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                  <text>,Page-:.-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:Record pumpkin on display at festival
. CIRCLEVttLE (AP) - Dave
Mangione and his two children
turned J1 pumpkin exhibit into a
family affair when lhey weighed in
lhe heaviest squashes in the show's
history.
Mangione , 36, the Pickaway
County agricultural exte nsion
agent, took first and second places
in the traditional event Wednesday
wilh pumpkins weighing 589.5 and

574.5 pounds. He won a dollar a
pound for first place and $50 for
second.
His son Kyle, 5, a kiadergartner
at Salt Creek Elementary School,
placed third with a 557.5-pound
squash and won $35. Kyle's sister,
Jillian, 8, a thitd. grader at Salt
Creek, was fourth with a 526pounder. Sbe won $25.
Each of the family' s squashes

more than 100 pounds heavier
than the nearest competition, Circleville Pumpkin Show trustee
Kenneth Crabtree said.
'
The Carpenter family won honors for the heftiest pwnpkins.
Frank Carpenter, 64, of Cir_cleville placed first with a 67.5pounder, second with a 63.5'pounder and tied for third with ·
grandson Gabe Carpenter

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Friday, October 18, 1991:

Two ton hippopotamus on the:loose

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College
Scores _

Livestock
yards
attempt
to recover

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Wll$

7:"1- u·nh

Sund:l\

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PORT CHARLOITE, Fla. (AP) recalled. "It was like an outer ' foi&gt;t elecb'ic fence around his several-acre enclosure short-circuite' &gt;
A lonely hippopotamus that space movie.' '
.
broke free from a wildlife park
There, glistening under a street after heavy rains, said Octagon,.
looked like an extratennestrial 10 the 'light, was 8-year-old Garth, a 2-ton spokeswomanJudy Maupin.
~·
Garth has had wanderlust since:,
woman who discovered it wander- hippopotamus that had escaped late
ing outside her home in the dark.
Monday night or early Tuesday th.e death of ~is twin brother, Percy e.;
"All of a sudden, .I looked out from 'the Octagon Wildlife ·Sanctu- in Augus~ she said. The two came-;
on the property and I saw a massive ary, about a quarter mile down the to Octagon four 'years ago from a~
Florida circus, where they wer(J:
creaiUre,My first thought was a road.
preh1stonc creature," Sue Smith
··
The hippo broke out after the 5- billed as "racing hippos."
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Ohio Department of Education
will ask the state Controlling Board
on Monday to approve government-backed loans worth $8 million for another 20 school districts.
Submission of the request
comes less than lhree weeks before
the Nov . 5 genera l election in
which 24 7 school money issues
will be at stake statewide.
Raben Moore, an assistant state
superintendent of public instruction,'said schools need additional
money,

ggc

1·LIWIII .
·MYLAR BILLOIII
R1

s 18
IICI

We Have A Large Selection Of
Adult and Children's
Costumes.
"•

RUDE SURPRISE- This home at 31
Portsmouth Road in Gallipolis sustained heavy
damage early Saturday morning when a 1985
Pontiac ,Trans Am crashed through the living
room wall. The driver of the car, Allen W. Elliot,
19, of Gallip~lis, apparently tried to make a left
turn orr State Route 141 at a high rate of speed

and lost control of his car. He was cited for
• excessive speed and operating a motor vehicle
while intoxicated. The home's occupant, Dawn
Meadows, was out of town at the iime of the
crash, and is expected to ·return home Sunday.
(T -S photo by Melinda Powe.rs)

·Theodore·f; ·R"eed, Jr~ na·med
Meigs County's 'Man of the Year'

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CHILDREN'S HALLOWEEN COSTUMES

HAND WRAPPED
FLOWERS
.,

$1
2
FOR

Selections Vary From Store To Store

REGULAR s3.99
LIDia Ill!

LADIES. RIBBED CUFF

SWEI71R

ASSORTED COLORS

SOCKS

IWIAftR SOCKS
FITS SIZE 9 ro 11 .

With Sound and Movement

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Columbus English teacher is
w~ tchin g her 8.0 students closely.
So are educators from all over the
country.
· Linda Staud~ heads a team of
teachers who devised a homemade
program to wage war against the
dropout rate at South High School.
The odds are not good. Nearly
half of all students at South ..High

•DRACULA •WITCH
•GHOST •SKULL

9TO II

s

99

SJII

EACH

2501 JACKSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT,
wv. 25550
(304) 675·2303

364 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS,
OH.45631
(614) 446·6620

.

quit. Disb'ictwide, the dropout rate
is two out of five.
Ms. Staude has overcome one
hurdle: last month, her team won a
$25,600 grant to pay for their ideas.
More than 650 teachers armed
with blueprints for drOpout preven·
tion programs asked the National
Foundation for Improvement of
Education for money. The foundation chose 17 teac hers, including

James -Van Keuren, director of
the department's Division of
School Finance, said more districts
can be expected to apply.
"We're still looking at 25 to 30
more districts, but I think we're
going to hold W)d wait until after
lhe first of the year and see what
comes out of the election," Van
Keuren said.
He expects as many as 64 of the
state's 612 districts .to seck loans
before the school year ends.

Gallia, Meigs coyotes cause some
concern, but no real problems
By JIM FREEMAN
From staff and wire reports
GALLIPOLIS - Many people
living In Gallia arid Meigs Counties
may ·Dot pay to much attention. to
coyotes (immortalized by such
images as Wily Coyote and his
counterpart the Road Runner in
Saturday morning cartoons) but
coyotes are here among us and
have been for quite some time.
Coyotes, long associated with
the American West, have made a
comeback in Ohio's 88 counties
(including Galtia and Meigs Counties), the Ohio Department of Natural Resources said.
"They've recently slarled coming back," said Juan Sandusky,
wildlife officer for Lake County
northeast of Cleveland. "We' ve
had more hit (by vehicles) this year
than ever before."
Gallia County Game Protector
Terry Hawk said Thursday afternoon that he' s personall y seen
three or four coyotes in Gallia
County.
Hawk stated a few have been
trapped or shot in Gallia County.
Wildlife officials said many
people mistake coyotes for German
shepherd-sized dogs wandering the
countryside.
Meigs County Game Protector
Keith Wood has had some reports
of coyotes, but has n' t seen any ·
save one that had been shot by
· turkey huntern ncar Chester.

"They have been in the state a Extension Agent Ed Vollbom, coylong time," said Jack·Weeks of the otes haven't posed a real problem
natural resources agency. " We forGalliaCounty farmm.
have records of them since at least
"They (coyotes) are a major
1913." According to infOrmation concern of farmers, and the confrom Hawk, coyotes seem 10 have cern peaks eaeh spring," Vollbom
first started appearing in Gallia . said. Th e concerh peaks each
County about seven or eight years spring because that's when most
ago in the Crown City area.
hvestock h3ve their young.
Steve Wilcox , wildlife rilanageNo coyote attacks on Gallia
ment assistant overseeing northeast County livestock have -been conOhio counties, said coyotes have firmed, according to Vollbom, and
been spotted in every Ohio county. no farmm in the county have been
" We have had them reponed hit reimbursed for coyote attacks.
all over the place trying to cross
Meigs County Extension Agent
roads," said to Wilcox, who said John Rice was unavailable for
there have been no reports of coy- comment. but an office' employee
ote attacks on livestock in northeast said she had never heard of any
Ohio.
coyote attacks on livestock in
Week s. who, has done coyote Meigs County.
research at the Crane Creek
Hawk and Vollborn have both
Wildlife Experiment Station near said they've heard coyotes howling
Oak Harbor. said coyotes can live at night. Vollborn singled out the
close to humans.
Northup and Centenary areas as
" We've monitored coyotes liv- spots where coyotes have been
ing as close to houses as ISO heardorspotted.
yards," he said.
It is legal to hunt coyotes slate·
Hawk doesn't feel this is reason wide. There is no closed season
eno ugh to keep your children and Sunday hunting is permitted
inside. 'They are scared to death of according 10 the Ohio Division of
people," Hawk said.
_ Wildlife's 1991 -92 Hunting and
Coyotes sometimes attack farm Trapping Regulations. Persons
animals, especially sheep, and the hunting coyotes during deer gun
state reimburses farmers for such season must possess a current huntlosses. Last year, Ohio paid out ing license and valid deer permit
more than $26,000 to farmers for with the tag attached and must be
animals lost to coyotes and wild usi ng a gun and ammunition legal
dogs.
. ..
for deer hunting.
According to Ga lli a Coun ty

Ms. Staude.
If the SoutH program is a success, it could spread to other
schools and other cities.
The idea is simple: Focus on
ninth- and lOth-graders teetering
on the borderline. Nurse them academically and prevent them .from
feeling lo st in the shufne of a
school with 1,300 students who
came from nine middle schools.

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786 NORTH SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT,
OH.45760
(614) 992a6491

BANNERS GO IJP • Bright red and white'
banners, like tbls one, are going up at schools
throughout the Meigs Local School District In
observance or Drug-Free Week, which starts

~•1.·

Here, the atude11t11
facuity at Sallsbury'EIIIIIeatary Schoollb Pomeroy prepare to
h~n1 tbelr'banaer. (Times- e~inel Photo by
Brian J. Reed)
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"The state budget this year was
a no-growth budget for most school
districts and of course (with) inila·
lion and everything else. their costs
continue to rise," Moore said.
The number of local districts
seeking state-guaranteed loans
from private lenders to keep classes
open is expected to set a record this
school year.
Last month . the Controlling
Board approved $59 million worth
of loans for 19 disb'icts, including
$46.6 million for Cincinnati public
schools.

HALLQWEEN
FIGURES

Aao,.ICI Colol'l
FITS SIZE

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State-backed loans
sought for 20 more
Ohio school districts

ADULT HALLOWEll

. AIIOIIW

13 S.CIIon 1, 94
A Mu111medlelnc.

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant October 20 1991

A,. FRtrrB
\......_ \ •.,·

. Sunny. High in 50S.

Weather •••~ .......... " ...........A-3

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Along the river ..............81·7
BusinessJFarm............. D-1-8
Classified .......................D3-7
Deaths................................ A3
Editor at . ............................A2
Sports ............................. C1·8

Gallia County's first families .
are honored, recently . Page B-6

Vol. 26, No. 37
Copyrighted 1991

•PEPSI•DIET PEPSI
•CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI
•DIET CAFFEINE FREE
PEPSI

Alabama 24 Tennesee 19
Miami (0) 34 OU 0

Inside

Levisay Grocery built in early part
of 20th century .· James Sands A•4

~

2LITER

NC State 15 Marshall 14
Michigan .2!11ndiana 16

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OSU 34 Northwestern 3
WV A31 Boston College 24

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THE HALLOWEEN SPIRIT - Motorists
stopped at the busy intersection of U.S. 35 and
S.R. 160 in the Spring Valley area of Gallla
County bave been greeted recently with tbe Jeer.
ing faces of giant Jaek-o-lanterns haallne over
the intersection. W1th Halloween just aroond the

_,

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corner workers installing 1\tW
signals at
the iniersectlon apparently got into tbe spirit
and decided the decorate tbe ll*hts with the •
large pumpkin-raced bags commonly ,used for
leaf disposal. (Times-Sentinel photo by Jim
Freeman)
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'Commentai:y and perspective

October 20, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant,

'

t,~MULTIMEDIA,INC.
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446·2342

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher.Controller

A MEMBER of The Associa1ed Press, Inland Daily Press
Assoctat.JOn and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoctation

'

LETTERS OF OP!NlON are welcome. They should be less !han
300 ,words long All letters are subject to editmg and must be signed with
name , address and telephone number. No unsagncd letters wall be
pubhshcd. Lclters shou ld be m good tas te, add rcss1ng ISSues , not
p~rsonalit1es.
"

National City earnings suffer

I

CLEVELAND (AP) - Nallonal C1ty Cor]J., by go mg public last
Spring with a bid for Amenb'Ust Corp., put 1ts cross-town nval bank hold•ng company into play.
· But when the dust settled last month, Amentrust had selected another
swtor, Soc1ety Corp., also based 1n Cleveland. Earnmgs reports for the
tfnrd quarter of this year show Ameritrust and Society gaining ground,
wh1ic Nauonal City slipped behind.
" ! think there i ~ a slight connection, 10 that Soctcty has had a lot of
ca rni ngs momentum thi s year and their profitability has been QUite
unprcssivc," srud banking analys t Fred Cumm10gs, of Cleveland-based
McDonald &amp; Co. Secunties Inc.
'' Amcntrust's board did take that into considcratton , gtven the fact that
Soctety's opcralmg results are relallvely stronger than Nabonai City's,"
he sa1d
·. NatiOnal City, w1th about $24 btlhon 10 assets and offices m OhiO,
Kentucky and Indiana, said tts earmngs for the thlfd quarter of this year
shppcd 8 percent from the same period a year earlier Third-quarter 1991
net mcomc totaled $60.2 million, or 92 cents per share, compared with
$65. 1 mlihon, or $1.08 per share, in the third quarter of last year.
Amentrust, w1th $1 1 billion in assets and offices in Ohio, Michigan
and lndmna, reported its third-quaner earnings were up 9 percent, from
514 mill1on. or 33 cents per share, to $15.2 million, or 36 cents per share.
Society, w1th about $15 billion in assets and offices in Ohio, M1chigan,
Florida and Indiana, reported third-quarter netmcome of $44.5 million, or
S1.33 a share, up II percent from $40 million, or $1.21 a share, last year.
All three banks have sizable non-perform mg asset balances, mcludmg
bad loans. But there are signs of improvement.
" The good news is it looks like there was some dedmc m non-performmg assets in most of the banks mCleveland, and net mteresl marg10s
were still fairly strong," sa1d Henry C. D1ckson, semor VICC president of
Prescott, Ball &amp; Turben, a division .of Kemper SecuriUcs.
"There was slower growth m expenses -expenses are very well controlled at this point - and mar~ins remain fairly high," Dickson said.
''The balance sheets appear to be getting stronger.
· "The concern would have to be that there just 1sn't much room for
Joan growth," he said.
Cummings said National City's perfonnance didn't have anything to
do with its failure to acquire Ameriaust.
"Their decline is just a function of internal problems related to asset
quality. They're going to recover," he said. "They pro~ably will show a
pos•tive comparison in the fourth quarter, since fourth-quarter 1990 was
so weak, and we're looking for a graduai improvement next year."

