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                  <text>Ohio

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MacGyver 1,1
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a World Today
QJI Prince Valiant
6:05 til Throe's Coinpony
6:30 (]) D II» NBC Newt E;l
(!) Shlr Seorch
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into the murder of a woman
who mal! till be alive.
Mlntr~

Urkel spoils Laura's data by

attaching himself to her with

glue. Stereo. 1;1
I!) 11) Woahlngton WHk In
Review Stereo. C
®lllil illJD Ootifon Polace
Stereo: 1f1 .
(I] CD America's Most

Wented A man is accused of
killing his aunt; a search lor
a missing pe:rson. Stereo. r;J
II)

Murder, She Wrote Q

a Crook and ChaH
a PrlmeNewa 1:1

1D MOVIE: Tho Pistol: l'llt

Birth Of I Ltgtnd (G) (2:00)
Stereo.

8:05 (1) MOYIE: l'llt Shadow
Riders (1 :55)
8:30 (]) D 11» What Happonld?
(Premiere) The plane crash in
that killed Rick Nelson is

examined. Stereo. 1;1
tiiD (J) CJ Step by Step
Carol talks with JT's teacher
aoout his problems at
school. Stereo. Q
II) 11) ~~~ Stro&lt;it WHk
Stereo.
®I Cil
Ill Major Dad
(Season Premiere) The Major
tries to bond with his father.

Stereo. £;1
9:00 (]) U II» Round Ttbll Wade
is emotional due to his

oil-duty shooting; Rhea's

LOOK'S LIKE: 11'5 GOINS
TO 61: ANOTHER ONe OF
TH05e: LONS-, t:OL..L DA't15.

cousin comes lo Stereo. []

tiiiD (J) a Dlnouurs Fran
eKplains the mat~ritualto

Robbie. Stereo.
I!) 11) ... Talking
Froat The 1992

David

vice-presidential candidates ,
Dan Ou;gla and AI Gore.

Stereo.

Ill Dotlgning
Women (Season Premiere)

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Julia bets her share of

Sugarbaker's. Stereo. a_

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(2:00)
a Noahvlllo Now Stereo.
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9:30 wa (J) a camp Wilder
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The risk
was needless

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Vulnerable: Both
Dealer. South

By Phillip Alder

Some writers rely heavily on th eir

West

2 NT

Pa.&gt;s

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iustify hb posi:ion, will unneces~aril y
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S..uth

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All pass

Opemng lead: • 6
L.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,

to alter someone else's drart .~
· 1
When South looked up on today's

deal. he found that he had gone down_ quren.l Tnerelore. South played "

Buj 1f rmh· he had counled the noun.. . heart to dummy's ace and fin(:~d thE:

I his tricks/ V'ith an adverb ("arefully). club jack. However. West won wsth u.e
he would ~zve avmdcd " "ff~rmg an- queen and cashed his ~wo spade winother noun (defc:lt).
South's rebi~ of ~wo

nc.:rump

ners· one down.
So.uth had four top ~ricks outside

l' sh,ow.o118-19 posnts. ThiS was Jn ac.:u- c!ubs. so h• needed only live club

:ate assessment ~f the power . of h1s tricks. not six. And as it was m his best

hand. That exc•11ent rlub sust was interest to keep West of! the ·lead,
worth a:1other two or three pomts.

South should have cashed the A-K of
s~ades club, , not taken a linesse at all. Here
declar€:r duclo:.tl"g his ace until the lhard the queen Jrops and declarer makes

The delenders attacked sn

round.

.

.

an nvcrtrick. But if the queen doesn't

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el,), Soutn knr.w _ that~~ 'lo a.: bet.Lt to ing East has the queen.
take an tmmediate flnrsse t~an to
Re.a~n an' invit~ to stnd c•rd-pliy q~·

cash the ace first and then to firjr.sse. uom ro Phillip Alder. ;_.., c•re oJ UJiB Mf~S~Mpotr.
(We3t can hold five possible single- They c•n M ;,no;wti'H Mly w-ou,1J tht! column.
:ons: !our low cards and only on"
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romance. Stereo. C

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BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Atlanta Braves at Son Diego
Padres (l)
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iJi Power, Polltlcalnd
Lltlno'a (1 :00) Stereo. C
\ll The '!101 Election SPoclll

Astra-Graph Matchmaker instantly re- ARIES(Morch21·Aprlt 18) When undOf
veals which signs are romantically per- pressure today, you might make con·
fectfor you . Mail $2 plus a tong, self-ad- cessions or commitments that may not
dressed, stamped
envelope
to serve your best interests. If you feel
Matchmaker. c/o this newspapor, P.O. you 're being backed Into a corner, stiffBox 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428. en your resolve.

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llil illJD Plckot Feneot
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have to deal with someone you dislike

QJI 700 Club Wlth Pot

at World Newa

tempt to be first among equals when
dealing
with co-workers today. If you
today because of something this lndl·

vidual did In the past. Holding a grudge
could end up hurting you more than it
does this person.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc. 21)11 you

attend a ga1hering today where friends

are saying unkind things about a pal
who Isn't present, you 'd be smart not to
partake in the discussion.
lopt. 21, 1lflll

Roblrtoon
10:30 (J) Nowo 1;1
[!) Ill Mojor League
BIHboll Cincinnati Rods at
San Francisco Giants (L)
a Auotln Encono
@ M1jor Looguo BeHbott

assume authority you're not en lilted to,
those you 're involved with wltl lind it
offensive.

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) Social situa-

tions and Impulsive spending are two
conditions which could negatively overlap in some unique manner today. Be on
guard in both areas.

(L)

a Coming of Ago

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22..ton. 18) Should CANCER (Juno 21..1UIJ22) You'll know
you decide to do something important what needs to be done today. and
today, dedicate all your effort and ener- you're likely to bo a good starter. but
gy toward this objeclive. Half measures

·vou'rtllkety to bo more ambitious in the could result In frustration and failure.
:,_- ahtad than you hove been In the AQUARIUS IJon. :ZO.Fob. 11) Don't ax·
'J)IIt. 11111 bodet welt for euccen In your peel others to be supportive of your.
.,dHvora, eoptcfllly wllOfe you're' views and opinions today - if they
'etrongly motivated.
sense you really don 't believe in them
'UIRA ISopt. 23-0ct. 23) Things lhat yourself. Sincerity is essential.
:'OOme easily for you today are likely to PISCES (Fob. :ZO.Mtrch 20) Joint com·
!be much mora rewarding than that for . mercia! ventures could be more com"'Wisldl you atrfvo very hard. Before rou plex than usual today. Take measures!
!icllock yourHif out, bloure you're doing to protect your Interests. as wet! as tha i
jl tor tho right reuono. Know where to Interests of those wHh whOm you'll bol
:look tor roonaooe and you"M Hnd it. Tho Involved.

11:00(])U (JJID IIl (J)CI

®JD II» m 0 Nowo
II! MOVIE: P - 1 (2:00)

your moUvatlon could ebb and flow
rather than remain constant. This might
deprive you of fulfillment.

Stereo. !;I
8 Crook and CIIIH
a Sporte Tonight
QJIScorecrow and Mrs. King
tt:30 mKoJ•k c
I!) Alive ff Stereo. C
())Ill MounlofliHr'!fagulne
Wast Virginia footbaH.
IIJ • Point After
121 Monernne
11:36 (]) e Tonlaht Show Wlth
Jav 1.tno StertQ. 1;1

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Say nothing ol
anyone else today that you wouldn't

want said of yourself. This could especially pertain to a close friend whose
feelings yOu hurt previously.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bopt. 22) Ueually, you

have a good sense of bargains and val-

ues. However. this quolltr may not be
operating todoy, and you might pay
more for something than you ohould.
'

.,

•

mBomey Miller

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You might TAURUS (April :ZO.Moy 20) Do not at·

r

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POMEROY- Time is running oul to register to vote in the November
election, but lhose who haven't yet registered have several ways 1o do so.
Secretary of State Bob Taft is encouraging Ohioans to call a statewide
ho~ine, 1-800-753-VOTE, if they need to register to vote or record a
change of address.
More than 16,500 Ohioans have called the hotline since it was
launched on July 2 by Taft and MCI Telecommunications Corp., which
has donated lhe loll-free 800 service. Tile hotline is in service ihrough 5
p.m. on Wednesday.
''The holline may well be one of the mosl convenient ways to register

to vote in Ohio," Taft said. "I strongly encouiage Ohioans to take ad van·
tage of this public service this week so that they will be regisiered to vote
by the Nov. 3 election."
The deadline for voter registration statewide, however, is Oct 5 at 9
p.m. Local boards of elections will operate under extended hours that day
to accomodate last·minute registrations. Voters must be 18 to cast ballots,
but may re~ster now if they will be 18 by Nov. 3.
The reg1stration procedure is a simple one, according to Rita Smith.
director of the Meigs County Board of Elections. No identification or credentials are ~uired to register, and registration may be done at several
locations. Mesgs County voters may reg1ster at the board offtce on
Mechanic Street during regular business hours. Registration materials are
also
at the Meigs County Public Library in Pomeroy, the license
bureau on
Avenue, and at Democratic headquarters, a1 220 E.

The long haul

HMI
fiiOQ .·

MJYCMIG.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " I've a1way1 felt that one or the most d8vastatlng
states or mind 11 the absence of hope." - Sidney Poltler.

Main St
Mildred Stevens, director of the Gallia County Board of Elections
reported that voters there may register al the board office in the coun:
house, or at the license bureau. located on the 400 block of Third Avenue.
Smsth advised that with the deadline quickly approaching, potential
voters could be beuec served by ~dling out applications in person, rather
than asking the board office to mad the materials to their homes.
The time for absentee voting is also approaching, and applications for
absentee ballots may be requested from the board offices in Meigs and
Gallia counties any time.
The deadline for submitting absentee ballots is Oct. 31, and board
offices will be open that Saturday from 9 a.m. until noon. Processing of
absentee applications in Meigs County will begin as soon as ballots are
received, Smith said.

Bush meets
Buckeyes
in weekend
ran tour

Opinions vary on new routes
to bus River Valley students
81 KEVIN PINSON
Tomes.Sentinel Staff
CHESHIRE- River Valley
High School students who take lhe
cross-county bus ride from the
Southwestern area to River Valley
High School are not too thrilled
with having 1o get up early and ride
lhe bus for more than an hour each
morning, bullhey seem to be learning lo accept it (See related story
on A·Z).
" I think preuy much that it's all
right." said Heath Ochs, a sophomore. "ll's a long bus route but it's
calm and we get there all right"
During the long process of consolidating North Gallia, Kyger
Creek, Southwestern and Hannan
Trace high schools, one of the leading arguments against the move
was lhe danger of the long bus
lrips.
·
Bus driver Ervin Arrowood said
he believes the consolidation hasn't
made riding a bus to school any
more dangerous.
"They (the bus routes) are no
worse than lhey ever were before,"
he said. "A lot of pecple let on like

it's a lot worse than il is."
He added lhat he has no suggestions for the school board on how
to improve the bus routes.
"There's no way you can satisfy
everybody," he said. "I wouldn 'I
want their (the school board mem·
bers ') job. I think lhey have a hard
job. I wouldn't want to do it"
Freshman Tom Simpson said
the only problem he has with the
bussing situation is lack of sleep.
"The only thing really wrong
with it is getting up and getting on
a bus this early." he said. "It will
take some getting use lo."
Some students said the consoli·
dation has nol changed the length
of time they spend on the bus each
day.
"It's not that much different,"
said sophomore Wendy Bush, who
spends ahout 2·1/2 hours a day on
the bus. "I don't like it, it's just a
long bus ride."
Senior Misty Simpson, however,
has a different view. She said that
if she had her driver's license, she
would drive herself to school rather
than ride the bus.

By BETH GRACE
Associated Press Writer
MARYSVILLE - George
Bush touted America's strength
and promised to "blow the whis·
tie" on Bill Clinton as he began a
whistle-stop campaign train lour
through northwestern Ohio.

TRANSFER - Gallia County students
change buses Wednesday morning in Gallia.
The students were transferring from a shuttle
bus to one which will transport them lo River
Valley High School and Buckeye Hills Career
Center. The county uses sbutlle buses to pick up

POMEROY - The Americans
with Disabilities Acl has many
local businesses and agencies in lhe
act of modifying their business
establishments to accomodate the
disabled.
The A.D.A. wenl into effect in
January. and prohibits discrimina·
tion against disabled individuals in
private, state and local government
employment. ll also prohibits discrimination in public accomodation, public transportation, govermem services and telecommunications.
Now, employees with more than
15 workers cannot discriminate
against a capable applicant because
of a disability.
Probably more keenly felt will
be the section of the act which
requires all public facilities (restaurants, hotels, theaters, stores and
offices) to be completely accessible
to all disabled persons. Thai can be
accomplished by constructin~ new
facilities or by removing barriers in
existing buildings.
Other clauses require all government agencies to ensure effective
communication with the disabled
public, and require new buses and
rail cars 10 be accessible 10 all disabled passengers. Every existing
rail system musl have al least one
accessible car per train by 1996,
according to the acl
By breaking down barriers that
deny them access, the law offers
people with disabilities new opporluruties in all areas of their lives from dining ou1 to using public
transportation to SC!)king employment
For many businesses, though,

students in
areas
a
point along the main route where they rendezvous with a bus that carries lbem on to their
destination. (Times-Senlinel photo by Kevin Pin·
son)

"I don't like it at ail," she said.
Arrowood said his bus does
"ll's definitely not the greatest." have fewer empty seats lhis year,
Sbe explained that her ride last year but "it's not overloaded."
was not as long and lhe bus was not
Max Haffelt, director of busias crowded.
ness and lransportation for the Gal·
"I think they could've put the 1ia County Local Schools, said the
school al a different place," she Ntnb Gallia and Kyger Creek area
said.
experienced a problem with over.
loaded buses al the be~innin~ of
the year, but the problem has since
been eliminated by shuffling some
of the routes around.

Br KEVIN PINSON
Tomes-Sentinel Staff

SIGN OF THE TIMES- Through the Americans with Disabilities Act, all businesses and agencies In America are now required
to be accessible to the handicapped. For many establishments, that
means the installation or ramps and elevators to accomodate tbese
patrons. Pictured is Meigs County Clerk or Courts Larrf E.
Spencer, who now bas access lo the offices or The I1aUy Sentinel,
due to the installation or a wbeekhair ramp. (Times-Sentinel photo
by Brian J. Reed)
.
the A.D.A.''s implementation in
July has conjured up images of
cos~y accommodations - elevators that may have 1o be installed.
expensive computers purchased
and office Door plans reconfigured
10 meet the needs of disabled work·
ers and job applicants.
Proponents of the A.D.A. agree
that tfie money thai businesses
invest wiU come back many fold by
providing a larger pool of qualified
employees and by creating a mar-

kel-of 43 million consumers who
previously had difficulty accessing
stores and service providers.
Benefits will be especially fell
by disabled seniors, who now have
only a limited access to public services due 1o the wheelchairs, walkers and motori~ed scooters that
they use as transJ)ortalion. ·
The U.S. Department of I ustice
has made $2.6 million in grants
available 10 provide information
and technical assistance.

NORTHUP- A hunting excur·
sian look a tragic turn Saturday
morning when a Mercerville man
fell from his boat on Raccoon
Creek and awarently drowned.
According to a spokesperson for
the Gallipolis Police Department,
Gerald W. Dennison, 57, 4484
Teens Run Road, Gallipolis, was
hunting with his son, Michael Den·
nison, Crown City. from a two-man
motorized boat on the creek near
Yellowtown Road in Nor1hup.
Tile senior Dennison fell from
the boat and, after an unsuccessful
.aaempt to find him, his son ran 1o
the nearest residence 1o phone for
help. A press release from Sheriff
Dennis Salisbury said the sherifrs
office was notified at 8:39 am.
The victim was under water for
approximately one hour and 15
minutes before help arrived. The
police spokesperson said this was
due to the distance the younger
Dennison had to run for help and
some confusion as to wbere he was
last seen.
Two members of the sheriff's
dive team, assisted by members of
the Gallia County Emergency Medical Service and Rescue Squad.
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment Gallia County Shenff's
Department and Gallipolis Police
Department. search the waters for
about hllf an hour before locating
the body submerged near the south
bank of the czWt,
Tile sheriffs press release said
the body has been released to
Willis Funeral Home and Dr.
Edward F. Berkich , the county
COO&gt;ner, was notified.

l!ush and his wife, Barbara,
waved from the back of an 1,800foot campaign lrain Saturday as it
rumbled along Conrail tracks from
Columbus to this rural northwest.
em city.

As he spoke from a Oag.&lt;fecked
platform at lhe rear of the train to a
crowd estimated at more than 1,000
He also said long bus routes are people, he blasted Clinton's plan 1o
common in rural school systems raise taxes on the top 2 percent of
and are not new to GaUia County. all wage·eamers. a level that the
More than half of last year's county Arkansas governor says applies 1o
bus routes were around 1-1(2 hours those making more than $200,000 a
long, he said, and that's the limit year.
Bush said that 2 pertent would
being placed on this year's bus
include
people making as little as
routes.
$36,00
a
year.
"That's whal we're striving for
"Bill Clinton's taxes are wrong
is not 1o have routes more than (.
1(2 hours." he said.
for America . Bill Clinlon's
· Arkansas record is wrong for
(Continued on A-2)
America," Bush said.

Gallipolis area man
drowns in Raccoon

BT BRIAN J, REED
T1mes-Sentinel Starr

mLikolr Suapoctl

15 Sectlono, 152 Pagea
A llulllmedla Inc. Nowtpopor

County election boards issue registration alert

Businesses
eye benefits,
cost of new
disabled law

DOWN

Sunny. Showers likely. High
around 70.

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, September 27, 1992

By BRIAN J. REED
Times·Sentinel Starr

+Ql0763
.Jl063
.Q7
+Q&gt;

Along lhe river ..............B1-8
Business/Farm ............... D1-8
Classified .......................D2-7
Deaths. .............................A-3
Editoral ............................A-4
Sports.............................Cl-8
Weather ...........................A-2

•
xmtsVol. 27, No. 32
Copyrighted 1882

Stereo. 1;1
10:00 illG l!lli'IIFiy Away

ASTRO-GRAPH

With arrival of fall, grass cutting
is winding down • Bob Hoeflich - B-S

I

Stereo. C

®lllil

B-1

I' I' 1· I' I' I' I' I

Trough • Track • Equal • Doctor • CHOCOLATE
"Exercise is such a dirty word," sighad the famous
columnist 'thai every lime I even lhink of ~. I wash my
mouth out with CHOCOLATE!"

Inside

Gallipolis Dufour House was torn
down in 1962 - James Sands - A· 7

Complete the chuckle quoted
0
by tilling in tho mi,.ing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

teens from lhe house.

FLAT
BROKE II

TH' CARD
•AMEII

mSlahUngo Starao.l;l

II! MOVII:: Fotr City (RI

•

1

editors. Others fed that the editor. to

1:00 (]) D 11» Flnol Appeal: From
tho Filii of Unaolvld
Stereo.
(I) ID
Ill Family

7

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IN SQUARES

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Children C
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Ul·t OIL. l-OOt:: AT TI'IIS

I' I I I I~
IN LOGE
1 I I I II

I was taught nol lo hold a
grudge ana lo forgive my
enemies. Granny always told
me thai it was easier to forgive
~~-e.~~~y~nce you had gonen

V Y0 R I

'1:11' LETTERS

(D Dtli~lng Women

Chicago Cubs at Montreal
Expos (l)

I~

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i!)SqUIIeOneTVQ
l1l Roldlng Rainbow Q

W~AT ABOUT
DOG'? 15 ~E

Bevo Francis celebration planned - C-1

T A C PH

(!) Slved by liMo Bell

GOOD GR I EF ~

One-room
schools are
recalled

low to form four simple

EVENING

THE SVS TO T~E

the

The train stopped next to a
hand·painted sign enumerating
"Clinton's Top 10," a list or
where Arkansas ranks in comparison with other states in terms of
education spending - 481h - and
quality of life - 75th.
Tile sign said Arkansas ranked
No.I in tax increases.
As Bush began the 233·mile trip
that ends today in Michigan, he
cautioned a crowd in Columbus not
to listen to "another candidate for
president (who) has been tearing
down the United States of Ameri-

ca."

"Maybe he's inhaling too many
of those bus fumes," he said, refer.
ring to Clinton's campaign bus
tours.
"Well, let's get that bus off lhe
side of the mad, because on this
train lrip, we're going 1o blow thl:
whistle on Gov. Clinton ," Bush
said.
Along the train route, crowds
gathered to watch the 21-&lt;:ar train
~s.

:

Three golfers waved wildly
from atop a cart on a golf course
outside of Columbus, farmers
waved from com fields, cement
trucks painted red, white and blue
lined up along the tracks just outside of Marysville and a message
calling for voters 1o "Re-Elect Barbara's Husband" was spray-paint~
ed on a sheet and hung from the
rear of a combine.

.

SEARCH - A diver with the
Gallia County sheriff's department dive team searches Racc:oon
Creek ror the body or a bunter
Saturday morning. Gerald Den·
oison, 57, Gallipolis, was found
submerged near tile creek's bank
after about half and hour or
searcbing. (Times-Sentinel photo
by Kevin Pinson)

While Bush spoke, Democrats
worked the crowd, dislributiriJ
Clinton-Gore signs and T-shirts
that read: "Bush·Quayle 'On The
Wrong Track Tour' 1992.
:
"Tour Ends Nov. 3 '92," read i
message on the back of the shirt. :
Climo~, in New Hampshire Sar~rday, tfl~d to turn lhe railroad

!mage. agamst Bush. "This admi.;.
1strat10n has been asleep at tK~
switch" as the national economy
has faltered, he said.
-

.,
'

I

�.,

nmes Sentinel

27

RVHS run driver
·:accepts new routine
'

..
'

By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
CENTER VILLE - The first
Jight Ervin Arrowood sees outside
.his house every weekday morning
is not from d!e sun - it's from the
·running lights of Gallia County
· L.ocal School District's School Bus
#37.
'While the sun still slept somewhen: over the horizon Wednesday
morning. Arrowood was fmishing a
cup of coffee in his kitchen.
His bus sat idling in the front
yard, waiting to haul about 50 students to Buckeye Hills Career Center and River Valley High School.
In order to have all the students
deliVI:red befcre RVHS's 8:30 bell,
Arrowood leaves his farmhouse in
Centerville at a quarter past six
every morning. The morning route
takes about two bows to complete
and covers the Southwestern area.
The consolidation of the four
county high schools to the old
Kyger Cn:ek location at the north
end of the county has worried some
county residents who feel the bus
rides may be dangerous.
Many parents have transferred
their children 10 other school systems to keep them from riding the
: busts.
, Arrowood said he personally
· hasn't received any complaints.
'
"I think everything is working
out preuy well from what I can
, see." he said. "But I'm just a bus
· driver. I don't get in on that stuff, I
: just drive a bus. I 1ry to do the best
: job I can and let everyone else
· worry about their's."
: Arrowood said he has been driv·
: ing a bus for 18 years and this is
· the longest route he has ever driv: en. The odometer gains about 73
: miles each time the bus makes its
· cross-county journey. he said.
: · He added that he reaDy does not

fuel supply. "The reorganization
simply reflects the staffing level
required to serve our remaining
affiliate mining operations and to
perform our coal purchasing and
transportation functions."
AEP' s fuel supply department
manages the procurement and
tran~lion of coal supplies from
AEP s coal-fired generating plants
and operates three affiliate coal
mining divisions. •

Recovered bikes
remain unclaimed

The Most Efficient Heat Pump In the
Manufactll'ed Housing Industry.

•

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~~Ivan . "

Correction
GALLIPOLIS - An article in
Friday's Gallipolis Daily Tribune
entitled "Police investigate two
accidents" reported a vehicle driven by Christopher T. Ellcessor
backed into a car driven by James
A. Willingham. That is incorrect.
Willingham's vehicle backed
into Ellcessor's car.
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
apologizes for the error.

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uo

Gerald Wayne Dennison

Bettie McClaskey
GAHANNA- Bettie McClaskey, 67, Gahanna, died Saturday Sept
26, 1992 at her residence. She was a retired F &amp; R Lazarus associate with
2I years of service.
She was born Jan. 5, 1925 in Rodney, daughter of the late Joseph E.
and Tracie M. DeLille.
She was preceded in death by her flarents, one sister, Geneva (Vernon)
Coleman and one brother, Bruce DeL1lle.
Survivors include her husband, Darrel McClaskey: one daughter, Jo
Ann Kruse; one son, Richard (Deborah) McClaskey; four brothers.
Charles, John. Martin and Raymond DeLille; two sisters, Ruth (Hunter)
Boice and Louise (Rex) Gn:enlee; four grandchildren: and several nieces
and nephews.
·
Services will be held at I :30 p.m. Tuesday at the Forest Lawn Mausoleum Chapel in Columbus with Pastor John J. Manos officiating. The
body will lie in state one hour prior to services. Entombment will be at the
mausoleum.
Friends may call at the Schoedinger-Margarum Funeral Chapel, 335
W. Johnstown Road, Gahanna. Monday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the American Cancer
Society, P.O. Box 185 Columbus, Ohio, 43216 and/or Hospice at Riverside, 3535 Olentangy Road, Columbus, Ohio, 43214-3998.

Ralph Trivette

tree, Basic Clerical; Vannen Crab·
tree, Auto Technology; Helen
Newland, EMT-A Refresher; Rex ,
Phillips, In-Service Fire: Stevel
Saunders, Seat Belt; and Rebecca
Stump, LPN.
• Approved the following parttime adult classes: Rope Rescue, in
cooperation with Gallia County
EMS, which began Sept. 19;
Advanced Training, in cooperation
with Vinton-Jackson Fire Fighters
Association, beginning OcL I; Fire

RIO GRANDE - The GalliaJackson-Vinton Joint Vocational
Board of Education met in regular
session on Sept. 22 in the Board
Room on the Buckeye Hills Career
Center campus.
In personnel mailers, the board
employed the following as substitutes:
• InstruCtors: Kathy Cremeans,
Thurman: Shannon Mayes. Gallipolis; Connie Mercer, Jackson:
and Irene Williams, Oak HiD.
• Bus drivers: Lori Cassill,
Wellston; Margaret Hall, Patriot;
Barbara Kemper, Kerr; and
Michelle Stepp, Wellston.
The' board also employed Many
wanace, Jim McCarley, and Bonnie Crabtree as Wednesday and
Saturday school monitors, on an as
needed basis.
In other action, the board:
• Approved facility usage agn:ements for the Diversified Health
Occupations programs field study
with Scenic Hills Nursing Center
and Pinecrest Care Center.
• Approved a 90-day extension
of the OITP program contract, as
requested by the State Department
of Development. The vocational
school acts as ftseal agent.
• Approved the second reading
of an amended Citizens Advisory
Committee Poticy 9130.
• Accepted the Dwight D. Eisen·
however Mathematics and Science
Grant allocation and granted permission to proceed with the necessary application procedures with
the State Department of Education
for the use of those funds.
In the adult education division,
the board:
• Accepted the resignation of
Gail Smith, Basic Clerical instructor.
• Awarded the following part·
time adult contracts: Bonnie Crab-

Sunday nme&amp;-Sentlnei-Page-A3

· VINTON- Ralph Triveue, 50, State Route 124, Vinton (Wilkesville),
died Saturday, SepL 26, 1992 at Scenic Hills Nursing Center.
· Born Jan. 10, 1942 in Virgie, Ky., he was the son of Edgar and Ada
Elswick Trivette ofRt. I, Vinton.
Surviving in addition to his parents are three brothers, Jerry Triveue of
Wellston, Kenneth Trivelle of Stoutsville, and Carl Trivette of McArthur;
a sister, Evelyn Triveue of Rt. I, Vinton; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vinton. Burial will be in Vinton Memorial Park. Friends may call at the
funeral borne Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Clinton and Bush campaigns are
sending high-level officials to Dallas to meet with Texas billionaire
Ross Perot, who reportedly is considering re-entering the presidential
race.
Perot, who said this week that
his July 16 withdrawal from the
race was a mistake, has invited representatives of both camps to meet
with him and his volunteers Monday in Dallas.
Bush is sending campaign chairman Roben Teeter, National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft and
Sen. Phil Gramm, R·Texas, to represent him. Coincidentany, Bush is
scheduled to campaign Monday in
Dallas.

Representing Bill Clinton will
be campaign chairman Mickey
Kantor, retired Joint Chiefs of Staff
Chairman William Crowe, Sen.
David Boren, D-Okla., and civil
rights leader Vernon Jordan.
Bush said his team would urge
his own deficit-reduction plan.
"The subject is not restricted, as
I understand i~ to deficit reduction.
But that will be a key subjec~" the
president said
Perot was to appear later Monday on CNN's Larry King Livt.
The Los Angeles Ti~s reported
Friday that PII'Dt had already made
up his mind and would announce
he was back in the race on the King
show.

..

In-Service, in cooperation with the substitute instructorS: Karen NewRio .Grande Volunteer Fire Depart· berry, Cynthia Haney, Doug Crab·
·
men~ beginning OcL S; and EMT · lree, and Carl Jividen.
• Approved agn:ements for the
A Refresher, in cooperation with
LPN program with Holzer Medical
SEOEMS. beginningqt:L 17.
• Granted permtsston to apply Center and Pleasant VaHey Hospi·
for the Applachia Research and tal for facility usage.
• Accepted donations from
Coordination Grant in the amount
BARD
Manufacturing Co., Bryan
of$20,000.
and
Pillsbury
Corp., Wellston. .· '
· • Extended the Seat Belt Pro• Agreed to be fiscal agent for .a
gram through Nov. 7, as requested
Project Equity Grant for telecomby the state.
·,
• Approved. the following adult munications.

MHS HOMECOMING QUEEN - Abby
Blake, daughter or John and Margie Blake,
Middleport, was crowned 1992 Meigs Higb
School Homecoming Queen on Friday evening.
Homecoming ceremonies tonk place during pre-

game activities as tbe Marauders took on theMiller Falcons. Miss Blake was ts(orted by Brad.
Anderson, son or JollD and Joan Anderson;·
Pomeroy. Fenton Taylor, Meigs Higb School Principal, crowned the queen. (Times·Senlinel
pboto)

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ltf.TIHUS SAT l SUII .3 :15

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Ponsmouth.
There's no better time than now to have the advantage of Cellular
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Perot summons staffers
from opposing camps

8unday................................ ........ 7! Cenll
UUI

.

GALLIPOLIS -Gerald Wayne Dennison, 57, 4484 Teens Run Road,
Gallipolis, died Saturday, Sept 26, 1992.
Born April 24, 1935 in Gallia County, son of the late Alben U. and
.NeUte Saunders Dennison, he was an employee of the Goodyear Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. plant at Apple Grove, W.Va. He was a member of Providence
Missionary Baptist Church, the GaDia County Tobacco Association. the
National Rifle Association and Union Local No. 644. Point Pleasant.
· Surviving are his wife, Helen Thompson Dennison, who he married
Feb. 18, 1956 at Providence Missionary Baptist Church; two sons, Jeff W.
Dennison of Bidwell, and Mike 1. Dennison of Crown City; a daughter,
Andra B. Dennison of Gallipolis; a brother, Kenneth Dennison of Shelburne Falls, Mass.; two sisters, Mrs. Merrill (Ramona) McCully and Mrs.
Norris (Maxine) Jeffers, both of Columbus; and three grandchildren.
Services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday in Providence Missionary Baptist
Church, with Rev. Charles Lusher, the Rev. James Lusher and the Rev.
John Arnold officiating. Burial will be in Ridgelawn Cemetery, Mercerville. Friends may c:all at the funeral home Monday from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.
The body will lie in state in the church one hour prior lO the services.
Pallbearers will be Gregory Jeffers, Steve McCully, Brenton Gilloll,
.Darren Gillon, Russell Lee Saunders, Carl Saunders and Ronnie Sheets.

:Ex-replacement workers will see RAC in court

accused of hiding his role as

.

LANCASTER Thirty
employees of the American Electric Power Service- Fuel Supply
Department are without jobs following a reorganization of the lan·
caster general office.
AEP officials said Friday the
reorganization was the result of
recent reductions in the level of
AEP's affiliate coal mining operations. Approximately 210 remain in
AEP's Lancaster wort force.
According to an AEP announcement, the move takes place three
months after the sale of AEP's
Southern Ohio Coal Co. (SOCCO)Maninta Division, located near
Fairmont, W.Va.
In addition, a restructuring one
month ago at SOCCO's Mei's
Division in. southeastern Oh10
resulted in the layoff of 212
employees.
AEP attributes the restructuring
as part of its plan to comply with
· new federal clean air regulations.
''This was a difficul~ but necessary business decision," said I.E.

HIGH EFFICIENCY HEAT
PUMP SYSTEM.

Special master OKs postponement

,,

--Area deaths-- JVSD Board acts on personnel matters

TAWNEY JEWELERS

The
company
gave
the
replacements just 30 days notice,
the lawsuit said.
.
-Diegally
fired
some
~lacements who were injured and
etigible for disability benefits.
-Violated an implied covenant
of good faith and fllll' dealing with
the replacements.
-Violated the West VIrginia
Wage Payment and Collection Act
by failing to fulfill its promises of
compensation to replacements at
thei(_dismissal.

..

Reorganization at AE
causes 30 to lose jobs

mind the trip, especially in the
morning. Arrowood said he enjoys
getung up before the sun and trav·
cling the back roads of the county.
some of which are no wider than
the school bus.
"Myself, I kind of like these
country roads," he said. "I'm just
an old coun1ry boy."
When not driving the bus,
Arrowood raises tobacco and caUie
on his farm. He admilled that the
longer route cuts into his farming
time, but said the exira hours on the
job are nice, too.
GALLIPOLIS - Several recov"It doesn't hurt me that much,"
ered
bicycles have not been
he said "Somebody's got to do iL"
claimed
from the Gallipolis Police
The first stop on the route
Department,
a news release
occurs at I 0 minutes before 7
announced
this
week. The bikes
o'clock when the sun is just begin·
were found in various locations
ning 10 peek over the hilltopS. The
around
the city and range in size
bus must travel 10 minutes out
from
children's
to adult's. If anyHoadley Road to pick up two pasone
has
had
a
bike
stolen and not
sengers, neither of which are riding
recovered
it.
they
can
contact the
this particular morning.
BUS DRIVER - ErviD Arrowood, a tobacco and cattle rarmer
police
department
at446-1313.
Along the way, Arrowood meets
from Center¥ille, drives 146 miles a dax on his bus route ror Gallia
Katlic, AEP iiiii~==
with shuule buses three different
County Local Scbools. He leaves bis bouse eacb mornin&amp; at ~:15 in
times. AI Gallia, Centerpoint and
order to complete the longest bus route iD tbe county before tbe
Buckeye Hills Career Center, stu·
8:30 bell at River Valley Hlgb Scbool. (Times-Sentinel photo by
dents from outlying areas are transKevin Pinson)
fern:d from the shuttles to bus 1137,
which will take them to their destination.
Most of the students Arrowood · almost an of the seats are rilled and bypass a blessing. The completion
transports are from one of the shut- Arrowood guides bus 1137 east up of the project has shaved considertle buses. A handful of others are Buckeye Hills Road to the career able time off his route, he said. The
picked up along the route, which center. It is the last place when: any bus drivers held a trial run last
runs from Centerville through Jack· students are dropped off or picked spring before the bypass was open,
Save Since t933, 511 Y•r• Serving the Public._
son County to Gallia, down CH&amp;D up before heading to RVHS.
he explained, and the traffic slowed
and Hoadley roads, then bact to
About 10 of the students are things a great deal
2G-40%
Centerville, over to Buckeye Hills dropped off; 10 more are picked up
"It's quite a bit longer the other
ORAl
and then on to RVHS.
from the third shuttle bus. Bus 1137 way around," he said.
422 SECOND AVE.
Although most of the students then enters the final stretch: U.S.
Watchtsl
At 8: 15 the bus pulled up to the ·
GAWPOUS, OH. 446-1&amp;15
spend over an hour on the bus, 35 and State Route 7 to Cheshire front of RVHS and released a torArrowood said the long ride hasn't aod RVHS. As he leaves the can:er rent of students through its doors
created any discipline problems.
center and heads into the final 15 minutes before classes start.
"They're not bad at an." he said. stretch, the sun has cleared the trees Before returning borne, Arrowood
"There's a few of them that get a and Arrowood has to adjust the stopped by the school's gu pumps
lillie loud, but most of them are visor under his mirror to cut down to refuel
·
good kids."
the glare.
"We didn't do too bad this
At 10 minuteS before 8 o'clock,
Arrowood considers the new 35 morning," he said.

: PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP) not yet received a copy. He to work involved in this. Realisti·
: ~ Fonner replacement workers at dectined comment until he saw the cally, 500 would be the max."
· Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. have lawsuit
The replacement workers allege
Barry Willey, treasurer of the that the company:
: filed a brell:h-of-comract lawsuit
: seeking at least $487.5 million repiacement workers • group, said
--Enga~ed in "willful, wanton
not an of the 1,000 replacement and malic:tous misconduct" in dis, from the Jackson County plant.
: Ravenswood Aluminum hired workers wanted to be involved in missing the workers after changing
: atx&gt;ut 1,000 non-IDlion replacement the lawsuit But he said additional their swus from temporary to per•.ers after its conll'act with the plaintiffs could join the action.
manent employment in December
"The guys who went back 10 .1990.
:United Steelworkers expired Nov.
: I, 1990. About 1,700 union wort aren't r,&gt;ing to want anr, part
-Failed to honor the federal
·workers wen: off the job for 20 of this sui~ • Winey said. • We •d Workers Adjustment and Reuaining
:months until they approved a new like to see everyone who's not back Notification Act. which calls for 60
·coinract this June.
days' notification of displacement.
: . The company fired most of the
:replacement worll:ers under terms
·of the settlement
: ·The lawsuit filed Friday in U.S.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - A
He was convicted in Israel of
:District Court alleges that the 325
federal
judge
has
postponed
a
hear·
war
crimes in 1988 and sentenced
•workers who filed the suit "have
ing
on
whether
Justice
Department
lO
death.
He continues to maintain
:lost past income and benefits ...
officials
misled
the
court
in
the
his
innocence
and is appealing his
:lu!ve suffered impaired earning
extradition
case
of
reputed
Nazi
conviction
to
the Israeli Supreme
;capacity, emotional distress and
CourL
guard John Demjanjuk.
have incurred and will continue to
Demjanjuk, 72, is a native of the
U.S . District Judge Thomas
jncur expenses in seeking other
Wiseman on Friday granted a Ukraine who was a naturalized
~mployment"
request
from attorneys that the Oct. American citizen for 30 years
, It seeks $1.5 million in compen16-17
hearings
be postponed until before 'he was arrested in 1977 and
Satory and punitive damages for
Nov.
12-13.
each of the plaintiffs.
Wiseman was named a special
: "We feel that permanent
master
by the 6th U.S. Ctrcuit
South-Central Obio
teplacement workers should be just
Court of Appeals for the purpose of
Sunday. showers likely, mainly
~1: permanent," said their attordetermining whether the Justice in the morninJ1. High around 70.
~y. Brian Yost of Charleston. "In
Department knew it may have Chance of rain IS 60 percent.
Ibis case, when the company saw
deponed an innocent man.
Extended rorecast:
what was in their best interest, they
Demjanjuk, a retired auto work·
Monday through Wednesday:
(lropped these employees and put er from Cleveland. Ohio, was sent
Monday, fair. Lows 50 to 55.
them out on the streeL"
to Israel to stand trial as Nazi Highs
70 to 75. Tuesday, cooler
: Company spokesman Pat Galdeath-camp guard "Ivan the Terri- with a chance
of showers. Lows 50
ble.
lagher said Friday the company
lO SS. Highs upper 50s to middle
was aware of the civil suit but had
60s. W~,fair and continued
'
cool. Lows
30s to lower 40s.
(Continued rrom A-1)
Highs around 5 to the middle 50s.
:
Haffelt said he received a lot oC believed it would.
:complaints before school started,
"It's been a smooth year," he
said.
"We've CUI down time and
10 0
:but hasn't received any .since the
it's
a
much
smoother
route."
·busses staned running. He also said
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
The only real change this year is
:that because of better organization
Friday
night's Ohio Louery selec:and more professional drivers, the the use of dual bus routing, Haffelt
tions:
·operation has run better than he said. Buses shuttle high school kids
Pick3
:r---~·--------------, from outlying areas to points along
2-9-3
the
main
route
where
they
are
. jlrllftllllv 'attmt. - jirentind
Pick4
transferred to a second bus that
4-2-0-4
(11IPIIUWOO)
takes them on to RVHS or Buckeye
BuckeyeS
Pobllobool llanclay, 826 'lltitd An.•
Hills Career Center.
OaJIIpolt., Ohio, by the Ohio Vllley
1-4-8-25-32
"Compared to the terrain we
.........hi.. c... pony/Mahlmodla, tne.
The Super Lotto jackpot was
s-.t clou poollp oold at Oolltpollt, have and the distances, I think it's
$16
million.
o~to 4563t. Bntore4 u MCOnd elut
really efficient," he said

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G•pols ·:~

�~Commentary

and perspective

September 27,1992

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

:·.-

ADl't'llioaof

UGHAN'S
Dl·

Page-A4

Who is against low interest? Savers are

WASHINGTON - George
Bush states he doesn't know anybody who is against low interest
•
rates. William Seidman, the fonner
:~
chief regulator of the banking
IZ5 Tldnl Aft, GaiBpolll, Ohio
111 Court SL,I'omtn~J, Ohio
'•
indusuy during the Bush adminis(614) .!192·11541
(614) 446-lJG
•
tration, brands that as one of "the
••
ROBERT
L.
WINGETT
most
asinine swements I've ever
••
Publllbtt'
heard."
·',•
"The old people have had their
HOBART WILSON JR.
savings robbed to benefit the
JI..UYOEdJior
banks, io boost the banks profits,"
·"
•
says Seidman. "They have taken
·
••
A
MEMBER
of
Tbe
Auociated
Prm,
and
lhe
"-ican
the
money from the old people and
.•
Nowsp~p~r Publilben Aslocillion .
the savers and put it on the bottom
,o
line of the banks. The Federal
,•
lEITERS OF OPINION are wekome. Tbay lhould be !011 thlll
••
Reserve is reducing .interest rates
,•
300
wordl.
All !eDen are subject to editin&amp; and must be •i&amp;ned wllh
,•
far
below where they would be in
•• nuae, ll!ldreu and telephone number. No unsi&amp;ned !etten wUI bo
normal
marlcets."
•• pubUsbod. !.etten should be in sood taate, addressins issues, not
••
Seidman
hails low rates as a
,
penonaliliea.
boon to the balance sheets of
beleag)lred businesses and boiiOwers. But he terms the earnings
evaporation facin~ the elderlr as
"an emerging pohtical issue' one that is inflamed by record bank
profits. The nation's II ,685 banks
have earned near.Jy $16 billion
through June of this year, a windBy JAMES HANNAH
fall owing to the lowest rates paid
Associated Press Writer
to depositors in generations.
DAYTON - A police search that led to the largest seizure of pow·
"At least politically those peo·
. dered cocaine in the city's history but was thrown out of court reignited ple (elderly) are awakening to the
:- the debate over authorities' stop-and-search power.
·: Susan Brenner, law professor at the University of Dayton, said that to
:• stop and search a vehicle, police must have reason to believe that it might
·• have been involved in a crime.
She said police can stop vehicles for a .quick investigatory check but
must be able to provide a specific reason. And a search cannot be forced
:' unless the officers see something durin$ the stop that leads them to
· believe a crime has been committed, she satd.
· Ms. Brenner said the law protects residents from being subjected to
·• police searches for no reason.
·
· The seizure in question occurred Feb. 19 when Dayton police Maj.
Ronald Lowe noticed a Ford Bronco at a stoplight. Recalling a police
· radio dispatch several weeks earlier about a Bronco involved in a drive-by
. shooting, Lowe followed the vehicle.
After losing sight of it for several minutes, Lowe spotted the Bronco
. parlced in an alley. He saw a man walking from a nearby house to the
vehicle and carrying a bondle.
Lowe called for assistance from other officers and ordered the vehicle
· stopped because he believed he had just wiUlessed a break-in and that the
: bundle might contain a weapon.
While searching the vehicle Lowe discovered that the bundle contained
· ·cocaine. The officers obtained a search warrant for the house and found
- more than 30 pounds of cocaine inside.
Larry T. Caner aild Christopher Randall Ross were charged with
: aggravated trafficking.
A judge last month ruled that the drugs could not be used as evidence
because there had been no legal basis to stop the vehicle.
The defense said the search violated the defendants' constitutional protection from searches and seizures except for probable cause.
"Everybody that drives a particular kind of car that was suspected to
be a couple weeks a~o involved in a crime is subject to lose all of their
• constiwuonal rights,' defense attorney John Rion said. "No one is secure
:•from the whim and caprice of the police officer."
:: Montgomery County Common Pleas Cour1 Judge Patrick Foley said
·: Lowe had no reasonable basis to connect the Bronco to. the drive-by
: shooling. And Foley said thai nothing in the behavior of the man walking
: away from the house led to an inference that a break-in may have
. occurred.
Coming off my two weeks vaca:• Since the police stop was unconstitutional, so was the search of the tion, it is difficult to get back to the
·: vehicle, Foley said. And without the "tainted" evidence found in the old grind of wori:ing and practicing
·: Bronco, a search warrant for the house could not have been obtained, he law. Anyhow, I believe that it is
· said.
worthwhile to get out of town and
• Foley said the improper stop and search that produced the illegal drugs see what happens in the outside
srtmmed solely from Lowe's hunch or suspicion.
· world.
. "Not being able to use those drugs in evidence against despicable drug
I went with a group of friends
offenders is an extremely heavy and burdensome price to pay to uphold and relatives to Las Vegas. This
the Constitution," Foley said. "But the price must be paid wherever any was my second trip but it was
.· citizen's rights are violated."
entirely different from the other
Monlgomery County Prosecutor Mathias Heck Jr. appealed the court's one. On this occasion, the parties
: ruling.
stayed downtown at the Lady Luck.
: Heck said he believes Lowe had probable cause to stop the vehicle and This is one of the fii'St hotels in Las
· complied with constitutional standards.
Vegas. The larger hotels and gam: Police officers must make split-second decisions, Heck said. The dis- bling casinos are located on what is
·; missal of evidence in a massive drug seizure can have a chilling effect on known as the "strip."
:. a police force, he said.
One of the first things that
caught my eye was that each establishment has one or more slot
machines to get your attention.
They are everywhere except your
room and the rest rooms. I cannot
understand why they have them
By The Al&amp;oclated Press
Today is Sunday, Sept. 27, the 271_st day of 1992. 'f!lere are 95 days everywhere. Nevertheless, all the
major casinos are overloaded with
left in the year. Rosh Hashana. the Jew1sh New Year, begms at sunset.
these machines. What is more
Today's Highlight in History:
; Fifty years ago, on Sept. 27, 1942, Glenn Miller and his Orc~tra per- pathetic is that most of them were
-formed together for the last time, at the Central Th~ter m ~assa1c, NJ., in use for most of every day. On
'r,rior to Miller's enuy into the U.S. Army. The band s selecbons mcluded weekends this city is deluged with
. 'In the Mood," "American Pa~l," "The Star-Spangled Banner," and, people trying to win some money .
Some do, but most of them le.we.
pf course, ''Moonlight Serenade.
leaving some of their moola at
. On this date:
these establishments.

::••

·..

.,.w-.rc.

ract that every time George Bush
says to the Fed to cut the rates, they
are cutting their income," Seidman
said. "And there are a hell of a lot

.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

.·.•...

·!···~===========.J
-~ Court ruling sparks

•'
''

[~ debate

over police stops

setting low short-term interest
rates. The Fed is complying with
the administration," Seidman says.
These are the ruminations of a
lifelong Republican, not the rabid
rantings of a wild-eyed liberal.
Nearly a year after departing as the
chairman of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp.• from which he
managed the cnsis and clean up of
failed banks and S&amp;Ls, Seidman
took White House officials to the
woodshed during a recent interview
with us. Nonetheless, he expects to
vole for Bush, despite serving as an
informal adviser 10 Ross Perot earlier this summer.
Seidman saves some of his most
scorching criticism for members of
Bush's palace guard, which whitewashed warnings of the gathering
storm . "Somebody should have
told George Bush two years ago
that this recession is different, that
we are in a recession," he says.
"George Bush has been, in my
view, sunk by the facl that he had
more brown-nosers around him in
the White House and the domestic
area. And that's what he wanted."
Seidman relates one White
House meeting with former Chief
of Staff John Sununu. He says he

more of them than there are
banks."
All money decisions flow from
the Federal Reserve Board, which
despite its vaunted independence,
Seidman regands historically as one
of the most politically driven institutions in Washington. He doesn't
chalk off to coincidence the fact
that there have been three reduc·
lions this year alone in the federal
funds rate- nor does he spare his
sometime tennis partner and friend
Alan Greenspan from criticism.
Seidman says the Fed chairman
has shown uncommon charity in
letting rates drop to avoid being
"blamed if Bush loses" this
November. "What the Fed is
doing. and George_Bush loves it, is

IM(OMIN(1!

•

r'\h

•

•

•

Vacation.time- 1992

~Today in history

~Cunning
.
'

wolves."
Prince Bill Clinton has taken his
advice about Republican foxes and
media wolves to hean.

