lepon and
Matt Rieger at the Raiders' eight
River Valley held the ball for
nearly three minutes and five plays,
but Jason Jenkins' punt was taken
by Jimmy Ingels, who relunled the
ball II yards to the Raiders' 26.
From there, it took Point four plays
- senior fullback Jason Safford's
series-opening 21-yard run and two
red-zone runs by junior tailback Jason Shinn preceding Safford's two·
yard scoring run - to hit paydirt.
Smith, the Knight's left-handed
quarterback, tossed a two-point
conversion pass to Kevin Miller to
tie the contest at 8-8 with 3:45 left
in the fll'St half.
Austin Moore's kickoff was
caught by returner Wayne Myers
who moved the ball seven yards to
the Raiders' 32. On the first play
from scrimmage, McCarty dropped
straight back behind almost her·
metically-sealed protection from
the line (a relative constant for the
Raiders' passing game) and tossed
a pass to Peck along the hosts'

Club finalizing plans for
primitive renezvous
\iALLIPOLIS - Membership
is now open in the Backwoodsman
Muzzle Loading Rifle Club.
The club meets the second Tuesday of each month at the Samuel L.
Bossard Memorial Library in Gallipolis.
The mu zz le loading club is
incorporated as a non-profit organization and is affiliated with the
National Muzzle Loading Rifle
Association and the National Rifle
Association.
The club welcomes those who
are interested in the sport, whether
it be for hunting, target shooting ,or
hiStorical value. Members attend
the national shoot at Friendship,
1n~ ., and the National Rendezvous.
Ttle next meeting will be 7 p.m.
SI!Jll. 8 at the library. Final plans
for the primitive rendezvous to be
he)d the weekend of Sept. 26 and
27 at Bob Evans Farm are to be
finalized.
• Stanley Houck is the winner of
the club's annual aggregate trophy .
Tl!e aggregate target is always the
same target - 5-shot reduced ring
buffalo. Each member scores for
~ first three shoots·they attend are
recorded for the year and are
tolaled for the highest score. .
· Houck's score was 136. Taking
~nd rlace was Bill Baker with a
seore o 134X. Third place went to
Jim Bums with a score of 131, and
foi)Jth place went to Doug Bryant
wlth a score of 130.
· Awards were presented at the
c ub's annual picniC Saturday, Aug.
2Z, at Raccoon Creek County Park.
•,Officers for the comi.ng year are:
Sl'cven Newberry, presoden~ Mark

•

::

Hall, vice presiden~ Mark Mooney,
secretary; Carroll Shoemaker, treasurer, and Mike Sibley, chief range
officer.
For more information, contact
Steven Newberry at 245-9595 or
Mark Mooney at 379-2835, or
write: Backwoodsman Muzzle
Loading Rifle Club, P.O. Box
1008, Gallipolis OH 45631.

sideline between the Knights' 30and 35-yand lines. Peck found sufficient running lanes after the catch
to streak past the secondary and
into the west end zone with 3:07
lert. McCarty's two-point conversion pass to junior fullback Mike
Cook put River Valley ahead 16-8.
Point drove 51 yards on its final
drive of the half, but two incomplete end zone-bound passes by
Smith killed that drive at the
Raiders' 21. River Valley got two
plays off before halftime.
The Knights matched what they
did in their last scoring drive once
they got the ball to sran act three.
From the Raiders' 43, it took them
four plays, including a series-opening 13-yard run by Shinn llftd a 14yard run by Safford that took the
guests to the River Valley seven,
before Smith ran up the middle for
the touchdown while the Raider defenders were lookin~ for either Safford .or Shinn. Smtih ran for the
two-point conversion that tied the
contest at 16-16.
At this point it was the Big
Blacks' turn to get fired up on defense, as they held the Raiders to
24 yards gained in 3:42. Part of that
time was spent going backwands, as
R iH~r

McCarty was twice taken down for
losses between passes of 20 and 14
yards to Peck. But Jenkins bad to
punt when the 14-yard pass on
third-and-23 to Peck was shan of
the fll'St down. Point started its second drive of the frame on its own
27.
It. took the Knights II plays, includong a series-opening 35-yard
Jaunt by Shinn, to visit the
promised land once again, and it
was Safford who broke the
Raiders' goal-line stand with a oneyard touchdown run 09 fourth-andgoal. Smith's two-point conversion
pass to senior tight end Jimmy Barnette, which was ruled complete to
the protest of the Raider coaching
staff and some of the players who
claimed the ball bounced into Barneue's arms, put Point ahead 24-16
with si~ seconds left in the quarter.
"Our kids made them work to
get it in," said Raider head coach
Jack James of Safford's second
touchdown.
Moore's kickoff went straight to
Peele at the Raiders' si~. and from
there Peck electriried the River
Valley crowd by streaking into the
clear along the Raiders· sideline
through the_coverage and into th~

\alll'\

created the final score.
"We dominated the second
half," said Steve Safford of his
troops, who be said "bad the advantage of having a game behind
us coming in and making mistakes
that wece COITCCtable."
More firsts- This week's
agenda has the Raiders heading to
South Point to fai:e the Pointersa 12-7 victor over Wintersville Friday night - in their first road
game. The Big Blacks will play
host for the flrst time this season
against Jackson.

,·

River Valley leaden
Rushing- Dobbins 6-17, I
TD; Cook 4-14; C. Peck 3-9; McCarty 8- (·3)
PassiDg - McCarty 10-18, 171
yds., I TD, I int; Dobbins 0-1, I
int
Recelvin&amp;- C. Peck 4-112, I
TD; Canady 3-53; Dobbins 1-S;
Cook 1-3; Covey 1-(-2)
Interceptions- C. Peck (I)
Fumble recoveries - none

Department
Point RV
First downs ......................22
10
Total yards .....................319 198
Rushing att-yards ....53-284 25-27
Passing yards .................. .35 171
Comp.-au .......................4-9 I0.19
Interceptions thrown ......... 1
2
Fumbles-lost ..................2-0 1-0
Punt retums-yands .............4
0
Kickoff return yards ........84 132
Penalties-yards .............4-45 4-45
Point Pleasant leaders
Rusbing- Shinn 17-107, I
TD; Safford 16-89, 2 TDs; Smith
15-78, I TD.
Passing- Smith 4-9, 35 yds., I
inL
Receiving - Moore 1-15; G.
Peck 1· 14; Miller 1·3; Barnett 1-3
Interceptions -Roush (!);

1419 State Route 7
GaiUpoUa, Ohio 4S6Sl
614·446-o'7S6

1992 grid standings

MaoterCard

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Near Kanaup Drive-In

Closeout on
Honda Mowers At Cost - Very
Few Left.

VISA

(Overall)
Team
W L
Point Pleasant. .......2 0
Portsmouth ............ 1 0
Gallia Academy .... ! 0
Coal Grove .....:...... ) 0
River Valley ..........0 I
warren Local........o 1
Logan ....................0 I
Warren Local ........O 1
Meigs ....................0 I
Athens ................ ...o 1
Jackson ..................O 0
Marieua .................o o

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
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RIVER FRONT HONDA

POINT PLEASANT, wy.

(304) 675;.1675

UP" -, RT. 7

••

)

d

drive, reaching the Marauder 11yard line before the threat stalled.
Slone mis:;ed his third field goal
auemp~ thiS one from 24 yards out.
~ig~ had one last chance to
reach. t ethBIUe Devil end zone,
reb acwmg e Gallia Academy 30,
ut agner was hit bard trying to
pass and coughed up the ball with
Gallia Academy's Brett Cremeens
recovering.
.
Gallipolis racked up 14 first
downs, compared to the Maraud• · s
etrs mneh. tansberry was Gallia's
op rus e,r wtth 85 yards in 10 carnes. Jamte Caldwell added 42 in 11
carries, and Barnes had 53 in eight
carries. Barnes completed 3 of 9 in
the air for MO yards and a touchdown. Donnally, who pulled in one
for 34 yards, was followed by
Bryan Hall ( 1-34) and Nathan
Miller (1 -12).
Heath Hudson led the Marauder
ground attack with 48 yards in nine
carries. Mike Cremeans added 16
in six carries and Hill 16 in five
carries. Wagner completed three of
12 in the air with an interception
for 27 yards. Aaron Drummer
pullc:d in one pass for 15 yards to
lead Meigs.
Meigs will travel to Vinton
County Friday to tangle with the
Vikings in the Tri-Valley Conference opener. Gallia Academy will
travel to Coal Grove.
Quarter totals
Meigs...........:...... .. .. O 0 0 0 = 0
Gallipolis ................ ? 7 7 0 =21

Statistics

Fumbles ............................2
Lost fumbles .....................O

Department
M
First downs .......................9
Yards rushing .............. .! tO
Lost rushing .................. .42
N t hi
81
e rus ng .................... . 2
~ass alte!"pts .................. l 3
omp euons.....................
~te&amp;"ptio~ thrown ...... 91
ar passong .......... ...... .
Total yards .................. .110
Plays ...............................4S
R
42
etom
...................

2

P OP
22
36 12
21 0
,20 7
22 31
16 20
0 3
16 20
0 21
0 35

so

0
0

Eastern's first score of the 1992 '
season. Senior quarterback Chad
Savoy's pass on the PAT was no
good, and Eastern led Ml.
At tbe 9:25 mark, Waterford hit
paydin as Powers connected with
Malac on a 45 ~d . TD JlliSS· Powers
PAT pass was droppe4 by Eric Me·
Cuu:heon, and the score was knot·
ted up at 6-6.
Minutes later, the Wildcats established another big drive as Power connected with J.D. Pinkerton
on a 74-yand pass play, putting the
ball on the Eastern seven. This set
up a Rob Smilh six-yard touchdown run at the 5:46 mark. The
PAT kick failed.
The Eagles looked to be establishing a major drive toward the
end of the fll'St quarter. However,
three straight incompletions
stopped the drive at the Waterford
31. The Eagles' offense suffered
during m~ch of the fmt half, giving UIJ two ~~ptions. Waterford

went mto the locker room with a
12-6 lead at the half.
In the third quarter, Powers
found Malac again from four yards
out with 2:44 remaining. The PAT
kick failed as the Wildcats extended their lead to 18-6.
The Eagles looked to be establishing a drive after Charlie Francis
(See WILDCATS on C-4)

S-41

2-65

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(In the SEOAL. .. )
Team
W L
P OP
Marieua ...............o o
o 0
0
Loi!an ..................0 0
0
Gafiipolis .............o o
o 0
0
Jackson ................0 0
0
Warren ................0 0
0 0
0
Athens .................O 0
0
0
TOTALS
0 0
0

Pcnalties ........... ........ .. .4-40
Punts .................... ..... 6-183

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(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE •

fection, pitching at the last minute
to Stansberry who ran it.in from
four yards out. On!:e agam Slone
added the ex'!' remt It was 14-0
Wl~tl81~ ~~ tailed
B
r\
E . ve~
•
ar nes reandsumtoethaMngcs agandner
pun130 Y
. e eJ 33 Y •
The OAHS driVe stalled. Slone
m!SScd a 47 yard fie!&lt;J goal auempt
w1th 47 seconds le~t m the half. .
The Blue Dev.lls scored tbe.tr
last touchdown With 7:36 to go m
th third riod h Jam Cald
e b kpe
w en f ta'celdes a-t
we 11. ro e a c0u~1e o
the line and raced m from 23 yards
out Slone ~de it three for three in
the ~tra pomt department to g•ve
Galhpolis a 21-0 lead. Blue Devil
bead~ Brent ~aund~rs ~gan
substotutmg at tb1s pmnt. We
played everybody dressed for the
game expect one," Saunders smd
after the game.
"I won't be able to eyaluate our
overall petformance unt!l I look at
the films," Saunders added. "We
still have some boys out with
injuries who missed tonight's
game. We saw some bright spots at
several positions, but we still have
lots of work to do," he continued.
Meigs put together a drive in the
fourth period. Behind the running
of Jered Hill and Wagner, MHS
drove to the Blue Devi128. Wagner's second doWn pass was picked
·off by Chad Barnes at the Blue
Devils' 10 to end the threat
The Blue Devils began another

Waterford defeats Eastern 24-6
By SCOTI WOLFE
Times-SenliDel Correspondent
EAST MEIGS - The debut of
Eastern coach Dave Barr was
spoiled as Watenord's Tyson Powers hit Jason Malac for three TD
passes to lead the visiting Wildcats
over the Eagles before a big crowd
at Eastern, Friday evening.
Eastern took li ttie time to get on
the scoreboard, as Pat Newland
took the opening kickoff at the Eagles' 10-yard line and entered a
footrace. Newland raced 90 yands,
breaking tackles along the way for

Rodgers E-Z Ride
Auto-Rentals

•

t'i:

Shinn (1)
Fumble recoveries- none

Quarter totals
Point Pleasant ......0 8 16 7 - 31
River Valley ........0 16 6 0- 22

SPECIAL!

By DAVE HARRIS
Times-SenliDel CorrespondeD!
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy took advantage of good field
pos~of :'scored a touchdown in
eac o e
three quarters en
rMoute to a 1- victory over the
e•gs Marauders Friday night at
Memorial Field in the season opener for both teams.
More than 3,000 shin-sleeved
fans were on hand
'
Five times the Blue Devils sraned dri · Mara
v~ mdef uder ~tory, but
th~ Me1gs ense, des)llte playing
wtth its back to the wall most of the
night, was able to hold its own.
Offensively, Meigs was unable to
get anything started until late in the
contest
The Blue Devils won the toss.
On the second play from scrimmage, junior running back Jason
Stansberry ripped off a 31- yander
to the Marauder 24 yard line. After
Blue Devil drive stalled, Tim
Slone's 40-yard field goal attempt
w~ short.
.
" Gallia ·A&lt;*Jerny sCored Its fust
touchdOwn of the night when quarterback Chad Barnes connected
with Mike Donnally down the fiWit
sideline for a 34-yard touchdown
strike with 2:02 left in the first
period. Tim Slone's placement was
good, and the Blue Devils were up
7.0.
The ~lue Devils !ft8de it a 14-0
game w•th 4:38 left m the fust half
when Barnes ran the option to per-

~lati-,tirs

Sports shorts

..
college football
·
:. MIAMI (AP) - Attorneys for
M:iami Hurricanes receiver Lamar
T.bomas obtained a last-minute
l~al agreement that cleared him to
pi)y in Saturday night's season
oiper at Iowa.
:.Thomas boarded an evening
fi!iiht for Iowa accompanied by
·aOiletic director Dave Maggard.

end zone. The two-poont converSion pass by McCarty fell incomplete, and the hosts bad to settle for
reducing Point's lead to two points
with no time left in the third quar·
ter.
River Valley, which suffered
two interceptions in the last frame,
never got past midfield the rest of
the way, and Point's initial possession of the final quarter consumed
5:09 and covered 65 yards in II
plays. Safford scored from two
yards out on second and goal with
6:51 left Moore's extra-point kick

Academy Friday night, Tbe host Blue Devils
nearly outrusbed tbeir guests by a J.to-1 margin while playing turnover-free football. (TimesSentinel photo)

GET11NG AN EARFUL -Meigs Marauder
Mike Cremeaas (30) isn't the only player getting
an earful from r~eld commaDder Mike Staggs as
the coach walks orr the field with his troops following the Marauders' 11-0 loss to Gallia

Gallia Academy ·hands Meigs 21-0 defeat in season opener

Point Pleasant comes back to hand River Valley 31-22 loss
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Staff
CHESHIRE - Before an estimaled 4,000 people - the largest
crowd in Gallia County history to
see a football game in the flesh that arrived in at least 1,200 vehicles of all configurations Friday
night, River Valley's Raiders treated the fans and the Point Pleasant
Big Blacks to a brand of explosive
football that for three quarten gave
fans on both sides of the field as
much to say about the game as they
did about the Robin Hood halftime
show the PPHS Marching Band put
on with Bryan Adams' "Everything
I Do (I Do It For You) " as the
foundation.
But the West Virginians' size on
the line and their grinding running
game er:ased the Raiders' halftime
lead and put them in position to
record a 31-22 victory.
"We made a couple of stupid
plays that got them back in the
game," said Point Pleasant skipper
Steve Safford, whose troops boosted:their record to 2-0.
"River Valley, who got the coin
toss to receive, and Point Pleasant
cooldn't get out of the middle third
of the field in their initial drives.
The Raiders set up shop for their
scwnd series on their own 41-yand
line after the interception return by
seiiior cornerback Charles Peck follo§;ing his pickoff of junior quarletback Brent Smith was wiped out
bY: a clipping penalty.
.The 11 -p1ay drive, which con·
sumed 3:35, was wrapped up early
in; the second quarter when senior
uiilback Dave Dobbins, who set up

teams at Memori!ll Field in GaUipolis. The Blue
Devils won 21-0 to claim their third straight victory. (Times-SeDtinel photo)

KIIIIUGI, OHIO

Sept. 4 results
Gallia Academy 21, Meigs 0
Point Pleasant 31, River Valley 22
Wheeling Park 3, l.Dgan 0
Nelsonville-York 35, Athens 0
Belpre 20, Warren Local 16
Coal Grove 20, 'Oak Hill 7
Portsmouth 36, Chillicothe 12
Tbey played Saturday
Jackson at Wellston
Morgan at Marietta
Sept. 11 games
Gallia Acl!demy at Coal Grove
River Vailey at South Point
Meigs at Vinton County
Jackson at Point Pleasant
Col. Watkins Memorial at Athens
Marieua at cambridge .
Warren Local at Fort Frye
Logan at Nelsonville·Yorlc
·
Dayton Col. White at Portsmouth

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NEW STORE HOURS: MONDAY·FRIDAY, 9:30 AM-8 PM
SAnJRDAY,,9:30 All-5 PUj S!JNDAY, 11 All-6 Pll

BY MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
POINT PLEASANT, WV

01721

\

'I

�_,

September 6, 1992•

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

Page C4 SUnday nmes Sentinel

South.ern records 36-16 vic~ory over Alexander in home opener
By SCOTI' WOLFE
Tlines.SelitiD.el Correspondellt
RACINE - Bleriding 1 potent
offensive attack with a solid defensive performance, the Southern
Tornadoes scored an impressive
season-opening 36-16 victory over
the Alexander Spartans Friday
night at Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field.
Southern is now 1·0 and
AlelUIIIder 0-1.
Last year's rushing phenom
Rossen Sin~leton, a 6-foot-2, 200pound runrung back. rushed for 209
yards on 22 carries, while senior
quartc;rback Michael. Evans (7·10)
joined forces with senior receiver
Jeremy Dill (8-123 yards) to open
up the passing game.
· Singleton rushed for three
touchdowns, and EV!mS ran for another while accounling for anocher
on an Evans-to-Dill TD rcceplion.
Southeni swted things off with
a 44 yard, Evans-to-Dill touch·
down aerial early in the fiist quar·
ter. Singleton added the extraS, and
Southeni led 8-0.
Alexander came back to push
the scon: 111 8-6 on a run by senior
tailback Shawn Hamon. The PAT's
failed.
Southern led 8-6 after the rust
round, but in the second Russell
Singleton broke a 42 yard burst up
the middle and ran it in for the
score. The PAT failed. but South-

em led 14-8.

So~them's

defense faced its
toughest test at this point l!ld rose
to the occasion. Southern, spear·
headed by Senior linebacker Nick
Adams with 10 overall tackles,
Singleton with seven and Kyle
Wickline with eight, repeatedly
turned away AHS drives and
closed the door on Alexander' s
J'llllftipg game. '
The lw:d·hilling Tmwloes also
forced five turnovers in the game.
Trentoa Cleland ~ two key
inrereeptions, one of which ended a
legitimate Spartan scoring threat.
and Evans .,.bbed another errant
aerial.
...Adams and Glenn Young
grabbed fwnble rm~Vcries.
In the third frame, Southern
to&lt;* a 22-6 lead when Southern put
together a sustained drive and
m6rched downfield for a score. The
drive~ on an Evans quar·
terback sneak of one yard, then was
followed by an Evans-to-Dill PAT
combination.
Senior Dwayne Hagger later put
Alexl!lder on the board and Hamon
run in the exll'BS.
In recent years, Southern teams
have folded ~ing down the stretch,
but this year s Tornadoes exhibited
the strength of a thoroughbred galloping unconditionally to the fin- ·
isli. The fourth ~ was Soulh·

AdamS, Bond among
Skyline racing victors
By SCOTI' WOLFE
Times-SentiDel Correspoodent
.STEWART- Series points
leader Danny Dean of Mount Vernon came from his eighlh starting
·position to claim the Skoal-Modified challenge feature race for
UMP modifieds, while Butch
McGill of West Union, W.Va.
· made it two in a row in the Late
: Models, Kevin Haught in the
: Sportsman and Elon Casto in the
: Street Stocks Friday night during
· the seasoo championships at Skyline Speedway.
With nearly 122 cars jamming
the pits, fans were tn:ated to a full
:evening of racing, while an all. smiles promoter Darren Willie presented season championship trophies to the season IJ!liDIS charnpi.

ons and the top lhrce tlnishers in all
diV8ions.
Andy Bond of Coolville, won
the Late Model championship over
brother Larl)' Bond, and Bob
Adams Jr. claimed the modifieds.
Also winning were Aaron Fleming,
Sportsman; Rick Venham, Street
Stocks; Todd Smith of Pomeroy,
Pure Stocks; and George Adkins of
Racine, 4-Cylinder Pure Stocks.
In what 8IJI)Ctlrcd to be 1 stuck
throttle, Toni Moore's UMP modi·
fied made. heavy contact with the
turn three wall and sustained
severe damage during hot la~s .
Moore, a top Skoal series pOint
man, was eliminated for the
evening and later taken 111 the bos·
pital for treatment of a possible
(See SKYLINE 011 C-5)

.Friday's Ohio high
:school football scores
AJ&lt;ron E. 28, Medina JtiaiUind 0
, Akron EU~ 11 , S\ow 1
Akron F~e 13, C\lyahoa• Falls to

Akron Hoban 30, Parmi Hol.y Name 20
Akron Kenmore 21, Rcw:re 20
Akron M1nchcncr U , Mopd~ 3
Akron Spring.l6, AUJn Cal-Hower 0

' Amanda-O cucrod; 15, Bia Walnut 6
: Amhent 22. Looain C.lh. 0
• A"'hbold 4l, Tol Ubbey 0
• AJ!n.abul• 6, LaBne.O
• .Mhtabula H• rbot 2J, Cardintll5, OT

• Avoo 39, Cu)'~ H11. 9
' A'tcn l..U.ell, Midvicsw9

· a•......, t4. RoynoldlbwJ 6
8&amp;mc1Yi11Dl :Z. John Glean 1
Bay47, Oc. Kennedy 0
BuUMUe 29, W. Greene. Pa. 19
BeU~ l i, St ~l 3

Bellefontaine 14, lndian Lake 0

·
•
:
•

Belpre 20, VinCII1l Wanen 16
Beret49, CJe. Mlnhall 8
Betb hire U, Dlt&amp;rin FallJ 0
Bcme Unioo 19, r-.tillerO
Bloom.CUTOU26, Liberty Unim 20

81Wf1«12l. Coty-RawSM 13
Boudm an Sl, Youne. South 6
BO&lt;cl:rvillc 22. Nooionia 16
Brookfield 26, &amp;Won S. 6
Bn:d:viJle 42. Arcanum 14
9NnJwi"- 33, Puma 0
Buckeye Cenlnl 24, Nonhmor 6
Buckeye J..oeal l4, Atilo 0
BIK)'IUI21 , Wynfm16

CtldwtU 52, New~XX~~cnnown 0
c...pb&lt;ll Mtm0rilll3. Qc. SoooJo 12

Can~.l Winc:hak:l' :Zl. Baley 13
C1nfield II, Allqhc:ay Academy 6
C1nwn McKinley 21 , Aklon ~ 14
Canwn S. 7, LoWnille Aqu:inu 0
Cudinaton 14, Olcntanp 13
C.rty f3, Van Buren 0
Cedarville 34, New BftiiU\In 0
Contabu'S 22, Millmpoll 21
Champion 3~. Oam:u.Yillt 6
Ch&gt;nlan NJ&gt;.CL 21. tlodfonll3
Chooopal« 33, fm&gt;klin Fum,.. a.- 6
Chippewa 18, Covcnb)' 12, 201'
Cin. Andenon 34, Cin. Mc:NIC:holu 6
Cin. Bacon 20, Cin. Mount Healthy 9
Cin. CAPE 13, Cin. Wooctwll'd 0
Cin. c...nuy Day. ll, WollW!wbwJ I7
Cin. Eldet 40, W. 0.1c Lakou 9
Cin. Glm &amp;c 36, Cin. Northwat 1
Cin. Landmarkll, HaiYJC Ac:&amp;demy 0
Cin. Wolle 3l , CiA. Oot llilh 7
Cin. Lodluld 2&lt;1, em. Roadina 14
CUt.l.ove.Lind 11,1daaon 7
Cin. Moeller 35, Cin. Aiken 6
Cin. SL Xavier 34, Ceatemlle 10
Cin. Wsu:m HUh 32, Hamiltm 13
Cin. Wyoming 12, Amelia 7
Circl~e 3, Mtditm Plain• 0
Clc. Adunt1 2. Findlay 6
Cle. Benod.iclinc 28, Sandulky 6
C1e. C1thoUc: 19, Clc. Univenity 0
Cle. Luthcnn W. 30, Fairview Park 19
Cle. VA SJ 13, Akmn SLV-S1.M 7
Clear Fork 19, ~own 0
CJwview 45, Oe. P.ut. Tt:d! 0
0D¥etlaf 40, Waclnronh 14
c..1o.w. 20, ootllill 1
Col. AcademJ V , WhedenbwJ 0
Col. B"""'cooftll, Woolhin""" Kilboume I0
Col. De$alell 7, Cot BIUOkh1vm l4
Col Huller 7, Cot Norohlond 0
Col. Soulh II, Col. lndcpaodonoc 12. 20T
Col SLOlarl• 23, Col Miltlin 7
Col Walnu ~ Jiticlae 1, Col. Eutmoor 6
Cal: WaUOd&lt;lft i'7, Wa1aVille S. 0
Col. We. \land 1•, Cal. WDIL6
Coldw1tor .CI, Dl1· leff..an I
Coll.i.ns W• u:m R.~ 14. Col.umtu Station 0
cotumblan• C•Mtw 41 , Berlin Center WCIICft'l
RNerft20
.
C~umlm Oft&gt;ve l 3, 1'oo]d&lt;n·Gilboo 0
c ...... ut 19, PymluonU., Volt. 10
Copter 11. B...Uido 0
Coi'tltnd Lakeview 71, Ltwd, P•. 6

- ,..., 46.
Camlll'l"! 6
cc..
....
10, Bndfonl 0
C""tline 21. PI,_..I4

Donvillc v

z.-w.-

12
O.y. Mlld~.....-1 3, Cin. Wilhnnr 12

21.81.1Ck.eye VllL ~
Dover I:!. Cambrid&amp;• 6, 20T
E Conlon 13, Unioood Lacall2
PaJMine2l, l'loicnbWJ spr;na. 11
J!aWkei6,Wiolllilfe 7
Edilon N. 26, Je--Soio 7
Blidt 32. An!loony
0
Elrrit Cath. Jl. LoniA l
Eu&lt;lid 14, a...tonc1 Hu. 0
Del&amp;WI.R

·a:

w.,..

Foltbom .!l. o - 1 3

fco..U 3l. Wtptlt"""' 7

•
PCII&amp;Grit St. Wmdelin 14, Ddl!h01 SL John I 0
Pnnldln Uti. 25, Col Brigt lO
FJaT~oat RoN 29, Tiffin Columbian 7
Olh..,, 26, Whiodooll l4
lltliM 13, A&lt;loJtnd 7

Otllipolio 21, Me;p 0
Oanlway 3.5, Tudaw 21
GufLeld Hll. 14, M1pk Hta. 12
Girud 3,

y.., .. Ubenr o

em's strongest of the game.
Singleton, who pounded the turf
for 22 carries and 209 yatds, broke
another pincr for 33 yards an another SHS score. Another EvansDill completion finalized that

·'

/

was void, but SHS led 36- t4.
·Statistics
Evans rushed four times for 22
yards, and Tuckfl Williams 3-19 as Department
Alex. RS
Soulhem had 250 overall rushing First downs ..................... .'! 4
19
yards and 123 in the air all with Rusl)ing yards ................113 250
Dill on the ~iving end. The SHS Passins yards ,_..............124 121
ur~r..l-at
•
offense had 373 yards overall.
Tolal yards ...............,.....237 373
rruuc; S Win•··---- - - - ' - ' - - - - - - Southern will travel Ill Water- Comp.-all. ....................5-19 8-l l
returned lhe ensuing kickoff to the Total yards ...•"'''''''''' .....400 ISS ford (1-0) next Friday.
r
Intilrceptions thmwn .........3
40 yard line. On third and 10, the Punting ....:.................J -114 3-84
'
2·2
Fumbles/1ost.................. .3·3
Waterford secondary found FUmbles-lost .................. 1-0 2-2 Quarter tlltllls
Penalties
.................... -.8-85 8-80
Savoy's pass and its third inrarcep- Penalties •.....•....•.••...•••1()..8.5 3-35 . Alexander ............6 0 8 2 - 16 Punts '"'"'"'''''"" "'""'J-119 3·9():
.~ ...............8 6 814- 36
tion of tJ.le evening! stopping the
Eagles drive at the W yard line.
Waterford capped off the scoring with 7:SO left in the fourth
quarter.as Powers hit Mllac on the
duo ' s third touchdown of the
'
evening, a SS-yard TD pass. Pow·
ers' PAT pass failed. as the Wild·
cats capped off a 24-6 victory. ·
Powers finished the evening 10
of 19 passing for 249 yards and
three touchdowns. Savoy was 12 of ·
29 passing for 87 yanls and three
interceptions.
Eastern was led in receiving by
Pat Newland with three cau:bes for
48 yards. Charlie Bissell pulled in .
five catclles for 46 yanls, and Jerefrom over 6000 sporting events each yearl From auto
my Buckley added 3 catches for 16
yards. Waterford was led by
racing to wrestling with plenty of touchdowns, hoopa
Malac's five catches for 147 yards.
and hOlM runs In between.
The Eagles' leading rusher was
Francis, with six carries for 22
Movleal From cl8181cal Bogart to this year's academy
yards. Eric McCutcheon led the
awardal Over 1500 movies each monthl
Wildcats with 25 carries for 100
yards.
Muslcl Uve conc:erta from wound the world.
Defensively, Jeremy Buckley
ClaaalcaVJizzJRock/Country, and 10CYa of studio grade
led Eastern with nine tackles.
Shane James added eight tackles,
non-commercial audio channels.
and Savoy and Newland each had
seven IIICkles.
Eastern (0-1) will travel to Mason, W.Va. Friday to face Wa·
harna. Waterford (1 -0) will play
host Ill Southern.
drive, Southern leading 30-14.
The last score was encored per·
formance for th.e tleetfootcd Sin·
gleton, who broke one on his own
two yard line and blasted 98 yards
for the score. The PAT attempts
(Continued from C-3)

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Quarter totals
Walelford...........l2 0 6 6 - 24
Eastcm .................6 0 0 06

~ptember 6, 1992

gary'Clark
p orrespondent
MASON W
scored a p;m. ~~to~~downSscraggand

added three two point conversion
runs while rushing for 171 yards
Friday evening to lead the visiting
Ceredo Kenova Wonders past
coach Don VanMeter's Wahama
White Falcons by a 30-7 score in a
classic gridiron confrontation between lhe two Class A football
powers.
Scragg, a talented 6-0 112 pound
• workhorse for the Wonders led C~-K. ':0. iiS se:cond win in ~ many
:;deCISIOns wtth his 171 yard outing.
• il,e senior speedster scored on runs
:.,&lt;If. 17 and six yards while adding
l ibiee successful PAT conversion
h ups for the Wayne County team.
l:fifike Mayo also scored for the
: ~isilllrs on a 20 yard pass reception
·fi9m quarterback Matt Arthur while
:·Bf)'atl Workman added a two yard
~l&gt;lirst in a 14 point Ceredo Kenova
t:fOJfth quarter.
! • · 'They (Ceredo Kenova) controlt lell the line of scrimmage on both
~ sides of the football and that was
:1he whole story," a· disappointed
·~llhama coach Don VanMeter said
: foUowing the setback. 'They are
very good football team. They
[turned the ball over to us twice in
:~ first. half on fumbles and we
'lailed to capitalize and then we
:panmiued three turnovers in the
~ ~d half and they tum two of
;lbOse into points." Wahama had
.,four turnovers on the night al·

:'one

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62 .S34
11 .470
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24.5

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Friday's scores

San. OU.. 7, Chiclao.S, 14 imina•
Mmtrail 5, H~Mtm 2
'hi' ' ' · ·a .2. Allu"a 1

•

"!!fiiYo\fl.CINCINNA112
l'laoboqh 6, Loa AoaoJoo l

Su Prinduo 4, SL Lau.iJ 3, 10 in-

\!: .W.
·• •
Tbey playtcl Saturday

• •• Silo Diqo (llabtioe 3-4) tt Chictp
: • · (0.-16-10). 2:20p.m.
. • Now Yolk (llillmon 1.{1) " aNCIN·

IJu&amp;'la (Wal 1-4). 1:QS p.m.
.. , PWladelpbia (Rivera 4·3) at Atllnll
1 • (Av., 11).9). 7:10p.m.
, ~•
(IGI. :1-9) " Mononol (Ntb·
•. holo~~ 7:ll p.m.
1 ~ ..

a.- Fnnci~eo (BuEkou 11- 1) 1t SL

• Oresl.eview 26, Bellbnd: 17
O=Uidd 33, Ada10 0

!..oW (Conrtia l·l 0~ I:Ol p.m.