Berry's World
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" OK, what are you hiding behind your skirt?"

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WASHINGTON- President
Bush has admitted that the recession is over, but the economic
recovery is not as promising as he
wants IL to be. In political terms,
that means Bush is worried that the
picture will still be murky come
election time next year.
He has already received bad
vibes from the heartland, conveyed
by Vice President Dan Quayle. At
their regular Thursday lunches,
Quayle has tactfully told the president that American business people
have soured on the Bush administration. Quayle should know. His
assignment has been to squeeze
money out or conservative donors
on the rubber-c hicken circuit
around the country. Even at these
Republican fund-raisers, the mood
is skepticaL
Bush comes off as a president so
preoccupied with foreign affairs
that he has neglected the domestic
agenda. As proud as the conservatives are that America put down
Saddam Hussem and as happy as
they are that commumsm is dead,
they would be happier 1f they could

Page-A2

meet thelf payrolls and pay their bankers themselves were refusing
bills.
to put money into the consauction
Bush is justifiably alarmed. He of more office buildings that will
blames his ch1ef economic adv1ser, remain empty, or to fill warehouses
Michael Boskin, and Budget Direc· with goods that tight-fisted contor Richard Darman who had sumers won't buy.
assured him that the economy was
The only way to jump-start the
picking up. At their instigation, economy would be to offer lower
Bush pressured the Federal Re,serve and lower interest rates and instiBoard to lower interest rates and tiite more liberal lending policies.
pump more money into the econo- But that is the very situauon that
my. That was supposed to break bank regulators want to ,avoid, and
down credit barriers and flush fresh ·for good reason. They have the
money into the stagnant economy, downfall of the deregulated savings
built didn't.
and loan industry as a fresh examTwo Cabmel members clued pie of banking run amuck.
Bush in on why not. AI a meeting
The latest round of 101eres1-rate
of presidential adVISers earlier this CUts will not have the deSIIed effect
month,.our sources say that Bush of loosening th e wallets of the
angrily blamed th,e bank regulawrs average American. Big busmesses
for being too tough and discourag- may enjoy some advantages, but
ing bank loans. But Commerce .. 10d1viduals will,_nQt. Falli!!gJDtcrest
Sec_retary Robert Mosbacher and rates will have little effect on
Housing and Urban Development finan ce charges for credit cards
Secretary Jack Kemp set him because banks are still passing on
straight.
the cost of bad loans in the form of
They srud 1t was ne1ther a short· high interest rates on plastic.
age of money, nora refusal to lend
Moreover, delinquencies on
for good proJects that was holding home mortgages· and credit cards
back Juans. Instead , they sa 1d, will continue to be friJ!htfmin1glv

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

By Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta
h1gh. And as long as unemployment remains in the 7 percent
range, consumers can't be expected
to go on a spending spree.
The bad news Bush must face,
and explain away in his campail!n.
is that the recovery w11l be weak.
He will be lucky if he can get
through the election ,without the
"double-dip"
tliat
some
economists fear- a brief recovery
followed by a second recession.
BROKEN PROMISES- Iranian President Hashemi Rafsanjani
has a confidentiai emissary. in
WashingtOn who told .us last month
that all Western hostages would be
released before Oct. I. When-the
terrorists released only British
hostage Jack Mann, Rafsanjani' s
man then prom1sed that an American hostage would be released
within a few days. That didn't happen either. Iran funded and tramed
the terrorists who hold those
hostages, but Rafsanjani doesn' t
seem to have much control over his
crf.llllon. Tbe terrorists still look to
Iran for ideological guidance, but
they are getting that guidance from
hardliners m Teheran. Rafsanjani's
representative still believes an
American will be released soon.
MINI -EDITORIAL - When
returning Western hostages speak
reluctantly about the conditions
they experienced in captivity, we
are remmded of the graphic truth
that we saw in 1989 in an underground parking garage in Beirut.
Hostages had been held there only
a few weeks before. The stench of
human excrement still 'hung 10 the
air. The garage was littered with
refuse from a thousand dreary
meals. We saw the places where
hostages had been cha10ed to the
wall. A canoon of Ronald Reagan
as a vampire decorated one wall.
The Star of David was branded on
his forehead, and the flags of
America's allies sprouted from his
scalp . That is the way these
hostages have lived for years.
When their stories can be told honestly without endangermg anyone
left behind, the world will weep for
and with them.

DAVID CRISENBERY

Davi~ M. Crisenbery
LEJEUNE, N.C. • L.Cpl. David

M. Crisenbery, 19, of the Second
Marine Division Camp, Lejeune,
N.C., died Friday, Oct. 18, 1991,
from injuries sustained in an automobile accident in Allen County.
He was born Jan . 10, 1972 in
Van Wert, the son of Donald
Crisenbery of Van Wert an~ Patty
L. Germann Williams of Van Wen.
He wa§ a 1989 graduate of Gallia Academy High School and an
All-State selection in football as a
defensive end and employee of
Cnsenbery Plumbmg and Elecrric
of Elida.
Other survivors mclude h1s stepmother, Dora Crisenbery of Van
Wcrt; three brothers, Greg Crisenbery of Kingston, Okla .. Robert
and Rodney Stegaman, both of Van
Wert; two sisters, Yvonne Stump
of Venedocia and Cathy Smith of
Elida; paternal grandmother, Marjorie Crisenbery of Ehda; maternal
~~parents, Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy
G~ann of Van Wert; ana maternal great-grandfather, Russell P.
Germann of Van Wert.
Funeral services will be conducted I :30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Cowan and Son Funeral Home,
Van Wert. Friends may call at the
funeral home on Monday from 4-9
p.m. and unul time of services on
Tuesday.
Military graveside serv1ces will
be held Tuesday at the Evangelical
Protestant Ccmeterv.

William F. Smith, Sr.
MIDDLEPORT - William Fred
Sm11h, Sr., 91, of Middleport, died
early Saturoay morning, October
19, 1991, following an extended
illness.
He was born in Montgomery ,
W.Va. on June 14, 1900, the son of
the late Andrew Jackson and
Rhoda McCormick Smith. He was
a retired coal miner.
He is survived by hi s wife,
Beatrice Ellen Smith, Middleport;
two sons, William Fred (Nancy)
Smith, Jr., Newark, and Alfred Ray
(Sue) Smith, Cheshire; five daughters, Mrs. Ted tMary Ellen) Spires,
of Defiance, Mrs. Robert (Virginia)
Duckworth, Mrs. Fred (Pauline)
Hoffman, Shirley Ann Smith, and
Bessie Mae Baughman, all of Middleport;·23 grandchildren; 25 greatgmndchildren and one great-great
grandchild.
Bes1des his parents, he was preceded in death by a son, Carter
Smith; two infants; seven brothers;
13 sisters: tWo granddaughters; and
one great-grandchild.
Services will be held on ""onday at I p.m. at F1sher Funeral
Home in Middleport with Rev .
Cecil Wise officiating. Burial will
be in R1verv1ew Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
on Sunday.

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Cincinnati Reds, l99l _____F_re_dw._. c_ro_w
One of the major disasters this
year in the baseball world was the
collapse of our Reds.
In some respects the writer is
not surpnsed at the outcome. To
begin with I watched them perform
in spring training. The veterans
appeared to have had the pennant
won before the team took the field.
In short this team gave every indication that the opposition would
roll over and die. For whatever reason the learn did not have the hungry look.
The writer witnessed many
games on TV and the team continued to perform as if in a nonchalant
manner. The extra effort wh1ch is
required of every ball player and
team was absent. With few exceptions, there was no extra hustle
noticeable.
••
. Just last week the Reds
announced the firing of its pitching
coach, Stan Williams. It is assumed
·that the frulure of the Reds' pitchmg staff was blamed on him.
Someone, either the pitching
coach or the mlfnager would have
to shoulder-the blame for the dismal performance of the entire staff
with the exception of Rijo and Dibble. At the beginning of the year it
appeared that the pitching staff was
as good as the year before, especially with Charlton, Dibble and
Myers in relief.
The starters were Brownmg,
Rijo, Armstrong, Charlton and

Champ10nsh1p and the World
Series. However, in 1991 Lou lost
his conuol over his players. If Lou
is retained as manager he certainly
would lose Charlton, Myers and
Duncan, all of whom were disgruntled with him dll!ing 1991. Two of
these players demanded to be trnded '9nd the third, Charlton,
appeared to be mad at everyone. I
doubt seriously whether these three
players would ever want to play
ball for Lou agam. So, if ·he is
retained as manager these three
players would be traded. All three
of them are excellent players in my
opinion. So, Rupe, would you
rather lose Lou or these three players? Also, Lou has been at odds
with General Manager, Quinn.
Their differences were published
frequently by the Press.
Lou lost his cool. It is difficult
to see how these two can live harmoniously in the future. Lou, of
course, deserves another year as
manager because of his success in
I 990. However, it would not cause
this writer any gnef if he suddenly
decided to manage the Mets. This •
would he better for Lou and possibly the New York Mets. Eric Davis
should be traded, but not for just
any ball player.
I believe that Quinn will not
give him away since his potential is
enormous. However, you cannot
permit a player of his type to play :
when he wants to play. Therein Iies :
the most serious dilem rna the Reds ·
have for 1992.
My own evaluatiOn of the team
•s as follows: The infield" as good
as any m the MaJOr Leagues. The
to inch pamstakingly forward . H1s a person's conduct today by the outfield has an outstanding player ·
motives were suspect, but he Sllli ll)lstakes he or she made 10 years in O'Neill The other outfielders
arc average. The c at~hi n g ts averdid SOJnething that Ronald Reagan ago.
It is that benignity that penn it- age, but adequate . The pit~ht ng
would never have done in the most
extravagant outreaches of his seml- ted a former Ku Klux Klan mem- staff is above average wuh two or
ity - appoint a black man to the ber, Hugo Black, to serve with dis- three of the p1tchers bcmg out- :
tinction on the Supreme Court and standin g. This would include
Supreme Court.
another
former Ku Klux Klan orga- Myers. Remember th 1s same pttchA final cavea1, if one is possible,
for attackers of Clarence Thomas: nizer, Sen. Robert M. Byrd, to ing staff was good enough to win
"He that is without sin among you ,- operate today as one of the Sen- the pennant in 1990.
Finally, Rupe, there is no
let him cast a.first stone." America ate's most influential members.
has a benign history of forgiveness,
History will be the final judge of known formula in winning th e
championship. Baseball' is a game
one that does n01 necessarily judge Clarence Thomas and Anita Hill.
of inches, especially where a line
drive can be either a hit or a double
• play. Or where a ball hit out of the
' ball park is e11her fair or foul.
There is no question tha! a winner
hl\5 to have Lady Luck on itS side
. By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Sunday, Oct 20, the 293rd day of 1991. There are 72 1days beside skill. In 1990 she was w•th
the Reds and in 1991 'she dec1ded
left in the year.
to move elsewhere.
Today's Highlight in History:
Rupe, so there you ha ve it! 1
On Oct. 20, 1944, during World War II, Gen. Douglas MacAI:thur
stepped ashore at Leyte in the Pllilippines, 2 lfl years after he'd said, " I doubt whether anything that I have
shall return." Said MacArthur: "I have returned.'
,., "" said will mean much Lo Marge
On this dale:
, _,.~·
Schott butth1s is my opinion, right
In 1740, Maria Theresa became ruler of Austria, Hungary and or wrong. I only hope that in 1992
that the opposition will not toss too
Bohem13 upon the death of her father, Holy Rpmant;mperor Charles VI.
many
curve balls at our beloved
In 1803,the U.S. Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase.
In 1903, a joint r~{llission ruled in favor of the United Stales in a dis- Reds.
Carryon
pute concerning 1jr.t 7 ' · · "' hetween the District of Alaska and Canada.