Chuck Stone
Even in Clinton's television ads,
he is working both sides of the
political street, but at separate
times and with separate themes.
Two weeks ago, he kicked off
his second TV campaign since the
Republican National Convention
with a commercial desi~ned to preempt expected Repubhcari attacks
and to win back Reagan and Bush
Democrats.
His commercial, "Getting People Off Welfare," calls for the endmg of "welfare as we know it"
(my emphasis). That four-word
caveat is as sneaky as the caveat in
Bush's promise to reduce taxes "provided (my emphasis) that
these cuts are paid for with specific
spending reductions so that we do
not increase the deficit''
Both caveats are known in street

language as "covering your ... "
Clinton's welfare reform does
not end welfare. It merely
embraces formulas that are already
operative in Pennsylvania and New
Jersey and that cannot succeed in a
catatonic economy.
Clinton proposes to ''provide
education, training and child care.
... Those who are able to work must
go to worlc." He cites Arkansas as
a successful example where 17,000
Arkansas reciP.ients were moved
off Aid to Fam1lies with Dependent
Children (ADFC) or food stamps
over a three-year period.
What neither he nor an Arkansas
official will reveal is how big a
. percentage of those 17,000
returned to welfare. (P.S.: Most of
them did.)
·
Moreover, with the continuing
increase of single-parent families
(22 percent of all families in 1990
and now a majooty of families with
children in Detroit and Washing·
ton, D.C.) and a Republican-made
7.3 percent unemployment rate, the
cleansing of the rolls of recidivist
welfare families will take more
than TV commercials.
Nonetheless, the fox earnestly
intoned on his commercial, "It's
time to make welfare what it
,,

I'

FredW. Crow

understand this game. Any book
writer on gambling will tell you
that the two worst games to play
are the slot machines and keno. Yet
these two have more individuals
playing than all the rest put togeth·
er.
The big game, of course, is dice
shooting. The big money gamblers
will sit at the dice tables and fortunes are won and lost in a short
time by playin$ the dice game.
Las Vegas IS on the edge of the
desert and the vegetation is not as •
attractive as it is in other pans of
the U.S. However, the large casinos
are extremely attractive. If you are
in a building on a higher floor you
can see most of Las Vegas lit at
night. This is a most beautiful city
and the Ughts are fantastic. I would
recommend visitin~ this city. You
can, of course, vtsit Las Vegas
without gambling, which some of
us did.
After 10:30 and during the wee
hours of the morning you can buy
the best steak or meal in town for
$2 or sligMy more.

many machines in the dollar range.
I never visited the larger casinos
this trip as I had done the previous
year.
I would estimate that there are
several hundred thousand slot
machines in Las Vegas. As stated
before, you can find them everywhere. All you have to do is have a
nickel, quarter or dollar and you
can play at will. There arc some
individuals who stay there all day
long and would lose a fortune
doing this. I never succumbed to
this enticement. The main games in
all the casinos are ~ambling at the
dice tables, blackJack, roulcue,
backarach and keno. Keno is a
game similar to bingo.
There arc approximately 80
numbers in keno and the players all
pick their numbers and hope that
In these hotels the room rates
his or her numbers match the num- are extremely low. You can get a
bers drawn in each game. I never room for $50 per night and you can
staved around long enough to have as many people in your room
as yon want. Later this rate would
be reduced and you could get a
room for $19. Actually you can
stay in Las Vegas fa: very liUle and
have the best food available. What
should be -a second chance, not a these people uy to do is separate
the murists from their cash at the
way of life."
Go, Prince. That ad is Clinton's tables .
Time passes fast while y,ou are
subliminal version of Reagan's
there.
What really bothered me was
"welfare queen" and Bush's
the
change
of time. This means that
Willie Horton. All three appeal to
if
you
left
Columbus at 5 p.m. it
ordinarily Democratic voters who
was
2
p.m.
in
Las Vegas. One does
had deserted to Reagan and Bush.
And it has worked. For the past get mixed up on the hours until you
three weeks, Clinton's lead over are there for a few hours. Our plane
Bush has hovered consistently had an indirect route to Las Vegas
between 12 and IS points, accord- with a layover in Dallas-Fort
ing to the New York Times/CBS Worth. We arrived in Las Vegas
News and ABC News/Washington that evening.
I cannot help but point out that
Pust polls.
"Clinton is holding on to both a there were other inte~esting matterS
significant lead and the support of on this trip. ln my bathroom the
important elements of the Reagan- commode seat was only about 15
Bush coalition," confU'IDed New incbes off the floor. It was the low·
est toilet seat which I have encoun·
York Times reporter Robin Toner.
Having re-established his slight- tered and I had great difficulty in
ly right-of-center credentials, Clin- geaing up and down. I imagine that
ton is now protecting his left flank when they construCted these toilets
by running a staunchly Democratic there they had midgets in mind and
TV proposal to fight unemploy· not one as large as yours truly.
ment ... "rebuild America ... create Rupe, this was quite an opemtion.
Another fascinating £act is the
8 million new jobs."
.
.
The lion arid the fox are aiJVe number of chapels for the use of
and weD and living in the campaign wedding ceremonies. There is
of the next president of the United absolutely no waiting around if you
schedule your wedding in adva!ice.
States.
Chuch Stone Is a syndicated One taxi driver told our group that
writer tor Newspaper Enterprise it was possible to get married without getting out of your car. ln other
Assocladon.

Clinton plays it both ways

. Prince Bill Ointon will become
)he f~rst Rhodes scholar to be elect• ed president He wiD win this elec• tion for two reasons: the Bush: .Quayle's co~temptuous .misreadi~g .
·: of the Amencan voters econom1c
:·:pain and Clinton_'s own abilit.Y to
: manipulate Amencan voters w1th a
mischievous cunning.
:: Clinton's campaign is more than
:: oleaginously smooth. It is eleganOy
.• devious. Best of all, 11 resonates
·: with the intellectual brilliance of
: the noted 16th-cenwry scholar Nic·
. colo Machiavelli.
In Machiavelli's classic, "The
: Prince," he laid down many
:: axioms for authoritarian gover·: nance. The Italian philosopher:· statesman guaranteed success to
:: any ruler following his prescrip. tions.
· One prescription used an animal
.metaphor, something with which
political doves and hawks arc
,familiar. Wrote Machiavelli: "The
: JH'inco being this obliged to know
: weD how 10 act as a beast must imi·
• ..tale the fox and tl!e lion, for the
:, ion oannot protect himself from
: -traps, and the fux cannot defend
•ltlmself from wolves. One must
!1hcrefore be a fox to recognize
.;:Vaps, and a lion to frighten
•

The nickel slots are quite promi·
nent in the lounges. The larger
establishments are Caesar's Palace
and the Riviera. You would see

I '

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page--\5

September 27, 1992

:~========~==~==~============================

~:rr
••
••
•'•
•••

wv

warned Sununu early on that the
country was headed for a disaster
in the S&amp;L area and that real estate
values were going down the tUbe.. You know what his answer
was? 'We're not worried, you're
just one of those guys ...' and then
he just yawned. That's as close as I
got to Bush.''
The Bush administration made
another politically tinged decision
recently by opposing heftier hikes
in the insurance premiums banks
pay to the deposit insurance fund,
agreeing to only half the amount
proposed by regulators last May.
Seidman
enthusiastically
embraces the eleventh-hour compromise hammered out by Acting
FDIC Chairman Andrew Hove,
who fou~ht off Treasury efforts to
nix any mcrease this election year.
So long as the econom~ doesn't
slip into another recess1on, Seidman is optimistic about the future
of the FDIC and the industry.
Still, the recent montage of
headlines often seem to beg questions of simple equity, and even
common sense. Record profits for
banks. Record low interest for
elderly savers. Banks gets spared a
stiff premium hike. The insurttnce
fund that protects $3 trillion in
banks deposits - and which taxpayers stand behind - is $5.5 billion insolvenL
Hove says now is the time to
bolster the safety net of deposit
insurance, which only four years
ago was $18 billion strong.
In the meantime, the elderly are
on their own. "Every saver, every
Gray Panther, everybody who has
their money in the bank is damn
well against low interest rates,"
Seidman claims. "It's their
accounts that are being paid at a
third of what they got a couple of
years ago. There's been a huge
transfer of wealth here."
With interest mtes at rock-bottom, Seidman says it's time to
revise one of banking's venerable
3-6-3 rule (pay 3 percent for
deposits, charge 6 percent for loans
and hit the golf course by 3
o'clock.) Now banks can pay 2 percent for deposits1 charge 7 percent
for loans and "mey don't have to
go to work at all."
·
Jack Anderson and Michael
Dinstein are syndicated writers
for United Feature Syndicate,
Inc•

words it took a very short time to
get married. It would remind you
of driving through a drive in restaurant, hamburger and fries on the
run. I have heard of individuals in a
hurry to get married, but this is
ridiculous.
Las Vegas has several big name
entertainers and Edie Gorme and
Steve Lawrence were two of them.
Most of our group did see the
Wayne Newton show and it was
very good. I would recommend that
everyone see it
There were several casinos that
had sports book. This means that if
you are interested in betting on
horse or dog races you could go
watch and bet on this racing via
TV. I managed to watch a few dog
races at the Freemont. In addition
to horse and dog racing there is
much betting on the outcome of
sports events. One member of our
group bet thirty dollars on a Reds !'Jets game. It looked like he was
going to be successful as the Reds
were ahead going into the 9th
inning.
The starting pitcher, Belcher,
had retired 23 batters in a row and
there was nothing to indicate that
Belcher was tiring. Lou Pinella, in
his wisdom, took out his starting
pitcher and inserted Dibble in the
lineup . After walkin11 two men,
Dibble pitched one d1reotly over
the center of the plate. Bonilla
promptly hit one out of the ball
park and the score was tied at 5-5.
The TV photographer managed to
get a picture of Belcher who was
made beyond description. What is
most ridiculous was that the Mets
scored two more runs in the next
inning.
On this occasion the players
were dressed in the old time uni·
forms. Our friend who thought ~
had money in the bank discovered
that his team lost and he almost
cried. He should have known bet;
ter. Poor ole George.
Rupe, this trip to the city of Lai
Vegas is one that everyone shou14
make,. especially to see the city
lights at night. Do not go there t3
make a lot of money. If you dof·
you will probably lose your shirt.
might add that all of our group
returned with our shirts on. Enough
said.
Carryon.
. Editor's note • Long-time
Attorney Fred W. Crow is tbe
contributor or a weekly colum• '
tor The Sunday Times-Sentine~ ,,
Readers wisblngto applaud, crll·
lclze or comment on any subject
(except religion or politics) are
encourage!! to write to •Mr!
Crow, In care this newspaper. )

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�TP-C operator certified

EMS runs
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
£ervice responded to six calls for
assistance Friday.
·· At 2:54 p.m., Middlepon went
to the intersection of State Route 7
and County Road 5 and transponed
Elaine Rouse 1(1 Veterans Memorial
HOSJ?ital for treaunent of injuries
recetved in an auf(l accident She
was later transferred 1(1 the Holzer
Medical Center.
At 4:37p.m., Racine answered a
call to a residence on Wells Run
Road where Pearl Hawthorne was
treated but not transponed.
At 5:35 p.m., Pomeroy took
Shawn Hawley from East Main to
Veterans, and at 9:45 p.m. trans·
poned Mike Welch from the Meigs
High football field to Veterans,
wltere he was treated and released.
At 11:04 p.m., Pomeroy went to
The Maples for Ted VanCooney.
He refused treaunent.
• At11 :15 p.m., Middlepon took
Christopher Rayburn from the Mid·
dleport Police Depanmentto Veterans. Rayburn was admitted for
observation.

BUS DRIVER FAULTED- A Meip c-..
ty Local School District bus driver was cited for
failure to yield after a bus-car colUsioa .~
afternoon at the intersection or State Ra.te 7
and County Road 5 (Bradbury) near M't•e
port. The bus driver, Charles E. Willi••-. &lt;e.
36679 Dye Road, Rutland, was eastboalld •
Bradbury and pulled across 7,_st~liinz ~-• left

r..t.ra..-*it.. t7EIIIine 8. Kouse, 77, l34
J ... ~!rift,. a
hiNII 1 ; ..._ D

a

lillllt •

5
"

tn, lbe State Highway

tt to •o111 vebicle's was

t •~ aDd several bus pas-

: s-11 · FfanlitaorinjuriesatVeter·
- M
W J1asti1a1 ud released. (Times·

s . ' .....)

--Local News in Brief:
Police probe shoplifting

TUPPERS PLAINS - Hearnon protection of our citstomers' water :
Han, an employee of the Tuppers supply," said Poole.
:
Plains-Chester Water District. has
been certified as a Class I certifted
treatment plant ~rator.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency recently released
results of the June examination.
Han has completed courses at both
the University of Rio Grande and
Hocking College in water ueatment
A graduate of Federal Hocking
High School, Han is the son of the
Rev. and Mrs. A N. Hart, and
resides on Bethany Ri!Jge near
Athens. He and his wife Brenda
have two children, Traer and T1.
In announcing Han s certifica·
tion, Donald C. Poole, general
manager, said that the district now
has one Class I distribution operator, three Class I treatment plant
operators, and one Class 2 treat·
ment plant ~rator.
"The District is proud to have
such a large certified group of people with the skills and education
required for making certain of the
HEAM ON HART

GALLIPOI:IS- Gallipolis Police were called to Hill's Depan·
ment Store Fnday afternoon by store security who had taken two
women into custody for shoplifting.
According to the repon, Margaret M. Casto, 62, Brown Stree~
Mason, W.Va., and Linda L. Powers, 43, Front Street, Mason,
W.Va., concealed merchandise on their person and attempted to
leave the store without paying for it. Casto allegedly took $18.94
wonh of merchandise and Powers took $8.42 wonh of merchandise.
The women were taken into custody and later released on a summons.

Woman reports vandalism
GALLIPOLIS - Tanya Lewis, Chatham Avenue, Gallipolis,
reponed that someone scrau:hed her car while it was parked m the
municipal parking lot early Friday morning.

State liquor agencies closed
GALLIPOLIS - All state liquor stores, liquor agencies and
depanmental offtceS will be closed Oct. 12 in observance of Columbus Day, John R. Hall, director of the Ohio Department of Liquor
Control, announced this week.

4-H Achievement Night set
GALLIPOLIS -The 1992 4-H Achievemenl Night has been
scheduled for Sept. 28 at the Gallia County Junior Fair Ground.
Activities will begin at 7 p.m. All 4-H members, parents and advi·
sors are invited to attend. Each club is asked to bring two dozen
cookies for refreshments.

Judge O'Brien processes 76 cases during week
POMEROY - Meigs County
Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien
processed 76 eases last week.
, Fined were: Gary Rosswell
Blodgett, Canonsburg, Pa., speed,
$20 and costs; Steven R. Barnett,
Reedsville, seat belt violatioo, costs
Qnly; Nancy Harsh, Plain City ,
speed, $23 and costs; Rodney S.
tuchard, New Haven, W.Va .• seat
belt violatioo, costs ooly; Brenda J.
Jones, Racine, Racine, speed, $20
and costs: Clifford T. Roseberry,
Syracuse, seat belt violation, ~osts
only; William N. Page, Manetta,
speed, $25 and costs; John M.
Qualls, Thomasville, Ga., speed,
$20 and costs; Scott A. Farrar,
Logan, speed, $22 and costs;
Lawrence Lee Jr., Pomeroy, seat
belt violation, costs only; Timothy
M. Whitlau:h, Reedsville, failure to
cootrol, $25 and costs.
Timothy A. Maroney, Marion,
speed, $20 and costs; Jason Daniel,
Gallipolis, seat belt violatioo, costs
only· D. Rosalyn Taylor, Tuppers
Plains. seat belt violation, costs
only; Leo P. Bisaillon, Jr.. Kanka·
kee, Ill., speed. $20 and costs; Joe
Roush, Racine, speed, $26 and
costs; Rhonda·L Wheeler, Gallipo·
lis, speed, $22 and costs; Wallace
p Hatfaeld n. Pomeroy. speed. $22
and costs, seat belt violation, costs
only; Cheri IC. Estep, Felicity, seat
belt violation, costs only; Regma
R. Eakins, Pomeroy, seat belt violation, costs only; Bruce F. Riffle,
Pomeroy, speed, $24 and costs;
. Miriam Brown, Wellston, speed·
ing, $20 and costs; Steven J. Cos·
sell, Pickerington, speed, $20 and
0

costs.
Steven A. Bales, Meadowville,
Va., speed, $30 and costs; Jon E.
Bunce, Akron, speed, $21 and
costs; Arkie Reed Ramey, Canton,
speed, $22 and costs; Barry L.
Bishop, Ironton, overload, $25 and
costs; Dwight L. Wallbum, Jackson, seat helt violation, costs only;
Lydia A. Phipps, Cincinnati, speed.
$23 and costs, seat hell violation,
$20 and costs; Michael Joseph
Vargo, Pfafftown, N.C., speed, $28
and costs; George P. Barr, W~inon,
W.Va., speed, $21 and costs. Darrell A. Thornton, Cincinnati, costs
only, seat belt violation; Richard L.
Warner, Elkview, W.Va., speed,
$30 and costs.
David W. Snively, South Point,
speed, $20 and costs; Joseph A.
Kaplinsky, Columbus, seat belt
violation, costs only; Warner L.
Nelson, Columbus, seat belt violation, costs only; Carol J. Clelland,
Pomeroy, speed, $21 and costs;
Alan 0. Williamson, Proctorville,
speed, $26 and costs; Michael R.
Duhl, Portland, speed, $23 and
costs; Daniel W. Close, New
Straitsville, overload, $25 and
costs; Paula Hess, Gallipolis, pass·
ing bad checks (2). $25 and costs,
restitution on each charge; Sandra
McClure , Rutland, passing bad
checks (9). $25, costs and restitution on each count; Tim Herdman,
Pomeroy, receiving stolen property, $100 and costs, six months in
jail, suspended, two years proba·
lion; Brian Riu:han, Syracuse, driv·
ing under FRA suspension, 10 days
in jail, suspended, $100 and costs,

Immunization, screenings set
for October by health agency
POMEROY - Immunization
clinics and triglyceride and cholesterol screenings are on the October
agenda of the Meigs County Health
Depanment.
In October, the immunization
clinics will be held from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays, Oct. 6
and27.
Norma Torres, R.N., nursing
director, said thatln the interest of
assuring the health department
plays a role in positively tmpacting
the decline of bean disease, the
triglyceride and cholesterol screenings have been scheduled.
The finger stick triglyceride
screening has been scheduled for
OcL 5 from 8:30-10 a.m. at a cost
of $5. Only 28 clients can be tested
at that time and appoinunents are to
be made by calling m-6626.
The $5 finger stick cholesterol
s~reer.ing will he held on Oct. 20

from 8:30-10:30 a.m. Again
appointments are to be made by
calling the Health Department,
Monday through Friday, 8 a.m.-4
p.m.
The low -cost screenings are
made possible through the levy
which will expire thi s year. A
replacement levy will be on the
November ballot and, if passed,
will provide the money to continue
more programs for Meigs countians
regardless of income.

....,.cd

two years~
Jerry I.!Jrilbe, l'll'llnn..,...iliJ""•
operator's liiJClliiiC, dmc lb}'5 ito
jail, suspemlc4. $75 ud cmas;
Terry Day, Paaaut. - * -.di,
c le, $20 ud CIIISIS; FIDyd D.
Pullins, I...cm~ a - . dri'l'illc
under SUSJl""•m, SIOO ..t1 CD!IIS.
five days in jJil.. 111Sf ,....., •idl
valid vpeiJiiUI's Mmt!r bf I • y
2, 1993,two ,_,. ....... "patll
of insutancc ..-.. -days or
license and.
d - • h
must be deli&gt;U'Cd iD lk cout;;
B~J. "
- R•' •.
---.
, • a
weapon lflllile iau""' w. I. SICJIJ
and costs, sO: - ' t s io jlllSBpended, 1M! )QSP'' . • on.
Bruce, As1tt:ll$. ildl,. si&amp;
,,... io
jail, s~"""·· l'W ,_s [!IRIUtioo restilutit!lt lilr" If:! • mlB..
Michael StewM, 9 t'e, liaitious plates, $}II :m1 msu: lCnJ
Payne. PometOJ. DO. si&amp; - •
in jail, "'SJ W ill 10 *Js,. $150
fmc 1Uid OO!IIS, - , _ JM' • ••

qi••••

~

operator•s

one year, pllles :ml 1 i ••• af
vehicle must Ill: t i
I iD cmn;:
Kevin Taylor, M',...l""' .._ 60
days in iail. • 1 .. d iD dtn:c
days, $100 Hll emu. n •jlw!ie+
two years pu• • "' Jt 1• 0..

Safety event set for Oct. 3

Racine, DUI, 60 days in jail,

..t.,

POMEROY- Rqats • ma
accidenls in, s"i• 1 bll
the Meigs 0 1 ; 2 ift"s Dqalment have b:caP I
I
The fust oaaaul 'll'e' !:a)'
mcrning:111d im&gt;uloui_....E. U..
kla, 42, !R-w ..... [b4jn4Marlin Wo1fe, 411, I J ;ilL
Acoorditl&amp; 110 dlr: ...... nwta
was itravelit!g IICIIIIt • 'll'lilre's Hill
Road when Wclfr, OOIA r it llllJ!6,
pulled to die QP iD ...U a tdision. struck a
CDJC
back onto die IUI1II _. ioiD lk
path ofHanH•,s

*"'"

Thcze was 11. .'

r. - ·year, two years probation,

plllr.es and registrabOII or vehicle to
1M: del&gt;~ Ill the coun; John G.

$10 and
rosu; Shannon Pierce, Racine, no
opuator's license. three days in
jJiJ. suspended with valid opera·
llll"s liri:ense in 60 days, $75 fine,
SEp:aftd ID $25, with valid operallll"slicense in 60 days, costs.
Gc:orge P. Barr, Weirton,
W.Va.. S£U belt violatioo, $20 and
miL'!; 'Emesl C. Hoschar Jr., Cutler,
..._ $24 and costs; Jerry L. Cole·
. . . Rudand, speed, $22 and
&lt;ll8lll; Stxy L. Mc:CR.erly, Gallipolis. at belt violation, costs only;
llroaiel M. HarriJ, Athens, failure to
&lt;1llllnll, $20 and costs; Anita J.
Blali:Ita, I'OOiero)·, seat belt viola·
licln, ~siS only; Michael R.
Vaqla. Akron, s~d . $21 and
t~MU, seat helt vtolation, costs
ll!lly. Ruthie E. Cue, Shade, seat
ld riobrrim, costs only; Monty E.
Failey, Bidwell, speed, $20 and
~ Chrisllilpher A. Davis, Mid·
di~J101t, SJ!eed, $24 and costs;
W'illiam J. Adltins, Taylor, Mich.,
&lt;Coatiaued oa A·7)

GALLIPOLIS -The U. S. Postal Service announced today
applications are heing accepted for a rural carrier position at the
Crown City Post Office.
Applications niay be picked up at the Crown City Post Office
from Sept. 28 through Oct. 2 according to Rick Buu:hec, posunaster.

Informational meeting planned

Ferrellgas Specializes In Responsive
Customer Service

When you call Ferrellgas, you gel alii his and more lor your
propane dollar. Your delivery learn is salely trained and
experienced in providing prompl delivery and emergency
service. We also offer special budget -minded cuslomer
programs !hal help you save money and eliminale worries
aboul running out ol propane.

the leh fro1ur dte n 1b " le
and heavy dltJwt: ID • Wall: car.
No charges -&amp;W 5I t 1111ti:
repon indiCIIed . . n [-Ia left of ceow ..S 'll'olic billd 111
cootrol ·his ~dlicl:o. 1la!:: 111
injuries.

--cd

on U.S . 33 at Rock Sprill(p ..t
involved a doo:r. C1lldt:s B. boa-

Pizza contest winners named
MIDDLEPORT- Winners in the pizza eating contest at last
week's Middlepon Catfish Festival were Cunis Hansline, ftrSt place
and Jessica Hooten and Jamie Chapman, second place in the age 7-9
category; and Harley McDonald, ftrSt place, and Chanda Moon, second place, in the 10.12 category.

Ferrellgas

atfmdr:s-.

'

9

lliD[})[b00® ~

Grand jury to get murder case

..

'

HUNTING SALE

liMrd~

DEER HUNTER'S
SPECIALS

in

50Cfl

pil'nl)iralkln Ia htnltr

outtr sock.

$10.00

ADDITIONAL

:BOWLING SEMINAR

SlO.OO

By Professional Bowler Steve

SKYLIN:E

I

STATE IT. 7 IORTI •IIIJ.IIIIIS

446·3362

MASON - People interested in participating in the Wahama
High School Homecoming Parade Friday, Oct. 2, must contact the
school no later than Wednesday at noon.
No entries dealing with political subjects will be permitted.

E·TEX~
footwear

llliiDWIIG 111
I SISEMR
IISUUTJD lOOTS
S 00 Off OUR PRICE

10

FALL
:KICK-OFF
!SPECIALS!
&gt;

I
•
I
I
I
I
•
i

4

•

I
I

KIPLING
SHOE CO.
POINT PLEASANT
PHONE 675-7870

DAILY 8-8; SUNDAY, 12-6

By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspo~~denl
GALLIPOLIS - The Dufour
House (later the Riverview Hotel)
was built in 1865 by John Baptiste
Dufour Jr. ro help celebrate his fa·
!her's tOOth year
of life. The
Dufours were both
born in Gascony,
France. They came
roAmericainl848
and located near
Gallipolis about
1859.TheDufours
were stonemasons and farmers by
trade. The elder Dufour fought in the
French Army during the French
Revolution when Rohespierre was in

formerwasnot.Dr.Eakinsresidedat
the Riverview as did Capt. Maddy
(then owner of the Carrie Brown
steamboat) and Capt. Hutsinpiller.
Also residing there were two school
teachers: May Lisf(ln and Jessica
McDaniels.
Howell's most horrifying experience came one Friday evening when
he accidentally filled all the lamps in
the hotel with gasoline instead of
coal oil. "I was so scared that !forgot
just how many lamps l had filled the
day before, so I went all over the
' hotel, emptied, cleaned, and refilled
with coal oil every lamp about the
place. The Riverview had been
spared! Somehow I attributed its
safety f(lthe presence of Rev. Wai-

(M)~er.

~."

While it was the Civil War that
gave prosperity to the Dufours (they
sold horses,hay ,and cattle to the
Union Army), it was the national
economic panic of 1873 that drove
them into bankruptcy. The hotel was
later owned by Henry Gilman. J.C.
Morris, Margaret Cherrington, L.E.
Damarin, Poe Bradbury and Dr.
Charles E. Holzer Sr. It was f(lrn
down in 1962.
Wilben Howell, a swdent at Lin·
colnSchoolfrom 1901to 1904,and
a porter at the Riverview, once recalled what the hotel looked like in
that era: "The sub-basement of the
building contained coal-bins and a
hugefumaceofsheetmeral. The doors
of the sub-basement opened onto the
banks of the Ohio River. The floor
above the sub-basement housed the
dining room, the kitchen, pantry and
rooms for the female help. The cook,
who occupied one of these rooms,
wasMissludyLewis. Thefloorabove
was on the level of Front Street, now
First Avenue. Here were the office,
Mrs. Cherrington's bedroom, containing one of those antique folding
beds that reached almost to the ceiling when it was raised, and a few
rooms for favored guests or visitors.
The ftrSt two floors above street level
cootained regular sleeping rooms,
while the top floor contained a large
storeroom in which the poner might
sleep."
.
From 1901 to 1904,therewerea
number of prominent permanent
boarders at the hotel including two
clergymen, Rev. Magee of Grace
Methodist and Rev. Walf(ln of St
Peter's. The latter was married, the

The brown-bearded. athleticallybuiltWaltonhadalsosavedHowell's
skin when one day some telephone
linemen had threatened to beat up
Howell. Walton had jumped in front
of Wilben with ftsts clenched and
eyes blazing. The telephone men
depaned peacefully.
It was around the dining table in
the hotel that Howell got quite an
education as captains Maddy and
Hutsinpillet !mew river history. Mrs.
Barlow,whosehusbandranasf(lrein
town,wasoneofthebestreadwomen
of her day and Dr. Eakins was a
wealth of knowledge on many sub·
jects.
Apparently the Hutsinpillers (the
C3P.tain lived with his son Carlos)
were big eaters especially when
pancakes were served. On one occa·
sion, the cook, growing tired of feeding the two "eating machines" asked
if other guests knew why Hutsinpillers are like caterpillars. The answer
was "because they make butter fly" .
"Shortly before commencement
week in 1904, the junior and senior
classes of Gallia Academy High
School sentseveral guests at the hotel
invitations to a banquet written in
German. Butnoneoftheguestscould
read German. When l went into the
kiu:hen and told the dilemma to
Louise Hewiu, the assistant cook and
a graduate of Lincoln School, she
said 'Why didn't you translate it for
them?'Whenitoldberitwasnoneof
mybusiness,sheroaredatme 'That's
whatlsayaboutaNegro,ifheknows
anything, he's afraid somebody will
finditout.Now,Mr.WilbenHowell,
you go back in that dining room and
read that German for those folks!'"
(Howell)
Howell had studied German for
three years at Lincoln School and had
no trouble reading the invitation. In

O'Brien ...
(Continued from A·6)
speed, $15 and costs; Amy D.
Rouse, Middlepon, seat belt viola·
lion, coors only.
Dennis W. Gramlich, Columbus, speed, $20 and costs; Harold
McDaniel, Albany, using weapons
while intoxicated, six months in
jail, suspended to ftve days, $200
and cos IS, two years probation, gun
forfeited to the state; William E.
Morris, Racine, DUI, $350 and
costs, 60 days in jail, suspended to
three, two years probation, operator's license suspended for 90 days,
alcohol assessment, failure to conuol, $30 and costs; Jennifer Lee,
Chester, allowing underaged indi·
vi duals to consume beer, $100 and
costs; Judy Sayre, Pomeroy, pos·
sessing a controlled substance,
$100 and costs; Brian Bass,
Racine, disorderly conduct, $25
and costs, restraining order;
Michael Henry, Ponland, criminal
uespassing, 30 days in jail, sus·
pended to five, two years proba·
tion, restraining order issued, alcohol assessment
Forfeiting bond was Matthew
Resh, Marietta, speed, $85.

,,,,

toad.. . . . &amp;royoo)

•Ln.dered s•lrts
•Sweaters

20% OFF

.

DUFOUR HOUSE- For nearly
years,
.•.
First and State in Gallipolis. Built in 1865 as the Dufour House, it , •
was torn down in 1962. Around 1900, Wilbert Howell was the
porter at wbat was then the Riverview Hotel. His recollections ·
make for interesting reading. Tbe sketch is from the Atlas or 1874. :

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honor of his graduation that same
year from Lincoln School,theboarders of the hotel bought Wilben a
morocco-bOund Bible. Howell later
taught school in Nitro, West Vir·
ginia, and at Western Baptist Col·

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History of a landmark: the Dufour House:

CARDINAL DRYCLEANERS

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SKYLINE LANES IS HOSTIIG I

•

Entries sought for WHS parade

OFF

915-JJII

Advanced Regist11afiH IJwk••

POINT PLEASANT - The Mason County Public Service District has announced water will be off Tuesday on Barton Chapel
Road from I 0 a.m. until 2 p.m.

n, o.u,.. ~~- .......,. IIIIX

BAUM LUMBER

11:00 A.a

PSD announces water shut-off

CHI-IIWA -OI!S,

.....

Sunday, Oct. 4

ATHENS (AP)- An Athens County prosecutor plans to present
a murder case to the grand jury Monday.
,
Proseculll' Bob Toy satd he would present the case after Jason
Clem waived a preliminary hearing Friday.
Clem was charged in the death of Shane Howman of Kilven on
SepL 15. Clem was being held in Athens County Jail on $500,000
bond.

NOW THRU OCTOBER 4, 1992
5trk ZUOl. T~ ullhmlt

$20 FEE- Luncllllltlz.lil

Anchor Hocking talks break off
LANCASTER (AP) - Anchor Hocking Glass isn't close to
meeting union coocerns, said a union negotiator.
Dale Lamb, assistant secre~ of the American Flint Glasswork·
ers Union, said coo tract negotianons brolce off Thursday. Lamb said
Friday that the talks were just lip service and unprofessional.
The unioo contract will expire midnight Wednesday.
Lamb said a strike is always a possibility but no decisions have
been made. Lambs said the union members were ready to strike
with a funher plan of action if needed when the cootract expires.
There are approximately 1,300 union members at the Lancaster
planL
Anchor Hocking did not immediately return a call Friday for
commenL

5 H0 E S

\

POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage has been
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Coan by Donald E. Dye Jr.,
Racine, and Carol Lee Dye, Pomeroy.
A dissolution has been gmnted in the coun to Joyce Lou Ann
Douglas and Richard Keith Douglas.

'r"

Oli~ comfort. Ori ·Spun

St. Rt. 241, c•ester

Couple files for dissolution

Calf today and ask about how these services can
help you-Level Payment Plan
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614-446-2264
~
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WIIH A HOT
SfiE SPA
fM

S~use.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Commissioners invited the
residents of the Bidwell-Poner area to attend an informational meeting regarding the status of the Bidwell-Poner Wastewater Treatment and Collection System Project.
The meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. Sept. 28 in the BidwellPoner Elementary cafeteria.
·
Following the meeting, public commenrs and recommendations
will be accepted.

Whal mailers mosllo you when il comes lo propane?
Prompt delivery. Reliability. Safely. Energy-savings.
Knowledge and experience. Friendly, helplul delivery people.

....., Ell Run Road, was south·
llcluDd ll1i 33. when a deer ran in to
tile left sidic of bis truck. There was
Uildbatc damage to the left door

Malee It A Long Cool

VF.:I'ERANS MEMORIAL
: Friday admissions - Melvin
U&gt;vesee, Pomeroy; Beatrice Lisle,

Postal applications available

C:al 61~-~46-226~

~Shade, speeding,

o am

,. 4

The sccood - - -

GALLIPOLIS - The ftrst Public Service and Safety Awareness
Day will be held in conjunction with the New Car Show Oct. 3.
From 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., local fue depanments, rescue unirs and law
enforcement agencies will give demonstrations in the Gallipolis
City Park. Various vehicles and equipment will also be on display.

When You Need Prompt
· Dependable Propane Delivery...

!IIISJ!'!nded to 10 days, $4SO and
00815. operWt's license suspended

Deputies probe two accidents

Hospital news

• Friday discharges - Anna
Cline, Wilbur Ord , Mabel Gocglein.

+ \ • r..-

lita~S~C

~~cy,

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

September 27, 1992

September 27, 1992

Pomero, • tl!p iwl C SpilUs, Ott

Page-A6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

o•lo River Plaza • Gallipolis • 446·9495
01111' bplr•l-30-12

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Super 8 Motel - Gallipolis
321 Upper River Road, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
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�[Grid game
\~hooting

:wounds 2
: ·ciNCINNATI (AP)- Two
,people have been arrested for
·allegedly firing shots imo the
:bleachers at a football game that
:inJured two 1eachers, authorities
said Sarurday. ·
· Patrick Leshore, 19, of Cincin·
niw, was charged with two counts
.ot negligent assault, as well as car·
:eying a concealed weapon and
·rej:eiving stolen propeny for the
:Friday night shooting.s at Wood·
:ward High School, pollee S81d m a
statement.
. Leshore was bein~ held at the
Hamilton County Justice Center.
, The statemem also said a 15·
year-old was charged with 1he
same crimes. Authorities would not
release his name because of his
a~e. but said he was being held in
the Hamilton Coumy juvenile
detention center.
Police said they did not have a
motive for the shootings.
. Nathan Ragan, 44, a sevenlh·
·and eighlh·grade girls' basketball
coach, was sitting in the the bleach·
·ers when he was shot in the
·abdomen, police Capt. Walter
McAlpin said.
He was in serious condition a1
.the University of Cincinnati Hospi·
.tal Saturday morning, said a man at
1he hospital who declined to g1ve
his name.
Chris Shisler. 23, a teacher at
.Woodward, was wounded in the
bullocks. He was announcing 1he
game from the press box. He was
in good condition Saturday.

esi~ged administrator

won't resign

plans to resign."
amusement park ~~ ~ear. . .
Inspector General David Sturtz
Sturtz began h1s mvestlgatl~n
on Thursday described the investi- Aug. 17 after The Colum.bus. Du·
galion as "very far-reaching."
{kltch reported on dlffJCulues m the
" ll's like throwing a pebble in d~ent
.
.
the pond, and the wave just keeps . ~s week he bnefed the .adm~n·
going and going,'' he said
JStraUon of Gov. George VomoVIch
He would not elaboraae on the on the status of the probe.
,
findings.
. B~ on that ~ Wal!Jice s
Sturtz said his investigation had JO~ IS secure, S81~ Pa~l M1fsud,
expanded from a probe that the chi~! of s~ f~ Vomo~ch:
.
State Highway Pauol started in
I don l th~ anythmg IS g01ng
December. The patrol probed aile· to~~ at th1s pomt based o~ m.~
gations against John Ray, formerly p~hmiDB!'Y [~port from _Davl~,
the department's top fiscal officer, Mifsud S81d So~'!~'· notlung crun·
and olher alleged wrongdoings, mal has~ up..
d
including the creation of jobs for
Ms. Monmg 581~ ~ epartment
friends and relatives of some had not been nollf1ed about any
administratas.
aspects of the investigation.
Ray was fired and sentenced to
"We've been aware that they're
18 months in prison on a ctuuxe of here," she said. "But v.:e'~e real~y
theft
in office for using a state car let them have free rem m theu
ThutSday in Portage County.
on
state
time to go to Kings Island investigation." · -·
The body of Richard Franks, 42,
of Ravenna, was found Wednesday
near Annapolis in western Jeffer·
son County. It had no head or
hands.
The body was clothed in a hunt·
ing vest and pants.
Authorities fii'Sl suspected the
slaying might have been related to
the deaths of five hunters in easaem
Ohio. But they later determined the
method of lcilling was different.
The other victims were killed
with a high-powered rifle from a
distance and their bodies were not
disturbed, Chief Deputy Ron Tum·
er said. Franks was shot twice .at
closemnge.
Authorities nrst had thought his
head had been severed from the
body but later determined it had
been blown off by a shotgun blast,
Turner said.
Four slayings of hunters in Bel·
mont, Coshocton, Noble and Tus·
carawas counties are believed to be
serial killings. A fifth death in
Muskingum County could be con·
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nected, officials said.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The swe
human services director, whose
department is under investigation,
has no intention of resigning, a
spokeswoman said Friday.
Questions about the status of
Director Terry Wallace were raised
after the staae's inspector general
said a probe or the Ohio Depart·
mcnt of Human Services was
expanding, Susan Mooing said.
"The question was put to us
yesterday whether Terry has any
BIG
·They pow potatoes big here
mtention of resigning," she said
you don't really llftd a low·boy to baul 'em.
tie bit of trickery with this potato be picked out of his 11rden oa Friday. "I can aell you unequivoBulaville Pike. It weighed ai'OIInd a pouad and a half. He placed It 011 cally at this time lhat he has no
a toy low-boy and took a doseup picture to 1et the false affect

Suspects charged .in hunter slaying
STEUBENVILLE (AP) -Two
men were charged with murder in
the slaying of a man whose mutilated body was found in a pond, the
Jefferson County prosecutor said
Friday.
Raymond Twyford, 29.. of

Windham, and Danny Eikleberry,
18, of Garreusville, were to be
arraigned at II a.m. Saturday in .
Wintersville County Court, Prose·
cutor Stephen Stern said.
The two men were arrested

Teen: 'I didn't mean
to
kill'
Krumpe1beck told jurors as Gar·
CINCINNAT1 (AP) - A teen·
ager who had robbed a townhouse
set il afire even thOU$h h~ lcnew six
children were sleepmg ms1de the
home. a prosecutor told a jury Fri·
day.
William Lee Garner, 19, told
investigators he thought that the
fire's smoke would awaken . the
children and prompt them to
escape, Assistant Hamilton County
Prosecutor Gerald Krumpelbeck
said. Five of the children died on
Jan. 26 when they were trapped by
fue in two upstairs bedrooms. One
child escaped.
"He set three fues knowing six
children were asleep inside. He
said he expected them to all escape
miraculously
unharmed,''

25 boaters to 'lock through'
new Gallipolis locks Oct. 10
HUNTINGTON - Twcnty-nve
area boalers will be chosen to be
.the fJCst 10 "lock through" the new
Gallipolis locks facility.
The U.S. Army Col]IS of Engi·
neers will hold a free, random
drawing to select privately owned
reereation boats for participation in
the Gallipolis lock dedication cere·
niooy.
: To participate, mail or hand·
c~ your entry to the U.S. Corps
ol Engineers, Huntington Districl,
Attention: PAO, 502 Eight Suee1,
Huntington WV 25701.
On a 3-by-5 inch card, include
the name, address and phone num·

September 27 1992

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

:Page-AS-Sunday Times-sentinel

heroftheregistrant/owner.plusthe
length, width and draft of the boat.
Also include the boat's· state regis·
uation and number. Only one entry
per person will be accepted.
No fee is required, however.
entries must be submitted to Hunt·
ington District Headquarters before
close of busines s on Monday,
October 5.
The dedication ceremony will
be held at the project site near
Apple Grove, W.Va., on Saturday,

nee's trial began in Hamilton Coun·
ty Common Pleas Court "He said
he didn't mean to kill anybody."
Defense lawyer H. Fred Hoene
asked jurors to use reason rather
than emotion in deciding Garner's
fate.
Garner is on trial on five
char~es of aggmvated murder. He
also IS accused of aggravated arson,
aggravated burglary, theft and
receiving stolen propeny. If con·
victed of the aggravated murder
charges, he could be sentenced to
death.
Police said Gamer sneaked into
the home and stole a television set,
a video casseue recorder, stereo
equipment and a telephone, lhen set
1hree fires to conceal his finger·
prints.

FHEE

For more informati .
or volunteer opp9 um'·
call The Scioto .eranc &lt;
o
The Arthritis oundatio
" 1-800-35 -0380

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Section B·
Historical society remembers one-room schools
GALLIPOUS • A few years ago, the Ohio Chapters of the Daughters
of the American Revolution, (DAR), revived ail interest in the history of
one-room schoolhouses located within the state.
At that time the local FrerJCh Colony Chapter NSDAR began to
research and document the "cradles of American education" that once
existell in Gallia County.
When the project began, the main objective was to learn what had harpened to the one-room schools and if any of the sttuctures were still m
eri~
.
. That was 1987, and because the project was so intriguing and historical
m nature, the Gallia County Historical Society pursued the inquiry and
has presently produced a new publication known as Gallia County's
One-Room Schools: The Cllldle Years .
This book not only tells the early-day history of education in the coun·
: ty, but offers the reader many funny and original stories as well as a col·
: lection of rare photographs about the "good ol' days," when the 3R 's
· :(reading, 'riling, 'rithmeuc) might have been taught by the rune of a hick·
: ory stick. One is certain to underswld the "one.JOOJn school" concept by
reading this book.
. Editors of the boot are Estivaun Matthews, Charles A. Murray, and
. Pauline Rife.
Other added attractions in the book include a li$ling of hundreds of for.
~er one·nx_xn school students, names of former s.;hool teachers and prin·
: c1pals, stones by former reachers and students, the McGuffey Readers,
· original poems, llld over 36&gt; photographs,
; Gallia County, founded in 180f, liad many early schools. Education
was and still remains important to the people of southeastern Ohio. When
· pioneers began to settle, they built rough, one-room log sttuctures to edu·
cate the youngsters. As time progressed, these early schools were replaced
by·wood-framed buildings which became scattered across the county lilce .
seeds strewn by the wind Scholars from ages S-16 entered the doors and
received their formal instruction.
A few structures still survive in some form or another. Some are
remodeled, but some remain intact as they were when used for school
insttuction. Several are used today either as dwellings, township govern·
ment buildings, or as church buildings.
. For several years, the Grange, a farmers' ocganization, used them 10
: hold. meetings. These remnants are gradually disappearing with time, and
, a1 thiS date most are non-eriSiellt Photos have been taken of the remnants
: that still exist Many struclllre$ were destroyed by rues, and when schools
had the need to consolidate, many were sold and dismantled.

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All Parts Extra

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IIKiudts: O..ting, Oiling,

AdJustntttliS, Greasing.

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TUESDAY, SEPT. 29-4 P.M.·7 P.M.

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FRUTH PHARMACY

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~O::I:~e~;1f04f5~~ft.blic~;;;7;8;6;N;.;Sec;q;n;d;l;v;•·;•;MI:d=d=l•:=;.;;:

~imts- ~entinel

By CHARLES A. MURRAY

~

Same Day Strvkt

Oc~J:~s concerning the draw-

Along the River

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ED !TOllS OF BOOK • Onrseeing nearly seven years of
researdJ and hard wvrk wue the editon of ''Galli&amp; County One·
Room Schools: ne Cradle Yean", (I tor), Pauline Rite, Charles
A. Murray, and F.stivaua Matthews. The book, with more than 300
pages, is printed 011 ivory color paper, and has a bard-back bur·
pndy color cover, imprlated Ia gold.

New Ohio school laws, enacted in 1914,led to change. Thereafter con·
solidations gradually led to the end of the one-ioom schoolhouse era .
In their day, one-room schools met the educational needs of the local
people, but as time continued. the educational system had to change. By
1934 the one-room schools began to diminish greatly because of the mpid
increase in population growth. The need for consolidation arose.
While seeking information for this book, we discovered that old school
records were d.iflicultiO fmd. Some of the former one-room school teach·
ers had a few records. The documents that still exist in the county school
office are very sparse. During consolidations, many records were lost.
Some were destroyed in fire.
"We researched the deeds in the courthouse to get dates. Many people
have shared photographs to share with renders of this book," said Murray.
"Many former teachers were helpful in sharing their lcnowledge as oral
histories. They gave us many stories and personal experiences that are
preserved in this document •
.
This past year the GCHS discovered some pertinent history that had
been wnuen in 1935 by Bion Bmdbury. Bradbury was the county superin·
tendent of schools at the time when many of the one-room schools consol·
idated. At that time, the Gallia County School Ofnce was housed in the
Gallia County Courthouse, and Bradbury had access to the early school
records that were stored in the attic of the courthouse.
Since that time, the courthouse bomed, and many of these early school
records were destroyed by the nee. Bradbury's unpublished writings
appear in the book under the title "Bradbury's School Journal." This
information is so valuable because it completes the resean:h, especially
the early historical data, for certain schools in which we were unable 10
nnd much information.
Bradbury also took many phoiOgraphs of the one-room schools during
the 1930s. Perhaps it was his gnalto poblish such a book and was unable
to do it If so, his dream has finally come true.
"In 1882, Hardesty's History of Gallia County reported a 10ta1 of 164 ·
one-room schools in this county," said Murray. "We have attempted to
document as many of these as possible by telling lhe location of each
school, listing as many names of students, teachers, and board members
that could be documented, and djspla~ing photographs."
"Credit is given to contributors as Information is presented," he added.
These early Gallia County structures, along with the others thai once
exisled across this land, were the "cradles of American education." They
produced American citizens who buill a nation that is recognized globally

September 21,1992:

ioday for its ability to maintain a strong, powerful nation.
·
"Our educational heritage is one !hat all Americans can be proud," said ·
Murray.
·
The School Bus
It was not painted a shiny yellow with pretty flashing red and r.ellow
lights and sparkling chrome; nor did it have any headlights. It didn t need·
any.
It had no sparkling windshield nor side windows. It never was state ·
inspected. God only knew how old it was; no man living lcnew. It was
rusty grey and had a two-speed transmission - slow and slower, so it ·
always got there. It was quite a feat because the road (now State Rouae'
141) was just din. The mud became axle-deep to this ·~olt wagon."
·
The bus was steered by a black man whose only name I ever heard was
"Monday." "Monday' steered the "bus" with a rope as he walked in front':
The bus held only two passengers in its hair-covered and naturally
warmed seat, but, as I said, there was no roof nor windshield. There ~
no rubbei tires, but it had good solid iron shoes and a good set of rear.:
"bumpers" that bomped pretty hard if a stranger got within eight or 10
feet of the rear. There were two long ears and a shon busy tall. Yes, it was'
an old mule.
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Now the bus never failed to be at the schoolhouse door with "Monday''
doing his bus duty of loading or unloading his passengers at 9:00 or 4:00,''
so the teacher never had to worry ahoul bus duty. Elizabelh and her second-grade brother, Charles, were the only passengers. This was the ·
~hoolbus at the Flag Spring's one-room school in Walnut Township dur·
mg the 1923·24 term of school. It was a 4 x 4 that did not require a school
levy to operate. since a bale of hay and a few ears of com would keep it
operating for several days.
.
What ever happened to that old mule? The rumor circulated that one
July, "Monday" decided to plow out his pa1ch of popcorn, but the suO:
became so hOI, the com got to poppin'. So much popcorn flew around that
old mule's eyes and can;, he thought it was a snows10rm and lay down in
the com patch and froze to death.
Note: Uncle Josh is the author's pen name. He wishes 10 keep his iden··..
tity anooymous; however, Charles and Elizabeth Webster did attend the· .
flag Spring's School, and they rode 10 school on a mule. From the book"Gallia County OM·Room Schools: The Cradle Years"

RALPH SCHOOL AT ENO ·The school building, after school' ..
was closed in January, 1923, was moved to the Wiseman farm ·
about .5 mUes south on State Route 554 where it was used for stor· .,
age. It Is presendy owned by Dr. David Miller. The former school
lot is now overgrown with bushes, briars, and vines.
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OAK GROVE • After school closed at the
close of the 1933·34 school term, the pupils went
to either the Cross Roads St:hool or the Harrison
School. For many years it stood as a vacant
building. Sam Denney bought the building and,

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PLAYTIME • Muriel Jones Allison taught
her nrst school here. It wu closed on Jan. 26,
1935. Tbe building was then sold to Robert EriL
It was moved three quarteri of a mile east of ils

for a time, it was used to store corn and hay.It
was changed into a dwelling where John Everett
Denney lived. Finally, the structure was disman·
tied and used to repair a barn which is on the
Tom Denney farm at the present time.

