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Scores

va tedl iorWVUn

M~l ~ O~boma State 3

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NC State 28 GeOrgia Tech 21
Southern Miss 10 Auburn 9
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Gallipolis, ~.elgs, Eastern, KC, 'NG.·
post conference wins Friday • C se~tion

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. . Meigs group to hold llSth annual . · ..
meet~ng today • ~eat t~e B~nd • ~~4

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OSU 31 Wlleoula 16
IIUDOis 24 Mlaalsota 3 ..

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Seniors
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P11111y cloudy. Hlgb In mid 501.

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Vol. 21, No. 35
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Nllddleport-Pomeroy-Galllpolls-Polnt Pleaeant, October 6, 19§1

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13 Secllona, 132 Pag"
~Multimedia Inc. NewlpiJ*

Meigs:coUnty sCtrools ·

recet~e grant-ror project

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HEALTH SCREENING • More than 250
Meip CouatiaDJ hue reiJitered to panicipate
1i till 1DaJ.-,Iwlc JaultlJ,FteniDg "blcll ita~· ·
cd 'J'bundar ud..W coatjaue. tbro!llll. T~--~; .
day. Tbe compreheaalft sc:reealnc, sponsored
. b1 tile Melp County Health Department aad
tbe Melp·County CouacU oa A&amp;ml• coven all
facets of health care on a sliding ree scale raag·

iaglrom a mlnlaium rl $2 to a maximum ol,$25.
Working ia cooperation with tbe spo!lf?rlar
ageacies are Veteram Memorial Hospll&amp;lad
U..•tdeJas .CQtiRtY lfU,ber~~Unlc. Here
)alie Anb ·x·nestad of Karr's Auclloloty Rives
au otoscopic eumiDatloa to Jackie HUdebraad,
as sbe moved through tbe screealng process. ..

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fanners may sell to the penhookers to avoid making, the trip to mar·
ket 'themselves.
In the meantime, livestock sales are cancelled in Gallipolis.
Owner Mary Williamson said a d~ision lias not yet been ~con:
ceming any course of action.
.
According to Gallipolis Fire Chief Ray Bush, one ~og was m the
building when it bumed.Friday m:oming. A. cause for the fire has
not yet been determined.

Fire's aftermath uncertain
,.

GALLIPOLIS - Now that the Gallipolis stockyard is a pile of
twisted roafmg, blackened walls and charred timbers. What should
the local livestock 'fanning community In expect?
.
"It couldn't have hai)IJene4,.at a '!'cne ~." said Gal~ Col!"ty
Extension Agent Ed Vohbom. Fall1s tradillonally the buSiest 11me ·
for selling and buying of livestock. ,
Livestock breeders will now have to take .their livestock a great
distance to market. The closCst ·markeiS are in Ripley and Mineral
Wells, W:Va, and Hillsboro and Albany.
Meigs O&gt;unty Extension A$Cnt John Rice said the fue is going
to have defmite affect on Me1gs County livestock fanners. Rice
cited increased transportation costs and larger crowds at the existing
stockyards as problems breeders will face.
·
Rice also (eels there will be an increase of people selling their
live k to penhookers, people who buy livestock from fanners
before
et and sell at the market hoping to ·make a profit. Some

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Guyan jirejight~rs fix truck .
MERCERVILLE -The Ouyan Firefighters' Association
recently SP.CD~ iwer $6,600 to overhaul the en~ine on' their. main
pumper uuck. According 10 fuefighter Toin Wnght, the repair was
paid for by the fuefighten and not by township fUI)ds.
:ro help recoup~ of the mon.ey, the association will hold a
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c~ SHOW - ne 01111110111 New
Show fKed 10111e compe.
~tltloa from Mother Nature Saturdly Ia tbe way or ralay skies, bat
• ~e~plte the rala aad cooler temperatures maay people made "elr

way dOWn thhe Gallipolis.Parlrfr.oat to look at the aew can, talk to
"dealen and recelve.Jlterahfte 0. aew can. Dealers partldpa..,_. Ill
tbe aew car sbow were: GeH. Job111011 Cllevrolet·OidJ.Geo be., NGr·
rls Northup Dodge-Cb'rysler·Pipaouth Inc., Smith Bukk·POil'*'
Smith'' GMC Trucks, and Turnpike Ford·Lincoii·M~rcury/Jeep·
· Eagle. (flmes-Seniblel ph~.by Jim Freeman)

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Oatober 6,1991

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October.6, 199.1
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8ru.n~INC.
,;.'
Ill Court S~, Pomeroy, Ohio
' (614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlsher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor
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Harding Colu ·
Jo.hn
Melissa Hardirlg of
sister, Ann Rose of
brother, Robert Dorst
fourgrandchUdren.
.
.three sons, Melvin,
Funeral seivices will be held 1 Patrick Kin~; several aunts
p.m. today at Jhe Eisnaugle-Lewis uncles; one ruece, Crysral Haiding;
Funeral Home, Jackson, with Rev. a grandfather, Archie Dorst, of
Gary Parker officiating. Burial will Cotumllus and a grandmother, Ida
be in Fairmont Cern•'""'·
Mills of St Mary' s, w.Va.
~,
Ada B. Clagg ·
Funeral services willliC held on
Mon4By at 1 p.m. 8t Ewing Funeral ·
VINTON- ~Bel~ Clag~, 75, . Home. Burial will be in Keebaugh
of Route 2, Vmfon, died Frt'!&amp;Y· Cemetery.
Oct. 4, 1991. at Ho~~e~ Medtcal
Friends may call at the funeral
Center followmg a bnef!Uness.
home from 9 a.m. on Monday until
Borg Feb, 20, 1916 m Hogsett, the time of service
W.Va. she was the daughter of the
.
late Westley and Rosa Campen Carl E. Rardin

in Poiiu Pleasant with the Rev.
Louis A. Hwell officiating. Bllrial
will follow in KiJkland Memorial
Garilen$ ncar Point Pleasant.
. F~ may call on Sunday, October 6 from 4 p.m. 10 9 p.m. at the
funeral home.

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PAT WHITEHEAD
. Assistant Pubilsher-CootroUer

MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily -Press
and llie Arncric811 Newspaper Publishers Association.

Associati~

ROCKY HILL, &lt;;onn. (AP) _
Ames Department St:ores Inc. plans ..
to close 77 of its 448 stcres and lay
off about 4,500 employees early
next year, the company announced
Saturday.
.
According to The Associated
Press, the Ga!!ipolis ,store located
in the Silver Brid~e Plaza Shopping Plaza is not mcluded in lhe
l~t
.
'·'The closing of these stores
will reduce our losses anti. improve

ureather
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South-Central Ohio
. Sunday, partly cloudy with the
~tgh 55 10 60. Chance of precipita- ·
uon 20 percent
"
Extended forecast .
Monday through Wedlfesday ·
Fau and cool Monday, except
for a chance of showers and thunderstorms in lhe extreme northeast. .
Fair wilh a warming trend Tuesday
and Wednesday. Highs in the 50s
Monday, 60s Tuesday 3!ld 70 to 75
Wednesday. Lows mos1ly in the
30s Monda~ and Tuesday with 40s
Wednesday.
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Account Executives
Stan Evans

Jay Caldwell

INVESTIGATE ALL THE
ALTERNATIVES
!
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'AULITTLE" FRUSTRATED
WITH YOUR CURRENT

TV SYSTEM?

The Ohio' Company ·
444 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

(614) 446-2125
1-800-776-4691

If you would like to eKplore all your options, call or write today. Our
Account Executives will show you why you don't have 10 settle for less.

f- Pleasesenlniemore iniormatiOn oii c5 aii6riiai~oo~
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Well, Strike Back &amp; Receive
The Programming You
Demand With Super TV
From Zenix
Video
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MembCT: The AMociatcd P.rees, Inland
Daily Proe11 As1oc:iation and the Ohio
r
Newapaper Auociation, National
,, Advertiaing Representative, Dra.,ham
• Nowapapcr Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
"" Now York, New York 10017.

Member New Yor1c Stod&lt; Exctian&lt;:te
Member SlPC

'

SUNDAY ONLY

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Ro"to

'

Ono Woolc..............................................oo,

One Ycar.:......... ......... .............. -~ ~.... $46.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
:sunday.......... ~..... ............ ............... 75 Ccnta

W'
:1111;,11

No aubacriptions by mail permitted in
area• whcro motor canicr scrvtcc is
, , available.
"'i
Sunday Ti mcs-Scn tincl will not be
t'Ciponsible for ad vance paymen ts m4Pc
t.o cani.cn.
MAIL SUBSCRI!!TI9J"S
"
, 1
9\lnday Only
One Ycar............... ~....... ,..... :.. ~......-... $47.84
Six Montha ............ ...................... ~.-- $ 2 4 . 79
\ Dallr~nd Sunday
.,
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
'
Inside County
. : 13 Woollo............. .... ........................$21.84
1 _.
26 Weekl .......................................... $43 .16
•• 52 Wooluo ............................... ........... $84 .76
Ro.t.ca Outside County
13 Wcoluo .... ..... ........ .............. ........... $23.40
26 Wooluo............... .. .............. ........... $45.50
52 Wooluo .... ..................... ................. $88.40

Tho

football games. Thls is quite •n
achievement which very few, ·if
any, other individuals are able lo
do.
.
The only other person thllt I
have ever heard doing double. ~uty
is !,Jonel Boggs Qf Mid&lt;!leP!Jrt.
. Lionel was an outstanding foocball
player. -At one MHS football prile
' he was reported to have lccft~e
cheers ror General Jim ~Ill
the half-time ceremonies.
·· :
Gelling ~ to the. ~eip , f!lot·
ball team, tt appears tbat l.t .is ·
improving each week. Frank ~lake
is an outstanding 'athlete ud is
headed for post season hooois.
Rupe, we have a lot of hidden 181ent in Meigs County.
:
Canyon.

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FOR ONLY

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By TIM Alllltlated l'ml
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: , , Today is Sunday, Oct 6, the 279th day of 1991. TltCre are 86 days left ,
• in the yUII.
: ;. Toda 's Highlight in Hisllry:
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,
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One ~undred years 181), on OcL 6,- 1891, Charles Stewart Parnell, the
: ~ "Uncrowned King of !leland," died in Brighton, EllaJand.
: . On Ibis date:
; • In 1683, 13 families from Krefeld, Gernwtr,41rivcd in plllsent-day
• •J'hiladelphia to begin Germantown, one of America's bldest aeuleinents. ·
, : . In 1863, ~ first Tutldab batb in the United StaleS opened. (It had .only ·
• •one customer Its fnt daY.)
·
:·
In 1884, the Naval VI• Coil~ was eslablilbcd ira Newpon, R.I.
;
In I927, the era of talking piCIUiel 'llriwd with the opening of "The
• Jazz Singer," Slatrinl AI Jolton.
·
·
: , · In 1939, in an addlea 10 the Reicbslla, Adolf Hiller denied having any
; in~ntion of. W'll tpina.Pnmee llld Brlllill, ,llld said be wauld agxee to
" peace with the two llllions.
.
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: . In 1949, ~cleat Truman li&amp;ncd the Malllll Defense ·Assisllnce Act,
: iolaling $1.3 billion in mililaly afd to NATO coonlriea.
·
• • In 1949, Ameril:an-bom lva T1$.D' Aquino, coavicied of being
: Japanese wartime broadcaster "T
Rose," wu sentenced in San
: •FranciJ,co ro 10 ~ill pilo!lllld Sl
•
In 1973, Egypt aild Syria .U.:bclltnel in ihe Stal1 of the YOIITKippur

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IT'S BACK
BY POPULAR DEMAND

:;

~ttEE CHANNEL~~

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PERSONAL TOUCH

MONTH
AT

1/4 ... Wnt of Hoh• IWcol tool• •II, Sl
4lllo&lt;lM1Piu,~, OH. ·

STAR BANK

4411-2411-t -100-315·1229

WENDELL

LESLIE

DOBBS/PETTEYS

"Hi, I'm Donna Waugh, Manager of
the Silver Bridge Office of Star Bank.
Our customers and tellers had such fm1
with this pfomotion last year, that we
decided to do it again:

pianist

·.

Peucys u'a! "rcsf&gt;ecl(ul nf the di"ersiry nf musical m·lc~ mul
performtd with authoril.'/, 1cchn ical jkill and enth 1~1im:m ."
-- Prnjcct for lht' Srud:t of Women in Mu~ic,
CITY UNIVERSITY OF NE\V YORK

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12
8:00P.M.
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In 1976, in his second debate with Jimmy Caner, Preaident Ford
· ' ur ned dial dim WJ1 "no Soviel clocninllion of eaaem Burope. •,• (Ford

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Ill« conceded be'd minP9'en)
1a 19711, Pope John Piul 011a wcdt·lolia u.s. blr, became the rust
10 visit die Wblte Houe, where be wu JeCeivcd ~ President

u.

Ja1983,c-!! 1 Tw uC I ,...,lr'"'llllhfdleN'chdioceee
; of New Yart. died • • 62.
·•
: . 1D 1989, &amp;tiW Beae Davia died Ia Nelilly-1111'-Sdnc, Fnnce, ll IF
.
l 81.1'111 ~ ,.o:
Pr-W.w AAwrl Sadal was 111ot 10 deaLh by
· ~ Mllllb ftl ! m llllili wbllomlewill allliiUry ]llllde.
:
Plve JWI qo: A crippled Sofiei nDCiear aubawiae unt in the
: A•Je+ OD.- lllaat1.200•r1New Yort, dlleodayl after a~ and
.. up~o~~• dllll• SoYiellllilllad ldlled b Clftl memben.
01111 ~ ,.a: Plelldenl BUlb veraed IIIIPPP IJJel!dinalegisla{ion
parnll ., C®ll• r~:;
of j tleffcil-tcducing budge!
.., 11 e , 11ii ~ rllaale .
biuled oil on afour-day mission. ·

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$5 Individual Ticket
$10 for this &amp;'2 other concerts
on the University Series.
Group Discounts Available for
10 or more.

THE CROP CIRCLES MYSTERY
SOLVED.

'&gt;

·sTAR BANK

MORRIS AND DOROTHY HASKINS

ARIEL
THEATRE
.
426 2a~Ave. • Galli;olis

I

We hope this promotion lets our customers
know How important they are to us at Star
Bank. Come into the Silver Bridge office or any
·other Star Bank office for personal service with a
personal touch. Remember, there's a star within
your reach.
·

All-American Program ...
Copland · Duo for Flute. and Piano (1970)
Laderman ·June Twenty·Nimh \1 983)
Th'O'mpson • Four Portraits (1 935-40)
Hoover • Medieval Sui te (1 983)
Muczynski ·SOna ta, op. 14. (1965)

.

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Our Tellers always try to recognize and call ~&gt;Ur
customers by name. Sometimes they get busy
and forget. So again this year ~or the month of
October, a bowl of quarters will be placed at
each teller's window. If the teller does not call
the customer by name, BEFORE THE END OF
THE TRANSACTION the customer takes a
quarter from the bowl. .

Such a pcrformcr--tqulll (»arts te~l1t1icol compeunce, mu5icn f
in tegrity and an istic enchusiasm- u·a.1 UJell worth sccinR ar1d
bearing.n
•
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.em. .

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Here is how the promotion works: · "

"Dobb.«' ()er/ormance was !Ot'Civ

Berry's World

'

Per Week

Recital Tour, Fall, '91
histo~y

u
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Receive n complete
C.""iiltellite sysleni &amp; 1

flutist

Today in

•j

operating cash flow;" Stephen .L.
Pistner. Arne$' ·chairman and chief
executive officer, ~d in a state·
menL
Most of the stores to be closed
are in Indiana, Michigan, Ohio,
Keotucky, West Virginia and Vir·
Continued on A-7

You don't have to settle for
the low rates being Gffered.

(USPS 525·800)
Published each Sunday, 825 Third Ave.,
Gollipolla, Ohio, by Lh e Ohio Valley
Publi1hing Company/Multimedia, Inc.
Second c:laaa poatage paid at Gallipolis,
Ohio 46631. EnteT&lt;?d as second class
mniline matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post
Office.

'.

SenUnei-Page-A3

Ames store in Gallipolis not
includ~d in closing_ list. .· , ·

CROWN CitY • Veronica L.
Sally Wears
·Blake, 71, Of 91 Mooney Rd. ,
• POINT ' PLEASANT
Sally
Cr9'YD City, died Monday, Sept.
Wears,
90,
of
Point
Pleasant,
died
· 30, 1991 at her residence.
•
Friday,
October
4,
199f.
81
Pleasant
: • Born Oct. 2, 1918 in LiverPool,
Valley Hospiral.
' England, she was the daughter of
Born February 8, 1901 in
· · :the late
Samuel and Hilda Gmdy.
h
Southside,
she was a daughter of
. S e was a retired countY
the
late
William
L. and Esther C.
. .employee of San Bernadino, Calif.,
(Thomas) Siders. She was a mem; and she .servel!in the U.S; Na'iy. .
ber
of the Bellemead United
: . Survtvors mclu!l,e three daugh·
·
Methodist
Church and of lhe
, ·ters, Sand(a Hartford' of Victoria,
· six gi\mdchildren and seven greatNamoi
Bible
Class.
: Texas, , Sheela Joyce Kilby of
grandchildren.
She
was
also
preceded
in
dealh
; Winchester, Va., and SaraJ. Patks
Funer31 service will be conducby
five
brotjiers,
two
sisters,
and
·nfWeUston; two sons, Jerry M. and
ied
at 2 p~m . Monday. pctober 7, at
one
granddaughter.
James M. Blake, both of Crown
Crow-Russell
Funeral Home with
She
is
survived
by
two
daughters
· City; one sister, Hilda Rosemary HarboUr.
and
sons-in-law,
Anna
Lee
·and
Rev.
Eugene
Garlow
and Rev. El. Grady of San Bernadino, Calif.; 10
She was a homemaker and
POINT PLEASANT • Carl E.
don
Shingle10n
officiating.
Burial
John
Smith
of
Point
Pleasant,
with
grandchildren; and 13 great-grand- ··attended the Pleasant Ridge Rardin, 55, of Point Pleasant and
· children.
Chwth.
.
formerly of Ravenswood, died whom she made her horne, and will follow in Pine Grove Cemetery
·
Bertie C. and Jeames Woodard of at Southside.
· She was preceded in death by
, Survivors include her husband, Friday, October4, 1991.
Visiting hours will be held at the
. • her husband, Jerry Marrah Blake, Deivard Clagg; one brother, Fred
Born March 24, 1936 in Sher- Colomdo Springs, CO; Q_ne son and
in 19S3; and one,SISler, G~
Harbour of California; and three man, he, was the Son of the late daughler-in-law, William E. and funeral home on Sunday fron 2-9
Grav~ide services were held 81 sisters, Opal Bush and Louise Dab- Everett Rardin and Gladys Marie ,Mamie Wears of DesMoins, Iowa; p.m.
•
;· the Miller Memo.rial Garden, ney, both of Gallipolis Ferry, (Siaats) Rardin. He was also
; Miller, with Rev. Fred Shockley W.Va .... and Nellie · Turley of preceded in death by three brothers
, officiating.
Bloomingdale, Ohio.
and one sister.
Funeral services. will be conRardin was a truck driver for R
' Willis . Funeral Home was in
, 'chargeof.&amp;rrangements._
ducted 1 p.m. Mofli)ay at the · &amp; L Transfer, Inc. 'of Gallipolis
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Ferry and fonnerly had driven a
·Charles E. Bowman
Home, with Rev. O'dell Bush offi- milk truck for J.R. Trucking. In ad·
'· JACKSON • Charles E. "Tad" ciating . .Burial will be in Beale dition. Rardin had worked at Kaiser
: IIQwman, 74, a resident of Beaver Ch?n;l Cemetery.
~ Aluminum in Ravenswood for 20
• 'Pike, Jackson, died Friday, Ocl 4,
riends may call at the funeral years.
: '1991 at'Holzer Medical Center.
home today from 2-4 and 6-9.
He is survived by his wife, Max'
Born Sept 1S, 1917 In Jackson, J
h H d'
ine (Krebs) Rardin; one daughter,
he was the son of the late Williard
osep ar mg
Carla Jo Smith of Point Pleasan~
. 1. and Edna Martindale Bowman.
COLUMBUS · Joseph Scott two sons, Randy C. Rardin and
• · He was retired from the Harding, 29, \)f 1533 Manchester Ricky J. Rardin, both of Point
.. :Goodye81 Aiomic Corporation, a Avenue, Columbus, died on Thurs- Pleasant; three brolhers, Kenna L.
~. retired Air Force major, a World
day, October 3, 1991 at Grant Med- Rardin of Millwood, Charles RarWar II veteran, and a Post Scout ical Center in Columbus following din of Edgewater, Florida and
· .Troop 48 Mastei. He was a mem- an extended illness. He was a truck 'Lewis Rardin of Sherman; one sis: ber of the American Sternwheeler driver.
ter, Betty 1Jlompson of Palm Bay,
:.Associapon, J~11 C9unty. Ama~
Born on August 5,_1962 in Florida; five grandsons and two
.
•t.ems Radio Association and the Hampton, Va., ~~ . was !,he son of step-grandchildren.
~ Gaiiipolis Boat Club. . ,
. Betty Harding.
.
Funeral services will be held 81
·Several attractive alternatives exist. These alternatives range from direct
. Survivors include his wife, Ruth
In addition 10 his mother, he is II a.m., 'Monday, Oc10ber 7, 1991
.Callahan Bowman; two sons, Steve sur~ivc:d by his wife, Debbie King ~e Crow-Russell Funeral Home
investments in U.S. Government securities to portfolios of government
securities managed by professional money managers.

A Division of

825 Third Ave., Galllp.olls, Oblo··
(614) 446-2341

·veropica L. Blake

..

Poml!roy-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt PJeaea.nt, WY

(6141446·ARTS

Ticket&lt;. available at Peddler's P.mtry,
Brtmica,rdi Music and Criminal Records.

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There's a star within your reach

"Star Bank, N.A., Tri·State"
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Member FDIC
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.Octob.er 6, 1991

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Pomeroy-MiddlepQrt GallipOlis, ()H.....pojnt Plealant; wv

October 6, 1991 . '.

~unclay T!mee Senilriel Pag~ A5 ·~_ ..
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; Up To

11 oz~

· ~~.V'J'JW'- .

·~:~~.n cEl\Tl;:,c::::

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resh Ground Beef.
19
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Quality Meat

MondaY • 100 11 oz.~~~ .
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TuesdaY .-toO 2 LtterBC (t2 oz.l
. Ylednesda! tOO lGI\ Bot D~gs .
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'l'butsdaY .IGI\ Chi' 8 DIP
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REFRESHMEN'rS
Friday &amp;
Saturda~
US-DA•North Gallta :h • · CHOICE
Band Boosters &gt;; t ra'-"'"'~~~,;~

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3 LIS. OR MORE .

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GIFi CERTIFICATE

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1 TRI FIRST ~
B iall ·
FO • 100 Loaves-IGA c0rttage cheese

:• 50¢
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DAIL ·. 011 cusorol!llllS

; Double
;coupons
;Everyday

: pop.·
1
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7:00A.M. TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 9:00A.M•
TO 10:00 P.M .

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Farm Fresh Produce

BACON

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Offer Expires 10/ 12/91. Goo&lt;!On1yal

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2 qt. Saucep~n w/cove'r
Store Pncc ..... $1 ~99
Coup9n Saving., .. . 5.00
Price W/Coupon .. 14.99

1

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If&lt;.-.

· ILUl. COOKWARE

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JGA Stores.

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II

5I I.

CASTILLE COOKWARE
· ,2 qt. Double Boiler · &lt; • ·
Rcg,Storc Pn ~c .. . . . . $14. )9 .
Lcss.icoupon Savmgs . , . 5.00
Y(luf Pricc W/Coupcin . .. 9.99

.Offer Expires 10112/91.

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r-:- - - ' - -'' • --- - -- - 5;-) r75- ...- - ... - - -- .1 ss
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STORE HOURS . • '•
MQNDAY·SATURDAY
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PHONE 44.6-0818

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.9039 ST. RT. 160
. BIOWEtt,
OHIO
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OH:....Polnt.Pieasant 1 YN

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Pomeroy-Middl~port.,-Galllpons,

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Page A4-SI.Inday nmes Sentinel

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Octo~r

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6, .1991 ·

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.· ' October 6,,1991

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omerQy""'Middleport=#Galllpolls,
OH~IntPteaaint,
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Sunday T'lme• .Sentln..t-P8ge-A't ,
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·~ . =~(~n~bv~~~~Jo~!~i~d~~;.~.~:o Kygtr9reekSchooisdelay Morul!JY · =~ci:m.d~eo~.= ar:t.c~c~menled. "Cbar!J
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. : . Serenity House bake'sale pta·nned ' .
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: 10 DAYS SAME A' CASH
. ~.. LAYIWAYf AVAILABLt:··nEE·DELIVERY
.

SOFA &amp;CHAIR ·

.'SOFA, LOVESEAT .

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SALE ENDS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12Th

Norwalk .Off White w/.Biue . · Bruards, overstuffed sloppy 10!1
Grltll &amp;Mauve Print &amp;Stripe
suite. Brown, vary co-atilt.

$980

Reg. $1828.00

Reg. $1315.00

SOFA, LOYESEAT, CHAIR

SOFA&amp;

. BrayhUiue w/Belge. GrHn &amp;
Rust Print.
Reg. $1949.00

·
EXTRA
SPECIAL
BUY·
.
788 2•4 Drawer Chest...............2 For '99°0

5

$1 09

lanchcralt1 !!'fie back, dark
erown.
Reg. $2285.00

$1237

SOFA;-LOVESEAT; CHAIR

RECliNING

By Stratford. Black with Beige,
Blue&amp;Mauve ·
$ '
Reg.$1201.00 ,

675

FLEXSTEEL SECTION~L

BROYHILL
Brown with wood trim.
Reg. $3160.00

$15 75

STRATFORD SECTIONAL

w/Hide·a· bed &amp; Redinefl Blue with 2 Reclining Ends
Reg. $2717.00

$179

Reg. ~2102.00

.,....,OFA &amp;. · ,

SOFA, LOVESEII',
CHAIR

ENGLAND

Woad trim, mulll·color.
Reg. $1461.00

$1299

Green ·

Reg. $1299.00

RECLINING SOFA
&amp; RECLINING CHAIR

·

$688

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR
Bruards, Blue Pin Dot
Reg. $1388.00

SOFA ·

· 2-5 Drawer Chest .............2 For s119°

0

Octagon Table w/glass &amp; §chairs, NOT $199--. NOW $28.00
Octagon w/glass &amp;2 chain, HOT $149----- NOW $58.00
) sets lg. Sq. Table w/glasst4 chairs, HOT $249-.... · NOW-$1 09 ea.
Whitt Vanity with stoo~ NOT$ 199"--- --"HOW $99.00
Jrass Vonll', with Stoal, NOT $139----- - NOW $78.00
Rechners, only 61n stock at----- S125.00 ea.
IS Whig Back Chairs, NOT $399---" NOW $248 ea.
Almand Day Bad w/sprlngs, HOT $210----- HOW $119.00
Brass Day Bed w/porcelaln baUs &amp;springs, NOT $270 HOW $159.00
Red Daybed w/springs, NOT $270------- HOW $99.00 .
2 Video Chairs-......",_""'""'"""""-----.. HOW $39 ea.
7 Sets of Glass Top Tables"'"""'" _ _ ___ ...;_,_, HOW $68 eo;
With FruHwood finish &amp;.beveled glasL NOT $195 ea. SETS OIILY
Maple Tables, set of 3, NOT $120.00-- ---"NOW $62 ea. set
2 Sets of 3 CoffH &amp;End Tables on Legs, oak, 2 sets only....
HOW$175 sat
Good Selection of Tables.....- ............._ __..Jroll $50 to $90 ea.
New Shipment of Bassett Mlrrors....- ....·--.Reduced 30o/o Off Retad
Lamps.•••••- ........ ,........-.......... __,...- '..........- -..40~ Off Retad
3 pc. Wall Units In Oak Finish, NOT $1200..""'"""'"-"""'HOW $488
Room Dividers In oak or walnut, 48"' wide or 60"' wideOnly 8Left
Your Chalce $148

STRATFORD

With Wood Trim

$599

Reg.$1125.00

Reg. $1281.00

SOFA, LOYESEAT, CHAIR
BreyhiiL Blue Flome pattern
w/wood trim. CLOSfOun

Reg. $2986.00

SOFA, LOVESEAT
ENGLAND. Multi·tolor,
Reg. $1106.00

$69

SOFA, LOVESEAT'&amp;.
WING CHAIR .

l SOFA

Dark blue with grftn, mauve,
peach (print).
$1392.00 . 5

735

SOFA, LOYESEAT, CHAIR .
BRUARDS
Over stuffed, blue &amp;mauve.

· England. Peach·w/dark green.
Reg. $1973.00

$944

$1444

Reg. $1968.00

DiNING
ROOM SUITES
. .
SALE$399
1-corner Chlna .ln Maple •
Reg. $662~50 ·
•

SALE

lfeg. $1430.0Q ·
Oak Table ChaJrs &amp;Bench
leg. $673.00 .·

6 chairs
. Reg._$883.00 '

Dark Pine Tible;

$788

SAlE $399

Round Table In ·ch·e rry,
Reg. $357.00 . · 4 chairs

SALE $199
, SALE .

$475

SAL~ ,$299
Maple Table, 6 chairs
Reg. $599.00 .·
$ ·.
Chr'omecraft Table'ln&gt;light oak SALE
w/4 swivel title back chairs, i~. $1139 $
.(hromecraft,Tabli, pak w/4
SALE
· swivel arM .•hilf~s, r•t· $1464
$
.
Cal·styl~ Table,~~~ w/4 swivel
tide back arm chair · • 986

LA·Z.BOY, FLEXSTEEL, CATNAPPER
RECUNERS SAVE BiG
HERE ARE .J11ST 1t. FEW EXAMPLES

La·Z·Bor Beige Rug, ''I· .$44t.oo......."""'"""'ALE $~81.00
La•I·Ioy Brown, "I· $569.00.........................SALE $349;00
Flustttl Blue, reg. $523.00......."""'""'"""""SALE $297.00
Flexstttl Blue, reg. $6.06:ao............................ SALE .$369.00Catnapper Twttd, reg. $429.00...~.................,5ALE $269.00
Catnapper,JIIauve, reg. $457.00..............,"....:uu_$_2U.OO

$1 099

MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM

1-Maple China
Reg. $1 00 1.00
'1-Solld Oak China

King Size Wood Rockers, Reg. $300...................- ........ HOW $166.00
2-Medlum Size Bookcases (water damaged).- ................- ......$33 ea.
Bookcases, all slzes.....·...................~~~-..- -..................30% Off'
1-Solld Pine Poster·aed (6 pc.), reg. $2445-.-.......SAlE SI 199.00
1-&lt;herry Bedroom Suite w/n.s., reg. $2236.- ---SALE SI099.00

644
848
' SALE 588
. . .

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. . RIVERSIDE DESKS

:Flat Tap. R_eg~ $320.,... .......... ,..;;...........:........SALE $166.00
Roll Tap. Reg. $343...................................-.SALE $198.00
Roll Tap. Reg. $457........... -.~.......................SALE $288.00 ,
RoD Top. Reg. $732.....................................".SALE $488.00

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Mqsf{!r transported on drug charge

-s 00
Reg. $26 T""""""""""""""""";SAlE 139

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BEANBAGs-

GRAND OPEN.ING ·

·..' ------------------------_J
...
~ Family Planning

Large 8 King Size

SIMMONS BEAUTY REST QUEEN PAIR
Reg. $71S.........~ ...............~.......u ....... .... SALE $399.00 set .
Tw.ll pair Bedding, sets an~ ...............................$99.00 set
Full Size Set. Reg. $350 .........................................$199 set
Restonic FuU Size Box Spring &amp; Mattress............$17.9.00 set

!

i - -candidates evei£f sc1ielluled---.

THE REAL THING· SOLID OAK
noGR MIRRORS
,

Neon Colors • Ohio State • West Va. UniversitJ •
Ohio University

·l

OUTpaCe zn
za
- . . ' . ~ALLIPO~I~ - ~~ur ~~~ were-~;ily ~ ~ ~~ - --~~~0aof?c~~'Cf~ifJ~~is'i:tt; - ~~ ~~~ ~J:'i-~

, GALLJPQLIS - A li3Pper education class will be lit~ &lt;in Tues'·
day, Oct. 8 from 6-9 p,m. at the Gun. Club on Due\ Rtdge Road.
Tmppers may pre-regisW ~y calling the O.O.Mclntyre Park Disaict·
·at 446-4612. Registration for' the upcoming bunter education class
may also be made through the park district. . '

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Up To s50% Off

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or.

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Gallta County Jwl. Jailed were:
.
Lodge, No. 107, French Art . 441Hl596.
"'
. ,. Claren~e Herman Roosh, 34, of Bidwell, arrested and incan:cl8t·
· Colony, and Southeastern Ohio . ,_.....,.._ _ _ _ _~
ed Saturday mpmmg on a municipal court bench warrant for fiilure
Regional Council.
.· ,
FALL HARDY
to appear.
.
.
Members of SL Peters EpiSCo~
·
Edward Wayne Colhns, 43 , of Dunbar, W.Va., arrested and
Church, Adkins and hts wtfe
6Y2"8" POTS
incarceJ"ated Friday a(temoon by the Gallipolis Police Department
Mtirge, a regislered nurse, are the
.
11.35
for
attempted
theft
and
escape.
.
parents
or
two
sons
.
a
nd
a
daughter,
Asst.
Colors
•
Kenneth R. Clark, 3~ ; of Gallipolis, arrested and inCarcerated
and have ope granddaughter. Their
_. 8 n 10"
__c'j
·~ --'Thursday morning Ofl·a municipalcoun ben~h warrant-fordomestic ~ - soti; ieff;-is-Assiswu Prosecuting
- ,~- · ~.. ·- · :!--*7·
d' 'minRal damAldaging.J .33 r Middl
. .
ted F .... . •
Attomed
hi Y~ ~':.~ounty, and he
. HUBBARD~S- ·-- 't··~~~·
:&gt;
anny . erson r. , o.
epon, UIC&amp;rcem
n....y .or
tiil
s w11e ,. ....,.., also a regis·
GREENHOUSE
~
GALLIPOLIS - Voters in Gallia County wiD have an OJlllOl\U·
ing under the mlluence commitment
·
.
lered nurse, have a daughter, Lao·
nity to hear and ask questions or county bQard or educadon candi· .
•
ren. Their son Brent is the execu.,
:! dates at a Special "Meet the Candidates Ni~ht" on.Tuesday, Oct IS.
tive director or the French Art
'
~The event will be held at the Senior CitiZens • Centet and is sponColony, and daugh)er Ann is a
;::
sored by the Ga!lia County Local Education Association, Gallia
. junior at, the University of Rio
• ,,
County School Support Association, Kyger Creek Academic BoostPOMEROY • Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports
~ ) ers and the Parent~Teacher Organizations of Addaville,. Bidwell·
that
deputies transported Keith Musser on Thursday 10 Orient Cor·
•t Porter, Cheshire-Kyger, Hannan Trace, Southwestern and Vinton
rection
Reception Center IIi begin servmg his sentence im~ by
.\
Elementary Schools.
·
.
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the MeigS County Common Pleas Coon.
'
Doors wiD open at 6:30 p.m. ror refreshments with the meeting
Musser pled guilty to drug charges last week.
~
to begin at 7 p.m. The public is encouraged 10 attend.

Reg. $314............~.......................................SALE $178.00

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F

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~ . Trapper class slated

· CURIOS

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Gallia'deputiesprobe theft

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of !lle University of Rio Gran~ ~ typif'ICI tbc ~ CCllplllifltj ·~ •
Holzer CQilege or Nursin~and CXQCiiiJve and eoft!m/!iuty ~=
!
.Oal"· County Em-,_., ·. ''"'-' ·who
. iJ 'wlled and dediC11ed
.· · ·noC'. ·
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-o-,
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Service~. He is a member of !be only to IUs profession, bun er¥eP!"
Mid-Ohio Valley Industrial Plan· his com~unitr. in a ~umber
•
nin Council. .
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-ways, while .still mwn. sure be:· .
~ . . GALbtPOUs -· Sezenity House, a home for w~n ;...d .chil· ' .
~is a board member and has quality time withbts family.•,
~ drert in Gallia, Meigs and ~aqksoneounties who are dealil)g with
.
.
,
. ·
· president ofConsoUdacM ll~th .Gallia County is fOI1Uillle to haVel:·' ·
~ domestic. viol~ce, ts SponsOring a.bake ~e 10 be beld Saiurday
GAj:.L!POL~S -:- The Gall~ County Sherifrs Dep-ent is · ' SyStems, the Holzer Hospital Poun· Charlie, .and we are plllUclto !lavc:r. ·
'
starting at9 a:m; at the Ohio River Plaza.in Galli~. · .
. . cwrenily mvesllgaung the burglary of a Gallipolis residence.
' !latjon. lfolzer Vangilard,lnc.. hi!lllll!lresent us 85 our 1991 Per1\ '
~ . . The Buckeye Hills Cli!li)ief of tbe qlmllllll11tY ahd HoliJe Ser·
· ' Accorlling 10 a sheriff's department report,~ Cole reported .. · Holzer Foundalion for.-'l'ri·State ' son oftbe Year.~
"'
~·
vices·members will be assisting Serenity House, ' . . ···.
Friday monung chat sometime bet;veeitOCt.l and Oct 4, an uniden·
Health Care and Joint Ventures
Tickets for the November 710!
::
Domestic;Niolence. ili the . pltysical;-psychologicalr~otional. or '
ti{ied person or persons entered her house through a window and
Pharmacy, Inc.
SEORC Person of the YearAwlidl . ·
•
sexual.abuse of a family member. If you need help or JU~ someone
. stole stereo equipment and a 12~gauge shotg!lll.
He is a chartePmembet of botJt Banquet ilre available-at S IS eaci F :,. • ·
~
tO talk to, please call the Crisis LiRe ar 445-5554 in Gallia County,
' the OhiO Valley Chapter or Ducks 81 tbcGallipolis Area ~tier
'
1 8()().2~2 5554 · M · · .. J kson Coun"•s
Unlimiled ·and Tri-State Chaoler or Commerce office. A reception M
or •
J •
m etgs.~" ac
"" · '
r
the Ruffed Grouse Society. He also S:30 PM ai the University Inn will
~
(l
,J(ll ,
·
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holds membership in the Gallia pecede.the 6:30 P~ ~ueL Pot
tatnrilent IS pl81Uled for the whole day and there v,:illbe games for
·
. · . · . , , · ·r
.
· . ·
· · ·.
!,heyoungsters.
, ' .·
·" :. , . . - - /'· .
. ..- · CHE~HIRE - .TI)eKyger Creek AuendaliCe ~ Scbools will
,
· ·~;,
,.
be 1111!nul~ on a one·hQur delay Monday, Oct. 7. BIICkeye Rural·
' '·
:·
·
·
·
·
·
EleclriC w•U hav.e the declric shut off durin•
. ~ - lioun.
· , ·' ·
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o;o•~•

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·~Ames

Continued from A~J ·· ·

.,: remain.

·

~· Meigs...

.

Reg. S2,000:.........:....,'...................'...................$888.00
Twin Beds..........~ ....................................Starti•g $33.00 up

f1U Beds........,.~.·.................................... Starttiaa $33.00 up

Queen Beds,..............................................Starting 533.00 Up
l..()ak Finished w/nlte stand..........................SAlE $399.00
1-Dark Finis~ w/night stand..............:....... SAlE $499.00
4·Bedraom·$ulte, ook, maple, dark oak fi1ish
Your Choke $599.00
.
l·Solld Pine w.ilh Poster Bed
Rag. $2~.674..............................................SAL~ $1299.00
1-Solid Pine Floor Sample, as is, 6 pc.
·
· ·
Reg. $1 S44 .....~ ........................................SALE $799.00

•

In Connecticut, stores wili be
closed in Hamden and New Haven.
Ames made the decision t&lt;i
close the ~t&lt;.es after studying them
forthe past year, said company
spokesman Bill Roberts.
"They were unprofitable and
we need.ed to reduce our losses,"
Roberts said.

·

It

M~kes

•BASEBALL CARDS
,•BASKETBALL CARDS .
•FOOTBALL CARDS
•HOCKEY CARDS
~ •OTHER SPORTS MEMORABIU~ :

Sense... ·
'

Confidential Se.Vices:
. Birth Control

V.D. Screening
Cancer Scrlitning
Pregnancy Testing

··

Co~tinuedfrom A·l

,;, inservice programs to provide
:: teach~ greater ~~ess to advanced
, educauon and tralJUng. . .
~ •To develop an~ dehver pro·
"' JPli!DS to train and m'!olv~ parents
; m. the CC!ucatton .o.r therr children.
; •To. mcrease mter-agency colJ ·
, lalxntton and ~IDVolve the bustt ~e~ ~~.p:qfesstona) commun_tty
·t m ~ssessmg· 'lleeds •ani:l' developmg
~acllon plans.
" !"lans:c;~II ror. educators liofD the
:U~versity of Rto Grande 10 ·work
~With a~ from ~h local schfJ!&gt;l
:communtty 10 prov1de suppon m

Harge White Orienta~ storage bed w/mirror, hght
bridge, matching c~est w/door. Reg. $3,000. SAlE $1,000
1..0rlenlal Dark Storage Bookcase Bed,

.CARD BOX

-..,---..;.·------~--

;: gjnia. tbe company said.
-~
Ohio Stores Listed
~
Alliance, Akron, Barberton,
~ Bucyrus, Cambridge, Circleville,
: Eaton, Elyria, Fremont. Galion.
'· Greenville, Kent, Kenton,
. : Lebanon, Ml!nsfield, Norwalk,
" Springboro, Tiffm, Tipp City, War~- ren, Wauseon, Willard. 14 stores

.
BEDROOM SUITES

OF

Sldi.. '" salt. "' - mused strvic• btca•
developing and implementing
restructuring activities. .
Teachers will be encouraged to .
develop and plan msbUction which
will increase tbe academic achieve·
ment of all students. In order to do
GAWPOUS
this teachers will be provided staff ' POMEROY:
236
E.
Mojn
St.,
2nd
Floor
development activities in three
414 Stcond Ave., 2nd Floor
areas • the effective schools
992-5912
446·0166
.....
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approach , different models of .
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
teaching and ways to aceess aca·
Closed
Thursday
1:30 to 12 Saturday
demic achievemenL
Clasld
Thursdly
' Supt. Riebel said that there will
be no delay in implementing th e
AlSO: Jacbon. Chesaptakl, Alhenl, Chllcttht, logan &amp; McArth.111
program.
·

NEW AND OW CARDS

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

SPECIAL

OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

· Umited QuantiJy Topps Desert Cards .
These were the o~s Setll Ia ,.. troops lvtrseas.

TH't ; CARD BOX

~

I Yr mile solfh of Tuppers Plains a• St. Rt, 7.laok for slg~
667-6092
Open Mon.-sat. 1 ·
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EXCELLENT BUYS ON USED

, FURNlTURE
11 k

·
.$
TV stan d w/VCR ( ompattmenl,n e new """"'"'"'"
35
20 cu. ft. Chest Freezer"""'"'............................._$249
2 End HI
a es, therry, step type, good sh· ape~........$ 60 pr.
Wooden Table &amp;6 chairs, like new..- ..............."•.$285
1iabl e,· 4cha1rs, breakfas t set, me ta1type............-..575 ·
Pair Gold Glass Base l~mps, real nice.................$30 pr.
2 GE Dryers good sho~ rws good
.$75 ea
M
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j
aytag Eettronlt Dryer, works great....................$ 19
(3) BroyhiU Cherry Coffee &amp; End Table ~et •
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NOW $22 5
New ·Was 5599•00.........................
,..._,
.
S11Jall Black Bedroom Suite, dresser chest, night stand
• bed &amp; mirror, hke new......................;..............$499
Hide·A·Bed. blue Drlnt w/mattress.......................S2SO
Bl ue· Rechner, good ·sha~...·-····~ .................."...$125

Zeti,.

Console,

stereo, wood ;.L
wtrr le aew, was $999- NOW $488 ·

12" id 0 k ( b'
1 d &amp; drawer..........53 5
wf e lbo a tnet w one oor
17 cu. t. G son Side·by·Side Refrigerator
coppertone
5250
·
""""""'"""""'."'""""""'"'""'""'
19 cu. ft. Coldspot Side·by·Side Refrigerator
Gold, li~e new.................................................$349
17 til. ft. Gibson Top Freezer &amp; Refrigerator
.

· Gald."•••••••"•·.. ·····"":••n .....;............................ $225
85,000 BTU Warm Morning Heater ~
Lp gas, Ilke new.;........................,;............. $599.95

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CLOSEOUT MODELS GAS RANGES

.

2-SunraJ Gas, almond, glass •acl, black oven door,
Was 5499.95 w/tradi.---""'"---.;_--.NOW $333
!·Sunray Gas Ranges, whlte~lass back with clock, black seethru owe•
door, cantiiiiiOUS dian oven, as $54_9.95 w.t·----NOW $341
4-Sunray
alrnorid,_glass
back with clack,·chrorne.Now
burner·$368
pan,
black ovenGas
door,Range,
Was $59S.,s;.
_______
3·SunfDY. Gas, 2 almond • I white, roll clock hghtln back paul and
oven wHh tlmer1 chrome burner pan, continuous clean, oven black. new
door also •lack Droll drawer 111 front. Was $649.95--.NOW S388
I·Mmlral Gas Range, almond, clock and timer, light In ov1111, black oven
door. Was $599.95'....---·- ----·-----NOW$395
I·Aifmlral E~ Range, almond, automatic dock, black oven doar.
Wos $599.91 w.t,____,.,,.. ____..,... ___ HOW$398
2-Sunray Eltc. Ranges, gold clock, black oven door.
Was 5599.95....,......_ ...;.___ ~"------NOW $385
I·Sunray Elec. Ra1!9e, c~per, clack back, continuous clean oven, black
oven doar and blaci broil drawer.

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Hol zer Medical Center has always had the highest
professional standards so that pa tients receive the best
•

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·· ft............
.-·"""-"'"'"""~""'-"
•
3-Gitson 17 cu.
Ref.,--......
grHn. Wos-$699.95
.. - ......- .NOW 549.95

3·FriJklalre, 17 cu. ft., 2·ilfmond, l·whlle. .
Was 5699,95...........- - ..- - - ..........................NOW s549•95
8·FriJklalre 19 cu. ft., 611lmond, 2·whlte.
Was $799.95...............- ......- ••- ..........................NOW $649.95
4·Kelvlnatar, 14 cu. ft. 1·whlle, 311bnond.
·· • ·
was$599.95...............- ....-.-.......................NOW $449.95
2·Kelvlnator, 18 cftu.lt., almondnd. Wass $699.95 ...............NOW $599.95
1·AIImlra~ 17ca. .,ama .Was 699.95 ..- ..........NOW $549.95
,l·AifmlraJ 19 cu. f,., almoncl. Was $799.95................NOW $599.95
CLOSEOUT WAIIIIIl fl DRYER AT SALE PRICES

25• Zenith Swlvtl Floor Model TV, remote.
Wa.s $799.95 .-..--·....--·-·-- - ..··""'""NOW $549.95
2s• Zenith R1010te Stereo TV. Was $899.......................NOW $699.95
Zenith R~eJV.)'{o~ S7-9U5..- -....- ..- .... NOW $599.95
War.. Momlnl
Gas' Grl'l1t,. works good...........-........$90 . tF ')7• GIW
·
Stdillieti Sfli'ft lV, LA. calllut, Wn $1049... NOW $799.95
2·Maytag nmer Dryer, white............... ~....;............ .$9~
26"' Gold Star Cllbe Rtmale TV Stereo, Reg. $799.95..... NOW $499.95
2·Maytog Electronic Dryer, green..........................$ 135 · W Zenith Porlabl• TV Color, Was $299. 95.............;:... NOw $199.95
1-Sears HumidiRer, lg; capacity w/chemicals .
20"' Zenith Porlable TV, colli. Was $399.9S..................NOW $299.95
Z11tth VCR, Vfas $399.95..-"'!''"""""''"'" '"'" ";_..,.,...NOW $299.95
k
d
wor s goo ••,..........."'""''''!""''''''"''"''"''''~••••••~50
. Bur NOW fOil CiiRISTMAS

Ed ward J . Berkich. M .D.,
Chai rm an. Depa rtment of Surgery

I

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Margaret S. Harn ish. M .D.
OBI GYN

Thomas W. M organ. M .D.
purgery
·

they have training in the most modern surgical tech·
niques. ~ One example is the new gall blapder·-surgery.