Hammond. In one of th e flfst
games of the season, with the Reds
leading by one run, Pmiella had
Myers pitching in relief. He pitched
a scoreless eighth inning. Without
any good reason Piniella removed
Myers and inserted Dibble in the
lmeup . Dibble pitched the ninth
mning and got the save. What this
meant was that Myers pride and
ego were given a good jolt. In 1989
Myers was the top relief pitcher.
Not so in 1991. Pmiella conunued
to use Dibble in games where
Myers had performed OK. The
manager appeared to have lost his
confidence in Myers.
During the year Charlton was
given the chance to start and developed a sore arm. Later he 'returned
as the set-up reliever. Myers was
taken from reli ef and made a
starter. Later near the end of the
year he was returned to his relief
role. What a merry-go-round!
One other-incident comes to my
mmd. Pitcher Gross was doing fairly well in relief when Piniella
announced that he was to start on a
Sunday and later on the following
Friday. He was in relief two days
before he was to start and got
bombed. The same evening he was
sent to Nashville. This was on the
Saturday before he was to start the
Sunday game. He later returned
and was pitching fairly well at the
end of the season .
At one time Piniella went 10 the

press and demanded that Quinn
obtain another starter for h1m.
When no pitcher was available the
controversy be_tween Pin1ella and
Quinn began to surfac e in the
press.
&lt;he management has literally
failed to kee p a strong hand over its
players . At least four players
demanded to be traded. Eric Davis
was held out because of mjuries,
which today no doctor- has diagnosed. When he was in the line-up
he had diffi culty in hitting the
heater on the mside of the plate,
espec1ally the h1gh heater. Reds
fans may have seen the last or their
star, Eric Dav1s. Rumors have it
that he may be heading for San
D1ego.
Finally, the Reds showing had
to be the collapse of the pitching
staff. Had someone handled the
pitchers properly, the Reds would
have been #I again. Was 1t
Wilhams' fau lt or was he the
scapegoat?
Just recently the New York
Mets in the National League flfed
its manager. There was a notice in
one of the newspapers that the New
York Team was considering Lou
Piniella as its manager. Rupe,
would the Reds be better off to
give Lou h1s release to manage the
Mets? Again you cannot di scount
his success in 1990.
A man has to be a good manager to wm th e National League

George Cremeans
TUPPERS PLAINS - George F.
Cremeans, 80, a resident of 42814
Calaway Ridge Road, Coolville,
died Friday afternoon at the Area-

(rhe
fight
'that
ShOUld
DOt
have
been
__
--=-By_Ch_uc_kS_ton_e
.
:: A skunk once challenged a lion
Jo a fight. The lion decli~ed the
.offer. "You're afraid," sneered the
skunk.
.
' · "Not at all," serenely replied
ihe lion. ''The problem is, you cannot wi n, but everybody would
Jtnow that I have b.een in a fight
with a skunk."
:: In Washington, D.C .. there's a
!iarallel situation in the Clarence
lfhomas-Anita HiU tragedy. But the
adversanal supponers of each per~n · will never agree on respective
desi~nations in the animal kingllom s unresolved challenge.
•: ·When the dust finally settles,
~either of the two protagonists will
walk away clean. The referee in
lhis fight that never should have
been the U.S . Senate, will be a
long 'time convincing the public
(bat it, too, does not deserve some
irf overflow from this conflict's
Stench.
•· From day one, lhe Clarence
l'homas nomination was mired in
~bntroversy. Blacks deeply resentIll President Bush's mampulau ve
~ttmalism in pic.king a medt~re
~lack jurist comm1tted to reversing

a decade of civ1l ri~hts gains. Many
women felt justifiably threatened
by the looming presence on the
Supreme Court of another conservative mind demonstrably hostile
to abortion rights. Conservatives
ordinarily opposed to affirmative
actio n were forced to defend an
embarrassmg paradigm of affmnative acllon. Cogitative persons of
good will on both sides were discomfoned. .
I supported the credibility of
Hill's accusations as strongly as I
opposed Thomas' nom1nation .
Sllll, there was an outside poss1bill·
ty that Thomas was unqualifiedly
truthful in his denial of Hill's
charges. But what I did have trouble resolving were those damnable
telephone calls from Hill to
Thomas. The messages she left
seemed a liUie too personal, a little
too chit-chatty. Either they were, as
she insisted, "garbage," i.e .. merely returning phone calls that
Thomas initiated, or she is a cool,
calculating personality.
All of us have made decisions
that compromise our integrity. As
former Speaker of the House Sam

Rayburn,-used to advise, "To gel
along, go along . To go along, gel
along." Hill has a history of going
along and getting along. It is a
price that the powerless have
always had to pay.
But the Clarence Thomas nomination to the Supreme Court did
adveruse a histori ca l tron y th at
most Americans have casually d1S·
regarded. Not since the mfamous
Dred Scou case of I 857 has a black
Amencan' s future precipitated
such a wrenchmg national divisiveness. Many black Americans arc
not sure whether they should
chuckle or cry.
.
In the Thomas-Hill fight, black
pride was .being trampled. Yet,
there was a pervers1ty to the contentious spectacle before the Uni1ed
States Senate- a black female
legal scholar with impeccable credentials confronting a black male
conservative with equally impeccable credentials. It symbolizes the
nation's crossing of a racial Rubicon.
Despite George Bush's smooth·
as-silk determination to abort civilrightS progress, America conunues

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Today in history

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No aubiiCTiptJons by mall permitted 10
areu where motor camcr acrvu:c ia
available.
The Sunday Timca-Scnbncl w1l1 no t be
re~ponaJble for advance payment&amp; mada
tn earriO'I'I.
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dia l'fursing Home, Coolville.
He was born in Barboursville,
W. Va .. son of the late Alfred and
Mertie Childress Cremeans.
Mr. Cremeans was a fanner and
a veteran of the U.S. Anny during
World War II He was a member of
the Vanderhoof Church.
Mr. Cremeans is survived by his
wife Audrey Buchanan, two sons,
Earl, Coolville and Joseph,
Reedsville; 'two daughters, Dorothy
(Sue) Loscar and Violet Lambert,
both of Coolville; five brothers,
·Roy and Leonard, both of
Coolville; Cecil of Vinton; James
of Little Hocking and Ben of
Shade; two sisters, Edith Ward,
Litde Hocking and Annie Calaway,
Reedsville; ~ix grandchildre, three
greatgrandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his first wife,
Lodie McNutt Cremeans, one son
Thomas, two brothers, Irvin _and
Ernest, two sisters, Hazel shutts
and Elsie Marshall.
Funeral services will be held 11
a.m. Monday at the White Funeral
Home, Coolville, with Rev. Edsel
Hart and Bill Murphy officiating.
Burial will be in the Meigs County
Memory Gardens where Military
Graveside Services will be condueled.
Friends may-call at the funeral
home on Sundaf from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.

Alma White

1

·-'

Charles and Johnny, al"llattswonh,
Pleasant and Jack of .,
OH and nine ~hildren.
Service will be held Tuesday,
October 22, at 11 a.m. at the Wil. eoxen Funeral .Home with Rev.
LarrY Bums and Rev. Wilmer
(Bud) Richmond. Burial wiU be in
"me Suncrest Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Monday from 7-9 p.m.

Juanita Gleason
POINT PLEASANT _ Juanita

sue Glcason, 32 • 0f Pomt
·
Pleasant,
died Thursday, October 17,.1991, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was a member of the Berean
B~tist Church and a 1977 graduate
of oint Pleasant High School.
Born OctQber 28, 1958 in West
Columbia, she was a daughter of
the late Charles J. GleasOn and
Sarah A. (Johnson) Gleason of
Point Pleasant
In adaition to her mother, she is
survived by eight brothers,
Clarence M. Gleason, Charles J.
Gleason, Homer E. Gleason,
Howard D. Gleason, and Glenn J.
Gleason, all of Point Pleasant,
Robert E. Gleason of West Columbia, John F. Gleason of Columbus
and Lester Gleason of Gallipolis.
Service will be II a.m. Monday,
October 21, at the Crow-Russell
Funeral Home with Pastor Wilmer
"Bud" Richmond officiating. Burial
w11l follow in Vansickle Cemetery
on Rt 1 Point Pleasant.
Visiting hours will be held Sunday, October 20, from 6-9 p.m. at
the funeral home.

GALLIPOLIS - Alma White,
82, of Route 3, Gallipolis, died Sat·
urday, Oct. 19, 1991, at the home
of her daughter, Mrs. Warren Andrea Smith
(Dora) Sal1sbury of Gallipolis.
POINT PLEASANT - Andrea L.
She was born Oct. 22, 1908 in Smith, 19, of Point Pleasant, died
Meigs County, daughter of the late Thursday, October 17, 1991, at
John and Mabel Tucker Braley.
Ruby Memorial Hospital in MorShe was a member of the French gantown, following a long iUness.
City Baptist Church and the Gallia
Born March 17, 1972 in Point
County Senior Citizens.
Pleasant, she was a daughter of
Survivors include three daugh- Bernard L. and Beverly (Layne)
ters, Mrs. Warren (Dora) Salisbnry Smith.
and Mrs. Herman (Sara) Nelson,
A freshman at West Virginia
both of Gallipolis, and Mrs. Dale University, Andrea was a pre(Mary Haskins of Columbus; two physical therapy major. She was
brothers, Frank Braley of Hamilton also a two-year member of the
and Allen Braley of Summersville; wvu Mountaineer Marching
one sister, Mrs. Wilbur (Mildred) Band. Andrea was a membet of
Clapper of Orient; seven grandchil- Trinity United Methodist Church of
dren; 13 great-grandchildren; and Point Pleasant and was a sbldent
six step-grandch1ldren.
member of Drummond Chapel
She was preceded m death by Umted Methodist Church, Morganher first husband, George McFar- town. She was a 1990 graduate of
land in July 1938; second husband, Point Pleasant High School.
Arthur White; o~e son, Harvey
Surviving in addition to her
Mc~arland; two mfant sons; and parentS are a brother, Andrew
one mfant daugh~er. .
Smith
of
Point
Pleasant;
Funeral serv1ces will be con- · grandparents Harrisoo Layne of
ducted 2 p.m. Monday at the Melbourne, f-L and Lee and Jerry
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vm- Smith of Marlinton, WV; Matt
ton, w1th Rev. John Wood ofBflc1at- Brunner of Pittsburgh, PA, a special
mg . Bunal .w1ll be 10 the rush friend; two uncles; two aunts and
Cemetery, Vmton.
three cousins
Friends may call at the funeral
Service will be held Sunday, Ochome on Sunday from 6-9 p.m.
Iober 20, at 2 p.m. at the Trinity
United Methodist Church with Rev.
Randy M. Barcus
Steven Dorsey officiating. The
body will be taken to the church
BIDWELL - Randy Morris Bar- one hour prior to service. Burial
cus, 35, of Bidwell, died Thursday, will be Monday, October 21, at II
Oct. 17, 1991 at Umversity Hospi- a.m. at Tyler Mountam Memory
tal, Columbus.
Gardens, Cross Lanes, WV.
He was born Jan. 27; 1956 m
Calling hours will be held on
Gallipolis. He was a carpenter and
today
(Saturday) from 6-9 p.m. at
consb'Uction worker and a member
the
Wilcoxen
Funeral Homw
of Local Union 650, Pomeroy.
A memorial service will be held
He is survived by his mother,
at
Drummond Chapel United
Carol Jean Murray and stepfather,
Methodist
Church in Morgantown
Clms C. Murray of Florida.
Other survivors include his on Sunday, October 27, at 3 p.m.
In lieu of ftowers the family rewife, cathy O'Dell Barcus, who he
quests
donations be made to the
married Aug. 25, 1977 in Gallipolis; and one brother , Andrew Virginia Chapter of the Leukemia
Michael of Bidwell; four step- Society of America, Hampton, VA
brothers; three step-s1sters; and a or the Trinity United Methodist
Church Building Fund.
st~p-grandfather, Eura Sampson.
Funeral serv1ces w1li be conducted 3 p.m. Monday at the James 0. Stover
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home ,
CHESAPEAKE - James 0 .
Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, with Stover, 69, of Chesapeake, died
the Rev . Alfred Holley officiating. Thursday, Oct. 17, 1991 at St.
Burial will be in the OhiO Valley Mary· s Hospital .
Memory Garden.
He was born Nov. 18, 1921 in
Friends may call th e funeral Gallip,olis, the son of Oliver E.
home on Sunday from 6-9 p.m.
Stover of Gallipolis, and the late
Edith
Lewis Stover.
Boyd Pearson
He was a retired employee of
POINT PLEASANT - Boyd A. Allied Chemical Corp., and ArisPearson, 64, of Point Pleasant, died tech Chem1cal, a World Wat II
Friday, October 18, 1991, ·at Navy veteran, a member of the
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal following Trinity Church of God, Huntington,
a member of the Proctorville
a long illness.
Born December 3, 1926 in Point Masonic Lodge 550 F&amp;AM. York
Pleasant, he was the son of the late Rite Lodge, and a 32 Degree
Wesley Pearson and Frances Mason.
Survivors include hi:. wife,
(Whitt) Pearson.
Tressa Adams Stover; one daughSurviving beSides his mother is
his wife, Helen (R&lt;~Rdolph) ter, Linda Stover of Chesapeake;
one son, Rick Stover of HuntingPearson; a daughter, Pauline Blazer ton, W.Va.; two grandchildren; two
of Gallipolis; five sons, Wesley and brothers, Eugene Stover of Odessa,
Scott of Point Pleasant, Dwayne of
Texas, and Lewis Stover of Mt.
Indiana, David of Eden, OH and Morns, Mi.; one sisters, Mrs. Earl
WiUiam of Bryan, OH; three sis- (Mary Lou) Houck of Chesapeake;
ters, Mae Luckeydoo of Point
and one step-sister, Betty Skipper
Pleasant, Velma S1ders of Wooster, of Louisville, Ky.
OH, and Gene1view Williams of
Funeral services w1ll be conGaUipolis; four brothers, leo, ducted 2 p.m. today at the Schnei-

OLD FAMILY PHOTOS COPIED
SPECIAL' THIS
WEEK!