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original location on State Route 141. It WaS used
as a dweUing and later as a garage on Melhorn
Tackett's land.

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: COAL VALLEY • After the clolliiJ of "'
.•sc:bool at tbe elltl ol tbe 1933-34 term, the b•lld·
Ina was purchased by Everett Cardwellud a

&gt;!

cblcllea llou1e wu aillde out ot IL It wu lAter
used u a calr ban. It Is stlll1tandlnl oa tbe
property owned by Gabe Allea •

MARTIN SCHOOL • Martia School 101 its
name because Henry Martla owaed the proper·
ty on which tbe school Wlll erected. Elmer Cald·
well taught his first school here. MerriU Wblte
purchased the school bouse when it was closed

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and moved It to Green Towusblp IICl'OIS ._ ru.d ;:
from the Jane Pettus Bogp' home. It was nnt
used as a garage and then as a stonge bulldln~o · •
It bas a good tin roof but Is empiJ now. Bl'lllll•
CJ'OWil up around it
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3 teens killed when pickup overturns

Meigs County calendar

abolil 2 miles south of Ezel at 8:30
p.m. when the driver lost control of
when !heir p1ckup tru&lt;;k overturned the vehicle, said Trooper Ralph
and struck a tree in Morgan Coun• Lochard of lhe Morehead post.
The pickup went over an
ty, Kentucky State Police said.
embankment,
overturned and !hen
The pickup truck was heading
- southbound on Kentucky 1010 sl~med into a tree, Lockard said.
MOREHEAD, Ky . (AP) -

Three teen-~ers were killed Friday

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Gospel concert,
Sunday, 7 p.m., Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church, Pomeroy. The
Pathfinders will perform . Pastor
Pete Tremblay welcomes lhe public.
COOLVILLE- Homecoming,
Vanderhoof B'aptist Church,
Coolville, Sunday. Potluck dinner
at noon. Pastor Cecil A. Morrison
invites lhe public.

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POSSESSIONS.

JENNIFER WATSON

Watson-Warner .
Mr. and Mrs. John Watson of
Gallipolis announce the engagement and forthcominJ marriage of
their daughter, Jenmfer Michelle
Watson, to Gary Dean Warner, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Warner of

DEBRA SALLEE and GRADEN ELEAM

Sallee-Bleam----VINTON - Rev. and Mrs. Sallee
of Vinton, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Debra Ma y, to
Graden Keith Eleam, son of Roger
and Jennifer Blankenship of Vinton.
Miss Sallee is a graduate of
North Gallia High School and a

1990 graduate of Judson College,
Elgin, Ill., with a degree in Human
Relations. She IS currently
employed· as the director of adm issions/social services at Overbrook
Center, Middleport.
Mr. Eleam is a graduate of
North Gallia High School and a
1991 graduate of the University of

Rio Grande , with a associate
degree in Nursing ..He is currently
employed as a registered nurse at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point
Pleasant.
The open church wedding will
be held at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday,
Oct. 3 at the Vinton Baptist
Church.

NIKKJE BROYLES and MARK MIDDLESTADT

Broyles-Middlestadt

Gallipolis Ferry.
An open church wedding will be
held Oc!Ober 17 a1 2:30 p.m. with
music beginning at 2 p.m. A reception will follow the ceremony at the
church fellowship hall.

ROBYN PITZER and JEFFREY HAWK

Pitzer-Hawk

BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS!
~ .

LONG BOTTOM - Mr. and
Clinton R. Pitzer, Long Bot. tom, announce the engagement and
~: approaching marriage of their
,:; daughter, Robyn Gail, to Jeffrey
:: Allen Hawk, son of Cheryl Lauder-· mil~ Racine, and Rollin K. Hawk,
' Guysville.
Miss Pitzer is a graduate of
::: Eastern High School and Rio
Grande University with a bache. lor' s degree in education. She is
· currently employed with the Meigs
~;, County School Dislricl.'l as a substi., . tute teacher.
~~, Mrs.

446·7470

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CHESJDRE - The descendants
: :or Arnold and Goldie Sanders held
~ ':'1heir annual reunion on Sept. 6 at
:_·_the Kyger Creek Employees Club
'· shelterhouse. The blessing was
:::..given by Alma Sanders.
:::: Attending were Alma Sanders,
,:_:Shirley Nolan; Debbie, Carrie and
- Tracie Jackson, Curt, Lori, Eric,
- Kelly and Justin Nolan; Ronnie,
Elaine, Rick and Ricky Barnes;
Jim, Rhonda and Travis McCany;
Fred, Terri, Alan and Stevie Queen.
Stephanie Crouse; Larry, Brenda,
Larry and Eric Burris: Christina
Denney; Faron, Allison, Todd and
Brett Sanders: Jodi, Malerie, Kayla
and
Jaye Lockhart; Delores
and Faye Johnson;

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at Kitchen Bazaar in advertising.
Mr. Middlestadt is a graduate of
Calvert Hall and the University of
Maryland Baltimore County. He is
employed at Yankee Engineering
as a mechanical engineer.
The wedding will be held Saturday, Oct. 17 at 1:30 p.m. at Our
Lady Queen of Peach Church,
White Marsh.

SYRACUSE - The First Church
of God in Syracuse will hold its
homecomin~ Sunday at 10:30 a.m.
A potluck dinner will begin at noon
followed by the afternoon service.
Pastor David Russell invites the
public.

MIDDLEPORT - Homecoming
at
the
United PenteCOSral Church in
RACINE - The Battle for the
Hearts and Minds of Our Kids by Middleport will be Sunday at 10
Children at Risk, a two pan video a.m. with a potluck dinner followseries, will be presented Sunday at ing the service. There will be no
7 p.m. at the Racine First Baptist evening service.
Church.
MONDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Family and
REEDSVILLE - Eastern Local
friends of the late Walter and Edna OAPSE meets Monday, 7:30 p.m.,
Oiler Gilmore, family reunion , at the high school.
Sunday, Rock Springs Grange Hall.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Dinner at I p.m. Bring a covered
Veterans
Service Commission
dish and table service.
mccl.'l Monday, 7:30p.m., Veterans
RACINE - Eagle Ridge Com- Service Office in Pomeroy.
munity Church homecoming, Sunday. Morning servi ce 10 a.m.,
RACINE - Southern Local
ca'l"y-in dinner at noon, afternoon School Board meets Monday, 7
service at I :30 p.m. Specia l p.m., at the high school.
singing. Public invited.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - AA meeting SunPOMERO Y - MADD meets
day, 7 p.m., JTPA building , Tue sday, 6 p.m., 119 Butternut
Pomeroy.
Avenue, Pomeroy.

County park site of reunion
GALLIPOLIS - Descendanl.'l of
Thomas I, Jones, formerly of Perry
Township, gathered SepL 20, at the
Raccoon Creek County Park for
their family reunion.
Attending were: Muriel and
John Allison, John Allison II ,
Phillip Jones, Bronwyn Jones Nelson , Bethanne and Donald
Schwenk, Donald G. and Francis
C. Jones, Frank Shoemaker, Ted E.
and Susan E. Thomas Jones, Geraldine Phillips, Tom Jones, Tina and

Greg Simons, Joy Jones, Stanzi
Ross, Brian Brinkerhoff, Dan and
Carol Lee Jones, Brerry and Elizabeth, Drew, Danielle Hudson, Donnie Jones, Michelle Meyers, Newt
and Patty Jones, Newt and Mary,
Briar Jones, John I. and Judy Jones,
Jim Jones, Jeanie t;;rawford, Joe
and Missy Jones, Jbhn and Toni,
Joshua, Adam Jones, Ed and Sandi
Jones.
Next year's reunion will he held
SepL 12 at the park.

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Mln.2RM

AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONEI

Hawk is a graduate of Eastern
High School and is currently
attending Rio Grande University
majoring in electronics. He is
employed with Fisher's Big Wheel
in Pomeroy.
The open church wedding will
be an event of Oct. 17 at 1:30p.m .
at the Racine United Methodist
Church in Racine with a reception
immediately following in the
churth social room.
The couple will reside on Route
7 near Five Poinl.'l.

:.Sanders
family
reunion
held
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5 ::,M

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GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Benny Broyles of Gallipolis,
announce the engagem ent and
upcoming marriage of their daughter, Nikki Lee, to Mark John Middlestadt, son of John and Joyce
Middlestadt of White Marsh, Md.
Miss Broyles is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
Ohio University. She is employed

MARlETTA - Golf tournament,
Marietta Country Club, ) I am. by
Easter Seal Society of the River
Cities, Inc.

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Beaver: Kaye Richards; Leann,
Michelle, Robbie and Brandon
Harrison; Sidney Sanders: Phil,
Maggie, Jarren and Phillip Sanders
Don and Zenia Evans; David ,
Penny and Sean Sands; Doug
Evans; Trish, Aaron and Jennifer
Butcher; Leslie Smith; Carl and
Norma Sanders.; John, Jan, Craig
and Jill Sanders; Mike, Kelly,
Randi and Andrea Tawney; Hank,
Sharon and Jodi Fasone; Jeff,
Becky and Julie Fasone; Harry Lee
Sanders; and Ona Ray and Luella
Sanders.
Next year's reunion will be held
at the same location on Sept. 5.

The right stuff
The success of the Revolution.
ary War, which was filled with
hardships, was due to George
Washington's leadership. He was
resourteful, a stem disciplinarian
and the one strong, dependable
force for unity. He favored a federal government and became chairman of the Constitutional Conven·
tion of 1787. He helped get the
Constitution ratified and was unanimously elected president by the
electoral college and inaugurated
on April 30, 1789, on the balcony
of New York's Federal Hall.

THE CORNER RESTAURANT
308 S. THIRD AVl

MIDDUPORT

Is Celebrating Its 1st Anniversary
Thursday, Oct. 1st!
FREE COFFEE OR BEVERAGE WITH SPECIAL
THURSDAY'S SPECIAL

·BAKED SOAK
Mashed Potatoes &amp;Gravy, Green Beans or
HOMEMADE CHICKEN &amp; NOODlES
With Homemade Rail
We would like to thank everyone for making
our first year a pleasant and
successful one.

The Gallia County Historical Society
Offers A

PRE·PUBLICATION
SPECIAL SALE*

HEATHER MCCANN

t Celebrates birthday

t
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TUPPERS PLAINS - Heather
t Marie McCann, daughter of Mark

1through October 31, 1992 Only
For The New Pubbcation

t

A. and Deborah (Craft) McCann,
' Tuppers Plains, recently celebrated
' her second birthday w1th two par-

"GALLIA COUNTY ONE-ROOM SCHOOLS:
THE CRADLE YEARS"

ties.

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One featured a " Ballerina"
theme and the other a "101 Dalmatians" theme.
Join ing in the celebration in
addition to her parents, were maternal great-grandparents, Gay and
Laura Fields, maternal grandparems. Robert and Carol Craft, paternal grandparents, Charles and
Em ma McCann, Jeannine Craft,
Danny Davienne and Brittany Hopkin s, Gary, Mary and Corey
Chu rch, Jenny, Missy, Rob, Charlie
and Chad McCann, Bobbie Pierce.

~ Receives degree
~BIDWELL - Amy Hatcher, a
• 1987 graduate of Gallia Academy
: High School, received a Master's
• degree 'in Joumalism from Indiana
~ University. Under a Reader' s
; Digest Fellowship for Reporting
; th e Arts, Hatcher studied arts
; reporting techniques and completed
· a minor in music history.
·
• She received her B.A. in Jour: nalism from Washington and Lee
: University and is currently
: employed as a reporter for the
• Atlanta Journal/Constitution and
: resides in Doraville, Ga.
: She is lhe daughter of William
lnd Samantha Hatcher of Bidwell.

Aaew publicatio1 that "preserves the past for t•e preseat and fgf.re• geaeratloas.

------------------ ----------------ORDER FORM FOR THE BOOK : ;.Gallia County One-Room Schools: The Cradle Years"
Name

Stieet- - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - - -

City.=-::=:;---:-:--:-::-~-:--:-----,----

Please send _

Stale
Zip - - - - -copies olthe above boo&lt; to the above address. Telephone ::Nu-m
"'"b_e r_ __

GIFT ORDERS-Please send _
Name
.

- ------

copies ollhe above boo&lt; to lhe lollowrng.

0 Include GiN Notice OOo nol~elude Gill Nolicl

S!reet _ _ _ _ _.,.--- - - - - - - - - - - : : - - - - - - - - - - -- c~
~
~P
Send Bookand Gill Not~e to Arrrve By (Dale):"
- - - - -Book to be lisled as a om lrom {~nl nlflll, organllalion or busmess lo be liSied):
----------------~--

BOOK PRICE - - - - - - - -

Pie-pybllcallgo Sale Price
Regular Price
(Belore November 1, 19921
(Aller November 1. 1992)
$30.95
$35.95 .
Ohio Residents, Add State Sales Tax'
1.86
2.1 6
To!al Cos! (wi111out mailing)
$32.81
$38.11
Po!Iage and handling (if applicable)- Add $4.50 lor each book ordered. Enclose check or money order for full amount

DEAR TRAVELIN' FRIENDS,
Where is the summer going? Time
I~:!:s. so qui ckly. We just get back
I.;
and it's time 10 go again.
The fall season is upon us and we arc pack ing up to go to the New
England area where the smell of maple syru p. woodsmoke. fresh salt air
by the ocean and lots of fresh seafood fills our thoughts. We have a great
trip planned and a full motortoach waiting to takeofffollowingourpre·
tour reception in the bank lobby at6 a.m. Saturday morning. We will
be staying four nights in the exclusive area of Hyannis, Mass. At the
Hyannis Regency and from there we' ll do tours to Boston, Plymouth,
Provincetown on the tip of Cape Cod, and have a day long cruise 10
Martha's Vineyard Island. During lhe evenin gs we'll he attending a
dinner-show, have a lobster-bake, and enjoy dining at the best HyaMis
has 10 offer. In addition, there may be a few surprises enroute which we
usually work in .
A great week-end get-away is planned for the Dayton area on
October 10-11 . This one is filling fast so if you're interested, contact me
immediately. We will overn ight at the Manchester Inn and attend the
Lacomedia Dinner Theater !hat evening for the production of
"'Nun5!'nse" ... winner of the hesl Off-Broadway Musical of lhe Year.
On Saturday and Sunday we will tour several area places of interest
including a tour ofDayton and Carillon Park which features lhe Life of
the Wright Brothers and History of Aviation. We'll also visit Lebanon,
Ohio, Home of the Golden Lamb Inn and Golden Turtle Chocolate
Shoppe. We'll wind up wi th a visit to the high-quality flea market,
Trader's World, featurin g over 300 vendors. Cost per person is $140
double,$ 130 triple, $125 squad and $180 single which includes Deluxe
Motorcoach Transportation, Pre-Tour Reception, Valet Parking, and
Baggage Handling throughout the lrip. In addition you are lrllveling
with your age group, re·acquainting with old friends or making new
ones. All admissions, the dinner-show and a breakfast buffet are also
included. The non-member fee is $10.00 additional. Full payment is
due by October I.
We are so pleased with lhe response to our Hawaiian Cruise which
is set for January 14-24, 1993. We have bookedagroupof33whichwill
hoard our Motortoach at the bank following a pre·tour reception and
travel to Columbus where we will fly to Honolulu and spend two nights
at a luxurious hotel relaxing before boarding our cruise ship fora seven
day cruise to the Four Islands. Aboard ship, we'll enjoy lhe great food
and entertainment, sail during lhe night to a New Island to enjoy each
day. What a great way to see and do it all- and are we excited!
We have a membership now of over 300 wilh new people joining
our tours each time. We feel that this is a great way to travel with our
friends,leaving all details up to us. One of ourpanicipants said recently
after completing a tour, "This is great - first time niy wife and I could
just relax and talk while vacationing, I usually am watching the
highway and she is busy trying to plan activities and meals - I tike
leaving alllhe work to someone else." So, come join us- we'd love to
have you!
LET THE GOODTIMES ROLL,

s.END CHECK ANp OBQEB TO· GALL!A COUNTy H]STOBICAL SOCIETY p 0 BOX 295 GAllIPOLIS PH 455MNS
Non·Oh~ rH ~enls do nol pay this lax.

"NOTE: Gil books ordert&lt;ll,or Christmas 1992 may nol be ablelo be shippe&lt;l in limelo arrive by December 25. however, lho Gift Nolice w;n be
sontand.shouldarrwe byChrrSim~s II order II Iecewed by December 14. (Reminder: Sale P1&lt;• ends Nowmbor ( 1992.)
For addihonal G~ Ord01s, pltostlr~ Inlormal~ (names. addresses, elc.) ona separate sheet.

"""""""'"'"""'""•r.. ,.,....,..
.r.... """"' """"' PIIIC,

MARY FOWLER, CO-ORDINATOR
PEOPLES CHOICE

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MHS gr

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OH-Polnt

SeptembJr 27, 1992

accepte

POMEROY - Flllllk Blake aild
Christina Weaver, freshmen at
Ohio University, have been accepted into the Copeland Scholars Program there. ·
Both are 1992 graduates of
Meigs High School.
The Copeland Scholars Program
is. availab!e to outstanding high
school semors planning 10 major in
business. Scholarships are awarded
to those accepted into lhe program.
Blake is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

John Blake, 424 South Second St.,
Middleport. At Meigs he was a
member of the National Honor
Society and four year member of
the I.U.C. academic ream.
Daughter of Betsy and Bill
Weaver, 642 Mill St., Middlepon,
Christina was a member of the
National Honor Society at Meigs
and selected for Buckeye Girls
State, a mock program in government sponsored by the American
Legion.

Beat ofthe Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
Friends and neighbors of Carolyn Wbaley-long an employee in
the county treasurer's office--have
taken on a worthwhile project.
You may want 10 help witll it:
Carolyn has been battling cancer
for a number of years so ller friends
and neighbors will srage a big yard
sale 10 belp Carolyn eliminate her
medical and hospital biDs.
The yard sale will be held on
Saturday, Oct. 3, across from
Cline's Fruit Market on Route 7.
How can you help? Well,
you're being asked to donate to the
sale. Items needed include craft
articles, furniture, smaU appliar1ces,
lawn equipment and other related
items in good condition. Clothing
will not be needed. Contributions
for the sale should be in by
Wednesday, Sept. 30, and if you
can help or need more information
call Mary at 667 -3958; Eloise at
667-3334, or Janet at 667-3073.
Please call after 6 p.m. Monetary
donations, of course, are more than
welcome. Checks are 10 be made
payable to the Carolyn Whaley
Fund and are 10 be mailed to Janet
Connolly, treasurer, Long Bottom
M.E. Church, 39923 Old 7 Road,
Reedsville, Ohio, 45772.
Carolyn's supponers comment:
"AU support and help given will

Dowell named new dancer
MIDDLEPORT -Jason Dowell,
son of Ben and Kim Dowell of
Middleport, is a new member of
the Country Dancers of Berea College, Berea, Ky. Dowell, a graduate
of Meigs High ~chool 1 is a freshman at Berea maJQnng m nursmg.

MADD elects
state secretary

MR. AND MRS. CHARLES L. HERDMAN

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POMEROY - Ellen Jane
Rought, a member of the Meigs
County Chapter of Mothers
Against Drunk Driving, has been
elected secretary of the state
MADD organization.
Rought and Pat Thoma, Meigs
County's delegate to Ohio MADD
were in Columbus recently t~
attend the quarterly meeting.
Rought will talce over the duties of
secretary in January.
Steve Wilson, a professor of
psychology and a "joyologist" was
speaker at the meeting.
The Meigs Chapter, one of 28
chapters in Ohio, has meetings on
the last Tuesday of each month at
the offices of Health Recovery on
Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy.
Thoma said that women without
children as well as men are invited
to join the local chapter.

King-Herdman
The First Church of God in New
Haven was the setting for the
double-ring marriage ceremony of
Ada Louise King of Middlepon and
Cllarles Lee Herdman of Broadrun.
Rev. Hennan Jordan officiated the
August20 ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Allen and Kay King of Middleport.
The groom is the son of Hersel
Henlman of New Haven and
Pamela Lane of Broadrun.
The bride wore a floor-length
formal made with waves of sheer
wire hem ruffles. The front bodice,
back and sleeves fealured delicate
embroidery. Simulated pearls cascaded from the neclcline with
strands of pearls draping the cutout sleeves and open back.
Her V-band headpiece was made
of slnUids of simulated pearls wilh
of fabric ftowers and simpearls on the side. The bride
al:!o wore a cameo pin from her
grandmother, Irene Hanson.
The !nde's cascadiqg bouquet
was made of silk peach carnations,
aqua rosebuds, baby's breath, peach
netting, ivy, strands of simulated
pearls and ribbons of peach, aqua
and white.
The maid of honor was Tracy
Rietmire of Middleport. She wore a
bright peach tea-length satin gown.
The gown featured a sweetheart
neclcline and a scooped back with
Sl131lds of simulated pearls draped
across it.
The best man was the groom's

father, Hershel Herdman.
Jan Johnson attended the bridiil
register. Jane Wise sang and played
the piano.
The couple currenUy resides in
Huntington.

He competed with other students for membership in the organization which was established in
1938 as a club 10 preserve the culture of the Southern Appalachian
mountains.
The dancers perform AngloAmerican folk dances, singing
games and·storytcUing songs. Their
material is drawn largely from the
Appalachian South, New England
and the colonial period. Several
types of English ceremonial dances
also are included in the 1roupes'
repertoire.
The Country Dancers have performed in England for the royal
family, at dance festivals in Latin
America, Denmark, Scotland and
Korea, at the White House and the
Lincoln Center for Performing Arts
in New York City. They also perfonn for school and community
groups, often dancing litcraUy "for
their ·supper" as they receive no
pay, only uansponation expenses.

No 6970

0t1u•e HanO-

Hela Srower ·

W!I!EX
ELDIE AND MARGARET DICKEY

Couple celebrates 63 years

GIVE ME A

74pv$J295
Portrait Value Ever/

. Seniors' schedule announced

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Bad blood

WHAT DO
J 2 Porlro1 1

lnc/ucles Porlrait
Identification Corer
SUBJECT FEE Of $2 PER PERSON payable when

~rtra it s

ore

ta~en ,

not indvded in odverli5ed

prrce . No depo~rt required . Poses lor cidverh sed portrort colle.;;tion ovr Jelechon ~on your chorce of

background Your favorite prop ~ welcomed Up to .lrve odditionof po5es tolcen lor opllonol portrait
collection with no obl igation lor purcha5e Not valrd with any other oH111. One advertised package
pe~ fomdy Por !rorl m.e~ opp!O!!imote. Chri11ma1 bockgrouncl ovoiklble ot no extra chOrge.

HURRY/ Don't Miss Our Biggest OHer Ever/

Seminole Indians in Florida,
under Osceola, began attacks on
Nov. I, 1835, protesting their
forced removal. The unpopular and
subsequent eight-year war ended
Aug. 14, 1842, but not before the
Indians were sent to Oklahoma and
the United States lost 1,500 soldiers.

•

THIS AREA KMART HAS APERIIANENT STUDIO OPEN:
Mo.da'f"Sahlrday, I0:00 a.m.·7:00 p.&amp;
0• S11day from Store Ope•ilg to 0.. Ho1r Before Closillg
GALLIPOLIS
Cuslomer Service. Col/ 1·800-438·8861.

C 1!192 PCA lnfl Inc

You know what's more
addictive than food?
The feeling of success.
Weight Watchers showed me how to eat right andfeel great!

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Foo.l was always on my mind. All mommg I'd think about lunch. Before bed, I'd want just
one more snack. I tried controll ing It on my own. but nothing worked.
Then I JO ined Wcrght Watchers.
·
Every step of the way, rhcy gave me the support and encouragement I needed to
succeed. But best of al l, they gave me a plan I could li ve with. Now I know how to survive
stressful days, cor ing out, ;mJ pame;, all wuhout
giving up my f'Vonte fooJs.
Fl\ .I/ II Hh
I've learned howw eat nght . and I feel rea llv
I /ttl/&lt; !fl .'
great. Siner JOining Weight Watchers. this is the
best I've ever looked. The only thmg I crave now
IS more success.

c••

Adl hoM: JON
•~noe ft1ft' IMIII)N wlJh Otlr
Sp«W f"rlu.Pmtntlol PY• Joill,l 011110111.

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R.S.V.P. - This phrase is revolutionizing furniture shopping at
Rutland Furniture. Whenever you see it, whenever you hear it,
you'll know you are getting the BEST possible price. No dickering.
No haggling. Just plain honest to goodness low prices on quality
brand name furniture, everyday. So don't worry about missing · a
sale. We give you the lowest prices 365 days a year, lower than
sale prices, everyday. So remember the phrase, R.S.V.P.- Rutland
Furniture's Showcase Value Price! You'll be glad you did!

.
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Phone and ask about
Community meetings near you.

OnThurtday

7

Alice Johnson was 65 years old and the picture of health.
Sometimes she vvondered what would happen if she had an accident
or a serious health problem. Alice, like thousands of other Ohioans,
lives in a rural area.

R.S.V.P.

$479
$439
$319
$999
$899
$1418
$969
$881
$1199
$799
$419
$429

And prayers as well as cards are
being asked for Barbara Coates
Chaney, fonnerly ofPomeroy.
Barbara suffered a massive heart
attack and is in the Cardiac Care
Unit, Room 201, Riverside
Methodist Hospital, Columbus.
She needs to feel your support.
Racine's well-known, Garnet
Irvine, will celebrate her 91st birthday on Wednesday, Sept. 30.
Cards will reach her at Box 547,
Cherry St., Racine, 45771. Garnet's always so pleasant.
Another long-time friend you
might want to remember on Friday,
Oct 2, when she observes her 87th
birthday is Sadie Thuener. Many
of you will remember, Sadiewidow of the long-time mayor of
Syracuse, Bill Thuener--as having
been involved in Pomeroy business
activities for a number of years.
She loves hearing from you. The
address is Box 57, Third SL, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.
Perhaps, you've missed seeing
friendly Mary Frances Bumgardner
of Middleport over the past few
months. Mary Frances has really
been missed in the old home town.
She is, however, currently making
her home with a daughter in
Columbus. You can get in touch
with her in care of Alma Nelson,
3201 E. Broad SL, Columbus, Ohio
43209.
1 enjoy hearing from you. Do
let me know what cooks in your
life. If you've got a project going
or need to get some infonnation out
or some in, drop me a line at 109
High SL, Pomeroy. What I'm saying is keep in touch. I'm always
interested.
Summer has just faded into fall
and while we regret the departure,
it does mean that grass cutting
should be winding down. Next
comes the lullaby of the leaves
with the gorgeous color show.
Then unfonunately, they all come
tumbiing down and we switch from
lawn mowers to rakes. But we will
keep smiling, won't we?!

one granddaughter. Spees resides
in GaUipolis.

MOTEL MANAGER - Lori
HuU or Gallipolis has been hired
as manager or the new Gallipolis
Super 8 Motel. Hull's responsibilities as manager will include
monitoring cost control, cbecklag
daily reports, preparing for
inspections, attending local
botel/motel ruactlons, making
sales calls and otber duties.

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••
Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing
Sliding fee salt. No one refused servkes b~a~use of l111biiJy to pay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
MIDDLEPORT
·509 S. 3rd Ave.
992·5912
8:30 to 5:00 Moaday·Friday
Closed Uursday

GALLIPOLIS
414 Secant! Ave., 2tad Aoor
446·0166
8:30 to 5:00 Mo•day·Friday
8:30 to 12 Sat1nlay
Closed Uursday

ALSO: Jatkson, Chesapeake, Alhens, Chillicothe, Lagan &amp; McArthur

FALL HAS ARRIVED•••
AND PRICES ARE FA L
AT
LIN
MASON FURNITURE
G

HERE'S JUST ASAMPLE OF THE f!UNY
BARGAINS WE HAVE FOR YOU •••

Have you ever wondered what life would be like without our
small and rural hospitals such as your hometovvn hospital - Veterans
Memorial?

$289

$149

We're here for you.

RUTLAND FURNITURE ..
742·2211

. 1·800.837·8217

UJN STREET • RUTLAND~
'

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Veterans Memorial Hospital

115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy
992•2104

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LIVING ROOM .SUITES . SELECTED GROUPS
50% OFF

Veterans Memorial
Hospltql

11

WAftt:
HOUSEs

3 PIECE LIVING ROOM TABLE SETS
SJ99 PER SET

On the day she had a heart attack, she was rushed to the hospital.
Fortunately, the closest hospital - close enough for the immediate
care she needed and close enough for family and friends - was just a
few miles away.

CREDIT TERMS
90 Dayw .Same ·At
LAY-AWAYS
AVAILABLE

FREE
DELIVERY

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be greaUy ·aPPreciated".
We'll pass along the results of
the effort after the sale.

RIO GRANDE- Dr. Larry G.
Spees was recently elected to a
two-year term as Grand Secretary
on The Grand Council of Alpha
Sigma Phi Fraternity at its National
Leadership Conference Convention
atlhe Adam's Marie Hotel in Charlone, N.C.
The Grand Council, which
serves as the board of directors for
the fraternity headquarters, is made
up of seven fraternity alumni who
volunteer their time and expertise
to directing the policies and programs of lhe fraternity and its headquarters operation.
Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity was
founded at Yale in 1845 an is the
nation's lOth oldest men's general
fraternity.
Spees joined Alpha Sigma Phi ·
at Ohio Wesleyan College,
Delaware, Ohio in 1957. He previ- .
ously served the grand council as
grand marshal and grand councilor.
Dr. Spees also formerly served as
grand province chief from 1980-86
and has served as grand chapter
advisor for 20 years for the Alpha
Sigma Phi Chapter at the University of Rio Grande, from their founding to present.
Dr. Spees is professor of Education and Psychology at the University of Rio Grande. Spees and his
wife, Bev, have one son, Greg, and

Ice-T remains on concert bill

iii'\JU

SUG. RTL
England Sofa, As Shown Above
$799
England Loveseat, As Shown Above
$729
$529
England Chair, As Shown Above
Bushflrie 3 Pc. Reclining Sofa W/Matchlng Chair $1n8
Norwalk 2 Pc. Colonial, Blue wlbuttone, Manager'• Special $189~ .
Norwalk 3. Pc. Colonial, Brown w/Oak Trim, Super Special $3177
Bruard's 2 Pc. Inclining Sofa w/Matchfng Chair
$1630
Bruard's 4 Pc. Sectional, Blue. Manager's Special $2016
Broyhlll2 Pc. Colonial
$1949
King Hickory 2 Pc. ColoniaL Manager's Specll!l
$1658
England Sofa, Mint Green
$819
England Loveseat. Mint Green
$719
England Chair. Mint Green
·$489
England Ottoman. Mint Green
$249

SHOW
ROOMS
~

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&amp;

Spees elected grand secretary
during national convention

We're Here for You.

Mon. thN Sat. 8:30-5
ClaM It Noon

541 Second Avenue
Tue: 7:00p.m.. Wed : 9:30 a.m.

..

-=-"" ·~&lt;:ft'\

NEW MEMBERS' PLEASE ARRIVE- 30 MINUTES EARlY FOR REGISTRATIONAND WEIGH·IN.

GALLIPOLIS
.

fll

WeAre Open:

AT-WORK MEETINGS
Lose weight where you work.
Weight Watchers will set up a meeting lor
you and your lellow em ployees. Call lor
lu~her information.

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EVERY LIVING ROOM SUITE STOREWIDE
PRICED TO SELL

Come to the Weight Watchers meeting nearest you.
ST. PETER'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH

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FliVAL WEEK! FINAL WEEK! FLVAL WEEK!

•I·-

Canaday
descendants
hold reunion

25 wallets

Chrislmas Cards

Names in
the news

Mr. Dickey, a native of Gallipolis, is retired from A. 0 . Smith
.
Corp., and Mrs. Dickey is retired
;
LOS ANGELES (AP) from the General Electric Co.
·
Roseanne
Arnold said she began
They have five living children;
:
dreaming
about
stardom at age 3. A
18 grandchildren; and 23 grea~­
:
·
star
on
the
Hollywood
Walk of
grandchildren.
Fame, she said, is proof .that her
dream has come true.
More than 300 fans, friends and
relatives
showed up on HoUywood
Monday,
Sept.
28
GALLIPOLIS - The following
Boulevard
for Friday's unveiling in
I
0
a.m.
Wallcing
club
are activities and menus for Sept.
front
of
the
HoUywood Wax Muse10:45
a.m
.•
Shon
subjects
28 through Oct. 2 at the Galli a
um.
It
was
the
1.966th star dedicat10 a.m. to noon - Craft class
County Senior Citizen's Center,
ed
along
lhe
famous
wallcway.
(making rag rugs)
. 220 Jackson Pike.
During
the
ceremony,
a doubleI p.m. -Chorus
decker
tour
bus
drove
by
with a
Tuesday, Sept. 29
sign reading, "We Love
10:30 a.m. - STOP/exercise
Roseanne.'' ·Overhead, an airplane
12:30 a.m. · Video matinee
towed a banner that said, "Yeah,
VVednesday,Sept.JO
Roseanne.
A star on the Walk of
10 a.m . - Elderwalk at Raccoon
Fame.''
Creek County Park
Thursday, Oct. I
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) 10:45 a.m. - Bible study
Musician Ste~en Stills said he and
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. - Quilting
10 a.m. to noon- Blood pressure other celebriues are going 10 make
sure the nation doesn't forget that
GALLIPOLIS - Descendants of (volunteer)
people need help in hurricane-ravNaaman R. and Anna Switzer
Friday, Oct. 2
aged
south Florida.
Canaday recently held their annual
10 a.m.- Wallcing club
"We
can kind of pester every·
reunion at Raccoon Creek County
10 a.m. to noon - Art class
body,
and
they'll let us come and
Park. Twenty-two relatives and two
Menus consist of:
break
their
arms for money before
guests attended.
Monday: Salisbury steak/gravy,
they'll
let
politicians
do it," Stills
Marshall Canaday gave the potatoes, lima beans, corn, lorna·
blessing. Following the potluck to/cucumber slice, butterscotch said Friday.
The
folk-rock
group
Crosby,
. dinner, he told those attending pudding.
· about how the family's descendants
Tuesday - Ham and beans with Stills &amp; Nash was among the acts
: fame from Shenandoah Valley, onions, Kale, boiled egg, corn- at today's Hurricane Relief concert
at Joe Robbie Sradium. Organ11·
. Va., and settled in Ohio and West bread, sliced peaches.
said
it would raise $1.3 million for
· Virginia. He also told the group
Wednesday- Spaghetti, tossed
the
relief
effort
. about meeting a relative, Buddy salad, Vienna bread, fruit cup.
An
"entertainment
task force"
. Canaday, who told him that an
Thursday - Beef stew, Iimas and
• annual Canaday reunion is held at corn, cole slaw, bread, chocolate including Gloria Estefan and Hullc
Hogan was fonned Friday to enlist
: Beckley, W.Va., the week after . dessen.
even
more celebrities for lhe Hurri· July 4.
Friday · Chicken and noodles,
cane
Andrew recovery. Gov. Law· The youngest attending was broccoli, bread, cookies, pineapple.
ton
Chiles
said entertainers can
: Wesley Montgomery, and the oldMake reservations by calfing
"maintain
the
nation's awareness
· est attending was Marshall Cana- 446-7000 before 9 a.m. on the day
in
the
months
ahead."
~ day.
you wish to attend.
Attending were: Marshall and
Helen Canaday, Jamie, Laura, DJ .
· and Wesley Montgomery, Darrell
and Alma Canaday, James, Diana,
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Rapper Los Angeles because of fears of
David, Daniel Boster and friends Ice-Twill remain on next week' s concert violence.
: Scott and Steve. Pat, Betsy. Katy. concert bill at San Diego Jack MurIn San Diego, stadium director
. Ginger, and Holly Canaday, Scott phy Stadium but has agreed not to BiU Wilson had asked concert proand Andrea Canaday, Don and perform his " Cop Killer" song, a moters to drop lce-T or his song,
Joyce Smith.
saying it might offend the more
promoter said.
The next reunion will be held
But promoter Brian Murphy than 200 police officers who would
May 30, 1993 at Raccoon Creek said he nixed an invitation for lce- be worlcing as security for WednesCounty Park, shelterhouse #4.
T to perfonn at upcoming shows in day's show.
LAKE CITY, Pa. - Eldie and
Margaret Dickey of 252 Hawthorne
Dr., Lake City, Pa., celebrated their
63rd wedding anniversary on Sept.
16, with visits from friends at their
home.

GIVE ME A
-GIVE ME A

wv

OH-Polnt

(

.

.
'

-

�:fag~B&amp;-Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

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

~ Childless

couple make plea to
:those with unwanted regnanczes
•

Dear Ann Landers: I broke down
and cried when I rend the enclosed
; dealh notice in our local paper. As
• you can see by the date on the
: clipping, il has laken me more than
: three months 10 mail this. I also
· confess lhat it took an hour before I
could compose myself enough to
. wrile this leaer.
. This is what appeared under Dealh
-: Notices:
': "Baby Boy Doe was found in a
: trash dumpsleronJune I, 1992.
"A celebration or this lillie angel's
Spirit will be held at Rosemont
Memorial Gardens. Graveside
services will be at 2:30p.m. June 5.
May this precious child rest in
heavenly peace."
· I hope every unmarried pregnant
;,J;irl who reads this will lake my
-message to hean. If they only
::lcnew how many couples would
:&amp;ive anything in the world 10
: have a baby, they would think
twice before doing an ything like
: this.
_ I am 42 years old. My husband
and I have been trying lO conceive
.for eight years. We are both
-successful professionals. We have a
.:beautiful home and no money
problems and would be wonderful
parents. We've been on the waiting
. lists or three adoption agencies
oJor two yean; and keep praying lhal
:;one of them will call.
:• Please, please, if you aren't able
:'co lake care of your baby, comact an
:;agency through your clergyman or

Ann

your doctor
be placed with a loving couple
whose empty amts long 10 hold a
litde one. You will be rewarded for
this act of generosity and feel good
in your heart, fm:ver knowing you
have donetherightthing.- SANTA
MONICA
DEAR SANTA MONICA: Thank
you for a letter lha! is sure to make
a difference. You have reached more
people than you will ever know. God
bless you.
Dear Ann Landers: Afler read·
ing all !hose letters in your column
about men whose mothm won~ let
go, I thought your readers might find
this poem helpful. I don~ know who
wro1e it. but please print it anyway.
.. TANK IN SAN DIEGO
DEAR TANK: Here it is with my
thanks for sending it on. As I read
the poem il occum:d to me that it
could apply to lovers as well as
mothers.
To Let Go Takes Love
To let go does not mean to stop
caring.
It means I can't do it for someone
else.
-

To let go is not 10 enable, but 10
allow
learning from natural consequences.
To let go is to admit powerlessness, which
means the outcome is not in my
hands.
To let go is not 10 care for, but 10
care about.
To let go is not 10 judge, but to
allow another 10 be him or
herself.
To let go is not to be iii lhe middle
arranging all the outcomes
but to allow othe!S 10 delermine their
own destinies.
To let go is not 10 be less protective,
it is 10 permit another to race
reality.
To let go is not 10 dominate but 10
be willing to let things happen.
To let go is not 10 betray the past,
but to have faith in the future.
To let go means to fear less, and
Iovemon:.
Gem of the Day: If you thinlc you
have no faults, that malces one more.
Is alcohol ruining your life or the
lift of a loved one? "Alcoholism:
How w Recognize It, How w Deal
With It, Hqw to Conquer It" can turn
things around. Send a selfaddressed, long, busintss·siu
en velo~ and a check or money
order for $3.65 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Alcohol,
c/o AM Landers, P.O. Box /1562,
Chicago. Ill. 60611 -0562 . (In
Canada, send $4.45.)

September '0 1992

September '0, 1992

People in
the news

Cheshire OES observes friendship night
CHESHIRE- Wonhy Matron
Donna Waugh and Wonhy Patron
Ralph Rife recently welcomed 49
members and visitors to Cheshire
OES Friendship NighL
Distinguished guests present
were: Associale Grand Patron Joe
Blazer, Gallip&lt;ilis, Grand Organist
Georgaleen Hockenberry, Marietta;
Deputy Grand Maron Judy
McCorkle, Oak Hill; Deputy Grand
Matron of District25 Kay Spencer,
Racine; Grand Representative of
New Mexico Sarah Blazer, Gallipolis; Grand Representative of
Pennsylvania, Mildred Donahue,
Vinton; Worthy Matrons Martha
Detty, Oak Hill, Phyllis Crisp,
South Point; Diane Bowman, Proc·
torville;
Wykle Whitley,
Wilkesville, Sue Starr, Middlepon;
Honored Masons Bob Kuhn, Middleport; and Dale Hockenberry,
Marieua,
Highlighting the evening was
the presentation of a 50 year pin 10
Odella Mack. She joined the Eastern Star in 1942 and is a very
active member or the Cheshire
Chapler. Her pin was presenled by
Gladys Rife.
The station or organist was hon·
ored with Cheshire Chapter Organist, Genrude Hysell bein~ the guest
of honor. Guest orgamst for the
evening was Katherine Shenefield
of Salem Center. She played
excerpts of son~s that relate to
members' lives, mcluding Rock a
Bye Baby, School Days, Sweet
Hour of Prayer, Stars &amp; Stripes
Forever, The Wedding Marth, and
In The Garden. Soloist, Mar~i
Wheeler sang "Without A Song .
Organists present were Gertrude
Hysell, Kalherene Shenefield, Bea
Kuhn, Judy McCorkle, and Georgaleen Hockenberry. T)ley were
each presenled a red rose from the
Worthy Matron.
Other Cheshire officers present
were Lois Snyder, Keith Dye ,
Wilma Haycraft, Pam Dye, Cindy
Sutphin, Doris Zerkle, Ruth Barr,

Gladys Rife, Catherine Lillie,
Cheryl Swisher, Margi Wheeler,

Kay Hockman, Dorothy Roush,
Homer Hoclanan.

Museum manager named
speaker for .annual meeting
POMEROY - John Briley,
manger or Campus Manius/Oh10
River Museum Complex for the
Ohio HisllX'ical Society at Marietta,
will be speaker at the 117lh annual
meeting of the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society, next
Sunday, Oct 4.
Briley, museum manger 'since
1978, will talk on "~boating on
the Muskingum". He was.co-chairman of the "Always a River" project for Parkersburg-Marietta, former second vice president of the
Marietta Bicenlennial Commission,
and past president or the Marietta
Kiwanis Oub. He is a member and
fanner offtcer of lhe Ohio Association of Historical Societies and
Moseums, a member of the Wash-

ington County Historical Society,
and the Sons sand Daughters of
Pioneer Rivennen.
Reports will be given and
trustees elected at the business
meeting.
The program and business meet·
ing will be preceded by a dinner at
I p.m. and members and friends are
invited 10 join the society trusllles
and officers. The roast turkey dinner will be prepared by society volunlllers aruf will be available for a
donation.
Assistance wiih the planning
and preparation or the dinner is
needed and anyone willing to help
is asked 10 call the museum by Friday, 992-3810.

I can hear just
fine, but some
people seem
to mumble..•

.

NEW BUSINESS • Puppy Palace Pet Shop
and Supplies, an independent business located in
the G.C. Murphy Company Department Store,
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, opened for business
recently. The shop orters tropical fish, reptiles,
birds, guinea pigs, dogs and cats as well as pet

Jan~ Ann

Karr, M.A.

Audiologist, CCCA

Mlllvlew Clinic
603W. Union
Athens, Ohio 457a1
Ph. (614) 592-2863

URG graduates r-------------------~
NEW SHIPMENT
NURSE
. score above
JUST ARRIVED!
MATE S
.: national average
RIO GRANDE - A number or
1992 graduates in. the Emerson E.
Evans College of Business Man- agement at the Uni versity or Rio
: Grande scored above the national
· average on a widely-used examination designed lO lest seniors' busi; ness knowledge.
; Nineteen seniors in Rio
; Grande's business program took
• the End of Studies Test in Business
ad ministered by the Educational
·, Testi ng Serv ice , Princeton, N.J .
·., The overall score for these students
:•was 159.9, just above the national
median score of 156.
:: At least one of Rio Grande's
; students scored in the 99 th per··centile, according to Dr. Charles F.
• Palm er, Dean of the Co llege of
· Business Management Rio Grande
. seniors have volu ntarily taken the
test for each of the three years it
·has been in existence, and each
:year has resulted in a score that has
"risen above the average, he said.
"We 're continu ing to make
improvements so that we wil l
'become one of the best colleges of
:.t&gt;usiness in the counLry ," Palmer
:Said, "I think it's good that we're
? hove the national avemge, and I
&gt;think il1ells you that our students
:are receiving an education that is
'above avera$e."
The lesliS utilized by a number
,of small and private institutions in
•Ohio, such as Rio Grande, Ash·:Iand, Blufflon and Wilmington, in
:addition to seniors at larger schools
.·like George Mason (Va.), Texas A
:&amp; M and Virginia Military Insti:tute. This year, 8,319 seniors were
·tesled nationwide.
; The test examines students on
:·such courses as accounting. eco·
&lt;nomics, management, statistics,
:;finance and marketing. Those subjects are taught in most business
~majors ' sophomore and junior
;years, but ETS does not exaniine
4hem until their senior year, Palmer
=~d.

+Tax talk

:.. The Supreme Coun ruled, 6-2,
:on Jan. 8, 1991, that a taxpayer
:Who-sincerely believed that federal
·income tax laws did not apply 10
·~him or her could .not be convicted
&gt;of tax evasion, since tax laws
} equired "willful " conduct. The
;t:ourt also ruled that a person's
·~ that a tax was unconstirutionill dld not proleCt him from crimi')lal liability for refusal pay taxes.

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R.S.V.P. - Thia phraae Ia ..volulionizing fumiluro ahopping al Rudand Fumiluoe. Whonover you SM i~ whenever you
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For Discriminating Tastes...

;a:

TO SPEAK - Brother Ivan
French, a retired professor of !be
Grace Theological Seminary,
Winona Lake, lnd., will be the
guest speaker at Faith Baptist
Church In Rodney. Sunday, Oct.
4, services begin at 10:45 a.m.
and 2 p.m. Both services feature
an aU-church choir. There wiU be
no Oct. 4 evening service. The
remaining services, Oct. 5· 7,
be~ln at 7 p.m. nightly. The pub·
lie IS Invited.

MADERA, Calif. (AP)
Country music singer Clint Black
sent flowers and a sympathy note
to the parents or a 17-year-old girl
killed m a hil-and-run accident as
she drove home from his conoen.
The basket arrangement was
wired from Nashville, Tenn., and
delivered Tuesday, the day of Amy
Wall's funeral.
"I'm deeply saddened by the
tragedy lha! has taken your daugh·
1er, Amy, from all of you," Black
wrote. "My prayers are with you,
and you have my deepest sympa·
thy.'

Reunions
CENTENARY • Pete and
Margie Parsons family reunion at
HONORED - Dr. T. Michael
Raccoon Creek County Park. Sept.
Rhodes, professor of mathemat·
27 at shelterhouse five.
ics, University of Rio Grande,
and
a Jackso• native, received
CADMUS • Cadmus alumni
1992
Rio Grande Alumni
the
reunion, Oct. 4 at Cadmus High
Association's
Faculty Citation
School Community Cenler, 10 a.m.
during
ceremonies
at the univer·
to 4 p.m. Calercd lunch.
sity Saturday night. The award Is
GALLIPOLIS · Scoll family presented to a faculty member
reunion. Sunday, Oct. 4, I p.m. who bas been on the start for at
least IS years and is singled out
with Marko lhe Clown.
ror his personal commitment to
(lttms for the community cal- the university's pursuit or excel·
elfdQr ap~ar two tlllys prior to an lence in education, and who has
t~tnt Thty must be rtcti¥td by demonstrated concern ror all
tht Gallipolis Dalll Trll&gt;une In who seek to learn. Dr. Rhodes is
a resident of GaUipolis.
adi'Onct for pllblicllliOII)

NOW AVAILABLE AT

In order to assist the
families of Meigs County
who are experiencing iob
layoffs, the
PRESCRIPTION SHOP
is lowing prices storewide. -

')

Monday, Sept 28
THURMAN - Thurman Grange
regular meeting, 8 p.m.

MADRID, Spain (AP) Michael Jackson has decided to
replace the Los Angeles police
w1th Spain's National Police in a
video clip lhal ope~s the concerts
on his Ctmenl European tour.
Jackson sjJent two hours Thurs·
day shooting scenes with 40 offi·
ce:s from National Police anti-riot,
mounted and motorized units, said
police spokesman Antonio Nevada.
The scenes, for the moment
without music, show Jackson
slrolling around a Madrid police
statioo ' surrounded by the offiCers.
Nevada said these scenes would
replace previous clips using Los
Angeles police offJCCrs.
Citing an
unidentified
spokesman for Jackson, a police
statement said Jackson chose to
remake the video with Spanish
police due " to the excellent con·
duct and professionalism demonstrated by the police" during his
concerts this week in Barcelona
and Madrid.
The statement said Jackson used
the video to ~each young fans lhal
police are there to help and protect
them.