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Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy, which can dramatically

'',,

reduce recovery time. Patients us~ally stay in the hospital . •

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only overnight and they're bad to their norma) routine ·

,f '

in just a few days.~ Holzer Medical Center...leading the

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board certified in their area of specialty. Additionally,

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possible care. ~ All surgeons are either board eligible or

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NEW REFRIGERATORS

2·G~scin Ref., lf4 cu.efft, greehn. Waslm$69.9.95~......."~-NOW $499.95
4-Glllson 15-cu. t. R ., 7 w lie, 2 a ond.
·· ·
Was $699 95 •
uow ~549 95

Skilled Surgery .

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,;.;ay to provide the best possible health care, right here.

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Holzer Medical Center

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Other surgeo ns end their specialties:

.,t

OBI GYN
Keith R, Brandeberry. MD.
l.aure l A. Kirkha rt. M.D.
Donald E. O'Rclurke. M.O.
T hc;mes P. Price, M .D.
J . Craig Strafford, MD.

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Malcolm W. Lentz. M.O:
S1.1rgery

.,...

J ohn H. V Iall, M .D.
Otolaryngology '

M o11tri~ Chaksi.lpa. M .D.

06/GYN

Otolaryngology
James R. Magnussen. M.D .

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Opthalmology
Edl.'\fllrd J . Sheridan. MO.

,),
'I

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£,
,!;;•

...

Gene ral
Alice A. Gricoski. M .O.
LB'Nis A. Schmidt. M .D.
Daniel H. Whiteley. M.D .

OrthOpooedics
Denise 0 . Hoimas. M .D.
Michael E. Moore. M .O.
Do nald M. Tholer. M.D.

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Urology

Restitute H. Alon2o. fJl.D.
Mel P. Simon. M.D.
Lawrence J .Yodlowski, M .D. ,
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,Pomeroy-Middleport~Galllpolls, OH-foJnt Pleasant, WV

·Page-Aa:-$unday Times-Sentinel

Along . t~e

October 6, 1991 ,

Hofnecoming Observed by area /Jigh schools .Friday

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River
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..~imes. • ~tntiml

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Section B
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· _ OCtober 6, 1891 •

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Gallia senior citizens able·to live independent
·uves through Area Agency on Aging program$
.organtzaUon. th~ Agency IS gov- .
emed by a sclf-perpetuilling B.oard
of Trustees mlide up ·on not il)ote
than two individuals from each of
.ce '""'unli'es 1.n the sem'ce area.
u• ON
, The Board of Trustees is
advised on service needs by an
0Areaf Amdevmisobe~sc.ou'Ol~ilmacoJ. ~fY~
'

By KRIS COCHRAN .
Tlmes·Sentin·eJ Ne- S••.•tr.
"" ""
0
ANDE B h
RI OR
• Y. t e ye~r
2010, one in five Amencans WI 11
beage6Sandolder. ·
Willi those statistics the need for
elderly services is grea~ and Pamwill
cootinue to grow, according to
Matura, ,executiyculirector of the
Area Agency on Aging District 7,
lnc · Ri Grand
- ., m o
e.
"As the elderly
their
·~ec1s will
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·· -60 years of age or older and
financially eligibly for •Medicaid :
f
• At risk o 1nursing home placement
• The cost of in-home services
provided to the client must be no
more than 60 jlCrcent of the cost of
MediTCBih'd ~ursmd
. $dhom1e care.
• · em lVI ua,
the PASS both groups is at least 60 ~ of I'ORT service· provider, @_nd the
age.
- · · -~ -~ individual's physician, must all
.- In 1983, the Agency became the agree
' . to the serv;•• plan.
.
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cootractor for the Title ill Nutrition
• The' client's health-and safety
Program for the. ten-county area,

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In 1972, ,Rio Grande College .
menu
was select.ed·to sponsor·one-of only ~ bon
four model programs in 0hio that wide basis.: , _
were funded by the U.S. Admi~is- , .ln.J988 •. thi: Agency conttac~
tration on Agmg. The A!ea-wtde With the Oh10 !'epanment of Agmg
Model Project developed services 10 o~. a pilot program m Care
for older Americans in a four-coun- Coordination for lhe area. ty area.
. In 1990,. the Agency conttac~
In 1974, the Model Project was w1th th~ O~o Departme~t of Agm~
officially desi~nated the Area to provtde m-home servlCCS to frail
l'\gency on Agmg by the Ohio elderly through the ~ASSPORT
Commission on Aging. The area Program.
served by the Agency was expand·
PASSPORT services
ed to cover the present ten counties
Pre-Admission Screening Sysin Southern Ohio, which include: tern Providing Options and
Adams, Brown, Gallia, Highland, Resources Today, (PASSPORT),
Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Ross, the newest service offered by
&amp;:ioto, and Vinton.
· AAA7, provides an alternative to
:- In 1978 the Agency ~;E~nded nursing home placement through
its central office slaff by 'ng on coordinated in-home services to
three new programs. It implement- Medicaid-eligible older adults.
C:d the Nursing Home Ombudsman
PASSPORT is made possible by .
Program, which is mandated by the funds lhrough the Ohio Department
Older Americans Act; it contracted of Aging (ODA), and is combined
with the Ohio Department of with the Ohio Department of
Health to operate the Nursing Health Services.
Home Area Training Center for the
One year ago on Oct. 15, home
AAA7 area of Soutbea_st Ohio, an care services were provided by
Actual and
area expanded by the closing of the approved community organizations
Projected
2l.B'fo
center near Manetta to include the in all ten counties of AAA7. These
'
percenllge
counties of Athens, Hocking, services include, personal care
of population:
Meigs, and Washington.
aides, homemaker, registered nurse
13'11&gt;
It also assumed responsibility services, home medical equipment
for the planning and supervision of - and supplies, occupational, speech
improvements to the Multi-purpose and physical lherapy, home delivSenior Citizens Centers in t!te ten- ered meals, respite care, adaptive
,f&lt;~UD;ty area f~m the Ohio Com- and ~isti~e dcvi~es•. '!linor ho!lle
mlSSIOII on Agmg. - modtf1cauons, dteuuan, soctal
In 1980, the Agency separated worker/counseling, major house
from Rio !Jran!le Coll~e (current- cl~g and~ ~'!lova[ . .
ly ~ Umv.mJty,pfR,io G~lk), ...... ~hen t-..-e!iJ1111Ut.y .,plleita- ==:;;: ::::iililcifiii,cniM
ji\4 ~ I cbarilable JlC!D-Profil includes:
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CROWNS GAHS QUEEN • GaiUpolis Blue
Devil football co-captain Jason Kopack (Z3)
crowns Kelly Smith 1991 GAHS homecoming
queen prior to Friday night's GaUipolis-Warren
Local football game on Memorial Fielcl. Miss
Smith, one of _six finalists seeking this year's
crown, is the daughter of John and Martha

QUEEN CROWNED • Chrissy Weaver was
crowned the 1991 Meigs_High Schoolllemecomiog Queen on Friday evening during pre-game
homecoming ceremonies at Bob Roberts Field In

Smith, Gampolis. Co-Captain Clint Davis (10)
shared-crowning duty' honors. Miss Smith was
chosen by members or tile student body. Flowers
were furnished by French City Florists. Other
finalists were Jennifer Kisnl!r, Lorle Neal Dean·
na Evans, Dena Greene and Kristen Farney. '

escort,
Sargent, as she was crowned by ,
Meigs High School Pr_incipal Fenton Taylor.
.

Environmentalists like corps new attitude ·

ST. LOUIS (AP) - The U.S. ject, which included replacement of pro Jes ted th at th e work :vould
Army Corps of Eng.neers has long Locks and Dam 26 on the Missis- greatly increase barge llaffrc and
been an easy target for environ- sippi River, environmentalists harm the environment.
menial groups -opposed to its tinkcring with the flow of rivets and
rii&gt;.ll&gt;~~·------;
1ts tmpact on wildlife hab11ats.
But times are changing and so is
the corps. whose chief of engineers
says the organization's future will
POMEROY -Four calls for assistance were answered on Friday
include addressin~ environmental
and early Saturday by Meigs County Emergency Medical Center.
as weU as engineenng concerns.
At 8:34 p.m., Pomeroy unit went to Mulberry Avenue. Dennis
The change has n't gone unnoMusser was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital. At.9:d2 p.m., 'Tupper
ticed by environmentalists.
Plains squad went to Eastern High School for Raben Warren II,
"Just wheQ you think you have
who was taken to Veterans.
a dependable lifelong enemy At I: 12 a.m., RuUand squad went to Painters Ridge Road for
one you can really count on - he
Sarah McCarty, who was taken to Veterans. At 4:11 a.m., Pomeroy
begins to show a good side," said
unit \\ICnt to State Route 7 and Union for Donald Waugh. He was
John Madson, an area environmentreated but not transported.
talist and writer.
"It's getting so you can't even
llust your best enemies,':. Madson
RUTLAND - A Rutland man escaped injury in an accident on
said in an Audubon magazine artiS.R. 143 in Rutland Township Friday morning.
cle about the Riverlands National
According to a report .from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Slate·
Environ(llenfal Demonstration
Highway Patrol, Andrew A. Vance, 18, was steering a truck being
Area. ·
.
towed by another vehicle. His truck lost steering and carne Joose
The I,200-acre Riverlands site,
from the tow vehicle. The truck went off the right side of the road,
near Alton, Ill., is the flfst of severstruck a creek and overturned.
game. Standing with her are (L-R) queen allen·
SOUTHWESTERN
HOMECOMING
al
projects
planned
along
the
MisDamage to Vance's 1981 Ford F-150 was listed as heavy and
• dants Tera Hanson and Angle Blakeman (left),
COURT - Renee Hale (center) was crowned
·sissippi
River
and
elsehwere.
It
is
disabling.
Hale, and queen attendan~ Lynn Gill and Missy
Southwestern's 1991-~2 homecoming queen at
being ha iled as a model for the
Vance was cited by the patrol for failure to wear a seat belL Neal (right). (Times-Sentinel photo by G.
Southwestern High School prior to Friday
future
by
environmentalists.
Spencer Osborne)
night's North Gallia-Southwestern football
Since before the Civil, War, the
corps has channeled, dammed and levied the nation's rivers to aid
navigation and provide flood conllol.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- An fit s in Ohio averaged less than said the Labor Department report
When the corps began work on
improvement this month in Ohio's 100.000 for the first time this year, on the nation's unemployment rate, the $980 million Riverlands pro·
unemployment rate doesn't signal Conrad said in a slat~ment.
is ".one more si$n ~at the econoan economic recovery, a stateoffiThe bureau satd 5,095,090 mytsstrengthenmg.
cial says. ·
Ohioans had jobs in September, up
" While I believe that the econoCOLONY THEATRE
" In re view of the summer 87,000 from August. The number my is on the right track, let me be
months, economic perfonnance in of workers unemployed was the flfst to say that alliS not' well.
Ohio and the nation has not been 348,000, down from 365.000 the I'm deeply conceri!Jld about those
robust. Uncerlainty continues to previous month.
, who are out of work," Bush said at
do minate rhe ·economy," said
The civili im labor force a news conference.
James Conrad, administrator of the increased to 5,443,000, up from
Ohio Bureau of Employment Ser- 5,373,000 in August.
In Washin~ton. President Bush
V·ICeS.
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Figures released Friday by the
446 4514
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U.S. Department of Labor showed
COOLVILLE- Rev . Thomas
Ohio's jobless rate 111. 6.4 percent m
September. down from 6.8 percent (Glen) McClung, not Rev. Mark
in August The national rate was McClung, wiD offtciate, along with
dow n 0. I percentage point to 6.7 Rev. Duane-Sydenstricker, at the
funeral services of Carl M. Findpercent.
The figures showed mod.cst ling, who died on Fridar morning.
gro wlh in employment and the size · Those services wil be held at
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
of the civilian work force. Continu- 1:30 p.m. on Sunday at WhiteA!)MtSSION $1.50
ing claims for unemployment bene- Blower Funeral Home.

L ocaJ b • ,

EMS runs answere.d

Man escapes injury in crash

Ohio jobless rate down slightly

men~ and what ~rvices, they ~Y of serv.i.ce. not only are the_client.'t,
•

needs are 115sured lhrough the proVl'sion Df. services. ~
. Referral process
Prospective clients .can be
refc:nW by anyone to PASSPORT
by callinf 1-800-582-PASS.
Callers wil speak with Kay AUbright, AAA7 licensed social worker, about their needs and financial
and program eligibility.
__
"When a call is received, 1 ask
nue8tions concernina the prospec
"
P
· uve client's dail~ h~ng arrange-

U.S. lila expec;tancy at birth:
78.6 Y!IB!ll for women
11.6 .years for men
Centenarians currently number
25,000 and am prolected by
the Natlonallnst~ute on Aging '
to exceed 100,000 by the turn
of the century.

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need says Allbnght 11us servtce
h I b
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receiving c p, ut man)' .am. 1
keeps them out of nursm~ homes . members are touched by AAA 7
so tlie~ can ~ntiriue the~ m~n· efforts.
:
dcnce m their own home.
• . Forrest Payne and his family m'
The AAA7 program must he just one of many PASSPORT&gt;
fuUy funded to allow equal access clients that have been heiP.ld ·
across Ohio for Medicaid eligible through the service.
-~
people who are severely d1sabled.
p
89
Jd ident
Gov~ _QeorgLYPi!tov~s bud- of s~Jwelne,t~nu·1ucarcs-too livrcse
get has alotted $46 million for the ho. e h's p'
ts 1· ed · H ;:;: ~
A
d'
M
m
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aren
m. e""'"'
program. ccor u\g to atura, one Je to d"13 bcte •v
abo t ...~ ears
$63-68 .5 million in slate match is
gd ,
s d u .'"hu Y
ago an gets aroun wit a ne'f,
needed for slate wide availability;
prosthesis and walkct.
•
Tlie state receives a certain
"When you get up there you'll:
· number of "slots" (PASSPORT see a difference,"" ~~~:f:.::_;dur=J~·~
openings), -which are__cliyided -ing-a-visit·from p
between all of the Slate's PASS· managers Bowen and R••rha•·.,
PORT progiams.
. · E li p
. ,
,
P ng. ayne •s a .onmer .armer,
· According to Allbright, most
-referrals come from those dealing railroad worker and coal miner. -with the elderly, such as hospitals,
Lori Birchfield, Payne's grandsenior citizens centers and nursing .daughter, has been taking care of
homes.
her grandfather for the past three
"Once an in-home assessment is years. She's up bright and early
conducted and they are eligible, every morning 116 Lm. to help her
before she heads to the
services can begin the next day,• grandfather
UnivenityofRioGrandeforaloog
said Allbright. "A care plan is also day of studyinf.
.
developed and ser t to a physician
Payne recetves home delivered:·
for approval."
.
If a client is found to be incligi- meals and oa:assional visits from a
ble for PASSPORT, they are homemaker.
.
referred to other community-based
"For many, the visits we make.
home care options or to a nursing are the only type of contact tberc
·
client's have with others," said
home.
. Epling.
But the attention and care for
Thanks to PASSPORT, Lori•
PASSPORT ~lients doesn't stop
was able to return to college an~
_ with the initial phone caU.
Case managers continue to mon- pursue a degree in Eduealion, whiJC:
itor the client's needs on a regular her grandfather continues a life ofbasis to reassess and adjust services in~:.~w what I'd do ~th-:
as needed.
"We reassess clients every six out Lori," commented Payne,
months," says Kathy Bowen, s.w.,
What did Payne do to stay in
case manager/assessor. "We make good health?
"That's God's business," he:.
personal visits every six months. says.
and make phone calls 111. least twice
during that time."
Providing services
:
Bowen is one of five PASSOthers providing smior citizens
PORT case managers. She covers
clients in Gallia, Lawrence, and with in-home services through
Scioto Counties. Other case man- PASSPORT are: JoAnne Schneiagers/assessors include: De~bie der, site director; Bonnie Dilfgcss,
Crawford, S.W.; Barbara Ephng, case management. supervisort
R.N.; Debbie Radekin, R.N.; and Margie Skidmore, quality assurance supervisor; Geraldine McKiDDenise Young, L.S .W.
niss, case aide; and Andrea Jpseph,
Success story
MIS/Dala
entry.
.
When an ageocy ollin du. rype tn' ' " " '

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448-0923

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Rockporr
OUTDOORS

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NEWSmPMENT
JUST ARRIVED!

•

THE SHOE CAFE
LAFAYETTE

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NO WITHDRAWAL NO NERVOUSNESS
,.. NO
WEIGHT GAIN

IN0NENIGHT'·

TAXING THE TIME ·Kathy Bowen, (right),
PASSPORT case managerlanessor, takes a
moment to si't down and talk wltb Forrest
. Payne, client, during a visit to his BidweU bome.

WRITTEN GUARANTEE
Color:
Brown'

Rockports makeyou feel like %l1king

-!~L§E ~

....... ,............._...

PERF 0 RMANCE
OUTDOORS

1111 .." _ , . ' " " ,...,, ~..... ,..

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help your fami/.y •••

dilll3 . . . . .

•HOSPitAL BEDS
•WH.ILCHIIRS
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(Times-Sentinel photo by Kris Cochran)

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Cochran)
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CHECK-UP • Following a refreshing batb,
Forrett Payne, (seated), receives a llaa ot water
from Rex Howard or Holzer Mealcal Center.
Howard visits Payne duriDI tbe week to help _

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· October 6, 1991 .

Times-Sentinel

~ . ~·

1eaiuring

~~ ·

?V \

~cquisitiotts
__

Carroll-Edge
.

(BRENDA) LLEWELLYN

'

•
~

'•'

•

Sinclair-Llewellyn ·

ALBANY - Brenda Susan Sinclair and Brian ·wayne Llewellyn
were united in marriage during an
Aug. 17 wedding ceremony at Eas~
lthens Church of Christ
: The bride is the daughter of Mr.
· anp Mrs. Paul L. Sinclair, Shade.
The groom is the son of Mr. and
~s . Charles C. Llewellyn. New
Marshfield.
~ The Rev. Willard Love officiat~g the double ring service and
duptial music was provided by
~ianist Susan Douglas and soloist
E-isa Feeck. A reception was held at
ille Athens Elks Lodge 973.
The bride, escorted to the altar
by her father, wore a gown of white
satin with a fitted elongated waist
bodice embellished wilh beaded reembellished lace and a pearl edged
v-neckline. The sleeves were slim
with illusion applique inserts and
pearl drops. The full skirt was
edged in beaded re-embroidered
lace which ·flowed into a semicathedral train accented wilh beaded window appliques.
Her headpiece was a waist
length veil of illusion with a pearl
band of shooting pearl sprays and
filament pouf wilh scanered pearls.
'the cascading bouquet was made
df silk blue and white roses, carnations: s"tephanotis and baby's
,ljeath.
' Susan Arnold, Albany, served as
maid of honor. Bridesmaids were
Sally Ingels, New Ifaven, W.Va.,
a:nd Misty Llewellyn, Pomeroy.

niece of the groom.
The auendants wore tea-length
gowns of royal blue satin with jeweled necklines and filled princess
seamed waist bodices. The gowns
had an open back which featured
·criss-cross straps and shirred
poufed lhree-quarter sleeves. The
tea-length skirts featured butterfly
bows at the center back. They carried baskets filled with silk blue
and white roses, carnations,
stephanotis and baby's breal.h.
Flower girl was Crystal Meredith of Athens. Ring bearer was
Nathan Brickles, Pomeroy, cousin
of the bride.
Best man was Pat Bails, Albany.
Groomsmen· were Eric Llewellyn,
Loueridge, nephew of the groom,
and Mark Meredith, Athens.
The bride is a 1987 graduate of
Meigs High School and a 1991
cum laude graduate of Ohio University with a Bachelor of Business
Adminislration in ftnance and management. She is employed by PutCHESHIRE • The 41st annual
tons minianue golf of Athens.
The groom is a 1983 graduate of Tate reunion was held recently at
Alexander High School and a 1984 the Gavin Employees Recreation
grailuate of Northwestern Business Area with a potluck dinner served
College and Automotive Diesel at noon. Sixty-oll!l family members
School. He is a certified automo· anended.
Prizes were awarded for the
tive diesel technician and is
employed by Tri-County Commu- tastiest dish, Lydia Smith; tastiest
nity Action and Appalachian Tire, dessert, Janite Grimm.
.The children played games with
both of Athens.
Following a honeymoon trip to pnzes gomg to all present
A talent show as held in the
Niagra Falls, the couple resides at
afternoon
with prizes going to
4036 Dickson Road, Albany.
Jannie Tate and J.P. Varian for the
children's division. Clarice Callicoat, Alison Rose and Janice
Grimm winning in the adult division.
Officers were elected as folThursday, 4 p.m., prior to the date .lows:
Teresa Varian, president;
of publication.
Cindy
Parsons, vice president; Bill
Photographs of eil.her the bride and Missy
Myers, game committee.
or the bride and groom may be It was also
agreed to have the
pu~lished with wedding stories if
relinion next year at the same place
desired. Photographs may be either and
time if possible.
black and white !Jr good quality
.
Births
noted were Brittany Parcolor, billfold size or larger.
sons,
Feb.
and Alyssa
Poor quality photographs will Longstreth, July14;
S.
One
death noted
not be accepted. Generally, snap- was I;loise Smtih on June
10.
shots Ol' instant-developing photos
The
prize
for
traveling
the farare not of acceptable quality.
tJ!est went to Donald and Ruth
Questions may be directed to the Tate; oldest, Harry Tate, 93, New
editorial department from I to 5 Lexington; and Alyssa Longstreth,
p.m. Monday through Friday at daughter of Lanny and Rena
(614) 446-2342.
Longstreth, was the youngest

$wimming practi~e slated
; RIO GRANDE - Practice for
cOmi!Ctitive swimming will be held
on Sundays beginning October 6
tHrough October 27, from 3 to 5
p;m. This practice is for both, boys
and girls age 6to 16.
i These pracpce sessions will ·be
h¢ld at the Lyne Center P!JOI on the
University of Rio Grilnde campus.
Cost is $1 per person. per session.
collected on site: The instructor is
Kim Canaday.
: The following test will be given
ta dctermine.eligibility. Tread
water for one minute. Swim one

.....

·~-

(

lap (50m) of .each of the following
strokes: Freestyle, backstroke, and
breaststroke, without stopping.
Racing starts and turns ·will be
introduced. The goal is this'class is
to perfect.each of the racing sirokes
to produce the fastest lime possible.
Lap swim min~ will be required.
For more mformation, contact
the Office of Continuing Education. P.O. Box ~78, University of
R1o Grande, R10 Grande, Ohio
45674 or call 614-245-5353 extension 325 or toll free in Ohio at 1:
800-282-7201.

--~~

. TRACIE HUBBARD and DONALD STEIN

Hubbard-Stein
SYRACUSE · Mr. and Mrs. Meigs High School and is attend·
Carl Roger Hubbard, Syracuse, ing Ohio University majoring in
announce the engagemepl and industrial technology. He is
approaching marriage of their employed at the United Parcel Serdaughter, Tracie, to Donald Stein, vice in Athens.
Middleport. He is the son of PatriAn open church wedding is
planned for Dec. 14 at 7:30p.m. at
cia Stein, Middleport
Miss Hubbard is a I 987 gradu- the First Presbyterian Church in
ate of Southern High School and a Middlepon.
'
1991 cum laude giaduate of Ohio
Miss Hubbard is the grandUniversity wilh a bachelor's degree daughter of the late Bill and Marin Home Economics, majoring in garet Eichinger, Syracuse. Stein is
family studies. She is employed at the grandson of Don and Ethel
the Elder-Beerman Deparunent · Lowery, Middleport, and ·Mary
Stein and the late Edwin Stein, Sun
Store in Athens.
Stein is a 1987 graduate of City, Ariz.

Leach-Hysell

MIDDLEPORT . • Charles be an event of Sunday, Oct. 13 at 2
Anthony "Tony" Leach and Julie p.m. at the Cheshire Baptist Church
Lovina Hysell are announcing their with reception to follow at the Old
engagement and approaching mar- American Legion Hall in Middleriage.
Leach is the son of Mr. and Mrs. ~he coQple will reside in
Charles Leach, Middleport. Miss Columbus where Leach is a manu'
Attending were Harry Tate Hysell is the daughter of Mrs . · facturing technician at Com·
Flossie Tate, Hazel Tate, Wall~ R..osemary Hysell, Middlepon, and puserve. Miss Hysell is employed
Tate, Faye McCabe, all of New Lawrence Hysell, Rutland.
as a hair designer at The Beauty
Lexington; Diane and Miriam . The open church wedding will Network.
Clonch, Darrell and Thelma Darst,
~ter; Donald and Rul.h Tate,
Ttm Tate, Cleveland; Milce, Barb,
For the second consecutive year, eight free. educational pr.ograms
Jason and Nick Tate, Carroll, Linda
Hills
Department Stores is Qffering offered by Hills. The com:J. will
and Jamie Tate, Thelma Tyler,
s and
area
schools
an environmental edu- provide free Earth Kids
Glady Garsner, Homer Tate and
banners,
as
well
as
an
environmencation
program.
The
Eanh
Kids
.Karen Tate, all of Columbus;
Robert Smith Jr., Shelbyville, Ky.; Club Ill designed to help schools tal handbook and a gift' certificate
Thelma Rupe, Janice~ Steve, Jere- participate in a~~&gt;environmental to help schools get their projects
my, Israel, Heather Grimm and program while aUowing !.hem the started. Interested schools should
Becky ZUrcher, all of Pomeroy; Iris opportunity to earn monetary contact Hills Community Relations
and Shaun Tate, Joey White and awards. The purpose of the-Earth Department at 15 Dan Road, CanClarice Callicoat, Gallipolis; Lelll Kids Club is to en~ourage students ton, MA 02021 or their local Hills.
Fetty, Bob, Teresa, J.P. and Curtis to work as a team In helping the
Varian, Kenny and Betty environment, and 10 instill in them
Longstreth, all of Langsville; John a respect for the world in which
·
Longstreth, Athens; Lanny, Rena, they hve.
Schools
will
be
given
three
cate•
Corey an~ Alyssa Longstre\h, Raymond and Lydia Smith, all of gories of environmental topics
Pomeroy; Arch, Debbie, Tyson and from which to choose an Earth
Alison Rose, Lon$ Bouom; Kids Club project: .Clean-up and
Charles and Virg1nia Tate, Beautification, Conservation; or
Cheshire; Cindy, Nikki and Brit· Recycling/Reducing Waste.
tany Parsons, Pomeroy; Bill and Schools can partici~te in environmental projects which they believe
Missy Myers, Darwin.
are
most beneficial for their stuMr. and Mrs. Harry Tate will be
observing their 73rd wedding dents and the community, said ,
anniversary on Friday. Cards may Glenn Ryerson, Duector-Marketbe sent to Mr. and Mrs. Tate at416 ing Consumer Affairs. Its imporSevigate Street, New U:xington, tant for kids to understand 'at a
young age what they can do for the
Ohio43764.
environment.
Award incentives are offered to
schools for the de:..elopment of
The September Meeting of the upcoming Bob Evan's Farm Festi- . environmental programs and !O
GFWC-OFWC Gallipolis Jr. val on Oct. 11,12, and 13. She help offset budget cuts. ~ere will
BOSSARD MEMORIAL
Woman·~ Club was held on Sept 9 reminded all member's to get their ~ a flf~l, second and !bird place
at the St. Peter's Epicopal Chwth.
T B card updated. The qpcoming w1~ner ~~ each of l;he th~ cat~LIBRARY
The meeting was called to order fall dance was discussed and will l!ones. FlfSI place wmners will wm
by President Terri Long. Faith be Nov. 9,1991 at the Elks Club. S!OOO, second .P!ace school~ will
McKinnis read an inspirational The theme this year will tie a Hoe w!n SSO!?, and third place wmners
PAIIIOIIIIIIIMIIW IOIIill liiiAIY
message. A potluck dmner was Down. The new member project will rece1ve $25~.
.
enjoyed with 50 new and old mem- was discussed by Michelle Jenkins.
The Earl.h K1~ Club IS one of
bers present .
All SU':"mer committee reports , _.......!"'"llllli___________llllli_ _•
Roll call and minutes were read were d1scussed and reports were
by .Amy Allison. Waverly Hively given by their chairman.
read all the summer corresponThe next meeting will be Oct. 7
~I,E(:I j \IJ!!
·dence and the treasurer's report at 7 p.m. New members should be
was.given by Sheila Wood, Katrina · there at 6:30. The Education
Northup gave her report on the Department will host the meeting.

Crow-Casd
MIDDLEPORT - Lynne M.
Crow, Middleport, and Fred W.
Crow, Ill, Syracuse, are announcing the engagement of their daughter, Anne Lowry Crow, to Ronald
Paul Casci, son of Paul Casci, Middleport, and the late Gemma M.
Casci.

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KAYLAPAYNE

News briefs

'

2nd .1\nltuaJ. Fall
Health Resource Festival.

Researchers at .Johns .Hopkins
School of Medicine report that men
who gain excessive weight during
!.heir 20s and 30s double their risk I
• in middle and old age of develop. ing gout, according to Arthritis . (614)446-7733
• Today, a publication of the Arthri· 1 ~~=====
t tis FoUndation.
t..

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Bring I~ any type of 8 mm film and we will transfer up
to 50 teet of film onto VHS Tape. ·

. We ~ave blank video tapes available for purchase, or
bring In your own, unused super high grade tape.
FOR INSURANCE PURPOSES WE WILL
COME INTO YOUR HOME AND VIDEO
YOUR POSSESSIONS.

Our Regular Servl£e Is AvaUable At AU Olflces.
&amp;AIR DAY SERVICES Oi' RELINES Al'fD REPAIRS!

DENTURES..JlTART AT $134 PER DENTURE!
SMALL ADDrrto/YAL CHARCE FOR SAME DAY SERVICE

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10II'OI'lNI FOIIK RD.
T• V •'IN• 1!7·7441

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RT. 2, BOX 8, GALLIPOUSI.OHIO 45631

1031 QUARRIER SmEET
301 ~~· B .. Charaoton • 3~2154

.

WORK • 4411-7:180 • HOM 1: 446-6939
Up er Rt. 7- Galllpalla

.

•

•

. OLD FAMILY PHOTOS COPIED

Friday, Oct. 11 • 10 a.m. - 4 P. m.

.SPECIAL TIUS

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Home Medical Equipme~t

GalliP,Oiis, OH

I 0 II Viand Street • Point Pleasant. WV

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FREE Body Composition Analysis (I 0 a.m. · 2 p.m)
11ealthcare-retated information from Pleasant Valley Hospital on
fopics such as cancer. diabetes. heart disease. medical power
of attorney and general health. fitness et nutrition.
AIIO PartldpatJng: The American CSnce~ SOCiety, the Area Ostomy Association, Dr. Patricia AmetL
cameo Lallles Breast cancer Sllpport Group. the Heart To Heart Ciln:llac SuppOrt Group, Llfe-Une
Medlcal'Il'ansport, Mason County Action Oro up, the Medlcalc:l Waiver Program. I'Testera center for
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Kayla celebrate her birthday were
her grandmothers Marjorie Payne
and Sharon Buffmgton, and great- .
grandmother Edna Payne. Also
auending were Ada Payne, Don
and Brian Buffington, Kim Dent,
Pat, Tiffany and Christopher
Thompson, Joann Martin, Mary
Smith, Cindy and Stacia Sanders;
Greg and Joey James, Ray Shaun
Allen, Lisa and Courtney Reuter,
Peggy and Spencer Russell, Glenna, Eric and Lauren Farley, and
Mary and Cierra Blythe. Sending
gifts were Lori and J.J. Birthfield
and Edna Cooper.

•· women ,s c[ub meets
Jumor

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY

ROOTS .

Miss Crow is a graduate !JJ6hjo
University and is ·currently
employed by the Meigs County
Department of Hurrian Resources.
Casci is a graduate of Hocking
Technical College.
A Nov. I wedding is planned.

Payne birthday observed
Kayla Dawn Payne, daughter of ·
Richard and Robin Payne, of Bid·
well, celebrated her first birthday
at her home on Sept 21.
The party was based on a "Min·
nie &amp; Me" theme. The guests were
served sloppy joes, chips, ice
cream, cake and punch.
Beside her parents helping

Serving

MTS RARE COIN$-

Hills _to offer Earth Kids Club ·

-

FOR
WILD
DRIED
•
DINSENO

!

ANNE CROW and RONALD CASCI --.

'fate family holds reunion

Wedding policy
· The unday Ti!Res-Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
a'nd Mason counties as news and is
tiappy to publish wedding stories
and photographs without charge
However, wedding news must
meet general s.tandards of timeliness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
span as possible after the event.
• To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
tl)e publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Materi;ll for
Along the River must be received
li_y the editorial department by

her mother's handkerchief.
· The maid of honor was Robin
Coen, friend of the bride: She wore
a tea· length salmon off the shoul·
der satin gown. Bridesmaids were
Jill Drummond and Renee
Gilmore, both friends of the bride.
They also wore salmon off the
shoulder satin gowns made by
Sally Stapleton. They wore broaches g1v~n to them by the bride.
The groom wore a full dress
black tuxedo with tails. Best man
was Larry Edge, brother of the
groom. Groomsmen were Mark
Edge, brother of !.he groom, and
Richie Gilmore, friend of the
groom. All of them wore black
tuxedos with matching salmon
cummerbunds and bow ties.
Ringbearer was Jared Burris,
friends of the bride and. groom.
Flower girl was Brittany Mount,
cousin of the groom. Registering
guests was Vicki Evans, cousin of
the bride.
A reception follo)Ved at the Elks
Lodge. Music was provided by Lee
Osborne of Gallipolis.
The couple resides at 276 Piper
Rd., Vinton.
.

fine Jewe[ry

rsr Anniversary Sale .
•DIAMONDS
•GOLD CHAINS
•RINGS
•EARRINGS
•BRACELETS

MR. and MRS. MICHAEL (CHRISTINA) EDGE

GALLIPOLIS • Christina Diane
Carroll and Michael Anthony Edge
)'o'ere united in marriage Saturday,
Sept 17 at Grace United Methodist
Church, with Rev. Joseph Hefner
officiating the double ring cereroony.
The bride is ·the daughter of
Lloyd Carroll o.f Gallipolis and
Mrs. Sandra CarrOll of Gallipolis.
The .groom is the son of Mrs.
Linda Holliday of Gallipolis.
The bride, escorted to ~altar
by her father, wore an ivOfl' own
that was designed by the b
and
made by Sally Stapleton . The
bodice was covered with lace and
accented with hand-sewn iridescent
pearls and sequins. The high collar
and cut out heart-shaped neckline
were outlined by sttands of pearls,
as was the open V-back.
The skirt and cathedral train
were detailed with layers of ivory
iridescent ruffles. An ivory satin
bow was highlighted with flowered
appliques.
The bride carried a break-away
bouquet of salmon roses and gardemas. She w9re her maternal grandmothers pearl bracelet and carried

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Medical Equipme~t
For more lnlorrilallon call (304) 87H100
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�'

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Times-Sentinel

..., .

18111

October

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

OH-Polnt PleUant, .wv '

Be_nd.; ..

VAUGHAWS
FRESH

FRESH
CARDINAL

I

I

\

...

POMEROY - Mr. and Mr s.
William Grueser, Blake Hill Road.
Pomeroy, will celebrate !heir 70lh
anniversary on Sunday, OcL 13 at
their home.
·· Miuried in Pomeroy on Oct. 13,
1921. they are the parents of
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Blackston. Pomeroy,

"

GAL;

IDAHO
POTATOES

-......;..=---'In the service--~
Argabright open hous~ slated . - -----

Airman Chad .R. Diddle has
graduated from Air Force basic
training at Lackl~nd Air Force
Base, Texas.
During the six w s of training
lhe airman studied · rce mission, organization and custo' s and
received special trailllhg in human
relations.
)
"'In addition, airrn~who complete basic training arn credits
toward an associate gree through
lhe COmmunit~ge of the Air
Mary Ducommun celebrated her inc.luding two sons, lhtee .grand- Force.
S da S t 1 t
Diddle is the son of Tom and
951h b'-'da
uu• Yon un y, ep · a
children and lhree great-gmndchil- Pam Diddle of 29210 Bashan
Rio Grande park. Twenty-one peo- dren. She received many citrds and R
P,le· came to help her celebrate, gifts.
,
oad, Racine.
The airman is a 1991 graduate
of Racine Soulhel)l High School.

received special training in human
relations.
·In addition, airmen who complete basic training earn credits
toward an associate degree lhrough
the Community CoUege of lhe Air
Force.
,
He is the son of Robert L. and
Carolyn s: Higginbolham of 5018
Anne-Lee Drive, Cross Lanes.
His wife, Amber, is lhe daughter
of Kathy and Larry Gillespie of
Rural Route 1, Leon.
.
The airman i a 1989 graduate
of Nitro High SChool.

The major diffetenae between
alligators and c;.rocodiles is the
Airman nan L. Higginbolham
snout. The cro~odile has a long, ~uated from Air Force basic
tapered snout, which narrows training at Lackland Air Force
sharply from the eyes to lhe end of · Base, Texas.
its nose. The alligator's snout is
During th~ six wee.ks of training
rounded. It is almost-a&amp; broad at the ~e amnan. S!Jidied Air Force-mis·
end oflhe nose as it is at lhe eyes.
ston, orgaruzauon and customs and

POMEROY · Aaron Howard
Parker, Long Bottom, received a
bachelor of science degree in civil
en~ineering from the Ohio State
Umversity at commencement exercises held on Aug. 30 at Ohio Stadium. He was one-of 1,742-students
receiving degrees.

GALLIPOLIS ·Mr. and Mrs.
Ishmael (June) Argabright of Gallipolis, will .celebrate thetr 50th
wedding anmversary, Fnday, Oct.
18.
They are the parents of Gene
Argabright of Kannapoli s. N.C..
Mrs Justin (Velma) Williams of
Galiipolis, Judr AFgabright of

Chapmanville, W.Va., and Mrs.
Keilh (Paula) SaunderS of BidweU.
An open reception will be hosted by their children from 2-4 p.ln.,
Saturday, Oct. 12 at the VintO!I,
Baptist Chun:h.
The couples asks that gifts be
omitted.
•

5

Ducommun celebrates 95th

Gator or croc?

.

£.:1

....
Usl

~
•

PRICES GOOD
WEEK OF
OCTOBER 6th
THRU THE
12TH

History books arrive ·
POMEROY • The pictorial history book of Meigs County,
"Through the Years in Picwre," has
llrivcd at ~ Meigs County Museum m"
hAJICIO)'.
The ·boob may be picked up at
die mllleWII Tuesday through Satarday from I-4:30 p.m. or. this
'Nednaday lind Thunday evening
tn. 7-9 p.m.
.• .

Two For

.

.

r

,)

$·1299

OR

no 2nd Avenue ·

GallipOlis Store
OnlyI

I

I

GaRipoRs Store Only!

CO~S

~~ ·s
Only ·

8

. 99
e

....a..,... ................ Ollllotrr-~- -.... o. ..... .., ......_
. c.ll
..... 0..
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Dllnhn,.,.,....

.

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'

24 PACK

u

•

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.G REAT DEAL!

• SUPPUES .

,

For lnformat5on or a cop~ of our FREE
hornl CIFI catalog Clll:

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See why 9 out of 10 pizZa lovers prefer Mqpse Bros.® plua ·
over any other piua.. : Guaranteed I Enoy'FREI; samples all
week and pick up an extra Moose Bros.® plua for the freezer!

.

. 446•2206
Serving lhe area lor
, 14yeara.

HOME OWNED

I

Visit our "IIW" Moose BJ;'OS~Pizza Shoppe tOOayl

OEALER

-·

CHIPS

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INDEPENDENT

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WEEK OF 10/12/91
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

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RUFFLES

1 FREE VI·DEO OR
NINTENDO
RENTAL

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lor any 12"
single topping
Moose Bros.®
piua

HOME OPERATED
•

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24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE '

...

YOU CAN'T SAY YOU
'NEVER GET ANYTHING

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OXYGEN SERVICE IN THE HOME

Gallipolis· Store Only!

AND 4 LARGE

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PEPPERONI PIZZAS.

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"WE BILL MEDICARE
MEDICAID, AND
PRIVATE INSURANCE.
DIRECT"

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.-

PHYSICAL THERAPY SERVICES
HERMAN 1. DILLON, MS, PT

. SPORTS MEDICINE SERVICE/SUPPLIES

MIKE HEMPHU.

A.t

INrgellcy 446·2734

40 OZ. BTL•

Corner of G~n. Hartinger Pkwy. .
&amp; Pearl Street • 992.-3471 · .

A huge selection of wool coots, all-weather coots,
Including ultra suedes, sweoter coats, mohair, and
man-made furs. Sizes 4 to 20. Pelltes and Regular

446·4040

PER LB.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

COME SEE
US!

Entire Selection

ij) ~ ~·

HAM

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-

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2 MEDIUM

· The"'ac.on Cheeseburger 1
Ptzz11 Fe11st.
, 1
· Sl~zling Bacon, Ground 1
Bel!.t-llnd EKtra Cheese 1

MARY DUCOfofMUN

Receives degree

KETCHUP

89.

COAT SALE

OFF

HEINZ
"BIG
SQU.EEZE"

CHIPPED
CHOPPED

()

PRE-SEASON.
MR. and
. MRS. ISHMAEL (JUNE) ARGABRIGHT
.

1 LB. BOX

PER LB.

U.S.NO. 1

On The FJench Square
314 2nd Avenue·
Gall;polls. OH
Phone 446-2333

DRAWING WINNER- R~JEer Burke, president of tbe North
Gallia Band Boosters, awards Ann Bush a $100 dlec:k after Bush
won the c:asb drawing at tbe booster's rec:enl ear wasblbake sale at
Brown's Market on S.R. 160.
·

(

49

For That .Special
Occasion ••.

and a son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Leo K. Smith,1i'errien
Springs, Mich. They have seven
grandchildren and eight great
grandchildren.
They have lived in the same
home in lhe Rock Springs area for
70 years.
·

CHU

•••
tO~r&amp;riiJ .

.•

STANLEY A. SAUNHRS MONUMENTS

Couple to ~lebrate 70 years

ZESTA
SALTINE .·
CRACKE

~

.

GRUESER

KEEBLER

GROUND.

2'./0
''
MilK

.

lA.RGE SELECTION

MR. and MRS. WILLIAM

Sunday

•

· Throug~ recycling, cardboard,
REEDSVILLE· Erica Lynn . boxe$ can have up to dWe or four:
Kessinger of Reedsville was one of . lives, and nationally 23 peJte~t of·
59 Concord College st)ldents grad- the 27 million tons of contaJner- .
· by Bob Hoeflich
uating at the conclusion of the Col- board produced for boxes last year·;
lege's summer term. Concord COl- was from recycled ~ber. · , .
7
Iege·is located in Alhens, W.Va. ,
When a male Sr'l Lankan JumpKessinger teceived ihe bac~elor inppidet confrorlts anolher male,
longevit)".:_the happr to hear from you on the of science in ttavel industry ,man" he splits his long "nose" and '
Meigs COunty Pioneer
. and HisiOri- OCCasiOn.
agement degree wilh dual concen· unfolds the halves into jaws with,
. cal Society has it
trations in lodging management . unshealhed fangs at each tip, says ·
The society will be holding its ' . The an.nual Bissell chili-soup aitd travel service$ management . National Geographic.
. ~
Il51h annual meeting today at the supper will be resumed this fall at
Meigs Museum. A potluck dinner the Bissell residence on County
.
at I will be followed by the busi- ·Road 28-lhe BSSban-Keno Road.
'
ness session and program.
Serving will begin at 6 p.m. on Sat~
;Jire Christmas Planning Com- wday, Oct 12.
mtttee is already at work getting
Due to lhe illness and death of
'
the lineup for thlllrl:"nual holiday Hayward Bissell the annual .event
open house in ordl(l'. The event was not held last yeat. However,
wiU be on Dec. 8 wilh "Chrisbnas one of the final requests of HayWonderland" as lhe !heme. Angel, · ward was that his family continue
Santa and snow scene collections the traditional supper. So the farniwill be featured and local organiza- 1y is picking up the loose ends and
tions will be asked to decorate wiD make Ibis year a special event
small trees to be used throughout in Hayward's memory. Guests
the museum. Demonstrations on may take either a dessert or Soft
making holiday theme items \viii drinks.
be featured as well as a slide show
Rock of Ages offers you a ·choice of 6 different col~red
Xi Gamma Mu.Chapter of Beta
of Christmas parades and other
granlta1.
Whatever your requlremanta may ba, complete
Sigma
Phi
Sorority
would
like
to
scerjes from Christmases of past
.utllfactlon
Is assured with ·Rock of Agee.
•'
keep
in
touch
wilh
any
service-men
years.
or women from Meigs County wbo
Mon .. Tues., Thurs. · &amp; Fri. 9:00a.m. 'til 4.:00 p.m.
Appointment=-693-6688 or 44&amp;; z;,:L7
Closer at hand, of course, is lhe are still involved in the Persian
second annual Stemwheeler Festi- Gulf.
val next weekend and ail a part of
. If you know someone who is
activity Bo~ Power, Inc., will saU mlhe Gulf area Wllh lhe iJCllled
35~ Third Ave.
81) auction on Satw&lt;fay aTtfie · forces do contact dr~p a-hne lo
••
parking lot of Farmers Bank and Charlonte Hanmng gmng lhe comSavings Co.
:. .
plcte name, rnnk a?,d address s.?
Anyone wishing to eontribule that lhe soro~ty can get 111,touch.. .
·items-no clothing, please~ is The address IS 45183 Baum Addiasked to conlact B~ Arms at 992- bon, Pomeroy.
5959 or Patrick Wood, 992-2281. I
--understand that items will be
I'm sure that you were delighted
Spacial occasions require special prepicked up if you wish. Proceeds this week to learn through the
parations. If you ara planning a wedfrom the auction will go to media lhat your Congressmen are
ding, anniversary or prom. then you
Pomeroy!e! Troop 249 of bouncing checks and failing to pay
should come see us at Haskins· Tan·
Pomeroy. e Molden will be their tabs in a Washington, D. C.
ner.
the auctioneer d he will be assist- restaurant. This undoubtedly will
You will have OVf!r 1,90 styles of tuxcd by Mike Martin and Henry Cle- restore your faith in·lhe leadership
edos to choose from . We have a large
land II.
of the nation. As yet, no name&amp;.
selection ·of the latest etyles and comhave been disclosed. You can try
plimentary accessories for this special
Down Middleport way. Mrs. the same behavioF if you likeoccasion.
Beulah White will be observing her however, I feel confident lhat you
Quality Formalw~ar
90lh birlhday qn Thursday, Oct. 10. name WILL be disclosed. Seems
at Alf~rdable Prices.
··you will remember Beulah as one like that's the way the system
works.
Do
keep
smiling.
of your tavorite waitresses over the
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 6 OR
I'm sure Beulah will be
MORE IN WEDDING PARTY

Be~f the

"J

~

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•

·.

