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Sept. 26

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Vols jolt No.4 Florida 31-14- C-1
Gallia County football dates back
to at least 1884- James Sands . . A-7

LAYUT

JUST REMEMBER. [ CAN
TAKE ANI{T~IN6 THI\T LIFE
THROWS AT ME !

Onthedayofherfirst
parachute Jump, granny
~
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~:;:~~:;::~·~ JUmp. She radioed her lnstrucrl
tor, "Help! I've gotten up and
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the chuckle quoted
by tilling in the missing wcrds
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you develop lrom Mop No. 3 below.

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111 ....:~

THAT WAS A HIT.
NOT A THROW!

Technicians dispel rumors about
artificial nails - Kris Cochran . . B-5

B-1

SCIIAM-I.m ANSWIIS
,.,
Switch • Knell • Showy - Invade • DOWNHILL
A cutie was obviously jealous of lhe blond who had
· gotten all the attention at a party. "She's got what I call
6obsled looks,' she purred to her date, "going DOWNHILL fastl"

Vol. 27, No. 31
Copyrighted 1992

NOIITH

Clinton vows to aid
defense companies

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PHILLIP

ALDER

WEST
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AMi,IC.AI'I SOCitTY
Of Pt4Ys'IC.ISTS

-·-

LI'ITLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) Bill Clinton is invading President
Bush's defense turf with a key
endorsemem and a promise 10 help
military-dependent industries adapt
to a shrinking Pentagon budget.
Retired Adm. William Crowe,
fonner chainnan of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, gave his backing to Clinton Saturday at a news conference
a! the Arkansas governor's mansion.
And as Clinton and Bush campaigned against each other Friday,
supporters of Texas billionaire
Ross Perot filed petitions in Arizona, completing an effort to get
hiin on !he ballot in all 50 states.
Pero1, meantime, remained coy
about whether he planned to reenler the presidential race.

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SOUTH

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Can you spot . 1
the textbook play?i
By PlliUlp Alder

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Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

There are many plays described in S.."
W..t Nor"
the textbooks of bridge. There are abo
deals in which the textboOk play is 1 NT
Pus 3 NT
wronc, for one reason or 11110ther.
Openlnclead: +7
Sometimes the problem is deciding
which catecory a particular deal fils'L...---------.......1
into. At other times it is reeognizlng
the textbook play in an unusiialguise.
South's overcall of one ..no-trump ders, C~~mpllmentlnc Soulb on bis duck
shewed 1&amp;-18 points. North's raise to at trlct one. South thanked them, but
came wu ,IUfeSiive, ~~ he added a be knew better. He bad noticed that if
pomt for his fl~rd swl .
East bad played the spade l!hJe (or
West led the ·~pede seyen: two, Jack, four) at trick one, the contract would
sis. East cont"!ued ,With the spade have been defeated. South wins with
king, South winrung With the ace. No'!" the spade 10 and leads a club, but West
declarer led tbe club. queen f~ hll · fila ID with the klJII and retunt1 bla
band. ~ West won With the k!JII, be second spade. East's llllt lustabi!Jbed
c:ouldn t lead another spade, so he willie he still bolcb the club ace 81 an
ducked the trlc:k to bis partner's ace. entry.
,
East CCIIttiDued with the queen ~ an·
Ill a no-trump CCIIttract, wben deoilier spade, atablilltiDI hltllltlll, but darer bu two stoppen Ia the IIlli you
be bad no re-entry. Declarer &lt;.'OilCeded are trylnc to establlllt, mike blm 111e
a. club. to West's klJII aad- llld- a!De- one o1 them 81 quickly 81 poalble
trlcb: two spada, three hearts, one "' ""'""' ,. - -.,., ·
diamond a!ld three clubs. The diamond u- lol'tllllp Alllr,IIIOiftlli
finesse wasn't needed.
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BARNEY

CASH CROP- Marijuana, with a per-plant
estimated between $1,000 and $3,000, is
coosidered by many law enforcement ofr'K:ials to
be southeast' Ohio's largest cash ·crop. Here,
v~tlue

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"If you're talking about 50
plants, you're talking about
$50,000," Smith said. "There 's
great incentive to take the risk.
"l!"s not very difficult to conceal one or 1wo or three plan!s.
What we find in some areas is they
may do ·a real small plot - five
plants here, five plants there. They
say, 'If I could just sell 20 of
Lhem.' ''
The Drug Enforcement Admin·
istralion reported thai nationally
nearly 5.3 million cultivated plants
were destroyed nationwide las!
year. Authorities arrested 5, 729
people.
Since !he program began in
1981, Ohio authorities have seized
marijuana plants worth more than

5LP

1~~.

lUFf II CAN YOU
PUT ME UP
FER TH' NIGHT?

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

tically pertect for you. Mall $2 plus a
long. sell-addressed, stamped enve·
lope to Matchmaker, clo this newspa·
per , P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH
44101·3428.
LIBRA flept. 23-0ct. 23) In your desire
to advance your interests today, you

Cbar
'Birthday
.... 11, 1112
A rlee In atatua 11 a atrong probability
lor the ,_ ahe8d. but n might not
abOut u you anticipate. lady
LUctc wtll write the acrlpt.
VIRGO fAug. :ZS.IIpl. 22) If you mleln·
tarpret 1 pat on your back or another's
word of encouragement 11 a proml&amp;&lt;~
today, you might be disappointed down
the road. Avokl wlehlul thinking: Know
where to )ook lor romance and you'll
lind 11. The Allro-Graph Matchmaker
lllltantly reveal• which signa are roman·
,·

might put your talth In the wrong things
or the wrong individuals. Strive to be
self-reliant.
SCORPIO !Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Ta~e care
tOday that you do not unintentionally
abuse a friend's generosity. You must
be caretul not to do anything that
smacks or being a uSOf.
IAQtTTARIUI(No¥: 23-Dtc. 21) If you
make commitments or promises and
lall to comply with them tOday. compan·
Ions will lose respect for you. Don't give
your word untaa you sincerely mean it.
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-~an . 11) To save
yourself tuture aggravation, run spot
checks on any work being performed
lor you. Be certain It Is being done as
you lpeclfied and will be finished on

time.

incllrHld to judge you tOday by the company yO\J keep, especially If those
you're Involved with conduct them·
selves In a questionable manner. "II will
be tarred by the same brush.
ARIEl (Merc:h 21·Aprtl 11) There's a
possibility you're pr""'"tly placing a
much hlghef value on a sensitive Issue
than Is necessary. Take a harder look at
your politlon.
TAUIIUI (AprH 20-Map :10) Try to be
more prudent than usual in the manage.
mont. ot your resources tOday. Don't let
others take advantage of you. and don't
let your eKiravagant whlml run amok.
GEMINII•r :11-.IUM :10) Be mindful of
your behavior todey, especlllty where
social ~races are concerned. II you
not conduct yourself In an epproprlate
man-. II COIAid oeverely mar your
Image.
CANCER ~~- 21.,., 22) Fau~y
judgment on your behalf is probable today becluae of your Inclination to trull
appearances and Ignore black-andWhite tactt.
LIO (~ulp :13-Aug. 22) II you got h,
spend II. But II you lf)8nd money you
merely hope to get, you'ro playing out a
~ that could result In an unhiiPPY

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. COLUMBUS , Ohio (AI&gt;)The Ohio Department of Rehabili·

EARLY VISITORS • Tasia Harris, front and Kaillin Kelley,
cousins, were early visitors as the !29th annual Emancipation Day
celebration got underway Saturday morning at the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds. Tbey were witb Angel Kelley, Columbus,
Kaillin's motber. Activities will resume at 10:30 a.m. today.
(Times-Sentinel pboto by Kevin Pinson)

operation.

CPJYII.
XYX
Y 0 0 L o · PC I . '
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "II doaan't maHer Whethef you win or ION. but
how you pley the game." - Grantland AIOI.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. It) II things
don't work out as yO\J anticipate today,
don't take gamblel that CO\Jid hurt oth·
era. as well as yourself. And there's a
ending.
chance thing• might not.
PIICEI (Fell. :zo.llorth :10) Others are

$374 million . The state receives
federal money for the program,
which has 23 agents.
Last year, 64,039 plants were
destroyed in Ohio, with 271 people
arrested on various drug uafficking
and weapons charges, said Julie
Graham, spokeswoman for Auor·
ney General Lee Fisher.
Authorities have seized about
130,000 plants so far !his year,
including 100,000 in one Preble
County raid. the largest ever in the
state. There have been no arrests in
that case.
In Meigs County, 6,755 plants
have been confiscated this year,
most of them spotted from the air,
SherlffJames M. Soulsby said.
In neighboring Gallia County,
more than 4,000 plants have been
confiscated, said Sheriff Dennis
Satisbury.
Marijuana in southeastern Ohio
is commonly associated with Meigs
County by the names "Meigs
County Green ," "Meigs County
Gold" or "Meigs County Buds."
Ironically, mos1 of the marijuana is not grown in Meigs Coumr.
According to an area aw
enforcement official wbo requested
anonymity, the high-qualily marijuana associated with Meigs Coun·
ty was reportedly developed in
Athens County by a group of Ohio
University botany sludenls about
20 years ago.
They grew !he plants in rural
Meigs Coumy and !he name just
stuck, he said.
Richard Braziel, staff coordina·
tor for the DEA's marijuana eradi·
cation program, said !he DEA
doesn't have a profile of the typical
marijuana grower.
"We've had state judges grow
marijuana. We've had district attor·
neys doing it We've had a couple
of sons of daughters of prosecuta'S
doing it," he said. "It's not just
some poor, lowly fanner out here
fixing to lose his fann."
An unidentified Meigs County
man admiucd Friday to growing
marijuana once while unemployed.
"I grew it for the money." he
said, "I didn't smoke iL"
He said it was easy 10 sell, but
added that selling the marijuana
was the most dangerous part of the

............,~

''

SHOWING 'BUD' ..:..... GaiDa Couaty Drug Abuse Resistance Edu·
cation (DARE) of11cer Deputy Richard Mudd shows orr the bud from
a marijuana pla"t coaflscaled Thursday netir the Gallla-Lawrence
cQUnty Illle. The bud cootalns tbe hlgbest amount or THC, lhe substance wblch @USes tbe "bllb" characteristic ol marijuana smoking •
(Times-Sentinel Photo by Jim Freeman) ·

"Many growers have started
growing marijuana throughout the
year indOO!'S," he said.
Growing marijuana indoors
allows the grower ~ keep using the
same plant over and over again by
Continued on A·2

which " Good Morning, Vietnam"
di sc jockey Adrian Cronauer, now
a Washington, D.C.. lawyer, accuses Clinton of lying.
Crowe was appointed by President Reagan to the nation's top
military post in 1985 and continued
to serve at the beginning of Bush's
term. Since his retirement, he has
publicly disagreed with Bush on
the president's emphasis on I he
Sw Wm anti-missile program.
When Congress was considering
whether to give Bush authority to
begin the war wilh Iraq, Crowe
counseled patience.
"War is not nea~" he testified.
' :It's not tidy, and once you resort
10 it, i!'s uncerlain and it' s a
mess."
Continued on A·3

Policy
changes
announced

Deputy Jim Spears or the Gallia County Sber·
iff's Department studs among marijuana
plants round Thursday. (Times-Sentinel Photo
by Jim Freeman)

AdJective

38 •xlc:an

Just by appearing on the ballot,
he could play a role in key battle·
ground states, where draining a
percentage point or two from Bush
or Clin!on could swing electoral
votes from one side to the other.
GOP strategist Ed Rogers called
Pero!'s ongoing flirtation with the
race an " ego-driven desire to influ!
ence who's going to be president of
the United States."
Crowe's endorsement of Clinton
is a coup for the Democratic cam·
paign, especially coming at a time
when the Republicans have been
hammering Clinton for evading !lie
draft during the Vietnam War and
for offering differing explanations
of how he did it.
The Bush campaign has taped a
television ad - no! yet aired - in

Some growing marijuana
during ba:d economic times
Bl JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Starr
GALLIPOLIS - Out of work
and out of luck in hard times, some
people who have never been in
trouble with the law are growing
marijuana to support their families.
"Any time the economy is bad,
people take more risks, especially
when
have families lo take
care o ,"said Charles Smith, head
of Ohio's marijuana eradication
program in the state attorney general's office.
Mature plants sell for $1,000 10
$3,000 making marijuana, according to some law enforcement officials, a major cash crop, if not the
lar~est cash crop, in southeastern
Oh10.

AMwertiP&amp;iUIJYJ ......

38 Acct.

1 Dleturll the

ARE TRYING TO P1NPOtNT THI!: UX:.O.TION
OF THE STAANPEP TIME-~/

Sunny. High near 75.

12 Sections, 100 Pagao
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, September 20, 1992

·~ -

BRIDGE

Along the river ..............Bl-8
Business/Farm ............... DI-8
Classified ....................... D2-7
Deaths .............................. A-3
Editorai ........................... A-4
Sports............................. Cl-8,
Weather ........................... A-2

•
nnts·

I I I I' I

~Y! I'D UK£ fO ef£.
"IJI() DRI~K~!

Inside

BACK TO POINT PLEASANT • Bob Hood,
len, president oi tbe Gallipolis Rotary Club,
hands over the Rotary Club traveling trophy to
Point Pleasant Rotary members Bernie ·Riddle
and Steve Carpenter Friday nilhl following the
football rivalry between Gallfa Academy and
Poinl Pleasant blab schools while PPHS rootbaU

tation and Corrections announced
poticy changes it hopes wiU reduce
gang activity in state prisons.
The new policy on gangs was
part of a security plan released Friday by Direc1or Reginald A
Wilkinson.
·
Under the plan. officials will
make unannounced prison shakedowns 10 search for weapons aii,d
drugs, have more control of prisoners' personal properly, review
assaults on staff members, ll'aln
employees to deal with gangs and
more quickly identify gang members.
.•
The plan also includes the previously announced change in classification of the Mansfteld Correctional In stitution from a maximumsecurity to a close-securi1y prison.
The announce men! came six
weeks after Mansfield prison guard
Thomas Davis Jr. died following an
attack by an inmate.
Prison officials have said !hat
Roy Slider, 32, charged in Davis'
death. is a member of Aryan
Nalion, a white supremacist gang.
Davis, 47, was black.
Wilkinson also replied to
demands made by the Ohio Civil
Service Employees Association
after the attack on Davis and a
nurse taken hosUtge by a Mansfield
prisoner earlier this month. The
union represents prison employees.
Wilkinson declined to continue
Continued on A·2

coach Steve Stifford looks on. PPitS's win
earned the Point Pleasant Rotary Club possession ol the tr~by until next year's game; It Will
the rtrsl time m tbree years that Gallipolis loSt
pnssesslon or the trophy. (Times-Sentinel photo
by Kevin Pinson)

�'\

, 1

'
,: ~· , A2-sunday llmes Sentinel

'

Sunday; Sept. 20

~y Tb.e ~iated Press
Skies wtll be mosl)y clear Sunday night and with light winds.
Temperatures will be well below
nonnal. Lows will be in the 40s.
and some valleys in northeast Ohio
may have temperatures in the upper
30s and frost is possible at those
locallons. Normal lows are in the
50s.
The cause of the cool weather is
high p~ssure that moved across
the regton Satwday.
Temperatures will begin to
w~m up Sunday. Highs Sunday
wtll be near nonnal in the lower to
mtd 70s.
Another cold front will be

;· :· Accu-Weather 0 forecast for daytime conditions ~d higb temPeratures
MICH.

Youngstown
· IND.

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• icolumbusl76"

•

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'

approaching the state early in the
wort; week and cause a chance of
showers and thunderstonns.
Fall begins on Tuesday.
Around the nation
Showers and thunderstorms
along a powerful cold front pushed
eastward early Saturday, soaking
cities from Arkansas to New Eng·
land.
The front drenched the East
Coast Saturday from North Caroli·
na to Maine, as well as much of the
lower Mississippi Valley and the
Southeast
The cold front dumped rain on
several cities early Saturday,

are bigger, Smith said.

W. VA
KY

~-~~·~~
'''
··::· ··:···:: --- ~ till 4

..,. ,,,,,

~ ';lhowels T-storms Rain

......

Flumes Snow

•! Via Associated Press GrepricsNet
'
,,.
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Ice

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
C1992 Accu-Wealher, Inc.

Weather

•

Monday through Wednesday:
Soutb·Central Ohio
A chance of showers and thunI' ~ . . Sunday, mostly sunny with a
derstorms
each day. Lows in the
'high around 75.
50s.
Highs
in the 70s Monday and
r . Extended forecast:
Tuesday
and
the 60s Wednesday.
'·•
~•

'"•"
....

stronauts squeeze
:;. n more experiments
~

~·-·
~·: CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
~~(\P) - Endeavour's astronauts
:;Jqueezed in a few final experi ·
:l)lents on their bonus day in space
1JJ!Iurday and began stowing equip·
'•ll!ent for .the trip home, even
~l{)ough rain threatened to delay
:fanding.
•:! The laboratory research mission
:.dready has been extended from
:Kven to eight days for scientific
~es.

:.: NASA aimed for a Sunday
tl!uchdown at Kennedy Space Cen·
~.- despite the discouraging weath·
·!•t forecasts. Commander Robert
~!\Hoot" Gibson had two chances
~~and thezc: 7:19a.m. and an orbi1
· rat 8:53a.m. EDT.
;~· Right directors said they would
:9 efer waiting until Monday to
·) ting Endeavour back if the wealh·
~ was bad at Kennedy on Sunday.
r~ther than send the shuttle to the
' kup landing site at Edwards Air
. rce Base, Calif.
• : Besides seven astronauts,
~deavour carries a slew of ani~s, bone cells and other biologi~ samples to gauge the effects of
-kighllessness. The scientists in
~ge of those experiments waited
xiously at Kennedy for their
ecimens, and a detour to
wards would delay analysis.
:•; There are two carp aboard the
~utile as weU as four adult frogs,
~ many as 447 tadpoles, 180 hor~ts, 7,600 nies and 30 fertilized
!flicken eggs. Seven of the tadpoles
»re hatched in orbit from eggs
~rtilized on the ground; the rest
re conceived and hatched in
ce.
• Japan's space agency supplied
itsfost of the experiments as well as
~e of Endeavour's astronauts ,
l(ilclear scientist Mamoru Mohri. It
·~ the first U.S. space miss ion
devoted to Japanese research and
rSA's 50th shuttle fli~ht

l

.

•~~· ··•

:Divorces granted
: :· POMEROY · Divorce actions
: )lave been granted in Meigs County
1Common Pleas Court to Frances
:~anley from Lawrence Manley,
•,and to Paula Mora from George
:Mora.

'' ..
' ..

:r.---~-------------,

!

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mailin1 matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, P01t

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I)' Carrier or Motor Rowte

I

Ono Woek ............ ... .................. .............OO,
One Yoar......iii'iii(i'jj'ci)j&gt;y""· -.. 14fl.80

I
•

PRICE
~ Sunday..................... ....................75 Conta

: No aublcriptiona by mail permitted in
areu where motor carrier u!'Yice i1
i available.

! Tho SondayrorTI""'"Sonlinol
will IIIII bo
advance paymenta made
l'llponltil

lbcant...
I
MAIL &amp;UBIICIIIPTION8
.
81111da,r lhiiT
' One Yoor. ............................... - ........ 147.84
Sill Montho.................................. - ..124.79
DaUyuds.....,

·•

MAIL IIVII8CIIIP'I10N8
l•ldo Co11111)' .

13 w........................................ ...... l2t.84
iS Wook.t ................................... - .... 143.16
52 Woek.t ...................:.... .............. .... $M.76

Bolo!! O.tlfldo c...17

10 Woeko ...................... .................... E3.40

26

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5,2 Weoko..........................................

5.1!0

8.40

a

For the fust time in week, the
astronauts got some time off to
relax . The five men and two
women had been splitting 12-hour
work shifts since the mission began
Sept 12.

'·

Court news
GALLIPOLIS - The following
cases have been processed by the
Gallia County Municipal Court of
Judge Joseph L. Cain:
Samuel Armstrong, Rt. 2
Crown City, was fined $50 plus
costs and sentenced to 30 days in
jail, suspended, and 90 days proba·
tion for disorderly conduct; Robert
Watts, Chillicothe Road, Gallipolis,
was fined .$50 plus costs and sen·
tenced to 30 days in jail, suspended, and six months probation for
disorderly conduct; Dennis M.
Blackston, no age reponed, Gallia
Hotel, Gallipolis, was fined $50
plus costs for each of two counts of
disorderly conduct by intoxication;
Neal Bonecutter, 20 , Union
Avenue, Pomeroy, was fmed $100
plus costs and sentenced to six
months in jail, suspended, and six
months probation and ordered to
serve 10 days of community service for each of two counts of disorderly conduct;
Ellen I. Egnor, 42, Mud Creek
Run, Gallipolis was fined $450
plus costs and sentenced 10 six
months in jail with all but three
days suspended and given a 90-day
hcense suspension for driving
under the influence; Teresa Green,
no a~e reported, State Route 7,
Gallipolis, was fined $750 plus
costs and sentenced to six months
in jail with all but three days suspended and given a 90-day license
suspension for D.U.I ; James I. Taylor, 26, Kriner Road, Gallipolis,
was fined $750 plus costs and sentenced to six months in jail with all
but I0 days suspended and given a
one year license suspension for
D.U.l ; Danny S. Boggs, 29, Rt. 2
Pomeroy , was fined $450 plus
costs and sentenced to six months
in jail with all but three days sus·
pended and given a 90-day license
suspension for D.U.I;
Samuel Meade, 31, Rt. 2 Bidwell, was fined $200 plus costs and
sentenced to one year in jail, suspended, and six months probation
on a reduced charge of reckless
operation and was also fined $250
plus costs and sentenced to six
months in jail with all but three
days suspended and six month s
probation for driving under suspension and Charles C. Damron, 19,
26th Stree~ Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
was fined $100 plus costs for driving under suspension.

All interested patties will be given
~n oppottunity to be heard. Futther
tnformat1on may be obtained by
contactmg the Commission at 180
East Broad Street. Columbus Ohio
43266-0573.
'
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO By: Gary E. Vigorito,
Secretary.

A pound of marijuana sells for
about $2,000 while a pound of
cocaine can bring in $50,000.
"Marijuana prices have continued to escalate, and it's becoming
more and more profitable to grow
it," Smith said. " When you think
an average plant can bring anywhere from $1,000 to $3,000
depending on the maturity, you're
talking about ... a lot of money.''
Marijuana is so easy to grow
that it has become a conage indus·
try.

"It happens to be a plant that
grows preuy freely. It doesn't need
a whole lot of water, a whole lot of
cultivation," Smith said.
Some growers plant marijuana
in cornfields because com usually
grows higher than the marijuana,
shielding it from view. It's also
grown in remote areas.
The marijuana eradication pro·
gram receives many tips from
farmers who find it or complain
about "strange people being in
their fields," Smith said. Other
times, plots are spoued by authori·
ties using helicqJters and planes.
Smith said most growers are
small-time operators in the south·
em pan of the state, which has high
unemployment. But marijuana
plots have been found in all 88
CO\Inties.
\ They're not trying to become .
miUiOJtaires by any means. They're
just try! g to survive, and they fig.
ure it d n't lake many plants to
be able to that," Smith said.
Salisbur said growers are
attracted by th lure of quick and

Patrol reports five accidents
GALLIPOLIS - The GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol investigated five accidents
between Friday and Saturday
morning. Three of the accidents
occurred Friday morning.
The rust accident Friday morning happened on State Route 588
near the intersection of County
Road 6. According to the report,
Michelle L. Ours, 18, State Route
218, Crown City, was westbound
on S.R. 588 when an unknown
vehicle traveling southbound on
C.R. 6 stopped at the intersection
and then turned right onto S.R. 588
and into the path of Ours' vehicle.
To avoid a collision, Ours went off
!he right side of the road and struck
a mailbox. The other vehicle did
not stop. Ours' vehicle was not
damaged in the accident.
A second Friday morning accident occurred on State Route 554
in Morgan Township. According to
the report, Charloue A. Hess, 4 7.
Peach fork Road, Pomeroy, was
westbound on State Route 554 and
Samuel M. Egnor, 31, Applegrove,
W.Va. was eastbound. The two
vehicles met on a sharp curve and
Egnor went left of ·center. Hess
braked, but could not avoid co!Ud·
ing with the left rear. wheel of

Judgment sought
POMEROY • A judgment
action has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Jeffrey Connolly, Racine, against
Chris Diddle and Detner "Pete"
Roush, both of Racine.
The suit requests judgment in
!he amount of $100,000 and alleges
pennanent physical injury resulting
from an assault against Connolly at
his residence in February.

.

Egnor's vehicle. Damage to Hess'
vehicle was reported as moderate
and damage to Egnor's vehicle was
reported as light. Both vehicles
were driven from the scene. No
citations were issued.
The third accident of the morning happened on State Route 160 in
Huntington Township. According
to the report, Barbara E. Adams,
21, S.R. 160, Bidwell, was north·
bound on S.R. 160 when a south·
bound vehicle driven by Bryan K.
Gardner, 31 , Mt. Carmel Road,
Vinton, went left of center. Adams
braked to avoid collision and slid
into the left rear wheel of Gard·
ncr's vehicle. Damage to Adams'
vehicle was reported as moderate
and damage to Gardner's vehicle
was reponed as light. Both vehicles
were driven from the scene. No
citations were issued.
Later that afternoon, troopers
investigated a one-car accident on
State Route 141 in Gallipolis .
According to the report, Sandm L.
Johnson, 31, Hannan Trace Road,
Crown City, was southbound on
S.R. 141 when she lost conuol on
wet pavement, spun ofT the left side
of the road and struck the embank·
ment. Damage to the passenger
side of Johnson's vehicle was
reported as moderate and the vehi •
cle was towed from the scene.
Johnson was cited for not )Yearing
a seat belt. The accident is still
under investigation.
The pauol investigated an acci·
dent early Saturday morning on
State Route 141 in which an
unknown vehicle slid off the right
side of the road in a left hand curve
and struck two mailboxes. The
vehicle then left the scene. The
patrol contributed the accident to
unsafe speed.

"they're taking a heck of a
chance."
"They have to grow the marijuana and then they have to sell it.
That gives us a two-fold chance of
catching the growers," Salisbury
said.
Because if we don't catch them
growing marijuana, we may catch
them selling it. Salisbury
explained.
As if to demonstrate, deputies
from the Gallia and Lawrence
county sheriff's departments confiscated 60 plants Thursday after·
noon from a single location near
the Gallia-Lawrence COWlty line.
The plants had an estimated

Sadie M. Cooper

and tore the roof from a home near
Eminence.
Temperatures Saturday were
forecast in the 50s in northern
Michigan; 60s in the rest of the
Great Lakes region; 70~ in most of
the Northeast, the Midwest, the
Plains and the Northwest; 80s in
most of the Southeast, Texas, the
southern Rockies, Nevada and Oregon; 90s in centrill California and
Florida and above 100 in the
Southwest.
The high for the nation Friday
was 110 degrees at Imperial, Calif.,
Lake Havasu City, Ariz., and Palm
Springs, Calif.

BIDWELL - Sadie Marie Cooper, 63, Bidwell, died Friday September
18, 1992 at University Hospital in Columbus. She was a member of the
Morgan-Bethel Baptist Church.
She was. born September 9, 1929 in Morgan Township, Gallia County
to Sadie Miller Cordell of Bittwell and !he late Kerr Cordell.
Survivors include her mother, four sons, Arnold Cooper of Gallipolis,
James Cooper of Orlando, Aa. and Gary Cooper and Gene Clark, both of
B1dwcll; one daughter, Diane Stanford of Detroit, Mich; one brother,
Alfred Cordell of Bidwell; seventeen grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by four children, Jackie Owen Cooper,
Stanley Cooper, Lloyd Oliver Cooper and Patricia Cooper.
Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home. Services will be held 1 p.m. Tuesday at !he MorganBethel Bapust Church with the Rev. Calvin Minnis officiating. Burial will
be in the Morgan-Bethel Cemetery.