Lid'l Doll,'s Dresses

~s----1'

WlYEtTIIIlLL
UlLIPOUS, OH.

Middleport, Ohio

GALLIPOUS - Divorce Sup·
pon Group meeting, 7:30 p.m. at
New Life Lutheran Church, For
more information call446-3808 or
446-4889.

NORTHUP • Homecoming services at Bethesda Uniled Methodist
Church. Lunch at 12:30 p.m. Bring
covered dish and table service.

R.S.V.P.- This phrase is rovoluioni!ing fum~uro shopping al RuHand Fumilura. Whenever you SM il, whenever you
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PHONE 992·6669
253 N. Second Ave.

GALLIPOLIS - Exodus will be
performing at Elizabeth Chapel
Church, 7 p.m.

- CEN1ENARY ·Joseph Ashby,
age 12, will be preaching al Centenary United Christian Church, 7
p.m. Copley family will be singing.

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7 p.m. Potluck dinner at5:30 p.m.

PORTER • Rev. Calvin Minnis
will be preaching and singing at
Clark Chapel Church, 7 p.m.

WHAT DOE IT SPELL?

JAZZ

Sunday, Sept 27
GAI.LIPOLIS · Gary Warner
_will be speaking at Mina Chapel
Church, Neighborhood Road , 7
·p.m.

EUREKA - Rev, Charles Lusher
will be lhe guest speaker, 6:30p.m.
al Providence Missionary Baptist
Church. Teens Run Rd.

GIVE ME A(!}
...---,
GIVE ME - A~
GIVE ME A~

Williams is president of the ' GaUiF•oli! Se11ior
Citizens. Dr. Coverton, who is a recent addition
to the Holzer Clinic Medical Start, spoke on his
new clinic and answered questions on Dermatol·
ogy.

supplies. Services stich as run puppy care and a
breeding connecting service are also orrered.
Displaying some or the store's merchandise are
(left to right) manager Susan Colley, owner
Herb lncoe and emplbyee Ellene Nickels.
(Times-Sentinel photo by Kevin Pinson)

Gallia County calendar

Better Hearing makes Ufe Easier For You
And More Enjoyable For Those You Uve With

GIVE ME A@

DERMATOLOGIST SPEAKS· Dr. Ronald
W. Coverton, (left), Dermatologist at Holzer
Clinic, spoke recently to the Gallipolis senior cit·
izens. Pictured with bim, (left to right), are Pbyl·
lis Pope, Medical-Secretary ror Dr. Coverton,
and Mr . and Mrs. Marion Williams. Mr.

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OHIO

MAIN

..'

•
•

�Sports
RIO GRANDE -Forty Yea!l! ago this fall, a phenomenon began in college basketball"that has been
unmatched by successive teams throughout the coun-

298 SECOND ST.
. POMEROY, OH.
THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIEl
27

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OCT. 3,

try.

For a two.year period, a small team consisting
mostly of rural youths. ~resenting a tiny teacher's
college in southeastern Ohio, set the basketball world
ablaze with scoring feats no one would have thought
posSible coming from what had been considered a
near-anonymous competitor. The ream, its star player
and its coach slew major opponents, gathered national auention, anracted conttoversy, and at their peale,
packed houses wherever they went.
They were the Rio Grande College Redmen,
whose star burned the brightest from the late fall of
1952 until the spring of 1954. The team's accomplishments, particularly those of 6-foot-9 center
Clarence "Bevo" Francis, are safely lodged in the
record books, rediscovered every year by sportswrit·
ers, pundits and fans who marvel at the incredible
story of a team from seemingly nowhere turning the
spor1S scene on its ear.
"I fmd it hard to believe, after all these years, that
it really happened," I. Newton "Newt" Oliver, the
Redmen's coach, reflected a few years ago. "Some- ,
times I wonder if it ever happened at all."
On the weekend of Nov. 20-21, the University of
Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community College, as
Rio Grande CoUege is now known, will honor Francis, Oliver and the team in a special celebration in
conjunction with the annual Bevo Francis Tournament. The townament honoring Rio Grande's bestknown athlete was started in 1983 and is regularly
auended by Francis, Oliver and their teammates.
The university has scheduled several functions for
the weekend, although the hi~hlights will be a luncheon for the team and !heir mtroductioo during the
halftime of the evening game at the tournament. Both
are scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 21.
Record stands - Within the NAJA, with which
Rio Grande has been affiliated, Francis continues to
lead in scoring with his 113-point performance
against Hillsdale (Mich.) College on Feb. 2, 1954.
For the same game, Francis holds the record for field
goals (38 made, 70 attempted) and free throws (37
made, 45 attempted). Francis' scoring total from that
134-91 victory ts also the standard recognized by the
NCAA.
But the performance that thrust Francis and the
Redmen into national prominence actually came
more than a year prior to the Hillsdale game. The
Redmen defeated Ashland (Ky.) Junior College 15085 on Jan. 9, 1953, wilh Francis netting 116 points.
While it was the team's one-game scoring zenith,
Francis' total was disallowed from the records by

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four-year institution, had played against a two-year
school. Nevertheless, the attendant publicity surrounding this game put Rio Grande in the forefront
of competition.
The team finished its first season at 39-0. Facing a
trimmed but saonger schedule in 1953-54, the Red·
men were 21-7 against such schools as Arizona State,
Buffalo State, Creighton, Wake Forest and Providence. Francis maintained a per-game scoring average of 50.1 points in 1952-53 and 46.5 the following
year, with a two-year average of 47.1.
Major attraction - Through all of this, lhe Redmen became a leading attraction of the early Eisenhower era, fiUing gymnasiums to capacity and forced
to abandon home play in the fabled 250-seat "Hog
Pen" of Community Hall on the Rio Grande campus
because of the crowds. Sports columnists made the
Redmen a near-everyday topic during the season,
major magazines attempted to analyze the success of
this unlilcely bunch of new spor1S heroes, and Dave
Garroway featured Francis and Oliver on NBC-TV's
Today show three times.
"I remember when we played Butler University. It
was the biggest crowd they'd ever had in lndianapo·
lis for a basketball game," Oliver recalled recently.
"They catcalled us, called us podunkers, but when we
were fmished, they gave us a standing ovation." The
Redmen won that early 1954 game 81-68, 48 of their
points attributed to Francis, before a crowd of
11,593.
Just when it couldn't get any better, it was over.
Francis and Oliver joined the Harlem Globettotters
organization at the close of their second season at
Rio Grande, and after a few years, each went their
own way, each on a path ·that took both of them out
of the basketball world. The memories and the
unequaUed success of the team remain a permanent
part of not only Rio Grande's, but basketball's, histo·
ry. And each year, usually around the time of the
NCAA and NAJA postseasons, the records are redis·
covered and discussed either in the media or in pri·
vate gatherings of hoop fans.
'A special place' -"The Rio Grande Redmen of
1952-54 occupy a very special place in athletics," Dr.
Clyde Evans, chairman of the committee overseeing
the celebration, commented. "Newt, Bevo and the
team made an outstanding contribution to lhe m~iver­
sity. The attention focused upon them put the instirution in lhe national spotlight at a very difficult time
for the school. It had a profound impact on the university.
"Today we have an excellent university with more
than 2,000 srudents, and we continue to receive valuable attention from the 1952-54 team," he said.

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FANCY STEPPING- Notre Dame's Lake
Dawson tries to step around Purdue's Pat Johnson aner catcblnr a Rick Mirer pass in the rarst

quarter of Saturday's college game Ia South
Bend, Ind. (AP)

Bengals' conservative offense
to run against Vikings today
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- What's
happened to Boomer's bombs?
Where's that quick-strike, no·
huddle Cincinnati Bengals offense
that left defenses breathless in the
1980s?
It hasn't shown up three games
into the season, and even opponents are ·starting to reach the obvious cooclusion: the team with the
racy tiger stripes bas become button-down conservative on offense.
"Cincinnati is determined to run
the ball," said Minnesota head
coach Dennis Green, who's devising ways to stop it
at Riverfront Stadium. "That s the key
thing - they like to set .the tempo.
It looks to me like they're all comfortable with it, Boomer included."
Well, sort of. Boomer Esiason
isn't exactly comfortable with his
ranking as the 22nd most effective
passer in the NFL, but he has to
admit the result is pleasing :::.

tod8r

Cincinnati is 2- 1 going into its
game against 2-1 Minnesota.
"It's not lighting up the score·
board, but it's effective f001ball,"
he said.
The Bengals are one victory shy
of their total for 1991 in large part
because their running attack is No.
1 in the league, averaging 170
yards a game. That's 40 more yards
a game than they average passmg.
Yes, that's right: Esiason, who
has thrown for more than 3,000
yards six times in his career, ,is
.averaging just 131 a game. That's
five yards a completion, one.of the
lowest totals in the NFL. The Ben·
gals haven't even completed a pass
longer than 27 yards.
Esiason would love to hit a few
long ones, but he and head coach
Dave Shula sound committed to the
philosophy of running the ball IS
long IS it works. And so far, it's
working.
·
. "If we're go!ng_to get 10 yards

a run to the outside, where the
pickings have been easy the last
couple of weeks, we're ,oin~ to do
that," Esiason said. ' We re not
drawing up plays to satisfy everyone's appetite for long bombs."
Green didn't ex11ect them to.
He'd do the same thing if he wore
tiger stripes.
"I don't think a team can be
successful in the NFL wilhout a
successful running game,'' he said.
"You win by running the ball, and
the passing comes later."
The Bengals' philosophy will
get a good test today. The Vikings
are one of the toughest teams to
throw against on third down opponents are converting only 29
pe"ent.
W~n the Vilcings sense a pass
is coming, they're tough to hold
back. They have II sacks and have
given quarterbacks little time to
throw when a lot of yards are need•
ed.

BEVO IN ACTION -Clarence "Bevo"
Francis (32) prepares to shoot during one of the
games be played in for tbe Rio Grande College
Redmen in 1952-54. Francis, whose 113-point

total In a single game is stiU a record, wiD be
honored along bis coach, Newt Oliver, ani!
teammates in a celebration slated for Nov. l0-2l
at Rio Grande.

No.7 Alabama, No.9 Penn
State among college winners
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) David Palmer, returning from a
three-game suspension, brolce open
a tight game in the fourth quarter
with a 63-yard punt return touchdown as No. 7 Alabama blanked
Louisiana Tech 13-0 on Saturday.
The Crimson Tide (4-0) won its
14th straight game despite an ane·
mic offense, drawing jeers from the
home fans after managing only a 60 lead on two field goals by
Michael Proctor through three pen·
ods.
Boos turned to cheers when
Palmer, who was suspended following two drunken-driving
arrests, took a punt at the 37 and
broke free along the right sideline
for a touchdown with 8:18 left
Other than that, defense dominated- especially Alabama's. The
Tide, ranked in the top five nationally in every defenstve category,
did nothing to hurt its standing with
a stining performance against
Louisiana Tech (2-2).
The Bulldogs didn't get their
first ftrst down until late in the second quarter and had only 117
yards, including minus-8 on the
ground. They averaged less than
one yard per play and were forced
to punt 12 times.
No.9 Penn St. 49, Maryland 13
At State College, Pa., Richie
Anderson ran for 138 yards and
scored a career-high four touchdowns Saturday as ninth-ranked
Penn State rallied from an early 3-0
deficit to beat Maryland 49-13.
Anderson scored on runs of six,
25 and 22 yards and caught a 26yard pass from John Sacca as Penn
State (4-0) boosted its scqes lead
over Maryland to 34-1-1. It was the
fourth suaight loss for the winless

Terrapins, whose only win over the
Lions came in 1961.
Anderson had his second I()().
yard plus game of the season and
fifth in his two year college career.
The Terrapins took a brief 3·0
lead in the second period, but
quickly fell behind as Penn State
- which has scored 150 points in
its last three games - scored three
touchdowns before the half.
No. 25 Boston College 14
Micbigaa State 0
At Boston, Mass., Boston College extended its shutout streak to
three games with a 14·0 victory
over Michigan State in a steady
rain Saturday.
Dwight Shirley scored on runs
of 80 and I yards for the 25thranked Eagles (4-0), who have not
given up a point in 187 minutes
and have outscored their last three
opponents 91-0.•
The last time the Eagles had
three straight shutouts was in 1942.
Boston College fans, who suffered through five straight losing
seasons, are already starting to
think about bowl games - they
threw oranges on the field, a ritual
for fans dreaming of a New Year's
trip to Miami and the Orange
Bowl.
'
W. Michigan 19, Ohio 3
At Athens, Ohio, Western
Michigan quarterback Brad Tayles
rushed for two short touchdowns to
break open a scoreless game in lhe
third quarter and Ohio University
fumbled eight times as the Broncos
won 19-3 in the Mid-American
Conference Saturday.
Tayles scored on runs of one
and four yards on the Broncos' flfSI
two possessions of the second half
as Western Michigan improved to

2-1 overall and in lhe MAC. Ohio
fell to 1-3 and 1-2.
Tayles also completed 13 of 23
passes for 158 yards with no inter·
ceptions.
John Carroll49, Heidelberg 6
At University Heights, Ohio
Willie Beers rushed for 166 yardS
and four touchdowns as John Car.
roll stayed perfect in the Ohio Conference with a 49-6 victory over
Heidelberg Salllrday.
Beers had 21 carries and scored
on runs of four, 13, one and two
yards for the Blue Streaks (3 -0
overall and 2-0 in the OAC).
John Carroll rushed for 362
yards on 67 carries compared to
Ill yards on 37 for the Student
Princes (1-1-1, ().J . J).
Wilmington 41, Tlmn 19
At Wilmington, Ohio, freshman
quarterback Eric Noble completed
11 of 14 passes for 139 yards and
two touchdowns in his first start as
Wilmington of Ohio defeated Tif·
fin 41·19 Saturday.
Noble also rushed 12 times for
66 yards and another touchdown.
Wilmington (1-2) had its highest
one·game point total in two yean,
as well as the most net yards, 485.
Wittenberg 16, Wooster 3
At Springfield, Ohio, Marlon
Perryman gained 157 yards in 26
carries and scored one touchdown
Saturday as Wittenberg defeated
Wooster 16-3.
It was the seventh time in the
last 11 games Perryman has
exceeded the 100-yard mark. He
scored on a 34-yard run, J.R. Runk·
el ran one yard for a touchdown
and Greg Brame kicked a 34-yard
field goal for the Tigers (2·1 overall, 2-0 in the North Coast Confer.
ence).

Yanks, Expos, Brewers win to delay
leaders' captures of division crowns
NEW YORK (AP)- Toronto's
drive toward the AL East title
stalled Saturday when the New
York Yankees beat the Blue Jays 21 on Danny Tartabull's two-run
homer.
Toronto, which began the day
with a 3 1~- game lead over the
Milwaukee Brewers. I:IIS a magic
number of five for its second
SAN FRANCISCO-Cincinnati'•

nlne·1•me winning 1treak wa1
ended S•turday •ftemoon IS lbe
Red• fell to tile San Francisco
Gllnll!l-3 beN.
Tbe Atlaatll Braves, with 1 ftve·
pme leed In tile Natlo1111l League
wat u a restdt of ClndnnaU's
lou, were to take on San Diego
Saturday tonight.

straight division title and its third in
four years.
Expos 12, Cubs 0
At Montreal, Quebec, Chris
Nabholz pitched his second career
shutout and the Montreal Expos
beat Chicago 12-0 Saturday, preventing Pittsburgh from clinching
the NL East championship.
The Pirates needed a victory
against New York and a loss by
second-place Montreal to win their
third straight division title.
Brewers 2, Athletics 1
At Milwaukee, Wis., the Milwaukee Brewers, still in a championship chase of their own, put Oak·
land's AL West title celebration on
hold a~ain Saturday; beating the
Athleucs 2-1 on Greg Vaughn's
sixth-inning homer.
Oakland's magic number
remained at one. A loss by secondplace Minnesota on Saturday night
against Kansas City would give the

Alhletics their fourth AL West title
in five yea!l!.
Indians 7, Tigers 4
At Detroit, Mich., Jesse Levis'
ftrst major league homer broke a 44 tie in the sixth inning and the
Cleveland Indians went on to a 74
victory over the Dettoit Tigers on
Saturday.
Levis' upper-deck shot to right
C~~me against Kurt Knudsen just a
half-inning after the Tigers had tied
the game with two runs in the ftfth·.
Cleveland added two runs in tile
eighth on a double by Carlos Martinez, who was pinch-hitting for
Levis.
Jack Armstrong (6-.IS) allo~
two hits and suuck out five in four
shutout innings for the vittory.
Steve Olin came on with two on
and two out iD the eighth and fmished f&lt;»" his 28th save.
Knudsen (2-3) allowed three
runs in four innings.

�Page C2-8unday llmes sentinel

~1Jy

I

September '0, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpol,a, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

beating Miller 16-6,

OH-Polnt

WV

·.

~~eigs

collects first victory
·:.of
season
at
homecoming
.
••'.,.

.

~

:· ''
B DAVE HAIUUS
. , Tlmet-~atlllel Correspondent
•:·· POMEROY - Eric Wagner
•.completed nine of 12 passes for
:•04 yards llld. a tDUChdown 10 lead
•'the MeiP. Marauders 10 a 16-{i win
over Miller befote a homecoming
crowd Friday night at Bob Roberts
F'Jeld iJ!.Pomeroy.
•·. The win was the first in four
·~for the Marauders, Meigs is 1:~:In the TVC. MilleJ: drops 10 0-4
:~eranllld. 0-3 in the TVC.
. ; •: The Marauder offense, which
:1ias struggled all year, showed
·~igns of pulling lhinJS IO~ether; but
flll!lbles llld. penalues tilled four
Meigs drives in Falcon territory.
: The Falcons received the opening ldctolf and was forced 10 punt.
A Jim Pullins five-yard return of a
36-yard Bruce Lanning punt pve
lhe Marauders good field position
at the Miller 44-yard line. On lhe
fiB! play, Wagner kept the ball on
an option left and scampered 40
yards 10 the Falcon four-yard liile,
bdt a motion penalty on Meigs nullificd the play.
.·· With Wagner passing or running
tbe ball for 37 yards, Meigs drove
the beiiiO the Miller 14 where the
drive stalled. Marauder head coach
Mite Staggs called on Carlos Mi·
an exchange student from
J;IIll2:u, 10 tick. He split the uprights

with a booming tick that could
· have made il from ll kasl45 yanls.
Once aglin the~ beld
and Lanning had 10 punt deep in
his own territory. Mite "Abby"
Welsh busted lhrough the left side
and blocked LanninJ's kick and
pounced on the ball m the Miller
end zone for the IDUChdown. Miana
added the exira points and MeiJS
held a 10..0 lead with 1:16left m
the first period.
Meigs received another break
when Chad Cook bObbled a Mite
Cremeans puntllld. Kevin Lambert
recovered Tor )'deigs on the Miller
22-yard line. Cook mon: than made
up for the fumble wben be recovered a Mite Cremeans fumble at
the Miller 27-yard line two plays
later.
Miller put together a mild threat
driving 10 tbe Meigs 32-yard line.
but quartclbact Robbie Jenks fumbled lhe snap on fourth dow11111d
fell on the ball for a loss. That
drive was aided by Lanning glining 17-yards on a fate punt on
fourth and seven from the Meigs
46-yard line.
Miller scored with 54 seconds
left in lhe third period when Wagner was hit hard a fumbled. Coot
picked up the loose ball and raced
down the left sideline for the 10uchdown. Lanning's extra point kick

'

hit the left upright and feU harmlt.ssly in the end zone.
The Marauders losl the services
of Welsh when with S:26left in the
game, the senior was hit hard after
a shon giin. After a delay of almost 10 minutes, Welsh was removed from the f~eld on a stretdler .
and was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad. A hospital
spokesperson Said be was treated
and released
Tho Marauder offense scored
their fust IOuchdown ot the year
with just 24 seconds left when
Wa~ner hooked up with 1im ·
Pullms in the right comer of the
end zone from 23 yards OUL Aft« a
bad snap on the extta point attempt;
David Fetty picked up the loose
ball and his pass fell mcomplete.
The touchdown should give the
TURNING THE CORNER -This unidenti·
contest at Pomeroy Bob Rober.ts Field, which
MaDIIder some offense some coolied Meigs runnlag back turns the corner
the Marauders won 16-6. (Photo by Rick
fidence for next weeks game at
agalnltthe MIUer defense during .•Fr;,;.l1,;a;;.y.;nl;;;g;.bt;.;'s--Ed-wa•r•ds•)-----------,
Trimble.
Mite Cremeans led lhe Maraud·
ers on the ground with 30 yards in Statistics
nine carries. Heath Hudson added
Mil. Mel.
eight carries for 26 yards. Jim Department
First
downs
........................
6
7
Pullins puUed in four passes from
Plays
................................
46
48
WIIIJICf for 90 yards and the IDUchdown, Welsh three for 17 yards, Rushing att.-yards .... 34-133 29-41
David Fetty one for 16, and Brett Passing yards .................... .! 134
Total yards ..................... l34 175
Newsome one for II.
Comp.-att
...................... 1-8 9-12
Nathan Brown, Aaron Drummer
Interceptions
lhrown .........3
0
and 1ered Hill picked off passes
Fumbles-lost
.................
.3·1
4-2
and Kevin Lambert added a fumble
recovery. Brown. a kicker, was see- Penalties ...................... .?/60 12-75
ing his fmt action ever a linebaclcer Punting ...................... .4-130 7-253
and played an excellent J.&amp;me.
Eric SL Clair led Miller on the
ground with 68 yards in nine car·
(Conference only)
ries,llld. Coot added 16 carries for
W L PF PA
40 yards. Robbie Jenks complered Team
just one of eight passes for one Belpre ................... .3 0 87 24
yard 10 Brady Daugheny with tbe Nelsonville-YOlk ..1 0 63 0
Vinton County .......2 I 76 19
lhreei~
Meigs willlnlvel 10 play Trim- · Trimble ..................2 I 65 46
ble next Friday evening, while Wellston ................ .! I 46 36
Federa!Hocking .... l 2 22 71
Miller will host NelsonviUe-York.
In other action in the TVC Fri- Meigs ..................... l 2 16 70
day evening, Nelsonville rolled Alexander ..............0 2 12 74
over Alexander 34-0, Belpre de- Miller .....................0 3 19 66
feated Trimble 40-12 and Vinton
Friday's results
County defeated federal Hocking
Meigs
16,
MiUer 6
35-0. In the non conference game
Clin10n-Massie defealed WellsiOn Nelsonville-YOlk 34, Alexander 0
Belpre 40, Trimble 12
13-12.
Vinton County 35, Federal Hock·
Quarter totals
CHESTER
915·3307
Miiier ....................o o 6 o- 6 ingO
Meigs ..................IO 0 0 6 - 16 Clinton-Massie 13, WeUston 12

FIRST TOUCHDOWN- River Vllley will:·
back Charles'Peck (20) celebrates u rust-411111'·
ter touchdown with teammates Rob Caludy (far
left), a teammate Peck Is edlpsiDE aad Paul
Covey (13) following his caleb or all eipt-yard
pass from Aaron McCarty to put the Raiders on

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Starr
CHESHIRE - After a see-saw
fltSt half, Warren Local dominaled
both sides of the line in the second
half and outdistanced River Valley
30-14 Friday night.
"We weren't ready 10 play in the
first half," said Warren boss AI
Riffey of his Warriors (3-1), who
fell behind twice in a time frame
that saw the Raiders score all their
points to finish lheir fltSt two possessions and run a fairly balanced
attack - 19 running .plays and 11
pass plays.
The Raiders (1-3) went fiJ yards
in 13 plays on a drive that consumed the game's first 4:09. Senior
quarterback Aaron McCarty's
eight-yard IOuuchdown pass to senior wingback Charles Peel&lt; on
third and goal capped the march.
After the 10uchdown, the Warrion
stopped Abe Haislop's two-point
conversion run short, forcing the
hosts to settle for a 6..0 lead with
7:51left in act one.
"We did what we wanted 10 do
in the fltSt half," said Raider field
marshal Jack James, whose troopS
lost their second straight home
game.
However, one thing the Raiders
wished they hadn't done was 10 allow Ryan Gilliand to return Dave
Dobbins' kickoff 43 yards to .the
Raiders' 44-yard line. From there,
Warren's run-oriented offense witnessed senior fullback Martin Lang
- the 6-foot-0, 205-pounder was
lhe ftrst opposition rushing leader
to be held 10 fewer lhan 100 yards
against River Valley this season run 27 of lhose yards in nine of the
Warriors' 12 plays, including the
touchdown run from four yards out
on rltSt and goal10 tie tbe game at
6-{;, Justin Gray's extta-point kick
put the west Washington crew
ahead 7-6 with 1:591eft in lhe first

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DON TATE CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO
·• . GETTING AWAY from a pair of Miller tacklers is Meigs
'.j larauder David Fetty, as be breaks Into the clear during Friday
'.11ight's homecoming game in Pomeroy. The Marauders won 164 to
·:Claim their rnt win of the season. (Photo by Rick Edwards)

Model Year Closeout Sale

..

·E
astern spikes lose two matches
;.
·:~:
By SCOTT WOLFE
.: :Times-Sentinel Correspondent
•:· EAST MEIGS - Eastern
~pped two non-league volleyball
.)lontests this past week, dropping a
'l)&lt;o-set game to Warren 1S-8 and
Y.i-7, while losing to Meigs 8-15
';il)d 9-15, after winning lhe first set

..(S-9.

:-. Against Warren, senior Carrie
1!orrissey bit 9·10 serves and was
l4 spiking in leading Eastern with
~ght points. Jessica Radford had a
for!ect 7•7 serving night, two
·~suts and three pomts. Shelly
Jiendricts and Heidi Nelson each
tfad two points, Jessica Karr had a
J@l and Stephanie OUo was 4-4 on
Jil!lline wilh one kill. Sherri Smith
..U 3-7 in the setting depanment
:·· Gretchen Crider and Cindy
?(~~~~~ each led Warren with 8
il
on a 10-10 serving binge,
Renae Wentz was abnost as
=~~:~ with a 9-10 day and seven
Tara Johnson had lhree, Jeanette
J5erce three and S1ephanie Arnold

· Eastan coach Don Jackson said,

that the beef of our schedule is
behind us. We haven't had much
momentum larely. We gave ihem
(Warren) one chance. and they lOOk
advantage of it. Their crowd got
behind them and we didn't handle
lhe noise very well."
Eastern started off on lhe right
foot, winning the rltSt match, but
Meigs came stonning back 10 claim
the last two quite handily.
Yvctre Young led Mci11s with
12, Billie Butcher added eight, Lee
Henderson seven, Lisa Fault live,
Bobbie Butcher three, Sara Pullins
lhree and Vanessa CompsiOn one.
Stephanie OliO led Eastern with
10 points (11 -13), Jaime Wilson
had 5 with two aces (9-12), Penny
Aeiker had an ace and five points
(8-9), Carrie Mmissey four points
(8 · 10), Hendricks four, Becky
Driggs two and Radford two.
Jaime Wilson was lS-44 setting
for 34 percent, Radford was 7-16
for 44 percent, freshman Jessica
Karr was 9-17 wilh two kills, OliO
was 8· 13 wilh three kiDs, Aeiter46 wilh two kills and MorrisSey 3-7
with one kill.

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· returned Gray ' s ki·"-ff
Dobbms
"""
39 yards to the Warren 40, where
the Gallians began a seven-play
drive that suaddled the first and
second quarters and culminated in
Dobbins' seven-yard touchdown
run four seconds iniO the second
frame. McCarty's two-point COO·
version pass 10 senior tight end Rob
Canady put the Raiders ahead 14-7.
Helped by a late-hit penalty
against the Raiders. Warren moved
the ball 37 yards in six plays on its
next serieo; before punung the ball
away from the Raiders' 41. After
the Raiders moved ~he ball fro!"
their own 10 to theu own 15 tn
three plays before having to pun.t.
the Warriors sci up shop on thetr
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Department
WL
First downs ...................... 11
Total yards ...... .............. .321
Rushing att.-yards ....57-238
Passing yards ...................38
Comp.-att ......................4-8
Interceptions lhrown .........0
Fumbles-lost ..................1-1
Punt returns-yards ........5-11
Punting ......................... l-34
Kickoff returns-yards .. J.fj()
Penalties-yards ............J -15

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POMEROY

with the Raiders' possession time
of 9:58 in the same stretch.
"The botiDm line was that they
whipped us on the line in lhe second half, offensively and defensively," said James. "We let down
after that touchdown," he added.
River Valley wasn't the same
le8lll afler that score, gaining one,
17, zero and 33 yards on-its four
second-half drives.
Warren's first drive of lhe final
quarter covered 37 yards in seven
plays and· lOOk only 2:19 to com-

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GALLIPOLIS - Bren Bostic
was recently named 10 succeed
Danella Greene as the remation
program division din:cw for the
0 .0 . Mcln~ Pm: Dislrict.
Bostic is a RaDt padualc of the
Univenity of Rio Gnnde, w1t1re be
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appointmept, the 19BS Gallia
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River Valley Raidtn
Rasblng- Peck 542; Dobbins
9-30, I TO; Mc:Cany 11-20; Cook .
3-18.
rau1na- McCarty 5-13.
yds., 1 TD; Covey 0-1. ·
Recelvlnt - Peck 3-42, 1 TD;
PenweU 1-5: Canady 1-3.
Fumble reroverlel - Coot (I)

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Warren Local Warrion
Rushing- Lang 21-84,2 TDs;
Cogar 8-66; ~arris 13-60; Reeder
7-27.
Passing - Harris 4-8, 38 yds.,
2TDs.
RecelviDR .,.. Perdue 2-8. 2
TDs: Handschumacher 1-19;
Nichols 1-11.
Fumble recoveries - none

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Hammond . "He got in behind the
linebackers to get it."
~'
This week's agenda will have
River Valley hosting Gallia Acacle-o
my and Warren Local returnin'g
home to host Meadowllnx*.
·.

plete. Harris' five-yard end zone
pass 10 Perdue preceded Gray's extra-point kick that completed the
scoring with 6:26Ieft.
" He (Perdue) ran a nice pat·
tern," said River Valley
receiver/secondary ~oach Ron

All SIZES

..

Individual ieaders

•

f

rer. They started off the frame by
driving 69 yards in 14 plays, with
the last play being a three-yard
touchdown pass from Harris 10 senior tight end Shane Perdue, who
had no defenders within five yards
of him, in the right coiner of the
east end zone. Harris' two-point
conversion run put the guests ahead
23-14 with 5:321efL
"We kept the ball, and we improved on both lines," Riffey said
of bis crew, who had lhe ball for
14:02 in the second half, compared

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With help from an offsides
penalty against the hosts, Wamn
wrapped up its 13-play drive when
Lang bulled his waY into tbe end
zone from two yards 001 ar the 2:13
mark. Another offsides penalty
against the Raiders made Gray put
away his kicking ICC aild gave senior quartetbact Jason Harris the
chance 10 run for two points, which
he did 10 give Wanen the 15-14
lead that stood al halllime.
Warmt 11bs a111tru1
In pushinc for their third
straight viciOry, Riffey's men
didn' t waste their first chance 10
extend their lt:ad in the tbinl quar-

Statistics

1984 Ford Ranger 414.........................$4495

COIIVIIIIIII o• am
fiiAICIIt lit lOW, LOW UTU.

Osllone)

Quarter totals·
Warren Local ........ ? 8 8 7 - 30
River Valley..........6 8 0 0 - 14

CBICI DDt DUB SELIC I ill OF
Pai-OWIID ftiADE-111.

308 EAST lUll

riors' running game moved the ball 21 mor~ ·:
yards than all the yards the Raiden gained by ·
kickoff, the run and the pass. (Times•Sentinel
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

STOPPING THE RUN, as River Valley
defensive end Bra~ Belville (88) demonstrates
against Warren Local's Martin Lang in Friday
night's gridiron battle, was the one thing that
gave the Raiders the most trouble. The War·

Warrea Local However, tbe Warriors, who
ra.e tn. he'iad to lead by one point at half·
11-. wfdl Delld ia the second half to win 30·
14. (TI•es·Statlael photo by G. Spencer

Warren Local records 30-14 win in bout with River Valley

•HEATING
•HOT WATER
•COOKING

TVC grid standings

iH boB'CI dU'ial Friday aigbt's game against

�September 27, 1992

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-Cs

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

South Point back in saddle with 29-19 win ·over Southern
By SCOTT WOLFE
Times-Sentinel Correspondent
SOUTH POINT - It was a
simple case of 100 little, 100 late, as
. Dave Gaul's Southern Tornadoes
dropped a 29-19 decision to the
· So11th Point Pointers Friday night.
The Pointers lOOk the opening
. kickoff and marched downfield
with a sustained drive, capped off
at the 8:04 mark by a 21 -yard
IOuchdown pass from senior quarterback Jerry Spurlock to Ian
Lewis. Mark Malone's extra point
kick was good, and South Point led
7-0.
The Tornadoes were forced to
· punt on their fii'SI possession, giving the ball back to the Pointers.
South Point struck again at the 5:24
mark, when Brian Leonard took a
reverse in from 35 yards out for the
touchdown. Malone's extra point
kick was no good, and South Point
· increased its lead 10 13-0.

Statistics
p
Department
G
8
First downs ..................... IO
182
Yards rushing .~ ............ .160
54
Lost rushing ...................66
128
Net rushing .....................94
13
. 'Pass attempts ..................14
4
Cornpletions .....................4
I
lnten:epled by.................. .!
54
Yards passing .................91
182
Total yards ...... .............185
Plays ............................... 58
40
101
Return yards .................110
0
Fumbles .......................... ..4
0
BREAKS UP PASS -Portsmouth's Bruce Ward (7) breaks up Lost fumbles ..................... 2
9-61
Penalties
.....................
J-43
this pass attempt IDtended ror GaWj,otls receiver Nathan Miller (24)
Punts .......................... .3-93 4-119
during Friday night's oon-leaJ'Ie game at Portsmouth, which the
Trojans won 2fi.7. Cfimes-Selitinel photo by Kevin Pinson)

Academy rnner Juon Stansberry (j3) Is
:::biroq:bt down by Portsmouth's O.J. Netter (:Zl)
:. ; after short gain during Friday lliaht's pme at
•; •Spartu Stadium ID Portsmouth, which tile Tro• •

::ln the Ohio Ri"Ver's Gallipolis pool

~iChubs

bait of choice for flatheads;
i~Jlybrid stripers prefer minnows

•••
;:: COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ::Here is the weekly fishing report as
•;provided by the division of wildlife
::of the Ohio Department of Natural

: . Jtesourtes:
.; •

Ohio River
:0 : In the Gallipolis pool, chubs are
•'!Jcing used to lake flathead catfish
::ap to 32 inches. Minnows and
:·thicken liven are being used to
&lt;lake hybrid striped bass averaging
:' 12·21 inches. Freshwater drum
;:•veraging 12· 25 inches are falling
spoons and jigs. Sauger averag&gt;In' 10-14 inches are going for
•:\WISler tails and minnows.
:; , In the Willow Island tail water,
:•anslers arc using gizzard shad
in sttong current close 10 the
:;
of the dam while laking hybrid
: •$1riped bass ranging 19- to 28-mch•~ with a few fish up to ten pounds.
:' Gizzard shad and sunfish are also
:: Jleing used to take flathead catfish
•.:averaging 25-38 inches with some
:' Weighing up to 22 pounds.
!: ' 111 the Willow Island pool, large•!inouth bass averaging 18 inches are
{ being taken around sunken barges
-.~Leith's Run on buzz bailS, sur•'•.race lures and rubber worms.
:•:
Southeast
.; . TYCOON LAKE - Fishing
::;pportunities for sunfish, large; •Oiouth bass and channel catfish are
•~ted exceUenL Use surface bailS or
:::.i&amp;ht crawlers to take largemouth
:~. Sunfish are easily taken by
•:uing small worms fished at shal:·tow depths.
·-· DILLON RESERVOIR \. : :Channel catfish can be taken dur: •{ng the late evening and early
•;morning hours when using tradi: 'ilona! baits such as shrimp, night
: ~rawlers or chicken livers fished
•:along the bottom. As water temper: ltures decline, saugeye rJShing in
:1he tail water will begin to
•Jinprove.
::·
Southwest
•. ROCKY FORK LAKE - A

·:for

•:fa:"

...

few flathead catfiSh over 30 pounds weeks.
are p~t, but are few in number.
CLEAR FORK RESERVOIR
Channel catfish are more abundant - Try rJShing with large imitation
and can be taken on traditiflnal baits in areas with lake bouom
baits during evening and early humps, logs, stumps and weed beds
morning hours. October is a good to take muskies. Try deep water
month for crappie anglers. Maps areas when fishing with minnows
with locations of fish· attractor 10 take crappies averaging eight 10
habitats are available from the park 12 inches.
offiCe. Troll at depths of 10.18 feet
Northeast
to lake muskies.
LEESVILLE LAKE - LargeCAESAR CREEK LAKE mouth bass can be taken on top
Try using live worm rigs or crank water lures, including buzz bailS
baits trolled at depths of 10.20 teet and black worms. Muskie fishing
along areas with wooded drop-offs has been good with most fish averand mid-lake humps to take aging 32-44 inches. Use traditional
saugeyes. Deep drop-offs to mid- types of muskie lures cast to the
shaDow areas around the coves are weed beds.
CUYAHOGA RIVER - Try
~~ areas 10 try taking largemouth
wherr using minnows or night Carolina-rigged plastic worms
crawlers.
fished in deep water at the Edison
Central
plant for bass .
DELAWARE LAKE - Crappies up 10 and exceeding 15 inches
have been taken during the past len
days. Fish deep with minnows suspended beneath a bobber for best
results. The submerged creek channel and areas with tree stumps and
vegetation are good areas 10 try for
largemouth bass. Fish the flats
south of.Cap Cole bay and in the
rail water about one week following a high water discharge to take
saugeyes.
.
BUCKEYE LAKE - Blucgills
provide good rtshing opportunities
in the eastern half of the lalre when
using small hooks and worms.
Crappies, channel catfish, largemouth and hybrid striped bass, carp
and muskie are also available.
Check with area bait shops for the
best methods used to take these
fish.
Northwest
BRESLER RESERVOIR Drift fish along the ouler shorelines
with spreaders tipped with minnows to take yellow perch. Night
fishing for channel catfish should
remain good for the next several

Ughtweights

You Mutt Try Theta On
To Appreciate Them.!
MaL &amp; Frl 1118 PM
Ttes., Wed., Tbr. 1116 PM
Sat•rday tl 5

SH4aytl5

89
55

79

110

88
106
144
OP

0
0
0
0

0
0
0

Sept. 25 results:
Coshocton 35 Athens 8
PO\ISJllouth 26 Gallipolis 7
Waverly 22 Jackson 8
Logan 26 WashingiOn CH 0
Cleveland JFK 16 Marietta 13
Sissionville39 Pt. Pleasant 6
Warren Local 30 River Valley 14
Meigs 16 Miller 6
Coal Grove - open

.m

BIIDUftCY
614-221.0818 ·
.,L LW. CENNAMO
AnORNEY AT lAW

Oct. 2 games
Gallipolis at River Valley
Coal Grove at Buffalo
Meigs at Trimble
Pt. Pleasant at Hurricane
Portsmouth at Ashland
Athens at Portsmouth ND
Vinton County at Jackson
Logan at Zanesville
River Local at Marietta
· Meadowbrook at Warren Local

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SINGLETON HEADS UPFIELD -Southern running back
Russell Singleton beads upfield during Friday nigbt's garne against
the host South Point Pointers, who won 29-19. Singleton gained 69
yards oo 13 carries in addition to catching two passes for 87 yards
and a touchdown. (Photo by Tom Hunter)

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t

onds left. South Point went into tile
locker room with a 21-121ead.
·
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30-yard pass play with 22 seconds
left. The drive was siOJllled as the
Tornadoes fumbled with I0 sec-

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good, and South Point's lead was
CUII021-J2.
South Point looked 10 be driving
for another score as Spurlock hit
Lewis on a 35-yard pass play at the
5:10 mark. The Southern defense
did a tremendous job of stopping
the Pointers' drive, as Cleland
picked off Spulock with 3:141eft in
the half. Southern hoped to cut the
lead even more, but the Tornadoes
were forced to punt with 1:561eft.
Southern's defense stepped up
once again, as Evans picked off
Spurloclc, giving the Tornadoes offense one more shot at scoring be·
fore the half. Evans hit Dill on a

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49
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of the Tornadoes lineup indefinetly.
.
In the second quarter, South
Point found paydirt again, as Spurlock, on the option, ran a six-yard
keeper into the end zone. Spurlock's pass to Jan Lewis on the
PAT was good, and South Puint led
21-6.
Southern lOOk over and began a
long drive, capped by a 25-yard
10uchdown pass from Evans to Cleland with 7:04 left in the half. Cleland was in tight coverage on the
reception, managing to snag the
catch from the South Point defender for the score. The PAT was no

1419 State Route 7
GaiUpoU1, Ohio 4Sft31
614·446-0'73.

VINTON UCEWAY
SPECIAL
AWARDS DAY •

1992 grid standings
(OveraU)
Team
W L P
Portsmouth ............4 0 137
Jackson ..................3 1 103
·warren Local ....... .3 I 93
Coal Grove ............2 I 67
Point Pleasant ........3 2 75
Logan ....................2 2 53
Gailipolis .............. .l 3 48
River VaUey ......... .I 3 @
Mei$S .................... ( 3 16
Mariena .................o 4 27
Athens ...................0 4 21
( SEOAL Only)
Team
W L
P
Mariena ...............o o
0
Logan ..................o o
0
GaUipolis .............o 0
0
Jackson ................o o
0
Warren ................0 0
0
Athens .................o o
0
TOTALS
0 0
0

Gaul said that his club was a little tenraive at this point, but later
became the aggressor, working extra hard 10 get back iniO the game.
Southern 'finally got its offense
rolling as the Tornadoes broke the
big play at the 4:31 mark in the
rust quarter. Quarterback Michael
Evans hit Russell Single10n on a
shon screen pass. Singleton then
began an 80-yard footrace for the·
end wne and Southern's rii'St score
of the evening. Evans' pass on the
PAT was incomplete, and the
Pointers lead was cut to 13-6.
Southern's passing game, headed by Evans and utilizing Singleton, Jeremy Dill, Trent Cleland and
Nick Adams on the receving end,
compl,etely threw the Pointers off
balance.
The Tornadoes lost junior Tucker Williams in the first quarter.
Williams reportedly broke his collar ,bone and wiD probably be out

CWipolls, Oltlo
446-1615

424 2JMI Ave.

GILLINUS, OHif
446·2532

KODALUX:TM Licenaed by Kodak

,.

. I

.Hometown Dealer

•

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GALLIPOLIS
(614) 446·3672

�•
Page C8 Sunday Times-sentinel

..

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

September 27,1992

Symmes Valley keeps Eastern -among winless with 54-17 decision
Times-Sentinel COf'l'espon&amp;ent
AID - The Eastern Eilgles had
one of their most successful offensive oulings d. the year, but fell 54·
17 to a more powerful offensive
explosion 111 Symmes VaUey Friday
night
Symmcs VaUey' s Rick Dillon
scored three limes, and Josh Mann
scored two touchdowns, while Brian Baumgardner, John Paul Pancr·
son and lfeshman quarterback Brad
Saunders each tallied one.
Symmes workhorse Ryan Carpenter rushed 17 times for 85
yards, but did not bit the end zone.
Dillon ran I0 times for 80 yards
and Mann galloped nine times for
35 yards.
Eastern had a great passing
night, with a banged up Chad
Savoy hurling 11·23 passes fer 212
yards in the air and two touch downs.
: Pat Newland caught four passes
for 108 yards unofficially, includ.ing one 70-yard TO reception.
;Tight end Jeremy Buckley caught
•four passes for 48 yards and also
:had a fumble recovery.
: Symmes scored first when
·Baumgardner trotted 13 yards to
;paydirt at the 7:23 mark; Carpenter
•scored the extras via a run and SV
led 8-0.
: Eastern's defense performed
·quite well the remainder of the
:rrame, while its offense began
marching the length of the field, a
saingof6ve
.straight drives of 60 yards or more
.in the first half. EHS scored just
·twice, despite moving the ball well.
_ At the I0:09 mark in the second
;quarter DiUon hauled in a 23-yard
pass from QB Shawn Charles. The
PATs failed, and Symmes Valley
ICd 14-0.
: Eastern made it 14-6 on a
Roben Reed reception. The PAT

pass failed.
At the 5:56 mark Symmes
struck paydirt again when Dillon
rushed for a 31-yard m jaunt and
Mann added the extras to give Valley a 22-6lead.
As Chad Savoy picked apan the
SV secondary with key targets
Newland, Buclcley, Reed and Charlie Bissell, EHS missed a scoring
oppatu1nity but later came back be·

fore the half to hit Newland on a ·
70-yard TO play. Charlie Francis
caught a PAT pass for a 22.{) score.
With 38 seconds remaining, Oil·
Jon struck paydirt again, and Scott
Smith caught the extras for a 30-14
score at the half.
In the third frame David Koenig
booted a 31-yard field goal to pull
EHS to 30-17.
Shawn Charles rambled in on a

~ollege.

Registration and a pre-clinic
reception will be held from 8:30 to
9 a.m. at the McDonough Center
Lobby. Muskingum College's Jim
Burson will speak on plyometrics

fensive performance of the year.
We had a good passing game and
picked apart their defense pretty
well."
Eastern hosts third-ranked West
Virginia Class A Wirt County this
week.
Quarter totals
Eastern ..................0 14 3 0 - 17
Eastern head coach Dave Barr . Symmes VaUey .....8 22 8 8- 54
said, ''This was by far our best of-

By Rick Simpkins
Sports Correspondent

Statistics

Department
E SV
First downs ......................IO
15.
Rushing yards ..................SO 280
Passing yards ................. 212 102
Total yards .... .......... .......292 3~
Comp.-atL .................. 11-23
4-61:
Interceptions thrown .........1
Furnbles ..........................O.O
14:
Penalties ....................... 4-50 3-35·
Punting .........................3· 38 1-30:

Connors
beats Navratilova
in 'BattleThisoftime,thehowever,
Sexes'
i
By TIM DAHLBERG
gize.
it wasn't :
AP Sports Writer
LAS VEGAS (AP) -OK, so it
w~sn't Billie Jean King-llobby
R1ggs; don't ask Jimmy Connors
and Martina Navratilova to apolo-

Nearly two decades after King
beat Riggs on a much ballyhooed
batde of the sexes, Connors turned
the tables Friday night with a 7-5,
6·2 victory over Navratilova.

Pointers win ... :--_(_C_o_nti_nued_from_c-_s)_ _

M~LONE C:HARGE~ - South Point fullback Mark Malone,
loUowmg the block of fallback Eric Conwell, (32) turns the corner
ag~lust S~utberu's ~efense durlug Friday ulght's game at South
Pomt, which the Pomters won 29·19. Malone rushed 31 times tor
182 yards and scored a touchdown. (Photo by Tom Huuter)

Marietta College Basketball Coaches Clinic set for October
MAR!ElT A - The fii'St Marietta College Basketball Coaches
Clinic will be held Saturday, Oct.
24 from 8:30 to 4 p.m. at Marietta

quarterback sneak from three yards
and Mann ran in the extras to make
the score 38-17 at the 7:51 mark.
In the fourth quarter Patterson
and Mann added ID's to complete
the scoring 54-17.
Patrersoo caught two passes for
~.yards, and Dillon had two for

and basketbaU conditioning from 9
to 10 a.m. Then Ohio University's
Larry Hunter will speak on improv·
ing defense through drills from 10
to II a.m. From II a.m: until noon,
John Carroll University's Mike
Moran will talk about defensing
special situations.
After lunch from noon 10 I p.m.,
Cambridge High School's Gene
Ford will
on ·
a win·

ning program at the high school
level until 2 p.m. From 2 to 3 p.m.,
Ohio Dominican College's Ed
DiGenova wiU talk about open-post
offense and three-point concepts.
Closing the clinic will be former
Rio Grande assistant and new
Marietta College head coach Doug
Foote, who will discuss special situations, quick hincrs and.the highoffense.