�'I

._,

)

..
Page-86--Sunday nmes--sentlnel

Is, OH..,.P,olnt Pleasant, wv

Tennessee Ernie .Ford treated for
liver cpn:di tion Virginia Jto spitql

at

~;;;;;;;F;;;;;;;inal

SUNDAY
POMEROY -·Another clean-up
session will be held at Sugar Run
School in POmeroy on S.unday .at I
p.m. Those interested in asststing
should bring the necessary tools.
.
REEDSVILLE • Open house at
Belleville Locks and Dam at
&amp;eedSviUe on Supday from 2 p.m.
to 6 p.m. Tours, boat rides and fl;ee
litter bags will be offered. Refreshments will be available ·from the
Eastern Ulgh School Athletic
Boosters.

oetober 6, 1991

Toni Monison will
the Meigs County .
in
Pomeroy on. Monday at 7 'fl.m. by
Dr. Joanna Grosh, Ohio Humani- ·
ties-Council, Columbus, and pro' fessor of English at Wittenberg
University. The preSentation is a·
part of the "Heroes and Hero~s of
the Ohio River Valley."

arrangements for theiiiiiiiifalliiiiiiiiear....
Rival will be made. Babysitting will
be available.
. RESTON, Va. (AP)- Country workers, especially coal minets, began his career as a $10-a-week
·singer Tennessee Ernie f.~rd was with lines such as "I owe my soul mdio announcer in his home town
TUESDAY
hospitalized in suburban washing- ·to the company store" and "anoth- in 1937, is also known foueligious.
POMEROY - ~The Ohio Eta Phi ton, suffering from wllat his son er day older and deeper in debl''
music and has sold more than 24
Chapter1 Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, d~bed as an advanced liver ailThe Bristol, Tenn., native who million gospel music albums.·' ..
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. 1\1 the ment.
Meigs County Senior Citizens CenFord, .72, ~as listed today in ·
ter in Pomeroy. All members are guarded but stable c'bndition. MoniSYRACUSE. The Meigs Cpun- urged to attend.
ca Ch~ppell, a spllkeswoman f9r
Electrolv.sis is !he process of
hair pero:tane~tly by destrovty Board of Mental Retardation and
ing the hatr growtng cells in the .
.of the hatr. follice. ElectrolysiS
HCA Reston Hospjlal Center, S81d
Developmental Disabilities''will
REEDSVD..LE - The American early today that Ford's wife, Bevertreatments is the only way to ~et
unwanted ha1r permanent. · .
meet Monday at 7 p.m.
Red CroS$ Bloodmobile will visit ly, asked that no further in(onnaII you are tweezing or wal!1ng your hair this only rips part of the hat.r.
follicle wall and will cause the follicle to rebuild to produce more coors·
Eastern High School on Tuesday tion on his condition be released
er, darker, ingro~ hair which may cause scarring.
. ·
SYRACUSE - The Sutton from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. If you are fornow.
,
Don't
be
foole'd
by
all
the
devices
you
can
buy
on
the
market
for
ha1r
HEM~OCK GROVE · The Township Trustees will meet Mon17 to 20, weigh 110 pounds or
Ford was .hospitalized Saturday
removal. Are they safe or sterilized? tO% of the women in the U.S . are
12511) anf!iversary of the Hemlock day at 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse more, you are eligible to donate
after
falling ill at Dulles Internaaffected by abnormal hair growth. II you have a hair problem get proGrove Christian Church will be Municipal Building.
blood.
tional Airport. He was en route
fessional help of an electrolysis. Hair permanently removed for men
celebrated at its homecoming on
back
to
his
home
in
San
Francisco
and woman.
.)
.
Sunday with services at 9:30 a.m.
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP LONG BOTTOM • The Flame following a state dinner aJ the
Mike Hazelton and Jim Quizenber- The Columbia Township Trustees Fellowship Chapter meeting will be
rY will be the guest speakers. A will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at held Tuesday at 7 p.m . at the Faith White House, his son said.
"He is in very grave condi6000 Grand Centra rAve., Suite I, VIenna, W. Va., 261 OS
basket dinner will be held at 12:30 the f1re station.
Full Gospel Church in Lon~ Bot- tion," said Bob "Buck" Ford, son
p.m. and afternoon services are at 2
tom. Pastor Gary Hines 1s the of the singer who made the million295-4533.
p.m.
RACINE . The Racine Chapter speaker. The public is invited to selling record "Sixteen Tons" in
Member and Certified by the American Electrology Association.
·
No. 134, O.E.S .. will meet Monday attend
10% Discount on first office visit
1955 and was star of a nationally
LOTIRIDGE · There will be a at 7:30 p.m. at the Racine Masonic
Hours:
9
A.M.-9
P.M.; Sat. appointments Upon request.
televised variety show in the 1950s
smorgasbord dinner at the Lot- Hall. Annual reports and election
Free Brochures
Free Consultations
POMEROY · The Meigs Coun- and 1960s.
tridge Community Center on Sun- of officers will take place.
ty Chamber of Commerce will
"He is being attended to on a
. day at 2 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults
meet Tuesday at noon at the 24-hour basis by a team. of-physi·;and $2.50 for children under 12.
POMEROY' • The Pomeroy Ele- Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilita- cians who are trying to compensate
•'
mentary PTO will meet Monday at tion Center. All members are urged for a very advanced stage of liver
:~ POMEROY , Eddie BuffmglOn;'· 7 p.m. Meet candidates ruMing for to attend.
disease and dysfunction," Buck
·'Gallipolis, will be the guest speaker school board. AJro to be discussed
said
: at the First Baptist Church of ·will be a food booth at the StemPOMEROY · The Meigs Coun- Ford
Known
as "the ol ' peapicker"
:.Pomeroy on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. wheel Festival.
ty Board of Elections will meet and "ol' Em
" Ford has recorded
··and Monday through Wednesday at
Tuesday at 4 p.m. for a regular more' than 80 albums
over career·
::7:30p.m. nightly. The public is
RACINE · Southern Junior business meeting.·
spanning
half
a
century.
·'invited toauend.
High Boosters will meet Monday at
"Sixteen Tons" sold 20 million
7 p.m. at the junior high. Everyone
copies worldwide, by Ford's &lt;;&gt;~n
POMEROY · In observance of welcome.
reckoning, after becommg a hll m
: World Wide Communion Sunday
1955. It was a tribute to blue collar
·:.the' Pomeroy United Methodist
LETART - The Letart Township
·:Chureh and Trinity Congregational Trustees will meet Monday at 7
:. Church will be sharin~ in open p.m. at the office building.
.
:: communion in the parking lot of
God Can Touch Your
.: Bank One at 11:15 a.m. In case of
CHESHI~E - Women Alive
Heart
: rain the sacrament will be held at will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
God can make you king
··the United Methodist Chureh.
Kyger Creek Clubhouse. Vicki
In this life and the next.
Roush will be the speaker. She will
A man with God's authority
POMEROY - The annual meet- talk about her trip to the mission
LACEY
&gt;ing of the Meigs County Pioneer field in New Mexico. Bring item
Makins-Gad's will your quest ..
::and Historical Society will be held lor the white elephant sale and a
God can give you the spirit
:·Sunday at the Meigs County Muse- salad item.
To live His life in you.
.: urn in Pomeroy. A poUuck dinner
MIDDLEPORT
·
The
MiddleYou will spc~hc truth
: will begin at I p.m. and program at pan Garden Club will meet MonAnd live for Christ the Jew.
: 2 p.m. Meeting wijl follow the pro- day at 7:30p.m. at' the home of
MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S
God can be with you
: gram.
Mrs. George Anderson.
FALL CAMP OXFORD
To serve on every occasion.
: PAGEVILLE - The Scipio VolHe can change your life
RICHARD BRADLEY
MIDDLEPORT - There will be
: unteer Fire De~t will have a swag arch class offered by the MidThru Christ's transformation.
: traCtor pull on Sullday. Registration dlcpon Ans Council on Monday at
God can touch your heort;
·· will begin at noon and pull starts at 7p.m.
Evangelist Richard Bradley His arm is not so short.
:: I p.m.
·
•'
from Oak Hill, W.Va., will be Just as He did to Saul
MONDAy
REEDSVILLE - The Riverview speakin~ at the First Chuft:h of God When turned to another sort.
POMEROY • "Beloved" by PTO will meet Moriday at 7 p.m. in Gallipolis. Services will begin
Sunday morning, Oct. 6th through God can be you·r peace
In a world of sin and hate.
Friday, Oct lith at7 p.m. ni_ghUy.
Bradley has been preaching for He can touch your heart
over 25 years in congregations, If you don't wait too late.
rl:!Robcrt L. Harper
seminars, camp meetings and in
and out .of the country. This week
8124191
·: WASHINGTON
COURT
Her husband is Ted Lozier.
he will have his charts and will be
: HOUSE -Washington City Coun. cil recently announced the hiring of
sharing
lion. from the book of Revela- r------------------~-------..-.:.-'------,
: Beth Yoho-Lozier as city engineer,
For more information contact
: according to the Record Hetald.
· Yoho-Lozier, daughter of Allen
Pastor Paul . Voss at 446-4404 or
446-0)96. Nursery will be provid· and Ji1ne Yoho of Gallipolis, is a
ed
nighUy.
·
graduate of the Ohio State University with a bachelor's degree in
mining engineering and another in

Canc£1.1 's 'E{ectro{ysis

STOREWIDE SALE••••

.

a

.

October 6,1991

-~

civMh~t:":Cf"career with the

They Feel Goocr

BANKRUPTCY

.

614·221·0888
Ohio Departm~nt of Natural
Resources Division of ReclamaL.W. CENNAMO
tion, working in the Abandoned
ATTORNEY·If·lAW
Mine Land (AMI.) program. From
8
East
81'1111 Strett, SuHe 900
J)lere she joined Sunoeo's home
Columbus, Ohio
office in Philadelphia as a field
engineer, and later moved into
·LOCAL CONSULTATION
management.
992-6417
A current resident of Washing11 In P...-oy With
ton Court House, she grew up in
~TTORNEY D. MlatAEL MULLU
Gallipolis. That background was
BETH YOHO-LOZIER
part of what drew her to the posioon,me~d
r-----~------------------------------~1
"I see a lot of similarities
between WashingtOn C.H. and Gallipolis, and I think that was an
aaraetion 10 the area," me told the
RH. "I'm looking forWard to the
challenge and responsibility as city
engineer. I'm al~ looking forward
to seeing a project lhrough from
beginning to end, and knowing that
I had-a part in it and made a posi ·
tive difference."

60PJ-$14~

Applications being
irf'fit-enfor Buckeye

·' FourBIGBxlOs
·" 'Cven Mpre

Portraits!

Card and HEAP
GALLIPOLIS - Bernadifte
Steinbrunner, Outreach worker for
the Senior Citizens Center and Jo
Ann Martin, will be taking applica·
tions ·for the Home Energy .Assistance Program and the Golden
Buckeye
Pro~.
day,
Oct. Card
9 from
II a.m.Wednesto 1:30
p.m. at Bossard Memorial Lill'8cy.
To qualify for a Golden Buckeye Card, a person must be 60
ye8fS of age or older and bring
proof of a~e . such as a driver's
license or birth certificate.
Pmon 18Jeln of age or o~
may qualify · they are completdy
and toeally disabled and they must
bring proof of age and disability

papers,

;

. -

'

HEAP (federal ·program) Is
deslgned to assisllow-incotne families meet the risina CGil of home
heating IIIII a bcUIItGid lillY qUalify for this uslllllict if ~e. total
. housebold income falls WJtbm the
income JUlcleUnes. For example,
one penon cannot exceed $9,930
(fa- each addidonal member, add

$3,390).

Appllclnll must brin&amp; proof of-

ii)I:Oipe, dlo JIIOil ft!CCDt heatlna bill

and social security number of
t.¥11')0110 Ia dlo boalehold.

IIl~§§~i~~i~['l
Featuring 12

Pen'' alt Christmas Cord$"

/nduda Portrait
/dcnlljlcJt.lon CArd TM
• CrodM.C..td Size

• Dunble Pla•dc

SIS Value lnel•du. J-JO.dJ; 4-hJOe, 4-SK7t, 20 Ulall•t•,

JJ l'ortrolt Cllrfel•a• Caret.; 19 Kee,.aah/ /lflnl-portralte
and a Portrait ldenllflcaflan Card" .
Chrlltmdl b&lt;Jcltground aoollable at ito «&lt;Ira cha111«.
,
.
I'Jice tnd\!de,&lt; sadeposit. pol(~rphotography. Each lddi~onal subject photographed
adds $2 to tt&gt;. pocl\age price. pold at photography. Poses ard advertiled special
portraits our selection. Not valid with any other offer. One advertised pockage. per /amity.
Portrait s~es opproxlmat&lt;t.

If you'rea woman, regardless of your age, irs time to face facts: One in 10 women in_thi!'
country will develop breast cancer durin~ her Iifetime. But when breast cancer is found at the
earliest possible stage, chances for cure are nearly 100 percent, according to the American
Cancer Society (ACS). You owe it to yourself, and you~ family, to protect yourself against
breast cancer through early detection. Breast self-examination is the first line of defense. And
if your personal or family medical history puts you at increased risk for breast
c~cer, mammography may save your life. Using a low dose of radiation, the
mammogram- an x-ray of the breast - produces a sharp, detailed picture
that can reveal small tumors_up to two years before they can be felt. This
makes mammography at Pleasant Valley Hospital a valuable tool your
NATIONA~
doctor can use in diagnosing- or ruling out - breast cancer. The ACS
BREAST CANCER
recommends women betw~n the ages of 35 and 39. have a baseline
AWAIIENESS '
malnQIOgram done for,Iater comparison; women over 40 are urged to have a
· MONlH
mammogram every one two years, and women over SO; annually.
When cancer is detected and defeated early, it's a major triumph for all of us. A triumph'made
possible by advances in medical technology. Technology available at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
For a &amp;ee guide to breast se If-examination, call (304) 675-4340, ext. 253.
.

to

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5 DAYS ONLY!
WED., OCT. 9-SUN., OCT. 13
ALL AREAK MARTS:
I . Wed.-Sat. 10 .(M-7 PM
On Sunday From Store O_penlng _to One Hour
Before Closing. GALLI~LIS .

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--"!'-~ ·
['ifii•s Your ld.ur..a,

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·Wouldn~t You' F.. .llett• ·

With
' Our NaiM On "'

tho.

still not motivated to work fa- low
wage,s. And with a high exJ)(It rate
there is little to purehase.
Her research shows that 65 per·
cent of news coverage over the past
eight monl)ls focuses on children. ·
Remaining news is about economic
conditions. News articles indicate
the new government has beCOJ!!.e
very secretive. much like the former govemmenL
I lilso bad an experience in old
Bucharest that I will never forget as
long ~ llive.
It was the day of Khomeini's
funeral, the ruler of Iran. I saw the
largest color photograph of him
hanging on the Iranian embassy. It
was the largest photo I have ever
seen. It covered the front of the
building . I left my group and
walked back with my camera to
take a photo of the picture.
I aimed my camera and all at
once an Iranian soldier jurnpecl in
front of me. He raised his rille -and
I heard him cock iL It was pointing
straight at me. Boy, did !lower my
camera and start backing slowly
away . Then I turned around and
started running. I think I was running as fast as Carl Lewis, the
fastest runner the U.S.
.I never want to go back to
Romania as long as !live.

Gallia County ~calendar
second service at 2 p.m. will featndllr IIJIPfiJ1' two l(llys prillr to on ture Dr. Joe Nelson speaking. The
event. Thry 1111111 be ncrlvrd by Parkersburg (W . Va~) Christian Col·
lilt Gallipolis Dally Trlbunt in lege Chorale.
GALLIPOLIS - The Mina
9'iWIIICt/orpublicllllon)
· EWIN~~~~· ~~~ecoming . Chapel Church on l':'eighborhood
· ·u be held. ~ th e E~~~g·
Road wtll hold semces at 7 p.m.
servtees WI
'th Dale Sanders preaclimg.
ton Church of Christ m Chnsuan WI
Union beginning at 10:30 a.m. The Everyone welcome.
speaker will !Je Rev. Tom Rhodes.
Monday, Oct. 7
GALLIPOLIS _ The Gallia
A songfest w1ll be held at2:30 p.m.
KANAUGA :Revival begins at . ~ountt ~puty Sherifrs AssociaSilver Memorial Baptist Church, 7 uon will.hold a meeung at 7 p.m. at
p.m . nightly, with Rev. Robert the G_alha County courthouse. All
Thompson. · · ·
depuues are urged to attend.
(ltrms for tllr CO/fllftllnlty col-

~

Friends of Bossard Memorial
Library meets in the library 1!1001·
ing room al 7 p.m. A repa-t w1ll be
given on the recent open house at
the library. New business includes:
fall book sale Nov. 5; book bags;
and library levy . Community is
invited.
·
Tuesday, Oct. 8
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia' County
District Library Board of Trustees
meet at S p.m, at Bossard Library.
PORTER - Valley Baptist
Church will have Rev . .Charles
Johnson preaching at7 p.m.

.

GALLIPOLIS -The New Life . CENTERVILLI! -The CenterQuartet will be singing at 7 p.m. at v1_lle Volunteer Ftre Departm~nt
the Elizabeth Chapel Chureh. Rev. Will have an open bouse begmn!~g
Alfred Halley welcomes everyone. at 7 Jl.m. '11?e o~n bouse IS bel g
held lD COnJUnCtiOn With ftre proCROWN CITY- H6mecom - tection week.'The public is invited.
ing services will be held at the
GALLIPOLIS - pivorce SupGood Hope Baptist Chureh beginpan
Gro'uv meets at 7;30 p.m. at
ning at 10 a.m. Revs. Larry Haley
the
New
Ltfe Lutheran Church. For
and John Mellon will be preaching.
information
call 446-4889 rJr 441Tbe Shafer Family and the Queen
1516.
Family will be singing.
...
ATHALIA - Revival begins 7
GALLIPOLIS - Homecoming
p.m.
nightly at Dillon Chapel with
services will be held at Calvary
speaker
Rev. John Jeffrey and speChristian Center on Jackson Pike.
Services begin at 10 a.m. A dinner cial singing. Rev. Raben Peisons
invites everyone.
will be. served on the
. grounds and a

EWINGTON • Revival to be
held at Ewington Church CCU Oct
8-12 with services beginning at
7:30p.m; services begin at 6:30
p.m. Oct. 13. Speaker will be Rev.
David Smith and Tom and T~
Moore will be singing.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce meets at
noon at Stowaway. Call Chamber
for reservations.

·-

THEATRE DONATION. The GaUlpolls KIWillls Clab·r~tly /
made a ~ donation to the Morris &amp; Doroihy Hasldns Ariel Theatre. Kiwanis president, Jay Moore, (left), Is shown presenting the
cbec:k to the 1Arlel Artistic Director, Loi'a Lynn Snow.

Bookmobile
schedule set

•

AGENCY

360 S.CMI ''"._ __:11~'!::~··~

PERM ·

MEIGS • The Meigs County
Bookmobile will make the following stops this week: WEDNES ·DAY: Racine, 12 noon to 5 p.m.,
Portland, 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.;
THURSDAY: Rutland, 11 a.m. to
3 p.m., Dexter, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.,
Crossroads • State Ro,ute 124 and
Br~dbury, 6:30 p.m. tO 7:30 p.m.;
FRIDAY: Tuppers Plains, 12 noon
to 4 p.m., Success Road, 4:30 p.m.
to 5:30 p.m., Keno, 6 p.m. to 7
p.m .. ; SATURDAY: Syracuse,_ 9
a.m. to noon, Southern Bapust
Church, I p.m. to 2 p.m,., HarrisonviUe, 2:30p.m. to 4:30p.m.

AA meeting set
POMEROY : The Pomeroy
groups of AA and AI Anon will
meet on Thursday at 7 p.m. at
Sacred Heart Catholic Cllureh. For
more infmmllion, eaU 992-5763.

KAREN'S
GREENHOUSE

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State Route 124, Racine
3 miles past Soutl:lern
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SHOP HOURS
M·F: 9 to9
Sat. 9 10 6; Sun. 12-5

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Apple Oder $3°0 ··
Pumpkins

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. CHESHIRE - GFWC/Riverside
Study Club
at I p.m. at the
home of Elaine Rouse, Cheshire.
Betty Koehler will be eo-hostess.
Rouse will present the program,
"The Koian and 'The King."

meets

FAMOUS BERKLINE~ RECLINERS!
THE FOUR SEASONS

Enjoy beautiful design, superb craftsmanship, BERKLINE•
IUJ FOICCMOII
solid quality, and exceptional value/ · .
'

We welcome aneth r beautiful autumn the
pleasant weather, the lovely fall foliage.
· However, regardless of the. ti!Ile bf the year,
well-trained ·professional health care staff
Veterans M~Jil;lorial Hospital is on deck every day of
the year - for the entire four seasons - to help with~-~~
r=":llfi~all of your health problems. Count on us 24 hours a
day, seven days a ':"'eek, 3{&gt;5 days a year.
Your Hometown Hospital Staff is prepared
available throughout the Four Seasons.

. VETERANS .
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 JAST MEMORlAL

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
The family of professionals

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By Mall Taney
female workers 11)0nlhly to detect
·
·
and traek conceptjons.
·
GALLIPOLIS ; I have been
. At--the titne of Ctausescus fall,
asked which foreign ·eountry I liked. as many as 140,0()0 children were
the best and that is hard to say living in squaiid orphanages. Par, because I've enjoyed seeing them ents who could not afford to proaU. They are aU different
vide food and shelter gave their
But I will tell you about the children to the orphanages in
wars
. t country in the world that I've effons to save their lives. Others
visited 8J1d that is Romania. If there obtained illepl abonions.
ever was a Hell on Ea{tl\, this is.iL 1
According to Juani~ Dailey
was there two years ago, just a few who did some research on Roma·
I'(IOnths before Nieol~W Ceausescu nia. abortion meant saving children
aJ\d his wife Elena were executed from death a8 a result.of IXMX' median Cbrisbnas day in 1989. . ·
ca1 care and starvation. It also indi- ·
.; Before the revolution that oust· cated rebellion .against the dictator · ·
ed the Ceausescus. Romanians who wanted more people to work ·'
cOuldn'tlalk to fmeigners'or open- to further his goals.
iy criticize the government, but I . It w~ common fa- a woman to
was able to bribe my tour guide to .' haye etgbt to l~n ch1ldren. ~y
take me through one of their hospi· gwde had five children and he S81d
~seven
it was strictly for- they went to bed hungry most
btdden to tourists. At the hospital! nights. I gave him $50 and told him
saw starv~g children_whose bpdies to buy food for his 'family. He
were nothmg but skin and bones. hugged me and we both cried. ·
Tl)ey lay in their own feces. I saw
Ceausescu and his family lived
one dead child who had been lying in exttavagance. News reports from
there at least five hours.
· Romania sa_y they ruled from two
Help was almost nil in the ho.s- 10-room palaces gilded with gold·
pitals as well as ·medical suppli~s. en walls and 14-caiat furniture. The
At night. the llospital was dark unfinished 1,000-roo'm "Palace of
because they had no light bulbs. the People" caused residents who ·
Ceausescu was only interested in had lived in family homes for cen.ihe healthy children so that they turies to relocate. These people had
:could work to produce goods that their land and homes taken from
·-would be exponed. Supplies for them and they were moved into
'.Romanians were scarce.
concrete-walled .apartments houses
: Those childi:en wbo were handi- where they share bathrooms and
-capped or unhealthy were culled kitchens. It was said that Ceauseseu
! rom the orphanages in Bucharest had a personal private subway line
.and taken 100 miles away to Vul- and a private IJ'ain with gold water
'turesti, Romania. There they exist- taps.
.
'!XI in an asylum that was unmarked
According to !)_ailey, prior to the
.an any map. The Oreonian newspa- oy~w o_f theu leader, Roma:per reponed that children at the age n1a s 1solat10n and secrecy that
;of three who were deemC(\ unpro- Ceausescu i~posed kept much
-ductive were taken to Vulturesti. news from bemg reported. It was
Reporter HoUy Danks said, "there only after his execution that the
:they were doomed to dark, dank, outside worlll was exposed to the
·fetid and filthy dungeons in out-of- brutality and poverty of that eoun:the-way places such as Vulturesti." try. .
.
: The Pittsburgh Press reponed
'?a1ley also sa1d the present
Ceausescu's goal was to raise ~e$1me has not offe_red .~uch
.Romania's population from 23-30 un~vement .to Romanran Cl_bzens
milliori by the year 2000. Because wh1ch ~ontnbu!es to. ~onunued
of that birth control and abortion uncenamty and mstabillly among
were outlawed. Taxes were levied citizens. Under the new leadership
,on couples with fewer than five of President ion Dliesc~, ~mic
children. To discourage abortion, ~ond1t10ns appeared m1ually to
Ceausescu's "baby police" tested 1mpro.ve. Ho;-vever, workers are

~

ammo ams·ave Ltves

Sunday nmea · .sentinel Page B1 '

Not alL trips have .beeri fun: Tawney .

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Guest speaker

:Former Gallipolis resident
:·named Washington City Engineer

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Pomeroy-Middfi;M-Galllpolla, Ott-Point Pleasant, WV ·

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''''~ ~

lr!'.( ( 1111/11

r' /{,•!11/r

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1111\//1/1/&lt;..f

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..2520 Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550 (304) 675,-4341!1 :li
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· October

Gallipolis, OH-Polnt

SCOPREMIUM

,Sports

SALTINE

CRACKERS

STORE HOlltS
Monday thru. Sunday

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH,

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports W~lter
. ,
COLUMBUS, Oh10 (AP)- Rayment fiarris ran
for two touchdowns and No. 14 Ohio Suue's defense
shut ~wn Wisconsin's rushing gamdor a31·16B!g
Ten viCtory before the largest crowd m Oh1o Stad1ilm
history..
Hams opened and closed the scoring for the
Buckeyes, 4·0 for the first time since 1984, on touch·
down runs of one.and SIX yards.
.
.
Terrell Fletcher ran'for 29 yards on W1sconsm's
second play of the game, but the Badgers were limit·
ed to ~mus:l yard on 17 rushes !herest?ft11e day.
Wtsconsm fell to 3-1 overall m the B1g Ten open·
er for both teams,
.
Neither. starting qull!lerback o/ flfSHeam offense
wauJTecuve. Jay Mac1as came m to direct Wtscon·
sin's two touchdown drives in the final three min·
utcs. ,
Mac1as led the Badgers to 133 ·yards of total
offense on their last two possessions, 38 yards more
than the Badgers had gotten the nine previous times
they had the b_all withTonJI Lowery at quanerback.
Starter Kent Granam quarterbacked Oh10 State to
a 17-21ead midway!hiough the fourth quarter, ~ut he
was mterc.e~ted and fumbled on the Buckeyes first
two possessiOns of the second half. He was relieved
by Kirk Herbstreit and then Joe Pickens, each of
whom led the Buckeyes to touchdowns in the closing
mmutes.
.
Harris' one·yard run on fourth ~own gave the
Buckeyes a 7·0 lead on therr fust senes. Graham hu
Bel'l)ard Edwards on a 22-·yard scoring pass early in
the se:cond quarterto makdt·J4·0.
. ·
W1th 14 seconds left· m the half, Oh1o State was
forced to punt from its own 14. The snap was low to
Tim WilUams and he kicked the ball while it was on
'the ground on the goal line, resulting in a safety.
Williams kicked a 4J.. yard field goal with 7:57
left in the game that made it 17·2 but the offenses
were just getting a late wake·up call.

LEAF

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McGUIRE SCORES -Miami Hurricane full·
back Stephen McGuire (30) makes use of the hole
. in the Oklab.oma State defense en route for the

By JQE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati Bengals are puzzled by
all this hubbub over the quaner· ·
back competition in Seaule.
·
The way they see.it, the Sea·
hawks are going to do the same
thing regardless who's calling sig·
nals - they're going to run.
"They're going to keep the
, same game plan," defensive line·
man Tim Krumrie said. "They're
- not going to change their whole
offense because of a quarterback
decision."
For the record, Seahawks head
coach Chuck Knox has .decided to
stan Jeff Kemp, an ll·year veter· ·
an, instead or rookie Dan MeG·.

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touchdown durin~ Saturday's game at the Orange
Bowl in Miami, which the Hurricanes won 40·3.
(AP)

wire. Both played last week in a
31·3 victory over IndianapolisMcGwire made his flfSt NFL stan
and threw seven passes, Kemp
played the second half and threw
10 times.
But the Bengals (04) are more
concerned about who'll get the ball
from Kemp on today at Riverfront
Stadium. There's a good reason
Seattle (2·3) has its "Ground
Chuck" reputation on offense: tlje
Seahawks love to run the ball.
"They do it over and over and
over, and they're very good at i~"
Krumrie said. "They don't change
milch. That's what they do, and
they do it very well."
· Especially now.
.
In their first three _games, the

·(l Florida 8t4te beat Syracuse ............... 411-14
2 Mlem{ beat Oklahoma State ................. 40.3
3 · WuhlD&amp;ton vs, Arlzoa~ ....................... late
4 Teaaeseee ................................ d.ld not play
II oidahoma beat Iowa %tate ................... 29-8
6 Clemson va: Georgia ............................. late
7 Mlehltan beat Iowa ............................ 4S.24
8 Notre Dame va. Stanford ....................... late
9 Iowa lolt·to.Mlchllan ........................ 2H,S
10 SyraeUie lost to Florida State ............ 14-46

GROUND
• STOKELY'

BATH JISSUE

Herbstreit,,wflo led the Buckeyes to a 33·19 victo·
. ry over Washmgton State two .weeks ago while Gra·
ham was IDJured, ·took over. Seve~ plays later, he
, scored on a 32·yard run after avoiding two potential
tacklers in the backfield and sprinting around right
end.
Macias, who completed 6 of II passes for 126
yards and the two scores, found ught end Mike Roan
~n a 55· yard C(!mpletion which set up the Badgers'
fust touchdown, a four.yard pass from Mac1as to
Fletcher.
Macias later hit Lee DeRamus for 30 yards, set·
ting up an l8·yard to~chdown iJIISS. to DeRamus with
II sec~nds left. ~w.s then h1t J1m Bourne fen the
two-pomt conversiOn.
. Pickens hit Joe~ !Jalloway on a 34·yardcomplc·
uon to set up Hams SIX·yard run w1th 1:17 rernam·
ing.
,
. Graha~ comple\ed 9 of. 12 passes for ll9 yards
w1th one 1nterceptwn, wh1le Herbstre1t hll I of 3
passes for 13 yards. Pickens was I for 2 for 34 yards.
Ohio State totaled 221 yards rushing, led by the
63 of Scottie Graham and 62 by Butler By'not'e. for
387 yards of total offense.
~-·
Lowe~y . completed 8 of.21 passes f~r 74 yards
before g1vmg way .to Mactas.. W1.sconsm f1mshed
wtth 200 yards passmg to go w1th 1ts 28 yards rush·
ing.
No. 5 Oklahoma 29, Iowa St. 8 - At Ames,
Iowa, Cale Gundy threw three touchdown passes and
continued his rapid climb up Oklahoma's career ·
passmg charts Saturday as the fifth;(anked Sooners
• opened Big Eight Conference play wfth a 29·8 victo·
ry over Iowa State. .
. . . . .
Atonmg for two consecuuve disappomung perfor·
. mances against Iowa State, the Sooners (4.0) kept the ·
Cyclones (2·3) out of the end zone and hm1ted them
to 253 yards..
.
•A s\\larm1.ng Oklahoma d~fense logged etght
sacks, mcludmg seven of Chns Pedersen, who had
engineered Iowa State's 33·31 upset of-!he Sooners

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OctoberS, 111ll1

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las I year. The year '(leCore, Iowa $tate ·had burned
Whitfield.each scored on shan running plays as East·•
·Okliihomafor 609 llltal yards in a 43401oss. ..
ern-M1ch1g81!, beat Kent State 21·20 Saturday 1n a
Oklahoma haS won 28 of its last 30 jl8'!les with · matchupof wmless teams.
' .
Iowa State and.\)wns IS straight v,ictories II) Ames. ·
Eastern Michigan (1·5 overall, 1·2 in the Mid ..
Gundy threw to~chdown paSses of 17 yards to
American Conference), blocked apoint·after attempt
Rickey Brady and 37 yards to Corey WU¥.n in 1the
that would have ued the score w1th 11:25 left after
flrst.bilf, then put the game oot of JeaCh with a 31·
Brad Smith scored for Kent State (0·5, 0·3 MAC) on
. yard.TD pass to Warren on a fouith·and·eight play in
a four.yard run.
·
the fouith quarter.
•
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·
. Vulicevic scor,ed on a two-yard run with 10:02left
Only a sophomore, Gundy completed 12 of 20
1n the fus~ quarter, Mc~nnon had a four.yard_scor·
passes for 206 yards running his career total tQ 1,569
mg run w1th 12:36 .left m the second ·and Wh1tfield
yards. .·
' , ·
·
·
had a siJ&lt;.yard touchdown run with 2:55 left in the
Bowling Green 17, Ceilt. Michigan 10- At
third. .
. .
.
.
Bowling Green, Ohio, LeRoy ·Smith's one-yard run
Th~ 1110 co_mbmed. for 223 yards on 54 came~: ·
with 8'44 to play gave Bowling Green a 17·10 Mid·
Wh1tfield earned 31 umes for 140 yards, Vubcev1c
Ameri~an tonference victory Saturday over Central
had 13 carries. for 43 and McKinnon had 10 for 40
Michigan that put the Falcons in a tie for the league
vards. Vubcev1c also caught four passes for 36 yards.
lead.
\
.
Defumce 14, Wilmington 10 - -At WilmingtOn,
· The victory w\.• 1Ji"e lltird in a row fo~ Bowling
Ohio, quarterback John S!flith scrambled 18 yards for
G!Wl &lt;•·I overai~nference) and broke a five·
the go·ahead touchdown m the fourth quarter, giving
game unbeaten s~ak for the Chippewas (3·1·2, o.J.'
Defiance a 14·10 victory Saturday over winless
2).
Wilmington.
.
. The big play_in thulriye for the winning \OUCh·
Smith couldn't fmd an ope~ receiver, but hef~l!d__
down moved the ball 22 yards to the Central Micht·
a· clear lane down the nght s1delme for the wmnmg
gan 13. Zeb iackson gained the frrst nine yards on a
touchdown with 9:32 to play.
,
, .
pass from ~rik White to the 26,_and the Chippewas
Deflallce (4·1) scored fust o~ ~ Lovmsky ~ su.· ~then were penalized half the distance to the goal line
.yard run m the frrst quarter. WllmmgiDn (04) ued 11
for unspo"rtsmanlikeconduci.
, · C\n Tim Andrew's two-yard run in the second quarter,
. Central Michigan opened the scoring on a 27·yard
and \\lent ahead on· TroY. Gantz's 37·yard (ield goal
field goal by Chuck Selinger in the second quarter,
early mthe second half.
. but Bowling Green went up 7, 3 with four seconds to
Andre\\/ led Wilmi~~ton with 135_ ruslling_yards
play in the first half on a four·yard pass from White
on 41 cames. Deftance s Von Cummmgs earned 31
times for 105 yards.
10 Ronnie Redd.
E. Michigan 21, Kent St.
- At Kent, Ohio,
· In another late game, Cincinnati beat
Branko Vuli:c~v~ic~K~wl!a.~
m~e!~~~.~a;~nd~Stephen
Louisvllle 30-7.
'

in~1int of. Saturday's
·
League game in
-Atlanta. Tbe Braves' 5·2 victory, coupled with
the L.A. Dodgers' 4-0 loss to San Francisco later·
in the day, gave them.the NL West title. (AP)

loss, captures NL West flag

ATLA,!'ITA (AP) _Believe it!
The Braves are the best in the
West.
Atlanta, the team that refused to
lose, completed one of the most
amazing turnarounds in baseball
history Saturday, clinching the NL
West title with a 5·2 victory over
. the-Houston Astros. - - ~Behind John Smoltz's pitching
and Ron Gam's hitting, the Braves
won their season• high eighth
straight game: And when second·
place Los Angeles lost tO San Fran·
cisco 4·0 just 3 1/2 minutes later,
the last pennant race was over. ·
The Braves whose 65-97 record
last year was ;.,.orst in the majors,
joined Minnesota this season as the
only tea ms 10 rebound from last
pl!ice 10 first. Atlanta will start the
NL playoffs Wedn~sday night in
Pittsburgh.
Atlanta made up 9 l/2 games on
the Dodgers since the AII ,Star
brcalc, compiling the best record in
the majors the second half at 55-27
while winning 2 1 of 28 down the
stretch.
" You just had that feeling that
yo u' re going to win every time
out," Braves managerBobbyCox.
Atlanta due.lcd the Dodgers
down the stretch and went into the
fin al weekend tied, The Braves
won Friday night while Los Ange·
les lost and then wrapped up the
third Ni.. West title in their ;!6·year
history in Atlanta, and first since
1982.
As soon as right fielder David
Ju sti ce caught the final ball in
Atlanta the Braves gathered on the
field to watch the end of the
Dodgcrs·Giants game on the score·
board. Their wait was a short one, ,
seiling another Selebration for the
pla yers and the sellout crowd of
44',994.
. The fans began chanting toma·
hawk·chopping and beating' drums
in the first inning as the Braves
took a 2·0 lead off Mark Portugal

defense Bengals' gravest
con.c~rrz in_today's.Seattle game __ _

2 1

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Atlanta hands Houston S.i.2

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.STOKELY .

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99
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99·(

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OOI'S!- Houston shortstop Andujar Cede·
no (left) fumbles the ball hit orr the bat or
Atlanta's David Justice as the Braves' Terry
Pendleton slides into second base in tbe first

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No. 14 Ohio siate hands WisconSin, 31-16loss

99(

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'm~s;.;J~ Section

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11

12
·13
14
1il
. 16
17
18
19
' 20
21
22
28
24
2!1

Baylor n. H0111tou ·............................... late
Penn. State va. Temple .·~ ···· · .................. late
J'loitda va. lSU ..................................... late
Ohio State'beat wtaconaln ................. 31-16
NebraiU .................................. dld not play
Auburn !oat to Southern Ml1111 .............. 9-U)
PlttabUrp beat Maryland ......... :': ...... 24-20
'California beat UCLA .... ......... ,..••••••••• 27·24

N CuoDna State beat Georgia Tech .... 28-21
,fllabama beat Tenn.Chattanpog!Ji::..... u .. !13-7
Ga Tech !oat to North Carollna.,...., .. 21·28
Dllnol1 beat MIDDeaota ......................... 24-3
Teus MM beat Tezu Tech ......... .'.... 37·14
UCLA Ioat to C&amp;Dfornla ...................... 24-27
Colorado ••••·............. ,. ......;••••••• •clld not play
'

.

S.eahawks rushed for just 46, 97
and 50 yards- well under their
109-yard average last· year. But
they've come around the last two
weeks, rushing for 170 and 168
yards in a 20·13 loss at Kansas
City and the victory over Indi·
anapolis . That's their best two·
game total since 1988.
And they've shown balance.
John L. Williams has rushed for
227 yards and Derrick Fenner for
205 yards and three toochdowns.
Just wluit Knox loves to see. .
"We've been running the ball
more," Knox said. " And usually
when you attempt to rush it more,
you "get more yardage. In the firs!
couple of games, we were behind
17·0 and 16-0 and we had to put
the ball up. And we weren't domg
as good a job blocking and we
weren't doing as good a job run·
ning at that point."
They have even more incenti~e
to keep at it this week: the Bengals'
defense is ranked last in the NFL,
Their run defense, a concern for
years, is lacldn_g again - a major
factor in their worst start since
1984.
A nice situation for whoever is
quarterback.
·
.
Kemp and McGwire spent the
.nrst three days of the week uncer·
tain which would start today.
Knox, trying to put an end to the
speculation, a~nounced his selec·
. uon of Kemp onWednesday._
Essentially, Knox chose Kemp's
experience and scrambling ability
over McGwire's strong arm and
potential.'·lt's the same choice he
madeforthesecondflalfofthevic·
tory over In"dianapolis - he
brought Kemp in after' halftime to
· hold a 17-3lead. ·
"My thinking was I would
bring in a veteran quarte1back at

(!0·!2).

.

. Smaltz (14·13) won hi s sixth
straight decision, allowing eight
hits with two strikeouts and no
walks. .
·
Like the Braves, Smoltz made a
thatpoin~kindoflikebringingina remarkable comeb8ck, too. He is
n:Uef pitcher in, ~balllO proleCI 12·2 since the All-Star break.
the lead," Knox said.
Lonnie Smith Jed off the Atlanta
As soon as the gaine ended, the first with a sintle, Marie Lemke
quarterback speculation started: · followed with 'linother and Terr)o
who would be No. I a~ainst Pendleton singled for a 1-0 lead.
Cincinnati? Everyone had to wait Justice reached on an tm&gt;r and Ron
to find ou~ including the two quar' Gani hit a sacrifice fly. Smith dou·
terbacks.
bled home a fUll in the second for a
"It's more or less a waiting 3•0 edge. ·
The Braves, who have won nine
game," Kemp said. "It's not that
much of a controversy, really. It's straight over the. Astros for a 134
not like the Dan McGwire and Jeff season series edge, made it 4.o in
Kemp fan clubs are f.ghting it ouL the third with the help of an error
Ithasn'tbeerl that big deal."

a

"'

by shortstop Andujar Cedeno, his crowd. Then, the current Orioles
f1fth m two games.
went out and got the type of v1c1Dry
Giants 4, Dodgers 0
, that thelf predecessors pulled off
At San Francisco, the Dodgers
\19th regulanty.
dream of a pennant d1ed Saturday
J1m Poole (3·2), who worked
at Candlesuck Park. .
.
out of a bases· loaded Jam m the
. Los Angeles lost to 1ts lo~g·ume si~ th, got the victory and Mafk
nval tOr the second ume tn less W1lhamson got h1s fourth save
than 20 hours and-was el,~mmated with 2 l/3 innings of relief. Mark
from the NL West race with a 4·0 Leiter (8·6) was the loser,
loss to the San FranCISCO G1ants.
Brewers 13, Red Sox 4
The G1ants were deterrmned n':'t
At Boston, Greg Vau$hn and
to let the Dodgers c~lebrate on theu Darryl Ham1lton drove m three
turf and Roger Crru~ managed like runs ap 1ece . as the Milwaukee
11 was the World Senes.
Brewers bas hed the Boston Red
Trevor Wilson (13·11) h~ld the Sox 134 Saturday for !herr founh
Dodgers to two h1ts and d1d not straight victory.
allow-los Angeles a ~nn er from . . Dante Bichette extended his hit·
the thtrd until the n1n th , as the ung streak to 11 ~m es w1th a sm.
Giants eliminated th e,, Dodgers . gle, dooble and tnple for the Brew.
whO had held forst place for 134 e~ . Paul Moltor also had three h1ts,
days.
.
gtv~ng h1m 214 for the season.
. Gary Carter singled in the thtrd
Rooki e Mike Ignasiak (2· 1),
mmng and Kal Damels .doubl ed who replaced starter. Dan Plesac
w1th one out nmth offW1lson. Dar· w1th no outs m the fifth, p1~ched
ryl Strawberry fanned for the the two h1tless mnmgs for the VICtory
second out of the mmng and Eddie in h1s fourth maJor·league a~pear.
Murray grounded out to end tM ance. He was followed by relievers
game and the Dodgers' ho~.
Julio Machado, Mark Lee and
The G1ants turned _a 1·0 advan· . Chns George.
tage mto,a 4·0 l_ead With three runs
Boston starter Tom Bolton (8·9)
m th e Sixth t~mng as Carter was reached for seven hits and six
appeared to miSJudge ~orne plate . run s m lastmg JUSt three· plus
on one ~lay and had the ball kicked mmngs.
.
out ofh1s glove on the next. .
Cubs 3, Cardmals 2
. W1lhe McGee began the s•xth·
,At Chicago, Hector Villanu~·
mmng relay w1th a one·out smgle va s run-sconng smgle broke a ue
off Mike Morgan (14·1 0) and a in the eighth inning as .the Chicago
steal of second before W1H Clark Cubs beat the St. Lou1s Cardmals
was walked mt~nuo~ally, W1lhams 3·2 Saturday m the fi rst game of a
then hll a soft lmer JUStlieyond the dou bl_ehcadcr.
.
reach., of a d1vmg shortstop Lenny
W1th th e score 2~2. Ryne Sand·
Harris, scoring McGee.
berg )cd off the eig hth with a walk
McGee was called safe at home from WJIIi c Fraser (3·3) and
by home plate umplfc ltm Qu1ck moved to third on Andre Dawson's
even though Brett Butler's throw single to set up Villanueva's hit.
clearly beat McG ee. Replays
Bob Scanlan.(7 ·8), the fourtl
showed that McGee stepped on .the Ch1cago pllcher, worked I 1/:
plate just' before crashing mto innings for the victory.
.
Carter.
St. Lou1s starter Ken H1ll gav&lt;
. After Kevin Bass was walked up'two runs in seven innings.
mtcnllonall y, Robby Thom~so n
At Philadelphia, Terry Mulhol·
flew out to left f1elder Dan1el_s.
land pitched his third shutbut of the
~hose throw to the plate was '"
ume to rcure Clark. Caner lunged season as the Philadel phia Phillics
attemptmg,to tag Clark. but was beat the New York Mets 1·0 Satur·
thrwarted when Clark k1cked th e day to clinch third place in the
ball out of his glove. Williams was National League East
It's the Phillics' best ftnish since
able_to sc~re · oefore the ball was
retneved m front of the G1ants 1986 when they were second.
Mulholland (16·13) gave up
dugout. .
eig
ht hits, Slr UCk out four and
, Ofloles 7, Tigers 3 .
walked
none for his eighth com.
At Baltimore, the. Orwles
capped~. day of nostalg18 w1th .an plete game. It was his first career
old ~ash1o~ed comeback, as Ch1to victory over the Mcts after sill loss.
~artmez. h1t a two·run homer m th.e
es.
The Phillies scored with two
stxth mnmg Satl!'daY to help BalU·
outs in the fifth inning off rookie
more beat Detr0117·3.
· The teams will ~nd the season, Anthony Young. Dale Murphy
and 38 years Qf maJOr·~ base· walked, moved to third on Darrin
ball at Memoj:laJ Stadium, today. Fletcher's single and came home
Before the game, ~Y of the best on Braufio Castillo's double.
Young (2·5) gave up four hils in
players from B~lumore teams of
the past were mtroduced !o the six innings.

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Page-C2-8unday llmes Sentinel

f··

PO{neroy-Middleport:-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

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

. ··;;:;

.

october a, 16{.

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GALLlPOLiS -· Gallipolis .•
· scored single touchc)owns in each '
period on Memorial Field Friday
night to post a 28-15 homecoming
victory over Warren Local.
It was the 66th Southeastern
Ohio League opener fdr the Blue
Devils.
. "It's nice to be 4-2, but we've
got lots of work to do.'' remwked

SEO grid standings

•

•

•

•
.•;. .

..