•
'

o..en.buoJ a.- 28, a. U..r o

Oft&gt;ve City 16, WatkiN Mom..W ll
Harnil&amp;on ... 21, Cin. Made:in 6
lltnlin NMhem 2A. Ada 13

Today's gomes
Hoaton (Henry 5-9) at Montreal
(l)oooiiMtloinezll-10), 1:3.5 p.m.
too
(Condirati ~12) "Plaa·
-!Jocb&gt;a 1· I I), I :3l p.m.

""'ela

·,

u...... LWwaool :1!, U..ob 2

l'llil~

llilliuol 4l, Col Wh-• 0
llilllbon&gt; 16, Ptin1 Voll l3

(). Bnatler 2-6) "

At·

lantt (P. Smith 4-0). ~10 p.m. .
New Yolk (Whilebuut 2·1) at
CINCINNATI O'uah O.l),lll p.m.
. . franriSM (Cuter 1).0) 11 SL LG1il
• (T.......,.I':l), 2:1S p.m.
. 1u Diqo (Ben• 10.12) at Chic•ao
. .• • (B..... 2·3). 2:20p.m.

J-

Hu.ronl3, BclleftloC 12
lndi&amp;D Vall. 40. Smi\bville 19

"""""' 36, R,.otli.Kr. 0
5L
25, Htmon, w.v•. 6
J~m~.lhm Aida lo, Mochan.ic:aburJ 1
Kuw l.ak01.114, N. Baltimore9
~CcmuJn 9. s.. thon 1

•

.• I., tile AL ...

ICaot
· -13,"Upper
" 13.Sanduoty
c.n... 01aoOalt
0
Kal""'
12
Konooo Rid , ,._ w~ 6
ltdtain&amp; 2:.:30, Fobmont 8
Labwood 17.
0
U.... 20. TaL c...nt 14. 3(11'
Leman·Malu'oe21, Cin. Walnut Hill 6
~ 1• •()ot.uio 6
Libaly- 2A, IIolp.. 0

''

Mi-

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Satisfaction.
Auto., llr, P. ...... brakN, wlndowa 6 door
loeb, AWFII ...- . til~ cruiao, alum.
~W~nlllg .._., 4 captain chaira, aohi bed,
lnclnclllghling, loadadl

76 l8 .l67

Mii!Nob&lt; .............n 62 .l37

•

IYIIIIW. 01

O..U.- -··············63

72

Cl,IVPJ.AND .. ....61

73 .4ll

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14 .... fiiiiCill

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Ll!MnyC..,.%7, T,..... I3

,~ OoidM&gt;I ·-············79 ll
' .... ~ "'" '""" "75 60

' ~ ~ ................71

·. c...,... . .. . .. .

; ,.

Tqa~

.. __ .............66

62

71

61 1•
' tu.o tlo:r ...........60 74
.... Scfll,e;.,...,..... :·"·"'"'56 79

1pprowe• crl41t.

.-%7

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4~

14

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.l90
.ll6
.l34
.412
.4l2
.448
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19

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36. Cbilli~o l 2
E.ZZ. Pibton12
Racine SoWtem 36, Ate.und« 16
Ra...... 30, C...wood6
Ridaewood 21. Tu""'wu Volll 8
River 22, Shenandoah 6
Rivozdalo 15,
13
Roc:.l Hi113l, Minfonl2&lt;1
Roc:.ly Ri..., 19, N. Royaltoo 7
R00t110WD 21. JaWon-Milton 12
S. Chuletton ~ :2.8, Sprina. Shawnee 6
S. Point 12. WlntenYWo 7
Solem 28, E. U,...,O.I V , OT
Slftdy VIII. 7, Cadiz 6
Sheridan 46, Faitf'ae.ld Un.im 13
Solon 33, Brioeh 7
Sptne Hllloland 42, Ridsedolo 6

Teua (Pnlik 2-2) It New York
•• (Miliw&gt;llo !-1). 1:30 p.m.
:'
MinMIIM (SrnUey 1~-6) at Tot'(lflto
,. (lutnau.r-l:!-3),1 :llp.m.
• - Sc.aulcl (JOhnton 11-12) a1 CLEVE' u.ND(Ne~3- 10~ l:llp.m.
·~,
80IUJft
on 6-7} at Oatland (Dar·
•~~ Unatl-1}, 4. p.m.
:.
Milwautce{Wcpnan 11-ll)atDeuoit
.- ' (Hue 3-1~ 7:Ql pm.
.
, aucaao (Hcq!, 6-11) 11. Kuuu Catr
" CHanoY 1-0),·a:O.fp.m.
• . llthlmooe (Muooint I !-l) tt Coli!omit
,•, (A-6-12~10:0lp.m.

'

TOdly's 111111es

~

•'

•

'*

Teu~(Di

' ·O.O)atNow¥c:d
(ltarni&lt;ooUotiA-tl~ 1:30 P'"·

- . , (Tramble)' 0.0) at T.,....

• (Sootlkonjro9-9},1:llp.a__ _.. __ _

.

penalty was assessed and five plays six yard scamper. ·
ashamed of tosing to a team of their mind that we'll bounce .back. Thi·s
later Carl King, even though in the
'This was a wugh one Ill lose but caliber," said VanMeter. Our kids group won'l quit I'm sure of that,"
grasp of a C-K defender, surprised Ceredo Kenova had one heck of a have been down this road before he added.
the Wonders by tossing a 25 yard defense and. we have nothing to be and · there's know ques~on in my
rsee WONDERS on C-6)
hallback pass to Travis Johnson for
six ~ints. Tomm:t Mayes booted
(Conunued from C-4)
the pomt after Ill gtve Wahama a 7_ _ __ _ _ _..___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
0 advantage with 1:42 remaining in concussion.
to wm. $250 to stan Harvest 50 on Wilson, Morrison. Ti m Buckley.
the first period.
Point man and dash winner, September 18.
Isner, Bond .
Cen:do Kenova came back mid· Benny Hickel of Pomeroy was the
SUMMARY
Sportsman
way through the second stanza to early leader in the mod main. but
Dash - Benny Hickel
Heat - Benn y Th ieman. Ed
take a slim 8-7 lead after Scragg Aaron Scott took command on lap
Heat - Danny Dean, Don Kerr, Venham, Kev in Haught , Aaron
capped a 74 yard six play scoring three, holding !hat spot until late in Do~g Henry, Hubie Hatfield , Fleming, Rick Hudnell.
drive with a 17 yard touchdown the race, when Dean, who had Kevm Rogers,
Hea t - Dick Grimm , Jeff
gallop. Scragg also added the two worked his way steadily through
Heat - Bob Adams Jr., Mason Snively, Rick Deeter, Brian Barpoint conversion which afforded the field, took final command.
Ash, B~ce Dennis, John Burdette, rett, Duke Dowdy.
Ceredo K~ova a narrow one point
Scott followed with Butch Chris Dtckson.
Feature
edge. wh1ch they held at the McGill, Dave Groves and Barry
.B·Main - Forre~te! Fry, Roger
Kevin Haught, Ed Venham,
halfume break.
Jacobs in pursuil
M1ller, Greg Schtlhng , Kenny Thiemann, Wood, Deeter, Hudnell,
Wahama took the second half
Heat winners were Dean and Rogers, Scou Sm1th.
Tim Lauderman , Benny Powers,
kickoff and promptly proceeded 111 and Adams, and Forrester Fry won
Feature - Danny Dean, Aaron Grimm, Ga ry Hart, Jeff Ga~g .
march into Wonder territory but a the B-Main.
Scott, Butch McGill, Dave Groves, Aaron Fleming, Jeff Snively, Brian
fumble killed the WHS possession
A tough field of 25-late models Barry Jacobs, Benny Hickel, D&lt;?ug Barreu, Dowdy. Bob Alloway.
and C-K turned the turnover into was led to the green by dash win· H~n~y. Forester Fry, R1ck
Street Stock
six points with a sustained lime ncr Delmas Conley. Conley took an W1lltarnson, Mason As~. Chns
Heat - Don CasiO, Roger Dunconsuming drive of its own. Matt early lead, before bowing briefly to Dtckson, ~n. Kerr, Robbte Evans, tap, Harold Pickens. Rob Lemaster,
Arthur connected with a wide open Bob Adams Jr. Butch McGill then Gre~ Schtlltng John Burdette, Gary Hogsett
Mike Mayo over the middle for for moved inlll the top spot on lap five Hubte Hatfi~ld, Roger Miller, Bob
Heat - Ric k Venham. Mitch
a 20 yard scoring wss while Scragg and never looked back as he half- Adams, Kevm Rogers, Bruce Den- Brunton, Lou Westermyer, Howard
added the PAT to make it 16-7.
tracked the field.
ms.
Miller, Ralph Gardner.
Cen:do Kenova put the contest
Adams was second, followed by
Late models
Feature- Don Casto, Roger
a"fay with a 14 point fo~ quaner Bobby Hill, Gary Dalton, Bill
Fast time - Delmas Conley Dunlap, David Hackathorn, Ralph
w1th Bryan Workman sconng o~ a Childers, Larry Bond, Chris Did- 12:74
Gardn er, Brunton, Todd Wolfe,
two yard run and Scragg runnmg die, Dale Keplinger, John Wright
Dash - Delmas Conley , Bob Mill er, Westerm yer. Pickens.
pver with the two point PATwith and Scott Wolfe.
Adams Jr., Butch McGill , Larry Hogsetl
6:06 remaining in the game. The
Heat winners were Bobby Hill Bond, Gary Dalton , Dale
final C-K tally came with 3:25 left and Andy Bond.
Keplinger.
Meigs Cou•ty Karate Club
when Shane Harshb~er picked off
Tim Buckley won the B-Main
Heat - Bobby Hill, Bill
a Tommy Mayes aerial and rctur· over Dan Morrison.
Childers, John Wright, Bob K~ith ,
Will Have lletlilllittg Karate
ned the interception 10 the Falcon
Ed Venham led the early por- Rod Conley.
Class Startilg Sept. 8,
five yard line where Scragg cui· lions of the Sportsman main, how·
Heat - Andy Bond, Chris Did7:00 P.M. at Carltoa School
minated
, the nig.hts scoring with a.
ever, eventual winner Kevin die, Kirk Isner, Scott Wolfe, Frank
Haught blew by with five laps to Wilson Jr.
in Syrase, Ohio.
gotoclaimthewin.Haughtdefeat·
B-Main: Tim Buckley, Dan
ed Venham, heat winner Benny Morrison, William Robinson, Mike
lnstructon are Mick Howell
Thieman, Jeff Wood, Rick Deeter. McDaniel. Ryan Cline.
and ftnt Jenkils
Rick Hudnell, Tim Lauderman ,
Feature - McGill , Adam s,
Ricky. Outimtz, infielder, to tht San
Benny Powers, heat winner Dick Hill, Dalton, Childers, L. Bond,
For More laformatioa CaD
Dieao Padra to complete the Cnis Ld·
fezu l.rlde. ReeaUed. SICVe SeitiGne, in·
Grimm and Gary Hart.
Diddle, Keplinger, Wright, Wolfe,
614·992-6839 or 992-6170
ficlder,lrom Rochcatet of the lnlcrnationDon Casto and Rick Venham D. Conley, Rod Conley, Keith,
tl l.eoau• Aaipood Tommy Shielda, in·
fic:lder, to Roche~ter.
claimed Street Stock heats and
CAI.IFORNJA ANGELS- Actinled
started sis-by-side in the feature .
Huhic Bmakt, outfielder. and SieVe Frey,
pi&gt;&lt;her.f'""' the ll·doy dWbl«iliJL 1\orCasto got the jump and never
c:hucG dtc contrlct of Hilly Hathaw1y,
looked back, whtle later Venham 's
f!chcr, from Midland or ahe Texu
car lost power. Casto roUed to the
:f~ ATIILEI1CS - Roctllod
win over Roger Dunlap and David
Hcwy Merocda, Clldter, and Troy Nod,
Hackathorn,
who came from 12th
out!icldor, from TaComa or lhe Pacifie
Coil\ LIIIIUC. Purda1aed lhe eomract of
to third, ahead of Raph Gardner
Sh1wn H.illep1,_pi1cher, from Taconta.
and Mitch Brunton.
Recalled Mike Racr.lr:a , pi1c:her, from
Madi.Jon tl.lhe Mid'lltllt IMpc. Sen1 Joe
Skyline resumes regular racing
SlUHnld, pildtar, to Tacana. Trtndc:md
nextFri~¥, then hosiS the $2,000
Rich OotNae. pilchcr, from the 15- Ute

Skyl•zne fQClng
• o·oo

VtnSlrlte. Pltl.burah. 164; Sheffield, Sen
Dicao, 160; Gwynn, San Diego, 157;
Lankford , S1. Louh, 150; DeShidrl1,
M......t. llO; &lt;maeom, MontrW. llO.
DOUBLES - V..Siyke, Pitubough,
31; Lankford, St. Louil, 34; Duncan,
Pbiladclphia, 34; W. Clad., San Francil·
eo, 33; Gri.cm, Mootttal, 32; 8dl, Piw·
burah , 32; Sheffield, San Dieao, 30 ;
Pendleton , Atlanu, 30; M'umy, New
Yom,30.
TIUPUlS - 0. Stnd.,., Atlantt. 14:
Finley! Heu~ICin, l !; Butla', I.e. Anaclel,
II ; Ali&lt;ot, SL 1Auia. 10; V..Siyko.l&gt;iua·
burJh, 10; Offcnnan, Loa ~la, I;
Moan&gt;finl. Philtddphil, 7; A
Pl.,.
bwJh, 7; DoShicldl, Moaua.l, 7; Sancl~
berLCU..ao. 1.
flOME RUNS - Mc:Gd.ff, San Dieao.
3~: Shcffiold, San Dleg~, 29; B.onda,
Pltoaburah. 25; O.ul.... Philtddo!Ua. 2A:
Hollina , Philadelphia, 20; L. WaUr.or,
MontrW. 20: Kam&gt;o. Loa Anplea, 19.
STOLEN BASES - Oriseom, M&lt;X~­
treal, 67; DeShieldt, Montreal, 44;
Robau, CINCINNATI, 39: BuUer, Loa
Ap.aelu, 39; Lallkford, St. Louia, 31;
Nilto; Ao!Mit, 34: &amp;loy, """"""· , 3;

·

··~="·

.

(ll doaal....) - Olovine,
Atlantt, 19-6. .760. 2.7(% Tewbbwy, SL
LoW,I4-5, .m , 2.01: M&lt;wpn, Olice&amp;o.
14&lt;1, .700, 2.32; K.llill, Miomrati.U-7,
.61:1, 2.64: Swinolcii,CNCINNA11.12-6.
.667 , 2.'1: B. Hunt. San Dieao. 14·1,
.«.7, 3.l4; Ca!o. Now Yook. 13-7, .6l0,

2.8l

~TIUJ{J!()W~

,.. c...._ Now Y'*

214: Smol!o. Ailantt, 113: S. F...-. ·
New Yoli, 164; 0 . Maddul, Cblca,o,
157; Drabek, Pitttburah. 149; RiJo,
CINCINNATI, 141; Bm•. Son Diop,
132; IWnitch,""""""' 132.
SAVES - Loa Smiob, SL l.ouia, 37;
Weacltnd, -&gt;r'Ool. 32; D.
Jon, 30; Myon, Son DUao,
Cbu1ton.
CINCINN'ATI, 25; Witch Williama,
Plilladolj&gt;hit, 23; Dihblo, CINCINNATI,
17.

- .Houa·
».

A.,.rkonLucue

BATTING - .E. Martinez, Seattlo,
.344; l'l&gt;clteu, MJn.....,tl, . 3~ Meek,

Minnuota, .315; 1.. Alomar, Toronto,
.311; Thomu, Chkaao, .3ti;' Molhor,
M.ilwaukeo., .31S; Griffey, Sattlle, .311.
. RUNS- Aoillioo. Jlotro;t. 94; E. Mu..,.., Sotalo, !ll; koioblaucls, Minnroou,
90; Andes~m, Balrimare, II; R. Ateu,
Tonmto, 87; Cadc:r, ToRinto, &amp;7; Pucken,
~.Bl .

RBI - Fielder, Detroit, 10&amp;; Carter,
TOfG1to, 99; 111111 Gonu.lcz, TCJ.u, 91; 0 .
Bell, Cli~ao. 95; Deveru.UJ., Baltimore,
94: McOwue, Ool:land, 93: Puckett. MJn.
naota, 93.
HITS - ~ekett, Minna:ota, 175; H.
Mutinez, Sattle. 171; Buqa,'CJ..EVE.
LAND, 165; Mack, Minneaota, 16 5·
Molitor, Milwaukee, 157 ; Devere~ ux '
Baltimore, 155; Knoblaudl, Minnsott'
ll4.
.
DOUBLES - E. Mutinez, Seattle
46; Orifl'ey, Scaulc, 3S; Mauin[l]y, NeV:
Yort, 3•;, Jefferiet , Ktnus Cit)', 33:
Younl, Milw1u.keo, 32; Reimer, Tuu,
31; Hall. New Yod, 31 .
TRIPLES - Dcvcreaux, Baltimon:~,
10; Anders"' Baltimore, 9: L Jolwon,
Olical", 9: Lollon, CLEVELAND, 8; R.
A.Jc.nar, Tomruo, 7; 6uc bod wilh 6.
HOME RUNS - Juan Gonzaler.,
Te1u, 39: McGwirc, Olkland, 31; Caner,
Toronto, 30; Fielclc:r, Detroit, 29; Deer,
lle&gt;toi~ V; T culot..,, llotroi~ V; Bello.
a.tlVI!lAND, :!6.
STOLEN BASES - LiJu.cb, Milwaukee, 49; Lofton. ClEVELAND, 47; Polonil, CaW'OIIlia. 47; Andcnon, Baltimom.
~ R. Hondcn:cn, Ot.kland, 4S; Rain01,
40; R. AlOOW', Toronto, 39.
PITCIUNG (lS dcci1ions) - Juan
Ov.zman, Tormuo, 12-3, .100, 2.29; Jack
Morril, Tomnto, 11-S, .783, 4.19; Mellowoll. au...,,l9-7, .731. HI: Muui·
aa, Baltimore, 13-S, .722, 2.&amp;1; Bosio,
M!lwau.ku, 13-S, .722, 3. IO: .Sm1ley,
Mimuou, 14-6, .700, 3.2.5; K.: Brown,
Tu ... 11-8, .692, 3.2S.
STRIKE01JTS - C1ernen•, Boaton,
183; Pm:z, New York. 179: R. Johnfm,
Seattle, 174; Appi cr, Kanna City, J49;
lou OUJJMn, Tix11, 141; Ryan, Teu1,
142; K. Brown, Tuu, 141.
SAVES - Eckeraley, OU.IInd, 42;
Apilera, MiMCIOll, 36; MOillaomCII)',
Kanau City, 32: Olson, Baltimore, 31;
Jeff Ru11ell, Oakland , 21; Reardon,

a-. %7; Honry. M;iwaukoo, 25.
Tran~ad ions
a-ban
-•t..auo

BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Sent

(Nicl&gt;oll3-3), 1:3l p.m.
MiJwaubc (Nav11r0 t:.. tO) at Dclnit.
, • (Jlolloo:ty H). 2:3S pm.
,.. , QU.cqo (NcCIJtW 9·11) ll Ka.uu
.- Ci17 (Piaoo ~ 2:ll p.m.
. .
'
Baltimore (Leffau 0.0) at Clliforma
(111-7-7). 4:0:S p.m.
11&lt;&gt;tu&gt;n (Viola 11·11) 11 Oakltnd (Wi•
9' 13), I:Ol p.m.

60-da diu.blod Jill

sil.\TII.E MARINERS -

R"'Ued

Jeff Scbacfcr, infielder, from Calaary of
the Pic:ific: Cola League.
TEXAS RANOERS - Rec~Ded D1t1
Smilb, pilcher, and Donald HmiJ, out·
6elder, f:n:m Tulll of dte Teua League.
· TORONTO BLUE JAYS - Named

Bill B)'d&lt;owm wisoant dirootoro(C.,..

dllnteoutins,.

N•llonaiLuaue
An.Af&lt;ITA BRAVES - AaRCCI to
tcdlll wi1h Rafael Belllud, infltlder, on •
t~)'W

OODtl'lc:l
CINCINN~TI

REDS - Slaned
Rkk7 Mladalcno. lnnelder, to a mlnorkq,'" contract.

MONTREAL EXPOS - Activated

8rct Duberic. inficl.dcr, from Ute 15-day
dialblod ldl

SAN DIEGO PADRES - Optioned
Ricky Outicrrez. infielder, to Ll1 Vccu
0t 1M PacifiC Cout Leap. Sent Rafael
Vtldt:t. pildlcr, wtJi&amp;ht to Lu Veau.

Basketball

N•llc.al B•btball Alloclatlon
ITI'AH lAX/. - Si&amp;l&gt;od John C""'Y·
pud,l.o a oa•year oon.tner..

Football
N"""""l Faotloolll.u!t

All.'.NTA FALCONS - . eel Bob
Wbilfidd, YciJC. to I ICiiCII of cur atc-

Y"'""'-

GREEN DAY PACKERS - Signed
Brian Noble, linebacker, 10 a 1wo-ye.u
eannCI.
DALLAS COWBOYS - Sisncd
Mich1el Irvin, wide rt~tei:ver, to 1 1hree-

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilnies Commission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No. 92·101-EL-EFC, to
review the fuel procurement practices and
poHcies of Ollie Power
Company, the operation
of Hs Electric Fuel Component, and related matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at the
Commission offices at
10:00 a.m. on September
9, 1992.
All interested parties will
be given an opportuniJy
to be heard. Further information may be obtained
by conlacting the Commission at 180 Easl
Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio 43266-0573.

But if you carry an ATM card
with one of these symbols ...

you have 24-hour access to your
accounts every day of the year
at our Supetfeller machines.
Supa'l'eller Locations
Marlena: • Down1own Office, Second &amp; Putnam Streets
• Fron tier Office, Frontier Shopping Center

•.Kroger OFfice, Washinston Ce nler
• Harmar Drive-up Su perTeller, Lancaster St reet

Alhens: • 1 North Coun Stree1
• 80 l East Stale Street
Belpre: • 1902 Washinston Boulevard
The Plains: • 70 N. Pl ains Rd., Country Corners Shopping Plaza
Other offices in Lowell , Middleport, Nelsonville, Re no Member fDIC

Y"'""""'·
DETROIT UONS -

Aaiv1tcd Ben·
nio Blade&amp; and Shr.ldon White, comer·
bacia, and Dcnnil Gib1on, linebacker.
Plaood Ltrry 'J1wpo. ttckle,"' injured ...
1orva. Waived DtiT)'I Ford, linebacker,
and Willie Cay, oomcrback.
LOS ANOELES RAIDERS Waived Vince Bvau, quar\Cibac:t. Rc·
aianed Detrick Oainc:r, nmninJ bltk.
LOS ANOELES RAMS - Placed
RobeR Youna. 4cfcntive e.nd, on injwed

........

MIAMI OOLPHlNS - Pltood Morit
C11)10rl, wide m:eivcr, on injurd racrve.
Ro-lianed fun Jc:nMtl, wide nai.ver.
PIIIU.DELPIDA EAOLES - Acti·
vatod Brie AUen, comorbKk. Rclea•ed
J.... c..,bool.ltloty.
TAMI'A DAY BUCCANEERS Sif'led R.httt Hall, ddenaive llnsnan .

Hockey
Nttlooul Hoekt7 !Ma"'
BOSTON BRUINS ~ Aoow..d Dorin
Kimble, ri&amp;]ot winlo fr&lt;m the TUIIpa Boy
LiJhlDinl for Xcn Hodac. center, 1nd
Matt fleryoy, dc{cmernan.
NEW YORK RANGERS - Sina«&lt;
Joby M~tn' and Bnd Tdey, defcme·
men, •nd Cnia Duncuuon 111d Dne
lbn-..leftwlnp.

Colleae
BROCKPORT STATE - Named Ed
Oonulez w~men'• \c:M..ia coach.
DARTMOt1111 - Ntmcd Borrr Ruwick men'1 U'lCk and aou m1l\try coach
ind Cad Wallin men's and womea'• (Je!d
&gt;!OOOdo.
.
JACICSONV!LLB - Named Do&lt;kJ
Motley womca'1 \Jack and field coach
and Ted Swinford crew COICb.
NEW MEXICO STATE - Si&amp;nod
Jim ·Hen, football cotc:h, U) I Cllo-ycar

---

PI!NN STA11! - Aanouaood lhtt l!ric

R.mla:4 ..U.IiDtbtctcr, will lit OUI the
1992 aeuon u aJOd.lhift.

•

'•
. '!--.. ,_-

J

·-

1991 NISSAN SENTRA

5 apHd, 1lr, CMIItll, tilt, crulae,
cherry red, wo told MW.

1989 DODGE SHADOW

Automatic, air, alereo, tilt, reor
delroat, nlcelocaltrlde•

1989 PONTIAC GRAND AM

1989 FORD ESCORT WAGON

I.E, Quod 4, olr conditioning, caautto, tilt, cruise, loco! trade.

Loco! owner, low mlloo, 5 apoed

1919 CHRYSLER LeBARON

1986 CHEVY CAVAUER

CONVERTIBLE, outomotlc, olr,
power wlndowa, low mi...

RS, 5.•peed trllllomlulon, olr condl·
llonlng, ••••-· crulu, trunk rock.

b'anamiaalon, alwao, nice.

•

• ,...
~

1990 FORD F·l SO XLT
LIFiat, autom111c, llr, 1111:, cruiH, power
windows A loeb , c••••H•. 18,000
miles.

1988 DODGE RAM 50
5 apeed tran smission , rear s tep

bumper, AMIFM otoroo, 4 now

Malee It A Long.Cool Summerl

'.

WITH A HOT

•• Leaders

SPRINGS SPA
FROM BAUM
LUMBER

;• •

will be closed
Monday, September 7
in observance of Labor Day.

W)

Sotalo (FUhor 2-1) ""'-"'"""""'

:

'

together while Ceredo Kenova lost
the ball on two occasions.
Wahama fought C-K on fairly
even terms for nearly lhree and one
half quarters before the Wonders
rallied for 14 poiniS in f!le final
penod to putlhe game on tee. The
score at the half stood at 8-7 while
C-K held a 16-7 advantage as the
two teams prepared for fourth
period action.
"We gave them a good game
throughout the first half and had a
good drive going following the
second half kickoff but we fumbled
the hall away and that set us back
considerably as far as our m()Rientum goes," VanMeter said. Wahama
drove inside C-K territory anum·
ber of limes during the final two
quarters only to tum the ball over
and thwart the Bend Area teams
comeback chance~.
Although the final score might
indicate somewhat of a one sided
contest nothing could be further
from the truth. WHS, for the most
part played inspired foothaU and
balded Ceredo Kenova tooth and
nail. The game featured bone jarring tackles and hard knocks on the
part of both teams with Mike VanMatre and Randy Purkey getting in
some vicious licks on the C-K
hallcarriers.
Wahama drew first blood late in
the opening canw when an apparent 51 yard touchdown run by
ihe Falcons Roclgl Stewart was
negated by a clipping penalty.
Stewart's long gainer was regulated
to a 31 yard pickup aflel' the

aue.._

BRAND NEW '92 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE

MatheWI 60, S&lt;Nthin&amp;tm 0

Monmevillc 19. KC)'Ilme 14
ML Olliad 13, Cot U.ftden..M.cKinley 20
Ncil....ul• Y. . JS. Atbom 0
New Albtn17, Oni01o 6
New Miami 'I1, Pw:blc Shawnee 7
New fttiladelphit 19, W0011ctO
New Richmmd l2. E. Cin1on 6
Newui. 32. Mt. VemCI\ 6
Nila 36, Beaver Local 22
Nonon 24. Canal Ful1CI\ NW 6
Obellin 34, Perkins!&amp;
Oil City, Pa. 7, Alhtabvb St. JaM 0
0 \nu:ted Falla 34, Clc.' Uncoln· We.t 0
Orqon Clay 1J, ToL Bcwahtt 14
Omoilla 21. Willud 7
Ot.c.eao40, EviCl"JTtCC'l o.
Plinelville Harvey V , F1Uport6
Paine~ ville Riverside 1&amp;, Oardon 12
Paftway 2l , Ddph01 Je{(encn 0
Panna P1dua ~1 Lorain Kina?
Palric:k. Henry JU, Leipsic: 6
Pen-y 22. Mtdilon 7
Pickerinaton 2&lt;1, Thxnto Worthinaton I0
~"' 42, Sprina, NOdh II
Pod PleuMu, '9/.Va. 31,c:Mihite Rlver VIll. 22'
Polmd l2, Y-. Willan 8
1'1&gt;1 OinJon 30, Oenoe I

12

JS.S
2J

74

San Frtneisco ........60
•

Oranvil.le 31 , Johnaown 7

McDemu:u N'W 32, P~OUlh Notre Dame 15
Mcllontld 21, Loctonia 6
Me: Mechen (W.Va.) Donahue 28, FL Frye 1
Moadowbrook 34, W. Muotingurn 30
M&lt;dint 21, Akron N. I
·
Mentor 31, CJ.e. Ghnville 14
Miami Trace 34, Hamil ~t~n Twp. 12
Milan Ed.ilon 31 , Norwalk I
Mineral Ridae 33, Cohnbi~n~ 14

.492
.466
78 .'109

• ' NAn (Ayola .~ 7:Ql p.m.
l :
[.- .Maele&amp;
.• (HIIIhilcr 9·11) It Pial-

Orondviow 10, Col. C...tlllnitl I

•3.