MUlE I II COY·DI BUK£1811.1. COICUS CLIIIC
SATURDAY, OCTOB~R 24, 1992
(Appllcltlon Form)
COST: $25.00 per coach. $20.00 per coach If two or more attend from the Slme school.
(Must register by October 16)
$30.00 per coach If reglltarlng day of the clinic
REGISTRATION: Make checks payable to Doug Foote and mall to Men'• Ba1tietball, Marietta
College, Marietta, OH. 45780. ReglstraUon can alao be made by phone. Just call614-374-4612
Nlllll(s):..·- - - - - - - -

School:----------

In the third quarter, Southern
got on the scoreboard fii'St as Evans
hit Dill on an 18-rard touchdown
pass. The ex1ra-pmnt Ieick by Unai
Aidama-Eiorza was good, and
Southern was down 21-19.
Two plays of tremendous magnitude followed, perhaps changing
the complexion of the game to the
finish.
South Point made a costly specia! teams mislake on the lcickoff.
Mark Justice bobbled the kickoff at
the 22-yard line, and Southern recoverd the loose ball. The Tomadoes were knocking on the door at
the 7:04 mark, as Evans dropped
back to pass, only to be picked off
by Greg llartrum in the end zone.
After a South Point punt, penalties and runs for losses put the Tor.nadoes deep in South Point territory. A short punt by the Tornadoes
gave South Point good field position at the 36-yard line. The Pointers couldn't capitalize on the opportunity, as they turned the ball
over on downs. The South Point offense was controlled by Malone,
whose third-quarter numbers were
20 carries for 120 yards.
In the fourth quaner, Southern
was looking to take the lead. Singleton went down with severe muscle cramps at the 10:41 mark. Singlcton was helped to the sideline
after a short delay and returned later. Southern was forced to punt
with 9:30 left
South Point found the end zone
again with 4:56 lefL The Pointers'
long drive was capped by a sixyard touchdown run by Malone.
The PAT was no good, and South
Point led 27-19.
Southern took possession, but
was forced to punt the ball away
with 4:05 left. South Point, once
again made a costly mislake, as
they fumbled on the Southern
eight-yard line with 2:04 left The
Tornadoes recovered, giving them
another chance at chance of knotling up the score. Michael Evans
• dropped back to pass, under heavy
pressure by the South Point de-

fense. Evans, trying to get off a
pass, was sacked in the end zone by
the Pointers with 1:52 remaining.
1 he safety gave South Point a 2919 lead and a hard fought victory
against a very tough Tornado ball
club. ·
ll.vans was 8 of 20 passing for
190 yards with one interception
and three touchdowns. Spurlock
was 4 of 8 passing for 78 yards
with two interceptions.
Malone was the game's leading
rusher. He had 31 carries for 182
yards and a touchdown. Leonard
rushed for 22 carries fer 128 yards.
Southern's rushing leader was Sin·
gleton, who had 13 carries for 69
yards.
Southern's leading receiver in
yardage gained was Singleton. He
hauled in two receptions for 87
yards and a touchdown. Dill
brought in four receptions for n
yards and a touchdown. Cleland
had one catch for 25 yards and a
touchdown. Lewis was the leading
receiver for South Point, with three
catches for 58 yards.
"We had to shut them down. We
played really hard and rose to the
occassion," said Gaul after the
game. The Southern defense was
led by Glenn Young and Adams
with II tackles each. Cleland
added iO tackles.
Southern (2·2) will face the
tou~h Chesape4ke Panthers at
Rac1ne next Fnday. South Point (3I) will play host to the Rock Hill
Redmen.
Quarter totals
Southern .......... ......6 6 7 0- 19
South Point.. ... .... l3 8 0 8 - 29

Statistics

Department
RS
SP
First downs ........................8
23
Rushing atl·yards ......21-9469401
Comp.-att ..................... 8-20 4-8
Interceptions thrown ......... 1
2
Passing yards .................190
78
Total yards .....................479 284
Fumbles-lost.. ................2-l 2-1
Penalties .....................8-105 4-35
Punting ........................ .l-37 5-30

about superiority of sexes. This ·
time, it was about entertainment :
and money.
·
"It was a fun night and we had ·
a fun time doing it," Navratilova .
said. "We also made a lot of·
money out of it."
Connors made the most, taking .
a ~500,000 winners check for a
short night's work before a soldout
crowd of 13,832 at an outdoor
coun at Caesars Palace.
He did so after digging a hole
with a 3-1 first-set deficit in a
match where he faced the disadvantage of unorthodox rules that
gave him only one serve and
Navratilova half

The Sissonville Indians literally

In the NL ...

Pil-... . . .

Eutem Dlvblon

Tum

W
91
Mooboil ...............•84
SL l.llw. ................n
Cbiooao...... ...........15
Now Yod&lt; .•.•....•....69

L Pet.
63 .l91
10 .545
1l .l01
79

.411

14 .451
l'lillldelp1Ua ...........63 II .411

Wwtern DMalon
Allulla ..................91 62 .595
CINCINNA11. .......11 (;! .565
Son Dies• ..............10 13 .l2l
.... ....... ......14 10 .411
San Fnnci8co ........68 16 .442
t.o. Anp ...........61 93 .396

GB

1
13
16
2U
26..5

45

II
115
23.5

30.5

San Dicao l,Atlaru 0

CNCJN!;ATI4, Sm Fnnc;Joo 2

u....... 4, t.o. Anpla l

They played Saturday

Hau~ron (X.ile 4-10) at lol Ansele.
(llmbilcriCH4), 3 pm.
OUcaao (B01i.ie S-l 0) at Mont.rul

(Nobholz 10.11), ],OS p.m.
Now Yaolt (llillmlrt 2-1) • PitubwJh
(Walk 9-6), 3'10p.m.
CINCINNATI (Swindell12-6) at San

""""""' (Bwt01 12-9~ 4~ pm.

SL L01~
~ (MI
c 1-land O.bome
10.1) at
· (SchillinsiJ..lO and
lti-~). 2,l' lp.m.
Atlanta (P. Smith 6-0) at San Die,o
(Doohai• &lt;4-6). 10~ p.m.

Today's g1mes
Chicaao (Moraan 15-7) at Monuul
Ell p.m.
St. Louil (Comtier 1·10 Uld Oark 3·
10) It Philtdclphit (Malhewa 0-3 and
Alhb)' 1·3), 2, I ,311 pm.
New York (Schou.ret S-7) at Pitll·
bur11t (l-1·12). 1:3S p.m.
ROUMn (R.I)'!Kildt G-3) •t 1.o1 An1o""(C...diottill·lo4),4,o5 p.m.
Atlanta (SmohJ: 15-12) at San Dieaa
(BonmiMi!~ 0.2),

L21ZPNC

239 95

(Bena13-ll), 4,0S ~m.
CINCNNATI (Rijo 14-9) al San Fnnciloo(Canu 1· ]~4~

Ust$389.95

SAVE

In the AL ...

$150

T-

grade engine •141JaUge
stMI deck &lt;21" cut,
staggered wheel

L hi.
511
.l65
.54&lt;1
.414

Cl
]5
6.!1
175
II

.411
.411

.444

II
22

W....... Dl•WoA
y.()tkland ............93 61 .604
MiMeoota ..............l&lt;l 611 .549
a.;.qo................ll 70 542
Tea• ........
73 II .474
K.wu City ......... 611 .. .&lt;&amp;51

95
20
2l.l

Calilomil ............. ..61
Seoale ................. .J9

155
l&lt;l

8.l

M . . . . . . .. . . .

16

.431

9S .Jil

Friday's scores

R&amp;G Feed and

s - a&amp;llok"'- ppd .• run
ICIMUC'oy4, - 3

T...... 3.NewYool: I
Milwtukee4,0at.lltld l
Doaoit 6, ClJ!VELAND S. I0 lnotinp

Supply Co.

OUc.JO 6. Califamia 5
SoattJe 4, r - 3, 16 inninp

399 W. Main,
992·2164

W

64
ldilwaube ............l1 (;/
Baltim&lt;n . ............ll 611
New Ylllt .•....•...••.1! 11
CLBVI!U.ND .......12 11
Dottuit. ...................1l 12
BoatGn....................68 l5

4 HP commercial

Pomeroy, Ohio

p.m.

....... 01-

r-. ................91

Tbey played Saturday
CLEVEI.AND (Coot $-7) It Detroit
(Hau 5·2).1 ,15 p.m.
. TotOn&amp;o (Jun. Guzman lS-4) at New
Y~otol-1),.1 : !0p.m.

Tilt 81.,. Wllh " A l l - Olllutl" FO&lt;

(Dulin&amp; lS·9) at Milwaukee
(W...... 12-14),l;SOp.m.

Plio, 11-. ~&amp; a-1-,
L-&amp;o..-

- . (Vd• 12-12 IIIII Doooon 1-91
at B~ ()blint 17-S and Lcfferta
0.2), 2. sm ~,..
Califam.ia (Finley S-12) '' Chicaao
(Femand&lt;&amp; 1-10), 7~5 p.m.
Kanlu CitJ (Aquino J..S) ll Mittneaou (Topani 1l · ll~ '~p.m .
Seaule (Flemina lS · lO) u Tnu
(Po•lil&lt; oi-l), 1:311 pm.

Phone Number: (office)-------

(home)-----

44; Gri.&lt;m,·M.-.1, 39; W. CW!t. ~..
Franciaco, 39; Lankford, St. Louil, 38;
Duncu, Philadelphia, 31; Psulk:c:m, A\·
lanta, 37; Graco, Chicaao, 36; J, B.U,
PiiiiiMoJIL36.
1'IUPLES - D. Sanden, Atlama, t•;
Finley, Houlton, ll; VaaSiyb, Pitll·
~I'Jh. ll; B~ll•, l..ol Ana~~· I}: AlIcea, SL LoWa, 10; Monndini, Philldcl·
pbia, 8; Offerman, Loa An&amp;ole.a, I;
DtShiddJ, MMuoal, 8; SmdbaJ, Oli&lt;a·
ao.l.
HOME RUNS- lololldll, Soa Di'lo,

34; Shoffiold, Sn Di•Jo, 33: Bond•,

0 . Hollinl, l'bill&lt;lolplu•,15; S•n4bcra.
Chicoao. 15; L. Wllbo, Manaal. 23.
STOLEN BASl!S - ODNom, Mon·
ned, 7S; DoShiclda, Montrul , 46;
Robcru, CNONNATl, 44; L..tlaod. SL
l.ouil, 42; Nilm, Atlanll, 41; Budor. Lao
......... 41:.0; Smilb. S1. Louio, 41.
PITCHING

Friday's srores

MOWER

(Sotolillc1~14),1 'lil pm.

Oakland (Wiu 10-14) at Milw•ukee

(Rym l ·9), ],Q! P"'·

Leaders
BA'ITINO - Sheffield, San Dieao.
.ll2; VanSI)k' Pi..bwJh •.324; Kruk ,
Philadelphia, .323; Robert•, CINCINNATI• •322; Gwynn, San Dlesa, .317 ;
Bondi, PitUborlh, .314; Butler. Lao Anaelel, .313.
R.UNS - Bonda, Piusburah , 1_04 ;
Ori116m, Montre.l, 91 ; D. Hollan•.
Phil•del_phil, t'; Van.Siyb, Pittabur&amp;h.
96; San~"!'J. a.icaao. 95; Patdldon , 11tlan\l, 93~ 81gjo, Jloultt~n, 92.
JlBI - Daulton, Philadelphia, 105 ;
hndlCIOft, Allan\.1, 102; Sheffield, San
Dic1o, 99: Bond•, Pittsburah , 97; Me·
Orilr, San Di'lo&gt; 96; L. Wolker, Mon....
al. 91; BaswelJ, Houllon, 90; Murray,
NewYat.,90.
HITS - Pendlelon , Atlanta, 191 ;
V..slyio, P11tOI&gt;oqil, Ill; Sltdliold. Sm
Dieso, 111: Ori111m1 , Montreal, 178;
Otluao. 171: Smdbera. Chic:lao.

11,448

lOW 8

•

lOW

a-

Tewb-

Alllnu, :10-7, .741, 2.87: M:npn. Oli&lt;a·
1•· 15-7, .61Z. 2.65; Swindelf, CINCIN·
NATl, 12·6, .667,2.50; C..... Now Yod&lt;,
13·7, .650,2.11; Loibmldl, Alllnla,IJ-7.
.650. 3.62; K. Hill. Man..U. 16-9, .640.
2.71.
STR.OCEOUfS- Cone, New Yort,
214; Smoltz, ·A\lanta, lOS; 0. Maddu;w;,
Chicaao. 190; s. Fcmandc.z, New Yolk,
Ill; Drabek, Pinsburah, 173; Rijo,
CINCINNATI, 166; Ba~CI, San Dieao,
156; 0.., Lao Anplol.ll~
SA YES - 1M Smilh, S1. LoW, &lt;40;
Myers. S.n Dic&amp;o, 31; Wettdand, Mon..U. 35; D. I-.""'"""'· 32; Chullon,

ltand)' SL ClWe. pi~ehcr.

Pbilodolj&gt;bio. 26: D;bble, CINCINNA11,
23.

Amerlcaa League

BAmNG- E. Martinez, Seattle,
.343; Puckett. Minnclota, .327; Molilar,
Milwaukae, . 32.5~ Thorn11, Chica10. .322;
M1ck, Mirm•ot.a, .319; Griffey, Seattle,
.312; R. Alomu, t .....IO, .310.
RUNS - Phillip&amp;, Dcuoil, 112:
Thomu, Chicaao, 106; E. Martinez, Seatlie, 100; R. Alomar, Toron1o, 99:
Knoblauch, Minnaou, 98; Puaeu., Min·
nciOtJI, 96; RainCI, ctuca1D, 96.
·
RBI - Fielder, Deuoil, 120; Caner,
Toronto, 1~2; 0. Bell, Chi~ go, 109:
Thorrw. Chicaao. 108; Puckett, Minneao-

Basketball
Ntdoul Buktl:ball Alloclltlon.

MILWAUKEE BUCKS - Named
Mike O..UC.vy, coaeh. vice ~dent of
M*lllbiD opallicnl, and 1M R.01e, vic:e
poooldenl of pla)OI' palonnol.
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES Tnded Soou Broob, a-1, to tho lJooo.
~.m Rocteu ror a 1995""scccnd·mund dnfl

p;.t.

FootbaU
Natklna!Foolballla.&amp;ue

CINCINNATI BENGALS - Acllnted. Reale Rembert, wtde nceher.
W•l•ad Fra.all: Robl....,., mrnerhaciL
Cltllll'Md Jetr QtttrJ, wklt rerelnr1 ctr
..1wn traM liM: Mouton Olin.
DENVER BRONCOS - Placed
Muhtnanod Oliver, comerbaci., en injunod.-ve.

INDIANAPOUS COLTS -Waived

ShOW\ Habodham, wide receiver.

MINNESOTA VlKtNOS - Placed
Mike Ta.ce, wide NC«v•, on injured roo

I ...L

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS - Ac:Uvat·
od Robert. Oaibome md Johnnie Dame~,
wida rUYCrt. Waived Clwle~ Willm,
wU:Ja receiver, and Tany Savaao., dllfen·
live tale.

Hockey
N1Uonal HotlltJ Lequc

BOSTON BRUINS - S;p.! Dmilri
Kvan&amp;lna¥,ld\ wq, 10 a two-year conln&lt;l.

BOMONTON OILERS - Ao:qwod
Jeff BloembcJ):, clcfcn•eman, from the
Tampa Bay liPtnin&amp; for future cuuidcrationland •ianod hlm 10 C.pc Bmon of
ll!e Amllicm Ood&lt;oy Leap.
IIARTR)RD WJIAI.llRS - Rdwod
Norm1nd ltoc:hcfon., defen1eman. Af·
sianed. Michel Picard, la(t wing, to
Sprinsficld or the Amerlctn Hockey
Leap.

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1ow*llll

defeat of the season. Sissonville
roUed up 296 yards on the ground
and passed for another 38 for a
total of 334 yards of offense. Point,
on the other hand, generated almost
no offense and did not get on the
scoreboard until there were only
two minutes remaining in the game.
The Big Blacks' 114 yards of total
offense represented their worst performance of the season.
"Without a doubt, this was the
· most pathetic performance we have
had here in years," said an obviously dejected Steve Safford after
the game. "! never thought a team
with the potential that this ream has
would play this badly. We didn't
warm up well and then things got
progressively worse. I realize that
as coaches we have to assume some
of the blame, but we can only do so
much. We didn't get out there and
miss tackles, miss blocks, or miss
assignments. We prepared weU for
this game. We knew what they
were going to do and we worked on
those things. But, they just plain
kicked our behinds," said Safford.
The Indians came into the game
with a passing attack that was supposed to give their opposition many
problems. Btit, it was their running
game that produced all night
against the Big Blacks. Led by the
bruising running of senior fullback
Chris Neeley and the quick feet of
senior
quarterback
Jeremy
Eastwood, the Indians averaged
just a litde over 5 yards per carry.
Sissonville ran the ball 50 times
and tluew 12 more times for 62 a
total of 62 offensive plays.
The Big Blacks, meanwhile, only
ran 32 offensive plays with 24 of
those being running plays. Point
managed only 32 yards on their 24
rushes while Brent Smith passed

for another 82 yards, the first time
in recent memory that the Blacks
threw for more yards than they
rushed for.
Sissonville got off to a quick
start, scoring on their very first possession of the evening. After forcing the Big Blacks to punt on their
initial possession, the Indians star·
ted on their own 23 yard line and
. moved 77 yards on 7 plays. The
drive was aided by a face masking
penalty against the Big Blacks.
Neeley, the game's leading rusher
with 128 yards, capped the scoring
drive with a 4 yard run. Sissonville
convened on a two point conversion with a pass from Eastwood to
Randy Wilkmson.
Pomt held the Indians on their
next two series, but on the Indians'
next possession, which was their
first in the second quarter, they put
together a 42 yard scoring drive
that took only 8 plays. Eastwood ·

.,•

..
&lt;

scored this touchdown from the one
yard line on a quarterback sneak.
The exira points were added when
Eastwood threw to line ·1hompson.
It did not lake Sissonville long to
put another touchdown on the
board. On the Big Blacks' first play
from scrimmage after the seecnd
Indian touchdown, Brent Smith·
dropped back and threw to Ryan
Roush. The ball fell incomplete, but
because Roush was standing para!•
lei to Smith, the ball was actually
ruled a lateral. Since the play was a
lateral, the play was ruled a fumble
instead of an incomplete pass, and
an alen Brian Ervin picked up the
loose ball and returned it 35 yard~
for the third Indian score. NeeleY:
passed to Jody Eastwood for the exIra points, and the· lead was extended to 24·0.
.
The Big Blacks had an opportunity to get on the scoreboard near
the end of the half, but .their drive
(See INDIANS on C·8)

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,

u,I06; Devete~Ua., Bahimom, 105: BdJe,
a.EYEu.Nll, I Dl.
HITS - Puckeu, Minnuota , 198;
Baerg• , CLEVELAND, 190: Molitor,
Milwaukee, 188; E. Martinet, Seattle,
131; Mack, Minnesou, lll ;_Mattinaly,
New Yoti, 171; Thomu, Chicaao. l'7!5;
Devaaux, Baltimore, 17!5.
DOUBLES - E. Mart inez, Seau1e,
46;'Thomu, Oticago, 41; Mltdncly, New
Yotk, 40; Griffey, Se~ula. 39: Telfaiea,
Kansu City, 36; Yount, Milw1uk«, 36;
Ventura, ChiCI&amp;O, 3S.
TRIPLES - Dcvmu.ux, BUtimoM,
11; ~ John1on, OUcaao, II; Anderton,
Baltunore, 9; Loftcn, CLEVELAND, 8;
R. Alomar, Tar~Wno, I; Sima, OUl.and, 7;
Raina:, Chicaao. 7; Molitor, Milwaukee.,
1.

HOME RUNS -

Juan Conulez,

r..u. &lt;4&amp;. Mc:GwW, Ootllnd. &lt;4&amp;. ew..

Toronto, 33; Bc:Ue, CLEVELAND, 32;
Fielder, Detroit, 32; Deer, Detrait. 30;
Tculaan, Dcroit., 30.
STOLEN BASl!S - Lo&amp;n, CUM!·
LAND, 62; l..iNdl, Milwaube, ll; Andmon, Baltimore, SJ ; Pal.ania, Calif'otnia, Sl; R. Alamu, Tonno, 47; R. Ht~rt­
OUIInd, 41; Rain-. &lt;lliclp. u.
PITCHING (I I dcci1iant) -Juan
Oul!llan, TotoDio, 15 -4, .789, 2.75;
MIUina. 8&amp;ltimc:n. J1.S, .T13,1S3; B~
aio, Milwaukee, 16-S, .762, 3..W; Jack
Morria, Toronta, 19-6, .760, 4.09; McDowall, ChilllliO, 20·9, .690, 3.20;. .K.
Brown, r ..... :ZO.IO, .661, 3.21; API""'.
Klnlu City, I S·8, .6S2, lol6.
STRIKEotrrS - R.I......... S..ule,
liS; PllfOZ, Naw York,lll; Cl.mcna,
BOltOn, 203; Jote Guzman, Texu, 174;
McDowell, Chica_ao...!_ !_6_3: _K__: Brown,
TClu, 161 ; N•&amp;Y· Q..EVEl.o\ND, lS7.
S~VES-:- r:ct.eralay, Oakland, Sl ;
A&amp;\l.ilera, MlMCIOU, 40; M~taantel')' ,
K•n•u City, 39; OlJon, Bahimcn, 34 ;
Hc.nkc, Toronto, 32; Jeff ltuueU, Oak·
land, », Olin, CLEVELAND, 27; Fur,
New YOlk, 27: Raudcm, BCIIIOrl. 27.

•

\FL srhedull'

Banks loan money to the people

Today's ""don

they know. That may be presidents, princes,

Allanta 1\ Otic.lp, I p.m.

Buffalo a New Ellal•nd. l p.m.
Donwral a.EVE(AND, 1 p.m.
MinnNou a ONCINNATI, I p.m.

San DYip at HounCil, I p.m.
Tampa 1 .tDccroit.l p.m.
Miami It S.alt., 4 p.m.
N.Y. Jeu at L.A. Ra.n-.,4 p.m.
PUuburJh" ~ 1•4 p.m.
San FranNco 1\ New Odeana. I p.m.
OPEN DATE : Dallu, lndian1polia,
N.Y. Gianu, Philadelphia , Ptloeni1 ,
Wuhinl"'".

•
•

'

a sheik or two. People with grand

s.

a.

projects in faraway places. Or if its Bank One,

Monday's eame

.....-

it can stay a htde closer to home. And

L.A. Raidaw ot Karooi City, _
9 p.m.

Transal'liom

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lllOKhcalor Utt

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CLEVELAND INDIANS- AI·
&lt;allod .lc* Horn1ncln, ohorlllop, frvm

Bank One,we always want to be in a position

Canton-Atroa ofLheiuln ........
TEXAS RANGERS - Si&amp;ned an

aareemenl 10 han Charl•non as their

South AllanUc lcape afi"Wa'- and Erie
1hoU New Yool:·l'cm Leapulli!M1&lt;&gt;.

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becomes one room too small.Al

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to do "Vv'hatever it takes" to help you

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ATLANTA BRAYES - 0..il"ao.4

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out the day you need us. Like today maybe.
;

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be ready when a house in the neighborhood

American IAII•
ODCAOO WHITE SOX - N•med
Miko !qoUoo, opecla1Uiiltut10 1lw p
aral maruaer and Dewey R.obiJlJon ,
bWipao coadl. Retainod Terry Bmn11on;
Jackie Brown; Walt Hrinl&amp;k; Dol&amp; ManNo~e:t,

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BosebiD

&amp;Oiino, and Joe

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11• FGU IIIDSftB COIIDIIOI IU
V6 eng., PS. PB, auto. trans .• air cond.,
titt and cruise, AMIFM stereo cassette•
4 captain's chairs, hookup for
television, new tires, luggage rack, wire

for reluian·

mcot. Purchued lhe cornnct of Pedro
BOUiboa,=, r..m Cbm.W. of lho
S...lhom
M
EXPOS - Announced
the raimnmt of Gary Caner, calclter, d fcc:dn .a.n of dlO 1992 ae~~cn.

CINCINNATI. 26; Mitch William•,

Nallonat League

1181 JIOiftiC IRIID D 1.1 I DB.

WAS
$799S

MinnCIOl.l

C&amp;Wamia (l..ananon 12·1..) at Chi.ca·
ao (Hoo&amp;h 7· 11}. 2:3S p.m.
S•attle (Jokn1on 11 · 1&lt;4) ll Tu.u

3.0 V6 eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., air
cond., AM/FM stereo, casselte, tilt &amp;
cruise, P. win . &amp; P. door locks, rear
defrosler, styled wheels, cloth split front
seats, 20,000 miles, A·1 c;onditlonlng.

4 cyt. eng., power steering, power brakea, 5
speed trans., air cond ., AM/FM stereo
cassette , floor console, rear defroster, tilt
steering wheel, cruise control, cast
aluminum styles wheels, 41,491 miles.

11

(11 dedi ....) -

bwy, S1. LoW. 16-!, .762, 2.19; Gllrine.

Today's games
Toronto (MorriJ 19-6) 11 New York
(Sondalon 12-9), 1:30 p.m.
CI..EVEI..AND (Meu 7·11) a1 Deboit
(T...U 6-10), I'll p.m.
Bc.kln (Q«nCI'Il 11-11) ll Babirnorc

(Nnaao16-ll),2'lil I'"'·
Kan1.u Cily (Haney 2· 1)
(S~ lol-9), 2.-Dl ~ro.

Piwbw.

~ 31' Doulloa, Pbiladdpua, 21:

SL l&lt;&gt;Wiatl'lilllddphil, 2, ppd., run
Mmtrr.al4, OticiJO 3, 10 iMina•
Pilllloqh 3, Now Ymk 2

LAWN

The Indians scored on their first
blew the Point Pleasant Big Blacks
possession
of the game and never
off the field last night, enroute to a
looked
back
in handing the 16th
very easy 39-6 win over the lack·rated
Big
Blacks
their sewnd
luster Big Blacks.

113; l.oakfool, SL Louio, 111.
DOUBLES -VanSlyke,

Basl'hall

Address:- - - - - - - - - - -

s~~69S

Sunday Times Sentlnei-Page-C?

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

Sissonville-breaks away early to defeat Point Pleasant 39-6

With five TDs from Dillon, Mann,
By SCOTI WOLFE

September 27, 1992

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approval. The APR (HI tl varwblr-ratc crrdr tlr1t r of $20.000 as af Ali,l(l-1•1 l , l 992 was
APR The APR may lncrtl1se or: · :
dccrcast, not wexceed 25~ Jn Ohio. The annu11/ jet. is $50. Clllsing costs are tlppmxima tl'ly $300. if you r·l!nc 1s djsconrinurd 111 In\ 1han one yt'(A ~ $125 in dcp;rng'cosrs will be charged. Nolr*'valid wilh any other offer. Offer aprlles roapplic.arions received thrmtgh No\·rmba 30, 1992
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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, pH-Point Pleasant, wv

Page CB Sunday Times Sentinel

September 27,1992

Wahama blanks Vinson 32-0 to collect third str·aight victory
By Gary Clark
OVP Correspondent
HUNTINGTON-Rocky
Stewart ran for 117 yards, Carl
King scored three IOUchdowns and
the Wahama White Falcons ex·
ploded for 19 firsl-quaner points
Friday evening as Coach Don
VanMeter's Bend Area team
coasted to a 32-0 shutout win over
the host Vinson Tigers.
The victory was the third in a
row for the eighth-ranked White
Falcons as Wahama improved to 41 overall on the 1992 grid season in
addition to moving into a first place
tie with Van atop the tough SWAC
conference race with a 2-0 record.
Vinson dropped its fifth decision
in as many tries on the current
campaign with the Tigers falling to
0-2 in league play.
Stewart, with his lightning-quick
moves behind a solid charge on the
pan of the Bend Area teams mas·
sive front line, topped the 100-yard
rushing mark for ·the fourth time in
five games as lhe Falcons' leading
ground gainer kept pace in his
search for a second strai~ht 1000
yard season. Stewart, a 5 7", 135·
pound speedster, picked up 117
yards on the night in 12 carries to
lead the Bend Area teams offensive
thrust.
King scored three of the Falcons·
live touchdowns on the night on
runs of two and nine yards from his
halfback position while the hard
hitting, 5'9", 161-pound senior, ad·
ded another score on a 23 yard
return with a Vinson fumble.
Junior quanetback Tommy
Mayes also turned in another su·
perb effort in guiding the Bend
Area offensive unit with Mayes
booting a pair of exD'B point kicks
and scoring once on a five-yard run
in addition to tossing a 36-yard
touchdown pass to tight end Mikel
VanMatre.
Although Wahama had an easy
time with the injury-plagued
Tigers, WHS Coach Don VanMeter,
while pleased with the victory, was
visibly concerned with the play of
his White Falcons.
"I don't like to play 'that's O.K.'
football and that's what we did. I'm
happy that we won the game but
we simply didn't play very well.
We were lucky to be in front by a
26-0 score at the half because they

outplayed us in the second half,"
VanMeter said. "I don't know
whether we got complacent after
we got the 19-point first quaner
lead but we just never seemed to
really gel into the ftow of the
game."
Wahama limited the Tigers to
just45 yards in total offense.during
first half action before gtvmg up
130 yards over the final two
quaners. After jumping out to a
quick 19-0 lead in the game's first
8:40, the White Falcons managed
just two scores throughout the
remainder of the contest wtth those
being on the Bend Area teams last
possession of the first half and the
first series following the intermis·
sion break.
Mayes and Stewan broke off a
pair of long pnm on the Falcons'
first possesston of the game with
Mayes capping an 80-yard seven
play drive with a five-yard run at
the 7:22 mark of the opening canto.
Following the ensuing kickoff,
King·then picked up an errant Vinson pitchout and raced into the end
wne for a 28-yard touchdown run
with the wmover to make it 13-0.
Moments later the White Falcons
struck again after a short Vinson
punt with Mayes and VanMatre
connecting across the middle for a
36-yard touchdown strike 10 make
it 19-0 with 3:20 left in the first
stanza.
The score stood at I9-0 until the
final minute of the first half when
another short Vinson punt gave
Wahama excellent field position. A
29-yard gain by Stewart Wll$ fol·
lowed by another 12-yard pickup to
the Tiger three and two plays later
King ran over a defender at the
goal line for the touchdown.
Mayes' second successful PAT kick
made the halftime tally 26-0.
Brandon Tulloh rewmed the
second half kickoff back to the
Vinson 39-yard line and successive
runs by King netted 29 yards to the
Tiger 10. After a one yard gain by
Stewan King once again got the
call and raced over from nine yards
OUL The exD'B point kick sailed
wide leaving Wahama with a 32-0
advantage with 9:25 remaining in
the third quaner.
Vinson then lhreatened on two
occasions with 13 and 12 play
drives but the White Falcons bent
but didn't break and kept·the Tigers

out of lhe end wne to preserve lhe
32-0 shutout win.
"You have to give Vinson credit.
They fell J!ehind early and then
gave up another score on our first
possession of the second half but
lhey didn't quit They controlled
the ball during the entire second
half. We didn't play well defen·
sively but we managed to make the
plays when we bad to keep them
from scoring," VanMeter said
Defensively the White Falcons
were led by senior linebacker
Brandon Tulloh in tackles with J.
C. Albright, Craig Weaver, Randy
Purkey, Kevin Barker and Shane
Scott also getting in on their share
of hits.
.
Carl King, Rocky Stewan and
Travis Johnson received the big hits
of the game with Stewan and Xing
leveling a would-be Vinson
n:ceiver early in the contest while
Johnson I!Dd Tulloh forced a Tiger
fumble with a bone-jarring tackle
during second half action.
Wahama will now prepare for a
touchdown with visiting Van in
what will be the Bend Area teams
.most important game to date. Not
only will valuable rating points be
on the line, but the SWAC con·
ference leadership hangs in lhe
balance when lhe two Class A
power.; clash in the White Falcons
homecoming contest next Friday.
"Van will kick· our butts if we
don't play belt&amp; next wedc:," said
VanMeter. "We have a lot of work
to do next week, a lot of work,"
emphasized the veteran grid men·
tor.
STATISTICS
Wabama Vinson
First Downs
11
10
37-102
Yds Rushing 34-250
50
73
Yds Passing
300
175
Total Yds
3-8
6-16
Passing
IntrcJ)I/Illrown
1
0
1-0
4-3
Fumbles/l.,oot
8-70
10-58
Penalties/Yds
2-44.0
4-25.2
Punts/Avg
44
57
Off Plays
Score by Quarters:
l 2 3 4 T
Wabama
19 7 6 0 32
Vinson
00000
SCORING:
WAH: Tommy Mayes 5yd run
(Tommy Ma)(CS kick)

Ohio high school football results
Adal4, PaWdina 6
Akron B»&lt;hlel29, A1oon N. 0
Akron Oomlld 30, Abaft E. 0
Akrm. MlndaCIIUir 54, Twllw 0
Akron SpoUia. 16, Medina Bucluo,. 0
Akron SLV-St..M l&amp;, Y«1n1- R.ayen 't1
Alli111.ce II, Uniomown Lake 0
Amcl&amp;a 14, Cin. Wllnut.Wlla 1
Amhent 21, Avon l...lke 14
Areldit 41, l.iherly-BSiton 14
ArchbcWI42, Ev-7
Aahlalld 23, Manlfidd Sr. 21
AshUbW. 20, Aahublll.a Edgewood 7
Aabubull Hubor 20, Geneva 14, or

Avm 14, Brocbidc 13
Ayaaville 44, Mwcrp 0
Bamecville 29, Buckeye Trail I
Bay 32, WORlakc 6
BcallJviUe 21, Frmticr 0
BeUbroak:47, Day. Olkwood 0
Bellewe 43, Buc)TUI 0

BeUewe. K1. 61, Cm. N. Coll&lt;g&lt; Hi1120
BclpR-10. Trimbl&lt; IZ
a..;.mm IAsan +4, Wynlanl 6
Baa.1A. Bn.nwic;k 0
Bodin Hiland 13, N....., 1
Bia Walnut3~. Ortndvicw 14
BlackRivcr216, Norwlli. St. PIW 0
Bloom-Camill2!, Ammda-lcarau:k 7
Bowlin1 a-. 12, l'myobur&amp; 1
B.od:M!Ic 10, ModW 0
Broakf..td 12, N''""' Falla 10
B....villc 61, DWc 6
Cadiz 1•. Union Loctl7
Caldwd116, Woodlfield 0
Campbd1 M....W I~ Salem 1
C•nt.an Cath. 21, OmiUe 10
ea-Gt..OU2t. w.-.o
Can1011 S. l4. Dover 0
Cmy lS, Folloria St. Wenddin 0
Ceduville 31, E. CUnu.l 9
Chompi"' 10, Hobbanl 0
Cin. Andcnon 23, Norwood 21
Cin. Bacon 1-4, Cin. Pun:t.ll-Marian 12
Cin. CAPE 51, Cin. Madein 0
Cin. Elder 31, Cin. Withrow 20
Cin. Olen Eae l-4, Cin. .Uniaon 14
Cin. LU.ou 21, Cin. Sycamore li
Cin. LISalle 33, an. Aiken 6
Cin. Muicmont4l,On. finneytown 14
Cin. Prinll:dm 41, Milford 0
Cin. St. Xavier 23, Cin. Colc:nin 3
Cin. Surmili SS, Landmuk Chriltiln 14
Cin. Taft 34, Cin. Hu&amp;ha 7
Cin. Twpin 28, tin. Northwect 11
Cin. Wett.em Hint JO, O.y. Dv.nbv 6

Cin. Wy- 1 7. Cin.lndian HW 0
CiJd&amp;Wic 23, Lopn Elm 0
Cla7"'""' 21 , M&lt;adowbud !4
a.. C.lholic 22, C1wdon ND-C. 20
CJc. OloonvillolO, Wamnaville H•. 8
CJc.x.,n.Iy 1 6 , - 13
0.. Univcnity40, Garfltld Ht.s. 12
C1..otand lila. SO, Oe. Soulh 0
ClioiiM·Muaio 13, Wolialon 12
Ctavalcaii7,S~8

Clyd&lt;21, Milan Edia"' 0
CoL Bri&amp;P 35, CoL Lindm-Mc:Kinley B
Co&amp;. Bndhlv.a 36, Col. MiiDin 0
c.L DoSa1oa 30, Cin. ML llallh1 17
Col. l!ut -46, CoL Eaaonoor 6
Col.lnd-dcnccl9, CoL W011 0
Col. South :16, CoL Marion·fnnklin 6
CCII. Wdallt RidJe 21, Col Wheutone 7
Col. WtUCIIICWI t.t-, Lainpcn 1
c.w-11. Lima Cath. '
c......r Cnwfan!.l.fmlcrid;lown 0
Columbul a.... .... llii1"'P 14
c...,..uot3,MadUoo3
CcpkJ :!1), a.-aburl a.- ,., C1f
C«&lt;land Lateviow 26, lAbn.c 6
Cooy-Ra""" 37, Vanluo 0
c..hodallS,A-1
c..._,-14, p - 7
C....... :!D, Tlpp 01)' B&lt;lholl3
c..1llne 21!, lllvinlalo 0
c...lavillc 30, Mayovillo.
C.,Oallop Palla 21. Ra...,.a II
Oonvillo 13, Iomolown Nmluidr 0

&amp;:~:~~:}. . McN~holu 8
o.,. HorWidpll. !loy. Carlll1o 6

gat .
-

41, Ooy. Paaonon 16
19, Bt.J!Ion I

1!.
23,'-0
1!. U._a!l3, u.- Looalt4
E. Palilllae 30, ~ 6
l!ullotc14,Bruah7
Ea.- :tS, Poobt.St.nm"" 0
1!4~ 36, lWon 26
-s.9 1o.t0kn,W.Va.7
~14,N. U'"""7

J!1iM zt Lima Sha"""' 21

Etpla i!, Lonia SoUIIoviow 13
m~o~a

w. rr. Qlocrllll o

BoclW'ri,'BeMooiO
faitfWdl}n;ont•.-Twp. I3, C1f
p_.t7,H•IIcrilla. wa,...?
PloW 50. wln6am rr
Plodlal zt, Marionllaldma 24

Ito,..... I
F-C.Ih.l6.
P!lolaMt 20,

MDktlpDrt 0
POIIaia 34. Ooqoo Cay 21, OT

Franklin41, Talawanda 21

Oalion 4S, Ncnali: 0
Gufi&lt;ld 30, E. c.n... 0
Genoa SO, Oiblonbura 0
0Uanl16. Can6dd 1
Onham l9,Lehman0
Onnd vaiL 62, Kint.md 1
Gran...Wc65, New Albany 6

a-iow 3!, Y.Uow Sorinp7
Grove Cily 11, Gallow1y 'watbnd 6
Grovcpln l1' Chillioahe 12
HamiliOII 9. Uma 1

H&amp;nlinNorlhcm!Z. VanllwmO
Hebn&gt;n LUewood 11, W. Jdf....., 11
Hillabooo ll.ll«&lt;loi·Tale 1l
Holland SprinJ ll, Mi!bony Llk&lt; 0
Howland l7, CLe. Eut Tech 14
Hudton lot, Revere n
HWIIinpn. 31, Adena 7
lndopcndcnco :zs, Brook!"' 0

lnctian LU.c41, Wayoedi.eld-Golhcn 0
1n&lt;tian VaiL 55, E. C..... II
ltonton29, Belle C#f.Va.) DuPoot 6
JackiCD·Mlltan 46. l..o'll'dlville 0
Jdlenon 24, AlhtlbuJa SL John 0
Jdtn Glenn lS, RiWI' View 6
JMnltown 19,8Wcy 14
l(Za\11111 Alder 16, l...ickin&amp; Vall 6
Konw La1&lt;o&lt;.&gt; 19' Elmwood 8
Kmaton JO, O!agrin Fal.b: 0

Stow 22, Nordmil 0
Suwtaburo 15, fbwnna SE 12, OT
Swantoo 17, Montpelier 14
Sylvan..ia Southview 17, Mlwnee 7
Symmoo V.U. S4, RcodJVille Eulcn 17
T.tlmodi"IO, W.to-"tl
lays Vllt 21, Clnal Windater 13
T"""""' :!D, Eul Dolluil C.lholi&lt;l
Thomu WoMin .... 21, Cot Buchao~ 17
r 1110r1 HicbYille 1
lipp aty S4, Sprina. C.1holic o

v.

Kenton ll, c.tawa-Olandorf 6
Kr.nton Ridae 20, Sprina- Shawnee 0
Lakewood 1-4, Valley forae 8
Lancu&amp;er44, Dty. Meadowdale 20

Twinlbu'l22, WicW!c 0
Unioco 14, Zane Traoe 9

Kau ROOMVdtll, Barbertm 13

Kioa• IS, Hamil""' llooa 0

Liberty Ccntc:r otl, Dcl.a20
Libmy Union 32. H•Lh 6
l..ictin&amp; Hu.. 36, Berne Union 6
Lima Bath :)9, Van Wat l9
Locldlnd 21, Cin.
o., 19

c..,...,.

Lopn 26. WuiWI.... CH 0
Lond0114l, Ola\""11 lD
LorainCath. 21, Moorocville 14
LoodonvW&lt; 21, a ... Fcllk 211
t..Wiv!llc42, M.adinP" 14
LouiniDo Aquinu '17, Ga.raw1y 9
LD&gt;dand 34, Cin. D= M 7
Luwville VaiL
o.-Jiold 1
Manaf'ldd Maditm 57, Co. Adama 6
~""" 21,P&lt;Itinl 0
Marion River Vall.31, PJ.dacdlle 12

t•.

Muon I 0, S¢n&amp;bolv7
Mulillon Jacbcm 'rl. New Philadelphia/
Mulillon Pen) 63, Canton Timien 14

McComb 3S, Adini\Oft i
MeDamoa. NW 20, PoNmouU! E. 12
McDonald 36, Bcdin C.wc:r Wcctcm RcaCI\'t 12
Medina Hlt.hlmd 13, Nortcn I
Map t6.~er6
Ma\lm 22, Mayfield 0
MilnUabouJ 13, Lanon·Monn&gt;eiO
M;dd1clown 22, Faitf..td tO
Minrnl RidJc 14, MllhcWI 6
Mincrva4l, Canal Fulun NW 0
Minion! 21!, FnnkliA Fumaco 0..... 6
Minlta' 17, Pbtwi)'O

Mop...., 39, WoodDdr 3
M......W. 21, t.onm C.th. 14
ML Oilcad 21, B.W,. VaiL lD
ML Vanon 16, Franklin H11. 12
N. Can.., 51, ct.. Hal I
N. Olmolod 29. Rocl&lt;y Ri.., 21
N. Ro1alloo 21, Midpodc 14
Napolcoo -10, Bodlanl, Mich. I
Ncloonvi11o-Yodll4, AluanderO
New&amp;Jt 26. Hilliard 1J
NmNno.&amp; lot, SiM!ey 13
Olmltcd Pall&amp; JJ, Plirvicw M 0
Onwio .3. B"'*"l" Cenlnl 2S
Or-an. 21. ChudU1 19
Ollqo 71, Eutwood 20
Otuwa Hi11138, Fairview 2fl
P•ineaville Hamy 18, Paincnille Rivcni.dc 13
Plint. ValL -47, Rictunond Dale Sout.hulta'JVO
Pandon~-Oilboi 40, l.eipcic 9
Pony :16, Faitpon 7
Ph.ilo3B, W. MYIIdngum 19
Picbrinaton 3,, M~ryJVille 7
Piq\1.1 34, Ciftlmvillc 20
Plu.u.nt 36, Cardinp 1
Plymouth 24,Collina W"""' R...,.. ll
Pol.1r1.d 17, N'llec 0
Pon. Cinl.aft 13, Huron 20
Puu- 26, Oallipolia 1
PymaWninJ Vall31, Cardinall6
Reynoldabuta 24, WIUW..U 14
Ridpom2J ,DaGrafflt.ivcaMie 12
Ridpwood 33.Jcwc:tt·Scio 0
Rjuman 42, Hilllclale 26
Rocl&lt; HW 21, - " ' t h W. 0
R.... ,....l9, Gama...W. 7
S. c.nu.t 21, New London 21
S. Owl•ton SoutheuU:m 31, Waynctvillc 2A
S. Poini29,Ra&lt;iMS'"'"-19
Sandu*l 42, Lonift Sr. 6
Sanduak1 SL Mary'a I. Oak ilarl&gt;o&lt; 6
Sandy VaU. 31, TIIICIRWU Vall. 14
Sebrin&amp; ott. Cohribiana 14
S&lt;noca E. 7, Mohawk 0
Shad)'11ide14, ~&gt;ina• 7
Shiller H11. 7, Parma 0
Shclbl +4, Titrm Co!wnbian IS

King 8-72; Tommy Mayes 9-40;
Brandon Tulloh 2-14; Chris Roach
1-3; Travis Johnson 1-2; Lynn
Black 1-2; TOTALS 34-250.
VINSON • Jason Wright 14-57;
Bob Jordan 5-22; Joe Rash 9-21;
Scott Harmon 9-2; TOTALS 37102
PASSING
WAH . Tommy Mayes 3-7· 50yds1td·lint; Carl King 0-1; TOTALS

3-8-50yds-ltd·lint
VINSON · Scott Hannon 6-16·
73yds
RECEIVING
WAH · Mike VanMatre 1·36-ltd;
J.C. Albright 1-10; Kevin Barker 1·
4; TOTALS 3-50-1 td
·
VINSON . Matt Brown 2-40; Brian
IPa!nier 3-31; Bob Jordan 1-2;
TOTALS 6-73

ended on the Sissonville I yard
line. Ryan Roush put the Big
Blacks in good position to Star\. the
drive, returning the Indian kick
from his own 10 to the Sissonville
40. Seven plays later, the Blacks
had a third and one from Sisson·
ville one, but time was running out.
Smith was forced to throw one
away to stop the clock. Then, on
fourth down, the Blacks tried an off
tackle play, but the Indians stuffed
it and that was the end of the half.
• Sissonville scored on their first
play of the fourth ~uaner and again
with 3:18 remainmg. They threw
for another two point conversion on
the first touchdown and Neeley
kicked for the final extra point.
The Big Blacks finally got on the
board on their final possession of
the game. Point went 65 yards on
only 3 plays for lhe score. Smith
threw to Jason Safford, who broke
a couple of tackles and then outran
everyone else to the end wne for
the score. The exD'B point pass
failed though, and that set the final
score.
"I am very disappointed that our
players didn't respond better than
they did," said Safford ''We were
ranked, playing in front of the
home fans, and we played with no
emotion. I cannot explain why we
were so ftaL I can't explain it because I don't understand it. Next
week we have to go to Hurricane
and I guarantee they are a much
more physical team than the ones
we played here tonight. I just hope
we are ready," concluded Safford.
Brian Preece led the defensive
unit with 3 solo tackles and 12 as·
sists. Milce Gardner had 3 solos and
11 assists. Robby Taylor had 2 and
10, Ryan Roush 2 and S, Jim Bar·
nett I and 10, Thny Reed 2 and 4.
Matt Rieger had a pass interception
and was involved _in 5 tackles.
Next wedc: the Blacks are on the

Lamb producers slate

annual dinner Oct. 3

road at Hurricane and the following
week they will play at Poca.

PA Pass Chris Neeley to Jody
Eastwood
S • Richie Given 9yd pass !'rom
STATISTICS
Jeremy Eastwood PA Run Jeremy
Point Sissonville Eastwood
Rush Attempts
24
50 S • Brian Ervin 6yd run PA Kick
Yards Rushing
32
296 Chris Neeley
Pass Attempts
12 P · Jason Safford 49yd pass from
8
Pass Completions
5 Brent Smith PA Pass no good
4
Yards Passing
82
38
Interceptions
0
I
INDMDUAL STATS
Tot Offense
114
334
RUSHING
First Downs
5
19 POINT • Jason Safford 10-43;
Penalties/Yds
2-20
3-30 Jason Shinn 7-3; Brent Smith 7
Turnovers
2
1 14)
Punts/avgYds
5-35
0 SISSONVll..LE ·Chris Neeley 23·
Return Yards
124
44 128; Eric Thompson 15·76; Jeremy
Score by Quarters:
Eastwood 7-69; Shane Cook 2-11;
1 1 3 4 Tot Brian Ervin 2-9; Scott Fouls 1-3
Sisv'l
8 16 0 15 39
PASSING
Point
0 0 0 6 6 POINT· Brent Smith 8-4.0-82yds.
Scoring:
SISSONVll..LE • Jeremy Eastwood
s . Chris Neeley 4yd run PA pass 12-5-I-38yds
Randy Wilkinson from Jeremy
RECEIVING
Eastwood
POINT • Jim Barnett 1-16; Jason
s . Jeremy Eastwood lyd run PA Shinn 2-17; Jason Safford 1-49.
Pass Eric Thompson from Jeremy SISSONVU.LE • Eric Thompson
Eastwood
3-19; Rick Conn 1-10; Richiy
S. Brian Ervin 35yd fumble return Given 1-9.

+

CO-WINNER - Co-winner of tbe "slow
engine" competition is this Reid 15 H.P. gas weD
· · pumping engine. Owner Mack Smith,

Upper Arlir'latoft 20, WeAerVille S. 9

U!banl 21, AellcfantaiM 7
Utica 21, Madilm Plainl 0
Vallcl View 7&lt;4, Midclldown Madi&amp;M 0
Vermilion 23, N. Ridfeville 14

v..... Co. ll, Fedenlllootinl 0
W. B"""' 35, Canalbon 0
W. Holmoo ll, Triway 1
Wopokonl&lt;l 22, Dc:liMico 19
Wtm11 Hardin&amp; 7, Boudman 3
w...... K~nooo~7 21. SUulhcn 6
Wamn Local 3D, o...hila River Vall. 14
Waledoo 15, CftOt......t 6
Walkinl MfiiiHirill 57, Delaware V
wa...... ll,Palrid:HaurO
WawdJ 22, Jaci.1101t I
Wa~ 2:0. W. Salem Nanbwsc:rn 11

Tawney Studio
424 5ecoltl Ave.. Wlpols

446-1615

If PILL I:LUUICE.
PRICED fD MliR.

R~hl now, Lawn-Boy's Powor M~ch"' m_ow·

OfS are fail Cfoolall"' prieod II tht ~Will priCOI

of tltt yearl With tltt Mulching lono"' features
!co m"'' torqu. to mulch thick, ht.wy gra11, a
potential Tfi.Cul"' blade tor tltt lineal e&lt;rt ond tltt
option lo add a grus catehtr "' leal shroddo!,
you won1 lnd·a btltlf mowor. Or a btttordoall

IN SPRING PARADE- One of the many tractors In the 1991 spring tractor parade was
this model L Case.

tinnual country festival set Oct. 3, 4

The loss maint.ained the Lady
Cougars' unbeaten record this season in Mid-Ohio Conference
action, but interrupted the same
path taken by Rio Grande, which
went to 4-1 in the MOC.