GAHS head coach Brent Saunde!ll.
"We almost shot ourselves in .the
foot again just before halftime, but
our kids came back strong in .the
second half. We knew they had
played some tough competition,
and tllat they had some ~ig linemen
a a couple gOod bac~."
(IAHS lOOk the cljlening kickoff
and mwcbed 62 yards in ni_ne plays

to-take a 7-0 lead. ,Big gainer~
included a lateral from Clint Davis
to Jason Matheny which covered
24 yards, and a 11-yard pas~ fron!'
Davis to Chad Barnes. Jason
Kopack raced over from seven
yards out (8:26). Tim Slone'skic~
from placemertf with Nathan Miller
holding was perfect.
~
·
(See GAHS on C·3)
, •

..
r-~--------~~--------~
·

(Overall)
Team
W
Portsmouth ............5
Jackson ..................5
Gallipolis ...............4
Logan ....................3

L

Coal Grove .......1.... 3

Col. DeS ales .........3
Mei¥s .................... 3
Marieua ................. l
Warren Local ........0
Point Pleasant.. ......o
Athens ...................O
MATHENY SCOREs - GaiUpolls tlllback
Jason Matheny (20) on groPII ID ceuter, scores
touchdowa from the three early Ia tblrd period
or Friday's Southeastern Ohio Learue aame
·against Warren Local. Matheny led Blue DevU

rullherl.with 97 yards In 18 ~rries. On len is
Mike Adam (46). On back at right is Jason
Kopack (23) who scored two of Gallia's four
touchdqwns in a 28-15 victory.

Marietta, Jackson SEOAL winners
In the first big test of the
$EOAL football season the Jackson Jronmen held on to defeat the
visiting Logan Chieftains 28-22
Friday night, Gallipolis beat the
. Warren Local Warrio!ll 28-15, and
Marietta entered the win column
for the flfSt time by crushing visiting Athens 41-14.
·
::
Jacloon 28, Logan 12
. At Jackson, the Ironmen ruilhed
for 259 yards ani! built a 28-10 lead
in the fourth quaner before permit~ng the Chiefs a pair of touch~owns in the fmal three minutes to
win their flfih game in six outings.
:• Ryan Mapes got JHS on the
lioard early on a nine yard run with
J:eith Woolum kicking the PAT.
Five minutes later the Chiefs Sll'llck
paydirt when tailback Bryan Lam·
·bert slammed over from the one
ind Josh Jackson'skick tied itat7~·
,· Less than one minute remained
}n the first period when Kevin
:Whetson.e scored from the three

The Chiefs, netting 134 yards on
with Woolum's kick putting the
36
attempts, were led by Bryan
hosts on top 14-7. Logan scored the
Lambert's
18-for-70 effort, while
only points of the second quarter
Miller
completed
13 of 25 passes
when Josh Jackson drilled a 39for
145
yards,
five
of them to
yard field goal wilh just 20 seconds ·
Mowery
for
70
yards.
·
remainipg.
Score
by
quarters
Following a scoreless third period, the Ironmen scored twice in a Logan ..................... 7 3 012 = Z2
three-minute span when Mike Jaclcson ................. I4 0 014 = 28
Morgan hit Ryan Reed with a 30Marietta 41, Athens 14
yard TD strike. but the EP kick was
At
Marietta tailback Chad Linblocked. Morgan scored ~e final
coln
returned
to the Tiger lineup afeight points for JijS when he dartter
sitting
out
three games with an
ed 72 yards to pllydirt and then
.
injury
to
rush
for 211 yarl)s and
added the conversion on a run to up
three
touchdowns
in leading MHS
the iead to 28-10 with 8:06 remaining in the cont.est.
. to their first ~ictory of the season.
The Bulldogs' Andy Thompson
In the final three minures Logan
scored 12 points when quarterback stunned the large home crowd by
Brian Miller fU'ed an 18-yard pass returning the opening kickoff 89
to Nathan Dickerson and found yards for a touchdown but the EP
· Dustin Mowery with a six-yard was missed. Athens was not to
strike as time expired. Jackson score again until the fourth quarter
roUed upp8 yards , as 'MOf$8D ac- as the iigers took a 21-o halftime
counted 1or· 121 on 12 carnes out lead and increased it to 34-6 before
of his quarterback slot and com- AHS got on the board.
(See SEOAL on C-3)
pleled 3 of 8 few 79 yards.

P Ol&gt;

1 157 91
1 238 140
2 131 79
3 107 .89
3 82 71
3 102 130
3 142 145
5 . 74117
6 . 79 158
6 17 156
6 ' 38 f41

Court Victory II Pump

$3' ooo OFF
THE SHOE
CAFE

Team
W
Jackson ............. .. .!
Gallipolis............ .!
Marieua .............. .l
Warren ................0
Logan ..................0
Athens .................o
TOTALS
,3

Gilbert·ended
FOR
in Frl·
However, tbat and Kevin Gillmatn 's
day night's North Gallia·Southwestern home- .
touchdown weren't enough to
coming game, this. message to .the Highlander
toutbaD squad-went unheeded until a,visit-to the _ keep_the Pirates from winning.4l·l&lt;l._(TimesSentinel photo by G. Spencer Olibor~e)
; end zone In the lin.al seconds or lbe th1rd quarter

LAFAYETTE MALL
GALLIPOLIS

SEOAL ONio-Y

- ~C!&amp;Ok .

\

p .OP
L
0 28 22
0 28 15
0 41 14
1 15 28 r-r--o--r--r1 22 28 f':'-t-:':-t':-T.:'t:::1 14 41 E-1-::ct:':+::-t:::t"3 148 148 r=-P.~

;GAHS wins~ ..
(Continued from C-2)

GARS marched to Warren Local's
14 late in the frrst stanza, but a 32- .·
. yard field goal attempt by ,Slone
was wide to the right.
In the second quarter, GAHS
i!Jarched 51 yards in seven plays.
Matheny's 14 yard gallop set up
the score. Kopack raced in from 12
yards out (8:39). Slone make it 14-

Gallipolis 28 Warren t5
Marieua 41 ,Athens 14
Jackson 28 Logan 22
Meigs 43 Federal Hoclcing 0
Buffalo at Coal Grove
Akron St.Vin-SLMary 38 DeSis 6
Ashland 27 Portsmouth 23
Hurricane 15 Pt. Pleasant 0

Gallipolis at Logan ·
Warren Local at Athens
Jackson at Marieua
Watterson at DeSales
Meigs at Wellston
Portsmouth at Ironton ·
Fairland at Coal Grove
Point Plerasant at Barboursville

•

F,riday's high school football scores

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Warren came back with a 10play, 46-yard .drive to the Blue
Devils 27. but Mike Adam and a
host of Blue Devils stopped that
threat with 2:56Ieft in the half.
However, two plays later, Warren's Jim Pierce pounced on a Blue
Devil fumble on the WI...f!S 25 to
$Ct up the Warrio!ll' first score.
" On the next play, Jason Harris
tossed a 25-yard scoring strike to
Dave Glover (1 :44). Justin Gray's
point frO!Jl placement made it 14-7.
' Bryan HaD's 19-yard pass interception return of a Harris aerial
ended another Walren threat just
!before halftime.
Chris Carman recovered a Har:ris fumble to set of the Gallians' •
:third touchdown. With Chad
;Barnes at ihe signal caller's post,
;the Blue Devils moved 43 yards in
·six plal':s. Matheny scoied from the
:three (8:27). Slone's kick made it
:21-7.
. Warren came back with an 81. yard march in 15 plays only to be
•stopped on the GAHS one at the
:start of the fourth period. That
appeared to be the game's turning
point.
: Fine defensive plays by Bob
:Mabry, FJ. Hastwell and Hall kept
:the WarriOlll off the board.
• Following an exchange of punts,
&gt;the Gallians marched 81 yards in
; nine plays. Barnes hit Matheny
: with a 22-yard TD strike (3:33) and
: Slom\ made it 28-7.
• With several Blue Devil regu;iars on the sidt:-Iines, Warren
;':qtoved 88 yards m just six plays
&gt;orith Harris racing over from 10
r iWda; nm.J.2:0S\ Han:is passM to
il.'ltovet'for the' two-'poini conver:sion, concluding the game's seerling.
·
: Matheny paced GAHS runners
•wltJI 97 yards in 18 carries. Barnes
::added 71 in eight while Kopack
;finished with 59 in 10 carries.
;GARS rushed 50 times f!)r 274
•yards.
.
r
:: Harris led Warrior runners with
•69 yards in 12 attempts. Ron
:Church had 42 in II and Dave
:Glover 35 in 12. Warren totaled
•151 yards in 37 atteinpts.
: • Davis completed one of six
;passes for II yards for GAHS
:while Barnes was two of four for
;47 yards and one touchdown. Hall ·
•had a 25 ywd reception late in the
•game.
: Harris hit six of 17 passes for
;115 yards (one intercepted) and
one touchdown. Glover had 77
~.yards with four receptions.
; Besides Carman, Barnes recov;ered a Warren Local fumble for the
•Gal5ans.
·
: Davis punted three times for 93
:yards. Warren's Andy Arnold punt·
!ed only once for 24 yards.
: Friday, GAHS travels to Logan
•while Warren Local goes to ·
'••Athens.
•Score by quarters:
~Warren
o 7 o 8 • .15
:oatlipolis
7 7 7 7 • 28

675-1160

Point Pleasant

(Department
G
:Firstdowns .,. ... ,. ....... lS
:Yards rushing,.,. ..... .301
:Lost rusltins ,.,. ..........27
·Net ruahlna ,. ...........274
:Pais attempts ,. ......... .10
:completions ,.,. ... ., ...... 3
:Inte~tcptlolll l)y. ....... ,..1
IYards passing ............S8
:Total yards .............. 332

IS I
17
6
2
115
266

(Return yuds :............46

101

fPI•ys ................~ ....... 60

,Fuinbles.......................1

W
16
182

31

S4

2

•Lost fumblos ...............2'
2
:Penlltlos ..... ,..,. ......9·88 2-10

:Puntl .............. ~.: .- .. 3·93

''

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
The Pirates, concluding a six•play the mark and the Pirates settltd fol'
Times-Sentinel Staff · .,
drive that started at the H1gh- a 39.() teid.
·
An opening kickoff that didn't . ,Janders' 38 laie in the fmt quanet,
North Gallia wasn't done. On
come out the way lhe kicker ex- got Staton to score from five yards the kickoff Southwestern freshmao
peeled turned out to be just what .out · t~re,e seconds into aot two. Abe Haislop touched the ball near
. !!'~ d~tor ordered for North Gal: Dobbms kick put North ahead 21· the Highlanders' goal line and
has Pmues, who went on to-score- 0.
downed the ball in the end zoneafon their first two possessions in
Followi~g a fumble by South·
ter it bounced away ftum him . He
·Frili!IY night's homecoming game western quarterback Aaron McCar- was touched by the Pirates fo~ the
~ga1nst the l!ost Southwestern . ty that was.recovered by Pirate ·safety., which conclude4 their seerHighlanders en route to a 41 -14 )ine~er Sco.tt Oiler at tlle.High· ing.
. ·
. ·
v1ctory.
landers 14, Vmton ran three plays
After holding senior fullback
."I .wll!l concentrating too hard," before Staton scored from 10 yards · Kevin Gillman, the Highlanders'
s~d JUmor,hand~an Dave _Do~- out. A;Jow. snap prevented the ex- top rusher, to 30 yards in th~ first
bms, the Pll'lltes spill end/kicker, tra-PQmt kick from bemg auempt- half (six in the first frame and 24 in
of his o~-targe~ kick, ,y.'hich v.:ent ed, set~ing North:s advantage ·at the second), North's defensive puroff the s1de of his foot, It went ma 27.-0 wtth 9:07 leftm the first half.
suit made life even more difficult
perfec\, spira.I and we.nt to t_he
. With 4:15 left in the second pe· fqr McCarty, who fa_iled to comground, he S81d of the kick, which nod, P1rate ttuarterback Charles plete the seven passes he threw in
ended up in the hands of one of the Peck ran 19 yards on a sweep to the the half.
·
Pirate lin.emen at the Hig~delll' . left side to conclude a ~ix-play, 56In the third quarter, the Vinton
44-yard 5.ne. From there,~ s1x-yard yard drive. The two-pomt pass was force started putting in wme of its
run by tailback Dann Sm1th set up mcomplete, and the Prrates settled reserves but it wasn't until there
fullback Casey Staton's ~8-yard fora33-0cushion.
·
were 21 'seconds left in the frame
touchdown run 56 seconds mto the
The Highlanders ran three plays wh en Gilbert scored from two
contest. Dobbins' extra-point kick and move&amp; one yard fro"! their 26 yards out to complete a 10-play,
gave North a 7.0 lead. .
before tao! back W1lly Go! bert, on 50-yard drive and cut North's lead
"That destroyed us," S81d South- thrrd-and-nme, threw an mtercep- . to 41 -6. His two-point conversion
v.:estern boss Jack James of the twn to Peck, one .of the corner~- run was stopped short pf the end
kick.
. , ..
backs. s,ettmg up shop at the High- zone, and the score remained static.
After the Htghlanders moved · landers 48, North marched for- Gillman cut further into the visifive yards to their own 18 on the_ir ward until Dobbi!ts ran four yards tors' lead with a four-yard run with
fmt senes,North drove 31 yards m f?r the tml~hdo~ to wrap up the 18 seconds left in the game to
·twoplayf,'with Smith scoring from SIX-play, drive Wll~ 1:50 left. Brad punctuate a 10-play , 68-yard
29 ywds out with 8:24 left in the Belville s extra-pomt kick was off
(See PIRATES on C-4)
first frame. Dobbins' extra-point
· kiclc pushed the -.visiiOlll ahead .14WANTED:
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.
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For the rest of the quarter,
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Pecplas Bancorp of Ma'rlatta .................................................................................. .$ 31 35
drives moved nine and six yards,
Park National Bank of Newark.................... ......................................~ ....... ............... 45 and both were four-and-out affairs.
Hocking Valley Bank of Alhens ...............................................................................117 121

In the SEOAL. ..

0.

Oct. 11 games:

1

.

~After .forcing a Warrior punt,

Oet. 4 results:

-

.

North Gallia posts 41·14 win ._
. over S·Quthwestern Friday . ~

r

.GABS beats Warren Locat
~8.-15 in.·home~oming game

'

'

,)

ADAM TACKLED • Gaiiipolls fullback Mike Adam (46) Is
tackled by Warren Local defender in Southeastern Ohio League
grid qpener Friday on Memorllll Field, GalUpolis. Aaron Seamon ..
(2) trails play. GAHS won, 28-15. Adam picked up 30 yards in
seven trips for the nlgbl.

(Continued from C-2)
. Marietta scored three TO's in
the fmt half on a sii yard run by
Eric Sauls and a pair of 30 yard
plus runs by Lincoln with Joe
Smith kicking all three EP's.
Sauls scored from the six in the
third period and Lincoln added his
third TD of the game on a 36· yard
. gallop early in the fourth quarter.
Thompson scored the final
eight Athens points in the fourth
stanza on a seven-yard TD.run and
a two point conversion run.
Tim Mullen closed out the scoring for Marietta on a three yard
run and Bo Meagle kicked the
point after.
Marieua roUed up 392 yards on
the ground aqd added 49 passing while Athens finished wllh 148
yards rushing and completed just
one of 12 pass attempts for 21
yards.
.
·
Score by quarters
Athens ....................6 0 0 8 = 14·
Marieua ..................714 614 = 41

OhloVolloy Bank of Golllpolls .................... ............................................................... '.fl
Citizens Beok of Logen,........................................................................................... 215
First National Bank of McConnalsvllle....................................................................105
Cltlltns National Blnk of McConnelsville ..... ........................................................130
Farmers Banking Co. of Pomeroy............................................................................ . 50
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I ~~~~ delighted to join with newspaper personnel
and readers across America -- together with the ~
Newspaper Association Manage;-s -- in celebrating ·
National Newspaper Week .

•

The course of public opinion and policymaking in
America has been profoundly influenced by our
daily ntawspapers. Indeed, Wendell Phillips might
have had .a valid point when he wryly noted, "We
live under a government of men and morning
newspapers."
'

Free and open debate in our Nation's print media
has always been a hallmark of our .Republic. Our
newspapers continue to enjoy tremendous popularity,
thanks to their timely and thorough coverage of
world events, as well as the-ir ability to foster a
lively .exchange of ideas and information among
citizens across the country. I commend newspaper
staff members for the commitment that they have
shown to their profession, and es'pecially for the
benefits that they bring to us each day.

GLOVER ON THE GO· Dave Glover (95) skirts rJabt end ror
a gain against Ga!Upolis In tbe Blue Devils hnmecom1D1 till Friday
night. Moving in fo~ the kill Is GaiDa's Aaron Seamon (2). GAHS
won, 28-15. Glover gained 77 iards with rour pass receptions, and
rushed ror 35 yards ln 12 attempts.
.

Barbara · joins me in sending best wishes for every
future success.

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1·21

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/I

1'

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....,

•

�)

•
•

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Page C4 Sunday Times-Sentinel

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October 6, 199~

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

October 6, 1991

.

By SCOIT WOLFE
T-S Correspondent
EAST MEIGS - Scoring 43
poiniS in the fim half, the undefeated Eastern Eagles, now third in
computer rankings, clobbered the
. Hannan Trace Wildcats 57 -6 in
' ~ V AC grid action here Friday
·night.
·
'·
; Eastern is now 6-0 and 3-0 in
1/le SVAC, while HT is 0-6 and 0-

3.

. · miscues. Alter Hannan Trace se' Eastern's Tim Bissell rambled · cured the .opening kick-off, their
for four touchdowns and 161 yards first drive fizzled and the Gallians
in just one h!llf of play to lead lhe were forced to punt • .
Eagles li&gt; lhe win. Every olherEaOn the ensuing kick Eastern's
gle then had his moment in the.
spotlight as all Eagles were stars
!his evening.
The game's resul!S were a combination of Eastern's exceptional ·
play and a a_raSh _of Hannan Trace

~C snaps losing streak with
~ 4-6 victory over Southern
:' CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek
SJ!uffed its four•garne losing streak
wilh a 14-6 come-from-behind vic·
tbry over Southern Friday night on
tpe strength of touchdowns from
top ground gainer Phil Bradbury
and Paul Covey.
.
.
• The Tornadoes (2-4, 0-3) scored
with 31 seconds left in the first
qualter when fullback Russell Sin·
gleton, who was one yard Shy of
the 100-yard mark, scored on a 32~ard run on !he second play of a
drive that began on !he Bobcats'
34-yard line.
.
: The Bobcats (2-4, 1-2). surged
·ahead when Bradbury's two-yard
l)Jn with 10:10 left in lhe ftrst half
!!receded Rhodes' two-poinr con·
version run. Following a scoreless
t)lird quarter, the Tornadoes ran
t-hree plays straddling the 10·
.Pinute mark of lhe fmal quarter be·
fore quarterback Michael Evans
threw an interception to Bobcat
4eep back Jamie Walters. Walters'
JO·yard return set''up Covey' s
three-yard touchdown run with
~:33left in the game.
• Bobcat lineman Matt Polcyn, a
tl-2, 225-pound senior who has
sten little playing time this season,
was installed at nose guard, and acdording to KC line coach Mike
Mulford, "he was more aggressive
than ever." Facing double- and
tl'iple-teaming, Polcyn racked up
tJtree solo tackles and three assisiS.
• Kyger Creek will head to Tup·
Jlers Plains to face unbeaten Eastern, while Southern will travel
$&gt;ulh to take on Hannan Tnlce.
!fcoreby quarters

-

Southj:m .................6 0 0 0 = 6
Kyger ckek ...........o 8 o 6 = 14

Statistics
Department
Sou.
First downs ...................... 7
Total yards ...................l63
Rushingyards .............. l41
Passing yards................. 22
Comp.-att...................4-12
Interceptions !brown ....... 1
Fumbles-lost ................3-1
Punting .....................4-119
Penalties ................ ::...?-45

J!:n
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
~ ~ ~~
North Gallia ..........5 I 162

Southern
Rushing - Singleton 15-99, I
TD: Wa~ner 5-19
Passtng- Evans 4-12, 22,_1
int. (cau~ht by Walter;;)
.
Recetving - Smuh 2·12: Dtll
1-8: Adams 1-2.

4
4
4
5

~

55

PF
125
136
128
97
40
32
30
Southern ...............0 3 24

·:;.
Friday's scores
l:listem 57. Hannan Trace 6

PA
48
32
62
58
100
93
113

Department
NG
First downs .................... ll
Total yards................... 261
Rushing yards .............. 261
Passing yards ...................0
Comp.·att ....................0·6
Inten:eptions thrown ....... 1
Fumbles-lost ................2-2
Pcnalties ..................... 5-2S

106

SW
4
193
193
5
1-11
0
2-2
3-40

Individual leaders

a

North Gallla
Rushin&amp; - Staton 12-116 3
IDs; Smilh·U-101, I TD; Dobbins
I(yser
14, Soulhem 6
7-27,1 TD; Peck3-14, 11D.
Nonlt Gall 41, Southwestern 14
Passin&amp;- Peck 0-6.
~ Hill , Symmes Valley 36 (3

:·:·

Southwestern
Rushing - Gillman (4- 105 I
TD: Gilben 14-50, liD.
'
Passing- McCarty 1-9 5·
~·Na•VW'i'
. .Gilben O-Q, .,.t.. &lt;etn~Bht by Peek) ·
Recelvbi1- Haislop 1·5. .
~ ~-·· SOulbw esrerp '
4

On this week'ulate...
I{yger Creek at~
$ilutbem at HanniD Trace
~

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South- · PatiiCii' Stiickland were subpoe·
WAVERLY----~--· naed to appear in court before
retirtd•Hocking County Judge
· )ames B; SdlWeu. Also subpoenaed
,.;:. •
· ·Were Bnd Basil, Kent Wolfe and
• - ·
to an article in Thura- superintendent Dave Roberts.
: day's
Cou11ty News
·:~e ~Y will a~e ~y (the
• lfatchnwl,
ftled a complaint dcc:ISIOII), said Roberts. It s done
: :'against the board on AJ?i'il 10, and dtat's the.eod."
,,.,.. l990; after the board tennmated a Eagles wm ...
••· S11pp1emental contract between
Co . ed f
C-4)
: -· Wolfe and the school syStem.
( nunu ro_m
.
:
'The News Watchma11 cited from 56 yards, the lctck was vo1d
: Wolfe's attorney, William Steele of and !he score was 43-0 at !he half.
• Columbus "We're real pleased"
In the second half Terry
: 5!lid Steel~. "All along, the whoie McGuire h~t the e~dzone_ at the
• uestion was whether the board of 10:26 mark.m !he third penod ona
education and lhe superintendent, lhirty-five yard run. The kick was
by .their words and actions, led him good by Kaylor. In lhe fourth the
to believe he had a three-year con- brother-to-brother combo of Fresh·
tract ralher than a one-year con· man quarterback Ryan Buckley to
lf8'.:~" Steele said.
Jeremy Buckley at ·the I: 17 mark.
The board had answered That was set up by a Ryan Buckley_
Wolfe's complaint by stating that to Jeremy Buckley 13 yard )l¥5 on
his temtination was due to me use a !bird and ten play. The kick was
of profanity in the presence of good and !he score was now 57-6.
P,layers and spectators at basketball
In rushing Bissell was 9·161,
games.
Scott Golden was 10-40, McGuue
, Wolfe was awarded a sum of 3-45~ Mike Hoffman was 4-25. In
$3, 132.50 which, according to recemng J. Buckley wa~ 2-16,
Steele, was !he difference between Newland was 1-10, and Smtih was .
what he would have eirned at 1·3.
.
Waverly and what he would have
In passmg R. Buckley was 2-2
earned'at his subsequent position as for 16 yards and Reed was 3-7-13
Clay Local High School basketball yards.
coach in Portsmouth.
Du~ing halftime the Eas~ern
: The verdict was signed by six of · Athleuc Department recogntzed
tbe eight jurors, which, according members of the 1971 (9·0) and
to Pike County Clerk of Courts 1981 (10-0, 4lh ranked AP) unde·
John Williams, is all that is needed feated.football squads. .
.
il) a civil suit
Eastern pl~ys . at home agamst
.Wolfe was suing for com pen- I&lt;;yge~ Creek 1n ,tiS ~nual homesa tory damages for back pay comemg game lh1s Fnday.
·including tlie loss of sa~ry in Statl.stlcs
eXcess of $10,000, moving ~pens­
es, loss of sale of bis Waverly
ltoine and purchase ~ a com~­ Department
HT
1~
ble one, transportation costs 1n First downs ......................9,
303
Cltcess of $15,000 and reinstate· Rushes-yands .................88
29
ment of his position as coach and Passing yards ....................o
S-9
llromeys rccs, the News Wlllclrmall Comp.·att ..................... 3-7
I
~ Aa:ortling to Steele, _
these Interceptions lhrown .......1
i8suts were dismissed by the court. Total yards .............:.. ,....88 332
: Waverly High School principal Penalties .....................S-40 10-95
David Smey and board member Punting .....................8-~ 2-44.

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conversion and Meigs held 8-0
·lead.Meigs scored on it's second
possession a(ter nh·ort Lancerpunt gave Meigs the. ball at the
Federal Hocking 47 yard line. Sitt
plays later Jeremy Phalin hooked
up with_Shawn Hawley on a 12
yard touchdown pass, R~by Wyatt
passed to Mike Cremeans for the
extra ooints and Mei2s held a 16-P
.lead with 7:18left in the fust pen·
od.
·
Mike Welch carne up with the
first of his two big defense plays
when he tackled Lancer punter
Ro~rt Lacy at !he Lancer 19 on a
fake punt attempt. Blake ran it in
from !he five, four plays later and
after the extra point kick was .
blocked the Marauders held a 22-0

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By DAVE HARRIS
. T.s Corresponilent~
• POMEROY - Kevin Musser
· i'ettirfied'the opening kickoff 87
:yards for a touchdown, Shawn
'.Hawley scored three touchdowns
: and lhe Marauder defense held the
Federal Hocking offense to minus
· 16 total yards enroute to a 43-0
•pounding over lhe Lancers Friday
;evening at Bob Roberts Field.
, The win was lhe third in a row
for Meigs and gave the Marauders
·a 3-2 TVC record. Federal Hocking
dropped to 0-6 and 0-4 in lhe TVC.·
: • The Marauder Homecoming
crowd had just sat down when
·Musser took the kickoff at the 17
yard line and raced untouched up
·the middle for the touchdown ,
:frank Blake added the two peint

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In other games, MontteaJ beat
. Pittsburgh 3-1, Philadel{lhia defeat·
edNew'Yorlc5-4in IOmningsand
San Die$0 stoPPed Cincinnati 3-2.
St. .Lou1s at Cflicago was rained
. ou.t ·
·
. .·
The Dodgers fell into second
place for the ftrst time. since Sept.
20. They-managed only .one run on
seven hits in six innings off Bud
Black (12-16) before Brantley
reliev~
~ .
.
Willie MeG~ smgled wilh one
out in the first inning againsl Mar·
!inez {17-13) and Clark followed
with his 29th home run. One out
later, N/illiams hit his career-hish
34th 1\otlte run, which also set a
San Francisco record for homers by
a third baseman.
·
Braves S, Astros 2
Steve Avery, piiChing with the

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Pena got three.outs for his 1Sth
save, makiitg him 11-for-11 iD save
chances since being traded fro,m
theM~ lp the Braves.
.
. A ctowd of 45,815, the largest.
of !he ~ in Atlanta. saw the
· Braves win their 93nl P!IIC· That
tied !iJe most they've won sinc.e
movmg south from Milwaukee for
!he 1966 season.
· .
Greg Olson hit a SI!Crifice fly
and ,Lontlle Smith.~ an RBI ~Rle m the second initins off rookie
Jell' Juclen (0-2). Roo Gant doubled
in dte third·for his 103rd RBI and
Terry Pendle1011 hit his 22nd home
run m the fifth. .
Expos 3, Pirates 1
Dous Drabek tuned up for his
start in Game I or the playoffs by
pitching five shutOut innings, but
Pittsburgh lost in the ninth on

,"MeigS beats Federal-Hocking--43-0 -

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Statistics

Because as the Dodgers took
batting practice Friday night, there
it was live on the Candlestick
Park's huge 1umbolRON screen in
center field: Allanta beatin_g Hous_ ton S-2 for its seventh Slraight vic·
, tory and first Jllace- at least tern·
_pllrarily·- in_lhe NL West: ·
··
"We thought !he ftrSt game of
' the series was lhe most important
one. We wa1ched !he Braves win
to.ni~ht and we knew we had 1;0
wm, ' Los J\ngeles' Lenny Hauis
said. "We just didn't click togetb·
er."
The Giants beat Los Angeles for
the seventh time in their last nine
meetings. The Candlestick crowd
greeted their longtime rivals with
loud boos and ll!mahawk chops, the
rally ·sign of the Braves.
"Everybody's ftred up, but it's
;
•

..

25m &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

'

.Sunday Timet Sentinel Page CSl

Ill

-

. 1991 Cadillac
Brougham

....,999 .·
..

I!

..

.'

Van defeatS
· ·
·
Wahama
27
.
,
·
•

•·
B)' G117 Clark
. S~r~ Correspondent ,
·
··
·
VAN, WV- The Van Bulldogs
solidified its bold on its numb«
four ranking among Class A
schools Friday.night as .lhe Boone
Co1111y eleven SC«ed three second
period touchdowns enrou1e to a .
conviricing 27-7, Southwestern Athletic Conference win over ninth
ranked Wahami.
The Bulldogs, winners of five
straight contests on the current
season, toOk a giant leap towArds a
1991 post season playoff berth with
the homecoming victory while
coacll Don. VanMeter's White· Fal-

~:-~sa:~e~-:!or;u::~
Bend Alea teams second setback m

lead.
si~.outin~s on th~' fC!IT· .
.
Anlltlre-r-botched up-punt-at• - We stmply -~idn -t -play - well at
tempt by Federal Hocking gave all," ~~-~,sappol~tedall WH~ ~h
Meigs lhe ball at !he Laricer three Don '"'""'~ S31d ter wnnessmg
wilh :48 seconds left in me half as !he ~alcons first conference los~ of
Hawley recovered the bad snap. ~ season agams_t two wms.
After Phalin's lhree yard run was Defens1vely we hild the people
called back by a Marauder peruilty, where !hey needed to be _hut our _at.Phalin hooked up with Hawley tempts at !&amp;Ckling thetr runnmg
from eight yards·out for the silt. bac)cs was JUSt awful and our. exChris Hall split the uprights and · penenced lals~~ V:commhasttted
Meigs went into !he locker room at some auc m1s s. an
a
!he half wilh a 29-0 lead.
gOOC! foo~ team but I can\ no I
The Marauder defense came up won t , belteve !hat !hey are !hat
wilh another big play off of a Fed· much better !han us but tomght
eral Hocking punt wtth 10:49 when they were and that'~ what counts,"
Welch broke lhrough and blocked add~ lhe veteran_grJ_d mentor.
Lacy's punt and Hawley picked it
STATISTICS
up and ran it in from II yands out
Wahama Van
Once again Hall' s placement was First Downs
15
17
trueanditwas36-0Meigs.
Yards Rushing 42-169 51-256
More D'OUble by the Lancer punt Yards Passing
51
91
team set up the Marauder's final ' Total Yards
220
347
score when Lacy's knee touch the Passing
7-15
6-10
ground at the 25 yard line as he Interceptions Thrown 2
I
'tried to scoop up a low snap. Mike ·Fumbles Lost
2-1
2-2
Cremeans did the honors from six Penalties/Yards
8-70
8-95
yards aut wilh 6:30 left in !he lhird PuniS/avg
4-28.5 1-36.0
period, Hall's kick was J:ood to Off Plays
61
62
give~ Marauder's !heir 3rd and Score by Quarters: . .
final pomts:
.
·
1 2 J 4 Tot
Blake led a Marauder balanced Wahatna
0 7 0 0- 7
groiDid attack with 44 yands in 10 Van
· 0 19 8 0 27
carries, Cremeans added 42 in five Scoring:
carries and Phalin picked up 34 in Van • Scan Grant two yard run
four carries. Phaltn was three of (Scott Grant kick) ,
nine in the air for 2S yards with Wahama · John Johnson one yard
Hawley P!aJiing in an three comjiie· run (Thmmy Mayes kick)
lions.
·
Van · Scott Grant four yard run
The Marauder defense held lhe (kick failed)
.
Lancers to an unbelievable minus Van • Steve Price lhree yard pass
48 yards rushing and minus 16 total from Jimmy Kerns (pass failed)
yards. Keith McFee picked up II Van • 1botie Rowe two yard pass
yards on seven carries to lead lhe from Jimmy Kerns (Herby Price
.Lancers, Federal Hocking quarter- pass from Jimmy Kerns)
·
backs completed three of 16 passes
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
for 32 yards, Matt Harris caught
RUSHING
two passes for 23 yards. Scott Pe- Waharna - Rocky Stewart 16-66;
tersan and lim Pullins each had an Brent Larck 15-58: John Johnson
interception for Meigs
4·36: Carl King 4-25: Lynn Black
Metgs will travel to Wellston 3·(·16):TOTALS42-169
-next week to pby the ·Golden Van _. Scott Grant- 28-144; Tony
Rockets, while Federal Hocking Flores 13-81; Dwayne Massey 3·
will host the Nelsonville-York 18; Jimmy Kerns 5-12; · Tootie
Buckey~,
Rowe 1-1; Ricky Meyers 1-0; Jim
Score by quarters
Wilson 1-0; TOTALS 51-256
Federal !:locking· 0 0 0 0 = 0
PASSING
Meigs .
22 7 14 0 = 43 Wahama - John Johnson 6-1043yds- lin~ Lynn Black l-5-8ydslint: TOTALS 7-15·51yds-2int .
Statistics
Van • ~immy Kerns 6-I0-91ydsDepartment
FH
M 2td-lint
First downs ............:.........9
6
RECEIVING
Rushing yards ............(-)48
145 Wlihama · Travis Johnson 3-30:
Passing'yards ................ .32
25 Brent Larck 2-8: Mike VanMatre I·
Total yards .................(-)16
170 8; Rocky Stewart 1-5; TOTALS 7Comp.·att. ................. .3-16 3-10 51
Interceptions tllrown .......2
1· Van • Chris Roberts 2-70; Tootie
Fumbles-lost ................2·0
3-3 Rowe 2·11-ltd: ·Herby Price 1-7:
Penalties .....................2·15 10-115 Steve Price 1-3-ltd: TOTALS 6Punting .......................5·83 2-89 9lyds-2td

Hard To Heat Your
Fuel Costs Up1-z

Area sp~ or.t:s br•·ef:"s''

Bl

D

.

·'lfi

.

·
fi ll 0 k

evl reshmen e

through faulty

windows.

as

BASF SK run set for October 12
MASON,_ W.Va. - As part of lhe upcomin~Bend Area ~tern­
wheel Festtval on Saturday, Oct. 12, the vtllage counctls of
Pomeroy and Maso!l.• '!J.Va. have e.odorsed the .BASF 5K run,
which will begin at Mason City Paris: that day at 10:30 a.m.
· The course will lle mostly flat, starting at city. park,extending
through the streets of Mason, across the Oh io River on the
Pomeroy-Mason bridge, up U.S. 33 lhrough Pomeroy and finishing
at the-Pome~y-levy.
'
----1, - - Pre-entry is $7 for runners and $5 for walkers. Race day entry is
$1 more. Race day registtation and pre-registration packeiS can be
picked up 9-10 the day of the 11iee.
All age groups can participate and prizes will be awarded. The
firstiOO entries will receive aT-shirt
·
For further inforinati&lt;in contact race directors Mike Kennedy at
614·992·7512 or George NicHols at 304-773-5851.
All entries should be mailed to: Sternwheel Festival 5K, c/o
Mason Town Hall, P.O. Box 438, Mason W.Va. 25260.

Sports card show slated
POMEROY - A sports card show will be held at the Pomeroy
Municipal Building in conjunction with !he Big Bend Stemwheelers
Festival on October 12 from 10 am. to4 p.m.
There will be 20 dealer· tables available for rent at a fc;e of $15
per table wilh proceeds, in part, benefitting the Meigs Band Boosters.
'\,
·
.
For infonilation or to arrang~ table rental, call992-3314.

'Hunter education courses posted
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources has announced lhe
listing for the public hunter and trapper education course locatioos
in Gallia County.
The classes wiU be held at the Gallia County Gun Club o~ Buck
Ridge Road in Green Township, just off U.S. 35, on Tuesday, Oct.
15 from 6 to 9 y.m. and on Sawrday, Ocl 19 from 9 a.m. to noon.
The class limit tS40.

Volleyball matchups posted
STEWART - Pam Doulhitt's Eastern Eagles (7-IQ) will play
Trimble (4•10) in lhe first found of the Division IV sectional lOur- , .
nament on Saturday, Oct 19 at Federal Hocking High School at I

p.n~iun winner will play Miller at 2p.m. The winn~ advances to ·
Athens for the district tournament to play the Dawson-Bryant
upper-bracket winner. In lhe lower bracket Kyger Creek, the top
seed, now 12-4, will meet North Gallia,4-7, in the lhree p.m...game.
That winner advances to Alhens to play lhe Shawnee State upperbracket winner.
.
At Rio Grande, Gallia Academy will face Vinton County on Ocl
19 at6 p.m. in the Division II sectional tournament at lhe University
of Rio' Grande's Lyne Center. The wtnner wtll play Jackson at the
conclusion of the match. At,8 p.m., Meigs will take on Rock Hill,
with lhe winner to face lhe victor of lhe Jackson match.

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~e
GALLIPOLIS - Gilllia Academy 's freshman football team .
boosted its record to 4-1 wilh a :Z0-12 win over Oak Hill Thursday .
night.
· .·
The. Blue Devils, 4-1, s&lt;;ored ftrst in t11e ftrst quarter on Jeremy .
Clay's 'four-yard touchdown run, which was set up by a 50-yard .
pass frO!ll Seth.Davis .t o Jamie Henry. But the Oaks tied the game ai
6-6 on a 60-yard touchdown pass (participants unknown).
Clay ran around-right end for a 36-yard touchdown at an unspec·
ified point in the ftrst half before Oak Hill got a touchdown pass to·
• cut Academy's lead to 14-12.
·
· After a scoreless third quarter, GAHS took possession on lhe
Oaks' 20-yard line and got lhe game-winning touchdown -a 15·
yard run- from Brandon Hill two plays later.
The Devils will ttavel to Logan on Thursday.
·

Research has
shown that 50o/q
of heat loss in a
typical house is ,,

'

''

&lt;Craig . Sbipley!s grplinder
dcllected off p11Chet Tom Brown.
PWiled, Meu 4 _
The Ph lilies moved one-half · ing's glove for the go-ahead~
· Philadelphia alippe_d pest New. gatt~e ahea4 ol the MeiS.
in the seve.nth inn in' a~d Sa&amp;.
York Into third place in the NL
Padres 3, Recb 2
Diego heal visiting Cincumati. . ., ,.

Jeff Br~tley, .who slr\lck outa
its longest wmning streak
~-lligb m,!D .tiRe lnninp for · of !he IalOR at ICVeiL .
. ..
hi~ 1~th sa~~- We SlUnk all~· · Tbe 21-year-ol~ ~.very (18-8)

had no choiCe.

.,

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

(Continued'from C-3)
march. Gil~'s two-point conversion created the final score.
"We showed a lot of character
coming back (from the previous
week' s 18-point loss at home to
Eastern)," said Pirate skipper
Gregg Dee!, whose sailors boosted
!heir overall record to 5-l and their
conference mark to 2-1.
North Gallia will have Oak Hill
as iiS homecoming game guest, and
Southwestern (3·3, 1·2) will host
Symmes Valley.
Score by quarters
NorlhGallia ......... l4 27 0 0 = 41
Southwestern .........0 0 6 8 = 14

wv

!IO~a ~gefullhi. 'ng ~ \ve'~ try· :IJ!liSe of. a velt~ •. held Houston Splie qwen'$ t'!o-run homer at · !he lOth inning drove i1J ~winthe Do!lgers, said hiUess for 6 '1/3 mrunp as .~ta . Three Rivem Stadium. .
ning run.

IDJIO SUCk Uto

:~~ ~~~~!:e~~~~.. ~~~ ·- ~~:itr:~
~~c~:~k~b:u~o=~~!~
mto next season."
.

I

•
•"

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
W.ElGHT·CONTROL

Pirates win ...

140 129
131 185
59 152
38 146

(Conference)
ream ·
wL
Oak Hill ................3 0
Eastem ..................3 0
$ymmes Valley ....2 I
Norlh Gallia ..........2 I
Sauthwesletll ........ l 2
KygerCreek ......... l 2
tlaiman Trace .......0 3

FAMILY PRACTICE

NO MORE YARDAG:E is the me~1age Eastern nose guard Mike
Hoffman (33, center) conveys with conviction to Hannan Trace running ba~ Heath Hutchinson during Friday's SVAC contest at Tup·
pers Plains, which the Ea~les won 57-6.

.

By BENWALUR:
AP B•ball Writer .
: Even _if the Los Anseles
Dodgers did.not '!3"t to :Watclt-the
scoreboard, even if theYJ~ want·

0-..

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

Kyger Creek
Rushiag - Bradbury 22-124, 1
TD: Rhodes 18-71.
Passing - Covey 2-4, 19:
Bradbury, 1-1, 10.
Receiving - Slone 1-11; Johnson 1-10; Walters 1-8.

QakHill ................4 2 173 "86
$outhwestern ........3 3 82 IS4

Symmes Valley ....2
Southern ...............2
i:yger Creek .........2
f{annan Trace .......0

KC
14
240
211
29
3-5
0
1-1
0
5-40

Charlie Francis, with an initial the 9:27 mark.
_
score. ._
burst of speed, penetrated !he front . ,From that point on East~rn .
Coach Randy Churilla was very .
line of Wildcat defenders then won · scdred; on intervals .of every ftve well pleased with his team's overa foot race o('85 yards to the end• minures or less. Robert Reel! htt ·all effort. The play of. the special 1
zone for the game's first score·at Michael Smilh for the two point teams was excellent as Easternextras via lhe air and Eastern led 8· contained the Wildcats very well . ,
on kick returns. One of Terry ~ ·
· 0.
At !he 6:31 mark Tim Bissell, McGuire's two puniS was downed,;
one of Saulh~astem Ohio's p~Jmier inside lhe one.
·
running backs put on a clinical of · At the i 1:30 mark Hannan's
"how lhe cream always rises to the Heath Hutchinson had a 63 yard
· top", sailing 60 yards to paydirt kick-off return. The kick was wtde ·
and his first of five scores. Reed's arid lhe score stood 23-6.
quar~rback sneak extra point run
Eastern's defense was super.
was void. The score now stood 14- !hroughout !he mght ~s e~tdenced ·
0.
by the 88 total yards by m:.
·Just moments later the youth
Charlie Francis 'ofEasterrf had·a
·and inexperience of the Wildcats 71 yard punt return, his second of···
resulted in a back- to-lhe wall situa- the night for a TD. His two TD.
tion for young quarterback Rick runs iotaled 156 yards for the night, ·
Dillon, who was caught by most of plus he added several other yards
the Eastern defensive line for a on other returns. Francis had 193.
' safety, !he sc.ore now 16·0. n on all-purpose yards., .
·: ·
that defensive assault were Steve
Randy Kaylor s ktck was vOJd
Barnett, Dan Short, Mike Hoffman, and lhe score stood 30-0.
and Mike Smithi
At lhe 4:55 mark of .[he second
In lhe second canto Tim Bissell 'frame Bissell again hit paydirt from
had his second 1D run of lhe night, one yard out, !he Kaylor kick good:
an eight yarQrun that culmiilated a lhe score 37-0.
. •
52 yard drive. Randy Kaylor hootAt 3:03 Bissell hit !he endzone .,
ed through the extras for a 23-0
(See EAGLES on C-5)
. "

Individual leaders

$VAC grid standings
(OveraU)

.

--

. --· ---- ·-

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,
otf-.:.Polnt Plaaunt,
.

Atlantawins;L.A.loses to puJ ~- raves on topoin NL.·West race

Eastern stays in unbeaten ranks .by downing Hannan ~ Traee 57-6
.

'"

~liS~ !pOillflipt.
1967

NEW DODGE
' SHADOW

14 door, a.nmatic, oir;
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ACCLAIM

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�/

· Page-C&amp; .Sundaynme~entlnel

· ~Toronto

Pameroy-Middiiii)OJ't~lllpolla, OH-Polnt plea$8flt,

wv

...