By The Associated Press
Cool bm sunny skies will be the
rule on today. Temperatures will be
in the 50s !tatew1de and could
approach •the 60 !Iegree mark in the
Cincinnati area. ,
A pleasant warmup under fair
skies will occur during the first half
of the week. The mercury may
reach into the 70s on Wednesday.
Sunrise will be at 7:46; sunset at
6:47.
Around the nation
A cold front pushed temperatures below freezing across the
north central Plains early Saturday
and snapped an unseasonable warm _
spell in the Northeast
A band of clouds and showers
stretched from Indiana through
Maine early in the day, and parts of
the South and the Pacific coastline
were fogged in.
Temperatures in the Northeast
were about I 5 degrees lower than
Friday. Snow flumes were called
for over the Great Lakes region and
a freeze was anticipated in much of
the Midwest.
Forecasters said temperatures
would be in the 40s and 50s in the
Northeast and northern Plains; the
60s in the Midwest and MidAtlantic states; the 70s in the much
of the South and West; the 80s and
90s in Florida, Texas and central
California; and more than 100 in
the Southwestern deserts.
Unseasonably warm weather in
the south-central United States
broke several temperatures Friday.
A reading of 85 degree s in
Albuquerque, N.M., broke the 1978
record by 2 degrees. It was thelf
third record high in a row.
The 92 reading in El Paso,
Texas, topped by 3 degrees the
1988 record. It was their warmest
reading for so late in the season.
Other records were tied or broken in Fort Smith, Ark., where 11

Ohioan~

der Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Larry Alexander and the Rev. Gary
Patton officiating. Bunal will be m
Rome Cemetery.
The family requests contnbu·
lions be made to the Tnnity Church
of God Blood Donor Program.
Pallbearers will be David
Houck, Gary Cook, Garland Robm·
son, Carl Browning, Claude Siple.
Roy Michaels, and men of th e
Trmity Church of God.

Fredie K. Baker
.GAHANNA - Fredie Kay
Baker, 70, died Friday, Oct. 18,
1991 at his residence.
He was a retired serviceman for
Columbia Gas, a charter member of
the Stonybrook United Methodist
Church, a I 940 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, and a
World War II Anny veteran.
He was born Feb. 10, 1921 in
Eno, son of the late Wilbur and
Hattie Rose Baker.
He is survived by his w1fe,
Shirley A. Baker, who he married
March 3, 1943; three daught ers,
Mrs. Jerry (Bonnie) Dempsey, Mrs.
Tom (Kathy) Nerny , and Mrs.
Kevin (Karen Kay) Boyd; one son,
Bruce Baker; I I grandchildren; and
one great-grandson.
Funeral serv1 ces will be conducted I p.m. Monday at the
Stonybrook Umted Methodist
Church, 485 Clark State Rd.,
Gahanna, with Pastors Todd Frail,
Ben Weisbrod and Gary Boucher
o[ficiaung. Burial w1!l be in Mifflin
Township Cemetery, Gahanna.
Friend.s ma y call at the
Schoediner-Margarum Chapel, 335
W. Johnstown Rd ., Gahanna, today
from 7-9 p.m. Contributions may
be made to the Hospice or Columbus, 181 . Washington Blvd.,
Columbus, 43215, or the Stonybrook United Methodist Church m
his memory .

last hit 89 degre_es in 1932, and in edged the 1953 record by I dep.
Midland, Texas, which last regisPalm Springs, Calif., was tift
tered 90 degrees in 1936. The 85 hot spot in the nation with a high
degree reading in Springfield, Mo., II 0 degrees.
;,

or
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OHIO Weather
Sunday, Oct. 20

.

•14

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95 .......
19.

Tawnc;y Studio
424 Second
Gallipolis, OH

'

) 't ;
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Accu-Weather~ forecast for daytime condttions and high temperatures ;
MICH

•

IToledo I 49' I

i)
IMansfteld I 49' I•
INO

Youngstown

il
•j Columbus!

' ' ' ' '~'~
~-:.,_-:_
·-4ln··~
••,',''

Showers T-storms Ram

Flumes

49'

I

'I : 1.

Snow

Ice

Svnny

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy
I

Vta AssoCiated PreS$ GraphicsNet

Q1991 Accu WeathCf, Inc

------Weather----South-Central Obio
Warmer through the period. High~
. Sunday, mostly svnny. High 55 mid 50s to lower 60s Monday, in
10 60.
.
the 60s Tuesday and in the UPJ!.CI'
Extended forecsl
60s to mid 70s Wednesday. Lows
Monday lhrou8h Wednesday
m the 30s Monday, in the upper
Falf Monaayaild Tuesday. A 30s to mid 40s Tuesday and mit!
chance of showers Wednesday. 40s to lower 50s Wednesday.

Tribune reporter places:~
first in ONWA contest ·.
COLUMBUS (AP) - The Oh10
Newspaper Women 's Association
on Saturday announced the winners
m its 1991 contest honoring excellence in newspaper wriUng, editing
and layout.
Melinda Powers was among the
winners for daily n ~spapers of
below 25,000 circulation and all
week)ies.
Powers, a reporter for the Ohio
Valley Publishmg Company Gallipolis Daily Tribune, took first
place in the News division with her
two entries. She competed agamst
19 other entries.
Other winners were Sharon
Gaich, second, The Press Newspapers, Millbury; and Barbara Vruth
Kline, third, Bellevue Gazette.
Commenting on Powers' entry,
contest JUdge Lisa Katz was quoted
as saying, "You wm because of
s1mphci1y. You wrote stnught news
stories and didn't make them
flashy. Stones spoke for th emselves; you merely covered the
tssucs and let readers draw their
own conclusions."
More than 270 entnes m 20 categories were received from Ohio

MELINDA POWERS
journalists. The Judges came from
newspapers across the United
States. Awards will be presented at
the organization's annual convention at the Springfield Inn in
Springf1eid Oct 26.
The Oh10 Newspaper Women's
Association, an organization of
more than 250 men' and women
print journalists m Ohio, has promoted JOUrnalistic excellence in
Ohio since 1902 through itS annual
contest and college scholarships. -

You don't have to settle.for
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investments in U.S. Government securities 10 portfolios of government
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,.•

Account Executives
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The Ohio Company
444 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
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i-Pleaseserilnie more iniorma1i0n oii cB a~erna'iiVe-s~'
I
I

:Name
•

2-Sx7

.

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Sunday Times-sentlnel-Pege-A3

Sunny weather in store for

October 20, 1991

Economic turnaround· will be weak at best
A Division of

wv

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:~s~~te~·~--------------~zt~p~·--------: Phone (HM):
(WK):

I

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

Levisay Grocery

.

.......,._
I
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-t~ ..,....,.J:i:

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WHEAT-KRISPIES&gt;UNVEILED HERE· At the turn ofihe
century this buading was constructed and in 1935, it "':as a g_rocery
store, and Wheat Krispies were unveiled to the public. Thts Kel·
logg's cereal soon became Rice Krispies.

Woman found unconscious on street
GALLIPOLIS - A woman remained in guarded condition in
Holzer Medical Center Saturday morning after she was found lying
unconscious near a roadway.
Peggy Sue Anderson, 18, address unreported, was found around
1:40 a.m. Saturday lying near the street at the intersection of Pine
Street and Third Avenue, according to a Gallipolis Police report.
Anderson was transported to Holzer Medical Center by the Gallin County Emergency Medical Service and was admitted to the
hospital's intensive car unit for treatment.

Deputy's cruiser hits deer
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallia County Sheriff's Department cruiser
sustained minor damage early Saturday morning after a deer ran
into the path of tbe car on State Route 141.
Deputy David L. Martin, 36, of Crown City, was eastbound on
S.R. 141 near the -intersection of Safford School Road ·when the
deer ran into his path from the left side of the roadway.
Martin was not injured. The car sustained damage to its grille
and hood .

: Car reported stolen
GALLIPOLIS - The Gal~a County Sheriff's Department is
currenUy investigating a report of a car that was allegedly stolen
Friday night.
Sheryl Walters, of Turkey Run Road, Cheshire, reported that her
1987 Nissan Sentra was stolen from her driveway sometime during
the night.
Tbe car is red with a wide gray snipe along the bottom.

, 3 incarcerated Friday
GALLIPOLIS- Two men and one woman were incarcerated in
the Gallia County Jail Saturday. They arc:
Her.bert F. Rose, 20, Racine, charged with re.;kless operation,
driving under the influence, driving left of center, no operator's
license and expire tags;
Richard L. Griffith, 29, Gallipolis. arrested on a bench warrant
for failure to pay fmes;
Becky S. Trout, 29, of Pomeroy, held for the Meigs County
Sherifr s Department on a trafficking in. drugs charge.

Golf cart stolen
GALLIPOLIS ·- A golf cart, yalued at $500, was reported
stolen from Chffstde Golf Course Fnday afternoon.
Steve Howard, an employee at the golf course, reported the theft
to the Gallipolis Police Department. The incident is under investigation.

Jackson judge apologizes
JACKSON- The Jackson County common pleas court judge
.made a publfc apology Friday for remarks he made at the conclusion of a criminal case, the Jackson Journal-Herald reported.
Judge William C. Martin III apologized for comments he made
following the drug trafficking trial of Keith Hager Pen ix and
removed himself fmm any further proceedings against Penix.
According to the article, the jury in the trial was unable to reach
a verdict and Martin declared a mistrial in the ·case. He then
denounced the law enforcement agencies and prosecutors involved
in the case.
"If those people had spent as much time gathering evidence and
preparing a proper case as this jury has wasted in hearing it, we
might have had a good verdict," the judge said.
In his apology, Martin apologized to Assistant ProsecutOr Tim
Forshey and called him "a good and decent man."

BY JAMES SANDS
GALLIPOLIS - In 1935, Ross
Kerr purchased the grocery stock of
I. T. Levi say whohadbeenlocatedin
the store across the tracks from the
C&amp;O passenger .
depot in Gallipolis
for some time.
Mr. Levisay
retired from the
business that year
after manyyearsof
operating grocery
stores. Ross Kerr _ . . .
also had considerable experience in
the business as he had helped operate
his father's store at Kerr Station before becoming a traveling salesman
for rust a Colwnbus wholesale grocery business and later a Jackson
packing company.
The Levi say Grocery was built in
the early part of the 20th century and
was once a saloon and restaurant, in
an era when there was passenger traffic to Gallipolis by rail. Duringprohibition the saloon was "converted" 10
a grocery and remained as such for a
while.
In the 1960s, the Gallipolis Wall
Paper and Paint Company. run by
Marvin Deckard, used the building.
When the accompanying picture was
taken about 10 years ago, the Sandlin
Pool Hall was here.
The big grocery news in 1935 was
the unveiling by Kellogg's of a revolutionary new cereaL The Kellogg
Company ofBattleCreek, Mich., had
blended just enough rice into wheat
to make a cereal that retained its
crispness even when milk or cream
was poured over it. The name chosen
was "Wheat Krispies", a name that
soon gave way to Rice Krispies.
It was 50 years ago this fall that he
famous advertising threesome of this
rice cereal, namely Snap, Crackle
and Pop were put on the payroll.
In 1935, practically every grocery
in Gallipolis sold Wheat Krispies.
And believe it or not there were 30
groceries in Gallipolis at that time.
A shopper could also buy Wheat
Krispics at 10 of the town' s restaurants: Hotel Lafayette Grill, Hotel
Libby Dining Room, Clark's Restau-

~arly

in

October 20, 1991 .

part of 20th century

At the grocery store in 1935 veal brought in by the Legion in 1935. It
. rant, Vanden's Restauran~ Gallipolis Cafe, Bon-Ton Restauran~ Busy steaks were 2¢, veal chops, 25¢ and seemsthatsomegamblinga~dthiev­
BeeRestaurant,Shartz'sSodaGrill, veal roasiS went for 17~ . Bologna __ ing had been done by some o~.the
Joe's Restaurant, and Swain's Res- was only 15¢ a pound.
·
carnival employees. Severo! red
taurant.
Sterliilg gasoline, the maker of faced" workers at the Eureka Dam
Other news of that month in Gal- "crystal green gasoline" announced building site had told police that they
lipolis included the reorganization of that there wer~ 18 places in Gallia had lost large sums of money 10 an
the Modern · MarkeiS Inc. grocery County where Sietling 'gas could be illegal game of some sort. These men
chain. In 1935,thereweresevensoores purchasedinciudingatS.E.Denney's did not say how the "carnies" forced
in the chain. Paul Wagner sold his m Vinton, c'.B .. Drqmmond's at them to play the games of chance.
shares to the other partners: Sidney· Mudsock, Ruth Mack's in Cheshire, One carnival man was arrested when
Lanier, U.S. Webb, J.H •. Wagner, and at--both T.M. Smith's and T.L. he took over a bathroom at a local
Clarence Wagner, and Marjorie• ·Shaw's in thi'veneL
rooming house and refused to come
Rine~art. In 1936, Modem Markets
LaSUy, there was much complaint out. When th~ door was busted 10, he
went bankrupt.
about the carnival that had been was found enJoyong a bubblc·batb.
· The first Eagle Scout in Gallipolis
history was announced. He was Ed
Maddy, scin of Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Maddy.
The Ben Franklin Store hel pet
parade down Second Avenue. It as
held in conjunction with the Arne ican Legion Carnival. Chj1dren we
.·~ ­
urged to decorate their wagons, scoot~~ers, skates, bikes, tricycles as well as .
their animals. Prizes were awardcdin
several categories.
Speaking of animals-out in
Mapleshade, people were -asked to
bear arms when it was reported that a
dog had engaged analligator in mortal
combat near the Ohio River. Stated
Na1eGillespie in whose backyard the
fracas took place, the tale of the
JOHN FULn :... J. MAIICUS FULTI "gator" was "nearly" 20 inches. Fi242 W. Main
OWNERS
Pomeroy
nally, when the dogs had "plum tuckeredout",Natewadedin with asledge
94J2-2101
hammer and slew the varmint. "Who
knows", said the Tribune reporter,
"Alligators may be abundant in
Mapleshade."
•
About that same time it was announcedthatbroommaker Jack Davis
of the county home had to be taken
away for his mental wellbeing. Davis
was always a mystery to Gallipoliw.ns as he carne to the Old French
City about 1909 to work in the Tab it
businesses.
Night after night and year afler
year, Davis would stand after work
on the curb al Second and Court. He
was quite small, stooped .and deaf
even in his early years. Where he
carne from and who he was related to
was just a mystery.