POINT 'PLEASANT - The
West Virginia Antique Steam and
~as Engine Association and the
West Virginia State Farm Museum
!ill hold its annual country festival
on OcL 3 and 4, at the Farm Musetim, located six miles north of Point
Pleasant,
W.Va., on Route 62.
•

W~li,Ceatvicw1

.I WclliYillo 26. Toronto 2l

W$c::villeN. 14, Gahanna 7

w..wnt•.-o

Whoclcnbo'l 41, Ooy. Jdfmon 6
Whcctinl (W.Va.) C.....t •3, Ri"' 34
WWanl
Upper SanMk1 0
Willi~huf&amp;-2A, Naw Ridrnond 20
WW..,F&gt;bl S. 33, Maple H•. 1l
Witmin.... 16, Gaohon
Worthinlfm JCilbounw l7,l)!blin 0
Xlllill1,8•vorczock 7
Youna Ubco&lt;ylS Qc. Wa~TcchO

t•.

t•

,:-.,J!,c-M.Kinle, 13

y ...
y...,1. s..llb7, Y""''o Eaal6
z.nc,.ille 20, Cambridp IZ

By WENDELL TOPE
, GALLIPOLIS- They say a
child never forgets. How true! I
sliD remember the trips I made with
father and grandfather to the
nitlls on Raccoon and Symms
Gredc:. We would arise at the break
of dawn, the wagons were already
lb,ded with our grists which
i_llcluded com for hominy breakfast
food, corn bread and feed for
yliung livestock. The horses were
hjtehed to lhe wagon and we would
be,on our way.
: The day before, my mother
'lould call the nearest mills in our
~~tea, our choice of mills were
lOcated at Northup, Cora or Cad~ us. There were several reasons
(1)1' calling. In dry weather of sumIller the flow of water could be too
low and would not furnish enough
loi'ater to operate the mills equip·

mr

O'DEULUMIU CO.

O'DB.llUMIEI CO.

O'DEll

c.m.i

Ylno St. II Thlnl Aw. 1:14 E.lllln St., POIIIIIOY, OIL lawa &amp;Goadert
44&amp;-1271
. 112-5500
(-tram K-Mart
R&amp;G FEED &amp;SUPPlY
IIDEIIOUISUPPIY 441-712S
31t W.lllln St., p.....,,, OIL 1Will .... Chiller, Oh.

The Rio ladies, who went to 104 overall, hosted Tiffin in another
MOC encounter Saturday after·
noon at Lyne Center.

N2-2114.

IIW301

J

Business Briefs:

Season With Sterling!
$7395

Free NFL. Hat

By The Associated Press
NEW YORK -:- A recent spilce
in long-term interest rates is push·
ing mortgage rates higher, and
homeowners, nervous that rates
wiD continue to rise, are rushing to
refinanCe their mortgages now.
If interest rates continu~ their
upward trend as many
'economists believe will happen refinancing will no longer be a
fi~ancial boon for homeowners.
B~l ilnalysts and mortgage banker.;
wd lbursday rates need to climb
much higher before that happens.
:For the time being, homeowners
who are undecided should take the
refinancing plunge, analysts sug·

Single control

lav faucet
w/pop-up,

with the purchase
of select Sterling
washerless

Faucets.

0482

Single control kitchen
faucet w/spray, 07232
• Washerless design
• Easy Installation

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
312 STH STREET

1175-1180

hawk and knife throwing.
There will be a quilt show by
the Mason County Extension, apple
butter and apple cider will be
made.
Food will be available at the
Country Kitchen. Church will be
held on Sunday morning in the Log
Church.

A look at Raccoon grist mills

Billina Cooper, the junior from
Jackson who has dominated the
team's statistics so far this season,
again took the lead in lhe Redwom·
en's game, recording 15 kills, two
serving aces, five digs and six
blocks.

Kick-off the

Antique engines from the early
1900s and machinery will be displayed and operating. Corn will be
ground for meal and for animal
feed.
There will be tractor parades,
horse pulling contest, demonstra·
lions of rifle shooting and toma-

'

Her sister Kellina was credited
with seven kills, while Deana
Smith and Amy Hambel added five
to the game. Kellina Cooper and
Michelle Spears had four 'digs each,
while Spears contributed four
blocks and Jo Chapman two to the
defense.

POINT PLEASANT

sold tooOur friends from Jackson
and Mason County, W.Va.
Attention tobacco producers! l
received a very "sobering" release
this week from the Burley Tobacco
Growers Coop. Association in Lexington, Ky. The article is titled
"Dealers, ASCS and Co-op Target·
ing Nested Burley."
According to the article, "nest·
ing" is defined as "any basket that
has been loaded or arranged to conceal foreign matter or tobacco of an
inferior ~rade or quality" including • tobacco arranged so that
inferior quality tobacco is con·
cealed under bales of better tobac·
co." The Burley Co-op will employ
15 new seasonal employees called
"pullers" to work in the market·
place before, during and after the
sales. Their duties will include: ( (I)
monitoring piles of burley on warehouse floors for nest, wet tobacco,
and other problems; (2) inspecting
"pool" burley being shipped from
warehouses; and (3) inspecting
"pool" burley being received by
processing plants. The article also
quotes Tommy Norvell, vice president of Southwestern Tobacco Co.,
and speculates that Southwestern
will monitor U.S. burley very
closely this year. Call the Exten-

sian Office for a complete copy of
this release.
The fall feeder calf marketing
season staned in earnest this week
with most stock markets in our
region featuring a.major "special
sale" in addition to their regular
runs. B~yers seemed to be all out
looking, but really didn't have that
enthusiasm necessary for a real
"hot" sale. Despite that, most of the
top end steer calves weighing
under 550 pounds were selling at or
above the $85 per hundred mark.
A noted pnce weakness was in
the lightweight straight-bred ,
heifers. Some market analyst feel
that the calf market will strengthen ,
as the bumper corn harvest that we
anticipate takes place. Some poten·
tial cattle feeders simply don't have
the dry feed or cash available until
harvest. This is also still a little
early to see demand for grazing
western wheat. Any pick-up in that
demand would strengthen the
lightweight price. A reminder that
slaughter animal and cash grain
market information are available
through the State Market News free
of charge by calling 1-800-282·
7605.
Edward Vollbom is the Gallia
County Extension Agent, agricul·
lure.

Export-import rule is eased

PDWD MUiaCB MDWDI

RIO GRANDE - Mount Ver·
non Nazarene stopped the II·
match winning streak posted by the
University of Rio Grande volleyball team with a 14-16, 10-15, 12·
15 defeat of the Redwomen Thursday at Mount Vernon.

By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
County Extension Agent
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOLIS- The Ohio Valley Sheep Association will conduct
its second annual lamb dinner on
Saturday, OcL 3, starting at 7 p.m.
at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds.
The organization welcomes
sheep producers, 4-H and FFA
members and their families, and
friends of the sheep industry. They
also encour~e fellow producers
from neighborinl! counties to
attend. The associauon, through the
generous donation of a couple of
producers, will provide the lamb
for the dinner. If you need more
details, please call Tom Walters,
president of the association. A
reminder of the regular monthly
meeting for this Monday, Sept. 28,
7:30p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center.
The Ohio Farm Science Review
was a successful event this year
despite the rain on Tuesday. The
Gallia and Meigs County Extension
Offices sold record numbers of
advance tickets this year. In Gallia
County more than 300 tickets were
sold this year as compared to only
75 last year. Some of the increase
was local, but a lot of tickets were

"It was kind of important for us
to win the ftrsl game, and when we
didn't play that weD, it kind of set
the tone for the match," Redwomen
Coach Patsy Fields commented.
"We just made a lot of errors at
crucial times."

Troy 32. Vandllii-Buth:r6

Lucasville, watches as club member BUI Sorden
checks speed ( 75 R.P.M.).

PENIAl IQ ZOOM
CAMERAS
•Auto Focus
•Auto Rash
•Auto Rim Advance
•Auto Rewind
•Auto Zoom
e5 Year Warranty_
•Free Batteries
•Free Case
•Free Rim

September 27,1992

Farm Flashes

Indians win ... -~&lt;C:::on:::tin::ued:.:lio:.::m:.:C:...:·7::._)- - - - - - - - -

Rio ladies fall
toMOC rival

Shenandoah 12, Wated'ord 0
SmilhYille 12, Norwayne 1
Solon 21. W. Ocaua• 0
Sptm Hiahlanclll, Norduncr 10
Spencervilkllil, Upper Scioto Vall. 6
s~ Nonh 14. CcnteMlle II
S!linl- Nor\hcaJtc:m 62, Oreenon I
sprin, s.w&gt; 21. FWbom 6
Sprin&amp;firld 16, Medina BPeyc 0
St Cainvillc 26. Wintetlvilk 0
SL Hcmy 21. Mnim Local 0
SL Marya 28, Celina 11
SI.C:Ubcnville 47, Cle. Collinwood 6

Tol Bawlhcr 10, TOl. Cenlnl6
ToL R..... ll. ToL Wood won! lD
Tol Roldotd 41, Anthony Wayne?
To!. SL John'a2l, Bryan 9
Tol Sw..n 40, C1o. Eut 14
Tot. Waite 'll, Tot UbbeyO
ToLWIU1mc&lt;21!,FwmoniRooo:!D,OT
Tri&gt;d 40. PlizbWI 14
Trc4wood·M.diJon 34, W. Canollt.on 29

WAH: Carl King 23yd return with
fumble recovery (kick blocked)
WAH · Mike VanMatre 36 yard
pass from Tommy Mayes (run
failed)
WAH: Carl King 2yd run (Tommy
Mayes kick)
WAH: Carl King 9yd run (kick
wide)
RUSHING
WAH. Rocky Stewart 12-117; Carl

Section D

Farm/Business

.

@

• Decorative loop handle

• Washerless design

g~t.

STERLING•

•

·'

\aloe Is Always In Style. ·
•

BOSTON - Wan~ Laborato·
ries Inc. ~d the financtalloss from
itS last fiscal year could be worse
th'n originally stated due to .the
exira costs of sltrinking the compa·
n)l in bankruptcy COUrt.

••

menL AlSo during certain times of
the year, the' miller would be so
busy he would not have time and
would give us a day to come and
get our grinding done. In winter
sometimes during real cold weath·
er, freezing weather would block
the mill wheel with ice and the mill
could not operate.
The day we would get our wm
we would arrive at the mill around
ten o'clock. Our grain would be in
I00 lb. bags and we would empty
our grists in the hopper as the
miller would direct, usually the
com would be ftrst, wheat next and
oats last
The com had to bll shelled first
then it went through the cleaner.
The cleaning process inc~uded
sheUing, -lhen most mills had three ·
cleaning sieves. The first or large
mesh screen removed all the large
particles such as cob particles, the
next screen sifted sucfi particles as
sand weed seed and any other that
might be present After the cleaning process the grist would be ele·
vated to the grinding hopper which
was located directly over the mill
where it would be stored for ~d·
ing. The hopper had a gate tn the
bottom·arranged so the miUer could
wm a lever or wheel to allow the
flow of grain into grist wheel for
grinding. The miller could re$Uiate
the amount of grain by listenmg to
the sound of the grist wheel. He
could tell when to allow more grain
into the grinding wheel called the
grill wheel.
After the grinding process was
completed, the ~rain was .elevated
to the bolting btns to be 'separated
into flour and bran or midlings.
The sifting sheets were made of
silk 'and there could be two or more
grades. The ftrlest was flour or best
grade for l)laldng bread or eake and
pies. In each community there was
lots of controversy among the
housewives over which miller in
tile area made the best flour
;

because the grade of flour determined the quality of baked goods
she could make.
The difference was in the bolting sillcs.
Really the miller had little 10 do
with the quality of the flour. The
quality was the fineness of the
flour. Wben the silks become warn,
they, would not sift as fine as new
silks. This was the cause of poor
quality baked goods. This hap·
pened to all millers because the
silks were so expensive they would
often neglect to change or replace
the old silks with new ones, and
yes, lhe housewives product was of
poor quality, so at times they all
were nght in their argument.

By MARGARET SCHERF
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Animal
products from certain countries
may now move through the United
States en route to foreign destinations without having to originate in
establishments approved by the
Agriculture DepanmenL
The countries involved are free
of rinderpest, foot-and-mouth dis·
ease and swine vesicular disease
but have been subject to certain
import restrictions because of
potential risk factors.
The main countries are Chile,
Denmark, Ireland and the United
Kingdom. The Caribbean basin
countries will be the recipients of
the exported prodllcts.
"This action creates new trade
routes for shippers in certain for·
eign countries," said Billy G.
Johnson, deputy administrator for
veterinary services with USDA's
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service. "We believe it also will
provide more business for domestic
transport and brokerage companies
without increasing the risk of introducing disease.''
To safeguard U.S . agriculture,

shippers milst tran51'1'rt their prod· amount of ruminant meat imported
ucts in sealed contatners and move from Denmark represented less
them out of the United St.ates in the than three-hundredths of one per·
shortest practicable time period, he cent of the total amount imported
·
said in announcing the new regula· in this country."
The
department
said
in
its
lions this week.
In another action, the depart· announcement that "because
ment said it is prohibiting enD'Bnce immediate action is necessary to
into the United States of some ani· reduce the risk that BSE could be
mal products from Denmark introduced into the United St.ates,
because of the recent diagnosis APHIS put this action into effect
there of bovine spongiform without prior opportunity for public
comment"
encephalopathy in cattle.
The fat.al neurological disease
Average retail beef prices
that strikes bovine and other rumi·
nant - or cud-chewing - animals decreased slightly in the United
is not known to exist in the United States recently, according to the
National Cattlemen's Association.
States, the depanment said.
It said a 19-city survey of super"BSE appears to be spread
through the use of ruminant feed markets showed that the average
containing rendered products from price of six cuts on Sept 10 was
infected ruminant carcasses," said $3.12 per pound, compared to
$3.14 on Aug. 13.
Johnson said.
' 'Average prices of ground beef,
"The disease could become
established in the United St.ates if round steak and chuck roast rose
materials carrying the BSE agent somewha~ while the sirloin and T·
are imported into this country and bone steak averages dropped substantially," the association said.
fed to ruminants," he said.
"This action will have only a "Retailers were doing more featur·
minor effect on U.S. importers," ing of the more expensive steaks at
Johnson said. "In 1991, the the time of the September survey."

SWCD plans annual tree seed sale
By CINDY JENKINS
District Forester
GALLIPOLIS - It's time once
again to start thinking about next
spring's tree planting. The Gallia
Soil and Water Conservation Dis·
tricl invites you to call or come by
the office for order forms or advice
on what, when and how to plant.
This year's tn:c sale offer.; several new varieties for both the back
yard and small plantation plantings.
Besides offering our usus! variety
of conifers, several packets are
available this year including: fruit
tree packet, shade tree packet,
wildlife packet and flowering tree
packet.
The fruit tree packet includes
two apple trees and two pear trees.
the apples are the honey gold and
the red wealthy. The pears are the

Bartlett and bose.
The shade tn:c packet includes:
2 red maple, 2 silver maple, 2 red
oak, 2 tulip poplar and 2 river
birch.
The wildlife packet, which will
attract several different bird and
wildlife species includes: 2 red oak,
2 flowering crab, 2 Tartian honeysuckle, 2 autumn olive and 2 red
osier dogwood.
The flowering tree packet
includes: 2 white flowering dog-

wood, 2 European mountain ash, 2
flowering crab, 2 Washington
hawthorn, and 2 tulip poplar.
The conifers available include
white pine, Colorado blue spruce,
and Norway spruce.
Also available is a crownvetch
seed packet for areas where soil
stabilization is a problem.
For more information call the
Gallia SWCD at 446-8687 or stop
by the office at 1168 Jackson Pike
in lhe Spring Valley Plaza.

RG business grads score
above average in testing
RIO GRANDE -A number of
1992 graduates in the Emerson E.
·Evans College of Business Management at the University of Rio
Grande scored above the national
average on a widely-used examina·
lion designed 10 test seniors' busi·
ness knowledge.
Nineteen seniors in Rio
Grande's business provarns took
the End of Studies Test 10 Business
administered by the Educational
Testing Service, Princeton, N.J ..
The ovenii~CCR for these students
are lS9.9, just above the national
median ICOIC of 1S6.
At least one of Rio Grande's
students scored in the 99th per·
centile, according to Dr. Charles F.
Palmer, dean· of the College of
Business ManqemcnL Rio Grande
seniors have voluntarily taken the
test for each of the three years it
has been In existence, and each
year hu resulted in 1 soore that has
ri11111 above .the a~ he said.
"We're contiiiUIDR to make

improvements so that we will
become one of the best colleges of
business in the country," Palmer
said. "I think it's good that we're
above the national average, and I
think it tells you that our students
are receiving an education that is
above ave~e.•
The test ts utilized by a number
of small and·private institutions in
Ohio, such as Rio Grande, Ash·
land,.Biuffton and Wilmington, in
addition to being used by seniors at
larger schools across the nation like
George Mason (Va.), Texas A &amp; M
and Virginia Military Institute.
This year, 8,319 seniors were test·
ed nationwide.
The test examines students on
such couries as accounting, economics, statistics, firuince and marketing. Those subjects are taught in
most business majors' sophomore
and junior years, bill ETS does not
'examine them until their senior
year, Paimer said.

NEW LOOK • After moving bls State Farm Insurance oiYke .
from Tblrd Avenue Into the building previously occupied by
Clark's Jewelry Store at 341 Second Avenue, GaiUpolla Jut sprlac,
Caron K. Snowden bad tbe Seco~d Avenue structure remodeled.
The renovation project Included a new Jock out fronL
II

..

�Page D2....Sunday nmes-sentlnel

September 27, 1992

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

Women train alongside men
in Marines basic training

Avon WHI AIICIIYI $15 Worth Of
Merch1ndl11 Fr11, Call 614-4483358.

VENDINO

A11uma 6 Aalt(encn To: CLA
237 c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribun!1
825 Third AVIRUI, Qalllpolla, 011

Trlmmlng, TrH Ramoval, Hldge
Trimming. Fr11 Esllm•lesl 614·
367·7957 After 4p.m.

ElR TREE SERVICE. Topping,

G101g11 Portable Sawmill, don't
h1ul your logl to lha mill just
tall304-1175·1957.

WOlFF TANNING BEDS

New Commwcll.l, HolM Units,
From $1iii.OO~La t.. Lollone,
AcCIIIOdll.
t'IYmtntl

Low Ao $18.00, Call Gday FREE
NEW Color Catalog. t-100.2211S2t2.

3316.

Loal:: Reward! Msle Slblrtan Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
Husky. Red I White. Aneweri With Or WlthoUI Motors. Call
To Lokey. Rod Collar, VlclnHy: Larry Lively. 614-388-9303.
Silver Bridge Piau AI'IL 814·
448-8311, P...HI
'fop Prlce1 Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Aln,s, Sliver Coins,
lost: Whllt I Brown Coc:klr Gold Coins. M. .S. Coin Shop,
Spaniel H11 Florida Tags. 151 S.CondAvenus, Gallipolis.
Vlclnh~: Kerr Rotd. Nama:

Woody. Small Aewanll 114·2455330.

Wanted: Middleport High School
parbooka, 1958·1959, 19591960, 1960-1981, 1961 ·1962. Will
pay $20 perlbook, 614-992·7303

WOMEN MARINES - Marine Second Lt.
Christine MacDonald, foreground, &amp;dd Second
Lt. Melissa McCamish, left, march along with

fellow Marines from a tiring field during combat
training at the Quantico Marine Base in Quantico, Va., Friday. (APPboto)

uk for Brenda.

The lawyer, Michael Schwartz,
said only that a woman committed
suicide in Waterford Township
north of Detroit.

WP Stars
~Nd Cali. 614-446-2844.

Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day before thl ad It to run.

Sunday odHlon
Friday. Monday
p.m. Saturday.

Schwartz said more ·"infonnation

fifth suicide, his lawyer said.

oolnl, Mayta;

ALL Ysrd S.lta Muat Ba P1ld In

Jack Kevorkian present at woman's suicide
SOUTHFIELD, Mich. (AP) A retired pathologist whose medical license was suspended after
assisting four people to commit
suicide was present Saturday at a

Would Llka To Buy Non Working
Washers I Dryers, G.E., Hot·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

would be available at a late aftetnoon news conference.
Kevorkian was charged with
murder in three of the four deaths.
The charges were later dropped.

ACROSS
t Talks idJy
7 Wrong: prell•

tO Lift with lever
t3 Biblical dancer
t9 Kind ol court
20 Inquire

2t Regret

caviar and other fish products a
day, he said.
Instead of 30 employees late
each day, the average is now only
two or three. Theft and alcohol
abuse alsc appear 10 have dropped,
said Kudryavtsev, who was elected
by the worlcers 10 replace a former
executive with a drinking problem.
Inflation has propelled the price
of a can of pink salmon up more
than I,OOO percent, from 2.38
rubles a year ago 10 24 rubles. Red
caviar has jumped from 20 rubles
10 more than 150.
Demand is still high, however,
and Kudryavtscv predicts year-end
profit of about 35 million rubles$140,000 - on sales of 300 mill ion rubles. Up to a third of the
profit will be distributed as dividends to the worker-shareholders,
he said. That would average more
than 20,000 rubles a worker.

24 Wsslond ol
25 Near
27 Coroner: abbr.
28 Off's opposite
29 - Man
30 Trousers
3t Imitated
32 Halt
34 Electrilled
particle
36 Soil
38 Tidy
39 - liver oil

40 Tantalum symbol
4t Delamed
44 Sun god
46 Pass away
47 Exists
48 Fortify
49 Bright star
50 Uno. in English
51 Kind ol curve

53 French article
54 Down :

prefiK

55 Plunges
57 Deposit

59 Pigpen
60 Mrs. Truman

6t Martin ID
62 Marta 64 Journeys

66 Slrike out
68 Health resort

70 Jumps
72 Consumed
73 Allude to
74 Crowd

staLe.

99 Ms. Verdon
lOt Competed
t04 One ol Santa's
helpers
t05 Employ
t07 The sun
108 Young boy
109 Chart
ItO Scottish uncle
ttt Type of cross
tt2 Prohibits
tt4 Seeded
I t6 Free ticket
tt7 Opp. ol WNW
tt8 Behold!

Knick Knacllo, Jewllry, Enryth·

lng, At: J. Nell, Ken' Hln'laburg,
ROdney CION Road Off 110 &amp;

OH AI Rod~ PIU, Exit Off 35,
Mond.ly lnalde Clothing, Fuml·

t20 Vases

t22 "How the West

127 Italian river

t29 Seasons
13t VItiate: ruin
133 River in Siberia
t34 Note ol scale
136 Above
137 Cask
139 Equality
140 Land measure

14t Monk 's title
142 - garde
143 Decimal base
145 Lowe or Morrow

147 Quandaries
15t Parcel olland
152 Quieting sound
153 Tehran's country

155 New Deal agcy.
157 Fights between
two
158 Falsel1ood
159 Leaning Tower
city
160 Babylonian deity

t6t Faroe Islands

" Lost caviar is lost profit," a
supervisor says gravely, paning the
worker's shoulder. The slogan has
the hollow ring of Soviet propaganda from bygone days. or five-~ear
plans and Heroes of Sociali st
Labor.
But there is a difference: since
the cannery changed from a staterun company to an employeeowned business two months ago,
production has jumped 10 percent
at the plant on this fishing island
just 100 miles north of Japan.
More than 3,000 miles to the
west. in Moscow, President Boris
Yeltsin hopes to see that k.ind of
success repeated across the country
when hi s privatization program
begins Thursday.

80 Tidies!
82 In lavor of
83 Pilaster
85

European finches

86 Tests
87 Holm oak
88 Abstract being
90 Lair
91 Nolhing
92 Bother
93 Chastise
96 Walk

whirlwind

t63
t65
t67
t68
t89

Change
Residue
Hebrew letter
NL's counterpart
Atmospheric
disturbance

t7t Approaches
t72 Intended
173 Roam

t75 Son ol Rebekah
t76 Brief
t77 Beasts ol burden
t78 Great Lake

conjunction

12 Old pronoun

t3 Prophet
t4 Cutting tool
t5 Portable
computer

table
16 Masqat is Its
capital
17 Dug lor gold
18 Imposes as a
necessary
accompaniment

t9 Calm
23 High regard
26 Hurt
29 - and go seek
32 Pieces ol
needlework

33 E•tra
35 Hypothetical
force

Crete
89 Blunt end
92 Mountains ol
Europe
93 Wager.
94 Guido's high note
95 Brother ol Jacob
97 Dawn goddess
98 Cultlvales
99 Secluded valleys
100 Soft moss
tOt Time gone by
t02 River In Germany
t03 Ruby or Sandra
106 Goes astray
109 Clayey earth
113 Break suddenly
115 Oland ID
116 Invoice word
119 Choose

37 Having no oaks
or maples

t33 Morsel

40 Three-base hit
42 Dlllseed
43 Decays
Declare

48 Girl's name
Concord,

ror one

56 Scorched
58 British streetcars
59 Squandered
60 Came to pass
62 Domineering

63 E•tras
65 That thing
66 Hold back
67 Workers

68 The urial
69 Transllx
71 Chores
73 Showered
75 Native metal
76 Carton
79 World org.
81 Teutonic deity

Addavllle.

814·367·

Will tekl cart of 1ldlfly r,erson
In my hom•, mal• or emale,
814-117-8183.

Neod Somecne To Mow 3 Aerts
Of Land Ground. 614~46·1274.

21

Business
Opponunlty

PUBLIC AUCTION

Grill Cook !Chat, Salary Based
On Exparlence Or Schooling.
Wrlto To Or Sond Rosume To:
Cis 239, efo Gallipolis Dally
Tribun1, 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Oldtr lady lor comp1nlon and
light houaekuplng tor elderly
lady, pr1ftr someon1 of good
chtraeter to make lhll her
homo, pay negotiable: 614-6982_T6
_ 5_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ J

SATURDAY, 00. 3, 1992
10:00 A.M.

Hairstylist
Nseded :
Paid
Vacation• Gauranleed Wages.

WANTEO:

INOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
recommends thll you do busl·
0111 wtth people you know and
NaT to 11 nd money through the
mall until you havtlnvesligated
th• offering.

614-446-7267.
Start 17.30 /Hour, Yo1.1r Area. No
Experience Nocessary. Must Be
18. For lnlo Call 1·900·820-8633,
Ext 6432, 6 A.M. To 8 P.M., 7
Days . $12.95 Phone F11.

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
Du1 To Expansion A 'Local Corp.
H11 ODtnlngs For 11 Psople
$1,000 Psr Month To Stat1 It You
Qualify, Ugt'll Uftlng Required.
Call ltlonday Betwean 10 &amp; 4,
814·446-45.5:1.
In
store
merchandising
positions available for lnstor1
product
promollons
and
demonstrations. Good hourly
rates, weekdays and wlekends.
Pom1roy
1nd
surrounding
arNI,
call
Monday-Frldly,
10:00am-4:00pm, &amp;14·898-9961.

FULL·TIME

.

v

AP·

POINTMENTS CLERK Needed
At Two Community Group
Homaa For Persona With
Osvolopmentsl Dlubllltles In
Gallla
County
{Gallipolis
!Bidwell). Hours: 10 A.M. -6 P.M.,
MfTu, WI Fri; 9 A.M. -5 P.M., Th;
lncludos 2 -Hour Weakly Start
Me~tlng;
Or As Otherwise
Schadulsd. High School Degree,
Valid Orlvtr's Licn11, Thr11
Yeilra Driving Congntod Trilfflc
Areas A1qulr~d · Good Communication And Ot'ganlz.tlion
Skills, Puncluai.L.. Ancf Able To
Work As Part ur A Toam Required; Experl•nct Working
With Psrsons Wlltl Mental
R1tardatlon Aod Dtvllopmental
Disabilities Pretorrod . Salary:
$5.00 /Hr, To S11r1. Send
Aoeume To Ctcllla Baker, P.O .
Box 604, Jakcoan, OH 45640.
D1adllne ' For
Applicants:
9130!92.
Equal
dpportunlly
Employer.

V1ndlng Aout1 : Local. We Have
Tht Newest Machlnll, Making A
Nlca St..dy Cuh Income. 1·

800.. 55-0354.

o--v 111...

tor Sale ., ..,..
liblt Llua • 4,000 tct· ft, lull
... paYod parlllng. "'"'"
locatkHt for OMr 30 )'llfll. Want
to lf'ljoy ow rlllrtment, M110n
County. 304-11243110 Of Sundays 304-8124211. Aek lor

ownar.

Local Pay Phono Routa. HI·
Traftlc Loi:allonl. 1KWtli&lt;ly 1·

1100-371-VEND.

Bu!_klng

Melli

ll1nulacturar

Salootlng Smolt /Largo Bulldor
lllta~r In Somo open AlMa.

HI~ Profft PotanUaL kcoptlng
Ori Bill Cllla!Hltd. 303-70'

320 , Ell 2401.

.
.,. . .....
~

Announcements
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

3 Announcements

3 Announcements

Call : Gentleman Nllda Home 6
Holp Wllh Soma Household
Dutll8. Wilt Pay Rent S1nd
Resonse: CLA236 cloGalllpolls
Dally Tribune, 825 Third Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

14

Business
Training

Retrain
Nowll!SauthNst•m
Business College:, Spring Valley
Plaza . Call Todsy, 814-446-4367 !!
Reg.t90.05-1274B.
.

Today You're '40'

rm. il 10,

5

Bul 10lu!re oh ..here
did all1ha1 hair go?

Happy Birthday

Gorman Shophord Pupplao, 6t4· 9
Wanted to Buy
245·9586.
:::-::::=:-=-:-:-:-:--:,Compllt• HouMhold Or &amp;Halt Border &amp; Stbla Mlxld Col· lltnl Any Type Of Fum/lure,
Us, To Country Hom1 Thlt Will Apptlancn, Antlqus'e. Etc. Alto

134 Communication

t35 Breathe In
t38 - sequitur
t4t Enemy
t44 Sodium symbol
146 Species ol wild
geese
t48 Hospital

Spade Only. 614-448-1821.

Apprallal

AVIIIablel

814-245-

5152.

I

Books:

.DIRECTOR OF PHARMACY
Progreulvt

Aural
Hospital
S.e~ing A Motlvet.ct Clinical
Pharmacy DifllciOf. Hs/Shs Will
81 A M1mblr 01 Co-Tum, Drug
Ullllntion Review, Ph1rm1cy
And Thar11_peu1lca. R1sponslbl1
For Dilly Optratlons , Drug Dis·
Drug lnfonn1tlon1
lrlbutlon,
O.Velopment 01 Pollcl11 Ana
ProcedurM. Must Havs An Ohio
LICinll, Compeltlve Salary And
Btn1tlt1. S.nd A11um1 to: Par·
aonn1l D1p1r1ment, Oak Hill
Community Mldlcal Cenl•r, 350
ChariOit• Avenus, Oak Hill, Ot'llo

45658.

attendant

animal

2

152 Yes, to Pablo
154 Thin Man's wile
156 Toward shelter
158 unasplrated
t59 An)ou
162 Australian bird
164 Sailor
166 Possesses
t67 Belore: prell•
t70 StoneiD
174 Nickel symbol

In Memory Of
Lost &amp; Found

LEOC.

LOST • Stpt. 20, vicinity Pot11111
&amp; Robineon Cr11k, t mo Be~gll,

STUMBO

6

email boys pet udly mlsHd,

REWARD, 304-182·2:103.

1

., ..
v-

.u.
...•

.. '• I

. ~ ·=

'••

...

Death 912511991

Card of Thanks

Tho outpouring ollon
ond oupport to our lomlly

We would Ilk• to
extend our thanlca to
the many frlende of
Chari11 (Chuck)
Bailey and of oure for
their .flowere, food
end cordi through lhe
oleknuo ond death of .
our brothe.r. Thenkl
for the care he
received II O'Bieneoe
Hoopltal at Athena
ond oil the core ot
Rlvarelde Methodlat
Hoephalll Columbue,
OhIo. Your klndneoo
ohall never be
torgottan.
HI1 Three Children
end Brother and
Slatere.

In momory of
FLORENCE M. SPIRES
hor blrlhdlly, S.pl
25. 1Wo blrthdayo hove
put alnce we oow you
luL Though we fMI
empty ond ud, we're
lUre thot with J..uo
lh- put two have
been the beol you've

ever hid.

We lave you olwayo.

h11 been · tremendoua.

Wo have groolly approclotod your proyora, vloilo,
phone collo, glfto ond
concem•l
Ao we continuo to loco
tho unoortalntiu of our
lllnooo your continued
proyo11 ond ouppoll oro
atilt groody n-d ond
approcloted.
cathy a Stove Elliott

ln ·Memory

DeniM, Julie,

s-•
5

CONDOS

Nortlr Myrtia lard, SC.

s.dly milled by will,
Bonnie, end chlldr.n,
Rl•end Llvf •

Tiffany Tunu

The Army can give

you

18 Today ...
IHaippy Birthday!

a definite edge on life if
you want to learn valuable

Love.
Mom &amp; Stepheny

bandi·On
training in 1 wide variety
challenging specialtie s.
Ir you qualify. tbe Army

bigb-tecb •kills. We offer
bard-to-duplicate

or

offers training in be fol-

Happy 20th
Jodi Dailey

lowing fields .
•Communications

Electronics

•Digital Communic~ons

Equipmenl
•Tactical Sstellile
Microwave

•Telecommunications

winter tlllrvlces or
all makes &amp; models
or furnaces.
Specializing In luel
oil furnaces.

•Tactical Fire Control

SyS1ems
•Computers
Thete are just a few o f
tbe bisb - tech skills

614·446·3704

wlticb

Happy Ads

you

in

an train . There

are over 250 specialties to
cboosc from. Tecbnically
speaking, tbe Army bu a

From Your
Shopping

lot to offer. Your Army
Recruiter can tell you even
more. Call today.

.•

, ,.

446-U4l
11

IE All YOU UN IE.•

Help Wanted

FAMILY DOLLAR
NEW STORE OPENING
WE NEED EXPERIENCED PEOPLE
TO PREPARE OUR NEW STORE

SALES, CASHIEI ,&amp; sroa I'OSIJJOitS AVAIWU
IF YOU HAVIIETAJI.IUIIAGI!Wfl EXPElliNG,
WI WOUlD UKE TO TAll TO YOU AJOUT OUR
STORE IUIIAGEI TRAiliNG PIOGIAM.
APPlY 1• PIISO• 011

s,.,,

BlrtWaJ to

Dalton CoiW., Cummins.
Born Sept. :&amp;6, 1"1
Love, A.lwaJS
Tour
IUehard

WEDNESDAY, SEmMlER 30, 1992
BEtWEEN 9 u. · 5 P.M.

FAMILY DOLUR STORES
...
FOODI.AIII SHOPPING CENTER
304 3RD STREET, POIIT PLEASANT, WV 25550-tOOI
£0UII.Cft'ORTUII1'I £li'.OI£JI .""

(SOI.E POSITIONS Taf'OIWIY)

1.. .

..

size, books, pictures, arts &amp; crafts, kerosene heater
&amp; lots more.

OWNERS
DENVER WELL AND LEON SAUTERS
Refreahrnenta by Relolelng LHe Church
C"'h - Pooltlve ID

Auctioneer: Dan Smith 949-2033

ESTATE AUOION

SATURDAY, Oa. 3, 10:00 A.M.
We've been convnloaloned to oellthe eatllle of the
lite Willard I Millie Clagg, lang-time reoldenta of
the Bidwell area.
LOCATION: One mile weot ot Porter, Ohio on SL
RL 554 or alx mllea eaot of Rio Grande on St. RL
554. Witch lor olgnol
ANTIQUE l COLLECTIBLES: 3 oak dresser w/mirrors, cedar fined wardrobe, pr. of metal twin beds. lull
metal bed, sev. sm. tables &amp; stands, floor lallll, oak
spindle back chair, I 920's Victorian style china cabinat, sev. oak slat back chairs. oak lallll table. pr. of
figural occ. Japan lalllls, six-leg dining table, live-leg
oak harvesl table, 2 sewing rockers, floor sale, t2 ga.
pickle crock. 14 gal. crick wiblue stencil, Coca-Cola
trays, wicker hallller, sewing table, 2 dr. buffet. sm.
radio in wood case. sev. adv. tins, cream cans. 9
metal lawn chairs, apple butter stirrer, sev. wood adv.
boxes, carpenters too l boxes, primitive work table,

•Avionics
•Automatic Data

State Rl. 160, Bidwell
Is now starting our

Levi.

-more.

Look Out World

B&amp;M HEATING,
COOLING &amp;
REFRIGERATION

Since we eiW you
illll
The ptlln io otlll there.
h'o, oh, eo hard to
bMr.
We mlu you eo
much,
Your laughter, your
touch.
We allen wondar why
You dldn~ fllllo hold
To your rnemoriM we
cling.
OH, whit joy " will
bring,
When . we
enter
IIMwln'edoor
To togeCher lllllfn lo,..

TECHNICALLY
SPEAKING, THE
ARMY HAS A
LOT TO OFFER.

Ac1111 Tr1nl

MARKER

Help Wanted

11

1·100·477·9864

Fall Reservations
Now Being Matle
For laformation:
446·2206
9 to 5

149 Earlh goddess
150 South American
151 Rosters

tiMIIII occuplnCJ'.
Yallcl ane year.

CHANNEL

radio &amp; record player, Ashley wood·

Llcenoe f Ohio 1344- W.Va. 5t5
Apprentice- Johnoon Smith N55t8
"Not Rooponoiblo for Aocidonll or Lo11 of Property"

$179.00
'

"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS"
Round oak fable and 5 chairs. broom machine, winepress, 6 gal. stone churn, pie safe, approx. tOO yr.
old 2 panel tin insert and drawer on bottom, watches,
clock. stone jars. green canning jars. antique radio,
hand crank portable victrola, Mahoney clolhes, cupboard, 16' Tiffany light fixture , 78 RPM recorda,
Koeing 5¢ glass jar and etc.
AUTO'S.
1972 Pinto station wagon, I 960 Rambler, 4 door.
"TRACTORS"
520 J.D. w~h live power, P.S.. 3 pt., 2 cylinder bought
new in Racine, Oh., 135 M.F. diese l. 3 cylinder. power adjust wheels, 930 Case w~h wide front .
"MACHINERY"
M.F. 300 combine gas. 3 row com head. small grain
13' head w/Dodge Slanl 6 engine, 5x14 Case plow,
J.D. plow, 428 JD 40' elevator w/wagon unloador, t2'
J.D. wheel disc, N.H. 66 baler. J.D. #5 mower 7',
gravity bed wagon, t5' conveyor dirt slinger, t8.4-34
duels, F1 00 truck parts.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Gold sofa bed, loveseat. 3 recliners, odd chair,
burner, 6 legged maple tablet, &amp; etc.
"MISC."
tO speed bicycle. child's picnic tab le, Eastern Star
clothes, jewelry, quilt blocks &amp; patterns, fabric, toys,
old &amp; new, Home Interior of all kinds, owl collection,
dishes, pots &amp; pans, new women's clothes, large

IMJMI trip alrlaN
, ..., •• 1141 2 •llhlil
'

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Located between Pomeroy &amp; Chester, Ohio on SL
Rt. 7 at Five Pointo. Take Co. Rd. 26 (Flatwooda
Rd.) epprox. 1.5 mile to Co. Rd. 82 (Texao Rd.)
approx. 1.5 mites·to TB2 (Wickham Rd.) approx. 2
miles to tann. Watch for auction signs.

couch, stereo

LAS VEGAS

grocrln, new I ulld m•rchanai ... Sat·Ntw guarantied IMr•
chandiM. Dlftsrent
dHIIf'S
WHkly. Ed Fr~l11r, Rt. 2 North
4 Par1 B1agl1 Puppin, To Good IIXtHn mllll. Llc1n11 No. 130.
Homes, 61{-446-4667.

8

Fmancial

Situation
Wanted

l

--

see our opportunity Yideo

Clara Day (6t4) 388-8000

446·7651.

~::t:~:&lt;f~~~~~:~~.:~~~~~

to

and
coverags
$5.00/hour. Ssnd reaume
Cecilia Baker, P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, Ohio 45640. Deadline
for applicants: 9130192. EOE.

tor everything

.. '
...

ffilai doors and
windows facing the bay where
scores of trawlers unload their
BIG EXPERIMENT -Fish in&amp; boats are docked at the Korsakov
catch.
Most of the cannery, last reno- · Fish Co. plant on Sakhalin Island )ast week. Since the company
vated in 1962, is in poor repair. But changed from a state-run company to an employee-owned business
the room where the salmon roe are two montbs ago, production has jumped 10 percent on this fishing
washed, salted and packed into island north of Japan. (AP Pboto)

Prallrobly Choohlro Am . Will

Call today

Will Do lronlngs, And Sewing,
Also Comton1r11 For Sale. 614·

Commensurate
Training
And Experience. With
Individuals
In·
terest1d In Applying Should
Ssnd A Lotter Of Application
And Resume To Robert L lannlng , Superintendent , Gallla
County Local Schools, 230
Shawn" Lane, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.
Deadline
For
Ap·
pllcallons Is October 15, 1992.

ClASSIFIED ADS
asuper market

...''•

IIMI,IIown, glis;

trlct S.tks A School Treasurtt.
Applicants MuS1 Hold A School
Troasuror'1 Llcenss. Salary

Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

..

fish scaler Anna Yaskina said ,
wa'ving a wet hand to indicate the
entire planL " Now I feel I have a
pan of it."
That feeling of ownership is
exactly what Yeltsin wants to
spread among his countrymen by
selling off thousands of stateowned factories, s10res and other
businesses.
Under his plan, each citizen will
receive a voucher for 10,000 rubles
- about twice the average monthly
wa~e- that can be scld or invested m newly privatized enterprises.
The Konakov cannery went private juSt weeks before Yeltsin
unveiled his ,program Aug. 19. It
fonnerly belonged to a collective
fishillfaa r
na. . . . . . . white tile

2111-7530.
Gallla County Local School Dis·

Pomeroy,

... .

HBefore, this was nobody 's / '

Child Car• For 6 Y11r Old,
Tuolday I ThursdlyS. 7:30 Till
5:30
P.M.
After
School:
WHkdaya, For 7 Yur Old.

0158.

...

W1lk1rs PalnUng Ssrvlce. Will
palnl inlorlor or ederlor, 614·

HOSPITAl JOBS

AVON I All Areas I Shlrloy
Spears, 304-675-1429.
Bob'a Etectronlcs, Kanauga,
Ohio II Taking Assumes F'or
Thl Fallowing: Car Stsrto In·
llaller, Sattlllt• Tectmlcl•n.
Apply In Person Only.

Considlf

board
123 Dove cries
t24 Arabian garment
t25 Obligations
126 Manage
128 "Days olLives"
t30 Merchants
132 Irons

52

Thura, Prl, Sat, Dlnltte Table,
Six Chain Good Condition,
Lola Moral :Jay Drlvt, 1-4.

895-3406.

company. 1-800-992-6356.

121 NarrOw, flat

36 Negate

45

Homewood.

"AVON• ALL AREAS! Stlart your

tlm1 with us. You'll love ths

87 Mountain on

6 Chair
7 Mother
8 Doctrine
9 Quantity or yarn
10 Lying lace down
tt Hurry

Was-"

123 Vehicle
t24 Equally
t25 Fulllll

77 Towet

insignia
78 Printer's error

5 Latin

lura, "Route 110, Put tGA
Soconcl Road Lab, Ont IIIla On

."
84 Collection ol
lacts

DOWN
t Suggest
2 Wandered
3 In a cot
4 Youngster

Help Wanted

==="-:-::=::-:::---

.

Watch ~r Signal

See Answer to Puzzle on Page A-2

Employment Services

- 2:00 p.m.
edition . 2:00 11

OaiWQI Sala: Slpl 25th Thru 7
Clothaa Slzte: Infanta Thru
Chhdrwl And Adub. Antlquas,

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Only

•Exceptional Earning Potential
•Independent Lifestyle
•Professional Training and
Development
•Flexible Hours - Full or Part-time

Tr" topping &amp; trimming IX·
l)arl•nce, fret estimates, 304·

895-3055.

Business

Earn a Suppkmental
or FuU Income and

Miss Paula's D•y Cart Center.
Safl, aHord1bla, c:hlldcare. M-F
t a.m. • 5 :30 p.m. Ages 2YI-10.
Belofll, 1f11r IC:hoot Drop-Ins
welcomo. 614-446-8224. N1w In·
tant Toddler Care, 614-446-6227.
Wenl.d ltendlng tlmbtr, top
prices paid, fr" estimates,
llcanstd logging company, 304·

21

___;;___:~~

John10n'1 Trtt Service, trim·
rnlng &amp; rtmovsl, trus, at'lrubs,
hldgas, frn esllm1111, 304·586·

found, flsan call J11on Noltln·
gham 1 1114-185-35&amp;8.

Rich

IIOUTE: ' Gt1

Oulck7 No W1yl BLII W1 Have A

Alt1r11tlons: S.Wing &amp; Mtndlng, Oood, StN.t,, Allonlobla, Buotne.. Won't Lul 1-eoo-m.
814416-4934.
lttU.

Somsone to mow or bnJ1h hoa
grau on v•ry level land, 30(.
67S-7763afler 10:00 PM.

Loot: ·brOwn trlfoid. bll(loid: 11

Rea l Eslale

Part·Time Slc:...tary For

45831.

New caviar cannery packing profits

(

614-245-5887.

Art
Contor, Typing, Filing, Wont ParfOCI, &amp;: GrHflng Ylltore. Send

22 Investigate

ten ill . .

Business
OpponunHy

21

Will Babytll In My Moms. Fsn·
Cld In Pl1y Area. Raf1rences
Av1Uabls. Rodney Ar1a . Call

Firat Flva Ladlta To Call To Salt

joined 230 men Friday 10 begin the ever since.
Ame.rican ~ilitary ' s fi.rst co~preThis time, women and men will
henSIVe, miXed-sex bas1c tr_aJnmg.
get,J!'e,same lessons.
.
In the 19?~· the Ma.nnes ~nd
It s JUSt natural, the way 11
the other mtluary .serv1ces !"e~ should be," Lt. Kristin McKinley,
m1xed-sex compames, but d1dn t 23, said as she stood ankle-deep in
g•~e women the. full range ~f batde mud on the rille range.
trammg. The miXed-sex umts were
Although women are barred
d1sbanded because of morale ~d from combat assignments, the
lo!!;istical problem.s and women s training will,prepare them for anytrammg has rematned segregated thing, said Col. Robert Fawcelt,
who heads the training school at
Quantico, 45 miles south of Washington.
"They need 10 be able to handle
themselves in a fluid battlefield,"
Fawcett said. .
On Friday, women and men
stood shoulder 10 shoulder on the
firing range in a cold rain, lobbing
p-enades and throwing themselves
miO the mud 10 fire M-16 rifles at
distant targets. In heavy baule gear,
helmets and gas masks, the women
were indistinguishable from the
men.
The women will be taught to
crawl through woods alongside
men in simulated battles with live
ammunition. And they will hammer each other with wooden sticks
that simulate bayonets. Later, men
and women together will perfonn a
simulated beach assault.
The mixed-sex training began a
day after two Navy admirals were
forced 10 resign over their handling
of charges of sexual harassment at
last year's Tailhook Association
convention of Marine and Navy
aviaiOrs in Las Vegas.
Several women interviewed Friday said they encountered no
resentment or harassment from
their male colleagues.
"I've never had that happen 10
me and I hope I never do," said LL
Jennifer Marks, .23, who attended
the Naval Academy.
"I don't think anyone wants to
jtO into banle. That's not the
1ssue," she said. "But I don'tthink
COMBAT TRAINING - Marine Second Lt. Melissa McCamish, there should be a distinction
of California, ejects a round from a M-203 grenade launcher, mount- between men and women if women
ed under the barrel of a M-16A2 rine, during live fire combat train- can do the job.··
A presidential commission is to
ing at the Quantico Marine Base in Quantico, Va., Friday. It was the
release
fmdings this fall on whether
first time that women have participated alongside men during combat
women should serve in batde.
training exercises. (AP Photo)

wllll.