Oclober 6, 1991

beats Min_~~s~ta 4~1 _in fir~t of three ALCS tuneups . -

The Toron!YBThlueeJAisocays
warmediatedPressup
'or, the.rr
· Amer,,
!canthLeagu~ playoff meeting widl Minnesota by beat10~ e Twms •. and ace:reliever Tom Henlce was anythmg but cold m returrung from an injury.
Henke, who ,hnd wondered if shoulder tendinitis
would force htm fro~ t~e p.ta)'offs, thr~w eight
strikes.on 10 pttches. Pilclung roc the rust time since
S,ept 17,Henke WOlke!\ the seventh inning, strildng
9,Jtt Jarvts Brown and retiring Dan Gladden and
""?fk Kn?blauch on weak groWlders. · . ·•
I can. t say I'm now 100 percent," Henke said
after helpmg Todd Stottlemyre (15-8) celebrate his

2 and Seaale 6 Chi'"..; 4
.
'
1.
-ou •
·
Toronto reliever Bob MacDonald walked Scott
L~ius and gave up Lenny Webster's sacrifice fiy
before gettin$ out of the sixlh-iru!ing jam. Jim Acker
wmted the eighth and Duane Ward pnched the ninth
fot his 22nd save. . . . .
.
. · ·
. Denny Ne,agle (0-1) ts still .looki,ng f~r h!s frrst
btg:llll!gue vtctory after aUowmg moe htts m five
mD!Dgs.
·. .
, .
. il!dlau3, ~aak~ Z- qevelanc! s Jun ThOI)Ie
htt hts f11"5tliii\JOC league horner, a two-run shot With
"Yo out in the top of the ninth inning at Yankee Stad!wn. ThOme's hQmer off Steve Fare (5-S) came in
hts 89th major ICI!8UC at-bat and scored Reggie Jef·
ferson, who had singled with one out.
· . Eric Bell (4-0), who .pitched 2 1/3 innings of two- ·
h!t relief, Wa!l the winner. Steve Olin worlced a hitless
moth for his 17th sa've.
Brewen 3, Red ~ Z - Dante Bicheue liit a
decisive home run, and Cal Eldred won for the second time in tluee m~ league starts, ICI!diilg surging
Milwaukee over slumping Boston at Fenway Part.
Eldred (2.0) allowed seven hits, struck out five
and walked two in 6 1/3 innings before being
replaced by Darren 'Hol!nes. Doug Henry got die
~nal .!Me ~uts for his 14~ save. as. Milwaukee won
tts third sb'lllght pt!!eand !llghdlm,tts last tO.
Boston rookie Mike Gardiner (9-10), allowed
~runs, ~ ~ and two w~ while ~ng out
one 10 6 2/3111111Dj1S- He JI!Ok his ~d s~ghtloss as
the Red Sox sustained therr seven!h m moe ~~Ranaen 4, Athletics 3 - Mike Stanley s smgle ·
· off right fielilet Jose Canseco's glove in the bottom

sethlection as a startu m the playoffs m a 4-1 vtci(Jy at
e Metrodome. "I slill have some soreness
.
· " But 1 can't say 1 have die sh
. ·1
enced before either and that's 8
.~.d
~=who has 32 ~ves in chances
• 881
e,
'·'The biggest·thing is to see.b
· , feeli
to.;,orrow;• be said. · ·
ow my arm s
ng
Blue Jays manager Cito Gaston said Henke would
pitch again in today's regular·seaso.n f!D8le if he feels
well enough.
· ·1
Elsewhere it WILl Cleveland 3 N Yort: 2. Milwaukee 3 B' to 2. T
4 ~d 3. De • . 4
Baltimore' 2 ~ 1: u{runeg~~Caim . 6, Kansas~· •
•
orrua.
.
lly

'

!E

JS

Ex-Edmonton players give~
·L.A.-6-3 win oyer Winnipeg .:

of the ninth moved Texas into thlrd place in the AL·
w
··
·
est
Stanley's hit,,ame off Dave Stewart (11-11) after
Kevin Reimer singled and De8ri Palmer walked with
one out. Reliever Kenny Rogers (10-10) forced.
HaroldB~ to fiy &lt;!lit in .the top or the nindl ~ith.
runners dil_fmt. and third. The _loss left the defending
AL champtons m fourth place m. '!'e W:esl
·
Tlgen 4, Or!ol~ ~ .- Detrott s Mickey Tettleton
hom~ off relic~ Jtm Poole wtth two outm the
14th mnmg at Balumore.
.
· Tony Phillips, wbo ll!ld walked, scored ahead of
Tenleton's 31st home run. Poole (2·2), the fourth
Baltimaepitcher, worked one inning.
Rookie David Haas won his first major league
decision, ;md John Cerutti earned his second save by
pitching the 14th.
Anaels 6, Royals 2- Lee Stevens had dlree
RB!s, and an error by Kansas City right fielder Qary
Thurman in the eighth inning helped California beat
the Ro~als it Anaheim.
Rehever Tom Gordon (9-14), allowed a leadoff
walk to Gary Disan:ina and a single to Luis Polonia
in die eighth.
·
Cliff'\'omg (1·0) retired the only baller he faced
in the eighth a{ter the Royals tied the game.
Marlnen 6, Wbite SoJ: 4- Dave Valle had the
decisive hit and "Yo RBis as Seattle clinched die ftrSt
wintii~g season in its 15.year history.
.
Relievez Cal"(in Jones (2-2) got the victory, Mike
Schooler allowed an RBI singfe by Frank Thomas,
but got the final "Yo outs for his sevendl save
Charlie Hough (9-10) was the loser.
·

Kinser among winners at WVMS Friday
GETTING READY -Tom Pearson (left)
and Mike Weller, grounds crew worken at the
· Hubert H. Hampbrey Metrodome in Minnea~
; lis, paint the Alaerkln Lea!!Ue logo on the field

---By SGOTT-WOLFE
·
MINERAL WELLS w.Va. _
Bloomington, India~a's Steve .
Kinser the II time outlaw king
led fro.it start to finish in the World
· of Outlaw Skoal-Copenhagen
Shoot-out 25-lap Sprint car feature
at West Virginia Motor Speedway
Thursday evening.
At 6 p.m. a downpour hit the
track and delayed die start of die
racing to 10:30 p.m., but most of
the large crawd in attendance
stayed into die early morning hOlD'S
to witness a fmc race.
Fast time of the night was posted by.Mark Kinsel of Oolitio, Jndi
ana, while Sammy Swindell was
second quick and Columbus driver
Charlie Fisher was third.
New Mexico drivez Johnny Her
rera outdislallced Steve Kinser in
the Tums fast car dash, which set
the starting positions for the fastest
six cars, dlus putting Herrera and
Kinser in to top two feature spots.
Holmesville, Ohio driver Keany
Jacobs won the filS! heat, Chuck
Ward won the sei:ond, and Frankie
Kerr won the third heat event
Aldlough Kinser wan the event
from Rag-to-Rag there was much
dr11111a as to whether or not arch
rival Sammy Swindell could ovez
haul the outlaw king. Kinser
m:ently won hia 302 World of Out
law feature and went over the .
$300,000 mark in winnings fll' the
year.
Swindell, who started sixth
worked his way up the ladder to
t«ond by lap number five, where
. he was in hot pursuit of Kinser. As
· Swindell's tires warmed, his car
became fastu, but the many yellow
Rags allowed the Goodyear rubber
to cool and Kinser's softer com' pound would dig in on the restarts.
On the fifteenth lap Swindell
pulled even with Kinser on the
backchute, much to die deligHt or
the crowd, but another caution
negated the bid and be was relagated to second place:

Thursday in preparation for the junior circuit's
playoffs, which bealn Tuesday between the
Toronto Blue Jays atld the bost Twins. (AP)

Scoreboard

s-

:, •In the majors •••

.:' I

ChiCip, 101; Boailli • •PitllbUlJb~ 100;
0..., All&gt;nlo, 99: 0 .
So . ....... 9~
I. B.U.l'iloaboqh. 94: Pend!'"", Aolan!a,

NATIONAL LEAGUE

.,

Euh:r.IHYidon

Tt11111

~
••

• ·l'illobuJp ........
..........

SL l..ou.i.l

Philtdelphi• .......

'

-~

.,~

New YGlt
Chicap
M-...

.•.....

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

Pet.
.600
.521

Gl
ll..S

.481

19

.471

19.5

,471
.447

205

2A5

W.wn DIYilklll

T-

W L Pet.

-

GB

.......... 93 67 581

t.oo~

~
••

W L
9c; 64
84 75
71 83
76 &amp;3
7. 83
71 88

......

S.Dioio ........

n.,. .m

I

12 71 513

II

Clld...tl 74 IN M3
s... Pnnd.oo ...... 74 16 .463
........ 64 % .&lt;00
r.-dincbed di¥iaian tilla.

••v
~
~

"

19
29

Friday's Scores

St. ImiutCbica~ ppcl .. nin
Allulta.5, RCIUIIOn 2

t,

I'

:

- . 3,1'5111buoohl

.

Ph 11 ·delphi·S, New")'cd4,10 im.inp

,1

Sao Dlof&gt; I, Clod11Md2
Sm Pnacilco4. Lol Anpklll

~
~

~

!

Yc:d (YGUr!J 2-&lt;f) at Rti.l.adllpllia

(Mulhollaod 1!-13), Ul ~m.
1
•" S\, LouiJ Otillll· IO and OIJt 1·1) II
'
ChiCIJO (LaDc:utar 9-7 and Boatic 4-9).
'
:1,2&lt;15 p.m.
~
l.ol AD&amp;!!" (Moraan 1~·9) at Saa.
, .. P
'
(WiiiM 12- fl or Hicicaon 2·
•'

•l·
•,-

1), 3:05p.m.

Howltaa (Portu_lll 1~11) 1t Atlant.l
(Smollz 13-13), 3:Q&gt; p.m.
-•~s.,..,.. 9-l) " Piuobur&amp;l&gt;

' : (Smilb 16-1 ' 7:05p.m.
I c~~w:.... (AIWIIlrOftl '7 -13) It San

K, D~oao(lllotool-f), tt:tlp.m .

•, I
"·

Today's ~:ames

1

"~ I New Y&lt;D (Cono 13-14) al PbUadclphi•
~: ca.-13-7), 1:3lpm.
•' , Mo.ltre~l (Buau 5·7) 11 Pituburp

• • (T-I-7),1:35p.m.
~

•

burp, 113: McOriff, 8111 Di1110, 106:
OanL, Atlanta, I 03; Illw1on, Chlcaao,
102; Baillla, Pit11b\qh. 99; Stnwbeiry,

LotAn...... , .

HITS - Pmdlctm, Allantl, 186; Buth:wr, U. An plea, 182; BCftillr,, Pitllbwt.IJ. '
113; Sabo, Cincinnati, 172; Jo•o. ~t.'

Loult , 172; Flnlty, Houlton, 169; T.
OwyM, San Dioao. 168; Sandbcra.
a.J~ao; t61.
•
DOUBLES - Daoilla l'ioubwlb. 44·
JotC. S.. l..cWa, 0, O 'N~~ Cblclnital~
3'; Slbo. ClM:InuU, 35i Ol!lt. Atlant1,
35; Zaile, SL l.ou.U, 34; Pel\dleton, At-

W.u.:ll.

TRIPlES - l..a!lkford, SLLou.il, 15; T.
Owynn. San l)i.ep. It; FiPr, Hcuct.on,
10; L. Oonulez, Houttoa, 9; Gri11om,
Mon11811. 9; Pmdlccon. AtWIIa, I; 5 ue
tiodwidl7.
HOM!! RUNS - !........_ Now Ymk,
31 ; ~~~u. William•, San Fnnti&amp;co, 34;
Oarlt, Adanu. 31; McGriff. Sm Dicp.
31: WCJut, Sa PIUCilco. 29; Dlwt011,
Chic:IJO, 29; O'Ntlll, Clntlnaall1 21;

s..wtialY.t.ooAnuloo.li.

Tbey ployed Saturday
New

HOOIIOD [}llftUic:h 11 -9) It Atlanu

f"'' "ClUe•...

.. ~ (l.oilnn411l·l;t). ~10
~ • St. LouU (0ll¥01U l-&lt;1)
'• (Madaa I H I~ :1:20.1"'"~
Clltc....ll (aU. 15-5) at Sin DlfiO

STOLEH BASE.f".!.. Orillaft, ~
· d, 76; NJa.aa, Allaata, 72; D.shieldl,
Montml , ,:6; L~t~kford, SL LouiJ, 164;
B.... """""""- 43: B -. Loo Aq~
Ia , 31;Callmla, New YOlk, '11.

PITClDNG 06 4ocidotu) - Rljo,

Clncl ..all 1 1~·5 1 .751 1 Uli Mitch
WiUW.., PhilaiWphia, 12--5, .706. 2..34;

S.,;tey, P l - . 1!1-l, .1&lt;14, 3.11; Av·
!!7• A!laou, 11·1• .692. 3.31: 11un1. S..
~Jioto. Il-l, .6l~ 3~. .,_, Pbilod&lt;lphil, 13·7 , .650, 3.31 ; Gooden, New
Y..t,l3-7,.6lO, l .60.

STRIXEOlTTS - Coao, Now Yort,
222: OlariM, Atlanta, 192; 0. Madd111,
Chluao. 191; Huaiacb, HGUJIOn, 166;
RIJo,'CIIIdaaatJ, 10; ~~~San Dief,o,
161; JWc:h., Llll Anaeb. lXI.
SAVES - Leo Smith, St. LoW.. 47:
Dllllillt, ClM:Iuatl, 31; Mi.ldt William~,
Philadelplola. ~ Fnaco, New Y.... 30;

RJ&amp;hoal, San :14: Ld!au. s..
· Di'l•· U: B. Loo41um,J!i1UburP, 17:
O.WI Smilh, OUclco. 17; Bawtper, At·
11Dt.a.17.

American Leape

(a..14-11). . . . ,...

·;

~

.••

ol

1M A:&amp;•Iil (11. .1Wor1·1} at Sta
Pna: 'r: ....:5± : 2--1).4:05p.m.
hoi ...... '

'

.
'

·-

.......... 13 77 5 19

Dtooj&amp;

NtwY...

a.-

r-

.•
'

'

7
9
20

M i l - ' ...... II ?9 506
OUMO'

70

90 .438

1..~-- 66 ~ .413

I•Jiu

IPM'

Clioop

r....

-

2A

56i 1M Jlf

"'

Pd.

GB

52l
5 19

lO

'( ~· w..... ot.w

"'

'ATriNO - Fr1nco, Tnu, .341 ;

Boap. BCll\cla, .331; Randolph, Mihnu·
k•, .329; Ken Oritrey Jr., S:.tllo, .321;

C. Ripba, Baltimore, .326; ·Palmoiro,

•'
LEAGUE
!':"- 1! AMERICAN
...._DI_
GB
ltr..
WLPcL
a·TCiniiiUt ........ 90 ?0 563
-6
.......... 14 ?6 52l

"

......
........ 16

L

66 .lll
?&lt; .Ill

......... 14 76
......... 13 77
o.tlaod
Jt.-Cily .. ..... 12 71
.......... 11 71
CallfoMa ......... 79 II
J&lt;liached diYWaa daJi.

-

8

II
IZ
IZ
ll

5 13
5 13

·.494

Transactions

94.
•
.
RBI - W. Cladt, San I'MO..O, 116:
Jolwon, New Yolk, t 16; Banet., Pittl·

Tu u . .313: Thomu, Chlcaao • .312;
Molilor, MllwWee, .322

RUNS - Mnlilot, MiiWI\Iko.O, 129;
PalmU, r-., us;
Oa.k.laad,
114; Siom, T~u . 109; White, TOI'ORIO,
109: Franco, Tuu, 107; Thlmu, Odcap,I03.
RBI - Nld111, Oeuoit, 133; Canaeco,
Otillncl, 122; Slern, TOUI.Ill: C. Rip-

c..r...oo.

ten. B•llimore, 114; Thomu. Oli.cqo .

Baseball
Amtrtcan Leta..
CLEVELAND INDIANS -

COith; Lulll111e, bullpen eoach; Mllrk
Wll•f• pltc:hlna coach, .. d 1111)'

Wllllamt, e•chlna a.ulllanl, will not
reblm 10 1M club MJ:I I&amp;IIOL OOtrtd

lluc,

wu., Uld

0UC~F, _ l00;1~0c.wlcz. Texu,

.-.,193.

DOT.JBl.ES -

~.

Palm~ Tau, -47;

C.

Ballimcn, 4S; Siem, Ta.u, 44;

XO. Clri«ey Jr., S..alc. ·~ Reed. Boorm.
42; Cu~er, Tan1111o, 42: Boap, Bcmon,
4l

TlUPU!S - L lolwon, CNcoao. 13;
Molilor, MUw111lu:e, 13; l . Afom•r. ·

r....... 11: Wbioo. T-.t~ MeR••

olhtr Joblla

lllal J01t MoraJu, hlldnt coaeb, will
rtlura ud Doni Chid, IMaUptl coaeb,

--

hu balll •ked 1o ntum 1o lhe c:oac:hlna.wrr. uaiiMpednede.padty.
Fi~

TEXAS RANOBRS -

.......

Davey

Nillcinal Leoeue

·

CIUCA.OO CUBS - A&amp;reed to tcnn1
witb Shaw01t Dv.naton, d"orutop, on •

(Nf-)'1111' ~

Buketball
Na1l&lt;lul . .lootboiAJooclodon
CLI!VJILAND CAVAlll!RS - SiFecl
Jcim ........ .
HOUSTON'IOCXEIS - Sif;ned v..

..............-do
~~- Mu...U,

10 •

t. .,.v 0011·

MWil HEAT - Siaud Goqro A"-·
l01, DCIIllaJI.(orwtnl; Milot Babk:, oaa1er.
Byn:m 1rvi11 and Pbi.l H-*"CIIl. pudl:
w~~~m "!oro. r......._
•
NEW JEJtSEY NETS - R~nounccd
~ ,.;..,q 10 Jack twey; forward, allow·
1IIJ h'b to • · lhe Loa Aalelell.akrn.
Si&amp;Ded RJ:' Addilon, t'Onrard, to a

mwli-,... .........
St!AllU! SVPI!RSONICS - S;,nod
Rich Kint. CIIIICir, to I fCJVr•)'DU c:c:mtnCl
FootbaU
N&amp;Uonal FootballlMpe

BUFFALO BlLLS - Phcod Eddie
F• •
an iQiurod ......,.
Slplod Mike Kleundcr, wido teeei.v..

"""'""back.

CINCINNATIBENGALS- Adlnl.
ttl • ....., . . .,, l&amp;ftty, l'roln lnJ•red

,_..,

'

INDIANAPOUS COLTS - Namt&lt;l

Dave Alu.u dcrlmlivo aui.Nat co.ch
Sipd Dvin Sbr'1 .. c&amp;.ive ~
""'""Raody Diuo.- jWd. ...
""Pankey, ..ale. .. iajuiOd ....... Mtiva~ Brian J.... , Unebtcker, fruD lho

s--

'"n~sTs"ciTY cmEFs - P~&lt;cod

.

~w.._

s-.I "aod Billy llcll,

Tennis
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) Goran Ivanisevic stunned No. 4
Andre Agassi, hitting a career-high
27 aces to win 7·5, 7-6 (7-3) and
reach the semifinals of the Australian Indoor Championship.
.The. Yugoslav saved two sel
pomts m ~e second set and eight
b~eak pomts overall..Ivanisevic
Will play !Oil-seeded Stefan Edberg
who ousted' Michael Chang 64

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Plaood C...y ............. ., lnjwod ...

.....

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS -

Ckimod Aloa&lt;ol!lpomioh, r.llbock. olf
Wln'llllr

Hockey
N"""""Hoekeyt.oque
EDMONTON OILERS - Totdod
~ ~. oenw, and f111uta cmllidoenuona to Ole Now Yolk RlriJen lot
Bait Nidaolla, cancer, ind Stmn Rioc:
andlouloDeBNlk. winp.

win!T-Sjxina·
f..W&lt;ItheAonericanHooby
YiU Tomlak,-.-.klft:

In other quarterfinals, No 9
Brad Gilbert beat· South· African
Wayne Ferreit16-\. 64, and while
third-seeded Pete Sampras defeated
No. ~David Whealoo 6-3, 4-6, 64.

- An·

ncmllld tha ~ d Cllrl. OiJ. 46-

r.......

' 1:

s.

HAR11'0RD WIIAU!RS - ~

MINNESOTA NORTH ST

.

NEW YORX ISLANOI!RS - Slpood

StiWe Weeb, aOihender.

ll.w• Cioy, '' O,.w "'· BalWn..., ~
GIHdao, Mirlloooio. 9.
HOME RVNS -;:__ Canteco, Oakland,

" • IWda. DeaoU. 44: c . ~en. Balti·
mm, 34; Cartar, Toronto. 3~; Thomu,
Odcap, 32; TINbull, JCanw City, 31;

T -. llolooio, 31.

STOLEN BASES -

R. Alomar,.

TOI'OIIIo, 53; R. Hm6elson, o.kland, 53;
au-, OW:ap. 51; Poi.Oilia, California,

REA PAL!

...

·=}oilers trade Messier to N.Y. Rangers

a

LANPS MONSTER BASS -With craJflsllu .a lure, Slllllford
Fulks ol CrOWII City liDded this 20-poand, 29-lnch white b-In the
Ohio River near Cl'OWII City on SepL 28. •

IAWN•BOY
FAIJ. SAVINGS'

39995 .

"'"'· Otldoul, 43: Aplloro, - . .
, 41 ; budan, B011an, 40; MOftt&amp;ametJ,
JCa-.. Cllr, n1 HaUe. Toranao, 3Zo 01·
IGft, Blldmore., 31.
•

Tbis week's NFL action
' oclay '

'

a.- .., .It r.m..a-. ,1
.,.....lbnoa.l p.m. .

·. ,...

.. Dlllal ....

Natloul Lope

IATliNO - Pm'"M, Adlai, .311;

T. Owru. l1a - = .-317; Morrl•,

Cl........, JJt1
WI\ '•oo.
.512: IOM, lt. l.nh, .JOdi ..-rkll,
~ .JUaiiGoilla, PluabwJII,

c-...
JCII,

.1 -.,.. ...

All-

.

111111 - · -y ....
· Loo101; lu4bor
112;
••

'

•

~"'

l'hotnl&lt; • Ntw Yocfat.. 4 p.m.
aLA. -4~m.

M'dim pc"s, I p.m. .
ATB: Atlanta, L.A. Rams ,

Ntw Odeanl,

s. Praaciaco

Moaday
x- aor. 1 p.m.

-

... lP0-;
\.
'
0 ·,. .._._,
"'- .

.

SAVE

S70

S70

j

~,

-..,.....-_~1&amp;:6~
'
':~(.)~ (\ ~
L~C

I'

Wednesday - 6·8 p.m., col : .Jege recreation
· Thursday - volleyball vs. Mt.
&gt;Vernon Nazarene, 7 p.m.
; Friday- closed•
·: Saturday - volleyball vs.
.1 Walsh and Salem, 2 p.m.
.,.
· Sunday, Oct. 6 - closed•
• -closed because of Bob Evans
; Farm Festival
·

·)n"
·
.
·
~
',/"

Sponsored •y: Melts Co. Hu11111 Society
.
P.O. lox 612
Ponr,y, o•1o

.

•4 HP commlfcill·
grade engine
.
•H-oauge 11111 deck
•21" Cut. 111011ered
whlll

•4 HP Commercial·
. grecla engine
•14-gauge 11111 deck
•21"•' cut. 1111g~recl

whfle1 ..... ·· "'' •·

.J· ·
'

'.

992·2164 . Pomuoy Ohio

Tilt SIGle with "All Klnda of Stun·
For Pttl, 8tabloa, Large l 8~\~tll Anlm~lo, Ltwna l

!

Oordena.

'\
\

'

',

.

'

Pool houn
•.; Sunday - 1-3 p.m... open
~,wim; 6-8 p.m., college swim
:• Moaday- closed for classes
~: Tuesday - 6-8 p.m., college

R&amp;G fEED ancl ·SUPPLY CO.
399 W.11al•

manager Glen ·Sather .rejected his to 64 points In 53g ames last seademands, Messier refused to join ,.SS_:,;,;"·; __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
the Oilers after playing in the r
CARD OF THANKS
Canada Cup tournament last \
month. .
We would like to say
Messier is reported to have thank you to the multi·
earned $1.1 million last season, and tude of Leo's friends who
Sather is said to have offered $2 expressed their sym·
million per season.
" In the end, the Oilers offered a pathy during our time of
loss. We deeply apprecl·
pretty substantial contract,"
Messier .said at the Montreal ate whatever you did: the
Forum, where the Rangers played many beautiful flowers,
·saturday night. "But I've been the abundance of food
playing m Edmonton for 12 years
ahd it (a paning) was going to be and other gifts, the cards
and words of con·
sooner or later."
Messier, who has not played dolence, the many, many
prayers. All have helped
since the Canada Cup ended Sept.
16, said he would play against to comfort us.
Montreal Saturday. But he admitKnowing Leo ("Snow·
ted " it'll probably take a week for
man" to his trucking
me- to get my legs into full playing friends) has touched so
shape."
many lives In the short
Messier joins Gnmt Fuhr. Glenn
span
of his lifetime, fills
Anderson, Steve Smith and J ~ri
our hearts and Is a trlb·
Kurri as players ,moved by Sather
since Edm·onton was eliminated
ute to him. Leo will be
from the playoffsJast spring.
smlllnQ;ttown on us from
" It's sad for me lQ trade Mark
Messier, but it becomes more com- heaven , until we meet
r.t eXc than that ," Sather said . again.
'We've traded a lot of players, but
Wife-Bonnie Stumbo
we've acquired a lot of young playDaughters-Tara &amp; Rlsa
ers in return. If you don't trade
Parents-Bob &amp;
.players when they ·still have some
Nellie Stumbo
value, you can never recover. "
Brothers-Stephen, Max
Messier, an Edmonton native,
was a star player for die Oilers in
&amp; Jerry
their vintage years. Injuries to his
Slster"Neda (Stumbo)
knee and dlumb reduced his output
Roush

"*'filAR

. .,

r,swim

'

~· ·-

•

.,
Gymnasium hours
: Sunday- 1·3 p.m., open ·recre·
:"ation; 6-8 p.m., college recreation
' Monday - closed for classes
:. Tuesday - 6-8 p.m., college

, recreallon

~

Ill I

·•,
: RIO GRANDE - The activities
'.schedule for Lyne Centu is .as fol 'lows:

List 369.95

SAVE

. ADOPT A .CAT
JUST CALL 992·6843

r.._
Wllhlrlp II Chiooao, I

lh!l'alo •

I

(_

MID ot Nawlin~JaM, I p.m.
I5
I It DreOit. 1 p.m.
N'" Yon Jtla ao Clowblcl,l l""'·
AIUIJ lf:UutTIIIlpt BaJ,l p.m.
S.W. •t Cladna.U.l

Major league leaders

•

, yne Cen ter SI3te

~-L

29995

Lilt 469.95

'

MONTREAL (AP).- There
was plenty of room for Mark
Messter's broad shoulders as he
JJlggedon aNew YorlcRangetSjerley for thefust lime Friday.
The Rangers hope Messier will
cany them on his shoulders in their
bid for their fiBt Stanley Cup since
1940.
"I don't dlink dlis franchise has
• ever had a player like him ,"
~ Rangers general manager Neil
Smith said.
· Smith acquired Messier, 30,
..; lrom the Edmonton' Oilers for vet- ·
center Bernie Nicholls and a
'.! pair of ~rom ising young forwl!fds
- Loute DeBrusk and Steven
Rice,
Messier, a member of five Sianley Cup-champion teams in
•.Jldmol!tOn, hastened the trade by
:-requesting a contract renegotation
;last spring. When Oilers general
,·
·
:·
.

·:·]Iran

- · 19·1, .7&lt;14, 3.27: LooP."!'• Coli·

a,.., r-•u..

nlfer Lawrence, Jonna Manuel and Tassi Cum·
mins. In the back row are Rochelle Jenkins,
Keri Caldwell, Samml Sisson, Jeni Cummins,
Emily Dub!, Kim Roush, Amber Thomas and
Couch.

•

mouNO (16 dac:iaiau) - Heated!,
11-&lt;, .?!~ 3.29; l!riobon, .....

STRIUOlTTS - Clcm8ns, Boalon,
2311R,; Jollnaon, Seaulo, 128; Ry1n,
Ttlll, 193: McDonll. ChietJO, 191;
...._ c.ur..;,. 1?3; FWoy, California, 111; SwlndaU, Cle........._l"·
SAVES - ~~aMy. Calilomia, 4l: l!do·

J1randi Mallory, Jenni Hill, Tabitha Willford
and Kendra Norris. Behind them ar.e Aimee
Manuel,· Jodi Caldwell, Marcy' Mathews,
Andrea Moore, Rasche! Rowe and Amy Weaver.

JUNIOR HIGH TORNADOES . - The
:. Southern junior hl&amp;h volleybaU team Is enjoying
{•, a fine seasoa under first-year coach Jenny
.&gt;; · Couch, a rormer Meigs and Rio Grande standc
!; ' out. Pictured are (front row, L·R) Hillery Har·
~;. ris, Missy Smith, ·Bea Lisle, Rayan Young, Jen-

L21ZPr.

41: C.ylcr. Dowh. 41 ; Fnneo, Texu,
:M; White~., T«ttl¥0, JJ.
.

fornit, 11·1, .691. 3.05; GullieUbn. 1)&amp;.
tloit, l0-9, .690, 3.90; Wi!p~UI, Mil.WIU•
be, 1.5-7, .611, U.S; M. Moore, QUJ.and,
17·1, .610. 1%: I"...... Colifamia, 18-9,
.667. 3.10: Clclnw. BOltOn. U-9•. 66'7,
254;
f£1 , 2.91

. Crew chief and Cornier hidden
hero Karl Kinser made the neces·
sary adjusbnents and'Kinser roared
to the win without incident
Swindell was second, Stevie
Smith third, followed by Jacobs,
Mark Kinser, Johnny Herrera,
Dave Calaman, Frankie Kerr, Gary
Cameron D, and Charlie Fisher.
The next event at WVMS is a
STARS late model~ on October
12-13; the 'West VIrginia National
· Open.
.

SpQrts briefs

orido ........... Mito
Bell, dol...f"e end, on t.ha illjllf'Od roHM. Rooipod P.lrick
dr:fen-

100;

.•

William~

lht oraanlzallo•. Namtd Gordlt
Mac.Ktelle adftaUI ICOVL .\aftOUnced

109 ; Cartor, Toronto, 101; Ventura ,

lten Orlfl'oy Jr., Sct.li&amp;lo. 100; Tuubull.
Kwu Cioy, 100.
IDTS - Molia, MU.-allkcc, 211 ; C.
Ri~U, Ballimcn. 209; Palmeiro, Tew,
lin; S~. Tew, 199: Fnnco, Tcu1,
19~ Su. New Yodo. I%: llodooa. Mia·

An ·

not~aetd that Rlth Dauu, third bait

_...Qn_ the tw.eJitieth circuit
Swindell edged by Kinser on the
back·chute to brietly take die lead.
On the frontcbute Swindell made
the pass for the lead but the yellow
was waving for a stalled Chuck
Ward in tum three.
Due to the number of cautions a
fuel stop was mandated. Although_
no adjusbnents were to be rna~
every car's mechanic was seen
using an unusual number of
wrenches to get fuel in~ car.

Sunday

OH-Pcilnt PleaSant, WV

;

~: Wednesday - 6-8 p.m .• col~J!:gc swim
f• Tharlday- closed
Friday -closed
Saturday - closed
,SIIDday, Oct. 6 - closed
'

.•BRAKE JOBS •OIL CHANGE
•WHEEL ALIGNMENT .

·MEIGS
TIRE
CENTER
JOIN FULTI MAICUS FULTZ

242 W. •1n

J.

OWIIEIS
992-2101

Pameroy

llyKEN RAPPOPOR'J
MaclnniJ.
·
A.. HQCI&lt;ey Writer
. ~ucka 4. Sbultl.3
.
• lbe.Los Angeles Kings ,looked, ' The _Shark~ made things inter· •
m~e like !l!e ~mon~n Oi!eJ:s. ... esung ·~ thesr ~HL debut. They
while the Oilers hardlyloc*ed like f~ll beh,md 3.0 m Vancouver,,talthem~ves. .
.
.
lied to tie'the game, then lost it ori a
. . Jan Kum, reu~lled wtth long- · ~wer-play goal to Trevor Linden
ltll!e Edmonton hnemate Wayne With 19 seconds left.
·
Gretzky, gave his new Los Angeles
The league's fust true expansion
teammateS a.lift with dlree goals to team in-17 years- four new clubs
lead the~ to a 6-3 victory over . entered from the World Hockey
the Winnipeg Jetson Friilay night. Association in 1979 -".allowed the
"It bro~ht back a lot of memo- Canucks to fU"C 52 shots at goalties," Kum said. "I've got to be a tender Jeff HaCkett.
happy man ~ ~-able to play with · Although the Sharks floundered
(&lt;fretzk:y) 18l!'D·
,
in front o(the belCI!gDeted Hackett.
·AI umes tt looked like the old they,erased a three-goal deft&lt;:it in
Oilers were stating against the Jets the third period when the Canucks
as ~urri was lined up with.G~. got complacent ~ Sharks were
whtle Marty McSorley and Charlie outshot 52-22, incJuding 36-9 in
Huddy patrolled the blue line. All the fusttwo periods.
Mrc teammates with ibe Oilers
Penplns 5, Sabres 4
during their Stanley Cup-winning
Jaromlr Jagr had three assists,
years of the 1980s.
including the only lJOe on the winKurn spent last season in Italy ning goal, as Pittsburgh opened
after a glittering career in Edmon- defense of its chamPionshiP with a
ton, where be helped the Oilers win win in Buffalo.
-L ·five Stanley Cups. . '
Gord Roberts' 3().foot slap shot
. Meanwhile, the retooled Oilers on die powez play at 13:38 of the
were hammered by the Calgary ftnal period' proved to be the winFlames 9-2.
_
nc;r !!S the Peogui ns..came_back_
"I'm very disappointed ... and from'83-l ·defteiL ·
rather embarrassed," said Ted
Mario ' Lemieux, who left
Green after his debut as head coach Wednesday's practice complaining
of the Oilers. " We didn't touch of back pain 1 gave· the Penguins a
anybody."
4-3 lead before Roberts' goal put
· Elsewhere in the NHL, the Pi1tsburgh up by two.
expansion San Jose Sharks suffered
Uwe Krupp scored for Buffalo
a 4-3 loss to Vancouver in their with less than five minutes to play.
first NHL game: the defending
Kevin Stevens ~the game at
Stanley Cup champion Piltsburgh 3·3 widl a powez-p goal at 4:13
Penguins edged Buffalo 5-4 and of the third·period w · Mark RecWashington stopped Philadelphia
·
S-2.
After tlt~~~ ~:~~-~ tead in
the fir~t period, Kurri personally
took care of things with two goals
within 10 seconds to give the Kings
a 3-2 lead. The Kings took control
at4-2 when Tony Gransto scored a
power-play goal midway through .
the fmt period
Luc Robitaille made it 5-2 for
Los Angeles early in the third.
Bob Kudelski also scored for
the visiting Kings. Frederik Olausson had two goals for the Jets and
Dave McUwain scored die other.
Flames 9, OUers Z
Theoren Fleury scored two
goals and added two assists as the
Flames breezed past die Oilers at
the Saddledome.
Calgary scored !Me power-play
goals in the fust period to break the
game open earl)';. The game produced 44 penalties - Edmonton
was assessed 24 for 103 minutes
and the Flames, 20 for 90 minutes. '
Fleury opened the scoring in the
first two periods as the Flames
stated to period leads of 4-2 and 72. Fleury, who scored 51 goals last
season, also assisted on power-play
goals by Robert Reichel and AI

chi and Phil Bourque got Pitll·
. .
~
. · 'fbe Sains abo got pta froln
Dale H•wercbuk, Doug BodgeF
andtookieBradMay.
.,

burgh's other gqa1s.

: Caplja115, nyen z
•"
Dmo Ctccarelli scored the ""' ·
ahead pi laic ill die W!l!Jd periorl
and Mike Uut stopped 24 11tots 11 ,
the capitals COiltinued their domi- .
natiOn of PltiladeltiWL
Peter 8ondra had two Pis and
Dale Hunter had three assists foi:
the Capitals, who improved to 9- i~
I in their last II games 1pitut the
Flye(J. Phi~delpbia hasn't won i
game at.the Capital Centre sin~
Dec. I, 1989.
•;
J.iut, elevated to the No. I ~·
tmding job becaitse of the holdoul
of Don Beaupre, won his 2S4tb.
~ gime to move into a tie with'
Tmy Thompson at 12th on the all·
time list.

THE FRENCH 500
FLEA MAllET ' I
&amp; GUNSHOW -- •.

Gallla County Jr. •
Falrlrounds · •

OCTOIE 11·12·13

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to 6

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Oct,ober 6, 1991

~FL'~ trend toward minimal offense hitting· Colts ha.rdest
By.Tb~ Associated Press

• Sconng IS down throughout the
NFL It's ~n p~ctically ponexis:~~~=~~·
~ew England,
. . P·
Not surpnsmgly,
_all four of
those teams have losmg records.
The Colts, who just fired thei~ .
coach, and the Buccan.eers, who
moght be thmkingaboutlt, are winless.
" We have to gain confiaence
mrou~h execution. You can't talk
confidence, yo~ ha.~e l~ get 11
through execution, sa1d Rtck
Venturi, the new coach of the
Colts, ":ho release~ Ron Meyer
after falling to 0-5. The number~ecthing we've got to do is that
c olts can't beat the Colts. It's
not a real creative message right
ilo,w, it'sjust,;;omething that I think
IS ~~~rtanlli h
-• NFL
l3fUl\JO s as sc_on;u an . ·
low ~,0 pomts and will .be_ starUng
tls soxth dtfferent offensove line
today at home against Pittsburgh.
The Colts have been wracked by
injuries and are 25th in total
offense with an average of 243 .6
yards per ,same. Eric Dickerson,
the leagues No.4 all-ume rusher,
has a career-low 3.3-yard average

wuh 260 yards as the only back to
rush the ball for the Colis. They are
gaining a paltry 50.8 yards per
g~~~~~ed~~~~~ean
personnel
.
changes are 10 or~e~, ?lher than
thoseforcedbythemJunes.
"We've g?,t to go ~ith .the,peopie we have, Ventun S3ld. We
may use them a lillie differently,
but you can't make maJor chan$es
at this point. What we're looking
for is better c~~ution than we've
had m the past.
Elsewhere, the Bucs are at home
to Philadelphia, the Patriots entertain ll:fiami and the Vikings are at
Deuo1t
Also, it's Dallas vs. Green Bay
at Milwaukee; Denver at Houston;
the New York Jets at Cleveland;
Seat~e at Cincinna~i; Washington
~ ~hGtcago; PShoeB~x at ththe NLoew
or lllllts,; an tego at e s
~ngeles Rwders; and, on _Monday
mght, Buffalo at Kansas Coty. .
Enjoying an open date are
Atlanta, the Los Angeles Rams,
New Orleans and San Francisco.
Tampa, which has just 59 points
in . its five losses, fa~es the NFL's
thlfd'lankeddefense.
:'It could be a low-scoring

game. There's no question· about
that •• said Philadelphia coach Rich
Kotlte, whose cl9b is without its
top:uc~sqcoa\l8l'lechrbacRic~~d ·W.II'•"'so
.
'""'
I _.. n
isn't conc.erned with facing the
same fate as Meyer particularly
.with the Rues having a week off
afterpla)'in&amp;Philadelphia,
"The bye week and Ron Meyer
losing his job don't have anythin~
to do' with this situation '
Williamson said ... This is ~n
important !lame because we need a
win Not JUSt me but the whole
~"
'
The Patriots (2-3), who have 56
points have the worst passing
game i~ lhe NFL. Head coach Dick
MacPherson knows his teani must
wake up offensively against the
Dol~ins.

' What they want to do is get
into the fourth quarter and let the
gunslinger go . after people,"
MacPherson said of Dolphins quarICrback Dan Marino, "Put another
notch in his belt and ride off into
lhe sunset"
Minne~ota (2-3) has changed
quarterbacks in hopes-of upgrading
an attack that has produced an
NFC-.Iow 49 poin!S and has no IDs

...
down

in the last 10 uarters Ri h G '
·
:
•
take
?, W · ~ an- poiOIS
on t!te board 10 fjve games :-ve!l, but when we ve g~tten
no~'Thesfuc~is~we·~!;il;:ting : ~feel a change haS got~~ be ~filideth~e ::~:.~v:;;t~~
Jthe jobBdone of~edns!yely," CQach ' • "There's a multitude prob· balls or ~ad~me penalti~ or made
erry urns sa1 . You put 49 · lems We've moved the ball tt · some errant throws"·
·
·
· : , :
·
. :. pre Y ·
·
•.

The game.would have been a
· sellout earlier; but 3,639 ~porary
seats were inslalled at-Riverfront
Stadium as soon as the Cincinnati
Reds home season ended.
I_t wiU be the ~~ngals' 30th
straight sellout.at Riverfront Stadiurn.
The club said Thunday it would
be impossible to sell 'ou! 3,639 ~i&gt;Ofl!rY sealS so close to game time,
even though about 3,000 tickets
were pan of season-tickei pack·
ages.
"About95 percent of the people
who had the option of returning
their seats didn't," said business
manager Bill Connelly. "Pius,-the
tickets Seattle returned sold. The
phones are still ringing ..u..
The_Bengals activated safety
Barney Bussey rrom th~e injured

reserve lis! so he can play"today.
Bussey, a reserve player lasf year
who won a starting _i?b late in the
season, has been s1delined since
breaking his thumb during the preseason.
The Bengals had a roste~&lt;, spot
open because cornerback Rod
JoneS' was placed on injured
reserve afU~r breaking an arm in the
Sept. 22 Joss to the )Vashington
Redskins. ,
Head coach Sam Wyche said ke
saw flashes of the old lckey Woods
during practice Thtirsdli.y, but perhaps not enough to activate Woods
off injured reserve.
. ~
"We've got our four other
backs bealthy," said running backs
coach Jim Anderson of"James
Brooks, Harold Green, Eric Ball
and Craig Taylor.

Making friends is .easier ·
if the ltioney is rlght ·
.

AP Bn•fnea Editor

new

c

'

Pomeroy·Masoa Bridge, will observe its grand
opening on Wednesday. The grand opeuing wiD
run tbrougb OcL 14 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and

'
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·
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PURl SWEETE-NA
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77le lfutrttlonal Adl7antoQe of Improoed
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high traffic araaa w~ere easy cleaning Is essential. One coat coverage,

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LAWN &amp; LEAF TRASH IWII.
Contains over 80% recycled platies.
ANW8L20 '

Limlll ol each Per ~r While Qucmlltlel Lotti

carpet and upholstery, Price stated
he will clean anythmg but septic
tanks. He uses a high pressure
cleaning system to perform many
of his cleaning 18Slcs, as well as a
steam cleaning system. He can also
provide cleaning for oriental n~gs.
Price has available to the public a
self-serve steam cleaner and he
also sells cle~ning supplies for
homes and autos.
Also available at the car wash is
an ozone chamber which Price
states can deodorize anything. He
also cleans and deodorizes smoke
damaged furniture.

NEW YORK - The
love
fest in lhe business world would be
abnost sickening, if it didn't make
so dam' much sense. ·
Dol~ and cents, actually, are
what's behind the alliances that
began to take shape this past week.
The leaden of Apple Computer
and IBM staged an e~borate press
event to,display asi~ document
launching their jomt ventute to
develop more compatible computers.
,
Two big Japanese ,companies,
meanwhile, said they· were discussing au investment--in U.S.
media giant Time Warner Inc.,
worth an estimated $1 billion.
The common theme linking
these blockbuster story lines was
Corporate America's desperate
search for invesunent capital .
Blame the economy, the credit
crunch, or t)le mega-cost of running
a big business these days. All of the
abpve·have forced companies to
consider strategies once unthinkable - including sidling up to
archrivals and foreign investors.
The venture between Apple and
International Business Machines
Corp. - off the scale for big deals
- has produced more than its
share of publicity since it was first
announced th~ months ago. On
Wednesday, when executives of

Nominations sought -for committee
GALLIPOLIS • "Farmers are
A few basic considerations
. asked to-llllmi~-dida~ ..ot --should be kept in mill!l when ~ircu­
their choice by October 28 to be on lating petitions, McKenzoe S3ld. In
the ASC Community committee order to be valid, petitions must be
: ballot," says Dave McKenzie, limited to cine nominee each, must
county executive director
include written certifocation that the
The ASC Community Commil· nominee is willing to serve if elect·
tee election will be conducted from ed, must be signed by at least three
November 22 to December 2, by eligible farm voters in the ASC
mail ballot The ASC communities · community, and must be received
in Gallia County for LAA-2 are as in the county ASCS office by the
follows:
October 28 deadline. At least one
Addison, Gallipolis-Green, nominee shall be a member of a
Clay and Perry
· minority group or female of 5 pcrASC committees are responsible cent or more of the eligible voterS
for managing federal farm pro- are minority group members or
grams on the local level to meet the female members.
'
needs of individual producers.
Farmers may circulate or sign
ASC committee members ~u~t nominating pelitions for as many
be concerned and respons1ble mdi- candidates as they choose. Anyone
viduals. McKenzie said Gallia wishing to nominate a farmer for
• County farmers have the opportuni- the ASC committee election may
ty to nominate people they feel contact the county ASCS office for
. would best serve the farm commu- full details, including eligibility
' nity Farmers have received petition requirements for office holders.
fonns by mail and are now submitFarmers should petitibn for and
. tfng them to the county ASCS elect those individuals they feel
: office
would do a good job as a member

;J. E. Morrison &amp; Associates
GALLIPOLIS • J. E. Morrison
: &amp; Associates, located at 530 Sec• ond Avenue, Gallipolis recently
registered as an invesunent adviser
· with the Securities and Exchange
: Commission in Washington, D.C.
1. E. Morrison &amp; Associates
· offers financial and investment
planning services and is wholly
· owned by James E. Morrison. Mr.
Morrison is also a registered representative of Royal Alliance Associates, Inc. a major brok~r/dealer
headquartered in New York City,
member of the NASDfS!PC,
A native and life long resident
of Gallipolis, Morrison has worked
as a financial services professional
for more than seven years.
•

.
revealed during the week, Wang
Laboratories Inc. agreed to sh~~;
technology with Computer Associ·
ates International Inc: that could
help boost sales and stem big losses
at uoubled Wang.
. ,
ECONOMY: Ctll for Euler ,
Credit Grows Lowltr
Economic signals flashed during
the week were mixed as usual, ~
September. unemployment rate
dropped by a tenth or a point 1p 6. 7
percen~ but new hiring was sluggish.
·
,
A private· monthly survey of
corporate purchasing managers
showed the industrial sectoc crept
slowly ahead ill September, but tbl;
latest reading from ~he govern·
ment's index of leading indica1011
was flat suggesting more trouble
ahead.
A survey by Dun &amp; B'radstreeJ
Corp, showed business exceutives
turning pessimistic about ihe
prospeciS ror the fourth quarter. '
Auto sales improved in lat~·
September, but the spurt wal
awibuted to the usual rush or sales
at the end of the model year, Over:
· all sales for the model year totale4
12.5 million, the WOfSl since 1983. •
Economists speculated thai
another round of interest rate cute
was in order to give the economy
another kick, but Federal Reserve
chief Alan Greenspan could wait to .
see the next batch of inOation nwn~
bers before acting.
:
.

•

\

of the ASC committee, The election. of c!;mcemed rarmers to posi•
tions on ASC committees is essential in the administration of farm
\
programs," McKenzie said.
RALPH ROSS
McKenzie further explained that
JOHN DAVIS, D
JOHN TOMPKINS
•
the county ASCS office welcomes
all valid petitions. The opponunity
to nominJ te. vote, and be elected to
office is guaranteed to all fanners
regardless of race, color, religion,
NEW HAYEN · Three man degree in electrical engineering nance helper," both in 1970; junior
sex, age, marilal status, handicap: have been promoted to new posl- from West Virginia Institute of maintenance man in 1971; main~~!•
or national origin.
lions at Central Operating Campa-' Technology and is working toward nance man in 1972; and mastei
.,
ny's Philip Sporn Plant, New . a bachelor's degree. He began his maintenance man in 1977.
Davis holds associate degrees ~
Haven, West Virginia. John P. career at Sporn in 1974 as an engineer
B
and
was
promoted
to
engi·
computer
science and businesi
Tompkins
has
been
promoted
to
wfll
production superintendent-mainte- neering technologist in 1979, main- admmistration and a-bachelor't;+--,nance, .Ralph R, Ross to mainte- tenance engineer- in 1982, and' degree in accounting from Rio
Grande College. He joined Sporn · •
CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleve- nance supervisor, and John P, maintenance supervisor in 1983.
Ross
was
employed
at
Sporn
in
in 1978 as a plant staff accountant'
Davis,
II
,
to
plant
information
land-Cliffs Inc. said it will become
1967-as
a
utility
man
B.
He
was
junior
and was promoted to plan~
majority iron ate pellet .supplier to management system (PIMS) coorpromo!fd
to
utility
man
A
and
utilistaff aq:ountant in 1984 and train~
Weirton Steel Corp. under a 12- dinator.
ty
operator,
both
in
1969;
auxiliary
ing coordinator in 1986.
•,
Tompkins
holds
an
associate
year agreement.
·
•
equopment operator and mainteIn addition, Cleveland-Cliffs
•,.
said it has agreed to invest $25 ntil•,.
lion in a special issue of Weirton
'
preferred stock which will provide
1i;
'•
a cash dividend of 12.5 percent per
.
'•
year, payable quarterly.
'"
Cleveland-Cliffs said it expects
areas? Kentucky bluegrass and ~
If you have questions please calL
EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
to supply at least one million tons
Biocngineered com is believed Kentucky bluegrasS/perennial rye- ;.
County Exteusion
of iron ore pellets each year to
practical. BioteCh companies say it grass mixrures should be seeded by ••
Agent, Agriculture, ·
Weirton, beginning in 1992.
·
looks as if field tests of bioengi· late October in Sou them Ohio if:
C.N.R.D.
Cleveland-Cliffs didn't release
neered com indicate the technology fall cover is desired. Seedings per-,:
specific price terms, but said it
is
practical fo~ producing c~ that formed in November often wiU not,·
GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio
expects sales of $400 million to
is
resistant
to msects or numuonal- germinaiC until next spring, Areas·:
$500 million for the conuact peri- Weekly Crop-Weather . Report ly beuer. Tests are continuing and seeded after the favorable fall ~
released Monday, September'30,
od.
estimated
26 percent of the Ohio one seed producer says farmers growing conditions have passed:
Weirton Steel, based in Weirton,
may see genetically engineered should be mulched,
•.
W.Va., is the nation's la"rgest Corn harvest to be complete.
'
Trivia - most experts agree thai:
Typically the Ohio com harvest corn by 1998.
employee-owned steel company.
-Several
concemed
individuals
it
takes
heallhy green leaves to '
Cleveland-Cliffs, based in Cleve- does not start until after October 1. are asking what to do if the lawn produce 35
a
peach
of good size and ;
land, manages six iron ore mines in The current com crop was rated as does ·not regreen. How late in the
qualil)''
::
fair or better "by 2/3 of the
North America and Australia.
reponers. About 12 percent of the fall can I reseed those large brown
.,
Ohio wheat crop had been planted.
The Hession Fly-Safe sowjng date
'.\
for wheat in Gallia County is October4 .
'
•
•
A reminder for the Ninth Gallia
•
· WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S. County Pride-In-Tobacco Associa•
fatmers have been leasing more tion Annual Meeting. Late rcserva•
•
Jand, instead of buying it, accord- tions should be made by calling
•
ing to the Agriculture Department 446-7007 as ·soon as possible. The
''A desire for more management event will be held Thursday, Octoflexibility is one reason for this ber 10 7 p.m. al the Senior Cititrend," says economist Denise , zens Center. Mr. Rod Koegel,
Rogers of USDA's Economic Owensboro, Kentucky,chairntanof
Research Service. "Many produc· the nevi Burley Tobacco Advisory
· e~have found that they can lower Committee will lie the featured
their fmancial risk through leasing speaker. Plan to attend.
instead of ownin~ land." ·
Somelhin~ New! "AgriTrends Instead or usmg their capilal to An Economtc Fact and Forecasts"
buy land1 farmers· can use it 10 Satellite TV show is scheduled for
finance mach!nery, cquipm~nt and Thursday Octc:&gt;ber 17,, 1991 at8
other neccss1Ues of thelf busmess.
p.m. This ed1liOI\, wtll feature
A, recent issue of the depart- updaiCS and outloo~ on grain, livement s Fannhne ma~me S3ld !he stock and international trade. A
1987 Census of Agnculture, whic.h spcci~ segment will be "Agricul·
is the most recent one, showe&lt;! that . ture in a Soviet Market Economy."
41.7 percent of U.S_. farmland was The Office of Continuing Educarented, compared w1th 38.9 percent tion at the University of Rio
in 1982, 37.~ peo;eent in 1974 and Grande and the Gallia County
35.7 percent m 1969.. ~
.
Extension Service are jointly span·
More than 402 million acres of soring a program session to view
DISPLAYS B.G SWEET PQTATOES- Paulin Unroe dll· :
farmland were rented in 1987, 'an and discuss the program. The Iocapllys
Ibm blc - t pota-..1be rallied ou tbe S. 0. Slolle r.. .:
inerease or nearly 19 ntiUion since lion will be Room 103 or Wood
tbls
summer
Ia Hau iloa 'I'wD, Ill GaUla Couaty, r,., tipped 111e :
1962. Tolal ~d m farm~ decreased Hall, Wood Hall is the new classscales
at
4.5
pouds
ud alllllier at 4.4. Unroe llaid she ItitltaiW •'
from _1.,12 ~illton acres tn 1959. to room building on the south end of
to seven! ralclftla 1D the area aad they Ud Dever nc:11 bft ::
• LO bllhon m 1974 to 964 milhon Campus Everyone is welcom~ to
sweet
potatoes.
'
:
.
.
~.
in 19S.7. · •
attend. Plan to arrive by 7:45p.m.
'

\

Three promoted at Philip Sporn plan(

Firm ' become
·majority supplier

F.arm Fla sh-es•

.