October 20, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant I

Meet the candidates
POMEROY - A "Meet the Candidates" ni ght is sched uled for
Tuesday at 7:30p.m . at Trinity
Congregational Church. Second
and Lynn Streets, Pomeroy. The
public is invited. This will give the
p4blic an opportunity to hear the
three candidates for mayor and to
learn of their positions on various
projects.

By CHARLENEHOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
RACINE - Super support for the
S(\uthern Tornadoes and Friday
night's homecoming activities was
shown by the large crowds which
lined the streets for Friday after-

noon's parade.
Racine's police, emergency
squad and fire trucks with their
sirens sounding led \he parade
down Route 1l4 to the ·downtown
and then back to the .high school,
where the enthusiasm of the stu·

dents overflowed' into a pep session
before the game with Southwest-

em.

'

Homecomirig candidates, Dawn
Shuler, Marcy Hill, Jody Hayes,
Michelle McCoy, and Amber Cumings, as well as t~e attendants.

house warmlh

• Aemo1e thermostat control
• Fireplace insert model lor all
fireplaces
• Simple elec1ronics tor easy.
reliable operation

the

now
technolOgy

ln. WOOd helt tocll¥:

BRECKWELL

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changeable top/rear exhaust
• Highestemctency and least
pollution

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Now Open Saturday 9'to 1- Monday &amp; Friday 9 to 5

•

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•BRAKE JOBS •OIL CHANGE
•WHEEL-AliGNMENT -

MEIGS TIREJCENTER

NO
NO INTEREST

'TIL APRIL '92:

•

..•
'
•••
••
•

i

TAKES FIRST • This float prepared by the
senior class at Southern High School was awarded first place by the judges at the annual home·
comii!B.Jiarade Friday afternoon. Using the

...

.

,I

'

by Bracken McFann and Brent DeCos.,e, inside
the toilet. Just hitching a ride on the front or the .
· float wasMichele Stobart, one of several clowns
in the parade.

SECOND PLACE FLOAT • "Flush the
Landers" was the theme of the junior class noat
in Southern High School's annual homecoming
parade Friday afternoon. Here Jason Powell
used a plunger to keep the Landers, portrayed

theme "We Deliver 1·800-TORNADO~. thenoat
featured t.he Dominos Pizza Noid trying to get
into the pizza box.

.

,.

'

Family Planning
It Makes Sense.••

'

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

vided to those applicants who have
not already applltid. Regular HEAP
is a non-emergency heating assistance program which requires proof
of the previous 12 months income
and social security numbers for all
household members.
For more information about regular HEAP, call toll free 1-800282-0880 , or for the hearing
impaired with a telecommunications device for the deaf (ITD) 1800-686-15 57.
Locally, call the Cheshire CAA
office at 367-734 1 for Gallia County , or 992-6629 for Meigs County,
the Gallia Outreach Office at 4460611 and the Meigs Outreach
Office at 992-5605.

•

I

'

SUNDAY, O(TOBER 20

FREE!

•

POMEROY:
236 E. Main St. 2nd Floor

Tranor wit11
37" /1/{) V!'i /1,1~ dl'ck

Special Clearan~• Price

$2675

00

BUY NOW AND SAVE SOME GREEN
ON ATORO®WHEEL HORSE:

WHAT'S A PARADE WITHOUT CLOWNS!- Sarah Duhl and
Chris Weaver were in colorful clown costuming for Friday arter·
noon's annual homecoming parade through Racine.

I

;

•

•

MONDAY THRU SUNDAY, OCT. 21·27
LONG HOTDOG AND MEDIUM FRENCH FRIES

OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
GALLIPOLIS
414 Second Ave., 2nd Floor
992-5912
446-0166
1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Closed Thursday
8:30 to 12 Saturday
Closed Thunday
ALSO: Jackson, Chesapeake, Athens, Ch~lkothe, Logan .&amp; McArth•Jr

•

Buy One Turtle Sundae and Get One

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
3/ii-XL&lt;m 11 and Cardell

••
:-

McClure's
Family Restaurant

Sliding fee sale. No one refused services because af inobility to pay.

•

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5

2.99

Gon. Hortingtr Pkwy

479 Ja&lt;kson Piko

MIDDlEPORT
614-992·5248

GAUtPOtfS
614-446-3837

354 East Main II.
POMEROY
614-992-6292

• Hurry in while selection is at its best.
• No money down. no payme nts and no interest for
qualified buyers on Taro's Revolving Charge Plan .
• Ask your deHler for details.

BANKRUPTCY
614·221·0888
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ATTORNEY·N·lAW

8 Easl Broad Street, Suite 900 •
Columbus, Ohio
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LOCAL CONSULTATION
·.' 992·6417

BAUM LUMBER

Sensitive Service

(HESTER
985·3301

In PomeroOtWith
·
!ATTORNEY D. ~~ AEL ~ULLn

Holzer Medical Center provides excellent health care for
women .'!&gt; All obstetric and gynecology physicians are either

The Farmers Banll Travel Club
Is Pleased To Announce
Fallulous Holida~ Trip

board certified or board eligible, and all obstetric and
Montrie Chaksupa. M .D
C hai r mt~n. Department of 08/GYN

neonatal nursing staff members have highly specia lized
skill s co care for both mothers and newborns. ,,_ Holzer is
the best option for natural, traditional or cesarean births.

OG:tEBAY FESTIVAL OF :tiGHTS

1&gt; Additionally, Holzer offers an epidural servi ce to reduce

Travel with us to WHEELING, WEST. VIR,GINIA to enjoy to.urs, join in
CHRISTMAS activities, and sec· the most gorgeous Christmas light display
in the area!!!
Keep busy with the many planned activities, or just relax and soak in
the festive Christma~. atmbsphcrc at your leisure.
Stopping at St. Clairsville Moll for shopping and lunch on your own. ·
Back on the hus at 2:30 to Wheeling, we will cat at Mellman's Cafeteria
(price included in trip). After dinner we will have a private guide ste p on
our bus for the tour of lights.
Leave Farmers EJank at 8:00 a.m. Stop for breakfast.
Return to Pomeroy 11 :00
·

Price only '45 per person
Reservations due by November B, 1991
"

labor pain . •,. In the Southeastern Ohio River Valley, over

•.·,•'.

..
.
..
•

one thousand w omen will choose to have their babies at

'

•,

H olzer thts yea r. "&gt; Hol zer Medical Center. . . leadin g the

•

.::;•

way ro provide the bes t possi ble health care, ri g ht here .
Laurel A Kirkhart, M .D.

Donald E, O'Rourke. M .0

Holzer Medical Center

::::

YourBankfn~···

•••
•,•,
•

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211 West Second Stnoet
P. 0 Box 626
Pomeroy, OH. 4&amp;789
614-992-2138

...,
•,

.

'

J . Cra ig StraHord. M.D .

&amp; Savings Company

'·

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.,•.
::
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Farmers Bank

'•.

I{
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'=·
•.
''••.'
.;
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.,••

@
···-

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Roule 7
P. 0 . Box 339

•

::•'••

Tuppers Plains, OH. 45783

614-667-3161

Ke1th R. Brandeberry, M .D.
I

·'

several school organizations with •
entnes.
In the judging of the floats, fli'SI
went to the senior class, second to
I he junior class and Jhird to Jhe
sophomore clasj. . - .
·· .

-.

• Nosmoke

STOP BYWORKING# BUT HURRY!
SALE ENDS SOON

Jenni Hill, Tracy Pickell arid Southern Homecoming Queen also
Megan Wolfe rode on open con· rode on convertibles in the parade~
vertibles in the parade.
Costumed twirlers and . the
Michelle Fnend, Meigs County . Southern band marched ·ln the
Fair Queen and Sieemwheel Fesl.i- parade, and there were nurt1erous
val Queen, and Junie Beegle, 1990 clowns, all Of the cheerleaders, and

••.."

NOVEMBER 17, 1991

• Meavy steil construction
• 17 heat tubes lor e'en. whole

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-AS '~

.

Large crowd views Southern homecomin·g_parade Friday

AppfiCatiOnS for emergency
HEAP to be accepted
GALLIPOLIS - The application period for emergency HEAPit
will be fmm Oct. 28 through April
3, 1992, according to the GalliaMeigs Community Action Agency.
Emergency HEAP was estab-.
lished to resolve heat-related emergencies resulting from utility termination, threat of termination or a
bulk fuel-supply of less than 10
days.
To qualify for this program, the
income guidelines that follow must
be met. Total household income for
the past 12 months must fall within
these amounts for the appropriate
household size:
One person, $9,930;
Two people, $13,320;
Three jloople, $16,710;
Four people, $20,100;
Five people, $23,490;
Six people, $26,880.
For households with more than
six people, add $3,390 for each
additional member.
Applications are taken at the
Gallia County Outreach office at
220. Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, and
ihe Meigs· County 'Outreach office
at 39350 Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
Monday through Friday from 9
a.m. to noon and 1·3:30 p.m.
No appUcations are taken at the
Cheshire office on Fridays .
Assistance in completing rcgu·
lar HEAP applications is also pro-

wv

\

,.••

_____,..•.
_j

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Page-A6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

October 2Q, 199..1

October 20, 1991

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

===~~~==

Arabs, Israelis have conflicting agendas
'

MADRID, Spain (AP) - The
Arabs and Israelis will come to the
·Middle East peace conference in
just 10 days with wildly conflicting
goals that the Bush administration
admits may be irreconcilable.
The Arabs hope to emerge with
land, Israel with peace. But the
Jewish state is loathe to 'relinquish
territory that includes its Sinai
security buffer, oilfields, two airfields and settlements.
"The road to peace ... will not

GOP candidate
Fellure to visit
Pomeroy Nov. 3

erships put their best on display along First
Avenue as area residents viewed the new auto·
mobiles. (Times-Sentinel photo by Melinda Pow·
ers)

He won Senate conf111Tlation on
a 52-48 vote earlier in the week,
surviving allegations that nearly
torpedoed his nominat,ion·by a former employee who accused him of
sexual harassment
His bruising confirmation fight
was alluded to- but only indirectly- by both Thomas and Bush at
Friday's swearing in ceremony at
the White House.
Thomas said he and his wife,
Virginia, had become "better people" as a result of the harrowing
confinnation ordeal.

A Hearing Aid ·
Is Less Conspicuous
Than Your Hearing Loss/

Lottery numbers
. Pick 3 Numbers
2-2-4
(two, two, four)
Pick 4 Numbers
5-7-8-9
(five, seven, eight, nine)
Cards
3 (three) of Hearts
4 (four) of Clubs
A (ace) of Diamonds
5 (five) of Spades

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603 W. Union
Athens, Ohio 45701
Phone (614} 592·2863

udiolocty
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1-: :oo.a:: 7-I o~J 1

Thomas takes seat on
Sup.reme Court bench

POMEROY ·Jack Fellure, a
WASHINGTON (AP) Republican and the first candidate Clarence Thomas says he's putting
in any party to file for the 1992 his conflllllation ordeal behind him
United States presidential cam- as he takes his place on the nation's
paign, will be in Pomeroy on Sun- highest coun.
day, Nov. 3. at2 p.m.
Thomas, praised by President
Fellure, whose campaign head- Bush as a man of "hard-won expequarters is located in Hurricane, W. rience," lOOk the oath of office at a
Va., will be speaking in the audito- sun-splashed White House ceremo·
rium at Pomeroy Village Hall , ny on Friday .
according 10 a release from the canThe 43-year-old jurist, th e
didate.
grandson of a Georgia sharecropThe candidate said that he will per, is the second black to serve on
be speaking on patriotism, govern- the court. He succeeds the first.
ment. God and Country. politics, Thurgood Marshall, who retired for
!be Council on Foreign Relations, health reasons.
the non-war on drugs, the New
World order, AIDS, Taxes. foreign
aid, the media, labor, the failure of
education, ecclesiastical decay,
church and state, and America's
political heritage.
According to Fellure, his presidential campaign headquarters is
now permanently located in the
Teays Valley Area of West Virginia.