a security lockdown at the prison
but did agree to assign an extra
officer described as a "floater" if a
prisoner must be moved. Davis was
working alone when he was
attacked.
Money is not available to imme·
diately add workers to Mansfield as
the union requested, Wilkinson
said.

~~~~~~~z6

GALLIPOLIS ·Edith Byer, 73, State Route 775, Gallipolis, died Fri·
day, Sept. 18, 1992 at Holzer Medical Center.
She was bom Dec. 12, 191~ in Iroto, Va., daughter of the late Alonzo
and Ehzabcth Rtchardson. She was adopted by the late Brad and Grace
Spurlock and raised in Daws, W.Va.
She was a housewife and a member of the Church of Christ in Christian Union , Leon, W.Va.
Survivors include one son, Robert Byer of Gallipolis; six grandchil·
drcn; three step gnmdchildren; nine great-grandchildren; four step greatgrandchildren; one brother, Robert McGuire of Jesse, W.Va; and several
nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Cecil Raymond "Pappy"
Bycr; one sister; one brother; and one half brother.
Services will be held 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Raynes Funeral Home,
Buffalo, W.Va., with Pastor Dennis Weaver and Johnny Hayman officiating. Burial will be in Zion Cemetery, Leon.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 6-7.

$200,000.
The Gallia County Sheriff's
Department destr"yed more than
220 plants Thursday evening, Salisbury said. He estimated the street
value of the plants at more than
$500,000.
Salisbury and Soulsby said anyone with information concerning
suspected growers should call their
local sherifrs department and leave
an anonymous tip - containing as
much detailed infonnation as possible.
This story was comriled from
St~nday Times-Sentine staff an~ l
Associated Press wire reports.

Joseph Gibbs Sr.
. GALLIPOLIS • Joseph A. Gibbs Sr., 75, 73 Spruce St., Gallipolis,
died Saturday, Sept. 19, 1992, at Holzer Medical Center.
He was born Feb. II, 1917 in Fayeue County, W.Va., son of the late
Joseph Z. and Nancy Rebecca Morning Gibbs.
He was a retired carpenter and masonry worker for Barr Construction
and a member of Gallia County Senior Citizens.
Survivors include his wife, Dorothy Thelma Gardner Gibbs of Gallipolis, whom he married Dec. 23 , 1937; two sons, Joe Gibbs Jr., and Henry
Lee Gibbs, both of Gallipolis; one daughter, Betty L. McCarley of Gal·
lipolis: two sisters, Freda Chamberlain and Icy May Sayre, both of Wellston; one brother, Henty P. Gibbs of New Haven, W.Va; eight grandchil·
drcn: and nine great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by three sisters, Alice Sheets, Cora Fry and
Opal Valadon.
Services will be held I 0 a.m. Monday at Willis Funeral Home, with the
Re v. George Hoschar officiating. Burial will be in Pine Street Cemetery.
Friends may caU at the funeral home on Sunday from 7-9.
Pallbearers will be Steven Hill, Joey Gibbs Jr., Bryan Gibbs, Ricky
Lee G1bbs. Glenn Lawson. Dennis Kirby, Mike Kirby, and Frank Kirby.

He said Warden Dennis Balcer
was reviewing criteria for prisoners
who live in honor housing at Mansfield. Slider was housed in an
honor section but did not meet the
criteria, Wilkinson said.
Paul Goldberg, executive director of the union,·welcomed changes
in security and the gang policy.

Snouffer trial_starts Monday
POMEROY - A story which
could be the script for a television
drama will unfold in the Meigs
County Common Pleas courtroom
on Monday, as a civil case filed by
Gary Snouffer of Pomeroy goes to
trial.
Snouffer filed the suit against
his then-es tranged wife, Sarah
Snouffer in November, 1990 .
Named as a co-defendaut in the suit
is Danny Zirkle, also of Pomeroy.
The suit alleges that from
September, 1989 to December ,
1989, the defedants attempted to
kill Gary Snouffer by means of poisoning him. Snouffer claims that he
has suffered injury, lost wages and
medical expesnes as a result of the

alleged poisoning.
"The conduct of the defendauts
was so outrageous in character and
so extreme in degree, that it went
beyond all possible bounds of
decency, and is regarded as atro·
cious and uuerly intoleral?le in a
civilized community," Snouffer's
original complaint said.
The plaintiff is requesting a
monetary judgment in an unspeci·
fied amount. He is represented by
Athens Attorney John Lavelle .
Snouffer's ex-wife, Samh, is represented by Athens Auorney Nico·
leue Dioguardi, while Pomeroy
Attorney l. Carson Crow will represent Zirkle.

Virginia Hill
RACINE • Virgil Hill, 50, of State Route 338 in Racine, died on
Thursda y, Septl7 , 1992 at Holzer Medical Center.
He was born on May 18, 1942 in Racine, son of Harry and Katie
Hensler Hill. He was a farmer, worked 29 years on the river and served
the past 17 years as a towboat captain. He was employed by the Crounse
Corporation. He was a member of !he United Steelworkers and Racine
Masonic Lodge# 164. He attended Racine First Baptist Church.
Besides his parents, he is survived by his wife of 32 years, Kathryn
Powell Hill of Racine; a daughter, Mrs. Jay (Tina) Rees. Albany; two
sons, Dwight (Lorna) Hill of Racine and Jarrod Hill, Racine; two broth·
ers, Paul (Crestyln) Hill and Charlie Hill, both of Racine; a sister, Mrs.
Joe (Janice) Glenn of Racine; five grandchildren; and several uncles,
aunts, cousins, nephews, and nieces.
He was preceded in death by his grandparents; his mother and father. in-law, Morgan and Clara Powell; and a nephew, Jeremy Guinther.
· Funeral services will be held on Sunday at I p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy with Rev. Roger Grace and Pastor Steve Deaver offici·
ating. Burial will be in Letart Falls Cemetery.

THE STEAK HOUSE

:William Young

NEW HOURS
SUNDAY • THURSDAY
6 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
6 AM TO 10 PM

: GALLIPOLIS - William Young, 67, 615 Fifth Ave., Gallipolis, died
. Fnday, Sept. 18, 1992, at Holzer Medical Center.
· He was born Dec. 22, 1925 in Gallipolis, son of !he late Russell and
: Stella Mae Sillman Young.
. He was a heavy equipment operator, operating Engineers Local 18 of
: Columbus and retired after 31 years of service. He was a member of VFW
· Post 4464 and Lafayette American Legion Post 27. He was also life-time
. member of Ohio Operating Engineers.
Survivors include his wife, Ruth Harmon Young of Gallipolis, whom
he married Dec. I, 1974 in Point Pleasant, W.Va.; two daughters, Mrs.
Harold (Rita) Coughenour and Nita Propp, both of Gallipolis; five sisters,
: Lucille Carey, Mable Swanson, and Beatrice Riffle, all of GaUipolis; Ruth
-Mathews of Frederick, Md., and Mary Laughlin of Frazier, Mich.; one
:brother, Russell Young of Gallipolis; two grandchildren: and one greatgrandchild.
He was preceded in death by one brother, Albert Young; and one
mfant brother, Bobby Lee Young.
Services will be held 2 p.m. Tuesday at Willis Funeral Home, with
'Evangelists L. H. "Sam" Gwinn and William B. Kughn officiating. Burial
·will be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
.
: Full military graveside services will be conducted by VFW Post4464
·and American Legion Post 27.
: Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday from 5-9 p.m.

SUNDAYS CHILDREN UNDER 12
EAT OFF CHILD'S MENU All DAY

It's Our 25th

.

'nton
Continued from A·l
Cll
.
···-- - - - - -

NEW
PIANOS &amp; O~GANS

· Clinton on Friday campai~ncd
.at New Mexico's Sandia Nauonal
·Laboratories and promised workers
:he would shift their research
:toward non-military uses so the
·facilities could expand.
: Just three days earlier, Bush said
:durin g a visit !hat he would ear·mark $166 million to Sandia and
'the other national laboratories. San;dia would get mere work on tech·nology to detec t the spread of
nuclear weapons.
- Clinton said that work was
:important, but that the long-term
:future of the labs should include
:helping American businesses com·
·pete in the consumer market
: "We would refocus fed eral
' (research and development) pro·
.:grams on critical technologies that
.' have dual uses." Clinton said.

Tk fy.fr,ot~'fe

DON'T
MISS IT!

lumni

eekend

Edith Byer

policy... ~ontinued from A·l

'

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio has set for public hearing
Case No. 92-102-EL-EFC to
review the fuel procurement 'practices and policies of Columbus
Southern Power Company the
operation of its Electnc Fuei .Component. and related maners. .This
hearing-lis scheduled to begm at
the Commission offices at 10:00
a.m. on September 22, 1992.

includin~ Little Rock, Ark., New
York Ctty, Albany N y and
Philadelphia, as wen' as ·m~~h of
western New England.
Showers and thunderstorms
developing along the front extend·
ed Friday evening from Arkansas
to the Great Lakes. Showers and
thunderstorms spawned in the
warm, moist air ahead of the front
stretched from the Gulf Coast
Aorida and Georgia to New York
state. Showers lingering behind the
front dampened southern Kansas
and northeastern Oklahoma.
Thunderstonns over north·cen·
tra1 Kenlttcky produced wind gusts
that downed trees and power lines

Now is
chance dtirlng our 25th
Anniversary Sale to get that new Kimball
you always wanted at a PRICE you never
'
expected. Come In early for the best and
most complete chdice of styles and
finishes.

• Class Reunions '67, '87, '82, '72, ·•52 and •42
• lOth Yeu Anniversary Celebration of AU Nursing Classes
• Reception and Awards Banquet
• Por Reservations, call (614) 245-5353, ext. 431

,,

BRUNICARDI'S
330 -2nd

Gal,llpolis
.

446-0687

/

/

/
•

""·

/

61tt~t~
Attends
llUI DIIIO!Ail!IR I!FI

-

"A Trusted Name in Music~
"

Bush, meantime, was in New
Jersey to criticize the family leave
bill sent to his desk by Congress.
The bill , similar to one the pres·
ident vetoed two years ago, would
require employers to grant unpaid
leave to workers with new babies
or family medical emergencies.
Bush told an audience of businesswomen and others that the measure
would encourage a "su!Jtle kind of
discrimination" in which employ·
crs would hire men rather than
women.
Perot, appearing on network
television programs Friday, said he
Wants the two-party system to work
and Bush and Chnton to address
the budget deficit problem. At the
same time, But he said that if his
volunteers demand thai he re-enter
the race, he might comply

.

BUY BY THE CASE SAVE!

.

CONSOLES • GRANDS • STUDIOS

University of Rio Grande ·

Sunday Times Sentlne~A3

--Area deaths-- Wallace, Satterfield trial set December 7

Continued from A· I
Some growl•ng···-------------easy money. But, he added. street value of approximately
just clipping off the buds, the part

of the plant containing the most
tetrahydrocannabinol (fHC) - the
substance that gives smokers the
"hi~~" characteristic of smoking
ml!DJU8118.
Soulsby said it is very difficult
to desc.ribe !'- typical marijuana
grower m Metgs County.
"It could be anybody," Soulsby
said. "You can't tell from the
clothes they wear or the car they
drive."
.
Salisbury agreed.
But county sheriffs are finding
that some growers are planting
marijuana to make some quick
money for their families. Athens
County Sheriff Joho Hicks, a member of the Buckeye Sherifrs Associatioo's eradicatioo program, said
that is why there are smaU plots.
According to the Ohio auomey
general's office, 7,289 plants have
been confiscated in Athens County
as of August 5.
Smith said authorities are seeing
more people who have never been
in trouble. A person arrested for
growing marijuana cou.[d be
charged with aggravated trafficking, which carries a sentenc'e, of
two to 20 years in prison for eaCh
count.
Why would these people take
the risk?
Simple economics, Smith said.
The price of marijuana has
increased in the last few years
because there's not enough supply
to. meet the demand. And many
marijuana traffickers have turned
their auention to cocaine because
it's easier to import and the profits

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

September 20,1992

Another cold front forecast for Ohio early in week

OHIO Weather

• r.

September 20, 1992

Pomeroy.-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

~

v

IIIn•
•••11~»•1
lln•1111• Ill•.

.

1480 JACKSON PIKE
GALUPOUS, OHIO
(614) 446·2206

-

POINT PLEASANT - A
December 7 trial date has been set
for two Mason County men indict·
ed by the grand jury for a May
1992 murder according to Mason
County Prosecuting Attorney
Damon B. Morgan.
Trial dates have also been set for
12 of 11 people who were indicted
by the September session of the
Mason County Grand Jury.
Robert E. Wallace, 29, of Point
Pleasant, and Ardley E. Satterfield,
20, of Letart, are scheduled to go to
trial Dec. 7 for the murder of
Bobby Pullins. The murder allegedly took place at the SouthfoJt
Inn.
Also scheduled to go to trial
Dec. 7 is Delano V. "Dale" Jackson
Jr., 28, of Point PleasanL He was
indicted on one count of brealting
and entering.
Three trials have been scheduled
to begin October U . The are:
Roger D. Roush, Jr., 22, of Point

Pleasant; Charles W. "Billy" Bays,
18, of Gallipolis; and Dwayne W.
Smith, 19, of Leon.
Roush was indicted on two
counts of grand larceny. Bays was
indicted on one count of breaking
and entering and one count of
grand larceny. Smith was indicted
on two counts of breaking and en·
tering 311d one count of grand lar•
ceny.
November 9 trial dates have
been set for Connie R. Fields, 27,
of Mason; David E. Barker, 28, of
Glenwood; and Harold M. Winnings II, 36, of Mason.
Ftelds was indicted on one count
of manufacturing marijuana. Barker
was indicted on a count of sexual
assault in the second degree and a
count of sexual assault in the third
degree. Winnings was indicted on
the charge of bigamy.
William E.F. "Frank" Wamsley
II, 28, of New Haven is scheduled
to go to trial November 23. He was

Minimum security prison
•
•
zs maxzmum cost to state
LONDON, Ohio (AP) Except for the blue uniforms, the
high fence and the razor wire, it
would look like a community col·
lege campus.
The brick cottages are land scaped with flowers, athletic fields,
even golf lessons are available, and
idlers can enjoy the benches on the
green.
Welcome to the minimum-secu.rity compound of the Madison Cor·
rectional Institution, the only
prison of its kind in the state.
When most people think of pris·
ons, they think walls, cell blocks
and hardened, bloodthirsty cons.
It's places like Alcatraz, Sing Sing
and the Ohio Penitentiary that fascinate movie makers and the news
media, not places like Madison
Correctional.
And yet minimum security is
where !he action would seem to be
these days. According to the Ohio
Legislature's Correctional Institution Inspection Committee, 60 I;'Cr·
cent of the males who enter OhiO's
prisons are sentenced for non-violent, low-level felonies.
The committee's 1991 report
describes the state prison system as
more of a swinging door than a
locked gate: 30 pacent of all pris·
oners last year were released within
six months; 61 percent served less
than a year.
About 11,500 of Ohio's 37,000
prisoners are classified as minimum-security risks based on a variety of factors, including their histo·
ries, the nature of their current convictions and their behavior after
being incarcerated.
Yet most prisons and most of
those being built are medium and
maximum security. And even the
minimum-security buildings at
Madison Correctional have reinforced walls and other high-security features, said Warden Rex A.
Zent
"We thought most of thi s
(prison) would be medium securi·
ty," said Zent, who helped plan the
prison a decade ago. The assumption then, he said, was that most
non-violent offenders would be
diverted into community-based
programs. That hasn't happened,
for a variety of political and financial reasons.
As a resul~ since 1986 the state
has opened 12 prisons, spending -

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS • Anna
Cline, Middleport.
FRIDAY DISCHARGES James Smith, Helen McCall, Ruth
Bierhup and Joseph Bowland.

Aru~!·
Ohio Valley

Symphony

according to the correctional insti·
tution committee - an average of
$53 ,000 per bed to house mostly
non-violent offenders in lockups
designed more for The Tenninator
than for the transitory.
The next generation of mediumsecurity prisons will be less· fortified and thus less costly, averaging
about $20,000 a bed, according to
Tom Sticlcrath, assistant director of
the Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction.
The new lockups wiU depend on
perimeter fences augmented with
razor wire and sensors rather than
on traditional safe~uards such as
cell blocks and remforced walls,
Stickralh said.
This should be ll'Ore than adequate for prisoners such as Jeffrey
Saco of Columbus, a 30-year-old
former auditor for an accounting
firm now serving a four-year sentence for aggravated assault. Saco.
who is in the minimum-security
compound at Madison Correctional, said this is his first time behind
bars.
To Saco, minimum security
means just that - minimal security.
"The ftrst day I walked in here,
I had somebody (another prisoner)
come up and say, 'Give me your
bag.... I warit to see what commis·
saries you have," ' Saco said. "I
ignored him .... If you're accommodating, it's seen as a wcalmcss.

indicted on one count of child
abuse resulting in injury.
On October 30, Robyn L.
Wamsley, 30, of New Haven, is
scheduled for trial. She was indic·
ted on one count of child abuse
resulting in injury.
Henry J. Cain, 55, of Leon, is
scheduled to go to trial December
14. He was indicted on two COWlts
of child concealment
Morgan said warrants are still
out for the arrest of five persons
who were indicted but failed to appear to answer their indictments.
They include:
-Stephen L. Hayes, 29, of
Cheshire who was tndicted on two .
counts oi sexual assault in the first
degree, two counts of incest, two

.·•••
•

counts of sexual abuse in the first
degree and four cowtts of sexual
assault by custodian;
-Toni Riley of HWltington who
was indicted on four counts of
sexual assault in the third degree;
-Carla Morriss of South CharlesIon who was indicted for obtaining
property m return for worthless
cbeck and obtaining property by
false pretense;
·Willard E. Bays, 24, of Apple
Grove, who was indicted for al·
legedly obtaining property by false
pretense; and,
.-Jay W. "Jack" Hinchman, of
B1dwell, who was indicted for obtaining property in return fQr worthless cbeck and obtaining propeny '
by false pretense.

s
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�.

September 20,1992

;:Commentary and perspective

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpc)lla, OH-I'olnt Pleasant,

. A Dh11!011 of
~tC
Ill Court St., Pom110J, Oblo
(614) 991-l154i

ROBERT L. WINGITI
PubU.IIer

..

PAT WHITEHEAD

HOBART WU.SON JR.
Euuotbe Edllor

••
·'·'
·•
•t

Alllllant Publlobe...CO.Irollor

A MEMBER of Tho Auociated Prell, and lho American
Jllewlpopor Publilbm Allocillioa.

•'.•

.•

.•

LI!TI1!RS OP OPINION are welcome. They 1bould be leu lhan
300 words. All leUon f t 1ubject lo editin&amp; and mull be 1igned wilh
uamo, oddre11 and talepbone number. No uasigaod !etten will be

::
•'

pononllitie~.

:!

publiUod. l.etlon ibOuld be iD good IIIlO, oddro11ing issUOI, DOl

· 1.!::::::::;:;:=======:::::!.1
.••'

;~ Ohio vs. Kentucky
~j in battle for jobs

,.

,.

,., •

By TERRY KINNEY
Assodlled Press Writer
:. CINCINNATI -The stakes have gone up since the days when Ohio
:: rax officials watched for residents driving 10 cut-rate stores in KentuCky
•: and smu~ling cigaretteS and booze.
•
;. New UICentives by the Bluegrass State 10 a1l1'aCl jobs have city, county
;: and stale leadels fearinB their economic base could be spirited away.
•: "At a time when many of our communities we callinJ for the elimina: lion of unfair tnlde practices with Japan and other counmes,lhe Kentucky
: General Assembly has appmently decided to adopt its own unfair trade
;. JX?Iicy at !HJIIIC.~· Mayer Dwight TIUezy wroo: in a guest column in The
,. Cincinnlll EnqUllel".
;:
Kentucky LL Gov. Paul Patton. who also serves as secretary of the
·: stile's Ecooomic Development Cabine~ has said development in northern
: Kentucky would benefit the entire Cincinnati area.
·
:· "I would hope !hat Ohio would not feel threatened by Kentucky," Patton said. "AU we're trying to do is ~et up 10 the same level of eclliiOIRic
development that Ollio has achieved. '
·: The baale swted in April when the Kentucky General Assembly
:. passed !he Kentucky Jobs Development Act, which offers tax credits
:: potenliaUy worth millions of tlollan to companies that move to the state.
·: White coUar businesses such as data · ~ companies or regional
: sales cetllel!l would be eligible, as well as heavy indusuy. Within cenain
: guidelines, companies might pay no state income rax for 10 years, and
• communities might also offer ptupe.ty tax abatements.
:
"We don' t consider it a battle, but I guess they (Cincinnati officials)
:. ;do," said Bryan Quinsey, manager of business development for the
·:-Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce.
;. ;. The Greater CIIICinnati Chamber of Commerce, which encompasses
::'tight counties in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana, sees the Kentucky initiative
the jobs batde as good fa- the region.
:•; • "The idea behind it was 10 attract new businesses that already had
·:-identified Greater Cincinnati as a target area," said Jim Wuenker, senior
::~vice president for economic development
:. • ''For a company already in Cincinnati to use that legislation would be
·:&lt;6ifficult because it requires new jobs to be created that represent new
:• ;income laX dollars in Kentucky. And !he only people who qualify are
· ' kentucky residents paying Kentucky taxes.''
. However, Sen. William Bowen, D-Cincinnali. was so angered by the
KenbiCky bill that he urged the Ollio Legislature 10 change state tax policy exem~g . Kentucky commuters from paying Ohio income tax on jobs
worked tn Ohto.
Bills are being considered in the Ohio Legislature to offer businesses
tax breaks similar to Kentucky. A Senate vote could come next week.
General Cable Corp., a new company beins spun off from Cincinnatibased Penn Central Corp., has said it will establish its headquarters in
Hi&amp;hland Heights, Ky., taking with it about 200 employees who work in
Cincinnati.
Penn Central spokeswoman Sandra Heimann said the tax incentives
were incidental to selection of the site, which provides the warehouse and
display space the company needs.
Still, Wuenker has testified in Ohio Senate hearings in favor of Ohio
incentives similar to Kentucky's.
''We would like to see the playing field level,'' Wuenker said.

WASHINGTON- Two key
words were omitted from the
2,000-page draft of the North
American Free Trade Agreement:
Invesror beware. Doing business in
Mexico can be a harrowing experience.
NAFTA is being sold as the
gold rush of the '90s. New jobs,
markets, sales and opportWJities all
beckon for American business. It
all may be true - but so is the fact
that south of the border, the court
of last resort can often be a cmupt
cop or a graft-seeking judge.
Jack Andrews has some advice
for the small and medium-size
firms that will rush south if
NAFfA is passed: "Anyone smaller than Chevron or G.M. is going
to have to fight a 10-year (legal)
battle " to resolve financial disputes. Without a battalion of
lawyers and friends in high places,
mastering the Mexican system of
official corruption is treacherous.
It's been a long haul for
Andrews, whose odyssey grew out
of a contract dispute eight years
ago. His small exporting company
had signed a contract to deliver
agricultural products to Andsa, the
Mexican government's food storage monopoly. In a court complaint
Andrews charged !hat Andsa officials conspired with the New York

offiCe 1&gt;f the Mexican Coffee Institute to underbid his company by
$75. His losses were$ } j million.
Andrews won default judgments

Lincoln had already passed
through, and that the men inside
were "federales," national police.
Last June, Andrew's case
prompted Sen. Orrin Hatch, RUtah, to write the Mexican ambassador ui the United StateS, with a
veiled warning: "I am concerned
that !here i$ real potential in cases
lilce this to jeopardize the successful conclusion to a Na-th American
Free Trade AgreemenL"
in California and New York courts
A second case involves the
for $2 miUion, but still hasn't col- plight of a Texas-based oil trading
lected a nickel..
company owned by Bill Flanigan.
Moreover, he believes it nearly Flanigan had a 1984 contract to
cost' him his life. He recounts an buy residual oil from the Mexican
incident one night in 1984 as he Petroleum Workers Union and its
and a partner drove his late model Commission of Contracts, which
Camaro back to !he Texas border both rene~ed aftel Aanigan refused
the day after meeting with the to pay kickbacks. Two default
Mexican AIIOrncy General's offtee judgments later, Flanigan is owed
about his dispute. As they headed $420 million awarded by a U.S.
down the bumpy main road 10 the court, but has yet to collect a cenL
border, a radio-equipped Lincoln He has also had a brush with death,
Continental began chasing the when a Mexican guide put a .38
Camaro, and on one sharp turn, pistol against his temple after
they could see that one of their pur- Flanigan toured a Mexican oil
suers was wielding a submachine refmery.
~n. A second radio-equipped car
The larger point underscored by
JOined the chase.
both cases, according to trade
Thanks to skillrul driving at experts, is the lack of an effective
speeds topping llO miles an hour, and enforceable arbitration mechaAndrews escaped. When be report- nism for disputes between private
ed the incident at the border, a American companies and the govMexican guard told him that the ernment-sponsored monopolies in

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

I

·:·.oo

Today in history
By The Associated Press .
Today is Sunday, Sept. 20, the 264th day of 1992. There are 102 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On SeJll 20, 1519, Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan set out
from SJllllll on a voyage to fmd a western passage to the Spice Islands .in
• lndoneslll. Magellan was killed en route, but one of his ships eventually
! citc~Jl!lvigaled the world.
.
•

Berry's World

•

::.1

WHEELING, W.VA. (AP) School districts in Belmont County
led the state in the number of emergency loans approved during the
past school year, a Stale publication
reponed.
. by
Ohio Schools, a publi cauon
the Ohio Education Association,
reports that the entire school system plunged further into debt during the 1991-92 academic rearSix of the seven schoo districts
in Belmont County - the Barnesville Exempted Village School

Mexico. Under current law, U.S.
businesses feeling swindled by
Mexican authorities have few
means of reliably recouping their
losses. One is to go through the
Mexican court system, the other is
to seize American assets of the
Mexican company after going
lhrough a U.S. court
J. Christopher Whalen, a Flanigan consultant and a Mexico
ex~ says that the chances of an
American finn winning in a Mexican court are slim . ''You cannot go
into a Mexican court and enforce
your rights, period," he told our
associates Dean Boyd and Jan
Moller. "It literally comes down to
how much you pay and who you
pay."
After winning a default judgment worth $92 million, which he
was unable to collect, Flanigan
seized, throu$h a court order, a safe
deposit box tn a Texas bank containing jewelry and gold belonging
to a Mexican official. After the
Mexicans proposed and then failed
to live up to another agreement,
Flanigan won yet another default
judgment - this one worth $273
million - and later seized three
union aircraft being held in the
United States.
One of !he aircraft belonged to
Mexican President Carlos Salinas
de Gortari. The spectacle of Salinas' plane being seized was enough
to prod the Mexicans to offer
assorted pledges to repay the
money, yet the money wasn't forth·
coming. Flanigan says he refused
anolher settlement offer in April
1991 after the Mexicans demanded
a 25 10 50 percent kickback fee.
For his part, Andrews has been
pursuing a political remedy enlisting the help of members of
Congress and appealing to the U.S.
Embassy in Mexico wilh no results.
Though some trade officials
believe NAFfA will make it simpler for U.S. companies to press
claims against Mexico, others see
new problems being spawned. DisputeS between !he two governments
will be handled by new trilateral
trade commissions. For big companies with deep pockets, that' s no
problem.
Those left out in the cold under
NAFfA could be smaller businessmen like Andrews and Flanigan,
who are still waiting for !heir day
in court.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are syndicated writers
for United Feature Syndicate,
Inc.

,_

r

Martin Schram

CASTING ms VOTE • Brent Saunders casts
his vote Thursday afternoon at the Gallia County Agricultural meeting at tbe Gallia County
Junior Fair Ground wbile bls son Clarice looks
on. Saunders was one or 128 people wbo

I

•

qi-_~
1H2
NfA.
~

by

tnc.

"Is MEDIA a GOOD doggie?"

"

George R. Plagenz

War1") quoted a historian for the
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission as saying: "The consensus
among scholars is that the boll!b
was not needed 10 avoid an invasion of Japan and to end the war
wilhin a relatively short time. The
claim that the bomb prevent~d
500,000 combat deaths is unsul&gt;ponable."
'
In any case, saving lives is oot
enough unless we remain hwnan jn
the process. In our effons to win•a
war, we must be on guard that we
do not destroy in ourselves thpt
quality of humanity without whieh
human life is of little or no value. :
. Is this what has been happeni~g
to us in the 47 years sinoe Hiroshima and Nagasaki? Instead Of
becoming a kinder, gentler nation,
we have experienced an erosion of
compassion and generosity of spilit
~ a loss of conscience.
Did this callousness, which ill
becomes a nation, all begin ~n
those two fateful August days in
19457
•
George Plaaenz Is a S)'lldlcated 'll'l'lter for Newspaper Enterprise Association.
·

Turnpike of Gallipolis
Cordially Invites You To View The .
Bill Elliott Budweiser Ford Thunderbird
On Display
Friday, September 25, 1992
10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
!'~"""".'~=

6

$1·0

All Colors FOR
HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE .

WASHINGTON (AP)- A bill important consumer legislation
SYRACUSE, OH.
establishing ~overnment controls Congress will face this year.
on cable televtsion rates is facing a
Senate fight this week and a threat·
ened presidential veto after winning overwhelming passage in !he
House.
The bill is the object of a highly
visible publicity campaisn between
the cable TV industry, which
opposes it, and consumer groups
that say new regulation is necessary to stop runaway increases in
Produced by Focus on the Family and Word,
cable rates.
Incorporated
President Bush has threatened to
veto it if it reaches his desk. He
PREMIERE SHOWING AT
said it "will hurt Americans by
imposing a wide array of costly,
burdensome and unnecessary
requirements on the cable indus-

DR. JAMES DOBSON
and GARY L BAUER

CHILDREN AT RISK

Brought To You Jointly By:

Riepenhoff Distributing, Jackson, Ohio
Budweiser and Turnpike of Gallipolis

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

try."

Responding to consumer complaints, the House approved the
measure 280-128 on Thursday - a
mal-gin suggesting but not assuring
that supporters may be able to
muster !he two-thirds vote necessary to override a veto in the
House.
Rep. Edward Marl&lt;ey, D-Mass.,
the bill's sponsor, called it the most

The Battle lor the Hearts

and Minds ol Our Kids
A TWO-PART VIDEO SERIES:
(1) 7:00p.m. Sunday
(2) 7:00p.m. Sunday
Sept. 27th
October 4th
SUPERVISED NURSERY AND CHILDCARE PROVIDED
(THROUGH AGE 11)

The Answers You Need ...

adviser on crime, then-police chief announcemen~ the Shotgun News,
Daryl Gates, demanded a federal bible of the gun industry, carried
ban on the sale and import of the first ad : " New! MADE IN
assault weapons after two of his U.S.A. AK-47-STYLE RIFLES ."
Los Angeles officers were killed by American gun companies rushed
them: "I do not want any more their AK-47 knockoffs complete
officers to be spray-gunned to wilh aU the not-so-sporting options,
death by street punks armed with including bayonets.
Bush fights his war on crime
high-tech killing machines."
But Bush, bowing to the NRA, with rapid-fire rhetoric . "We're
chose a bizarre split-the-difference determined to protect another funpolicy on assault weapons: Buy damental civil right: freedom from
American. He banned 43 weapons crime and the fear that stalks our
made overseas (German Uzis, cities," he said in his 199i Stale of
Soviet and Chinese AK-47s, et at., !he Union address. A year earlier,
but OKed the manufacture and sale in Kansas City, he blamed his usual
of identical guns - if they are suspect for being weak on crime:
made-in-the-U.S.A. Think of it: A "It's time for Congress to fmish
protectionist assault weapons poli- the job, because it does no good to
cy is malcing us safe from !he trade send the troops into battle wearing
handcuffs."
deficit.)
The other day, the crime-fightUnderstand the depth of Bush's
cyoicism. His own Bureau of Ako- ing troops of the National Associahol, Tobacco and Firearms had tion of Police Organizations urged
reported to him: " ... The ultimate a nationwide 6an on assault
conclusion is clear and compcning. weapons and endorsed Bill Clinton
These semiautomatic asSjlult rifles for president. Harry Truman would
were designed and intended to be quickly reco~nize the familiar
particularly suitable for combat coalition . We ve returned to the
age of the Law-and-Order Liberals.
rather than sporting applications.''
Martin Schram is a syndicated
What happened next could have
been predicted by any free-marke- writer for Newspaper Enterprise
teer. Three weeks after Bush 's Association.

comm enting on David McCul~ . the horror of it sear your conIough's new biography of Harry science, you can loolc at anything
Truman, says, "By dropping two and not be moved by compassion
nuclear bombs on (Japanese) cities, for the victims or disgust for those
doing the deed.
But was it as bad as Hersey
makes out? Or is this just an author
exercising dramatic license?
Let's hear from another source:
killing more women· and children "In being the fuSI 10 use (the atomin less time than anyone else in his- ic bomb), we ... adopted an elhical
tory, Truman destroyed the con - standard common to the barbarians
science or our country."
of the Dark Ages."
Forced 10 live with ourselves,
WhQ Slid that? A Quaker perwe have put the heinousness of our haps? .( pacifist?
actions in Augustl94S out of mind . No, !hose are reported 10 have
by defendinF what we did. "They been the words of the chainnan of
deserved it,' we say.
the Joint Chiefs of Staff in World
Or we silence our consciences warn Adm. WUliam D. Leahy.
by not thinking of Hiroshima and I
Even Gen. Dwight Eisenhower
Nagasaki in terms of the sufferings reportedly said, it wasn't necessary
we inflicted, but i1t terms of !he "to hit them with that awful
American lives we saved - even if thing."
it was only a member of our own
It is becoming increasingly hard
family.
to defend the banbing of Japan on
"I've got to approve of what the grounds that it ended ~ ~ar
Truman did," a friend of mine sooner and saved half a mtlhon
says. "If we hadn't dropped the American lives.
bomb, my brother would not have
An essay in The Christian Scicome home." ·
ence Momtor on Aug. 6 (" Was
If you ean read John Hersey's Hiroshima Necessary to End the
account of Hiroshima and not have

•

•
and the general economy," Luoas
said . "There needs to be ; a
change."
.
Bridgeport will have a 4-mtll
levy on the November 3 genelal
election balloL
'
The Union ·Local district
received approval to borrcJw
$475 ,000 . Superintendent Bob
Butts said the county was stniggling because of !he economy $d
the difficulty in getting levies
·
passed.

FALL HARDY MUMS

AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE I

Modern violence has dulled our soul
We gave up blushing a long
lime ago. Have we now given up
wincing tno7 The most horrible and
gruesome scenes appear on our
movie and television screens and on our city SlreetS.
Nobody flinches.
Sometimes we even laugh - as
when the younF boy in· the movie
·'Home Akme' drops a hot iron on
the heads of two men burglarizing
his family's house while his parents are away.
"Home Alone" was voted one
of the best comedies of the season
when it came ouL
Dropping a hot iron on somebody 's head for laughs comes
under the tide of violent slapstick,
which would have been considered
an oxymoron when slapstick was
innocent horseplay that made us
hold our sides in mirth.
(And to think !hat parents used
to complain when Larry would
poke his fingers in Moe's eyes.)
Some would date the beJinnings
of our callousness 10 suffenng (and
even torture) to the day the United
StateS drooDed !he ftrSt atom bomb
on Japan dtiring World Wilt n.
A New York Times reader,

District, Beliaire City schools,
Bridgeport Exempted Village, Martins Ferry City schools , Union
Local and Buckeye Local - had
more than $3.2 million in loan fund
money approved by the controlling
board.
Bridgeport Superintendent Sam
Lucas said the district borrowed
$890,000 for general operating
expenses.
.
"We're being hurt by a declining tax base, unfunded mandates

•

dropped in to vote on five o~n director's pos_i·
tions on the fair board. Also p1ctured are DanDle
Greene (far left), Ken Saunders (left, behind
desk) and Carlos Wood (right). (Tribune photo
by Kevin Pinson)

Cable regulation heads
to Senate for final vote

Bush has dodged the war on crime
three years, 250,000 new assault
We cheered our quick viciOries
weapons were manufactured in in the wars of Panama and the PerAmerica (according to a congres- sian Gulf. But there can be no ticksional analyst who uacks gun com- er tape parades, no confeni celebrapany records) - wespons that can - - - - - - - - - - be fined with large-capacity magazines, flash suppressors, silencers,
folding stocks and pistol grips so - - - - - - - - - - !hey can be fJred from the waist a tions of the bloodiest war of the
Ia Rambo.
Bush presidency - the war our
Those pictures from Stockton commander in chief repeatedly
prompted prominent conservatives declared but won't fight to win: the
to urge curbs on these weapons so War on Crime in !he Streets.
easily available to street thugs.
Timidity, trepidation and tragic
Ronald Reagan spoke out. Even abdication of leadership left us
Barry Goldwater, who 'd posed wilh a Bush administration that has
wilh his rifle in the National Rifle dodged the much-needed war to
Association's "I'm !he NRA" ads, take back our streets from the drug
drew a bead on guns made for gan~s and the drive-by ldUers with
human slaughter. "I'm completely th e1r assault weapon arsenals.
opposed to selling automatic George Bush, ever-fearful of
rifles," !he Conscience of the Con- offending the Far Right, chose the
servatives told The Washington political expedient of leaving our
Post in 1989. "I don't see any rea- cops out-gunned.
It has been more than three
son why they ever made semiautoyears
since !he nation was stunned
matics ... I've never used an auto·
by
the
horror of those pictures from
malic or semiautomatic for hunting. There's no need to. They have a schoolyard in Stoclcron, Calif. no place in anybody's arsenal. If five children lying dend, 30 ·more
any S.O.B . can't hit a deer wilh one wounded by a deranged man with
shot, then he ought 10 quit shoot- an AK-47 assault weapon that
ing.··
squ~ed off I 00 rounds in just two
And Bush ' s 1988 campai gn terrifying minutes. And in those

Sunday Times sentinel-Page-AS

Belmont County schools outpace
districts in state emergency loans

September 20, 1992
Page-A4

Cost of doing business in Mexico can be dear
..

wv

Holzer Health Hotline
1-800-462-5255
:I

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

• Page-As-sunday nmes Sentinel

..

September 20, 1992

September 20, 1992

...------Local briefs------.. Controller says state
Deputies jail four
Gas theft reported
has no money to help fair
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia CoiDity sheriff's deputies jailed three persons between Friday and Saturday.
·
Odessa M. Morrison, 37, Rt. I Alice Road, Ewington, was
arrested Saturday morning for disorderly conduct after a warning;
Willis T. Boykin, 36, Buckridge, Bidwell, was am:sted early Saturday morning for domestic violence and Terry J, Raike, 32, State
Route 7, Gallipolis, was jailed Friday evening for a D.U.I. commitment.

GALLIPOLIS - Police investigated a complaint from a clerk at
SuJ?CrAmerica, Second Avenue, Gallipolis, who reported that a·
white male in a white Ford EscO(I had pumped $5 worth of gas into
his car Friday afternoon and left without paying. The clerk was able
to get a tag number.

Police issue citation
GALLIPOLIS - Police issued a citation early Saturday morning
lo Steven Arrowood, 35, Rt. I Cheshire, for open container.

Gallipolis man taken into custody

Woman taken into custody

, GALLIPOLIS - Paul D. Newsome, 37, Evans Heights, Gallipolis, was taken mto custody by Gal~a County sheriff's deputies Friday afternoon for two counts of assault and two counts of menacing.
He was later released on a summons.

GALLIPOLIS - Po~ce took Betty J. Hughes, 59, Elm Street,
Pomt Pleasan~ W.Va., mto custody Friday afternoon for two counts
of falsification and two counts of theft. She was later released on a
summons.

Deputies investigate B&amp;E
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County sheriff's deputies filed a complaint from Rhonda Smith, Gallipolis Meuopolitan Estates, Bidwell,
who reported that someone entered her apartment between Thursday evening and Friday morning and took 48 v1deo cassettes and
two rings. The items were valued at $300. She also reported that the
screen on her bedroom window had been tom loose.

Car reported stolen
GALLIPOLIS- Scott Wroczynski, Spring Valley Drive, Gallipolis, told Gallia County sheriff's deputies that someone stole his twodoor 1987 Toyota hatchback from outside his apartment. The vehicle was last seen at 7 p.m. Thursday.

B&amp;E, theft charges filed
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported
Saturday that charges of receiving and disposing of stolen propeny
are hein.g filed against Jeremy ~hockey and Gerald Douglas of
Shade, mvolvmg the theft of Ite·ms from the Jeffers Farm in
Columbia Townshi~. The items were stolen on August 10, and a
Black and Decker drill and Ctaftsman disc grinder had been pawned
at Ohio Valley Trading Post in Athens.
According to Soulsby, several other items that had been stolen
·were recovered and the pair bad given confessions.
Breaking and entering charges have been filed against Roben B.
Schoolcraft of Albany, charging that he broke into the building at
the farm.

McDaniel a"ested after incident

Police probe attempted B&amp;E

Woman reports B&amp;E

PAGEVllLE - Hanold Dwight McDaniel ofPageville Road, was
arrested Friday night following an incident at the Pageville Slore.
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported that McDaniel
is being charged with carrying a frrearm while under the influence.
McDaniel reportedly became upset over an incident at the store
involving his child, went to the store with !he shotgun, reportedly
cocking the giDI, causing alarm to those present.
He was jailed and later released on bond.

GALLIPOLIS - Laura McCarty, State Slreet, Gallipolis, reported
to police that someone had entered her home and gone through her
things. Nothing was reported missing.

Desert Storm vets sought

GALLIPOLIS - Police investigated a complaint from Margaret
Lindeman, State Street, Gallipolis, who reported fmding gouges Friday around the trim on the back door of her residence. According to
the report, it appeared as if someone had attempted lo push m or pry
open the door.

POMEROY - All Desen Shield/Stonn veterans who served in
the Persian Gulf are encouraged to contact the nearest U.S . Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Facility and get their names
added to the Gulf War Veterans Registry. Veterans who are experiencing health problems are advised to file compensation claims in
addition to registering.
Remming veterans are reporting many mysterious health problems, the sources of which are yet to he determined. Some of the
most common problems are depression, lack of concentration, hair
loss, bleeding and sore gums, night sweats and flu-like symploms.
The registry wiD he the source of data should the Federal Government pass legislation to initiate a study of the problem.
Information is available from the Meigs County Veterans Service Office, at 992-2820.

Police investigate shopliftings
GALLIPOLIS - Police were called to Hills Department Store,
Upper River Road, Gallipo~s. by store security, who had taken an
alleged shoplifter into custody. According to the repon, Oma
Newell, 57, Asblon, W.Va., had taken $43.88 wonh of men:handise
from the store without paying for iL Newell was taken into custody
by police and later released on a summons.
Police also investigated a shop~fting at Foodland Grocery Store,
Third Avenue, Gallipolis. According to the repon, a juvenile had
taken a bag of chips worth $1.59 without paying for them. The
youth was taken into custody and released to his parents.

&lt;

•

&lt;

Malone
endorsement
announced

r •'

POMEROY - State Representative Mark Malone (D-South Point)
has received the endorsement of
the Ohio AFI./CIO.
John Hodges, President of the
Ohio AFL/CIO said Malone's
advocacy or the working people of
the 94th District has entiOed him to
the endorsemenL
"Mark Malone has stood up for
working peoRle all of his life,"
Hodges said. 'He has fought for a
decent living for working people.
That's why we have endorsed

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- AI
least one controlling board member
does not believe the state has funds
available to assist the Ohio State
Fair, a newspaper reported Friday.
"The state doesn't have any
money as far as I'm concerned,"
Rep. Roben E. Netzley, R-Laura,
told The Columbus Dispatch.
"We have to really look into
this thing to see where the bDuble
is/• he said.
Interim Ohio State Fair manager
Mark List was in a meeting Friday
and did not immediately return
calls seeking commenL
The Ohio Expositions Commission, which runs the fair, is $3 million in debt, a preliminary state
audit repon said.
In another development, KFC,
Taco Bel.! and Mr. Hero planned 1o
leave the fair one year after they
replaced three other fast-food
restaurants.
The commission has said it will
ask the state to help pay bills and
the debt on the fairgrounds' Celeste
Center.
R. Gregory Browning, the state
budget director, was out of the
office Friday afternoon and not
immediately available to comment.

Charles Barnhan was taken to Veterans. At 7:59 a.m., Tuppers Plains
unit went to the Arbaugh Addition.
Clifford McCanney was taken to
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
At 10:27 a.m., Pomeroy unit went
to Mulberry Avenue. Mae Ketcha
was taken to Vetcnms.

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. UNITED WAY BREAKFAST - About sixty
· people turned out Thursday morning for the
: United Way Kick-Off Breakfast at the Gallia
: County Senior Citizen's Center. Members beard
: presentations from area agencies such as Sereni-

ty House and the Outreach Center. President
Wayne Benson announced the United Way bas
set Its goal for the fall campaign at $75,000.
(Times-Sentinel photo by Kevin Pinson).

•
Ch
fi
l
SChOOl head to dnve evy or evy
: DA YTON , Ohio (AP) - It
Jooks like the superintendent of the
city's public schools will be driving a Chevy for the levy instead of
hts Mercedes since union leaders
nexed therr muscles on the impon
issue.
La st wee k, the school board
votcd to Iease Sup er in tend e nt
James Williams a 1992 Chevrolet
Caprice instead of giving him an
·an nual $6 ,600 car allowance ,
whic h he spends on a silver-blue
Mercedes-Benz sedan. The lease
payments will cost the board about
55,000 a year.
The action occurred after Wes
Well s, executive director of the
Miami Vall ey AF L-CIO, told
sc hoo l board members that "it
was n't the right projection" for
William s to drive a foreign car in a
city of 20,000 General Motors

Corp. workers.
' ' We're buying their products
by employing the kids they educate," said Wells. "They should he
buying our products."
The board's action comes at a
time when it is asking voters to
approve a 10.4-mill propeny tax
levy in the Nov em ber election to
avert an $8.7 million deficit by
June.
Wells said the local AFL-CIO,
which boasts 80,000 members in
11 counties, could help get the levy
approved. However, the union has
yet to take a position on the issue,
"If we opposed it, that tax levy
wouldn't pass," said Wells.
He said local labor leaders are
scheduled to meet with Williams
soon to discuss the levy campaign.
Asked if having Williams drive
an American car instead of an

"The AFL/CIO encompasses
over a million working men and
women in Ohio. We're standing up
.for Mark, just like he has stood up
for us," Hodges said
" I am very pleased to receive
the endorsement from the
AFL/CIO," Malone said. "I have
fought and will continue to fight
hard for the working men and
women of this region, and look for-

CARDINAL DRYCLEANERS

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impon will affect the union's decision, Wells reptied: "I think it is a
good-faith elTon in the right direction."
Williams could not he reached
for comment. Jill Moberlr.
spokeswoman for Dayton pubhc
schools, said Friday that Williams

Ohio."
Malone is challenged by Republican Frank Cremeans ofGaUipolis.
Among the other endorsements
announced by the AFL/CIO were
th
. Craont:
.cosecandiofdaTteed'orStncth.eldands,·xth'DeU.mocS
1
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gressional seat, and Ohio Senator
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ioday.
: He was proud of his fledgling
·World Basketball Lea~ue, which
expanded to 10 franchises in five
.$CBSODS. His own team was called
-the Youngstown Pride.
. But in a matter of days this past
·summer, Monus watched all that
"crumble: He was fired by Phar-Mor
.on July 31. The WBL stopped play
:the next day. And on Aug. 4, PharMor,accused him of masterminding
)In alleged $350 million swindle
·that pushed the company into federal bankruptcy coun two weeks
later.
"Sometimes people don't want
to admit that they can't do it," said
,Milt Kantor, owner of the Dayton
WBL franchise. "The best laid
plans go astray. I don't think he
could accept that''
With roots in the Mahoning
Valley, the 44-year-old Monos had
brought hope and pride to the economically depressed region, about
50 miles southeast of Cleveland.
Once a major s~l center, the
valley's big Cities of Youngstown
and Warren continue to deal with
the decline of the steel industry and
a: shift toward a service economy.
The downtown · streets in
Youngstown are lined with boarded-up businesses, and the city's
July unemployment rate of IQ.8
percent was the .third-highest
among Ohio cities. Warren's rate
or I 1.5 percent was the highest.
Phar· Mor and its distribution
~ubsidiary, Tamco Distributors Co.,
.were among the area's largest
·employers, responsible for about
3,000jobs.
. Monus took empty buildings in
,the city's decaying downtown and
filled them with Phar-Mor offices.
: "He could have gone to (subur·
,ban) Boardman or Austintown or
Liberty. But he didn't, he stayed in
\he city. I think that says a lot for
the ~uy,'' said Youngstown Mayor
Patnck Ungaro, who grew up in the
same area as Manus.
The company has since laid off
hundreds of employees natioowide.

IIi

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP)Michael "Mickey" I. Monus was a
proud man.
The co-founder of Phar-Mor
Inc. was proud of his drugstore
.chain's rapid growth from a single
-store a decade ago to about 300

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12 S.E.E.R.

"

WASHINGTON (AP)- A one-year freeze on planned National
Guard and Reserve layoffs was included in the Senate-passed Pentagon budget bill.
The freeze, inserted Friday during committee action by Sen. Jolin
Glenn, D-Ohio, was triggered by opposition to severe cuts in Ohio.
Glenn said he was particularly concered about plans to eliminate
seven of eight Ohio medical units and 82 of 102 Guard helicopters
in Ohio.
"These are not cuts that make sense,'' he said. "My fear is that
it was done in a haphazard way with liule regard 1o public safety or
military preparedness.''
WASmNGTON (AP) - The House has agreed to continue
funding for the Atomic Vapor Laser Isotope Separati9n technology
- a uranium enrichment method that an Ohio plarit is trying 1o

secure.

The Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant is competing to
become an AVLIS site. Rep. Bob McEwen, R-Ohio, whose district
includes the plant, ha.i been active in drumming up suppon for
AVLIS and maneuvering to give existing uranium ennchment facilities priority consideration when the Energy Department decides
where AVLIS should go.
McEwen on Friday called the $70 million AVLIS funding for
next year ''pan of a long series of recent successes.''
WASHINGTON (AP)- Ohio lawmakers are hoping emergency
Ohio communities will he~in moving again once PresIdent Bush signs a bill containing addibonal aid for states smashed
by Hurricanes Andrew and lniki.
The House approved the $11.1 billion aid package Friday.
The day before the vote Reps. Douglas Applegate and Mmcy
Kaptur, both D-Ohio, complained in a letter lo Bush that payments
to lornado- and flood-stricken Ohio communities were suspended
when the hurricane hit Florida.
"It is imperative that grants to our local communities come
through as soon as possible and that they are not made to wait again
for a year and a half,'' the letter said.
When Shadyside, Ohio, was hit by flash floods in 1990 that
killed 26 people, the federal disaster payments were so slow in coming that local governments had to take out loans and shoulder interest payments.
~yments for

1919 RlO GRANDE FOOTBALL TEAM •
This is what the 1919 Rio Grande ·College root·
ball team looked like. Football began at Rio
Grande in 1914. The 1915 and 1916 teams bad
The 1915 Rio Grande team was 32-1 with victories over Jackson,
GaUipolis and Ironton High Schools.
They tied Ironton and lost to G~po­
lisandWellsion. Tbelrontonvictory
was a forfeit. It seems that when an
Ironton player was ejected for fighting, the whole Ironton team quit.
The record in 1916was four wins
and two losses. Wins came over
Centerville (twice), Marshall Re·
serves and Jackson (by forfeit). Losses
were lo Gallipolis and Marshall
(varsity). In 1917 theRedandWhite
beat Centerville and Ironton (forfeit)
while losing 1o GaUipolis (twice),
Jackson and Huntington. The 1918
team beat Gal~polis and lost to
Ponsmouth.
The 1919 team featured at the
ends Cecil Davis and Willard
McDaniel, at tackles Ray Saunders
and Dwight Stnwsbaugh, James
Davis and L. Dillon at guard with
Dwight Tanner as the center. Hollis

wiDDing records. In 1917, the Redmea were 24
and they were 1-1 in 1918. The 1919 team won
only once.

Ewing, Don Allen, 0. Davis and Bulletin, had a larger team than Ohio
Hoban Jones made up the backfield. University. Athens' fullback weighed
Two games were played that year 190 while 3 of the 4 in Rio Grande's
against Centerville with Rio Grande backfield weighed less than 130
winning one 19-0. The game at Cen- pounds. AI Ironlon, Rio Grande lost
terville was played in Mr. Beman's 12-6mosUyacconlingtotheBulletin
field east of the village. Thanks to the because the referee would not keep
spectacular panting of Raymond the fans off the field. The umpire in
Allison of Centerville the Welslunen the game was Progler who had been
were able to tie Rio Grande 0-0. ejected for fighting from the 1915
Huntington beat Rio Grande with game. According to the Bulletin,
Carter the hero for the West Virginia Progler told the Ironton players they
team. He was the leading rusher, could slug at will and he would not
receiver and scorer. The unusual pan callitapenalty. A number of Ironton
was that he was also the tackle. One players were, however, ejected. By
of the favorite plays for many teams the way this Ironton team was not the '
in 1919was thetacklethroughtackle Tigers but the professional Tanks
play in which the tackle would loop featuring "Shony" Davies at tailback.
Homecoming was held on Thanksbehind the fullback, take a pitch and
giving
Day in 1919 (the ftrSt Rio
fiDI toward the other tackle. Since
Grande
Homecoming was in 1918).
most teams used an unbalanced tine
the tackle on the short side was an Activities in 1919 included trap shooting, church services, banquet, social,
eligible receiver.
Rio Grande lost to Athens High, the introductioo ofRio' s firSt official
which according to the G~polis cheers and the game. Doane College
(Now Denison U.) spoiled the day by
winning47-2.
James Sands is a special corre·
spondentofthe Sunday Times-Sen·
tlDel. His current address Is: 65
Willow Drive, Springboro Ohio
45066

Authorities seize
$1 million worth
of drugs in raids

In the Youngstown Pride's
It recenOy reached an emergency 4h;ement with its lenderS to use media guide, Monus says the name
cash collateral to pay employees represents "the quality and characand buy merchandise as it reorga· ter of its community to the rest of
nizes under Chapter II federal the country and the sports world"
Phar-Mcr also brought a Ladies
bankruptcy laws .
Monus and current President Professional Golf Association tourCLEVELAND (AP) - At least
David Shapira had started Phar- nament 1o Youngstilwn and spon$1
million wonh of goods authoriMor in 1982 and built it into one of sored another in florida. And he
ties
say were acquired with drug
the largest drugstore chains in the held shares in the Colorado Rockmoney
have been seized, a Drug
country. The company reported ies baseball expansion team.
Enforcement
Administration offiSo serious was Monus about
steady sales growth: $1 billion in
said.
1989, $2 billion in 1990 and $3.1 sports that he was on hiS way to the · cialRick
Coleman, head of the DEA
Olympics in Spain when Phar-Mor
billion in fiscal1992.
office
in
Cleveland, said the holdcalled to say he had been fired,
~ut those sales figures, like so
ings
of
Frederick
L. Darling, 34,
much about Monos and his deal- according to his auomey, Richard were seized Friday from five
ings, have been thrown into ques- Goldberg of Youngstown.
Since Phar·Mor made its aUega- Cleveland sites .
tion by Phar-Mor's aUegations that
Authorities said about 150 law
Manus and former chief financial tions, Monus has sold his interest enforcement officers participated in
officer Patrick Finn deceived the in the Rockies and Phar-Mor has the ntid, which came after a twoboard and the former outside audi- ended its sponsorship of the golf year investigation. A coon hearing
tors, Coopers &amp; Lybrand, by tournaments.
Kantor, whose Dayton Wings will determine whether Darling
reportin~ non-~xistent profits and
were at the I.Otl or the WBL stand- must surrender the propeny to the
embezzling company funds.
government
. The FBI and the U.S. attorney's ings when the league folded, said
Coleman said Darling is being
office have been called to investi- the WBL' s finances were rocky sought on a drug abuse warrant
from the start this year. The league
· gate those allegations.
after a police search earlier this
Although Phar-Mor was repon- was supposed to provide financial y~ar foun~ drug paraphernalia in
ing gains as it expanded through suppon 1o many of the franchises hiS possess10n.
the late 1980s, it now appears the but never came through, he said.
Authorities said among the
" Through the whole year they
·company was losing money,
items
they seized were three housaccording to documents in Phar- only made one payroll,'' said Kan- es, a used-car lot and a tavern.
Mor's lawsuit against Coopers &amp; tor. "Our players got paid every
A police search of Darling's
week- we made the payroll. He
Lybrand.
office
desk yielded $21,000 in
Phar-!)ior has charged that the (Monus) owed over $260,000 to us, cash, three
handguns and one
auditoo were negligent in failing to a week and a half before the season ounce of heroin,
Coleman said.
discover the alleged fraud. Coopers closed."
Coleman
said
no
arrests
resulted,
Monus
grew
up
on
&amp; Lybrand has countersued, saying
but
six
men
were
detained
at the
Phar-Mor is trying to diven blame Youngstown's middle- to upper- used-car lot.
class nonh side. He attended Unifrom Shapira and the bOard.
Documents filed in U.S. District
Neither Monos nor Finn would versity School, a private college Court in Cleveland by the U.S.
comment on the case. Monus prep SChool in Cleveland, and Bab- attorney's office aUege that Darling
reeenUy told The (Warren) Tribune son College in Babson Park, Mass.
Lyden described his friend of started the used-car business to
Chromcle that he was advised to
more than 10 years as "basically "conceal andor disguise" drug
keep a.low profile.
profits, hegiMing in October 1990.
""f11e lawYers have told me that quiet.''
Between 1980 and 1987, Dar"If you didn' t have anything in
I just can't say anythin~. It's not
ling's
reporte!l taxable income did
common with him, then he would
that I don't want to tallc,' he said.
not
exceed
$12,625. He didn't me
Monus' friends and business probably be hard to talk to,'' he tax returns from 1988 1o 1990, the
associates remain baffled by his said.
Ungaro also called him "shy, document said.
ran.
Mark Lyden, who served with intrOverted, sensitive.''
Menus on the Youngstown State ·
See PuzZle on Page D-2
University board of trustees, said
Monus was the type of person who
"wanted to make things happen."
"He was obviousfy very interested in sports. He thought it would
bring notoriety 1o the valley as well
as Phar-Mor," Lyden said. "He
wasn't just promoting Mickey
Monus, he was promoting PharMor and Youngstown."

Free literacy training offered
LAKIN - The Mason County (304) 675-«J76 10 a.m. to I p.m.
Literacy Council will hold a free weekdays or leave message to
Tutor Training Workshop October name, address and phone number.
6, 8, 13 and 15 (Tues. &amp; Thurs.)
Tulors are particularly needed
from 6-9:30 p.m. at the Lakin from the !.eat-Buffalo area; they
Education Building on S.R. 62 may call during oflice hours for
nonh of Point Pleasant. No registra- car-pooling information.
Previously-trained tutors may
tion fee or book fees will be charged, and training is also open 1o wish to attend a Small-Group
Tutoring W&lt;Bshop, to be held conOhio residents.
Completion of all segments of currelllly with the Basic Wort.shop,
the workshop qualifies tutors to also at Lakin. Small-group training
teach basic reading and writing teaches !lll.orS who. an: already
skills, using a phonics-based trained in the QIIC-{)IK)Oe method
method, to adults and young adults. the techniques and dynamics of
Tutors usually meet with a student tUioring two or more students at
three hours per week at a time and once. The literacy council has imlocation convenient to both. mediate need for tutors willing to
Utelaey tutoring is the ideal help "small groups" of students.
volunteer activity for those who
Previously-trained Wtors may
have only a few hours per week to also auend the Basic Workshop in
spare.
order to update their skills and take
Pre-registration is requested. Call on a new studenL

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Proudfounde_r of Phar-Mor
sees his empire crumble

446·1968

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By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - Football was
played in Gallia County as early as
1874, and a number of cornmUOlties
like Wigner, Cora, Rio Grande and
Centerville had organized teams by
the 1880s. However early GaUia ..
football was not '' ·' ·
American football
but Association
football or rugby.
It was about 1900
that American football became popular in Gallipolis. Association football
was still played in the county until
about 1915.
But the football played in Gallipolis, say in 1909, would hardly he
recognizable to us today. For one
thing the field looked like a big checkerboanl as there were not only lines
going across the field 1o mark yard
lines, but there were also tines every
five yards running parallel to the
sidelines. These latter markers were
1o help the referee keep an eye on the
quarterback. Before the QB could
run up field, hand off to another hack,
or pass, he had 1o run five yards
laterally. Forward passes could only
he thrown five yards to either side of
the center and no pass could go further than 20 yards. Also a pass caught
by the receiver in the end zone was
not a touchdown but' a touchback.
Incomplete passes were also treated
a,sfumblesandoouldherecovered by
either team.
If the rules did not discourage the
pass, then theshapeofthe ball did, as
it was much rounder than today's
"pigskin". We also should note that
in 1909 pass interference was not a
penalty, and field goals were wonh
four points instead of three.
. TbeftrStorganizedAmericanstyle
-football team in Rio Grande College
hislory was in 1914 with Samuel
Renshaw as coach. Apparently it was
nota very good team as the yearbook
Grandion states: ''The candidates all
showed up well, but on account of
late organization and lack of practice, the season was not noted for its
brilliant victories."

Browning had said he planned
to meet with List on Friday.
·
The State Controlling Board has
loaned money to the fair in pre vious years. The fair did not receive a
state subsidy this year, and the
commission had hoped 1o make the
event self-supponing.
The board next meets Sept. 28.
Commission Chairman Fred
Johnson has said the deficit is not
necessarily related to the fair,
which he said still could show a
profit. The deficit could be the
result of other fairgrounds operations. ,
The Dispatch said the commission is in debt to more than 200
companies for goods and services
from May to September.
Officials from KFC, Taco Bell
and Mr. Hero said they would drop
out or the fair because or uncenainty about its future, Carol Ruskowski, the fair's marketing director,
told the newspaper.
The fair this year signed a $2.6
million deal granting Pepsi-Cola
Co. exclusive soft·drink rights.
Wendy's, McDonald's and White
Castle, all of which serve CocaCola, left the fair in response.

FALL
KICK-OFF
SPECIALS!

Sunday Tlmea Sentinel-Page A7

Gallia County football dates back to 1884 .----Washington briefs--,

Meigs squads answer calls
POMEROY - On Friday at 5:38
p.m., Pomeroy s~uad was sent to
Bob Roberts Field for Adam
Wyatt, who was treated at the
scene. At 5:53
p.m., Racine units went to State
Route 338 for an auto accident.
Harry Ray Frye was taken to Jackson General Hospital.....t6:59 p.m.,
Middlepon squad took Grace Call
to Pleasant Valley Hospital from
North Third. At 7:01 p.m., Middlepan squad went to Overbrook Center. Anna Cline was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital At 7 p.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to Bob
Roberts Field. Stacy Wolfe was
ttansponed 1o O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital.
On Saturday atl2:31 a.m., Middlepon unit went to South Second.
Anna Davis was taken to Veterans.
At 3:04a.m., Racine squad went 1o
Plants Road. George Cummings
was taken to Veterans. At 4:17
a.m., Tuppers Plains units went to
an accident on State Route 7.

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

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51'1ttllt'. Colli 800 JJ8 8861

0 1tl21'CA WI. lftl.

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Pomeroy-Middlepon-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant.' wv

Page AS-Sunday Times Sentinel

.v!c.e President Qu~yle
vzszts Portage Festival
RAVENNA.~h~(AP)-Dan

visitor to Ohio recently, then
anended Balloon-A-Fm, a Portage
County festival featuring hot air
balloons. The Bush-Quayle campaign staff ahout a week ago asked
if he could attend, said Jean Wise, a
member of the Balloon-A-Fair
comminee.
About 3,000 people jammed the
town square, cheering and booing
Quayle throughout his 10-minute
speech. Nearly one-third in the
hoisterous crowd were Clinton supporters.
" I hear our opponents screaming out here," Quayle said. " You
know what? I'd be screaming too if
I supponed BiD Clinton.''
Quayle reiterated many of the
same issues stressed during the
Republican Convention - family
values health care reform and a
strong ;.ilitary.

Quayle amved tp Ohto Saturday
and wasted no tinie jwnpin!' on the
issue of DemocratiC prestdential
candidate Bill Clinton's draft
record.
"Bill Clinton just needs to come
clean," the vice president said
shonly after arriving at the Can10nAkron Regional Airport . " He
needs 10 come claan on this issue of
how he avoided military service."
Clinton has denied that he has
lied about his Vietnam draft status.
Quayle faced questions in 1988
about his ~wn draft status ~use
he served. m the I~dtana Nauonal
Guanl dlDlng the Vtetnam War.
"I told the b'Uth and got all the
faciS on the ~ble," Qua~le said. "I
wore the uniform for stx years. I
didn't avoid military service."
The vice president, a monthly

Pressure mounts on Germany
•
to cut Interest rates as G-7 meets

Man says woman may have
been
mistaken
about
Lowe
ments. He asked that the deputy be
BEUEFONTAINE, Ohio
(AP)

held in contempt of courL
Prosecutor Gerald Heaton
requested a hearing on LeFever's
testimony.
"A cursory investigation
revealed that defense's statemeniS
are inaccurate," said Heaton. "We
believe a hearing with full testimony will show this."
Mrs. Day stood by her account.
"I am still 100 percent sure it
was Terry Lowe," she said. "I
know who I saw."

- An emergency technician
responding to a call may have been
the man a woman said she saw running near the scene of two slayings
in Belle Center.
Jeff LeFever said in testimony
presented Friday that on the
evening of July 5, 1986, he ran past
the home of a woman who testified
that she saw Terry Lowe run by her
house, which was several blocks
from the slayings.
Lowe, 52, of Lima, is charged
with two counts of aggravated murder in the slayings of PhyUis Mullet
and village Marshal Murray Griffin. He haS pleaded innocent.
Mrs. MuUet, 37, was stabbed in
her home and her throat was cut.
Griffin, 64, was shot to death after
responding 10 the emergency call.
Lois Day identified Lowe as the
man she saw running by her house
that night.
After hearing Mrs. Day's testimony Thursday during a live radio
broadcast of the trial, LeFever met
with Lowe's attorney, Dennis Day
Laser. LeFever's conversation with
Lager was tape-recorded and presented 10 Logan County Common
Pleas Judge Mark O'Connor.
"Mrs. Day was referring to
somebody gotng up the street,"
LeFever said. "The more I listened, the more I thought ... proba61y she heard or seen ... me going

The
Visible
Difference

September 20,1992

WASHINGTON (AP) Finance officials of the world's
seven richest industrial countries
conferred today in an effon to find
a successful joint stiategy to calm
the worst currency crisis in two
decades.
Pressure was building on Germany to do more to relieve slnlins
on the system by cutting interest
rates further but German Finance
Minister Theo Waigel pointedly
told reponers, "Blaming one side
doesn' t advance matters, it just
leads to mistakes.' '
Treasury Secretary Nicholas
Brady and Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan welcomed
their economic oounterparts at the
start of the meeting at Dwnbarton
House, a 200-year-old mansion in
Washington's historic Georgetown
diSbict.
With all the turmoil this week in
financial markets and the tension
surrounding today's meeting ,
Brady joked with reporters befocehand that he was- looking forward
to "a very nice meeting, a quiet
meeting."
The finance ministers and central bank presidents from the United States, Japan, Germany, France,
Britain, Italy and Canada were
expected to confer all day behind
closed doors before issuing a joint
communique.

Many private economists said
that while they expected the communique to contain plenty of sooth·
ing promises of joint efforts to stabilize currency markets, they were
not looking for any dramatic new
action plan given Germany's reluctance 10 cut interest rates.
In advance of the Group of

Seven meeting, Brady held one-onone discussions with Waigel and
Japanese Finance Minister Tsutorna
Hata.
A Japanese official, who briefed
reporters on condition of anonymity, said that both Brady and Hata
agreed that turmoil on world currene y markets could endanger

Along the River
•

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world growth.
They also indicated that they
would push for efforts 10 stabilize
currency markets, the official said.
He did not indicate what those
actions might be but often governments intervene by buying massive
amounts of a weak currency to
prop up iiS price.

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CHKK IT OUT!
fv1L . VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
11 S East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy
992·21 04

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111·

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nnssnr IWSSIE GARIMJIII -TIMse·•em·
• bas Gl lite an... VdQ.......,.. Glean

. Tucker, Connie Hill and ·sbelia Curtis, are pictured bere weeding the "Tussle Mussie" herb

LeFever said he was responding
to a call from the Belle Center
Emergency Response Team, for
which he was a volunteer. He said
he had been running to the squad
house.
· Lager said a deputy sheriff interviewed LeFever, but failed to tell
anyone about LeFever's state -

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during a show held iD conjunction with third
annual herb rest olthe River Valley Herbalists
on Saturday,'Sept. ~at Dave Diles Park.

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424 SECOND AVE.

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PLANNED PARENTHOOD
•

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OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

MIDDLEPORT
509 S. 3nl Ave.
992 5912

GALLIPOLIS
414 Secou Ave., bd Roar
446·0166

·•
M da F'da 8:30 to 5:00 Monday·Friday
8:30 to 5=00 on y· n Y 8:30 to 12 Saturday
Closed nunday
Closed Tllursday
ALSO: JackSOI, Chesapeake, Athews, Ch.llcothe, logan &amp; M!Arthur

,,

will be held at the park on Sept. 26.

By JULIE E. DILLON
Times-Sentinel Stair

I

Up.''

.....'\",\

garden planted recently at Dave Diles Park in
Middleport. The group's third annual berb fest

River Valley Herbalists to host
third annual herb fest Sept. 26
l

OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Miami
University's next president will be
the provost and vice president for
academic affairs at the University
of New Mexico.
Paul G. Risser was the only candidate university trustees invited to
th e campus. His sel;ction to
replace Paul G. Pearson as president was announced Friday.
Pearson, 65, is retiring Dec. 31
after 11 years as Miami president
Risser, 53 . a botanis~ also has
served on the faculty and in administnltive positions at the University
of Oklahoma and the University of
Illinois. He has been at New Mexico since 1986.
He praised Pearson 's leadership
aL Miami . Pearson sa1d he was
pleased wiLh Risser's selection.
"I know Paul Risser as an inLcrnational scholar and an eloquent
spokesperson for higher education
and am delighted that a man of his
caliber and experience in teaching,
research, administration and service is replac ing me in this important job," Pearson said.
Ri sser received a bachelor 's
degree in biology from Grinnell
College in Iowa in 1961. He
received his master's and dociOraLe
degrees in 1965 and 1967 from the
University of Wisconsin . He is
from Blackwell, Okla.

September 20,1992 .

CHECK IT OUT!
Veteran$ Memorial •• Your Hometown Hospital •• offers a
~ell-trained health care staff, state·of·the·art equipment
and a wide variety of services •• with the added 11 plus" of
tender loving care •••
It is on accredited hospital you can count on to meet all of
your health care needs.

.

Miami University
picks new president

Section B:

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DEI'OI CJ.EAM.U'- Stm..

d.eltlftr YlleJ ..,,
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':.1:1....Ill..IIMllltllt8tt IIIII

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5 t . . . ....

port nceatly to dean up the buildinl wblcll wiD

be aeed darlac the IJ'Oup's tblrd !lnaual berb
test oa Saturday

MIDDLEPORT - Do you want
to. know more about wreath and
swag making, basket weaving and
potpourri making? If so, then the
upcoming third annual herb fest of
the River Valley Herbalists is the
place for you.
The fest will be held Saturday,
SepL 26 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
Dave.Diles Park in Middlepon.
The herb group, River Valley
Herbalists, was organized in October 1988 and is comprised of
Meigs County, and Jackson County, W.Va., members. The purpose
of the group is to study herbs, their
cultivation and ways in which ·to
use them. Nava Couch is president
of the group.
The group has established gardens at the Ravenswood Riverfront
Parle in Ravenswood, W.Va.: the
Meigs County Museum in
Pomeroy; the Dave Diles Park in
Middlepon; and on Blennerhasseu
Island near Parkersburg, W.Va .
The group has also worked in the
Pomeroy Mini-park.
Demonstrations during the herb
fest wiD include: wreath making at
10:30 a.m. by Lou Ann McDonald;
swag making at II a.m. by Connie
Hill; basket weaving at 11:30 am.
by Janet Theiss and Verla Shaffer,
slate painting a! 2 p.m. by Verla
Shaffer; potpourri making at 2:30
p.m. by Nava Couch; cooking
demonstrations at 3 p.m. by Glenna
Tucker and Denise Arnold; and a
Tussie Mussie demonstration at
3:30 p.m. by Linda McCoy and
Paige Winebrenner. Door prizes
will be given away at each demonstration.
In addition to all of the above
demonstrations there will be a
medicinal herb display by Betty
Milhoan as well as a dried herb display and sales table.
•
Entertainment on Saturday will
include Sharon Yencha on the dulcimer and a performance by Sweet
Mountain Sound.
The Middlepon Ans Council
will present a quilt show, "A Stitch
in Tune," featuring about 35 quillS
belonging to Meigs County residents. Admission to the show is
only $1 and following the show
there will be a reception for all the
di Ia .
~efre:hments will be provided
by the Eleanor Cin:le of the Heath
United Methodist Churdl.
· The cenllli focwt or Saturday's
fest will be 1he old depot bulldins
in Dave DUes Pirie. The group has
. been working to elean up 1he building which will serve a showcase .for
many of the members items .
The main goal of the herb fest,
according to Connie Hill, herb fest
co-chairml!l with Shclia Curtis, is
to promOIC what this area really has
to offer and what the area along the
Ohio River has to offer with
regards 10 promoting tourism.

FEST DISPLAY • Tbe River Valley Herblllsts, an herbal
enthusiasts group with members from Meigs County and Jackson
County iD West Virginia, wiD present its annual berb fest Satur·
day, Sept. ~ at Dave Diles Park ·in Middleport from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. A variety or herbal displays will be featured.

QUILT SHOW PLANNED· Tbe Mldclleport Arts Cou11dl wiR
present a quUt show, "A Stltcb Ia Time," featuring about 35 quUts
belonglnc to Meip County residents. Admission to the show Is
nly $1 and following the sbow there wUI be a re«ptloo for all the
lsplayers.
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Pomeroy-Middleport--Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

September 20, 1992

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SUSAN SISSON and

has surpassed a million, which was
the number of visitors last year.
Borin is hoping for an attendance
ofl.4 million this year.
Bolli pandas have gained weight
since coming to Columbus, Borin
said. Qin Qin has gained about 15
pounds and Xing Xing about 10
pounds.
After the pandas leave, their
exhibit space will be taken over by
a family of pygmy chimpanzees.
By next year, when work is
completed 10 conven the exhibit,
the chimps will have indoor and
outdoor yards.

SPICY EGGLETON and TONY THOMAS

Eggleton-Thomas
NASHVILLE, Tenn. -Mrs. Car. olyn Sue Hayes of Flllllldin, Tenn.,
. announces the engagement and
. approaching marriage of her
• daughter, Spicy Eilen Eggleton of
: Nashville , Tenn., to Tony Scolt
: Thomas, of Antioch, Tenn., son of
;Peggy Thomas Mallory of
rNashville, and the late Dean
~Thomas.

· Miss Eggleton is the daughter of
: the late William Harold (Tom)
: Eggleton. She is the granddaughter
· of Harold and Marevia Cregar of
· Franklin , Tenn ., and Marcella
Eggleton of Bidwell and the late
. Woodrow EggleiDn: She is a 1984

graduate of David Ltpscomb High

~:f~r~e~n~~~~y::~;~:~

~~- Thomas is the grandson of

Town celebrates giant fungus Robber uses
CRYSTAL FALLS, Mich.
"Our 38-acre mushroom may taxis to get to,
- So what it if isn't the world's -ormaynot-bebiggerlhanthe
biggest?. The Humongous
one on Mount Adams in Washingbrought ms~ll fame to Mi~htgan s ton," said Jeff Syrjanen, who owns from holdups
(AP)

Mr. and Mrs. Norman Thomas of
Silver Point, Tenn., and Mr. and
Fung~s
Mrs. Bee Ragland of Granville,
Tenn . He is a 1984 graduate of Upper Penmsula, and that s more
Overton High School and is · than enough~ to celebrate. .
employed as a driver for Sadler
Atleast,lhat show they feel m
Brothers Trucking and Leasing in Crys1al Falls, where a three-day
Nashville.
Fungus Fest.began Fnday.
_
The wedding will be held Oct.
. The affwr was m~ptred by the
tO at Cricve Hall Church of Christ, dtscovery last s.pnng that the
Nashv~le .
woods aro.und thts southwestern
Upper Perunsula town were home
to what scientists said was the
largest organism in the world- a
fungus roughly the size of 38 football fields.
The bloom on the Armillaria
bulbosa faded a little in May, when
scientists in Washington state
claimed the Northwest woods was
home to a fungus so big it made its
Michigan counterpart look puny.

the Ben Franklin store in Crystal
Falls.
"But a U.S. Forest Service
pathologist out lhere said ours certainly is friendlier than WashingIDn's, which he said was a dangerous fungus as well as maybe not a
single living organism."
The Washington fungus is said
to be 1,500 acres.
"This could be a bad fellow,"
Syrjanen said, explaining lhat the
Washington fungus destroys its
habilat as it grows and may be
harmful to wildlife lhat eat it
"Our fungus is a friendly one
that doesn't harm anything as it
grows, and it's edible," said S)'ljanco.

Seniors' schedule announced

SCOTT STOCKMAN and RENEE HOLLEY

Holley-Stockman
GA LLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
David Holley of Gallipolis,
an no unce the cngagment and
approac hing marriage of their
daughter, Renee Michelle, to Scott
Stockman, son of Hal and Charlotte
Stockman of Gallipolis.
The bride is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and Mt.
Vernon Nazarene College. She is
currentl y employed wi th Constar
Plas tics of Newark.

The groom is a grnduate of Gallia Academy High School. He
served six years in the Navy and is
currently employed with Resinoid
Engineers in Newark.
The open church wedding will
be held 3 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 28 at
the First Church of the Nazarene in
Gallipolis. ,
The couple will reside in
Newark.

REVIVAl
CHESTER
CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE
September 22·27
7:00 pm "lghtly
pm Sunday •venJng Service

Eva•gtli$1 Rev. Jill Crane
Will le Preaching and Singing Nightly
Everyone Welcome

Pastor Herbert Grate
•

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GALLIPOLIS - The following
are activities and menus for Sept.
21-25 at the Gallia County Senior
Citizen's Center, 220 Jackson Pike.
Monday, Sept. 21
10 a.m.- Walking club .
II a.m. - Jan Michael Long
open door session
I p.m. -Chorus
Tuesday, Sept. 22
10:30 a.m. - STOP/Exercise
I0 a.m. to 3 p.m. - Quilting
12:30 p.m. - Vidoo matinee
Wednesday,Sept.23
10 a.m. - Walking club
10 a.m. ID noon- Blood pressure
(health department)
10:30 a.m. Herb class
Thursday, Sept. 24
10:45 a.m.- Bible study
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.- Quilting
Friday, Sept. 25
10 a.m.- Walking club
10 a.m. to noon - Art class
Menus consist of:
Monday: Chili/crackers, cheese
cube, tossed salad, bread, pears.
Tuesday - Pork/dressing, rice,
spinach, applesauce, bread, cookies.
Wednesday - Chicken/noo dles , cauliflower, cornbread,
pineapple
Thursday • Baked steak/gravy,
whipped polatoes, green beans,
bread, pudding.
Friday - Baked fish sandwich,

Foster Ho

polaiDes, carrots/pineapple in Jello,
vanilla wafers.
. Make reservations by calling
446-7000 before 9 am. on the day
you wish to attend.

Boggs attends ·
WSU seminar
GALLIPOLIS - Beverly Boggs
of the Gallipolis City School District, recently attended the third
annual Writing and Its Teaching
Institute held at Wright Slate University.
The two week seminar was
offered by the university in an
effon to allow teachers to become
better t.eachers of writing and reading.
Secondary, middle, and elemenrary teachers shared the joys, frustrations, and expeclations of teaching while learning new methods for
increasing student interest and success. Teachers gained first hand
experience by lrying out some of
the strategies on their own writing.
Teachers wrote and conferred
with each other; they observed
demonslrations of effective classroom slrategies; and IIley studied
innovative approaches based on
current research.

DETROIT (AP) - A robber
has been taking raxis 10 smaU businesses, holding up the places while
the meter was running and usir!g
the cabs for getaway cars, police
say.
Nineteen businesses, mostly
fast-food res1aurants, have been
held up during lhe past two weeks
by a man using a cab, police said
Friday. No mcsts have been made . .

BRITTAN KATHERINE
\VITI'E, daagb~r of Greg and
Tammy Witte, YorkvWe, Obio,
celebrated ber first birthday
wltb a party given by her
grandparenta, Jobn and Sanb
Flsber at tbe Flsber borne.
Tbose attending was ber
aunt, Basbeba Witte, Pittsburgh, Pa.; great-aunt and
uncle, Jo Ann and Fred Van
Kirk, Charleston, W. Va.;
great-grandmothers, Wilma
Witte Henthorne, Parkersburg, W. Va ., and Eunice
Hardman, Ripley, W. Va. Also
Clarence and Sally Lambert,
Pomeroy.

An urgent call to All Christiam!
"40 Days of Prayer"
A national eiTort to unite believers In prayer for our nation
and upcoming election. Is our country worth just 10
minutes of your time?
If so, would you join with believers all over our nation in
concentrated prayer? We are asking everyone to pray for
10 minutes between 12-1:00 each day beginning September
25. We are also asking all churches to ring their bells at
12:00 as a call to prayer. We will conclude this effort with a
joint prayer service at Dave Diles Park on
November J from 12:15-12:30.
"If My propk, whkh art talkd by My lllllllt, wiU humbk
theiiiSilves...tutJ PRAY. .. "
II Ch,To11. 7:14
The Middleport Mlallllerlal Aaoclatlon

&lt;:::;

Besides the fashion show, there will .he a make-up image booths
sponsored by Mary Kay, Avon and
Beauty Control. A dessert buffet
and non-alcoholic drinks will be
served.
Ga1ewood said models of all
ages and sizes will display the -!atest styles from Carl's Shoe Store,
The Shoe Cafe, Knights Department Store, Bernadine's, My Sister's Closet, Britlany's Fashi.OJIS
ani. d Fashion Buf Plus, all o{ Gal,
tpolis and Lisa s Closet of Jackson.
"We're hoping that it's something that can he fun for women
and help the community out also"
Gatewood said.
'
Gatewood said lhat lhe Emblem
Club is a women's organization
made up of lhe fam~y and friends
, of Elks Club members who "are
dedicated to charilable endeavors
·and devotion to community berterment.
"We work all year to raise
money and everx bit of it is put into
the community, • she said.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Emblem Club #199 is preparing for
1ts second annual Fall Fashion Flair
fashion show and, according to
chairperson Charlene Gatewood, it
promises to be "a day to show all
women how 10 be beautiful and be
good 10 themselves."
The show's proceeds will go 10
the Gallia County Council on
Aging's home delivered meals programGa.tewood sat'd .that tht' s ,·s the
first year that all of the fashion
show's proceeds bave gone to one
charity. Members of lhe club voted
unanimously to aid the council's
program after considering many
c~ties,
.
_
~veryo~e ~tves t~ th; c~tl·
dren s. chariues, she said. . I lhtnk
sometunes our elderl&gt;: are ·~ored.
~Y. bave already paid the~ due.s,
11 s 11111e for eve~?ne to pttch m
and pay them back.
Sandra. ~rummond! director of
the council s home delivered m~
program, S81d 112 to 115 sentor ctt(NANCY) BENNE1T m
tzens are served each day by the
program, and lhere is a waiting list
of others who are interested in
receiving the service.
"We just don't have the ~
der provided music.
to
run routes," she said. "We ve
Marlene Putman made a four been
looking for volunteers but we
tier cake and was assisted in serving by Sandra Justis, Marilyn just don't have lhe volunteers to do
Cooper, Christie Cooper and Kathy iL"
The service provides needy
Hetzer.
·
senior
citizens in Gallia County
Joann Lawrence arranged all of
with
a
hot, well-balanced meal
the bouquets, corsages and bouiOnonce
a
day five days a week,
nieres.
Drummond
said. The fashion show
Wedding colors were lavender,
proceeds
will
be used to hire addiwhite and gray.
tional
drivers,
she
added.
Two candles were lit by the
"I'm very pleased with it
mothers to signify the beginning of
because
there are many seniors we
the ceremony. Later, the bride and
can't
get
to," she said. "It's a very
groom a center candle to signify
worthwhile
cause. We'll be able to
lheir new family. The minister read
service
more
seniors this way wilh
bible verses and prayed with the
the
home
delivered
meals procouple before pronouncing them
gram."
man and wife.
The fashion show will be held
A reception was held in lhe felfrom
2 to 4 p.m. Sept. 27 at the
lowship hall of lhe church.
Gallipolis
Elks Lod~, 408 1/2 SecThe couple is residing in Panond
Avenue.
Admtssion is $2.50
land.
for adults and $1.50 for children
six to twelve. Admission for chil-

Hunt-Bennett

. .............. ,~(

PORTLAND - Nancy Elizabeth
Hunt and Stanley Eugene Bennett
Ill were united in maniage Aug. 22
at Ponland Nazarene Church with
Rev. William Justis officiating.
The bride is the daughter of
great-grandmolher.
R. and Nancy L. Hunt,
Thomas
Maid of honor was Lisa G.
Ponland.
Smith, sis~r of lhe bride, ParkersThe groom is the son of Stanley
burg, W.Va. Bridesmaids were
Eugene
Bennett Jr., Belpre, and
Tara K. Smith, sister of the bride,
Susan
Diane
White, Long Bouom.
also of Parkersburg, W.Va; Diana
was esconed by her
The
bride
Armel Bernett, Vienna, W. Va; and
father and was given in marriage
Pam Kinney, Lusby, Md.
Flower girl was Katelynn Ber- · by her parents.
Maid of honor was Sheri Roush
nett, Vienna, W.Va.
and
the flower girl was Thomasina
Best man was Mark Holter,
White.
Guests were registered by
Lancaster. Groomsmen were Ray
Trudy
Justis
and Lynn White.
Smith, brother of the groom,
The
best
men were S!anley E.
Athens; Michael Smilh, brother of
the groom, Tuppers Plains, and Bennett Jr. and Thomas White.
Ushers were David Justis and
Mark Gaddis, Tuppers Plains.
Ring bearer was Kyle Holter, Nathan Plants.
Cathy McDaniel and Jan LavenLancaster.
GuestS were registered and bird
seed roses were distributed by Tina
Boston, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Pianist was Calhy Moore, Vienna. Vocalists were Peggy Alvis,
Spencer, aunt of the bride, Jeff
Arnold and Kay Coulson, Torch.
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - A
A reception followed the ceremony at DuPont Employees Recre- jury on Friday awarded $100,000
ation Center. The reception was in damages to a 300-pound woman
hosted by Donna Bos10n, Parkers- who accused Rhode Island of disburg,•W.Va., Vickie Thomas, and crimination for failing to give her
Stephanie Thomas, Mineral Wells, back her job at a state-run mental
and Cindy Smith, Athens.
hospital.
Bonnie Cook, 32, had sought
A rehearsal dinner was hosted
by the groom's parents at lhe Point $60,000 in back pay and the next
of View Restaurant
available job at the Joseph H. Ladd
The bride is employed by Cam- School in Exeter, where she had
den-Clark Memorial Hospilal as a worked as an attendant between
1979 and 1986. She quit to look
surgery unit manager.
The groom is a supervisor wilh after her sick child , reapplied in
Fairmont Supply.
1988 and was tlli1red down.
After a wedding trip to Key
After a weeklong trial, lhe jury
West, Fla., the couple wiU reside in deliberated for less than two hours
Vienna, W.Va.
before finding in favor of Cook.
U.S. District Coun Judge Ernest
Torres still must rule on her request
to gel back her old job.
"I Jove lhe verdict," a jubilant
Cook
said.
political fund-raiser and had just
Dr.
Robert Carl, the executive
parked his car on Canal Street near
director
of lhe Division of Retardathe French Quarter when one of lhe
tion
and
Developmental Disabilirobbers put a gun to his companties,