' 67
71

Loa AnaeJeo ...........l 4 80 .&lt;03

•

1 ,

Grud Volt. :!I, Jdfencn 6

L.iltilaHu. Sl. Ntw Lu.inaton 7
Lidtio&amp; Volt. 7, Tri·Valley 0
Uma lath 34, AllenE. 13
Limt CaiiL
WoJIOO Tnce 0
Lima Shawnee 21 . Bowlina Gret:n 14
Unle Miami 20, Leb.nan 0"
Lond&lt;X046,Lopn Elm 14
l..ouil¥illc 14, N. Canton 7
t...u 19, s. C..tnl 0
Luc:uville v IDey 26, Huntinstm 14
Man.lfiel.d Madilm 59, Shelby 1
Mtolf'..W Sr. ll. Omepoot 13
Mtplcoon 2.Hillldtle 0
Marion PluN.nt 14, N. Union 13
Ml.rl.inatoft 21, Waterloo 21
MattW Ferry 42, Union Local1 6
Marymlle 21. llonjomin """' '
Mtaoilloo I7, Allitnoc I
MuUUon Jacbm 34, Clc. W• Tech 6
Muaillon l'ury47, 0e. Collinwood :zs

3
9.!S

15.5
18.:S

f '.•·

WI r1gret WI CGIIMt llollor

CB

~l

J

446-2411 or 1-800-365·1229

L

lS
62

! .:

21.. Groups

Pd.

l6 .l82
59 .560
6S .5ll

Waltra Dlvlllon

Atlantl .•................78
CINCINNA11........72
; , San0ieao ..............71
l
HOVItoo .................63
t

SPECIAL SEPI. 6
· BICYCLE UCES
FOR KIDS

W

P i t - ..............78
MOIDci1 ........~ ......75
Chic:aac..................68
SL latii ...... ..........6S
New Yodr: .............. 62
Philtddphia ···-......54

&lt; '

VINTON UCEWAY

Sunday Times Sentlnei-_Paget-CS

Scoreboard

•' .

~

E
Department
Wat.
8
First downs ...................... l4
Rushing yards ...... :......... lSI
30
Comp.-att. .................. 10-19 13-30
InterCeptions thrown ........ .3
3
Passin&amp; yards .................249 125

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

·ceredo-Kenova
beats
Wahama
30-7
to
boost
record
to
2-0
o:Y

"

Statistics

. '·,

' Notlcmll LeJIIII•

:

BATTINO - Shtlfiol4, Sea Diop,
..1
.333:
V..Siyi&lt;e. Piaabwlb •.333: ErUk,
1
• • Ploiltdolphlt • •322: Owynn, Sm Di~,
"' .315: PI f'e!OI, A\lan.la, .109; c.minili,
,3(]1; Butlor, Loa-· .307.
.:
RUNS - HoWoa. Philtoolpbia. 15:
: Orto-.-.1:!:-.~
', 1:!: ~~lain. - 1 3: VanSIJI&lt;e. l'llla-

1986 CHEVY CAMARO

T·Topo, •tomelko, air, coouue,
power wind-• 6 locke, till,

.,.._

'1986 SUIARU 4 WD

1986V, NISSAN TRUCK

1UR80, aulomollo, olr, power oun·
root 1111d wlnciOwe,
till,

5 opel!d tronomiaolon, local !rode,

cruiN.

•-•tt•,

only 62,0110 miiN.

I

0

·~

•- tmah: 10; DeSbield•. M~r~.uu.l, 79;

Arlin,..,

r•

•:

.,

Jlallk;-m, AtlaiU. 19,

RBI - Shlffielcl, Saa Dieao. 92;

-~we 92;

., ~ W4K,"'Moana1.71.
\

•'

.........,.,A&gt;

lanta.l1: MCIOiill(Sal Dic&amp;o, 17: Bonds,
- 7 9: Mumr. Now Yoot.. 71: 1.

HITS - hndleuaa, Alhnla, ·l66;

'

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 241, CHIItr

915·U0.1

sprin, N"'""""""' 38, Cot Retdr o

r

I

••

.

"

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

Page C6 Sunday Tlme~entlnel

September 6, 1992

:. : Ohio fishing report

.~ Hybrid stripers

in Gallipolis, Racine pools prefer chicken livers

: . COLUMBuS. Ohio (AP) • Here is the weekly fishing repon as
provided by the division of wildlife
of Ihe Ohio Department of Natural
Resowces:

end of the lake lor the best results.
Cmppies, redear sunfish and carp
are also present in this lake.
O'SHAUGHNESSY RESERVOIR - Try areas with fallen
uees and 1:rush piles along the west
shoreline to take largemouth bass.
Cover along the deeper shorelines
holds a fair number of crappie.s.
Shoreline cover lake wide is a consistent producer for bluegill
anglen.
Northwest
CHARLES MILL RESERVOIR
- Use minnows suspended
beneath a bobber and fish in areas
with submerged structure to take
crappies . Use night crawlers,
shnmp or chicken livers fished
along the lake bottom at night to
take catfiSh. Areas with fallen lreeS
and submerged stumps are the best
places to 1ry when fishing for largemouth bass.
VAN WERT RESERVOIRS Both reservoirs offer good fishing
opportunities for bass, walleye,

Southwest
COW AN LAKE - Fish with
night cmwle~ along the lake bottom to take bullheads and channel
catfiSh. Fish at depths of eight to 15
feet around the drop-offs to take
crappies. Woody shoreline cover is
a good habitat for largernoulh bass.
Troll along the drop-offs and all
points in the lower half of the lake
for muskies.
GRAND LAKE ST. MARYS
- Large numbers of bullheads
averaging nine to 12 inches are pre·
sent Fish with night cmwlers along
the bottom in boat channels and
uibutaries. Nighttime fishing for
channel catfish is best with soft
craws, cut baits and night cmwlers.
Cmppie fishing is mted good with
some fish measuring 15 inches.
Central
OAKTHORPE LAKE - This
40-acre Fairfield County lake
offers excellent largemouth bass
fishing opportunities. Try the areas
with deep drop-offs on the western

whe.n fishing for white bass. Cmyflsh fished in the main channel are
being used to take drum up to 26
inches.
Southeast
PIEDMONT LAKE - Fishing
Obio River
at night for muskies is most proIn the Gallipolis pool, chicken ductive in the areas od Essex Bay
•livers, cut baits and night cmwlers and Indian Run. Troll the 1110uth of
• work best for taking channel cat- Essex Bay to the 4-H camp for
fish up to 26 inches and hybrid walleyes. Smallmouth bass fiShing
at the 4-H camp is mted fair. Flat· striped bass up to 15 inches.
· In the Racme tajl water, anglers head catflsh up to 50 polinds have
are using jigs tippee! with minnows been taken around Marina Ba)i and
and chicken livers along the public by the dam. Channel catfish are
-. access walkway and next to the offering good nighttime fishing
opponunities lake wide.
hy~ discharge to take white bass
OHIO POWER RECREATION
averaging I 0-13 inches. Chicken
AREA
- Many of these recreation
livers and surface plugs are being
area
ponds
offer good opponunities
used in front of the hydo discharge
to take hybrid striped bass avera~­ to fish for largemouth bass and
ing 13-20 inches. Fishing is best m bluegills. Bass flshing is best in the
early .morning and early evening
the early morning hours.
In the Greenup pool, jigs and hours. Use surface baits, small
. crank baits are being used to take crank baits or plastic worms. A
saugers up to 16 inches at the dis· special user permit is required to
charge. Jigs and spinners work best fish , hunt or camp on this area.

Seattle to host Cincinnati in season opener today
ByJIMCOUR
SEATTLE (AP) - Seattle 's
Tom Flores is starting over. David
Shula of Cincinnati, the head coach
with the famous father, is just start·
ing.
The Seahawks are listed as four·
point favorites against the Benl\als
m today's regular-season-openmg
game at the Kingdome.
After a four-year absence from
NFL coaching, the 55-year-old Flo. res is back on the sidelines. He
served as rresident and general
manager o the Seahawks the past
three seasons.
Former Bengals head coach
Sam Wyche left Cincinnati at the
end of a 3-13 season after a Christ·
mas Eve blowup with general manager Mike Brown. Wyche says he
was fired, the Bengals say he quit
Shula, son of Don Shula, was
promoted from the Bengals'
receivers' coach to head coach.
David Shula was 32 when he
got the Bengals' job. He's 33 now.
His father was 33 when he took
over the Baltimore Colts in 1963.
Don Shula, coach of the Miami
:: Dolphins, has a 281-123-6 record
: in his 28 seasons as an NFL head
• coach and is closing in on the late
· George Halas' record of319 career
coaching vic10ries.
He's offered his son some good
; advice; and David has listened. .
" He looked back at what he d1d
• his fust year in the league," David
. said. ' 'One of the things he pointed
: out was thai he felt he made a mistake at times in relying too much
· on the veterans on his club.
"He relied on them a liWe bit
more than pushing them. That' s
· something we talked about before
: the season started. So I haven't
: done that."
• Wyche, now at Tampa Bay. was
• very popular in Cincinnati, where
:· he coached for eight years . He
• coached the Bengals into the 1989
Super Bowl, where they lost to Joe
Montana and the San Francisco
49ers 20-16.
He could be tough act to follow.
but Shula doesn't seem worried.
" I've just come in and tried to
be myself," Shula said. "I've just
uied to do things the way I feel
they should be done. We haven't
looked back at all. We're focusing
on the future. "
Flores became Seattle's head
coach last Jan. 6 after owner Ken
Behring and nine-year Seahawks
mentor Chuck Knox paned company. The team went 7-9 its last season under Knox, now coach of the
Los Angeles Rams.
Aores coached the Oakland and
Los Angeles Raiders to Super
Bowl victories in the 1980s. The
Oakland Raiders beat Philadelphia
27-10 in Super Bowl XV in 19&amp;1
and the Los Angeles Raiders
defeated Washin~n 38-9 in Super
Bowl XVUI in 1984.
But Flores doesn't have Jim
Plunkett or CUff Branch or Marcus

Lyne Center slate
RIO GRANDE - The activities
schedule for Lyne Center is as follows:
Gymnasium hours
Today - 2-4 p.m. and 6-8
p.m., open recreation
Monday - 6-8 p.m ., college
recreation
Tuesday- closed for class
Wednesday - 6-&amp;p.m., college recreation
Thursday - closed for volley, ball vs. Shawnee State, 7 p.m.
·Friday - 6-8 p.m., open recre· ation
Sat'urday- 2-4 p.m., open
recreation
Sundpy, Sept. 13 - 2-4 p.m.
. and 6·8 p.m., open recreation
Pool hours
Sunday - 2-4 p.m. and 6-&amp;
p.m •• open swim
Moaday- 6-&amp; p.m., college
swim
· Tuesday - 6·8 p.m., college
., swim
Wednesday- 6-8 p.m., col legeswim
.. Th•nclaY- closed
Friday- 6-&amp; p.m.; open swim
• Saturday - 2·4 p.m., open
' .
·swtm
· : Sunday - 2-4 p.m. and 6-8
•p.m., open swun
•

.

Allen, leading offensive players in league. To tell you the trUth, we
his coaching years with the were putrid last year."
The Seahawks will stan their
Raiders.
first
-round draft choice, Ray
The talent is considerably less in
RoberiS
of Virginia, at left tackle in
Seattle.
Under Flores, Kelly Stouffer has the offensive line. Robens suugemerged to replace Dave Krieg as gled in Seattle's exhibition loss to
Seattle· s staning quarterback. Chris San Francisco last weekend.
"There's been a big burden
Warren will stan at running back
and wide receiver Brian Blades got placed on his shoulders because
back this week after a 43-day con- he's been asked to come in and
play,'' Flores said of Robens.
tract holdout
The Seahawks didn't get much
"I'm enjoying myself," Flores
said. "But I know we're going to help from last season. They just got
struggle some. We have to flnd a older. Defensive linemen Jacob
way to win. That's what we're in Green, Joe Nash and Jeff Bryant,
all in their 30s, made the roster.
the business for. To win."
Just three rookies and two Plan
The immediate future doesn 't
B
players
made the team.
look promising for Shula or Flores.
Defensive lineman Keith MilThe Bengals ranked last in the
NFL with 21 sacks last season. lard, acquired with a second-round
Instead of going out and dmfting a draft pick and future considerations
defensive lineman in the fust round in a trade with Minnesota, won't
in April, Cincinnati went for quar- start for the Seahawks. Neither wiU
Rueben Mayes, a runnipg back
terback David Klingler.
Incumbent Bengals quanerback who was retired last season. Mayes
Boomer Esiason thought the dmft- cost the Seahawks a 1992 fourthround draft pick.
ing of Klingler was a mistake "I don't think you can have
and not just because Klingler wa~
picked to replace the 31-year-old eight or nine drafted P.layers make
your team every year, ' Flores said.
Esiason some day.
"My fust reaction was: 'I hope " We have the young and the old
he (Kling!&amp;) can rush the passer,"' and there's not a lot in between."
Esiason said. ·:we've (Cincinnati's
The Bengals have a player who
pass rush) been laughed at in the spent three seaso~s with the Sea·

Wonders win ...

hawks.
Derrick Fenner was Seattle's
opening-day tailback last season.
He was signed by Cincinnati as a
Plan B free a.~tent during the offseason.
.
.
Fenn&amp; IS moavated to ~how the
Seahawks they made a m1stake by
not making him one of the1r 37
protected players at the end of last

NG
•HOT WATER

•COOKING

START·
ED - John Carroll orrenslve
lineman Dan Polcyn (Kyger
Creek '91) will join his fellow
Blue Streaks in their season
opener oo Saturday, Sept. 12 at
Alma College in Alma, Mich.

CHESTER

915·3307

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING
Wahama - Rocky Stewart 12-56; ~~~~!!!!!!!~~~~
Tommy Mayes 5-39; Carl King II30; Matt Fields 1-12; Jason King 1(·1); Tmvis Johnson 1-(-3);
TOTALS 31-1_33.
C-K - Josh Scmgg 32-171; Bryan
Workman 15-72; Nick Swanson 121; Jim Dingess 3-8; Craig Me·
Cormick 1-7; Paul White 2· 7; Matt
Arthur 2-4; TOTALS 56-290.
TOTALS41-290
PASSING
Wahama - Tommy Mayes 3-13-35
yds-2 int; Carl King l-l-2Syds-ltd;
TOTALS 4-14-60 yds-1ld-2int
C-K- Matt Arthur.1-4·20yds-1ld
RECEIVING
Wahama • Travis Johnson 2-43-1111;
J.C. Allbright 1-13; Kevin Barker
Scoring:
1-4; TOTALS 4-60-1td
Wah - Travis Johnson 25 yard pass C-K - Mike Mayo 1·20-Jtd
from Carl King (Mayes kick)
C-K - Josh Scragg 17 yard run Swim meet Monday
(Scragg run)
4 cyl. engine, P. staerlng,P. brakis. auto.
tr~ns.
, AMIFM stereo cassette, air cond., P.
C-K - Mike Mayo 20 yard pass
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
windows
and power locks. ti~ and cruise, P.
from Matt Arthur (Scmgg run)
Municipal Pool's swim ~ will
driver
seat,
rear defroster, cast aluminum
C-K - Bryan Workman two yard hold the swim meet ongmally
run (Scragg run)
styled wheels. Less than 15,000 miles.
scheduled for Aug. 28 on Monday
C-K · Josh Scragg six yard run (run from 6:30 to 8:30p.m.
31N INVENTORY TO CHOOSE FROM
failed)

r

VB engine, power steering, po- brakes,
automatic air cond., AMIFM stereo
cassette, Premium Sound, titt &amp; cruise, rear
defroster, leather Interior, full power, cast
aluminum wheels, 16,000 miles. Like new,
must see to believe

SAVE 1IIOUSANDS Of DOWIS ON 1115 OND
FAmll PIIOIIIM t•n
I

118811GLI Pllllllll

y

V-6 eng.; power steering, power brakea,
auto. trans., air cond., AMIFM stereo
cassette, litt' and cruise, power windows
and power door .locks, rear defroster, local
one owner car, 38,000 milea. Extra clean.
WAS $7495

•Heating &amp; Water Heating
•Lift Truck Gas Delivery
•Grain Drying &amp; Cooking
•Construction Heating

.

IPICIIL

FOR HOME, FARM, BUSINESS
&amp; INDUSTRY

• ··· ·•••

~

1 - FGRD F·IIO XL'r LAIRII'r
I

1

I,

6 cyt. en(Jine, P. llea~ng, P. brakes, auto.
trant., air cond., AtNFM atereo casalllle. titt &amp;
crulat, all power alldlng r•r window, chrome
rear step bumper, atyled wheela with trim
rint~~. tutone paint, deluxe topper with alldlng
(Jiua, running boardt, local QWOer, 25,000
mllH.

.WAS

..., $12, tiiO

RUTLAND nRIIWRI
and 10111.1 US
FAMILY OWNED
Toll Free 1-8Q0..837·8217
742·2511
The Plains, Ohio
Rutland, Ohio

By CINDY JENKINS
District Forester
GALLIPOUS - Timber Stand
Improvement and thinning are cuilura! treatments that require the
selective removal of undesirable
trees, vines or large scrubby
spec1es from forest stands to concentrate the nutrients of the site on
the more desirable trees.
Many of the woodlands in the
Gallia County are infested with
grapevines, honeysuckle and various shrubby plants and low tmldc
species that reduce the availability
of growing space, moisture and
sunlight to commercially valitable
' !rees.

.

lOW •••

Brbllla ,.oar ltHt
oa a New Car or Track aad we
wiD ti'J' to meet or Belt the DeaL
PO.IlA'GOOD D.UL ••
lEE .JA.Cit ROUSH or BO. ROSS
Our Service Department Ia Open Mon,-Fri. 8-5; SaL 8-12
.
Muffler Shop Mon.-Fri. 8-5; SaL 8-12

· An example of this would be ironwood, etc. These. plants, are
jllllpevines and spicebush growing beneflcialto wildlife and add beau1n the understory of red oak and ty to our forests but when allowed
hickory on a nonheast facing slope. to completely take over the widerThe grapevines eventually climb to story they become a detriment to
Ihe top of valuable trees and cover the woodlot and can cost the
the crown with its foliage.
landowner hundreds of dollars a
This blocks the sun and hampers year.
the trees growth. Grapevii)CS often
There are two main ways to get
are so restriciive with their vines on rid of grapevines, pest shrubs, and
uees under 20 feet tall that the topS weed tr~.es. These methods arc
are literally broken down. T&amp;e mechamcal and herbicides. The
nlain stem of a yOliDg sapling can tv.:o are often used in conjunction
also become belli beyond its ability w1th one another.
to straighten itself again, even after
Thonn1ng in the woodlot is
Ihevineisremoved.
another form of Timhcr Stand
Other unwanted woody plants Improvement (TSJ) that can make
are spicebush, pawpaw, dogwood, dollars multiply . Not only docs

Farm City
Day: a look
at a lifestyle
By CONSTANCES. WHITE
GalliaSWCD
GALLIPOLIS - Saturday,
Sept. 12 at 9 a.m. will be the begin·
ning of Farm City Day . Wagon
tours will pull out from the equipment shed -on the Thelma and Merrill Rose farm on Hannan Trace
Road, just south of Patriot
The tour promises to give you
an overview of the farming operation. Dr. Allan Boster will talk 011
beef quality assurance and what it
means to the customer •.Ed Vollbom, Ohio Cooperative Extension
Service agriculture agent, will discuss feeding and healthy animalJ.
From the water resources· man·
agement srandpoin~ Soil Conservationist Patty Dyer of the Gallia
SWCD will discuss Ihe pond and
spring development and 1ts impo-tance to the farming operation. The
economic impact of agriculture on
our local economy will also be dis·
. cussed.
:: Displays. demonsuations and
· exhibits of equipment will be there
for us to view. The Gallia County
EMS will be doing a "Jaws of
Life" demonstration. We are still
looking for an old com pick&amp; to
. use in the demonsuation. If you
.have OIIC and would let us bonow
: i~ CODUICI the Gallia SWCD office
at 446-8687.
Food for refreshments will ·
: include the usual spread of roast
· beef .sandwiches and hamburgers,
; bean soup, lemonade, milk
icc
4 ·cream.
The children can rest for awhile
• and listen to stories being told by
Kristi Eblin from the Bossard
. Libmry.
This is a wonderful oppoi tunity
, for grandparents to take their
grandltids out to a farm like they
used to know. As more and more of
our Jqlulation getS further and fur. ther away from an agricultural
, background, events like Farm City

thinning free important growing
space for valuable commercial
species, but Selling trees that have
been removed as fuel wood, posts
or poles can yield some ready cash.
Thinnings are
most beneficial in plantations or
natural srands where the lreeS were
planted or staned to ·grow at the
same time. In this type of situation,
the lrees are all even-aged and rela·
lively uniform in height and diame·
ter.
Timber Stand Improvement
(TSI) is the basic forest practice
necessary to initiate forest management on hardwood forest area.
Ohio timberlands have been producing commercial wood products
since the early 1800s. The average
cutting cycle has been about 20
years. This means that most established woodlands could have had
as many as nine harvest.cuttings.

During most or the harvest
cuttings, only the highest value
limber was removed. From a tim·
ber buyer's standpoint, this method
of opemlion is economic common
sense. For a forest landowner, it
may mean that less desirable 1rees
are left after each harvest
After eight or nine harvests in a
woodland not under fCI'est management, it is possible to build up a
high proportion of undesirable trees
thai may not be salable for any pur-

pose.
Tree values differ greatly
depending on species, size, quality
and end use. Timber prices for
sawtimber stumpage for black walnut, black cherry, white ash, white
01k, red oak, hard maple, soft
maple, yellow poplar, and basswood are more valuable than hickory, pine, elm, beech, COIIDnwood,
black gum and sycamore.

Farm Flashes

Annual event shows otT best
in Gallia County agriculture
By EDWARD M. VOL~BORN
Galtia Extension Agent
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
PATRIOT- The lOth annual
Farm City Day for Gallia County
wiU be the big event for next week.
This year's event will again lie
hosted by a hard- working family
SITE OF EVENT - The Rose farm oo Hannan Trace Road,
farm.
south of Patriot, will be the site or the annual Farm City Day
The site for the Saturday, Sept
observation 011 Saturday, Sept. 12 from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Wagon tours
12 event will be the Merrill and
and oth&amp; activities are scheduled.
Thelma Rose farm, located just
south of Pattiot on Hannan Trace
Road. Wagon tours will take visitors around the farm. A couple of
changes this year relating to the
wagon tours. The tours will stan at
9 a.m. and will continue until
around 11 a.m. Wagon tours will
be somewhat shoner and this year
start earlier to avoid the afternoon
heat.
Some of the wagon tour slOps
will feature di~ussion of: Agricul·
ture, An Economic Development
Opponunity; Quality Assurance for
Beef; and Water Resource Management. Farm City Day guests will
see much of the Rose farm as they
arrive traveling south of Patriot
The Rose Farm features a beefforage type operation with some
com, tobacco, wheat, and soybeans
in the rotation. lnnovati ve beef
READY TO SHOW- Visitors to Ihe annual .Farm City Day on
management practices on the Rose
Sept. 12 wi,U Bee a typic:ally weD-managed farm racing tbe needs or
farm were the topic of a feature
today's agrkuUvral marketplace.
article in the May 19&amp;7 issue of the
Ohio Farmer magazine. Plan to
attend and enjoy the 1992 Farm
It's a time to show the hard- City
Day are even more important to our
Day.
young people's education. This working farmers in our county that
gives everyone the opponunity to you do care and appreciate what
Adequate soil moisture is an
know more about our environment they do for the quality of life in important ingredient for any fall
and have a ~ understanding as Gallia County. So, come on out for fomge seeding. There is still time
an enjoyable ttip to the country. to make a fall seeding, but the earto where their food comes from Farm City Day lasts unlill p.m.
tiot just 1 supermarket ·
lier the better chance for winter

survival. Interest for new seeding motioo Oc
·
•a7 h
usually is high in drought years &gt;:an tcur 111 61: 1lfadtl Dliiy &amp;..,
when there is a hay and pasture at M"'iPw, Wis..• On. 7-4.. Fiat
shortage. In high rainfall years, !)eel is .... r iMs Ail . . . .,.
such as this season, only limited lbe ooa: cf dtisllip _. Pie $ISO
interest exists.
wilh ••el6:•• •'4 y.. lf "
The situation of forage supply ed, Cillas-asp 77 (~
seems to dictate making forage 7007).
seedings in less desirable growing
conditions. This might be a situaI jwt ""'*'"w:d e , 6 • 111is
tion that we would want to get bet- weet r.- lk 7991-93 OlliD a.ll
ter organized . .The Gallia SWCD P.erf_ _... Test.. lllfaebn io•
has 2 no-till drills available for ·ckMI· far !toA !IIIoW 7"
rental to local farmers.
OouniiDBead . . Valcy: .
arc due by Sqa. 21. A falltPD: -...
The Gallia County Pride In :tbe ••*4'' • ICR, , ilaqii..
Tobacco Association has booked a :i blcatlllofl - •-ollit&amp;.
van for the University of Ken tucky's Tobacco Mechanization
Field Day. The event will be held
Friday, Sept 11 from 1-4 p.m. at
the Woodford County Researcb
Farm near Midway, just south of
Lexington.
Several experimental and commercial pieces of equipment will be
on display and exhibited. A special
interest will be an experimental
stalk·spearing machine for stick
harvest If you would like to panicipate please call. Details will soon
be complete for the Tobacco Association Annual Meeting scheduled
for Oct. 15.
A reminder: The Mason County
Young Farmers Fall Livestock Producers Meeting to be held at 8
p.m., Sept 8, at the Mason County
Vocational School. A speciBI invitation has been extended to surrounding ·county farmers to attend
this industry sponsored event
The Gallia County Dairy Pro-

s

Food industry

Manager named

•venae

mes

--

""-·

....

..

.

RAMW.I.C.BAY5

Hays qtteJUls
banking school

Both moves will save GM to give up a $600 Chrisanas hoous an auto industry analyst with
m011ey, but analysts also see ames- that was taken away from salaried Salomon Brothers Inc. in New
York.
sage to hourly workers represented worken.
by the United Auto Workers union.
"GM is still hemorrhaging red
UAW President Owen Bieber
"This 1lliiiOIIIICCIICDt will be the has said that getting OM to replen- ink, and eve~ constiwency is tak·
frrst of a string of announcements ish funds that provide income for ing a haircu~ ' said Kirnan. "This
that relalc to white-collar downsiz- laid-off hourly workers will be a is building a book to improve their
ing," said John Cws•, an analyst top bargaining issue next year.
bargaining power" in next year's
with Wertheim S&lt;:htoder &amp;: Co. in
Analysts said the uming of talks, he said.
New York. "The UAW has to get Wednesday's announcement was
The alltomaker lost $7 billion in
evidence that evrsy constituency at curious given that the leading North America last year. Some
OM is helping to chip in. ••
automaker and the union have been analysts have estimated GM's
Sucb bints haven 'I worked negotiating to end a strike at a key North America losses through the
before. The UAW refused to abide parts plant in Lordstown, Ohio. first half of the year at $2 billion.
with a GM request that its memben Supply shortages from Lordstown The automaker has reponed total
take two weeks of vacation in July have forced at least seven assembly worldwide losses of $21 &amp;million
in line with a companywide shut· plants to close since Aug. 28.
so far this year.
down.
Key issues in the strike are the
GM generally sets aside 3 perLast yiar, union workers refused use of outside suppliers and work- cent to percent or its salary r,x&gt;l
GEORGE R. STAMPER
ers for jobs now perfQrmed by for merit mcreases.and recogmtion
UA W workers and GM's decision bonuses.
to close a tool-and-die shop that
For some employees, losing
employs 240 of the plant's 2,400 raises and bonuses amounts to a
pay cut. because they have come to ·
Since we believe acquiring compa- workers.
GALLIPOLIS - George R.
By STAN EVANS
GM's
move
could
also
affect
count
on
t!Jeir
merit
payments.
The
OALLIPOUS-OnJuly2.1992, nies look 81 Ihe acquisition effect on next year's national contract talks benefit changes also will cost Stamper has been promoted to
Marketing and Customer Services
the House of Representatives passed repoltedeamingsas well as cash flow, with the UAW, said Jack Kirnan, employees.
manager
for the Athens Division of
it
would
not
be
realistic
to
expect
the
new tax legislation that. among other
Southern Power Co.,
Columbus
things. would allow a 14-year write- entire cash flow beneflts of the tax
according
to Dana E. Waldo ,
lcgislati&lt;in to flow into acquisition
• offofthegoodwiU
Athens
Division
llliDIIBer.
~ · However, even if only half of
· •lb•t is incurred
Swnper
is
~eplacin&amp; Howard E.
1tdid, dw would still be a substantial
: ,tluring business
Stevens, who retired Sept. I after
step up in trans1Cti011 values.
: /purchases. AI37 yars of scrviee 10 the company.
In lldditi011, the ltgislatlon in and
: •though the bill is
Swnper is presently Marketing
of iiiCif might provide a catalyst for
·: not reuoactive,
and Energy Services manager for
taltcover activity since companies
: 'and thus would not
the Pikeville Division of Kentucky
might want to. take advantage of the
;.;llelp companies
Power Co. He has been with Kennew p:ovisibn immediately out of
tucky Power for 13-1/2 years and
• thai made major
origmally joined the firm as an
· :takeovers in the past, it wouldsignifi- fear that it could be changed back.
associate engineer.
! ·eantly reduce the fUI811Cing costs for Eiiactment of this legislation also,
undottbtedly.
would
aaract
Wall
He possesses a bachelor's
:.:rulllte acquisitions and, we believe,
in elecuical engineering
degree
Sueet's
~~tendon
and
could,
at
the
· 'possibly set off a new binge of rakefrom
the
West Virginia Instiwte of
. ': ovc:l activity in the food business. vrsy )Qst.increasc speculative inler:
Technology.
Stamper and his wife
&gt;With food companies already Jlelling est in food IIDCks.
arc the p~re~~ts of two children and
Gi\'CII their current price and alJo
:"at Ill
or llmolt four limes
they pltn to reLx:a•e 10 Athens in
· theirstatedboolmlue.thumountof COIIIiclllrina their size and ~
the near future.
·goodwill incvrmi in any takeover Sllli'e!lolderiiMUI, weviewtheshlres
In his new ~sition, Stamper
"thcle days is obviously substantial. of ConAara. Borden. Quater Oats,
will
be respons1ble for all ruUI·
-::The ability to write that off over 14 UniVerlll Food.l, CPC, Gerber,
ing
and
custaner services functions
'Yean drlmatically changes the eco- Ralston Purini, CamphcU Soup and
in
the
Athens,
Gallipolis and WellHeinz 10 be the most likely beneftei·
:· bornics fm acquisitions.
RIBBON CUTTING • Gallipolis City Manager Gleao Smltb
ston areas which comprise Ihe
if takeover speculati011 heats
As discussed in this report. for
cuts tile ribbon at Ihe grand opening of Vl'RA Jlurnlture, Upper
Athens division. Stamper's respon. River Road, GallipoliS, Tuesday morning. Looking on are Ray·
example, it would allow a company up.
sibilities will include the Coilslnto[Mr. EYIDiilait lnftltmellt IIJ'Oo
such is Philip Morris to pay 40-SO
moad Jobosoa, owner of the store and Essie Lee, o'WIIer of tbe
tive Marketing Program, Dcmalld
lEer
for
1be
OhiO
COIIIJIIIIJin
Ill
lhtlldlna.
ne lltore olren both rent to own and cash and cany fur- Side Management activilios and III
ptn:eatmore for anacql!ililion wiJb.
nltare and ippllaoces.
·
out changing its lOIII cash ~Y· GaiHpalll olllce.)
facets of customer accounts work. .
. DETROIT (AP) - General
: Motoo Co1p. could be sending its
. largest union a signal that painful
: COQCCSSions could be in the worts
· next year, according to analysts
· viewing OM's l,alest cut.
: GM has informed its salaried
. workers they will Ieceive no merit
. increases or bonuses this year, their
. second involuntary concession to
· the financially ailing automaker in
·. two weeks.
The approximately 80,000
white-collar workers were told of
the·latest cuts in letters from their
managers Wednesday. GM told
salaried employees Aug. 24 they
would have 10 begin paying their
own health insurance premiums.

Money Ideas

4 cyl. engine, power
steering,
power
.
.
.
.
.
brakes, automatic transmtsston, a1r
conditioning, AMIFM stereo radio, rear
defroster, local car, 47,511 miles, extra
clean. Looks and runs like new.
WAS $5495

Section D

jGM merit pay ban could be message to union

san san san

WANT RELIAIIUTY
AND SERVICE?