Higher edu~ation enrollment
grows, but at slower rate "

'ATE

c8:1
ON DISPLAY • Mr. Weatherman cooperated
a little better Saturday as the new car show,
sponsored by Ohio Valley Bank, was held once'
again in the city park. Gallipolis' new car deal·

be simple," said Secretary of State
James A. Bilker III, whose eight
mjuous trips this year got the
peace talks set up. "To the con·
trary, it Will be extremely difflcul~
with many problems, many hitches
and probably many interruptions
alon~ the way."
.
Life-and-death issues aside, the
gaps are obvious even in little
ways. For instance, there is a furious fight going on between Israel
and Syria over where to hold the

.

.negotiations after the ceremonial
first round.
Israel prefers the Middle Ea:&gt;t
and Syria wants to stay in Madrid,
or at least Europe. It's part Of
Israel ' s straiegy to, deal directly
with the powers and the Arabs to
bring outside pressure to bear.
. Even seating arrangements and
the shape ·of the negotiating table
haven't been worked out, though
Baker managed to snuff out one
fire before the invitati~ns ;-ve~t out.

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TOURING SI-TE - Dr. Parry M, Dorsey,
• left, president or tbe University of Rio Grande,
• converses with Nancy HoUister, center, director
; of the Office of Appalachian Development, and
l

· Elayne Macarthy, local program plaimer.for the
office, at the site or the university's new child
care center. The center is scheduled ror comple·
tion by the rau or 1992.

~egional

development officials
tour site of child care center

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COLUMBUS (AP)- Public
.universities and ~lieges are reP6rting enrollment gn)wth this fall but
at aslower rate than in past years.
A preliminary head count report
presented to the Ohfo Board of
Regents, was told. on Friday shows
a record 443,321 students have
enrolled in at least one academic
credit course this fall. ·•
The systemwide total was 2.1
percent higher than last year. Public higher education recorded 4 per·
cent growth in 1990 and 3.3 per- .
cent in 1989.
Regents Chancellor Elaine
Hairston said the slower growth
rate this year was expected.
"That is right on target with the
projection that we had built into
our ... current operating budget. We
had projected between 2 and 3 per·
cent," Ms. Hairston said.
Growth rates varied sharply
·

•
:. ·RIO GRANDE - The direc.tor
of the state's Office of Appalachian
Development got a first-hand view
O£ a public-private collaboration at
th~ University of Rio Grande durihg a recent visit to the campus.
"This is a significant project,"
J\lpncy Putnam Holtister comment~d· as she toured the construction
siie of the university's child care
c~nter. "It involves the university
!VJd the community and will serve
as a laboratory and classroom. I
think this will reach the vast majority of students here at Rio Grande."
The child care center, funded in
part by a grant from the Ohio
Qoard of Regents, is designed as a
day-care facility for Rio Grande
students and a practical learning
experience for those majoring in
~$.ely Childhood Development, an
associate degree program started in
l990. The program trains students
To'r jobs in the child care profesiijon.
• , The facility will also serve as an
&lt;i~ sc rvation area for students
jflajoring in elementary educauon
add nursing,
' ' "One of the most prohibitive
tpings for a young mother trying to
gain an education is finding quality
jlare for l)er children," Hollister
.~id. "This facility will serve those
heeds." _
; The '4,900-square foot center is
peing constructed with labor provided by the Building Trades class
~ t Buckeye Hills Career Center,

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•

explained Rio Grande Vice President Herman L." Koby. Koby
accompanied Hollister on the tour
with Dr. Barry M. Dorsey, president o( the university, and Paul D.
Harrison, Rio Grande's vice president for development.
The estimated construction cost
is $160,000, Koby added.
Hollister, a former mayor of
Mlarietta who was appointed 10 her
present position earlier this year,
came to Rio Grande to view the
campus and tour the center site,
where she conversed with university .officials and BHCC students
supervised by Building Trades
instructor Tom Neal. John A.
Shump, superintendent of the GaiJia.Jackson· Vinton Joint Vocational School District, was al so on
hand to view progress on the job.
The university is presently seeking funding from the Appalachian
Reg ional Commission to ass ist
with the completion of the project.
Hollister was hopeful the money
would be approved.
"The bell h"asn 't rung yet, but
we're about there," she said..
Elayne Mlacarthy, local program
planner with Hollister's office who
has been the primary observer on
the project, was also optimistic
ARC funding would be forthcom ing because of the project's ooten·
tial benefit to the community.
"It will move faster now that
we've been down here to see what

is being done ," Macarthy .said .
"The ARC was interested in finding out if there was more community involvement in the project, and
we've found that it's here. I can't
think of any project that's had more
community involvement from the
ground up than this one.''
The building, set on the site of
the former ROTC headquarters, is
expected to handle up to 40 chit·
dren and is scheduled for comple·
tion by the fall of 1992. It was
designed by the Athens architectural firm of Panich &amp; Noel.
"! really think it's a good piece
of work," said Dr. Yvonne Shoemaker, Early Childhood Development instructor, who helped plan
the structure.
" I credit the cooperation of
everyone on campus because they
have been attuned to the philosophy behind the program. I kind of
feel the building belongs 10 everyone , because everyone has been so
supportive," she added.
"This is an important project for
the university," Dr. Dorsey commented. "lt'particular)y demon strates the u-niversity's eommitment
to older students in southeastern
Ohio.
"We want to encourage these
students, often referred to as nontraditional students, to con sider
college attehdance, and to know
they are welcome at the University
of Ri9 Grande," he added.

COLUMBUS . Ohio ,(AP) :;everal organizations with chapters
in Ohio are warning of the dangers
bf a world population explosion
1J.at they say threatens ali, life on
me planet.
.
~ The world count is now 5.4 billion, and is increasing at the rate of
lJ5 million a year, the conservation
hnd environmental groups reported
friday.
• Stephan Sedam , Great Lakes
fe gional vice president of the
f'lation al Audubon Society, and
others spoke at a news conference

DISCOVER THE DIFFERENCE .
ENTIRE STOCK
MEN'S

&amp;LADIES'
I

GAUIA COUNTY
•

WHEN: Tuesday, October 22, 1991

WHO: All parents/students (Juniors &amp;
Seniors) are invited and urged to attend the
annual Gallia County College Night Program.
The following are the participating high
schools: Buckeye Hills, Gallia Academy,
Hannan Trace, Kyger Creek, North Gallia,
Southwestern, Oak Hill (Jackson Co,), Wellston
(Jackson Co.), Vinton County High School

WHAT: The 1991 Gallia County College
•

Night Program is an opportunity for parents and
students to speak with over 35 college
representatives concerning admission
requirements and financial aid. (sponsored by
the area High School Guidance &lt;:;ounselors. ·
•

WHERE: The University of Rio Grande,
. Rhodes Center Building.

7:00-8:30 p.m.
Presentations begin at 7:00p.m.

PASSPORT
AHD I.D.
PHOTOS
Ready_In
5 MINUTES

TAWNEY STUDIO .

t

CHESHIRE . The 1992 Community Services Block Grant ap~liaation. prepared by the Gaihatvfeigs Community Action Agency
f-AA) , will be available for review
l!laTting Monday, Oct 21 and endmg Wednesday, Oct 30.
: A copy of the completed appli·
~ation can be reviewed at the CAA
qffice in Ches hire. Any comments

WHY: Families can get the answers to

que~tions regarding their college decisions.

Take advantage of the opportunity to speak with
college representatives from near and far.

Board
takes steps to fire teacher
.

sexual activity with a female high
school student."

We have the dollars to get your
students through the quarters

Here is how the promotion works:

ROOTS

Oui: Tellers always try to recognize and call our
customers by name. Sometimes they get busy ·
and fqrget. So again this year for the month o.f
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.

Direct Shipment
To The Orient
/

Point Pleasant

We hope this promotion lets our customers
know how important they are to u s at Star
Bank. Come into the Spring Valley office or any ·
other Star Bank office for personal service with a
personal touch. Remember, there's a star within
yow reach.

! The board cite.;! " immorality"
;l'nd " good and jus\ Cause" for SUS·
J1Cnding Ms. Boes, pres1dent of the
Findlay Teachers Assoc1abon.
; Ms. Bocs can appeal within 10
days. If she doesn't request an
Sdministrative hearing, the board
said it would fire her Nov. 18.
1 Ms. Boes declined comment on
tlte allegations. .•
• Superintendent Jan Patton also
&lt;Icc lined to discuss the case.
; The board discussed the case in
¢tecutive session, a meeting closed
!p the public. After the executive
¥Ssion, the baaed voted to suspend

Compliments of Student Loan Service

/

"Hi, I'm Sheila Wood, Manager of the
Spring Valley Office of Star Bank. Our
customers and tellers had such fun with
this promotion last year, that we decided to do it again.

,.

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•

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Dale Briggs, the board ' s vice
nresident, read a statement that
911id: "In or about December 1990
lend January 1991, Ms . Boes •.
en~aged in inappropriate intimate

POINT PLEASANT

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TOP DOLLARS

on the application should' be
received by the CAA no later than
Wednesday, Oct. 30:
The CAA ~dmm1sters the block
grant for Galha and Mc1gs Counties, and the grant pro~1des fundmg
for a number of services to lowmcome res1d~nts. T~e CAA ts an
EEO/Affmnauve Acuon employer.

Rockponsmake youfeel like walking"'

424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.~

"From Central Ohio's Big
Darby Creek to the Amazon Rain
Forest, the very survival of our nat·
ural world depends on our ability to
voluntarily control the dramatic
rise in the human population," he
said.
Citing examples of the growth,
he said that every three days, the
world gains more people than live
in Columbus. ·

'application availablefor review

$700
OFF

.

marking. next week's seventh annual observance of World Population
Awareness Week.
The society. the Sierra Club,
National Wildlife Federation,
Planned Parenthood and others said
they hope to make policy makers
and the public aware of what they
called "the critical link between
population stabilization and envi·
ronmental carrying capacity.''
Sedam said overpopulation is
the ·greatest single threat to the
quality of life in Ohio and around
the world. .

VINTON RACEWAY

ROckporr

!Population-environmental problems linked
•,•

among universities, branch cam- with a double-digit increase was
puses, commumty colleges and Centr.\1 State, where the head count
technical colleges. There alsO were was up 14.1 percent
differences among individual insti· ·
Head counts are viewed as a
tutions.
.
snapshot of enrpllment. State subsi"We are seeing the greatest dies institutions receive are b.ased
growth occurring in the technical on full-time equivalent enrollcollege sector," Ms. Hairston said. ments, which will be calculated
The enrollment report ~bowed over t!te.nextlwo months. . · ·
technical colleges scored gains of
In other . action, regents
7.1 percent, while branches grew approved salary increases for M:s.
by 6.3 percent. Community col· Hairston and 32 other staff memleges were up 4.2 percent, while bers.
four-year campuses recorded the
smallest gain of 0.2 percent
Among technical colleges. head
coupts ·were up most at North Cen·
tral in Mansfield, which recorded a
Now radng every Sunday
21.4 percent boost, and Owens in
Toledo and Findlay, which grew by
Featuring Bomber Cars,
20.4 percent
Powder PuH and
Columbus State added about
4 Cvlinder Cars
2:000 students this fall for a 15.3
percent increase, the largest among
No Alco'holk Beverages
community colleges.
· Law Enforcemeat
Eight university branches had
01 Prenises
double-digit growth, led by Miami
University's campus in Hamilton at
388-9617 or 388~9300
"19.6 percent. The only university

Member FDICJ

Puzzle on Page D-2
•'

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li

�-. ,

Page-A&amp;-Sunday Times-Sentinel

David Duke .challenge threatens
incumbent Gov. Buddy Roemer

CROWNED QUEEN . Michelle McCoy was
crowned tbe 1991 Southe~n High School homecoming queen in half-lime ceremonies al the
Southern-Southwestern football game Friday
ni2ht. Junie
the 1990 queen, "placed the
crown on
head.after presen
her

with an arm bouquet or roses . Stephanie
Amberger was the flower girl and Michael
Roush, the crown bearer. Michelle, daughler of
Barry and Carolyn McCoy, was escorted by
Michael Hill.