which
the school,
ion's head and ordered her to toss said the slateoversees
would
probably
folout her purse.
After the pair fled, Connick low the judge's ruling.
The state argued that Cook's
spotted a police officer and they
weight
would hinder her ability to
chased down one of the suspects in
restrain
or help patients, even
Col)nick 's car. Two other officers
though
she
testified her weight was
nabbed the second.
comparable
when she held the
Police hooked TerreU J. Perkins,
same
job
from
I98 I to 1986.
17, and a 14-year-old boy who was
Cook
also
testified
that she was
not identified because of his age on
told she might be considered for
charges of armed robbery.

MR. and MRS. JAMES (ROBIN) SMITH

Smith-Smith
TUPPERS PLAINS - Robin
;Renee Smith and James Robert
· Smilh were united in marriage dur:ing a double ring ceremony at Cal. vary Memorial Church in Parkers·burg, W.Va., wilh Rev. Lee Ham:mond officiating.
: The bride is the daughter of Mr.
-and Mrs. William A. Smith, Park:ersburg, W.Va. The groom is the
·son of Mr. and Mrs . James R.
·Smith, Tuppers Plains.
The bride was escorted by her
,father and given in marriage by her
parents. She wore a gown of white
luslre satin with a high neckline,
log-o-mutton sleeves which ended
with bridal tulle and was embellished with pearls, lace and iridescent sequins and lace. At the hip
line were two bows of lustre satin.
At the back was a large bow of lustre satin that held an over skin of
the entire dress. The full skirt
extended to a scalloped chapel
length lrain. Her headpiece was a
pearl pointed front peak halo wilh
white flowers and .beads extending
down one side and was atlached
with a pouf and waist length veil.
The veil, wedding flowers and
bridesmaids' dresses were made by
·lhe bride's mother.
· The bride carried a cascading
:bouquet of mauve and counuy blue
:roses, deep mauve baby roses and
.an assonment of various flowers in
'different shades of ma·uve and
:country blue. The bouquet was
•highlighted with sparkling baby's
:breath and looped seed pearls.
- The bride wore an antique neck:Jace which belonged to her great-

~ Bandits

dren five and under is free. Tickets
wiD be sold at the door.

ClASS RI \GS

FREE ClASS KEY with golcl purthale
Hurry ... 0!fer Ends Oct. 15!

Jury says state discriminated
against 300-pound woman

pick the wrong man

; NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Two
•bandtts realtzed they'd picked the
: wrong victim when he identified
himself as District Attorney Harry
Connick.
·
. The thieves tossed a purse taken
•from Connick's companion back
. miD the car and fled Thursday night
'after he told them "Pm lhe district
•attorney. I don't think you want to
do this," Connick said later.
. But not before the robbers got
~ into a lively debate about whelher
ao go through wilh the stickup, said
·.connick, father of singer Harry
·,Connick Jr.
·. Connick quoted one of the rob~bers as telling the other, "No, man,
.;that's lhe district attorney."
:• Connick was on his way to a

GoLDLm F.

lhe job if her weight dropped below
300 pounds. She said she went on a
diet but suffered side effects from
taking weight-loss pills.
Mark O'Brien, a doctor at the
center, said he never promised
Cook a job if she lost weighL
Cook's attorney, Lynnette
Labinger, argued that O'Brien
stereotyped Cook when he refused
to rehire her because she was overweight.
"We know she can do Ibis job,
she's done this job before,"
Labinger told jurors. "There is no .
reason why Bonnie Cook should be
denied the opponunity to earn a
living and suppon her family."
Coole estimated her wei$ht at
300 pounds on a job applicauon in
1988. Her actual weight later was
recorded at 329 pounds. "Weight
is reversible, and Bonnie Cook can
lose weight," said John Breguet,
an auorney representing the slate
Department Qf Mental Health,
Retardation and Hospitals.
The lawsuit, ftled by lhe American Civil Liberties Union on
Cook's behalf, said the slate discriminated on the basis of handicap
or " perceived" handicap.

ur

STYJ.E SPECIALS
LADIES'

II

Needed

Special people are needed to
beco~e caring and gi~ing foster
parents to troubled and needy
youth of all ages. Training and
supervision are provided. Help
make a difference in a yo~ng
person's life. If interested, please
contad Ms. Cartwright at The
Ohio Youth Advocate Program.
1-800·472·4943. ·.

MR. and MRS. STANLEY

I /

Happy First
Birthday

Sunday nmes Sentlnei-Pag~~3__

By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Seatinel News Starr

Miller-Ranegar
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Miller of
New Haven and Mr. and Mrs. John
Ranegar of Cheshire announce the
e_ngagement ~ fo_rthcoming marnage of thetr chtldren, Jennifer
Lynn and Charles Edward.
The open church wedding wiU
~e _place ~e.ptember 26 at lhe Galhpolis Chrisban Church, GaUipolis.

••-

Emblem Club models
fashions for needy cause

Sisson-Jenkins
. PO.MER&lt;:JY -Timothy A. Jenkms, Ftve Pomts, and Susan R. Sisson , Pomeroy, announce their
approaching marriage.

----

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

September 20,1992

Endangered animals draw
900,000 to Columbus Zoo
. COLUMBUS (AP) - Visitors
to Columbus Zoo are expected to
contribute hundreds of lhous'ands
of dollars to benefit giant pandas
and other endangered species, a
zoo official said.
About 900,000 people will have
seent two pandas on loan 10 the zou
by the time their 3 112-month
exhibit closes Sunday, zoo Manager Jerry Borin said.
"We're going to miss !hem. 11
was an exciting year," Borin said.
"It will be something of a letdown
not having them here."
The endangered animals leave
Wednesday for their return to
China.
"We will be able to cover costs
of the project, cover the $300,000
TIMOTHY JENKINS
payment to the Chinese for panda
conservat_ion, and I'm guessing
there will be several hundred lhousand left for other endangered
species prognims," Borin said.
The open church wedding will
A panda import permit issued
be an event of Satu.nlay at 6 p.m. at by lhe U.S. Fish and WiJdlife Serthe Church of God in Chester.
vice says net proceeds from the
pandas' visit have to go to panda
conservation or other programs to
benefit endangered species. Those
pro~arns will be reviewed by the
zoo s animal management commitJennifer is a 1992 graduate of tee and by the Fish and Wildlife
Manhall University with a Service.
bachelor of science degree in mediLast Sunday, a record i9,479
cal technology.
people visited the zoo. The previCharles is a 1990 graduate of the ous record was 17,952 on June 13.
University of Rio Grande with a
"We've been running about
bachelor of science degree in in· double our normal week's attendustrial technology.
dance," Borin said.
Attendance Ibis year at the zoo

·-

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MIDDLEPORT- Heidi Ann
has been qualified by the
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Sat.9to6P.M.
Suaday 12 to 5 P,ll.

NO /·PPOIN1MENT
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I

�wv

OH.....Polnt

says
Fischer destroying
reputation of chess

HMC program to focus on·
sexual assault; Dodrill to speak
GALLIPOUS - Andlher in the
series or programs throughout ·
September, as a part of Holzer
Medical Center's observance of
Women's Heallh Monlh, will be
held on Friday, Sept. 25, in the
French 500 RoQm, according to
Connie Carleton and Phyllis Pope
Brown, co-chairpersons.
Feazured speaker will be Monica
Dodrill, executive direcror of Community Assault Prevention Services
(CAPS) in Gallia, Jackson and
Meigs counties. She will make her
fust presentation, "Focus on Sexual
Assault" •.at noon for lhe medical
and nursing staff and lhen the second as a program for lhe public at
2:30p.m.
·
The noon session will ·help !hose
professionals attending understand
what "rape" really is, know proto-·
col guidelines for rape victims
from the time of auack to the legal
conclusion, know the contents of a
Rape Kit, and ihe imponance of
preserving-evidence.
During the second session
Dodrill will present a program

"
•'

,,\
~

''

MONICA DODRILL
designed for !lie general public, on
lhe same subject, "Focus on Sexual
Assault". Through her six years of
assault prevention training and
experience at the National Assault
Prevention Center in Columbus,

,

September 20, 1992

September 20,1992

along with her victim crisis counseling, she is qualified to speak on
this subject.
· Dodrill has had four years of
mania! arts training, and served for
two years as coordinator of the
Rape Prevention program. She also
is a member of the advisory committee to the Ohio Department of
Health in the production of
Statewide Sexual Assault Protocol.
As Carleton and Brown point
ou~ "Ms. Dodrill is an e~pert m her
field and we feel fonunate to have
her come to the Holzer Medical
Center to provide such an important and informative program for us
during Women's Heallh Monlh."
"Women have increasing concerns abQut sexual assaul~ and lhis
makes her presentation timely and
even more imponant to all women,
so lhat we can learn how to better
protect ourselves from such a
f~..~tening experience," they

a

.

Women of all ages are invited to
this free program. Phone 446-5313
to pre-register.

HELSINKI, Finland (AP) World chess chanlpion Garry Kas·
parov said today thai former champion Bobby Fischer, the temperamental American playing a SS million rematch wilh ex-chanlp Boris
Spassl!:y, is ruining the reputation
of lhe game.
.
"Today we are seemg somebody ,who came back and who is
insulting all leading players, and
who doesn't play go~~ chess,:•
Kasparov said on televtston. He ts
in Finland to inaugurate lhe Helsinki Open chess championships lhat
began Saturday.
Kasparov, 29, of the form~r
Soviet Union, has not defended bis
world tiUe since taking it from fellow Soviet player Anatoli Karpov .
in 1985.
Fischer insulted Kasparov and
olher world-class players during a
news conference in Yugoslavia
where he is playing Spassky, a
Russian-born French citizen.
· Kasparov said Fischer was a
great example for him when Fischer woo lhe world championship by
defeating Spassky in Reykjavik,
Iceland in 1972.
Fischer contends the match in
Yugoslavia is a world championship, but the World Chess Federation does not recognize it as such
because it Slripped Fischer of world
champ status in 1975 after he
refused to defend it.

......

and

Local nail technicians dispel
rumors about artificial nails

LONG BOTTOM - Mr. and four children, Mrs. Roger (Ruth)
Mrs. Charles (Grace) Price. Loog Dillon, Long Bottom; Mrs. Paul
Bottom, will observe their 50th (Carolyn) Whaley, Long Bottom;
Read-In
wedding anniversary with an open Mrs. Jim (Jeannie) Starcher, Long
house at lhe Long Bottom United Bottom; Mrs. Chester (Teddy)
5 MIN TE$
Methodist Church on Sept. 27 from Mondry, Reedsville; and Bob
FLY·IN A SUCCESS. Tbe Point Pleasant
raised $400 to promote ihe cadet program and
2-4 p.m. hosted by family and (Penny) Price, Long Bottom. They
Composite Squadron 47078 or tbe Civil Air
lhe search and rescue efforts, according to Les
Aft
friends.
have seven grandchildren and two
Patrol held its 19th annual Labor Day Fly-in at
Burgess, Civil Air Patrol public affairs. Also on
424 SECOND AVE,
The couple was married Sept. great-grandchildren.
tbe Mason Couaty Airport. Approximately 75
hand were ultra lights, antiques, borne builts,
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
_2_7_.1_94
__
2_an_d_lh_e_y_are
__th_e_~_are
__n_ts_o_f___________________________a_i~-'_a_n~
__n_ew
__i_n_w__ta_k_e_pa•r•t-in--tb_e_e_ve_n_t_w_h_k_h____a_nd__a_b_c_w_r_y_bui.;lt~a:w~cn~n~. . . . . . . . .~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;:::::~

T'AWNEY STUDIO

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day of that event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.
SUNDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange will hold a chicken llarbecue Sunday at II a.m. at the grange
hall. Public invited.
POMEROY - Meigs Genealogical Society will meet oo Sunday at
Meigs Museum at2 p.m.
RACINE - Descendants of
James C. and Ethelinda Stone
Moore will hold a reunion Sunday
at Sutton United Melhodist Church,
Racine-Bashan Road. There will be
a carry-in dinner at 12:30 p.m.

',

'

·'

will feature Rev. Paul McGuire. Rock Springs United Methodist
Church, Monday lhrough W$esPublic invited.
day with Rev. Wesley Thatcher.
MINERSVILLE - Minersville Rev. Keith Rader invites lhe pubMethodist Church, homecoming, lic.
Sunday. Regular services. PoUuck
RACINE - OAPSE, Southern
dinner, noon. Afternoon entenainLocal,
meets Monday, 7 p.m. at lhe
menL Public invited.
high school. All members urged to
COOLVILLE - Vanderhoof attend·.
Baptist Church, Coolville, youth
POMEROY - Revival, Calvary
revival, Sunday lhrough WednesPilgrim Chapel, Route 143, Monday, 7 p.m. nighUy.
day through Sunday. Rev. L.J .
'
POMEROY- Homecoming, Mt Cherryholmes, evangelist. Special
Hermon United Brelhren in Christ singing nighUy. Rev. Victor Roush
Church, Texas Road, Pomeroy. invites the public.
Sunday school, 9:30a.m.; worship,
RACINE - Racine Village
10:30 a.m.; fellowship meal, noon;
afternoon service, 1:30 p.m. Spe- Council will meet in recessed sescial singing by The Glory Land sion Monday at 7 p.m. atlhe council chambers at Star Mill Parle.
QuaneL Public invited.

RACINE - Homecoming, Morse
RACINE - Gideon and Artime- Chapel Church, Racine-Portland
sia Roush reunion. Star Mill Park, Road, Sunday. Potluck dinner at
Racine, Sunday. PuUuck dinner at noon. Afternoon service, 1:30 p.m.
with special singing by The Con·
I p.m.
querors. Pastor Hap Ingels invites
. POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buff- lhe public.
ington will be the guest preacher at
ROCK SPRINGS - Hymn sing,
Naomi Baptist Church in Pomeroy
on Sunday at 10:45 a.m. Public Rock Springs United Methodist
Church, Sunday, I p.m. wilh Heavinvited.
en Bound Four. Revival begins
RACINE - Homecoming at lhe . Monday.
Mt. Moriah Church of God in
RUTLAND - Descendants of
Racine will be Sunday beginning at
9:45 a.m. There will be a puppet Oscar and Charles Reed Hysell,
show at II a.m. with dinner at family reunion, Sunday , 12:30
12: 15 and afternoon service. p.m., Rutland Firemen' s Park.
Singers include lhe Jenkins Family, Potluck diMer.
.Jronton; Mountain Top Singers ,
REEDSVILLE - CommunityRacine. Guest speakers will be feawide church picnic, Sunday, I p.m.
tured. Public invited.
Forked Run State Park, hosted by
HOCKINGPORT -Music bene- Reedsville Church of Christ. In
•fit for Glen "Lefty" Baker, Sunday case of rain lhe picnic will be held
.from 1-11 :30 p.m. at Hockingpon at lhe Olive Township fire house. ·
at the home of Kenny and Millie Bring a covered dish and lawn
Reynolds. All bands welcome. chair . Special sin~ing. Anyone
Food and sofldrinks available.
wanting to sing is mvited. Public
invited.
POMEROY - Jeff Faull. evangelist, will speak at the Bradford
POMEROY - AA meeting, SunChurch of Christ Sunday through day, JTPA building, Pomeroy, 7
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. nigh~y . A p.m.
nursery will be provided . Derek
Stump. evangelis~ invites the pubSOUTH BETIIEL - The Caper
lic.
Crusaders orTuppers Plains will be
in charge of lhe bible school ser- 1
RACINE - Homecoming Wrek- vice at South Bethel New Testa·
end Celebration, Carmel Melhodist ment Church on Sunday at 6 p.m.
Church, Racine, with Rev . Paul The public is invited. ·
Sellers. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship ·service, II a.m.; carry·in
MONDAY
dinner, 5 p.m. Evening services
ROCK SPRINGS - Revival,

UNDER
NEW MANAGEMEN{

PERMS $25.00
Special Wraps Slightly Higher
~AI.RCUTS'

$7.00
/(i~ 12 &amp; Unde" -$5.00
SHAMPo'OICUTISTYLE

'
I

$10.00

TINA MOLDEN
MANAGER

CONDITIONING TREATMENT $2.00 wilh special

HAIR HAPPENING
. ' Silver Briclge 'P~:.a

446-3353

i!'-- - · - -·' " " " ' - - - -- -'1

:-

L

Gallipolu, Ohio
· - --

TUESDAY
CHESHIRE - The Gallia Meigs
Community Action Agency will
have a free clolhing day Tuesday
from 9 a.m. to noon at lhe old high
school building in Cheshire.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Republican Women's Club will
meet in joint session the Republican Executive Committee on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at headquarters on
Mulberry Avenue .
MIDDLEPORT . The Middleport Elementary PTO will meet
Tuesday at 7 P..m. at the school.
Open house wtll be observed. All
parents, teachers and interested
people are invited to attend .
RACINE · The MiddleportPomeroy Branch, AAUW, meets
Tuesday, 7 p.m ., Racine United
Methodist Church. All members
and pro spective members may
attend. Tara Grueser will share her

UNWANTED HAIR
eamp experiences.
MARlETT A - Parents and
Friends of the Hearing Impaired
will meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at lhe
Easter Seal Office in Marietta.
" POMEROY - MADD meets
Tu~y at 6 p.m. at 119 Butternut
Avenue,Pomeroy.

RAC~ Racine Rurit.an Club
will me~tT~sday, 6:30p.m. at
Star Mill Parle in Racine. All members urged to attend.
PORTLAND - Portland Elementary PI'O will meet Tuesday at
7 p.m. at the school.

Photographer
sues Madonna
I

NEW YORK (AP) - A photographer has sued Madonna for
$4.5 million, claiming lhe sin,ger's
bodyguards beat him up outstde a
pizza parlor because they mistakenly thought he had taken pictures of
her.
J. Kenneth Katz c barged in
court papers Friday that he was
attacked at Madoona's behest Aug.
7 outside lhe pizzeria in Manhattan's Soho neighborhood.
Katz said a friend, Angie
Coqueran, actually photographed
Madonna and also ·took pictures of
the singer's driver manhandling
Katz. Coqueran said she also was
abused by the bodyguards, but is
not suing.
Madonna's spokeswoman and
the security firm that hires her
bodyguards did not return telephone calls.

Unwontld or obnormol hair grOW!h II I diiOrdor many women ... oxporlonclng lodoy. Thoro oro 2typu ol hllr-¥01tuo (llghQ, ond tormlnll (dirk). Moll votluo holre oro 1011 ond downy, IOI!Mitlmu they become occelerotocl, mooning
they grow longor. Tormlnol hllro 111 dork, coorM ond doop--011 In tho !allclio ol your olein.
II you hovo 1 heir problem be vory ceroful whit you do to lhl hair. Ught hllr
con bo otlmulotocl Into dork holr by lwtlozlng, woxlng or uotng hair romovol
creomo on rour body. Wulngii[UIIIIUllr woy Ol IWMIIng. Even II you hi..
dirk holr 111d you !WHEt, Wll, or UM croom• you ero In lor 1 nlghtmuo ol hair
ancl okln probllmo. Twoozlng or hllr ,.movot .,..m• wtlllrrllote 111 okln. The
only dollnoo tho okln hlo 11 to grow moro dHper hair ond maybe mort hair
lhon you hod boloro. Stop end think obout tho holr romovol croa,.. lllhly a,.
otrona onough to mlko tho holr oil rour I••• whotll tl dotngto ... okln.
CrHIIII and twoellng atoo can lud to Ingrown hllre lhot•• .lnloctocl ond can
ow lho !oct or body. II mootollhl pooplo hod lhl monoy lhly lfllllt on dlvlc••, cr.. me, and wax11 lhty could han lnn•lecllt tniD electrolpla trtatmenta,
thl only periNinonl hlk romcwal method. lhl clovlceo you buy !rom mogU11111
or doportmontolortl, do lhoy oll.. lhty oro Storlllad (meonlnggorm-lrH)?
AI In oloclrologloll hopo lhll tnlormaUon holpo you wllh rour hair problem.
Ao o compoulonolo poroon who hod abnormal hair growth !rom on adrenal
dtflcltncy at ·~ 14 that ltd Ia 1 tMard, mulllche, eld•bt.tma on lhll face, I
know ouclly how you !HI.
11 you .,... unwonlld holr, oloctrolylle cen help rid VOUIMIIollhl pralllem.
Our oqulpmllllll lhl bell thltlo ovolloblo, our lloatrnonll are almoel polnlloo.
II your trootmonllllhll olltco hurto thtn you can 1.... without poytng. lhl old
llblo ol oloctrolyalo - no poln, no gain - lon't truo. Our Etootrologloll, tochnlquo, end oqulpment uolng otorill11d lnotrumonll olllre you tho butllut·
mont In oloctrolr•l• tocloy. Tilt only pooplo IIIII come to our olllct have hllr
p1Gblom. The ollcllotogloto on 11111 at Condy'o Eloctrolyolo hlvo all nporloncod tholr own bottle unwont.cl hair.

---Names in the news---

CANDY'S ELECTROLYSIS

6000 Grand Control Avo., SUHo1- '11onn1, W. VI. 21105
H... : Tlllldly.frldly N; Sol Appalnlmonl upon Roquool
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Con-I Comjllomonllry CO!IIulltlan
Hom12IIHIOI
Cortllocl Pr-lonol Ellclrolyoll

MOTHE-RS!

.

D.D. STUDIO
WILL BE AT

5

Hawaiian Islands Cruise

FOODLAND
STORES

W£

!AK[

CH!CKS

September 17,.1992

Scott's girlfriend upsets delicate
balance of bachelor pad ecosystem
·en"ta.,l' ......

PASSPORT
AND I.D.
PHOTOS

·
Meigs C0 unty calendar

Sunday Tlmes--Sentlnei-Page-85

Excuse me for being sexist, but r;:;;J_:;;,~f~~·~
~"i&lt;.'i.jl pull~ ~ inside.
women sure know how to ruin a ·"•
1rJMI\
'1
,·'&gt;f~·
Ntcka had not only
been busy
._ .,, r,.,_~ .
clean
a1so done some
perfectly good bachelor pad
=it .•• ..... ; ....... -.·:.•·•:::.;-.:
. 1ng • but had
•
My rriend scou lives in ~"u .~.;;Or~.:ffi.~r ·
mmorredecoraun~.
Ponsmoulh. His aparunent is use.:!
••)',~~;~·: .·'~~:·r: " .;!4!: .·.· ~·~~~:.· Bestdes buytng a new b~d
as ~central meeting point for me ~·~·~': .•~~-:·.;[: i~iJ,,.;&lt;;;,~~·: ·.-···;:.• spread, she also mstalle~ a btg
and lhe rest of the hometown gang :::11.;,. KEVIN PINSON
\ fancy g~ee~ shower curtam lhat
to get together and plan our week- ~/.!l.
"'~~'
.
looked like tt used to hang from a
d
,... .• ,...
~;.t . ..
!heater stage. The ftrst time I used
en It was lhe perfect hangout for a LON,G.
.
·
the balhroom after the redecorabunch of young single men such as
I,t s downng~t uncomfortable. lion: I sat there for half an hour
ourselves. The apanment provided foe s even afratd to even u~e the watang for the show to stan.
a very comfortable environment ashtrays now, because lhey re as
She also had purchased some
and gave shelter to a bunch of clean as the plates in the kitchen matchmg hand towels to hang
bachelors wilh no social life.
cupbo~rd (th~ pl~tes used to be be!tde lhe stnk. Not usabl~ hand
There were a! ways plenty of stored m the sink;. If you wanted to to els, but the ~d lhat are JUS1 for
pizza boxes to prop our feet up on eat off one, you sunply scraped lhe show· That dadn t really affect us
and if we ever wanted some potato green stuff off, rinsed it off and g~ys though, because we usually
chips to snack on all we had to do used it).
wtpe our hands on our jeans anywas reach down between the cushWhen Nicki first moved in, I way.
ions on the couch
pull out a hadn't talked to Scott for a couple . The closest ~e ever came to
handful.
of weeks, so 1 was unaware of his mtenor ~ecoratmg before Nicki
The floor had a sticky movie new living arrangement. It wasn't moved m w.as when we left a
theater feel to it It was lhe kind of until I went home for lhe weekend frozen ptzza tn .lhe. oven too long
place where you wiped your feet oo and stopped by for a visit lhat I dis- and ended up usmg II as an ashtray.
the way out, not on the way in. And covered lhe change. And lhe shock
The ptzza had been popped 1~
we liked it lhat way.
almost killed me.
the oven and forgotten about until
All of my friends are professionScotty's apanment building has t~e thtck black smoke from the
a1 smokers. which means lhe place one of lhose security doors where kitchen obscured the televiSion.
was usually filled with smoke, you buzz the apanment you want
B~ the ume we found the oven,
lied techs. Shlmett bas been doing nails for three
PRACTICE TECHNIQUES - Pictured pracashes and cigarette butts (it also and the resident can unlock lhe the: ptzza was as black as coal and
years, Brumfield, three, and Burris, nine.
ticing the tedious task of applying artlliclal nails
means that I will be lhe first one to door from his or her apanment.
twace as hard.
are nailtechnklans, (I tor), Gina Shifflett, Heidi
According to Brumfield, it takes 2 1/2 to 3 hours
die of lung cancer because I'm the
Once we buzz his apartment,
Not even Speedy: w~o would
to apply 10 nails. (Times-Sentinel photo by Kris
Brumfield, and Carolyn Burris of Mane Designonly one not breathing smoke Scotty knows we ' re coming, so eat a Goodyear Radtaltf. he had
Cochran)
ers in Gallipolis. All three are state board certithrough a filter) .
nobody bothers to knock on his ~no~gh catsup, would consoder eat.
In the good old days, Joe just aparunent door, lhey just walk on mg IL
flicked his ashes on lhe rug and rub in. Just like I did lhat afternoon
The crust around lhe edge. had
them in wilh lhe toe of his shoe so
1 opened the door and stepped curled up and turned the PIZza
nobody would see lhem. That was in. Then I noticed the freshly ho~l-shaped, so after tt ~led we
about lhe extent of our cooperative waxed floors, the recently vacu- settt on lhe table and used II as an
housekeeping program atlhe time. umed rugs and the empty sin!' wi~ ashtray. It was the. ~eel decor to
About once a month , Scott's a stack of clean dishes bestde n. fit our tastes .... unul it cracked and
mother or grandmother would And you could actually see the sun fell apan two wee;ts ~ter. . .
· from lhe nail bed, giving it a yel- customer is done, the instruments come in and clean the place to pre- shining lhrough lhe clean windows. . The chang~ Nicki has msuwted
By KRIS COCHRAN
My face flushed and I stam- 1s even stanmg to affect Scott. I
low color.
are soaked in an anti-fungal disin- vent the Environmental Protection
Times·Sentinel Staff
Agency from condemning it as an mered out an apology, thinking I ealled h.im a couple of weeks back
A person's nail has a perspira- fectant."
The customer has a disposable illegal toxic dump. The rest of the had walked into the wrong apan· and whtle we were on the phone,
GALLIPOLIS - Ladies, pan of tion rate of 18 percent, added
ment. I closed the door and double- Joe came into lhe apanment. Scott
Brumfield.
towel
which is sanitized, lhe towel month was total chaos.
looking your best could be right at
"We
will
not
work
on
anyone
And
then
Scott's
girlfriend
checked
the apartment number. I was s~tting on the bed and Joe
your fmgertips.
which the technician works on is
moved
in.
Don't
get
me
wrong,
had
the
nght
place.
came 1~ and JUmped on lhe bed
with
a
fungus,
"
said
Brumfield.
Literally.
sanitized, files are sanitized, and
Nicki
is
a
real
nice
person
wilh
an
My
ftrst
thought
was
that
Scou
bes•de htm. ·
. Taking alllhe steps necessary to "Nor will any of our technicians even lhe table is sanitized.
"Ge.~ your feet off the bed
help women have beautiful finger- with a disorder work on a cus"Everyone should be so sani- incredible amount of patience (i.e., had changed.aparunents. But the~ I
.
nails are nail tec~nicians Heidi tomer."
tarr," said Burris. "Even when she puts up with Scott and his recalled talking to .ham a few mm- sp~d! I heard Scott say. ,
utes befme on the mtercom outside . What dtd you JUSt say? I Satd
To prevent molds, lhe customer were doing a customer's hair, the obnoxious friends).
Brumfield, Carolyn Burris and
I'm not writing this in an the secunty door. I had even sup- mt?. the ph~ne.
Gina Shifflett of Mane Designers receives a repair bottle to take combs are sanitized and never used
twice."
.
home
with
them
in
case
a
nail
attempt
to convince Scotty to lhrow phed .~•m w1~h t~e correct pass
..What?
.
in Gallipolis, owned by Cindy Sexher
out.
Heck
no.
She's
too
good
of
word:
Budweascr.
.
You
JUSt
told
!.oe
to
get
hos
feet
needs
to
be
resealed.
Also,
lhere
However, having beautiful nails .
ton.
a
cook
to
toss
out
in
the
street.
I
was
almost
convmced
some
off
the
bedspread!
According to the technicians, are no bubbles under an artificial requires teamwork between the
Now that Nicki has moved in, shaved-head sheet-wearing cult
"Oh God ..... help me." Scott
there have been misconceptions nail, the prime spot for nails to per- technician and lhe customer. The
about the effects of anificial nails, spire.
technicians suggest if the customer the place is as spotless as the day leader ~ad bram washed my long- stammered.
"Mold can transfer from person has a problem with a nail, they when lhe other women in Scott's ttme fnend mto a hfe of peace,
which can be attractive when properly applied and cared for.
to person and nail to nail," said should take care of it right away or life would come in and clean. And prosperity and good housekeeping Kevin Pinson is a reporter with
· Stressing lhe need to follow san- Brumfield. "It (mold) can tum to stop ·by the salon each week to it stays that way ALL MONTH when Scotty opened lhe door and Ohio Valley Publishing
itary procedures by bolh lhe techni- fungus, and a nail can be lost when have lheir nails checked.
cian and customer, lhe technicians it is not taken care of."
All these sanitary steps have
Wilh a total of 15 years experi- proved beneficial to Mane Design.observe strict requirements even a
doctor would be proud of.
ence between lhem, all lhree tech- ers and its nail technicians. Last
Billy Ray Cyrus, Alan Jackson,
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Gov. make public appearances.
"Before tile technicians begins, nicians have been taught to know week, stated the technicians, the
Harwell's firing caused an Wynonna Judd and Trisha YearAnn Richards. trying her hand as a
both she and the customer wash the point when a doctor should step salon was inspected and exceeded
film critic, gave 2 1/2 stars to lhe uproar in Detroit Mike Hitch, who wood.
their hands with an anti·bacterial in.
state law requirements for sanitary
political satire "Bob Robens" and purchased the Tigers from pizza
soap," said Brumfield. "We then
"During our training, we must procedures.
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) said it sometimes comes close to magnate Tom Monaghan about a
Brumfield, Burris, and ShifOett,
check the customer for any disor- know every nail disorder, lhe cause
Terry
Waite. who spent five years
month
ago,
immediately
set
to
der, such as fungus or mold, on of the disorder, the reason for lhe are all state board certified techni- real life.
in
captivity
in Lebanon, says his
work
to
bring
him
back.
The film "works hard to captore
lheir nails."
disorder, such as heredity, and we cians. Shifflett is a graduate of
experience
won't
make him walk
Rick
Rizzs,
one
of
two
announc·
the superficiality, the manipulation
If either fungus or mold is evi- must know the cure," said Brum- Pittsburgh Beauty Academy and
away
from
opportunities
to ease
ers
hired
when
Harwell
was
fired,
dent, each must be taken care of field.
Clarksburg Beauty Academy, while and lhe sheer absurdity lhat, I must said Friday: "We got thrown a suffering and conflict in lhe world.
before any nails ean be applied, she
Prior to a nail application ses- Brumfield and Burris are graduates concede, are part of the political curve ball. But we're looking for"That hasn't changed," Waite
added.
sion, all inSinllllents soak in a wet of lhe Huntington School of Beauty process," Richards wrote Friday in ward to this opportunity.... This is said Thursday before giving a
the Austin American-Statesman.
According to the technicians, a santizer cootaining 70 percent alco- Cui tore.
"Bob Roberts," starring and fine. I think we'll learn from speech at Wittenberg University.
"There's nothing to be afraid
mold is a discoloration caused by hol, which is kept at lhe statioo at
" I don't feel vindictive toward my
directed by Tim Robbins , tells the Ernie. "
of," said Brumfield.
moisture between lhe artificial nail all times.
captors."
and the natural nail, and a fungus is
"We're here to make people story of a right-wing millionaire·
"Nothing is used twice until it is
Waite, 53, lhe Anglican special
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) folk singer who runs a U.S. Senate
caused when the nail itself lifts sanitized," said Shifnett. "After a beautiful," added ShifOett.
envoy
for lhe Archbishop of CanBrook
s,
Brooks
&amp;
Dunn,
Garth
campaign against lhe longtime, libterbury.
helped free hostages Beneral Democratic incumbent played Dolly Parton , Pam Tillis, Tanya
jamin
Weir,
Lawrence M. Jenco
Tucker and Steve Wariner have
by Gore Vidal.
and
David
P.
Jacobsen
in 1986. He
In her review, lhe Democratic been added to the perfonners who
governor hinted that she found the will sing Sept. 30 on the Country disappeared in Beirut on Jan. 20,
1987, and spentl,763 days in cap·
movie maybe a touch too authentic. Music Association awards show.
tivity.
The
two·hour
program
will
be
"Viewers in lhis weird political
Waite urged people to value
season might wonder where the televised live from the Grand Ole
lheir
inner freedom to think.
Opry
House
by
CBS.
satire ends and reality begins,"
"No
matter what happens there
Previously confirmed perform·
Richards wrote.
is
still
that
pan that can't be cap·
ers were Mary-Chapin Carpenter,
turcd " he said
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Actor
Tony Dow, who played older
brother Wally Cleaver in lhe televi·
TH[ MOST TllUSHO NAME IN TRIIVEl.
sion series "Leave It to Beaver,"
says depression once brought him
to lhe brink of suicide.
Dow asked a congressional eauBx perience Oahu, Maui,
cus Friday to spend more money
Kauai and Hawaii in 7 days
for research on mental disorders,
and total comfon.
saying the treatment he has
received over lhe years has saved
his life.
Cruist alf&gt;ard the ss
"I had all lhese elaborate t&gt;lans
Inlkpendmct, a classic
for committing suicide," he satd.
Dow. 47, said he began experioccanliner with wide, spaencing depression in his early 20s,
cious decks and comfonable
and the pain it caused him was
staterooms.
worse than anything else he has
ever felt . He said his experience
showed people wilh depression are
Hosted by Dee tJnaaer
" regular people."
" I mean, who could he more
OUTSIDE CABIN $2499.00
regular than Wally Cleaver?" he
said.
INSIDE CABIN $2149.00

MR. and MRS. CHARLES (GRACE) PRICE

Price open house planned

wv

OH....Polnt

JANUARY 14·24, 1993

Dear Senior Citizen,
D.O. STUDIO

Are you one· of ~Y Senior Friends? Has your pet
been to the family veterinarian for his annual physical
.and vaccinations?
The Gallia County Animal Welfare League, Inc. has
been awarded a grant for the purpose of assisting
Gallla County Senior Citizens, age 55 and older, in
obtaining annual veterinarian care (physicals and vaccinations only) for one of their pets, maximum amount
($40.00).
Soon thi- money will be gone. Please let the ~-&amp;ague
aslist y~u in · maln~lnlng a healthy pet companion by
visiting the vet of your cho.lce In Gallla County.
Sam's Senior Friends applications are available at
ttie nursing care. centers, veterinarian offices, and at
The Senior CitiZ~tns Center.
For more Information, telephone Marilyn Smith at
(614) 446 4496.
Your Best Friend,
Sam

- ·- - --

- - - - . . . -- - -I

-·

....

ALL AGES AND
FAMILIES
:

GOOD NEWS · SCENIC AND BLACK BACKGROUND IN YOUR PACKAGE
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Will not slick or fade

· generation family or Helen Miller ..L·r are, front,
. Helen Miller, great-great grandmother, and

0/
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2 • 8 X 10
2• 5 X7
8 WALLETS
18 HALF SIZE
WALLETS

~Treasures found

REG. $1 • .95

NOW
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on dellvO&lt;y
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Peroono under 11 mull be accompanied by po,.nt.

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ONE SPECI~~~~~ts\M~!2t NoON-7
THIRD AVE.
WED.; SEPT. 23 11:0CJ.6:30

-_..;.- -- · -·----- -----

FRI., SE~ ~E~~OG-7:00
SAT., s~:lit ~~tlo-4:oo

FOODLAND
"

-·-·-""-·- ---------...

- --'1

'

-~--

"'""--·

.

-· . _.,. _.

_

••••••

Scpterr1bcr 30th and

j

r,:·.

OHIO VALLEY JA&lt;;~SON PIKE
THURS., SEPT. 24 11 :OCJ.6:30
JACKSON AVE.

PT• PLEASANT
POMEROY
PT. PLUSANT

in family barn

home to torkeys, sheep and hay are drive from New Haven.
By LAUREN A. BORSA
"I think people like to come out
bulging with books, about 50.000
Associated Press Writer
to
lhe
country,' Whitlock said.
BETHANY, Conn. - Want a in all.
.
Cows
from a nearby farm J!111ZC
"When farming gotro be so clif•
.rare book on fishing lhat was printin
the
fields
near lhe bootsrore, and
ed in 1895? Or maybe you're a col- ficult, lhis was lh~ &lt;?nly otlter·lhing
iector in lhe market for something 1 knew," said Whitlock, 76. "1:. people browsing for books ~ ~o ·
·on animals, printed in Italy in 1639. would love to be a farmer, but now pick up a dozen eggs at WhiUock s
from children who raise chickens
· Gilben WhiUock can find it for I'm happy being a bookseller."
on
a neighboring farm.
And
so,
nestled
in
Bethany's
Just let hiin' run out to ' the
On weekends, some book
rol)ing hills is Whitlock Farm
~· "Fony-four years ago - when B.ooksellers, two rustic, red barns hunters bring picnic lunches and
.WhiUock decided it was geUing 100 crammed. with books, magazines, make a day of it, browsing at lhe
hard to make a living farmin~ in maps and prints, as well as records srore, then stroUing down a country
· road. A neighbor's dog often stops
lhis country hamlet - he dectded and antiques.
to follow his father into another
The business regularly draws by to snooze among lhe stacks.
But for the serious coUector
·family business, .selling books.
scholars, authors and rare book
lhere
is much to look through.
· Now, barns that were once dealers to the small town a shon

DEPOSIT

GROUP PICTURE $1 .00 PERSUBJECT. PIIY WHEN TAKEN.

.GALLIPO
GALLIPOLIS

Dustin. Second row, Elizabeth Ohlinger, greatgrandmother, Mark Dutcher, father, and Wilma
Acord, grandmother•

FIVE GENERATIONS .. Pictured is the live·

DETROIT (AP) - Veteran
baseball broadcaster Ernie Harwell
will return next year as the voice of
the Dcuoit Tigers.
Harwell, 74, was fired last year
after 32 years broadcasting Tigers
games. He will help broadcast lhe
team 's games next year and then
will retire from announc
to

PRIMO II
Black, Old Gold

TIIEtlf!JE
· MfE
LAFAYETTE MALL
GAWPOUS

•

.

----------------------~ -·--------~··-..-..-~-~-·

.,,

. . ----------....,- --- -' ---·· -

�September 20,1992

Pomeroy-MiddlePQrt.-...Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleaaant, wv

Plgl 88-Sunday nmes Sentinel

U. Rio Grande offers classes
RIO GRANDE • Two classes in
WOI'I!PmeCt S.O .t: S.l • lnicrmedi. ate Wordilroc:essing will be offered
this fall ~by the University or Rio
G~ Office of Continwng Edu-

cauon.

QUEEN CANDIDATES· The Racine Fall
Festival Queen will be recognized at Racine
annual festival to be held next weekend. Pictured, 1-r, are Southern High School students,

Toni Sellers, freshman; Bniady Roush, sopho·
more; Amber Obllager, junior; aud Raberta
Caldwell, senior. The queen will be anuounced
during the parade at 10 a.m.

Maestro competition in full swing

CHARLES ADKINS JR,
GALLIPOLIS - Five local
celebrities who agreed to panicipate in a fund-raiser for the Ohio
Valley Symphony are at the peak
of their campaigns. Each bas one
more week to outdo the others and
be declared the winner. The winner
will accept the baton from OVS
maestro Ray Fowler at the end of
the season opener Sept. 26 and
conduct John Philip Sousa's Stars
and Stripes Forever.
The candidates are Charles I.
Adkins, Ir., president and chief
eliCCUtive officer of Holzer Medical
Cenlcr; Dr. Barry Dcrsey, president
of the University of Rio Grande;
Robert Eastman, businessman and
supermarket owner; William Medley, assisWlt professor of Finance
at lhe Universuy of Rio Grande and
Attorney Barbara Wallen.
Fowler plans a conductor ' s
crash course Sept 24. It won't be
the only practice the candidates get.
Artistic director Lora Snow provided them batons and Stars and
Stripes recordings in mid-Septem.ber for some serious closet conducting.
The winner will remain a mys-

DR. BARRY DORSEY

WILLIAM MEDLEY

tery until the OVS completes the
evening's selections. Since conui·
butions can still be made through
intermission, the candidates will be
very visible, making their final
pitches for su(liJOrt
Prior ro concert ni~h~ contribu. tions can be made duectly to the

BARBARA WALLEN
candidates, dropped at Peddler's
Pantry or mailed to Ariel Theatre,
P.O. Box 24, 426 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, 45631. Checks should
be written to Ariel Theatre with the
candidate's name on the memo
line. All contributions are tax
deductible.

Letters containing warmth, support
·and checks flood Horne stead
By DANA KENNEDY
Associated Press Writer
HOMESTEAD, Fla. - The
message from Elkhart, Ind., was
·brief and wrillen in a child ' s
scrawl, surrounded by large hearts:
"Dear Florida - We're praying
for you. We love you!!"
From Auburn , Mass., came

.,

.
~

and an all day workshop in Using tion Classe:; at the Univ.ersity of
Computers
• Rio Grande generate Continuing
Intermediate/Advanced MS-DOS Education Units. Participants will
Ope111ting Systems. Two different receive ' continuing education cereourse times are being offered.
tiflcate for .7 CEU' s.
Evening courses will meet from
Further information on the
6:30.9:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 6 workshops and registration inferand Thursday, Oct. 8. The class mation may be obtained from lhe
will meet on lhe University of Rio Office of Continuing Education,
Grande campus in the Davis Career University of Rio Grande Box 878,
Center. An all day course will meet Rio Gntnde, 45674, or by calling ·
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Wednes- 245-5353, or mil free in Ohio at I ~
day, October 7. This class will 800-282-7201.
meet in the College of Business
Flower arranl!ing
Computer Lab, Room 108.
The University of1~io Grande
Cost for the class is $60. The through lhe Office of Continuing
pre·registration deadline is Mon- Education will be offering a one
day, Oct. 5, for both the evening evening craft class on arranging
and all-&lt;lay class sessions.
flower on a grapevine wreath. This
Computer users can make more course will be offered on Monday,
use of their systems by understand· · Oct. S from 6:30-8:30 p.m. in
ing lhe basics of the operating sys- Anniversary Hall; room 103.
tern which runs heir apl'lication
Cost for the course is $25.
programs. Knowing the Dtsk Oper- Instructing the course .is Pat Parating System commands and func- sons from Pat's Posey Patch.
tion allow the user to be more in
Participants will learn basic
control and more productive. This techniques of arranging, proper
course will make you a more orga- preparation and design. All fall
nized and efficient computer user.
arrangement on a wreath will be
Topics include: function keys, created for your home. Each person
creating and organizing directories will need to bring wire cutters and
and subdirectories, formatting a pair of scissors. All other materidisks, installing, copying, erasing, als are furnished by lhe instructor.
renaming and backing up files,
Wood puncbiug
checking for disk contents and
with tole painting
errors, recovering lost files, crea~'\
University of Rio Grande
ing batch files, and understanding through the Office of Continuing ·
input and oulput.
Education will be offered a craft
This course is suitable for all class in wood punching with tole
IBM or compatible users. DOS painting. This course will be held
practice disks and take home work- Mondays, Sept 28 and Oct 5 from
sheets are frovided. Instructing the 6:30·9 p.m. Cost for the course is
course wil be Robert Bence. Par- $20. Instructor for lhis course is
ticipants will receive a continuing Helen Armstrong of Jackson.
education certificate for .6 CEU's.
Participants will combine wood
Spreadsheet applicatious
punching and decorative painting ·
Two classes in Lotus 1-2·3 • · ro make a board wilh pegs.
Intermediate Spreadsheet ApplicaSweatshirt painting
lions are being offered by the UniA painting on sweatshirt clas·s
versity of Rio Grande Ortice of will be offered on Thursdays, Oct
Continuing Education.
I and 8, from 6:30 to 9 p.m. in the'
Evening class sessions will meet Anniversary Hall, room 102. Cost
on Tuesday and Thursday, Oct 20 for this course is $20.
and 22 from 6-9:30 p.m. An all day
Pre·registrntion deadline is Sept
session will meet on Wednesday, 29. Pre-registration is required due
Oct. 21, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Both ro limited class size. Instructor for
classes will meet in the College of the course is Helen Armstrong of
Business Computer Lab, Room Jackson.
108.
A Halloween desi~n is lhe patCost of the workshop is $75. tern that will be patnted on the
Course participants will receive sweatshirts for this class. Particiinstruction. course worksheets and pants will be using a variety of diftake home practice diskette. Pre- ferent paints and methods to apply
registration deadline for both ses- this pattern ro a white sweatshirt
sions is Monday, Oct.19.
made of 50 percent polyester, 50
Lotus is the leading application percent cotton material. Students
program for MS -DOS Computer are requested to bring the sweatSpreadsheets. In lhis intermediate shirt. The shirts will need to be
class, participants will learn more washed wilh no fabric softener. All
advanced functions, such as intro- other materials will be furnished.
ductory macros, graphing, database
For more information and regis·
functions, windows, range names, tration contact the University of
and printing functions. Participants Rio Grande, P.O. Box 878, Univershould already be familiar with the sity of Rio Grande, Rio Grande,
basic Lotus spreadsheet functions.
45674 or call614-245-5353, extenlnstructing the class will be sion 325 or roll free in Ohio at I·
Chuck Clark. Continuing Educa- 800-282-7201.

.

Evening sessions are scheduled
for Tuesday and ThUISday, Oct. 13
and IS from 6 to 9:30 p.m. The
evening session will meet in the
Davis Career Center, Room 113.
An all day session will meet on
Wednesday, October 14 from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. The day time session
will meet in tho College of BusinesfComDutcr Lab, Room 108.
Cost ol the class is $75. Registration deadline for these courses is
Monday, Oct. 12.
This class is the second in a
series on WordPerfect word processing. In lhe class more advanced
functiOns wW be covered, such as:
developing macros, changing formats wilhin a document, printer
control options, and use of the
spelling checker and thesaurus. A
basic understanding of Wordper·
fect is important
Instructing the course is Chuck
Clark. Participants taking this continuing education class at the University will earn a continuing education certificate for .7 CEU's.
Lotus 1-2-3
Beginning workshops in Lotus
1-2-3 • Introduction to Spreadsheets are being offered by the University of Rio Grande Office of
ContinuinJ Education. The classes
will meet mboth an-day or evening
se&amp;Sion options.
The evening classes will meet
on Tuesday and ThUISday evening,
Sept 22 and 24 from 6 to 9:30p.m.
The all day section will meet on
Wednesday, Sept. 23 from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. The classes will meet in
the College of Business Computer
Lab, Room 108.
Cost of the workshop is $75.
Pre-registration deadline is Monday, Sept 21.
Teaching the class will be
Chuck Clark. Participants will
receive CEU Certificates from
URG.
Lotus 1-2-3 is the leading
spreadsheet application program
for MS-DOS computers. In this
introductory class, participants will
learn basic spresdsheet functions,
such as: keyboard'overview, data
entry, number formats, worksheet
organization and commands,
spreadsheet manipulation, entering
formulas, and printing repons.
Participants will receive take
home workbooks and samples of
spreadsheet applications. This class
is excellent for persons who are
just beginning to use spreadsheets.
MS-DOS
Intermediate/Advance
The University of Rio Grande
will be offering both a two evening

Gallia County calendar
. ROBERT EASTMAN

these words of hope: " Don't give
up, look to the future as a new
beginning. Dream new dreams and
you wiU find your way."
A widow from Santa Monica,
Calif., encllsed $10, explaining it
was "love from a stranger who
cares.''
The leners were among more

TO PERFORM • Son·Sblne wiU be slnllna at MemrvWe Ml&amp;-

•• Jlonal'}' Blptlst Cllurtb Suuday, Sept. 20 aurma morning servlca

•• of tile cbun:ll'a bomecomlllg. Services will beglo at 10:30 a.m. The
HIJIP7 Trayelen will lie perrormln&amp; In the arteruoon. Son-Sblne
con1l1t1 or Marty aud Rllonda Glusburo and Kent and Lisa
Walker.
·

than 400 notes of encouragement
and support from around the world
that have arrived at city hall since
Hurricane Andrew ripped through
town.
Most of the leuers contained
checks and cash, ranging from a $6
private donation to a $1,500 check
from a company, said municipal
spokeswom31) Ann Marie Gothard.
The average donation has been $50
to $100. she said.
"They're gratifying to read,"
she said. "They're all very encouraging. They say they lrnow it may
take awhile to rebuild but they give
a lot of hope."
A woman in Holland wrote:
•1The sun is always coming up in
Florida. When we were there, I
remember lhe narne, 'The sunshine
state.' Let the sun shine in your
city."
Many of the letters were sent
directly to City Manager Alex
Muxo, who appear~d on national
television after the disaster and was
interviewed by scores of newspapers and magazines, People seemed
to be touched by his optimistic d«:·
laration lhat "there is always a
tomorrow" and his belief lhat the
area wW rebuild.
·
"The way you answered the TV
cameras was one of the finest ~
most carinj! I have ever heard m
my entire life," an Iowa resident
wrote; "Your attitude wW no dol!bt
help many lives. Our love is wtth
you across the miles."
Other people were moved by
Muxo's account 'of how his 12·
year-old son .lost his treasured
baseball card collection, one or
countless tiny tragedies caused by
Andrew.

of God. Dick Latham of Marion, is
the evangelist Services begin each
night at 7 p.m.

Sundliy, Sept 20
MERcERVILLE· Homecom·
ing services·at Mercerville Mis·
sionary Baptist Charch, 10:30 a.m.
Special singing in morning and
afternoon with preaching by Joc
Dolan and Berkeley Saunders. Dinner at noon.
VINTON • Vinton Baptist
Charch to hold homecoming, 10:30
a.m. Special singing by John and
Debbie Cardwell Potluck lunch at
noon.

GUY AN - Bias family and Born
Again Believers will be singing at
the Guyan Tabernacle.

·

CENTENARY
Centenary
United Christian Church to host
Rev. Charlie Johnson as guest
preacher and the Stapleton Family
Singers, 7 p.m.
EUREKA - Eureka Church of
God revival, 7 p.m. Will continue
at same time nightly until Saturday,
Sept 26.
HOCKINGPORT - Music benefit for Glen "Lefty" Baker, II·
11:30 p.m. at Kenny and Millie
Reynolds Building. All bands welcome, country, bluegrass, gospel.
Everyone welcome, bring lawn
chairs. 1·667-3745 for more information.

Monday, SepL 21
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Business and Professional Women
meeting, 6:30 p.m. at The Stowaway . Program by the legislative
committee. "Meet the Candidates"
night.
'
CENTERPOINT · Revival Crusade for Christ at the Centerpoint
Freewill Baptist Church Sept. 2126, at 7 p.m. Sponsored by the
Meigs-Gallia-W.ason counties Cru·
sade for Christ. Rev. Clyde Hen·
derson, president.

Tuesday, Sept. 22
RIO GRANDE - Open Gate
Garden Club meeting, 7:30 pm. at
the home of Mary Jane Wolfe .
Members are to bring material to
make grapevine wreaths. lnstalla·
lion of officers.
CHESHIRE • Cheshire Chapter
Order Eastern Star, 7:30p.m. Bring
covered dish.
Reunions
NORTHUP • Ashbury Church
group reunion, Sunday, Sept 20 at
the White Cemetery Church on
White Cemetery Road near
Northup. Potluck dinner at noon.
Public is welcome.
CENTENARY - Pete and
Margie Parsons family reunion at
Raccoon Creek County Park. Sept
27 at shelterllouse five.

Beautiful Sele~ion
of Dresses
Petite (2-16) &amp; Missy (4-20)

GALLIPOLIS - Homecoming at
Bulaville Christian Church. Regu·
lar morning service and covered
dish dinner at noon. Preaching I
p.m. by Rick Towe. Special singing
by "Shammah". Everyone welcome.
MERCERVILLE- Larry Haley
preachin~ at Providence Missionary Bapust Church on Teens Run
Road, 6:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Historical Society Board meeting,
I p.m. at the Episcopal Charch. No
program.
GALLIPOLIS • Mark Erwin
will be preaching at Mina Chapel
Charch, Neighborhood Rd., 1 p.m.

.Liz Claiborne Sportswear
and lzod Sportswear
NEW LIZ CLAIBORNE HANDBAGS! ·

*NEW CAPEZIO *

RODNEY • Rodney United
Methodist Church annual homecom ina, 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m .
Singing by the McDaniel Trio wilh
Dal) Hayman on, piano. Sermon ·
will be by Arland King. Carry-in
diMer in fellowf:ltip room 8J I p.m.
GALLIPOLIS -' Revival 'meet•
ing in progrw at lhe First Church

~

. LAFAYETTE MALL

GALLPOLIS

I.

(

Pomeroy-Middleport.-...GaiiiPQIIa, OH-Polnt Pleaaant, wv

September' 20, 1992

I

Sunday nmea Sentinel Page-ST

Engagement ring not essential
for bride-to-be, sa s Ann · .
Dear Ana Landers: I am writing
about something that is really
causing me grief. I plan to take
your advice because I know you'll
provide a sensible answer.
I'm a 28·year-old female, and my
boyfriend, "Ryan," is 25. We have
been seeing each olher for five years
and living together for three. He says
he wants to speytd the rest of his life
with me and we are planning ro be
married next summer.
Most of the wedding details have
been worked out •• lhe location,
time, guest list, etc. However, we
are not "officially" engaged. By lhis
I mean he has not actually asked me
to many him.
I have talked to Ryan about
this and he says we're "beyond
that point ." I would also like
an engagement ring -- nothing
expensive, no diamonds, just a
symbol of our commitment. He
says he's against such a traditional
ritual.
Ryan really is a wonderful
person. He treats me well and tells
me that he loves me. He says in his
mind we are already engaged. I
realize that I could buy myself a
ring, but it would mean a lot more
if it carne from him.
Am I being silly for wanting
a proposal and an engagement
ring? -- KINGLESS IN PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR RINGLESS: You've stated
that most of the wedding details have
already been worked out ·- time.
place, guest list, etc., which is pretty
solid evidence that Ryan intends ro

Ann
. Landers
ANN LANDEIIS

"1992, Loo Aac&lt;l•

Tim.. Syudi&lt;IU IUld

C......,nSJDdlaie''

marry you.
are you now
waiting for him to ask?
As for the ring, it would be lovely,
if only for the symbolism, but it's
not essential. And it ce,nainly isn't
worth arguing about. ~ccept the fact
that you are a romantic and Ryan is
DOL The only ring lhat matters is the
plain gold one that he places on .your
finger during the wedding ceremony.
Dear Ann Landers: I am one of
five children. Our mother passed
away seven years ago and Dad has
been living in the same home with a
housekeeper. Dad is doing well, but
soon he will be 92, and we have
started to talk about what to do with
the possessions that he and Mom
accumulated over a lifetime.
My brothers and sisters all own
their own homes, and all but one
sister live in this state. Most of us
are well off financially.
The problem is, how do we
divide the contents or Dad's
house? My brother's wife has
already asked for a painting she's
always admired. My older sister
has said on several occasions
that she wants the wing-back
chair, even though I also would
like it. One of my sisters received
jewelry from my mother befor~:

she died and the other two sisters
did not Needless to say, the list
goes on and on, and what's worse,
some of the better items have
already started to appear in my
siblings' homes.
How can we be fair about this? I
think the wives and husbands of
the siblings should oot be involved
or should get only token items.
Should we number the valuable
items and draw lots? Should we
select according to age?
I hope you can come up with an
amicable solution. I don't want the
family to come 81*1 over this. ••
FAITHFUL READER IN NEW
YORK
DEAR NEW YORK: Does your
dad have a lawyer? I think he'd
better step in and say, "Nothing goes
out or this house .as long as your
falhcr is alive."
After your father dies, the
children (no spouses) should be
permitted to select the items they
want, with the eldest getting the first
pick (one item only) and so on
down the line. There's nothing like
dividing an inherirance to bring out
the worst (and best) in people. .
Planning a wedding? What's
right? What's wrong? "Tht Ann
Landers Guide for Brides" will
relieve yolll' IJIIJdety. Send a ~If­
addressed , long, business-size
envelo~ and a check or 11Wnty
order for $3.65 (this includes
postage and handling) ro: Brides,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611 -0562. (In
Canada, send $4.45.)

Establishing an investment program
GALLIPOLIS - Successful
investing is rarely a matter of strik·
ing it lucky with one or two hot
investments. Instead, it usually is
the result of a consistent, well ·
thought·Out investment program.
One of the best ways to establish a
sound investment program is
through a written investment policy
statement that outlines your objectives, goals, and risk tolerance.
An investment policy statement
(IPS) provides several advantages:
• U you're working with a ftnan·
cia! planner and other investment
professionals, such as money managers, the statement will provide
clear guidelines for their advice or
management of the portfolio.
• It provides guidelines for eval·
uating the performance of your
portfolio and its manager(s).
• A policy statement keeps you
from panicking in times of extreme
market fluctuations. It' s tempting
to bail out when the market is drop·
ping and buy in too heavily when
the market is going through the
roof. An IPS will keep you on even
keel.
What goes into an investment
policy statement? The IPS should
state your investment objectives.
For example, do you want the panfolio to provide high current
income or more long-term growth,
or a combination? What minimum
total rate of return do you want the
portfolio to provide? Typically this

is expressed as a percentage above
the inflation rate.
What portion of the portfolio
should be liquid-that is, easily
converted to cash without significant loss or cost (money market
instruments, Treasury bills, certificates of deposit, and so on) . Stocks
and bonds are less liquid because
though they can be easily convened to cash, the loss can be signilicant if the market is down at that
time. What portion can be illiquid
(real estate, limited partnerships,
private-party loans)?
What classes of assets are per·
milled and not permitted? If you
don't' want equipment leasing and
junk bonds, say so. The policy also
may prohibit certain investment
vehicles such as limited partner·
ships.
What are the minimum and
maximum percentages of each per·
mitted asset category? If you want
the portfolio to contain no more
than 30 percent in foreign stocks
and 5 percent in precious metals,
write that out. Also state the maxi·
mum percentage any specific
investment can take up in the port·
folio, such as 5 percent
How much risk are you wilting
to take? For example, are you will·
ing to accept losses within certain
categories as long as the overall
portfolio does not lose principal
over a 12-month period? Will you
accept an overall portfolio loss of

Principal once sentenced to death
in killings is freed from prison
By AARON WATSON
Associated Press Writer
HARRISBURG , Pa . - A
school principal once sentenced ro
death for the 1979 slayings of a
teacher and her two children was
freed from prison Friday after the
state Supreme Court said prosecutOrs badly mishandled the case.
In a 5-0 decision ordering Jay C.
Smith freed, the court said the
• prosecution hid crucial evidence
that could have helped his defense
against the murder charges. He was
convicted in 1986 and his death
stntence was later reduced to a life
sentence.
"Sure I'm bitter. I'm angry,"
Smith said after walkin~ out of
state prison Friday ni~ht tn Huntingdon, about 100 m1les west of
H,arrisburg. "I don't think I can be
happy anymore. What is there to be
happy about? You can see what
kind of justice system you have."
. Smith said his time in prison
wlis ''worse than a nighunare.''
· His lawyer, William C.
Costopoulos, said: "I honestly
· believe I have set an innocent man
free • "
I
: Author Joseph Wambaugh ' s
book about the case, "Echoes in
the Darkness," became a best seller and popular television miniseries.
• Susan Reinert's nude and bat·
tered body was found in her car
parked at a morel near Harrisbuig.
Her .children, Karen, II , and
Michael, 10, were never found.
· Authorities contended Smith
arid William Bradfield Jr., a teacher
at the school in MontgOmery County, killed Mrs. Reinert and her childlm to collect $750,000 from their
estate. They cpntended Bradfield,
who is serving a l,if~ senttnce, W8$
romantically involved with Mrs.
Reinert, an English teacher.
.• smith's defense had argued that
Mrs. Reinert was murdered at the
New Jersey ~bore where Bradt

field had been.
Smith won a new trial in
December 1989 after the state
Supreme Court ruled improper
hearsay evidence was introduced in
his fJTSt trial. The court said Friday
that prosecutional wrongdoing was
so bad that reu:ying him would violate his constitutional protections
against double jeopardy.
Besides hiding evidence, the
prosecution concealed that the state
had promised a key witness against
Smith favorable ueatment in his
own unrelated trial, the court said.
In addition, prosecutors tried to
discredit a state policeman who tes·
tified he had collected the evidence
they denied existed. The state
found lhe evidence during the trial
but waited two years before telling
Smith'sattomey.
"It would be hard to imagine
more egregious prosecutorial tactics," Justice John Flaherty said in
his opinion.

five percent in any· given 12-month
period but not in any 3-year peri·
ad?
How long will the assets be in
the portfolio? Is the portfolio
designed to provide college funds
in 10 years? Retirement funds iii 20
years? What is the minimum length
of time you want specific assets to
remain in the portfolio? A shorter
time, say two or three years, means
the portfolio will be more speculative than a portfolio whose assets
must remain for at least five to ten
years.
Income and estate taxes can
have signifiC8Dt impact on lhe '¥PC
of assets robe placed in a pottfobo,
and consequendy on the portfolio's
return, so the statement should
describe tax conditions as well.
Develop these and other guidelines wilh your Certified Financial
Planner professional. As you can
see, an investment policy statement
is not as sexy as today's hot stock,
but it can provide tomorrow's
financial security.
This column is produced by the
Institute of Certified Financial
Planners, a national association
representing the top financial plan·
ners in the country, and is provided
by Mark Curry , The Wiseman
Agency, CFP, a local member in
good standing of the Institute. For a
list of CFP professionals in your
area, call toll free 1·800-282PLAN (7526).

ENTERTAIN LOCALLY· The Quarter
Horse Band will be pertormlug at Holiday Ina
in Gallipolis tllrougb Sept. 26, playing a variety
or music rrom Top 40 to southern rock, rrom
couutry to gospel. Band members include Paul

McWain, David Sutter, Tony Thomas, and Paul
E. Sa!Ue Jr. The IJ'OUP is currently working on
material ror their own studio project and they
have worked wllb entertainers such as Colin
Raye, BiUy Dean, aud Johnny Paycheck.

Consumers could see irradiated
chicken in the grocery store
By JENNIFER DIXON
AP Farm Writer
WASHINGTON - Poultry
processors got the ~een light Fri ·
day to begin zapping chickens,
turkeys and game hens with
gamma rays to lcill bacteria.
But the poultry industry isn't
wild about the idea. Only one plant
is expressing interest in irradiating
chicken, And consumer activists
worry about the safety.
The Agriculture Department' s
new regulations could allow irradiated chicken and other poultry
products to start showing up on
grocery store shelves by late Octo·
ber.
The regulations will allow fed ·
erally approved facilities to use
irradiation ro treat fresh or frozen,
uncooked whole or cut·up poultry.
The process involves passing food
lhrough a chamber containing rods
of radioactive cobalt-60 or cesium·
137, where it is bombarded with
gamma rays. Illness-causing bacteria, insects and mold s are
destroyed.
H. Russell Cross, administrator
of USDA 's Food Safety and
Inspection Service, said treating
chicken with radiation conuols
bacteria "with no hazard to consumers and with no adverse affects
on the poultry's nutritional value."
Food poisoning caused by the
bacteria salmonella is among the
food safety service ' s top targets,
and chickens are a major source of
the problem.
·
USDA estimates that 35 percent
of chicken carcasses are contami nated with salmonella, but
Lawrence Glickman, head of
pathobiology at Purdue University,
puts the figure over SO percent
Kay Golan, spokeswoman for
the national Centers for Disease
Control in Atlanta, said the organi-

zation receives about 45,000
repons of salmonella cases a year.
Golan said incidents of salmonella
probably are much higher than that,
between 800,000 and 4 million
cases annually, because most cases
aren't reported to the CDC.
Consumer groups, however, say
there are better ways of making
chicken safer, starting with
improved plant inspections.
" The approval of irradiation for
poultry is a quick-fix approach JO
Improving a highly inadequate
poultry inspection system in this
country," said Ellen Haas, executive director of Public Voice for
.Food and Health Policy.
Consumer advocates worry lhat
the process reduces the levels of

some nutrients and may leave tiny
amounts of uadesirable chemicals
in the meaL And they question the
safety implications for plant workers, communities and the environ- ·
mcnt from the use and transponation of radioactive materials.
"The USDA is prematurely
unleashing a potentially toxic technology on the Amencan people
with the hope that lhe process is
safe. It is an outrageous scientific
leap of faith,'' said Michael Colby, •
national director of Food &amp; Water, "
a food safety organization.
:
Treated poultry would have to :.
cany a label with the gneen, inter- :.
national symbol for irradiation and ~
the words "Treated with Radia· ··
lion" or " Treated by Irradiation."

People in the news
LINCOLN , Neb. (AP) - Dr.
Steve Allen Jr., son of the comedian, didn 'tiel the sense of humor he
inherited go to waste when he
became a doctor.
Allen, a family practitioner in
Ithaca, N.Y. , travels the country
telling other health professionals to
lighten up and play a little.
Allen, 48, in Lincoln on Thursday to address a conference of 750
doctors, nurses and other health
professionals, said his message for
doctors is: " Make yourself laugh
and to make laughter a corporate
policy in your office. You have to
be willing to see yourself as a cartoon occasional! y."
MUNCIE, Ind. (AP) - Director
Paul Verhoeven, who se films
include "RoboCop," " Total
Recall" and "Basic Instinct," says
one of his new projects reflects his
own search for God.
Verhoeven, attending convocation at Ball State University, said
Thursday he is three or four years
away from making " Chri st the
Man.''

" It will be a provocative movie
by putting Jesus in a completely
Jewish, political-military context,"

Verhoeven S8JCI.
"We're talking about an occupied nation here that is terrorized :
by the Romans. You have a situation like the Germans occupymg
Europe or the Japanese doing the .
same ... in the Far East."
,
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) British composer Andrew Lloyd ·
Webber describes the revival of
his musical "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat" as a
production for children.
The show is making its U.S.
premiere at the Historic State Theatre in Minneapolis, with Donny
Osmond in the starring role.

m

BIIDUP!CY
614·221-Gaaa
..J.. L W. CENNAMO
AnORNEY AT lAW
8 East Brolld Street,
Suite 900
Columbua, Ohio

1·80G-886-0LAW
(1-Boo-886-0529)

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No.14 Tennessee hands No.4 Florida 31-14Ioss
The Gatono (1-1 overall and SEC) lost for only the
second time in 161eague games since Sieve Spurrier
became the coach. The other defeat was a 45·3
thrashing at the hands of Tennessee, also in
Knoxville.
·
Florida's famed Fun 'n Gun offense was effective
mostly for shooting irself in the foot most of the day.
The Gators were penalized 12 times, punted nine
umes, and managed what is for them an anemic 278
total yards of offense.

Cincinnati, Cleveland post
afternoon baseball victories

320Z.

Section C
September 20, 1992

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)- Heath Shuler ran
for two touchdowns and passed for another Sarurday
to lead No. 14 Tennessee to a 31-14 upset of No.4
Florida.
The Vols (3-0 overall, 2-0 Southeastern Conference) got scoring runs of II and eight y;uds from
Shuler, one of 15 yards from James "Little Man"
Stewart, an~ a 66-yard touchdown pass from Shuler
to Mose Phillips to end Florida's SEC winning streak
at I L

•

· POMEROY, O'tt.
..
THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANIITIEt
.
' 26,',199~:

1rimts- Jentinel

CINCINNATI (AP)- Bobby
Ayala pitched seven shutout
innings to get his first major league
victory and Barry Larkin drove in
three runs Saturday, leading the
Cincinnati Reds to a 5-2 victory
over the San Diego Padres.
Ayala (1·1) scattered eight hits
and struck out six in seven-plus
innings in his third major league
start. He left in the eighth after giving up a walk and a double to Tony
Fernandez, and the Padres scored
twice off reliever Steve Foster on
Jim Vatcher's groundout and Fred
McGriffs double.
Rob Dibble pitched the ninth for
his 22nd save.
Larkin had a sacrifice fly and a
two-run homer otT Frank Seminara
(8·4) to raise his RBI total to a
career-high 70. Joe Oliver doubled
home a run, and Cincinnati scored
its fifth when Larkin hit into a double play.
The Padres have seen a lot of
this from Larkin: he's 19 for 5I
(.372) against them this season.
Semin;ua had been good luck
for the Padres, whinning his last
five starts. The right-hander got
into trouble right away Saturday,
giving up a leadoff double to Bip
Roberts and a single to Willie
Greene in the ftrSt. Larkin followed
with a sacrifice fly .
Greene walked and Larkin hit
his 12th homer to center field for a
3-0 lead in the founh. Oliver's two·
out RBI double completed the
inning.
Roberts singled in the fifth off
Gene Harris, stole second and third
while Greene worked Harris for a
walk, then scored when Larkin
grounded into a double play.
Indians S, White Sox 4
At Cleveland, Ohio, Reggie Jefferson, recalled from the minors
two days earlier, had three hits,
including a two-run double in the
· eighth inning, as the Cleveland
Indians beat the Chicago White
Sox 5-4 Saturday.
The Indians, who overeame an
early four-run deficit with the help
of Albert Belle's IOOth RBI of the
season, ended Olicago's four-game
winning streak. They denied Jack
McDowell (20-8) in his second
anempt at his 21st win.
Eric Plunk (9-4) pitched one
scoreless inning for the victory.
Steve Olin got two outs for his 27th
save.
Cleveland, trailing 4-3, chased
McDowell in the eighth, puning
runners at second and third on a
walk, Mark Whiten's single and a
sacrifice. Jefferson greeted Scott
Radinsky with ·a double into the
right-field comer.
McDowell, who got no decision
in an extra-inning loss to Cleveland
last Sunday, blanked the Indians on
four hits until the sixth, wben Belle
drove in his tOOth run with a single

and Carlos Martinez had a basesloaded groundout
Cleveland made it 4-3 in the
seventh on Carlos Baerga' s RBI
single, a grounder that glanced off
Frank Thomas' glove at ftrSL
Thomas and George Bell home·
red for Chicago, each keeping a
share of the team lead. Thomas hit
his 24th homer in the ftrSt inning,
then doubled before Bell hit his
24th in the fourth. The two RB!s
gave Bell the team lead at 105, one
more than ThOinas.
·
The White"Sox added a run in
the fifth on Mike Huffs RBI single.
Giants 3, Dodgers 0
At San Francisco, Calif., Jeff
Brantley and Bill Swift switched
roles and stopped San Francisco on
five hits, leading the Giants over
the Los Angeles Dodgers 3-0 Sat·
urday.
Brantley (5-7), making his sec·
ond start of the season and the
fourth of his major league career,
went six innings, giving up four
hits, suilcing out four and walking
one.
Brantley has made both of his
slarts this year against the Dodgen&gt;,
allowing only one run in 10
innings.
Swift, moved to the bullpen
because of shoulder problems,
pitched three innings for his first
save of the season. He lowered his
league-leading ERA from 2.12 to
2.08.
Swift pitched in 71 games last
year for Seattle, all in relief. He has
made four relief appearances this
season, allowing one run in II
innings.
Tile Giants ended a four-game
losing strcak.
Cubs 6, Cardinals S
At Chicago, IU., Ryne Sandberg
got three hits for the second
straight game and the Chicago
Cubs beat St Louis 6-5 Sarurday in
the opener of a doubleheader.
Sandberg, who wem 3 for 4 in
Friday's 9-7 victory over the Cardinals, went 3 for 3 with an RBI double and a walk. The Cubs won their
fourth in a row.
The Cubs took a 3-0 lead in !he
first inning, keyed by Derrick
May's two·run single off Donovan
Osborne (10-8). Chicago made it6·
0 in the second on Sandberg's double, Doug Dascenzo's· RBI single
and Marie Grace's sacrifice fly .
Frank Castillo (9-10) lasted five
innings,' allowing seven hits and
three runs. He won for the first
time after three consecutive nodecisions.
Bob Scanlan gave up an RBI
single in the seventh, but pitched
three innings for his 14th save.
Blue Jays 1, Rangers 0
At Toronto, Ont., David Cone
combined with a pair of relieveno
on a four-hiller and the Toronto

Blue Jays blanked Texas for the
second suaight game, beating the
Rangers 1-0 Saturday.
Toronto won for the 15th time
in 20 games and held its lead over
Baltimore and Milwaukee in the
AL East
Cone (3·2) gave up four hits in
seven innings. He struck out five
and walked three. Duane Ward and
Tom Henke each followed with a
hitless inning, with Henke getting
his 30th save.
.
Scott Chiamparino (0-3) did not
allow a hit until Dave Winfield sin·
gled to start the fifth. Chiamparino
allowed one run on four hits in
seven innings, suilcing out six and
walking one.
Alfredo Griffin blooped a one·
out double in the Toronto sixth and
Devon White followed with a single.
Roberto Alomar' s slow bouncer
to second scored Griffin.
Tigers 3, Red Sox 2
At Detroit, Mich., Tim
Naehring, whose solo home run put
Boston ahead in the eighth inning,
made a throwing error with two
outs in the ninth that enabled two
runs to score and gave the Detroit
Tigers a 3-2 victory over the Red
Sox.
Scou Livingstone doubled and
pinch hitter Dave Bergman drew a
walk from Greg Harris (3-9) in the
Detroit ninth.
Chad Kreuter hit a grounder
down the third base line that
Naehring charged, but his high
throw skipped off finot baseman
Mo Vaughn's glove and into the
right-field bullpen, allowing both
runneno to score.
· F~ Tanana (13-9) pitched his
third complete game of the year,
giving up f~ hits. He walked two
and suuclc out one.
With the score tied at 1·1 in the
eighth inning, Naehring hit his
third home run of the season.
Brewers 4, Orioles 1
At Milwaukee, Wis., Chris
Bosio won his team-record ninth
straight game and the Milwaukee
Brewers moved past Baltimore into
second place in the AL East by
beating the Orioles 4-1 Sarurday.
The Brewers, with 14 games
remaining, trail ftrSt-place Toronto
by five games. The Blue Jays beat
the Texas Rangers I.Q Saturday.
Bosio (15-5), who has not lost
since July 9 in a span of 13 starts,
broke the club record that roolcie
Cal Eldred had tied Friday night
with his eighth straight victory .
Pete Vuckovich, Moose Haas and
Mike Caldwell also won eight
straight with the Brewers.
Bosio allowed six hits in seven
innings with one walk and two
slrilceouts. Darren Holmes pitched
the ninth for his fourth save.
McDonald (12-12) lost his fifth
straight decision. He gave up three
runs on six hits in 6 1/3 innings.

Cincinnati to take on Green Bay
in inter-conference game today
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) The Cincinnati Bengals did some
pounding last week with their
"hammer" offense out of a nohuddle set, putting together drives
of 90,' 75 and 80 yards that made
!he clock tick and the Los Angeles
Raiders' defense ~sp ,
Today, they ll be knocking
against a soft Green Bay Packers
defense that has given up 820 yards
in two games.
The Bengals (2-0) used short
passes from quanerback Boomer
Esiason and the running of Harold
Green and Derrick Fenner to put
together three scoring drives last
week, all over six minutes in
length, during a 24-21 overtime
win.
"When you combine our ability
to run the ball with our tempo
offense - the way we can hold
people at the line of scrimmage for two weeks'in a row we've taken
advantage of a defense that's
tired," Bengals head coach Dave
Shula said.
"lt;s quicker. It's up tempo,"
· Esiason said. "My guys are looking at me like I'm out of my mind,
but I'm telling them to stay right at
the line. Sometimes I find myself a
little tired."
Thill all sounds likes bad news
for the winless Packers. They had
trouble containing the big plays last
week against Tampa Bay's no-huddle offense in a 31 -3 loss to the
t'

Buccaneers and former Bengals
chief Sam Wyche.
"Playing against a no-huddle
team last week should help us,"
Packers head coach Mike Holmgren said.
"But that to me was not the
problem last week. We are going to
take our lumps but right now we
are teaching what we believe in.
That's been a cause for some long
gains - guys out of position or a
mistake is made. So partly, it is
what we are making them to do and
partly, it always boils down to, I
suppose, a player making or not
making a play."
The Packers added two playeno
to their defense this week that they
expect to make big plays - defen·
sive lineman Danny Noonan ,
picked up from DaUas on waiveno,
and ftrSt-round draft choice Terrell
Buckley, who just signed a week
ago. But neither is completely comfortable in the defense.
Cincinnati lost a key player
when veteran linebacker Ran Bent·
ley tore knee ligaments against the
Raiders.
The Packers have given up an
·average of 290 yards passing in
losses to Minnesota and Tampa
Bay and 119 yards average rushing.
Ther,'re 27th in defense.
' This defense reminds me a lot
of the Giants," Esiason said.
"They're huge inside,_ a_ ~u~~

'

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of 300-pounders, and unlike the
Raiders, they don't take themselves
out of position because they're so
bent on getting to the quarterback.
They try to take up two gaps at
once, and they're hard to move out
of there."
Shula said he likes his team's
172-yard rushing average, secondbest in the league, but he doesn't
expect to always do that well without a passing threat
"Our completion percentage is
good (60.7) and we ve only had
one interception, but we're going to
have to start opening up the field
more with the passing game,"
Shula said.
The Packers· offense has also
been misfiring and vulnerable to
the sack. Don Majkowski, benched
at halftime last week but the starter
today, has been sacked eight times
and backup Bret Favre four times.
Green Bay has averaged 130 yards
passing and 112 yards rushing.
''Our passing game will continue to improve," insisted Holmgren,
"That might be the last thing I feel
really good about as we go along
through the years here because that
will' probably take rhe longest to
kick m. I think our running game is
making progress. If we get into a
game where I doll'l feel! have to
throw the ball to catch up to win,
then you wiD even see more out of
our running game,"

Florida was hampered by the loss of star runner
Errict Rhett for most of the game with an injury. He
carried II times for 34 yards, half of the Gators' total
for the game.
No. 6 Michigan 35, Oklahoma St. 3 - At Ann
Arbor, Mich., Todd Collins was no ordinary Elvis
Impersonator. Collins, filling in for injured Elvis
Grbac, threw two touchdown passes Saturday and set
a school record for completions as No. 6 Michigan
defeated Oklahoma State 35-3.
It was the first stan for Collins, a redshirt sophomore, who completed 29 of 42 passes for 285 yards
with one interception. His only previous action was
mop-up duty in parts of six games last season when
he completed 16 of 26 passes for 138 yards.
Bob Ptacek had held the Michigan completion
record stnce 1958 when he completed 24 against
Ohio State.

Collins th~ew touchdown passes of four. and 44
yards to Demck Alexander, Ricky Powers scored on
runs of 23 and five yards, and Ed Davis had a oneyard TD run for Michigan (1-0-1).
Oklahoma State (I· I) could manage only a 34·
yard Lawson Vaughn field goal.
No. 10. Penn St. 52, E. Michigan 7 - At
Philadelphia, Pa., R1Ch1e Anderson scored twice as ·
I Oth-ranked Penn State put four touchdowns on the
board in the first 11 minutes to defeat outclassed
Eastern Michigan 52-7 on Saturday. ·
Coach Joe Paterno switched from freshman quar'
terback Wally Richardson, who led the Lions to victory in the first two games, to John Sacca and the
offense didn't miss a beat. Sacca missed the season
opener with a severely bruised shoulder and was
replaced by Richardson.

BAERGA STEALS -Cleveland baserunner
Carlos Baerga (right) slides into third base
ahead or the tag by Chicago White Sox third

sacker Robin Ventura during Saturday's Amer·
ican League game in Cleveland, which the Indians won S-4. (AP)

Heidelberg, Otterbein deadlock
FRANKFURT, Germany (AP)
- Heidelberg recovered a thirdquarter fumble and Matt Mosher
scored on a three-yard run to lift
the Student Princes to a 7-7 tie with
Otterbein Saturday in the first
NCAA football game to be played
inGennany.
The two Division III teams
,played their Ohio Conference
opener. Heidelberg is 1-0-1 overall
and Ouerbein is 0·1-L
Heidelberg's Brad Carter recovered a fumble at the Otterbein 37
and two plays later, Jim Newland
hit Greg Lehrer with a 32-yard pass
for a first-and-goal at the three.
Two plays later, Mosher rushed in
to score and Bryce Davis kicked
the extra point to tie the game.
Otterbein scored in the first
quarter after Brant Smith recovered
a fumble at the Heidelberg 25. On
the next play, Luke Hanks completed a 24-yard pass to Don Mellick
at the one, and Darrin Liggins
scored on the next play with Andy
Mahle making the extra point
Mellick led the Cardinals with
131 yards on 30 rushes. Hanks
completed 16 of 27 passes for I 84 ,
yards with one interception.
Tom Nieter rushed for 48 yards
and Newland had 46 for the Student Princes. Newland completed
only 8 of 25 passes for 95 yards
and was intercepted four times.
Otterbein also lost three fumbles
and Heidelberg one in the rainy
playing conditions.
A crowd of 4,351 watched the
game in 20,000·scal Bicbercr Berg
Stadium.
John Carroll 51, Capital tO
At Columbus, Ohio, P.J. Insana
passed for two touchdowns and
John Carroll out.scored Capital45·0
in the middle two quarters in a 5I·
10 Ohio Conference victory Satur·
day.
Insana completed 7 of 13 passes
for 75 yards with one i~terception.

He hit Willie Beers and Brian Ash
for touchdowns on plays that covered 20 and five yards respectively.
Beers. who gained I04 yards on
19 carries, also ran for a one-yard
touchdown for the Blue Streaks (20 overall and 1·0 in the OAC).
Capital (1-1 , 0-1) lost three fumbles and had two interceptions and
was plagued by punting problems.
The Crusaders had one punt
blocked and had a high snap on
another punt, with both mistakes
leading to touchdowns. One other
snap went over the head of the
punter, resulting in a safety.
Paul Aams had two one-yard
touchdown dives for the Blue
Streaks.
Ohio Northern 21, Marietta 0
At Ada, Ohio, Arnie Boigner
rushed for 136 yards and one
touchdown and Ohio Northern's
defense limited Marietta to minus· 7
yards rushing in a 21.0 Ohio Con·
ference victory Saturday.
The victory marked the first
time since 1978 that Ohio Northern
had posted back-to·back shutouts.
The Polar Bears (2-0 overall, 1-0
conference) defeated Blullton last
week.
Boigncr opened the scoring on a
53-yard run after a scoreless first
half.
In the fourth quarter, Ja son
Clark scored on a one-yard run and
Tony Bennett on a three· yard run.
Quarterbacks for the Pioneers
(0-1 - 1, 0-1) were sacked three
times for 26 yards in losses. The
Polar Bears rushed 48 times for
188 yards.
Thomas More 52, Wilming[9n 21
At Wilmington, Ohio, Ryan
Reynolds ran for three touchdowns
and caught a pass for another Sat·
urday as Thomas More beat Wilm·
insoon 52-21 in an Association of
Mideast Colleges game.
Derrick Jell carried 25 times for
180 yards and one touchdown for

IT'S OURS! - AI River Valley aoee guard

Jerry Ramsey (71) trots ott the neld, Raider
tackle Grady Sayder ('l) exults-In Mike Cook's
recovery or 11 Fr111ktort Adena tumble Ia the
nrst quarter or Friday night's hl&amp;ll sdlool foot•
ball game in Frankfort, which the Raiders woo

the Blue Rebels (3-0, 1-0), giving
Thomas More its 13th consecutive win. Reynolds carried 19 times for
70 yards, including touchdown
runs of four, two and nine yards.
John Paul Case was 8 of 14 for
151 yards, including a 61-yard
touchdown pass to Reynolds.
Eric Noble hit 7 of 12 ~ses for
117 yards and ran six yards for a
touchdown for Wilmington (0-2, 0·
1).

Rcn Washington ran one yard
for a touchdown, and Chris Garrity
caught a 55-yard touchdown pass
from Steve Foerstner for Wilmington's other score.
Thomas More had 507 total
yards, to 341 for Wilmington.
Ball St. 10, Kent 6
At Kent, Ohio,. senior tailback
Corey Croom gained II 5 yards on
the ground, including an 11-yard
touchdown run, as Ball State edged
Kent 10-6 Saturday in the MidAmerican Conference.
Ball State's win follows nonconference losses to Clemson and
Kansas. Kent, 0-3, has lost two
conference games.
Matt Swart put the Cardinals
ahead in the first quarter with a 31yard field goal.
In the second quarter, Mike
Benzy hit a 29-yard field goal.
With 7:46 left in the quaner, Ball
State took over possession at
Kent's 49 after a punt and drove it
in on I I plays. Croom, who also
caught fiv~ passes for 35 yards.
went over nght tackle from the II
for the game's lone touchdown.
Benzy hit a 22-yard field goal in
the third quarter.
With 4:34leftto play, Kent took
over on its own 15 and in II plays
arrived at the Ball State 30. On
fourth and 17, Kevin Shuman
found Jimmie Woody for 17 yards,
but Woody fumbled. Malawi Hills
picked it up ran to the Kent 20 to
secure the win.

27-14. The decision marked tbe River Valley's
first·ever 1ridiron victory after two seasoa·
opening defeats. For the story and additional
photos, see C-l. (Times-Sentinel photo by G.
Speacer Osborne)

�OH-Polnt

wv

Valley downs Frankfo~t
~dena 27-14 for first-ever wtn
l
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' raiily leuing the ball bounce
~ay from him, the S·foot-11, 155·
~und speedster put to use the
: • that got him into lhe Division
, .I regionals in track late last

! , ;,~8;,.as focused on gelling the

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and then 1 saw lhe middle cole. Then 1 cut back outside,"
said of his 98-yard race 10 the
~lh end zone that brought early
~eers to the Raider faithful. The
;...-.·llowing two-point conversion
~
~ss from Aaron McCarty to
:·~
&lt;'J'
nady was complete, and River
:. ey Jed 8-6 wth 3:32 left in act

: e.'The trouble, at least for lhe War·
:•:
;,1pn, was that the Raiders' weren't
:l¢one. Dave Dobbins' kickoff was
:)!lught by Wilburn, who got it to
if1e Adena 25·yard line before be·
&lt;'lol" hit in traffic and fumbling lhe
'!~, I. Junior fullback/linebacker
ke Cook recovered lhe ball at
1point
:•:· From there, it took River Valley
~ven plays - two of those were
:)(arked by penalties -10 reach the
••

I

:;:

Statistics

~partment

RV
FA
~~trst downs........................3
II
"total yards .................... 177 270
i.~shing au.-yards .... 19-110 54-242
~!Passing yards ..................67
16
-:cornp.-att ................... .4·12 2·5
;:InterCeptions thrown .........2
I
.-Fumbles-Iost ............ :.... J-2
3-2
t:Punting ................ ~ ..... J-110 4-146
3-0
10•Punt rewrns-yards ........ 2·22
~Kickoff returns-yards 3-124 5-67
~Penalties-yards ............. 7-55 8-55

The next· three drives for Rive(
Valley, which never got past midfield the rest of the wat, were
sh(ln-clrcuiled by a pair o incomplete passes on the Raiders' .last
drive of the third quarter, a fumble
by Dobbins that was recovered by
sophomore defensive end·J.R. Garrison (7:31, fourlh quarter) and an
inten:epti'on of a McCarty pass by
~~~;:: ~Sf~~~e~~:Ct~;~~ {~~~\.defensive back T.C. Lane
· ~"'
lh 10 23
k
But with 39 seconds left and lhe
Raiders 10 ~ ... uc at e : mar
Warriors on the Raiders' 16 after a
in lhe second quarter. The Warriors
squandered the yardage they gained four-yard run by Wilburn, Wilburn
on a pass interference flag against threw a pass where McCarty, one
lhe Raiders wilh a pair of motion of the safeties, was in coverage.
McCarty
ht · th
d
penalties levied against !hem. From
caug II at e seven an
midfield, two pass plays_ a 47· returned it to lhe Raiders' 41 wilh
Pa c
44 seconds left to play.
.
I
yarder from McCarty to u1 ovin tbe rirst qiiarier or Friday night's game
ROLLING OUT- As River Valley fullback
ey and a 13-yard paydirt toss to
"They ran a post, and lhey unAdena at Frankfort. Cook scored anotb·
against
•
1
d
derlhrew
it,"
McCarty
said.
"I
was
Mike Cook (44) beads downfield to block,
Cook - padded the Raiders ea
er
touchdown
to help the Raiders win their firstRaider quarterback Aaron McCarty (fore•
furlher. McCany's· two-point con- lhe only one !here."
ever
contest
by
a 27-14 margin. (TilDes-Sentinel
version pass intended for Peck fell
Though Cook, Peck and McCar- ground, to tbe right of the 3 on the down mark·
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
incomplete, and River Valley set· ty were among the good-hands er) rolls out past tailback Dave Do~Jblns before
'
tied for a 20-6lead with 9:51 left in • Raiders that received most of lhe throwing an elxbt-yard touchdown pass to Cook
the first half.
auention in lhe game because of
"We've got a lot of young kids, their deeds, the success they en· tl y soohomores
predomman
~
, and joyed couldn't have happened
we're developing, Grooms said. without effective play from the
By BEN WALKER
had been waiting for instructions to have about two weeks of
"We hun ourselves with penalties," linemen.
NEW
YORK
(AP)The
base·
on
what to do with lhem, and had advance notice.
he added
"We made sure the (defensive)
balls
used
in
next
monlh's
World
The Raider defense continued ends didn't get hooked, which
Series will have more room for
made th (
its domination of lhe Warriors for
em Adena) run lheir plays autographs because, for the first
the rest of lhe half, allowing !hem inside," said Raider two-way tackle time in recent years, they will not
two, 22 and four yards in their last Grady Snyder, who was part of an bear the commissioner's signawre.
lhree drives.
offensive line lhat had considerable
Fay Vincent's sudden resignaSecond-hair action
success in opening up lhe middle tion last week left Rawlings, which
The Warriors' offensive wnes for the Raider running game.
makes lhe balls, up in the air. On
Rock of Ages is the only nationally
continued briefly, as they moved
"Our defense did some hitting Wednesday, lhe manufacturer got known
brand of memorials. As an
the ball one yard on their initial tonight. They bent a lot of times, the word.
Authorized Rock of Ages Dealer. we
drive of the lhird quaner. But after but didn't break," said James, who
"Major league baseball has are proud of our unmatched reputation
Dobbins busted through lhe middle saw lhe Warriors outgain his team requested that any World Series for service. You can trust Rock of Ages
and broke into the cfear for a 53· on lhe ground but cut off the out- balls we stamp from now on have and their Authorized Dtalers.
yard touchdown run and lricked the side running lanes. However, no
signature,"
Rawlings
eXua
- pom
· t WI'th 9: oo left m
· lhe pe· linebackers Mike Camrbell and spokesman Scott Smith said Thursriod to give lhe Raiders a 27-6lead, Tom Meade wete part o the crew day.
Adena put fullback Aaron Hough that held senior speedhack M~rk
Instead, Smith said, the balls
....
Smith,
who
is
also
one
of
Adena's
MEIGS COUNTY
10 wou•.
will simply say: Official ·Ball DISPLAY YARD NEAR
The 6-0, 178-pound junior trackmen,to 53 yards.
1992 World Series.
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
gained 53 of his game-high 154
This week's agenda -The
The decision could be good
JAMES A. BUSH, Mgr.
yards on a drive that covered 69 Raiders (1-2) will return home 10 news for collectors. To meet lhe
PHONE 1112·2588
demand
from
sporting
goods
yards in 13 P.iays and consumed e~~e~~:~~ ;i~f~~:d ~:c~?.~t
5:30. Hough s lhird-and-goal run
stqres, Rawlings began shipping
from four yards out with 3:16 left colhe to take on Huntington Ross.
commemorative 1992 World Series
VINTON, OHIO
and his two-point conversion run Quarter totals
DISPLAY YARD
balls with Vincent's signature in
allowed lhe hosts to create .the final River Valley ....... .14 6 7 0 - 27 August.
STATE RT. 160
JAMES
A. BUSH, Mgr.
8
"There are lhousands of them
PHONE 388 8603
out there now," Smith said.
"They're hot. I'm trying to get my
hands on one.''
The balls that will actually he
used in World Series games are
now at Rawlings' plant in Costa
Rica, needing a stamp. Rawlings