1times - ~tntinel

Timber Stand improvement benefits forests

ana

'1480

RUTLAND
BOTTLE GAS
Over 40 Years
Dependable
Service

Fish are averaging 22 inches.
Anglen are !rolling at depths of SO
feet, with one in 10 reponing limit
catches. In the area from the Grand
River to Geneva. walleye fiShing is
fair 20 miles offshore at depths of
30-50 feet Perch flshing has been
fair. Top spots include the area
three to flvc miles out from Cleveland. Use spreaders tipped with
minnows ftshed near the bouom for
best results. Some steelhead are
being caught in the Grand River
from shore up to the first darn in
the Painesville area.
In the western basin, poor
weather has slowed flshing aclion.
Some perch are being taken one
mile west of Green Island, around
Rattlesnake Island, and off Marblehead. Perch anglers should fish
near the bottom with minnows at
depths of 15-35 feet Some walleye
are being taken around West Sister
Island. Smallmouth bass can be
taken at depths of 15-20 feet in the
rocky areas around the islands.
Most fish are averaging 15-15
inches and can be taken on live
bait

SEE US FOR HOME, FARM,
BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY

(ContinuedfromC-5)

Wahama will return to action
next Friday night when the Eastern
Eagles visit the Bend Area for a
7:30 p.m. contest.
STATISTICS
Wahama CK
First Downs
9
14
Yards Rushing
31-133 56-290
Yards Passing
60
20
Total Yards
.t93
310
Passing
4-14
1-4
Interceptions Thrown 2
0
Fumbles Lost
4-2
4-3
Penalties/Yards
4-30
6-40
Punts/Avg
2-30.5 3-32.7
Off Plays
47
63
Score by Quarters:
1 2 3 4 Tot
Wahama
7 0 0 0 7
C-K
0 8 8 14 30

perch, catfish and saugeye. try
Reservoir No. I for saugeyes and
Reservoir No. 2 for white bass.
Fish the outer shorelines and drift
fish for perch, walleyes and catfish.
Northeast
.
SPRINGFIELD LAKE - Use
red worms or wax worms to take
bluegiUs in six feet of water around
vegetation and submerged structure. Use minnows suspended
beneath a bobber and fiShed at a
depth of 10 feet to take cmppies.
Surface baits ll!ld plastic worms
work best when bass fiShing.
PYMATUNING RESERVOIR
~ Walleye anglers are having
good success fishing at depths of
18-20 feet in the south end of the
reservoir with Hot 'N Tots and
night cmwlers. Bluegill fiShing is
rated excellent off the causeway
and near shore when using small
worms. Early rooming crappie fishing is good in these same areas.
Lake Erie
In the cenual basin, walleye
fishing is rated excellent 10-12
miles out from Cleveland's Edgewater Park and Wildwood Park.

Farm/Business
..

••

R
I c.
•l'blfb--.

MIDDUPORT

I

Hays. . _ ........
receruly
:0'"' J9llt
"
11f die ObJ SOnoP or B•tiwa
spon~ by dte o.io 8 ' a '
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lUI~.._,.
•~
filedune ,_-cf..., a 61: -.d-

l q ·l ltitoolldla Olio ua....r
ty.

The 91MJaP, di Rr

feuional ~c•'l

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·offcr.s t.artos • CJMG''

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•eDhanoe ... !lllilk . . . ~ ....
bank •..-••iies _.

- •-J
L
• a.

resi""""'period. gAI a ... cf- 1lllara
two-,_.
two-year awwa.n.a IIIey ac
II · ·

also uqaittd 1D • ·~'

a:. •
••lk

a
intereu ~ paujc:a

ass\~

.

p;''

interim.

Eel

The OIID P ' a ·s Aw *H•
iS 1

ncmiRfiln• i*'

~ROC

I

by the mm!N •&lt;ill hllb al &lt;Ilia
For more diD a~. ORA U!;

been ~·····
nica.tioo,
• O Jf'dlaiiC
.:7
governmemal a:uiu:s Ill ils ben.

r.Jios

SWCD sets metliug

�.I

~

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

Page D2-Sunday nmes Sentinel
ASTRO-GRAPH

'.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Bepl. I, 1112

Thoro could be a substantial improve!Mtlt In your financial circumstances In
the year lhead. II you utUile tha gilts
Y.OU - · bomJWith, benefits are likely In
--'ar-.
VIIQO (Aug. ZS.Sepl. 22) Your popullrlty with otherS will be enhanced today; you'U be lmpr- by their virtues
and not their faults. And knowing you
notiCe makee them feel good about you.
VIrgo, treat yourself to a birthday gilt.
Stnd lor VIrgo's Astra-Graph predlctiQrll lor tha year ahead by mailing
$1.25 plus a long, sell-addressed,
stamped envelope to Astra-Graph, c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428. Be sure to state
your zOdiac sign.
LIIIIA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A matter or
considerable lmporlance to you, where
your secutlty Is concerned, looks like It
might work out better than you had
hoPed- provided you don't leave any
lOose threads hanging.
SCORPIO (Oct. ~- 22) Be an attentive listener today When in tha company or a lrlend Who hu a gilt lor doing

m1ngs right. What you learn can be ap- nlng could yield bigger rewards than
plied to your own affairs In tha not-too· usual.
·
dlslant future.
IAGmARJUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Your
Sept. 7, 1tt2
financial aspects "'e very encouraging
today, h -. keep What YO\l're doing
and how you're doing It secret lor the More travel than usual is probable tor
the year ahead. There are Indications
moment. Tha leas said, the better.
CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. 22.,.,. 1t) Friends you might even be able to journey to a
will be closely observing you today, but place you've always wantad to visit.
not lor negative reasons - rather, be- VIRGO (Aug. 23-lapl. 22) Don't be surcause you'll conduct yourself in a man- prised 11 your social calendar gets a bit
ner that will make a favorable crowded today and tomorrow. There
are Indications your · popularity with
impression.
AQUARIUS (Ju. 20-FH. 1t) Your In· peers Is ascending. Major changes are
stlncts and logic will be harmoniously ahead lor Virgo ;;. tha coming year.
synchronized today. This should give Send for Virgo's Astra-Graph prediC·
you a definite edge In competitive situ&amp;· tiona today. Mall $1.25 pkJs along, selllddressed, stamped envelope to Astrationa Where you're Challenged.
Graph,
c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
PISCES (FR. 211-Morch 20) A, lrlend ol
yours might be In need of a bit of en· 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be
couragement today. You're just the 0'18 sure to stat• your zodiac sign.
who'll know what to do and say to re- LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) . 11 there is
awaken
this
individual's
self· something ol imparlance yOtJ're hoping
to pull otf at this time, try to do it with
confidence.
ARIES (M'"h 21-April 1t) Ma)or ac· the assistance or pro~en ames, rather
compllshments are possible today, ow- than with those who are un1ested.
ing to your keen imagination and re- SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your powsourcefulness. You have a faCtJity lor ers of observation are exceptionally
keen today. You can learn a lot by
gelling around what obstructs you .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Even closely observing others. especially
though you'll be protective of your self- someone whose qualihes you envy.
interests today, you'll be concerned SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc. 21)11 you
about tha welfare of tha other guy. Your apply common sense in your commercial affairs today. you should come out
honorable attitude elicits respect.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) This could be on tha protit side of the ledger. Let your
one of your better days for personal ac- pragmatic know-how guide you.
quisition, as well as deriving benefits tor CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22-Jan. 11) You'll
those with whom you're associated. Put Cherish independence and mobility toyQur

full

focus

o_n

unique benetits. It's something you're
apt to lind rather intriguing.
ARIES (Marcil 21-April 19) You might
not accomplish your objectives totally,
but you can get an excellent start - if
you make them priority matters. Don't
be afraid to push yourself.
· TAURUS (Ajlrll ....., 20) Try to keep
your schedule t.pble enough today so
you'll be free to make adjustments, In
case somethlfle more Interesting devel·
ops. It looks like It might.
GEMINI (MaJ 21-.lune 20) Seek out sit·
uatlons today that can be de".lloped
Into additional sources or earnings.
There's a very good chance you might
discover more m&amp;n one.
CANCER (June 21-.luty 221 Someone
you're lnvo111ed with In a parlnershlp
mayhaveabetterperspectlveonlseues
than yo~ do tOlley. A !rank discussion
could be verY reveall~g ,
LEO (July 23-A... 22) Methods, which
up until riow have not produced the
types ol resultt you've been dealrlng,
Should be modified today. Better ways
can be found.

September 6,

endeavors.
CANCER (June 21-JuiJ' 22) You 're apt
to be at your best today In arrangements where you can mix with creative
thinkers. They'll learn from your Ideas
and you, in turn, will learn !rom theirs.
LEO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 221 This can be an
extremely productive day lor you - II
your agenda Is well-organized and you
utllile your time property. Smarl plan·

1·5-11

.AK

·---

PHILLIP
ALDER

•s

There's a time
for everything
By PblUJp.AJder

eanl.

dldatea llhould pou... thrH
yeara IXptrltnct In accounting
or ~lated tltld, thould be 111~
MOhYit~, poicllll IXptrltntl
wfth dolo entry, 10 koy l ...,.
oonh al computtra. lndlvldutl

SOUTH

+QH
.AK43

lhl lob oxpodlonlly In 1 lut·
Plctd
llmcaphoro. Solory

Eul

PaiS
All pass

. Opening lead:

+Q

L.-------------l
ble side-suit tricks, giving the declarer
a ruff-and-discard is probably your
best defellse.
·
On this deal, Victoria Donaldson
was sitting East, playing with her fi.
ance, Freddie Fourpwood. After they
had collected .three club tricks Victoria saw that the only chance 'tor a
fourth trick lay in the trump suit. ·.So,
at trick four, Victoria led her last club.
And Freddie came through, rufflng
with the heart eight and effecting a
trump promotion for Victoria to defeat four hearts.
Now Victoria and Freddie are happily married with therr own team-offour growing rapidly.

...,UIJIJ

commit·

commlf'lauratt with tXperlanc:t.
Send resume to Boz C.1 e111
Point Plaastnl Ragllttr, 200
M1ln St, Point Pl1111n1 WY
~5550. An equa.l opporiunhy
employer.

Vulnerable: Both
Deal~r: South
West
PaiS
Pass

1

mant &amp; dedication to complel1

.$43

11&gt; ,_,

tO:

cou nting clerk. lnterntld Cln.

• ould also txfibit

.AQ6

•.

11

Huntl~on Ia 181klng an

••o

.QJ8

Help Wanted

••um Charleston, Parkersburg

EAST
+P6U
.Q9 7
9
.AI092

WEST
+.t0873
2
t8 7 53

11

~~g plant loclttd one haur

.KJ42

IIITIRL FIll AIM

'

OH-Polnt Pleaeent, wv

September 6,1992

ACCOUNTING CLERKMonuloc-

1065

.K76 .

The Senior Life Master had agreed
to teach a course to our intermediate
players.
I am sure (the SLM began, in the
fin;t class) that you were each told,
when silting on your grandmother's
knee, about Stayman: that you should
use the convention: when holding at
least game-Invitational values, a fourcard major and a side-suit doubleton.
Tiley deliver
But that isn't always true. For examThe U.S. Poltal Service is governed pie, look at this North hand. With 15
by an 11-member Board of Gover· points, he is close to a slam-try opponors. Nine members are appointed to site a strong nQ-trump. North should
mne-year terms by the president with raise to three no-trump. There will
Senate approval. These nine, in turn, surely be at least nine tricks available,
choose a postmaster general, who is and unfriendly distribution might de·
day, so try not to let yourseH be drawn
no longer a member of the president's feat a four-heart contract.
into situations that are restrictive.
The board and the new postHowever, even the four-heart concabinet.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Condimaster
ge~~eral
choose
the
11th
mem·
tract
looks safe here. After the defend·
tions are a trifle unusual today; you
ber,
who
serves
as
deputy
postmaster
ers
cash
three club tricks, tbe wiMing
could be in tor some pleasant surprises.
general.
An
independent
Postal
Rate
heart
finesse
will bring home 10
especially in involvements you antici·
Commission of five members, ap- tricks. But no., we come to another
pate will end positively.
PISCES (FR. 20-March 20) A friend pointed by the president, recom· truism learned from your grandpar·
Who has your best interests at haarl mehds postal rates to the governors ents: Never ~e a ruff-and-dis·
might invite you to partiCipate In an ar- for their appn'lal.
·
Yet theN! is 'all exception.to this
rangement that has been prOducing
. rule as well. U you bave won all possi·

meaningful

.J

NORTH

BRIDGE

1992

AVON I All Arou I Shlrloy
304-675·1429.

~PIIrl,

C:ertlfktd Motorcye11 Mtchenlc
Ptld VacaiiDR, Good Working
Condlllone, Sind Ruutl'le To:

P.O. Box 342, Gllllpollo OH

45631,

I

OENTAL ASSISTANT N-d To
Join Domol T11m. Must Bo Will·
lng To Wall! Hord. Will Troln.
COmputtr Experi.nce Hllpful

fltu~ Sand Rnumt: m Jack:
san Plkt, Suh1 1101, O.lllpotll
OH 45631.
'

Exparl•nc:ad Full-Time AtAo
Salesman Nllded, Good Loca·
lion, Soiory Nogolloblo, Sond
A11r.nse To: CI.A 235, cJo Gil·

llpo I~ Dally Trlbun!o. 825 Third
Avenue, Galllpolla, ut1 45831.
Hslralylltl
N10dsd:
Pold

18

Help Wanted

I

For Colle;• Schal•r•hl,_.

5112-1840.

.

.

MAJOR TELEPHONE COMPANY
17.80 -$15.75 /Hour. Now Hiring. 14
Business
TKhnlclans, lnstalltra, Account
S.rvlco
Ropra~~n1o11vol,
Training
Optrolon. No Exparlonct =-:-:---,.,.....,..,...:.--NteiSury. For Information Call A.traln
NowiiiSouthtastem
1-218-73•9801 Exl. F6432, 8 Busln101 Colltgo, Sprlna Vall~y
A.M. -II P.M.7 D1y1.
Piazo. Coil Todly, 114-448-43671!
Rtg.fi0.05-1:1141.
NIOd Extr1 Monoyl (School
Fun, Sovlngo, Or Chrlstm11): 18 Wanted to Do
Soli Avon, C.II1.8Q0.551-4801.
Will Bobylft In My Homo. Ftn•
NHd Rollablt Doyllmo B1byolt· ced
In Play ANI. Rtltrancta
ler In Gr11n School District, 1~4·
Available. Rodnty Area. Call
446-6887.
614-245-!11417.
Now taking application• tor part
time walterts&amp; potltlon. Apply Goorgoo Ponoblt S.wmfll, don'l
In person NO phone calli haul your loa• to tttt mill jull
pll111. Vhl•ge Plua, 3004 coll304-1175-1l51.
Jacklan Avt.
Mill Pouil '~ Doy Clra Cln1or.
Sala, ttfardable, chlldcart. M·F
PARK RANGERS
Gam•
Ward1n1,
Slcurlty I un. - 5:30 p.m. Ago• 2~10 .
Malnttnanca~ Etc. No Exp. Before, afttr tchoot. Drop-Ins
Hec:eesary. I"Or Info Call 211- Wllcomo. 614-44&amp;-11224. Now In·
71i1Hi641 Ext 8710 8 A.M. To 8 toni Toddler Ctro, 614-446-622'1.
P.M. 7D~yo .

lng pllnl located
on• hour Hunfrom
Ctiarltllon,
Parkersburg,

11nglan II anklng I payroll
cJ•rk. Thl1 lndlvldUol will 11aumo primtry mpon1iblllly lor

Pomeroy,
Mldclllport

200
hourly
~mploytol.
lnloraoted candldoln ohould poo1n1 lhrH
yNra UptriiRCe ln ICCOUI'Mina
ondlor paY,oll rolaled floil,
ohoukl be •xrrloncod In dol~
•ntry and 1 key. Individual
should 1110 oxhlbH 1 commll·

&amp; VIcinity

mant and dedlcltlon to com·
Plett tht Job upedlently In a

Sopl 5, 1114g.
Feb. 4, 1VV2.
To live In heart• WI
leave behind 11 not to
dlo.
Grandmother,
Nlilla Ruuall

proxlmololy

Announcements
NoTICE TO CONTRACTORS oftlce of ihe Dlatrlct Deputy
3 Announcements
STATE OF otiO
DlreciDr.
DEPARTIIEHT OF
The Director
liMo
Fro~ Adult Tlllk Una.
TRANSPORTATION
c.~-u. Ohio

.....121, 11111
Contr8Cla.toe
No.l2-lll

Ugol..= CONTRACT
• UHIT I

• .....,. propoul• w111 .,.

,..erv•
right to reject any •nd .U

1·'114-25'1-2606
Uvt, Ono On Ont.

bida.

JERRY WRAY,
Director of Tranaporllltlon
AUGUIIT :10; BE_PT.I, 11111
Public Notice

=
, ca.•

lmpromg -lion I1.20 on
~ Roula 7 by

alip ropair.

. Work Llngth: 0.18 mile.

lolt:

4 Kltttnl, 7 Wllllo 01oJr

Whlto And Gror Whho

10

'l\:'.':1

-~~317.
5 Csto Sho&lt;t Holrtd, 5 llontho

7

Yard Sale

=========
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Old,&amp;M-4-.

Using the Cltmifieds
Is as

U., God Blne tiCh
and 8¥11)' one Ill you.

•.

•Slater-ln-lllw;

8

-·-

CLUES ACROSS
I. Foretell

homt hM

NIW l.in1l Rd. Tl1il 3 btdmont

a bath,! .en kldlln, ban ,... 1111 •

btautlulsun-

room. Thtro 111110 1 3llc40 "'....., llhlll '"'IIU - r t y lhsl
coukl bt Wii:piMed and M¥ed II. Mid 30's.
NEW LilTING- BEDFOIIO 'IOWHIIIP - CO. Rd.l7 • Loc:oltd
on Bt• - · Rldat Ad. Vou wtl ttnd 40 .... 11111 wlh llpdng
wattr and TlWI:ra Pwnl Willi' only Y. mill ,._,., Mlneril rtaN•
are lila -wlhthll ~- i2&amp;,ooo.

IIIDOLEPOAT -1141 H. 2nd. Lot us you thll comott-IYou'lfdnkMiwtthi1Tho-hss3.8.A, 1~bolhl. Ut
1111., ut11y room, ~ rr .,...., 2 .., oncr1WII iiiVt (lnOod n
toto
yont. n tt. 30't.

tor,_

POIIEIIOY- 111 Ill lTV~--- ttoorronctl - I l l .

lOW_ ...... _

.. ,_ .... - -.•

has 2 BR (COUld be 1), - · Ill., IR, ,..., mr., krill
yont, lnd. ~~~~~~-: I.DW 50'1.

-·

IIIDOI.EPORT - ...._ a. ~ This oton11 II n vary gooct .
... . . I lncf II vary nlct · I'Fictd far IJDIIIIf )'OU - - oUI, ar • 1111tt1- holM, I 1111 3 BR .,.1 ~ bllho. Clooo •

5.
Anchor chain
I

7. Tableland
8. l!ntertain
10. Vow
11, Merry and briahl

13. Din
' .
14. Mailagang
l7. ~bution

· 19. Level
'
2I. Silk fabric
22 .. Anxiety
23.Uqer
24. Gratify
'

IN MEMORY

employer.

OF
CATHY DEE

•

card of Thanks

2. Spring :
3. Notion
4. Tutored
5. Escort
6. Spoof
7. Sticks out
9. Clarify
12. Divine
15. Ailment .
16. Brawl
18: Not now

'

.

816124-7n/92

RAINBOW INTERNATIONAL

Approximately 3,000

, XI. 2401.

Nalionally

Known

Servlc•

r--"'

f

square 88 ·
0
Officel, Thi'M OVIr·
head 1 "foot door•.
.,..
•
Call 992-6637 or

Wllh High Rtptal Cu11omors

446-9786.

Recession RtSittant Butlnttl

Capital

Required.

Financing Avaflablt. Call John

Millo I·Bff0-583·9100 Exl. 2215.
Vending Routt: Local. Wt Have

The Newttt Machln11, Making A
Nlct Sltldy Cash Income. ~600-653-8363.

FOR RENT
Recently remofor rent in

Ntw Commercltl, Horn• Units,
From $199.00. Lamps Lotions,
Accn.,rlas. Monthly Payments
Low AI 118.00, Coli Today FREE
NEW Color Cat1log. 1-800·2286292.

Pomeroy.

1200 to

3000 square feet

Bldrooms,

Rl.

160,

Kerr,

2.25

Aerts

4br,

2

Bathl,

Flnlahtd Basement, 2 Car
Garage, Proptr1y Acca11 To
Raccoon Creek Sttown By Appointm•nt, 814-446-0946.

11

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

available.
Good location.

992-6637 or
446-9786.

· Call

SEPTEMBER 12, 1992 10:00 A.M.

LETART; WEST VIRGINIA

LOCATED AT THE YOUTH CENTER
ON CAMDEN AVENUE IN POINT PLEASANT, WV.
WATCH FOR SIGNS

U.S. 33, Approximately 20 miles West of Ripley,
W. Va., at lhe Richard Silver Fann.
(1/2 mile below Racine Locks and Dam) Watch for signs

cul'llld glass d11nas 1n center and ponly ol mirron;, Museum quak~.
VICiorian walnul2 pc. seo bookcase,60' oak rcii!O!&gt; desk hi illp, original
finoh ooAIUichen c:abn81 wilh rcll,f anq lall Vidorian walnul bed (lui size),
sd1ocl mosier's desk,caboose pine cupboard, Bentwood hall~•. child's
q dresser, YICiorian waiM wash •land wnh '"'' and nul pulls, dleny
·Sheridanc:hesl, 4 pc. ooA watertali bed100m &gt;uile, ooA ,.., bad&lt; nx:ker,
sllre rtbon case, cabnei oul of hardware slore, beauliful carved ma·
hogany a&gt;ftee Iailie, plus oltler lurnii!Jre rol loled; Fos10ria American
polem 35 pieces sq.cake. ""'"'· OOwls, looled 1umblets,divided dishes,
c:&lt;NerOd candy, wafer ~Ichor Fos1ona cc;ony pattern JJ pieCes, Fosloria
ccMnglass, FosiOria slernware. 16 pieces Capo Cod, Vilgin~ RosaChina
50pices, ltL dogwood ponem,21 Heosay punchcwp&amp;, Blue W~low chi;,.,,
Blue Willow chi~'s ila sol, Ho,.r Laughlin, Hailequ1n pattern :JQ ;ieces,
24 pieaoS green moon•lone, Vi~m boliles Coibaullblue, Depression glass
vanous patterns, Ins &amp;Herringbonewatersel,Cellcoid Santaclaus&lt;XlOiue
jar, glass paanuiS a&gt;okie jar, 1956 and olhOf a&gt;Ooe ;am, Kyger SlOne jar
wihhairline cracl&lt;, l.aige amounl ol miscellaneous glassware,~ 1ea,
Fen1oo. Wan. shawnee pg, oldchalK pig ban~ old ,.I&gt;J IOjS, WotvOfine
coal loader, happy sandman bucket an&lt;l '"""~·Polar Rabbit snack set
Man lracl&gt;r ~lor easlllrasla&gt;aSl Man dumplnlek, 1940's 'Marl' doll
liaise and'"'"''"'"· ·~as and Hooeman· co11ec1or dolls, older games
and ioys, lram solS Ameri:an F~er. Man, lio1181 242 and Mar, kithen
ilems,chaicoal'a&gt;wboy on bucking i&gt;nlr¥:' nic8 print '"'"""' ni:e piCWres
"Fenna' cigarette prinl, Alladin, Bradley &amp;Hubl&amp;dlamp&amp;, 1947SoopBox
Oerbf car~l wood wifl ho;met allofiginel, Harrison &amp;F'•her print,lowe~
haiS, ;ewo~ . Geneva 'fluting lron'daled 1866, mile bolllss. metalDazey
chum, 2glass Dazey dlums. ant~ue sled and more.
AUTOMOBILES AND GUNS will sell a! t 200 noon.
AuiOmollilas s~d wilh low reserve
,
•1955 chevy, 2 door sedan, two-tone groen, 6 cyl, 3 speed, 17,960 act.
milas, model210 series. All Ofiginel cream puH
•1964 Chevy HNova, 66,514 act milas 4 door, aUIO., 6 cyl., complelely
overhauled.
•1964 CheVy II. Miles are wer. has been IVSiorecl
ANTKlUEGUNS: t2ga t20mag. M;rtin pump, t2ga doullelmelwitl
ParkHuml wilhrabtilears,J.Sleven 32~rile, model! ORem.pumpg111,
moda 371thsca pump wilh extra banal, Savage model1863 muule
loader.

Double Bookcase Secretary Desk, Curved Glass
China Cabinet, S1onewara, Glassware, Coins, Etc.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11
Supar Cur~ed Glass China Cabinet wilh Claw Feet, a
Mirrored Back and Original Finish. Victorian Glol/9 Box
Dresser, Walnut washstand, 4·Stack Bookcase, Rockers,
Red Oak KitA:hen Table, FlatwaA Cupboards, lrcn Youth
Bed, Chairs, Butter Molds, Dasiy Chums, Sad lrcns,
Victorolia, Saws, Oil Lamps, Fem Stands, lrcn baby Bed, 8
nn Pie Sate (painted), 3 Door Oak Ice Box, Washstand
(painted), Sellers Kitchan Cabinet, Holel Washstand(?) ,
Old Dolls, Maibles, Oak Dressers, High Chairs. ·

SATURDAY,SEPTEMBER12
Unusual Double Bookcase Secretary Desk with Leaded
Glass Door Compartment between Bookcases, 5 Legged
Square Oak Tsble, Oak Sideboard with Claw Feet, Pi9 Sale.
Flatwall Cupboard (original finish), 3 Door Oak Ice Box
(Porcelain-Lined), LihToplce Box, Square and CNal Victorian
Tables (Original Finishes), Oak Larl&lt;ins Desk, 2 Spool
Cabinets, Hoosier Kitchan Cabinet, Large Anvil, High Back
Beds , Drop Front Secretary (painted), Wall Phones

LVNCB

(548)

PHONE (304)375-4997 • (304) 375-5815

Real Estate General

RN'S

HOMES . FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET GALLIPOLIS, 01110 45631
- ·

SOUTHERN OHIO MEDICAL CENTER
Is a great place to build your nursing eareer,
whether you're a new greduate or an experl·
enced professional. We currantly have full-time
positions for RN's In our Medlcat-Surglcal
areas and on eall positions In our Hosptee
Department. Excellent Salary and B1neiHs
Package. Send resume to Southam Ohio
Medical Center, Human Resources, 1248
Klnneys Lane, Portsmouth, OH. 45682 or call
(614) 354-5000, Ext. 7607 or our TOO Line at
(614) 354-7648. Southem Ohio Medleal Center
promotes the hiring of Individuals who are
non-smokers.
·

•
'
•

•

MASON, WV

•

773·5785

I

Real Estate General

Canaday Realty
.44:~~3636Jltl&lt;fJ/o~
.

'

TERMS: Cash or Check with 10. Out of stata buyere mull
ha,., • current bonk tenor of crediL No EscepUon11
Nol Responsible lor accidenll or lou oiPfOPSIIY
licensed and Bonded in Oho . KeniUCky. and WeS1 Vrginia 166

KATHY AND MIKE VOSHEL

-

~-

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON

AUCTIONEERS:

Help Wanted

'

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION COo

TERMS : CASH or CHECK with Positive I. D.

Good Location .
Call 992-6637 or
446-9786.

~

AUCTION CONDVCTID BT

NOTE: This is not s complete lis6ng, not responsible for
sccidenls, injury or the~. ALL snnoun&lt;:ements day of sale
take pl'f1Cederrce over printed matter.

(982)

·-

~ 1900 Roadslar?.Pedal car, all origml, 2 beautiful caMid E
. ..

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 at10:00 AM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 at 10:00 AM

COMMERCIAL
OFFICE
BUILDING in
Gallipolis.

AN,IQUE
AUCTION
SATURDAY,

2·DAY ANTIQUE AUCTION

'

AUDREY F. CANADAY, BROKER
MARY P. FLOYD, REALTOR • 446-3383

.

PLEASE ITPP BY OUR OFFICE AND WE WILL BE
HAPPY TO IHOW YOU ALL THE PROPERTIES NOW
AVAILABLE IH TltE MULTIPLE UITING BOOK. WE
ALIO HAVE INFORMATION ON CONVENnONAL, YA,
FHA AND FrnHA FINANCIHG. LOOK FOR OUR SIGN
AT 21 LOCUST ITIIEET ACROSS FROM THE GAWA
COUNTY COURT HOUSE.

NEW LOW PRICE $48,000...0NEOF THE BEST BUYS
ON TODAY'S MARKET. 3 BEDROOM RANCH , FAMILY
ROOM , KITCHEN AND DINING AREA ARE LINKED
FOR AN OPEN FEELING. FIREPLACE MAKES THE
AREA VERY HOMEY. 2 CAR GARAGE, CENT. AIR,
GAS FURNACE, CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM.

. ,A,,;...::...

WhereVIr we go,
whatever we do, each
day beglna and end•
with you, Granny.
Sadly mlaaed: Tubby,
Kenny, Jim, Jerry &amp;
Rick.

5

BECAUSE WE CARE ABOUT
YOUR NEEDS•••
FLEX • POOL NURSING
Southern Ohio Mtdlcal Center rocognlzea your nead
lor llexlblllty to puroua oulolda lntereato, continue
your education, •nd r~laa your f•mlly. With our
Nuralng Flo Pool, you can work flexible hourllohllta
at premium pay.
·
Work on an "aa Needed'' baalo
Premium Pay
s% ll'lenlng &amp; night ohlll differential
' Weekend diHerentlal
Fot more Information please call Human Rasourceo
al (614)354-5000 ext. 7607, or our TOO Une at (614)
354-7648. You may aond your resume to Southern
Ohio Medical Center, Human Reoourceo, 1241
Klnnayo L.rrno, Portomouth, OH. 45662. Southern
Ohio Medlc•l Cent~&lt; promotu tho hiring ollndlvldu·
alo who ere non amokera.

rtm ,..,....

PRIVATE WOODED AREA - BEAUTIFUL PINES
SURROUND THIS OUTSTANDING REDWOOD HOME.
INFORMAL
FAMILY ROOM/KITCHEN AREA.
BEAUTIFUL FORMAL LIVING ROOM AND DINING
ROOM, 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, LARGE STUDY OR
HOBBY ROOM OPENS ONTO DECK ON SECOND
FLOOR . FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM,
WOODBURNER IN FAMILY ROOM . 2 CAR GARAGE. 7
ACRES. $115,000.
IF YOU'RE JUST A UTTLE BIT COUNTRY - THIS
APPROX . 24 ACRE SPREAD MIGHT SUIT YOU
FINEI LAND IS MOSTLY FENCED PASTURE WITH
A BEAunFUL WOODED AREA. FOR FAMILY FUN
THERE IS A COrf CABIN WITH FIREPLACE BE·
SIDE A STOCKED POND. THE MAIN HOUSE HAS 3
BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS. FAMILY ROOM FEATURES
CHERRY PANELING AND FIREPLACE . 2 CAR
GARAGE . SEVERAL OOTBUILDINGS. JUST MIN·
UTES FROM TOWN.
MLI 1157

E.O. EJM.F.H.

Marcy,

mercy,
ahe purty, do you
believe she juat
turned 30?

"Happy
Birehday"
Terry,

R.N.

Valuable skill training
with good money.
'

The Army Reserve offers you a chance 10 learn a
valuable sltill. li. skill !hal could open new career
options for you.
Team up with a nearby Army Reserve unit. Mter
compledna Basic Trailiing, you'D Bltend an Army
school for skiD training lbal will sharpen your talents.
Then you'll return home and serve usually one
weekend a monlb and two weeks of Annual Thtinlng.
Your weekend pay Stai'IS at $85 wilb oppatunilies for

promotion.
And out bow you can get a useful part-time sltill.
Come to us.