Twenty-six percent of Ohio's
corn has been ·harvested th us f:ar

.
..

..

Farmers are
leasing more land

•

JAMES E. MORRISON

.Werry retires; compl~tes 38
·years service with Philip Sporn
; NEW HAVEN - John E.
Werry, production superinte~nt·
maintenance at Central Opcraung
'company's Philip Sporn Plant,
';New Raven, W. Va., elected early
'Tttirernent on October L
; Werry joined Sporn in 1953 as a
laborer 8fiu serving with the U. S.
. ! •Anny in Gennany during the Kore·
' an War. He was promoted to maintenance helper in 1954, junior
'maintenance man in 1960, maintenance man in 1962, dent-maintenance in 1988.
Wetry is a member ~f Am~can
Legion Post 39 and smgs 10 the .
choir at the United Methodist
Chun:h in Pomeroy .. He and his
'wife Jean have two sons and rour ·
grandchildren.
~

'
the two companies linked arms for
· the cameras for the first time, the .
hyperbole accelerated.
But even amid the hoopla, it
was impossible to miss the spectacular potential of this deaL If all
goes as planned, or even somewhat
as planned, compuU~r ·users of the
future may be able to plug the same
-software. mto IBM and Apple I'Cs.
Standards alto may emerge for
more powerful workstations and
largrz computm.
It did riot stretch the imagination
IO"conclude, as computer_newslctter editor Richard Shaffer did, that
the Apple-IBM marriage would
wriiC a new chapter-for~business­
school texts. Another analyst, Sam
Alben, coined the term "coopeti·
tion" to describe the new-wave
pairing of competitors.
·The potential investment in
Time Warner by Japanese electronics maker Toshiba Corp. and trad·
ing company C. Itoh &amp; Co. mirrored previous deals that have
linked Sony Corp. and Matsushita
Electric Industrial Co. with American entenainment houses.
•
As with Apple and IBM, it is
mutual benefit, not admiration, that
inspires sueh investments. The
Japanese get entertainment software for their elecuonic hardware;
the Americans Ret capilai to I!!OW
.or reduce debiS.
In some c:aSes. the motivation is
survival,
other deals

'

:registered
investment ·advisor
•

Gallon HY-KlAS INTERIOR LATEX FLAT WAll PAINT. Portee! tor

otaln roslolant. Scrubbablo, wator clean-up. Non-yellowing. White.

POMEROY • Put away that jectto change.
water hose, sponge and ~hamo!s
For anyone who attends the
cloth because there is a new car grand opening Price will provide
wash in Pomeroy • The Weekend free hotdogs with every wash. A
Pomeroy Car Wash - owned and regular wash at the Pomeroy Car
operated by Mike Price. The car Wash includes the removal of bugs
wash is located near the end of the from the front of the vehicle, clean·
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge and oper- ing or white walls, spokes and tires,
ates Thursdarthrough Saturday • an overall hand wash, liquid wax
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
and hand drying, Price states that
The new busmess will observe hand waxing is also available at an
its ·grand opening ·wednesday extra charge.
through Oct. 14 but will resume
Price has been in the cleaning
regular weekend hours following business for IS years and specialthe grand opening. Price states that izes not only in cleaning automohours of regular operation are sub- biles but also in ·Cleaning houses
and trailers (interior and exterior),
'

55 LB. ·BAG

~t

6 Gallon 1.5 HP WET/DRY
VACUUM With PORJAILE 112
MPH VELOCITY BLOWER &amp; 3
FREE AnACHMENTS.

'

!bose atteudlng will receive free hotdogs wltb
every wash. The business Is owned aud operated
by Mike Prlc:e wbo bas 15 years of 'xper1euce in
the cleaulng business. ~ice offers a variety of
cleaning servkes.

New car wash opens in Pomeroy

·

.

By JAMES M. QNNEDY

NEW C'AR WASH· Tbe Pomeroy Cll' Wasb,
a new business located at tbe foot of tbe

Reg. $6.49

-ietttmd ,SectiOn D
•

Quz'ck
ti'cke( Sa
. les J1'.Qr Seah aw
· ·k, S•B. engalS
. ,
.
1'. ·
·· . d' .· • C • •
· •
game bUl'l'.J
uS case Jor new sta zum zn zncznnatz
, · ·
·
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CINCINNATI (AP) - . Quarterback Boomer Esiason says the
quick sellout of about 1,500 suddenly available ticketS for the
Cincinnati Bengals' game with the
Seattle Seahawks today made a
suong statement about the value of
the NFL franchise.
' ' What's that tell you about
being able to fill a new stadium?"
Esiason !aid.
The Bcngals' management has
at odds with the city, which owns
' RiveTfront Stadium, The club says
it has outgrown the 60.000 seat stadium, which is 20 years old and
lacks IJI1?filable luxury boxes.
Desp1te a 0-4 record, it took just
three hours to sell about1,500 tick·
ets Thursday and prevent a home
blackout of the television broadcast
of the game,

..

October 8, 1991 .

of

NOW THRU
OCTOBER 31

2 SJ·o·OO

·;

·'Farm/Business

OPENING

Sweetenae
Plxlno'.. gao and

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'

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

.Page-CS-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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JOHNWERRY .
If

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:·P~2-:-Sunday TlmeS'-Sentlnel

BERNICE
B~DE OSOL

Oct. S, 1991
·
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,
;
,
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,

You may finally be able to transform
something In the yearahead1making an
Important alteration that has been long
overdue. Your accomplishment will not
only be an advantage for you, but for
olhl!l's as well.
LIBRA (Stpt. 23-0ct. 23) You might get
ln&gt;olved In something that is being mismanaged today. It you Ieel you can do a
I better job - and you can - step in and
:· do a little reorganizing. Libra, treat
; yourself to a birthday gilt. Send for Li' bra's Astro-Graph predictions for the
; year ahead by mailing $1.25 plus along,
, sell-addressed, stamped envelope to
· Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Bo• 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3426 .
Be sure to state
, zodiac sign.
SCORPIO
· Your ambi. tlous

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-I;'olnt Pleasant, WV

provided you do what needs doing with- tive.' It's a laaaon your pol doaperately
out calling too much attention to your- nfi6Qs.
.
self. Appearing too setl-servlng could CANCER (June21..Jul' 22) 11 you follow
be counterproductive.
your Instincts t!)day, you should be able
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You to manage your personalaHalrs so that
could be extremely fortunate today you ac~leve the end results you desire.
when dealing with intangible things. The Oon'tleave concl~siOns up to chance.
same. however, might not be true when LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) An arrangement
you switch to tangible interests.
you make today with an older Individual
CAPRICORN (Gee. 22-Jon. 11) lf..ihere has strong poaalbllltles lor mutual sue1s somet~lng owed you t.hat has not yet ceaa. 'However. lfla roaults might not be
been forthcoming, don t be afraid to • Immediately apperimt.
speak up today. Your probabilities lor VIRGO (Aug.'23-8ept. 22) Try to devote
collecting 11 now are better than usual. your time and eHort today to situatiOns
AQUAAIUS (J•n. 20f8b. 19) You won't that cen offer you material rewards.
feel comfortable in a follower's role to- Strive to be Industrious lor a profitable
day. and there isn't any reason why you purpose.
should. You have good leadership qual1
ities, so use them.
PISCEs (Ftb. 2G-Merch 20) Joint vanOct. 7, 1991
tures look promising lor you at this ·LIBRA (Stpl. 23-0ct. 231 Individuals
time, but only It you can make a contrl- with whom you're Involved today will exbutlon either mentally or materially that pact you to follow through once you
could help advance the. endeavor.
make definite commitments. Peers will
ARIES (Merch 21-Apnt 19) Make It e lose respect lor you - If promises are
point to Include long-standing fnends In unfulfilled. Major changes are ahead for
your social plans lor thiS afternoon or Libra In the coming year. Send lor Ll·
eve~mg. These are the pals w1th whom bra's Aatro-Graph predictions today.
you II have the most tun.
.
Mall $!.25 plus a long, self-addroased,
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) You re .ca- stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, clo
pablo ot handling se~lou.s development.• this newapaptr, P.O. Box 91428 , Clevetoday In ways that Wlil'llln you the adml· lend, OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state
ration of your peers .. It will give them your zodiac sign.
reasons1o say n1ce th1ngs about you to
,
.
others. .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You might
GEMINI (Miy 21-Juno 20) You can be receive Information from an unusual
instrumental today In teaching a com- source today that will be given to you
panion how to look lor the positive along with the expectations that it be
things In people rather than the nega- kept secret. Don't betray the trust.

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51

11
Help Wanted
--_,..:;......;;,;...;.;..;;.._.;.
• EXTRA INcoME ''II " •

)1

Help Wanted .

One Year Ago, Oct 6,
LEONA KRAUTTER
.went to Heaven.
• You are home In Heaveh
dear onej . ....
Oh; so happy .•nd so
. bright!
There Ia perfect Joy and
beauty
In the evorllatlng light.
All the peln and grief Ia
over
Every rootless toning
. paaaedj
You are now at peac.

fn Memory

DRIVERSOTR
Elm $2004500 WHidy Mallin; , IIIIIEDIATE HIRING WITH Ill·
In loving memory
::"'0:~.::/..!~~
IIEDATE ANSWERS. Phorio In
.d mHit Stomood EnvoloJie To:
of STACY RENE'E
lll'\V Trovo~ P.o•• 11ox 430"/10,
And Wt Will
-lnd Noll
LUCAS ·
Miami, FL331M.
V.. ot Rttillll hlorl I P. . '
==.~P:;OST:;::::).:.L..,JOI
=s-·-- Tho
It's
only
bean a year
limo Dly, Minimum Sill
Golllpollo AIU.
slhce your young life
Montr.
Alii How
Btort 111.18/Hr. + lonofHL For You To QuOUty lmmtdlltlly For .was taken. ·away so
Al&gt;olleotloft I fnlo. Coli 1·2111- Up To A S4,CIGO llor\•.
brutally from us.
,
7 Lm. To 10 p.m., 7
•
~-37ll4,
1-100-)'U-2771
Stacy, you're sadly
01
-...:P;.;.·~==..,.,=--~
missed )ly family and
'POSTAL JOBS •
CAST
friends.
~J:":!~~~cf.'rlor:, ':,:1;~:
Emplopr
You may be gonli
CitrkL For An Application ....., Eltull Opportunity
MIF
bul you will navH be
Eum lnlarlnotloft eou 1;21a.
forgotten.
'I3Ha07 Ext. P8432 I o.m. Tot
p.m., 7 Dop.
·
Elm To PCIO Wtokly. P r I
•lways love you,
AVON • All or11o, Cotl Morllyn Ing lloll. . At · Homt. Work
Dad
Evonlngo, WHkondt. Bond For
Wuvor 3044112-2645.
Focto, Sond Ll'llt S.A.S.E., R.
D.B.S. Jr.
A Dolly Solory ot $300 For Lawlo-GDT, Rt. 1 Box 11,!!1
Buying llorchondlaL Buyor ::&amp;~ ~oocl, NOIIhup, . ""
N-d. No ~nco No....
Hry. 114-315- 2, Exl3183.
AUSTRAUAWANTS YOU
Ill Loving Memory
Elcollonl
Poy,
Bonolfto, 1 Card of Thank•
.
of GARY GENE
Tronoportollon,
407.,'112-41117,
~... ~ lll.m.-10p.m. Toll
PUTMAN Oct. 6,
;,;,:::::~:-::-.,...--,....,,..,...,- Tht Chlldrtn, Pll'tnll, sroH of
1962-0ct. 5, 1985
AVON I All Arooo I Shl~ll' Harrisonville Bementaty, and
God gave you 10 us
=SPN::;=:"
,::•.:.304:.:.:.-e111-::..:.M:.:
·211::.._ _ _ Mr. Clyde . Henderson thaak
BobyiHtor Noodod In VInton y~u very inoch lor your recent
on Oct. 6, 1962. Little.
Arlo. Nood Atfortne11. 114-388- Mtllorlal Dedication· to
did we know that ha
111
:::_7_A-:-h-=",...'.:..P'"'_·-.,.----- Matthew,
was
letting us hava
Bronch lllrl~on nHdtd. Dutltt
Ronnie Vance and family
Include:· Chlldron'o So1¥tc.o, . L..,_;;i;;;;,;.~;,.;;;;;;.;;;;;;;.:J you for auch a· short.
Aoloronco Work, Circulation
time. We remember
Dutltt. EKpoltonco working with ~-------2
the love, joy and the
chllclron ·. . - lltnry bodefn Melnory
t""',ol , _...ry. Ubrlriln wll
thoughtfulness that
Wortc lppiOKimotolv 20 hounl
ma_da you the wonder·
wooklv 11 tho Muon (l!ty
Bronch. ApOIIcallono llo ont~
. In Loving
ful son, brother, husoblo II tt. llooon Col.nty Public
Ubmy.
,
band, father, nephew,
uncia and frland that
CABLE TV JOBS
No Exp!Nionco Noc-ry.
you were. We all still
on his 77th
IIUO An Hour. For lnlormotloil
love you and miss you
Coli 1·-73U212 Ext. 1432; I
birthday,
o.m. To t p.m. 7 DIYL 112.81
much now as wa
as
Ftt.
did then.
CONSTRUCTION Ful~Tlmt, New
1~91.
·Parents, brothers,
Projcll. Corponttro Laborwn,
DI}'WIII,
Mo~M~,
PointTo
Gallipolis
sisters-In-law, wife,
Barbara and
3 Announcements
$24/HA Coli t-800-Qt-tm.
&amp; VICinity
Michelle Stahl,
daughter &amp; grand·
CONSTRUCTION
mother, nieces &amp;
No Hunting or Trupo-g on La'lll Solo: Rlln, Shlntl lion- FuU.Tlmo, Now Projoct, CorponMattie Ball and
Robo~ c. Dorll linn on Chlr- cloy, Tuttdly, Wod-y. Boyo t..., Llbortra, Drywall, Muon1,
nephews.
their families.
toston Rood.
Clothtt To SID I, Btthtub, Polntoro. To $24/HR Coli t . 151-1737.
eon..-,
Sink,
lltlrlgonotor,
No Humlng or T.._..;ng 11 Comont Blocko, WlilbiO!o,
onjllmo on Roymond Smlth'o w-·· ClolhN Molwl Go
Form, Rt. t, Golllpollo Forry, WV. Poll Dttlcl, ~-11, Tum
4
Loll Filii - ·
..;_.....:~l..G;;;;.;.Iv.;;.ea::;w.;;.a;::y:____ Yllll
Sole: Oc- 11th, 12th,
1 mole aor•r Colilo, 2 porw 13tti. flomlmade Craft lleml,
old, purebrod; 1 fornole Border Wtntor Cooto, Blqcleo, Nlco
llortl !11 Ook Drlvo,
m7~~·a!:'~ ~~ Clolhlna.
Bohlnd'll--..._ On B.A.
114·251-80•t
35.
See Answer to Puzzler
C-2
2 Friondly Kltlono To Good llondoy Oc:tobor 71h, 131
DOWN
Homo. Phono: 514-4411-311111.
Socond Avonuo, Boby Clothoo, ACROSS
abbr.
Adult Clothoi, Farmol
1 Wise persons
4 Klnont 8 WHkl Old, 2 Groy, 2
Andll.,.l
92 Strict
Dork St~po~ 114-+lf-4180.
1 Leather bell
2 Bodies of soldiers
95 Chinese currency
6 Genus or maples
3 Washing lightly
Abindonod Fomole Puppy,
Pt. Pleasant
98 Paddles
10
Mix
4 Peer Gynt's
About 4 Monlhl Old, l.Dolca Uko
&amp; VIcinity
99 Thin coaling of ·
Port Block Lab FIM To Good
14 Out of date
mother
Homo: Fomolo 'hgor Khton, 114- Glrogo S.lo, 2211 Jolloroon,
wood
19 Gets up
5
367'1008.
Saucy
llondoy I ,._y, Oct. 7 I 8,
tOt Teaches
21 Title
6
Artlola
•
wlnt•r
clalhN,
GIIIIWirl,
done,
Long hlltod lduh cat, ltrnllo,
103 Jog
22 Greek letter
d~ellw.d, litter tn~lned, not
lllllquoo,illnL
.
7 Uncouth person
104 Harvest goddess
good with clllldrwn, 304-171123 Chastise
6 Large ·birds
7181.
105 Nevada city
24 Daughter of King
9 Arbiter
Pomerqy,
106 Concerning
Sttr.a, No Spuklr'l, 114-245lear
10 Strainer
Middleport
5430.
107 Old pronoun
26Jncompetent
11 Ripped
106 Fondles
&amp; VIcinity
To 1t. right' or flmUy
12 Part of TGIF
goiters
whh oldor clllldnon llonlor Colt 10 " - Only live
13 Sun god
28 Chief; principal
lit, houN br~tn, •paded, had All Yord Solot IIUII S. Pold In
Twlc.
e
"
Advonco. Dlllllno: 1:00Dm tho
alllhota, 304-773-5477. ·
14 Equal
·29 Dawn goddess
dow boloN tr. oct II to '""·
111
Army
off.
15 Limb
30 Enqllsh streetcar
Toyo, 304-08&amp;-572.
Sulidoy ICIKkin- 1:00pm Frldly,
112 Stop
llondoy octHioft 10:00o.m.
16 Seamen
32 Walt on
llllurdly.
113
Bake&lt;Js
products
17 Spirited horses
33 Falsifier
t15
Father
llondly
OcL·7.
Chlldron'o
16
Uncanny
34 Honolulu wreath
6 Lost &amp; Found
t t7 Christopher and
clothll, old rrunk, lg. otoroo,
20 Father
35
Fireplace
part
dotiL GlofVO Whlto'l,
FOUND btk IIIII tonk Gonnon dllhoo,
Michele
23 Wire nail
37 Pitcher
Old Rt. 33.
Shophord, Lito~. 30WIWII7.
119 Tin sympol
25 Ordinances
39 Fish eggs
Found, Sprtngor Sponiol! block Yord IIIIo Oct. 1'1, l:oo-?? on
120 Temporary beds
27 - the Snowman
40
Narrated
ond whho. Contact S.lobury Rt. 7 noxt to St... Hlghwoy
121 Sentence part
28 Heap
41
Secret
writing
ElomontorySchoot.
::cGirop--:=::--'---,---,, - - . , - - 124
"Window"
31
Shea Stadium
42
Fastener
Yord Solo- au Gen. IW1. pllwy,
126 Fruit of the pine
Found: 0 '11' And WhHo Aneort Oct. Jot, ._thing lor
44
Declares
team
Col, Very Lewing, Hu a- ...~
127 Listen to
48 Quote
Doclowld. Noor W-nd Drlvo .
··-33 Oodles
12~ "Only the_- " ·.
A111. 304-GlW207 Till 4p...., - - - P -ub-- ,.-- ..--e
. -47 Cakes of soap
36 Speech
8
11"' 8111
814-446-8211 Allor 4:30p.m.
130lrae
48 Merry
38 Rodents
Loot: Doa, llolo Block Lab, 1
&amp; Auction
t32 Rational
so 'stralns
40 Row
Yooro Olcl, 711 Poundo, lloreor133 Small horse
52
Prohibits
41 Walking stick
vlllo Aru, Rowordl 114-218- Rick Pu,_ Auction Comen,
134 Males
53 Como ID
8T.l3.
hill limo IUCIIonttr, com o
43 Strain for breath
135 Twist; swerve:
ouctloft Llcan8fd lo,
55 DIHICulty
45 Figures oi speech
LOST: RocVNhho loco cow with WOII Vlr;lnlo, :104-nwm.
colloq .
57 Therefore
46 Virtuous
whl1o toll. IAIIIn Porter oru. If
t~und will PlY $50 -ord to Wod~or'a Auction Sorvlc:o,
137 Strike
58 "My Favorile -"
47 Poet
poroon who II_. htr. Coli 814- Rio G,.,., Ohio 1114-245-!152.
139
Quantity:
abbr.
59
Reflect
deeply
49 Entrance
388·9857 or ••• "751.
-~
140 HalrleS!I
60 French article
51 Stop
9 Wanted to Buy
141 Taut
•'
62 Consume
52 Brags
7
Yard Sale
CompMille hol••hatd or EllatMI
143
Narrow
opening
64 Civil injury
53 Toll
Any typo of fumttu.._ op.
145 Actress Alicia
pllincoo, ontlquo'a, ole. Aloo
66 Italian river
54 Scene of first
opprolllll
114-245-!152.
146 Quickly
68 " The Terminator "
miracle
146 Jonathan of
Gallipolis
illod llollllo .. Call 114star: lnils. •
56 Handling; usage
44Ut711.
" Davis Rules"
69 Trinket
59 OHice stall
&amp; VIcinity
150 Serving dish
70 Bashful
60 Without company
152 Adherents or
71 Oillseed
61 Viewed; observed
Artus
73 Harvested
63 Mollifies
153 AHectlonate
75 Guides
65 Scottish caps
154 East Indian palm
71 Broadway's
67 Poem
156
Most
arid
69 "Letlt-"
Tommy 157 Workmen
70 Food Implements
78 Tibetan priests
158 Pedal digits
72 "Canterbury _: ..
80 Entertain
159 Athletic group
74 Ustlnov ID
81 Moray
160 Birds' )lomas
76 Spanish article
82 Began
77 Handle
84 Sows
79 Depreaaed
86 Glad tidings
83 Suitable
87
Liberty
Employment Services
85 Stories
89 Pollee person:

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ex,.-.

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: Toll F111, 1-eoo-487-151S
; 313.

Public Nolle~!

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STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMENT

CIRC~~llON

Tl
Publf
r 1• U.o1
c.tlon:Tht
iJundoyllntttoStnllnei,Pub-

~~::'~:=·Octob•

10. Exttnt ond natura of
Circulation.
A T
N
. otat
o. Cop let
Printed· 13 800
B. P~ld Clrc~latlon:
1. Sa leo through Dealert
and Carriero, Street Vendor•
and Counter Saleo: 11,081.
2. Malt Subocrlptiont:
1,057.
·
C. Total Paid Ckculodon:
12,1D38.
. Frtt Dlotrlbution by
Cerrler or Other Meene,
I 'iampi1U
I'
Complimentary,
Free Copltt: 133. ·
E. Tolal Dlttrlbutlon :

":l1 1991
~·! 3• F111quancy ol lttuo:
:'Wttkly.
::: A. No. alluueo PubUthed
t6nnuolly: 52
•
Annutl SubiiCIIptlon
1~Ice: $48.80.
:..- 4. Locartlan of Known ott~ of Pubtlc.don: 825 Third
CoplttNotDiotrlbutad:
iiVt., Galllpotlo, Ohio, Gorilla
1. OHice Uoo Left Over,
~nty 45831; 111 Court SL, Unaccounted, Spo:tlAlter
;fomoroy, Ohio, M•lga Printing: 509•
U?et. of tht At.d- 1Asio2n.l:oR,tturna I
owt
Bualne8t 1,
1,020.
G. Total: 13,800.
Actual No. Copltl of
A,._, Galllpollo, Ohio, Slngleluue Publlohod NearCounty 45831; 111 eolia Filing Date:
St., Pom•oy, Ohio,
1D. Exl.nt ond noturo of
County, 4578t.
Circulation.
Publloher: Robert L
, A. Tatol No. Copleo
Prl!&gt;ted: 13,SOO.
B. Paid Circulation:
1. Saleo through Dulero
and Carriero, Street Vendoro
and Counter Soleo: 10,5011. ·
2. Ma11Subocrlptlont:VS1.
C. Total Pold ClrculaUan:
11,470.
D. FrM Dlotrlbutlon by
Moll Carrier qr Other Mflno,
Somploo, Campllmontory,
and Other frM CopiH: 13S.
E. Totti Dlttrlbutlon:
11,608.
F.CopleoNoiDiotrlbutad:
1. Office Uae I.e~ Over,
Unoccounted, Spohtd After
Prlnllng: lSI.
2. Return• from Newt
Ag t 1 503
on " ' • ·
G. Total: 13,800.
I Carllly that tho atat•
mentomadebymoaboveore
note• corroclond complete.
Rob.rr Wingett,
Publlohor

=:-a.

a~~':.:.hJ!:.~

-d

, Morol Pold Vocotlont. 114-44&amp;, 7267.
: ;;Ho::rd7-::wo-r-:-:kl-ngi-:-•:-po-ndt"'bto:-1- por-.•
: oon
to Nn floor """"'
ltnpplng. wuln; lnd
Ina corpoto. Soino pointing ,..
• qulrld. FloKibto houro, :. _ llrinlngo. Aooly II
, Pornoroy NuroJng onct . Alhlb
, Contor, 31711 Rockoprlngo Rd.
: Pomoroy.
'
• lmmodlatt Oponingo Avollobtl
:, Stortlng
For Caotllltd
N.,...PorAI••·
Solery S4.BO
Hour
• Sign on Bonuo Avolloble. eon:
; h";,s.~.~~~H~N; ~~==
• Dnvo, GoiUpollo, OH 415631, 814-

With everything to give.
In one olngle mom.nt
He may ha·11 stolon
lifo
there's no way In

But I'll be with

I
86 Clu,tch
87 Simpleton
88 Transported with
delight
89 C-F linkup
90 More uncanny
91 Cornered
92 Pigpen
93 Surglcel saw
94 Babylonian deity
96 Novelist Anita 97 Stupefy
100 Bond nemesis
102 Young onder
105 Evaluate
109 Sow
112 Sharpen
113 Supplicate
114 Quiet
116 The sweetsop
11 B Capuchin

Ucen11d

AuplrltOry

Athens, Ohio 457tn, '814-!in.

5551, Ext. 227. EOE.
RIGHT NOW!

Arw You Thot Spoclol Poroon
Wo'vo BHn Looking For?
• Slnc:er. Peoplt Sklll1

-Enorgollc

FullUm• Position • 8 a.m. -4 p.m.

~monkeys

Commtftluratt

With

Educotloft -'nd Expononco.
•

.

I

Sond Rnumo And LaHor By·Qc.

toblr 15th To Belinda Fleming,

Prtvtntlon Program Manager,
HNlth Racover Servlcu, P.O.

Box 124, Athono, OH 45701.
E.O.E.
Tho llolgo Locol School Dlllrict
II

c~m.ntly

Hiking

IP"

pllcollonl from ctrtltlld op.
pllcanta tor • Glr11' Junior High

Bookllblll Cooch lor tho 11111tt882 ochoot yoor. •Apptlconto
mull hold I Vllkl Ohio INChing
e.nltlcatt 1nd for coaching

posltlont must m... c1nlllci:·
Uon r.qloll111mtnt1 of Ohio lor

opono modlclno ond CPR. Por·

10n1 INeruled aho~odd contact
Jim CArpintlr, Superlnllndtnt,

lloloo locll ScllooloJ P.O. Sol
272, 320 Elll Mo n StrHI,
Pom1roy, Ohio. .
.
Von Q~vor Wonlod. Aftroctlvo .

'

Salary Plut

eommllllon, SliM

Elporllnco
Holplul.
Ap.
~lleotlono Avalloblo At Conflnll
Df'YCINM~

11 Ohio

Alv1r

Plou'p Gtlllpoill, .No Pho011

Calli ,.....

VIIIIQO Pizza Inn now toklng IP.
pllcllloftllor woHrwll. Apply In
person. 3004 Jacklon Aven1.11,
Point PI-nt.
VOCALIST NHdtd For Eltobll- Rock Sind. Somo E·
qulpmont NoCIUiry. Sorouo
lnqulrioo Oniyl 114-446-f1SO,

45788,

Wonttd- Proarom Suporvloo1
po~qlmo pooftlon, RN roquiNd
lll*J111CI

hOUI'I, Including WMklndl. An

EEO omployor. Appllcl~on will
bo oc'i:optod until Octobor ])1
P.O. lox 122 Pomoroy, Ul1
CERTIFIED by

45788

lhel'nllllllonlll
Truck Drivtr&amp;
lnl1ialtt of Am8rice

Wontod: Port·Timo lo~ondor,'
For locll P~VIIO Club. Exco~
lent Working Condition. fridlyo
And SotiUdly Nlghll Onlr,1·
Roolr At: CLA OM c/o Dolllpolo
Dolly Trlb~ 1 121 Third Avonuo,
Golllpoilo, "" 415631.
WE NEED YOU to toko onop.
ohotl lrom homll Fullol'lll tlmo.

•

PAT~IDT. . w111 PI•&gt;•• rou

lor tht- COL 11111 Ia 1 811tt ApprovM
3rd paty tilting . .
• RflltiCMJ Aid for thole wflo qudy
• Hllllil-on r,.m,g -No hotri•lludy
• Trlkl In S.hott WH111 .
• Job Slflrih AaJstm. olfMd
• WHird.ty and WHklfld r:imH

Kathy,
. 'You're it.
That's It.

• No 11perlencl nee. cau 1..goo..
230-31138 ($.1111 mln.i or Writo:

PASEP.,'11 V, 111 S. \.lncolnwoy
N., Auroro IL eot42.

12

1~1150

Situation
Wanted

Eldl~y Oonttomon Nttdt Pllco
To LIVI, In Gllllpotlo. 8ond
Aoply To: CLA 100~0 Gllllpollo
Dolly Trlbuiiil,. 121 1"lrd Avonuo,
Golllpollo,
411131.

PATRIOT~

Charz

•

Clfl

prolorrld. N-d to ouporvloo
ln·homl mp~l 111¥lcoo. Mull
hovo rwlloblo llinopo~oilon ond
bo wiiUng to wolli tlolllblo

.. Announcemenl s

.. '.

t'iofM

Gantllll'lln Wlntl 8GIIIIonl To

TO

Llvo-ln. Prtt Boord. 814-44&amp;3411.

I

.

•

\

..

)

·'

. ,.

~-~-y='U:,':i A:,'"!' :'"tt..

"-"'*ill
·•
,..

NOT to IOnd _ , ilVOUiil.tho l4w At ltf,Ot, Coli
::'~~','n~ hovotn-lillloct
Colotot-

:_Color

,

.

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

ISAACS-AUCTION
HOUSI
.
VINTON, OH.

R'r.2

.

T.HURSDAt .Oa. 10, 7 P.M. .

F111anc;al

AL~ NEW AUOION

21

(1 MILE ABOVE GOODYEAR PLANT)

250ft. and
Includes a like new 50 ft. x 60 ft. convenProperty Is approx. 114ft. x

Ience store with thousands of dollaraln
current Inventory, security system, office,
basement, snacklcatll ber and gas stor-

Business
Opportunity

Altontionl Slyllng Solon For
Solol Primo Locoflon. Coli 814441-0803, 114-4411-1355.

Door Priz's given every hour. Come
·

·

and browse.

Merc~andlse

guaranteed. We will have our regular :
Saturday night
. auction Oct.

&gt;lENDING ROUTE: Gil Rich
OUick? No Woyl But Wo Hovo A
Good, Stuctv, AHordab~e1 Butl·
nHo. Won1 Lall. 1...,C).284VEND.

.12. , •.

AUCTIONEER: FINIS ISAAC
(614) 388-9370

.

age tanks. This IHn ongoing business
with potential yearly grosa sales of over

Terms

·-SCRAM-LETS ABLAZE .
JUNIOR .
WOOLEN
SQUAWK
MILLER
UNSOLD
DOLLAR BILLS

be ,held at B &amp; F Market.:

Of Sale: 10% Deposit day of sate .

lit,..

and Balance due upon closing.

Dol't ltlu

..,.

bdNss .,..,.

Auctioneer: Howard McComlick, 1200
Cpll 743-6299 or 1-IOD-564-6915

Real Estale General

"I can't believe what it costs to
mail a letter today!" growled the
fellow·in"line-at the Post
·Tile
next thing you know they'll put ~lue
on the back of DOLLAR BILLS!

Oflice.

Real Estate General

· •
•
•

Real Estate General

WINTER AUCTION SERVICE

·AUCTION: EDWIN WINTER, #334
Rt. 1, Millwood, wv • Phone (304) 2..73-3447
~unch Available
TERMS: Cash or Check Day of Sale with PoaltlveiD
Not Responsible for Accidents or Loss ol Property
"We
Your Attendance"

Gu\l\•

101

'

HOWERY'S

PRIDE OF
- Beaulilul home
situaled on 3.605 acres mn. Four BAs. 2Y,
baths, equ ipped kitchen , DR. LR , FR, cent.
vac. system, large slacked pond, beautilul
dack work. Call for more datails.
-

CONVENIENT lOCATION • COM·
FORTABLE HOME - Jusl al lhe edge ol
town lh1s home oilers 3 BA s, balh, kilchen,
LR. DR, 24x30 garage . Nice shade trees.
Very well kept

NICE HOME FOR THE GROWING
FAMILY - Green Township near Cenlenary.
Bi-leve l home oilers 4 BAs. 2 balhs, LR ,
kilchen wilh range, mlrig., DW, displ. , oven ,

EVERYTHING YOU COULD WANT - ·This
seclional home is located jusl a few
minules lrom Green Elem. School. 4 BAs.
2 balhs, LA, equipped kilci1en, DR. fireplace,

FR. gas heat. attached garage, situated on
approx. one-ha1f acre.

cen tral a1r , 16x32 pool w/heater, covered

RIO ' GRANDE AREA-2 . 87 acres, m/1,
lovely 2 slory home wilh 3 BAs. t 112 ballls,
_k~chen . Lf'. Ideally locale.d near new
highway.

VILLAGE OF CENTERVILLE - Nice 2
slory oilers 3 BAs. balh, LR , kilcheo , DR.
g~ . heal , 2 fire places Si1ua1ed on 1.850

111
'1117URt

ANTIQUE AND COLLECTIBLES SALE
At McAnhur, Ohio. In lhe Jr. Fair building at
the VInton County FalrgrDunds, 2 miles
Nonh of McArthur on S~ R. 93.
Excepti onal .cl~an lurniture,95% ol sale. Lrg. oak dry
smk With OIIQ inal z;nc &amp; pull out leg, oak S ro lllop
desk with line interior, oak ·highback desk cha ir, oak
curved glass china w/claw feet, nice mahogany dental cabinet wlleaded glass doors, highback bed, 4
legged and 5 legged oak _tables, set ol 4 oak pressback chairs with double dragons in press, oak
Hoosier kitchen cab inet complete with floor bin and
boltles , oak Sellers kitchen cabinet, complete with
long llour' bin , large double maple kitchen cabinet,
maple bakers cabinet wilh double cutting boards,
double drawers, double flour bins &amp; many drawers in
top, oak round glass bookcase secretary, oak flat
glass bookcase secretary, 3 door oak ice box, oak 3
slack bookcase with desk &amp; drop tront, oak library
table with large lwist legs and claw feet, 12 tin pie
safe, walnut 2 drawer Viclorian table, 53"x31 "; oak
flatwall kitchen cabinet , mahogany Chippendale style
secretary w/serpentine front-claw teet and broken
arch lop, Chippendale 4 drawer chest &amp; matching
mirror to hang on wall, oak w~sh stands with towel
bars &amp; cfrie has claw leeit, 2 nice ladies' dressi ng \lanilies, one h.as claw feet.: ball and claw foot organ
stool, nice oak slap back cupboard , oak press back
rocker, elched glass lransil window, long drop regulator clock, and MOREl
·
GUNS &amp; ETC.; German Wa llher P.P.K., 2-Winchester
low wall, Baker 12 ga .• Savage 99-243 lever brass
coun ler, German Schuelzen, Thompso n Center
Hawke n muzzle loader, Thompson Center ~·,~·~"
muzzle loader, Hunter arms Fulton 20 ga,, Savage
Fa'vorile 22, Winche ste r pump 06-22, J. Slavens
Gould 22, J. Slavens 32 pistol, Man Iicker Sport rille,
Pacitic 366 shotgun, Ruger mini 14, Be rolla Al2-12
ga .. Remington 552 auto. 22, Rem ington 591 bolt
5mm, Winchesl er 70 30x06, and more guns. Also
mi sc. supplies - Weaver 710 scope; Lasco scope
4x40, Pac ific scope 3x9x40, Weaver K4 scope,
Weaver marks man scope, rock crusher, pie sets,
scales, she lls, hearing p101e ctors etc.; also several
knive s,· including Case, Kybar, Tree Brand,
Remington hunting kn ife, stones, buckle and MOREl
TOYS: Smith Miller mobile gas truck . Nylinl pes.
including street sprinkler tank truck, alec. power
Lineman truck with trailer, U-Haul 3 pe. sel and mqre;
Tonka pes. inclu ding 32' tire truck, Jeep, 29" car carri·
er, sand loader, lg . 24" Allied Van Lines, Horse trailer
w/horses, Service truck,' cement mixer, and more;
wrecker trucker, Ford stationwagon wlsuspension,
camper &amp;' slables horse van w/horses; also one
Slruclo crane and o.ttier toys.
,
·
MISC.; Pee Wee Herman doll, approx. 200 Indian
arrows, old marbles, sloneware jars an~ jugs, including Donaghho &amp; 5 ga l. blue &amp; wht. spongeware waler
cooler; child's green granite bowl &amp; cup, child's d is h,
Aunt Jemima &amp; Mo sa il &amp; peppe r,. lg . Watt spag.
bowl, candy con ., china &amp; glassware w/lg. pedestal
vasaline punch bowl; Amberena toothpick holder,
several pes . of Jewell Tea including coffee pot, teapot, .water pilcher, gravy boat, bowls; creamer &amp;
sugar, salt &amp; pepper, 10 cups, 8 saucers, &amp; more;
Bradley .&amp; Hubbard oil lamp, good old handmade
quilts.
·
Many, Many Items .not listed. This Is a vary line
sale wllh clean merchandlll. Vary little low end
material. FOOD AVAILABLE;
,
. TERMS: CASH or CHEC!&lt; w/Pos. I.D.

In Edueallon Or Ael1tld

R1t1

Ho..-. I

.
w!:':.
OHIO VALLEY PliiUIIHIING CO. Ccth111/fl • • ,._._
, . 1,_
~- .,-~·
•
1 zi"ii;

'

APPLE ,GROVE, WV

Clolollllcollono: Bocholor'o Do-

wl1h

Trip

~m::C'"' .

SATURDAY, OCT. 12, 1991

Flald Pluo 3 Yooro Work Ex·
perienc. Or eomm.naurltl Ex·
porionco. Cortlflod Provonllon
Spoclollll 0. Eligible For Entry
Into Cortlllcotlori P - . Ex·
porioncoln Working WHh YoU!h,
Schoolo, And School Pllaonnol.

Lilt
John Honcock
lneuranco Com-

Orttndo

a:t....:...;_

Somo Fle1lbto Houro And Somo
Evonlng And WHkond Hourt
lloy Bo Roqulrod.
QI'M

Tho

. Op=~lty

''

,

Tllomorkollng. Lat'a Tolk Nowl
For lntol¥1tw Clll8t4-446-4664.
SCHOOL SPECIALIST

120 Hold
121 Await settlement
122 Permission
123 Antien! d animals
125 Tells
126 ·:candid ._ ..
127 Consecrated
129 Bark
131 Most rational
132 Actress Miles
133 Buddies
134 Repairs
136 Untamed
136 Separates
140 Storage
compartments
141 Fork prong
142 Great lake
144 Mountain lake
147 "Malor -"
148 Court
149 Health resort
151 Even score
153 12 Ins.
155 Early morn

tl'o. Not

B lF MARKET

'

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12
10:00 A.M.

• EnthUI~ic
- Gool O.lontoil
S.vml Poahlona Avllllblt In

"

it..... cii.nln; : Ch••oo ~n'l'

Builllllle,

21

Bu1111111

.

I

HoopHol, 55 Hoot&gt;ltol Drlvo,

l l A TJIEE sERVICE. Toool!lf,
Trl-lng, Trtt A-11. Hidao
~f.=.t· Fr• Ettlmetiollf4-

21

Auction the real estate, building and

The sate wlli

Conrtct : O"BienHI Mlmorlll

Do

8

SSOO,D.O.O:"-'-'~

C.re

a.ol
9,' JO Alii.

WlntiCI to

All

II

For Information

Prlltltlontra.

OCTo

OWNER IS RETIRING

.

•

Bonuo

•

WEDNESDAY..I

11

store stock of:

.,_
....I ling the personal prop\rty of the lata Mra. Eater
Hughes and har sister, Mra. Etta Day, who'a retired
to a nursing home.
DIREC TIONS: Off Rt. 33 at Cottag1v111•,
• take
Conrad Hill Road to Flatwoods Road, go approxlmillely 3 miles to Crooked Run Road In
Flatwoods, then 112 mile to sale aile. Signa posted.
' 446
~;:;:'71:;;11
7,;:;:-;;;;;-::~=-'"'
ANTIQUES-COLLECTIBLES.I'URNITURE·
MISCELLANEOUS
~~~!!Q~~~:~~~~~~~~~B~~~: Nice 5 leg oak dining
table, 6
oak pressed back chairs, ornate
•
45324.
' serpentine buffet, old quitts, marble top Victorian
:. iiNMd~=-so-m..-...
-~=-.-::u,.-.,.--=-3-:-Ac-,.-, parlor t~ble, nice; copper wash boiler, drop-leal table,
: lovol Ground. lllnt-tod, Coli
serpenline dresser, cpest, B.&amp;. R.R. lanlern, excellent
, 114-44&amp;-1:m.
cond ition; old slant top desk, beautitul 52"x78' hand
: No ExP.Orlonct NoCIUiry. A crochel table cloth, stoneware chamber pot, bianket
• Dolly Solory ot $300 For Buying
chest, iron Bullfrog doorstop, teed sacks, butter pat
' MorchondiH. 814-315-2082 Exf.
; 3833.
• ..
mold, cherry design; doll bed, ·small cedar chest, trea-.
die
sewing machine, wash bowl and pitcher, clay mar: Now To king Appllcatlono· 11
bles, crocks, trunks, old floor lamps, 2 matching metal
• Domino'• PIIDI, GllllpoUa.
lull beds, old RCA Victor table top radio. #20 stone jar,
'Ovor Tho Rood Drlvor, Mull
stone jug, yellow, pink and green depression glass, old
• Hovo 2 Y11111 ConHcutlvo Driv: lng Ex~rlelnce, Clean Driving
costume jewelry, crocks , new Era potato chip tin, plus
•Record, AI¥! S. Willing To Toko
items not listed .
• A DNg Till. For lloro Inform•
FURNITURE-MISCELLANEOUS: Wh ite Westing'tlon Clll: C&amp;D TruekJng, St4:446-HI4.
house 18 cu. lt. relrigerator·treezer, only 4 months old;
beautifu l ·Emperor walnut grandfather floor clock,
•Pomoroy Arto POSTAL JOSS,
"Bt8rl ltU8hr + bonolho. For ' handmade; maple dinette with 3 chairs and side .
_ opOIIcltloft Into, clll 1-2111-324- bench ; sola , sola and loveseat, rocking chairs, 2 co lor
, 15:ltl7om-10pnndtp.
console TV's, Maytag washer and electric dryer,
RESPIRATORY CARE PAACTappan microwave, Magic Chef gas range, sweepers,
TIONERS
Fo ley &amp; Williams uprighl piano with bench , lamps, 4
o·e- -~ Hotoltol
p1ece bedroom suite, sewing machine, 2 window air
Hu lmmodloto Full And Port·
Tlmo Optnlngo~ In Tho Cor·
conditioners, Lane cedar chest, cedar wardrobe, lots
dlopuiiiiOIIIry. Wo OHor A Vory
of dishes , pots ' &amp; pans and linens, bookcase, hand
Co111f101Hivo Solo!J Atngo, AI
Woll AI Excollont Educollon tools , plus lots of miscellaneous loo numerous to
And othor HuHh Allotod
mention.
S.noho. Tho Co'lflopulmonory
Sale Will Last All Day!
Doporlmont
Provldn
All
. Atpocll Of Rooplrllory Thoropy
· SALE CONDUCTED BY
S.rvlctt. Wt Aro S•klng

Wontod motlvotod oolooporoon,
$28,00.$52,0GO 111 yMr, trwlnlng
pravldld, uportonco proforlllf.
Hnd IIIUMI 10 Dolly Sontlnol
PO Bol 1218 Pornollly, OH

12311/Couplo1••
U•MOil
A..tlobtllfy.--3twm.
1w1n not M•u::~flllbtiror~
dlbll- ... my own. Dovtd
Lat-r.
·

·
·
O
C'J
1

on..,..,.:

114-317~11

IWWIIA CRUIII
5 Doyti, 4 NlaiU, OVIr Bouahl
Corp011ti 'litp, H1111 POW,
Tickleo Good s Yilt. Plut

ES!I!E

i• ;;::::::,::::::;,.·L=IST
.;...
. _.__...,.
_NEE~oE-D:
Gourontttd · 1110 WMk Pluo

a,IIU. I
Od...r 12,
You wore Justa
Just beginning to
And you were ao

=-=:::;;.:..::..:...::=::.::.__

Announctmtnts

&amp; Auction

='"'"

PU'·a·LIC AUCTION'

American Aucll~m Co. has been
commissioned to offer at Public
·

Public Sale

8

:
;• Outot•
tunny To Wort&amp;
H by.
SllotAt Youl
EliPII~Inco
{ Noco-ry. Coli I To 5, 1~

STAC~E~~y~~~~~~i_~~;ksl

•••lllbll.

3

Rllroln . r:::hllum
BuolniH Collogo, ~ V.ll~
Plou. Coli Todi•, 1
•• 87
A_oglotorotlonti!O.os.1:mi:•
Goorg•Paot-Sowmlll,don'
houl your 10111 to tho mill Juot
clll304-f711-1167.

; lmmoct • • Aooponoe.·
:
FISHERMAN!WblotEN
• Top Lavot ao~oo PGo~t~o~~ Now

SUNDAY PUZZLER
on

••

. Bu11neea

; ~.:l~~abJ~~:.
Yr.:
11

'

====------

g:_:

•

14

, FECERAL GOVERNMENT IS

,october 6,

Public Notice
~~~,------~~~~~

~I E

' ::'mblo;·~.::~~:,:l

Sadly milled by
Husband, Children,
Grand~hll,dr.n and Grtal·
granddtughter.