I

•••••

~

SAVE TIIOUSINDS 01 DOlWS ON lHIS ONE!

1•2 FOlD f&amp;ONDIIBIRD
V6 eng .. P. steering, P. brakes, auto. trans.,

AMIFM stereo cassette, air cond., P. seal,
P. windows &amp; P. locks, rear defroster, cast
alum. wheels, 10,300 miles, A-1 cond.,titt &amp;
cruise. Loaded.

~~~999

::._.
(Overall )
:•ream
W L P OP
•fonsmouth ........... .3 0 Ill 42
:1ackson ................. .3 0 95 24
goint Pleasant ....... 3 1 tB so
~pal Grove ............ 2 I 67 32
tJNarren Loca1 ........2 I 63 14
ttlallipolis............... ! 2 41 53
Valley .......... ! 2 SS 80
an .................... l 2 27 55
ua.................o 3 14 90
:~igs ....................0 3 0 82
~lhens ...................o 3 13 109
t"
Sept. 18 games:
:ft. Pleasant 13 Gallipolis 7
~iver Valley 27 Frank.·Adena 14
t~verly 25 Athens 0
"ackson 48 Circleville 6
~~ 20 DeSales 19
·~erSburg 28 Marietta 0
tit 29 Meigs 0
!6Greenup6
ersburg 12 Coal Grove 7
Loca120 Parks. South 14

'E

•.
1

·~ot)

•;

Sept. 25&amp;ames:

tbens at Coshocton
allipoliJ ~ Pon.smouth
• lfkson at Waverly
·
at Wuhington CH
;&lt;:Jev-JFK at Marietta
Sissionville at Pt. Pleasant .
Watren tocal at River Valley

I

:llliUer at Meigs

Hamill&lt;lO Twp. 13. Millcnpon 12
Hudin NMt,em 42. Leipak 7
llillionl 34 Col. Miftlin 7
·
Hilllbcxo 34. UDioto 13
Holland Sprin~ 20, Tot. Roil"' 6
Howlmd 38, Young. Willon 0
Hubbard 20, Smnhm 10

Sp&lt;n&lt;:aVillo 20

Boudman I 3, Steubenville 3
BrocH'tdd 6, Jackson- Millon 0
BrOOuidt 7, Lorain Southview 6
Brookville 28, Bollbrool: 6
B~eyc Local34. Oak Olen. W.Va. 0
Buckeye Vall. 14, Olcntan&amp;Y 9
Caldwell 40, Reedsville EuLem 0
Campbell Memorial 32, Lon.in King 0
C1nal Winchclta Tl, Col.. Ready 7
C•nfield 29, Youna. Uberty 0
Cudinal34, Ledgemont 0
Cuding\011 43, N'. Unioo 0
C•n:y61,Ridgcd.alc0
Cedarville 8, Cin. Summi16
Celina 34, Wapok"""' t3
CentcrbwJ 23, New Albany 6
ChtgrinF.U. l7,Awun l4
Clwnpim 19, E, Ptlatine iS

Otrville ~8. Copley 19

Oucso1ll, An:hbold 21
Oua.waHilb 14, Nonhwood 6
Paineavillo,JUveni.de 60, Jefferson 0
Ptim VaiL 7, Potumoulh E. 6
Padl;orab\q, w.v•. 28, M.uiCI&amp;I 10
Putway

10. Ayonville 7

Pluldin&amp; 47, llppc Scido VaiL 6
Philo :111, Moram20
~ua3S,Utbma7
PtintPiouan~ W.VL

•

Hunm 14, Wellir\alon 10
J..rmtoo SO, Boydtounty.Ky .. 0
J.Won 48, Circleville 6

lOOn Glenn34, New L.e1inatM 0
Jclwtown Nortlv_!dp 14, f«wtown 13
XMttoo IS, Mayfield 6
Xmt ROOICVelt 34, Atmn E. 0
Ken""' Ridp 13, Spring. Calholic 0
K«tczin&amp; AI~« 6, Day. Cmoil 0
Kin&amp;ll.C, W1)'11eaville 10
l..ai:ewood 13, lby 2
Lcbanaa 77, Sprin...... 9
Lcman-Muuoa
O.y. P.tt.caCill
l..olinpa 77, BPO)'NIIO
u~&gt;ooty 11onton 12, McComb 6, ar
Ubooty Center Sl: e . _ 14
Liberty Union 21, Faidfeld lJnian 7
Ue1Wt1 Hu. 34, Col. Caii&lt;IU1i&amp;l 0
Lictina Vall. 20, ea.hoctm 12
Limo Balh 20, SL Muy'al4, Of
Lima Shawnee IS, Kcnlon 9
Uttlo Miami t4, Wilmia
0
Lopn 20, CoL DoSaloa
1.onin Coth t2. ClarriowiO
Laodonrillc 42, Hilbdllc 7
Lauiaville 27, SUm I
Louiavillo Aquil!u 35, Clc. Hay 14
LovelAnd 29, Cin. Madcin 1
1.ucu20, Cadill4, ar
Macli&amp;an 7, Aduahttla l!dsewood 0
Mal•cm 13, E. Can""' 0
Manchester 26, LaBtiC 6
M~nlfidd -4(), llarbcruln 0
Manoliold Madioon 34, Mt. Vcmon 12
Maple Hu. 23, Noanandy 0
Marion lncol 36, Bradford 13
Marion Plcuant12, Coklld Crawtotd 0
Muysvil.lo'l7, Bc1WonWno20
Mlllillonl&amp;dl&amp;on7,W-O
tdwillon Pony 19, N. C..IM H..,,. 12
Ma""""' 21, Tol. Woodwud 14, Of
Ma)'JYiDe 33, Ri¥WVicw 0
Mcadowbrook 11, Union Local6
Modunlcabwt47, Wayn..r&gt;dd 0
Medina?. waa.wor1h 6
Mcn,..JS,Clo. w... Todi6
Miami E. 31, New BNmdi :111
Miami Tnao41 , Lasan flm 16
MillmilbwJ 21, Vandllia-Bullcr 7
MiddldoWTI 21, Lako&amp;l 3
Middlaown Madia! U, Di.Lie 0
Mil.. l!dlooo 49, Keyotono 0
Minom 44, Fairloas 14
Minford 50, Pmamouth Not:re. Dame 22
MinAer36,Sld!!eyiAunan 13

rr.

fr

13,Gollipolis 7
l'11101d 28, Pu.nbura Sprin~ d
Ptrt. Cin10n 21, Sylvania Sc.nhview 7
l'lxumouth 16. Otocnup Co.. Ky. 4
ProctorvilJo Flidand 22, Wayne, W .V1. 16
l'ynlawnln&amp; VaiL T/, Sebrin&amp;8
Racine Sov&amp;bcm 16, Fort frYe 7
Revm 3, Brecbville 0
Reynold&amp;bwx Zl, Dublin It
Rittman 20, Cowrttry 0
Rock Hi1112, Oak Hill 0
Rocky River 26, Ca. I..mooln-WCII. 14
R-town 28, Woodridae 6
Rouf&lt;m145, 1!utwood f5
S. Cbarl•ton SE 54, Riverside 22
Sandlllky 3S, Franont Rou 14
Sandy Vall. 10. Smithville 8
Shadyoide20,Boal1Jvlllel9
Shelby 2t, /uhJond 3
Shenandoah 6, Buckeye Tmil 0
Shoridll! 7, Ctookaville 0
Sol.m 21, Shaker Hu. 6
Spart&amp;
12. frodcli&lt;itown I 0
Sprins- cmh 22, Tr&lt;Kwood· Madaon 7
Sprins- ............. t4, Loculoa 13
St. Caimillo 37, Alouad"l4
S-'-&gt;17, Windham 0
S..Opville 7. Elyi&amp; Call!. 3

E

Tipp Cty 35, Orccncm 0
Tot. Callnll4, Tol. Whilm" 8
Tot. SLiolut'• 20, findlay 13
Tol. S""S2, Amhony Waynol2
Tol Wailo 21, Orw:on Saileh 0
Tri-Couruy N. 17, Covinatcm 14, OT
Triad S2, Ri4armont o
Trimble 24.-Wdl.IIM 6
Troy6l,ToLUbboy0
Tutcuawu C.th. 19, MinaoJunclioo 16, OT
TwinlbwJ 34, Nordonia 9
tmioniOWD Lake tl, Carlan GlcnOU: 0
Uni10d Localll. Bu&lt;icye Ce~~llll8
lltlca 12. Hoalh 6
V&amp;lloy forao 26, MUlporl&lt; 6
Valley VLCw .50, 0.)'. Norttuiclae 14
Van Wert26. Elida 18
Vcruillu 14, Caldwata 12
W. Brudl 19, Bo1VerLocal l2
W. GeollJI t7, Bnuh 14, Of

•
.,[1.\enungton.

AMMUNITION

w........m. Hu. :111. eto. Eut o

#6 SHOT

Wa\iinl Manwial41, Tca)'l Vall 0
Wn.y 25, Alben~ 0
W•ynedale 14, Triway 0

We.tem Brown 21, Hamilton Rou 14
Wccern RC~a"Vc 14, S. Caurall2
Woaunillo S, CoL lloocbcrad 20

,

52" )( 9" X 4"

$19.99

10-520

~~~~~]~~MW~~~ru~n~~·
M/870 12GA

M/870 Express

Express
Combo

20GAPump
0

N. Bdtimore 28, Danbu.r)' Lakc:aide 1
Napolta~27, Bowline~ 6
NoloonW!o-Yod&lt; 29, Melp 0

LEM TREE STAND

'

$279.99

N5571

UUGl~R
• 22 LA
• 10 Shot Clip

Mossy
Oak Camo
12 GN26"-RC

1988 DODGE ARIES 'SUPERCUAN·ONLYS2,0011MIUS'
1988 fORD ESCORT GL•ooOR·AUTO.·AIR·un.~
1985 PLYMOUTH HORIZON

12 GA-28-RC and
12/20/RS BBL

12 GN28/RC
Satin Light Control

20 GA·28"·Mod
Pump Action

NIAll!

721&amp; .

-··· c
(cuNOuR'iJ
..__ ,__
SPECIAl EOITION SHOTGUN CASE ' •.

12 GA
Deer Gun

lOW 1

FEATURES

• Clrptltd. •• wlllhtt IJOI1CIItl~ plll lorm .

Brush Master
12 GN20"·RS

10122 Auto
22 LR Birch Stock

THUNDERHEAD'IZ5
IIOf'ot'f , ...

"~
...u.u

I

• Conllonablt camo ClnYII ,,.~,
• NO lei . . en Dlr11

• Fold• nat ror

backott•in~uor•g•

Plainsman
Rifle

• Itt Cloudy Dar Gref
• Ntw

1984 OLDS CIERA S/W "NEEDS A liTTLE wou•
1,84 DODGE ARIES •oNtr 56,ooo AcrUAL MILES•
1~82 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT .,,~r •on·

1988 FO..D AEROSfU CONVERSION
VAN
'

V6 engine, P. steering, P. brakes, auto.
trans., air cond., AMIFM cassette, tik
steering wheel, cruise control,
co~lete wheel trim, luggage rack..
WAS
$4995
NOW

~·

50 Cal
.Percussion

ftiglllllllor mort ltg room .

• 26 in BBL · Ughtwelght

6

Brlnlla your belt deal on a New Car or Truck and we
wiD trJ' to meet 01' Beat the n.al.
lOA A GOOD DIAL~.
SEE JACK ROUSH or BOB ROSS

Broadheads$19
9
PQr Pack
• 9

NEW STORE HOURS: MONDAY·FRIDAY,·9:30 All-8 P11
SATURDAY1 9:30 AM-5 Pili SUNDAY, 11 ....,.,.

Our Service Department is Open Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat 8·12
Muffler Shop Mon.-Fri. 8·5; Sat, 8·12

BY MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
POINT PLEASANT, WV

AUTO/ftUCK Cllftl
"tetllCng lou iitttt t9S9"
VIAND STREET

,,

AMERICAN EAGLE®
.22 LONG RIFLE BULLETS

M/870

4 cyl. eng., P. steering, P. brakes, auto.
trans., air cond., AM/FM stereo cass.,
long bed, rear step bumper, styled
wheels wltrim rings, bed liner, low
miles, extra clean.
WAS $7995

Coal Grove • open

""'"""

*5583

FORD RINGER XL'r PICKUP

Your Hometown GMC Truck Dealer
135 Pine Street
Gallipolis, Ohio

F!''""""l"

~mington

7

SPECIAL . . . ill

Smiths GMC Truck Center

'

• Naw 40 rtiUna bOa

5 TO CHOOSE FROM, ALL DIFFERENT

TIME'S RUNNING ·OUT· OUT· OUT

•Mason Sand
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•Concrete
Sand •Fill Dirt
.
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•Block and Mortar Mix

• H igf'l · velocll~ penorman ct
, 35 g••ln copper ·l)llltd. nonow oornt Dullll •
·Pta lOCI Dvlltl reOucu baur r •e•d,ng

$3.99

Wtllmlle-44, U.bon I

GL 4 DR •

$2,000 Rebate on all
1
92 GMC Jimmy's
2. 9°/o on all1992' Full
Size Sierra Pick-ups
No Better Time J!.Buy•••

"We DeUver aad Spread U....atone"

Brick of ~~=~=t
10 Boxes

12Ga 1oz

WulWlJ110ttCIII 3,POIUmoothW.6
Wau:rf'c.d 14, Ridpwood 0
.

4 cyl. eng., P. steering, P. brakes, auto.
trans., air cond., AM/FM stereo cass., P.
seat, tilt steer. wheel, cruise control, P.
windows &amp; door locks, rear defroster, cast
aluminum wheels.

WAS $7495

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP RAP

$9.99

GAME LOADS

or

Mlwpdior JS, Pllrick Henry 0
ML Gil...t 9, Ellin 6, Of

: E. Liverpoo\ 14, Ywn&amp;. South 6
• Eltbn 28, Day. Oakwood 1

PUSHED OUT OF BOUNDS • Gdlpolla' Chad Barnes (11) Is
pushed out of bounds on tb!J play by Polnl PleiSint's Brian Preece '
(8) durin second half action. PPHS beld off repeated G AHS tbreatll ·
to come from behind and post al3-7 victory.

f~!!~!~L~~

W. Jdfenon 14, Wca.fallll
W. Salem NonhW~~~U~m19, Cu.yahot• H11 . 14
WallhJCIIU.it 21. Youn.. Eul6
Wanat Hudina 42, O.e. South 0
W""" lncol 20, PutonbuiJ (W.V•.) Soorth t4,

Coal

,

.'

PHONE 675-1985 .

••

•.

·-

SPECTA·CULAR
HUNTING

Tallm&amp;&lt;lp 2t, Akron C...·llowc&lt; 6
Ttllin Cll..,. 31, Woodm,..l2

......,n

• E.Kno•l9. Suubural3

position lhe entire first half due tD
costly mistakes and Gallia Academy's lricking game, never passed
it's own 43-yard.
It was entirely different the second half as Point Pleasant took the
lhird .qulll'ter lrickoff and marched
59 yards r.o knotlhe score at 7-all.
Gallipolis began a drive on it's
own 13 late in the third period,
moving 52 yards in 15 plays to the
Big Blacks 35, but a pair of penal·
ties proved costly. rn fact, a 15yarder against GAHS gave Point
Pleasant a fust down on the GAHS
48. That set up the Bill Blacks winning .drive as PPHS hu paydin five
plays later to score what proved to
be lhe game's winning touchdown
with 5:16 remaining on tbe scoreboard clock.
Gallipolis had two more chances
to pull it out, moving to the Big
Blacks 38 in 10 plays, but after
picking up a fust down on lhe visi·
tor's 38, failed to malce one yard in
two tries with I :49 left to play.
Point tried to run out the clock,
but was forced to punt wilh 36 sec·
onds left.
A bad snap from center went
over Brent Smith's head, wilh Gallia's Bryan Hall recovering on the
PPHS 33 wilh 20 seconds left
Two pass attempts fell incomplete, then Point Pleasant's Ryan
Roush assured lhe Big Blacks of
their third win in four sllrts by
picking off a "hail Mary" pass by
Chad Barnes near lhe endzone as
time expired.
Gallipolis dropped to 1-2 on the
year.
Here's how the scoring wenc
First period • Gallipolis' Jason
Stansberry recovered a PPHS fum·
ble and returned it 14 yards to
make it 6.() with 5:26 left. Tim
Slone split the uprights and GAHS
led 7..().
Third period • Roush returned
the kickoff I 7 yards to the Big
Blacks 41. It took lhe visitors II
plays to knot the count. Jason Safford scored from three yards out
(6:30). Austin Moore's kick was
true. A I 5-yard spearinl! penalty
against GAHS kept lhe drive alive.
Fourth period • After taking
over on the GAHS 48 followin~
anolher IS-yard Blue Devil penalty, Point Pleasant scored five plays
later when Jason Shinn raced in
from II yards out with 5:16 left in
lhe game. The kick after was wide .
Shinn, who had been bouled up all
night by lhe GAHS defense, had 47
(See POINT on C-4)

Swanr.an 32. Wa1.1101!111 20
Syi...U. Ncmhn...6, Bodf...t 0

Mopdc.. 77. w•
Mohawk T/, Ri&gt;"' Dolo 0

• Delli 40, Bry•n 0
~ DoyluiDWn 7, Canal Ful\QI NW 0

12

:!

~992 grid standings

21, C&amp;mbDcfsc 0

• Ddaware 14, Bi~ Walnut 13
· Dclpttc. SL JOOn s 39, Lima Petty 0

NOW 8

OakHa.bor49,NorWalkiO
Oreaoo Clay 33, PCIX)'Ibara 13

Genoa 40, Mi1bury Laltol
Girud 33, Cord&amp;ttd [.aby;ew 8
Goohon 19, Clamant Ncrit,..... 0
Gtlham 2:1, Sprin. ShaWDOOO
Gtond VaiL 19, Piny 6
Onnvillo lO, Gnndvicw 6
&lt;hoonoviow 20, Madlaon l'lalAI7
Otoenlidd
19. """~
'
8.
~0..0.18,
0
Grow.Cky t4, Fnnltlli1 Hu. 3
Hamibna 21, Fairliold 19

. Cin. Winton W('l()dJ 21, Cin. Tl!t I
Cin. Wilhrow 12. Huber Ht.~. Wayne 1
Cin. Woodward 36, Oxford Tabwanda 32
Claymont 26, W. Holmca 7
' C\c. Benedictine 14,l...akcwood SL EdwardS
: Clc.. Collinwood 6, N. Olmltcld 3
• Cle. Glenville 28, O!udon 6
, Clc. Manhall32, We~tlake 13
· Clear Fork 13. Onwio 0
Cloveded23, Buclccye 3
Clyde 14, UppaStndutk)' 13
Col Academy 48, Col. Mlrion-Frank.lln 6
' Col. Brigp: 14, Col. Wat 6
, Col. Brcdhavcn 3S, Waterville N. 10
, CoL Eas1moor 31 , Col. Un~m - McXinley 0
• Col.Soulh 28, CoL Eut 0
· Col. SL Olarlcsl4, Col Narthland 9
·. Col. W11Ju1t Ridgc42, S. Pant6
· Columbul Grove 18, Del.ph01 Jcll'mm 13
. Cory-RaWIO(I)4, Vm Dun:n 0
. Cralline 28, NOI'thmot 7
• Crestview 23, Plymouth 19
, Cres1wood, 12, Field 6
• D•llon 41, TUlia• 0
. DanvUic 14, Jonathan Alder6
•. Day. Cariillc 19, Pw:b~ Shawnee 7
'. O.y. Chlmirudo-J\I.lienne47, Day. Stebbins 6
: D1y. Mudowdalc 13, Spring. South 8
• Ddianoe41,0Uawa..Qlll"'dcwf 0

UVI liVE liVE

Norwdt St. Paul42. MOIU'OC'fillc 41, 3af
Nonraync 36, Oaawa:r IS

O....a 17,Aahtabub SL lollt 12

Bloom Carroll 37, Bu.leyf

:
.
.
•
·
.

Hudin:¥.,aiCO
Newbwy 0

Gll'I'Ctllrille 20, RaYeMII SE 12

B.t.ru.. 62. Kinland 0
Bcmc UniiX'I 16, Ridmlmd D.I11 SE 0
Black River 14, Medina Hiahllnd 0

.

Now..t. 34, Thomu W""'"""'" 0
NOWI&lt;I\Fallat7, Mincnl RidpO
Nile&amp; l.:I,Clo. Ad1n11 14
N.......,..lO,IIoa-6

Frutklin 2.:1, Xonia 21
Fmnoat SL loa&lt;plt S6, OibooobwJ 0
Fmntier 14, Filhet Calh. 10
Gah~~~ta 34, Col. ln.datco t4
Gallion T/, Mad"' Rudin&amp; :111

Bodford 14, Gl.rfield Hu. 6
Bt.llevuc SS, Sandusky Pcltina 0
Bellevue, Ky. 14, Cin. Huaha 0
Bc.lpm 19, Vintoo Co. 6
· Benjamin Logan 2.8 , lndisn l...ake \3

,

Euclid 21, Bnmwic:t 14
FWb&amp;W :lA, W. Uberty-Satan 6
PWbom7,T.......a.O

New Mutiomllc(W.Va.)Ma,p.oUa 37,River 16
New Miami ..0, Cin. N. Colle&amp;o Hill 0

Fairview Pllk ,Broctl)'l16
Fodonllloddna 22. Millc 1
F01toria SO, Tiffin Colurnhilll20

New Philadelphia 7
Ammd• -Oearen:ci 36, Col. Hartley 6
Amhent2l, Vemillion 19
AniiOn.ia 43, Twin V.U. S. 22
AI'Cidia 36, P•ndon-Gilbol 13
Adingwn 39, VlnlucO
Adubul.l 7, Conne~ut 3
Ashtabui.J Hubor 2, Painesvi..lle lhl'\'ey 0
Austini.Own Filch 13, Erie (Pl.) Prep 0
A•IX'I Lake 32, fudands 6

Btwf~a~22.

Ncwl.uldcm.9, Ma_p~ I , OT

Fairrit:w 20, C

Allian~ 27,

B11n~c

Elmwood tl,ilopeweli·Loudon t6
El)'rif 12, Tot. Bowrh" 9 .
Elyria W, 22, Midview 8

Failport

1\krm SLV-SLM 17, Akron FI1'C'.tt0ne 14
Allen E. 20, Ada IS

. Cin. Lockland 16, Middldown Fenwick IS
· Cin. Muiemont27, Cin. Drecr Put 21 OT
Cin. Princeton 2A, Lima Sr. 7
·. Cin. Pu~ - M1rian 3.5, Cin. Aitc:n 0
', Cin. Readinf 18, Cin.lndion 1!i11 0
' Cin. SL Xnu~rll,Cin. Oak Jlil)l. 7

automatic air cond., AM/FM stereo
cassette, Premium Sound, tilt &amp; cr~~ise, rear
defroster, leather interior, full power, cast
aluminum wheels, 16,000 miles. Like new,
must see to believe

win
• Looking on is Garry Peck (23) and
Austin Moore (12). On right Is Gallla's Jason
Stansberry (33).

Faitmont 34, W. Cmulhon 19

1\kron Spring. 22, Nortoo 7

Cin. Anderson 46, Cin. Northwest 6
Cin. CAPE 6, Cin, Wyomin&amp; 0
: Cin. Country D1y 16, Bdbci·T•tc 7
· CUI. Hanilm 32. Cin. Twpin 0
CLn. LISallc 31, Cin. ML Re.a!thy 6

YEAR END

•:
Adena Warriors
:•. Rushing- Hough 24-154, I
::rD; Smith 18-53; Wilson 5-23, 1
•:TD; Barker 3-11
:• Passing- Wilburn 2-5, 16
:: yds., 1 inl.
•: Receiving - Garrison 1·11;
!'Rawlings 1-5
.: Kickoff returns - Hough 2::43; Barker 2-24
::- Interceptions- Crace and
•.lane (I each)
Fumble recoveries - Garrison
~I); olher was team tackle

\Iron Buehtcl 39, Stow 9
Wan Ellet47, Cuyahoga Falh 0
Wm Garfield 14, MWillon ll
Woo Hoban 17, Gad'icld H11. Trinity 0 ·
lk.ron Kenmore 21, Hud1011 2
,\bon Manch~ 26, L&amp;Brr.e 6
~ N. 14, R1venn. 11

, Chanlon NI&gt;O. I 0. 0.111oli
. Chcu~o3t ,Symm,.Vall. 12
•: Chcs.hiR .Riw:r Vall. 27, Adell• 14

va engine, power steering, power brakes,

return midway through the first
quarter, Coach Brent Saunders'
team was stopped on the PPHS one
and five-yard lines.
•
Point Pleasant, in poor field

Ohio high school football scores

·Professional

LOGAN MONUMENT CO.

ant's visiting ~dders on Memorial
Field Friday rught
After taking a 7-0iead over
Coach Steve Stafford's West Virginia crew on a fumble recovery

SCORES • Point Pleasant runback Jason Safford (37, left on ground) scores
rrom three yards out in the third period to cut
Gallipolis' lead to 7-6. The Big Blacks went on to

World Series baseballs to sport no signature

OFF TO THE RACES - River Valley tailback Dave Dobbins
.: · · Rushing - Dobbins 6-74, I
~JD; Cook 7-29, I TO; Peck 4-4; (10) likes the bandoff from quarterback Aaron McCarty before
breakil;g through tbe line and into tbe clear for a 53-yard touch·
•• McCarty 2-3
:(· Passing -1vfcCany 4-11, 67 down run in the third quarter or Friday night's game against
Adena. The touchdown put the last of the Raiders' points on tbe
:• yds., I TO, I in~ Covey D-1, I int
•! Receiving- Covey 1-47; Peck board in their 27-14 victory. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer
:01-9; Cook 1-8, I TO; Canady 1-3
Osborne
Kickoffreturns-Peck2-124,
1 TD; Haislop J.o
.: Punt returns- Penwell 1-16;
•.Peck 1-6
~ Interceptions - McCarty (I
:• for 34-yd. rerum)
Cook
,.~(l)~~::~~=~!ery
,.

GALLIPOLIS • Host Gallipolis
failed to cash in on two of three
golden opportunities in the first
half, then dropped a 13-7 nonleague heartbreaker 10 Point Pleas·

promised land, with Cook, who
scored on an eight-yard run on
lhird and goal with 25 seconds left
in the fust frame, moving lhe ball
17 of those yards. Peck's two-point
conversion run fell short, which
forced the Gallians 10 settle for a
14-61ead.
The Raider defense held the
wam·ors to a seven•play drive lhat

:: :Individual leaders
••t;~ .· River Valley Raiders

E
f.

Sunday nmes SenUnel Page C3

Point Pleasant scores late to defeat Galli otis 13-7

~iver

:•:
··
·
.
f.fBy G. SPENCER OSBORNE
f:•1 TimeS-Stlltlnel Stalf
•· FRANKFORT - River Val~y's Raiders recorded lheir fust
1jln on ,lhe gridiron Frida~ht
tb a 27· 14 victory
. over F
on
na lhl!t according to head coach
,:.;1~J:.es, shoilldn't have been a
,..,.
•t. 'Tm not pleased with what
""'' re-doitlg on offense," said
~. who regained lhe services
senior prOdigals .Rob Canady
~ Charles Peck prior tD lhe game.
••• After Jake Grooms' Warriors
•Jil 3)
ed
!2 1
'II''
wrapp up 8 ·P ay • 75 ·
~ jlrive witb a 16-yard run off
guard b · · . · back J.P
t
YJUntOr wmg
·
lson, at lhe 3:49 mark in the fust
, Adena fell victim 10 a pair
gal Procedure penalb·es lhat
:~ipcd out a successful kick by
~phomoreRyan Colvin on his fust
·
·
try. The
· two-pomt conversion pass
that followed was incomplete, and
~~arriors bad to seule for a 6-0
For the hosts, those points were
~ most desparately needed of the
·~
·ght, as Peck demonstrated on
c's second kickoff. After tem-

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

September 20, 1992

20, 1992

POINT PLEASANT

'

•

•

\

. ..

...

"·- ~ - . ,

--····.

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

;·: hll• C4 Sunday nmn SenUnet .

S.outhern keeps Fort Frye out ~f

, ·,

. By~OTr·WOLFE'

· • n.tii&amp;IIUMICorrapoildelll
.• · , :RA~ _ Secoad·half adjust·
·menlllaniled 1 Southern offense
lhll bill been ~led by penal: tieJ I1ICI turnovers · allowing the
·&gt;·rca. 1,.,.. 10 post ~ 16-7 &amp;rid uillll!llh
the Fort frye Cadets
&lt; Southern moves to 2·1, while
Fort~dlops 10 ().3,
Senior running back Russell
Sinaleton pounded the turf 21
limes for 136 yarda gaining most
or'hia IUCCCSS In the second half
, 'with IKIIIe great lead blocking from
·, Nick Adlms.
.
. Adams and Jeremy Dill gar.

cmr

nered most of Solllhcm's .receiving,
as Dill caught thret JI8S$CS for 32
yards and one touchdown, while
Adams had 4-44 yards. Tucker
Williams had another for seven
yards.
Michael Evans, who startee! off
with three interceptions, regamed
composure and marked a. true
champion by ooming !lack With 816 attempts overall, one toUChdown
pass, one PAT, and one touchdown
run. Evans meticulously guided lhe
Tornadoes downfield with good
second half form .
.
The two halves were much m
contrast 10 one another. The frrst

half sa"! Southern show~ng s1gns of
uncertalllty and reflecuons ~f last
week's loss Ill ":'aterford, ~bile the
second halfplaymg agresSJvely and
confidently.
.
•
SHS hea_d coach Dav1d Gaul
said, ''We didn_'t ~ve a good fust
half, but we dido ! lose a gnp on
thmgs. That was ·~porlant! The
players, espec•ally m ~e second
half, were mentally. physically. and
emotionally ready 10 play. Theseniors showed tremendous leadership."
The game started when on the
opening play, Fort Frye's Bob Carney mtercepted an Evans pass.

•:t: Caldwell hands Eastern 40-0 loss

:•:·
:~:

·:· :down effort from senior running

·:•:&gt;bact Jolh PerldllS, defeated Dave

:~::llm's Eastern Eagles befo~e a
: .;.~crowd on a very damp Fnday
·:-:e'lellingatEastemHighSchool.
:~ ; .· Perkins put lhe Redsldns' first
· points on the board in the fim
quarter with a 15-yard touchdown
• run. Quarterback Roman Lori's
PAT kick was good, and Caldwell
.. led 7-0.
:•&gt;. 1n lhe secood quarter, lhe Red·&gt;:skins offense continued to roll. Don
:-:-Schehl scored the rust of his two
;:::JOUChdowns as he rambled in from
• . , our yards out. L on· •s k'ICk was
•••••
:•:•koQd.
Caldwell led 14-0.
•••;.

:::&lt;Point wins...

::::;

(Continued from C-3)
in four trips during the
,g
•:·:~·s winning drive.
GalliPOlis had 243 IOta! yards,
;:;: ;168 rushing and 75 passing and
:~;:~·eked up 15 first downs in 60
••.• s from scnmmage.
;:;:; Iansberry led Gallipolis runwith 60 yards in 14 attempts.
added 52 in 15 uies. Chuck
;:;:~finished with 23 in eight car-

·.:·.:"ards
:+.

..

agamst~.oneof.wh~chcalled

' .

:::: _ By SCO'IT WOLFE
:·: • T~ (:orrespoadeal
..: . · EAST MEIGS_ The Caldwell
:· :~ed*ins. spumc1 by a three-touch·

·:·:aen
:-:•Jiunes

...... · lies.
;:; : · Batres hit five of 16 passes (one

·:-;Intercepted) for 75 yards. North
:•: 1tauaht three for 48 yards. Ryan
·:·.Barnes one for 13 and Stansberry
·~ •OIIe for 14.
.
.: GAHS fumbled five times and
;lost two, with Smith and Roush
recovering for lhe Big Blacks.
PPHS~162~hingMdW

passing for 176 total yards in 44
' pia •
the coaches son, led the
· ···.winners wilh 76 yards in 14 carries.
: · Shinned finished with 59 in 13
· · attempts. Smilh was one for lhree
&gt;.. in the passing department for 14
• . yards, hitting Moole in the second

.. rarront,

.. period.
PPHS fumbled four times and
· lost three with Stansberry, Jason
Casey and Dylan Evans recovering
.•. for the Blue Devils.
•:
Gallipolis plays at Portsmouth
':. Friday. Point Pleasant will hoSt Sis:• sonville.
•: Quarter totals
•:. Gallipolis ................ 7 0 0 0 =7
,•. Pt. Pleasant .............o o 1 6" 13
•'11,.•,
""
.

:::!Statistics

•:~':oeplrtment
G
PP
'•' Firstdowns ..................... 15
11
.~~ Yards rushing ...............195
190
'1: Lost ~bing ................... 27 28
·:· Netrualting ................... J68
162
··: Pass attempts ................. .l6
3
·: ; Cornpletions .....................5
I
!• Jnrcrcepled by ...................0
1
··~ Yards JliSSing .................75
14
!• Total yards ...................243 176
' :~ Plays ...............................60
44
.•: Return yards ...................61
50
:· Fumbles ............................5
4
, • Lost fumbles ..................... 2
3
:• Penalties ..................... .?-65 4-20
. nuo .. ......................... 3-100 3-104

Minutes later, Sebeh! struck
paydirt again from two yards out.
LOO's kick was good and lhe Redskins increased their lead to 21-0.
Eastern established a good drive
that saw them march inside the
Caldwell 30 yard line. Outing the
drive, Eagle quarterback Chad
Savoy wem down after taking a
hard hit from lhree Caldwell de·
fenders. Savoy. who was not seriously injured, did not play the re·
maindcr of the game. Freshman
Brian Bowen took over lhe reigns
at quarterback, only to see lhe drive
end with about 5:00 left in the balf.
Before the end of lhe half, Lori
found Josh Perkins on a 55-yard
toucdhCaldownd pass· ~·s kick failed
11
an
mto lhe locker
room wilhwe
a 27went
-0 lead.
1n lh e th'1rd quarter, Caid well
managed to find lhe end zone two
more times. Perkins broke away for
a 60-yard touchdown run. Lori's
kick failed and Caldwell led 33-0.
Toward the end of lhe quarter, Don
Sebeh! drove in from three yards
out for lhe touclidown. Lori's Ieick
wasgoodandlheRedsldnswemon
to preserve a 40-0 viciOry.
Easll:m did took 10 be a much
improved team;. Brian Bowen and

L21ZPNC

Robert Reed each took lheir tum a1
leading lhe Eagles offense in the
second half, and the Eastern de·
fense played very well in the sec·
ond half.
Leading rusher for Eastern was
Chad Savoy on four carries for 44
yards. Caldwell was led by Josh
Perkins with 14 carries for 173
yards.
Eastern's trio of quarterbacks
(Savoy, Reed and Bowen) finished
the evening, combined, 8 of 26 for
113 yards and 1 interception. Lori
finished 4 of 7for 176 yards.
Easrcm (0-3) travels 10 Symmes
Valley next Friday.
Quarter totals
CaldweU (3-0) .......7 20 13 0- 40
Eas tern (0-3) .........0 0 0 o- o

hack a Dill TO recepuon 10 lhe end
zone.
FF took over, but SHS held 00"
four downs. A had snap out of lhe
end zone gave SHS a 2·0 lead on a
safety at the 1:13 mark.
Anolher bright spot in lhe SHS
camp has been kicker Unai AIdama-Elorza, a foreign exchange
student from Spain. Aldama had
kick-offsof48,s 5, and60yards.
His 48.yarder 10 begin the second half however was run hack 50
'
'

yards by Carney, setting up Fori
Frye's fust score. Carney lhen ran
a :ZO.yarder from scrimmage. Three
plays !Mer, Huck plunged in from
one to g1ve FF a 7-2 lead at lhe
8:07 mark in lhe lhird frame, as the
PA.T kick split lhe uprigbtl.
Soulhem's offe~se responded. A
33-yard run by Smgleton set t~e
stage for a one-handed grab by Dill
in lhe end zone. Dill snagged lhe
Evans' pass with one hand and
pulled it in for lhe 8-7 score. On a
falce dive into lhe tine, Dill ran a
shon slant and grabbed lhe extras
to give S~lhem a.I0-71ead at the
3:04 mark m the lhird frame.
SHS shut dl)wn lh.e Cadets on
lhenextdrive,thenqUJcklrwentiO
work. Southern found gapmg holes
in lhe middle of lhe FF line. Singleton had two big runs and Adams a
key reception 10 set up an Evans
run from lhe one. The PAT Ieick at·
tempt was aborted wilh a bad snap,
leaving the fmal score intacl
"Coach (John) Porter did a good
job wilh lhe offense and in mald~g
adJUStments atlhe half," Gaul satd.
"The kids also made adjustments
on the field. I'm proud of the effort. This was a grea1 team win.