446·3343
IE ILL YOU CAN IE.•

ARMY RESERVE

,:

___ ....... _...,;_...;.__,4.._,_ _ _ _ _ _ _:"'-----A---.:
-

STEP BACK IN TIMEI THE ABOVE TURN OF THE
CENTURY SKETCH OF THIS BEAUTIFUL . OLD
HOME PROVES IT ONCE WAS ONE OF THE MOST
ELABORATE HOMES IN GALLIPOLIS. IT COULD BE
NOW WITH SOME WORK AND IMAGINATION. IF
RESTORING A VINTAGE HOME IS YOUR DREAM,
CALL US FOR A TOUR OF THIS ONE .... AND MAKE
YOUR DREAM COME TRUE. $60,000.
MLS 1315
THIS SPACIOUS HOME SETS ON 4 CITY LOTS - 3
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, SUPER LARGE LIVING ROOM
WITH FIREf&gt;l.ACE,FORMAL DINING, DEN, KITCHEN
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE, TRASH COMPACTOR AND
DISHWASHER, FULL BASEMENT, 15'X10' CONCRETE
BASKETBALL COURT, GAS FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR
COND ., APPLE, PLUM AND CHERRY TREES.
GARDEN AREA. EXCELLENT BUY AT $52,000. NEW
ON THE MARKET.

SOUTHERN OHIO MEDICAL CENTER

Julie

..

O.lllpollt, 3 yro, 01&lt;1, 3 Btd·
roomo, Groy Ylnyt Siding, 1 '112 304-117$.1212 or 171-3110.
Both, • Csr O.roao, Lsrao Dock,
Hut Pump, City "Schoato WANTED TO BUY: Hou11 On
$54,900. Clll Moore"• 114-44&amp;- Olbblo Drln, O.llpotlo. Phon&amp;:
llt-446-0813.
4850.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

E.O.E./M.F.H.

GRATUlATIONS

lol!- 11-- ·-~- - -·,·~

8

MISCELLANEOUS: Watertle,Y Clc;cks, Oil Lamps, Fenlon
Ware, Rosellilla Poitery, Carnival Glass, Plow, Rockers ,
Offioe Chairs, High Chairs.

FOR RENT

2

Socludtd
3 ·a
ocroo, z mil11
outthnclhomo
Hill Ad,

STONEWARE: 3 Galan D. W. Rhodes, Cotlag eville , W.
Va., Graham and Stone Jackson C.H. W.Va ., 3 Gallon
HamiiiOn Jones, Greensboro, PA, Several A.P. Donaghho,
Chums, Water Cooler, 2 and 1 Gallon HamiiiOn Jones.

deled office space

WOLFF TANNING SEOS

OH R-=coon Rd., 105 Ann Dr,

More.

Exclusive Territory Origolng 1'-----~~-....1
Tranlng And Support, Soma In· 1'
~tstmtnt

31 · Homes for Sale

COINS: 1825 Lg. h-1858 Flying Eagle Cant, 1875Seated
Liberty Dime, Assortment 1800-f921 Sil119r Dollars, Wheat
Pennies, Mint Sets,Sil119rCenificates,Proal Sets,and Many

t Tw

Franchise Avalloblt For Locol
Aroa'y Listed In Enlropronour
And onlure Mogazlnas At Ont
Of Tho Most ProiHoblo
Franchllll In Tht U.S.A. Slablo

31 Homes for Sale

·

SOUTHERN OHIO MEDICAL CENTER

See Answer: to Puzzle on Page D-8
.
. ' ''

·-r- ---..--------r.-----------------·~------------------~~~:-------------=-"""'==¢-::l:w-

....

In Loving Memory
DELORES BUSH on
her birthday

Happy Ads

Faye Wright
~--

SADLY MISSED BY
HER FRIENDS

Did,

20. Weave

clal building In
Middleport.

I'Dtaltr In Some Open Arau.

BIRTHDAY

Mr. &amp; Mrt. John E.
(Pearl) Oannay and
family would like to
express their appr•
elation to those dear
friends end f1ntlly
member• who aant
flowers, cards, glfta
and vlsHed wHh them
and helped make
their 50th Wedding
Annlvll'lllry a very
memorable day. May
Godblell
you alii

CLUES DOWN

High Profll Polanllsl. Acctpllnl.
~~ EBosl Ouolltlod. 303-75 •

ON HER

reco~ery.

We wish to thank
all of our family and
friends for their 10
many aets of love
and kindness during
the loss of our loved
one, Larry Skid·
mora. Especially
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home for their
kindness and understanding. A· speelal
thank-you to Sharon
Tackett and Danny
McGuire, you're the
bast.
God Blass You All.
The Larry Michael

Large hlgh-celltng
garag•ty,.. ~omm•r-

(PICKENS)
SPENCER

Granvel • Jack"
Wamsle

rif'

fiUTLNI) -

of

I wish to extend my
thinks to the neighbors, friends and
mlnlaters for the
prayers, visits, flowers, food, cards and
• telephona ealls dur:lng my rec:ent hospitalization and

I'"

NEW LISTtiiCI -

Clfl

Employment Serv;ces

Pu.,.,-

HEIII.OCK GAOYI· T'ltll 3 Df """"" In • """'*Y ........ 2 bolhl, illgo living
room, ~ ...,., lnd iiUndiY liN. A·now ro&lt;il has
recently bean - l l l d 30'1.
'

leu; C-2

Polnl PIMo,nl Rogllttr, 200
Main 51 1 Polnl Plt111n1, WV

1

Public Sale
&amp; Auction .
den trRior, caii1M-112·7173.
P11roon
Soturdsy, Sot&gt;l· ICh I llondoy, Rick
tvU limo
Sopl. 71h. Geoalol•, Rock· Iueiien
r.·~ Rd, Old f3, County Rd.
1188,0hlo '

-•..,.K •

.....

..mea.

ond Lswot Clift Ad. wru hsvs
lool~. guno, knilM. ......... loll
of - . ond oar, oloa1111p. gor•

tO

2!550. An lqUII opportunity

Labor Illy Hie: ...... 71113114
Chlldnno R..d. .....
4pm. Slgno Will bell Bla WhHI

773-57111.
1131 Cllllhsm St1101, StiWdoy,
Calico cat, 3yrs. old, 114-Hl- Sopl, 5, I, 71h. Chrlstm•~ Sopl. 1111·71h, 1:00-4:00. Toolt, W'"'--J· AUC1Ion •-•·-,
Oecoretlon:s, Dllhn, Lg. Size, klda clot"-. milo. Komo. Bo• 8,
7651.
Rio Grondo, Ololo 114-24W152.
Wam1t111 And Ment Clott••· Soltm Stroot, Rutllnd.
arty:
Dob.rman
8 W•k• To Unlcam1, Automotlc Wolhtr1
1HO Dodge Carov.,, Serial A Good Homo &amp; Z R1bbl11, 6M· AndMoro.
319-2684.
f2B7FK1K3LR7115181
Sopl 71h, Labor Doy Solol 2218
1988 Ford Convoroion Van, Fivt ador1bl1, lonble ldtttne, Eaat.rn Annu-, L.atm, Acros•
614·1192·2834.
From Blue Fountain, Rt.7,
Serial
MtnliWomtnl, Boy1 Clothing,
II FDEE14NIJHIIS7730.
KIHtns to glvtiWIJ, 114-742- Loll Mise I
Thaaa vahlciH will ba 3130.
1old ot • public oolo at the
Jackaon Plko office ·or the Molo pan a.,.., BhiJI':rd ond
Ohio Vall-r Bank Company, pan loy Collie, 304 4 1!1141.
370
Jackaon Pika, llodlum Fomtlt Dot. Llk11
Galllpolia, Ohio •I 10:00 Kld1, 611 118 t071.
a.m. ,on Saturd1y, Mixed B11gloo to
IWIY to S.turday, Sunday, Monday,
September 12, 1112.
good loomt, 114-114 -30114.
t :CI0-5:00 1 Milt On 554 OUt PorThe •ahlclea wUI be oold One llmale whha etl, 1 yur ter, Baby hema, Womtn, Mtnl
to the hlghHI bidder "u lo old, long hair, dlc:lawld, Ultlf- Clothing, Houaewira, UIIIC.
without •ny exprMied or tralntd; 614-992-1440.
Ill 5th, nh. 11-4. 112 .MHo on Rt.
Implied warranty. Tho v•h ~ PuppiH to glv•w•y, mlr.ld So
7 On Rl, 211. Adulto, Chlldrons
ciH may be ' " " ol the bJHd, will M rneclum slza dogj Clothing, Rolrlgoralcn, Bool
Jeckson Pike Office of the 614·!192·5836,
Troller, llondhsitl Scanner, Old
Coko Coalor, Blqcloo Boby
Ohio Valley Bank Company
yr old Germ1n Sh..,..rd mlr, Clolhoo, Toyo, Ex~~reilo Blko.
up to tho dahl and time of 5good
Wtlch dog, 304-l71-2fl17,
lheoola.
Pt. Pleasant
Th Ohio Valley B•nk 6
Lost &amp; Found
&amp; VIcinity
CompMiy r••rv•lh• right ::-:--:--':'__:-.:;.::.:.:.:,,....,to accopt or ralect any and Found: Brown. milt Cocker
II bldo, and to withdraw tho Spanltl, w/ collor. Rl. 33 nt~r
vehlclea from aola prior to 111
Alhono Co. llno. 114-111·
11
the oale. Terma of Sala:
CASH or
CERTIFIED
CHECK.
SEPT. 6, 9, 11, 1112

• Bidding H: Bidding on
Jhla project II r•trlcttd to
Minority Bualnaa Entar·
)lrlau (MBEa) corUfitd aa
MBEa ln accordance with
locdon 123.151 (B) (2) of
11M Ohio Rtvlaocl Coda by
lhe s - Equal Employment
Opportunity Coordinotor
ilnd qualified to bid with
ODOf under Chopter 5525
Jll the Ohio Reviled Coda.
. Tho dolo .. t lor
comrlotlon of thla work
lrhal be aet forth In tho
llkldlng propoaal."
· Each blddor ahall bo
iequlrocl to file with hit bid
1 . .rtlllad check or
t•hllr'e ohack for on
imount aqu•l to livo
percent ol hll bid, but In no
l!vont 11101• than fifty
tllowand doH. ., or a bond
for ten per cent of hla bid,
Pj::'~rto
the Olllctor.
·
IIIUIIappiy, on lhe
proper
farmo,
lor
~wallficatlon at 1-t ton
pay. prior to lha dlda nt lor
opening bldt in ec-donca - - - - - - - with Chapter 5525 Ohio ___
P_u_b_nc_N_ot_lc_e_ _
RtvtMCICo&amp;
FOR SALE
PIMI and apaclllcatlona
The Ohio Valloy Bank
ara on file ln lhe Dep&amp;rmMnt
of Tranoportatian ond the Company hao tha following
propar1y for aala:
.
3 bedroom houae plua
2.27 acraa In tho VInton,
Ohio•eL
3 badroom houeo ond lot
1 card ol Thanks
In the Vlllaga of Rio Grande.
3 boclroom hOUII piUI 14
ocrH In the Northup, Ohio
We would like to
3 boclroom houoo ptuo
axpreaa our alncere
lhlnka 1o all the &lt;10+ - • on Routa 7 Iouth.
If you .,. lnterHtad In
nelghbort and frlenda any of lhe obova property,
for all your acta of plaaae Cllt 441-2631 EsL
klndneaa and aymp• 251 for •ppoin-1 to thy during the lllnMa ., if you "-any .-~~ana
1nd death of Jewell conoarnllltl any of the
ptOpally lilllcl.
ShiiO. For 1he devoted
SEJ'T. e, t, 11, 1tt2
c•r• given her by
Sandra Phllllpa, hny
hder, Iva Thome•
end Libby Phllllpa, for
the mMJ' group• 1hllt
pr•red lot her to
Denny Coburn for hla
ooneoUng wordl, your
vlaltl, food, floral of·
ferlnga, the p•llb•rere, Waugh - HtllleyWood Funer1l Ho1111
lor 1helr eltlclent

'I

S.nd I'. . Umt

2

Molal B•lldlng Monulacluror
Soiocllng Smon /Lorge Builder

S20,000 114-446-11637, 014-44•
11668.

commeneuratt whh experience.

Ftmlll Bugltt,
YlclnHy: Rl. 160, &amp; 554, 614-'lSB11048.

Giveaway

loii•PIICtd llmosphort. Sllary

2887.

Wanled: l.tdy c-ponlon To Lao1: ....U- Booglo, block
L'-ln Noor Thio Hotzor with ttn ••rlpea1 last ...n n.. r
Hospital, Any Ago. 114-44.3411. Pagtvllle. AIWinl, 114411-2806.

naahW lithe omc. of liMo 1------..;___ 4

Director of tho Ohio
PUBUC NOncE
Oepart111ant ol Tr-·
FOR SALE
)lot llllon, Columbua, Ohio,
The
Ohio
Valley Bank
unUI 10:00 A.M., Ohio
rd Tlrne, Tuoaday, eom,..y, 420 Third
bar 15, 1te2, for lm- Avenue, Galllpolia, Ohio
,,.._...,,___..,llllllllln:
45631, will oflar for aala the
County, Ohio lor following deocrlbed prop-

LOST Chi- Pug, tan body
wlbllck foco, rwno lklmor, 2300
block ot Jefferson An, 304-l'fS.

tor

FOR RENT

In Memory

ap-

payroll

• Earn $1,000 Per We~k • Local
Pey Phone Roula 1-800·226·
gggg,

2
Real Estate
;=======::::;
1--------In lovlnn memory of my
•
darllngg1'11nddaughter,
JQY RUSSEU.,

a ...kly

Homes for Sate

Euv Woilll Exc:oilonl Poyl At- ElR TREE SERVICE. To~ 3· bod room ranch homo
umbi~ Producto At Homo. Coil Trl111mlng, Troo Rtmovol,
100X200ft 1o1, DR, FR, Lil
Toll Froo, 1-100-487-6561 EX!. TrlmridnD. FrH Eltlmlllll 6
wlflraplact, largt kitchen, 2
313.
317-7151"Att.r 4p.m.
batht, doublt car gar1gt, niW
M bl'· h
k 1 1 hook Utnox heat pump. Brick front
a .. oma wor • lVI •
" wlaldlnn. 304-882·3310 .o r 882·
Ph1rmecy Cltrk Wantld : Fun. upo
(oxcopl-lrlc)l.,..ucon- 3281 •
Tim•._ Ptn•Tlmt Avallablt Far IINC1ion Jobl, odd obi, palnl·
·
Doy And Evonlng Shiftt. Excll· lng, plumbing, tic. V11y 5 roonf houat, garage, tcreage,
ltnt BonoiHo. Prafot Individuals reaaonablt rat11, IM-112·!5387 Rt. 2 N., Owl Rollow Rd, 3G4With Prtviou• Phermacy And tnytlmt, or IHvt m....ga.
875-8043 btf01110:00 PM.
3rd Pony Billing bptOrlonco
Wtntld
To
Do:
Babyaltllng
In
g yr okl, 4 btdrooma, 2 baths, 2
Who EnlO, Woilllng With Tho
Public. Ptioss Contiel: Humon My Home. Have NurH A11latant ar garag., haat pump,
AHOUrcn Dtpartmtnt, Holzer Trtlnlng. Located Within City firaplact, £nsulaltd windows,
U.dlcal Ctnl.,, 100 Jackion Limits. Call 8~4-441-1226.
deck, storage bldg, Raybum Cut
Ad, 304-675'5115.
Plko, Gllllpolii~,Ohlo 45631. 114· Will claan homeloHicll, txc :,:::::,::=,:..::_:.:::::...
____
~-!105, TOO Numbtr: 114-446rafortncos, 304-1175-1621 1111 BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
••06.
Historical Ar•a Corner Lot . 81 6
Wt A,. An Equtl Opportunity 11 :00PM.
Empfoyor, W1 Do Nol Dls- Will do gentral houu cltanlng Main St. Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
crlmlntto On Tho 81111 Of on 1 Wllkly or on1 tlmt bnls. Completely Renovated : 2 Full
BathS, 3 Large Bedrooms, New
Roco RIIIQion, Ca~, Soi, No· Have tXPtrltnc• &amp; rtltranc:ts. HVAC,
New Carpel. Available
tlonll1Orlgrn Or DlloDIIily.
Contacl Paula after 5pm tl 614· lmmldlally. 614-446-:2205.
SliM P1r1on Minimum 2 Years 949-2447
By Owner: Spacious All Brick
Experience In S.IH Of Lumbar
Country Ranch 3 Bedroom s
And Building Mlltrlll Apply in
Dining Room, Fun Fin. Ba se~
Financial
Person: Tham11 Do-h Ctnttr
ment, FP /W, W IB, Stove, CIA 2
Golllpotl~.
'
+ Car Garag~J. Co. Water, Green
Elementary 1\iallipotis S.D. 614Soli Avon All Arou, Croll 614·
21
Business
441~358.
Opponunlty
Hama For Sala In Chethlrt Vii·
Sorn10ne to milk cow In mod11n
milk fKIIIIIta, hourly wa~t,
lag1, I Rooms, &amp; bath, LQ. Flat
!NOTICE I
1.01 By Qwnor, 6-3:30 P.M.
lind r•ume Ia P.O. Box 94,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Phon•: 614-446-1818 Atter 3:30
Polnl P1111n1, WY 25550.
rtcommtndl that you do busl· P.M. 614-441-0425.
Spo~~
Minded
Collogo ntst with people you know, and
Proepects 01 AmeriCI II A tfa· NOT to tend monty through tha
llon~l
Oraonillllon Which mall until ycu have lnvestrgaied 46 Space for Rent
the offering.
~outs High School Athletes

Now. Expanding In Southtasl
Ohio. And Satk Rtpreunatlvts
For Stcurt ArtU To Interview
Coachea, Parents, And Athl•tn.
.Vacation• G.aurant•ld Wage•. Several Part·Timt And FuJI·Time
114-446-7267,
Poolllcno Opan In Loctl Arao.
- - · - - - · - - : - - = - Athletic
Btckground C01chlng
House and trtller Npiiln, 114Counllltlng Htiptul. Coil 814:
ifl2-5858.

PAYROLL CLERK Manulaclur·

31

Wanted to Do

Sunday nmes-Sentlnal~3

WATCH TIE BOATI ON THE OttO RIVER FROM THE
DECK OF THIS HOME. 3 BEDROOM HOME, 2 BATHS,
FAMILY ROOM . KITCHEN EQUIPPED WITH RANGE
AND REFRIGERATOR. VINYL SIDING . PATIO/
CARPORT. ABOVE GROUND POOL $52,000.
TWO YEAR OLD. AWE RANCH WITH BRICK TRIM
ON LARGE LEVEL LOT. HOME ,FEATURES CHERRY
KITCHEN CABINETS, SNACK BAR,.3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS, 2 CAR GARAGE. ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP.
PRICED TO SEU. FAST AT t57,800.
MLS 1114
APPROX. 25 ACRES - OLD HOUSE NEEDS
REPAIRS. SMALL BARN, RURAL WATER TAP, NICE
SITE FOR NEW HOME OR MOBILE HOME . OHI
TWP. $15,000.
21 ACRES M'L. BULAYILLE.fiORTER ROAD - PAVED .
ROAD , APPROX. 800' ROAD FRONTAGE , SOME
WOODED AREA. $18,800 . . OWNERS WIU.
CONSIDER FINANCING WITH $4,000
DOWN
PAYMENT, BALANCE AT. 10'Jio INTEREST. 10 TO 15
YEAR TERM.

......--

RESIDENCE AND MOBILE HOME PARK - VERY NICE
4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNTRY HOME ON APPROX.
23 ACES. BACK PORCHES. 2 CAR GARAGE. 8 '
MOBILE HOME LOTS WITH MOBILE HOMES AND 5
t,40BILE LOTS . ALL PRESENTLY RENTED.
£XCELLENT LOCATION. CALL FOR COMPLETE
DETAILS.
COUNTRY AT ITS BESl'l LUXURIOUS A·FRAME. HAS .,
BRASS AND LEADED GLASS LIGHTING, ANDERSEN
WINDOWS, ITALIAN TILE IN FOYER, BUILT-IN
STEREO INTERCOM SYSTEM, 8 ROOMS ' 3
BEDROOMS, 2'.1 BATHS, FAMILY ROOM, FORi.tAL
DINING, EQUIPPED ~ITCHEN, FIREPLACE
EXCEPTIONAL PROPERTY!
' '
CONVENIENT LOCATION ON STATE ITREET .. '

g~~~~~ii :~~~ ~':=s~

•

HOME HAS LARGE LIVING ROOM AND DININO
ROOM, EAT·IN KITCHEN , BASEMENT VERY '
AFFORDABLE AT $35,000.
.
·
KERR ROAD - VERY NICE BUILDING .LOT, APPROX. 2 ·
ACRES. GAS, ELECTRIC AND WATER AVAILABLE.
$11 ,000.

-------..,~-----~---- · - - -·--- - - 1 1 - · .;..
·-= - - ...,;...
&lt; --;.;...,

�-

-~.

... ·····• .... -. -... ·-· ,...... ..

··-

'"

nmee--Sentlhel

45

46

HOWERY'S

51

52 Sponlng Goods
Household
_ __;;G:;.:o:;.:od:;.::;.:s;,__ _ Complolo oo1 ol Romo, Lody

Wood lrvnd" bod wl'l bulll·ln
drawm $100. 2 ainglt mattr••
304-675-3631.
Roll1d Ook Toblo, (Claw - $25.
Aulomallc wuhoro $75 lo S215;
Fool, 2 Llo-. 4 Ook Chlirl). sm. Ook Chi~• oloCiflc dlytro, $75 lo 185; I goo
Clblnolo, Sllll\ng: $115. 114- dryer sts; oloclric. goo rongot
441-4311.
575 1o $15; uprlgh\ toozor $95;
·
- lypo " - • $50; ponoblo
PICKENS FURNITURE
dl.hwalhefl S&amp;O: we. alto stock
NoW/Uood
new and used applianc:e parts.
-hold lumlshlng. 1/2 mi. Dolbon
Swlohu'o Used ApJ.rrlcha Rd. Pt. Pl•unt, WV, Dlllncet. comer Rand I Perch
·coii:IIIH75·1450.
Sl. Konougo, 114-446-1'173.

••h.

Space for Rent

Counlry llobllo Homo Porll, Rt

33N., untMr new m~nag1ment.
Lola, PSi home rwntall, $235;
IM-112-2117

1175 Peril VIlli 2 boclroomt
10111 ollc, 1 liilh, $5,500. g;;;.d
cond, 304-17W501. .

September 6, 1992

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

llobllo HOme sa- For RIO! In
Choohlro, 114-H2-6127, I~

1711.
·
Trtlllor !« lor Nnl, noor Rolo
liniYIIIo on Rl. 2, 3.
Trollor t«o lor non\ In Aoclno,

Aefrltmton, FreNII'I, Waaher,
Drv~f!t Air CondM\onor, Color
T.V.'o. olc.l14-258-1238.
SOhl I Choir, In Good Condl'
lion, Porth Dock For Solo Aloo.
114-446-7311.

~-.5658 ,
·~

8

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES SALE

1 Luar golf ctubl, und very

lhlll, m~kea nlct Chrlltmn glfl,

304-675-1211.
Oon WMoon 357 llulum 8 318
bol'l'lll, hun\ holstort oxcollonl
- gun, $350. 304-6 5-3156.

Sunday, Se_11t. 13, 1992 • II :00 A.M. at the VInton
County fair_grounds, Rt. 93 • 2 miles North of
McArthur, Ohio (70 miles south of Columbus).

Antiques
.:.:,_ _;;....;,.::.;.,.-:-..,.--

Extra large oak bow glass secretary w/dragons ;
laney 2 dr. oak bookcase w/wave gallery; oak railroad
stand-up desk • very unusual one side rol l·top and
other side 9 drawers w/slanted writing service; oak 3
door icebox; oak Hoosier kitchen cupboard wmour bin
etc. ~ small oak bakers cabinet; good oak hall seat; 6
matching press back kitchen chairs; oak stack
bookcase; 2 door oak wardrobe; 30 drawer corticlli
stenciled spool and needle cabinet; walnut slant lornt
desk; larg e oak claw loot sideboard wlmirrored top;
mahogany marble top stand; mahogany highboy
dresser wlbonnet box ; oak dressers wtmirrors, oak
library table; oak office chair; 3 beds·one oakone
walnut-one ash; walnut Martha Washington sewing
cabinet; rockers; oak flatwall; oak washing telephone:
6' church pew: unusual large parlor stand.
ALSO : Approx . 25·30 pes of rough furniture,
including 2 oak llatwalls; maple night stand; sm~ll
kitchen desk; oak HMsier cabinet; oak Hoosier (A)
cabinet; mission oak clock case 6' tall; oak table w/4
chairs and sewer; wood medicine cabinet: singer
treadle sewing machine; end tables; Art Deco coffee
table; office chair; pressback chairs and MORE!!!
Stoneware · jars &amp; jugs • some marked ; crocks;
collection of spongeware · custard set • 5 bowls, 6.
p~chers, yellow &amp; green, also multi colored cookie jal '
&amp; large bowl; glassware; jewel tea pottery; coke tray;
sterling silver pes; Hillers stamps; mud men (made in
China) ; candle st ick phone lamp ; large metal bird
cage: 10¢ &amp; 12¢ comic books: old marble s; Indian
artifacts; old 6 shot 32 revolver; case kn ives; old
advertising; good clocks ; oil lamps ; iron bed; misc.
tools &amp; MORElli

81.1y or ..11. Alvtrlne Antiques,
1124 E. lhln Strut, on At. 124,

Pomoroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00

a.m. to &amp;:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00

lo 6:00p.m. 614·992·2526.

Public; Sale

Public Audion
Saturday, September 12, 1992 - 10:00 A.M.
Located approximately 11 miles south of
Gampolis at ·14873 State Route 7.
The following will be sold:
DineHe set w/6 chairs &amp; hutch, Early American 6 pc.
living room su~. real nice 4 pc. bed room su it, 3 pc.
wicker set, bentwood rocker, 2 lounge cha irs.
typewr~er, writing desk &amp; chair, Antique Mahogany
dresser base, Gas range. upright deep freezer, sears
sewing machine, oil lamps, antique tables. lawn
furniture small picnic table. canning jars, whee l
barrow, 'atum . ext ladder, step ladder, fishing
equipment, several pots , pans, and dishes , some
crafts, one lot ol hand tools, one lot of books, and
other antiques and miscellaneous items, Murray 11 hp
riding mower, 20' Murray push mower.

Ono lum'od., Ono unlum'od:
IICh 4 rooow l bolh. No poto,
qu\01. Rot. I Soc. Dop. 814-44632 Aero Form, S Bod,_,- 0444.

33.

'fanns for Sale

W/BaMment, Bam, Gantge With

Tobocco Lolmont. 114-251·1312 Small FUmllhed APinmtnl,
Conlrolly Locolod, U\1111\oo Pold,
After4:00.
Downolllro, $185/Mo. 614-14110544.
1hrH 1 bedroom 1pl1 loc1ttd
Business
34
Buildings .

7th Str..ti tor further lnformaa

lion 304-675-5440 uk tor Loo.
Good Commordol Building For Unlurnlohod 2br Glrogo Apl.
Loo.., High Trolllo Aru, Sond Aefrlg., Stove FumJah.d. W111r
Pakt, No P..a. $225 Pl1.11
Roo~"To: CLA 238, clo Go~
\!poliO 01\ly Tribune, 125 Third Dopooll 114-441-:1444, 450 Roor
111 Avenut.
Avenu., Galllpoll1, OH 45631.

------45
35
&amp;
Lots

Terms: Cosh

Concession Stand

Anna M. Fulks, Owner

Fumlshed
Rooms

Acreage

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/POSITIVE I.D.
REFRESHMENTS: FAIRBOARD

AcrNgt IVIIIable tor homl

c:or111rvclion on Roybum Rd,

AUCTIONEER: RODNEY HOWERY

Nt.anablt restrict~ wat•,
lnformat&amp;on ,.tlld an rtquelt,

(614) 594·3780 days or (614) 698-7231 evenings
BRING YOUR CH'AIRS!

304-675-6253.

Real Estale General
Rentals

41

11 cul:llc foot general Electric
lrost frle relrlgtralot frtller,

I

coppertana color, good c::ond.,

53

&amp; AUCIIon

Merchandise

10 horH commercial gravely
mower wllh equipment $1500·
1975 Ford LlD, needs' repai r'
$300; 614-94!1-2056.
•

Houses for Rent

3 - - ,..,.., $275. .....
plololy ......lid, .... dop ...

qulrod, lnqulro 1100 Jo. Blvd. or 2211 N. Main St.
lllh

SilO, 614·185·4440.

1D86 Kawaukl KOBO, L.ud'wig
Mare drum, herd case, atancf.
.. lcka, 304-675-1312.
'
2 ·14" Mag. Wheals Fer 1983

Challenger $35, Tire Chalns, L-

711-15 Now 130, 614·256·1619,
814-446-4172.
2 pea wlda counter top, 1 cor·
ner, 1 ltraight pc 3' long, $10.

bolh, 304-675·2315.

25Cu. Fqot Hotpoint Chest
FrHzar, Runs Good $99. Call
614·367-n15 If No Answer,

L..ave u..aaga,

3

Piect

614 ~367-7745 .

dinette,

tan

$40·

recliner, $35; qUMn siz~ bed,

mattrns, bax eprlngs $50· 6~4·

992-5608.

•

'

SILVERTON, WV
SAT. SEPT. 12 - 1 0: 00 A• M•
LOCATED NEAR RAVENSWOOD, WV. FOLLOW
RT. 2 NORTH ·TO 1-77. TURN AT CHEVRON
STATION ONTO WILDING RD. 1/2 MILE TO SALE
SITE. SIGNS POSTED. OWNERS CHARLIE AND
BEm JONES HAVE SOLD HOME AND WILL SELL
MANY YEARS OF COLLECTIBLES PLUS SOME
FAMILY HEIRLOOMS TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER.
ALL DAY SALE. BRING LAWN CHAIRS AND
SPEND THE DAY.

42 Gallon Hot Water Hutar $25·
11" Color T.V. sao. 614-367.0.31. '
II odd lot plocoo Polriclon pot·

AN.T IQUES·COLLECTIBLES: rare clay bottle
believed to be a German beer flask wilh wood
stopper, marked ? Hein Preussen; 8K solid gold
tern Wtdgewaad china, aU 7
pco Willnall IIIWO, $100. 304·
locket with 2 piclures of civil war soldiers; early
67W9110.
1900's Lovell hand crank washing machine in
78 RPM Rocordlng 01 Or\glnel
very good condilion; Anchor folding bench
Cal Of SOulh Poclltc Wilh Mil·
1tn -nd Plna $71,114-441·1240.
wringer; Windsor ladies desk; "Gone WHh The
Air Axil, Air 5\h WhMI, lnlomo·
Wind" oil lamp; oak wall telephone; 2
Uonol Cob Over, 2 Full Tonko
spongeware pHchers; Amphora vase, matlled;
1m Ford Dump Truck, sa 5o0
SM 441 ID38.
I
Flow Blue
(Lonsdale) 4 place setting
Aluminum Porch Glider, Matcf\..
dinnerware ; old wall mirror w/side prints ;
1~ Rocker S65i An1lque Parlor
apothecary bottle w/optic glass stopper.
Toblo $30; Old Pomoroy
Poolcordo, S5 &amp;Up. &amp;14-446labeled; ornate coffee &amp; end tables wilh inlaid
0111.
tops ; small cast iron frog w/babies; sterling
silver inlaid beij buckles; lithographs-1893 Paul
8x10 Solid Wood Barn Slylo
Storage Building, Like Ntw,
De
Longpre, Gould plus others, all framed;
$500. 614-446·9625.
papier mache cal; linseled oleographs signed
Bl; school but for etorage, all
J.W. Morgan, Ravenswood, wv; mirrored
Hill out IXCIPI 2 front 01'1411,
shadow box; chalkware; Lindburg postcard,
no motor, 304-67$.7223.
dated
1928; #1 dinner bell; Roseville crocks ;
Buckstove Flrtpltca lnHrt
$450; Umbrotlo Teblo, 4 stoneware pitcher and bowl wash sel; A.P.
Cuohlonocl Chllro, $75; 114-446Donaghho slone jar; stone jars and jugs; single
7121 Evontngo.
cross cut saw; baskets; beaded evening purse ;
Chair &amp;: cauc:h, enn::lse
water bike. 304-882·2711
carved wood and brass carving set; collection
1:00PM.
of Jim Beam bottles; iron pots; E.O. Hiehle
soda bottle (Parkersburg, WV) ; old combination
post office bole made into bank; lots of
. glassware including teapots , Barvarla, NorHake,
OiiiO,-sa;·!'Uoi~!~;;;;p~;;;:lll hobnail, small and large hens on nest, Fenton,
Blanco, etched, cut, pressed, depression,
porcelain, Havilan!l plus much more still In
boxes to be unpacked. We will also be selling
lhe same day many household Hems such as
riding lawn mower, furniture, freezer, bedroom
suite and other general household Hems.