Cool weather helps
firefighters battle
blazes in Northwest

SPECIAL
left, shares a special
moment with her daughter, Christa Uchylil, alter a press conference Friday in Aberdeen, S.D. Schweitzer acted as surrogate mother to bear her daughter's twins who were born Oct. 12. Christa
holds Chelsea in the photo. (AP)

:surrogate grandmother
:(lnd parents face media
.
'

By JOE KAFKA
Associated Press Writer
ABERDEEN, S.D. (AP) :chad and Chelsea Uchytil, the his·loric pair of twins delivered by
their grandmother, met the world,
and yawned.
· The infants made their first public appearance Friday, six days
afler !heir birth.
Their mother, Christa Uchytil
was born without a womb, so she
can't carry a child. Eggs Ia ken
from Mrs. Uchytil's ovaries wete
fenilized with her husband's sperm
and implanted in the uterus of her
mother, Arlene Schweitzer of
Aberdeen.
Mrs. Schweitzer, 42, is lhe first
American woman to give birth to
her daughter's children. A South
African woman gave birth in 1987
to triplets, acting as a surrogate for
her daughter.
.
. Chelsea and Chad were born by
Caesarean se€tion Saturday, five
-weeks prematurely. Doctors say
·Jhcy are healthy and may leave St.
Luke's Midland Regional Medical
'center on Wednesday.
" "It'll feel preuy amazing," said
Mrs. Uchytil (pronounced YOUkuh-till). "IL'II be a special time for

,

us to go home and have ... our
wholcfamily."
Mrs. Uchytil, 22, and her husband, Kevin, live in Rapid City,
nearly 400 miles away. She was at
her mother's side when the babies
were delivered ; he mi ssed the
births by four hours because of the
long drive.
The family has been very close
throughout the pregnancy, he said.
"It's just been all a picture-perfect scene," Uchytil said.
The new parents held their son
·and daughter during the 45-minute
news conference. When Chad
began to cry, his falher looked as if
he wasn't sure what to do.
Mrs. Schweitzer, her husband,
Dan, at her side, was mauer of fact
about her surrogacy . "I just felt
like a mother Helping her daughter," she said.
She said the family has received
hundreds or leuers of support from
around the world, and no negative
comment.
"Something we thought was a
family proj ect has turned into
something the world is interested
in," Mrs. SChweitzer said.
Fertilization and implantation
procedures cost about $7.000. most
of it not covered by insurance.

Robert Gates heading for
confirmation as CIA director
WASHINGTON (AP) Robert Gates appears headed for
confirmation by the fu II Senate to
be President Bush' s new CIA
director, and the agency's chief
· Senate overseer is 1Jromising to
shield from retribution underlings
who criticized him.
Gates' 11-4 ~roval Friday by
the Senate Intelligence Commiuee
gave him a big boost toward
endor~ement on the Senate floor.
probably in about two weeks. Even
his opponents were conceding he
would probably prevail.
The nommee, who would
become the firsl career intelligence
analyst ever to head the agency,
had been criticized for a career history that detraCtors said was full of
misjudgments, abrasiye ma~age­
ment and ·an·overweemng des1re to
please superiors.

But Senate Inte lli~ e nce Committee Chairman Davod Boren, DOkla., said Gates has matured.
"Bob Gates himself hllS openly
admiued that he would do some
things differently if he could do
them over, " said Boren, who all
along has been one of Gates'
biggest boosters. "Ours is not a
society that forever holds a per·
son's mistakes against him or her."
In an unusual aside, Boren
addressed a ~romise to "courageous people· at the CrA who had
cooperated with lhe panel's back·
ground investigation or Gales.
"They know who they arc,"
Boren said. "They have my commitment, indeed the commitment
of this committee, that no untoward
action will be taken against them,
that their careers will not be,disrupted."

.,

By LINDA ASHTON
Associated Press Writer
SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) Cool autumn weather today helped
firefighers make headway in containing this week's numerous
Northwest blazes that killed five
people, destroyed more than I00
homes and chamed a quarter-mUIion acres.
The eastern half of Washington
was among areas hardest hit by the
fires, which were sparked by
downed power lines and fed by
high winds and· unseasonably dry
conditions. Wildfll"Cs also scorched
parts or Idaho, Montana and Oregon.
Six-thousand firefighters fought
the blazes.
"We 'II keep trying to get a line
around the fires, mop up where we
can, hit any hot spots - and hopefully lhc weather will cooperate,"
said Pat Flowers, a spokesman for
the Montana Department of State
Lands.
U.S . House Speaker Thomas
Foley, D-Wash., surveyed the devastation in his home district Friday.
"These were wildfores that clearly
got away," he said..
Ron DeHart, a spokesman for
lhe U.S. Forest Service, said most
of the propeny lost to fli"e - 104
houses and 40 other buildings was in four eastern Washington
counties, in which 34 large fires
and several smaller ones burned.
Officials who began tallying lhe
fires' costs and estimated it reached
$15 million in Spokane County
alone. The Federal Emergency
Management Agency authorized
reimbursement of most frrefighting
costs in eastern Washington, esli·
mated at more lhan $3 million.
Firefighters shivered Friday, b~l
they welcomed the cool weather.
Snow was forecast by Monday in
Montana, where authorities said
eight of the 15 fires that ravaged
the state had been contained.
Firefighters were optimistic that
'continued cool temperatures and
higher humidity would give them
an edge this weekend as subfreezing temperatures had earlx Friday.

By GUY COATFS
Associated Press Writer
NEW ORLEANS (AP)
Three candidates led the field Saturday in the pfi!nary for Louisiana
governor, and ifwas so c!ose Gov.
Buddy Roemer was womed about
making lhe runoff.
His main challengers: swe Rep.
David DUke, 41, a Ku Klux Klans·
. man·tlJmed-populist Republican, ·
and former Democratic Gov.
Edwiri Edwards, 64.
Roemer, 47 , who recently
switched parties from Democrat to
Republic;m. had support from President Bush and was guided and ·
par!ly bankrolled by the R~publi·
can National Comm1ttee.
In Louisiana, all candidates run
in .!he same primary. The toP two
·vote-getters will meet in a Nov. 16
runoff unless a single candidate
gels more than 50 percent or the
votes.
Although 12 people filed as candidates, the three were leading ·in
most polls. A distant fourth was
U.S. Rep. Clyde Holloway, 47, the
stale GOP's nominee.
Voters in New Orleans and two .
other communities also were decid·
ing whether to limit the number of
consecutive terms that can be
served by local elected officials.
Roemer won the governorship
as a Democrat in 1987. His evangelical fervor and promises to .
"scrub" the state's image, its environment and the budget propelled
him from last in the polls to lhe primary's top runoff spot with 33 percent or lhe vote. Edwards, with 27
percent, shocked backers by drop·
ping out, handing Roemer his '87
victory.
However, Roemer's hardheaded, self-styled reformist attitude
and failure to fulfill many campaign pledges alienated some vot·
ers.
Among his most controversial
acts was vetoing the nation's
strictest anti-abortion law. The
Legislature put .it into law anyway
in the first override in modern
Louisiana history.
Edwards, elected governor in
1971, 1975 and 1983, was shaken
in his third term by his indictment
on federal racketeering charges.
Edwards accused the Republican
prosecutor of plotting his political
downfall.
Edwards was acquitted in 1986,
but couldn't overcome lhe scandal.
Opponents charged that his wheeler-dealer style gave Louisiana a
bad image.
"I' ve learned from my mistakes. I'm mature," a more mellow
Edwards said recently.
Carrying the baggage of the
KKK and flirtations with American
Nazis, Duke managed to win a leg·
islative seat in suburban New
Orleans in 1989.
Last year, he ~arnered 44 percent of lhe vote, mcluding 65 percent of the white vote cast, in the
U.S. Senate race against veteran
Democrat Bennett Johnston.

BEAUTY AND THE
BEAST
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20
3:00P.M.
Morrio &amp; Dorothy Haokins
Ariel Theatre
426 Second Ave. • Gallipolis

t

. .. October 20, 1991

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

'

·Along the River

'mhnt!i -- imthttl

Section ·B
October 2o,199~

· Fire at the ·stockyards did_more
thanjJist destroy a building
By MELINDA POWERS
GALLIPOLIS - It ., was
strangely warm in the dark room,
warmer than ·it was when she went
to bed earlier in the·evening.
·
She kicked off the covers and
sat up in bed~ stud~jng the odd
glow coming from behiild lhe window blinds. She got up and walked
10 the window - a window that
looked out over the Gallipolis
Stoelcyards.
·
··
She peeked out. ·
.
"Oh my God, it's ori f~re;" she
whispered to herself. .
The plastic blinds in Tracy
Stewart's,room ·later bent and
twisted from the heat that rolled
over the nearby brick house as the
barn and offices at the stockyards
burned to the ground on Oct 4.

MY VOTE FOR THE NEXT GOVERNOR • Republican
gubernatorial candidate David Duke emerges from the voting
booth giving the thumbs up Saturday in the New Orleans suburb
of Metairie with his daughter, Kristen, aner casting bis ballot in
Louisiana's primary. Duke said be cast his vote for the next governor. (AP)

Rockporr

ALL MEN'S AND WOMEN'S
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make you feel
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THE SHOE CAFE
LAFAYETTE MALL
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

Nearly a week later, Tmcy, her·
father Tommy Joe Stewan, and her
sister JoAnne Stewart Sheets
relaxed in the living room of the
same brick house, talking about the
fire and i.ts effect on their lives. ·
They spoke about how the
stockyards quietly boosted business
in Gallipolis and how the fll"C could
hurt the town.
Tommy J~ bought lhe yards in
1968 and held his fiTSt sale on Oct.
17 lhat year. He later sold the busi·
ness to ·his two daughters and his
former wife, Mary Fraley
Williamson "to keep it in lhe family." Tommy Joe stayed on as manager.
Nearly $8 miUion dollars could
pass through hands at the yards
during a good year, and 30,000

.....
head of. callle could be sold, ·
Tommy Joe says.
·
On any given .Saturday, sellers,
buyers and !heir wives arid family
would come to Gallipolis, for the
auction. The men would stay at the
, stockyards while die women would
go into'•1Qwn to shop, Tracy says.
More than 300'people from as far
away as Kansas, Oklahoma and
Texas would come to.the ·yards to
do business. . /
.
"They woul~:shop, .getgas,"
Tommy Joe sild. "I don't lliinlc it
will ever be known how muCh the

Unless otherwise noted,
pictures that appear were
donated by the Stewart .
family.
I

stockyards helped the economy."
The yards re·gularly did business
with River City Farm Supply, and
customers frequented the Last
Chance Carryout often.
At one time during its history,
Bob and 1ewel Evans ran the
restaurant at lhe stockyards, welcoming out of town sellers and
their wives. Bessie Dewitt also
acted as cook at the smail eatery.
. Now, lhree fuU-tim~ employees
and IS other Saturday worlcers are
out or a job due to the OcL 4 blaze.

Ohio. Fred Gills and J. Everett
G_ills operate.d th~ Ohio Valley
Ltvestock Sales Company into lhe
·1950s.
.
In May, 1953, a fll"C consl!l)led
the yards, killed five animals, and
damaged more than $100,000
wo~ of equipment and buildings.
According to the May 25, 1953
issue of lhe Gallipolis Daily Tri~e, the building was conslf1Jcted
enurely of wood and ~·went lilce a·
bonfire once the blaze ~ot started."
One neighboring tiusinessm~
said at the time, "Gallipolis ·
wouldn't be worth two cents with-

out iL"

Tracy says that plans 10 rebuild
the yards are being diseussed:;;hut
nothing is definite. If the Stewarts
were to start again, the new stockyards would be built somewhere
· outside the city limits.
"I~ will just have to be away
from the traffic and the con·gestion," Tommy Joe said.
The family has been approached
by the Gallia Cou~tY Community
Improvement Corporation and the
Gallipolis Chamber qr Commerce
to find out what their (llans are.
A new site somewhere in the
county, with room to e~pand the
business, seems to be the favorite
option.

The stockyards were ·buiit
"We would like to say thanks to
around 1930 under the leadership O\lf customers for their suppon and
of local businessman James N. expressions of sympathy. We are
Caldwell, and was the first live- sorry for the inconvenience to them
stock auction house in southern

IN THE 1970s- The Ohio Valley Livestock

C~mpany,

as it was ~nown in the 1970s (as in
thos photo), was a b1ghly successful business.

and to our employ'ees,'' Tracy said
Saturday. "We see our situation as
tern porary and are planning to seek
you in the near future."
Meanwhile, clean up efforts
continue at the yards as the staie
fire marshal investigates the possi·

Callie buyers and sellers would travel from as
far away as Kansas and Oklahoma to trade 'at
the yards, located on Vinton Avenue.

ble cause of the fire that changed
the lives of the Stewans.
Tracy walked out of the house
and picked up a charred piece of
paper that had blown onto the
lawn.

"This is a bill - this means a
cow-and calf, this is the price per ·
head, this is the weight," she
explained expertly as she pointed
to diHerent places on ,the paper.
She looked over her shoulder at the ·
SIDCkyarlls.
.
"It's easier to tallc about now."

M' K•..FUGATE;~ D.P.M.
·~·

I

i '•

. AND

!

•

t

ENRic·o TAN, D.P.M.
MEDICAL and SURGICAL TREATMENT
OF THE FOOT AND ANKLE
19 W. Washington St.
Athens, Ohio 45701
(614) 592-2366

OFFICE HOURSl ·

Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
Saturday 9 a.m.-12 p.m.

It's Time For OVB To Mail Out
l991 Christmas Savings Checks.
We've Just Sent Out Checks Totaling
s1,069,000 To 1,517 People.
See How Easy It Is To Have A Debt Free
Christmas Next Year By Opening Your
Christmas Savings Account Today.

Coii448·ARTS for more Into.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS · Garnet Bachner, Rutland.
FRIDAY DISCHARGES · Harvey Earlewine.