WHERE TO? - Soatbern running back
Russell Singleton (35) seeks an answer to tbat
eternal grldlroa questioo while heading upfield

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Sunday nmes Set•uel P 1

Ci

practiced lhat ~sition all season
long and Mark H1ckel came off lhe
bench ..and gave us ~ ?~tstandm~
e!Jon, VanMeter sa1d. You cant
s10gle any one pers~n out though
because all of our lcids srcpped up
and cranked II up another notch and
therr re~ard was a most sausfymg
VICIOry.
.
Wahama m fact had a number of
stan.dout performers in lhe game in
Crrug Weaver, Doug Huff, Randy
Purkey, Mike Miller, Mike MatiOx,
Mike VanMatre and John Smithson
all of whom parti~ipaled in the
1renches for lhe Wh1te Falcons. In
addition Rocky Stewart picked up
109 yards rushing on the night
while King added 85 yards and had
the all important punt relum and
don't forget Tommy Maves who
guided the WHS offense while
booting a 24 yard field goal and
adding an extra point Ieick.
Wahama gained an early lead on
its first possession of lhe game with
the White Falcons marching down
lhe field behind lhe running of
Stewart and King. The WHS drive
stalled deep into enemy terriiOry
and Mayes ·split lhe uprights on a
24 yard field goal to stake lhe Bend
Area team to· an early 3-0 lead.
Ravenswood answered quickly
however behind Gould and lhe
passing arm of senior quarterback
Pal Akers with Akers tossing a 27
yard scoring pass to Todd Pillo 10
complete a 69 yard eight play drive
for the host team . Rod Beckett added lhe PAT Ieick 10 give the Red
Devils a 7-3 advantage.
"We were forced to make some
adjusunents with our defense at the
half and the changes we made were
a modifi~ation of a combination of
different defensive ·alignments and
that is a sign of a good group of
youngsters when they can modify
somelhing at halftime and perform
as well as lhey did," said VanMeter.
The score remained 7-3 until late
in lhe lhird quarter when Kmg took
t a Ravenswood punt at his own 34
and returned the kick to the Red
Devil 27. Five plays later Stewan
took a piu:h from Mayes and put a
dazzling move on two Ravenswood
defenders at the two before racing

into the end zone to put Wahama on
lOp by a 9:7 score.
.
.
Followmg . the ensumg k•ckoff
the Red Devils had a 30 yard ru~
by Kenny Cham~rs called bacli
because of a holdmg penalty and
Wahama forced. ~e host ~ to
punt from deep m •ts own temtory.
Once agam King returned lhe ~ck
10 ~e Ravenswood 38 ~here lhe
White Falcons began a tune consummg drive wh1ch ate up more
than four minutes of a turning
clock. WHS covered the 38 yards
in eight plays with Mayes running
the opuon to perfection and puching the pigskin 10 King at the last
instant with King racing in from 14
yards out for lhe touchdown.
Mayes' PAT kick made it 16-7 wilh
4:05 remaining i~ the contest.
.
The Red Devils took to lhe arr
followin!1\ the ensuing kickoff wi~
Akers gu.•dmg lhe Ravenswood arr
show wh1ch ulumarcly resulted m a
six yard touchdown gallop by Beckett with 1:00 left in lhe contest.
Becket! added lhe point after to
make it 16·7 but the onsides kick
was recovered by King at the
Wahama 49 where the White Fatcons ate up the final seconds to
claim the hard fought victory.
"We needed Ibis one to see just
how good ~ team we are," replied
VariMeter after the excitemenl of
the upset win had waned some·
what. "I won 't say we' re a good
football team ye1, though. Right
now I'd say we're a decent team
!Vid tonight we seemed to grow up
a lot and lhat will surely help us
down the road."
Wahama will now visit Vinson in
its next outing with lhe Tigers
being a much better football team
than its 04 record might indica1e.
"We can 't afford to let down one
little bi~ when we g? up against
Vmso.~, . VanMeter SBid 10 .conclu·
s1on. Vmson 1s a team that •s ready
to beat up. on somebody. I only
hope that tiS not next week when
we get down there."

Yards Rushing
51·226
Yards Passing
25
Total Yards
251
Passing
2-9
Interceptions Thrown 1
Fumbles Lost
0.0
Penalties/Yards
2-10
Punts/Avg
241.0
OIT Plays
62
Score by Quarters:
1 2 3
Wahama
3 0 0
Ravenswood
7 0 o

33-140
115 .
255
7· 17
2
2·0
5· 33
2·32.7
52
4 Tot
13 16
7 14

Scoring:
Wah • Tommy Mayes 24 yard field
goal

3·19; PJII Ak1rE 4-ll6;; Kalil}
Charrillers 1-l; Clli!lllillnll fw1imm&gt; 16; Brad lhmll-1; ltyD 'M1111 1.$.
TOTALS3H41l
PASS'INC
.
Waharna . fllllmiiY ~ 2-1-25
yds·llnt; 0111 1Kq 6-1; TOTALS
2-9-25yds-llim
Ravenswood - P&amp; Abls 7-11115yds·lllll-:!irll

Rav . Todd Pillo 27 yard pass from
Pat Akers (Rod Beckett kick)
Wah • Rocky Stewart five yard run
(run failed)
Wah . Carl King 14 yard run
(Tommy Mayes kick)
Rav . Rod Beckeu six yard run
(Rod Beckett kick)
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING
Wahama • Roclcy Stewan 26·109;
Carl King 14-85; Tommy Mayes g.
18; Brandon Tulloh 3-14; TOTALS
51 •226.
Ravenswood . James Gould 14· 56;
Rod Beckett 7·35; Damien Mancini

lli!CEI"'l'iiG

.

Waharna. Cad Kq I-ll;~
B311ker G-7: roTALS 2-lSJ!ll$
Ravensw~ - Tlllllill'lilb J.f6-llilt
James G@uld HIS; Glfl1l: ~ 116· [}arn:ion ~·umiin J-lji;
TOTALS ~-US~UIIlil

TOSHIBA
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•

PER MONm, INSTALLED~

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STATISTICS
Wahama Ravenswood
FirstDowns
12
12

September 0~

Nelsonville-York beats Meigs 29-0

1993 FESTIVA

V-8, AUTOMATIC

SAVE

StatiStiCS

Department
FF
RS
12
FII'St downs .......................8
Yards rush~ng .. ........33-126 33-149
70
Yards passmg ................... 5
Total yards ................... 131
219
Comp-a~ ......... .............. l·7 8-16
Intercepuons lhrown ........ 1
3
Fumbles/lost.................. l-1
0·0
Pena!Ues ...................... 540 8-65
Punung ........................4-35 3-25

1993
COUGAR IR7

$10,995°0

1993 EXPLORERS

RAVENSWOOD-Carl Kin~'s
39-yard punt retom late in lhe thrrd
quartel •gniled a 13-point fourth
quarter elTon by the visiting
Wahama White Falcons Friday
evening as Coach Don VanMeter's
Bend Area gridders came from be·
hind lo upset heavily-favored
Ravenswood in a thrilling 16-14
gndlrDII coofrontation at the Jack·
son County school.
King's 39 yard return of a Brad
Hunt punt set up a five yard Rocky
Stewart scoring jaun1 to put
Wahama on top by a 9-7 margin
wilh junior signal caller Thmmy
Mayes orchestrating another scor·
ing drive by the Bend Area learn on
its next possession which provided
lhe White Falcons with what
proved to be its margin of victory.
The win improved the locals'
season record to 3·1 while
Ravenswood fell 10 1·3 following
lhe hard hitting nonleague contest.
While King, Stewan and Mayes
furnished lhe offensive heroics for
Coach VanMeter's crew, the under·
lying key to the White Falcons pull·
ing off lhe upset win was the play
of lhe Bend Area teams interior
line.
"We played one heck of a second
half and the credit goes to our line
play," VanMeter said. "We told our
line at the half that they would have
10 tom il up a notch and take it to
lhem and lhey did everything we
asked. We knew going in lhat lhe
interior line held lhe key as to
whether we would be able to play
with them and in lhe second half
we took conuol and took it right to
lhem," added the veteran grid mentor.
Wahama held the Red Devil's
leading rusher, bruising 210 pound
tailback James Gpuld, to a minus
seven yards on the ground over the
final two quarters and limited
Ravenswood 10 just40 yards on lhe
ground during the final24 minutes.
"J.C. Albrigh1 played his best
half of the season and Shane Scott
played exceptionally well at outside
linebacker even though he hadr! 't

during Friday night's game
visiting Fort
Frye, wbicb lhe Tornadoes won 16-7. Singleton
gained 136 yards in tbe contest.

EVERY OPTION

GOOD!

By Gary Clark
Sports Correspondent

The offensive line. gave us great
second half protecuon and lhe de·
fense played aggessively. At the
end of halftill)e, we ~ooked ~ck at
the 'large crowd behmd us (literal· .
ly) and we knew we had to win."
Defensively, Glenn Young had
one sack, a fumble ~very and 10
tackles. Adams, Smgleton and
Tucker Williams. had 14, 13 and
12, resvectivel y. Jamie Smith
added e•ght and Trenton Cleland
had six. Evans had an interception.
Southern will head to South
Point- a 42-6 loser to Walnut
Ridge 42·6 Friday night- Ibis
week.
Quarter totals
FonFrye ...............o 0 7 0 - 7
Southenj ................O 2 8 6- 16
• •

Statistics
Department
Cald.
E
First downs ..... .............. ... 19
10
Rushing Yards ...............312
69
Comp.-aiL .................... ..4-7 8· 26
Interceptions lhrown .......... O
I
Passing yards ................. 176 I 13
Total yards .....................488 182
Fumbles-lost.. .................0-0 3-2
Penalties .......................3-30 6-60
Punts-avg...................2-38.5 5-25.0

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

Wahama comes from behind to edge Ravenswood 16-14

with 16-7 triumph

1993 ESCORT WAGON

"IN STOCK"

LAWN
MOWER

wi~ ~olumn
S~uthern s defense held, on four
P ys,lhen
aftbr a co~ple run,s Chad Huck
graS bed an '!ltercepuon.
.
oulhem s defense held agam.
The fust quarter ended 0-0.
Tf:e. second canto proceeded
muc like. !he frrsL A couple key
~ns by S~e ~urcheu sparked a
n Frye dri_ve mto Soulhem territory •. but a b1g sack by Adams and
~nswng fumble recovery by Glenn
oung saved the day for Soulhem.
Runs by Singleton, a pass to
Adams and a couple of passes to
Dill put SHS at first and, goal.
Southern had two consecuuve offen~ive pass interference calls

· September 20, 1992

September 20, 1992

500 '

•.
::
:•
••
:·
·: ·
;;"
•.·
:::
'•'
:::
'; •

..

I

By DAVE HARRJS
Times-Sentinel Correspoodent
POMEROY - The Nel·
son ville-York Buckeyes rolled up
264 yanls on the ground and limit·
ed lhe Meigs Marauders to eight
yards rushing in 19 tries en route 10
a 29-0 viciOry over lhe Marauder
Friday evening.
The win gave the Buckeyes a 3·
0 record overall and a 1-0 mark in
the Tri-Valley Conference. Meigs
drops 10 0-3 overall and 0-2 in the
TVC, the Marauders have yet 10
score in the three losses.
Nelsonville-York won lhe toss
and took over on its own 20 after a
touchback. The Buckeyes put to·
gether a 80·yard, 13·play drive be·
fore Randy Cline scored from two
yards out. Tad Stinebrink added the
extra point to give Nelsonville a 7·
0 lead at lhe 6:36 mark of lhc first
period.
After a Marauder punt, the
Buckeyes made it a 13-0 game
when Casey Nungester ran 33
yards for lhe score, the quarter end·
ed when Justin Gail coughed the
ball up at lhe Marauder one·yard
line . The Marauders' Jim Pullins
pounced on lhe loose ball .
On lhe first play in lhe second
period, Marauder quarterback Eric
Wagner was lhrown for a two-yard
loss and a safety by lhe Buckeye's
Eddie Carter. The Buckeyes drove
to the Marauder 26 after the free
kick, but quarlerback Jeff Warix
was pressured on a fourth-and· II
pass by Kevin Lambert that fell in·
complete to lciU lhe drive.
After another Marauder punt,
the Buckeyes put together a 40yard, six-play drive, with Gail scoring from 10 yards ouL Once again,
the kick by Steinbrink was true,
and it was a 22-0 game at the half.
Meigs took the second·half
lcickoff and looked like it had their
offensive problems worked out
driving to the Buckeye 19. But
Wagner's pass on fourth down was
picked off at the eight yard line by
Jeremy Polley. Nelsonville put 10·
gether a five-play, 92-yard drive
and Gail wemlhe final48 yards for
lhe srore. In lhat drive, Gail carried
four times for 73 yards. Steinbrink
added lhe ex1111 poiniS 10 close out
the scorin~ with 4:01 left in the
lhird and g•ve the Buckeyes a 29·0
win.
.
Gail a 6-1, 185·pound sopho·
more carried 13 t1mes for I 33
yards. Nunges!Cr added 104 yards
in 13 carries. Jeff Warix completed
11 of 16 passes for 93 yards. Brian
Warren pulled in four passes for 35
yards.
· Wagner led the Marauders on .
the ground with only I 5 yards on
11 carries. Wagner completed 6 of
14 through lhe air for 68 yards and
one interception, and Brett New·
some failed 10 complete a pass in
eight attempts with two intercep·
tions. Receiving for Meigs were
Mike Welsh (3-20), Mall Craddock
(1-19), Healh Hudson (1-17) and
DavidFetty(1·12).
In other Tri- Valley Conference
action Friday evening, senior tail·
back Russ Jacob carried 37 times
for 264 yards and lhe tie-breaking
touchdown in the lhird period to

,.

lead Belpre's Golden Eagles over
Vinton Coumy 19-6 in a battle of
undefeateds. The loss was the frrst
for the Vikings in 18 contests. Federal Hocking scored 22 unanswered
points 10 knock off Miller 22· 7 for
lheir first win of lhc year, while
Trimble defeated Wellston 24-6. In
a non ·conference game St.
Clairsville defeated Alexander 3713.
The Marauders will have Miller
next Friday at Bob Roberts Field as
their homecoming guest. Nelsonville will host Alexander in a
game lhat will put Dave Boston Sr.
against Dave Boston Jr. in a fatherson battle of wits for the third time.
Quarter totals
Nelsonville-Yorkl3 9 7 0 -29
Meigs ....................O 0 0 0- 0

Statistics
M
5
19·8

Department
N· Y
Fim downs .. .................. .. 16
Rushing atL-yards .. ..46·264
Yards passing .. .. .. ............93
To13l yards ..................... 357
Comp.·atL .......... ........ 11/19
Interceptions thrown ... ...... 0
Penalties .......................4-50
Fumbles-lost ............ ...... 44
Punting ...................... .3-103

446-2411 or 1-800-365-1229

68

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76
6·22
3
7-50
1-1
5· 175

TVC grid standings
Team
W L PF PA
Trimble ..................2 0 53 6
Belpre ....................2 0 47 12
Nelsonville ............. I 0 29 0
Wellston .................I I 46 36
Vinton County ....... I I 39 19
Federal Hocking .... I I 27 36
Miller .....................0 2 13 55
Alexander ..............0 I 12 40
Meigs .....................0 2 0 62

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Friday's results
Nelsonville-York 29, Meigs 0
Federal Hoclcing 27, Miller 7
Belpre 19, Vinton County 6
Trimble 24, WellsiOn 6
St. Clairsville 37, Alexander 13
Tbis week's games
Miller at Meigs
Alexander at Nelsonville-York .
Federal Hocking at Vinton Coumy
Trimble at Belpre
WellsiOn at ClmiOn-Massie

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BasebaU
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Buffalo Bisons general manager
Michael Billoni was critically
injured when a car driven by an
alleged drunken driver struck him
while be rode his bicycle.
Billoni, 37, was 10 critical condition at Erie County Medical Cen·
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Sports briefs
Baseball
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
U.S. Senate subcommittee said that
it would hold a hearing on SepL 24
10 review major league baseball' s
antitrust exemption.
The exemption was created in
1922 when lhe U.S. Supreme CoUrl
ruled in Federal Baseball Club vs.
National League lhat bnseball was
not intersl3te commerce.
Baseball
ATLANTA (AP) - Atlanta
Braves catcher Greg Olson broke
his right ankle in a collision at
hpme plate with Houston's Ken
Camimti.
Olson will be lost for lhe rest of
lhe year, including any postseason
play involving Adanta.

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.

.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

With 30-30 goal met, Bo~ds'
B Th Associated Press
Wi~ hisesecond 30-30 seas0 ·
· the books Barry Bonds' f ~ m
appears unlimite(l and unc~re
B nds · 'ned falh B
n.

30-30 club by hilling his 301h
homer as 1he Pittsburgh Pirates
bealthe Philadelphia Phillies 5-2
Friday night in a rain-shortened 5
1/2-innin game.
;mult?.tim~~ember ~f b~bb~·a Bondsg who had only 20 homers
e
s
'

Scoreboard

IS-7 612, 1SI· K. Hill.· ~ !6-l.

B a~ l'h all

667' i12; Swmddl, aNCJNNATI, 12-6.

"Mi z.so· Cone. New York, 13-7, .650,
2.s 8: ~-Au..... 12-1 •.632. 3.11.
STRIKEOUTS -Cone, New York,
214 ; Smolt&amp;, Atlanu, 201; 0. Maddux,
Chi o, 181; s. Femandu, New York.

In the NL ...
Euler~~

Tum

l?J~jG,

DIYialon

WLPtLGB

Pittsburah .............. 86
M......i\ ................ 82
SL Louil ................73
OU..so..................73

New Yai: ..............65
Plliladclphia .......... .s9

61 .58j
6l .558

4

12 .503
73 .500
81 .44~

1~5
20 .~

12

.om

86

Phibdelphil, 2S; Dibble. CINCINNATI,
21.
BATTING- E. Martinez, Se•t.tlc,
_34 3- Placli.ClL. Minnaotl, .321; Molilor,
Mil~ aukec. .325; Griffey, Seattle, .~24;

American League

CINCINNATI........ 80

67 .144

SanDiego .......... ....77

69 .527

8.5
II

Houstm ..... ........ .... 71
San Fnncisco ........ 64

76 .433
83 .415

1/.5
24.5

Los Angclca ........... 60

8'7 .408

28.5

Friday's scores
Chic~go-~. SL LoW 7

CINCINNATI 4, S&amp;n Oi01o 2
MontreallO, New Y(IJk 4
Pituburgh 5, Philadclphi1 2, S.S in-

rungs, rain
Hounon 13, 1\tlanu 3

They played Saturday
San Diep (Seminat11 8-l) at CINCINNATI (Ayall 0.1 ), 2:15p.m.
SL l..ou.U (01bcme 10.7 and Oliv~
8-9} at Chicago (C11tillo 8-JO and Paller·
IM2-J), 2, 2:35p.m.
Los AngelCii (Ojeda 6-8) al San Franciaco (Bnnl!ey 4-7), 3 p.m.
Philadelphia (Grem.e 3-1) at Pittsburgh
New Yodt.

(Sabcrlngcn 3-4), 7:10p.m.
Hou&amp;ton (Blair 5-6) u Atl1nu
(Giavine 20-6), 7:10p.m.

Today's games

Phil•dclp~•

(Schilling 13-10) at Pi UJ-

burp.h (l'omlln 13·8), 1:3.5 p.m.

,

Montrc•t (Hill l 6-8) 11 New York
(Fc:rnandc% 12-10}, I :40_p.m.
HOUlton (Bowm 0-~) It Allant1 (Avr:ry 10-l0), 2:10pm .
San Diego (Greg H1rri1 2-7) at
CINCINNATI (Bokhm- 12·14), HS p.m.
S\. Louis (Chrk 3-1 0) at Chicaao
(Bookie l ·9), 2,20 p.m.
Los Angclu (Kevin Gross 7-13) at
S1n FrancUco (Rogers 0-1 ), &amp;:OS p.m.

In lhe AL .. .
Eulfm Division

w

Team

Toronto ... . ...... 87
Baltimore .............. 81
Milw1uk.ce ............. 81

L Pet.
62 .584

GB
4.5
5
17
17
17

65 .SSS
66 .551

CILVELAND ... 69
Detroit....
...... .. 69
NewYmk ..............69

7! .469
7&amp; 469
78 .469

BosliX\ ............... .....66

81

20

.449

Western Divlslon
OU1and .................90 l7 .612
MistnCIUJI.I .............. 32 66 .554
Ctuaao......... ......... 79 67 .S.I
Texu ..................... 71 71 .477
Cllifomia ...............66 81 .449
Kanas Ci~y ...........64 82 .43!1
Sctule ....................56 91 .38 1

tthck Minneultl, .32l; Thomu, OUca·

go, .liS: R. Alornu, Toronto, .316.

RUNS-I'hillipo. o.uo;, lOS: E. Mutincz, Seattle, tOO; R. Alomu, Toronto,
97; Thom.u, Chieaao. 96; ~oblauch ,
Minncs&lt;X&amp;, 9S; Andcnon, Balumore, 93;
Raines. Chicago, 93.
.
RBI -Fie!der, Deuon, II~; Carter,
Toronto, 110: Thm~al, Chicago, 103; G.
Dell, Chicago, 103; Puckett, Minnesota,
101 ; Ju an Gorl:alez, Texu, 100: Belle,
CLEVELAND, 99.

los Angdes I I, San FPJ1CiJco 4

11

Wcnel•nd , Monuoal. 3S; Myers, San

Dieao, 35; D. Jaaca, HOUilOI\, 3l ; C?'arl·
IM, CINCINNATI, 2S: M;~eh W"illiom&gt;,

26

Wet:tft"n Dhillon
Atlania ...................88 58 .603

(Dnbek t:l-10), 7,05 p.m.
MonLTOal (Dames 6-6)

CINONNATI, 162; Drabek,

Pdubw1h. IS7; Huniocll. u-m.146.
SA ~S-Lce Smith, St. Loua, 39;

8.5

10.5

20

•

HITS-Puckett, Minnuou, 192; E.
Martinez, Setttle, 181 ; Baerga, CLEVELAND, 180; Molitor, Milwaukee, 180;
Mack, Minnuola, 177; ~btti.naJ.y, New
Yart, 171; [)evc:ra.ux, Bll.timore., 170.
DOUBLES-E. Murin"- S..ule, 46:
Griffey , Su ttle, 3g ;_ Mattingly, New
York, 37; Thomu, Chicaao, 36; Vtntun,
OUclgo, 34; Ycunt., Milwaukoc, 34; Jeffcriet, K1n11s City, 33; Joyner, Kansu
Ci1y, JJ.
TRIPLES-Oev~x. Baltimme., l l;
L Jotuuon, Chicago, 11; Andenon, Baltimore, 9; Lofton, CLEVELAND, 8; R.
Alomu, Tonnlo, 7; Rainc:t, Chicaao. 7;
Molitor, Mil.waukee, 7.
HOME RUNS- Juan Gonulez,
Texu, 40; McGwiro. OUJ.and, 39; Caner,
Toronto, 33; Fielder, Dc:troiL. 32; Belle,
a.EVELANO, 31; Deer, Detroit, 29; Tet.·
tlet.on, Detroit, 29.

STOLEN BASES- Lofion. CLEVE·
LAND, S9; Liltach, Milwaukee. .52; An·
denon, Baltimore, 51; Pnlonia, Califor·
nia , 50; R. Ht.ndcncm, Oa.k..land, 46; R.
Alomu, Toronto, 44; RaiDes, Chi~:~oao.
44.
PITOUNG (17 dccis:ions}-lllln Gu:lrrwl. TMOnto., 15·3, .133, 2.49: Jack Morris, Toronto, 19-!i, .192. 4.08;. Muuina,
Baltimore, 16·5, .762, 2.60; McDowell,
OUclgo, 2{)..7, .741, 3.07; Ba~i o, Milwaukee, 14-S , .737, 3.66; K. Brown. Texu,
19-10, .65S, 3.37; Appicr, K.anus City,

15·8, .6l2,H6
STRIK.EOt.n'S-R. Joh.'\lort, Seattle,
203; Clemals , Booon, 200', Pcn:z. New
Yod,194; J01cGuvnan, Texas, 16l ;· Mc·
Dowell, Chicago, 1.5 6; Juan Guzman,
Toru\l.o,l53; K. Brown, Tcu:u,l52.
S AVES - Ecken le ~. Oaklartd, 48 ;
Aguilera, Minneaou , 39; Montarwncry,
Kanns Ci ty, 3S: Olson, Baltimore, 33;
Jeff R.u11ell. OUland, 30; Henke, Tmmto, 29: k ....... llolton. 27.

\FL sdwdull'

24

2!5.!1
34

Friday's scores
Tormw 13. TCAu 0
Detroit 10, B01ton 3
Kanua City 3, New York 2

o.;caso 1. CLEVEU.ND 7
Milw•uk.oc 12. BalUmorC 4
Minncsot14, Cllifami• I
Oakland 7, Scaule4

They played Saturday
OUcaao (McDowdl 2.0-7) at CLEVE-

1.AND(CookS-7),1J5pm .

Baltimore (McDonald 12·11) al M.J.J.
wau.kc:c (B01io 14-S), 3 p.m.
Tnu (Chi.lmparino 0-2) ll Toronto
(Cooe 2-2), 3 p.m.
Boston (Darwin 8-8 } at De1to1t
(l'anan• 12-9), 3 p.m.
Ne• Yor~ {Perez 12-14) at Kanns
Cily (R.umwsen 1-0). g:osf.m.
Oakland (Wcleh 10· ) 11 Seattle
(Leary 6-91. to,os p.m.
Minneaou (J'•pani 15-10) 11 California (Valera 7-10), IO:OS p.m.

Today's games
Tc:ul {101e Gumtan 14-11) at Toronto

(Juan Guzman 15·3), I:JS p.m.
Chic~go (A l vu~

S-3) .• L CLEVELAND (Meal 7-10), 1;3.5 p.m
B011 ton (Violt 11- 12) at Detroit (Gul·
hWoo 14-11 ), 1:35p.m.
New Yoli (WiQman 3· 1) 11 Kansas
Cuy (Reed 2-7), 2:35p.m.
Baltimore {l.dl'e:ru 0-2) It Milw1u.kec
(Dooa 8-9), 2:35 p.m.
Minnesota (Mihoma 3-J) 11 Califorrua (Finley 1· 12), 4:05 p.m.
Oakland (Stewu~ II -9) at Se1ule
(lllnsoo 8-16), OS p.m.

Leaders
National League
OATTING - Sheffield, San D1ego,
333, Van Slyke, Pm.sburgh, .330; Ktul.,
Phibde1phia, .323: GwyM, SUI Diego,
31 9; Buller. Lol Angel~:~ .. 315;_ L Walk er, Monlreal, .313; Honda , P1ttsburgh,
.J09.
RUNS - Boncll, PmsburJh, 100; Oris·
1om, Mon\.le.ll, 96; Hollins, Phib.ddphia,
93; B1ggio, HoultOn , 91: VanSl~kt, Piusbur&amp;h, 91 ; Per!dleton, ALlsnta, U; Sand ·
berg. Oucago, !6.
RIJI - D•uhon, Ph il 1delpk!t, 101;
Sheffield, San Dieso. 96: Pendleton. AL ·
lana. 96; McGri!T, San Otego, 9S ; Bonda,
PittJ;burgh, 93; L. Walker, Montrc.al , 87;
Mumy, New Yort, !1.5.
HJTS - V1nSlyke , Pinabursh, 181 ;
Pendleton, Atl anll , 179; Sheffield, San
Dlt8o , 173; Griuom, Montrea l, 170;
Grace. Oucago, 168; Gwynn. San Diego.
165; Sandbcr&amp;. Ch.iclgo, 164.
OOUBLES- VInS 1yke, PlltJ;burgh,
41 ; W. Clark , San Fnnci&amp;cn, 38; Grisu.m,
Montreal , 37; Du.nean, Philaddph.i1, 37:
Lankford, St.. Lauil, 3~; Grace, Qllc ago,
35; J. BcU, P!LIIburgh , 35 .
TRIPLES- D. Sanden, Atlant• . 14:
Finley. Hou lton, 12; VanSlyke, Pitta ·
bufih, II; Butler, Lol: Ang~ ~ · 1.1; Al icea, SL lAlli, 10; Monndtnl, Philadel·
8; Offennan, t...o. Angc!CI , 8: Sand·

au.. .8

OME fVNS- McGnff, San Diego,
34: Sheffield, San Die go_. 32; B,onds ,
Pittsburgh, lO: Otu.lwn, Plillldd!Wa, 26;
Hollil'll, Phlladclph i1, 24; L Walker,

Monuu.l. Zl; Sandberg, Chiugo, 22
STOLEN BAS ~ria.om, Montre.al, 72; DeShlddJ, Montrul , 45; Bui.!CJ,
L,.o. An4cl.e1, 41 ; lM\kford. St.. l.ouia, 40;
0 . Smnh, St. Lou.is, 40; Robens ,
CINCNNATI 39; Ni.tm, Adan1.1, 39.
PITCHING (17 dceisions)-Glninc,
Atlanta, 20-6, .7fJJ, 2.1 1; Tewbbu~, SL
LouiJ , l6-S, .76~ ~V: ~ .CIU&lt;• s•.

Today's action

ClNCINNATI at Grea!. Ba~. I p.m.
Datvc:r II Philadclphil, I p.m.
KanJU City at Houston., I p.m.
New Orleans at Allanta, 1 p.m.
San Fnncilco at N.Y. Ja., I p.m.
Setale at New EnaJand, I f .m.
Tampe. Bay at Minnelou, p.m.
CLEVELA.NDat L.A. Raidc:n, 4 p.m.
Detroit It Wuhington, 4 p.m.
L.A. Run1 at Miami, 4 p.m.
Pnor.nix at Dallu, 4 p.m.
Pmsburgh It San Diego, 4 p.m.
lndianapolilat Buffalo, 8 p.m.

Monday's game
N.Y. Giants ll OUcago, 9 p.m.

Transact inns
Baseball

Amaiclnl.aaut
CLEVELAND IND,IANS-Sia...t a
worklna•areemen&amp; to hold aprln&amp;
tnlnlna at Wlnler u.,.en, Fla., In 1993.
Walnd IMTIWJ, outllelder.
DETROIT TIGE RS- Si&amp;n ed Ernie
Huwell, radio brotdcut.er, to 1 cnc-ycar

""""'·
NEW YORK Y ANK.EES - Activaw:d
Mike Galleeo. i.nflelder, from the 15-day
diJabled liaL
SE ATTLE MARINERS- Claimed
Lee Twlcy, outfiC.Idcr, off waiven fiUil
the Clevel and lnd i1ns . Plued Ke rry
Woodson, pii.Chc:r, on 1hc 60-day diubled
WI.

Nallonal Ltaavt
ClOCAOO CUBS-Named Al Goldis
VlCC praidcm d sooutina and player devclopmcnL
SAN FRANOSCO GIANTS- Named
Tony SiesJ.e u1ittan1 acncral m.anaaer.
EJ.cn:isod lhelr optim oo Robby Thomptort, second batemlrl, for the 1993 sea10n.

Basketball
NaUon~l

8111kdball Alaodallon
CHICAGO BULLS- Traded Byron
Houston, forwa rd, to the Golden SLate
Warrion. AcqWred Rodney McCny, for·
wud, from the Dallu Mavericks.
DA LLA S MAVERI CKS - Traded
Rodney McCny, ftWWud, to the Ch.i.caaa
Bulls. ACillliMd 1 1993 fltll ·round pick
from the Go.lden Stat.c Warriors.
GOLDEN STATE WARRlORS- AcqWJcd Byra~ Houswn. fmwani from the
Chie~1o Bulla. Traded • 1993 tint-round
pia to the Dallu Mavc:rickJ. WIMld Jim
Pesenm, forward .

Football
NalkNYI FOOiballln&amp;ut
DETROIT LIONS--Claime.d Scott
Loekwood, runnina back, off w1ivcn
from the New En&amp;tand Patriou.
MIAMI DOl.PHINS- Pitecd Rcuie
Roby, punter, on injured te~CI'Ye. Sisned
Joe Prokop, pwna.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS- Ro-

lused Scolt Lockwood, runnina btck .
AcLivlled Tim Edwards, defensive end,
rrom U!e pncticc Kjl.lld.

Hockey
Nallon•l Hotter UIJUI:

f~t~re u~l~mited

on Aug. 21, hit hi~ 30th ~1th lwo
out and none on 10 lhe f~fth off
Terry Mulholland to gtve the
Pirates a 5-2 lead. Bonds. a free
agent after this season, also has 3&amp;
stolen bases.
.
.
"When we were m San Otego
(in late August), I told (Gary
Sheffield). 'There's no way I can
catch you and (Fred) McGriff.' and
they had only 28 homers or so
then," Bonds said. "So I said. 'I'm
throwing lhe rules out and going
for it.' I took a shotat it and it paid
off."
Actually, it figures to pay off
even more after the season when
Bonds can put himself on the open
market
Bonds has hi I his 30 homers
d~spite drawing a major league
htgh 115 walks. somebmes spolly
production from the Pirates' No. 5
hitters and only 427 81-bats due to a
three· week injury layoff.
" You have to have the right
players around you," Bonds said.
"You have the wrong players
around you or you're not winning,
it doesn't happen. It's a ttibute to
theotherguyshere.''
Only five players - the Bondses. Howard Johnson, Ron Gant
and Willie Mays- ha~e had multlple .30-30 seasons, wtth Johnson
holdmg the NL record of three.
Two of Bob~y Bonds' 30-30 sea·
s~ns came wnh the S~ Franctsco
Gtants and three were m the Amertcan League.
. "Barry's som~thing special:"
Pirates manager Jtm Leyland swd.

There s no leUm~ what he Udo m
baseball ~fore he s done."
The vtclory kep\ the NL East·
leading Pirates four games ahead of
Montreal, a 10-4 winner in New
York. Elsewhere •. it.was ~ouston
13, Atlanta 3; Cmcmnau 4. San
Diego 2; Chicago 9. St Louis 7,
and Los Angeles 11, San Francisco
4.
Tim Wakefield {6·1) gave up six
hits, walked five and struck out
three over six innings and now has
a 2.28 ERA at home. He is l·I with
a 2.40 ERA on the road.
The Pira1es trailed 2-1 against
Mulholland before Bonds. who was
2 for 3 with two extra-base hits and
two runs scOred. doubled with one
out to stan the fourth and scored on
Jeff King's. single. Lloyd McCiendon singled ahead of Slaught's RBI
single and Jose Lind made it 4-2
with a run-scoring single, the
Pirates' fifth straight hit.
Expos 10, Mets 4
Dwight Gooden was guaranteed
the fii'Stlosing record in his nineyear big-league career as Monlreal
beat New York.
Gooden (8· 13), who is scheduled to make just three more stans
for the remamder of the season
gave up four runs on nine hits i~
seven innings~ The 27-year-old
right-hander had never fmished less
than five games over .500.
Mark Gardner (12-9) got the
win by pilching 1 213 scoreless
innings in relief of Bill Krueger
who was making his flfSI start fo;
the Expos since being obtained
from Minnesola.

-

OE K y

"The problem is that we're ·too
alike.'' he said. "We both hate to
lose and have ft•rv
-, personalities."
After answenng a .few quesll.ons. he abruptly ended the interVl·ew by wallring through lhe crowd
Ofreponers.
Piniella met the media a few
minutes later and had a different
explanation for the scuffie: he was
defending his integrily. Piniella
chose his words carefully and
didn't apologize for charging Dib1
be.
"1 sort of lost my cool," he
said. "It's just thai simple. It haperu¥tey met Friday with control· pened. When my integrity gets
ling partner Marge Schott and gen- quesu·on·•.
"" it's not that easy of a
.
•
....
·
st'tuao'on
to deal with."
eral manager Bob Qu mn to """ 11
oul. Dibble won 't be suspended,
There was only one public apol·
·
ogy
Fn'day - Dibb,le relucta. nlly
and the two Sllld m separate news
adml.tted
he shouldn 1 have npped
h
conferences that 1 e matter was
closed.
Piniella to reponers, setling up lhe
confrontation.
They ended up hugging after
Piniella had informed reporters
Dibble saved a 4-2 victory over
after
the game Thursday that DibSan Diego on Friday, but there
were indications the rift wasn 't ble had ll.ghtness in his pitchin1.
entirely gone. They held separate Shoulder. Dibble denied it and sai ,
pre-game news conferences that " Lou's full of (it)," using an
were more cold than conciliatory.
expletive.
Dibble was combative towards
"I might have said tha~" Dib·
reponers. accusing them of inciting ble said Friday. "It was wrong on
the incidenl He said tbe fight was a my part. I'm apologizing for that
case of two quick-tempered people and I apologized to Lou.''
clashing.
.

CINCI~';/ATI (~P)

_ Rob
Dibble reluc1811tly apologized. Lou
Pinielladidn'tsay hewassorry.
That's where it stood Friday
after tbe Cincinnati Reds reliever
and manager publicly patched up
the differences that led to a clubhouse wrestling match.
Piniella charged Dibble on
' 11owm•
· a 3-2 vtc·
ursda
Th
y ru'gh110
"bbl
D
tory over Allanta. 1 e to Jd
reponers that Piniella had misled
them about tightness in his ~&gt;itching
shoulder. prompting Pimella to

cheered. when he slruck out !he last
two ~a~rsto. end the game.
. Cmcmnau _went ahead t'k stay
wtth two runs mthe th1td off ruce
Hurst (1~·9) o~ Larkm' s seco~d
run-sc~nng tnpl e and Reggte
Sanders double.
.
Cubs 9, Cardmals 7
Andre Dawson, Ryne Sandberg
and Derrick May homered to help
Chicago beat visiting St. Louis
after wasting a five-run lead.
Chicago, which led 6-1, fell
behind 7-6 when th e Cardinal s
scored four runs in the seventh ,
capped by Geronimo Pena's tworun single. But Daw son tied the
score in the bottom of the inning
off Bryn Smith {1-1) with his 21st
homer. Steve Buechele then smgled, Bob McClure relieved and
May hit his eighth homer on 1he
first pitch.
Jeff Robinson {4·3) allowed one
hit in three shutout inning s as
Chicago won its third sll'llighl.
Dodgers 11, Giants 4
Rookie Eric Young had three
hits, including his fir st majo r
teague home run, and drove in two
runs to lead Los Angeles over San
Francisco at Candlestick Park.
Pedro Astacio (4-3) allow ed
three runs and six hits in 6 2/3
innings to win his second stratght
start over the Giants. But th e
Dodgers took the lead with three
runs in the third off Bud Black and
Young hit a solo hom er tn the
fourth .
Will Clark had three hits and
three RB!s for the Gtants.

Piniella said there will be no
repercussions for the temperamenJa1 reliever. who's been suspended
by the National League three tim_ es
in the past two years 'for on-fteld
outbursts. Tht's was his fltSI run-in
wt'th a member of his own team .1
"I don't hold any grudges. I
never have," Piniella said. "Wh~n
you're wilh a team, a player for
seven months, sometimes things
can go awry. I've never had a doghouse since I've managed. When
· happens, tl· •s over WI·th •
someth m~
Forget it. '
Their scuffle in front of
reporters and television cameras
won't be soon forgotten. It immedia••ly
became a defining moment in
""
a season offrusuation.
1be Reds' viC"'"'
~·, over Atlanta
completed the;•
season
series wilh
u
the NL West leaders. The two
teams were expecled to fight for
·•· o'tle down the stretch, but the
""'
Reds fell out of contention weeks
ago wt"th shoddy play.
Dibble was conspicuously
absentinlhelateinningsThursday.
He didn't even warm up as the
Reds ttied to protect the slim lead.
It was puzzling when Piniella
chose Steve Foster - who had
never saved a major -league game

- to close the game. Foster came
through, sttilring out Damon Berryhill and
run· Otis
· Nixon
· · with
to two
d ·L
nersWh
m sconng
th postuon1 en
lh 1n Jd
en
e
learn
wen
on
e D'b
te
leb
F
• fi
to ce rste OSler s ltSI save, 1 blep·wasn't
· 11 with
• them.
1 · D"bbl
tme a s exp anauon: 1 e
complained of a tight shoulder
when he tticd to wann ur Wedncsday
so hedcouldn
be used.
o ·bblnigh~ .n
th F I·da
1 e con ltDie
at
n
·
'd k d r
1y, dsay••
mg he as c or a coupe a,s
offBut
to rest
shoulder.
histhe
denial
of any shoulder
problems Thursday night - and
hi s remark about Piniella brought
fft r the manager
1 th out of· liis
kJ
o tee •Or a btuss e h at was
1 qwc .dY
broken up y ot er p ayers an
coaches. Pi · ·u · b.
tb ·
It was me a s f.tggest ou urstd
since he uprooted trst base an
threw it into the outfield during a
~arne
in 1990. his firs! season in
· ·
· H•
d f th
mcmnatl.
e
s
prou
way
h • urbed h'
lhio eson
c sc
dts temper sedsea« .
"I've
rna
1 • th · h e a concert
h " h euort.
·d ·
t s eng tapproac . eSlll ·

Milwaukee beats Baltimore 12-4
to stay five games behind Toronto
By The Associated Press
While the Milwaukee Brewers
didn' t gain on the Toronto Blue
Jays, they did pull within a halfgame of the second-place Baltimore Orioles.
Rookie Cal Eldred {9-1) tied a
Brewers record by winning his
eighth sll'llight stan and Milwaukee
beat Baltimore 12-4. remaining
five games behind the AL East·
leading Blue Jays.
" We're still trying to catch
Toronto. but to catch Toronto we
got to catch Baltimore first, " said
Greg Vaughn, who hit a three-run
homer. " Nobody remembers second· and third -place finishes .
Everybody remembers No. I."
Kevin Seitzer drove in four runs
for the Brewers, who have 15
games left. Eldred, called up July
15, is 9·1 and tied the club record
matched by Chris Bosio just four
days ago. Moose Haas , Pete Vuckovich and Mike Caldwell also won
eight sll'llight for the Brewers.
" It 's pretty imporlant to shut
them down in the first inning, especially with Baltimore because they
can score a lot in a hurry," Eldred
said .
Rick Sutcliffe (16-13), who had
won six of his seven previous deci·
sions. gave up seven runs and eight

hits in 2 213 innings.
"They got a lot of hits, a lot of
the pitches they got to hit came
from maybe just trying to be a lillie
100 quick to the plale," Sutcliffe
said.
In other games, Toronto beat
Texas 13-0, Oakland beat Seatde 74, Minnesota beat California 4- I,
Dettoit heal Boston 10-3. Chicago
beat Cleveland 8-7, and Kansas
City beat New York 3-2.
Blue Jays 13, &amp;angers 0
Dave Winfield hit a three.run
homer and Jimmy Key (11 -13!)
pitched seven shulout innings as
Toronto won for the 14th time in
19 games.
Devon White hit.a two·run
homer and a two-run double at
SkyDome. Winfield hit his 431st
career homer and increased his RBI
total to 1,700, both tops among
active players.
Kevin Brown (19·10) gave up
eight runs - four earned - and
seven hits in 3 2/3 innings, his
shortest outing since Sept. 29.
1991.
Athletics 7, Mariners 4
Mark McGwire hit a three-run
homer in the fltSt, his 39th and fii'SI
since Aug. 14•.liS visiting Oakland
won its IOth sll'llight and extended
Seattle's club record losing streak

NE W YO RK ISLANCERS- A• ·

·LARGE SILECnON

PmSBUROH PENGUINS-sip&gt;od
1

and uns.ure

Wil Cordero hit a three-run
homer, his firsl big-league home
run, in Montreal's six-run eighth
innin~ and Tim Laker added a two·
run smgle.
Astros 13, Braves 3
The Brsves lost a ~arne and a
catcher as Scott SeMls and Craig
Biggio each drove in two runs during a five-run third inning a1 Fulton
County Stadium.
Atlanta lost catcher Greg Olson
for lhe re$1 of the season and the
poslseason. Olson sustained a fractured right leg and a dislocated
ankle in a jarring home plate colli·
sion with Ken Caminiti in the
fourth inning.
The ASiros pounded Braves
starter Charlie Leibrandl {12-7) for
eighl bits and six runs in 2 1/3
innings as they handed Atlanla tts
worst loss of lhe season. Jeff Bagwell had four of HouSIOII's 18 hits
in suppon of Pete Harnisch (8-10).
Reds 4, Padres 2
Bany Larkin had a pair of RBI
triples to help Cincinnati take a
tighter hold on second place by
beating visiting San Diego.
The Reds o~ed a 2 1/2-game
lead over .lhe third-place Padres as
rookie Ttm Pugh (3·1) won hts
third sll'lligbt game. The right·ha!t·
der allowed.tw~ runs and stx htts
over 6 1/3 mmngs m hts fourth
major lea$_Ue start.
.
. Rob Dtbble ptU:hed the mnth for
hts 21st save. Dtbble, who was
involved in a clubhouse scuffle
wilh manager Lou Piniella Thurs·
~y mght, was booed wben_ he was
mlroduced to stan the mnmg. but

mul1.1year

oontnCL

VANCOUVER CANUCKS- Ao ·
1igned Mllt W~Xtm and Aaron Doh, d&amp;-

fenacmen; Mark Smile, fcwward, and Sonny MilfiiCCI, 101hcnda, ID their jwtior

oquadJ.

to 14 games.
.
Mike Moore (15-1 !l won .hts
ftftb consecullve dect_ston agamst
his Conner team, allowmg four runs
and seven hits in 7 113 innings as
the A's reduced their magic num·
bet to seven and mainlained their 8
1/2-game lead over Minnesola in
the AL West.
Dennis Eckersley finished for
his 48tli save in 50 chances. Brian
Fisher (2·2) allowed six runs and
seven hits in six innings and
walked six.
Twins4 Angels 1
_Tieers 10, Red Sox 3
Wbi~ Sox 8, Indians 7

DO RO.O FING

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH
GARAGES • ADDITIONS • SIDING

TROMM BUILDERS
"'A Ou•llty
20 Yr. bp.

"''""flCellCo1fr1dor•
AI, 614-742·2321'

Rock of Ag81 offer• you 1 choice of 8 different colored
ar•nitn. Whete¥11' your NqUirementl '!'IV be, complete
.lltleflctlc!!' .!1 ,..,red with Rock of .All'•: . .. . _ ·
Open Mon., Tues., Thurs. &amp; Fri. 9:00 •Jil- .~tU 4:~ 11 .m.
Other Hours by Appoliltment-1193·88811 or 446-:l~2-7

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
352 lhlnl AY-.

Pll. 446·2327

e

ByHANKKURZJr.
Associated Press Writer
Coaches Bruce Cosle1 of the
New York Jets, Art Shell of the
Los Angeles Raiders and Ray Handley of the New York Giants felt
the season shrinking this week as
their teams ~m to he contending
for nothing but aspol in oblivion.
The Jeu, beat~n 20- 17 at
Atlanta and 27-10 at Pinsburgh,
rewrn home for a showdown today
against the San Francisco 49ers.
Coslel this week predicted his
team would beat the high-powered
49ers, even without lineman Jeff
Lageman, !heir besl defensive player, and probably without Browning
Nagle, their staning quarterback.
"It is not the make or break of
the New York Jets," Coslet said.
"We are going to go out and win
the damn game, though."
The Raiders were last-minute
17-13 losers at Denver and lastsecond 24-21 losers in ovenime at
Cincinnati. They will be making
their home debut against the Cleveland Browns, itself coming off a
Monday night heartbreaker in
which quarterback Bernie Kosar
broke his foot. He's out for six
weeks, to be replaced by inexperi·
enced Todd Philcox.
This' week the Browns signed

veteran Mike Tomczak as
Philcox' s insurance.
The Raiders will go with quarterback Todd Marinovich taking
over for Jay Schroeder.
"We feel the kid is ready to
go," Shell said. "This is as good a
time as any 10 make the change.
It's a matter of going in a different
direction and trying to find a way
to win football games."
The Giants, 0-2 at home after a
31-14 loss to San Francisco and a
34-28 loss to the Dallas Cowboys,
travel to Chicago for a Mondar.
nighter against a team they haven I
beaten on the road since 1962,
when the Bears played at Wrigley
Field.
The Giants are coming off their
most inspired and productive half
of football in lhe Handley Era.
Chicago announced Friday that
William Perry, having slimmed·
enough to meet coach Mike Dilka' s
320-pounds-or-less requirement,
will stan on the defensive line.
In other games today. the
Philadelphia Eagles and Broncos
look to slay QDbeaten in a match a1
Veterans Sladium; Sam Wyche-led
Tampa Bay tties .to go to 3-0 when
it travels to Mtnnesota; rookie
coach Dave Shula looks to make it
three wins in a row against the win-

RIO GRANDE -The 12th
annual Gallipolis Cross Country
Invitational welcomed 29 schools
and 508 runners Tuesday at the
University of Rio Grande, actord·
ing to a repon submitted Friday.
The varsity boys' rsce. which
saw 165 runners from 26 schools
participate, was the largest in the
Invilabonal's lm1ory.
Here are the meet results.
Varsity boys
Team scores -Waverly (120),
Lalham Wes1ern (146), Piketon
(148), Ripley (148). Sardinia East·
em (161), Fairland (186), Logan
(203), Millon (228), Meigs (240),
Boyd County (256). Ravenswood
(259), Warren Local (283). Mariet·
ta (314), St. Mary's (325), Belpre
· (379). Minford (413), Ironton
· (461). Ashland Paul Blazer (490),
Jackson (495), Coal Grove {509),
Souih Webster (524), South Point
(547). Manchester (602). Gallia
Academy, Northwest and Unioto
(no team scores).
Top 10 - Brett Perry, Milton
· (17 :04); Chad Sexton. Sardinia
- Eastern (17:20); Nalhan Hawke,
Sardinia Eastern (17:21); Flavius
Lilley. Sardinia Eastern (11 :32);
Corey Whalen, Logan (17:32);
Brad HQnl, Ripley (17:36); Steve
: Lyons. Ashland (17:45); Brad
l.ylrins (17:45); Shawn Dehaven.
St. Mary's (11:45), Scott Porter,
Waverly (17:48).
GAHS runners - Jason
-Williams, 92nd (20:02); Brett
' Baker. 106th {20:24); Chris Roettk·
•er, 114th (20:30); Jared Ford, I 15th
(20:34)
Varsity girl'l
1n this race. 129 runners from 24
. schools took pan.
•· Team scores - Athens (75),

~.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP): rhe Georgia Dome is open for
' business. That means more work
:for Bart Whitaker.
• "It's been organized confusion
&gt;around here the lasl few weeks,"
::said Whitaker. a Columbus native
·"who has been assistant general
manager of 1be nation's newest
major sports arena since March
.• 1991. "It's like we lassoed a buffalo and we're trying to get it under
· conttol."
• The Georgia Dome is the home
• of the Atlanta Falcons and will be
.the site of the 1994 Super Bowl
• and several events in the 1996
, ·Summer Olympics.
.
• • The biggeSI concern for Whttak' er 34 a graduate of Whelstone
High School and Capital Universily, comes in the days leading up 10
a major event.
"It's been a 15· .or l~·hour-a­
day job lalely getting everything
finalized," he said. "It takes the
ftrsl three hours of my morning jusl
to sll'llighten oUI my desk and dis·
seminale and organize everything
that's developed overnight.
"People can't imagine what a
mind-boggling process aU Qf this
is. For example, I'll be in charge of
, 3 000 part·lime employees .. .
· akJne. It's Cluite a handful of a job.
.bul I'm confidenl we're going. to
· have a state-of-the-art operauon

1990 Po1tkx Gr..d AM 2 Dr."........................ $6995
1989 Po1tlcx Gr..d Prix 2 Dr., red ...............". $8595
1989 Fonl R.... ILT, air ............................... $6995
1989 Olds. Delta 88 4 Dr., white ..................... $7995
1988 Gevy 510, gray, alr ...............................$4595
1988 HOlda Accord Dl4 Dr............................ $7595
1988 Gevy 510 Pkk~p,alr .............................. $4595
1987 Bllldl Somerset2 Dr., red........................$3595
1987 Po1tkx Bo•uvle LE 4 Dr., red ...............$5595
1987 Fonl R..,ILT, alr ............................... $4995
1985 Bllldl Riviera. M1st see .......................... $6995
1986 GMC %To• (w /•tilly bed).....................$3595
UNDER $1,000.00
1983 For~ Escort Wagoa ....................................$695
1983 Gevy Cavaler......................................... $695
1977 DaiSII 121 01Wagtl.................................$595
1973 Qevy
See Scott or Ralph Sheets

·~here.''

• Whitaker, w~o previously held
· ·Operating pOsitions at the Louisiana
•.Supertlome, lhe Macon (Ga.) Coli· .
:"scum 8nd lhe SL Petersburg (Fla.)
•-Bayfronl Cenlt'Z, believ~ the G~·
•"gia Dorile eventually wtll sl811d m a
! "Class by itself.
'
• "One lhing that sets this com·
•~lex apart is its appearance,"
Whitaker said. "People are auto•:.Vatica!ly taken by the modem pas..tel colors. You don't see peacock
~ ~ue and wild etum on the outside
. or toO many buildin~.
·
' ".:\lid .the sight lines are ex~p-

Mon., Tues., Wed., Fri. 9-7 or
Thurs. &amp; Sat 9-3

GALLIPOLIS MOTOR CO. INC.
236 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOUS, OHIO 45631
PHONE 614-446·3060

Gllllpollt, OH.

.

f ...

less Green Bay Packers rookie
Mike Holmgren, and Piusburgh
roolrie coach Bill Cowher will try.
to stay perfecl when the SJ.eelers
visit the San Diego Chargers.
where Bobby Ross is still seeking
his fii'St NFL victory.
Also, Indianapolis Colts' Ted
Marchibroda takes his fii'SI shot a1
stopping the high-powered offense
he helped build a1 unbeaten Buffalo; unbeaten Dallas will play host
to lhe winless Phoenix Cardinals,
again playing without injured quar1erback Timm Rosenbach; NFC
championship game foes th~ Wash·
ington Redskins and Dettolt Ltons
· malch up at RFK Stadium; the
unbeaten Kansas City Chiefs are at
Houston; NFC West rivals the New
Orleans SainiS and the Falcons
meel in the Georgia Dome;
Miami's Don Shula tties nolto lose
before his son when the Dolphins
host the L.A. Rams. and the Seattle
Seahawks and New England Patti·
ols meet in a baule of winless
teams at Foxboro Sladium.
At lhe Melrodome, Vinny Teslaverde wiU be coming off the best
game of his career, a 22-for-25,
363-yard gem against Green Bay.
Wilh three TE&gt; passes and no mterceptions, he ranks third among

Meigs, Gallia Academy.teams -among
top lO_in Gallipolis CC Invitational
Ravenswood (80), Warren Local
(131). Marieua (139) , Gallia
Academy (177), Logan (214), Belpre (219), Sardinia Eastern (229),
Boyd County (237), Minford (241).
Millon (247),. ·Ashland (261),
Unioto (267), Waverly (298),
Meigs (391), Latham Western ,
Raceland. Jackson. Piketon, Sl.
Mary's, lronlon, South Point and
Manchester (no team scores)
Top 10 - Susan Ferguson ,
Boyd County (20:55); Amy Sloan,
Athens (21:06); Michelle Potts,
Sardinia Eastern (21:39); S1acey
Felty, Boyd County (21:39); Carrie
Brisker, Minford (21 :41); MicheUe
Nesselroad, Ravenswood (2! :52);
Missy Sloan, Athens (21:58); Jes.
sica Strafford, Gallia Academy
(21:59); Melody Gonzalez,
Ravenswood (22: 13): Brooke
Salmons, Ripley (22:32).
Other GAHS runners - Jean
Kni~hl, 351h (24 :46); Whitney
Adktns, 37th (24:52); Kalherine
Strafford (61st, 26:21); Sara Walker, 75th (27:15); Blair Simpson,
90th (28:12); Michele Davison,
99th (29:13).
Junior varsity boys
There were I00 runners from 23
schools in this race, including some
entties !rom River Valley.
Team scores -Waverly {52).
Warren Local (69), Logan (71),
Piketon (Ill), Fairland (119). Ripley (128) Raceland (142), Gallia
Academy, River Valley, Athens,
Sardinia Eastern. Ravenswood, St.
Mary's, Latham Western, ~outh
Point, Jackson, Belpre, Mtlton,
Ironlon, Minford, Coal Grove,
Unioto and Ashland (no team
scores).
Top rive- Nathan Frisby,

Dome's opening
plenty of work for Whitaker

Check with us before you buy.

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-C7

e

•

N.Y. Jets plan to upset Vegas with victory over San Francisco

~Georgia

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

September 201 1992

In today's NFL action,

Have Piniella, Dibble kissed and made up?

•iant.d Derek Arm•trona. Ry•n Dulhif.
Daniel Paradis, and Jame1 Startup, oeti ·
t.en: latrdl Deulina aM Steve O 'Ra.~.rkc,
forwucb, and Juon Widmer, dd"enMman,
"' lh&lt;il jwUO&gt; JqUidl.
Jarom.ir ha.r, right wina, to

September 20, 1992

'.

tiona! for a place thai seats 71,500
people. Every seat was designed to
focus on the field. It's the smallest
playing surface area of any field in
the NFL. Thus, unlike a lot of the
domes. most of our seats seem like
lhey're righl on top of the Held."
Whitaker, who earned his
degree at Capital in business
administration. said he landed in
the arena management industry son
of by aecidenl
A cousin was legal counsel for
the Superdome and learned of an
opening for a security job there.
Whitaker was elevated to director
of Superdome security within a
year, soon became one of lhree
event coordinators and eventually
.decided to make arena operations
his career.
"You've heard of military
brats? Well, I'm sort of a facility
brat," he said. '"I practically grew
up in Ohio Stadium seUing Cokes
and hot dogs, and through my dad,
I WIIS always really close to sports.
I've always been the kind' of person
who likes to be where the action
is."
Whilaker 's father, Mark,
coached track and cross country a1
Hamilton Township, East and
Brookhaven high schools for 31
years and remains active as an official.

Raceland (19:01); Bernie Miller,
Athens (19:31). Chad Lykins, Piketon (19 :52); Delmar Sinifl. Logan
(19:57); Kris Bryant, Waverly
(20:00).
GAHS runners- Adam Blair,
62nd (23 : 11); Tim Epling, 85th
(25:50) ; Adam Salisbury, 89th
(26:41); Aaron Salisbury, 99th
(32:21).
.
Junior high boys
There were 60 runners from 12
schools in this race.
Team scores - Minford (67),
Boyd County (72), Warren Local
(94). Pike1on (100), Logan (113),
Latham Western (114). Raceland
(114), Waverly (187), Gallia
Academy, Marietta. Athens and
Jackson (no team scores).
Top five - Coy Lindsay.
Logan (11:31); Nick' Otstot, Marietta (II :44 ); Brandon Dodridge,
Minford (12:06); Jacob Cottrill,
Gallia Academy (12:10); Eddie
Nehus, Gallia Academy (12:20).
Other GAHS runners- Chris
Smith, 25th (14:12); Joe O' Dell.
56th (19:06).
Juaior high girls
Then: were 59 runners from 10
schools in this race.
Team scores- Jackson (49),
Gallia Academy (80), Warren
Local (81). Belpre (83). Logan
(I 02). Waverly (133). Raceland
(155), Minford. Marietta and Ash·
land (no team scores).
Top rive - Kasey Hoover.
Jackson (14:28); Theresa. Evans,
Jackson (14:34); Aadra Boggs,
Gallia Academy (14:31); Tresera
Meadows. Minford (14:48); Harvest Sparling, Warren Local
(14:59).
Other GAHS runners Becky Knight, lOth (15:S7); Jill
Carter. 181h (16:3S); Lindsay Easton 28th (17:39); Liza Holeski ,
35th (18: 11); Meredith Mullins,
39th (18:23); Kelly Caldwell. 40th
(18 :25); Kasey Atkinson, 41st
(18:22).