I

Mahogany drum table, mahogany magazine rack. meal table
and 4 chairs, fullsize melal beds, IWin size metal beds, maple
desk, small chesl•.laney lrunk, server. 2 oak chairs, baby bed,
high chair, night &amp;land, slick hall ~ee. cahinel, Minute Masler
microwave. Kenmore 7500 BTU air eond.. Ma)'lag 110 dryer.
Unico freezer, 2 fancy floor lamps, antktue mirrors, old pic·
tures, Fenton vase , jewel tee bowl, Comingware dishes,
goblets. lazy susan bows. misc. glassware, old Christmas
decorations, Chriotmas tree, books, pols and pans. lei"'
phone, raaos, flaiWare, small kiu:hen appliances, coffee pol,
pressure cooker, Eureka and Kirby sweepers, back mas·
sager, linens, portable hand swing machine, sleam away,
whj~elchairs, Regen\ guitar, loys, lamps, coo Coo clock. fan,
ironing board. grey graniteware, fruil jars , 3 slone aocks,
suileaase, National Geographic magazines, old lanlems. old
wooden bo~es, oldwocden wagon, AC botlle cases, ice
cooler, lawn chair. Garcia fishing pole, old rod and reel,
Shakespear Mar Hoff IQ64 nickle siler reel. bamboo poles.
rod and reels and fishing supplie•, \1\e jackels,
arrows. assortment of shovels, racks . pilchlork, plow. assort·
ment hand IOo\s, nu\S and boUs cabinels, old large wooden
loolbox and loots, nails, handsaw, Craflsman bench grinder.
Craftsman vise , small Craftsman portale driU press, lead
molds, one man saw. Sears table saw, drop cards. lurniture,
clamps. antique sled, Sky Plane sled. alaclric weedealers ,
kerosene heaier, Slap ladder. lawn \railer and more.
t 2 fool Bass Boa!

AUC1'lON CONDUCTID BY

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
LUNCH

MASON, WV

n3·5785

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON ,..
EXECUTOR: LARRY FREY

...

CRUEDS

I
I
I

ATTORE

I

ERAEAT

I
I

TULSSY

I

1--~,...--;r::"l?.;...r..l...;._;-1~~-I

"How many doctor jokes are

-•1
lIII I
s s IO
I II I

----l.L--..1.-..&amp;..-.L.-.L.
. .....J there?"

One comic asked the
olher. "I don't knmy" the second
comic replied, "how many?" "Only
.._.:"""'1,.:-.::::;-:.......,.;....;:;.....;;_,...~. lhree ,' the first comic laughed,
'1he resl are .. . . ....... "

L..

ra_P_E_P-0- 5- 0

19

T I ..l!-.,n.,n--'-.---l
NI
t--,-.,.
10
1
J
1 1

_ . . . . 1
•

~;;rod

.,

r I' 1 r r I' r I' r 1· r~ 1
1

~~
Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

~

Complete the chuckle quoted
by f1lling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

AUCTIONEER: EDWIN WINTER #334
MILLWOOD, WV (304) 273-3447
1111. HUNTER'S PARADISE- Pride of owno,.hl&gt;

•42 Mobile Homes

wll be all yours to own lhtl bu.Uiitully maintained
homo and bulklngs. 3bodnno., 2bllhs, 00\lnlry ldl. &amp;
IMng nn .. 24x32 · 24x36 bun &amp; horoo sill. 24
ACRES, tobacco base. Also a modem 2 bdrm. mothtr·ln-law home.

for Rent

;z

Bodroom Noor Nonh Gllllo,

. Stove, Frlclp, Water, Tr11h F1.1r·
·~nl-, $200, $200 Dopooll,
. AlterencM, 114-318-1111.

,-

::-:--

--::--:--:--

' 1008.

· 2br Unlllml- Clblo, !JI1
· Cllan And OuiOI, ~. Reference, Ovtriook
Cillo
: Rl'#er, In Klni"UU.
er'a
, -Homo Plrll,l\4-4*1802.
: 3 Bedroom Tn~ll• $225JIIo.

i
'

, Wlter Paid, Na h11 Alklwed,
O.pot,h, A•t.r'llnca Required.

1

' 114-251-en7. LNwe M.... ge.
: Mobllo Homo For Ron! In Oo~
· Hoollo. 114-IIIZ.el37, 114-4411-

· 1'181.

· Nice Moblll Home, Centrat Air,

• Porior ArM, $250 Ptuo Socvrlly
: Dtpooll, II4-446-61H, 114-4411. 18&amp;5.
: Tolol Ellclric, 3 -oorn
. Mob\11 Homo, Nlco, Ctoon No
• Poll. Locolod: Add\oon Am,
• 8M-387·'M38.

: 44

1111. NEGOnAeLE PRICE - Sharp - T...oluly
docorolod. 11 1CICII nns. 415 bodrooms, 3 blll'll, LR.
DR, kl .. ulllly nn .. luH ciYIIIod basomotn wllh lamly
nn. 2 cor gonoge, pool end patio. 1 ac. n&gt;'l.
1n2. HIDDEN TREASURE - SurpriSing~ lOW price
ol 5110,000. More than 5,000 sq. n. olllvlng opoce
and large rms. throughout This weU constructacl
home otters 4 t&gt;edrms .. 2 baths, upper and ..,wer
Rvlng, 2 wb llroplaces, lam\~ nn .. bulft·ln kllcllon
wlbarbecue, 2 car garage, 1st floor laundry.

H31. A SCENIC QUIET PLACE TO UVE -

3
LOTS IN LAKEVIEW COURT SUBOIVISION.
RESTRICTED, RESIDENTIAL ONLY. CLOSE TO
HOlZER MEDICAL CENTER. DRIVE TO liMITE
RD .. TO CHAROLAIS LAKE DR. TO LAKEVIEW
CT.
11&amp;2. FOUR BEDROOM HOME, 2 BATHS - Aocmy
ranm homo \ocllod In t c:ounlry. Exlenstvt wo11&lt;

COI11llo4ed os lolbws: new Thonno Alslde wlndowo,

sacurly dooro, sleet oldng, heaVy rool, klchon,
e«am~ tile ll'lry • - \nlo lllo klellon, 1\lx53
&lt;IICI&lt;. cemort walks and \)1(1 . Stolt;s home and siCfl

BUSIIESS
YOUR
\nc:OmO. L.ovoly roll pluo _ . , .
qullllrl. Ucoroood lor 10 · All tumlluro
~-.oliO 2 boc\nn. Folrmonlw/glrdln liD ond lumlluro. 3oc. n&gt;'l .

; 1 Bedtoom Apol1mlnl Rio
• Grondo,I\4-:Me.-. .
: 1"'-':'bocl-":-'roo=m-o:-:po-:~::m:-:onl:::-;1-:
n -;PI:-.
• PINNnl, W.YL, 1-304-175-t042.

hOOd.

c- 1o c:11y pool and convo- 1o OIIOpplng.

Clllor 1 llhcwi1g.
Hl4. LAROE COIIIIERCIAL BUILO\NO on Slota
Routo 2. 2 bodnn. opl. on 111 floor. P - 3 moro
oplo.M_IMlma_lnh-.
H3G. EXCELLENT
APARTMENT
BLDO.
INVESTIIEtre Good monoy . - r tl TOWN. \.lrVI
opt. bldg. 'llllh 3 1w0 bedroom opes.; 2 ono bednn.
l\lll.. p1U1 1 oolllgo wllh lwo """rlmento. This
PIOI*IY hOI boon w o l -. Reollcod price.

• 1 Bod.-n• Uvlng Room,
· KMchln,
ollth,
SZZ5.11o.
Roforonco Roqulrod.
• 114-441 0640.

· Doootlt'

; 1-112 - -1.2 Bllho, WID
Hookup, am MOnth, Dtpotll,
.•UIIIhln, 2 Mlloo N. Vlnlon, S.R.

J

1117. SWEET &amp; LOW - ComiO!table smo11 2 bedrm.
IMlma. LaC e6'x166', rural waler. b. gas heal on stalt
roull. 515,000.
1827. LARGE 2 STORY HOME on Sla\e Roule. 3

and._

ld. $23,000.
.

1614. LARGE COMMERCIAL BUilDING on Slllo
Roule. 2 bednn .. opt. on lSI floor. P..- 3 mcro

1830. NEW LISTING - LOCAlED JUST OfF SR
35 - Immaculate ranch wlh new Improvements.
Lovely new COipolllrou~ul, now &lt;IICI&lt;. rool3 yoors
Old, 2 bodnno., LR, tonnol din. m1., 1111., encloaod lrort
porcn. omco nn. or IIUdy and baoomonl .
1731. COMMERCIAL or RESIDENTIAl - LAND
CONTRACT - Primo ioeollon. Eoolem Avo.
Opponunlly 10 comblno home one\ bu!llneoo. Oil~
RIVer fronlogo. Very nice 3 bodrm. homo
wlltflP-1,\ul-rl . Thll \o 1 money m11&lt;1ng
piCflOdlon. Cal lor 'l'fl0\nll1llnl.
1875. R·E·D·U·C·E·DII LOVELY 2B'x70 '
"FRIENDSHIP" DOUBLEWIDE RANCH wllh 3 BRo.
2 bolhl, \AFR, DR.Idlchon wlbar, range, !JoN, 1111\ly
room, ole&lt;. HP, CIA.• llropllco, vinyl siding, cKy

CLOIE TO RIO GRANDE - Noll dHn COl·
lagoololq2bodnno., lbolh, g o o d -. mllll
sl&lt;lng, nooriy. dooorolod, 1 ~. gardln lf!CIC,
1.61 oc.IM.. Hoolalptor ndJio homo. Thii\Stor mo
and my gal. Groallocabont '45,000.
1136. COMMERCiAL or RESIDENTIAL - LAND
CONTRACT - P~mo locollon. Easlem Avo.
Opporlunlly IO oomblno home ancl busineSS. 0No
River tronlage. Very n\co 3 bodnn. home wlh
aw\lanoos, lull baoemonl. This Is a money molcfng
proposllon. Col lor ...,.\nlmenl.
1754. SEClUDED COTIAGE FOR TWO - 2 IJod.
roomo, 11rgo LR. lui balh. 011·\n ldlchon, 2 ~
now repairs hovo been mo&lt;le lo makelhls a oomlo!l·
ablliMlma. $20,000.
11H. KYGER CREEK AREA - 3 bedroomo, 2
balhl, roncn homo anc1 carport,
gordon
opol, t oc. m'l. $24,000 pluo . . - IMlma.

-..ltdlngs.

ap\1 .

Nil. lEW USnNO - IN TOWN - N.,. 1112 110&lt;'/
wth 3-4 BRo, Ill balho, LR, FR, khchon wtnoot&lt;.
poJI\11 bulmlnt. gas ru ...ce, gugo. N.,. yard.

1717. PRIME DEv£LOPIIENT LAND: Und \lys

$301.

wl Oklor 2 Slory bltck home W\U1 4.bedroomo and
buldlngo. Home In roood ol rapalr. 121 ac. n&gt;'l. 011 SR
35, cloiiiO Pinoclool
Homo .

1738. UNIQIE IIH.EVEL wllh 3 BAI, 3 baths, brlcl&lt;
111d alum. siding, kKc:hon (c:horry coblniiO) wllh
d\MI1e, t•miy room (llrtpll&lt;a), UIP\Iy nn., LR,
-noel in ~ack pOfdl, 2 c. gorago on 4 oco. Mit.
IIUST SEE.
1752. REDUCED $10,000.00. GOOD LOCATION.
Very r1&lt;0 3 BR, 2 blt111. MOClrlar (VIndlloj- \afllll
LR, DR, ldlchon W-Ill room, Pooplionllly \orvo
1amlty rm., .-.doted paUO 0118'X36'1WIIiMiilfG pool,

IIOS.

5-11112.

Prot.ulonll

A HOllE OF HIGH STYLE 1n&lt;1 low mo\n-

tenance • In your lutuN, conlkllr lhls 4 bedroom

and hll\1100 oq: n. of lvlng opoca. Et. hill pu..,,
conl . llr,lnd \lrop!ICI. Pn&gt;polty, -.ltllurot 14&gt;122
bulkllng 1011 smol bulllnoa, ancl 36x48 molal build-

NEW UlnNG ~ BIGGER THAN I LOOK BlociC homo wtlh 3 BR, 1 balh, LR. ldlc:hon, luol oil
hsal. CheCic me OUI. $20'1.
NEW uanNII - 5 ocres of roHing lind In good

Ing. Cal lor pricl oncllocll\on.

\oc:al\on. Ctooe ln.

1121. NEW UITIHG: 2 llory lromo homo wlh ol.
sld~, 3 bdnno., 1 balh, IVIng room. I~ room. and
11rgo lclchon, and 2 cor-· Homo \o priced In lho

lurnlohod, llundry

11: Vlltaol 'Qn.eft Apit. ... or

171Z.f7H. TAKE A LOOK AT lHtSI Bolli ltououlor
1111 pricl 01 onol Cll tor -

"iiEAUTtFIJL APAATIIEHTS AT
:auDGET PAIC!S AT JACKSON
•ESTATES 631 Jockoon Plb
1!0111 Sltvmo. Walk 1o ilhop 1
onoviH. Cllll~511. EOH.
~ ROOm Fum\lhH Aportmonl
' f« Aonl, Upolokw, Wlltor ,,...

a-,

t1 Cldor
I~

11n. CROWN CITY. NICt older homo wllh 3 BAI, I

bath. ool·ln ~Mchen , LR, DR. enclosed pon:h, 2
oulbldgl on .5 aco. rn'l. ·

titS. NEW LISTING...3 boaoom ranch ,.,.,. wlh 2

•
REDUCED ...Thlo

,
lI

Yoiy

FUL COLONIAL STYLE HOME at Ai o
Grande. 2.87 actos 11111, 3 BAs, I ~ baths, LA,
kitchen , FR. Just off Pteasanl Valley Rd.

.

1101. A GOOD 8UY AT 127.- Eurolcl. 2·3 BAo,
I bllh, LR, oal·ln \dfchon, ~ bllemll'll, gu 1....-. I
outbklg. 30'&gt;114' ..,..... on 5.18oc. n&gt;'l.
.

'

·

17112. LOOKATTHti-Acozy 3bodroom homo wllh
living room, ldlchon, bolh, uuthy PLUS vlrr;l lldlng,
now root, ""'- and NC. Allhll pluo greollocol\on,
132.000.00.
1111. THII - . ; II LOCATED on 1 oc. 1M foolu&gt;
lng 2 or 3 - . o wlh llrn\y 100m, kllchon, balh,
-.pori,lor(IO llorogi buldng. Thlo """"' lo
. 111 t31C1Ninl•arter home.
.

j

bllhl, flrntft room, locolod on 3Y, oc. m'l. Porloct lor
t.omeone wanting dolt to 1own and .a country
otmoop111ro confllnll\on. Pr\Cod In lho $40'o and
locolodln-To-h\p.
'

.

.

1150 CORNER
- Vary
oro BRs, both, kilchon, carpel, fireplace, 1
car detached garoga.

3

Mixer

_ , 01101, oliO M; $10, IM1824423.
Ruge IDr ule, 1 112 yardl:,

·\110.21; IM-1112·2411 or 114-H2·
3123 - n 1:001,.12:00
noort.

D. C. •111 S.let1 11C.
Cannelbu~,1nc. 45719

Spedalizmg in Pole

BUidilgs.
[)esVled to.mset your
n&amp;eds. My size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES

Poll Buidrtgnnd

PICklgl

1142. 535,80011- WHY PAY RENT? - .Ranch
slyla homo on SA 160, 3 BRs. LA , k1lchen,
bath, altachad garage, t00X300 lot
PRICE SLASHED BY $10,000 826
SECOND AVENUE -This homo oHors 2 BAs,
upstairs, t BA down, LR, ldlchon, OR, balh,
utility rm .. gao hoal. Garago wlhealed
workshop and II bath in noor.

R1n111 :10" Gu LPN Nolurol Eyo
LovOI Ovon Sloroge Spoco, Ex·
collonl Cond\1\on, 1100, 1\4.4411318.
Ror•l blue Ntln lormal, tH
fon81h, ongfl.cut \leo boftom,

Wonnollon.

.-1o

·flllllod,

t2ot. REDUCED TO S4t,800tt - BEAUn·

POMEROY·P-kAw.• VERVUNIOUESl\'LE 1 112
siOry home with 3 bedrooms. Home has been ·newly
remOdeled inctuang new wiring, plumbing and !henna
payne windows. Has front porch. side decking and lull
basement on 4 loiS.
ASKING$32,500
DEXTER· WANT OUT OF TOWN't Here'o a I t/2 oiOry
frame home with 4 bedrooms, large parlially enclosed Iron!
porch, has been newly painlsd llao a cellar and garden
area.lnsulalioninwalls&amp;calllng.Countrycharrnat $16,000

PRICE
3 bedroom b~ck
ranc11 homo lo -"*'II you 10 orjoy lho bonofldll
ptouuroo o1 comlo!l one\ doolgn. FIOIUrH Eloc. holt,
cont. air, - - · 2 cor 1111•go lind opplllnCio.
-~~-on 4011150 1o1 onll hl!lltflPIIIX· 1636
oq. ft .
por\tclfY bollnCod lor comfort.

; •.,hWIUIU.

CDnc:rete

17H. GREAT INVEBTIIENT...3 1 bedroom IIJirt• ·
moou. Ful bdll. living room. lcllc:hon, Ioiii oq. n.
ltflPIOX· 1440.•Eiiol' 1111- of owning your own
horne alo111f wllh 1 rtnlal lncomo. Coif lor mo"

· colt f14.ea.rn1. EOft
3 room I bolh, WID hook..,p,
" ltovt~, Nf tumllhld, Vef'Y otean
' "!'~,no (1011, $185. mo. 3'04-175~ 4NV or d75-1H2.

..

176

$30'o.

, """" \IC\111\oo IO IChoOI
. In lawn. AOOilcailono avatlob!o

•

Center,

Plool\c And llodoi Cutvortllnch
Thru 10 Inch In Slock. Ron
· Evono, Jack- Ohio. 1.8IJO.
537-t521.

Clpo Cod brick homo. Homo lx olualod on 2V. acres

1350/Mo. 7 IIHoo From Go~
1\pollo, ROUio 7, Pltono: 114-4411: 3500,IM-251-1114.
2Or 3 Bodroom Aportmonl, Pw·
!lolly F"'nlohod $350/Mo. Pluo
: Dtpooh Inc\~ Wol•, ·
• Tr- Lol For Rort, $110.11o.
: Wlllr, ""'• Fll'nlohod. Bcoh
' Locllod AI: Hannon Troco
' SChoof DIO!r\ct. IM-2511131.
~
t.. :zbdrm. aptl., totll ttectric, ~

'

Do-M

· McCormick Aoltd, 0.1\ipollo.
• King Coot o-. now In olock,
· SldO,. Equlpmonl, -roon,
: wv, 304-175-l'121.
· LadiH Lona Bilek Gonutno
· Loolhll' Coo[ Slu: 18 Brond
: Now, Moko Nlco 0\ft, $55, 114·
. 317-7214.

e14-l4e 1011, .-.a.

2 Bod-, Clr(IOI1, Yord,

t

Thom11

CORNER OF S.R . 141 AND GRAHAM
SCHOOL ROAD - 2 or 3 BAo, balh, kilehen,
LA, conlralair, allached gar~. Priced for firll
time homaownoro.

.....

VIrginia, :J04..t75-4418.

plloncotl

Bors Clothing, Sire: 5-I, Glrla

· ZT-3T,I14 4411055.
KILLS FLEAS\
· Buy ENFORCER FlU Kllloro For
· Poll, Nomo &amp; V•rd. Guoronlood
EHocllvol Buy ENFORCER AI:

Soroy Polnl•, Curing BlonkOio,

2 bodroom Air cond, gound
· -~~I dop "qulrid, no
; poll,

INVESTORS - 4·PLEX FOR SALE - Good
incomo. Each unit hat 2 BRs, LR, kilchon and
bath. cal lor mora lnlonnallon.

Panltonlc PII"'IRRI Computer,

w.........,.

' 2 S.droom Aportmont, Locolod
Bohlnd Holzor Clinic Of W.a

Surry, $475, 114-441-8707.

H1ywud DIOiomlo Eonh Pool
1\llor, lhp, $75. 304-675-1813.
Jonny Und Bolly Bod, Cor Sui,

: IBM compollblo. 640K RAM.
3.5\n. dlok d~vo, oxponolon
ofolo, onhoncod byboard,
· monochrome manHor, Dot
Moklx prlnllr, 114-867-3840 ofter

alec. lumace, A/C, rtf., riN, dllpOMI, range (dbl.
ovon), fln!&gt;locolnd -umor. 2 c:or on 1
... mil.
no... Ifill.. lloull.

• 110, 814-311-DO&amp;O.

Grovoly Mowor, Dull Wholl,
Eloclnc Stort, 30" a.... Mowor,

: New n~ver 1.1Md 12 von 100 wan
elren dual aound $100. 304-6751813.
Nice 8' Bar Shelvn In Back And
S Bar Stool1 Lllthlr, 814--446+ 31131100.
.

·- o n .Uocron&gt;'l.

bedrooms, bldh, LI4, OR , ktlchen, oil lumace, bam

.

ATlENTIDN HOME BUYERS EQ UAL
OPPORTUNITY - NO DOWN PAYMENT - LOW
INTEREST LOANS qual\ly for lhls program and
make you llndllrd. Modoll lncomo eon buy In !flo

1111. MORE IPACE THAN YOU CAN BELIEVE~
Th\o 4 - - hlllul -mont wllh fomly
room, bodrvomlnd bllh upollft, 3 bodrooml, balh,
ond living room. Lccllod In IJI\01 noighbco·

- . ; - ..

Apanment
for Rent

Real Estate General

1771. VINTON CO. FARII: Locoled on SR 180,
RestOillltM 3 bechn., brtdt hon. w..basei"'I'Mtri. Also •
1979 Acodonly mobl\a iMlma has 2 bodnno., kit ,
&lt;tmg aroa, tJI and balh, bun wl!llals, loot shed,
mlclron house, so oc.n&gt;1. MoOIIy lloblo.

· 2 boclroom lrollor w/112 ..,,. 1«,
· 2 112 mlllo out Now un:.,~:d
; Rullond goo hoot '"'"
,lnoldo, iM-1112·2103 or 114-'M2·
,242t

, 2 Bodrooow 1 Bllh, s..lo
.. R- 211, Gatttpollo. 114-211-

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK DAY OF
SALE WITH POSITIVE ID•
"WE APPRlCIATE YOUR ATTENDANCE'

REEDSVILLE- THIS IS SOOO COZY I I ftaor blcck home
wilh 2 bedrooms, one car garage, relll' o«eened porch.
ceiling fans. Home has been newly rewired and lnc:ludea a
produce building and .6051 acre ofground. ONLY$18,000
MINERSVILLE· NEED A TRAILER LOT? Here's a 80 x
100 vacanllol with hook-upa available. This site has a
beautiful view of the river!
ASKING $6,500
SR 7 CHESTER· 197i S.rin~ Mobile home 14 X 70
wilh 3 badrqoml, I 112 beth, ' ing, ap~iances, can~al
air. 12 x 16 ~10rage building on I+ liCit
~ 18,000
WHEN'S THE BEST TilE TO SELL? TObAYI INTER·
EST RATES ARE LOWbBUYERS ARE HE REt THEY
WANT TO eUYI IF Y U WAHl TO SELL DON'T
WAIT GIVE US A CALL TODAYI WFLL GET
A BALE GOING FOR YOU I

1510. WHITE ROAD - 20 acroo, mn, vacanl
land not lor from Charolais lake. $20,000.

18111. 65 ACRES MIL - HunlngiDn lirp. Appmx. 38 acres crop, balance pattura and
woods, 2 story homo. 4 BRo, bath, LR, IQIChon,
·concreto block blm with loft, lobacco baoe,
fronlago on Raccoon C!Mk.
VERY NlCE BRICK HOlE ON 1.04 A. m~.
· oquippod IQIChan, LR, 1~ baths, fireplaca, can·
·tral air. $49,900.
NEW LISTING
CONVENIENT
DoWNTOWN LOCATION- Owner hat ratirad
and wants somothing omallor. Thla 4 or 5 BR
horne hoo 2 bllho, modem kllchan, c.ntrll air
and much more. Localld ot 4t4 3rd Ave.
$52,800.
1578. JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD - ADDISON
TWP. - 38e ICrl \arm, 3 ponds, tobacco baM,
55xno bam wlconcreta ~aors, may conalder
split.

S33 000 - GREAT STARTER HOME localed
nea; \Own on S. R. 141, LA, eaHn ldlchtn, 2
BA s, bath, laf90 carport. Well kepi.

1511. 78 ACRES MIL, Sugar Creek Rood Waler tap and bam on pmperty. $32,000.

1114. $21,000 - .3\ols + older homo. Bidw.ll, 3
BAs. bath, LR, kitchen, workshop and ga~&gt;.:;e .

l821 . CARMEL ROAD -Rio Gronde ArN 5 acre loll lor lfllo, $6,900 oach. Call lor
cfotaUs and di~lions.

IOO'xl50' LOT ON DEBBY DRIVE - Owner
wants a quick solo. Call today and slart building righlaway.

1880. PLANTZ SUBDIVISION - Nice startor
homo offora 3 BAs, 111 balh, LR. kit. , lull
basamont w/outsi&lt;M entry, carport, gas heal,
cily utililiat.

1758. PATRIOT AREA - Ouial neighborhood,
easy living, homo offora 3 BAa, LR, oal·ln
kitchen. nice carpe~ alloched garogo.

1118$, MN FARM - Remodeled homo plus 20
acrn m.1. Moldy crop land. HouN haa 3 BRs,

youroall, have a privalt coolfout, walt b 1 llh·
lng opot or lull onjoy ne-.re, than don'l let tu

bath, kltchon , LR, baautilul dock. All lor
$45,000. Cal Ruallor moN dotailo.
1264. COMIIERQAL PROPERTY· - 1.4 A.
m.1, 2ollll1'011\agl along SR 7, jus\ across \rom
Ohio Rivtr Plaza.

,,

SECLUSION - II you want to juot gal away by
ono gat away. 4.5 acro1, rn.ol, 3 BAt, ball, lR,
OR, kitchen, aooe11 10 boating on Racooan
Croek, c:lly lchoolt. Cal Ruth lor-. dllllt. ·

1888. S2t,OOO - Cheny Dtivt, tdga of bwn off
SR 160. Small homo and .e,...,.. m1.

�Page . DS-Sunday Times Sentlriel
54 Mscatlanecius

61

Bll lou 1nl COUCh, ' almoal
. t100 114-812-522
•

~

Comoofdtr

t

Farm Equipment

63

Livestock
1115 MF 01- Troclor, 124 Dolor, l,ngut Yurllng Holltr Salt
~~~ llo"lng , llochlnt, AU lroo;~d• For 5 Ia 6 Monlh Full
Condition,
· 1~500 0 B0 81 ·• Horolord Bull. 614·44"
114-381-11881.
• . . . .
~

Merchandise
·

•

Pomeroy~lddleport-Galllpolla, OH-Pplnt Pleasant, wv

·

P-r 110 MF Dl- Shorp· 165 ME

12

z..;..

IIWIII-1170
Dr 114-•~Dietll, Sharp·,
.
~C
Pfl T0-20 Ferguson

._

Aelljlorrt I

1011 .

. ''""' u Ntw Tlnot, Now
Aubbtr, Now Polnl, 114-281-

Ozy-, 1522.

, . With Clr, $150, ~~

..._

.:..:::::-=:-::-=--'-:;;-FS~la Wagon,

Hanel
1
T.¥. Arid VCR Coli Lots Than 1 $Z,IIOO. 304-175-l '
'lwON, ._IIWA 1111.
For lilt: Corn Plcktro Nowldto

I;i.':"al100 24 Pin Prlnltr

And Ollvor Fannon H lroclor

Seara
$100.
Antlq~

Manure
Cl.lltlpacktra, And Oiskt, Othlr

1 g

NO.

IJI

et.: ; .,

With 3 Pol,. Hllch, Now Holland
Rakn

liiiMOI c11111 1100. BlcyciM $100. Farm Equlpm1nl, Howa'a Farm
"""+pol 110: 304-1711- lloehlnory, Jackson, Ohio 614·

.,..,.
'
TOll IOdll• -old
. ...,..., ~-- 1
.
....,..,. - · · rom
o..a.
ll!!cM
.tore,
$50.
each,
'I

* Ia•=•Wllool
IBL
Pttol

~

7281~-41:.:144:;:::...--::-:--=-:::-::::-:-:
John Dtlro Groin Drill $600; 4

Row Com Plant.,, $500, 614·
2SI.eotl
;:::~;,.·--,...-,,.--,.,....1Wo Klllbro gravity boxes, Mor·

Blko Ukt gan Form, 3~·937-2018.
Now, IU,I14-!117-06311.
63
Livestock
Tobocioo 8llckt, 114-311-21 11.

Transportation

71

Autos lor Sale

196? Cullaaa Supreme, new
pilnt, · 65.000 orlgln~l mllea.

Baat offar, 304-882-34t18 or 3B4·

1112:Z47V.
1176 Oldt 88, PB, PS, Air Con·
dltlonlng,

3 YNr Old Pure Bred Polled

71 Aut

Autos for Sale

1178 C.!l!flro Chtvy, molollle
b1Ut1 305 V-8, •uto, IXC cond,
s~,ooo. 304·882-3UII '"" 3:oo
I~040,:.:c::s._--::-:---:--::--:- PM.
Guomn~ Sprl~tr Ar.rll &amp; 1178 Chivy C.mtro, molallle
I rown w1 sa, u11 Boodod •
bluo, 30S V-1, ouloml!~l •••·
1800. 614-37!1-2312.
cona., 12000, call 304-...:4518
.Htrd Dloparul Solo: 5 Ofttf3pm.
Crollbred COWl and OOIVII,
1171 Ford $300, Very Good
Angua H11f11r, Holaltin cow due, Tranaportation, 814-446•7055.
614-72·2513. ·
I:R:-tg-:lol"'or-ad-,-7Cor_rl.,.ad-t-lo_,B-uc.,.k,...,3 1171 Okls, good ahape, MOO,
coiii1H82·5K2 oKtr 4:30pnt.
ytoto old, 1125; &amp;14·112·7802.
1810 Ford Mutlang, I Cyllndtr

Square Balers, Reglltered Holstein bull, 23
Spreaders, SHdtrt, month1, Ci~III14-H2·'121l

And

71

New

nres,

Runs,

Loolct Goodl $900. 614-445-81117.

Enalnll, Aulomalic,

R~o~na Good,

$'1Gb,l14-441-1025.
1181 Chevy SWI I Cyllncltr,
1880 Kowtookl 710 LTD Wllh
Forrlng With Boa•; 18:11
~":""'h.114-2111-lrnl, 114-211·

-Ia

-

71

g,..~

high mlloogo, $500; 304·

III2-34H or 304-882-24'N.

IHI Thundtrblrd, 302 Englnt,
PW, AC, AMIFII Storto, .-so,
Sto: R...oon Trolltr Pork, Rl.
141.

71

Autos for Sale

1tn · Pontia

atll 3100

Prix,

Orand

Loldtcll114441o073t

INI Chrytlor LtMr 11 It $800.
:104-17&amp;-$1114 ofttr 5:00 Pll.
INI lltrcury Grand llorqulo,

WleMJow1 tinted pllta g11u

a.u· -

pane,

J04~11504.

$40.

nlco.

Wulllumer, With Pipe &amp; M•t

Col Allor S
lllQ,

P.M. 11-41, 114-258-'

Willou, Tool lox, AMIFM CooMilt, Good CondMion, RI!M .
Good.
1m c.ao Chtvt 1 · 112 Ton
True~h Gtoln Btd, Exetlltnl
Cond
,114-245-1525.
ltJB Chtvn&gt;ltl 314 Ton A Type Hlleh 4 WD Eltclrle Btokt

.-m.

.·

Unit 400 Enalne, New Tlrea,

72

$1,500. 114-44a:6411.
Trucks for Sale
Tlroo,
1118 Ford FI001 HI, lip., Zip. 1m Dodgo D-50 axle, 11ft. alum1num box, _good Shocko, GOod CondHionl $1,200,
~~~runt goocj, ~. 11+3al-8758.