Sunday

18 Wanted to Do

By ANNE GEARAN
Assoc:iated Press Writer
QUANTICO, va. _ For the
first time since women officers
joined the Marine Corps, they're
slogging through mud, practicing
hand-to-hand combat and staging a
mock beach assault along with
men.
Although women are still barred
from the front lines, 19 of them

EDITOR'S NOTE - This green-and-red cans is immaculate.
week, Russia begins its biggest So is a section where a small joint
experiment yet with capitalism. On venture with a Japanese food comThursday, the government will pany produces fi sh cakes,
begin selling off thousands of busi- dumplings and seaweed noodles for
nesses, with ownership going to export.
employees or to ordinary citizens
The cannery employs 500 peowith government vouchers that can ple, which is "small enough that
be exchanged for shares. An Asso- everyone knows each other and
ciated Press correspondent visited a feels some responsibility" for profRussian business that has already its, said it s director, Victor
gone private in the once-socialist Kudryavtscv.
nation.
" Large factories will have a
much tougher time," he predicted.
"The main thing we have gained is
a new attitude. ... It's not just issuBy ALAN COOPERMAN
ing stock, it's not just promising
Associated Press Writer
dividends; it's propagandizing the
SAKHALIN ISLAND, Russia whole idea of ownership. I don't
- Sitting at a precision scale, know whether really big enterprises
wearing a white lab coar, Irina Fur- can do that "
dui looks like a scientist. Actually,
Sin ce goi ng private, the canher job is to spoon exactly 140 nery 's output has rise n to about
grams of sticky red caviar into each 130,000 can s of pink salm on,
tin produced by the Korsakov Fish
Co.
Spooning caviar is tedious
work, but Furdui does it with speed
and accuracy. perhaps because she
is not just an employee but also a
stockholder in the cannery, which
for decades was owned by the

wv

OH-Polnt

'

railroad jacks. sev. old hand tools, carnival glass, other glass.
HOUSEHOLD: 25' Zennh color TV console w/rernote. t9" Mrtsubishi color TV. dineue w/4 chairs, recliner, 3 bookshelves, loveseat. hide-a-way sola. occasional chair, sev. prs. of lalll&gt;S, kneehole desk
w/chair. 6' oak conference desk. very nice leather
desk chair. Wang COlllluter w/printer, folding chairs &amp;
utility trays. t4.5 cu. ft. Frigidaire relrig.. Litton
microwave. Frigidaire washer &amp; dryer, Amana chest
type deep freeze, nice 3 pc. oak bedroom surte, sm.
tables &amp; stands, krtchen rtems. pots. pans. dishes,
kitchen appliances, knick·knacks, linens, flatware,
books.
TOOLS l FARM ITEMS: All types hand tools, 12 gal.
shop vac, Sears space heater, 50 &amp; 250 gal. cattle
water tanks. Sears snow thrower, over 2.000 tobacco
sticks, Jog chains, chain binders, pipe vile, anvil,
electric lence charger, hydraulic jacks, hydraulic wood
splitter, garden sprayer. fuel cans, block &amp; pulleys,
lumber, step laddere, truck tool box, 17 cu. tt. utility
gardan cart, 4 wheel barrows. sm. wOO&lt;Ilurning
stove, 2 300 gal. fuel tanks on skids, 275 gal. tuel
tank w/pump, boom pole 3 pt. hitch, tool boxea, electric grinders, 2 Lawn Boy mowers, work bench and
shelves, cattle tank de-ice float. sev. lntereating box
lots.
THIS WIU BE AN INTERESTING COUNTRY FARM
SALE. FIELD PARKING I PLENTY OF SHADE
TREES. COME AND SPEND THE DAY!
Leo ley L.arnley, Auctlonew
311 1076
.
Lie. I Bondad In St81a of Ohio
Caeh/Check Wl'proper ID
o-r: lhertl Ctogg
LUNCH PROVIDED BY THE

�~nday nmes-Sentlnel

. -·

31

Homn for .Sale

8

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt

44

Public Sale

Homo For 111o 1n Cflooltl,. VII- r---....:==:':A:u:ct:l:o:n==:...--~ :_Ro~wN: ltoth, Lg. Fill

8

Apartment
lor Rent

Orocloue llvl-. 1 ond 2

=

MW

tiM. Caiii14-112·T11t EOH.

':,.q':!,,"Q.

-

VINTON, OHIO.

1
pump,

SP ' CIAL AUCTION

~_r·ra..
M.ICJC!;.W•t·
._.ltJ co.only
31M-17141-

conllructld " - .
- l d ... ,_.. la4, lrldbwy
Road, llllgo Co&lt;lnty, OhiO.
Nowly·

WED•1 SEPT• 301 7: 00 P.• M•

ThrM 'b•droom, 1 112 blth,

...'t:u'":. .::,not;::
Col! IIIIo Hulcllllo.!!. Rutioncl,

All new merchandise. We will aell one of any
hem put up. For Information call Auctioneer:

l14-l11N301 "' 8*'"2"2404 ""

FINIS "IKE" ISAAC 388-9370

r::'"~

apPOintment.
0id
HMt1 Howd Cobin,
~ 21!12 FL 11' Fl. Down,
Num-. Slllcllld, f1.20Cl 10

aq,.,.

111M F""" WIHio Funonl011141 Tum Riahl AI HIOIII"11ton
Btoglo Cklb "Sial\ Onlo 223

or ISAAC'S FEED at 388 8880.
Not reepon1lble lor accidents or loat ltema.
Llcenaed and Bonded • Indiana, Ohio and W. Va.

t1 030

Mobne Homes
. for Sale

Including la4

1213 Por Month

ront. Now 14'- -11-.,
lnctudoo dolivlty, comDiolo ..,.
up,S.okiltlng • otopa, f.aoo.a37-

112

Bod,_.,

14•711 Falrmon~ 2
Hat Hod Tondor LOOI!ng Coro.
Lorgo LIVIng Aroa A 111111 s.o
- . 114,1100. ~.o~. 01 E&lt;troo,

1-5-131'1.
till Schull Troillr, 12d0, Good
COndftlon, 8.-wm,

:'eo."=

~ ~""l:"O::

Tf!louoh Outt te,bO. 114-MI-

ons.

'* Portcwood. 141170

, bod,
3/4o.,.la41nclty
Umbo,
311t411-41D1be..,.2:ooPII.

44f.4721. Endo t-!0.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
3 Acroo S.rvoyld, Utllillu In-

. ..oiiOd.

High
:.,~~:;;;,.'\";~ 8110

Gollil

Nol1h

:;;: :. SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS:
•
lltlat CoutriY, Solem 1Wp,,
$156' ecre. flemott 1 Mautlful
llndi a illdt, puturt 1nd hills.
Colt tor good map, 1~14-5i3114&amp;. Alhlnl.

36
•.-

Reel Estate
Wanted

-.-

=:::!':P.ySmol
Form Or Wooded
In Socludld A,.., Coil

•

Rentals

,;:

~311.

~

:

41 Houses lor Rent

on

1 hdroom

While AVenue ,

Oolllpotlo $25Mio. lncludoo
Utlllllto, ·o.poott Roqulrad. &amp;14·
446"'112.
3 bldroom home, convenient
tocltlon,

..t

&amp; ct.p r~ulrwd,

*~75-3271.

r

,

'
~

• . . .aoma, O.Ck, 1 Acre,
Rlvortronl SO&lt;IIh St. 7, $490/Mo,

-·

Dtpooll,

Y11r

Roloronc:u,

LNH. 1·513-llllli.
lioUH

tor ront In Mlddlepon,

,.,. $250, 114-fi2--3187.

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

,

2 Mdroom lr~l~!l 12x64, $2751

mo., 12751

•~1 , references,

no pels, In country, 614·992-

""
-~

3U6.
2 a.droom1 N11r Nor1h Gellla,
Stov1,
A•trlgeralor,
Water

,

• DopooH. 614-388-i686.

&gt;',.

rrrnh Peld, $200/Mo. Rlfttenct

2 BMroo!M, 1 Beth, Stale

Routo 218, Oolllpotla. 614-2!56·
1008.
3 Bedroom

Trailer $225fMo.

Water Paid , No P111 Allow.d ,
A•f~~r~nct

Deposit,

Required.

114-256-6717, LMYI llaollgo,

44

Apartment
lor Rent

,'

.-

1 bedroom apar1ment In Pt.

PINIInl, W.Vo., 1-304~75~042,

2 BA

untum'.cl
garage apl. wf rwfr!g. &amp; ltcwt.
Water lum"td, $250 month. Olp.
Nomodelld

roq'ld, 114"'46-3717.

2bdrm. 11)41., Ioii i eltctrJc, 1po

tumlohld, tsundty

plilncoo

room taciiiUn, cloH Ia Khool

tn

town. AppUations avall1blt

It: VIIIIQII

Ore~n A~l.

call614-112-3711. EOH.

,_.g or

2br, CA Weiher, Dryer Hook·

Up, 111 ~k)or1 No Pits , Aeter•n·
.... 814-441-1011,

3 room unturm.hed •pt, nlet

llorogo
otovo • rot tumlhtad,

nolghborhood, loll ol
~.

,..._

•...

111p • ref mqulrwd, 304-875--1090.

Apts.

for

rent•

• "-"'" $11'15

Downtown

month pluo
: dopooll, 114-Di2·1'!511 oft or 5pm,
,_ IEAIITIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
• UTATE\11 , 538 Jocks on Plkt
f1om """"'"· Wolk lo ohop &amp;
• ........ Coii814-441·25N. EOH.
.~

;;
~

-.

...
•-

?
••

~

'·

.. '

-.
•'
•

Auctioneer David Boggs
Lie. No. 4596
Gallipolis, Ohio 614-446-

nso

Licensed and bonded in State of Ohio
Not responsible for accidents or loss of .
property. We are now booking sales.

1

CINn. 2bdrm., unfumlshtd, no
pet.. downtown Ntw Heven,
WV. Allo commerclal epec1, or

..... 114-if2•11111,
Fumilhed AI:Mir1ment 1 Bed-

iiiliiiO. UllllllooNollPold.Oolllpolll,
114-4464411 After 7p.m.
furnlthod Apo~mtnl, Controlly
.Locolorl, Noll And Ctoon, No
Poll,. Socu~ty Dopooll •
Rotor ..... 814 1410414.
Comfltlly Fumlohtd, 1br, nort
to Ubrary, parking, h.. t, air,
roltroncoLdtpolll roqulrld. 6141tt 0331 ntor. 7p.m.
Fumlohld EHicloncy J1751Mo.
Ullllllll Pold, 701 Founh
A'IIIWI• Oolllpollo. 114-44&amp;-441&amp;
Allor 7P.ll.
furnilhld Eltlcltncy $118/Mo,
Ulillllil Pold ll!oro Bath, 107
...... AYinut, Ooillpollo, 114441-4411 Aaor 7pm.
-

29 112

~

dopooHo roqulrod, 114• =oopm.

... •ft•

Complttly Fumlshtd

mobllt
0

=ria' ri~~~ 'i:,lo~::,WC'A. ~t
448.0338.

ano ond two bedroom
•P1rtment1 for rtnl. 304475-

2053ort1'!5"'too.
Ono btdroom oportmont, turnloftld, vo~ ctoan. Nice.
·•
Woohtr.cfty~r hookup. No polo.
Coli 304~75-13at.
pol•,d•pooft,,*ll92-6677.
Ono bedroom oponmonto, turnlshed,

OA.M.
1

OWNER: Polly Swisher
DIRECTIONS: located on Kingtown Road acrolt
from Krodel Park In Point Pleasant, Weol VIrginia.
From Jackaon take 35 East to Henderaon, WV.
Croea blue bridge on Rt. 2 North acro11 Kanawha
River. Turn right at firol atop light on Rt. 2 North.
Watch for auction signa.
THIS ONLY A PARTIALLISTINGI
HOUSEHOLD: Couches, 3 chests of drawers, en d
tables, new stereo system, linens. entertainment centers, white wicker bed, brass bed, white wicker loveseat, washer and dryer, bookcase, dishes, black dishes, pots and pans, toaster, Westinghouse electric
roaster, silv erware, fan back wicker chairs, and new
vases.
MISCELLANEOUS: 5 piece wrought iron lawn furniture set, porcelain dolls, collectable dolls, stuHed ani·
mals, bK:ycle, moped, Nintendo video game, weight
benches, Crafts man lawn mower, 88 guns, books,
wicker baskets, collectable tins, fishing poles, folding
chairs, Ryan weedeater, records, file cabinet, chalk
boards, rnelal trunk on castors, spools of coaxial
cable, wooden trunk. and an antique sword.
TOOLS: Electric drill, 2 chain saws with cases , screw
drivers, pliers, pip e wrenches, adjustable wrenches,
files and too many other hand tools to list
AUCTIONEER; FINIS "IKE" ISAAC
licen•ed and Bonded Ohio 113728
Weal Virginia $1030
Phone: (614} 388-9370,388-8880, 669·6151, or
245-5939.
Available for Houaehold, Ellate, Farm and
Charhy Auctlono.
Not Reaponoible for loot llema or Accldento.
All llemo Sold As lo and Where Ia.

PUBLIC AUCTION
10 A.M. SATURDAY, OOOBER 3, 1992
AT LONG BOTTOr.!, OHIO
HOWARD LAWRENCE SR. ESTATE
CONTENTS OF LAWRENCE GROCERY STORE
DIRECTIONS FROM POMEROY, OHIO: Take S.R. 7
North to Cheoter, Ohio, turn right onto S.R. 248.
Follow S.R. 248 Eaat approx. 9 mi. to long
Bottom. Turn right onto S.R. 124, go approx. il
mi. Auction is behind the Post Office. Due to
parking space, auction has been moved to the
above location. Signs will be posted from
Cheoter.
The following Ia a very partial listing of the coni·
enlo ol the General Store Mr. Lawrence owned &amp;
operated near long Bottom for several yaara.
PICKUP TRUCK
1986 G.M.C. y, ton Pickup, 6 cyl. auto., 46 ,000 mil.
Very clean &amp; well cared for. Topper 8' Pickup.
CLOTHING ITEMS
Big Ben &amp; Blue Bell coveralls &amp; bibs, Maverick &amp;
Wrangler lined jackets, coats &amp; vests, DeeCee lined
coats, flannel shirts, hooded &amp; thermal shirts, dress
shirts, thermal underwear, cammys, work pants,
children's sweats, Hanes underwear, Lea boys jeans,
gloves. plus other clothing. All sizes including extra
large.
HARDWARE, PLUMBING, &amp; ELECTRICAL
Roof coat &amp; roof and foundation coating in 5 gal.,
pipe insulation, heat tapes, P.V.C. pipe fhtings, rolled
roofing (9 rolls), alum. flashing, copper tubing, sandpaper, shovels, hand saws, garden hoses, spiHti ng
malls, hammer, axe &amp; sledge handles, lawn rakes.
small engine tuneup kils &amp; mufflers, paint thinner &amp;
stripper, 24x36' chicken wire, stove pipe, fuses, elec.
sockets &amp; swilches , spray paints, engine oils, trans.
fluids, hyd. oils, bar &amp; chain oils, Coleman fuel, wind·
ow blinds, drapes, flashlight batteries, mops, 2 #6
Griswald skill ets (n ew), dishpans, pots &amp; pans, misc.
school supplies &amp; stationery, socket sets, fishing
supplies.
GROCERY ITEMS
Wide variety of grocery hems, some case lots, including cigarettes &amp; tobacco products, cleani ng supplies,
h ea~ h &amp; beauty supplies, canned &amp; boxed goods.
APPUANCES &amp; MISC.
NEW IN BOX wood &amp; coal heater, gas cook stove,
NCR cash register (needs repair}, refrigerator, el&amp;c.
hotplate N.I.B., Christmas decorations, 2 gas PUilllS,
1 gas pullll for parts, 1,000 fuel tank, M.T.D. 12 hp
riding mower, 85 gal. mixed calcium for tractor tire1,
Farmall Cub 2 way plow.
NOTE; Thle will be • lerge All Day Auction 10
bring your lawn ch•lra. All hemo to be removed
day of aele.
HOWARD LAWRENCE SR. ESTATE
Meigs Co. Ohio Probate Case 127571
ADMINISTRATORS; JOANNE LAWRENCE &amp;
HOWARD LAWRENCE JR •
AUCTIONEER; COL W. KEITH MOLDEN
614-742·2048 - Ohio Lie. t4318
Cuh
Poa.I.D.
lunch by Reedavllle United Methodist Church
Reatroom Available

ulllltla1

lncludtd.

SOc:urity dtpooll roqulrld, no
poll; 614·992-2218.
Ont btd100m furnished oport::::~.~:~;;n9;~d dopoolt,
Two btdroom oponmonl In
Pomtroy, no polo, doposll, 114m~m.
Unturnlohld 2br Gorogo Apt.
Rolrtg., Stovo Fumlohld, Wolor

l:~nN:141~J.2 ~~ ~:;,~

1111
Avonua.
Wldll" Aplo, 508 BurdtHo Sl,
Point PINNnt, no poll, 1 onct 2
bldroom1, 304-675-2072 after

5:oo.

L:::::::::::::::::::::::====J
r
45
SATURDAY, OOOJER 3, 1992

. • 304-4175-7!127 or

Business
Buildings
Sllll luilllnp. Wo Doll. 2,400
To
sq.
Fl.Now,
QuqntiU•
Llmi!N.
Ad
Sovo
_ , . , lmmldlalo Dollvory
Avllitbit 011 Somt. Bob ' *

· ~:·
.
•.
··-

7 p .m.
Consignments taken from 1oto 6 day
1
of sale. New and Used Merchand se.

Consignment Sale every Friday

~R~:.::..•R.;.! ~~~:

34

'

Rt. 35I GaII •lpO1•IS, Ohl 0

PUBLIC AUCTION

For Solo: llolllit Homo, t2x65
Prloo: ta,IOO. 1144'1W181.

'

BOGGS AUCTION SERVICE

~~
_._ _.,,V"'-.
' boll'2.~~~~~
lolnl..;_
3044·,-•

2-... oponmonto In
2
Pomttoy
lllddlopott,
bMha. WID~ncl
h: olmpe,
equipped
kltch1n1, 1 112 GlriQt. Aeferen-

-::================~~ Ono
bodroom
..nt no
In
Pomttoy,
po~lollyoport
tumlohld,

lloploCirovoRooa,
~~;;,;.;.;.;.;.;.;;;____
I"

32

-

011 and

September 27, 1992

September 27, 19

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

8

46

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Furnished

Rooms
Roome lor rent
• week or monlh.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallla Hot1l.
&amp;lol-440-iSIO,
Sl11plng
roomo with cooking.
AI., traller epace. All hook..upe.
Coil oftor 2:00 p.m., 304-77315151• lluon WV.

ESTATE AUCTION

S.cond

•'

W1ntld To Rent: Motor Home

For W••kend Trlp To South

BondJ.f'! Nov 13-15. Call Pol 614·

+IHMI,

49

Ing llncll tor ltiH, call 304.a63·
1073, 81m-5pm, WMkdays only.

Merchandise
51

Household
Goods

1Si0 Relrfg•retor, Sld1xSide,

Gontrol Eloclric, 23.7 Cu. Fll No
Frost, let Maker, Almond, V nyl.

114-388-8261, 814-3811-9507.
4 pc !living room oullt, good
concl, $80, 304~75-2583 or 875·
1024.
8112 Carpet, $60; Mollohan Fur·

nltur•, 614...,...7444.

Slut Solo/Choir, "tWin Bod, Mil·

tr~~u,

Sm.U CMit Of Dr1wers

Sla: t-7, Boyo Cloll111, 614-367·
0404 After 5:3G p.m.

•
,o

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•
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·'

''
'

· O.E. Dryor, $7!1; 3G Inch Eloctrlc
Rongo $85i. O,E, Woohor1 $95;
Whl~pool waohar $85; 3o Inch
Eltc1ric Rongo SD5i, 30 Inch

Real Estate General

Almond Hinge, 8
Monthl Old, S175i Refrigerator
,• - • Almond, New llodtl, $295:
. ~ _ .. Retrlprllor Harvt1al Gold, Frost

EIICtric

•

:

•

wv

T~:~;t~~y S©R~lA-L££~5®

VINTON, OHIO.

PUBLIC
AUCtiON
SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 3, 1992 • 9:00 AM
LOCATED AT 2023 CHATHAM ST. IN GALLIPOliS, OHIO.
WATCH FOR SIGNS. MRS. WOLFE IS MOVING
AND WILL BE SELLING THE FOLLOWING:
ANTIQUES: V&lt;torian w~nut bed, Voclorian marl&gt;e lop dresser and
matching wash stand wtlh mim&gt;r, Clark Onl. 2 drawer spool cabins\
Birdeye maple wash stand, round oak table, very early loa c:ar1, ~I
mallcgany server w•ih desk, unusu~ VICtorian lable, super oar~ walnut
chesitumlegs, Martha Was!;ngton 59Wing chest, Queen Anne ceder
ches\ w~ul Vocman 1Dlier, nice oakV~ table, martie lop table,
Oriental la~e . early !ian lull chest with tum legs, childs wicker rocl&lt;er, doll

SATURDAY, 00. 3, 1992, 7 PM
ANTIQUE AUOION
PARTIAL LIST: Old tools, pictures ol George
Washington, Abraham Lincoln, lurn~ure , brass kettle, toys, glassware, knives, coins, silver dollars,
advertising tins. More Hems coming in before sale
time ..
AUCTIONEER; FINIS "IKE" ISAAC
Licensed &amp; Bonded
Ohio 13728
Phone: (614) 388·9370,
388-8880 (Isaac's Feed Store)
Available for houoehold, estate, farm, and
charhy auctions.
Not reaponelblelor accident• or loat hema.
Plenty of food will be aerved from our new
k~chen.

MODERN F~NITURE : Nice sola, ;&gt;a~orm rocket, Zanith 25"c:olor ccnsole TV, 3 n~ht stands, chast, G E. 18 cu. It relfijeretDr, ~~ ~an one
year old, T"'''''Jl gas rango.
GLASSWARE: Wash bowl and ~Ichor sot,severol pieces ~nkand green
deplession, g ~ lmko~. honoy dish wth lion heads, 10 American
Fooma go~ets . several ~tellers, He~ ~-. Orion~ vases, Blue
Spode vase, 5pc. Roseville ~I vase and othert, Cranbeny glass, Hull An
vase,beautiful carnii'ID glass, oil lamp,Femon lamp cranbeny, ;&gt;us much
more g~sware.
SMALL ANTIQUES: Several bsque small bet7f dolo, vel'/ old Martha
Washington doll, miniature Orion~ doll, small china doll. 3 sloneware
~tchers one will\ hunting scene, stone jars, 3 cruets, granileware,lJince
jal, COSIJme jewell'f, post cards, Vintage chi~ dress, t 7 beautiiul quills,
Eight Day long manU aclock, Sissons banJO cloc~ S~sons steeP. cloc~
oak k~chen clock with lion embossed, beaulilul prints and p&lt;ttre karnes,
CMI war printCCP'I' 1900 New Yof1&lt; Fredrk:k Miun &amp;Walker Warnerprills,
njlroad larltern rod gk&gt;be, qurll &amp; cookbooks, several beaded pocket
books, washboard,3 early hickDI'f baskels, doillls,3aochetbedspreads,
16 alerting comholders, slerlrng HaiWare and olher piocos , T~er tobacco
tin, "'floe grinder, laney noor lamp, Reveroware, pots and pens, 3 Sanll
Claus lights, snowman and house Chrislmas l~ h ts, sewing machine,
linens, - •. blankeis, rag rugs,several hooked rugs, fans, garden 11&gt;00,
stepladder,3.5 HP lawnmowar, Irk&amp; now, plus much more.
Aur/ONEER NOTE: fhJt /1 tn II dey 111cllon lheu'r hundred• of
p/I&lt;H o/QIIIIWIII not Mortd. Bring 1m chalrlnd tptndtht doy.

HUTCHINSON AUaiON INC.
NEW MERCHANDISE AUCTION
SATURDAY, OOOBER 3RD AT 2:00 p.m.
located 11 mile• weat of Athena. Exit 50 I 32
well onto 50 - t towanlo McArthur. Auction 11
• qu•rter of • mile on the left.
For the first time ever we will be auctioning a truck
load of new merchandise retailing up to one hundred
and fifty thousand dollars. Items to be offered are:
new 1urn~ure, electronics, tools, bisque figurines , gift
Hems, and many hms not advertised,
Terma: Cash or check whh poohlve ID. Not
reaponaible lor looa or accidento. Food
available.
Auctioneer Mark Hutchlnaon
614-698·6706
llcenlld •nd Bonded In Ohio
AISoc. FrankHutchlnaon 614-592·4349

Sunday

.\

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

cribs, child's chairs and more.

PARTIAL USTING: 2 pc. living room suHes, oak
curio, cabinet with glass doors, oak pie safe,
dining table and chairs, recliners, awfvel rockers, bedroom suites, bicycles, tricycle, dolls, aU
types of chalks, all types of toys, touch lalllls,
other types of lalllls, all types of bisques, tools,
jewelry, all types of ceramics, pHcher and bowls,
washstands, china dolls, churns, pillows,
Christmas decorations, 12 gauge Remington
870 pump, 25 auto. Raven pistol, pictures, picture frames, pellet guns, and much, much more.
Eata
Caah
Poolllve I.D.
MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER
Lie. 3516
614-245·5152
Lie. and Bonded In State of Ohio
TRUCKLOAD OF NEW MERCHANDISE
$50.00 Door Prize
Not Reaponalble for Accldenta or lo81 of
Property.

PHON.E (304) 375-4997 • (304) 375-5815

For Lease
Humoro

Prime South••et•rrl Ohlo hunt-

ALL IIEW MERCHAIDISE
SOMETHIIIG FOR EYEIYOIIE
DOOR PRIZE $50.00

(548)

I

47 Wanted to Rent

FRIDAY, OOOBER 2, 1992
AT 7:00P.M.

KATHY AND MIKE YOSHEL

'

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'

CDISftiAIIUC7101

AUCFIONEEIS:

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

apace,

Trailer lots lor tint In Racine

From Gallipolis, take At. 141, turn
onto At. 775, tum right onto Pebrlot·~
Road. Watch for signs, .

ADMINISTRATOR OF ESTATE: JEAN KARSCHNIK

office

• . 814-1112•5858.

•

dluation

floor

1000+ eq. ft.1 center ot Pomeroy

114-H;Z-66n.

~

RAVENSWOOD, WV
8MILES FROM POINT PLEASANT, WV
"ANTIQUE FURNITURE"
Beautiful round oak table with 31eafs, 6 oak T-back chairs
with leather oeall, petite oak sideboard, - 6'" feet tall, oak
buffel. oak lbraty tablo, Viclorian alyle cnuer, oak cnsser.
oak sowing rocker, wic:f&lt;er rocker, very ornate pump organ.
claw and bal footed orvan stool, oek roekert , high chairs,
two-&lt;hwer spool cabinet. oak dresser base, four (4) bow
back chairs, floor lamp, Scheirich kitchen cabine~ two (2)
oval bubble glass plciure frames, ona-drawer night stand,
drop leaf klichan table, Ho-Bo an rocker end tables, press
back chain, 4 piece 1930's bedroom suite, treddle sewing
machine, earty worllllbles, Ingraham oak wall clock.
"MODERN I HOUSEHOLD"
3 piece bedroom suite, Maytag wringer washer, 2 piooo
living ·room suite, recliner, curly maple wardrobe, hide-abed, Frigidaire refrigerator, Zanilh black and while TV, book
shelves, pols end pans, glassware.
"TOOLS I COLLEC11BLES"
Pi &lt;:lure hmes, cast iron skillets, Depression glass, pottery.
oi lamps, gran~e waro, Murray lawn mower, rakes, shovels,
lawn cart, wheelbarrow, old campaign buttons.
TERMS: Cash or Check witll proper 1.0. Not Responsible
For Loss Or Accidents. Announcements Day Of Sale Takes
Precedence Over Any Printed Material.

8

. 114---2187

·,

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1992
10:00 A.M:

(982)

.

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' !Pu.b[lc.

Space for Rent

Loi•J_!85i home rentals, $235 ;

•

WE HAVE BEEN COMMISSIONED TO SELL THE
ESTATE OF RUBY G. AKE OF FLATROCK, WV,
ON STATE ROUTE 2, 24 MILES SOUTH OF

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis; OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Counlry Mo~lt Hom• P•rk, Rt.
33N., under new n\lnagtmant.

bod.

~~'i=rlllt.::J=
::~ ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE 5-m:~~ti:~.~~

Ylllfnbmtk.

PleaS~~nt, wv

WOlD
GAME

- - - - - - - Edit ed by CLAY R. POLlAN

Q Rearrange

the 6 sc rambled
words below to make 6

simp le words. Pri nt letters of
eac h in its li ne of squores.

I
I
I IHLENK I
I
I
C!TEEM

ARAGGE

~I

-rl--rN':"'T-r-0-.0
_N-.--!1
6

I've been watching the
trends in the work force very
'---'----''---'----'"---'---' carefully. Now I'm beginning to
wonder what will happen when
1-....,.T__,Ur:-R'""N=-E.--S-r--1 the trend toward longer educa7 le 1 1
lion meets the trend loward
.___.1
__ ....1
. _..__--'·'--....·__, early ----------.

1I I I

I

I

LECCI T

I 1I

I I

I
I

q .n
Complere !he chuckle quoted
by Idling in the miss ing word s
_ you develop lrom slep No. 3 belnw.

1--r::-T-T."-::-II- -1
9

_

.

_

j0

.

.

•

C)

11111111111

L

: . · • Froo J150; Color T.V. Consolo

• '. • $150j MIYIIQ Wringer Washer
.; ... ~ Square Tub $150; R•frlgerator

' : : SlduSidt Almond, Llko Now,
' • Woltr a 1.. Olsponoor $350;
' , · Skaggs Aoalllncn, 75 t...,Yine

' . · , SlrOOti, Ootlii&gt;olio. 114"'46-7398,

: · · 1~81-3481, Open 6 To 6
,
lloncloy Thru Fridoy, Till 2

Soturdoy,
, 0000 USED
~

APPLIANCES

AUCTION CONDUCTED Bf

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON ...
LUNCH

MASON, WV

773·5785
OWNER: MARGARET WOLFE

TERMS: Cuh or Check with 10. Out of olale buyoromuot I
hove a current bank letter ol credit. No E•cepllonol

I

Not Responsible tor accident! or loss ot property

W.lharal. dry1r1, refrlg•ralors,
rangn. :.kagg~~ Appll1nces , 76

VIM St10111,Coll814-446-7398, 1·

800"'111-34 ...

Real Estate General

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Complete

furnishing s.

horN

Houra: Mon-911, 8-5. 614-4460322. 3 mlln out Buleville Ad.
FrH Delivery.

llaJIIg l'loohlr I Oryor While

ARSTIII
Locatod in 1 quia! family orionted
noiltJborhood, thio 3 t..droom homo ofters a k&gt;t
without aaking for a lot Large kitchan/lamily
room a,.a with Clllhodral ceiling end akylilt\ta,
living room, 2 fu! batlla, ICRNII1ecf In porch,
atlachod garage. Large lot City IIChools.
$59,900,
1200

$250 For Set Other Washers &amp;
Dryoro JIOO I Up. Now Pans In
Stock. C1tl Washtr &amp; Oryar

SPRING VAU£Y AREA in this spaciou1
lmmactJiate ranch wilh 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
family and dining room on level lot. Also large
deck. You neod to -lhis one. 14114

NEW UST1NG -On Durgan Rd. is lhis 3 bod·
room metal sided ranch with 2 baths, laundry,
living nn., dining area, 2 car attached garagt.
Can be sold witll t acre m~ or 5 acras
and
bam. Call today tor mora information.
1477

mn

CIESHIRE VILLAGE Is lhls well
usod car bulinell on At 7, witll two
garoga and office. A mobllo home tllat hal
bodroomo, 1 bath, iving nn., dining nn. and
kitchen. Asking $99,500. Wilhout mobile home
$89,500,
1473
OWNER WAHTS SOLD - This well built brick
homo with 2 bedrooms, t balh, laundry room,
living and dning room, kitchen, 1 ear attached
garage. Larvo walk-in attic nice patio and Lshapod front porch and more. Reduced to
$49,900,
1382
OWNER DESPERATE AND ANXIOUS
TO SELL tills 3 bedroom rench homel Naldo
a IIHia sprucing up. Nice 1lzld lot 72'xt50',
Altachod t car earpo~. MAKE OWNER AND
OFFER TODAYI Reduced to S80,i00. 1452.

QUAUTY HOME - Owner being lransfomKI
out of area. 5 BR, 3 balht, in-ground 20X40
pool. Beautifully dacoralod. Call now. Aoduced
to $128,000.
1454
CLOSE INI Enjoy a view of lho rivor from the
groat room of lhislovoly a yur old, 3 bedroom,
3 bath home with family room end finiofted
basemen~ nine clooato, 2 ara walk-in. Tax !rea
for niM years. Too many arnenitla1 to mention
hel8. Call for mora infonnation. Asking 80's,
1475
RELISTEDI PRICE REDUCE FOR A QUICK
SALE Ill - Ustod at $$165,000.00. One of the
best tanms and modem country homos in the
araa. Four bedrooms, 2 baths, powder room,
largo walk in cloNI end new 22'x28' family
100m. all cedar wood with balcony and mora,
Largo modem bam witll ~lo and loeding equipmont 115ocras rich bottom lond endluah paatura and good fencu Large tobiiCCO Dale can
bo purchaood with or without. Cerna and the cropa. Mak8 uo an one~
1472

RUSSEL D. WOOD
Owner/Broker
Eve.446-4618

TAMMIE DeWrrT
SillS Agent

Eve: 441-1514

CHESHIRE VILLAGE- is whara you wiH find
this spiiCiouo, older two alory homo with 3 bodrooms, t Y, bath, family room, dining room ,
baautiful stafrcaN, nice level yard and mora.
Only $49,500. Callloday lor more Info. 1467

CLOSE TO lOWN- 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, liv·
ing, dining, f1mlly rooms, natural gas heat,
central air. Aoking $74,900,
·
1424
NEW US11NGI STOPI THIS IS ITf - 22 acres, m~ . mini !ann. Has pond, bam and fencing
all raady for somo horses. lncludos 3 badroom
ranch home wilh 11\ balhs, dining room end
more. Allachod garega end a 32'x4B' detached
garage, storage building. PLUS 3 room and
bath apartment Ownon moving out of area,
Want aofd now!
147t

•
HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD ,;, il this 11\ Ito~
log home with basement, 3 bodrooml, 2:i
batll1, family room, living room, kitchen, loun·
dry ern. skylight, oatellitt oysttm, covar.d
porch, heat pump, cenlnlf air, t2'x12' building
ond much mora. Call for delalls.
M2S.
FARM ON LONG HOLLOW RD. - Thii
home hao 2 bodrooma, 2 batlla, living room,
dining room, kitchen, ocruned front porch,
heat pump, central alr, 40'x30' polo oftod. AI
this and mora on 107 acras 11111. Asking onlY
$55,500 and owner wifllinlllca down payment
What mora oould you ask lor.
M23,
•
NEW US11NG ON FRANK RD. - A p.ortill
bride ranch on 1.034 ac, 11111 wilh 3 bedrooms;
t 1\ balhs, living room, dining room and kitchen:
Ona car garage attached, Asking only $52,5007
"
.Call today, 1462

''

PIIYI St., Gllllpollt. New. Used
tumhure, hNIII'I, Western 6

Won booto, 814-·3159.

VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP·
PUANCES
&amp;14-445... 428
61+44tJ-3158
RENT·2-0WN
No Dopooll • GRANO OPENING
Nothing Proownld Or Uood,

•

CARTER
. Broker/Agent
Eve: 378-2184

YOUR
STARTED"
Settle Into lhis homey tllraa bedroom witll
foncod backyard, You'Y love the largo kitchen
and
i C07Y family room. Priced at

INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY
Over $1 ,200 par month income is pmducod
from lhis five un~ apartment building. Good
location in town. Good rvnlal history. Very nice
I with accesslo back alley. $59,900. 12U

'

NEW USTING, SPRING AVE, Ia thlo 4"
bedroom, t batll, wood and brick ,.nch wilh'"
tamily room, dining room, den, full baaament,.
fireplace, and gas hot water hut, butla~~;
pantry, tncl?sod front porch, beoutiful bow·
Window wlwindow - t and much more. On~/
$~2 , 000. CaY today, It won't last long at tlla
pnce.
1445 .

POMEROY - CHECK OUT THIS SPECTACULAR AFRAME HOMEI - Foalu,.s tO rooms, 5 bedrooms, 2
belhs, deck, patio, ti,.pl ..., added lnoulation, appioncet,
2 ear garage, driveway on a pavod atroet with 2.725 acre
in a vety nice noighborhoodl An aboolute unique end
"must BH' homol ASKING $95,000.

•
•

52 Sporting Goods
lrnm llouoor Rlllo llodol 98
S375; Browning PBS 2001.
Buck Spoclol $350; Gun Coblnll
$100. &amp;14-446-7357.
Rtmlngton SOL 100 &amp; MM Bull
Borrol, Still In Bor, $350. 614·

••

53

•
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•

Antiques

=au~y~or
~l~ti~I.~R~Iv~or~IM~An=l~lq~uo~~

1

1124 E. Ma in StrHI, on Rt. 12q,

:

1.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00

Pomwoy. Houn: M,T.W. 10:00

room , basement haa rae. room

' ' : ::110~gol~lull~ol::'l.::711=.-=3t)4.195.,'J:::-::=:::1101=.
· II" Color

with

Sompo T.V. 114-44e-

1tf01,

firaplaco, in :!Fund pooL 2 car garoga.
more amonil11o. Aoduced to a low price
$139,500.
1413

2 AliT 1418 Prlnlwo I 1
llonftO&lt;, Lllco New 0.8,0 . 114~21.

~ llocll -

.,.....

MIH With Powor

Un. ti,OOO. 114471o2724, After

J f1lol

utlllllo dish wipolo,
roollver
- 114-'1-11,
"'
11tat ottor;
11241101pOOoftor

MARTHA L SMITH
Salt• Agent
Eve. 379-2651

~·

8oby lllhllil!._~i:':'uro pol

-

CYNTHIA J. DRONQOWSKI CHERYL L. LEMLEY
Salta Agent
Meigs Co. Agent
Eve.24Hit7
Evt. 742-3171

,..., ..... ......
I

ng ....
•••tnt
makwt,
p!OM.: ·-W41S,
~

!,
•

Wooltburnor

Ut11o Jolin
h , All lniulllld
lolotor,I*:IINDII.

Plpo

Oak shaded lot
UNIQUE STARTER HOME
Not your averega tun of lho mill starlor home.·
Thio octagonll ohaped horne offen a diffar.nt
ftoor plan. 3 bedrooms, t bath (plumbing for
second in baNmont), ~l'ing room and family
room . Wooded lot Dead and street clooo to
town. Priced for tho budget minded at $44,900.
1234

2!58~869.

•

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CATHY A. WRAY
Salle Agent
Eve. 446-4255

SUNDAY IN THE COUNlRY
Every day'o a braak..,way ..,..,. kind of IHe In
ihis 3 bedroom ranch on 6Yt ICIIII, Call today
lor on
lo - Ho neat and clean
Interior
the outstanding kilc:han.
Priced
1508

Enr.

&gt;

'

''

,; Approx . ·' 24 ac,.l ·
beautiful two olory colonial home 0111rlookina
Pomeroy, Executive otyfa home ·
entry, family room wfflreplace, fonmol

PHnLIS L. MILLER
Salts Agent
Eve. 256-1136

1605

Air Condllk&gt;nor, Color
T.V.'o •tc. 114-258-1238.
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE, 62

'

'

GRANDE AREA - is
this 3 bedroom t balh ranch witlllulf beaernant
Including a flmlly room, patio doors opan to
,45 acre 11111 ol open aapce. Country typ.o living
juol minulllo away from village of Rio Grande
with an attractive price ol $52,500.
1411

' shed and 2 horse stalls. Call today
your cnienc:e Ia own you "mini Tara•. Priced
$74,9001
1601

Rtfrlgtrslo,., FN1ztra, Washar,

: • , to 8:0!1 p.m. lt4-Di2·252&amp;,

NEW UST1NG-

large scraanad in porch, sun patio, 2 car

REDUCED! REDUCED!
Owner moving oul of stal8. Anxious lo sell this
secluded home siluated on 4.223 acrao, mn,
wilh small pond, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living
room , family room , dning room ancf Iorge
kitchen, now add an above ground pool end 1
car
with shed. We have all this lor only

Dry~

•

PATRICK A. COCHRAN
Office Manager
Eve. 446 8856

J. MERRILL

Shoppo, 814-446-2i44,
PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uold
Houooftold tumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jtrricho Rd. Pt. PINoonl, WV,
coll304-4175·1450.

NEW USTING -CRAVING A
SOUTHERN ELEGANCE IN YOUR LIFE1
Thin you must oeo this home. Ba imprassed
as you stop into tile ovenlzed fonnal living
room and dining room wilh 2 firapiaces. Cart
family room, kiichen and balh. Upstairs you will
find 2-3 bedrooms, plus a largo bath wilh
whirlpool tub, Ample outdoor area fealunng

RACINE - Morning Star - DON'T LET THE
OPPORTUNITY TO OWN THIS NEWER 1% STORY
LOG HOME PASB YOU BYI ,. Homo t.atu,.o 4
bedrooms, electric heal pump, penna-payne windowo,
large front porch, loft room , lull baaernenl wilh 2 car
garage, utility &amp; shower, canlnlf air, al on approx. 5 acnta
of land. Very nicel Adeal such as lhis is herd Ill lind..don't
waitl $89,900.
NEW US11NG- CARPENTER- Mini lann on Carpantar
Hill Rd. foaturas 10+ ..,., wilh 2 bedroom 10155 mobile
home, Property includes dug well, septic, large bam.
garage and garden araa. Privata setting. $23,500.
NEW USTIHG- POIEROY -CONDOR ST., Alfonlablo
home or uoo as a r.ntal lnveolrnent property Include• two
lots wilh tram• 2 atory horne with 3 bod room a, bath ,
N,G.F.A.. heat Asking $8,500 .
NEW USTING - MIDDLEPORT - VERY CUTE - Ono
floor !ramo home with 2 bedroom s, full basement, ona car
garega, ponna-slone front, small front ond lide porchao.
$18,000.

DON'T SETTLE FOR A HOUSE JUST
10 UVE IN....
From the moment you step into tile larvo foyer
you can 'feel' your family Ul'ing in this classic.
Fonnllliving room, dnlng room, sunny kitchen ,
very "•able family room, 3 nlco bodroom s plus
2 lull batlla. Storage galora In the large al1ic, 1 '
car garage, fuM bastrnanl If thah not onoogh,
in town convenienea.
1609
COUNTRY PURE I SIMPLE
lntrodrca your childr.n to the joys of oounlry
life and outdoor fun in this 3 year old 3
bedroom, t :.1 balh home on 4 acras, mil. You'll
appn&gt;CIIte the 2 car attachod garage and lull
basement A lot of house tor $49,500. Also
avaUabla for rant for $375.00. Deposit and
rater.nce raquir.d.
1501
VERY PRiVATE 6 WOODEOt - Perfect
sottln~ to anloy thit ntwly constructed log
home. Large front porch Ill enjoy cool oummer
breazoo; at1ractiva woodbumer end hurth to
wonm your ooul on tllota cold winlllr nigflll,
Approx. 2,300 oq, h. of comfortable living
opaca Including 3 bodroomo (room for 4th),
very atllactive coun~, living room with
plna ooiing, newly fin
family room end 21\
botllo. Largo 2 car garega wilh overhaad
atoraga. Approx. 5 years old. M9.800. 1211

HENRY E. CLELANO......,_,_,..........,.,_........IMI2.C1t1
TRACY BRINAQER......................- .................f!41o2A31

.

TRUSSELL.......................-~..................,MI-2110
'

kitchen, living room. Priced to sell al $49,900.

1205
YOU'LL BE AMAZED at what you can buy for
$49,000. Thio 3 bedroom , 2 balh ..nch homo
features a combination kllchen/1amily room
wilh fireplace, 2 car garage, above-ground
poo, cenlnlf alr and ca,.-free aluminum oiding.
Sit light and you'l miu it
t501

120 ACRES, , .This could ba an i xcellant
place to hunt, fish or just ralax . You have a
largo stocked pond, paolura, timber and 3
bedroom living lodge. Older bam, hull t-o
and mo,.. Loeatod on Lew Jones Road. Cll
for price. 1700

SUPERB CONDITION - Beautiful ranch in
immaculate condition. Overlooking lho river,
this 2700 oq. ft. plu a home offero plenty of
room for tllo family. Faaturvs include very nice
oat-in kitchen, large family room plus roc .
room, 2 fireplacao, beautiful living room. Also
hal inground pool, large patio araa. Large 1
acre /ot Call for an appointment lodayl
$134,900.
1204
HIGHWAY EXPOSURE - Need a piece of
ground with good At 35 exposure and ac11s?
Hera's 14.2 acras, m/1, right along U. S. 35 .
Good access to tho highway. Good road
frontage also (township). Producing gas well
on proparty.
1216

80 ACRE FARM -Guy., Townahlp - Wolo
Run Road and SL RL 218 - Beautiful hornt
silo , 16-tB acres tillablo, 65 acru fenced .
Appro1. 2,000 lbs, tobacco ba se. Mineral
• rights. Some timber. Outalanding bam for
tobacco, cattte, horNs, some bay• with
concrate. Concrale drive through. Good waltr
supplyl 580,000.
ts17

QUIET COUNTRY UYING - Movo into the
country and enjoy tllio beautiful little Nt up, A
larvo 2 aCIII lol witll plenty of good ftat ground
for animals, 3 bodroom ramodelod home, larvo
building with 3 high overhead doors, plus
traclor and inplernenls. All lor only $50,000.
1201
GETAWAY, HIDEAWAY! - Hera's an out of the
way 32 acl81 of ground. APprox. 8 acres
tillable, balance paotura end woodland. Utility
pole, soptic oystam and dug well on proparty.
Bam. lnexpenliva property, Perfect tor mobife
home sot up, 519,500.
1212

HAPPINESS BY THE ROOMFUL. . .Completely oatisfying 4-5 bedroom, 2 bath bl-ltvel
with mlintonance free vinyl siding. Larvolivfng
room and dining room, hugo lamiy room wltli
pool table , comfol!ablt kitchen with wooden
dade to enjoy your summer meals on. Nioo a
lot in great neighborhood b rliN cllldrln ln.
Now odd a t car ga,.ge and I"'Ve cloaeto
throughout. Everything your family could WIIUIL
$77,500,
1104
VALUE • THE MOST SPACE FOR YOUR
MONEY - And tlle,.•a jult no cornp.orioon to
lhlo. , .3 bodroomo, 1 balh, larv elivlng room,
den, Iorge family room or dining room, 20X40
inqround pool, largo barn and oovoral
burldinga, II thio plua 6.1110 acrea, 11111. Reactt
tor you to movo inb lor only $62,000. OIIIU.t
phone nowl
M17

REAL FS Il\IE 1l'C

NEW US11NG - MIDDLEPORT - VERY ROOMY - 2
otory homo wilh 3 bodroomo, anclooad front tunroom,
N.G.F,A. hea~ include• • 24x24 garage (ih roomy lao),
all for only $27,000.
FALL IS HEREI PERFECT WEATHER FOR VIEWING
YOUR NEW HOMEI COME IN lODAY, PICK OUT THE
ONE YOU WANT, TAKE A LOOK, THEN PACK AND
MOE INI HOME SWEET HOME COURTESY OF
CLELAND REALTYI

to town location. Roomy

bi-lavel home. Family room started in lower
level (not much 1o finish), 3 bedrooms, eat-in

DON'T BE LATEII
Call now for an appointment on this YIJY
attractive 2 story colonial in Spring Valley.
Perloct family homo in a great noilt\borhood,
This home boasts 4 bedrooms, 2:0 balhs, largo
tamily room, i ving room , dining room, eat~n
kitchen witll TV room off of ~- Plenty o1
slomge. Patio and deck in back for outdoor
fun. Prit&lt;ld to sell at $87,500.
1213

446?£44

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER • 446·9555
Loretta McDade - 446-n29
Ctrolyn Wesch- 441·1007

B. J. Hairston -

446~240

Sonny Games- 446-2707

�I

' -,

September 27, 1992

1992 '

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

12 Trucks for Sale
72 TrUcks for Sale

72 Trucks fOr Sale
· ~·

·.com..-

1584 Computor
·•fW/prlntar, Sanyo color monhor,
•:Jo(l: ol gam• and programs,
•;ptl*, 5 1/4 ciiCI and .tlnd ror
:;f400' « beat oHer, 114·742·2601

11111 Chov. P.U. $1,215; 1189 11110 (Ioiii Fonlbpii;Xk'~f· ~~~
'
Nlaaan P.U. $3.415· 1tl1t Ford white, club II • ..
owlrlg pkg, AJC. auto ovtrdrivt,
P.U. 12,895; 1il7 Toyolo P.U. 1..,.
,..,., on tho goodiH a

Z block - o n i o n - 1
molo; , - · IWI&lt;i. Old, i'uil

$2,515; 1N5 Chi~ S.10 Blazer
$2,HII; 1187 Dodge Caravan

blooclod. no poporo, $75oa., 114112·7013,-y.
AKC pupploo, PCII Bolly Plgo,

• on•lpm.

$3,111i,1885 Ply. Voyogor $2,995;
1987 •ord Clrgo Von $2,695;
1911 Chov 314 Ton P.U. $2,995;
198111UlU 414 P.U. $2.111; 19lltl
Fotd Bronco II $3,295; 1984
JNp Wogonoof. 12,111; 1981

:,Evana Motora, 1530 Elstam
. lYinuo,_ Golllpolll, Cl011out
..Prlcel On Romolnlna Hllllboro

Wllh

bfis, llrda. Puppy PaJace, 114·

441-41404.