NFC quar1erbacb.
AI Washinglon.lhe Lions ftgme
to have a huge mental disadvanlalle
- !hey were bealcn 4S.O and 41 I 0 by lhe Redskins last 9CISOII- 1be
defending Super Bowl cbampioos

dall Cunningham all the more
frighten ing. The Broncos. too
reliant on John Elway for offense
so far, need running back Gaston
Green {23 carries. 51 yards) to fmd
some holes.

Denver-Philadelphia game tabbed
as preview of coming Super Bowl
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
It's the third wedc of the season
and we have Super Bowl Preview
11 to follow Buffillo and San Francisco last week.
This one's Denver at Pbiladelphia - lhe guys who always lose
Super Bowls vs. lhe latesl team that
Herschel Walker is supposed to get

there.

The Bills, losers of lhe last two
Super Bowls. proved something
last week by beating a SIIOIIg NFC
team 00 the road.
·Now it's the four-time Super
Bowl losen. the Broncos. who go
into Philadelphia 10 uy the same
stunt. The odds guys say they
won't- they're 6 112-point underdogs.
The Broncos come off a 21·13
win at home over San Diego in
which they were outgained and
ouunuscled.
That doesn 't bode well against
Plliladelphia - unless John Elway
is in range of a comeback in the
final two minutes.
He won't be.
EAGLES, 24-10
Detroit (plus 9 til)
Ill W11511iJI&amp;Ioa
The Lions were at RFK Sladium
twice laSI year and came OUllosm
by a combined score of 86-10.
These aren 'I !hose Redslrins Darrell Green is gone for lhe sea·
son and lhe Johnsons (AJ. and Sidney) will replace bim.
But more important. lhe Lions
have won their last 12 games
indoors bul are 2-10 outdoors and
RFK isn't lhe most pleasant ouldooran:na.
REDSKJNS, 27-14. ·
Saa Francisco (miniS 4)
at New YodJds
This is lhe secmd time in dlree
games 1he 49ers are playing at
Giants Stadium - they beat the
Giants 31-14 there opening week.
So scnw:h home field ad'IDIIIalle the 49ers have played more in lhe
Meadowlands this year than the
Jets.
Steve Young may 1101 throw for
449 yards this weelr:. but he won't
have to.
49ERS, 31 -14
New Orleans
(plus 1 Vl) at Allanla
The Jerry Glanville factor - up
at home one week, down on the
road the next And he loves to beat
up on the Saints.
FALCONS. 20-17
Kansas City
(plus 5) at HOtitoa
Can any two teams be more different?
DomeField advantage didn't
work the flf'SI time for lhe Oilers.
It's a sandwich game for lhe Chiefs
- next up is lhe Raiders on Monday night
.
OILERS. 20-14
New York Gianlll (plas 5)
at Chicago (Moaday lighl)
The last time lhe Giants won in
Chicago was 1962, so does last
week's 28-poinl second half mean

Rodgers E-Z Ride
Auto-Rentals

Green Bay's Mike Holmgren.
Dave Shula slays ahead of Dad.
BENGALS, 23-10
L.A. Rams (minus 8 112)
at Miami
Dad keeps pace.
DOLPHINS, 40-7.
Cleveland (plus 8)
at L.A. Raiders
Nobody shows up on camera
cringing in the owner's box more
than AI Davis and Art Modell.
It's Modell's third suaight week
on the tube.
RAIDERS, 17-6
Indianapolis (plus 17)
al Buffalo (Sunday night)
No one can find Bob lrsay to
watch him cringe in the owner's
booth.
Blll.S. 44-7
SeaUie (plus 3)
at New England
Not exactly the game of the
week.

PATRIOTS, 14-3
Last week: 11-3 (spread) 13·1
(straight up)
Season: 16-10-1 (spread) 22-5
(sll'llight up)

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they're 0-2 and due? If they let
Carl Banks be lhe head coach, Phil
Simms lhe offensive coordinator
and Pepper Johnson his counterpart
on defense, why 1101? ·
GIANTS, 27-24
Phoenix (plus 14)
atDaUas
The Cowboys learned their lessoo last week.
COWBOYS, 41-10
Pittsburgh (plus 3)
at San Diego
How come the 0-2 team is
favored over the 2-0 team?
Because ...
CHARGERS, 17-13
Tampa Bay (plus 7)
at Minnesota
How come the 1- 1 team is
favored over the 2-0 team?
The second new coach to stan
unbeaten falls ...
VIKINGS, 24-13
Cincinnati (pick 'em)
at Green Bay
Unbeaten new coach III at winless new coach.
"If it's not getong done. we'll
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COLLEGE STATION, Texas
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N.C., qualifted for the pole posillon
.in the NASCAR·ARCA Texas
Shoolout. .
Allen's speed on the qualifying
lap was 181.397 mph.
Auto racine
DOVER, Del. (AP) - Jeff Gordon led qualifying for the Splilfire
Spark iOO Busch Grand National
stock car race ill Dover Downs.
International Speedway with a titrie
of 143.079 mph.

got untracked in beating Allanla
24-171ast week.
Two of the league's most dangerous q~ks will be at ~Ork
a1 Plliladelphia, where the addioon
of Her.;chel Walker has made Ran·

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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-P,olnl Pleasant, wv

·Page C8 Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ohio fishing report

,Livers, night crawlers best baits for Greenup pool's channel catfish
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Here is the weekly fishing report as
vided b the division of wildlife
the 0~ Department of Natural
Resources:
Ohio River
In the Greenup pool, channel
catfish averaging 20-27 inches are
being taken on chicken livers and
night crawlm fished along the bot·
tom in the Ironton area
In the Willow lstan'd tail water
anglers are drifting shad from th~
ate down river 50 yards and talc·
rng hybrid striped bass averaging
17-28 inches striped bass averaging 25-26 i~ches and walleyes
· g 24 inches
av~~ Hannibal · 1 an tern are
g
nd
uLsmg sps'~snteerrs lsanlanspood ~~na
ower 1
"

rr

. . r'.:J

hybridstripedbassaveraging 14-25
inches.
Southeast
JACKSON CITY RESERVOIR
- Good to excellent numbers of
channel catfish, bluegills, sunfish,
largemouth bass, golden trout and
saugeye are present. Trout fish.ing
is popular from early sprmg
through autumn. The use of PVC
pipe struCtures bas provided good
underwater fish concentration
auractorn.
FOX LAKE - Excellent numbers of channel catfish are present
and average 15-17 inches. Largemouth bass up to 22 inches are also
available. SunfiSh and bluegills can
be taken on small worms fished

Soutbwest
.
MIAMI RIVER - The nver
~rovtdes good fishmg opportum_ues, espectally below th~ dams.
Saugeye fis~mg opportumues are
best from Piqua to Dayton. Rock
bass, carp and suckern are present
throughout the .enti!C nver. Chan·
net catfish fis.hr~g IS .best between
Da~~;L~~;~O:.~VER. U
- se
night crawlers fished along the bottom in areas with deep pockets and
slow movmg current to talc~ channet catfish. Try usm~ small Jig&amp; and
mmnows or small mght crawlern 10
take rock bass.
Central . .
. INDIAN LAKE - . Ftshrng at
ntght wlth slow movmg current
when using night crawlers, shrimp

beneath a bobberin shallow water.

or chicken livers will produce the
best results for. channel catfish
anglers. Fi~ at night with minnows
near the bridges to take white bass.
RUS~ CREEK LAKE - Use
larval baits or red worms fished in
the shallow water to take bluegill.
Areas with vegetation or submerged structure will produce the
behsl results. Use surface baits in
t ese same areas to take largemouth bass.
Northwest
LA SU AN - These area lakes
have good nom belli ofbluegills and
largemouth bass. Special regulations apply at these lakes. Use
small worms or larval baits to take
bluegills. Try imilation baits and
surface lures to take largemouth
bass.

.

Marinovich, Philcox today's starting passers

By JOHN NADEL
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Quarterback Todd Marinovich and head
coach An Shell have some advice
for those expecting Marinovich to
work miracles for the Los Angeles
Raiders- forget it.
"I can't walk on water/ ' said
the 23-year-old Marinovich, who
has taken over as the Raidern start·
ing signal-caller: "On the surfboard, I do pretty good on water.
"He {Shell) feels strongly I'm
going to make more good thin~s
happen than bad. I think that s
true.' '
.
Shell announced this week that
Marinovich will replace veteran
Jay Schroeder as the starting quar·
terback.
"We all have to undmtand one
thing with the kid now," Shell
said. "He's not the savior. That's
what I told him . I said, 'You are
not the savior. You are here to add
to what we have. We are going to
give you an opportunity to use your
talents to help us win.'
: "He's a young guy. He's probably going to make a mtstake here
and there. So don't think he's the
answer to everything."
The Raiders started the season
with a pair of losses.
In the first game, a 17-13 setback at Denver, Schroeder was ter·
rible, completing just 7 of 24 passes for 181 yards with two interceptions, and be lost two fumbles.
In the second game at Cincin-

WILLARD RESERVOIR Drift and troll night crawlers or
small crank baits to take walleyes
averaging 13-24 inches. Channel
catfish and bullheads can be taken
during late evening and early
morning how on traditional baits.
Fish the outer shoreline areas with
spreadern tipped with minnows to
take yellow perch.
Northeast
SPENCER LAKE- Channel
catfish and bullheads are abundant
and can be taken from shoreline
areas during late evening and early
morning hours. Try using Hoola
Poppers or twitch baits to lake
largemouth bass. Bluegills average
six to nine inches.
TAPPAN RESERVOIR Find
areas with fallen trees andbrush
ptl~s to locate larg~mouth bass
whtch average 12-23 inches. Ex~ellent numbers .or cha~nel catftsh

In totkzy's Cleveland-L.A. Raiders game,

nati, Schroeder was terrific, completing 25 of 40 passes for 380
yards and two touchdowns with
one interception. But the Raiders
were beaten 24-21 in overtime by
the Bengals.
"There are two people who take
the brunt- the head coach and the
quarterback," Schroeder said. "I
can 't argue with the decision. I
accepted it. I'm not going anywhere. We have to find a way to
win a football game.''
The Raiders will try to find a
way to win today against the
Cleveland Browns in their home
opener. Like the Raiders, the
Browns are 0-2 and trying to find a
way to win a football game.
The Browns will have a new
quarterback at the controls, too,
only not by choice. Todd Pbilcox ·
will make his first NFL start
because Bernie Kosar suffered a
hairline fracture of his right ankle
during a 27-23 loss 10 Miami on
Monday night and will be sidelined
at least six weeks.
Philcox, who turns 26 next
week, has thrown just 10 passes as
a pro. completing four for 49 yards
wnh two interCeptions.
Marinovich has a little more
NFL experience than that He started his team's final two games of
last season and looked impressive
at times and not so impressive at
others as a fill-in for Schroeder,
who had two sprained ankles.
But things are different now -

OPEN WEEKDAYS TIL 8 P.M.
SATURDAYS TIL 4 P.M.

at least for the time being, the
Raiders are Marinovich's team.
"He's the quarterback, he's here
to lead us," Shell said. "We feel
the kid is ready to go. This is as
good a time as any to make the
change. It's a matter of going in a
different direction and trying to
find a way to win football games."
Most likely, Philcox won't be
leadihg the Browns as long as
Marinovich leads the Raiders. But
with quarterbacks going down due
to injuries so often, no one can say
for sure how long anyone will lead
a team.
"I've always felt that it takes a
little luck, be at the right place at
the right time, to last in this
league," Philcox said. "Obviously,
this is what I'm here for. !look forward to getting a chance to start.
Unfortunately, it comes at the
expense of Bernie's injury."
Of the Raiders, Philcox said,

"They're a team like us thm staned
out 0-2. Like us, they're not very
happy about it."
The Browns signed veteran
Mike Tomczak two days after
Kosar was injured, so and Philcox
soon could be back on the bench.
Tomczak, 29, won 23 of 34 starts
for the Chicago Bears between
1986 and 1990.

Farm/Uusiness

September 20, 1992

provide good night flS~ng opportum~es . Use cut bait, mJ!Itt crawlern,
chtcken hvers or shnmp for the
best results.
.
Lake
Erte
In the central basin yellow
'

Hog R1111st, Be• Dl111er &amp;

Live btertal•meat after the

~erch fis~in~ is .rated go~ wtth
ftsh rangmg 10 sue fro":~ ~to
II mches. The best Spotts
to
four mtles off of Clevel~.i
~glees are usmg spreaders Uv~
With mmnows fished along
bol.
tom at depths of 45•50 feet. teed
head are bemg taken'" the Gran
Rtver and around .thefPehrry:~lear

Some ,good could emerge from currency crisis

ms

By RICK GLADSTONE
AP Buslaes5 Writer
NEW YORK - Europe's currency carnage and
fractious politics dominated the fmancial lamlscape
this past w~k. sending quivelli of fear into boardrooms and"boUllies around the globe.
Germany's extraordinarly high interest rates,
severe economic malaise in Britain and Italy, and the
uncertain outcome of a crucial French vote on EUropean economic unity were seen as the mJiior underlymgcauses.
They combined in a lethal explosion that derailed
Europe's system for keeping exchange rates relatively stable,. The resull was panic.•. despair and
backpedalmg from Europe's grand vtSion to become
a single economic superpower.
, Britai.n and Italy abandojt~ the exchange mte system after their currencies were d,evaslated in frenetic
foreign-exchange trading: Genruuiy rejected criticism
of its interest rate policy; and fear in!CD$ifie(l· that a
." no" vote in France on Sunday would create more
fear and uncertainty.
Nonetheless, there was reason to believe some
good could emerge from the convulsions, particularly
for the ailing U.S. economy, a number rJ mternational economists conteilded toward the C!ld of the week.
They said irrepressible forces have been

~~;~~t/:n~t~s~s~ ~~ dep~~o~~

"
S
ab?ut 30 ee.t. ome wa 11eye are
be!"g taken etght to 10 ~iles off of
Wildwood ¥ at Euclid. AnglC:S
are trolling sliver, blue and purp e
sPfns depths of 5~ f~.t h"ng
n.1 e jeste~ 11 asm, 1 ~ ~re
remarn.s 5 ow· ~ ow pe~
averagmg fro~ 8" 10 12 mches.
The best areas mclude the Toledo
Shipping Channel •.Maumee Bathy,
the Toledo water mtake and e
Bass islands . Smallmouth bass
fishing is fair. Anglers are fishing
along me bottom at depths of 15-30
feet around the islands using soft
craws and live bait. These fiSh are
averaging 13-15 inches. Some
walleye are being taken by anglers
· th.e area 0 f Rat tlesn ake
tro11·mg 10
Island and Ntagara Reef.

:t

lnawranoe \Qincy
Ave.

POMEROY - The newest mem- She is a graduate of Wabama High
bers of the Farmers Bank Advisory School and the West Virginia Jnsti.
Board, desi~ed to aid the bank in tote of .Technology in Montjill eominumty service efforts, have gomery, W.Va., wbere she gradiJ!It·
been named.
ed summa cu~me lauae wt!h
According to Paul Reed, Presi· Bachelor of Scrence degrees m
'dent of.UJe Faqners Bank and Sav- Compilter Management, Business
ings Company, those new ·members Management and Accounung.
are Ferman Moore, Cheryl Lemley,
Upon graduation, she was
.Anna Damitz and Eugene Facemy- employed with C~leston National
't!r. They will join the newly-forined Bank as staff aud!tor, and was !ater
'board at its OfEIIIIizalional meeting PfO';DOted 10 semor Slaff audttor.
to be held later this month.
While employed there, she perIn addition to being a member formed audit work for Charleston
of the bank's board of directors, NatioJllli Bahk as well as other Key
Moore is executive director of the Centurion Bancshares' affiliated
Meigs Unit, American Cancer banks, including Filst Huntington
Society. He was the president and National Bank and Citizens Nationgeneral manager of the former at Bank iD Point Pleasan~ W.Va.
Royal Crown Bottling Company in
She resides in New Haven,
Middleport.
W.Va. with her husband, Scou and
, Moore is a member of Drew llieir two sons, Holt and Brice.
y,'ebster Pos~ American Legion in
Eugene Facemyer is the presiPomeroy, the Middlepon Masonic dent ofFacemyer Lumber Co. Inc.,
l.odge, Shrine and York Rite. He located on Bailey Run Road in
lltJends St. Paul Lutheran Church in Middleport. He and his brother,
Pomeroy. He and his wife, Ullian, · Denl)is, staned the business in
have five children and reside on 1964 on their farm in Columbia
Lincoln Hill.
Township and incorporated the
•. Lemley is a licensed real ~ business in 1969~ when they moved
agent with Century 21, Big Bend to Middleport.
~ealty in Gallipolis. She is a memF~yerLumberCom~yhas
ber of the state and local Boards of three facilities: a distribuung yard
Realty. She attended Rio Grande and dry kilns in Middleport, a
College, Gal(ipolis Business Col- sawmill in Ripley, W.Va. and the
~ege, Ohio School of Career Tech- newly formed Diamond Export
Jiology. and the American Institute Co., which exports veneer logs in
-df Real Estate Appraisers. She has Albany. Being a producer of 18
.been a licensed agent since 1977. million board feet of hardwood
,She is also a slate certified Resi- lumber a,year, Facemyer Lumber
dential Independent Fee Appmiser.
Co. has cusiomers in 25 stateS, as
, Lemley and her husband, Larry, well as Canada, the Far East,
have three children: Ryan, Aimee I;!urope, the Middle East and South
and Jill. They live in Rutland and Africa.
auend the Trinity United Methodist
He has been a resident of Meigs
Church in Porter.
County for 32 ye&amp;lli, where he and
; Barnitz is employed by Bob •s his wife, Darla ,live on a farm in
Market and Greenhouses, Inc. in Columbia T.ownshi~. They have
,1)1ason, W.Va., as an accountant two IIOIIS, Eric, a seruor at Alexan-

OR
800/837·1094

1992 OLDS

1992 Cadillac
Sedan Deville.As Low As $22,995
1992 Chevy Cavalier R/S ... $13,499
Convertible

~~ACHIEVAS
· ·

IIUist, aut0111tk.

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$7,299

trans.

THEN CHOOSE

...

99
1992 CADILLAC
SEVILLE

NOW ONLY

Whitt Diamond
bt., leather
seating. Y-8.
LOADED.

$500 Rebate or 2. 9%

NOW
ONLY

32,868

5

AM•lltlllc, Y-6, tit,
nile, pew•
ntlews&amp;lecb,
zl a b • wlttels.

LOADED.

~BLAZER

NOW ONLY

Touring Coupe

NOW
ONLY

Pkg., leather
stating. Deko Bose
stereo, Y·l.

5

34,703

$1

'

1992 Chevy Caprice...........$13, 999
1992 Chevy Corsica .............. $9488
1992 Chevy Cavalier R/S ..... $8888
1992 Olds Cu~ass Ciera ..... $12,999
1992 Olds 98 Regency .......$19,488
1992 Chevy Astro .............. $14, 999

EUGENE FACEMYER

der High Schoo~ and Robert, who
resides at Pratt's Fork.
Having a foqdness for the outdoors, tie enjoys farming, raisin·g
' cattle, hunting and fishing. He is a
veteran of the 82 Airborne a member and past director of the Ohio
Forestry Associatioo a member of
the F.O.E., the NatioOai Hardwood
Lumber A~sociation, the Ohio
Farm Bureau, and the Hocking
Valley Sportsman Association. In
1989 he was honored as Meigs
Coun~'s "Person of the Year" by
the Southeastern Ohio Regional
Council
These new membelli will serve
alongside P.aul Reed; Paul E.
Kloes, CEO of the bank and chairman of the bank's board of direclOlli; Bruce J. Reed, Vice President.
in charge of lending; Donna
Schmoll, compliance officer; and
local businessmen Bruce Fisher,
John Musser and Phil Harrison,

who were named to the board earlier this year.
"The Farmers Bank is proud of
its commitment 10 our community," Paul Reed said. "The advisory
board's activities will center on the
needs of the community, and suggest ways that the Farmers Bank
can meet and handle those needs
through our products and services."
Among the issues that the bank
hopes to address through the new
board are downtown developrnen~
assessment of the credit needs of its
consumers, teaching customers
how to deal with economic problems in the community and conducting seminars on banking and
bank products.

Butter production up
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.
dairies rroduced 96 .8 million
pounds o boner in July, 12 percent
more than in July oflast year.
In a report on dairy products,
USDA's National Agricultural
SIJitistics Service also said cheese
output, excluding collage cheese,
was 546 miUion pounds, 9 percent
above July 1991.

Ward retires from
Philip Sporn Plant

PRE·OWNED VEHICLES
1985 Dodge Caravan ............ $4999
1985 DodgeD-50 Pickup ...... $3495
1984 Chevy Camaro ............. $2999
1989 Chevy Corsica .............. $6499
1989 Chevy Caprice ..............$9488
35,000 miles.
1990 Olds Cutlass Supreme...$8888
2Door.
1985 Mercury Cougar. ..........$2499

• RECEIVES AWARD- Tile Olllo Para Bureau llecleratloa's
;Challenger's Award was 11vea to Kim Harlell, ·OFBF orpallatlon
:director for Atbeas. Gallla, Jacksoa/VIntaa, Lawreace aud Scioto
couatles. Tile award was preseatecl durlua a receut Oblo Parm
·Bureau board of trustees mHIID&amp;In Columbus, acc:ordla1 to GleDD
:J'Irue, OFBF vice praldtDt rrt field aenlce&amp; PlC\ured (left to right)
:are:
Ray Noecker, Oblo Farm Blll'tla praldtat; Harlea IIJid C.
WOllam Swauk, executive vice presldeat.
.

c.

.
•••••

•

b

·- ·

•

• • ••

. ....

.

..

-··

· ·-

•••••

OPEC had its own unity troubles, as Ecuador quit
and Iran griped about the cartel's latest producuon
agreement designed to raise prices; Continental Air·
lines received a takeover bid valued at $400 million
from Germany's Lufthansa airline and California billionaire investor Marvin Davis; Mellon Bank agreed
to buy old-line money management fum Boston Co.
from Sheanoa Lehman Brothers for $1.4 billion;
Pltar-Mor Inc., the troubled drugstore chain, said it
would close 63 stores in 14 slates.

_,.

Electric utilities
By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS - Electric utility
stocks performed very well .in the
second quarter. Our Electric utility
summary posted a 3.5 percent gain
compared to the
S&amp;P SOO's 1.1
percent advance.
This performance
comes Ill a time of
economic disillusionment despite
several tidbits of a
stronger recovery.
Thus, the auractiveness of the group
is still very apparent.
In relation to the bond market,
electric utility stocks are on target
The 30-year treasury bond rose 4.5
percent in the second quarter pushing
its yield closer to our 7 percent estimate. The Federal Reserve's efforts
to stimulate the economy through
monetary means stalled on most
fronts. This fact combined wdh limited fiscal policy initiatives led investors to safe haven invesunents, and
extended bond maturities.
The !50-year record high spread
between shon and long-term yields
indicates that any additional easing
by the Fed wdllld do very liule for
long term rates. Although short-term
rates are not likely to decline further,
the porential exists for an additional
drop in long term rates. The environment remains ripe for such a decline.
Real rates are still high oo longer
maturities. Economic activity will
remain subpar as the economy deleverages. The historically large
spread between long and short-t.erm
yields also suggests investors' de·
mand for higher yielding, long t.enn
maturities will remain strong.
From a relative valuation basis.
electric utility stocks are still auraelive vehicles. The group's relative
strength compared to the S&amp;P 500
recovered well in the second quarter
after its first quarter respite.
Driving this move upward are two
primary factolli. First, the attrllCtiveness of electric utility stocks to certificatesofdepositisstillveryappar·
ent. At the end of June, three-month
and one-year CD's carried an average yield of 3.8 percent and 4.2 pe~­
cen~respectively, whileourElectnc
.Utility Summary boasled a 6.1 per·
cent yield Second. the economic
oudookremainscloudyatbest. There
are occasiooal reports "of improvement in thC economy, but these are
often count.ered by weak business
reports in othCr areas. The net effect
. is a sluggish rebound, a sideways
stock market and increased uncer.
lalnty
~
• relati e rformance
group s
v pe
•
though sluggish forthepastfive yealli,
c_ontinues to aun~l investor a~uon. As the fo~OW111g graph deptc~,
invesurs conunue to buy electric

NEW HAVEN • William C.
. MARY
Ward of Second Street, Middleport,
has retired from Central Operating
Company's Philip Sporn Plant,
New Haven, W.Va.
GALLIPOLIS - Mary Groves
Ward worked for Bethlehem will retire from Reliance Electric
Steel and the Department of Hous· on Sept. 30, after more than 25
ing in Maryland as well as Federal years of senice.
Mogul in Gallipolis before joining
Groves was employed at ·the
Sporn in 1980 as a utilil)l worker B. Gallipolis plant by Robbins &amp;
·He advanced through the positions Myers on June I, 1967. She was
of utility worker A, plant janitor, one of the first ~P of employees
and equipment operator C before hired at Galllpolis.
bOing promoted to equipment oper- . Her career included several ~s
a10r B in 1984. He has been on · m manufacturin~ and prodbct;ton
long term disability leave since control. AI the ame of her reure1988.
·
men~ she was a shop order control
. the prod ucuon
· conAn Army veteran, Ward is a coordi
. Jla1llr m
member of the American Le!Pon at trol dcplrtmenL
Middlepon and associate mlllisrer
Groves wu recently presented
at thC Paint Creek Baptitt Church gills from fellow employees during
in Gallipolis. He lias one daught.er i podllCI&lt; dinner beld in her honor
and four grandchildren.
at the plant picnic shelter.

utility stocks. on a cumulative basis.
This fact is not surprising given th9
amount of private deposits tied-up ;,;
lowyielding, shan term time deposits. One of the better avenues for
income-oriented investors remains
electric utility stocks.
.
Until the poitical environment
crystallizes and the economy gathers
somestrength,stocksarenotlikelytO
make much progress. As a resul~ we
expect equities to remain in the current trading mnge for the foreseeable
future. Under this trading range see.
nario, market volatiHty rises as in'
vestorn seek to loct-in profits, wheq
bad news arises, regardless of loog
term objectives. Thus, we portend
that this environment is an excellent
opportunity to move into safe haven
investments.
Likewise, the treasury market
faces its own quandary. The SJlre8l!
between the &lt;)(Hiay and 30-yearueas:
ary issues is the widest in 150 yeaci
{not a misprint). This fact is due to
concerted efforts by the Fed to jump
start the ecooomy while fiscal policy
remains trapped in the black hole o(
partisanship. Then there is the presi.
dential election which, 81 this jullQoo
tore, is still up for grabs. The mark...
is comforuthle with President Bust!
in so much lhathispoliciesareknoWJ!,
Bill Clinton's policies a concern ._
they reflect the Democratic Pary'i
tax &amp; spend history. But even this I(
uncertain.
Given our expectations that 0.:
economic recovery will remain slug~
gish, electric utility stocks offer an:
excellent opportunity for capilllf·
gains. This scenario is n01 ooly true
for the individual, income-orienteil
investor, but also for theprofessioo»
investor's defensive strategy.
:
)Mr. EVIIIIS is an ln&gt;eStliiEal bro\
ktr ror The Ohio Compauy it it(
Gallipolis otr!Cf.)
·•

....
Downtown bank:
•
changmg
name ,:•
•
CINCINNAT1 (AP) - Centrll:
Trust Co., one of the city's mai¢'
banks, will change its name to PN€;
Bank in February 1993.
;.
The name change was RIC!'--"
by Pittsburgh·blsecl PNC F~
Corp., which bought Central Trust
in 1988.
:
An anist' s rendering releaselt
Thursday shows a ml neon ' 'PN(I
Bank" sign atop the downtowrt
Central Trust Tower, a landiDIIIt iit
the city's Ohio River skyline.
:
PNC Financial Corp. salct
Wednesday it will scrap the 111111«11
of its various banks in favor of ~
shared PNC Bank name to give~
unified image 10 the $4S billidli
institutioo.

·:

•

.
\.

•

TI~KER:

Money Ideas

a· TOVeS retireS
. . ---- .- ·

Tu•• and title ltta not Included. lntei'Mt
m• subject to bank app~oval. On the apot,
11111nclng to qllllllltd buyers.

==::u===
'P.

ANNA BARNITZ

WILLIAM WARD

..~· 1992 CADILLAC
ELDORADO COUPE

$400.00 Additional Rebate
Availahl~ to Fint Thne New Car
:.. v ..... on Selecled Model&amp;.

1992 GEO Metro Convertible,
1992 GEO Prizm,
1992 GEO Storm
Your Choice $8888

All Wheel Drive.

s1 999

992 CHEVY 5·10

CHERYL LEMLI~Y

Lemley, Barnitz and Facemyer are
·rzew Farmers Bank advisory board members

THE POWER Of INIELLIGEIIT EIIGINEERING

Competition Blue,
AM/FM stereo,
5 speed

lion of east and west Germany, the Ballcans war and
breakup of Czechoslovakia.
"I think the path to European unification is virtually closed off,' he said. "Even California is talking
about Splitting up into two slales. So why should we
think these countries that have been going at each
other's throats for a millenium will cooperate? I just
don't think it's going to work.''
COMING UP:
European Community foreign ministern will convene Monday to assess the French vote on the Maas~cht treaty; in U.S. ec~omic news, the government
will repoo August bousmg starts Tuesday, regional
economic outlook Wednesday, weekly jobless
claims and gross domestic product Thursday, and
August durable goods orders and personal income
Frida.

GALLIPOLIS - Lori Hull of
Gallipolis has been hired as manager of the .new Gallipolis Super 8
Motel expected to open at the end
of the month.
Hull's responsibilities as manager will include: monitoring cost
control, checking daily reporfs,
preparing for instructions, auendmg local hotel/motel functions,
making sales caUs and other duties.
The Gallipolis property, located
beside the Bob Evans Reslaurant at
321 Upper River Road, will have
48 ~uest rooms and will provide
conunental breakfast, copy and fax
service, an attached indoor pool
and hot tub, 24-hour desk service
and other services including a
meeting room for 20-30 people.
The Gallipolis location will be
the 21st Super 8 Motel to open in
Ohio.
LORI HULL
Hull has been a resident of Gallipolis since 1981 and has seven
ye&amp;lli experience as motel manager her husband, Wendell, have a
for another motel chain. She and daughter, Amy.

~oore,

Call Angle
Today lor Detads ·
446-0699

POMEROY. OHIO

s1

FREEMAN MOORE

.

CBEVY-GLDS.CAD.-GEO

1992 GEO
METRO

in Europe and increase its appetite for U.S. exports.
Kathleen Srephansen, a senior economist at Donaldson, Lufkin &amp; Jenrette Securities Corp. in New
York, said she believed a "no" vote ~y the French
would further strengthen the United States as an economic safe haven for investolli fleeing tincertainty.
But even a "yes" vote, Stephansen said, might
help the· United Slales indirectly if it defuses economic tensions in E~.
"A yes vote might li'Onically bring lower interest
rates, .. she said. "People might perceive this to be
another way of promoting economic growth. That
should benefit growth here.••
Othern hold a more negative view. They see the
Maastricht treaty as a symbol of Europe's tortuous
effon to unify, reflecting economic rivalries and selfin~sts that have charted European history far cenlUI'Ies.
"The French vote to me is not the critical factor,"
said Raymond Wollieck, economist at the St. Louis
invesunent fum A.G. Edwards &amp; Sons Inc. "What is
happening in Europe is they're sweeping against the
tide of history."
In his view, the forces at work in Europe overwhelmingly favor a reshaping into old nationalist
enclaves that have re-emerged since the eollapse of
the Soviet Union. As examples, he cited the integra-

... cut your insurance COlli!

Dash for Cash Kids 12 &amp;Under.

2.3 Iter Quad
lti!Jint,alr, tilt,
pulse wipers,

unleashed for lower .interest rates because of the currency crisis. Lower rates are a prevailing therapy for
stimulating weak economies, by niaking it .cheaper
for consumers and businesses to borrow and spend
. Some economists were holding 10 that oplirnistic
vtew regllrdless of the outcome of a weekend fintm.
cial ministers meeting in Washington and France's
vote on.~ ~a-called Maastricht treaty for European
econorruc \llllty.
·.
Stephen Roach, senior economist at the·Wall
Street investment firm Morgan Slanley &amp; Co., said
it's possible the currency crisis and its aftermath
would benefit the United States in at least one of
threeways.
·
First, he said, It has. embellished U.S. stocks,
bonds and the dOllar as safe-haven invesunents during times of economic turmoil elsewh!ie. That brings
fQ~eign money flooding into the United Star.es, greasing the eConomy's w~s .
s~. a stronger dollar, in ~ular. gives the
Federal Reserve more flexibihty if necessary to
lower interest rales, which already are at the lowest
levels in three decadeS.
Third, Ro8ch said, is the lilcely possibility thm the
stubbornly high interest rates in Europe will head
lower. That will not only ease pressure on interest
mtes in the United Slates, but will stimulate growth

Hull named motel manager

614/992·6614

SUNDAY 1·5

September 20, ~992

Eam the CLUB
DOUBLE DISCOUNT

races. M1st brllg owa•ilks
&amp;eatilg IIHsils.

Section o ·

.·

VINTON UCEWAY
SPECIAL
AWARDS DAY
S1nday, Oct. 4, I:00 p.m.

~hues - ietdinel

�•Page-02-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

September 20, 1992

'Congressmen search for votes in Monta~a-wide district
CIRCLE Mont. (AP) - Rep.
Pat William~ ducklid into J1's Bar
and Grill and like any good candidate homed in on a table of eight
among the sleepy-looking farmers
and harvest workers eating breakfast
Five were Canadians. The other
three couldn't care less about him.
But salvation sat at the next table.
"Yeah, I recognize you," said a
big man extending h1s hand to the
congres~man.
Wendell Pawlowski had made a
politician's day.
Hunting for votes in the most
populous congressional district in
the nation is no easy task, especially when the district is the entire
state of Montana. The numbers are
daunting - 800,000 people spread
out over 145,388 square miles.
It's a long way between voters
in Montana
"I think I've traveled by everything so far but train and mule, ••
Williams said recently, shouting
over the roar of a single-engine
lane 0 small the volunteer pilot
p
s

had declined to carry the candidate's luggage.
Geographic distance isn' t the
only distinction -of this campaign
- it has two congressmen in it.
Liberal Democrat Williams,
who has represented mounrainous,
forested western Montana, is up
against conservative Republican
Rep. Ron Marlenee, who has represented the agricultural plains of the
eastern part of the state. The two
were thrown together by 1990 U.S.
Census numbers that cost the State
one of its two Ho~ seats.
.
" The remammg member m
Congress is g~in.g to represent a
quarter of a mllhon more people
than anyone else m Amenca rep~;
sents, anyone else m Congress..
Williams said. "We don ' t quae
have enough for two, .~ut we have
way too many for one.
Marlenee, 57, ts a rancher who
views government as a treacherous
servant at best and us.ually a usurper of freedoms. The e•ght-Jerm lawmaker has focused on agncultur~
•ssues and has the support of reli-

gious groups such as Pat Robertson's Chrislian Coalition.
The 54-year-old Williams, a former teacher, has th~ backing o(
labor, defends the Nan~ Endowment for the Arts and 1s a deputy
whtp m the House leadershtp. The
seven-term congressman argues
that government can be a positive
force.
The race is rated a ross-up and
polls have shown the two seesawing in the lead. Both wrote bad
checks at the House bank _
Williams 66, Marlenee 22 - and
both received letters from the Justice Deparunent clearing them of
any wrongdoing.
. Williams has been hurt by the
widening scandal at the House Post
Office, where investigators are
examining whether it serveCI as a
vast favor mill for members, their
staffs and campaign organizations.
Williams' son, Griff, worked as
a clerk, shuu!ing passport informalion from Capitol Hill to the Stale
Department. Problems arose when
he was told to pick up mail from

Blood donor approaches 25 gallons

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
man who thought he could no
longer give blood is taking advantagc of a new rule that will let him
s rpass 1he 25-gallon mark next
;onth.
Donald Hall, 80, donated h1s
first pint on July 4, 1943, to support the World War II effort. He
t ept giving over the years until he
reached 24 1/4 gallons.
: But in 1982 he found out he had
t olon cancer, which disqualified
him as a donor. He had surgery
with no recurrence of the d1seasc
but was not allowed 10 give more
.blood.
· Early Jhi s month, Hall read a
newspaper article that said new
;guidelines started in March permn
.

victims of heart aJtacks, strokes,
most can ce ~s and diab~tes to
donate blood tf some cond1bons are
met.
" I was tickled 10 death," Hall
said. He called the Red Cross to
make an appointment.
The donation brought his IOtal
contributioo to 24 3/8 gallons. On
1he day Hall resumed being a
donor, he made an appointment for
Oct. 28 - meeting the minimum
eig ht-week delay between donations - to give one of the five
pints that will pu1 him at the 25gallon mark.
"It's no big deal," Hall said. "I
JUSt read this week how many millions of pints of blood the Red
Cross needs every year. I'll just

:Key chazon collectioon
the former Cincinnati Reds player's
HAMILTON , Ohio (AP) Robert Owens found a hobby in h1s 4,192 hits, an Elvis chain and a soft
basement in an old box containing drink bonle chain that turns into a
a few key chains he had collected pen.
"I'll keep messing with them as
through the years.
long
as I'm able to hunt them
Owens, 79, mounted a piece of
particle board on a basement wall, down," he said.
V1sits to garage sales have
hung the key chains and kept on
yielded some key chains, but most
collecting.
The particle board now covers come from family and friends.
" My son' s a long-haul truck·
one-half of the wall and holds more
he satd. "Everywhere he goes,
er,"
than I ,000 key chains.
he
sends
back key chains of the
His collection includes a Pete
stale
he
goes
through."
Rose key chain that commemorates

ASTRO-GRAPH

CANCER (June 21-JuiJ 22) In order to

make your agenda more comfortable
today, there's a possibility you might re--

arrange thmgs tn a manner that wm Ina
convenience others. Consider every-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

one's position

LEO (JUIJ 23-Aug. 22) It's besl not to
attempt on your own tOday - or with
ineKperienced helpers - tasks that Involve work ing w1th unfam•liar materials

or tools.
Sept. 21, 1992
It 's to your advantage 1n the year ahead

m'lbur

~'Birthday
Stpt. 20, 1912

Greater success is hkely In the year

. ahead 1n endeavors you conduct on

to seek committee work tn an organization with which you're afflliated Such a
position could produce a number of

valuable contacts.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 221 Going OtJt on
lhe town with friends today mighl tum
oul 10 be more expenstve than anticipaled. Beller have some back-up lunds
on hand - just in case. Major changes
are ahead for Vtrgo In the com1ng year

Send lor Virgo's Astro-Graph predic; your own . rather than from those you tions today. Mail $1 .25 plus along, sell• engage 1n wi1h others
addressed, stamped envelope lo Aslro: VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) If yOtJ gel in- Grsph, clo this newspaper, P.O. Box
• valved with friends today who enjoy ac- 91428. Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be
' Jivltles you dislike, your day COtJid be sure to state your zodiac sign.
:spoiled. Be selective when choosing lei- LIIRA (Btpt. 23-0ct. 23) An important
• sure· time companions Virgo. treat objective can be achteved today w1lh·
:yourself 10 a birlhday g1ft. Send for Vir· OtJI you having to be too assertive. Try
·go's ASiro-Graph predictions lor the to keep the force you use down to a
; year ahead by mailing$ t .25 pius a long, m1mmum.
, self-addressed, slamped envelope to SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) When SO·
• Astro-Graph, c/o thiS newspaper. P.O. clallzlng w1lh friends today, subdue lhe
: Box 91428. Cleveland. OH 4410t-3428. temptation to pass on gossip that has
• Be sure to state your zodtac sign
yet Jo be verified. Deal wilh !acts, not
' LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If you ap- hearsay
; proach a difficult objective In an ad-lib SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) If
" !asht on today, you might not achieve lt
properly handled, joint efforts can grati: To be successful, you must be consis- fy your ambittous asp~rat1ons today. But
~ ten t and tenaCious.
if mismanaged, they could leave every: SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 If you have one trymg to protect a personal
, a captlve audience today, do not at~

poSitiOn .

tempt to impose your views or opinions CAPfiiCORN (Dec. 22-JM. 11) Unless
:on 11. The ind lvtduals will resent your as- you know uactly whal yOtJ want loday,
. serttveness and totally turn against there's a strong chance you mtght end
: what you 're espoustng
up spmning your wheels. Be bolh pur, SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 Usu- poseful and methodical.
. ally, you're a generous individual, but AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 11) If yOtJ're
otoday you may be a trille loo soH-serv- rendering service tor another Joday,
Ing. Unfortunately, you might have to

deal wilh someone equally as selfish.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jin. 111 A
stron g-willed associate will see to it to
make decisions tor you today - il you

do nol think for yourself. Thts could
Io ree you to do something yOtJ'd ralher
not
AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 111 PartiCI·
paling '" fmolous pursuits could be
very tempting today, and you might
waste a lot of precious ttme wtthoot pro--

ducmg anything ot aubstance
PISCES (Feb. 20-Meroh 20) Don't introduce Imaginary problems into your
social involvements today. You could

gel everyone all stirred up over something they can do nothing aboul
ARIES (Mirch 21•Aptil 111 You musl
be careful today that you don't make
Impulsive changes where critical objectives are concerned. Your revisions may

lack lhe quallly ol,yOtJr Initial lhOtJghts.
TAURUS (Aptll 20-MIJ 201 Your polllion on politics and religion mlghl be diametrically opposed today to thai of an
~ndlvidual wllh whom you'll be Involved.
A Jhoughlless remark could Ignite the
temper of ellher party.
GEMINI (MIJ 21-.lune 201 Even though
you're noted for being a quick lhlnkor
who makes snap judgments on lmporlant lssuea, It could be a mlalake to
have this as yOtJr modus operandi in 11- nanclal affai rs today.

spell out In advance what you expect to
be paid tor your eft orts - or else there
m1ght be a mtsunderstanding .

PISCES (Ftb. 20-Mirch 201 II looks like
the marker 1s go~ng lobe called in on an
impulsive commitment you recently

made. If you latl to keep your word, hard
feelings could result
ARIES (Mtrch 21-April 11) This could
be a productive day for you, provided
yOtJ don't tel thoH who aren'JinVOIYed
In your critical assignments lntorfere
with what you hope to accomplish
TAURUS (Aprll20-May 20) Try 10 either
schedule your day so you can partlcipale In social involvements or dedicate
your lime to tasks Ihal need Immediate
atlenlion. Don't atlempt to do both.
GEMINI (Miy 21-olune 20) Funds earmarked for family and household needs
will be well·spent today, but If yOtJr nonessential e&lt;travagant urges control
your credit cards, you won'l be as
equally shrewd
CANCER (June 21-.lulJ llltl Individuals
who come In contact with you In SOCII(
eltuatlon,s' today will be lmpreMed by
your warmlh and wit. However, Illyou have buslnns dealings with may
see another aide ol you.
LEO (JulJ :D-~. 221 YOtJ'il be Inclined
to Jreat Olhers generously today. But If
you realize you have done yOtJr kind
deeds Impulsively, you may have giver's
remorse later.

k

· ·

"

eep on g~vm~. .
,
He sa1d giVI~g blood ha~n I
changed much smce the last nme
~.e gav~ blood a decade ago.
Th~re s JUSt a whole lot more
quesnons than there used 10 be,"
he wd. .
.
.
Dr. Ambrose Ng, medical director _of blood servtces for the central
OhiO ~gJon of the Red Cross, S1ud
~he gu1dehnes were expanded to
mclude:
.
. .
-Anyone m remiSSIOn for five
years from any cancer other than
leukem1~, lymphoma or ca~cer
treated With ~he_motherapy. Pane~ts
who had radianon trea~ents w•th
no recurrence .o~ the dtsease for
five years are elig~ble. . .
- Heart attack vtcllms who
don't have symptoms of heart
problems six months after the
attack, no physical restrictions and
aren't taking heart medication.
- People who had a stroke a
year ago, as long as there are no
symptoms and no medication other
than aspirin is bein~ taken.
- And diabetics, two weeks
af.er they begin insulin treatments.

city post otfice boxes set up to
receive campaign donations.
He later balked, spying he
believed it was wron~ for House
employees ro_do campatgn work on
government u~.
As Repu.bhcans look to .make
hay of the •ss~es. the candtdates
ttavel. f~ and w1de.
WJIIU1111s recently embarked on
a 12-h~ur, 300-m!le loop 10 sh~e
hands m the farmm~ and ranchmg
towns of Circle, S1dney, Plent~wood, Scobey - Marlenee s
hometown- and Glasgow.
The Democrat wo.uld meet
fewe~ than 200 people m the vast
empuness ~f northeastern Montana,
an~ ~unt 11 a g~ day.
. Marlenee, 11 seems to. me,
beheves that government 1s an
ogre, a boogeyman. a!l,d sho~ld
~~Y out of your hves, h~ sa1d.
Oh, he wants g_ovemmen! m YOI!f
bedrooms-. he JUst.~oesn t want It
m here helping you.
. Me3:11whlle, Marle~ee w~ loggmg J!lll~ ~ugh Williams westem d1stnct m a cavemo~s Suburban carryall dubbed B1g Blue.

~:~~~r~:;~~:rd~~~~~~~
viSited tevensv1 e, IC!Or, orS

·n v·

.. enee s WI e.
.
Went outiO feed ~e ch•clcens
~n:ec:he hogs got her, Marlenee
JO .. ·
,
,.
Well, th~t ,sa sh!',llle·
"Poor eaun , too.

University workers
build better scarecrow
CINCINNATI (AP) -Two
exterminarors at the University of
Cincinnati have invented an electronic scarecrow 10 slOp birds from
landing on school buildings and
making a mess.
Roger Hall and Keith Eakins
devised a sensor that activates a
high-pitch alarm when birds
approach. The birds then fly away
and fmd somewhere else 10 roost.
The men took on the project
because starlings roosting on Procter Hall left so many droppings that
students and staff could not use the
rear patio, which had to be cleaned
twice a week with a hydroblaster.
"We just started thinking of

what we could do," Hall said .
''We thought if we had an alarm on
a timer to go off every hour, the
starlings would become used to it
too fast."
Hall said their gadget worked
right away. "Within a month's
time, it cleared them out of there,''
he said.
The electronic bird diverter cost
$450. One alternative that had been
considered, placing netting around
the building, would have cost at
least $25,000, Hall said.
Eakins and Hall are workin~ to
get a patent for their invenuon,
which also has been installed on
another building at the university.

C

vallis, Pinesdale and Darby.
The Republican ticked off a
series of point; - government
spending and regulation, family
values, his concern for sportsmen's
issues and his scorn of animalrights groups.
"Can Montana afford 10 throw
the timber industry out the door
and lose 5,000 ~obs there?" he
said, voicing a avorite theme of
the need for balance between jobs

ANSWERS
SCRAM-LETS
TURBAN
HELMET
GLAMOR
NAPKIN
SWF.HVE
DEMISE
ARRIVED on
TIME

TO

~\\c4llh-/&amp;'E~S

' .zo

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

Sunday Times

Sentlnei-Page--03

Desert Storm Commander says stopping the war meant saving lives
NEW YORK (AP) - Invading kick the Iraqis out of Kuwait," the
13aghdad to topple Saddam Hussein retired four-star general said in an
would have bogged down the Unit- interview for " Newsweek on Air"
ed States in a quagmire "like the carried by The Associated Press
dinosaur in the tar pit," according radio network.
"W~ never considered going to
to Desert Storm commander H.
Baghdad.... We'd accomplished
Norman Schwarzkopf.
•'The legitimacy for what we our mission."
Schwarzkopf said going to
were doing was the United Nations
resolution which called for us to Baghdad would have splintered the
fragile 28-mcmber coalition that

ejected Iraq. And he said the ceaserue saved American lives.
But Schwarzkopf may not complelely silence the second-guessing
over the cease-frre's timing, which
he covers in his bio~raphy, " It
Docsn 't Take A Hero,' excerpts of
which appear in the Newsweek
issue available on newsstands
Monday.
In a phone call wuh Gen. Colin

Powell; chai rman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, Schwarzkopf said
he wanted to keep going on the
advice of his commanders.
"I want to continue the ground
attack ... drive to the sea and totally
destroy everything in our p,ath,"
Schwarzkopf !Old Powell. ' In one
more day we'll be done.·'
But when Powell called back

Scientist says Medfly is entrenched in California
government eradicators, the Medfly
population is entrenched and
resurges periodically, said James R.
Carey. an entomologist at the University of California, Davis.
"It's consistent with my argument all along that they are reappearing in the same areas," said
Carey, a member of the panel for
the state Deparunent of Food and
Agriculture.
The Medfly is never truly eliminated, he said Friday. Eradicalton
programs only kill enough of the

LOS ANGELES (AP) - In
contrllstto official opinion, a scientist warns that the latest Meditcr·
ranean fruit fly discoveries under.
score his belief that the pest is
entrenched in California.
More than 100 flies have turned
up in the San Jose area in the past
week. At least II were discovered
in traps in Pasadena.
Both areas are under quarantine.
Rather than broughl in with
smuggled fruit, which is the posi·llOn of a stale advisory panel and

flies so they are not detected in
traps, Carey said.
Medfly infestations begin with
maggot-infested fruit brou~ht in
from Hawaii, Latin Amema or
Europe, said Roy Cunningham,
chairman of the panel of scientists.
" If you look at records of air
traffic, travel has increased enormously in the last 20 years," said
Cunningham, who works for the
U.S. Department of Agriculture in
Hawaii.
,
"The immigrant population has
increased enormously in the last 20

years. Carey tnruw&gt; out au evidence of smuggled fruit," Cunningham saJd.
Cunningham said Carey's view
of a Medfly population that1sn ' t
detectable is unscientific because it
can never be disproved.
It's possible for Medflies 10 go
undetected for a season, Cunningham acknowledged, but he said the
possibility that could happen year
afler year is highly unlikely.
"If they are there, we can detect
them,'' Cunningham said.

and told him the White House
wanted to slOp the ground war afler
100 hours, Schwarzkopf agreed.
The Iraqi army was in full flight
from Kuwait, and U.S. pilots were
bombing convoys alon~ an escape
route called the "H•ghway of
Death."
' 'I'd have been happy to keep
on destroying the Iraqi military for
the next six months . Yet we 'd
kicked this guy's butt, leaving no
doubt in anyone's mind that we'd
won decisively, and we'd done it
with very few casualties. Why not
end it? Why get somebody else
killed? That made up my mmd,·'
he wrole.
Schwarzkopf's book will be
released later this month by Linda
Grey-Bantam publishers in New
York.
Schwarzkopf had fueled secondguessing over the cease-frre when
he 10ld interv1ewer David Frost that
he wanted " to continue the
march." He later apologized and
said he agreed I 00 percent with
President Bush.
But in his book, Schwarzkopf
said he "felt irritated" that
"Washington was ready to overreact, as usual, 10 the slightest ripple
in public opinion" over the bomb-

ing of the fleeing convoys.
"I thought, but didn't say, lhat..
the best thing the White House
could do would be to tum off the
damned TV in the situation room,"
Schwarzkopf wrote.
But part of Washington's thinking was formed by Schwarzkoprs
" mother of all briefmgs," in which
he told the world that the coalition
had effectively destroyed the Iraqis
by the fourth day of fighting.
"So I couldn' t very well say,
well, I have 10 have another half a
day or the JOb' s not done,"
Schwarzkopf saJd.
At bottom , Schwarzkopf
defended the outcome of Desert
Storm, even if U.S. forces are now
back in the Persian Gulf enforcing
a "no-fly" zone of Iraqi aircraft
" Had we taken all of Iraq, we
would have been like the dinosaur
in the tar pit - we would still be
there , and we, not the United
Nations, would be hearing the costs
for that occupation,' ' Schwarzkopf
said.
"Saddam' s military forces suffered a crushing defeat and are no
longer a threat to any other
nation," the general sa1d. "Do I
think it was worth it? You bet I
do.' '

A patient called to tell me he'd be
about 15 minutes late for his dental
appointment and asked lilt would be
a problem. I said no, but we wouldn't
have time to give him an anesthetic.
He ARRIVED on TIME.

SUN.D AY PUZZLER
See Answer to Puzzle on Page A-7
ACROSS

1 Gain
7 - cheese
12 .. - were Jhe
Days"
17 Cry
21 Relund
22 Scottish hillsides
23 Protective
ditches
BRIDGE
24 Olherwlse
25 Swilch poslllon
26 Care for
28 Clutch
30 Talked idly
PHILLIP
32 Companion ol fro
33 Compute
ALDER
35 Debatable
37 Pigpens
39 Stalk
40 Vigor: colloq.
41 Mr. Simpson
43
Highway
NORTH
1·11·11
45
Small
finch
+K10712
47
Teutonic
deity
.163
• QJ 8
48 "Avengers"
+KQ
character
49
Soupy
WEST
EAST
52 Disturbance
+QJ 9
+3
54 Covers with dirt
•K J 9 s
7
• 10 7 6
U S !3
56 Censure
+J 10 96
+87542
57 Tipped
59 Misplaced
SOUTH
61 Wife ot Osiris
tABU
62 Float In air
• AQ4 2
+A K2
63 Word ol sorrow
+A3
64 Fourteenlh letter
66 Delace
Vulnerable. Both
67 Music: as wrinen
Dealer: South
68 Circumspecl
West
Soutb
East
• 69 Martin ID
2 NT
Pass
Pass
71 Gaelic sea god
Pass
All pass
4+
72 Quarrel
' 74 Mrs. Gorbachev
Openmg lead. • J
76 Irritate
77 Thtrd person
78 TV's Mister 79 Inclines
81 Hawaiian dish
82 Remainder
..
83 Blemish
84 Fuel
85 Ottsprlng
By Pbllllp Alder
87 Announcemenl
89
Backbone
Benjamm Disraeli requested, 50
90
Sows
years before his actual death, that he
92 Walked on
be allowed to die eating ortolans
94 Memorandum
(small game birds) to the sound of soft
95 English counties
music.
I doubt he got his wish, but 1f your
contract dies, you should be able to
say, "I gave it my all, but it was impoaible to make w1th the best line of
play."
.
South opened two no-trump, show·
ing 20-22 points in the modern style.
North used a transfer b1d, and South
jumped to game because be had an excellent hand for play in spades North
needed no further encouragement to
bid a slam.
West led the club jack to dummy's
kiaa. At once S!lulh noticed the lrrltat·
lng duplication In clubs. Nine high·
card points, yet only two tricks. Think·
ing be needed a 2-2 spade break and
tbe beart fillelle to work, South imme·
tllately caalled tile ace and king of
apadel. WMil East dilc:arded a low
club, South lfO&amp;Ded. Then South led a
low heart and finessed the queen.
Wben II held, he said: "That would
work, wollldn't It? But I still must lose
two major-nit tricks - one down."
If you had been North, would you
have·SY,IIJ~thlzed with your partner?
I hope you would at tlie table, but afterward you miJht have taken blm to
task for colng down In a cold c:ontract.
Wben tbe ttump Ioeer II expelled,
there iJ a faint cbance for succesa. Af.
ter lbe rme..e of the !teart queet1 winl,
declarer c:1111et 1M helrt ace, tilt club
aoellid 1111 three tll8niolld wlnaerl. FInally, South exlll with a tniinp. Since
West started with 011ly two hearts, be
18 endplayed. On hll minor-suit return,
dummy's heart loser ll dilc:arded
wblle South ruffs.

3 River In Siberia

96 Grants use of
97 Looked lntenlly
99 Spread for drying
100 Top of head
101 Dines
t02 Planet
103 Seed conlalner
105 Mexican shawl
107 Near
109 Paid notices
t 10 - America
111 Fear
113 Flank
114 Before
115 Seagal ID
116 Soil
t t7 Toll
tt8 Swab
t 20 "Roger &amp; - "
121 Scheme
122 Speed contesl
123 Boston124 Enlreaty
126 Takes unlawfully
t 28 Commonplace
130 Cylindrical
132 Alight
134 Change or - 135 Comfort
t36 "Evening Shade'
star: lnlls.
137 Altempled
1~9 Walk
141 Neon symbol
142 Inquire
t43 Moody; gloomy
t 45 The Pentateuch
147 Scorch
149 Scotlish cap
t 52 Scandium symbol
t 53 Wiped out
t55 Baseball teams
157 let fall
159 Balon Rouge's sl .
180 Merll
162 Another 48
Across
164 Babylonian detty
166 "- and
Answers"
168 Winter vahicle
189 - Lauder
170 Part ol
fortlllcatlon
17t Nets

••o

To live
forever

(I),_,...,....,.,

M!r~d at, Co~;alhs , referrmg 10

and enVIfllllment .
. ed M
1
People often recogniZ
arenee and volunteered they would
vote for h!m. A few were w:rr; or
~nrespons1ve, but no one was osule;,
, .
..
Where s Cmdy? a supporter

·September 20, 1992

4 Obese

5 Bll o.f lnformalion
6 Choir voice
7 Brand ID
8 Quarrel: abbr.
9 "Used-"
10 Becomes warm

1t Belonging to
actor Davis
12 Martin ID
13 Jump
14 Paddies
15 Declares
16 Chemical
compOtJnd
17 Marry
18 Spanish article
t9 High regard
20 Individuals
27 Entrance
29 Authorization
31 Printer's
measure

34 100 pennies
38 Shadow
38 Nap lime, tn
Madrid
40 Bose or an;ou
42 1969 Super Bowl
winners

44 Fate
46 Nat. Assoc. of
IntercOllegiate
Athletes
48 Frolic
49 Vapid
50 Was ill
5t Compess point
53 Former Russian
ruler
55 Q-T linkup
56 Wearying person
58 Railroad stallons
60 Snare
62 Seasoning
65 Short sleep
88 Sagacious
69 Glistened
70 Apportions
72 Narrow, flal
boards
73 Bed canoptes
75 Eieclrifled
particle
78 Ebbs
77 Steeple
79 Dispatches

DOWN

1 Malay canoe
2 Tear

IIAIM

............._....._

__

~- - --

·--- -......... .,. .- -...

,..,. ~. -..

..

-- ..---~

'

80 Painful spots
82 Ceremonies
83 Malice
84 TrOtJsers
86 Neither
88 Small child
89 Form
90 Entreatrles
91 Conducts
93 Economic slump
95 Shovels
97 Time gone by
98 Femaled102 Mud
104 Wet
106 Edge
107 Babylonian
abode of dead
108 Taut
1tO "Three Blind -"
111 Expel from
cOtJntry
112 Plaything
114 Kite
116 Tropical frull
tt 7 "- Apache"
119 Edible seeds
12 I Hammer point
122 Hazard; peril
123 Italian river
t 25 Picnic peats
t 27 Video: lnits.
128 Plagues
t29 Spanky, for one
t30 Places
confidence In
t31 More uncanny
133 Act
t36 Having one's
taste dulled
138 Italian poet
140 Plaster ol 143 Rivera ID
144 Encounter
146 Chief
148 Flower
150 Toward sheHer
151 Church service
153 Goat
154 Ruby or Sandra
158 Nahoor sheep
t58 Greek letter
161 Concerning
t63 C-F linkup
165 Newlay ID
167 N.Y. building

4

Announcements
3 Announcements
TALK TO CANDY LIVE
t•900-tiJI0.44115, Sa5 /Coll

Crown Com. BoCI FL, 18 +

Giveaway

4

1 year old tamale Labrador•
Relrlaver, 614-992-5947.

Giveaway

Giveaway

Cats &amp; Kltttna To Glv11way,
Call 614~46-3SISO.

Whirlpool Microwave,
Rapa[r, 814-448-4208.

Friendly Kittens To Giveaway.

Winter

6
Naeds

diHarent

lltterlrtlnld. 814-446·3897
color iris bulbt,304-675-7622.
Kitten To Good Homa. 814·446- Kittens to give 1 way, 304-67S·

Wanted : One Winchester 3030,

onion

HIS.

Massage.
Part Rat Tarrier pupj]IH, 304·

After 6 P.M.

Registered flmale Blue Heeler,

304-675-3827,

lrolned, 304-fTS-3770.

UIOd tiroo, cai1614-gg2·3511.

===..:.::==~:...::.:.;:..._
In Memory

Found: Black &amp; Whitt Cat With
Flea Collar1 On EvergrHn Road,

DAVID ALAN
WHITE
Born July 3, 1954
Died September 4,
1992

Gallipolis
'&amp;VIcinity
a F1mily a Miloo Rt 141, Tuto l
Wed, Furniture, Clothll, Rtoys,
Swing Set, Child't.
ALL Yard Sal11 Mutt Be Paid In

Advtnct. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lho day btlforo tho 1d It to run.
S.nd1y tditlon • 2:00 p.m.
Fnd1y. Mondty tditlon · 2:00
p.m. S.lur~y.