.

·

·1, ~r.rr~:r.alJs.~~

Solely home In Heaven at
·
last.
·

will

Help Wantld

·

forever.

Memory of
JOHN. B. STAHL

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

-~.!_1~Cc[jto~~~r~6~,~1~~1==~~~~~===i~~;.;;;~P~o~m~•1'o:y-::M:Id:d~le~po~r~t-G~a:lll~po~l~la~,O~H~-~P~o~ln~t~~~w~v~~=====r~~s~un~d~a~y~~~~~~l!~

October&amp;, 1991 .

10:00 A.M.

161 ACRE FARM - Large bri ck home. 6
BAs. 2 baihs. LA. kilchen, FR,;Ielac. heal,
carpet, property fronls on Raccoon Creek ar1d
Lilli e Raccoon, tobacco base. Can be
pwchased wilh mote or less land.

CLOSE TO TOWN BUT SECLUDED
SETTING- Localed on Neighborhood Rd ..
1t /2 sto1y hom e oHe1s 4 BRs, bath,
equ ipped kilchen , LR , DR,·pan. basemen!.
Bl ock bldg. wilh 3 rms . and carporl behind
housa. Silualed on t .75 acre mil.

HOME AND 17.6 ACRES MI L, GREEN
TWP- Home oilers 3 BAs, bath, LA.
kitchen, allached 2 car garage. Nice palio.

CORNER LOTS, very nice home oilers 3
BAs, balh , kilchen . carpe l, lireplace, 1 car
detached garage.

PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS ONEI
Large log home can be purchased with 162
acres or 2 acres. This home offdrs 4 BRs, 3
baths equipped . kitchen , LR, FR. 2
lireplaces. heal pump/cent. air (backup
system). oversized 2 car attached garage.
Frontage on Raccoon Creek.

TAKE A LOOK AT HTISI!I- Localed on
Second Ave .. walk 10 slore, church. school
and shopping. 2 slory home oilers kilchen.
LA , DR, FA, 3 BRs, 2 balhs. gas heavcen·
tral air.

SMALL HOUSE AND 3 LOTS· Located In
Bidwell, 3 BAs, LR. kitchen, balh. carport,
$21 ,000.

6.46 A.. m/1, along SR 325 A.. Sect. 34,
Raccoon Twp.

97.457 A., m/1, Clay Twp., Secl. 21 &amp; ·
27. $30.000 near Clay School.
.98 A. , mn (Hobart Dillon Subd.). along
Raccoon Creek , g10a1 fo1 a mobile
home, large pine trees on 3 sides , .all
lev el.
36 A., mil, Springfield Twp .. Old SA
t60.
.MEIGS CD., 240 A.. mil. Bedlord &amp;
Chester Twp., old original log home
with add11ional added , drilled well, co.
waler avilable. Same family owned lor
4 _generta 11ons.

Herman Northup Road , Green Twp.,

close 10 Green Elementary School. 3
tracts appro11. 20 acres ea., 1 tract
approx . 5 acres .
84 A., mil, Morg an Township, some

larm land. all vacan 1. . $27,300.
66 A.. mil, Hamson Twp.. !ront son

THE PLACE TO, BE - lovely all b1 i~k ...
home on SR 35. 80•450 lois, 4 . BAs .
equipped kilchen , LR . DR. heal pump
w/gas furnace. ~arpon and garage

Lincoln Pike and Carler Rd ., co. water
&amp; elect on properly, shower house,
shed and farm ·equ1pment

30.5 A., mil. Raccoon Twp., _Garners
Ford Rd., pond and barn , lovely place
tor a new home.
·

JUST THE HOME FOR YOU!!I Very nice
all brick home localed on Kathy S1 . iuSI oil
SA 35 , new kilchen . 3 BRs, LA. din1ng, 1Y,
balh.
OFFICE BUILDING LOCATED AT 250
SECOND -OIIi ce do ~n and t BR
apartmenl upSiairs . Very mce building. CaU
for details.

NEW LISTING - 3 BR, all brick ranch wilh
full basement' and 1.25 acres, m/1. Green
TINp. Ju st a lew m1 nu tes from town O!l SA
141 .
QUIET, SECLUDED setting just minules lo
HMC and downtown. Home lea;ures 3 BRs,
· kilchen wlrange &amp; relrig., LA. DR. carpel,
,fireplace. city sch,ool dist

EXTRAORDINARY-11 2 A. m/1, beaulilul
large log home. 4 BAs, 2tl2 baths, LR ,
kitchen , DR, FR. 3 fireplaces. Call for more
details.

BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOM E oilers lois ol
atlraclive feaiUres: 3 BAs, 211 b'alhs. LR.
FR. Slone FP. heat pump/cent. air. 2 ca1
allached garage. city schools .

5 ACRE LOTS, Green Twp .. Fairfield
Vanco Road and Wilson Bostic Ad ..
beautilul place lo build a home.

640 FOURTH- 1112 slory home oner. LR,
. kilchen, dining rm .. beth, nii:e back porch.
gas heat, clo se lo elementary school.

ATIENTION!! Very nice home on Graham
School Road- Ranch wilh 3 BAs. LA, FR
kilchen . balh . cenl. air, 2 fireplaces, city
schools.

PRICE REDUCED BY $6,000... 16 acres
plus nice Cape Cod slyle home w/4 BAs.
• bath, kilchen, city schools .
' RIVERVIEW FROM YOUR OWN BACK
YARD - Very nice all brick home oHers 3
BAs. LA wlfireplace. equipped kitchen. lull
basement

MOBILE HOME and .82 acres mil,
$14 .500. 2 BAs. LA. kilchen wlranga,
relrigc, washer and dryer, rural water. ~ ·
GOOD IN· TOWN LOCATION-Just a block
from grocery store. Nice home oilers LR
kilchen, BAs. balh, large Iron; porch.
"
LeGRANDE BOULEVARD .,-ALL BRICK
3 BAs. LA. kilchen , ba lh , full basement'
gas lorced air, alleched garage, cily
school s.
FAMILY SIZE HOME - Anractlva home
localed a1 Centenary, offers 4 BAs; 2 belhs,
kilchen, . LA. Auached garage and nice
lawn.
...,

AUCTIONEER: RODNEY HOWERY
PHONE:

594·3780 DAYS, 698·7231 Eves.
Your Lawn Chairs.
J

"'

~ ~·

.' . ".

~

108 A , mn, Guyan Twp.. vacant'land,
spring on property.

bedrooms. LR. kilchen balh, lull basemen!.
carpel. deck, garage, siding. Tobacco base
and tobacco barn. A~ditionalland .

LOTS TO OFFER-Th is property is located
just at the edge o11own on Rt 160 end has
lour tracts. priced separalely. One features
a 2 BR home wilh gas heat. Three
addilional lois for sale- Call our office lor
details.
'

VERY NICE RANCH STYLE HOME
LOCATED ON STATE ROUTE 160-3
'BAs, LA. kilchen wlrange . relrigeralor, one
car a11ached garage. 100x3Q,O II. lot. ·

·Commercial Property, 2.4 A,, mil,
1.248 11. lron:age on SR .7, near Ollio
River Plaza.

OHIO TOWNSHIP-53112 acres . more or

WALK TO All THE HOME FOOTBALL
GAMES - Very nice home jusl a lew blocks
from downlown, 3 BAS, 1112 balhs, LR, Dr,
gas heat.

FRONTAGE ON THE RIVER- 3 BAs, LR,
equipped kilchen, fuel oil furnace. e'en!. air,
lull basement, attached garage. 3 Acres.

3 A., mil. Cha1olais Acres along SA
t60 ncar Holzer Hospital.

less, very nice ranch style home offers 3/4

EXCELLENT COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
Sleet building wilh approx. 3,000 sq. II.,
1.057 acre .

17.5 A.. m/1, Perry Twp., SY.mmes
Creek, bottom land, some hill, lOb.
base. $9,000.

acre.

NICE STARTER HOME-localed just .at
,lhe edge ol town. This home lealures 3
bedrooms balh, living room , kitchen, dining
room and ~ lull basement. Five minules lo
downtown.

Prese ntly used as Riversi de Marine,

3.187 A.: mil. Rodney Cora Rd .. nice
homseite, building restrictions.

patio, 20x24 shelter house .

STATE ROUTE 218-t .263 acre m/1. Very
nice home offers 3 BAs, 1 balh , living room
kitchen range and refrigeralor, lireplace, city
waler, basement city schools.

-

.110 A., mil. along Raccoon Creek,
Hunt Twp .. app1ox. 70 A. bottoms,
lronls on SR 160, artesian well.

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1991 ·

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV
21

31 'Homes for Sale

Business
Opportunity

Pay Phono Route. Local. Priced
For Quick S11t1. 1-800-4n·1111.

Unique 4-BR houM on 1D-1cr11,
Br~dbury R01d, utra bulkJing,

127,500. 1114... 82·2111
3~3111

22 Money to Loan

32

Of'

211-

OIMI cltpooll.304.f'IWIIB.

3 ~tdr0om

F1rry, ull tor

holM O.IUpolll
StiWirt, 304-IJS.

only.

All Typoo 01 Loan• "-n•l

Bu1lntt1 Etc. C1ll For F!W 112 1cre tot with ,14170 mobile
Conaultltlon With A lAin homa, 3 bedrooms, 111 tltclrlc,
OltiCir Today! 1-8oo.992-8450. ntldt repairs, phoM 304482·
2141.
G1Ur1ntMd A"ulls.
·

Real Estate General

1185 Rodman 14xlll Zbr, 2

3-BR . on Uncoln
Po"*DY· 114-1112·'1119 altor
4415 Ahtr 7p.m.
I :IIOpnl
GIICIOUI l~lng. 1 end 2 bod''
42 Mobile Homes
room tp1utment. 11 Vlllaa
Menor
end
RIVIIIlclo
for fltnt
Apartriltnttln MlddiiPOfL. From
&lt;142 mollllo homo "" r"!'1 2·8R, l111. Call 614-1112·7781. EOH.
tum.. wllhlrldryw, '""• Ill Nowly romOclalod 2 end 3 llodhoot, 1236 fill' mo. pluo room ~nit In Mlddllporl,
~llll_•· 11Wt2.UOO Of' 2 bolhl, Equl- WID hook..ps. . Rtfnnct tnd
Mxto 2 Br, 1
Iouth of depcoH llqU~Id. Phone 1'14Eurllca, on 81. Rl.?. No polo, AS-4448 ..., 8:00pm.

31 Homes for Sale

446-3636u4~.
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-- ~ · ··

\'

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·-·

"i

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:· '

.

~

Farm For Rsnt Or U111 54
Ac111, NNr·Nonh Oallll High

2br

614-245-1111.
36
Real Estate

-..-

Apol1mont,

AIMI Roongorot.. Fum-. You
·Par UtiiHIOo.lf4.441-1D117.

Wanted
.-..- ...,. ,.,.. wtth

Go11go

120Dimc.:~_l1oo tllpcoll, stove

a yr

~~~,;0.:!:· ~ '&amp;.~

Srnon 1br Aponmo,., 7 Coun

...,

FOR-Si\LE ·

coUNTRY ESTATE:- Give- yauR- FAMI"Y-THE PAl·
VACY THEY DESERVE! 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS,
FAMILY ROOM, PLUS RECREATION ROOM, LOVELY ·
FORMAL LIVING-ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, EQUIPPED
KITCHEN. FORMAL DINING ROOM. REAR DECK,
SECOND FLOOR BALCONY. ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP,
NATURAL REDWOOD EXTERIOR, 2 CAR ATIACHED
GARAI'E. SURROUNDED BY 9 BEAUTIFUL WOODED
ACRES. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT. $125,000.
2110 JACKSON PIKE •• 4 ROOMS PLUS BATH . NICE
LOT $27,000 GREAT LOCATION.

Pol.. Plallllnt IIIL
Hood llmlly room end lormll
dlnlnv room. 't1111 PlY up to

BIDWELL •• 3 BEDROOM. . NICE LEVEL LOT $28,000

' 845 SECOND AVENUE IN GAWPOUS· 2'STORY VIC ·
"'ORIAN
'STYLEHOMEPRESENTLYUSEDASA4.UNIT
'
RENTAL WOULD MAKE LOVELY ONE FAMILY RES!·
DENCE. $55.000.
RESIDENCE AHDMOBILE HOUE PARK· VERY NICE 4
BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNTRY HOME ON APPROX.
23 ACRES. BACK PORCHES, 2 CAR GARAGE, 8 MQ.
BILE HOME LOTS WITH MOBILE HOMES AND 5 MQ.
BILE LOTS. ALL PRESENTLY RENTED. EXCELLENT
LOCATION . CALL FOR COMPLETE DETAILS.
VAN ZA
NE A
NT RD. • • A KYGER. . 8 ROOM HOME
APPROX. 25 AC. $39,500

movie~ . C.lll14-446-all. EOH.

2 bldroom houla In Muon.
$200 o1uo utlloill, roleronco

lWo bedroom tumllhld aDI,
retw.nc. and depottt,
882·2566.

end dopolit. 304471-1211. .

·:Rkl ~ 3 a.cirooM 3 l.Dit.
o.
fr Dr 11f.i Bit.._
·, LR • ..,.. • • •
,..,
:·VInyllldlng, 2-Car - · CA.
:,.llcUul. $11,000. 114-245-litlll.
: loc~uo~o~Htu,.ora Oroom. 31
'woodtd ~ with 3 BA, 'blth,
'•II modem conWrHnc• Only

2 bedroom houM In Point
PIIIIIIM, dlpoeM and f'lftrtnet
roqulrod, 304471-3m.
2 bedroom houN, Htndtrwn
WV, 1225. mo. Atlertnee ,Qej

11 minutMior AlvtniWDOd •nd
z \1211'11111 from Rlclnt. oaiiiMJ41-3311.

8-h Strolll, lllddilport, Ohio.

*

$8,500. NICE WOODED LOT WITH BUILDING. WOULD
MAKE EXCELLENT HUNTING CABIN.
•

AllDREY F. CANADAY, BROKER
LINDA G. SKIDMORE
MART P. n.om
REALTOR 379·26.88

1

:.
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REALTOR 446-3383

Real Estate GLlJieral

'

'I
J

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•

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Par~

ftoutt 3:1, North of Pomeroy.
Loll, rtnllll, ,_rtt, 11111. Clll
114·112-'11179.

47

FIVt 220 Will HNtt111l Qood

Shipe! $225 For Alii oM-245-

mt..

Qravelr- ,Trictor Rotary Mower,
Plow, Cuhlv1torl Snow B*ltJ
Sulky And Du1 WhHts. Wl1
SoiiSoporote. 614-441..141.
Huokr Homo Uto ...r McCu~
toch chtln IIWI mil rUd down
Sopl. Soil. Slclaro Equlpmont,
Htndnon, WV. 304-076-,_21,

Wamed to Rent
KlndloWood Woodbumori_OloN
Rollrod couple, non-omok.,., Door, Br111 Trtm uouiM
no ptta, wish to rtf'll cl.. n, Blowo111Uud Ono Yoar. Chlmnty Kit ncluded, $500. eM-317·

0171.

Maytog Wllhlr, Eacollonl CondMfonfl100. 614~41H421.

g

.

10

0 0 NsuL
11

Z llnil-on Toirlorl2 end 3
Yll old, S11Q, 110h. Iloilo good

-ngdogo,304412-3431.
AKC

lllnlltu,.

~Blood

Pomt~~nlon

Very nicelY decorated ranch home perfect tor
starting: Located at the end of a quiet lane, this
3 bedroom home is ready to move into. Fully

AKC Pom~ranlln, 1hot1 and
- · 304476-2113.
AKC roolotorod Cocllor Sponlol
u....Apoo'o, Tor Pooclin, h;a
lhott and wormed, 304-e71-

equipped eat-In

211S.

$59,900.

Comp lele the chuckle quoted
'
by -filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

•=· r r r r r r r r r rr

i ~:--.L....J.-L....~-·

1

VERY PRIVATE &amp; WOODED

01010p Only, 1210. 114-441-4817.

Private 1 acre mil,
beautiful pine trees. yet
ranch wilh 3 bedrooms; 2
room, family room, fully eqLopp&lt;oo kitchen.with
dining area, utility room.
outdoor living
area offering 25x1.0 covered patio, 3Sxt0 sun

County Appl- lno. ....r oppt-. T.V. HIL 0t&gt;on
t Lm. to I p.m. llon..eot. 1'14127 lrd. Avo. GoJ •

$75.900. To make this •perf.ect home· yours,
call
Carolyn
Wasch.

114-416-'11144.
' Couch, E11y Chair, Rtcllfllr
Chair, Twin ~J ~,.....,, Chll1
01 DIIWOII. Will Soli AI One

Real Estate General

patio, 24 it. above-ground pool with wood
deck, 2 car garage. Gallipolis City chools.

nice 2 bedroom mobile home, extra large
screened-in porch overlooking lake, storage
shed, completely underpinned. Lake frontage

Offers 3 bedrooms, living room, fam ily room,
eat-in kitchen newly remodeled , 1~ bath,
attached 2 car garage, cen,ral air, Green
Township, city schools . Withfn m1nutes of
hospital and town . Call lor an appointment.

and more, approiC. 1 aora lawn. can to take a

Raccoon Township. Unbeaoable price. $29,000.
Caii!Oday.
#2895

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

vinyl aiding, storage building, 1Yt acre plus
excellenl garden area. Tobacco .allotment

UNDER $5,000
1972 Schull mobile home wilh expando. 3
bedrooms, elec. heat, plumbing has been

Flrlptoco 1.- With Eloctrk
Fan. Call IM-441-3103 After
lp.m.

Ohoo lrom your Iron !porch . This 3 bedroom, 2

tie downs , 2 • porches and
underpinning included. Situated on rented lot
Oviner anxious to sell I Call at once .
j2910

USED APPUAHCES
WolhOIO, dryoro, r~oro.
11ngoo. Skigp a.otilncoo,
UpPor Rlvor Rd. Baolclo Stona

bath spilt level home 1s just minutes from town,
and there is a 2 car garage with automatic door
opener for your convenience. Satellite dish.
This home is priced at an affordable $54,900.

~pproK . 23 acres , 3 bedroom ranch . Barns ,

12811

•

PRICE REDUCED! MUL'I'f·PURPOSE
Excellent location lor residential or commercial

propeny. 35 W"'l area. Vinyl sided 3 bedroom
ranch. Over 1 acrelol and approx. 1,100 sq. it.
commercial bu ilding.
#2909

RACCOON CREEK FRONTAGE
Localed in lhe Village ol Vinton . Much potenlial

cellars and cellar house, shed, pond. Adcltional

for business or residence. Call for directions.

OUT OF STATE OWNER IS DESPERATE
To find a buyer! Come· and see this nice size 3
bedroom, 3 bath brlck!lrame ranch with 2 car
garage, enclosed sun porch, over 4 acres and 2
car unattached 2 car garage.
·
#2926
NEW I- NEWI - NEW I
THis modular is only g months lold and sitJated
on over I'll acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths,
living room study, formal dining, family room,

study wlih shelving , anached 28'•30' garage.
Eleclric heal l"'mp. Make an appoinlmenl today
10 view ihis beaullful home wlih everv extra'
possible. lmmediale possession. Rio Grande
area.
12919

$81,1100.

1211

NEW LISTING! CONVENIENT TO TOWN!
Just 2 m~es out At. 141 . This 3 bedroom home

1500

has a full, divide·d basement , living room with
fireplace , deck, gas heal wilh central air, and

11605

more...Green Elemenlary. Only $44,900. t407

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49 !:l'.DAR STREET

.

Older home with fats of charm . Very attractive
and well cared for 2 story wilh a perfect
address ·tor kids and the whole fam ily. 3
bedrooms. 1'11 batlis, large private back yard.

Very well cared for maintenance free ranch
home in excell ent neiahborhood. Home
includes 3 bedrooms. eal-in kitchen, formal
dining room ,. living room with attrac tive
f1replace and family room with another fireplace
(with insert). Good storage , 2 car garage wllh
breezeway outbuildinA. Gas heat (low bills) ,
and 8.38 additional acres lor sale also. fJiease

don't hesilate to call today. Call Dave at 446·
9555.
#229
FINALLY A S..,_RTER HOME you don 't have
to fix upl! You will need to see this 3 bedroom
with recently replaced vinyl siding , roof and
gunering, plumbing, 200·amp. electric service
new gas furnace . Large lart)Uy room, 2 full
convenient laundry room and private
This opportunity is onl~ minues from

'

Compioto $1.41 Woo~ 4 D1-r
·SUH~,
13.21 7Willi;
PoolerWoo~
&amp;,d-)
·_ ,
_pc.,_Cou,.ry
l11.17
lncludol _
Plno
DOno«• With BorN:h a • Chal11,
l10.N Wook.OPEN: Monday
Thru Baturdly, ll.m. to lp.m.,
Sundar 12 Noon Tlll 5p.m. •

.

12922

HOME &amp; LOTFOR $29,9001\

SWAIN

Olivo 81., OoUipollo. Now l Uood
fumhure, hlltn, Welttm I
Work
lf4.441.3151.

room , eat-in kitchen and dinlng area. Plenty of
parking . Not many places ravailable lor this
price in good condiUon.
M218

RJRNITURE. 12

RACINE· Majestic &amp; beautiful . A well maintained 2 otory
home with 4 bedrooms, I 1/2 bath, fftrt1oly room, 2 car .
garage large tront s"ang porch. Newly decorated lnskfe
with mauve, blue &amp; peach. A cneary, lovely homo sure IO
please your tamilyl Reduoed to $46,900

VI'RA FURNITURE

NEW USTING- REEDSVILLE· 1 iloor block horne with 2
bedrooms, bath, one car garage, rear .~ned ~rch.
ceiling fans home newly remodeled, addo~onll lxlold1ng on
_6051 ecreolground.IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONI $21,000

WHAT IS THE SENSE IN PAYING YOUR
HARD EARNED MONEY IN RENTI
When you could be paying lor lhis remodeled
homa. Living room, bath , lorced air, gas heal,
newer deck. nestled among shada lrees on
appro•. I acre lot.
12920
PRACTICALLY CITY - BUT COUNTRY!
One s1ory frame home wilh over l\ acre lol, 3
bedrooms. lull basement, auached garage,
earpon. Fireplace In living room. pertect
reliring couple or newlyweds.
12925

NEW LISTING- N.. r PORTLAND- Everything you'd ever
wanl in one packagedeall Approx. 221/2acros ~'th a nice
14 ~ 70 all electric Holly Pat1&lt; mcblie home With 2 bedrooms : rool cellar, satsllifll dish, stocked pond, boms,
buildings, fruit uaes, oome fenced, pasture &amp; tillable acrel.
What else could you ask lor? How about the reasonable
price oi 532.0001 Sound gllod'llt isl COME SEE I

llll.m. 4 111111 OH Routo 7 On
' Routo 141 In Contenary.
WillingturnancOIAC,
1100 DBO~ !Ill Wiler hooler, 10gol. $50, UUIIII big ..,_ TV,
11000.114-11U171

NEW USTING· POMEROY·-Bu~noss building on Main
sweet! 2 •tory cam marciaI building woth one .· two apa~·

Sporting Goods

your chance 10 be an entrepreneur lor ONLY $27,000

llrownlng TMIIY Maltlr

REDUCED- 3 Commerclaf Buildings in Mlddeport known
a&amp; the Coals Building. CALL FOR DETA!l.lil

. 171-1210.

53

AMiques
4Dyr old PI llyn wator pump,

FIXED RATE INTEREST NOW AT a:a75%
.
·STOP IN TODAY AND CHOOSE THE HOME OF YOUR
DREAMBI

oomplll• wfth MOIOI &amp; ~CM­
Ioril• reiiCfy to a.a, IM-H2~

1144 oftat l:iiOpm
1uy • 101. Rlvlrlno Antlq-.
1124 I. lloln 811111, p..,.,.,,
HeMIN: M.T.W. 10:00 l.m. lo 1:00

r:..z.'"=

1:iiO .to 1:00 ~m.

·~~

· 304-

OWNERS TAKING A LOSS
Newly listed home in Green Township with 8
• aore1 of ground. Sellers moving South .and
unload this 3 bedroom 2 bath home.
room has cathedral ceiling , very nice
~~.:~~·n,. formal dining room, 2 large covered
outdoor pleasure. Oversized 2 car

II

_
carpon. Poiced lo move at $55,000.

I

HENRY E. CLELAND ......................................... 992·B191
TRACY BRINAGER;.....................o...........:........949·~439
JEAN TRUSSELL .............................................949·2610
JO HILL........................... :..................................985·4466
OFFICE ...................................;.....~ .................... 992·2259

~----------------~---------J·

HEIGHTS - E~eecut i ve quality
home in a professional neighborhood! The
nome teatures newly remodeled kltchen aod
baths 3 bedrooms, 2'.-i balhs . tongue a~d
groovS family rOom paneling, covered pat10.
storage building, 2 car carpon, tre e~. l ov.el~
variety of shrubs and fl owers. Quts.ta·ndlng v1ew
of river and town .
#400

opportunity.to design and complete the interior
of a home in an excellent neighborhood at an
affordable price. The completed exterior of this
1Y. story tog home 1ncludes a deck. 2 car
garage and basement. Buyer would own 1120th
of an 8 acre stocked lake with full privileges.
$69 ,900.
t401

1226

We have sold, s-old,
sold iri the last 2 weeks.
Our listing inventory is
low. If you want results,
call one of our agents
today!! ,

ments upstaira with commercial room downal&amp;lrs. Here •

Compound lloilr with ..... 304-

Old lllhlon cldor -

I

NEW LISTING- RACINE• An older lr~e farm homo with
6,.33 acres. F.arm includes barns, cnb &amp; sheds ASKING
$79 ,900

Drawer Chill, 144.15: Bunk
ltd, 1221; Complete Full Matt
Sot. S1DI.OO Sot: 7 pc. Coder
lad100r1t SuMo, $1H.OO.OPEH:
Mondlly Thtu llturdly, lun. to
lp.m.; lundly 12 Noon Till

-

CHAROLAIS LAKE ESTATES - A rare

shopping. Features 2 lull balhs, large living

ROOM: Toblo' With 4 Podded
Plno
IMI 3
Chain, .• $2111.00: llalehlng 2
Ocor """'· $341: Or 1511.01&gt;
lal; Olk Toblo0 42dZ Whh I
low
lac"
Chalfl 1
1121.110.1EDROOII: POotor Bodo
room SuH• (5 po.), $341.00: 4

52

UKENEW
Brick and frame ranch offers 3 bedrooms , living
room with fireplace, dinin~ room. 2 baths and
eat-in kitchen. Energy sav1ng heat pump. 2 car
varage . Silualed ~n a flat 1 acre lot. $55.500.

Tree &amp;haded lot provides good privacy on this
brick ranch with 3 bedrooms. Includes livln~g
room , 1 bath, lull basement Brick patio to
enjoy, grape arbor and mori;! . Priced at
$49.000. Call Sonny Garnes for more
information.
1703

on si. At .141. City schools. $~9.500 .
1618

Quiet country surroundings make thi s 3
bedroom home anractive. Located close to

-L

NEW USTING IN CITY SCHOOLS

cenlral air. Priced to sell al $79,900. E•lra lot

Cou'"'I

To view this 6 acre mini farm . Remodeled 3
bedrooru vinyl sided ranch style home with
garage, in-ground pool, large barn and
numerous oulbuidings . Several teet of road
frontage. Beautifully maintained. ,
12907

JUST LISTED
Tho Hard To Fi~dlll you have been loo~ng for
acreage plus a nice home, well this is it.

ni~hts . Appro• . 2,300 sq. it. ol comlortable

livmg space including 3 be~rooms _(~oom for
4th) , very attractive country kitchen,llvmg room
wilh pine ceiling , newly finished family ro~m
and 2Yt baths. Large 2 car garage w1th
overhead storage . ApproiC . 5 years old .

USTING - LeGRANDE BOULEVARD
, Nice neighborhood, sidewalks, close to town .
You alSo get the com fort of a cozy three
bedroom home. Air conditioning, back pado.
tun basement, new carpeting and m.ora .,. .C:all ·
1708
lor appointment and price .

ENjoy the scenery as you view the beautiful

C1loln, $141.00:
Dlnotll Willi' lanch

MAKE AN APPOINTMENT
IMMEDIAT.ELYI

repl ~ced,

Perfect setting to enjoy thi.s newly co~structed
log home. Large front pofch to enJoy cool
summer breezes: attractNe woodburner ~nd
hearth 1g warm_your soul on thos~ cold w~nter

IMPROVE YOUR VIEW I

114-416-3158
Vl'rs Fumltul'l
Sell I Choir, l11.10 Wook;
RICIInor, $1.47 Wook, Swivet
~ocillr, 13.13 Wook.Bunk lad

ATIRACTIVE RANCH HOME
ON JAY DRIVE

RENT RACEitl
Wllh this 2 or 3 bedroom home. 'Remodeled

LOTS OF RIVER FRONTAGE
Priced at $2,800 and up. Call lor more delaUs.

jl228

SPRING VALLEY AREAl

390 BLUE LAKE DRIVE
What can we say, but well maintained! Very

YOU CAN AFFORD TO TAKE A LOOK
AT THIS HOME- ONLY $2;100IMMEDIATE POSSESSiuN
3 badroom ranch, eat-in kitchan. balh, uollily

SUPER LOCATION, SUPER HOME
Very allractiv~ 3 bedroom home. Large living
room , lamily room, dining ' room and kitchen.
recenuy ro~d , 2 lull bajhs, 2 car garage.
Over 2 acriiS:- Sfiualed al Buhi·Morlon Reed
fust oil SA 35. Call loday. Immediate possesion.
.
12914

.1603

11124073

lf4.441.3151
.LMNO ROOM: loll l Chak,
S1111.0Dj, Roctlnor1 • $MI.OO;

0

pond. Own wilh pride. $65,000.

pu.,., malel and temeln. 114-

RENTZ OWN

sell quickly at $39,900. Maka an appointmenl
today.
12Q28

salellile dish. 2 plus miles !rom At. 7. $52,500.
.
#702

AKC Riglotorod Slbottan Huoky

Household
Goods

lnCenl~n~ry.

lb-t:..

Does a nice lot and. good neighbors appeal to .
you? This home ·oHers that and more. A nice
size ranch home located in Kyger Creek area,
large living room t spacious kitchen with oak
cabinets, oversized 2 car garage, cable and

That's what the owner told us . We have to
agree - it invites commendation. A finely
crafted 3 bedroom home with living room ,
dining room, fami ly room , large kitchen and 2
·baths . Situated on a picturesque 3 acr~ !"'I
wooded setting wi!h access to large f1Sh1ng

AKC rtgllltrtd Pomen~nlant,
had ahot1 and wormed, :104-1712113.

Mil• Oft Route 7 On Route 141,

''I 'can't believe what it costs
to mail a leHer today!" growled
the fellow in line at the Post
Office. " The next thing you
know they'll put 21ue on the
back •of -····- -----1 ·

room . living

room with attractive fi replace artd nice, large
lawn, all make this the home lor you . Priced at

1-153

,2930

~tchen. di~ ing

"THE PRETIIEST" PLAOE AROUND''

PRICE REDUCED $2,000111

OUIET COUNTRY &gt;U,IHUo

Uno. l110. 114-

Sollll $475 Will dlllverl 304-522·

peep allhis onel

RE L I LM

Wlbb. Clll 11t 111 023t, 1-800312~231.
'

you by!

~

8

a...., ond . . _ Shoi&gt;'Pel
OIOOinlng. ·AI lnido, otyloo.
lll'lltl Pel Food Dealer. Julie

.._lnbow V.ccum Cltintr, cost
6Ver $1400, 1-mos. old. Mull

mobile home space. Private setting. Priced to

,

Country Mobile Homo.

' '

..•

.•

46 - Space-forRent~

at $65,000 with seller financing to qualilied

'·

6

affordaBle price. $45,900. Call lor your
showing today! .
#704

years old. Finished space is heat~d with high
efficiency gas and has central ,a1r. Ideal for
many uses. Call lor more information.
1200

4464704.

buyer. Don 't let thiS unique opportunity pass

ctntr•l hl•t, air, reltNnca ,..
qulrod. 814.. 46.0338.

LOWONE

. -:·
7

24Ut21

Boster
1260

with floating dock. Mus! see to appreciate!
'
#2931

KWUQAS

kllchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths. Nice deok
overlooking flat professionally landscaped
yard .
Ci ty
schools .
$79 ,900 .
'!219
.

fireplace ,· spacious kitchen, lull bas~ment
sound good? Well if so. we have the home for
you . Located just minutes from toWn . You will
also get central air, semi-lined cedar closets,
extra large family room and all at a very

LAtt&lt;.it COMMERCIAL BUILDING
ON ST. RT. 7
Located near Silver Bridge with over 5,'100 sq.
ft. ol clean, dry space. Appro• . 1/2 finished, 1/2
unfinished. Plus 3 bedroom apartment only 8

Range Top, Ocod CondNionl
$200 For AIL 614-418-4423, 114-

Coil oHer 2:00 p.m.,
5651, M11on wv.
.

1wtv11 "ooW, $ti.QUj CoffM I
1no1 T - . $11.00 Sot.OINING

'

complement of casement windows let the
s~nshina In even ~m cloudy days. Beautifu l

Block, brk:~ HWOI ....... windows, lint•, 110. Clludl ~n1111, Rio Ororidl, OH Coil SM-

Rare opportun ity to become owner and
·landlord aU in onel Live in this cOmfortable 3
bedroom, 1 bath ranch with living room, dining
·room. family room while the 6 other rental units
help pay yotlr-mortgage. Convenient Second ·
Avenue location, good occupancy rale. Priced

0 N UR J I

.

Building
Supplies

DOES A LARGE LIVING ROOM wilh a alone

GOOD LOOKS &amp; STEADY INCOME I

•

..
..~

ton, OH 1-800oln"o1528.

55

FINAtCY A
WITHOUT ~OMEWORK
lro all been donal This 2 tear old home is
roecry and w~iting lor you. Slight contemporary
·design prov1des a very spacious feel . Large

CIHt llotol. Cali114-441-73N.

2

5

Blconcl

GOOD

Edi11d by CLAY R. POLLAN •-__;:...__ _ _ __

3

,. ,, ,,

--

100m1

Alao I~&gt;Tier · -·

AUCTIOH l

i-~

1210

1u
or un rn, In Mldcltport. ,,._

Nlc.ty Fumllhid Aptrtment,
1br, ntld to Ulnry, .,...._lng,

Z AL B AE

Allllon

F0&lt; rent· Now 1 bdrm opt, hom

2 Mdroom hou-. new17.
diCOflltd. carpMed, pain,
,...,.,. and ctepoelt r.,qulrecl,

Real Estate General

'*·.

446-6624

depoail, 3CM-·25M.

112-5225 or 11124304.

..

'

'"'

738 Second Ave.

REALTOR'

'&lt;l;

'

CUpol lx12 $50 I Upl Soil On
All Outaldo Corpot: 13.19 I Pr.,l~o~m firm quMn wat~nnat·
$4.H: Kllchon C&amp;rpot, $7: Vinyl lrtU.L Miler, liner, dl'lln-ldl,
$3.H I $4.H . Solo On All CU· 175. •ull bod, complolo $50. 1'14pet ln.Stocld Mollohan C.rpela, 112-7511

HOMES, FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET
GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631

Judg Dewlff- BtokBI

m

·

THE VIEW WILL CAPTIVATE YOU, AND YOU WILL
DELIGHT IN THE PRIVATE SETTING 'oF THIS
SPACIOUS HOME. WELL BUILT RANCH WITH
·APPROX . 1800 SO. FT. OF LIVING SPACE SITUATED
ON ONE ACRE MIL. PRICED TO SELL AT $60,000.00.

gouthe~n Sli~~s CJJea~ £stale ~ne

.

.

~

Fruttal
Vegttables

Ucutlute ... N,I144tl IUZ.

·Real Estate General

.

s~~IINAO.~~R~~-~ leeo
Doublo
Well Ovono,
StolnStool-Sink;
onoOno
Jonn-Air

StoOplno

56

•
Instruments

T,.nlpo,-.n!ICotoAnd- ·

Real Estate.Gene.n il

:;..::,"oH

Reorronge the 6 scrambled
·. '
words below lo moke 6
: simple word s. Print letters of
: each in its line of squares.
"

Rooms lor rn . wok or month.
~:~~~ II $120/mo. Oallll Hotel.

5I

Real Estate General

:0
.

Furnished
Rooms

Coal, Hame Dtltvtrr. Minimum
01 4 112 Ton, 151 Por Ton, 114384-3338.
Coc&gt;kltlolo, $41 ..., quo• connlng taro. 11. por ao.z. 114-11231
" ., 1112' 2106'
Concrott I plalltk: IIO!IIk: tanko,
Ron Evan• Enterprta.s, JICk·

Merchandise

.~~=E~~~~=
WORD
THAT DAllY C. fN 't) 4\' ,( ·. PUZZlER \:)~ ~QU N).
GAM I
·,·• - - - - - - -

45

Vlovlnlo.IM~I-2101

8-h 811111, lllddilporl, Ohio.
Onl room apt, rtlerwteM and

dlpcllt. 304-176-7Itl.

no poll. 304471541.2.

RACCOON ROAD • 39 ACRES, MOSTLY WOODED.
WATER TAP, 2 SEPTIC TANKS, ONE TRAILER SITE
PRESENTLY RENTED. $25,000.

IM-4411-41121.

hoult or mobljt hom1 w/rlvsr
view 15~111• up or down river
from Roclno In Ohio 0&lt; Will

CENTERVILLE· ATIRACTIVE HOME HAS VINYL SID·
lNG, 4 BEDROOMS. FAMILY ROOM. LARGE KITCHEN .
1 CAR GARAGE. APPROX. I ACRE LAWN. OUTSTANDlNG BUY AT $28,500.

Real Estate General

3«tom attc~ In Pomeroy, 111

•p., I mo.

IU... 142 Fourth Avenue, Galllpolii.IM-441-3117.

NEAR HOL2ER HOSPITAL- SPLIT FOYER DESIGN.
HAS 4 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS, LARGE LIVING AND
DINING AREA. EQUIPPED KITCHEN WITH SNACK
BAR FIRE AND SECURITY SYSTEM. GAS FORCED
AIR' FURNACE , CENTRAL AIR COND . 2 CAR
BASEMENT GARAGE. ~bo,uw .

IL===~~~~~:~~==1~~~~=====~~~=~~=~======~~;:=~;=~~~~~~

Of

$235 ptt'-mo., $200

YEARNING FOR A BEAUTIFUL OLD HOllE TP
RESTORE? LET US TAKE YOU ON A TOUR OF THIS
BEAUTY. FRONT ENTRY HAS BRIDAL STAIRCASE,
REAR ENTRY HAS A WINDING 3 STORY STAIRWAY
THAT TAKES YOU TO WHAT ONCE WAS THE
SERVANTS QUARTERS ON THE THIRD FLOOR.
THERE IS,A BALLROOM WITH MARBLE FIREPLACES,
LIVING ROOM AND ENORMOUS DINING ROOM ,
KITCHEN AND STUDY ON THE FIRST FLOOR. SEVEN
BEDROOMS ON THE SECONDc MUtH. MUCH MORE.
YOU WILL HAVE TO MAKE ANAPPONTMENTTO SEE:
"LLU~ THIS HOME. ONLY $72,009.
LOOK AND COMPARE! 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, ~
COMBINATION KITCHEN/DINING/FAMILY ROOM AREA _
WITH FIREPLACE . LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE,
CONVENIENT LOCATION JUST OFF AT. 35. THIS
HOME IS A BARGAIN AT $58,000.

~steal

Avonuo, Ooll{pollo, Ohio, 114441..338.
Wol\! ponllllhlrto $1.00, 111&gt;cooll, whlto unllormo $3.00,
..... 11.00 dlnlm-tockll•
$20.00,132 8i.t!'"!ut, Porriwy,

614-11&lt;·190~

Kitchin Wltn Stowe,
Aatrlgtrato.rl. tl~o. PIUI
O,DOIM, Ulllllltt, Rtftrtnc::e.

=a
Ron

:S.roorw, 1-blth unfur-

StrMt,

57

· Ulod Wuriltw llt&gt;lnait plano.
good -1'14-:146WHIT£'9 IIETAi. DETECTORS .

Av., 4-roonw, 1-bath unfur·

WR 1n llkkleport. o1oe1 lo
.:hooll1nd lawn, 1200 Plr mo.

uiiiHiee pold,l181, 114-1112~
Aplnmonto "" 1t1a Eldarlr. Go~
lla ...... Aportmonll. m Buhl
$500. fill' month. Ho dolldron or Morton Rood. Doolanod lor the
pole. - ' I M 4.
Senior Clll1on (12 I ado~ end
Han&lt;ll~ po110111. Equll
houolng opportunity.
ApRentals
ptlcotioi11 moy bo plctwd up ol
Spring Volley Ptuo. 121 JICk•
IKKI Pl'kl or caiii'IMtl 4131.
41 HOUseS for Rent
BEAL/TIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
1 8R, otovo l ll~lg. hom. now ESTATE~, . 1:11 Jocklon Plkl
arpet, wuhlr I d'""'r ~up, from 11~Wmo. Walle to ahop I
Moolla

·

-lion

both.·--

nlohod1 upotln on Sprl•g Ave.

..

req~ll&lt;!-

for r.nl 30'H75o

56 Pefl lor Sale

~UWt
And -Whtto, And White,
For loll. Alody Oetobor
3n1.•.~17M.
.

Tandy 128K .· cator cOmputer

nlahed, upttllrs on lutt1rnut

Sc'-1•304-273-&lt;1581.
S
•
CareCrOW$
44
Apartment
Halloween Waod
lor Rent
(rafts
l.olo &amp; acmgo ovlilloble lor
·
p
1 &amp; 2 bdrm o:r. In Mlddlepcn,
,now homo conot""'lon
on
ainled Pumpkins
••
d, Utllltn
Fum, 1p rert, no pets,
3br, 81th, Khchtn, DR, LA, R1 Ybum R00 d. P• • - 101
1'14-112-2211.
"
2 miles west of
Baal, G1r1g.. Ctntrll Air, Qu
::'~~lono.wac\:;,ptet':~~.:~
Bdnn
unhomlohed
opt.
with
Gallipolis
on 141
1
Hoot, Mid $20'o, Mlddloporl. 1141124360.
lion mollod on roqw11. 3DW71- portilt utlllloo pold dlpcllt ond
$253, John D. Gonich, no rolwonceo roqullld 114-112·
By owntr 45212 B1um Add. t . lingio-wldo till loll, ploua.
20114 oHer 1:00 11HIHM2
hind ouolng rtn~ Ch..,or, nlco
brick &amp; In • good qulo 112 to 314 Kra loll, 1D mlloo 1·bdnn In T - Plolno, ocmo
1111,
split
tlvet
hOme oouth "' Point PieeNnt. moo. tum utiUtlll pd M25 mo pi •
l1oOiilpcllt .0 Poll. 1-bd~
wlfwnllhld kltchtn, family rm, 304-61W814.
wlflreplal::e, J.bdrm, ~th, 20 Iter• 11/L, 1 11110 Put Chor· ~ring Avo Po.,...,, l1114 mo
, ~lilly rm, mud rm, living rm, loll Hllo, On O.J. Whllo Rood,
uo l1DD d•POI!'.. no pole, I'Mdln:r,n rm Widick outsJda, new
?·:M113Ihor l cwpm
car Ina, 2-car garage, con- . 8111 OHor Over 120.000. 1142 boclroom Alhlon Uplond Rd, ~-!.
cr • driVe. rMdy to mov• In to. 441·1800.
Alklng prlco $79,000. FO&lt; IP' • -· ~ 11o1, ·~coon • ·ke, HUD occaplld, nc polo, 304-4171·D, C. Mtlal Sale• I4088
polntmtnt, 114-843-1113
·~
' orHHIIII
~
12DOD.I'M-1112-371
·
CaMelbura, Inc. "
45719
u.
wHh
trlllor,
In
Florido,
304·
2
Bodroom
Furnllhod
Aport·
S
.
I'
•
.
p
I
GOVERNMENT HOliES From l1
mont, Socoml Avenuo, Go~
pe&lt;:la !Zing In 0 e
(U Ropolrl. 0.11- Tu 1.,..2454 .
Propertr. R•poMtnlont.. Your
~f:~M:'mc, l100 Oepcoit.
Buildings.
A,.a 11 105-112-8000. Ext. OW. :::.,:.,-;~:~~~10. ':,~
Designed to meet your
10188 For Cunni Aepa Uat.
2·BR opar1ment now " 1111blo
ep.m.
needs. MY size.
HOMES FOR SALE BY OOV'T lllldowhUI Subdlvlelon, u :.,%':~'"f: !!'!'~~tn.!t~
CHOICE
OF 10 COLORS
AGENCIES! IRS Fortc-111, mliee ouo Send Hill Road, hll o~olloncoo, well to woU corpot,
FREl:
ESTIMATES
ON
Aepoe.; S&amp;L BalloUt1 AYIIIIbll
POSI Bl.ildi~Sand
AI Bqaln Prk:11. 1..0~ 1011Vk:1od building lotolor Nil AC ond ilrgo cloooll. Llundry,
a low u 11500, and one aen playground
and
mldlnl
1500 Ell. HRIII For lmmodilto loll
lor olnglo wldol IVIIilblo manager on lhl. 8- l&gt;nt II
Package De s. Save
""~ QIIM.
.,,., 304-875-sceo ., 1711-4100. $245 • month. eo• Julia ., 304- Hundreds, even Thousands
773-5521 ., otop by Lydlo
Hou• And LMd For Sale! 113
Aerel, Free Gul 1,.....1411, Ma""' Bottom Sub-dlvlolon, oportmonto locotod on Ando~
Of Dollars.
001 1' " lolo, Rt. 2 tronlage,
114-112·7314.
oon St. bohlnd lhl golf driving
local
Sales
Re~esenlative
p..L.1. rMUC*I, c/tu water, 304- ra-In ulton
s;;:-'2331, ·
'
·~ •
.
DONNA CAl ENBERY
2·BR In Middleport. Ho pote.
ES R 8o 166
0~. WhHo Rood, 2 Ao:m Ply own ldliHiall, $200 fill' mo.
G,alli~·IO·IIs·,· Oh~IO 45631

f;t'~~-uii~::S,/:.',;l-;~ =~~

two · bedroom

ond

P~.

{•4•&gt;.

43 Farms for Rent

Bilek And Decker. 7 112 Inch

2!JII3 or 671-4100.

Sm111 Moblte Home Upp.r
Route " Aellrence And Dtpo11t

114-446-3780.

an~ Alfll'lnCI rtqulrld, 304-182·
2111.

. •.1441;::

Bond Sow, Wlnlor C!toihlng, Cootol 114-256-1014. ·

Pita for Salt

"*·

-wut.

wlcofor monitor, alntOII lirlnd
......
1100 lor
lhll 1:00pm,

ap~nments

.

Roqul~&gt;d.

w.- •

,...,=,.,.

Ono

Reference And Dtpotll R•
qulred. C.ll After 2p.m. 614-448-

0527.

¥i

::304:;;..
;:7::6-~7321:=;·==
·
.,
Appil llo, Korboonl llcroon,
Prlntlr, ~ 1510. 114-44111115, Lllvellaooago.

d~potlt

p-...

56

Floh Ton~ 2413 Joc:klon Avo.
Pel..
204-e71-2063,
Rocondltlonocl wuhlra l hoU llno Tropicol IIIII blrdo,
doy111, IICh l100 11111 up. Wo IINII anlmaleand I''I'Fa ...
.u mokoo. 'l1lo
DryorShGppo.- .

boclroom lumlllllod opt, ,.,....,.
~-:~•.clapoolt.· roq~od
. • 304- .
-~Nonh 41hlulllddl-. Ohio. 2
mllhld apt,

Pets for Salt

Merchandise

R_. to Reel Reoo
114-tQZ2111
Boll bod end 2 ohlln, S16Q.
1m VW pop-top compw, $1100.
·114-'1112·2281
.
-

bldroom

Miscellaneous •
Merchandise

56

54 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

·North 3rd'St, ll!idcl.port, Qhlo, 1 21N RCA ~TV and anltnna, $2GO.

-

1.!'1 acre lot. n11r Chllter, 3b&lt; T11ller, . Totll Eilclrk:,
$210/mo, 1100 O.poolt, 114-367·
110,100.00
obo ... , .. 3111
HouM Ac:rot~ From Southern
0434.
Hl11h School, R1clne. 614-371_
2br lloblio Homo, c:&amp;ll 114-2112424.
1760.
ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII Dealer Ropo, 1111 (&gt;olm Horbor
, Reduced To Sell: 2 Slary 3br Ylnyt lkllng, lllllnglo 1001, zxi
Comor LA! In Chlllll11, Ohio. loldt willa. dlshWIIhlr, .. v.
For
Rent.
Elcellenl Condition. Fllnanclna l1DOD'o. Coli Man 1_,_ Mobile Hom•

Avalllbtl. V04-132-ISI51,
1132·7fl0, lf4.317.4141.

54 Miscellaneous

,w. :·=·

U6 Ac~M And 4 BedrtlOm

MZI.

Apartment
for Rent

home, 1 ml'- bllow low!'t·ov"· wlblow.t;·w. ,.,..
.=1fvtr. No Petl, ~;A,
ntedl)alta,

l'e..,.,ICM, 114~51-100.

54

Pomeroy-~lddleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Fuml- 3 11oomo l Both, 11171 Chovy Chovllil - · 1171
Cllln, No Poto1 RlllriiiCI • Buk:~ 12111, 1MI rn;;,;;; pick·
Dlpcoll Aoqulroa.lf4.446-I_SII. up, J2000, 1-old w;,;;.r Cook
tlove; 1175, 1'9•• cook ltove,
Comptltly Fumilhtd ·mobi!O good ·aeo.
ho!lllr

O.pooit Requrtod. utUNiee Pald1
No Polo, 101 112 Socona
AVIIIUO, Qajllpolil, 114-371-2171.

Fumlo~Pold,
EH~,
- lOT· ·
Shall .BIIh,
~··· UIIINiee
Second Ave, Gallipolis, 114-441-

Bolho, 20d Dock, WID, AC,
l13,DOD. 114-441-11111 IIUIIIIMI
2-bdrm rnobilt homl, 12152 on

Ociober

•

.,u,

Real Estate

I

44

Real Estate General

Fumllhld Elflcleiicy $t7&amp;'mo.

3950, 7:30 Ull .4:il0 - k clap

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

*LOANS$

3 btd!oom home oloM to
ochopla and -~~ ,.,.,_

l

'

Apartment
for Rent

41 Hous&amp;s lor Rent

..'

PERFECT STARTER HOME
IN THE COUNTRY!
GREAT BUY FOR $26,00011
Very nice home lor starter fam ily or income
property, etc. 3 bedrooms, large living room.
aat·in kitchen with nice cabinets, 1 bath ~nd
separate utility room. Nice flat lot. Convement

location.

1115

Very well built and attractive rustic style ranch
that's perfect for the small family. F~atures
include 3 bedrooms, t lull bath , attractive eatin kitchen with oak cabinets and living room wi

th lireplace. Veoy well insulaoed. Deck, llat lot
and separate 2 car garage with workshop area,
shed and dog kennel . Farmers · Home Loan
tackers - you. can't beat this one at $48.2001!1

Wiseman
·
Real
Estate
.
.
(6.14) '446-3644
. .'
David. Wiseman, Broker, 446-9555
•

CAROLYN WASCH, 441-1007
SONNY GARNES. 446-2707
. .

LORETTA McDADE, 446·7729
B. J. HAIRSTON, 446-4240

..

'·

j

I

•

�'.
Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

•

Transportation

61 Farrrt Equlptn.ent

· 71 Autos

.·

wv

6,1991

71 Autos !.or Sale

Services

for Sale

7'1 Autos for Sale

81

Home

Home

1812 Monte Carlo, nlco oar mull
...,. tnoo1 _w.lll1oko Uoo·OBO,
61WIII-71.. or 6111-104f. ·

1978 Codllloc Mokl A Good
Worlc Cor, Atklng, $700. 114-4487282.

.

.

19114 Dido bona.ae Brahm. ox·
cellent ln•l• and out, m111t ••
ond drlvo1o OpPrOCio1o, 614-812· 1818 bluo

1978 ChiVY Novo pluo 81 Do1oun
210, 1500 ooch. 114-44H4ll o~
titS p.m.

3113, $3300.

.

:

..

.

li

eo..Jca, good cond,
new 1lrq &amp; brak11, 80,000

Will build ra..,
pillo ICI'MMi:l
P'U_I·UP, vln
~~ tr~lir lklrtlfll, • .

mllol, 14,800. 304-8&amp;2.un

18H Cam.., R.S.,, Black,
~Ilid, T·Topo, A\llo, Air, Till,
""' .. .., CUNttt lter.o, Ont
Ow!ior, 31,000 llllol.:..nl· C&lt;Jn.
dlllon. f19UZ Por
h. 114-

1982 C.mlfO Looka Good,
Runs Good,•. i3,000. Call 814446-3517.
19BZ ChiVY C.Jobrity Good
Condition! 11,500. 114-!170·211 I'
After 5p.m.

,.

44H18i, 114-141:11104.
1881 ~cava..,, air, PS, PB,
~!!""
.. -~r.:o·
18,100.
-•ottor
8 pm,
5-1280.

'

19114
Codllloc
Flollwood
Brougham, 58,000 mill&amp;. $3915.
Bt4-445-170l

Real Estate General

Plumbing &amp; .
Heating

1100 Ford ~ocon, GT, Asking.
18,000. 814-441.0731.

Real Estate General

Estate General

•

850 'Bufi£ Morton 'l?j. (ja££ipoflS

446-4206 or 446-2885
'Bonnit Stutes, 'Broker

-

Stutes Real Estate [H

Lovely Cedar and Brick Ranch.
In Green Elementary School
District, Modern and beautifully
decorated. Large family room &amp;
den area. 3 bedrooms, modern
eat-in kitchen w/atrium ddors
leading to a back deck area. Lg .
front decks also. t ,680 sq. feet of ·
living space. Lots of privacy at the
end of the street. Be the first to
view this new home.

-

.

-··

a

home offels-over
space,
· room, family room,
room, kitchen. office or cjen, 4 bedrooms, 3- t/2 baths,
stainless steel pool, 2 patios. two car garage and a large
·stocked pond. The 40x60 stables have six box stalls and a
tack room. Other buildings include a 40x60 pole barn and
other sheds. All this and much moro are here among the t02
acres mil of beautiful rbllil\go hills. Priced at only $ t 57,900. By
appointment only.
1362

..._

_,

YOU'LL INSTANTLY BECOME A "COUNTRY GENTLEMAN"!

1q. IL

Stop and see this recently built home O!lstled on a 3.67 acre landscaped lot . Very
well buill home with over 1700 sq. ft. of gracious. well decorated living space with
extras like hardwood floors; cherry kitchen cabinets, large spacious rooms and lla~rge•l
country fireplace. You'll fall in love quickly. Outside enjoyment can't be beHer. with
brick and concrete patios, breezeway and large comfortable.front porch all sec1uo••o
from the world by trees. Call So~ny for an appointment.

VAC\ \T L -\i\ D

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

Prestigious Neighborhood
5.6 Acres more or less of Woodland. Excellent
building site. Land has been surveyed.

LOT-SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
large lot approx. 101'&lt;171'. City water, city sew.eJ,.
natural gas, electric. all are available at this lot. Prepare
to build your droam homo in this pleasant, quiet.
subdivision just a short distance out of
,Galllipolllls,
Lott17,
1458
1
BUSINESS OFFICES &amp; SALESROOM FO,R LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2nd AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE.

446·3644

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~ --------~R~e~ai~E=s~ta=te~Ge~n~e~ra=I------------------~R=ea~I~E=st=a~te~G=e~n=em~l________

Real Estate General

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Real Estate General

0

·•••
••

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:-

·:r
::.

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·,••.....
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LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

«p,,a.

•

OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE BY
$10,0001!1 Very nice home offers 3 BAs, 2
baths, LR, kitchen. This farm is situated on
Sugar Creek Road., Ohio Township, and has a
new 28x40 barn, tobacco base. Call for more

..... .

RESIDENTIAL • INVESTMENTS • COMMERCIAL • FARMS

23 LOCUST ST., G~LLI~OLIS, OH 446·6806

Real Estate General
OFFICE 992·2886

details.
'·

-·

BROKER 446·0008
Associate 446-707$

RANNY

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RUtH

1707. SPECiAL NOTICE· REDUCED TO $31100 NEW USTING CLOSE TO TOWN - C1ty water. 'sewer
ond ac:llo~s. 3 bedrms., •nyl ranch, 1· 112 baths Wid

kit, din. area, ~zy liVIng rm., hardwOOd ftoori, -full
basement wlfamJiy rm. and woodburner and outside

1f/tJtJel

enb)'. AC. Shaded deck w/carpOtt, 26'&gt;32' garage.
Excellentlo work on your cars. Storage shed. Tr&amp;ed
~4~ .
.

1~.

ieut(tlf,

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

·,

. 446-'1066

.

Allen C. Wood, Reeltor/ Brokar-446·4623
Ken Ma111an,' Realtor- 446·0971
Moll Canttrbury, Reeltor- 448·3408
Jeenattt Moore, Realtor~266 · 1746

1740·
AND CREAM FOR $43,100 - Move
into th&amp; 3 bedrm. ranch in a charming neighborhood

.

~- ''"-'-'. LR, kit. lliJII other rms, are lastelully decorated~ - ~M7Q2o ·NEW..LfSTINC:-Ranch-style.home wuh:l
h rm. wlfireplacve, pa11o and trees for the piemo
t/2 baths family room dlning room new
18

· Cily schools. located on Sinersweet

&amp; LOW - Less thBI1 1 yr. old. Verylg.

1741, MIDDLEPORT ANYONE? SZB,OOO -

~II

buy

lhia exceptionally nice 3 bedrm ., 1 ~ baths, 2 story
h~ t. Lovely new carpet, range, washer and dryer,
1~ ear garage. Neat and clean home located 507

beclrm. w/l&gt;ath, !amily bath, 3 !&gt;ed! ms .• lormat dln[ng,

carpets, new windows and door5, app . t:i84 sq.
ft. ofllvlng space. Call for an appointment

1748. 15 acre farm m/1. This pl-op~ 1s located Just
past the Gall!a County line into Jackson Counry,
School District 11 South western. Home features 3
bedrooms, 2 baltls, app, 1152 sq. ft. botde gas hear;
air cond., 2 car detached garage. Satellite dish and
attachments, 8' round above ground pool, two 8'.11.81
buildings, large bam shed, and cellar house. Calllof
more inlormaoon.
'

hOI. Owner will land contract to qualified buyer.
$23,500.
.
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Leading CrMk-Higley Rood· This is a beautiful building
spot with plenty of room to expand or huntors droam. 38
acres with free gas and water and electric available.

-·· - - - .

~-$23,100

SYRACUSE·A fantastic thriving grocery store businessThis money maker comes with everything lnclucing the
stock. II has a dairy case, walk in cooler, all kinds of
shel~ioig, 3 deep freezers, meat .slicer, grinders, meat
block, and lots of olher itoms. The upstairs could be
, remodeled into a2 bedroomepartmentsoyou could live on
top of your business. If you want to start making moneygive us a cell.
$138,100

loads of pine cabinets, 1 car garage. Hard to beat
price I $40,000.

Sycamore St.
·
1732. BARN &amp;VACANT LOT -78 oc. nv1.all mineral
rl!3hta, e ae. of bottom land, some liat on top of the

PORTLAND-Barrlnger Ridge RINid-Hero's a nice 3 bedroom homo with 2 lull baths with a whiripool&amp;lb in one of
them. Has beautiful oak cabinets in the kitchen and a very
very larae living room. This home has tree gas andlull!ing
on 2 acres of all levelland.
$50,000

~

1709 LOT FOR SALE .... 1 acre lot lor sale in Addison
Township. Call for price aM locauon.

rms. throughout. Deluxe Dayton doublewide. master

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
LEADING CREEK-Higley Rd.-3 flat acres ihat would be
beautiful builcing spot. Has water available and .sits on a
paved road . This one won't last long you betiBr see it quick
JUST $11,500

PORTLAND-PorUancl Rd.•This home is fantastic, The
owner has recently remodeled-has new roof, vinyl slcirig,
new sindows. It has 3 bedrooms and all redone ilside.
Comes with equipped kitchen . Sitting on appro•. I acre.
$35,000

f,ISTING -IDEAL
LARGE FAMILY
2 balha, 7 ac. mil olllai land. Cozy LR

CLOSE IN - $25,000 buYJI this home on Texas Rd .
bedrooms. partial basement with laundry and wort&lt; 11111,1 ,
FA natural gas heat, city utilities, garage. Please cal tor
OF VIEW- Blue Lake from yO&lt;Jr liv·
ing rm. or
and Raccoon Creek from your front
appointment
. ~29,8
porch. Frontage on both, 3 lots and an attractive well
NEW
LISTING
IN
VINTON
VILLAGE
-Very
nioa one
maintained 2 bedroom mobile home with t Yt ear garage.
story
brick
home
with
2
bedrooms,
bath,
dining
room.
lv·
Lots of trues, 3 septic tanks, 2 water taps , picnic shelter.
ing room. laundry and equipped kitchen, hardwood lloora
Enjoy home and views. Doo1 delay, see it today.
383
t car attached garage. Walk-in attic. Nice back pa6o iiiM!
. BIDWELL AREA - Hero we.have a ranch style house with 2 L-shaped COY !!fed front porch. Asking mid $50's. 11382
bedrooms and bath, family room , kitchen and living room, RIO GRANDE AREA - 9.2 acres mil and new home with
12x20 mil outbuilding, 1 car detached garage. All on over t/2 living room, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, ~tchen , laundry room,·
acre. Asking only $19,500. Call tor more intormation. 1365 barn cellar building, and small house. Only one mile from
Rio Grande. Call tor more info.
IIJ77
this
nioe
3
bedroom
brick
ranch
in
a
RIO
GRANDE.
AREA
20
acres
and'
lo~ely
remodeled
. Jllis home inclu®s t-112 bath, living
combo, full basement, heat pump, oen· homo with living room, 3 bedrooms, 1-t/2 balh, large
combination family and dining room, heat p~~~~p'alectric
· and 2 car garage. Asking ~ .000. Call lor your show1368 furnace. rural water, also horse ~am. All tor 'M,OOO.I37S
FARM - 148 acres mil with large tobacco base, newer
GAVIN DR. - 2 WAYS TO BUY - Straight out qr land consawmill and several pieces ollann equipment plus remotract. 3 bedroom home, nice fenced yard. new carpet. newly
deled home w/4 bedrooms, ~~ing room. bath. lnd lovely
painted inside and O&lt;J~ farnily room and more. $34,000. 1338
eat-in kltchen with walnut cabinets, secluded Mlling. Calf.
tor do-. REDUCEO. .
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CROWN CITY AREA - Is this 2 bdrm home wkh living i'oom, 124 ACRE MIL FARII- LoCated an Unooln Pike and IIIII
dining room, kitchen, bath, above ground pool on over t-112 ranch style vinyl sided home with 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, lomily
acres. Only $27,500. Call today lor your appointment. 1358 room , dining room and kitchen, fireplace , 36x48 approx. blm,
new fences , tobacco base. some implements. AskinG
NEW USTING - 1987 14x65 Clayton N&amp;Wpon mobile horne, $69,900. Cal! lor your appointment today. :
t2rt
2 bedrooms, 1 bath. total elect. In city school district. For only
$21 ,000.
1356 JPCREEK ROAD - 67 acres mil. Good bu~cing sitos. Rural
water available. Some timber. Road frontage. Call for mont
RIO GRANDE AREA - Throe tracts of land. t) 22 aaos mil; information.
1210
2) 20 acres m'l; 3) 100 acres; or buy all three with 40x60
horse bam, . t4x60 implement stora~e sheet. All have road CHESHIRE AREA - 12.9 acres mil of vacant land. Not
frontage on Tyn
Ad. Various pnces. Call for more inlor- . restricted. Has two story barn. Some timber and 700' road.
mation.
11359· Frontage on Story's Run Rd . Call lor details. Asking for
• . 1335
_STARCHER HAMRICK RD - tO acres mn ot vacant $16,550.
ground. Lots ol pine trues. Call lor details. Only $20~. . I'ARM - 55 acres mn on l'roviden!;B School Rd._!.l!rge
tobaoo base 32x 70 bam with garage, pond, with 1976
BULAVILLE PIKE - Is this 2 bedroom wood sided home
24x46 mobile home plus addition, 3 bedroom, li~ing
with balh. kitchen, large living room and laundry, heat with.
room , dining area, kitchen, bath.Asking $59,900. 1385
natural gas, wood or coal , lull basement, 2 car detached
NESTLED AMONG THE TREES - A 3 bedroom homt
garage and 16'x20' building. All on over 2 acres. Only
with family room, living room, bath . Also a large 20x20
'36,000.
1381
bu ilding with a 12x20 shed. All on 1.390 acres :~
schools. $53,900.
CONDO IN CITY - All brick with 2 bedrooms, 21ull baths,
equipped kitchen. living room , dinin g room, laundry COUNTRY LIVING - Near Clay School. 2 bedroom
· w/Washer and dryer, heat pump, cent. air. many extras. home on 4 acres, gas IIPOr turnace. rural water. $24,900.
Very nil". Must see. Only $6~,000. Call for more info.
Good starier home or rental property. See it todayl 1387