AKC roglolorod Cocbf Spaniol
··ll•r TruckHd• In Slock I 112
•:fl. J!to11 Prtc:o: $715, Now: $595, Lumbor: - - . • Plonod, puD!IIot: &amp; wllo old, wormed &amp;
• 1Z 1'1. Rog: $HI, Now: $1'15. lloplt, Poplar, Wild Cherry, oholo, $121. 3tJ4.175.fl7)'8.
Btubolrd, c.tna, Door Jams,

Prlc11 lnC!udo Light KH1 &amp;
:'.. "446.fl512.
-•nock
Hitch. l'hono: 614· Elc. Aloo, 15 Inch l'lonor, 24 Fl.
Flatbod, 3 Axlo Troll«, 61+446~ ~==7=~~~~~~
~
.- il'lnwood
For loll.!..All Oak, ln-

--d

8038.
Moclntolh SE, 4 MB o f _ ,,
..~otlon: 114-361-rol'l.
80 liB hold d~vo, koyboord,
::i'
IIOWOOd,
hardwood, mouoo, $100. 3tJ4.175.3843.
.. lilck-up or dollv•"!!r 114-192·
1 nc1 1 kll
bokod
• $520 or 614-992-o422 1H1r ... '·1
.. roo 1
;:s:oopm.
enameland gaiY. 304-3 -2001 1
31Z-1842..
~Jor Sal• Slzt madlum ladlu
·twlnler coat, denim wl leather Namt bl'lnd lldl• clothing,
"' trim, tlannelllnlng, like new, .... tlzt 2044. Slacke. blouMI,
~ng $tOO, paid $150; 1110 misc. ,........ Itt. 614-192·~6.
-l'adloo clolhlng; coli 614-992·
4151, Npm ot 614-941-22114 o~

"J2

........pm.

AKC Roglltorod Moll a..glo, 4
Monthl Old, Tri-Color, $25, 114-

441-7'130.

Doa Training I Yoaro El·
perlence, ~~ You To Tr1ln
Your Pit. 6

Drogonwyncl Cottory: CFA Por·
slant • Slameae Klntna. 814446 3844 After 7:00p.m.

Fish T1nk. 2413 Jatkson Ave.
Polnl Plalunl, 304--875-2083.

lull llno Tropical llohl blnlo,

small animals and auppl 1&amp;.

Full blooclod blk &amp; whlto molo
Chlhuohuo, 2 yro old, good with
chlldrtn, $30. 304.fl75-2314.
Happy Jack Gtrmoxldl: Advan·

Labrador Rllrllverl, Chocol•t1,

AKC, $275; Fomolo Mlnlat..o
Sclvlouzor AKC z YNro $175;
Bolton Torrlorol $125 Up;
Chlhuohuo llolo AKC $150;
Cockm AKC $75 Up. 614-3720232.
Young Turk"YY &amp; Gul_,:
lloko, Groot Watch Dog• • · Ell
Laul614-3711.:!513.

57

Musical
Instruments

GemelnMrdt Flute, E1c1111nl

Condltlan, $285. 114-388-81'14.
Kowol Plana, Vorl Good Ccndl·
tlon, $1,500. 614-&gt;M1-00Z1.
Promloro Snoro Drum, ColO &amp;
Stond1 Polfocl Condltlanl $190.
14-44o-ZIT5.

1111 Honda Accord LX, 4 Door,
Auto, loodod Low 111111, Now
TlrM And iloHory, Elcollont
Candltlonll14-446-2301.
11181 Pontile lannovlllo LE 4dr.
Sldln, Mke ..w, rtiW
all
aptlono, 30$ V.fl, Ul15; 114-112·

74

ana.

1188 Flroblrd T-Top, V.fl, Air, PS1
PB, AIIIFM Cooootto, Tlntoa
Wlndowo.$5,300 Boot offor. 614441-0365.

Hond• t25 Dirt Bike $17Q, 614--

3111.:1853.
1987 Oldl Dono 88, VInyl Top

LHdlcll Elctlllnl Condlllonf
614-448-4225, Aft1r Sp.m.

1187 Pontiac Bonnevllll, $3,195i
1181 Elgl1 Summit $3,415i 1988

Real Estate General

FOR SALE: 4bdrm., 2Y2 bath,

newer home in Pomeroy. Beautiful
river view! 992-6723.
Real Estate General

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

D. C. •tal Slits, IIC.
Cannelbu~.

Livestock

Now Fro,. Alklnmont. Moko Of·
for, 814-245-1224 Ahor I P.M.

2 Togg1nburg W.thtrw $40 Each
Or $1CJ For Both. 114-258-1429.

1e88 Nl111n Stanu GXE, 4cyl,

63

1\lol In!., Sop., Olctllont condl·
Big Holotoln oprln11ing hollorl, tlon, ~0; 814-1112·2615.
;.c;,d on IMpectron, &amp;14-848- 108t lroc·Z, V.a, air, AU-FU cas·
Roglsrorod

Package Deals. Save

of Dollars.
Local Sales Representative 56

Pels lor Sale
OONNACRISENBERY 1 1 - - - - - - - 64

~

S. Sl Rl. 7
.
633

Fuii·Bioodid

Hay &amp; Grain

Groom ond Supply ShopoPor

~~~~~~~H~:::~1G~roa~m~ln~g.~AI~I
~br~ood~1~,~~~~~~lo1;·_1 304-615-3!110.
Hoy lor
ICJlllrt bollll2. a
Wobb. Coli 614-446-0231.
llml Pet Food Otlltr. Jull1

Real Estate General

S2.50. Round ~111 $20. e1ch.
Mil,

uU,
tiH,
W/DVIrdriYI,

cruise,
51,000

aulo
mllll,

15 512,100. Anor 5:ooPM 304-862·
31111.
7Z Oldl, 2dr., 350 Rocklr 4-bor·

Uonlh LlmouiJn Bull. Ragl•
larlld Pure Bred 18 Month
Umcusln Htiflr Sail. 64·256·
, t87.

Hundreds, even Thooisancls IIiz;is~:i\

1

1187 T1mpo GL 4 Door, 2.3
Utr, C ~lndor, k~gh Output, 5
IPHd, P P\!L PS, PD, Cruise,
Alr, nn, A
M CUitlll, Ntw
T101t.Up, Now Tiro Rodo And

Nl, eutomauc. motor and .
tr'ln1ml11lon In greel st'11pe,
$45~; 814-ei2~12.

11 c dill El Do do look• and
1
runa likl new, $-..u:
814·992-

oc 2:00,'!::=
2323I boforo
ohor 5:30.

Real Estate General

MIDDLEPORT - If you want privacy near town 'Mth a
great view, lhtn wo have lie pfaca for you. On this 6.77
acres you can buy your d111am home. Thero io wator &amp;
aloctnc available.
$17,5111
RUTLAND- Depot StrHt- 130' dHp maku a hugo,
beaut~ul yard. Alto very neat 3 bodroom homo with vinyl
siding, naw 'Oindows &amp; very oconomical heating. $32,500
POMEROY - Eul SeCond Straol -.Dead ond slraot
You'll nHd lo IH to oppreciata thil 2-3 bodroom, 111
bath, 2 otory homo. lt'o walking cblanca to llo111o but nol
right in !own. Could bo uHd lor business. $21,000
FtATWOOOS ROAD - Appro1imaillly 411 ocra1 with a
great laying building Wi. TPC watar ovailllblo &amp; 111ctric
available. Almool 1111dy to go, juot noodt you. $12,000

N. 614-441.fl86.1.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

POMEROY- Uncoln llllghtl- Cut. at 1 button,noat
as a pin cllscriboo thlo 2 bodroom homo with equipped
kitchen, carport &amp; part ba"""'ont Has floored ottic &amp;
50x288fol.
$20,000

GETAWAY:~~~~~~~~~
ment, approx. 7 milts from Gallipolis. lcllal !_ocailon.

Excellont condition, ove~ooks Blue Lake and Raeeoon
Crook, 23 ft. travel troller, suncllcl&lt;, rulul water, 11ptic
oystom, and olectrlc liohing, boaling, hunting or just
llllaxing.
1584
VACANT LOT 121100 OF AN ACRE-OWNER
FINANCING. G111at placo to, build a new homo (a Dream
Homo) or place a trallor on is lot Tho Rural Wlllr
Sysllm and Elecbic Sorvico Is available at 111e properly.
270 feel frontage along Eno·Vinton Road.
,.ee
BUSINESS OFFICES I SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNlOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

LEADINGHAM REAL ESJATE

ADDISON - Honeysuckle Rood - Could bo uHd for
111nlal or a nice llllrtor home. Two bodrooms, 1 bath, now
oeplic and now wirirg. •
$24,500
SYRACUSE _.College Road- MECHANIC'S SPECIAL
- Two bay ga111go with wol1&lt;ing outdoor hoiot, wired for
air comp,.uor and walcllro. Lois of shelves, cobirola lor
slorage &amp; parking aroa.
$11,000

B1

Home
Improvements

Cufllo Homo l m - o :
JET
Yoaro Eoporlonce On Older • Aonllon Moton, lepolrod. Ntw
Nowor Homot. Room Addltlono, • ....- 11101010 In otock, RON
EVANS, .IACKSOH, OH. 1.ICJO.

~=~t"t_F~ as-.

1111111•1 R o ' - No Job
House and tralllr ,.PIIr, alectrf. Too Big Or Smolll 114-31"1-0511.

011, plumbing, hAling, Clr·
ptmlry1 ptlntlng, lnaldt and oul;
614-992·5851.

Davia SNlnt lllthlne And
Vacuum a. ...u Repair, FrH

114--237-G481, day

or

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

nl~.

-·~
~ -------

Anldlnlllll

wiring,

ANSWERS TO
SCRAM-LETS
EMETIC
KENNEL
GARAGE
NOTION
UNREST
CELTIC
RETIREMENT

304.fi7$-11M.

85 General Hauling

I've been watching the trends in
the work force very carefully. Now
I'm beginning to wonder what will
happen when the trend toward longer
education meets the trend toward
early RETIREMENT.

WI

Do

Hauling

Anytime,

Anyfll-, No Job Too Big or

Too UttiL BaHIHnt Cl11nlng,

Gonorol Work, Any Kind! 8143711.zz71 Anytlmo.

87

Upholstery

Mftny'o Upholotorlng oarvlclng triCO&lt;Intr .,.. 21 1..... Tho
blill In tumltul'l uphollltrlng.
CaM 304-675-4154 for fr• ....
tlmotn.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

.-..

Realty
446~3636

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
11' Ebca boot, lnboord llon:ruoo
305, $4000, caiii14-112~7S'Jit.
1188 Golo!cy 11 112' Now 140 HP
-110, WI Trollw A ~~ Uko

ANY HOUR

Boat

lo At Golllpollo - Club.
SEASOHAL CLOSE .QUT
850 SX Kowllokl Jot Ski
- S50 Ovor lrwolco
11110 150 TS -\lood
Slit Prtc:id
Hamtnon Wotor Sporto

RESIDENTIAL.COMM.IlRCLA.L

FARMS

INVESI"MI!NT PROPERTIES
SALES • APPRAISALS
IWLOCATION

..~j}r'

H6 - 3636

OFFICE: 25 LOCDST ST.
GiiLLIPOLIS, 0 ·15631

MARY P. FLOYD
REALTOR ·1·:6- 3383

614-888-711711

ILDI~N~G~SITE~~?!TH~IS~ONE

101
l!!lliiiiiiiiLOOiiiiiiiiKliiiNiiiG•FO·R·A·N·CE·BU
..
WOODEO - LOCATED IN
IS ON A BLACKTOP ROAD . HAS GAS, WATER AND
OHIO TOWNSHIP. SEVERAL
ELECTRIC AVAILABLE. CONVENIENT TO HOLZER
NICE BUILDING SITES.
HOSPITAL OVER AN ACRE. $9,000.

Real Estate General

EXPLORE TIE WOOOS - RELAX WITH A BOOK ON
THE SECOND STORY DECK OR TAKE A DIP IN THE
POOL THIS HOME WAS BUILT FOR COMFORTABLE
FAMILY UVING. 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, NICE OPEN
FAMILY ROOM, KITCHEN ARRANGEMENT,
BEAUTIFUL BRICK FIREPLACE IN UVING ROOM .
SECOND FLOOR STUDY OR HOBBY ROOM ,
ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP, 2 CAR GARAGE, 7 WOODED
ACRES, CONVENIENT LOCATION.
TWO YEAR OLO 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 SEU FAST AT $57,900.
WATCH THE BOATS ONE THE OHIO RIVER FROM
THE DECK OF THIS HOME . 3 BEDROOM HOME, 2
BATHS, FAMILY ROOM, KrTCHEN EQUIPPED WITH
RANGE AND REFRIGERATOR. VINYL SIDING .
PATIO/CARPORT ABOVE GROl,IND POOL. $52,000.

Real Estate GenBral

CJ/~
/F - . - -

CONVENIENT LOCATION ON STATE STREET IN
GALLIPOUS - WALK TO DOWNTOWN SHOPPING
CHURCH AND SCHOOL 3 BEDROOMS, 2 ST0RV
HOME HAS LARGE UVING ROOM AND DINING
ROOM . EAT-IN KITCHEN , BASEMENT. VERY
AFFORDABLE AT $35,000.
CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP - APPROX. 25 ACRES WITH
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOME. NICE COUNTRY
SETIING. $39,500.
RESIDENCE AND MOBILE HOME PARK- VERY NICE
4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNTRY HOME ON APPROX.
23 ACRES . BACK PORCHES, 2 CAR GARAGE. a
MOBILE HOME LOTS WITH MOBILE HOMES AND 5
MOBILE LOTS. ALL PRESENTLY RENTED
EXCELLENT LOCATION . CALL FOR COMPLETE
DETAILS.
CAMP AND ASH IN YOUR OWN BACKYARDAND WHEN YOU ARE TIRED OF ROUGHING IT,
WALK ACROSS THE PASTURE TO YOUR VERY
COMFORTABLE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH RANCH
HOME . FAMILY ROOM HAS FIREPLACE. NICE
KITCHEN, 2 CAR GARAGE . APPROX. 24 ACRES,
NEAR CITY.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

'9{ rl'md ~~~ PROFESSIONA~~:'!~:~J~~EN(£
EUNICE MEHM, REALTOR, 446-1897
RUTH BARR, REALTOR, 446-0722
DEBORAH SCITES, REALTOR, 44UII06
LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR, 44UII06
lllatAEI.IIUER. REAl.TOR, 44f.6606

AE$fDENTIAL ·INVESTMENTS. COMMERCIAL • FARMS

PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

Real Estate General
THIS SPACIOUS HOUSE SETS ON 4 aTY LOTI - 3
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, SUPER LARGE UVING ROOM
WITH FIREPLACE , FORMAL DINING, DEN. KITCHEN
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE, TRASH COMPACTOR AND
DISHWASHER, FULL BASEMENT, 15'X10' CONCRETE
BASKETBALL COURT, GAS FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR
COND., APPLE, . PLUM AND CHERRY TREES,
GARDEN AREA EXCELLENT BUY AT $52,000.

Canaday

lneurance..

114-888-llrl

oloct~clon.

r :;..•

31'11.
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
coli 114-11:1...17, DovJo.Clulckol

111 WlnttrS..,_ Froo
Hanrlnan Wllor Sporto

or commercial
IWVIce or repilrw.

Ridenour Elecirltll, WV000301,

==-~~- - .,. 4-~.~..l;.
..
.
·.5•1
l!

w-.

DON'T MISS THE BOAT
Cobia - o AIGivMwoy Prlcoo

ntW

llootor Uconood

.

tDI2 Hondo ZIOX .....
$3,200. firm, oftor 5:00 - -

New, 15,800. IM-t4

WOttl, INo •llmotoo, 30W75552t. WV I 020385•

UtiiMy Bldg Spl: 30'x40'11'
Pointed
Stool Sldl"11 &amp; Roofing,
Ron'l TV - · opoalollxlna
lnZ.nlth_.......,.
...... 1 ·15'd' Slldlno DOor, 1·3' Sor-........
ilo vlco Door, U11o Erectod. Iron
_ .- . _......
- wv
Noroo Bldgl. 1-«1~352·1045.

Pick-Up And ~~;22 -~~~ 11ogMo BIHmont WotorprooC:=~~R=~=d~,~~~~="~·___ 1n-

. =;;;;;-=

1ill1 KowoNkl
4 --·
Good
CondHianl~~
1,.,.251-4311.

Trlplo "A" Roollng • Romodol·
lng, docko, potehoiio, otc. Ouollty

t•.
Local rellnnc• tumisMd.
FrM ..Cimll... can colttct 1·

Real Estate General

1i87 KXIO Kaw. ·Runo Groll,
Elcollont CondHionl lf4.441.
2110 Aftw 5 P.ll.

Home
lmprovemenls

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondlllanol llotlmo guonn- -.a3111 Dl1lo ~46-2414.

hiii'MI1, "Hondl LIM oover, lat1
chrome, 304-171-4123.

HYSELL RUN ROAD -If a kilchon with lo11 ol cabinets
is what you nood, this homo is for you. ll has 3 bodrooms, a largo lcilc:hon and a largo living room. Comas
with 3/4oclll &amp; a pallo.
S:Zt.IOO
DOTTIE TURNE.R, Brokor..................................11i12·5692
BRENDA JEFFERS............................................992-3058
DARUNESTEWART...........................................992-6385

Real Estate General

Home
Improvements

B1

\IZ.f!SM.

Motorcycles

1111 Hondo ,,.. .toto now lin
bottory, ca, All:i!M rodlo,

·POMEROY- Thlt 3 bediOOm, f.s ofory homo oitllng on 2
lots -.ill make you a nice starter home or renlal . II has a
now lumaco &amp; irsa groal buy 11
$14,500

PS, outol, olr. Now Rongor LB

t-. $275. 304-6JH260,

•

a

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

1986 Dodgo Omnl. 51600. PB,

~:W.n~~o.:'t ~~~::.;

81

Home
Improvements

B1

Services

e-

Tkoo, ShorpiiiW

u,.,

1ur Audl 4,000 Ouatra, $4,300.
114-446-210~ 114-386-8504.
11187 Chryll•- Yorkor, 4 Cyt,
T,.bo, A~J. Cruloo, AMIAI
Rodlo. 114-i00-10H.

Auto Pans&amp;

76

Slit Prlcol on All Pondallrwr
Accessories
Bed u.... In Undor Roll
• ovor Roll llodolo Avolloblo, 4 1lumn lurbiM whNis, fits 112
1151 Elich. Evono llolon 1530 lon Ford or ,_p, 3211'100~:15
Elllor Avoriuo, Golllpollo, tlroo. 30WlS-2714 ot 175-1577.
Phono: l - 2 .
Tronamlalono Uood •
robuTn, otortlng ot lW;_ ~...
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
d~YO lllrtlng II 0111.00
11179 Bronco, 480 Auto, Uft KH, 114-24W617, 114-311-2263,
44 Inch Ground Hogo, Rongor
XLT Pockoat, Cruloo, Air, nn
Too llony llow Polio To Uot1
Moko 011.. or Troclo. 114-245munor IP.II.
11187 Chov. Allra V•~.!"Y good 79
campers&amp;
oondltlon, 114-MH....
Motor
Homes
11187 Chovralot Allro Von, 4.3 ....,,....,.,,.....;.....,.-.,.-...,...-F.Longlno, olr, PS, PB, now tlrM 111111 IICMrntolnMr truck compor,
ond whoolo, . - ; 114-JII2.z175. 9 vz ft, Mil contolnod, $1,2115.
1187 Food Ao-.r, XL. Locdod. :304:.:,:.fl7:.:5-,;;1731:,::_
. --::-::::---::::304.fllWZU.
1111 Wlldorr•u 8x21, A/C,
owning, 1 bodroom, $16,000. ln1887 Plymcuth Voylgor LE -tad, $11,000. firm. Fomlly
loodod, 11,000 lctuol lllloo. Prldo llolllit Home Pork Lot 28,
Elcolllnt CondHian, $7,300, Golllpolll FllfY, 304-675-2805.
O.B.O.I1+441-11158.
.
22 Ft. ~hmon, Fully Sol~
1981 Food Rongor XLT, 414, olr, Ccntolnod, Awning, AC, Mull
V.fl, I opoocl, oxc cond, will toko sao To Approcrllo. $3,500,
trodo, 30W75-4MI.
o.B.o. 114-3SI--.
11111 louzu ~ 4Wd, 4dr, po, Two 10 112ft. ollclo In truck compb, lopd, $12,000, 114-387-1044 • plr'li ont 11 1I2ft. travel tr1ller;
hln eton, retr=, fur·
Jimmy 4&gt;14, S.15 ':'~C· Now 1R
nace. Your chdce,
.; 114-

Ford EXp $2,215; 1988 Chov.
Spectrum $2,215; 1984 Oldo
Cutlooo $2~~5; 1115 Chov
Coltbrlty $t,n5; 1984 Ply Con·
OctobM Bnn1 for Sail, $7 A quill $t 295; 1985 Chov
Buohol, Plck Y®r Own. 614-388- Covollor ~15; 11110 Doroun
$115; B&amp;D Auto Slloo, Hwy 164
1711.

58

CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
· Post Buildings and

llllll,~oltori:OO.

1061.

ced gormlcldol dlolnlocto,. lnldlvataa pirvo, polio, ECHO,
and
Rhino
vlruMI.
01olnfoctoonllnary konMI boctorio. R&amp;G F•d &amp; Supply, 114992-2164.

Inc. 45719
Specializ1119 in Pole
Buidings.
Designed 10 meet your
needs. Any size.

mon, ZI,OOO. -~loo, 511,JGO.

11110 Food Rongor SUI Undor
Foctoty
Wolflnty - 6Sod,
W/Ovonlri!.!J.. E1CIIIIont Oolor
lllloogo, w• Aocopl Cor
Ford P.U. S2,19Si 1883 ChtY. S-10 Truck AI TradHn ti,&amp;OO. 1144x4 P.U. 51,895; BID Autololoo, 4410140.
Hwy 164 N. 114-446-fll!.
1112 CK·1&amp;00, hell ton, rod
Climolot truo.,IOIIIId: on crpo
1m GMC Pickup, lookt and llano, f1Z,OOO. :1041b4211.
run• great, $1400 or trade tor
good car of eqUII vtlut; 614· 1911 S.10 Truck14op., OICOIIonl
condition, ,.. sharp, onf
247.:1021.
owner, $3500; 114-11'2-3142.

Pvlhon ltllb, Hamata ..., Qer·

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

23 LOCUST ST.
Real Estate General

.

=·•-''

PATRtaAAOSS, REALTOR. 245-1575

1129, BEAUTIFUL HOllE WITH A LOT OF
CHARACTER. Coclor l1docl homo I01tll 2 bodroomo, 2
room, rlr*lg 100111, ldtcllon, ull/1)' plus 2
e.n be UMd for extra ~. 2 garages.
on 2~ ac. sener Jook 11 tti:l ore!

.

REOUCED on IN-TOWN proporfJ
otorr homo wlh t ~ boh LA FR.
ldlchen wlnook, p•r11al basemenr, g1.1 'turMc 1 ~
ga,.ge, Nice yard. 30's.

Cozy 3.4 BR,

1~

1716. KYGER CREEK AREA - 3 bod""'"" 2
bllho, ronc11 hcmo onc1 """"'"· Olllbull&lt;lk'lgo. gord., ·
opol, 1 a&lt;. 11111. S24,000 ~s rnob1o ·

1101. A GOOD BUY AT $27,1100. Eurollo. 2-3 eAS,

1115. QUALITY HOME LOCATED ·IN CITY - 4
bodloomo, 2 bothl. living room, dlnlng/kllchon

UlllNG - BIGGER THAN I

homo wth 3 BR, 1 bolh, LA, ldtcllon,
hooL Chock,. out $20'1.

1121. NEW lllllNQ: Thlo - - kfllllor alloritr
honMI relhmont home. FIIIUrtl 3 boGoom, 1 bolh,

living ra..,, lalge lclcllon, lamlly room, lnd 1 cor
g11111go. Cd lor- and P-$30,000.

cormln~d.

ILtl buemtrt wtltl family room. Call lor

dololls.

1782. ClOSE TO HOSPITAl. , conlrally locoled to
living
room, lclchon, uUIIIy onc1 bolh, groal no~od.
Shqlplrrg . V~ lidod, 3 bo&lt;i'oom honMI wllh

$32,000.00.

1 bolh, LA, eat-In Ntchon, ~ . 11111•.,_, t
outbklg. 30~1~. on _!.88 "'!' ~

co:

ffl8. VINTON
FARII : Localod on BR 110
- - 3 bectm.,
""'-mort.-~
W79 Acoclomy /lao 2 bodrmo 111.
!lrq ..... LA """ bllh, born w...... tool ·;.....,·
dllckon -·50 ... rr&gt;'i. Mostly 1 -.
'
t82S. NEW LISTING- 5 acros ol roltrg lond in good
location. Cloll ln.

br1ac-

~­
i'"- \

1209. REDUCED TO $49,110011 - BE-\UTIFUL
COLONIAL STYLE HOME al Rio Grandt. 2.87
acres mn, 3 BAs, 1~ baths, LR, kilchen, FR.
Just off Pleasant Valley Rd.

tm. F-.Y HOllE wth

-w

room 1o .,..,......,

O.U.T. 4 -r-. both, lei., OR, LA. IMI. nn., 111
floor bodrm. &amp; 3 up. E - lrotf &amp; por&lt;ll, ll.t
- · lftiChod garogo. t IC. 1114. $45,000.

'
-

-0

. BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN wth -

'*'"

quwtera.
for 10
· UCIII'lltCI
lon1y ....
- IMkllib, All lufNiurllnd
lvil11

••rrlrmont
- lr1d flmluro.
· . . 32.._
bodnn.
w!gonlon tr.l&gt;
11111. F - -

NEW"USTING- CONVENIENT DOWNTOWN LOCATION - Owner has r.tired and
wants something smailer. This 4 or 5 BR home
has 2 baths, modem kilcherr, contra! air and
much more. Localed at 4143/'dAve. $52,900.

THE PRICE
with lola of poten·
tial
in town )uot a low bloclto '""" 1111
aloroo. Homo offertlR, DR, IG1clwln, tli botho,
3 BRa, gas hoat. largo attic.

-

lr1d )IOU
homO bUy• •
rand1 wth
-..ont, llf. LA, r1n
rm., """"'"" 11-. 3 bodrmo., 2 bllthl ond 111
floor llundry. Famly ruom w-.mng llroploca on
- · ooWh! room. or llCtro -.~.arve
viol oroo wfOutlldo door ond 2 car garogo. OUdly
bull homo """'$60,500.

room

..,.

1711. VINTON CO. FARM: Locolid on SR t60.
AtMOI'II:Itl3 btctm.• brick tlomt wiburtrnant. Allo a
1878 -11'11' homo hoo 2 - ... kl ..
dining UN, LA ond boll, born W/11111, tool llf1od,

- -· 50 IC. 1114. Moltly-.

m2. ~~~!1. TRioASliiRE
o1 $110,000. Moro
, oq.
ond llrVt .... llvoughout. Thll ... con~i;Q
home on. . 4 bodnnl., 2 balho, -

IMng, 2 Wb llreptac.. , lomlly nn ., bull-"ln·- ""'"''

w.t&gt;a-. 2 cargaroga, 1st floor laundry.

Nl7. SWEET &amp; LOW - eo.m.tobio- 2 boclrrn.

1111. aa.ERaAI. « REIIDENTIAI. - LAND
CON1RACT - Primo locotlon. ~ Avo.
TURN YOUR FAMILY LOOSE HERE ....4.49
ac111s, mn, with fronlage. on now SR 160 and
old SR 160 al Portar. Older hom~ offem4 BAS,
bath, LR, dinette, kitchen, bam on property.
1571. JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD - ADDISON
TWP. - 386 acre !arm, 3 ponds, lobacco base,
55X110 bam, w/concrete floors , may consider

oplit.
1114. $21 ,000 - 3lotS+ older home. Bidwell, 3
BAs. bath, LR , kitchen, woikshop and ga~.

1751. PATRIOT AREA - Oulll nlighbOrhood,
oasy living, homo oHoro 3 BRa, LR, oo1·in
kilctlon, nico carpet, attochod garage.

1666. LOOKING FOR A PLACE FOR A NEW
BUSINESS - SR 180 near Bulavillo Pika,
aprox. 200'x200' lol, all utilities available.
1510. WHITE ROAD- 20 ac111s, rn/1, vacant
land not far lrom Charolaiolake. $20,000.

1511. 78 ACRES MIL, Sugar Crook Road Wallr tap and bam on proparly. $32,000.
1512. 101 ACRES MIL Guyon Townahlp.
Owner finoncing lo qualifred buyor with ~9'1
down paymerrt.

Oi&gt;rorlunlll'
.. ooml&gt;lno
homo3 lnd
-homo
·· Ol'io
Rt.'or ........
Yory n1cO
-.
...
.....,._, lUI bMimiUI. TNI II I money rnDq
~ d!cwL cal lor~

11110. CORNEA LOTS - Very nico homo onlrt 3 ·BRo, bath, Ieitch an, carpet, fi111pl-, 1
car delached g~taQt.

ALL BRICK lual 1
town .. .10X23' ldlchtn,
1&gt;atha, full boHmtn~

12114. COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 1-4 A.
m/1, 248 frontaga along SR 7,juolacroao from
Ohio Rlvor Plaza.
SPRING VALLEY AREA- Commen:ial, rosl·
cllntial, you nome ltl . Very cenlrelly locottd
trtl of Galli• County. 124.4 acres, mn,
olluatod In G1111n &amp; Springfield Twps. Call for

100'X150' LOT ON DEBBY DRIVE - Owner
wants a qulcl&lt; Hie. Col today and otart building light away.
PRICE SLASHED BY $10,000 - lzt
SECOND AVENUE - Thla home offlrt·2 BRa
upotalra, .1 BR down, LR, kiicMn, DR, bath,
utility
, . hoot. G111111
walk·

'1.04 acrn.

'

·

,.,_ted

'HSI. A Scattc QUIET PLACE 10 LIVE -

3

.LOTS IN LAI&lt;EVEW COURT SUBDIVISION
RESTRICTED, RESIDENTIAl. ONLY. CLOSE
HOI.ZER IIEDICAI. CENTER, DRIVE TO WHITE
~p. , TO CHAROI.AIS lAI&lt;E DR . TO lAl&lt;EV£W

ro

0 :~ I!TLITIESAVAIABLE.
AmNTION HOllE BUYERs -

EQ U A L

OPPOATUNITY - NO DOWN PAYMENT - LOW
IHTEREIT LOANI qualify lor lhlo program and
- · ycu -Don1mloooUI.
·coni&gt;Uy In 11\0
tiOiiwrgo.
CIII4411A.

..

\.

-

_

.._.

-

-~-

-.··-·-··

-...

'

..

homo. lot 11'11168', rurol walar, b. goo 11M on ....

....... $15.000.

IVr. LAR&lt;IE Z ITORY HOME on Flouit 3
bonon-. 11111\ LA, OR, llltdlon, o1 lumooo bim
11111 "'VV lot. ~3.000.
.

.

.
H14. LARGE COMMERCIAl. BUilDING on ::"· 2 bodrm., op. on 111 floor. " - 3 , _

�September 27, 1992

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

Paga D8 Sunday nme&amp;-Sentlnel

Monus attorney raps CEO for troubles
YOUNGSTOWN (AP) - PharMor Inc. is divetting blame for the
company's troubles from Chief
Executive Officer David Shapira,
who was in charge of the books,
the attorney for ousted President
Michael Menus said.
Manus' attorney, Richard Goldberg, said Thursday that Shapira
oversaw the discount retailer's
financial operations and should be
accountable if corporate money is
missing, the attorney said.
In July, Phar-Mor announced it
had evidence of an alleged $350
million fraud and embezzlement
scheme. The company fored Manus
and fonner chief financial officer
Patrick Finn, then sought
tion from
under

II of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.
Finn's directsupervisor.
Monus and Finn haven't com·
"David S.hapira, in ~is role as
mented directly on the allegations. chief execut1ve officu, ·~terfaced
Goldberg said Monus doesn't with all senior vice presodents. of
have the accounting skills to pull the company .. However, they
off such a massive scheme.
reported to Mtckey Monus and
"If he wanted to cook the Mockey Menus rel"lrted '!! David
books, I don't think he has that Shapira." Ms. Robonson wd.
capability," Goldberg said.
Coopers &amp; l,Ybrll!'d was ~bar­
He also said Shapira lOOk con· Mor's accounung fum until the
trol of Phar-Mor's accounting two alleged fraud was uncovered. Phar·
ago, when Finn began report· Mor fired C~~s and later. sue~
mg .to Sha~ira. M"!'us worked on th~ accountong form, char~!ng 11
buymg, while Shapora oversaw the w1th gross negHgence for failmg to
books and Finn, the auomey said.
uncover the alleged fraud. .
"Mickey is not a detail guy.
Coopers also sued, chargon~ that
Everyone knew that," Goldberg Shapira and the board are lfJ''"g to
said.
deflect altentoon from then own
Phar·Mor
alleged enors.
Robinson

Ohio Lottery

Browns,
Ben gals
both lose

Pick 3:
351
Pick 4:
6563
Super Lotto:
1-6·9·12·24-31
Kicker:
075589

PageS

r.,., ratured by the Meigs Soil and Water
CGIIMnatioa District, is located somewhere in
Melp Coanty. Individuals wishing to partici·
P* ill tbe weekly contest may do so by guessing
lk ru.•s owner. Just mail, or drop off your
cnss to the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
r.eroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Trihae, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a $5 prize from tbe

'

Louisiana last month that the darn·
age in doUar tenns was a record for
any natural disaster. Combined
with lniki's desuuctive trail
through Hawaii SepL II, the losses
are expected to total at least $8 bil·
lion.
But those figures don't reflect
the indirect, delayed economic pain
inflicted on other areas and businesses that may have thought they
were relatively safe and snug. This
may be especially so for insurance
cus10mers.
Prudential Insurance Co. provid·
ed a revealing insight into its deep
exposure to disaster risks last
Wednesday by quadrupling esti·
mated losses from Andrew 10 $1.2
billion.
The next day Continental Corp.,
aoother big insurer with heavy lia·
bilities in disaster protection,
sharply reduced its risks by getting
out of some lines of business,
slashing the quarterly stock divi·
dend and absorbing a $320 million
accounting charge to help pay for
the claim costs of Andrew and
lniki.

.-Met.

Money Ideas

Equities

BySfANEVANS
GALLIPOlJS - If the Federal
R te.'sobjecliveincuttingthedis·
by one-half point in early
July was to stimulate the equity
_.,. il: was a
'
5U [ I ! Unlil dial
Clll. !be S1DCk marka'spedmnance
in 1992 was n«
implessive. Bot in
July,
upside ·
breadlb and VOl·
umc was the best ..
of !be yea and approximated the
S1DCk market's year-end rise - the
Jasuimethe R:d cut the discount rate.
Tbe rise. however, was characterDcd by group rocation with no segmelll of the market demonstrating
• ·,.m leadership during the ad·
-From time 10 time during July,
qdical sii!Cks were suong as inves·
IDIS bel on economic recovery. At
c*:rt:imcs,growthstocksperfonned
....-. investoB demonstrated dis·
prospects.Stocks
wi* 11iJ11 rellllive dividend yields
- a popular as investors
Ned for income. While leader·
11
- , remajns a problem, July's ad·
is signaling that stocks are in
tbe pnx: m of anughing following a
wiaklinl ba1f performance.
flii&amp;bp:iuH:amingsmultiples,low

c:aa..,

_,_coonomic

dividend yields, competitive intercsl
rates, high bullish sentiment and relatively low mutual fund cash reserves
indicate the stock market is not likely
to break out on another bull market
run. As a resul~ stock selection remains a key to invesanent success
ovu the remainder of the year.
Ralhu than look to quarter-toquarter earnings perfonnance, it is
time to step back and look at a com·
pany 's long term growth potential.
Earnings in the first half of the year
have generally been disappointing
for one of two reasons. Expectations
for growth stocks have been too high
and prospects for economic recovery
were stretched. During this period of
time, corporations have been either.
one, spending money to insure con·
tinued long term growth or, two,
reducing costs to improve operating
efficiencies for the long term.
I uSI as corporations are implementing plans to improve long tenn
perfonnance, investors also need to
step back from the quarter-to-quarter
horse race and find the companies
thai arc: one, creating products/serv·
ices that are in demand while ,two,
increasing the return on capital for its
sharehol ders.ll is during periods such
as these that the seeds of tomorrow's
results are planted.
[Mr. Evans~ an investment broker for The Ohio Company in its
Gallipolis office.]

Vol. 43, No. 109

PLUS•••

B.IRED AS CONSULT ANT ·
-Patricia Silver, Middleport,
,_II)' joined the starr at the
ra-r Touch Salon as a styl~t
ud n~•etic consultaat. Tbe
Pa
• Toaclll SaiGa, located at
54 SDk Street. opened January

....

HOOD FAMILY SHOES
POMEROY

210 E. MAIN
992·6254

in the sixth district, and especially
in Meigs County, depend on the
minimum wage to make a living?",
Strickland asked. "At the time of
the vote, the minimum wage hadn't
been increased in 10 years, but
Congressman McEwen voted
against it. Two weeks later, he
voted himself a huge pay raise.
What kind or representative would
be so harsh to the people he repre·
sents, and then be so generous to
himself?"
"Mcl;wen traveled to 37 foreign
countries, and you and I, as taxpayers, paid for it," Suickland said.
"He spent $200,000 in tax dollars
on newsletters to poople he doesn't
even represent yet, at a time when
so many of us are unemployed and
without health care."
Strickland said that economic
develOJ?ffienl and job creation and
promObon would be among his top
goals for Meigs County, if elected
to Congress.
·
"When I go to Congress, no
county in the sixth district will be
more im~rtanlto me than Mei~s
actions."
County, Suickland said. "Th1s
"He voted against increasing the county deserves to get its fair share
minimum wage. How many poople from its congressman."
. "'

HUGE SUCCESS • Satur·
day's Recycle Day at Meigs
High School was a huge suc·
cess. Members or the Meigs
Vocational and Industrial
Clubs of America (VICA),
sponsors of Recycle Day, were
joined by school starr and
other volunteers to help
unload old tires, glass and
plastics, batteries, appliances
and used motor oil brought in
ror recycling. Tires .by the
thousands were turned In to
Mid-America Waste Systems,
to be put through a shredder,
added to bot mix, and used in
road construction. The tons of
glass and plastic donated by
Meip Countians will be recy·
cled, made into Dew products
antl.retlUJl_ed tQ' the;-..rket.
Here VICA members Kelly
Phelps, John Youna and VIr·
ginia Shuler separate glass
from plastics. More than 100
appliances were turned over
to Mansback for salvaging the
scrap metal, several dozen old
batteries went to Interstate
Salvage of Ravenswood, and
gallons of oil were collected by
Safety-Kieen of Ashland, Ky.
for re-refiJJina. "Usiagit once
is never enough," said Kenny
Wiggins, Meigs County Litter
Control Program director,
who assisted at Meigs Coun·
ty's first Reclcle Day held on
the Meigs H1gh School park·
ing lot.

CANDIDATES SPEAK • Congressional
candld1te Ted Strickland, far left, was the
keynote speaker at Saturday's Columbus Day
Dinner, held by the Meigs County Democratic
Party. State Representative Mark Malone, far

"I want to help provide health
care for all of us," he said. "Millions of Americans have no ac:cess
to health care, and others are without adequate educational opportunities. I want to work so that the
people of the sixth district do have
health care and an educational system that we can all be proud of."
Stricldand's speech carne during
the social hour of the evening.
Other speakers included Stale Representative Mark Malone of South
Poin~ whose campaign for re-election brings him into Meigs County
due to last year's re-districting.
State Senator Jan Michael Long
of Circleville, a Meigs County
native, spoke on behalf of U.S·.
Senator John Glenn, and the presidential ticket of Gov. Bill Clinton
and Senator AI Gore.
"Four years ago, George Bush
talked to us about a 'kinder and
gentler nation,'" Long said. "Now
we see literally millions of homeless people on the streets and
unemployment at highu levels. I'm
just trying to figure out what the
president's idea of 'kinder and geO:.
tler' is."

•

Continued on page 3

righi, also spoke at the dinner. Also pictured
are, 1-r, Mary and Harry Stobart of Racine,
County Chairwoman Sue Maison and State Senator Jan Mic:hael Long. (Sentinel Photo by Brian
J. Reed)

OAPSE union elects officers,
endorses Strickland, Malone
Sf JIM FREEMAN

QUEEN AN-D CANDIDATES • Amber
Oblinger, second from right, was crowned Har·
vest Moon Queen durin~ Racine's Fall Festival
on Saturday. Pictured wllh Amber are the other

caildldates, 1-r, Brandy Roush, Roberta Cald·
weD, Toni SeUers and last year's queen, Marcy
Hill, who crowned Amber during Saturday's
festival

Man pinned beneath mobile home, dies

HOOD FAMILY SHOES IS GOING
OUT OF BUSINESS.
EVERYTHING IN THE STORE IS

JRJRRY IN! WE STILL RAVE A
WIDE SELECTION Of' SHOES!

A Mulllmodill Inc. -poper

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
· Ted Strickland of Lucasville
Democratic candidate for U.s:
Congress, slammed his Republican
opponent for alleged abuses and
pledged aue advocacy for Meigs
County at the Meigs County
Democratic Party's Columbus Day
Dinner on Saturday night.
McEwen's involvement in the
House banking scandal, his vote
against an inc~ in the minimum
wage and his alleged abuses of the
congressional franking and travel
priveleges were highlights of
Strickland's speech to the Democratic audience.
.
.. I'm going to be critical,"
Strickland said. "Some would call
it negative, but! think it's just honest."
"Bob McEwen bounced 166
checks in the House Bank," Strick·
land said. "If you and I had done
what McEwen did, we'd be facing
some serious legal consequences.
Yet Bob McEwen has not owned
up to or apologized for his

END OF
MODEL YEAR
DEALER
DISCOUNT

In 1966, the Mattachlne S&lt;lciety
successfully challenged a New York
state law !hat outlawed ba" frequented by three or more known
homosexuals.

REDWING SHOES ARE PRICED AT COSI.

1 Sec1lon, 10 P""" 25 _,to

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September,28, 1992

at Columbus Day dinner

The resuk was a growin~ expectation that premium rate hikes are
inevitable in the entire property·
casualty insurance industry. lndi·
viduals and businesses, even those
far from the hurricane wastelands,
will pay more for proleCtion.
The wounded condition of the
insurance industry leached else·
where as well. The financial weak·
ness or Allstate, for example, led
Moody's Investors Service to
downgrade the credit ratings of its
parent Sears, Roebuck and Co.,
which means the retailer will have
to pay more to borrow money.
In the case of building materials,
the hurricanes couldn't have come
at a more awkward time. The hous·
ing industry, sauggling through a
protracted slump deSpite the lowest
lending rates in two decades, had
relatively small stockpiles of plywood and other fmished lumber.
That means the enonnous need
for wood to help rebuild is strain·
ini the entire market, pushing up
proces more than 25 percent in
places as far away as New England
and California.
Andrew's disfl!ption of natural
gas supplies from the Gulf or Mexico led to record high gas prices in
the energy market this past week.
For homeowners who heat and
cook with gas, that will translate
into higher prices this winter.
Although many economists say
the overall damage of Andrew and
lniki in a $6 trillion economy won't
be significant, others say it can't be
ignored. The impact was enou~h to
weaken some important natoonal
statistics.
On Thursday, the Labor Depart·
ment said applications for unemployment insurance jumped for the
fourth straight week in mid·
September, partly due to claims
from Andrew victims. On Frida)'.
the Commerce Department saod
Americans' personal income in
August fell 0.5 percent, the worst
drop in 19 months, a disruption
economists blamed on the hurri·
cane.
noose numbers were enough to
jolt the U.S. financial markets,
which had been preoccupied with
the uncertainties raised by an
upheaval in the European foreign·
exchange system.
Bonds rallied on the prospect of
lower interest .rates but stocks
sagged as investors grew pes·
sirnistic about the outlook for cor·
porate profits.

50%oFFI

mid 60s.

..-----Recycle Day... -----. Strickland blasts McEwen

Ohio Valley Publishin&amp; Co. Leave your aame,
address and telephone number witb your card
or leUer. No telephone calls wUI be accepted. All
contest entries should be turned in to the news·
paper olrtee by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
or a tie, the winner will be cl10sen by lottery.
Next week, a Gallia County farm will be fea·
lured by the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
District.

Hurricane wounds
continue to spread
By RICK GLADSTONE
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Andrew and
)niki are history, but the turbid
fmancial backwashes are swirling
far beyond areas ravaged by the
llmricanes.
_: Two leading property-casually
io us showed just how devastat·
cd lbeir balance sheets were this
a sign dlat premiums for
million~ of policyholders nationwide litcly will rise.
A widespread shortage of ply·
wood is hurting homebuilders and
do-it-yoouselfers thousands of
miks away. Natural gas prices are
Jilin&amp; up for everyone this winter.
~ hlllficanes' impact even
jllnd tbe financial markets, and
plllllibly President Bush's re-elec·
lioa ~;bances, by undermining
lln:ady-anemic government eco·
.:..UC !bljsrics The weakness cast
(wdwx doubl on any significant
rellaud in the economy before
flee lian Day, a little more than a
. . . . away.
ll Wl5 dear soon after Andrew
plandercd South Florida and

Low tonight in mld40s.
Partly cloudy. Tuesday, high In

rears

Copyrighted 1992

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery

r

I

SERVING THE
TRI·STATE
FOR
38 YEARS!

NO MONEY
DOWN WITH
APPROVED

SUNDAY SHOPPERS
WELCOME.
COME IN AND
IIOWSEI

A Rutland man died on Saturday evening after being pinned
beneath a mobile home.
Steven Earl Gray, 46, was pro·
nounced dead on arrival by acting
coroner James Witherell, acccrding
to Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulshy.
Soulsby reported that the mobile
home had been moved ontO a site

in the village of Rutland on Satur· him pinned beneath the mobile
day morning, and installation work home, which had been placed on
had been taking place that after- concrete blocks.
noon.
Soulsby said that he's uncertain
Bob Imboden, who had been as to why Gray was under the trail·
assisting in the installation work er. Units of Meigs Emergency Ser·
during the day, left the scene vices were also on the scene. The
momenlarilf. called for Gray and, body was taken to Fisher Funeral
upon retummg to the scene, found Home in Middleport, w~re funeral
services will be held on Tuesday.

Ohio highway death toll climbs to five
By The Associated Press
A double-fatality acccidcnt Sunday night in Clermont County
raised Ohio's weekend traffic death
toll to five, the State Highway
Patrol said. ,The pauol counted
fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday to
midnight Sunday.
The dead:

SUNDAY
BATAVIA· Mark A. Russell,
23, of Williamsburg, and Micllaei
Lee, I, of Batavia, when a car and
picku~ truck collided on a Clermont County road.
SATURDAY
CANTON- Gary D. Watson,
35, of East Sparta, in a one-car

accident on a Stark County road.
MASSILLON - Roger G.
Lamb, 35, of Carrollton, motorcy·
clist on Ohio 800 in Stark County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
PORT CLINTON - Meri Jo
McGarry, 21, of Oak Harbor, in a
one-car accident on a Portage
Township road .

OVP News Staff
Support for collective bargain·
ing helped Democratic hopefuls
Mark Malone and Ted Strickland
rack up endorsements Saturday
morning in Gallipolis during the
. 53rd annual meeting of the Southeast District of the Ohio Association of Public School Employees
(OAPSE).
State Representative candidate
Malone and U.S. Representative
hopeful Ted Strickland both
described themselves as supporters
ofcollective
Malone talked
about the importance of maintaining collective bargaining.
Many candidates want to take
back what we've gained, Malone
said.
Malone lambaSted his Republi·
can opponent, Frank Cremeans,
saying Cremeans and othu Republicans present a threat to collective
bargaining and the health and safe·
ty of Ohio's laborers.
Strick land, in a brief address,
told the union he supported OAPSE
and collective bargainin$. He also
said he believes companoes should
not be able to replace suiking
workers.
Stricldand assailed his adversary
Bob McEwen by drawing a contrast betwe.en himself and the
incumbent Republican.
"Bob McEwen is on record as
having voted to allow companies to
hire replacement workers to replace
striking workers," Strickland said.
"I feel workers have a right to orga·
nize unions and to strike as a
weapon of last reson."
'
Strickland said both parties are
calling it a close race.
"I haven't written bad checks or
visited 37 foreign countries,"
Strickland said. "I don 'l oppose

Turner, treasurer; Marge Gillenwater, state executive board member;
and Roberta Roach, state executive
Joe Rogala, OAPSE executive board alternate.
In other action, the union
director, tall:ed about politics and
said people tend to trivialize poli· endorsed Judy Kelley and George
Phillips for School Employment
tics.
"Politics is about getting things Retirement System (SERS) repredone that need done," Rugola said. sentative and scheduled the next
"It's about suffering if you don't union meeting for 10 a.m., January
get it done."
. 23, at Washington Elementary.
ApProximately IOO people, repRugola said many people in
resenung
OAPSE locals in Athens,
power portray politics as dorty or
Gallia,
Hocking, Jackson,
trivial in the hopes of discouraging
Lawrence,
Meigs, Morgan, Perry,
voters.
"People in power want you to Pike, Scioto, Vinton and Washingstay home and not vote," Rugola ton counties, attended the meeting
and luncheon held in the Washing·
said.
·
OAPSE State President Joann ton Elementary cafeteria.
OAPSE
represents
approximateJontony also emphasized the
ly 28,000 workers across the state
importance of voting.
The union elected the following and is affiliated with the American
officers: Marsha Haner, presidcn~ Federation or State, County and
Carol Harper, vice presiden~ Mary Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
Patrick, secretary; Barbara Jill which represents more than
100,000 workers.
increases in the minimum wage
while voting myself pay raises."

JOERUGOLA

,,

••
•

MARK MALONE

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