Public Sale
David w•• 1 thy, quill llltlt boy who niiYtr drew 8
1t1entlon to hlm'nll. It took very lillie to m1ke him
&amp; Auction
happy; ht Wit never materilllttlc. He wao alway•
Rick P11rwon Auction Ccmpany,
humble; ye~ he Wit confident. On~• he tel hie tull time auctlonnr, complete
alghll upon 1 golll, he puroued II with a dogged auction 11rvlca. Ucansed
t68,ottlo I W11t VIrginia, 304delermln•llon. He Inherited, p1rtlcul1rly from hie 773-5785.
father, 1 compeUUvt eplrlt which 1n1bled him to
AU&lt;llon Strvlco,
achieve some mueure of euccue throughout hie Wodom1yor'1
Rio Orondo, Ohio 6t4·24S.5152
lila.
Alto Auction. Auction Friday
1could alwaye depend on Dave, even aa a child, to MI.
I Saturday, 7:00 PM. Frl·
aay or do the right thing. I've never known him ID be grocrln, new I uHd merchan·
Sat·NIW RuarantHCI mer·
dlahone11 or vlndlcllve; I 1dmlred hl1 lntogrlly. I dlll.
chlndiM. 01 artnt dtalert
relied on hit aound judgment to help m1kt deel- wHkly: Ed Frazl1r, Rt. 2 North
olona. He wu a good listener 1nd one with whom I IIIIMn mlln. llctnH No.l30.
1hared m1ny eecreto. I knew lh1l he would never
btlray my confidence In him, and I truly 1pprocl1led 9 Wanted to Buy
Compltte HouHhold Or Eshit loyally.
Any Type Of Fumhure,
David wao kind 1nd tender hterted. I c1n remem- latesl
Appllanctt, Antlque'a, Etc. Alao
ber thll during hit junior ye1r In high echool he Appraisal Av1llabltl 614·245cried tor daya when hla dog died. Ht wae compll- 5152.
tlonato with the 1111 fortunate. One of hit gr1de Books: Booka: Books: U11d
achool cla11m1ttt Wll tilling WHkly newopapere and Rare, Bought and Sold.
Box 731, O.lllpolio,
to Nrn opendlng monty. I cldn'l purchaHiht Pllflll, Thoophilut,
Ohio 4583t. 614-44&amp;-7282 a.
and 1c1n tUII hur Davt'l lttl running upalllra to 10P.M.
hla "monty aock." Dripping wol from the pouring Squlrool Dog, 814-388-8528.
rlln, ha clmtlnlo lht houn wllh the paper. lleciUee
prices paid tor clean, tall
of Dlllld't w•rm, aofllttllnge, Bobby hid money to Top
dug ytllow rool (golden aeal),
buy popcorn 11 the blllg•m••·
Equinox Botanical, 614·742·2581
11 David 1ppeer1 loo good, remember thel lhle or 614-'lll2·254a.
memorl•llt wrltlen from a molher't point of view, Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
1nd 1111 llmo•t lmpolllblelor ua mome to bt objac- With Or Without Motors. Coli
Uve 1bou1 our children. Forgive mt, honay, but you Larry Lively 614·388·9303.
Top Prieta Paid: All Old U.S.
did h1vt atlnky t..~ and you - • buli-hudld.
Colnt, Gold Rings, Sllvtr Coins,
My llltlt boy waa 1lw1yt a aource of pride for me, Gold
Coins M.T.S. Coin Shop,
but 1wat wen prouder of David 11 a man •. He .waa a 151 Second Avenut, Gallipolis.
devoted father to hie children, "poclally hll b1by 11 - - - - - -- -gtrla, 1nd 1 loving hulbllld to hi• wile Ludle. He 1 Card of Thanks
IIWIYI looked up ID hit big brother Jim; h1 loved
him dearly. Evon though It Wll dllllculllor DIIYe ID
The family of
be openly •llecllonlle, he 1nd I thlred 1 apeclal
bonding, 1nd I tun -ure In hie love for me. He dilly
Daniel Joaeph
manllttted hll love for God through hie wordl 1nd
"Bo" Morrl• would.
1ctlono. Dave hee alw1y1 bean 1 h1rd worker. He
like to convey their
w11 enthuallldC .lbout hla new job, -• nd he took
alncere thank• lor
pride In hla work 1nd In the men wllh whom he
worked. He waa alao extrtmtly proud of hit Karall
all the food, flow·
femlly; he w1nted to ahar• In lht molding of young
ers, help and IUP.
people'• chlriCIII'.
port In our day• of
1em ao lh•nltlullh•l God put David In my c•r• lor
grief. We Wlah to
thlrty-alght yeare. He g•v• me lh• moet beautiful
ye1re of my lite. Thill yHn were filled wllh pride,,
exprel8 a 1paclal
happlnell, Md 1 love allong 1110ugh to tutllln me
thankl to Rev.
until God fulfill• HI• ptomlll thll I eh•ll •• my
Ronnie Lemley and
beloved ton 1111111n.
McCoy .M oore
DIVId'tllllllly and I •r• deaply moved by the great
oulpourlng ottove you have ahown for him. To lhq11
Funeral Home. ·
of you who·h1ve llled to make our heartbreak one
Danny Joe will be
11111 we could endure, we ••toraver grateful.
_gf'llltly ml118d by
Sincerely,
all.
D1vld'1 loving mother, Jennie Wh\11 Aahley
·-.. ·•·
..... .... ,., ,___ .,...... ... - ...--,....·-·"1'·- ____ ,....... _, ....
i
~

11

Help Wanted

Amerlcare Home Care, 680 Eut
Main Street, Jackson, Ot'tlo Ia
Seeking Certified Home Meallt't

AldH

Home Haallh Ald11

And

Homemakers
To Service Gallia County. Ap-pUcallons Will Be Taken Monday
·Fridoy, 9 -5 P.M.

Help wanted

14

Chri1tm11 Around The World Is
Miring
Otmonstrelors. No

Dellvwy. No Collecting. Earn

Commlsaion On First Sate. Free
$300 Kh Of Christmas Items. No
Investment. Also
Booking

18

Business
Training

Wanted to Do

Will do houu cleaning, tX•

Ret,..ln
Nowii!Sautheastem
Butlntll College, Spring Vallev
Plaza. Call Today, 614-446o4367f!
Reg.I90-05-1274B.

porloncod, 304~75-7185.

Will take care of eldtrly during
day hours, l'lllablt, have

roflfonen, caii614-9411-21BI,

·

Parties. 614-379-2502.

EARN MONEY Reading Books!
Potential. 18 Wanted to Do
Dotollo. (1) 605-962-8000, Exl. Y·
Will Babysil In My Homo. Ftn· 21
10189.

Financial

$30,000JYr. Income

AVON I All A1ooo I Shl~oy
Business
ced In Play Aru. References
Spoaro, 304-675-1429.
Help Wanted
Easy Work! E:~~cellent Pay! A.s- Avallab5e. Rodney Area. Call
Opportunity
BabysiHer Natded Afternoon umbla Products At Home Call 614·245-588l
Found: Grty Male Cat. VIcinity: 'AVON' ALL AREAS! Shoro your Shih,
2· 11:30 614-446-8752.
Toll FrH, 1-800-467-5568, Ext ElR TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Gallipolis. Plaut Describe, 614- time with us . You'll love the
313.
MEDICAL BILUNCI
245-9606 Btforo 2 P.M.
company. 1-800-992·835&amp;.
Trimming, TrN Removal, Hedge EMC·Amerlcl
Electronic In5
Trimming.
FrH
Estimates!
614·
Happy
Ads
First
Five
Ladles
To
Call
To
Sell
loot: No&lt;th Gallia H.S. Mon's
surance Claims Proceulng For
367·795TAhor
4p.m
.
Avon
Will
Racelve
$15
Worth
ot
Ring Wllh Groon Stono At Wood 3 Announcements
Medical Practltlonara, $30,000
Merchandise frH, Call 614-446Halt 111 Floor Ladltl Room,
Parttime
To Cdr $80,000
Georgn
Portable
Sawmill,
don't
3358.
URG. 814-44tl-834a.
haul your toga to the mill just Fulltlme. lnvntmtnt U.ISO Plus
PC. For Information By Maill13Happy 60th Full time, 3-11 shift, AN tupar- call304-675-1957.
B&amp;M HEATING,
599·7955.
7
Yard Sale
vlsor, must htvt tuptrviaory

614-446-42•1.

In Memory Of

~

refrigerators 304-576-2596.

119a.
4393.
614-446-3496.
Klttono, Mtko Groot Pttoi White, 6 Lost &amp; Found
Employment Services
Black Sllv.r, 614-256-1793 Laava .;_,....,.::,:_;....,.:,_,.,,.,...-:--:-:::.,-

2 Clll &amp;: Hvtrlll klltWII, lllllr

: '" · - :-· ··· · ~

11

Lost &amp; Found

Wanted: frosl free refrll)tratora
In good or repairable cond alto
Hll
clean
guaranteed

1/:! Colllo Pupplto, 614·3Sa·9033 458-1856.

2

4

.,.-~ ·-

•

11

COOLING &amp;
REFRIGERATION

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

Wedding
Anniversary
Sept. 24th
BiU &amp;Beulah
Barnett

Love,

614-446·3704

SEW CREATIVE
FABRI&lt; &amp; &lt;RAfT OUTLET

·-~·" ' "''' ' _

Building

Manufacturer

Only Bost Quolifitd. 303-759·
3200, Ext 2401.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS

895-3486.
New Commercial, Home Units
From $199.00. Lamps Lotions'
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
Wantod
To
Do:
Babyslltlng
In
Due To Expansion A Local Corp, My Home. tiav• Nurse Assislanl Accusorlts. Monthly Paymanl!i
low As $18 00, Call Today FREE
Hoo Ot&gt;onlngt For 11 Poopio
Located Within City NEW
$1,000 Per Month To Start lr You Training.
CoiOf' Ca1alog. 1-800·228·
limits. Clll 614~41 ·1226 .
6292.
Qul~tv. Ugnt Uftlng Roqulrtd.
Clll r.fondly And Tuesday Bee·
WHn 10 &amp; 4, 814-448-4553.
Looking For Exporlonctd Truck
Dnvor, Whh Tankor, C.O.L. To
Holl Firm Milk Lang HourL 61411 Help Wanted
245-tiSST.

Unkcn Healt. Facibtles, IIC.

from 10.00 AM • 2:00 PM.
Apply ot tho WY Dept of

at,

Employment Security,
PINIIAI, WV.

Cal446-1407 ,. - 0

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

Metal

Selecting Sman /Large Builder
/Dealer In Same Open Areas.
High Prollt Pottntlal. Accepting

will bl taken on Sept 18 I S.pt

AitiiJict.m.

I need your l1mi1J doll
'to ftnlth a tooalc on lhll
dttctndllnll of GEORGE
IHEETtl., Rw. W• 10~
.... 8tnd me your line
beakiD 1tll0 ancll CM
ptobllbly 1111 whiUior you
, ftt Into GIMIII'I f1111lly.
Wll .._ 111\tllwl,
Gtrtoldlne Hille Schlecht;
13 N. Kenoeha Dr.;
llldleon, WI. 53705-2630.

Trtt topping &amp; trimming ex·
parlance, frH tltlmates, 304·

mtlllng 11'11 Income
guklellnn of 1111 D•pl of Labor,

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

Wrlgh~

welcome. 61-...4&amp;.8224. New In·
fanl Toddler Cart, 614-446-6227

over

1Ws w.........
ladudts Puffy .......

dttctndllnll •d rel•
tivM: lllrlow, Bay,
lluYtr, Beck, Belville,
BeVIn, Bltlllktnlhlp,
Bogge, Bolllr,
Brumfield, Burnell,
Ctldwtll, Ctlllterbury,
Certl, CllapmM, Clork,
Cofer, Cox, Crem•n•.
Dailey, D.,lllo, Day,
OtWIII, Dlckay, Digglno,
Fellure, Fowler, Frtolay,
· Fry, Gorllc, Golll1rd,
Greeno, Halley, H•nlton,
Hlnem1n, Houck, Irion,
Jtllwa, Johnaon, King,
M1r1h, Mert, Martin,
lltal, Neal, Niday, Pickell,
Rico, Aach, Root,
Rucker, Rutherford,
Slundtra, Selley, Shlltr,
Show, Shoelllllktr, Smith,
Sowtrde, Sllvwa,
Sttw1rt, SWIIln, Swindler,
Thornllln, Utdrlch, Unroe,
Will, W1i11ct, Ward,
W1ugh, Welle, Whltrock,
Wilcoxon, Woolen, Md

814·1192-t14n. EEOC.

6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agts 2~10.
Befort, after tchool. Drop-Ins

clerical Job. AppiJcallon• tor peraons 55 &amp;

Craft Claaua.

ATTENTION I
GEORGE SHEETS'

11 shift, "AN Chtrge nurn posi-

tion It tvallablt. Contact Klrla
Hunllf, RNOOtl, Overbrook
C.nttr, 333 Pagt St., Mlddle,por1, Ohio 45760. Telephone:

Mill Ptula't Day Care Canltr
Sat., affordable, chlldcart. M-F

Office I

Register now for

lllf........
Hws: Ita.· Sal. 9-6
Ltcato4 2.... (1111 ClllsWt
Golt . . . Cr.. ld.

experience, knowledge Df OBRA
r~gulatlons, Infection conlrol, 6
quality auurance; Pari tlmt, ~

Point

Ohio ~ratln Extension
Strvlc:t hllf-tlmt aasociatt
agtnl adulllnd youth expanded
fOod 1nd nutrition education
program coordinator polllion.
Rasponslbla for oversHing tht
EFNEP program tnd euparvi..,
Ina three nutrition ~ucatort In
Ailltnl, Meigs and VInton

Birthday
Penny

count!...

degr•

Maatars

preferred, Bachalors dtgrH and
approprialt acadamlc training
In nlltrillon requlrtd. Must au~
mit rnumt. Contact local Ex·
tanlfon oHica In Utlgt County,
114-9SI2-66H to requtat appllca~
Uon. Dtadllnt Stptambar 28.

AJJEEO omployw.
PARK RANGERS
Wardtnt.

Game

ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF NURSING
SERVICES

Pomwoy Nu~Wing tnd Rthtlbllllllion Ctnt.r, 1 1110
oklllld nur1ing cenler, Is Htklng 1 spllrn-ort·
tnled, energetic indlvidutl lor the ADON potiUon on
our nurolng INm. The qualified condldllle will be . ,
RN, lictnaed In Ohio, with uperitnce In long-linn
cart, excellent communic1tion tkilla, and lttdwahlp
lbiUties.
We otter compotitivo ollary and bllnefill, ond corgrowth poltnlill.

bed

Forward r•ume, aummarizing qualificaUona Md ••:
f11Y hi1tory to:
Pomeroy Nuraing ond Rthtlbililllion Ctnler

Security

36759 Rockapringo Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio 45761
(614ltv21606
Wt 1re 1n Equ1l Opportunity Employer

llllniWI-• Etc. No Exp .
Neceuary. ,.or Info Call 219TIMMt Ext. 8710 B A.M. To a

P.M. 7 Doyo.

Temporary, ptirt-tlme clerical
woril In doctora office. EJ-

porlonco would btl holplul. Ap-

pliacUons will be taken Monday,
Sept: 21, 162, during the houri
ol 12:30 PM · 4.30 PM, 11 Or.
John Wade'a office, Pleasant

V11loy Hotphal.

WANTED: Part·Tlmo

Position

(22

Hill IWkl Avoilsblo At A
tommunlty . Group Home For
Ptr.one Wllh Developmental

Happy 49ih
Anniversary
To The
Greatest
Parents
Anywhere!
BiU&amp;Ruth
Holt

Dlnbllllloo In Bldwoll. Hours: 8
a.m .a p.m. OR 10:30 t .m. .a:30
p.m., Sat (Aotllts); 8 • m -6
m. OR 1 -11 p.m. Sun
Rotatll); 2 -Hour Weekly Slt H

~tflina·

A•

Othtrwlll

Driving R4Cord Good Corn·

munlcatlon And OrganiZIIIon
Skills, Punctual And Ablt To
Worlo Ao PI~ Of A Toom R•

quirod; Exporlonco Working

J,

«:

lAme, Your Kidl
Grondkidl
P.S ,, The Big Party
u Ne"r Year!

.. __ ,.•_ _ ,.. _ •._._,

Or

SchodUI~d. High Scho!ol Dogroo
Vtlld Driver'• Ll~na• And Good

-----~-~

With ,

Ptreone

With

Mental

Alhlfdltlon And Oawlopmantal
OIMbllhln Prtftrrtd. Slllry:
$5.CM) /Hr1 To Stll'l . Sand

Rtoun\0 To Coc:llla Btkar, P.O.
Ooodllno For Appllc1nts:
ll/23/i2. Equll Opportunity
Employor.
Box 604, Jacbon, OH 45640;

Valuable skill training
with good money.
The Army Reserve otTers you a chance to leam a
valuable skill. A skill that could open new career
options for you.
Team up with a nearby Army Reserve unit. After
completing Basic Training, you'll attend an Army
school for skill training that wiU sharpen your talents.
Then you'll reiUm home and serve usually one
weekend a month and two weeks of Annuai·Training.
Your weekend pay starts at $85 with opportunities for
promotion.
Find out bow you can get a useful part-time skill.
Come to us.

1o build new barbed
level ltnd!...!!'u•t be
304-675-£1113

1hor

446·3343
BE ALL YOU CU IE.'

ARMY RE'SERVE
... o:---"'"'•""_ '_ _ _.....,...,...

_,~· · ··-·~

'

... • - - ··· "': - ·•-•-.

�.()fi...:polnt Ple•88nt,
21

Business

8

Opportunity
INCJ11CEI ·
• OHio VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

__ _.,.. _and
l,;o;.;s,....
-... --....
ncommencll thlt you

do bull-

Vtndlng Aoult: Local. Wt Hovt
Tho-litchi-, lloklng A

.l.ocll Pty Phont AOUIO. Eom
$1,200 Ptor Wtok. Muol Sell. lIOO-'JII1·11M.

L'lll44 Halt.iv Raod, Pamoroy
-control To Oalllpollo Or Alhlnt.
Slick 11!111 Codlr Homo, s -

Producers
Livestock

..... you ..... ln-ljplod

~=- Cuh-1-

HILLSBORO, OHIO

:Ohio Approved Graded
Uvastoct Assn.
Fuder Calf Sale
Wednesday, Sept. 23, 7:00 p.m.
Ohio Approved Graded Feeder Pig Sale

I

Real Estate

Thursday, October 1, 7:00 p.m.
CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME

31

Homes tor Sale

44

For More Information
Call

513-393-3424

Donnie Everetts, Manager
Weldon Taulbee, Ca1tle Salesman
Don Knore, Cattle Salesman

Ap!lrtment
tor Rent

44

20,1992

Old,

Thai

34

On

Sola

Ap-

I

Gn~nde, 114 388 0841.

Business
Buildings

8

Commorolal blda 2 400 tq ft
flrot llvll, full llnlihid ......
ment, 1 ac,. land, could bll1ur-

nod Into homo, AI. 2 Polnl
aon-1111 RNky,
304.e7w030., 67'-3431.
Sllll lulldl[~gt. Wo Dotl. 21400
To lOOk Sq. Ft. OUqntnloo
Llmllod. ~ Now. Btvo
ThouNndo. lrn.-11 DoiiVtry
Avalltblo On Somo. Bob &amp;14·
4411.0721. Endt - ·
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
PI-~,

3 Acr• SUIVIyod, Ulllltlot lnlllllld. Hart~ Golllt High
School, T h - Rotd. 8110
Milo, se,eoo. 114-125.e111.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

·ESTATE AUCTION

EVERYONE WELCOME

ISAAC'S AUOION HOUSE
SEPT. 26, 1992 - 7 P.M.
We will sell for 1'/, hours. Then we will
have live music. There will be all types of
door prizes to be given away by local
businesses.
Free Soft Drinks and Coffee
BY ISAAC'S AUCTION
AND FEED STORE
This is to celebrate our 7th year in
business.
"No alcoholic beverages"
AUCTIONEER, FINIS "IKE" ISAAC
Gllllpolls Fwry, across lrom
Btlll School. Chy water,
netunll g.., unattached gtrage.

$23,500. 304.e'IS-8860.

_)lome For S.le In Cheshire Vii·
:... Jagl, t Rooms, l bath, Lg. Flat
.•.Lol By Owntr, 11-3:30 P.M.
.... PhCHIII: 114-441-11711 Aher 3:30

.: e,M.IM-441-MZS.

~ two ttory, ltrtgt~ono ocrt,
, ·tocllod II 4 320
II Rldgo,
·:125,000; 114-941evenings
or &amp;14-192-36114,
• )tan mutage.

:)net - -

::WANT£0 TO BUY: Houst On
1

Olbblt Drlv•, Gallipolis. Phone:

; t14-441-Q8g3,

: 32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale
$213 Pu Month Including lot
nnl:. New 14' wide mobil• home,

lndudel delivery, comple1• nt: ~t.klnlna • otopo. l-.e37·

: 1HI 2 IR King mobllt homo.
~ Nlldt eomt rtptlr. $2000. 7tm·
'· 101m &amp; 7:30J)m-npm. 304-895342t
1111 Flamln~o , 3 bedroom, 12 x
85. Atklng 13500, 61 ...~2-3033.
1m PMriHt 2 Btdrooms,
• 12:1:50, G.. Hoi, Uk1 New

: Through Cull $&amp;,450. 614-446~ 0175.

\ 1NO P1rkwood, 14x70, 3 bed-

~

roame, 314 1crw lot In city limits,
:. 304.e75-45011.

:-

WlndiOf 141711, 2 bod·

~.

CIA, total Me, under-

1*'nlng. 8120 lroottd woocj
ti»&gt;fCh, &amp;l20 alumn twnlng &amp;
t&gt;ftlllng wtacrolll, evtrything uc
:~'cond. one own«, 30A-675-5149.
: 1117 14172 On Renltd Lol. Heat
: Pump And Storage Building In; eluded. 614-446-8706 Afl:1r 4l&gt;.M.
1

1181 Fairmont 14z70 2 Bed·
~ WID. CA. Deck, Ut ility
. -aulldlna, SttUp Quail c,..k,
•$14,100l14.:145-g3111.
,,.:c..::;,;__
_ _ __

:: 1811 Adtmt 2 BR, 111 -lrlc.

down l 1akl OVIr
; P I - •· ~15-8197 or 615-

}' $1500

, 1113.

~~~~~~~~~
•· Nlct
10155 M.H., 2 BA, I both,
rongo 6 rolrla., Ioiii
• AC, -

• lltclrlc, $2,000 080. 614-046: . 7241.

;: 21
•'

_

_

Business
Opportunity
__.:...:
_.:,__

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
Sunday, September 27 at 11 :00 a.,m.
Located 11 miles Wnt of Athena. Take US 50 &amp; 32
W. and exit onto 50 W. toward• McArthur. Auctlon
II • quarter of a mile on the left.
Maple dresser, other dressers, bookcase, yard benches. round maple table and 4 chairs. 2 drawer filing
cabinet, heavy maple bunk beds, matching maple
twin beds, 5 drawer storage cabinet, ceiling fans, 2
sets of coffee and end tables, several matching chairs
ideal lor office or waiting room, couch, 24 in. apart·
ment size gas range, Red Baron arcade game,
Asteroids arcade game, bed linens. glassware, pots
and pans. slep ladders and many items not
advertised.
Terms: Caah or check with po1ltlve tO. Not
responsible for loll or accidents. Food available.
Auction-: Mark Hutchin1on 6t4-698-6706
Lk:enled and Bonded in the State of Ohio
Aaeoc. Frank Hutchinson 614-592-4349

How can a repairman llars
known lor t'l is loneliness
inaease your income? Vou 'M
lind ou1 when you open a
MaYtna Homo Appliance
Conl9r. That's bacausa you'N

be soling tha tl consumer
prelerrod waslto,. and dry''"· plus tho 00f1"4llele
Maylag ino or ro-igorators.
ranges, and rria'owaves and

dishwasltll'l as well.
But !hare net all. You can
also make additional income

soiling paris and rebuilt
appliances , plus sarving
Maytag ond oltor b1011ill.
A$20,000 nininun -~
morrtls required. Bul Rlllllll&gt;
bar, our Home Appliance
, · Cenlers are tltt only slores
' allowed to Identity lhamselves 'with the Maytag nama
and our 25 years ol proven
dopllndablllty.
So pul Old Lonoly lo wMI
lor you. Cal t-304-522-3071
......... delalls.

IIJ MAYTAG
Dependabi&amp;ly Ploce.

Real Estate
Wanted

Sttklng Small Farm Or Woodod
Propany In Stcludtd Ar11. Call

216-214~311.

Rentals
41 Housea tor

Rent

Btdroomo Untumllhod,
Locllod: - . . . . . wv, 114-

3

4411-31140.

4 Btdroome, Dick. 1 Acr•,

Rlvtl!nlnl SolAri 81. ~ $410/Mo.
Dtpoth, RtfotonCII, YNr
Llloo. 1-.1n.e~n.
For llle or rant· 2bdrm. haust,
Loculi st.. Pomtroy, 14100,
rtnt• $150; 1bdrm, hOU111
Poocock St., Pomtroy, tl50;
114-62·2720 or 114.VVZ-358V.
Houtt let l'ln1 In Mlddllporl,
,.,.. $250, 114-VVZ./1187.

42 Mobile Homes
torRent
12xl5l 2 btdro~~m, Jumlthtd, 1
112 m lo on Mlllolono Ad, ApCII
no pall, $200. p ut
• nfllr8IK:el1 304411-

.

141711 2br, Clltn, Ptvtd Ad, 7

Saturday. Sept. 26, 1992
10:00 A.M.
This Is the personal property ot the late
Fannie Burke. Located at 2010 Elizabeth
Street, Belpre, Ohio. Turn at the Red Barn
Market on Middle Street. Watch tor
auction signs on Washington Blvd.

ABSOLUTE AUCTION

"Household"
3 pc. Bookcase bedroom suite, china cabinet,
Goose neck rocker, Sylivan T.V., Lazy Boy
Rocker, coffee &amp; end table, 2 pc. living room
su~e. Queen Ann table, single bed, cherry
sweater chest, Kenmore sewing machine in
cabinet, Breakfront Mahogany china cabinet,
stands, telephone stand, kilchen cabinet, lamps,
dishes, pots &amp; pans, linen, electrical appliances,
&amp; ect.
"Antique or Collectors Items"
Duncan File table &amp; 4 chairs , set Cherry
Blossom Diamond China, lan, maple leal,
pinwheel, &amp; eel. hand made quins. 1963 walking
doll, Oak dresser, marbles, Iris carnival pitcher &amp;
6 glasses, Finlon basket, misc. carnival dishes,
Pink depression cabbage rose, Imperial,
Vasoline Hobnail, cut glass, complete set of
Rogers Bro. Silverware &amp; case.
"Misc."
7600 BTU M .W. ·air condijioner (like new),
curtains &amp; drapes, catpet, collection of dogs,
cats, owls , ducks, frogs, cows, horses, birds,
bears, &amp; ect. Handmade horses &amp; wagon,
handma~e pillows, approx. 50 crotched doilys,
blankets, &amp; bedspreads, misc. jewerly, pictures,
15 new sheets, lawn chairs, folding card tables,
throw rugs and lois more.

2 BR moblll home tor rtnt: no
poll. Dtp. I rol. rtq'ld. Call ol·

Dan Smith - Auctioneer

lor 2 p.m. 114-446-0U7.
Nlco rnobllt hO&lt;nt Camp Con..,, 3 bldrooma, an •lectric, air·
cond, no pete, reterencea, 304175-2133.
44

2

Apartment
lor Rent
blldroomt,

carpetld,

tp-

Hovon,

-3716 E.O.H.

Rt. 35, Gallipolis, Ohio
Consignment Sale every Frl~y 7 p.m.
Consignments taken from 10 to 6 day
of sale. New and Used Merchandise.
Auctioneer David Boggs

Merchandise

I bf&lt;jroom tpanmon1 In Pt .

Household
Goods

51

- · 114-446-10711.
3 room 1pt, stave &amp; ref fur·

nlohtd, nlct nolghbor'-d, dtp
&amp; rol roqulrtd, 3CIW75-10VO.
Apt lor rwnt In Paint PINHn1
114-441-2200.
•

Avocado grotn oltc Holpolnl

In Stock. $5.00 Up. Mollohan
~trpolt,
114-44&amp;-11144.
Couch &amp; IOVIHII 3 mo Did, lkC
condJ mauve chllr, waodtn

boncn, 304.e7S.7ll88.

"Not r•IJIDnslblt far JKddtnll or loss ol praptrly"
• Amouncemtnll by audianter take
prKede!iCt over prlnl.d mailers•

Family roam 111, GE ••"'"·
cottH I tncltlblle. aorM tool•,
w~ Iron table wlfour
c:halro, :104-675-45G1.

Aponmont, 1br
SZIO/IIo. Ulllllloo Pold, gzli
F....,h, Golllpollo. 614-446-4416
Afttr7 P.ll.
Compltlly FurnlshOII, 1br, noll
lo Ubra'J', pirklng, heat, tlr,
rafarenc•L.dtposlt requlrtd . 614·
441.0338 ••fore 7p.m.
Fumlohod EHicloncy 1175/Mo.
Ulllllloo Pold Short 81th, 607

LOCATED t7 ...ES SOUTH OF POINT PLEASANT, WV,
ON RT. 2TO ASHTON UPTON ROAD.
TURN, GO BIILES TO AUCTION SITE.
FROM CHARLESTON, OFF RT. 60 ON JOHN CREEK ROAD
IN MUON, WY. GO t2 MILES TO AUCTION SITE.
WATCH FOR SIGNS NEXT TO H.ANNAN HIGH SCHOOL.
ANTIJU:S:3pc. VICtorian mlllblelop bod11l0111 ouiJewi~ lall bod, drassar,
washstand beautiful~ CIIIWd, boautilul ~ind doorc:om&lt;r cal&gt;net unusual
sizJI, pop&lt;Jiai comer cabinet noeds doo's nic:o fool and lop on il, S~net
Oesk. 12 tin pie sale, nic:o oak Jelephont, chlrry m!Nll and !ourchosl oak
SIIJI.Hi·boy, nic:ooakpumpQ~Van, oak cupboard lop, oak side bold. dtop
IIIII table and 4cane back chairs,2newoakhll&amp;ea~ . mu~y bod, 3tier
mahogany sland, oak claw I biU lamp Jablo, 6 oak T-back chairs, ic:o
CAIIII1 table and~ helll1 bock ell airs, nic:ooakhalllnle,INlllt ell air, SO\'Oml
lalHs. oak manl~. sawing stand, custom made tall oak queen !ize bed.
~stOOl, 2 pc. step bock bookcase noeds door! on llp, mission s~lo
walnul ibmty Jablo, custom made oak eniOflainmenl center, spiMing
wheoil, oak lidH-bed couch, 1920's cllip. s~lo sole needs re::overed,
fumn"'" in rough
g05s cllina.,.., 75 bonlwood chairs, roc:l&lt;ar,
llatwafl cupboard, oak cllesse~ bll85, buffet &amp;more, beautiful oal&lt; kiid1en
clock with lions,INl(1y boskel4 buttar molds,coffee grinder, apple peeler,
3 whiskey blrrals, InS$ bed, Coca Cola cOOler, CtSI •ron park benc:l1,
copper kettle, ·~ qt cllum, flo ~ue ~aner and other piettors, green
dtpleuion, palwm and m$&lt;. g~sware, ClOCks, ont B&amp;W stoneware
croci&lt;, m~ 8 Altddin pul down typo chandalier, 11101 and snps,
wcodan bovos, 8jlpie pooler, buck board wagon, iron gJJ~. 3500 watt
genoralor, 31ols of lumber cheny, pine and some oa~ large lot ol Spill mil
I,... and luel lank and more.
FARM EQUIPMENT WILL SEll AT NOON
FARM EQUIPMENT: Qljyer 1255 Dies~ 1655 nr. plows, carry all, disc.
Olver hyd. lin Boom flO.~ . pest hokl dWO&lt;. 2hay wagons.

cu"'"'

. AUCTION CONDITCTID IT

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO.

441-4411 Aftor 7p.m.

Grodouo living. 1 tnd 2 bod-

814·

M1yt1g wtaher I dryer, match-.

One bedroom tpartments, fur·
nlthtd,

ulilllln

lncludld.

Slc\lrlty dlposlt r1qulr~, no

polo; 114.VI2·2218.
One bedroom furnished

1Pir1·

•nl, rwr.renc11 1nd dtposlt,
no pill; 114-H2.:1137.

lng lit $225; Olhtr wath•rs,
$75 to $100; Dryoro J50 lo $100.
AU told with Wlrranty. Wnhtr &amp;

Dry or Shoppo. 614-441.:11144.
Phllco lite range, IVICidO
, ..... $75. 814-446-H25.

Throo 1 btclroom oplt locl1td
7th S1,.eti tor turthtr lnformal!on 304.e75-&amp;440 Ilk ... Lao.

45
.

MASON, WV

LUNCH

MASON, WV

773-5785

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
OWNER: LOWMAN &amp; MADIL YN GARRETT
TERMB:C.horc:t.ecll.witt'l LO.
Nell ~ ror ICCiclentl or 10u d proptl'ly
LlotnMcl and Bondtcl ~ Oflio, KlfltUCky, I Wttt V~ glnla tOO

·~-·

I

It ........"'-~

. J-,;-;...;.1~15~I:r-;.;.1,......-116

Real Estate General

L..

A patient called to tell me he'd
be about 15 minutes lale tor his

_

dental appointment and asked il
it would be a problem. I said no,
but we wouldn't have time to give
him an anesthetic. He ...-.. on

Buy or 1111. Alvt&lt;lno Antlquoo,
1124 E. Mol~ Blrot~ on Rt. 124,
-ro: II.T.W. IO:DO
o.m. lo 1:00 p.n., Sundty 1:00
1o 1:00 p.m. 114-tl2·25211.

-oy.
54

•

_

_

•

_

mont, approx. 7
lrom
Excallent condition, overlooks
and Rac:coc&gt;n
CrHk, 23 H. lravol ltailor, oundeck, Nrai water, oaplic
sysllm, and oltetrlc fishing, bOating, hunting or juat
rlllaxing.
1514
VACANT LOT t21100 OF AN ACRE-OWNER
RNANCING. Gr11at place lo,build 1 new homo (a Dnom
Homo) or place a lnilor on il lot. The Rural Wallr
Sysllm and Eloctric S.Mc. 11 available at tho proporty.
270 loet lronlago olong Eno-ViniDn Rosel.
~~~

I
II I I I I.
ME S 0 I E

I0

•

Q Complete

II

•

•

•

•

•

,.to
!he chuckle quoted
by filling in tho missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

BUSINESS OFFICES I SAU!SROOII FOR U!ASE
OOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

LEADINGHAM REAL EHATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446-9539

Room• for rent • welk or month.
~=~1:}111 $120/mo. Golllo Hotol.
I
1580.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Slllplng roomt wllh coohlng.

Alto tralltr tpact. All hook-ups.
Call tft• 2:00 p.m., 304-77:11651, u..on WV.

46 Space for Rent
Country Mobllo Hamt Pork, At
33N., under new manag1m1n1.
Loll, 185; holM ,.nl..., 123.5;
114-62·2187
Mobile homo lot tor ,.,.. In
,Chlohlro. 114-441-VIII.
:Trtller lots for rent In Racine,
.114-VVZ-.!1158.
·47 Wanted to Rent

773·5785

OWNER: LARRY &amp; BERNICE WAGNER
TERIIS: C11h or Chock wllh I D. Out olatota tiuytrt mutt
hove o curront bonk IIIIUor of crodll. No Excopllonol
Not Responsible lor Keidentl Of lola ol property
Lic.nsed and Bonded in Ohio , Kentucky , at:'Cf West Virginla IJ66

Real Estate General

Cool 6 Wood

IIOVI

$300. Tri·

S.ar IWMPII wilttachmenlt 2

OFFICE 992-2896

Real Estate General

yrt old,IZ50. 304.e71-1725.
CommodO&lt; 1A4 Compulor
w/prlnl•, Stnya color monitor,
&amp;alt of pm• tnd programt,
paper, 1114 dlaca tnd atand tor
1400
or - · 114-~2·21101
IAtrlpm.

NEW USTING - RIO GRANDE AREA ..., Is
!his 3 b4idroom t balh ranc:ll with lull basemonl
including a lamiy room, patio door11 open to
.45 aero mn of open space. Country type living
jus! minutal away from v~logo ol Rio Gnortde
with 111 attractive price ol $52,500..
14&amp;8

Custom m1dl draperitl, cmm

color wlbrown ¥Jllnct, rods In·

205 North Stcond Ave.
Middleport, OH
. .
.
WELCHTOWN ROAO.A 2 story frame home with 4 3/4
aaes. Has a newer coal and wood 1\Jrnace for cheeper
headng, and a·tamily room, dining room, and 3 bedrooms.
Comes wilh range, tefrigerator, washer and dryer.
ONLY $23,000

-

HARRISONVILLE • Mobile Home Only • A I 984 Nashua
mobile home. Comes wilh equipped kitchen plus microwow, dishwasher, fronl porch, rear deck, and underpinning. Looks like NEW.
$t5,000
IIIDDLEPORT • S 51h-Has 8·9 room s, 4 bedrooms, and 2
tuQ balhs. look at the e1tras·Has maintenance free sidi!'9.
heat pump. fenced backyard, open slairway, .formal dining
room with bay windows, lull basement, and 1111 dose to lhe
schools.
$48,500

cludtd, lkt window 120" wldll
70" long, 304-e'IS-11138 ohor
5:00.
F0&lt; Btlo Or Trtdt: 24 Fl. Abovt
Ground Swimming Pool. $300.
114-317-7577.
Genellt

Nulrhlon

Prod...clt

Amino Acid Body
Building Wllallt loll and Ill
~turner kwmuru. Available •·
ctuolvoly ll Alii Aid Phormocy.
ThiMiewaytod~ .
•
Aulo. wllhtr I dfyor, $125; 1111·
-lng rolrlfiiiOtO&lt;, $125;
Mojllg ,.,_ -nlc drytr,
110 voAo, 1125; 114-1112-23.12.
IBII -.:lrlc H C..iocllng
'IYPIWIM• $50, Call t14·24S.
51121 Aftor 4 P.M.
KILLS FLEAS!
Buy ENFORCER Flol Kllltro F0&lt;
~II, Home &amp; Ytrd. Outrtntlld
Elllctlvtl Bur ENFORCER At:
Thomoo Do-M Clnltr, In
McC..mlck Rood, Golllpollo.
King Coli etov11 now In ttock.
Slcllro Equlpmonl, HondlrtOn,
wv. 304-e'IS-11121.
.
Llkt Now 1811 PC Jr. Compulor
llllu~ng

NEW UlnNG, SPRING AVE. lo thlt
100m, 1 bath, wood and brick ranch with
100m, dining room , don, lull baMmont, fi,..
place, and gas hot water heat, butlor't pantry,
endosod front potth, beautiful bow window
wlwindow seat Md much rno&lt;8 . Only $32,000.
CaU today. It won't lasllong a1 thai pnca. 1445

VILLAGE is this wall
I
used car bullnou on Rt. 7, with two bay
ga111go and office. A mobile homo that haa 2
b4idrooms, t balh, living rm .. dining ""· and
kitchen. Asking $9~.5 00. Wilhout mobile home
$89,500.
1473
OWi~ER WANTS SOLD- This wall buill brick
with 2 badroomt, t bath, laundry 100m,
and dining room, kilchen, 1 car attached
· ~= Ll~go walk-in attic nice patio and Li
Iron! porch and more. Reduced lo

GALUPOUS CITY - It whtrlllOY find this
attnoctive and well maintalne homo with
lanced in backyard, alum. siding, lwo bod·
rooms, one bath, a largo onclosod back porch
for those wa"" summer nights or onjoy tho
cerillal air. Also a ono car garage with atonogo
and much more. Call for moro Into. Only
$-48,900.

1444

VACANT LAND ON UNCOLN PIKE - 66
acres, smaU pond, plus 18124 shoW&lt;Ir house.
Asking $26,500.
1476

BEECH ST. - Appmx. 24 10,.1 with a beautiful two story colonial home over1ooking

Pomeroy. Exocuti-. stylo home with lonna!
ontry, lamily mom wniroplace, lormaf dining
room , basement nu roc. room wilh otono finplace, in-ground pooL 2 car garage . Many
more amamt1es. Reduced lo al ow price of

$138,500.

1413

OWNER'DESPEAATE AND ANXIOUS TO
SELL thit 3 b4idroom noncn homo! Needs a
little sptueing up. Nice sizod lot 72'x150'.
Aitaclted 1 car cerpolt. MAKE OWNER AN
OFFER TOOAYI Asking low $30'o.
1452.

Sylttm W /Prirjtr, DIIIUII Dtlk 1

All Atl. llat•lllt, Proartmt.
1110 Finn. 114~45-5021 Afttr 4
P.M.

HAPPY HOLLOW RO.- It

111

home with basement, 3 bedrooma,

lamily room, living room, kil:hon, laundty .....
skyliltlt. satollile system, covorod porch, hMt
pump, conlral air, 12'xl2' building and much
moro. Call lor details.
1425
1200. REDUCED TO $4t,eooll -BEAUTIFUL
COLONIAL STYLE HOME at Rio Gtartde. 2.87
acros mn, 3 BAs, 111 bath1, LR, kilehan , FR.
Jusl oW Pleasant Valley Ref.

RICK PEARSON .AUCTION CO.

I
1~ I I

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
WNCH

Mahogany bedroom surte, maple bed and chest,
several chest ol drawers, dresser and mirror, sheW,
nice mahogany dining room surte, lowboy dresser
wlmirror, 2 pocket walches, excellent, liger maple and
cherty E~ire chest, desk and chair, mirror, leather
lop step tables, mahogany occasional tables. 3 pc.
sect ional sofa, night sland. bookcase, 2 quihs. old hat
boxes, hats, hal molds, bedding, glassware, ctystal,
silver, plate, pictures, 45 records, green depression,
wooden block plane, hand tools , lawn mower, lock
boxes, exercise bike, costume jewelty, Maytag
washer &amp; dtyer, window AC, dinene, Boy Seoul items,
"75' Reds World Series stub, porch glider, uniforms,
matbles, 3 lace doll, several composition dolls. other
dolls, doll accessories. 7 silver dollars, Christmas
items, old clothes and suitcases. t6 ga. shotgun, sm.
kitchen appliances, cookware , 2 card fables and
chairs, old radio, Jaguar car kit, etched glassware,
mantel clock, jewelty box, many items too numerous
to·mention.
TEARY L LLOYD,.AUCTIONEER 286·1229
Licensed and Bonded In Ohio
Terma; C.ah or Ohio Checks
Refre1hmenta Available
Not responsible lor loll or accidents

AI1CTJON CONDI1CTID BY

Gtvln Sl, Aodnoy II, li4-2-ls5TIS.
- Hallond tupar 717 choppor
1 ltnlfo oorn 1 a•- pick up ~lilly -ruollon lnlltr,
lul30' - · .... 0111114- ; Now Halltrid Whl~ Awoy 1112-2101
-......
.
••ll•p ...... lldglf' ..,.
llllap wap. 10 ton g..r, w
••
.,
....
..,
....
u,40, .....
CotiOY Ttmlltn tnollogo wagon, ion and 40 ra-n
Ntlurol g~~~. v- chalco.
$151.11 Wom1lllat11 1: Thomu
Ptlr ond lobltt, unll, buG
wh8cklr, 25" ooneoe. co&amp;or T'i, Hardware, 114 1• 0111
bllgt - h , -~. chair, Woodbum!ng Elnh Blovo 100
304.e7Wzat oftor 4:00 Pll.
Son.., ExC- Condtlon,
$400 Ptoono: 114-31-11210.

THEMEL

MAGLOR

Mlscellanaous
Merchandise

Ollhw-. Alr Ttmp. 10,000
BTU c . - Alr Condklnot, 1
Yr. Old. IU. 8ptca llaklr
lllc........ Olthtt, Clot~
LlmJII, And llloc komt 101

NA RT

I I' I

54

Moving Bolo: Bapl Z3rd • Oct
3rd. G.E. Eltclllc Rtngt 1 Sol~
Clllnlng Ovtn, Frtg1dtlrt,

I· I uY I I I I
8

Mlscellanaous
Merchandise

Furnished
Rooms

Owner, Ann Lewis, will offer the following
items tram her mo1her's estate.

Victorian matllle top sideboed, oak bulfel, oak display cabine~ beautif\JI press back plartorm rockar, sol ol8 arrow back
chairs, 2 oak mandes, iron bed, nice carved window table ,
victorian walnut hall tree, oak chairs, round walnut i&lt;~ble, 2
spoon carwd&lt;tik beds. school desk, cabinet top, unusual6
drawer jewelry box all carved, can&lt;le wick bowls and olher
pieces. disltes sailS, pr. aystal lamps, bunerdish, asso11ment
ol milk glass, sugar Md cmamer and tray , 20 pc. set ste~ing
natwaro, 16 sols of ste~ing silver salt &amp; pepper shakers plus
other sterling pieces, 25 pocket knives , case, xx and others,
pockat watches Cyna Swiss 15 jewel, Elgin 15 jewel, Hampton 5 jewel, Walthan 15 jewal, Hami lton 17 jewel, coHee pot,
lantern, nice 14 steel traps, tree stand, shovels, racks, assortment ol hand tools, saws, picks, bolt cutter, wrench, a&gt;&lt;es,
haylotj&lt;s, Trolley, pulleys, cycle grinder,meat grinder, crosscul
uw.wood planes,madic, carbide light, 45cal. muzzle loader,
Conn. Valley Arm powderhorn and more.

54

I I I I I I IoN1 I I .I I

SAT., SEPT. 26, 1992, 9:00 A.M.
254 Cross St., Jackson, Ohio.

LOCATED AT 702 SOUTH RITCHIE AVENUE,
RAVENSWOOD, WV
WATCH FOR SIGNS

lAM I

I

home, 1 mil• btlow tow!'1 over'-'A.

PUULII

R E V E WS

tiN. Call 614-62·7187. EOH.
Complllly Fumllhtd mobllo

4411.0338.

'¥DID

-J.L.......L.-L.-J.-..L.-J.

room a,.rlm1nt1 11 VIllage
Manor
•nd
Alve ...lcl•
Aponmontt In Mlcldlopolt. From

looking river. No Pita,

tiiAl DAILt

ANKPIN

Second Avenu•, Gllllpolla, IM-

THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER 24, 1992 •10:00 AM

Sundlly

I I I I I? I I
I
I'
I:=::::::::::::::::!
I I I I ..

50's TOYS, GAMES, SPORTS ITEMS

Saturday, September 26, 1992
10:00 a.m.

SWAIN
RJANITURE. 82
Ollvt 81., Golllpollt. Ntw I UtOd
tumllure, Mliltn, Weatem l
WO&lt;k-o.I14-441-31H.
Whllt, Whl~fOOI DlgMol Stove,
Solid E-tt, Stll.c!Nnlng.
Aottlltd: MOO, 2 Yllll Ord
$300.114-31U5H.
Ukt new Sertl ¥ne Siver mat·
t - I box tprlngo, 304.e75AUCTION I

4014.

Fumlohod

WV

words below to moke 6
simple words. Prl"' letter1 of
each In Its line of squares.

W1J~· goo&lt;l cond, $50. 304~75-

1 Bavlngo On All VInyl &amp; Car-

Point Plu88nt,

O Rearrange the 6 ICrambled

2br, CAL Wllht&lt;, llry• Hook· Va12 Carpal, $GO; Mollollon Fu~
Up, 111 •loor, No Ptlt, ~t1tron- nllurt, 114-441-'11144.

Licensed and bonded In State of Ohio

PUBLIC
AUCTION

Household

Goods

PINNnl, W.Va. 1•304.e'IW042.

OH

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gal II

Ap!lrtment
tor Rent

4596
Gallipolis, Ohio 614-446-7750

614·949·2033
Ohio License t# 1344
John Smith • Apprentice • Ohio #55 18
Cash • Positive I.D. • Refreshments

Real Estate General

FURNITURE, ANTIQUES, DOLLS, COUKTIBLES

BOGGS AUCTION SERVICE

property. We are now booking sales.

Case #92·286
Gaynelle Davis • Administratrix

drytr1 elrcond. 304-773-4248.

44

Public Slle
. &amp; Auction

1992

Not responsible for accidents or loss of

Rtq'd. 114-388-1135.
2 bodroom, lumlhNd, wolhor &amp;

MI. From Halzor $250/llo. Doj&gt;.

1
fwnlahld, nArmo,
IChool
11~================::::::! lpllances
thopp,';la:ro-s:m.
New

PUBLIC
AUCTION
OPENA MAYTAG HOME
APPLIANCE CENTER

36

September 20,

Lie. No.

Acrugt IVIIllbJI for home

conllrudlon on Rayburn Ad,
rwaeonabll reatrictlon., water,
lnl«matlon mtllld on roqutll
304.e7UZ53.
'

a

Apartment
tor Rent

Bedroom Apanmonl Rio Zbdrm. apll., talal •l~etrkl, apo
pill-• Jumllhod, loundry
1011111 flcllhltt cloll 10 tchool
proal,..,oly 40 Aont, Motlly 2 lA ro..-od
In lawn. AI&gt;Piicillont avolltblo
prtgt lpl. wl ;;;;\g.
-RNIIort,· toll
I Bloom
408 -Richland
Avo., W.11r tum'Od. R50 monlll. Doj&gt;. ll: Yllllao ·croon APIL t4V Of
call114.fVZ-3'111. EOH.
Athlnll14 512 5211.
'
roq'od. 114-441-3717.

....... 2 Btlhl On!Y • 112 YNrt

l«1f ....... -

·-

33 F•rma tor S•l•

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

wv

t880. PLANTZ SUBOIVISION - Nice 1tanar
homo offe11 3 BRs, 111 balh, LA, kit., lull ballmt~l·~~ wloutSido tnlry, carpon, gas hut, city

U l luwt.

SECLUSION • If yOY wanllo just go! away by
you~lf. have a privata cookou~ walk lo • fish·
ing spot or just enjoy natu111, then don't lot thio
one get away. 4.5 acrea, m~ . 3 BR1, bath, LA,
DR, kitchen, access to bOating on Raccoon
CreQk, city schools. can Rullt tor more dotlllo.
1264. COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 1.4 It
m~ . 248 fronllge olong SA 7, juslacrosslmm
Ohio RivO&lt; Plaza.
NEW USTING- CONVENIENT OOWNTOWN
LOCAnON - Owner hll rolirod and wantt
something smaller. This 4 or 5 BA homa hat 2
balhs, modem kilchon, cantral air and much
moro. Located at 4t4 3n:l Avo. $52,eoo.
1142. $3S,eooll- WHY PAY R£Nn - Ranch
'ttylo home on SR t60, 3 8Rt, LR, kitchen,
bath, atladtod gar11ge, 100X300 lot

..

t895. MINI FARM - Remodeled homo plus 20
acraa mA. Moatly crop land. House has 3 BAs.
bath, kitchen. LA, beaulilul de ck. All lor
$45,000. Call Rulh lor more delails.

JZ24. TAKE A LOOK AT lHISII - L.ocatod on
Second Avo .. walk to otor11,. cltutth, school and
shopping. 2 story home ot1111 kitchen, LR, DR,
FR. 3 BAl. 2 baths: gaaltoat, contnol air.

1898. 65 ACRES 11/L - Huntington Twp. Appmx. 38 acros crop, balance pasturo and
woods, 2 stoty nome, 4 BAs, bath, LA, kitchen,
concrete block bam with loft, tobacco base,
frontage on Raccoon Croek.

1146. OWNER HAS REDUCED TIE PRICE WALK TO ALL THE HOME FOOTBALL
GAMES - Vory nice homo jutt 1 taw bloc:lct
from downtown. 3 an., 111 batht, LA, DR., gat
heat

•

1150. CORNER LOTS - Very nice nomo oWors
3 BRs, bath , kitchen, carpet , liroplace, 1
detlcned ganogo.
t571. JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD - ADOISON
TWP. • 386 OC:rll linn, 3 pondt, tobacco baoa,
55x110 bam, wlconcrelo flooro, may consldor
tplil

1821. CARIIEL ROAD - Rio Granda , _ - S
aero Iota lor Nit. $8,1100 oach. Call lor clollls
and directions.
tl86. LOOKING FOR A PLACE FOR A NEW
BUSINESS - SR 100 ntar Bulavlllo Pike,
aprox. 200'1200'1ot, all utiRtiiiiVOilabll.

. t751. PATRIOT AREA. Quiet nelghbOIItood,'
IOO'XISO' LOT ON DEBBY DRIVE - Owner · easy living home oWors 3 BAt, LA, oal-ln kftch.
en , nlee catpet, attached ganogo.
wanla a quick 1111. Call today ond slort bu~d·
ing righl away.

t512. 101 ACRES MIL. Guyon Township.
Owner financing to quoliliod buyer with 20% . INVESTORS - 4-PLEX FOR BALE - Good
clown payment.
income. Each unh hat 2 BRS, LA. kitchen 111d
bath. caa lor mono information.

t5t0. WHITE ROAD- 20 atrtl, mil, ~nt
ltnd not far lrom Charolaia Llki. S2Q,OOO.

1114. $21,000 -31oto +Oiclorllomo. Bldwoll, 3 1511. 71 ACREI MIL, Sugar Creak Rood BAs, bath, LA, kllehon, wotbhop 111d ganoge. Wawr lop and bam on p10p111y. $32,000.

1888. S2t,OOO- CheiT'f Drive, odgo ollown on
SA t60. SmaN homo and .ltlacrll nVI. .

POMEROY-Union Ave.·.lat!le rooms and a beautiful stairway come with lhil home. lt also has 3-4 bedrooms, FA NG
tumace and t t/2 bath I .
WAS $1g,goo OWNER WANTS AN OFFER$17,900

llalllg woohtr I drytr, hoovy
dulyl.oxlllllonl condlflon, SZ7!,
114-MV.224V.
1111111 root tnd oldlng. blkld

QUALITY HOME - Owner baing translorrod
out of aroa. 5 BR, 3 balh1, illijround 20x40
pool. BoauHiully docoratad. Call now. Reduced
to $128,000
1454

ena!MI•nd IIIV. 304-372·2011 &amp;
372-N42..

NEW USnNGI STOPI THIS IS ITI - 22 acr·
es, 11111, mini tarm . Has pond, bam and lencing
all rlledy lor tomo horses. lncludos 3 badroom
ranch homo wilh Ill batho, dining 100m and
mon. Atlaclted garage and a 32'x48' dolachod
gar11ga, otorago building. PLUS 3 room and
balh apanmanl Ownoro moving out ol eras.
Want sold nowl
t47t

Mlcrowavo • lltnd, good condl·
lion, $50, 114-H2.:1111.

CLOSE TO TOWNinQ, dining, tamiy rooms,
central air. Asking $7~,eoo.

TUPPERS PLAINS.Rice Run Rood·lnstandy appealing Is
lhlo 3 bedroom modular w~h 2 baths. You111ove 1o come
home to cook supper in the beauHiul ~tchen end then ralax
In lronlof lhe fireplace. This is si ~ng on approx. 1.5 acres.
WAS $45,500
NOW $43,500
IIIDDLEPORT·Hamlilon Stroet-Looking lor a nice home
In town. on a quielslreel. This 3 bedroom, 1 112 story home
is lust lhe one. It has a lot of harct.vood floors , fireplace, 2
rul baths, 4 porches. Sits on a comer loland lito home Is
wei cared lor.
$32,000
LANGSYILLE·Haw would ~ou like a 52 acre farm? Well
hen! it it appro1. 45 to 50 acres lanced: Wilh aboulf 0a.cres
~Kable. Afao sitting on It Is a two bedroom !lome w1th a
I replace' and two car garage. Has well water that has never.
gone dr/ Even has a little timber acres. Jual $48,000

oomE

TURNER, Broklr..................................9t2·5092
BRENDA JEFFERS...........................................9t2·305e
OARUNESTEWART..........................................9g2-1315
SANOY BUTCHER..............................................tll2·5371
SHERYLWALTERSJ.Chllhlro............................387-o421
JERRY SPRADUNI.i ...............................(304) 882-34t8

OFFICE.1.............................................................882·225t

NEW usnNO -On Outgan Rd. is this 3 badroom molal eidod ,.nch wilh 2 baths, laundry,
living ""·· dining"'"· 2 car attacltod garage.
Can bo oold with 1 acre nVI or 5 acros mn and
bam. CaiiiOCfay lor m.,.lnlormation.
f4n
RUSSEL D. WOOD
Owner/Broker
Eve.446-4618

O.Wm
Salts Agent

TAMMIE

Eve: 441·1&amp;14

CLOSE INI Enfoy a view ol tho river lrom the
gmt room ol thlslovol~ :. yr. old , 3 bedroom. 3
bath homo wilh family room and finished base·
men!, nino closals, 2 a111 walk-in. Tax lroe tor
nina years. Too many amenities to mention
horo: Call for mo111 lnlo""ation. Asking 80's.
1475

PATRICK A. COCHRAN
Office Manager
Eve. 446-8655

J. MERRILL

CARTER
Broktr/Agent
Eve: 37t-2184

t423 . FARM ON LONG HOLLOW RO. This nome has 2 badroom 2 baths, lving room
dining room. kitchen, acroenod tront porch'
heal pump, central oir, oiO'x30' po;. shod. AI
this and mor11 on 107 oc:rn 11111. Aolring only
$55,500 and owner wiU fin..,.. down pa)'IMnl
Whal moro could you aile lor.
MH
NEW USllNG ON FRANK RD. • A partial
brick ranch on t .034 ac. m.1 with 3 bedrooms
1~. balhs, living room, dining room and
Ono car ganogt attached. Alking only 552,500.
Call today.
1412

klll:hen:

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

PHYLLIS L. MILLER
Salts Agent
Eve. 25&amp;-1136

CATHY A. WRAY
Salta Agent
Eve. 448 •2&amp;&amp;

CYNTHIA J. DRONGOWSKI
SliM Agent
Evt.24Htt7

MARTHA L SMITH
Salts Agent
Eve. 379-2651
CHERYL L. LEMLEY

MetgsCo.Agell
Eve.

742-3171

:

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

Plge--06-sund._y Times Sentinel

54

57

MIICtllaneous

Merchandise

58

liluslcal
Instruments

Farm Suppl re s
&amp; Lrvestock

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Now 11" Scroll aow. Salollho Clarlnet, 1.0wner, 614-446-7822. For Sill: Apl)lu, Yellow I Rid
.,.._ '10" .. to $225. Conn INmpol llkl now uaad 1 Dalloi...,IM-258-6085.
0110, ~04-~lS-4131
IM• fi!Oiorcyclt boola, olzo12
OllllndY f175; 110 ,oond, ooll
Nf.1114'47141211.

55

month. W/CIII I rniii'IUII, 304875-3383 oftori:OOPM.

"l''"

) AICC lllalol•ad Lobi_,_MIIN, 2
Yro. Dld.11ood Palo 1aroocling.
COl Allar t:30P.M. IM-a56-t710.

!;:

.. . . ....- ..

~ ~

-

'"'"

Me ...,..., Pol lolly Plgo,

..

•
•
:
•
•

Drlgonwynd Collory: CFA Por·
114:-• 1141 After 7:00p.m.
Tonk, 2413 Jackoon Avo.
Ploaaonl, 304-675-20113,
tno Tnoplcal ftlh 1 blrdo,
--andouppl110.
l4aoov Jocll Gamloxldo: Advon·
- - iarmlcldol dlalnfoctonl In- - porvo, oollo, ECHO,
lind
Rhino vlru-. Dl~lfocl-nary klnnol bocllrta. RIG Faad I Supply, 61411:14114,
Nckll Paratl Poroonolhy Pluo.

..... a s - Ktnono.

446·1066

Allen C. Wood, Reehor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Reahor/Broker-446-0!171
Moee Canterilury, Realtor 446 3408
Jeanette Moore, Realtor-256-1745
Tim Watton, Realtor- 446·2027

Real Estate General

10 I ACRES
MOSTlY
WOODED - LOCATED IN
OHIO TOWNSHIP. SEVERAL
NICE BUILDING SITES.
$23,000.

Ulllhy

Instruments
I4Midy Aho SU. only UMd air
.....,._ $150, ea11 114-1112-31113
~lpm.

1i188 Fold down hardtop
P1lomlno camper, alr-cond ,
oloopo I, 304-675-4128.

House 1nd t111lltr repair, tltctrlc:al, plumbing, hutlng, car71 Trotwood Travel Trailer, 18 h., pentry, painting, inaldt and out;
614-1192-5858.
$700; 6M·Illl2·2717.

Real Estate General

304..f7~

$200. Snara
Kl 1200 Aftor 4:30 P.M.

1US

Renault

4--door

MW tim &amp; brak11, etc. ell
powtr, 304-175-li2il.

IN GALUPOUS - 3 bedrooms, bath, kilchen , living
room: basement, 21ots, 20Xt50 and 37x150. Call for
:· appointment $14,600.00.
·: REMODELED ONE AND ONE-HALF STORY
HOME - Located on Stata Route 7 al Eureka. 3 bod. · rooms, living room , dining room, kitchen, and bath
. located on 32.9 acros mn. CALL TO SEE !II
· HOME ON STATE ROUTE 553- 11 rooms 4 bod·
· rooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room 2 kitchens
: one in basement, almost 3 acres, fruit' trees, calla~
.. garage and storage building . CALL FOR AN
; APPOINTMENT TO SEE!!I

TWO YEAR OLD FRAME 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 SELL FAST AT $57,900.

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS - Locatad on Rt. 7
(Euroka). 30'X36' blook building wilh storage in base·
man~ 70 n. frontage on Rl. 7. Lot runslo Ohio River
Was .11sed as convenient mart. DRASTICALLY
REDUCED. NOW ONLY $32,000.00.