~~~~~~~~~-~An~d
1

-y

Rhos

tg. kit, with bar and eating area.

above gmund pool. tO miles out of

1682. DUALITY-LOCATION-SPACE - Oualll'f Is in."

1750. HANDYMAN SPECIAL •
land contract. You'll go back in ti'ineif v'"
, this large 2 story home, 3 bedrms.,
dining nm .• utility rm .•cellar. Barnw/approx.
an acre. $26,000.

me brick Cape Cod home that has a friendly home
atmosphere. It features .t bedrOoms, 2 bath s, living ,
room overloolrJng the Ohio River and alarge lake type'.

TIME
• 3 ec. of flat
~niov n»ino In a country home very close
w/4 bedrrns.. bath, kit. ,
, 2 cement porches , barn and
trees and a good garden spot.
i Mid
r
~\

a 36x48 metal building. perfect for someone that has •
1 busineu and needs a large storage area . Plus, a

14x24 bulldog lhal could be used lor a sh~rcom Of

a.amaJI aP81'ttnenl. Call for more detllila.

.

$78,900
BREATHE THE CLEAN COUNTRY AIR·This is a nice 3
bedfooin horne on Scout Camp Road. If storage builcings
are your weakness-then this is.tha place you want It also
has•a basement and a garage.
Possible LAND CONTRACT
$26,000

•ne. COMMERCIAL
Jocal~n.

body of Willi( adjoining property boundaries. Spacolo•

or RESIDENTIAL. Prime
Eootorn Avo. Opportunity to combine homo

11611. NEW LISTING:

and bualnett. Ohio Rivet frontage ~ Vary nice 3
badrm. homO w/ap~loncea, lull basement. Thla is a

ls localed on I ac.

mil leaturing 2 or 3 bedroom with family roo m.
kllghen, bat!'1, covered carpon,large storage build1ng.
Th1s homQts an excellenr staner home priced in the
$30's. Can for more information.

.

lnoney making pmpooltioo. Call lor oppolntment.
-

···:

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&amp; ACREAGE IN HARRISON TWP.- 3 bedrooms,
bath with deck acro.ss from and SIZe, 24x22 block
garage. Tobacco pounpage. Call about this onel

1700. COLONIAL CHARM WITH
FROrn'AGE. Immacul are condition, 3 bedrms.,
b8ths, kitchen, LA&lt; DR wittl woodburning llroplaco. ...
This home is weU cared for and located con¥eniently' ..
to rown and snapping. Very good garden spot. 1 ear
garage. You have not idea what a nice home until
see inside. 140,000.
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-,

vou

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·distinctivot and different 4 bedroom. bl-ievel
with 3 baths, LR, FR with fireplace. khchen
(with chtirrx cabinets), dinette. el~~ · heat
pump. CIA ref., range, dishwasher. disposal,
screened-In back ~h. 2 car garage ~ 4 aaes mil. Priced right Take a ·look at quality. Call
for an appt
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116~. BUSINESS FOR SALE ONLY _ WALLPAPER .•

· flaB. NEW USTING. MARK ·oF QUALITY.

&amp; INTERIOR DESIGNS - 1500' of'display area. Top

BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME _- 2800 sq. ft olliving space ,
3 bedrooms, t il baths, located on 10 acres and borders
Raccoon Creek. Green and Gallipolis schools. CALL
NOWIII
GOOD INVESTMENT PROPERTY' - A 2 story lrame
double located on. Second Avenue, Gal lipolis. 4 rooms
and bath downstairs and 4 rooms and bath ups tairs. Call ,
today.

of. the hne Jnvenrory and fixed assa i ~ ReasonBbte
priCe.
!) ·

11656. NEXT TO WAYNE NATIONAL FOREST _ 127
· bedroom ranch with
rot., range, FR, gas
Call lor locatiO!) .

LEADING CREEK-Higley Rd.-Hunt or tann on this 18
acres with a nice big bam. This land lays flat, has a great
bulding site, and water and electric available.
ALL FOR $18,500

ac. MIL. Fronra on 2 ·road s. land .contract
$25,000.00.
.

~OCATED IN GAtLIPOLIS - VIne Street - 4 rental
units, good income propeny. Calllor_more inlormation.

~~~~~c~ IN GALLIPOLIS - 3 rooms and bath, walki ng
qi
to schols and stores. Priced at $16,000.

1879. PORTERBROOK SUBOIVISiqN - A qulot
neighborhood ~ Whtrll you will ba II you
this lovely 3 BR ranch with 'LA, kitchen/dinette,
·
·
large lamUy r.oom , range, dishwasher, ref., i
utlll!y rm.~ elea. BB heat, c1ty schools on 314 acre m11

m

.• 739. MAK~ Oi
.
Treeslll 12
room, fifl!Piaoe,
nice backyard. Call lor

1OOfi!FIACT: Y_OUR CHANCE TO BE A
you cannot afford 10
eat•in kjt., attached

ranch w/great
bllh, pelio and
and prioa.
"

' la'Vflot.On~ S32.o00.

..
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'\

~..

.J
,~

--,..--·

..

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Call.

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oiiEEN ACRES - Two lots, t large ·levol home site. 140
ft. by 148 ft , citY water, Green School, good condition .
Priced right at $10,000.00.

CHESHIRE·Watoon Gro~• Roed-Com&amp; """ this lovely
brick front home with full basement, 2 car gnge, 3
bedroom s, 2bath&amp;, and lots of stor&amp;Qeapa~. All this Mt!lng
on 63/100 of an acre in a groat location. Pnce was $63,100

WE HAVE BUiLDING LOTS IQ Rodney Village II. Call lor
more Information.
I
.

.

1\1, story home sl1ua1ed on 219 lors ano casement, ,
close to shopping centers. We1t kept home and large ,
2 car garage. Treed lot lmmea1are possess1on.
•

... ""'"' \ ..

NOW 113,500 .

1

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1712, LEASE WIOPTION TO BUY. KMR. 3 bedrm..

.,

GREAT LAND FOR DEVELOPMENT - 40 Acres lor sale
In tho city limits ol Gallipolis. Check this one out.

.'

'

.

CALL TODAY FOR AN
APPOINTMENT

~
!elf,

NOW MO,IIOO

DOTTIE TURNER, Broksr- .............-............-..112-1802
BRENDA JEFFERS.....................,.................. ,812-3011. ·
.DARLINE STEWART..............................." '''''''H2~HS

'. lANDY BUTCHER.......- ..................~ ...!............ttz.SS71

SrAfii::ti!!fi RD.,

- Two ways to buy. Hou11
and 82 acres
or ~use and 3 acres mn ' Either way
you get a lovely well kept t 'II sto~ sided home with 4
bedrooms, bath. dining roo m, den w11h woodburner, h~1ng
room, and kitchen. partial basement. deta.ched 2 car
garage, 20x30 parn, 8x30 covered porch. k~l ~ees . and
much more. Call lor prices and Info. Must see th1s one.
.367
NEW LISTING -ST. R11 60 with river view. One acre
,with. neal 2 bedroom home. Must seel Asking only

mn

NEW UMA RD.- 3 bedrooms. 2 belhs, large spacious
kitchen wit~ isla~d range. Home has had lots ol care.
Look this one. Only $35,000.
1381
POMEROY AREA - Charact&amp;r, style, cauntry charm This home has It ail. Older home, completely roluiblshed.
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, Wrap-around porch. Several b!'i&lt;llngs. Situated on approx. f.t/2 acres. Rock Spnngs
Road. Asking $5a,500.oo. W~l take MH for down payment
11345
ROSE HILL RD., POMEROY - Is this aluminum sided 1·
· 112 story home with 4 bedrooms, bath, dining room , ki!efl·
en and H~i'lll room, Full basement on t aae con~en1en1
to downtown Pame'ror. Only $28,000. Call tor details'.
.
-1372
- Whoin you can own this home. ~
ranch home siaing on 112 aero m/1, 3
trees, grapes and raspberries. ·call for

1357

szs.eoo.

mo.

2 YEARS OLD - , t story vinyl sided 2 bedroom. 1 bath
with full basement, gas heat. large L-shaped decl&lt;.
$19,900.
_124$_
NEW ~ISTING - Eastern Schools; .3 bedrooms, 111
baths, family room, e•tra good eo&lt;\PitiOn . On approx. 2
acres. Asking $45,000.
1314
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P•ge-D~unday Tlmes-Sendnel

•

Pomeroy-Mid~leport~lllpolls,

October 6, 1991 ,:

OH-Po.lnt Pleasant, WV

Browns lose
17-14 battle
to NY Jets

Cheaper meat prices could
be in -store for consumers.
By JENNIFER I)IXON
AP Farm Writer.
WASHINGTON - · Sha~ply
lo~er farm prices for hogs and?~·
tie could mean cheaper meat pnces •
for consumers this month, especial. iy cool-weather favorites like
rc_&gt;aSts, soup and stew meats, officials say.
·
.The Agriculture Dep~tment
srud Monday that farm pttces for
hogs and cattle tumbl~d again in
September lJ.nd rematn sharply

below last year's levels.
The lower meat prices, however,
were offset by strong prices for
apples and oranges, which ).lushed
up the farm price index sltghtly,
USDA said.
.
But withotit the fivefold
increase in orange prices, the farm ·
price index shows deteriorating
prices for producers, particularly
catde and hog raisers. At the same
~me, the prices farmers paid for
t.tems such as fertilizer and fuel

List of eligible voters
posted for ASC elections

were 3' percent higher in SeptembCr :
lhan a year earlier.
.
:
· The. abundant meat supply ,which has been driving down farm :
prices could, however, translates •
into better retail prices for con- :
somers, said Diet Edwards, a food _
marketing specialist' with the Tew ·
Agricultural Extension Service.
·
The biggest reductions will be :
for items in seasonal demand, such
as ground beef, roasts, round stiak
and soup and stew meat
USDA, meanwhile, said the allfarm products index of prices
increased I point- or 0.7 percent ·
- from August to September. The index was the same as in Septem: bee 1990, at 148 percent of the Jan- uary-December 1977 average.
•
Bob Milton, chief «onomlst for •
the sratistics branch at the depart- ment's National Agricultural :
Slatistics Service, said lhat without ..
the fivefold increase in orange ~
prices the farm price index would ~
actually have shown a decline of 6 ·
pen:ent.
,:

GALL! POLIS - A list of the cannot vote in more than one comnames
of all .known eligible people munity. If an eligible voter has sepwin a $5 prize from the Ohio VaHey Pul)lishing
MYSTERY FA~M -This week's mystery
10
receive
ballots in the upcommg arate farm interests in more than
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
annual
ASC
commiuee election is one community in the·sarne county,
number with your eard or letter. No telephone ·
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
availablein
the county ASCS special care will-be laken to see
calls will be accepted. AIII:OIIfest entries should Meip County. Individuals wishing to participate
offtce,
reports
David
U. McKenzie, !hat only one ballot is issued 10 that
be turned in to the newspaper olr.ce .by 4 p.m.
in tbe weekly contest may do so by guessing the
·
County
Executive
Director.
Farm- voter.
each Wednesday. In case ola lie, the winner will
farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your guess
ers
will
_
begin
nominating
candibe chosen by lottery, Next week, a GaUia County
off to the Daily Sentinel,lll Court St., Pomeroy,
dates for -the ASC election on Octofarm , will be featured by the Gallia Soil amd
Obio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
ber :
Water Conservation District.
tbird Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, and you may
ASCS, an Agency of the U.S .
Department of Agric;ulture, is·
responsible for farm program
administration . On the lOcal level,
ASCS operates under a farmerelected comminee system. This
'
year's elections wiU be by mail ballot betwcerT November 22 and
Ferrellgas provides you with a long-term
December 2. Voters may also get
commitment to safety and quality service.
ballots at the county ASCS offtce.
GALLIPOLIS - The 6allia
Anyone
ho
meets
the
following
County Agricultural Srabilization
Ferrellgas gives you a lol more than just whal we put in
requirements is eligible 10 vote in
and Conservation Commiuee
your lank You get propane PLUS ...
these farmer committee elections: ·
reviewed community boundaries
'
any individual of legal voting age
for the ASCS community elections
SAFETY
...
We
have
one
of
the
most
experienced
propane
with an interest in a farm as owner,
to be held between November 22
delivery teams in the business. We give you more lor your
operator, tenant, or sharecropper ho
and December 2. "This is one of
money when it comes to safety and dependability.
is eligible to' participate in any
the first steps in administering the
annual ASC committee elections," ·
ASCS program.
SPECIAL ~ERVICES ...Because we value you as a
Several general provisions relate
said David . McKenzie, County
to
ASC
voter
eligibili}Y.
A
wife
Executive Director.
customer, we want to give you better service while we help
McKenzie said that in compliwho operates a farm wiU!-W-busyou control costs. ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL
. ance with changes required by ·the
band can vote if her name lSonthe
CUSTOMER PROGRAMS, including our level Paymenl
deed of conveyance. Any person
Food Security Act of 1985 the ASC
Ptan and the Ferrellgas Installation Review.
under legal voting age can vote if
commiuee set boundaries around
ATIEND~ DEALER DAY· Amona tbe
from across
ASC local administrative areas - the 'Midwest and Eastern United States and Canada attending
he or she runs a farm, and a legal
Ferre IIgas
guardian
who runs a farm for a
(LAA that help provide farmers
"Dealer Day" at Bison Trailers, Inc. located In New Parish, Ind.
State Route 35
with effective farm program
child can vote for the child. No perwere Larry and Linda Montgomery, ol Moatgomery Trailer Sales,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
administration through local represon can be denied the right to vote
Langsville. The dealers toured the plant and looked over the 1992
because
of
race,
c'
o
lor,
religion,
senration.
line of horse and livestock trailers made at the plant. Mr. and Mrs.
.Call-us at (61 446-2264
Gallia County is divided into 3
national origin, age, sex, marital Montgomery stand In front ol a new 20 toot gooseneck traDer that
local administrative areas. Only
status, or handicap. ·
is'part of the 19~2 Bison liaeup.
..
LAA number 2 ill have an election.
A person may cast a ballot in
A list of ASC communities. a
any county in which he or she is an
boundary map, and the number of
eligible ASC voter, but he or she
farms within each community are
available 10 the public at the Gallia
County ASCS Office. The ASC
communities in Gallia Countr for
LAA-2 are as follows: Addtson,
Gallipolis.&lt;Jreen, Clay and Perry.
POMEROY - Vane Scott, co·
Awards to be presented during
Other events concerning the
founder
and
general
manager
of
the
the
meeting include Outslanding
upcoming election . will be
Colonial
Flag
Company,
CoshocFarm Family, Goodyear .Farmer,
IIMounced as they occur. Participation in ASCS elections is open to ton, will be the featured speaker at Soil Judging, Hay Show, and Affilall eligible farmers regardless of the Meigs Soil and Water Conser- iate Membership Certir~eates.
TwO'supervisors will be elected
race, cOIOI', religion, national ori- vation District's annual meeting
gin, age, sex, marital status, or and banquet to be held on Oct 22 to serve three year terms on the
at 7:17 at Mei~s High School.
board of supervisors. Candidates
handicap.
Scott's top1c will be ''The Many are Jo~ Bolin, Bill Holcomb,
Faces or Old Glory."
Marco Jeffers, and Rex Shenefield.
· Tickets r~ the annWII meeting Nominations will be raken from the .
FINANCING AVAILABLE.
and
banquet
to
be
served
by
the
floor on the night of the election.
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - City
Absentee balloting may be done
Council, which spent $227,000 to Meigs Future Farmers of America,
buy and renovat~ a former Ohio wiU consist of chicken, baked pota- in the SWCD Office on the day of
Natioaal Guard armory, bas agreed to, baked beans, cole slaw, rolls, the meeting from 8 a.m. 10 2 p.m.
to sell it for $108,000 to Akro beverag!'S and desserts. The cost is or by sending a request to the
. $7.
office and and an absentee ballot
Corp., which !llakes car mats.
Tickets
may
be
purchased
from
will be mailed 10 you.
Councilman Charles Ede said
the
Meigs
SWCD
supervisors
Alan
Deadline for making reservaMooday lhat city expenditures for
Holter,
Thomas
Theiss,
Charles
tions
for the annual meeting and
the site were appropriate. Federal
Yost,
David
Gloeckner,
·ibid
Rex
banquet is Oct 15.
funds used for the project were
intended for economic develop- Shenerteld.
Rower windows, door IOCICS,I
ment, he said.
air, tiH, crulae, stireo,toadld.
Akro's·purchase of the site will
lead to creation of 30 jobs, said
Mayor Sam Purses, who said Akro
hal promised to spend $50,000 on
remodelin$. "Quite frankly , I
'MlUid do this .deal every day of the
week," Purses said.
Schools will benefit because the
3.8-acn: complex again will generate propeny raxes, said .CouncilPower windows, AM·FM
man Arthur J. Cirelli. He said Akro
aterao, door locks, 1111,
could have expanded production at
crulae, V-6 engine, loaded.
ill .... plant instead of buy-

Announce
boundaries
for elections

Ohio Lottery
'
Pick 3:782
'Pick 4: 0854
Cards: K-H; 5:C;
3-D;Q-S
Super Lc;~tto:
5-17-19-25-26-28
Kicker: 070706

Page4

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{

Low tonigl:tt in midJOs. Tuesday, sunny.
high in mid-60s.

•
Vol. 42, No. 108

Copyrighted 1991

1 Section, 10 Pagn

25 cents
Allultlmedla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 7, 1991.
.•.

.

More than-1,500 on
hand~ fo_
r dam ceremony

ANYONE CAN SELL YOU
PROPANE!

.~

I· •-

the Assistant Lockmaster at nearby Racine
Locks and Dam, explains the locking procedure
to a tour group.

TOUR GUIDE - Larry Circle, center, was
one of several tour guides at Sunday's open
house at Belleville Loc:ks and Dam. Here, Circle,

By B~ll\N J, REED
Sentmel News Starr
More than 1,500 people attended-an open house at-BellevilleLocks and Dam in. Reedsville on
Sunday, almost twtce the number
who attended the last open house
there in 1979.
According to Lockma ster
George Connolly, the crowd was
more than had been expected, but
he was pleased with the numb\'r.
"This is a civil works project,"
5=o~nolly S81d after the open house.
It .s good that peop!e. can see ~~w
thCir w dollars are liemg spent
Those who atten~ed the open
house were g1ven gu1ded tours of
the. sprawling project~ heard cxpla·
nat1on of how the facthty operated,
sa~ boats locking through t_he
factltty and we~e allow~ to wiilk
along lhe dam .'tself, whtch spans
from Reedsville to Bellevtlle,
W.Va.
In. f!!Ct. Connolly said, many of
the VISitors 10 the locks and darn on
Sunda~ carne across the dam from
Bellev1Ue.. .
In addttton to the tours and
demonstrations, visitors were given

short rides on th,e Ohio River
!!l!oanl"the&gt;project s mamtenance
towboat
- A-dozen-staff-members, made
up of Belleville employees and
staffers from other locatiOns,
helped to guide tours, piloted the
boat and assisted in the daily operalion of lhe locks.
"This is terrific," one ReedsviUe
resident said. "It's right here in our
backyard, but so often we lake it
for granted." .
..
.
The BellevJIIe facll1ty da1ms a
n~vtgatton pool ext~ndmg 42 .2
mtles upstream to Wtllow Island
Locks and Dam at Reno. That pool
borders on Metgs, Athens, and
Washington Counties in Ohi.o and
Wood and Pleasant Counttes 1n
West Virginia. Work on the locks
and darn was compl~~ m 1968, at
a total cost of $63 million.
·.
There.are two lock chambers at
the facthty, each mcasunng 110
feet in width. The dam, ~he high
structure wh1ch spans the nver, has
a top length of I ,206 feet and a
1~9-foot ftxed we1r (or barner)
wtth a 130-foot open crest. There
are eight "tainter" gates. each .110

feet wide by 34 feet ·high, se
between IS-foot concrete piers
The gates are individually raise&lt;
- and-lowe-re'd-m mai-ntain a poo
upstream of the dam during lov.
and normal flows, in order to main
tain a navigable pool.
As the flow in lhe river increas·
es, lite gates are raised to hold the
upper pool. Eventually increasing
flows reach a level whc~c the galeS
arc completely out of the water. AI
this time, the river reverts to free
flow .
The basic plan of operation at
the locks and dam is to maintain a
stable pool level during low to normal river flow for navigation purposes.
It is estimated that so far in
1991 ,36 million tons (that's 72 billion pounds) have been locked
through the Belleville locks. The
locking procedure itself requires an
average of 20 to 25 minutes
18 people are e)Jlployed at the
Belleville project, which never
closes. Those personnel are under
the direct supervision ofLockmas- ·
tcr Connolly.
·

Ferrellgas

Annual Meigs S&amp;WCD
banquet slated Oct. 22

GM FACTORY PROGRAM CARS
NO·MONEY DOWN!
TO QUALIFIED BUYERS
- ON THE SPOT -

To sell structure

_:___ $12,888

1991 BUICK CENTURY
SEDAN

$12,888

inglbe~.

lntofnt up ...
CLEVELAND (AP) - Blue
Cross &amp; .Blue Shield of Ohio
repartee! net inc0111e of $4.3 million
for the rtrSt half of 1991, compared
with a loss of $15.5 million for the
lirlt half of 1990.
.
Reserves for protection against
f11turc claims increased by $49.1
1
!J1illlon, or 56 percent, to $136.4
million for the first six months of
the year.
Blue Cross had investment
income of $8.1 million for that
period. compared with invesunent
lllllOIIIC of $6.6 minion for January
to June of last year.

''People come to me
for good rates... ·
they formy
G90d
senice."

Dawn Schuler and Jodi Hayes, Queen Marcy,
Junior Attendant Nicki Beegle, Sophomore
Attendant Jennie Hill, and Freshman Attendant
Tracy Pickett.

QUEEN MARCY AND COURT - Marcy
Hill, center, was crowned Harvest Queen at the
Racine Fall Festival on Saturday. Also pictured,
left to right, are candidates Amber Cumings,

By JIM FREEMAN
.
OVP News Starr
Three people received minor
injuries in three separate motor
vehicle accidents investigated by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol over the weekend.
According to a patrol report, the
first accident occurred Friday
evening on C.R. 35 in Lebanon
Township and resulted in one
minor injury.
A pickup truck driven by Curtis

E. Price, 31, of Portland, was west·
bound on C.R. 35 and went off the
right side of the road, struck a ditch
and ovenurned coming to rest on
its wheels, the report indicated. The
driver stated he swerved to miss a
deer.
Price's pas senger, James R.
Pauley, 23, of Pordand, was treated
and released from Veterans Memorial Hospital for contusions and
abrasions.
Damage to Price's 1986 Ford

..-----Local briefs-Diabetes Association to meet

•

The South Central Chapter of the American Diabetes Association will meet Saturday, Oct 12, at Woodland Centers in Gallipolis.
All diabetics and interested people are invited-to attend.
··For more infonnation, call Frank DiClemente at 614-446.5500.

Meigs EMA scores well'o
•

M:eigs County Emergency Management Agency Di!C(!tor.Robert
Byer is pleased with how the county scored in the recent SARA
Tnle III Ohio River Exercise.
.
·
Byer reporred on Friday that the county received a score of.41
out of 46 possible points in the exercise allhough only 27 .points
were necessary to pass.
The exercise lOOk pl~ in early September, and was conducted
in several Ohio River counties.

37 YEARS.·oF DEPENDABLE SERVICE!
.,,,. .....

-A
CAUME.

Slaw Farm
ln.&lt;Ur:tna: Con~nk..,.
If&lt;- Clfllc....,. llcM&gt;mi"'ll•lll IIN"o'

open house on Sunday at Be'lleville Loeb and
Dam. Here, the tow "Cincinnati Star" is seen
from atop the da111. Spectators can be seen In the
lower, left-band corner elthe photo.
·

Pat.rol. probes 3 weekend accidents Fire Prevention Week observed here

'

No quotes neede~ - ~~~wAsHINGTON(~· - QuolaS will not have to be imposed on
U.S. meat imports, expected to
tota11,318.4 million r.unds for
1991, bei:auac thlt • 100,000
pountll below tbe lriJget level that
Would nqulnl them. .
Apicaltare Edward Madigan
IIIIIOiiaced dtis week that the United s~a~e~ will not bave 10 impose
quo111 beclnoe AuiUalia and New
Zellud, tbe twO largellsuppliers
rllwpailed J!11111. have qJeed to
limit their exporu to tho United
S..lcr the rest oldie year.

..-

PICTURESQUE VIEW - The breathtaking
view or the Obio River and the communities oJ
Reedsville, Obio and Belleville, W.Va. on either
side of the river was a popular feature of the

·Lake to be drawn down
Lake 'draw-down at Forked Run State Park will take place later
this fall, and those planning to bOat or fish in the lake should take
note.
According to Park Manager Randy Wachter, the lake will be
drawn down seven feet so that dock and beach repair and shoreline
improvements can be made.
·
Wachter expects the work 10 begin around the ftrst of November,
and it should be completed· prior to the beginning of the year. The
Continued on page 3

Ranger was listed as heavy and disabling.
No cilations were issued.
The second accident' occurred
Saturday morning ori S.R. ·t43 in
Salisbury Township and resulted in
two minor injuries.
The patrol repon indicated that
Jacinda D. MuUen, 17, of Middleport, was driving northbound when
her car slid off .the right side of the
Continued on page 3

Three injured
in auto wreck

[Editor's Note : October 6-12 now in light or new state regulahas been declared "Fire Preven- tions. •·.
Those regulations, contained in
tion Week". The awareness camthe
Ohio Administrative Code
paign is sponsored by the National Fire Protectioa Association, regarding local firefighting~· e
the U.S. Fire Administration, the full effect in Murch, 1993, al . h
Ohio Fire MarsbaU's Omce anil some regulations have be in
. local fire departments and EMS effect since they were passed in
departments. This is the first in a 1988.
Speci fically , those regulluions
series of stories focusing on fire
mandate
t~at each volunteer fire
sarety and local fire prevention
department
be · equipped with
efforts.]
expensive turn-out gear and attend
man~ated training programs.
By BRIAN J, REED
According to Meigs Emergency
Sentinel News Staff
Can Meigs County'S' smaU vol- Medical Services Director Robert
unteer fire depl\.fllllents survive the Byer, it will cost each fire dePartment $1 ,600, based on today's eco·
1990's?
That's the question being asked nomic standard s, to completely

Three persons were transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospiral 'by
Middleport and Pomeroy units of
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service for treatment of
injuries suffered in a three-car accident on North Second Street in
Middleport Saturday afternoon.
Injured were Charlotte L. Satterfield, Pomeroy, and Janet McKee,
Portland, drivers of .two of the
vehicles, and Betsy Heck, Portland,
a passenger in a vehicle driven by
McKee. None were admitted to the
hospiral. Driver of the third vehicle
was John Stewart, Pomeroy. !'fe
was cited for failure to maintain
assured clear distance.
·
According to the report of Mid·
dleport Police, ·Saucrfield and
McKee had both stopped .in trafftc
-when' the-1\Ccident occurred. Stew-·
an, driving a p~lmp truck, failed to
stop striking the rear of the McKee
vehicle pushing it into the rear of
ROUTE DISCUSSED - George Nichols,
the Satterfield car.
center, coordinator ror the 5K Run-Walk, to be
There was rear end damage to
the Satterfield car, front and rear - held Saturday in conjunction with the Big Bend
end damage to the McK~ vehicle, . Sterilwheel Festival, discusses the race route
with Meigs County residents, 1-r, Bruce and Rita
and front end damage to the StewReed and Pam and l)on Vau~ban. Tbe race will
an truck. ·

outfit each fireman in accordance
with the state's new regulations.
For departments who must sell barbecued chicken and host bingo
!lames to raise operating funds, !his
ts not good news.
.
·, Fire training costs are on the rise
as well. General training Courses a
25-hour course in handling ha'z.
ardous materials, various in-services !llld refresher CQurses are now
required for each firefighter, The
cost of lhe training course, for
example, can cost a department
several hundred dollars, as the
average instructor fee runs at over
$400, and materials for each firefighter arc SIS.
Continued on page 3

begla in Mason, W.Va., and conclude in
Pomeroy. To pre-register for the race contact
Nichols at (304). ~73-5851 or Mike Kennedy at
992-7512. Par1tc1pants may also register the
morning olthe race.

like a J!ood nci¢lbc&gt;r. Slate farm Is there.
\11

\.

,).

'I

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