302Voa, Automellc, Full PoWif,
Enalne EKotlltnl, Bod~ Good,
IOZ;OOO, ~· 114-411-1215.

1111 Ponlloc Porlolllme Slallon .
WlgG!!, All Pawtr .Aec:....tltt,
NtW Radial T1101, 12,000. Afttr

1181 Manit C.rlo SSiiExcollonl
014,441-'NSI.
1181 Oldt Dtfto 18 BI'OUQhom·V·
I, IC Lotdtd, E•etlienl Condltlonll14 HI n\ IJ4-441..71t71.
1811 Flroblnl lllaek, Aul-tle,
Now Pllnl Job, Now TINt, Now
Ellht1111, I.GW IIIIOtat. Atltlng:
114-441--oflor 4p.m.

::.r·

2

Real Estate General

~~~

old,-·

MC lrtnany Spaniel Champion
Ita ult'ne, Excellent Condition,
With Kldo, $100. 114-

II_,.

llkllound pups, tiiYif • blk,
fiQO. NOh, 104-13l-3268 ... 1372121

-rollin Bluo Htolor pups,
... • MOot., 114-62-7101.
Asoltlotod Auttrallon
_.,.,.. 110111 7 llonlhl, $100.
114-2M-1011.
Dngonwynd canary: CFA Por·
olont a S - • Kllltno. 814IU- Afttr7:00 p.m.
f1oh Tonk, 2413 Jockoon Avo.
Polnl Pltlunt, 304-675-2083,
lui llno Tropical llahl blrdo,
omo11 onlmolt and tuppl H .
Hall CMw pupplat, molhtt lull
- . 1 Rod Cllow,$50.304-675-

•
~"'

"

'

'

''

,-

.

LOT - SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
One large lol approx . _IOI'x171'. Cily water, cily
sewer, nalural gas, elec~IC , all are avaijabfe,al this lot.
Prepare NOW to build your dream home in this
pleasant, quiel, and nice subdivision jusl a short
d!slance oul ol Gallipolis. Lot 117.
1456
BUSINESS OFFICii &amp; SAlESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2nd AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

LEADINGHAM REAl ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

KYGER CREEK SCHOOL - Spacious older
homo on ftat lot with 3 bodrcomt, family room,
1!4 batht. Shop attached. $53,000.
1467

- is where you find lhia
attractive and woU malntalnad home v.ith
lencod in backyard. alum. oiling, two b4td·
rooms, one bath, a large onclooed back
porch for thoM wann summor nighls or
enjoy lhe central air. Also a one car garago
with storage and much more. Call lor rna
info. Only $-48,900.
1444

,·

;.;aerruac ·tt.:r.?'

FEfllliRED HOME

QUAUTY HOME - Owner baing transferred
out ol ora. 5 BR, 3 baths, in-ground 20X40
pool, Baau~lully daooralad. Call now. ~oed
lo
.
1454

OFFICE 11112·2886
QUICK BALEII Ullld at
.
tho best farms and modem country hornet In
1he araa. Four b4tdrooma, 2 batha, powder
room, largo walk In clotot and new 22'1126'
family room, all codar wood with balcony and
mora. Largo modem bam will oio and faading
equipoMnl 1.15 acn~o rich bottcm land and lulh
patiUto and good r.noea. Large tobacco baMcan bt purchasod with or without. Como and
aee lhe crdos. Maka ua an offorl
1472

205 North Second Ave.
Mldd"port, o~
SUCCESS ROAD- Hlrcly looko Uvod In- This 1989 2
bedroom 14•70 2 bath Oanvila mobile homo hat 1 gar·
don IUb. central air conditioning, gas fumac:e and calhe·
dml ceilings.
$15,000

Pupt~lott,

$35 Each,

114-241-15f7.
A.la~lttd Ptt Bull pup•, ahola
enil wonntd, rMdy In :1 weeks,

-

7121.

II

I
I

-lllroldt.

!i1

Musical
Instruments

Iundy Clarinet In e111, nctl·
lint oondHion, 114-,..2·1800 afttr
lpm.

Conn Trombono Wllh ca ..
Llllcl 2 YNrt, In Excllltnl Con·
~-COli

RUTLAND - A split-levol homo worth an opon raisod
hallway has beautiful oak railings. Has 3 bdnno., a largo
bath, utility room &amp; a kitchan loaded with cabinets. Has a
2 car garage, and aluminum siding. Buy 1.8 acrao and
home for $45 ,000 or y, acra and home for..

$42,000

DRASTICALLY REDUCED -IIIDDLEPOAT·COLE IT.
-This 2 story houaelslooded with character. It hat open
stairway, oak baseboards, crown molding, arch door-

ways, cornice boards, fireplace, and handmade kitchen
Owner wanls to moro. Was $48,000.

OWNER DESPERATE AND ANXIOUS TO
SELL llio 3 b4tdroom ranch homol Ntodt 1
littlo spNCing up. Nice lizld lot 72'xl50'.
Altachtd I car carport. MAKE OWNER AN
OFFER TODAY! Alklng low S3o'a.
1452.

LANGSVILLE -A I ~. story home that on approx.
acres. It has 3 odrms., 2 baths, hoal pump,
woodbumer. Soma land tillable. Would be groat place for
hunting.
147,100
REDUCED... .HISTORICAL Corn11 ltoro - Hu e
aportmonlo up and 1nothlr atora down. Start your own
buslne... Hao lots ol room and hu an Income. Buy
butinooo, oqulpment, 1tock, and bulldinga. WAS
$t33,000.
BUILDINGS FOR ONLY 110,000

Auto Pans &amp;

USTING - RIO GRANDE AREA - Ia
lhit 3 bodroom I balh ranch v.ith lull buomont
including a family room, _patio doors open to
.45 acra rnA of open spaca. Country 1ypa living
)ull minute• away from village of Rio Granda
with an attractivo prlca of $52,500.
14611

a..-,
GMIII eon 1111on, e...m-2m.
· -~-···· . . ·-· - ····--··-~- ..-

.

79

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

1814 VIking Pop-Up C.mpor

RUSSEL D. WOOD
Owner)Broker
Eve. 446 4618

TAMMIE

DtwrrT

SliM Agent
Eve: 441·1514

NEW USTING- 636 acra finn wtlh two older
homos. 3 bathe, 7,5G6 lb. tobaco bau mil.
Soma fencoo and mora.·Call tOday for mora
Info.
1471.
NEW USTING -On Ouogan Rd. io this 3 b4td·
room molal tklad ranch wllh 2 batha, laundry,
living nn., cinlng area, 2 w altachtd garago.
Can bt tcld wilh 1 acra rnA or 5 acraa mit and
bam. Cal today for mora infonnalicn.
1477

PATRICK A. COCHRAN
Office Manager

Eve. 448 8666

J. MERRILL

DUE TO RECENT SALES WE
HAVE DEPLETED OUR
INVENTORY AND NEED NEW
LISTINGS IN ALL PRICE
RANGES I

COOLING &amp;
REFRIGERATION
Slate Rt. 160, Bidwell
Is now starting our
winter services of
all makes &amp; models
offumacea.
Specializing In fuel
oil furnaces.

WANT A COUNTRY HOME
UTILI! ACREAGE? - Than you'd better
check this ona out This 3 bodroom ranch ails
on ~:. acres, rnA, and ltalutoi new carpo~ng,
an oulstandng kitchen, 2 car garage and over·
all graal conation. Priced to oell al $59,900.
1508

MARTHA L. SMITH
Sales Ag111t

Eve. 37&amp;-2&amp;51

Eve. 256-1136
\

CARTER

Brolllr/Agant

Eve: 371-2114

A. WRAY
SliM Agent
Eve. 448 4251

CATHY

414-367-7811.
22 Fl. Cotehmon Pull campo•·
fully Soli Conlolnad, AC,
Awning" Vory Good Condition,
$3,1100 u.B.O.I14-381-IIII.
:n Fl. C.mplf For Salt,
Good Condition, $3,400 C.lll14258-llf7.

81

J. DRONGOW8Kl CHERYL L. LEMLEY
Meigs Co. Agent
Slits Agent
Eve. 742-3171
Evt.241•t7

CYNTHIA

out of Stata
an onarl"
Someone is going to bag a
i and il mig&gt;l
as wall bo you . Htlitato and yoa wi~ miss out
on oi\Tiing a 3 badroom ranch wilh family room
and aal-in kitchen. This homo is situated on a
largo lovollol within 2 milos ol town and has an
eloclnc heat pump. Calllodayl
1500

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

446·1066
Allen C. Wood, RNIIor/Broker 446 4523
Ken Morga11, RNitor/Broker ~41 0971
Moae Canterbury, R..ltor 448 3408

~~~~~~ Realtor-256-1

TO
THE
i
bi·
laval and onjoy lhe largo
room, 4th
b4tdroom, ~ bath and wealth ol storago opaco
it offors. Upstairs you'll find 3 bedrooms, I Y.
baths, living room, eat-in kitchen with deck for
ouldoor dining. Now add an oversizod I car
ga~&amp;go, largo privalo lot localtd on tho edgo of
town in a family orionted neighborhood. A lot ol
home lor only $64,900.
f602

A HOME AT AN AFFORDABLE
PRICE? - THAT YOU CAN MOVE RIGHT
IN TO? - Then you noacl to take a look at this
beauty. Large living/dining room combination,
nico kiiChtn with laundry araa, 3 bedrooms and
2 baths. Newly painted ceilings and exterior.
Combina this low price will low intamst rates
and you can lullill your homeowne(s dream.
$29,900.
1613

lhis homey thra. b4tdroom with loncod
yard. You'lllovalht largo kilehon and"*"".
cory family room. Priced at $37,900.
.::

IN GALLIPOUS- BRICK HOME- 3 bod100ms. liv·
ing room , kilchon with dining atoa, 1112 bath, finished
baoemont wilh family room, beth, utility room, ond a
storage room, 2 docks and a 17•32 in-ground pool
and a storage buiding. MAKE AN APPOINTMENT
TO

VERY PRIVATE 6
oetling to onjoy lhls newly oonsbucltd log homo.
Large front porch lo on)oy cool summer
braezas; anractive woodbumor and hearth lo
wann your soul on those cold winter ni~Jhls.
Appro•. 2,300 sq. ft. ·cf comlortablo living
space inclu&lt;lng 3 b4tdroomo (room for 4th),
very anrac~vo country ~tchon, living room with
pint ceiling, newly finlohod lamily room and 2~.
baths. Largo 2 car garaga with overhead ator·
aga. Approx. 5 yoaro old. seg,900. 1211

HOME ON STATE ROUTE 553 - I I rooms, 4 bod·
· • ,_., 2·balht. i!lina room, dining room, 2 kllchano _
one In baumont afrnost 3 acral, fruit lrMs, cellar,
garage and storage building . CALL FOR AN
APPOINTMENT TO SEEIII
REDMAN OOUBLEWIDE IN QUAIL CREEK
PARK - 6 yoars. old, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living
room, dining room, kitchon, ulil!ly. room. Pricod at
$29,900.00.

fumacelcantral air, new stdin" and is newly

IN GALUPOUS - 3 b4tdrooms, bath, kitchon , living
room, baaomenl, 2lols, 20xl50 and 37x150. Call lor
appoinlment.

radacoralad.

homo dose to lown. Oily schools., Priced at
$36,000.
1215

FOR SALE - 40 acra fann located 8 milos off Stale
Routt 14t on Uncoln Pike. The home has 7 rooms
"and bath. Thora is a bam and olhar outbuilding; also
a fann pond and lobacco base.

ULTiriATE GENTLEMAN'S FARM .
24.8 acl8 paradloe. Knoll IDp view. Exoellonl
sunsols. Pine lnHs galore. 1750 sq. ft. ranch in
mova·in condition. 3 large bedrooms, 2 full

1GB4 DOUBLEWIDE MOBILE HOlE - 24150. 3
bedrooms, 2 balhs, FR, alae. heal PRICED TO

Services

LOCATED IN GAWPOUS - VIne Street- 4 rental
units, good Income proporty. Call for mora
lnlonnation. ·

Home
Improvements

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village. CeJI
lor mora inlonnalion ..
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1-11»1114·106&amp;
:-

Mii"

(E)

1712

n11d are new owners for lhis 2·3 bedroom

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS - Located on At. 7
(Eureka,. 30'X36' block builclng with sto18go in baoe·
·mant, 70ft. frontage cr1 AI. 7. Lot runslo Ohio River.
Was .11aed as convenient man. DRASTICALLY
REDUCED. NOW ONLY $32,000.00.

HOME AND 2 ACRES MIL - 3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
living room, kitchen, fireplace . and unfinished baoemont. PRICED AT $36,500.

at $57 ,toOII

EVERYTHING'S NEWLY REMODELED! Now kiiChon linoloum, new living room carpal,
new coiling " livipg room, somo new fin.ras in
bathroom, Mw fumace, new hot wator lank,
newer roof, now wall and linoleum in bathroom,
now siding. Interior newly painled. Now aU we

PROPERTY LOCATED ON WOODSIDE ROAD - 2
mobilo homos, one a 1976 Allen, one 1Htd100m, one
1973 Casllo, threo b4tdrooms on a 150'x455' lot. Call
lor inionnalion.

SELL.

BUS! NEBS
LOCATION - Oulalanclng polontial on lhis
drivo thrv cany out Grut location along Sl At.
35. 3 bedroom Nlidtnca includod in oalo. I.Dts
of road frontaga. Will lncluda lnvontory end
equipment 1513

REDUCED PRICE
THIS....Selltrs will pay $1,000 towarda your
financing poinls. This vary nice 3 bedroom
homo really naods no incanlivaa to ..U, bul lhe
owners want il SOLDI Localed in PloaNnt
Valloy Estates, this homo has a new roof, r.w

REMODELED ONE AND ONE-HALF STORY
HOME - located on State RoUio 7 at Eureka. 3 badrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, and bath
localad on 32.9 acres m~. CALL TO SEEIII

•o

COUNTRY PURE 6 SIMI~
Introduce your children lo the joys of country
life and outdoor fun in this 3 year old 3 bad·
room, 1)I balh heme on 4 acras, mn. You'll
appreciate the 2 car attached ga~aga and full
basement A lot of houM for $49,500.
1507

Over

DOES A LARGE UVING ROOM WITH A
STONE FIREPLACE, spacious kilchon, full
balament sound good? Wolf, W10, we have lhe
homo for you. Located just minutes lrom 101\Tl.
You wil also gat cenlral air, oemi4inod codar
closels, oxtra largo family room and all al a
vary affordable price. $43,toO. Call for your
showing todayl
1704

SECLUSION AT fTS BEST! - If you're look·
ing for peace and quio~ yet in Graan Twp. a!
an affordable price, then look no further.
Siluated on 4.223 acras, m~. with small pond,
3_bodrooms, 2 batha,livi!'jiiOOm, family room,
dmmg room and largo kilchon, now add an
above ground ~I and I car garage wilh sheet
Wo havo allth11 for only $42,000.
1605

BEGGING FOR CHILDREN - Friendly H
b4tdroom, 2 bath bHoval located in one of lhe
basi neighborhoods lor raising chlldilln. largo
living room and dining room, nice kitchtn·, alCIIB
largo loiniy room with pol tabla Included, nice
lot, woodtn dock, 1 car garaga and amplo otor·
ago throughout. Thla It everything a family
could Wllnt. Delay mi~t moan cbappoinbnont.
eau Can&gt;lyn loday. m,500.
1604

THE CONDI110N CAN'T BE SURPASSED
In lhio tomWble 3 badroom, ;l balh brick ind
vinyl taneh. Ita spotlell concltion lo avjdonca
ol loving cara by' a particular ownor. Pretty
10onit will hava 1 new owner. and It 0011kl bt
you. Prlcod at $64,500.
1508

•

PHYLUS L. MILLER
Salts Agent

Real Estate General

-

Real Eatate General

HAPPY HOLLOW RD. - lo lhia 1)I alory log
homo with bettmon~ 3 bodrooma, 2l\ balh,
family room, living room, kitchln, laundry araa
okyfi~t. oatellito ayllem, covered porch, heat
pump, contral air, 12'x12' building and much
more. Call for details.
·
1425

Real Estate General

Wood" ~a{ty, Inc.

CIII)'.I14 Ul 8568,

lmagino sitting
privata pond and
fish bittl Vary
4 acr;.;.;·~;,..·;;;.;~~:i;
Comlortablo homo with a kitchen that won'l
quit Give us a call for mono dalalls.
1208

.

SHUT YOUR EYES ...and imagine your family
enjoying thia custom homo faaiUnng 4 bodrooms, 3 balht, ivlng 100m, dining room, family
room, 2 kitchont, dlen 0r office. Profetlionally
landscaped 2.24 acraa, mn, 3 car garaga. Now
add a rofroshing lnground pool. lt't not a
dream, Ira a now way of Ula. Call Carolyn today
for your privata viewing.
1614
INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY - Ovor
$I ,200 par month income Is produced from this
five unil apartmonl building. Good location In
town. Good renlal history. Very nice lot with
aooeulo back alloy. $59,900.
f20G
IIGHWAY EXPOSURE - NMd a plato ol
ground wllh good At. 35 IKpOIUra and acras?
Hon1'o 14.2 acrao, mil, rlglit along U. S. 35.
Goocl to lhe hiclhWIIy. Good road Iron·
lage also (townthip).ol&gt;roduclng gu wall on
P"'f''rly. 1211
·

baths, living room wllh olcna fireplace and
inoert. 22ft. family room. 1Bxt6 in"9round pool
with skinny dippin' privacy. Hunt, re1oe 4-li projacto. Portocl place lo build a big pondl Fruit
lrtll, garden spot. Green schools. Price
raducod lo $109,900. Don'l htsitatol
1202
SUPERB CONDITION - llaluliful rw1eh In
immaculate condition. Ovorfootcing flo river,
this 2700 aq. ft. plua homo offera plonly ol
room for lla family. Faalurao include vary nice
eat·in kitchen, largo tam. room piUo rae. room
2 firaplaOII, btauliluf living room. Alto hu'
inground pool, largo patio araa. larao 1 acno
lot. Cal lor on appoinlmont today! $134,to0.
1204
AFFORDABLE
HOllE
IN
GREEN
TOWNSHIP! - Picture yountlf in flit 3 bodroom ranch localad in a family orionhld noi~­
bomood lhal your kido wll !oval You wifl Ilea
lhe convonianco to shoppino, hospital, ate.
Homo offors fonnal living room, family room
largo oat-in kitcl1on, I Yo baths and 2 ca;
garage. CaM today to view lhit homo.
1232
GETAWAY, HIDEAWAY!- Hore't an out of lhe
way 32 aero• ol ground. Approx. 8 acm 1111·
able, balance pastua and woodland. Utiity
poll, 11ptic ayatem and ci.lg Willi en property,
Bam. lnoxpanSIVa proparty. Parfact lor rnoblfo
home oet up. $19,500.
1212
OVERLOOKING THE RIVER Channing
homolocahld along At. 7 orr.n a pleasant way
ol lffe. While tho baautiful Ohio River 11111111
along in tho front you can onjov a ralaxing do
in lhe inground pool. W.l dacoialld inside wii1
3 badroomt, ~ v.ith ehatoclllr and a
luU biMmonl Gordon spo~ wrap-around drive·
way. $50'1.
1217

.WE NEED NEW LISTINGS!l
REAL FS troE Ir'C

. 446:ti44

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER • 446-9555
I
Carolyn Wesch- 441·1.007
Lorette McDade- 446-7729
Sonny Games - 446-2707
81 J. Hairston - ·446-4240

.

...............................(304,

___ .,__ .._ - ·- --...--·-·- ---.....-----

elttr. t, mkrowne,

ltrlor a lnllllor Polnllng, E•·
portoncad, lnturad Loelllid Lo-

Brokor.................................. 992·5692 ·

NH Iuper 711

Now goo lonkl, ono 1on lruek
-1•, todlolort, lloor malt,
lie. D" RAu1o, Rlploy, WY. 104~72-3833 orl-800-273-1321.
Running boordo tor 111!12 Chlv,
4 door, S-10 Blozo&lt;,ln bo~, 1100,
304-aa:!-35711etvt11lt1Ngt.
RV 0&lt; trvc:k tldt mlrroro 'l'. par
pair, 304-182-:ZXt

llrntft Home lmprovement1.
Room AddMiont, Gongoo, E•·

LANGSVILLE - Co. Rd. 10 - Approx. 2 acrot of
beautiful bottom land. Water and oloclric available. Great
homo lila or mobile homo aile.
$6,500

11 Firm Equipment

........ _J _

Approx. 24 acres with a baauti·
ful two atory colonial home overlooking
Pomwy. Executive slyfo home with formal
ontry, lamlly room wllireplace, fonnal dining
room, basement has rae. room with stono fire- •
ptaco, in-ground pool. 2 car garago. Many
mora amtnities. Reduced to al ow price ol
S13G,500,
1413

OWNER WANTS SOLD - Thil well buiR bride
home -Mill 2 badroomt, 1 bath, laundry room,
living and dining room, kitd!on, 1 car altaehod
garage. Large walk-In attlo nice patio lind ~­
shaped lronl porch and mora. Reduced to
$411,900.
1312

CLOSE INI Enjoy I vlow al
great 10om allhislovoly 6 yr. cld, 3 b4tdroom, 3
bath homo with family room and linilhod ba...
ment ni ... clooels, 2 n Wilk-in. Tax frao lor
nine yoan. Too many arnonllios Ill mon~on
hera. Cell for mora infonnalion. Asking 80'1.
1475

Wlnl 10 buV UNCI plano for
_... 304-17W:W.

I-

aa:cH ST. -

VACANT LAND ON LINCOLN ~IKE - 66
ocras, smaH pond, plus t8x24 shower housa.
Asking $28,500. .
1471

FAIRVIEW SUeOIVISON-CREW ROAD - A largo ~
acre lol with a Barrington doublawida, sitting on a lull
basemont. Home has 3·4 bedrooms, dining 100m, famKy
room, and in -ground pool, back dock, and much mor•.
$57,000

Z!1t.

f, 'I'll Suppl1es
&amp; L1veslock

16

AIC, IWnlng, II I ntW, $13,500.

Asking $99,500. Call lor more lnlonnation.
1473

NOW S3t,to0

1Nro Drum Ukt New, 114-37t-

• PJI. '-"' -· 1111.

PNorlll 15GO batt bolt troller,
'Milp Tl TJohn..,, u;IOO. 304175-1080.

bldroom1,

cabinets. Has 3 bedrooms, 1~ baths, full basamant.

-lor Nit, 114-t48-2722.

tLu:tt:; Prilduoe, 10 A.M. •

•'

10n Fleltwood 35ft e~mper,
tf'IVIIed 1. . lhln 4,000 milts, 2

bedroom mobile home, gas haat, central lir.

1toton. $ZOO,I~H.

'/lOW,..,..

Fn, WlntaiSt0111ge_FrH

BIMpl e, S.tf Ccmlllned. $1,500,

NEW USTING - Now car lot on Rl 7
Cheshire. Has 30X50 garage w/offlce. Also 2

11noto Drum, Sllekt,
lllnd, Pod, l Coot, Uttd 1

Fruits~
Vegelables
111wor
P111duet 7 112
_ ... 01 Cltlllpolll On Sl. AI.
l AI la!'Qh-'o Form

NEW USTING ON FRANK RD. - A partial
brick ranch on 1.034 ac. m~ wfth 3 badrooms,
tl\ baths, living room, dining room and kitchen.
One car garaga attached. Asking only $52,500.
Call today.
14&amp;2

NEW
es, mn, mini lann. Hu
,
all ready lor ooma horaoa. Includes 3 bod100m
ranch home with 1~ baths, dining room and
mora. Altaehod ga~aga and a 32'x48' dotachod
garage, IIDragt building. PLUS 3 room and
bath apartment Ownon moving out ol araa.
Wanl sold nowl
1471

..-tt

58

Lowul Prlcot Anywhtfo
Financing Available

114-381-8751.

Aft1&lt; 3:30P.M.

"'"""" CP 10 E*lronlc Plano
1111~ Gnlllhlc Equsdzor For
~orland u... $110,

BIDWELL AREA - Is this well kepi cozy 2
bedroom ranch Wi1h two om largo lois. 1 car
gangaaltaehod 1 car garage. New hill pump .
Partial baumtnL MulliN. For only $39,500.
1478

CREW RD. - lalhlo un~e contemporary with
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family nn., dming area,
living nn. and kilchon. Two decks all way
~rounC!)ouM. Full basement and mora. Only
J:llltllllO· Rodlcod to $4B,OOO.
1427

RACINE - EAGLE RIDGE ROAD - Wanl a homo with
lois of potential and 23 acros of land? It has 4 badrcomo.
salollila dish, 24 fool pool, T.P.C. walar and a 2 car
garage.
ALL FOR $28,000

laking dtpotKo, 614-IIV2·

'NMI'I to diHtn,. oboul lht
Happy Joc:k 3-X lito collar? II
WOtUI Conlalnt NO oynlhtllc
For c1ogt • coli!
RIG Fttd I Supply, 614-IIV2·
2114

SPRING
is lhis spacious
immoculate
3 bedrooms. 2 baths,
lamiv and dninR room on lovol lol Also large
deck. You ntod lo -thio one.
1454

85 General Hauling

Refrigeration
Wo Do Hauling Anytlmo,
~ct, No Job Too Big Or
R.-.nuet or commercial Too
Uttll. BIHmtnl Ctaanlng,
wlrtng •. new ..,.-vkl or rep~lrt . Glnonl Work, Ally Klndl 114Malter Uceneed eiKtrlclan, 37!1-2278 Anytime.
Ridenour Eleclrleol, WV000301,
:IOl-115-1781.

11444w811

Gt a 92 Kawaukl Jat Skis
650 SX • $50 Onr lnvDice

,1 14-2....-n, 114-3'71-2283.

olniKIIOrdlnory ktnnol
Iorio. A&amp;G Fttd I Supply, 1141124114.
puppy Palaeo Pot Shop.
Loeolad In G.C. Murphy Co. Golllpoh. Oponlng 10011. 114-441·
Al1 Torrlor

1423. FARM ON LONG HOLLOW RO. This homo haa 2 b4tdroom 2 baths, iving room .
dining room, kitchen, ocrMnod front porch,
heal pump, central air, 40'x30' polo shod. All
thla and mora en 107 acraa rn/1. Asking only
$55,500 and ownor wiU financo down paymont.
What mora could you ask for.
1423

In Wl11f,

1111 drivo. 590 · S 12:\, Hock·
lngpon, Ohio; 814-5a7-0368 or
IM'St4-1388.
For Solo: 1190 Chaekmolt Ski
Baal, 22 Fool 225 Evlnrvdt
Molot, Joekjllolo, Excollonl
Conclhlon, 614-288-3318.
HAMILTON WATER SPORTS
Proetor.riiiiii...Ohlo
1-4114-886·n68
. CIOM-Oul On
Ill &amp; 82 Coble Booll

ludatl Trant1111Hiont, Utod a
l'lf!ull, tlartlng .. .... Iron!
wlwll drlvo otir11na o1 ln1.oo

Di·
bo&lt;:·

0404.

W11tr, Tql Drhtt. 590 S.R. 124,
Hockingport, Ohlai 614-667-6366
Or 114-H4-1138S.

Accessories

Hippy Jilek Oennoxldt: Advan-

vlruMI.

AVE. Is lhls 4 bed·
room, 1 bath, wood and brick ranch with family
room, dining room, den , full basement, fire·
. placo, and gu hoi waler hoat, buUa(s panlry,
enclosed front porch, beauliful bow window
w/window saat and much mora. Only $32,000.
Can today. II won't last long allhal price. 1445

Real Estate General

cocr gormk:lclal dltlnloelont lntcUVOI.. parva, oollo, ECHO,
Rhino

.

miiNG

84 · Electrical &amp;

Real Estate General

Eldr... HD Trollor, $13,1100, In

tnt, HO trllllr; $13R5DD,

2:112.

1M

oldl"9 ol' lrollor tklrtlng. 114245-1152.

Real Estate General
1-----:..:.::::..:::.::=..=:.:::::...
______.;

814-62-6877. Davii.Qulcktl

26' B•yllner, 1984, Volvo 260 HP.
IJttpa 111, IJC, rpidu, 1111ny u:~

3111354.

AKC Clllhuah"' Puppy, Molt
1121 OniJ 1 Ltftl114-311lol!Ot.
Me Aecllol- Bttglo Un...-, 4ood Pol Or Brotcllng
110 Col lltvt Slapltlon 114Zif-1f11 Or 114-441-4172.
AKC Rtglolttod Cllow Chow
Puppltt, All Ftmolo, 3 Black, 2
Rod, 1110 Etch. 614-251-1417.
AKC
Rtglllllfad
Golden
Rlltlt- pupo. 2 maiM. 111
olloCt tnd wormad. 1150. SOl·
112-2413 oftorlpm.
Me ,..lllltrad Norwoglon

C.rtlf't Plumbing
Fourth and Plno
Golllpoll_o, Ohio

21' Bayllnlf, 1N4, Valva 260 HP,
Sl11p8 Six, AIC, R1dar, M1ny

1 Chow P"P1 black malt, 5moll.

2 Pomttonlan Pupo, I Monlht
:+.
1 llolo, 1 Ftmolo, 614-446-

Will build polio oovoro, dtoko,
ecrMMd rDDml, put up vinyl

Hourt, Wintered Under Cavtr,

Pets tor Slle

Plumbing &amp;

Heating

Will C.tod FO&lt;. 13,900. 614-4468315 AKtr 5:30.

i

82

Improvements

1111 lllrtfillui e... bolt, 304~J5:o6536.'
!Gal ·sunlr8c:klr Ponloon Boo!,
24 Fl. llorcury 40 HP llolor, Low

:MUI2t

:I:· *"

good Davit Sewing MaChine And

Boats &amp; Motors ·
tor Sale
·17R Gtumon c,not $300. OBO,
304-175-31M.

1.., Rio Grtnclt, OH C.ll 814-

2 Ftmtlo Amtrlean Eskimo
Spllz PuOIIitt, Btoulllul &amp; Initio
Etch O.B.O. 114-446-

very

75

Block, brick, uw•r plpe1, windows, lintels, ttc. Claude Wln-

11124102.

bodw,

lnouranco..

Real Estate General

114-lt:l-41347.
tnd S..pply Shop-Pot
o-tna. All br-, tlyloo.
1tmo Pol Food Dtllor. Julie
· Colll14-441-0231.
- luntannor 24 Wallo bulb
llnnlng bod wllh 1tet ltnnor,
WOtb uetllenl, aooc1 condlo
lion, $1800 OBO. MUll ttll; 514-

Home

81

.--------"t
B&amp;M HEATING,

·" MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE

:lll-7lll1

!56

$.

, ~hHier, IXC ~~ 304-675-e130.