CONVENIENT LOCATION ON STATE STREET IN
GALLIPOLIS - WALK TO DOWNTOWN SHOPPING,
CHURCH AND SCHOOL. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 STORY
HOME HAS LARGE LIVING ROOM AND DINING
ROOM . EAT·IN KITCHEN , BASEMENT. VERY
AFFORDABLE AT $35,000.

FOR SALE - 40 aero farm located 8 miles off Stale
Roula 14t on Lincoln Pika. The home has 7 rooms
and balh. There is a bam and other outbuilding; aiS&lt;&gt;
a farm pond and tobacco base.

CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP -APPRO X. 25 ACRES WITH
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOME. NICE COUNTRY
SETifNG. $39,500 .

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

REDMAN DOUBLEWIDE IN QUAIL CREEK
PARK -: 6 years old, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths , living
room, dtntng room, kitchen, utility room. Priced .at
$29,900.00.

.'

HOME AND 2 ACRES MIL - 3 bedrooms, t bath ,
' living room, kitchen, fireplace, and unfinished base·
manl PRICED AT $36 ,500.

JM-44W177.

Real Estate General

LOCATED IN GALLIPOUS- Vine Street- 4 rental
units, good income properly. Call for more
· infonnation.

Real Estate General

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village. Call
for mora inlormation.

::&amp;3::'1".:85=2:1·:__
: _ _ _ _ __ Horot Bldgo. 1-8011-352·1045.

Lg. LA, !amity rm., tdt., 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, 2 car
anached gar1~. Lo~ety lOt. This Is a custom bulb
hOme cl very good quality.

cl ownership

1134. BI-I.EVELon

will be all yours to own this beautllully mlinlllned
homo and l&gt;ulldngs. 3 badrms., 2 b..,., oourlly kll. &amp;
l~ng rm .. 24&gt;&lt;32 gorago, 241&lt;38 born &amp; hone sial. 24
ACRES , tobacco bue. AlSO a modem 2 tdm. moth-

110 - 3 ..,_,,

LR, tll·ln kl ., farnly nn. and extra kitchen on lower

level. I cor gor, I IC. mo1. $52,000.

35 - tmmaa.llate ranch with new l~rovernents.
lovely new caipOIIIwouit&lt;&gt;ul. new deCk. J&lt;d 3 years
old, 2 badnns., LR, Iormal cln. rm., kll., encleotdfn&gt;nl
porcn, ol11ce rm. or study and bl!omenl.

-mont.

price

AITENTION HOME BUYERS £ 0 UAL
OPPORTUNITY - NO DOWN PAYMENT - LOW
INTEREST LOANS quality for lhla prog'""' ond
mlli&lt;e you landlord. ModeSI tneoma oan buy In tha
$60s range. Doni miss out Call4 18 8808.

cl $110,000. More than 5,000 sq. H. clllvlng spl08
and targe rms. lhroughoul . Ttlls w~l constructeo
hOml -oners 4 bedrms ., 2 baths , upper and tower
Nvlhg, 2 wb liropaees . family rm.. buln·ln kilchon
w.ballleQHI, 2 car garage. I~ lloof laund ~ .

1753. HoME. C.IIIIN I AlYEA BOITOM overlookIng 0No RIVIF. $37,000, 3 blltm. ranch, full diVIded
-

· 1" bllhl, bulking. Cly.

1831. NEW LISTING - Locking for 5 ac. Mil, 111110
double wide, s1or1ge bulding, located on old SR 160
Porter. C~llor appolntmant. $40,000.

c

• ....

•

•

IF IT WERE PERFECTba
much higher. This 3 badroom,
ranch
hom&lt;~ is priced for quick oale at $49,000. For
this you'll gel a homo wilh a fireplace, a 2 car
garage, aluminum siding, central air and an
above ground pool Batlar cal today.
1501

o-u-T. 4 baO'ooms. Dalh, kl .. DR. LA, lim. rm .. lSI
lloor bednn. &amp; 3 up. EOOosed lrort &amp; bad!: porch. lull
basemert anaehed garage. IIC. m1. $4S,OOO.

1638. A SCENIC QUIET PlACE TO Lift - 3
LOTS IN LAKEVIEW COURT SUBDIVISION.
RESTRICTED, RESIDENTIAL ONLY. CLOSE TO
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER, DRIVE TO WHITE
AD., TO CHAAOLAIS lAKE DA. TO lAKEVIEW
CT.All UTILITIES AVAilABLE.

and appllancoo. Plica IO $75,000. 11808 II I
1ra1or pact or 10110 bul&lt;l. Prlcad $t0,750. 1807. 2 Cll
garago 26x40 ond lei tSOX40. P~cad $21,500.
Proporty can bo bo\9'1 oaporall or logalllar.

·- ....,

~--1117. SWEET £ LOW - Comlortable small 2 bOdrm.

homt. Lot 66'x166', rural water, b. gas heal on state

R--

1102. CLOSE TO RIO GIIANOE cilln ool·
tago ohllng 2..,_., I bllh, good lnouiMIOn, mOlal
slclng. nawtv dooorllled, 1 oui&gt;UIIdlng, gardon opot,
1.61 ac. Mil.. Hoolalp lor mobil homa. ThiS IS for mo
and my gal. Groat locatiOnl $45,000.

tBOS. REDUCE - CLASSY 3 bedroom botclc ranch
hOme , 2 car garage, lite. IIIII, cant. a~. llroplaco,

.....-.rc

H14. LAAGE COMMERCIAL BUILDING on Slate
2 bldrm .. lpl. on 101 floor Possible 3 more

85 General Hauling
aomo oppllanca ropolra. WV
304-578-2388 Ohio 114-441-2454. Wt Do 1 Haullfli Anytlmt,
Anyplact, No Job Too Big Or
Sopite tonk Pumolna SilO~Galllo Too Uttlt.' Blllmlnl Clunlng,
Co. RON EVANS ENTERP•ISES, Gonoral Wort, Any Klndl 614Jockoon, OH 1..00-537-1528.
3'/g-Zl78 Anytlmo.
Real Estate General

1813.
ranch homo wlh
bathS, tamly room,
on 1c. m . Per11d tor
someone wartlng doat to lown, hOspllal, and tar

1803. IF A HOME OF HIGH SffiE and low 11111r&gt;
lenance ll In your future, consldtr fhll 4 bedroom
Cape Cod bf1clc home. Home 61 alulled on 2X aaea
and hU 1900 oq. H. at lvlng spiCO . £1. '-!pump,
cont . air, and flrl(llace. Proplllly, olio, f011Urllt4x22
Dulkfilg for a small bu~ness, ond 36x48 malll buildIng. Cal lor prtco ond location.

enough out to have peace and privity. Call tor
location and pdce.

1123. NEW LISTINQ- READY FOR OCCUI'NITI
- Sal your furnlhn rlgN In Ilia aptc and apan 3 BA 1
bath hOmo wllh LA, lolgo AR, lll·ln klc:htn, garaga,
112 b - . tuel ol fumaco, dty ldloolo on 5 oco.
.,, $40'•-

and

I ac,

1782. CLOSE TO HOSPITAL, centrally located lo
ohO(lf&gt;inQ. Vln)'llkfld, 3 bedroom horne wl1h llvlno
room. klchan, ulllty and bllh , great ne ~orhOOd .
132.000.00.

ln9. VINTON CO. FARM: Located on SR 160.
Rosloral&gt;lo 3 bldnn.• blfct&lt; home W -. Also I

1979 Acaclemy mobile hOme hll 2 bldnnt., k!.,
clnlng aroa, LA and bllh, bam w/1111111, tool shod,

~~:.~~~1~ II

THtl 2-STORY
on Flrll Av-o. 4 I&gt;G"m •• 1X baths.
lomlly ....,, lvlng room, balomonl , ·ond amol I
IICIIn..lllffl. - . ~ ,_,, DCIIIgo on lot Han-.
II
101.

-

hOull, so oc. rM. MooUy u -.

1736. COMMERCIAL

.. . . ..

"""

ltnl

candhlon,

Ill

-SECLUSION AT ITS BESlllf
you're looking for poact and quiet, yel in
Graan Twp. at an affordable price, !hen look no
furlhor. Situated on 4.223 acru, 11111, with small
pond , 3 bedrooms, 2 batho, living room, family
room, dining room and 111191 kitchen, now add
an.above ground pool and 2 car gerago with
shod. We have lllhio for only $42,000. 1605

Mowroy'a

Upholot~ng

..,.Ic-

Ing trl counly .,... 21 )'111'8. Ttlf

bUt In lumhuro upholot~Mg.
tau 304-175-4154 tor troo """
tlmatn.

Real Estate General

SETILE FOR A HOUSE TO LIVE
IN...From the momonl you sloP. into tho largofoyer_you can "feel" your famtly living in this
class1c. Formal living room , dining room, sunny
kitchen, very livable family room, 3 nice bedrooms p_
lus 2 full baths. Storage galore in the
largo attic, 1 car garage, full basement If lhars
t609

located along Rl. 7 offero a paasant way of life.
While the beautiful Ohio Rtver strolls along in
tho fran~ you can enjoy a relaxing dip in tho
inground pool. Well decorated inside with 3
bedrooms, woodwor1&lt; with characlar and a full
basement Garden spot, wrap-around drive·
way, SSO's.
1217

speaks for ·
the pride
home.
full bath , two :.;

deck and nicely la~;~.:~Pe'~~:!=~
to town. Washington
Priced al only $64 ,900 .

REACHING FOR THE TOP? Than thla like
new contemporary home with vaullod coiling ia
for you. Enjoy lho abundance cf space this
beau~. has to offa~. IMQ{Dams, 2Yt baths, for·
mal liv1ng room, dtnin~"'-n. family room and
large oat-in kitchen, beautiful otairtaH and
w~.work , 2 car garage + extra storage; . AI
this Sltuatad on .52 acra , ml1, in Green Twp . 1t1
hard lo lop thio homel See it soon with
Carolyn. $102.500 .
11&amp;01

·:.

III'Vicl,

goragod. 52,000 ml; $13,100. 8144411'141'1
doyo,
446-&amp;452
IVInirtgl.

19111 Z·2B, 5.7 o,.o,
glut,

very

~27

cltln,

$12,500. 304-675-5794.

mpg,

l01utad,

AUTO INSURANCE
coli 814-1112.e677, Dovlo-QIIckol
lnsul'lnct ..
Fifth Attl, blk, IXC
304-675-4138.

AFFORDABI
AT ITS BESTf Oulalanding
homo and v
affordable price. Low
maintenance bri
lltMnt.• featuring 3
bedrooms, 2 balhs, living ~dining oocm,
family room and largo kitchen. If thars nol
enough, add a rivar viaw,m 2 car garage and
salallila dish. You can't pass this up al only
$48,900.
1618

"THE PRETilEST PLACE AROUND" Thars
whaltha owner told us. We have to agree - it
invites commendation. A finely crafted 3 bad·
room homo with living room , dining room, fami·
ly room , largo kitchen and 2 baths. Situalod on
a picturosquo 3 acros, mn, wooded soiling with
access lo largo fishing pond. Own with pride .
$79,000 .
1603

ATIENllON EXECUTIVE$11 Everything you
need and .M~..oome will be found hero !II
Approx. 2, ~,_al.l~"ll oroo. Fonnalliv·
ing room and diniriii'II'Mt-~Y room, 2 kitoh·
ens, 4 bedrooms, 3 ballii'lnd dan or office.
Professionally landscaped large tal inground
pool and 3 car ge~. C~l ~r addti09al infor·
mation and your pnvala vrewrng.
1614

NEW LISTING! H1pplne11 by tho
RoomfuL.. Complately aatisfying 4·5 bod·
room. 2 bath bi-lovol wilh mainlanance fraa
vinyl siding. Large living room &amp; dining room,
hugo family room with pool table, comfortable
kitchen with wooden deck to enjoy your summer meals, on . Nice size lot in groat neighbor·
hood Ia raise children in. Now add a t car
garage and large clo,.ls throughout, avery·
thing your family could want $77.500.
1604

74

1731. UIIQUE 81-lEVEI. with 3 BRa, 3

and alum. siding, kllchan (chlny cao•lnell•l wnh
dlneHt,

(fireplace), utUIIv rm., · LA,
2 c. garage on,. ac1 . Mil .

SYRACUSE· A VERY COMFORTABLE HOME that is
move inlo ready. features 3 bedrooms, carpon, modem
kitchen wilh appliances. A very nice home in· a good
tocaaon. Lei us show you around you'll fe el righl at hom e!
ASKING $34,900
NEW USTING- RED HILL RD.· SIMPLY BEAUnFUL
INSIDE l OUTI 22• acres wilh newer brick ranch home
wilh 3 bedrooms. 2 t/2 baths, carpellhrough-out. attached
2 car geraga, full finished basement, attic space, fireplace,
appliances. also includes boms, pond, and oxlra mobile
home hook-up. Beautiful home lovely locadon ASKING
$139,500

1136. NEW LISTINQ, IN
CLEAN 2 bodroom hOmo wKh ldlchan and dining
•rea, bath, Will tte.t with CIA\ r1nge wibuiHn oven
clthwllhar, dlspoaol, VII)' nice ylr&lt;!lanoad, 30'1,
'

NEW USTING- SR 325 DANVILLE· Mini Farm with 2·3
acres, frame home wilh 2 bedrooms. Features pond. bam,
garage, shed, cellar, chicken hou ... now wiring and new
, ftoonng in houae. DrilledwaterweH. Localod on paved road
in quiet oounlly community. $22,500

- · BEAUTIFUl. BRICK HOME IOcalod In city
tchOof

d~rld.

3 btchomt, 1~ baths, WVIng rOOrrt,

dining room, kllchan, pluo full butmonl. lnground
pool and 2 ear gorago.
•
.
- · EXCELUENT
APARTMENT
BLDO.
INVESTME!m Good money makor IN TOWN. LJugo
lj)l. bldg. will 3 IWO bedroom lpiS.; 2 0111 bedrm.
lfllll., piUS I 00111g1 · wiiA IWO apo~l!llnll. TNs
"""""" hat- .... matnlalnaff. Raducad pdce.

~

··-

~

-

..... . ....,

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

'-

Plymo~h

PRETTY AND PRACTICAL - Skip exterior
painting thio .Ummer and enjoy lho above
ground pool and !IM~Pl porches of thia 3 bodroom, 2 bath ra'littl8ome. The backyard is
fenced and thoro it an oversized 2 car gerago.
And lha price is $54,900.
15011

.

. "' .

-..._.

Ot1nd Voya;-r

LET NATURE 8E YOUR
coun·
try homo on 1.ft!tl'ras. Privacy, four bodrooms, family roM' and one car 1ttached
gerago are just S&lt;&gt;mo of tho feeturos !hat you
will onjoy. Priced at $47,500.
1501

1752.

REDUC~O

110.000.00. GOOD LOCATIOH . .
wllh largo •
LR, OR, kllchon ..-ldlll room, lliCipllonolly t.go
larrily rm., anc:loaad polio ol 11'1311' ooiooo•rg pool
olac. fumoca, AIC, ref., rNI, dlapooal, range ,(eli
ac.
milflroplaca
__
_
_
ovon).
and -·
2 . ._ goraga on 1

HENRY E.a.ELAND- ......,_.. ,...........................8112-1181
,TRACY BRINAGER ......;.....................................949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL-........... .................................. 949-2&amp;60
OFFICE.................................................,_...........992·2259 ·

Vf!ly ni&lt;O 3 BR, 2 balhl, MOCMor (Vtndalo)

;-

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

.~

~··

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

-

WE'VE GOT THE PLACE THAT YOU 'RE
LOOKING FORI CALL TODAY LET US
SHOW YOU YOUR NEW HOMEI

......

MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
coli lt4-H~.e677, Davlo-&lt;l!Jickll
Insurance..
FCH S1l1: 1175 V1rn1ha 500 Full
Wlndohlld, Runa GOOd, $550
614-258-1490.

75

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

Budget TrlntmlniOf'll, U11d &amp;

robulll, llartlng or' $119• 1ronl
whaol d~vo otartlng ol if 19.00
614-245-51177, 114-37J.2213.
Loh Front Fondor And Hotdor
PoMI For 1m Oldomobllo CU1·.
1111 SUpreme. Telephone: 614·
441·7195.

gao llnko, ono ton truok
whllll r1dlltora tloor mats,
alc, Dl RAU1o, R(ploy, WV. 304·
372-3933 or t-273-9329.

79

PRICED T0~.. $57,1100 - Nice 3 bedroom
homo local
liiJiul Slraet. Heal pump ,
family room, doc ."HJIIIII.noighborllood.
City schools. Call today forB information .
171,
DON'T TOUCH A THING - Just move right
into his pampered 3 bedroom, 2 both ranch
wilh care·free brick &amp; vinyl exterior and 2 car
attached garage. Slap inside and soo tho new
carpet, lha largo master suila and the overall
great condition . lnslandy inviting al $64 ,500.

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

11 h MountalnMr lrvc:k Clmptf,

304-t7HOI2.

120 ACRES ... This would ba an axcollanl
place to hunt. fish or just ratu. You have a
largo slockad pond, paslura, limber and 3 bad·
room living tooga. Older bam, fru~ trou and
more. Located on Low Jones Road . Call for
price.
1700

.WON'T LAST LONG! Bo lho first to - lhl1 4
badroom, 3 balh home located close to town.
Firoplaco in living .Mill.. dining room , full fin ·
oshed ba,.menl
2 car garage with
openers. Concreto patio with hoi tub plus
wooden dock. A 111al bargain al $74,500 .

w'lllf'•.

COUNTRY COMFORT - Imagine sitting and
rolaxrng by y_our own private pond and not
hoanng onrttung bul tha fish bitol Very privata
home in Green Township. Over ~ acres of
heavenly bocl&lt; yard , Comfortable home wilh a
kilchon lhat won't quit. Give us 1 caN for mcro
data~·1201
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY fN EXCELLENT
LOCATION - Outolanding potential on this
dnvelflru carry out. Graallocalion along St AI.
35. 3 badroom residence included in oata. lois
of road lronlago. Will include invenlory and
aqurpmont
1513
OUT OF STATE OWNER SAYS " GET AN
OFFERII" Groat polanlial for most' any typo of
bu11nuo. Thll 3,I I 2 oq. ft. building moot
r.conlly broultll in S500.00 per month. 2 bad·
room apartmonl overhead. Bu ilding could be
lra~sformod into rooidonlial property Vliy
easily.
1210

As you can see, we've been busy
selling ... And we can sell yours, too!

f1 Fl. Aluminum 801t Tr~ller
Rabutn B5 HP Morcury 814-4488251.

76

~;·

GREAT IN TOWN LOCAllONI Looking for a
utility building in 1 handy location? Want lo
start a small business or move your present
ana? Gel good visibility wilh this toea lion without paying lhe normal high in·lown pricasl I 124
sq. ft. building wilh 2 finished rooms and bath .
Largo wori&lt;shop and supply room. $39,900.
Owner will consider ,.INng aa a business aiS&lt;&gt; .
Call Davel
1203

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

you'IIW'Itftut

•
-~n· m

ISO&amp;

SHADY LOT. CLOSE TO TOWN - Lolo of
characler and a~rm can bl found in il 1!4
atory home wifVCfalking diolance lo town.
Includes 3 badrooms, largo living room, dining
room and t :.1 b1th1. Full basom ant 3 car
garage wilh oportmenl ovolhood .

PRICE REDUCED TO $U,OOO- Out cf Stole
Ownor SallfANako an offort" Scmoone ia
go01g Ia bag 11'11~ ~ mig, I ao well be
you. Htsilltoand
on owning a 3
bedroom ranch wilh family room ond eat-In
kitchen. Thio homo Is litualod on a largo level
lol within 2 miles of town and has an etoclric
heal pump. CaH lodayl
1500

!a
-n
. . .·~

Motorcycles

1168 Attar 5:;su

p~h ,

•

1801. A 0000 eUY AT $27,1100. EuraiCI. 2·3 BRo.
t balh,,LA, lll·ln kllchen, %basomtnl, gas~· 1
oulbldg. 30~14' approx. on 5.81 PI' . ,_

.... .

.
. '

1183 Suzuki 054 SlrMI Blko,
Sharp, $750 614-3fl'-01138.
1111 Hondo Elllo 250 Motor
Scooter low MI. UU new $700.
811 m 1131 batord pm
1ttl Warrior 350 Mod. Plpo,
Good Condition, EXIra Tlroo, Ex·
tondld Axta~, $2,300. 614-448·

, RACINE·SR 338 Frame home with 2·3 bedrooms . 2 fire·
• place• on appror . 63• acres, well &amp; cistern , barn, equip,
: mont building, oom crib, ~uil trees . paved road. Immediate
po11essionl
· ·

111"1111· - yard. 30's.
1828. NEW LISTING: TNI homo llldllllor 1 Sllllor
home retlrema,. home. Features 3 be«oom, 1 bllh.
living room , large kllchan, t1mlly room, and 1 car
ga111ge. CaN for location and Priced $30,000.

... " . .. ... .

-

LE, Only 33,000 Mlln, 111,300.
114-448-8330.

CONTRACT - P~mo toclllort Easlam A¥1.
Opportur;ty 10 comt&gt;r&gt;e home lnd buolnlss. ONo
Aoer lronlago. Vf!ly rico 3 bodrm, home wlh
apptla/IOOO, tu! buemont Tim Is a money mailing
propos~on. Cd tor""'"-,

kMctltn wlnook, partial basament, 01• lum•ct,

locallon. c-tn.

1817 otdo Dolla 88, VInyl Top ·
Loadldt Exoallonl Condition 1
&amp;14-446-4225, Aftorlp.m.
1988 G11nd Prix •xc cond,
~.700. 304-675-7532 .onor 8:00
PM .
118e Oldl CltrTI, V-8, AC,
Cndoo_ Till. AMIFM Coaoollo.
4Dr, Dk. Bluo, 614-.245-5371 Aftor
7:00P.M.
1114 Oldo Doha 88 Broughom.
2dr, '1-8, All Opllona, 49,000
Mil-. Now Tlrao, 614-448-2300.
1110 NIDin Mulma GXE, excel·

1181

or RESIDENTIAL - LAND

1116. PRICE REDUCED on IN·TOWH prcporly.
C.zy 3-4 BR, I X story hOmo wlh 1X bllhl. LR. AR,

-·

Upholstery

2440.

1183 Bronc'!.. air, auto.1 PS, PB,
MW tim, r.s,800MI., t3500 or
ball otltr, _
614·H2·7733.
1114 Ford tr4, wl1ll opllon1, 1111,
cr~11, dull 111 t1nk1, new
tlr81, power wlndows. locks 6
doore, new Urn, aouthem
INCI&lt;. 304-773-5452.

,

112S. NEW LilTING - 5 acraa ot rollngland In good

87

1911 Ponlloc Flore, V.t, 304-372·
11317 '"" 4:30.
1917 ·Dodgo 11110 35/mpg
11,795. 11187 Ply111outh Ho~zon,
40 mpg, AJC, Si50. 304-t"IS-

73 vans &amp; 4WD's

1754. SECI.UDEO COITAG£ FOR TWO - 2 bodroomo, llrgo LA. tul bath, lll·n kllc:htn. 2 pordlol,
new repon hove boon mode lo make IIIIo a CX&gt;Itlfoll·
lillie home. $20,000.

tit&amp;
CITY - 4
Dalfrooms, 2 balho , living room, dining/kitchen
colli&gt;lned, lull b...monl wlh lamlly room. Coli for

•IIICI:riclan.~

miss outl

For aalo or lroda: 1885 S·10
Btaz~r1 V.t1 II.Momtllc, al~ good
condmon, o3800; 114-1112-.882.

1832. FAMILY HOME Wlh elbow room to 5-P·U-t.&lt;f'.-u

..

Uc.nNd

Rldonour Eloclrlcll, WYD00306, ·
304-t75-1711.

Ron'a TV S.,.loo, apaclollzlng

not enough, in town convenience .

Nnl ucelllnl, new tlrn, campar 1 - , $3000; IM-1112·3252.
1917 Cllo-.y holt ton 34,000
mlloo auto, AJC, AiiifM lopo.
1112 S·10, 4 cy~ 4 opood, $1,500.
1172 c:..:J: !/4 ton, 4x4, 1&amp;00.
tlrm. 3
5-1332.
1917 Ford plck-&lt;~p truck. AC, PS,
aulo., wl tool box.., e cvl., new
llroo, lt4-1112-t359.
1887 Ford R1nger, 4 cyl, 5
opald, good oond, 304-t7S.
61130.
19H Dodgo 1M Low Mlloo,
Aulomollc, Alr1 PS, PB, Runa
Uka - 1 No KIIIOnoblo Oftor
Raluaad, 114-441-9351,
1990 Chaory So10 Tolloa, Will
Soorottoe1 .Toka OVer Paymanta,
814-256-1..,1:

1111. NEGOTIABLE PRICE - Shlrp - T_,uly ,
docorall&lt;f. 1tl01al """· 415 IIIGooma, 3 Dallll, LA,
OR, kl .• utiiY nn., full dl'lkflld basemoln with IMtll)'
rm. 2 car garage, pool and poliO. 1 oc. mo1.

1719. VINTON CO. FARM: Loc*d on SA t60,
Rosloroblo 3 badnn., blk:t&lt; homo
Alao a
1979 A-.ny lllOOIIe homo hll 2 ..,_., kll.,
dining uea. LR and bath, bam wfllato, tool llhad,
c:lllcl&lt;sn house, so ac. .,_Mooltyllablo.

er-In-law home.

routa.$15,000 .
fl27, LARGE 2 STORY HOME on State Route. 3
bidioomt. beth, LA, DR , ktlchen, ol lumaoe, Dam
.... lolgo 101. $23,000.

Muter

Real Estate General

1630. NEW LISTING • LOCATED JUST OFF SA

PARADIS£ -

localed In e country. ExtensNe wor1c
c:ompltttd as follows: new Thermo AJislde wnJDM,
IICUFII)' doorS, steel skiing, heavy roof, klchen,
lite entry e~ended IIIIo lha klchon. 16&gt;53
- . comanl walks and pad. see lhls hOme and Slop

-rclal

18114-wheel drln Toyol1 truck,

oqu1pmon1 · olso 2 bedim. Flinllonl home
. . . . . . II&amp;&gt; and_ ..._31C. m.1.

...~ ••nuo BEDROOM HOM£, 2 BATHS - Roomy

or

R£0UC£D $53.000 - Splendid 111111~ homo.

.

1120. CITY SCHOOLS - CLOSE TO TOWN ond you wllmlsl on lha hol1esl home buy. 9
rcorn ranc11 w111 1u1 cl¥ldod ba3omenl, tg. LR, din.
nn.• aqo!Wod kllchan, 3 bedmiS .• 2 balhs and lsi
ttoor taundly. Fady rcorn w-Iling lillplace on
oowtng 100111. or e~ra badnn. LJugo ser·
v1co door and 2 car gorago. Qlally
bUll homl cntr $60,500.
- IU!IINESS OF YOUR OWN wlh constaro
- . .. LOYtly ro• iiOmO plus separa!e lt.ong
quartera. L.k»nntd for 10 I'IS6deni:S. Afl lumiUre and

- Surprising~ low

RHidonllal

wiring, niW HFVlct or NPIIrl.

1

apaod lranomloton, air oond,
AMifM c-1. dayo 304-t754441avonlnga17S.t762.

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
--·-·- OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
....
1·800-884·1066

.
.

Spt : 30'x40'xl'

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

••er 4:0G

$53i5, caii114-IMII-2181.

LOOKING FOR A NICE BUILDING SITE? THIS ONE IS
ON A BLACKTOP ROAD. HAS GAS, WATER AND
ELECTRIC AVAILABLE. CONVENIENT TO HOLZER
HOSPITAL. OVER AN ACRE. WILL BE SURVEYED
WHEN SOLD. 511,000.

t1S,OOO.

Troml&gt;cina

Bldg

Alratlon Maeors, r1p1 ired. New Painted &amp;MI Skiing &amp; Roofing,
&amp; rt-bulll motortln 1tock, RON 1 ·15'•8' &amp;kUng DOor, 1·3' Sir·
EVANS, JACKSON, OH . HIOO- vlco Ooor, $1~110 Eroclld. Iron

In Z.nlth 1110 ~Icing moll:
other b111nd1. Hou11 calli, 1110

Cylinder,

1i88 Clmuo Z-21, 59,000 miles,

RESIDENCE AND MOBILE HOME PARK- VERY NICE
4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNlRY HOME ON APPROX.
23 ACRES. BACK PORCHES, 2 CAR GARAGE. 8
MOBILE HOME LOTS WITH MOBILE HOMES AND 5
MOBilE LOTS. ALL PRESENTLY RENTEO .
EXCELLENT LOCATION. CALL FOR COMPLETE
DETAILS.

APPROX. 25 ACRES - OLD
HOUSE NEeDS REPAIRS.
SM~
BARN , RURAL
WATER TAP, NICE SITE
FOR NEW HOME OR
MOBILE HOME. OHIO TWP.

Musical

-~-

I

Hltchbaok. Will aac~floa both
for $1500 OBO; 114-247·2532.
1W Clmero Z·28, exc cond,

0 ·t5631

-251:1.

.....

Muat1ng,

Whlla, 3 Spaid. Good Tlraa,
: Fanoy Hub Capo; 114-251-1255,
114-256-1421.
t!l78 Dono 18-455 $1200. t970
ChtYIII~ wlparts car 11500.

ti1W8·

OFFICE : 25 LOCUST ST.

'(!Dung Turkayo l Gtmy'o: Mokal

,

Waterprc»

for plck-&lt;~p INC' In good cond~
lion; 114-1112-23110.
1984 RM~ult 2-door Stclan, new

C i\BUI BY Till'!' POtll)

TIME FIND! SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT.

Qraal Wlllch Dogs I Eol LNo

.......

1168

or night

84

1181 Dodg• Challenger, !tp.,
aood oonaillon SIOO or trada

WATCH THE BOATS ONE THE OHIO 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.

.,.,.,r

HIDOEN TREASURE

Call collect 1-

JET

Times Sentlnei-Page-D7

Home
Improvements

Improvements

Autos for sale •

conlrol,

THIS SPACIOUS HOUSE SETS ON • CITY LOTS - 3
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, SUPER LARGE UVING ROOM
WITH FIREPlACE, FORMAL DINING, DEN, KITCHEN
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE, TRASH COMPACTOR AND
DISHWASHER, FULL BASEMENT, t5'X10' CONCRETE
BASKETBALL COURT, GAS FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR
COND., APPLE, PLUM AND CHERRY lREES,
GARDEN AREA. EXCELLENT BUY AT $62,000.

For s.1t,
Wfoofyo. IM-311-111191, 114-311-

' .

71

81

Home

1181 Rrtblrd, 53,000 mlln, 5

Aoklng $200 Llkao Kldo, 614-3677101.
Puppy Pataca Pal Shop.
:LoCatld In G.C. MIWohY Co. Gill·
lfpolla.- opon. l~41-0404.

·j.~.N.:,~'~: &lt;:~.

I

Transportal ion

Su

cond, AMIFM CltHtte1 crulu

THE RESIDENCE IS A 3 BEDROOM HOME WITH FAMILY ROOM. 2 CAR GARAGE . A ONCE IN A LIFE

0... Whh Orongo P*ld $350,

.,;.-~~*"'"'

81

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Unconditional Ut.llm1 guaran·
t• Local rtfll'llf'ICH furnished.

32 Loo:ust Street, Gallipolis

24 ACRES MIL HAS BEAUTIFUL WOODED AREA, POND AND CABIN COMPLETE WITH FIREPLACE.

ul\..,.,::r!!'"
. ............

G ~ LLIPOLIS,

81

Wood 2(ea{ty, Inc.

COUNTRY ESTATE NEAR THE CITY

IU!LOCATION

AUDREY F. CAIIADAY
REALTOR ·l-16 - 3636
HARY P. FLOYD
REALTOR ·1 ·:6 - 3383

campers&amp;

79

&amp; Grain

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

1180 Uncotn Towne Clr, loldtd,
$1,000. 614-441-4731.

INVESTMENT PROPI:RTII);S
WJ!S • APPRAISALS

-.IM-311-115t

Hay

Motor Homes

PM.

FARMS

Cockat•Uo: roro ootoro. lama,
llaldmMIIam Pion,. Paklll;
!land fad pooch tocld Lo¥1

lklndy

Spaclol Feodor Cllt Salol
Alhono Llvotock Sol•1 US 50
Will, Atblny, Ohio. Tnurodoy
SOptomber 24, 1812, AI 1:00 P.M.
All Conolanmenla Woloomol
Uvootock .locoptod Slartlng AI
W~ar 4 P.M. To tO l!M.
Hauling Available. 614-5112·2322,
Or lf4.U8.3531.

64

1!178 Marcury Zaphar For Sale,
6t4-146-7140.
1171 Buick LoSobro, SIW or
belt oHII', call&amp;14·il2·3113 after
6pm.
1980 Datson 280 ZX, 5 aptad, air

RESIDENTlAL-COMMERClAL

M1-4040-

Pomeroy-Middleport~lllpolls,

&amp;M-256-6160 IHvt number.

ANY HOUR

pjtlifn lllllllo, Hlmoloro. GOr·
ll!llo, IJr*, Puppy Poloco, 114-

ST

Real Estate General

446•3636

Go; 411atoo, aFamatoa,I14-3J3.

-

Glilllo1 Groot On Trollo, Gooo
IIOOdiOIOI, I1,200. 11447W832.

63 Livestock
:.:........;;;.;.~;..:._- .

Realty

AICC Roglat- Cockar

:::'"'~·-·
MC -lion Pupo, ANdy To

JIIMbl•

Reglltared Du1rt1r Har11 M1r11

_FALL SPECIAL SALE
.
Tuolldoy • Sop~emblr 22 - 1:00
P.M. Along Whh Rogulor Sale:
CIIVN, Y01~1na0. l l Yr. Old •
All Brolda Clllli To Bl Brought
In Ooy Of SOlo. Trucking Sorvlct
Avolloblo. MARIEITA UVESo
TOCK SA~E COMPANYP.O. Box
333, Marietta, Oh. Locattd In
WHivlow- Phonl 114·3J3.
08870onald L Hlrt, Jr. Mgr.

.

.

~

. ;i''

-and 8uiiDIY Shop-Pal
-Ina.
All IWtidt,
..,.. Ptl Food
Daalor. ullo
Watib. Col114-448-0231.

Livestock

Rogllllorod Fuii·Bioodld 15
Month Llmouoln Bull. Roglalorod Puro Brad 18 Month
Umouo!n Hollar Sato. 64-258·
ttll

Real Estate General

Real Estate Genei al

1112

•.
Canaday
"

·''" ··

__,;·

. ::.~--:

Pete for sale

Farm Equipment

For Sale: Farmou H Troclor Wtlh
3 Point Hitch, Hoy I Groin
Elevltor, Mln1.1ra SP!Udln,
61 Farm Eq!Jipmtnt
~-Plckaro, Now kiN I Ollvar,
....,. Equlponanl. Howa'a Fann
lkuah ho8l. bol bled., bock MRdachll!lry, Rl. 124; I lfayhaw
lrid bait .,..... Con
deliver, &amp;14-M~.
' ~=:"'"· ~. Pho!oo: 114-

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

.

4, -

I

Good Uald Ctorlnal, Excallonl
Condhlon, 114-318-11118.

Building
Supplies

S6

Potltou tar 11111 $10
hundrld, colll14-i85-421I

61

63

1992

September 20, 1992

t

....
=-·

REAL FS IroE 1l'C
446~44

--

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER· 446·9555
Loretta McDade- 446·7'729 ·
Carolyn Wasch - 441·1007
B. J. Hairston - 446-4240
Sonny Games - 446·2707
. ••.. .-..·

�1992

_OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

·Annual Farm~CityDay big success
'
Gallili County Farm Bureau at the Roach a'nd Brad Ray, but -wne'
Issue 5 Labeling l,aw stop and Or. glad ro have them tl!ere j11$1. in ~- ,'
Allan Boster and Fred Dee! at the · The GallipoliJ Daily Tribune :
and WJI;H-WGTR Radio Station
beef and conswner quality stop
The exhibitors· and demonstra- did ~~fine i9b of co~g the event,.
Coastance Whtlt Is with the&gt;
IOfS niade for a festive atmosphere.
Gallla
County Soli and Water .
'We wish to thank Jividen' s Farm
Conaervatlon
District.
·
Equipment, and Dean Annstrong
Farm Equipment for providing
equipment and staff to show vari. '
ous pieces of farming and gardening equipment.
·
The children attending were
entertained by Kristi Eblin of
Samual Boss¢ Memorial Library
doing the story telling.
.
The rescue demonstration put on
by the Gallia County EMS Rescue
SQ.W!d showed various tecbniques
usmg air bags to simulatJ: the raising of a tractor off of' a person
trapped qiuler a tire. They also used
FROM s4.50 TO ~0.00
the 'Jaws of Life" in connection
ANY SIZE • ANY COLOR
with the air bags to demonstrate
how a person could be rescued .
•Yesterday's Chevro~t
from a com picker. Those demon'
strations remmded those of u5 who
•Che¥y Truck •Bow T11
work with farm equipment and any
•Yrmdshield Logos •
heavy equi~ment that safety is
essential. This is especially imporany vehide
tant to know as we enter the hm:·
vest ~n and concerns for farm
eSpray .Mask for custom
safety increase at this time of year.
paint jobs ·
·
Rescue members Tim Miller)eff
Roach. Brad Ray and Steve Shqrt
•Air Brushed Heartbeat ·
are all EMTs and Roy Jones is a
paramedic.
'·
Items·
Our thanks to the Ohio Valley
Visitors Center Director Kim
•Ford Logos
Sheets and the Gallia County
•Custom l:icense Plates
Chamber of Commerce Executive
Secretary Sharon Bowman for
assisting with the preview tour on
Thursday and being the grill cooks.
The safety of the wagon tours
•Computer Cut Vinyl
was well supei'vised by Deputies
•Any Type Style •
Pearl Comer and Jimmy Spears of
the Gallia County Sheriffs DepartAny.Color
ment
·we want to recognize thp, new
•Office Yfmdows
River Valley High School· FFA
•Eqlipment
members Ben McGuire and Jason
Shrives that assisted with the park-

By CoDslance S. White
GALLIPOL.I S- The lOth Annu•
al Farm City Day waS a vl:ly successful event.
We are fortunate to have flll'llling families lite"Thelma and Merrill Rose and theil; son Jim who was
host for this major agricultural
event
Many hours of preparation are
spept !)y the host family. Only
through the willingness of the·host
family to show their farm, is this
major undertaking able to become
a ~ity. We th;mk them for all the
16ng hours and hard work they put
, in to make the day such a: success
Without the support of the many
who contribute
time and tal·
ents to the event, it just wouldn't be
possible. Special· ~ go to the
major financial supporters Ohio
Valley Bank; .Star Bank, Unity
Savings &amp;: Loan, and Bank One.
Other contributors were Gallia
County Faim Bureau, Gallia Coun' may win a $5 prlze_trom the · ty Dauy Promotion Committee,
45631, and you
MYSTERY
This week's mystery
Valley Bell, Milk Maroting,Inc.,
Ohio Valley Publishing f;o.l.uve your name,
featured by the Galli&amp; Soil and Water
McDonald's and Brown's !GA.
address and telephone number with yoar card
; District, is located somewhere in
As always, the Gallia County
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. All
Individuals wishing to particiCommissioners and their wives and
coates! entries should -lie, turned ill to the uewseontest may do so by guessing
families did a great job of satisfypaper office by 4 p.m. eac!J Wedntaday. In ease
f•r~m'• oWller. Just mall, or drop orr your
ing eyer.yone's thirst with their
or a tie, the wiuuer will be choaell by lottery.
· Daily Seutinel, 111 Court St.,
lemonade.
Next week, a Mei&amp;s Couaty farm WUI be feaOhio, 45769, or the GaUipolis Daily
Jacki Graham-OCES was instrutured by the Meigs SoU and Water Coilservation.
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
mental in organizing the members
District.
of the Gallia County Homemakers
Extension Club, Gallia County
Farm Bureau Youth and COO{'Cr&amp;·
tive Extension Staff who asststed
with serving the Beef Sandwiches.
Those serving beef sandwiches
were Helena Lear, Annabelle Fellure, Janette Elliott, Edie Duncan,
;Patty Graham, Paul Shoemaker,
diny can result in an unnecessary Inc .• say there are a few procedures Mike Shoemaker, Jacki Gr.aham
loss of efficiency and can damage 'you,can do at the beginrung of eal:h and Debbie Hughes.
the furnace. "Consumers gencrally heating season to ensure ·a !!lOre
Star Bank provided workers
.
don't realize they play a vital role comfortable winter.
Barb Coleman and Elizabeth RumI. BEFORE PERFORMING ley for the day to serve the bean
in making sure their heating sysMIT
MAINTEN:ANCE, BE SURE soup which. was cooked \IY Jim
tems operate at peak performance
TO
TIJRN
OFF THE P0WER TO H9ward, Gallia SWCD Supervisor,
to maximize home comfort and
THE UNIT AND WAIT FOR THE and Vlfgil Carr
money savings," said Yates.
.
Although it's best. if a qualified BLOWER TO STOP!
The beef was processed by Barr
2. Always begin each new heat· Custom Meats and cooked by Galservice technician handles major
maintenance tasks on your furnace ing season with a clean filter in the lia SWCD Supervisors Rob Massie instractors Jim Walker, Tom Pope
or heat pump, service expens at furnace and check filter monthly and Paul Duncan. The ice cream and Bill Holcomb much success
18 BERGER AVENUE
international heating and cooling throlighout the winter. Dirty filters and milk was served by members this year.
.
Luckily, we didn't need the serGAWPOUS, OHIO
manufacturer, Lennox lndustries should be replaced or cleaned of the Gallia County Dairy Promoimmll!liately to prevent equipment tion Committee and Valley Bell vices of the Gallia County Emer446-1968
froril wotking harder, which ~ults staff. Our thanks to Lori Lee gency Medical Service team of Jeff ·
in energy waste and possible. inter- Carmichael Lisa Mills, Ralph
nal damage.
Hutchinson and Dinah Myers
3. Visually inspect the blower
A lot of neighbors and friends
comparUDent before eaeh heating provided additional tractors and
season. Use a vacuum to remove wagon for the tours. Those pm:ticiany dirt or dust, which can result in pating were George Woodward,
imp~oper perrormance and lowDon Pope, Phil Pope, Mike Whit·
Big Bluestem, Little Bluestem, and effictency operallon..
By EDWARD VOLLBORN
taker, Lloyd Wood, Bill Carter;
Indiangrass.
We
saw
strands
of
· GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio Agri ~
4. Check the area surrounding Henry Myers, Phil Nisly. Mike
urk~;~,
cultural Statistics Service continues switchgrass capable of producing 4 the furnace for materials that could Hughes and Rob Massie.
.•
au.LU.
.• to rank the Ohio com crop good to tons of hay in one cutting situation . easily burn. Remove boxes, rags,
Businesses and agencies assistWarm-season
grasses
stan
growth
· excellent. As of· this past Monday
furniture, etc. This is a fire hazard!
ing with equipment were: Ball Fur·,an estimated 5 percent of the Ohio about one month later in spring
S. Occasionally check the chim- niture, Skaggs Appliance Service,_
t;em crop was mature. Silage bar~ than our current cool-season ~s­ ney and. flue pipe coooections for
Evans Farms, Inc .. 0. 0.
CAROLL SNOWDEN
··"' ves~ haS began in earnest. There es. As a resul~ spring soil moiSture tightness, bloclcage or loose con- · Bob
Mcintyre
Park
Dislrict,
the
Gallia
342
Second Av..oGalllpolhl .
·••.were even some reports of farmers is conserved and used from June I nections. If you think it needs County Litter Control, Farm Credit
Ph.
448-4290
• Home 446 4518
· cqr~~bining high moisture com in to September I. Warm-season cleaning or repair, ca1l your service
Services
and
Galfipolis
Vault
Comceutral Ohio. Many of the local grasses (Switchgrass, Bluestem, representative.
pany.
-·tobacco farmers are finishing their etc.) establish ·very slowly but if
6. Set t~e thermostat on
-STATE FARM
We are grateful for the particibarvest..
.
handled properly will last for many "HEAT" .and move the setting
Occasionally we get calls from years. Native, grass seed quality is above room temperature. Listen 10 pation of our tour speakers -Thelma Rose and Lawrence Burdell at
· ~le interested in the Wild Horse measured on a "Pure Live Seed"
the fw:nace for any unusual sounds the Farm"History stop, Cindy Jenk·
(PLS)
basis.
PLS
includes
percent
Adoption Program. I just received
and call your service representative
ins-District Forester at the Econotification that some 125 horses germination and percent purity . if you suspect problems.
. .
nomic Development sto~. Patty
·,·will be available at the stockyards Native grasses are being looked at
7. Check into low-co~ preventa· Dyer-District ConservationiSt at the
INSURANC 'E . Like a good neighbor.
,in Ripley, West Virginia on Octo- as a forage to suppon the nutrition live maintenance agreements. Most
®
Pond
and
Spring
Development
needs
of
local
beef
herds
during
the
State Farm is there.
ber 3· and 4. Questions should be
contractors, such as independent stop, Ed Vollbom-Ohio Cooperamid-summer
time
period
when
we
addressed to the Depanment of the
Lennox dealerships, offer some
State Farm Insurance COmpan1es • Home OfllteS B190m1nQ1on. llhnOlS
Interior Offtee in Milwaukee, Wis- have problems with both quantity type of "planned service" agree-· tive Extension Service at the hay
and quality of the grasses we now ments guaranteeing regularly and forage S':9Jl.
leonsin at414-297.,4433.
Janeue Elliott and Edie BosticI was privileged earlier Ibis usc. Both Graham and Ludwig are scheduled, year-round equipment
· week to be a·pan of a small group expected to be present at the Graz- maintenance.
'to tour field size p!antings of native ing Seminar to be held on Satur'
· i!~SIOS in'IOuth-central Ohio. day, November 7 in Wood Hall on
, · ~y of tl)e plantings. are 10-12 the campus of the University of Rio
· -~ old and arc switchgrass of the Grande. Call for details.
~II variety. Mr. David Gra- · A reminder of the 1992 Ohio
, · ' ~ IDd Mr. Gary Ludwig of the Farm Science Review to be held
September 22-24. Advance tickets
' ii11.10 Department of Natural are
available at Ohio County
&lt;Resources have been integrating
Extension
Offices through the close
·, '11ative grasses into their manage ~
1
of
office
on
Monday. September
'ment plan. They have excellent
Edward M. Vollborn is GaUia
records of cultural practices.
County
Extension Agent, AgriWASHINGTON (AP) - The
'Oilier native grasses that we saw
culture.
phrase
"busy as a bee" has
, ~ere Cav~-in·IW,l;J Sw!J~hgrass,
acquired new meaning for agricul~~~~~-=~------~
tural researchers who are putting
LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
the industrious insects to work proMineral .Wells, WV
teCting U.S. crops along with polliSeptember 12, 1992
~................. $21,073
nating them.
SrocK STEERS:
Taking advanta~e of the bee's
Dlscount.....................-2,250
59.00-117.00
.. ., ~under
excellent
worlc habtts, Agricultural
60.00-108.00
,, 300-500
Research Service scientists are
50.00-88.50
S00-700
enlisting it to batd~ fire blight, a
48.00-78.00
800-over
bacterial disease that affects pears
YOUR
STOCK HEIFERS: ·
and
apples,
and
earworms,
which
60.00-98.50
300-under
COST •
auaclc corn and cotton.
55.00-99.00
300-500
"Here's an ideal vehicle that is
50.00-88.00
S00-700
going
right where we want the bio47.50-69.25
800-over
logical
eonuol agent to go," Harry
STQCK BULLS:
R.
Gross,
an ARS entomologist in
300-under
53.00-112.00
.
T
ifton,
Ga.,
said in describing
300-500
51.00-100.00
experiments
using
bees to carry
.500-700
51.00-92.00
into
fielcls
a
natural
virus that
47:50-61.75
auacks earworms.
360.00-940.00
Qross was working with biolog1992 GRiND
38.50-63.50
ical
conuol
agents
against
the
ear310.00-666.00
worm and watching bees busily
lol!ded, anti lock brakel.
forage for nectar in a field of crim45.00-54.50
son clover. It dawned on him that
38.00-45.00
the bees would be ideal couriers of
25.00-37.00
bioconuol agents.
In e~ents with a bee-couri94.50-103.00
QI' techruque deviJed by Gross and
86.75-93.00
his colleagues, 70 percent to 90
78.00-85.00
lJCitent of the earworm larvae died.
That compared to a mortality rate
35.00-50,00
of 10 pen:ens to IS percen{ for lar19.00-25.50
vae put on dOYcr llead.s not visited
45.00-131.50
by viruso(811')'ing bees.
35.00-61.00
Earworms feed on clover and
65.00~130.00
other early season plants before
they move on 10 cotton, com and
'
24.00-36.00
other crops.
.
.
21.00-31.50
Johri B. Vandenberg, a bee
21.00-31.00
expen with ARS in Logan, Utah,
19.00-21.00
and Sherman V. Thomson, a plant ·
29.00-44.00
pathologist at Uta,h Slale Universi- ·
Tact 6 PM; Horses 8 PM.
ty, ~ using ~ in exPeriments ·
for bioconlrol of lire bJiiliL
. . .

Ohio Lottery

Bengals lose
game in final
seconds 24-23

Pick 3:
586

Pick 4:
Super Lotto:
8-14-18-41-46-47
Kicker:
678810

PageS

Low tonight In mld-Ms.
Showel'5. Tuesd•y, high In 70s.

AUTOMOBILE
•:tit_

----

meir

DECALS .

,ARM-

'ps offered for maximizing
orne comfort for winter ·

1 Section, 10 Pageo 25 ..,II .
AMultlmedlo Inc. Newspapet'

SIGNS

~~~~:f:~~:~:~s~g

Auto Trim Center

'------":"""---.....1

Flashes

show Ohio corn crop
good to excellent

FACE PAINTING • Sltlrin Nug&amp;ud oiTered
free race painting to children attending Saturday's Catfish Festival in Middleport. Here,
Jenny Chapman, 7, bas a design or her own

By·JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Starr
In what some see as a conllict of
interest, a commissioner of the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio (PUCO) is also on the board
of directors of an organization
actively opposed to installing
scrubbers at the Gavin plant in
Cheshire.
Ashley Brown's name is listed
as a member of the Washington,
D .C.~based Center for Clean Air
Policy's board of directors, accord~
ing to a press release from the
organization dated August 14.
The press release is titled "AEP
Can't Wait for PUCO to Decide"
and criticizes the decision by
American Electric Power to install
scrubbers at the Gavin plant.
Brown, one of live PUCO com ~
missioners deciding if American
Electric Power can install scrubbers
at the Gavin plant, said Monday

ODEL CLEARANCE
.

The contract between the El\Stern Local School Board and the
district's teachers was extended
when the board met in regular session last week.
The extension between the
board and the Eastern Local Educa·
lion Association was extended
from September I through and
including August 31, 1993.
The board employed the follow·
ing as substitute teachers for the
1992-93 school year on an as-need' ed basis: Ronald Juuon, Ellen
Waught, Kirk Reed, Barry Haynes,
Joanna Weaver and Nancy
Wachter.
· The following were employed
as class advjsors for the 1992-93
school year on a supplemental contract: Nancy Larkins, 9th grade;
Dave Barr, lOth grade; Donna
Wolf, lith graile; and Jim Huff, 12
grade. Scou Wolfe was hired as the
reserve and varsity high school
girls' baslcctball coach, Paul Brannon as junior high girls' basketball
coach, and Tammy Capehart as
junior high cheerleader advisor.

a·o,NNEVILLE

Debates•.••••••••••" ••••••••-1 ,250

$17,573

1992 GRAND

1992 BUICK

AMS

CENTURY

PRII4 DR. -·

'11,900

'11,990

... 3,400

Out-of·Town Price 01 I New Iuick or Pontiac
If Given the Claancel ·

~

__ _.........

-·-'

•

I

Dennis Eichinger was employed,
on a supplemental contract, as
junior G4&amp;gh boys basketball
coach.
Leonard Koenig, Jr ., was
employed as a substitute maintenance custodian. Sandra Needs was
hired as a Chapter I instructor.
The board approved Lori Hens ~
Icy as a volunteer assistant junior
high cheerleader advisor.
A purchase services agreement
was approved between Connie
Rankin and the Eastern Local
Boaro of Education for the purpose
of providing transportation for
Mary Rankin on a twice-weekly
basis to and from Western Hills
Rehabilitation Center at a rate of 25
cents per mile.
The board also:
- Approved the amount of
$930.20 as the tuition rate for the
school year;
- Approved the disposal or sale
of equipment;
- Approved a Worlc Experience
Program Agreement with the Ohio
Depanment of Human Services;

.--Local brief-____,

GUARANTEED lOW PRICES ·We Will Meet Any

.

morning he does not consider his
position with the CCAP as a conflict of interest
Brown was critical of those
bringing up his position wit!\ the
CCAP as an issue. He said he filed
a disclosure concerning his membership on the CCAP board and
does not participate with the CCAP
as far as the scrubbers arc concerned.
Brown said he intends to vote
on the scrubber issue as a member
ofthePUCO.
However, Brown pointed out
that no complaints or protests have
been filed concerning his participation in the scrubber decision.
If somebody protests, I'll consider abstaining from voting, he
added.
State Representative Jerry W.
Krupinski (98th District), chairman
of the House Select Committee on
the Federal Clean Air Act, said

Monday morning there would cct·
lainly appear to be a conflict.
Krupinski said the issue raises
an ethical question because it
would appear as if Brown is plannin~ to vote on his own wilnesses'
testtmony.
"I trust Ashley Brown to act and
react accordingly," Krupinski said.
"He's professional enough to know
what he has to do."
In the past, Brown has been
seen as a "friend of coal," Krupins·
ki said. I feel he is knowledgeable,
objective and will back his decision
with factual information.
"He (Brown) does his homework," Krupinski said.
Krupinski said he is convinced
that AEP has submitted the least~
cost option and added that the
scrubbers will probably be
approved with or wtthout Brown's
support

Eastern board extends teachers' contract

BIA1 tBE 92 PRICI INCRIASII
1992 PONT

QUEEN AMY • Amy Rouse of Middleport,
center, will represent her home community as
1992 Catrtsb Festival Queen in tbe year ahead,
arter being crowned on Saturday. She is pic-

PUCO official a member
of anti-scrubber group

"See me for a11·
J.'D
J
ds ,
msurance nee .

Bees used
in research
project

choosing painted, as ·
youngsters wait in
line to receive tbeir own custom paiot job. (Sentinel photo by Brian J. Reed)

Youth in,serious condition
A Middleport youth remains in serious condition in the intensive
care unit at Grant Medical Center, Columbus, for treatment of a
head injury suffered in a fall Saturday nighL
J. R. Blackwell, whose address was given as 277 Lincoln St.,
Middleport, was taken by Life Flight to Grant at 10:17 p.m. after
first being taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital for emergency
treatmenL
The Middlepon unit of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service was called to the Meigs Junior High School football field at
9:13 p.m. The EMS reponed that Blackwell had fallen from the
bleachers.
- .

·--

- Set the next regular meeting of
the hoard for October 21 at 7 p.m.
at the cafeteria at Riverview
School.
Present were S. Ray Karr, President; Jim Smith, Vice President:
and members Ron Eastman , Bill
Hannum and Mike Martin.

lured with Julianne Buck or Pomeroy, l!rst runner-up and Miss Congeuiality_,.. lert, and
Stephanie Scott, Miss Ohio Rivet Valley, who
assisted in the pageant. (Sentinel photo by Brian
J, Reed)

Amy Rouse

is crowned
festival queen

CRAFT DEMONSTRATIONS • Quilting, tole painting and
chair caning were among tbe cral'ls demonstrated in Dave Diles
Park during Saturday's Catfish Festival in Middleport. Here,
Mary Wise demonstrates chair caning to Mayor Fred HolTman
and his wife,.Pauline. (Sentinel photo by Brian J, Reed)

Recycle Day set Saturday
at Meigs High School
Meigs County will have an
opportunity to participate in an
Environmental Awareness and
Recycle Day at Meigs High School
on Saturday, from 9 am. 10 I p.m.

Residents wiU be able 10 recycle
several difficult items, such as used
motor oil, tires, batteries, glass, No.
2 plastic, and cenain types of major
Continued on page 3

The crowning of Amy Rouse as
Catfish Festival Queen, plenty of
entertainment and other sites and
sounds helped make Middleport's
Catfish Festival a success on Satur' day.
Rouse, 19, was one of six candidates to participate in the festival's
first-ever queen contest Julianne
Buck of Pomeroy was named first
runner-up and Miss Congeniality in
the pageant.
Amy, a Middleport resident, is
the daughter of Chris Rouse. She is
about to enter her sophomore year
at Ohio University, where she is
studying to become a secondary
education teacher. She is about to
audition for the school's glee club.
She attends the Middleport First
Baptist Church.
Buck, 18, is a resident of
Pomeroy, and the daughter of
·Roben Buck and Debra Buck. She
attends the Trinity Congregational
Church in Pomeroy. and is a member of the youth group and teen
choir at Middleport Church of
Christ. She attends the University
of Akron.
Other candidates for ihe ti tic
were Nora Eastman, Angie Searles,
Linda Chapman and Mindy Harris.
A host of performers, including
daggers and other dancers, singers
and instrumentalists, and the
Southern Cheerleaders kept the
Continued on page 3

Quayle denies strings were pulled to avoid draft
CHICAGO (AP) - Bill Clinton
sharpened his attack on President
Bush's handling of the economy as
he hunted votes in the great battle·
ground of the Midwest, calling
Bush afraid to debate over his ''donothing" record.
As the Clinton camp unleashed
the campaign's ili'St auack ad Sunday - a spot using video clips of
Bush to portray him as ~)lind to the
recession - Vice President Dan
Quayle was on the defensive about
his enrollment in the National
Guard in 1969.
Quayle acknowledged that join·
ing the Indiana guard lessened the
risk of being sent to Vietnam. But
he denied strings were pulled on
his behalf and pressed anew his
charge that Clin10n hasn't told all
about how he avoided the military.
Clinton was campaigning in
Chicago today to pick up the back·
ing of business leaders, following a
Sunday night voter registration
rally to a predominantly black
crowd in the !Uinois city.
Fresh polls over the weekend
showed Clinton holding comfortable leads in several battleground
states and running dead even in
Indiana - Quayle's home state
and a place that hasn't fone Democratic in a prcsidentia race since

1964.
Clinton began his Sunday in
Macomb County, Mich., home of
many scxalled Reagan Democrats,
where he pitched populist economic themes and hammered Bush for
not offering an economic plan until
10 days ago.
"Too little too late," Clinton
cracked, noting that Bush served up
the plan some SO days before the
election and more than 1,300 days
after taking office.
"This is a do-nothing adminis·
tration that will do nothing again
for four more years if we're foolish
enough to give it to them," Clinton
said.
He chided Bush for not agreeing
to debates yet. Tonight, Clinton
was heading baclt to Michigan to
be in place for the proposed, and
then canceled, first debate with
Bush that had been set Cor Tuesday.
Michigan has 18 electoral votes:
Illinois 22. To both the largely
white crowd in Michigan and the
black audience in Chicago, Clinton
preached racial harmony.
"They're just like you," Clinton said in Chicago of his earlier
visit ro suburbia. "They're working harder for less money . ... They
don't know if they can send their
kids to college. They're mad when

President Bush vetoes the family
leave law."
Quayle, appearing on NBCTV's "Meet the Press," said "a lot
of factors" went into his decision
to join the Guard upon graduating
from DePauw University in May
1969 and losing his student deferment.
Pressed on whether his main
motivation was to avoid being sent
to fight in Vietnam, Quayle said,
''Wbcn !looked at all the options, I
wanted to join the reserves.''
"'Of course you have much,
much less of a chance to go to
Vietnam" in the Guard, Quayle
added.
"I never asked for any special
treatment," he said . "No rules
were broken, no regulations bro~
ken. There were openings. Thousands of people joined the Indiana
National Guard in the year 1969.
•· just like I did.'.'
The New York Times , in a
lengthy article re-examining how
Quayle got into the G~. t;eported
Sunday there was "a strikmg pattern of favoritism" on how Quayle

and others got into an elite headquarters unit.
But Quayle said his draft status
had been examined in 1988 and
now the issue was "the truthfulness or the lack thereof of Bill
Clinton."
Clinton "has not told the truth.
He has vacillated. He has dodged
this issue," Quayle charged.
President Bush, returning from a
weekend in Camp David, Md., on
Sunday, said Quayle "certainly
has" answered all the questions
about his miliUJry record.
Clinton put up two new ads in
about 20 battleground states,
including one titled "Curtains,"
that shows Bush's 1988 campaign
promise 10 create 30 million new
JObS.
It twice shows Bush offering
rosy talk about the economy,
including a 1991 clip in whi~h
Bush say~, ''I'm not prcpared•to

say we•rc tn a recession.''
:
Each Bush statement is followed
by a narrator pointing out increases
in uncmploymen~ or Bush' veto of
a bill to extend jobless benefits.
.,

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