RACCOON ,CREEK FARM..... mostly
crop land approx. 1 mile creek frontage.
Located on SA 160 at Ewington, Ohio.
MAY TRADE for residential or rental
property.
BLACKBURN REALTY 446-0008

Building
Supplies

Stpllc Tonk Pumping 90, Golllo
aM &amp;
BASEMENT
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
drlvt lo opptociOit 114-1112-2803
WATERPROOFING
or 114-7112·2421. '
Uneondlllonol llollmo gumn· Jteklon, OH 1-100·537-8528.
t•. Local rtfer.nc• 1fumll)ltd. Ulllhy Bldg Spl: 30'•40'11'
1112 Sltrro 311,000 lllloo, Groat F101 ullmoltt. Coil eollocl 1· Polnltd
Siding I Rooting,
got IIIINgt, 614-44&amp;-1081 Aftor 614-237-G488, dty or nlghl. I ·15'.S'Stttl
Sliding
1·3' Str·
6 P.ll.
Ragon BOIImtnl Wolorproo- vlco Door, $5)QODOor,
Etoelod. Iron
Hartt Bldgo. 1-IOD-352·1045.
For Solo: Hoavy Duly Dual Allo ling.
Trollor, 4,000 lb. Ctp. 614-446- Curtlo Homt lmprovtl'\tnlt:
71100 (d' 114-441-1107 '''·
Ytoto Exporlonco On Oldlf &amp;
:;::--:----...:.;.:;___ INowtr Homoo. Room Addltlono,
13 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Foundation Work, Roollng,
Khchlnt Alld lolho; Froo Es·
1913 Ford Bronco AC, low llmOittl Rlltrtncot, No Job
mllugo, 4WD WllockoOul hubs, Too Big Or Smolll614-367-0516.
front radl1l fir11, must

&amp;15-20711.
111f/ 250 Ouodrocor. $2,000,
Ociod condKion. Lolt now ps~o.
304-675-2362 or 304-675-21121.
1890 Hondo 300 Fourtm 4

Zonllh Sl- For Solo, $85, 814-

55

Home
Improvements

614-446·3704
Rid, elec
ltart,IJC1hlft
feYtrll,
$1 1000,
Cond,drtv•,
3Q4.. Ij•---------~========

TRUE STORIES

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

81

Home

Plck-U. And Dallvory, Goorgos
1887 Plymouth Voyogtr LE e.. Crook Aood, 114-448-0294.
011111111 Condition, law Ull11ga,
JET
Loodad, 17,500. 614-446-11958.
Alrollon MOl-. ropaltod. Now
IHt Bronco II, Loodtd, Asking: &amp; rt·bulll moloro In ttock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH . 1-aolll7,100,114-441-o731.
537-1528.
74 Motorcycles
Ron'• TY Service, 1pec::lallzJng
In Zenith 1110 Mrvlclng most
11112 Hondo Nlghl Hawk 750, uc othlr bn~nds . HouM calli, also
cond, 1,000 mlf••, uklng $1,200. oppllonco ropalro. WV
304-11'5-Zfll.
:IOl~lV-23111 Ohio 814-411-2454.
1114 Hondo 3 whttlor 200 Big

•

Real Estate General

81

~=~ally, ntw tires, 614- Vacuum CINntr• Atpilr, Free

ANSWERS TO ~"\l~~-4\!.~S H
SCRAM·LETS
AERATE
"How many doctor jokes are
STYLUS
there?" One comic asked the other.
CURSED
"I don't knovf the .second comic re·
RPOPT.OAS1iEE
plied, "how many?" ~Only three," the
O
first comic laughed, "the rest are
INSIST
TRUE STORIES."

aP.II• • 14446-l'm.

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

1m GIIC 7000 """ dump __.;;lm.;;p::::.;.:ro:..:v.:e::.m::e::.:n:,:ts:...__
ltuck, 311 tnglno, ntw bod now

av1111 91

I

...

441-4331.

72 Trucks lor Sale

Trans, Long IH, At... Hitch

lp.m.

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

oltd 40 Gallion
1111111111 au. Youto eholeo.
tiiUI Womoldortl a Thornto
~~
Wtlahl btnch wKh wtlghlt,
gooCieond $55. 30l-4175-363l.
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allloon 1210 Steond
AWinuo, Gallipolis, Ohio, 614-

Trucks for Sale

September 6,1992

1170 Ford 100 P.U. 302 V-1, Aulo,

AUTO INSURANCE
Dodat Dynotly 4dr,
1811:1 Llnc:ol Town Cor, Ex••~
lonl Condition, Ont Owntr, Air Aul-lc, lloelriC Trvnlc, RNr ..1.1 814-ttZ.al77, Davlo-Qulekol
All -.,, Ntw Tl- I BOIItry Dttroetw, CruiM Contral, New lntUranct ..
Sliver Wllh Block Lotlhor Top. Tlrtt, APorol. 41,000 Mil•. Ex· WhKt 1181 Comoro V-41, MuHI
otlienl "Condftlonl 18,800. 114- Port HI Mllt!J. Good C.ro, Will
" ·IICM!· 114-441-351\
24H!OI.
llolnltiNd ..,soo; Whht IIIII
IN:! Monlo Corio WIT-Tops,
Sunblrd
Con~ A-1 Condlllon,
1818
Fonl
Probt
GT
Aoklng:
:104-171-'1523.
.
4 CYI. EFI ZO.OOO Milos Mutt
IN4 Ponlloe 1000, $250. 304- 18,100, ·-~Stllf $10,100, 114-441422 Ahor

WIIor Htattr Still 52, 40, 30 Go~
len

72

Autos lor Sale

1188

1181 Da,taun wagon, air, Nne Condhlon, 18,000 Dr ott Ofltr.

Ulld 41on Stewart Wlrntr air- Slmmtntal Herd Bull &amp; 3 Pure 1983 Cutlass, auto, air, AM..fM, 1882 Clmaro Z28 red with t·
oond. perflct runnlr:'t cond, Bred Slmmental Bull Calves For driv1n
dally, good cond, S1,000. lopa.l. automatic, V.a, very nice
,_ USO. oqulrrol cogo Sprlna Sorvlco, 614·25H402 AI· 080, 304~75-.,.211.
cor, •2500; 614·l'I2-23H.
blowr wlh 3/4 hp molor $71. lor 5 ~II.
IM-I~I-

lor Sale

September 6, 199'2 ·

·- --···---....;..-..

--.,..---·~--1:.....--.--

. ._ ____. . . . . . . . . . __
~

.......J\.-_....,..,.

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

hi' . DB Sunday nmes Sentinel

September 8, 1982

Harry Clark retires :

Slowing economy spurs decline
in end of week market activity
By CHET CURRIER
AP Bns'ness Writer
NEW YORK - Stock prices
Slgled Friday in the slowest trad·
U.S ollhc year, regislerin$ a wary
response to unexpected new evldeatc ol weakness in !he economy.
Activity tapered off to a near
standstill in the afternoon as
inn•on got an early start on the
lo!ill..abor Day weekend.
the ·Dow 1ones average of 30
industrials dropped 10.27 to
3~1.93, fmishing the week with a
. . gain ol14.32 points.
• Declining issues held a slight
edJe lllllldvanccs in the daily tal)y
011 the New Y01t Stock Exchange.
Big Board volume came to an
estimiiiCd 124.34 million shares as
of ol p.m. EDT, down from 212.54
million Thursday and the lightest
. lOIII since 76.82 million were trad·
ed ill a post·Thanksgiving session
IMtNOY. 29.
The Labor Deparunem reported
Friday morning lhat nonfann pay·
roD employment fell by 83,000 last
month, rather than posting the
sharp inatase econom1sts had been
expecting.
'WitiKJut a temporary surge from

a government summer jobs proGlaxo Holdings climbed 1/2 to
gram, analysts said the drop in 29-314. A Food and Drug Adminis·
employment would have been even tration advis&lt;wy panel recommend·
mere dramatic.
ed llpp!Oval of the company's drug
The news was taken as a suong Zofran for use against post-operasign that the economy was still tive nausea.
·
struggling to gather forward · Digital Communications Assomomentum as summer · draws ciates, whktt warned !ale Thursday
toward a close.
that its earnings for the current
II sent inrerest rates tumbling in quarter would fall short of analysts'
the credit markets as lraden con- estimates, tumbled 3-1/2 to tS-3/4.
cluded that the Federal Reserve
Bank stocks managed only a
was moving to ease credit condi- mixed showing on the drop in
tions further.
interest rates. JP. Moraan rose 5/8
Rates on short-term Treasury to 60-1/4 and Chemical Banking
bills feU more than 20 basis points, added
1/2 to 33-1/4 but
or hundredths of a percentage BankAmerica lost 1/8 to 43-7/8
point, in some cases to below 3 andCiticorpdropped 1/8 to 16-3/8.
percent. Prices of long-term govFederal National Mongage rose
ernment bonds rose almost $10 for I to 66-1/2, and Federal Home
each $1 ,000 in face value, lowering Loan Mortgage was up 1/8 at 42their yields 10 around 7.28 percent.
7/8.
But brokers said stock-market
Amerada Hess, subject of a ratinvestors' response was more ing downwgracle by a brokerage
equivocal, influenced by worries fum, dropped I to 47-3/4.
about economic growth prospects.
The Nasdaq comPQSite index for
Among actively traded blue the over-the-counter market slipped
chips. Merck rose 5/8 to 48-7/8; 1.44 to 573.44. At the American
General Motors gained 3/8 to 35- Stock Exchange, which had an
1/8; Philip Morris slipped 1/4 to abbreviated session because of a
84-3/4. and International Business rue at a nearby building, the marMachines lost i/8 to 86.
ket value fe11.2S to 384.85.

Ohio Lottery

Cowboys
defeat
Redskins

CHESHIRE - Harry K. Clark ·
retired Aug. I as a purchasing:
assistant in the Stores Depanrriellt ·
at Ohio Valley Electric Corp.'s ·
Kyger Creek plant, Plant Manuer
Nonnan H. Tm:r announced.
Clark joined OVEC in 1954 as a .
guard in the Personnel Depanment •
In 1957 he transferred to the
Stores Department as a stores attendant In 1980 he advanced to
storeroom supervisor and in 1981,
to P!U'Chasing assistant
A member or the American
Legion in Pomeroy, Clark is a Mid· ·
dleport native who served in the
U.S. Army from 194S to 1947 lind
frQm 1950 until 1953. He and his
wife, Frances,vreside in .Minersville.
•

Pick 3:
353
Pick 4:
6767

Super Lotto:
6-7-12-22-23-43
Kicker:
260513

Page4

n. Ylage of O.slllre wl WI

MYSTF;RY FARM- This week's myste11 farm, featured by
tbe Meip Soil and Water Conservation District, is located somewhere In Melp County. Individuals wislling to participate In the
weekly COII~t may do 10 by gness.IDJ. tbe farm's owner. Just mail,
or drop orr 1our guess to the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
P0111eroy, Ob10, 457", or tbe GaiHpolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave~ GaiUpoHs, OhiO, 45631, and you may win a $5 prize trom the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name, address and telephone number wltb your card or Jetter. No telephone calls will be
accepted. AU contest entries should be turned In to the newspaper
office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case or a tie, the winner wiD
be chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallia County farm will be featured by the Gallla Soil ind Water Couservatlon Dlstrid.

Its r9fir Sept............
• T•slay, Sept..._ I, 1992

Vol. 43, No. 115
Copyrlghled 1982

1 Secllon 10 Pogee 25 oonll
A MuiUmodill lric. -poper

at 6:00 PJI. Octoller's ......
wllle Wl•ltsr. . .
...... lllg.. of • ...,
OdoMr 5, 1992 at 7:30P.M.
Public llvlttlf to attiiiiL
Thallk you,
LolsM.Silyder

Army plans to open
another tent city for
Andrew's victims

L----..;a..t:::.:~·TrtasUr;;;;:;;;•iloill
· •.

Producers can apply for loss relief
GALLIPOLIS • Secretary of
Agriculture Edward Madigan said
that the $755 million in emergency
funds for agricultural disaster
announced recently by President
Bush can apply to program crop
tosses incurred in 1990, 1991 , and
1992.
This is in addition to the $995
million disaster assistance for
1990-91 !=lOPS announced by Madipn Jlllllaly 2, 1992
The application period for disaster claims for fall seeded program
~ ~nted in 1991 and harvest·
ed 1n 1992 ill begin September 8
and end October 2, he said.
The application period for producers with losses on other 1992
aops, and b producers with losses from 1990 or 1991 crops ho did
lot previously receive disaster paymelii!J for those losses, ill begin on

October 13 and end February 12,
1993.
Disaster assistance is available
on a per farm basis for any two
years of 1990, 1991, or 1992,"
Madigan said ''The original program provided t995 million for
either 1990 or 1991 No, relief iU
also be provided for fall-seeded
program crops elanted in 1991 for
harvest in 1992.
"Producers ill be eligible to
apply for assistance for 1990. 1991
or !992losses: however, if producers received assistance for any of
those years they may not receive
further assistance for that crop
year. Producers ho receive payments for fall-seeded program
crops will only be eligible for assistance for 1992 crop losses."
Producers with qualifying gross

revenues of less than $2 milliOn per
year may me claims for losses of
participating and nonparticipating
program and non·proS~Bm crops.
"Pr(Kiucers with crop insurance
must have had losses greater than
3S percent," Madigan said. "Producers without aop insurance must
have had losses greatec than 40 percent. Producers with 1992 crop
losses may be required, under certain conditions, to purchase crop
insurance fer 1993."
Madigan said producers intending· to file for assistance should
begin to assemble their records
now. so they ill be ready hen the
official application period opens
and they should contact their county Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation Service office for
additional information.

ON
NOWI
RUTLAND ROYALTY ·Adam Lambert,
lett, was selected Prince Rutland, with Tyler
Barnes and Jamitha Willford selected Mister

divulge terms of the agreement
until his membership had a chance
to vote on it
"I can teD you both sides arc in
complete agreement," he said in a
telephone interview.
He said the metal stamping
plant would go back on full-production starting Sunday morning if
union members approved !he con1!3Ct offer.
Gerald A. Knechtel, vice president of personnel for GM North
American Operations said in a ,
Slatement: "After nine (lays of
intense bargaining we and the
UA W were able to reach an equitable solution to the local problem

Unit plans zoning workshop
MARIETTA - A workshop on

rural and small10wn zoning will be
held on Friday. September II from
1-3:30 p.m. at the Washington
County Career Center in Marieua.
The workshop is designed to
introduce citizens and planners

·Timber...
(Continued from D-1)
Consideration must be given to
: proper spacing between potential
· crop uees. A crop tree IS one that 1s
· to be grown to maturity and not
· removed befcre the final harvest It
· is usually selected on the basis of
its size, quaUty, and location with
respect to other liees. Crop trees
are straight and tall; they arc valij·
able species free from serious
• defect
Trees selected for removal
would be trees damaged mechanically or naturally, trees of poor
form diseased uees, trees wi1h
· multiple stems, trees that are lim by
with a large spreading crown and
trees that have excessive defect.
Some trees called weed 1rees that
have little or no sale value should
also be removed. Some of these
species include muscle wood, black
Jlllll. ailanthUS, CIC.
Keep in mind that cutting and
removinl trees from the woodland
risks dainage to the residual stand
• and soil compaction or other dislllTballces, depending on t)le type of
: equipment used to 1ransport har; vest£d material, may result Felling
} should be done with care to avoid
· bRaking lOpS or main branches of
crop trees.
An acre of land can produce a
, cataia amount of tree growth. One
• 1!1-.e pb .of TSI and thinning i.!
: io obtain the correct number of
. treeS per acre to most effectively
; lllilize the growth capacity.
:
If you would like more infonna; &amp;ion or a consultation with a
' 10rcs1cr about your woodlands, call
: 446.-8687. All SCS and Gallia
l SWCD programs and services are
; offered on a nondiscriminatory
' blsis wit!Mlut regard to race. color,
: !Wionll origin, religion, se~ . age,
: nwital stabiS, or handicap.

•

who are not zoning specialists to
the basics of zoning. There is no
registration fee and no prior registration is required. It will be spon·
sorcd by the Ohio Plannin$ Conference, a statewide assoc1ation of
professionals and citizens interest·
ed in orderly development.
Topics include an overview of
zoning, historical perspective and
Ohio's zoning laws and resources.
Concurrent sessions will be held
for people interested in zoning in
smaller municipalities and rural
areas. Topics will include procedures to establish and admmister
zoning and zoning experiences of
local municipalities and 10wnships.
Speakers will include Robert
Eichenberg, planning director of
the Athens County Planning Commission: James Cobban, Ohio University geography professor; Terry
Jacobs, office of local government
services. Ohio Department of
Development; David Allor. director
of the University of Cincinnati
School of Planning; Don Buckley,
director of the Clennont County
Planning Commission; Melvin
Stedman, Athens roning inspector;
Bob Badger, Marietta city engineer; Roben Nau, Buffalo Township (Noble County) trustee, and
Joseph Clark, Buffalo Township
Zoning Commission ~dent.
Moderators will 1nclude Vijay
Gadde, Buckey~ Hills-Hockmg
VaUey Regional Development Dis·
trict, and Ray Schindler, retired
OSU district extension community
development specialist.

at the GM Lordstown Fabrication
Plant .
"As is customary, we will not
be releasing details of that settle·
ment pending ratifiCation by local
union membership."
The strike halted paris produc·
lion 11 the Lordstown plant and has
led to at least 42,900 layoffs at
other GM plants.
The automaker bad closed nine
plants by the end of the night shift
late Friday because of a ·lack of
parts. The P.lants are l~ated in
Oklahoma City; Wentzville, Mo.;
Flint, Mich.; Baltimore: Orion
Township, .Mich.; Sprin~ ~ill.
Tenn.; Lansmg, Mich.; W,lmlngton, Del.; 111d a plant adjacent to
the pans plant in·Lonlstown.
The company said it was unsure
when the rune plants iclled by the
strike would be reopening.
"The strike was unfonunate, but
allowed us to resolve a number of
key competitive local issues within
that plant," Knech~ said "Just as
importantly, this agreement docs
not impinge upon our ability to
meet our restructuring lllrgets while
providing job and income security
and addressing other needs of the
employees at that operation.''
. The company saicl almost 2,000
Ohio employees would be laid off
if the strike continued through
Tuesday.
GM and Locaf 1112 negotiators
reached an agreement Thursday
averting a walkout by the local at
the GM assembly plant at Lordstown scheduled for Friday.

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P'olicies pertaining to the elementary basketball programs and
field trips for students, kindergarten through sixth grades, have
been adopted br the Meigs Local
Board of !lducauon.
According to the new sports
policy, all students are eligible to
participate in basketball when the
program fll'St starts, but in order to
stay eligible, they must be passing
in math, reading, English, and one
other subject
If they are not passing in the
required subjects then they will not
be permitted to particiP.'!te in practice or games. Eligibility will be
checked on a weekly basis. The
rule applies to both basketball players and cheerleaders.

FLORIDA CITY, Fla. (AP) Each morning before dawn, a line
forms in a sweltering blue tent,
where canvas cots sit on a gravel
floor. Here are the s.ick, the
stunned, the ailing - the victims
of Hurricane Andrew.
Some of those heading into
Peggy Mankiewich 's makeshift
clinic have broken bones or bruises
they've ignored since the storm
two weeks ago. Others have infec·
tions or illnesses developed from
living in leaky, rubble -strewn
homes.
The hurricane has created a dou- ·
ble health care emergency: sick
people who need help and an ailing
medical network too weak to treat
all of them.
"The whole health care system
in this community disappeared,"
said Dr. Ricl!ar4 Ott, pr~ident of
the Broward County Medical Association. "Doctors' offices were
wiped out. Even if they weren't
damaged, they were out of the loop
because phones weren't wcrlcing."
State officials say most doctor's
offices in this community, about 20
miles south of Miami, were
destroyed, and at least half those in
neighboring Homestead.
.· Deering Hospital, in south Dade
County, suffered about $4 million

damage, including the loss of major
medical equipment, a spokeswom.
an said. It is expected to be closed
for about two months, though about
20 doctors are offering limited care
from trailers outside.
To fill the gaps, IS temporary
clinics and three Veterans Adminisb'ation mobile buses arc operating
in hurricane-battered communities,
saiil Mike WiUiams, chief of emergency m¢dical services at the state
Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services.
Six clinics are being run by
Humana Inc .. a national for-profit
health care company. They are
staffed by volunteers such as
Faustino Gonzalez, an internist
from West Palm Beach.
"How could I not come?" said
Gonzalez, an immigrant from
Spain who was examining a fourmQntli-pregnint farm worker in
Florida City. "We got su lucky,
those of us who did not get hit I'm
in this countty 23 years. I know it
sounds corny, but it's a way of paying back everything I've got in
America.''
Hundreds of other medical volunteers ·from across the country
also have fanned out across hospi~ls and clinics in the stonn-ravaged area. Some say the hurricane

A RaciQe.man was cited after a two-vehicle wreck on Ohio 124
Salurday aro.und 4:SO p.m.
,
Accordin&amp; to a report from the Oallia-Meias Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Roy L Bailey U, 18, 50330 Ours Rd., Racine. was
westbound on Ohio 124 and suuclr. the rear of a farm tractor driven
by Joseph A. Swain, 58,46870 SR 124, Racine.
. ·
Bailey and Swain were transported by the Meigs Couilty Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital where they
were treated and releucd.
Damage 10 Bailey'~ 198S Chevrolet~~ and Swain's 19S2
Ford fann uactor .was listed as heavy and disabling.
Bailey was cited by the patrol for failure to maintain assured
clear distance and failure to ws a safety belt
·

~,,.,c...

t:tiT4li"HI·I
·u bl I.'W

• Llgtuweight
Rtg. 24.11 033-1021 .

.;;;;J)

superintendent's office and
approved before a trip is taken.
The policy states that funds for
the activity trips may come from
donations, principals' activities
funds or fund raisers, but that sbldents j n grades kinder11arten
through sixth cannot be rcqui,!ed to
take part in fund raisers in order to
qualify 10 go on a field trip.
Repeated trips 10 the same location arc diS(;auraged and students
in the lower grades, kindergarten
through second grade, are not to be
on the bus more than for a 100 mile
radius. The policy excludes reachers who take students on a field trip
after the school year is completed
when they are not considered Wlder
Meigs Local's jurisdiction.

Card, who is in charge of the
federal relief effort, headed to
Washingion to brief President Bush
and members of Congress about
the situation in Florida and
Louisiana, as well as Guam, which
was hit by Typhoon Omar last
week.
In Louisiana, Agriculture Secre·
tary Edward Madigan was to
review farm damage today and
Marilyn Quayle, the vice president's wife, was to have lunch with
Red Cross volunteers and relief
recipients.
For some people in 1hc zone of
destruction, there was a sense that
the crisis was passing and that it
was time to resume their lives,
however altered they might be. ·
In hard-hit Cutler Ridge, Bob
Beolet mowed his front lawn Sunday and then moved his neighbor's
lawn Monday. "It's beginning to
look more like the old neighbor·
hood," he said. Down the slreet,
garbage crews loaded debris into
dumptrucks and conlraCton nailed
tarpaper over holes in rooftopl!.
New federal and state a1d centers opened, handing out millions

of dollars in food stamps, disaster
grants and interest-free loans.
The Salvation Army appealed
for volunteers and asked people to
donate items other than clothinJt.
Spokes man Jim Minter said tho
tons of clothing being shipped iQ
are much more than is needed by
s10rm victims.
:
He urged that people sepd
money, as well as baby items, cspc:cially diapers and baby food. Card
suggested construction material,
medication and insect repeUents.
The Army Corps of Engineers
said it had installed plastic roofmg
on nearly 1,100 homes and was
malting another 16.2 million square
feet of plastic roofmg available. .
An estimated 18,000 United
Way volunteers helped with the
cleanup over the weekend. Much of
the work fell on·the 27,000 military
II'OO(IS in the area.
The tent camps began to take on
the characteristics of real cities,
with amenities that included a bal:·
her shop at the largest one, Harris
Field. It had 1,2SO residents Monday night and Red Cross volunteers
were 111r11ing people away.

has, ironically, made i1 easier for
some people to get medical attention.
"We' re seeing a 101 of relatively
poor people and we're convinced
they're getting better access to
health care than they did before the
hurricane," said Ou, whose association has been among the volunteer
groups working in the area.
.
Mobile units also have been dispatched to those reluctant to seek
help: elderly shut-ins who won't
leave their homes, fearful of looters; fann wolkers who don't speak
English; illegal aliens scared of
immigration authorities.
. Though many of the 250,000
people left homeless by Hurricane
Andrew are living outdoors or in
shelters, and tons of garbage have
accumulated, the area has been free
of mllior health problems.
"What we're seeing is primary
health care problems - runny
noses, sore throats." 'Williams said.
"Ir an orthopedic surgeon or a
b'auma s~ want to come down
here, they re going to get bored
very quickly."
Many in'juries are related to
rebuilding efforts or life in dam·
aged homes - chain saw cuts,
nail$ in the feet, dehydration, infec·
. Continued on page J

MONDAY'S GOAL· Volunteers beJ.ln to
put tbe root on the bouse they were building
Monday for a Reserve, La., family whose home
was destroyed when a Hurricane Andrew relat-

ed tornado bit the area Aug. 25. The volunteers
began work oa the project late Friday. Tbey
were bopine lo have It finished late last night.
(AP)

Bush, Clinton cast race as
choice between hope vs. fear
WASHINGTON (AP) - When
they're not busy wrapping themselves in Harry Troman's mantle,
President Bush and Bill Clinton arc
casting their newly opened fall
campaign as ''a choice between
hope and fear," each claiming his
stake to the more positive choice.
To George Bush, "Governor
Clinton waniS to scare American
workers so he can slip into omc.e
with the failed tax-and-spend poli·
cies of the past. ·
"We can do worse," Bush says.
"You can't trust Clinton and Gore.
They have nothing to run on but
negativism and fear."
Not so, says the Democrat:
''This tlection provides Americans
their clearest choice in a generation: a choice between hoPQ and
fear ....
"We arc running on vision and
hope," he says.

Those were the. mess.iges Bush
and Clinton trumpeted Monday on
what has been the b'aditional Labor
Day kickoff 10 the fall presidential
campaign.
But this year it was just another
full day in a campaign that Bush
said "has been going on about I0
months too long."
Their running mates also debet·
ed in absentia, IIIJUing job opponunities versus cnVIl'OOmenial protec·
lion.
AI Gore, in Labor Day speeches
in Detroit, said, "The only lime
Bush and lVice President Dan)
Quayle slltrt thinking about your
jobs is when they are scared that
their jobs arc on the line."
Quayle began a three-day 'Western swing. He acknowledged California's economic troubles but predicted voters would, in the end, be

uqable 10 support a candidate about
whom they had "grave" characla'
questions.
After concentrating Monday on
key battleground states in the Mid·
west, the presidential candidates
and their running mates scattered
today. Bush was 10 address B'nai
B'rith in Washington, while
Quayle con1inued his battle for
California; Clinton campaigned in
Connecticut while Gore toured
Texas' Rio Grande Valley.
Clinton , in former President
Truman's home 10wn of Indcpen- ·
dence, Mo., said "we tried it their
way for a dozen years now . In
1980, America had the hiKhest
wages in the world, and now we're
thirteenth. For more than 10 years,
most Americans and most people
lisrening to me today have worked
longer work weeks for less money
to pay more for the basics of life."

...----Local brief__, Ohioans celebrate Labor Day, say goodbye to summer
.
.
Racine man cited in wreck

SOLUflONS

• Programmable ·
Rtg. 4U5 115· 902

DOWN

2. Elaslic 3. Idea 4. Taughl S. Chaperon 6. Bluff 7. Protrudes
9. Enlighten 12. Heavenly 15. Dlness 16. Fracas IS.'Law 20. Knit

The policy states that the administration of the basketball program
will be done by elected coaches.
Each building will pick one coach
to he on the committee and problems arising in any school will be
directed to that committee.
In order to participate in a basketball practice or a game, a student must be in school for half of
the day with an excused absence
for the other half.
The policy further limits practices to I 1/2 hours twice a week
and to school days.
Field trips now musrbe correlated to educational objectives.
according to the new policy adopted by the Board of Education. An
application must be filed with the

HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) The Army announced it was open·
ing another tent city for refugees
from Hurricane Andrew, even as
relief officials claimed to have
turned a corner from crisis to
reconstruction.
Military officials said Monday
they would open a tent city at the
Miccosukee Indian Reservation on
the fringe of the Everglades. The
Miccosukee tribe's huts and trailers
were badly damaged in the s10rm.
The five existing tent cili es
filled up suddenly over the Labor
Day weekend as authorities closed
shelters in schOQis, which are being
readied for the delayed beginning
of the school year next week.
After the holiday weekend,
which saw thousands of volunteers
head to hurricane-ravaged sections
of south Florida to help clean up,
officials proclaimed a new phase in
the mass1ve stonn relief effort
"I'm not ready 10 declare victory," U.S. Transportation Secretary
Andrew Card said, "but we've
made dramatic progress and we're
continuing to move forward. The
community spirit is rerrific."

Hurricane's legacy: Sick people
and an ailing health care system

See Puzzle on Page D,2
ACROSS
I. Predict 5. Cable 7. Plateau 8. Amuse 10. Oalh II. Cheerful
13. Racket 14. Coping 17. Delivery 19. Flat 21 . Satin 22. Concern
23. Tany 24. Satisfy

and Miss Rutland, during Saturday's annual
Rutland Street Festival.

Meigs board adopts new policies

GM, local reach tentative agreement
LORDSTOWN (AP) - Nego·
tiators from GeiiMII Mo10rs Corp.
and United Auto Workers Local
1714 reached a tentative contract
agreement early Saturday ~fter a
nine-day slrike. both Sides satd. .
A ratifiCalion vole by the strik·
ing 2,400 members was scheduled
for 2 p.m. today m Youngstown,
said Local vice president John
Fredrick.
Neither side would elaborate on
the terms of the agreement
Kef issues in the strike were the
hiring of non-union workers and
GM's plan to close a tool-and-die
shop where 240 people work.
Fredrick said he couldn't

Clearing tonight. Low In midSUs. Wednesday, sunny. High In
mid-80s.

PrietO apply 11 po~lclpa11ng llortollnd dtlltrl

Sal• Pril:ll End 1/21/92 bcepl WMit
..~

.

. · 11 The Alloclated Press

. Oh1oans saying soodbye to
liummer had to conrend wilh spotty
rain; hilh humidity and tempera·
tures In the low 80s while celebrat·
ing Laber Day.
·Intermittent downpours were
blamed tor a smaller-than-usual
crowd at the annual Rlverfest fire •
works display along the Ohio River
Monday night. Police estimated
that crowd• lining the river bankS
in Cincinnati and Newport and
Covingtllll, Ky., clidn't qwle add up
to the more than SOO,OOO who

watched in previous years.
, Cincinnati police LL Tom Streicher said 137 alcohol- and drugrelated arrestS had been made on
the Ohio side of the river by midevening. Newport police officer
Paul Bardo sa1d the crowds were
relatively quiet on the Kentucky
side.
lWiicr in Cincinnati, Democmt·
ic ~tial contender Bill Clin·
ton and his runnins mate, Tennessee Sen. AI Oore, l!tcnded an
AFL-CIO picnic at Coney bland
lliiiUSCment perk.

In Toledo, 25,000 rubber ducks
took to the water 10 raise money for
a variety of charities. Participants
in the Great Maumee River Duck
Race depended on the current to
sweep their ducks to viciOiy.
Tens of thousands of people
watched aerial acrobatics on the
last ~Y of tile Cleveland National
Air, Show. No one was hurt when
an F-16 jet was forced 111 make an
emergency landing.
In Lordstown, the Ocner~l
Motors stamping plant was back in

business after a nino-day lltrike lhat
crippled production nationwide. ·A
United Auto WOlters official. Aid
the union hopes the strike that
ended Saturday will set • ·]IOiilive
~ for national conii'ICI nego~~~.
lionS next year.
.
Parades feature' aspiriJia oflicO,.
holders 1nd lributes to worlcen
altiiCied spectnn in 1 numb« o1
communities.
The Slate }ijghway Patrol llid
at least 19 people were tilled cin
Ohiow~i£':jys during the Libor
Day
•

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