The Timing Has Never lleen Better.
COLONY THEATRE

HACK THEN.- Ernest Dewitt acted as barn man at the
stockyards in the '70s and his sister, Bessie Dewitt, acted as cook at
lhe yard's resta.urant - the same restaurant where Bob and
Jewel Evans \Vorked.

SCENE OF DEVASTATION - This was the scene on Vinton
Avenue on the morning or Friday, Oct. 4, 19111 as the Gallipolis
Stockyards smoldered from an overnight blaze. The yards were

rebuill aner they first burned in 11153, 23 years after it was built
by James N. Caldwell. (T -S photo by Jim Freeman)

SPRING VALlEY CINEMA
446 4514
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'

TAKING A REAK- Tracy Stewart
(right), now Ia ber 20s, takes a break with her
. rallier Tommy Joe Stewart after a long day of
tradln1 at the yard5. Tommy Joe estimates that
' '

during a good year, 11 much as $8 million dollars or cattle was bought and sold at the st!ICk·
yards.

TAKING A BREAK- Tracy Stewart
· (right); now Ia her lOs, takes a break with her
father Tommy Joe Stewart after a long day of
trading at the yards. Tommy Joe estimates tbat
'

...

during a good ~r, as much as $18 mRilon dol·
Iars or cattle was bought and sold at the stock•
yards.
'

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Page--:B2-5unday Times -Sentinel

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October 20, 1991 .

October 20, 1991

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

1 •·-.·~:.

~-··I"'~...

..

'0

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_..,,.

..._

__

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

.
-~~,... ,'

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MR. AND MRS. EDWARD (MELINDA)' WINGO

Arrowood-Wingo OAK HILL Melinda
Arrowood anll Edward Wingo were
pnited in marriage Aug. 31 at First
Baptist Church in Oak Hill with
Rev. Melvin Mock officiating.
The bride is !he daughter ·of Mr.
and Mrs. Flem Arrowood of Oak
Hill.
• The groom is !he son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Wingo of Johnstown,
Qhio.
• The bride wore a floor length
gown made of satin and tulle !hat
was highlighted with iridescent
sequins, pearls and lace. The back
of the dress contained satin-covered buttons leading to a satin bow.
The crown-style bridal veil exlended !he lenglh of her train and was
trimmed in iridescent sequins.
~ The bride carried a large
arrangement of purple carnations,
lavender roses, white lilies, greenery, ribbon and pearls.
The maid of honor was Leah
Arrowood, sister of the bride.

Bridesmaids were Amy Hatcher,
Sue Baker and Belh Blevins. All
wore deep purple satin dresses wilh
graduated hemlines.
Best man was Jeffrey Sprau.
The groomsmen were Steve
Wingo, John Wingo and Jeff
Wingo. All wore· black tuxedos
wilh purple ties and cummerbunds.
The ringbearer was Danny
Arrowoed, nephew of !he bride.
The groom wore a black tuxedo
with a while vest, tie and cummerbund and a lavender boutonniere.
Amy Board played the piano
and Christy Mock was !he soloist.
Melissa Hammond registered
the guests and Teresa Arrowood
distributed programs.
A reception followed at fhe
James A. Rhodes Student Center at
the University of Rio Grande .
Hostesses for the reception were
Lori Edwards, Jennifer Litzke,
Amy Barker and Chrissy Barker.
The couple reside in Johnstown,
Ohio.

MR. and MRS. DAVID

In the service

'

Senior schedule announced

MIDDLEl&gt;ORT - The second direct all the parking and none will
annual haunted, hayride and Hal- be permitted ·along the roadway
loween party, co-sponsored by where the tractors travel. Those
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Ameri- attending will be direct~ into !he
can Legion, and th.e Village of parking area at the marma. When
Middleport wiD be held on Oct 31. cars enter the area, ,!he occupants
Bob Gilm.ore is chairman of !he will be counted and each person
event which laSt year was attended 'will be given one tic~e.t for,.a ride
by hundreds of Bend area residents. lhrou~h Sleepy 11ollow. The wagBetter lighting, more organized ons will load on !he hill in !he area
' parking, and better attractionS have just off of Page StreeL · _ .
been added this year; Gilmore
Everything, including tefresh· reports.
ments, will be free. ·
·
Several more wagons will be
Gilmore said !hat help is needed
used to speed up the trips tluough and residents who would lil:e to
Sleepy Hollow if Gilmore is able to contribute time are asked to conlocate !he wagons, traCtors to puU tract him.
them, and drivers. Anyone intereSt·
ed in providing equipment is asked
to contact Gilmore at 992-6128.
. Plans also call for the ftrst wag·
ons at 6 p.m. to be loaded at Overbrook Center wilh patients who
want to make the trip lhrough the
land of fright. Those wagons will
. g() .lhi:Qugh Sleepy Hollow and be
returned to Overbrook before the
general public rides begin.
Again !his yeat costume judging
will be held with prizes to go to the
.Hair.Hi.laliglats
winners in several categories.
welco 1111 CanciJ Stanll'f
As for refreshments, !he Ameri(BRENDA) WARTH
can Legion Auxiliary has ordered
to t..lr staff, ' ·
80 dozen donuts and 40 gallons of Cindy Ia the daughter af Mr. &amp; u....
cider to be served to !hose attend- Ronald Lemley. Wfte of Chartn
ing. Hotdogs will also be available Stanley. Cindy Ia a graduate of
carried a bouquet of burgundy and for roasting at !he site of !he bon- The Halrdealgnara Academy Ctaaa
mauve roses, white carnations and fire.
'
af June1989. Her work tkperlenca
white lace with mauve streamers. .
All of the activities will begin hu been lor The New You Muler
The bridesmaid was Amy on !he hill above the marina park- Cuta Regia Corp. and FIHta. Slop
Warth, Pomeroy, sister of the ing area. Additional lighting has In or call Cindy lor your new took
groom . Her dress was of mauve been added to !hat section, Gilmore today. For the tateatln now looklo
taffeta with pouf sleeves, a fiLted reports. Parking will also be han- can Cindy at ~41-459Tar vlalt her
bodice and accented wilh a large died differently tlris year, he report· at
bow in back. She carried a bouquet ed.
~ IDGHUGRTS
of burgundy and mauve roses ,
Legionnaires in uniform will L-4~32~PI~ke:.;s~t.~,KU~R!!~:!....J
white carnations and white lace
with burgundy and mauve streamers.
The best man was Darren
Warth, Pomeroy, brother of the
groom. Groomsman was Wade
Connelly, Pomeroy. They both
wore black cut-away tuxedos.
Their boutonnieres were sweetheart
SALES &amp; RENTALS
24 HOURS
roses and baby's breath . Ushers
OXYGEN
were Wade Connelly and Jesse
7 DAYS
HOSPIIAL BEDS
Maynard, Racine, nephew of the
WHEElCHAIRS
l WEll
bride.
WALKERS
Music was provided by Lisa
SERVICE
LIFT CHAIRS
Starcher, West Columbia, W.Va.
Registering guests was Amber
Maynard, Racine , niece of the
Full line of Medical &amp; Suraical Supplies
bride.
su
Pika • o•tpoR•
A rece ption was held in th e
(61.1
U6-IJ06
,
IOU
lift 1-100-UI-UO.
church social room following the
ceremony: The three tier cake was
decorated with mauve·and burgundy roses around the edge and
Make the most of Fall
silk burgundy and mauve flowers,
fashions with Connie's
lace and beads in the center of the
bottom and middle layers. The top
leather footwear fashlayer was capped by a porcelain
ions with whlpstltch
bride and groom standing on a lace
detailing.
and flower covered base with a
In Taupe, Navy,
Black.
large heart trimmed in. flowers,
'
pearls, lace and a wedding bell
behind the couple. Punch, coffee,
nuts and mints were also served.
Helping at the reception were
Roberta Swisher, grandmother of
the bride: Patty Maynard , aunt of
the bride: and Frankie Hu nnell,
aunt of the groom.

. ...

·- -...-....
...

.....

~.

. ... ..

Adams- Hen~le}'?
SYRACUSE - Harold and Garcia Adams. Long Bottom, are
announcing the engagement and
. approaching marriage of their
daughter, Christi Dawn, to Paul
Daniel Hensley, son of John and

CYNTHIA RIFFLE and DENNIS FACEMYER JR.

Riffle-Facern yer
MIDDLEPORT · Charles and A reception will follow at Royal
Ruth Ann Riffle, Middleport, Oak Resort in Pomeroy.
announce the en gagement and
Miss Rifllc is a senior at Ohio
approaching marriage of their . University and is majoring in
daughter, Cynthia Lynn, to Dennis health education. She is employed
Lee Facemyer Jr., son of Dennis at the University Mali in Athens.
and Donna Facemyer, Albany.
Facem yer, who resides in Mid·
The open church wedding will dleport, is sales manager at Facebe an event of Nov. 30 at 5:30p.m. royer Lumber Company. Inc., of
at !he Middleport Church of Christ. Middleport.

son. Other memben are Mrs;
Elaine Gearge, J.uanita Spurloc:K;
and Willa Saunders.
:.
I\eadin~s included "Hal~
Pumpkin,' .liisns of Wiater," an4
"Songs of Early Autumn," by Patsons, George, ani! Saunden.
.
Materials of baby breath,
globamerous, straw floweu,
yarrow and a multi-colored bow ,
were passed out to members to.
·make a fall flower basket.
· Betty Hubbard closed with !he
benediction . ·
.
•
. The next meeting will be OCt.
24, with the Star Garden CJub as
host.

News notes

Barb Hensley, Tuppers Plains.
The first zoological garden in
The open church wedding will
the
United States was estaNished
be an event of Nov. 3 at 1:30 p.m,
in
Philadelphia
in 1874 .
at the Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene. A reception wtll follow
!he ceremony.

Airman Michael Duhl has grad- of Racine Soulhern High School.
uated from the aerospace propulsion specialist Uet engine) course at
Ye Must Be Born :Again
Chanute Air Force Base, Rantoul.
Students were taugh! repair and
First, ye must be born
maintenance of jet engines, with
Into
the earthly sphere.
emphasis in ground safety practices
It takes a natural birth
when grouncl support equipment.
Called-the
water here.
Included in the training were maintenance documentation and manThen, ye must be born
hour accounting, as applicable to
By the heavenly source.
engine maintenance.
It's a oupernatural wind
He is !he son of Mr. Mike and
The Holy Spirit's course.
Diana Duhl of Portland.
The airman is a 1990 graduate
Ye must be born again
To go from death to life.
That's why He gave His son
To end our future strife.
A TOTALLY

TRICIA BURKE and GREGORY CARPENTER ·

Burke-Carpenter
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Burke, Reedsville, are
announcing the en~agement and
forth coming marnage of their

FuHMAL WEAR
"For the ...... times

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

"

Adulreducation
class offered

daug~ter, Tricia Renee, to Gregory
Bryan Carpenter, son of Roge1 Carpenter, Rutland , and Mr. and Mrs.
Bruee Hawley, Long Bottom.
The open church wedding will
. be an event of Nov. 9 at 1:30 p.m.
at the Alfred United Methodist
Church.
A reception will follow at
lhechurch.

'1369~ :
TAWNEY

JEWELERS INC.
422 Second Ave. Glllllpolls

$69.95

SAVE $90
SAVE

$25
Complete with:
•2 pillow shams
•1 day bed
•link springs

Ye must be born again
It is a life offaith.
B'ased in J esuo Christ
Being lostlo being saved .

•lnner1pring mattrass
•Day Bed (wood or mllblt)

$26995

II H(J Mill I I)

NO OTHER TRIBUTE IS AS WnNG
AS AP~SONAUZED MEMORIAl
FROM LOGAN MONUMENT CO. IT
15 AWORTHY EXPRESSION OF
lOvE AND RESPECT.

Questions may be directed to !he
editorial department from I to 5
p.m . Monday through Friday at
(614) 446-2342.

LOGAN
MONUMENT
COMPANY, INC •
POMEROY
MEIGS COUNTY DISPLAY YARD
NEAR POMEROY-MASON
BRIDGE
JAMES A. BUSH, MANAGER
PHONE 992·2588
VINTON, OHIO
GALLIA COUNTY
DISPLAY YARD
JAMES A. &amp; KIMBERLY
BUSH, MANA.GERS
1.__ _ PHONE
_ _ 3811-8603
_ _ _ _. .

AT

HOLZER CLINIC

'.'

EHS craft show
set November 9

.
L~=====

..
r;,;;;-...-.

9

A,CJirf!a.stic&amp;mt's•
.lheOo...WIIFamilyHaircullerso

0
95/
-------~
I

t~:::it,Ri,_

-:"-:::~.~- , I
........::::~!'1.8•(
--~

MON. &amp; FRI. 9 TO 9 P.M.
SAT. 9 TO 6 P.M.
SUNDAY 12 TO 5 P.M.

0,. .... &amp; Fri. 'tl I P.IILI T-. Wat, Thun. &amp;.Sit. 'tl 5 (l.tll.

REEDS VILLE - The Fourih
Annual Eastern High School Craft
Show, i.n support of the Eastern
Band, is planned for Nov. 9 from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the high school.
Quality craftsmen from Ohio
and West Virginia with exhibits
such as quilts, baskets, rugs and
dolls will be present. Also available
will be food , entertainment and
more. For information call 6149854231. The public is invited to
attend.

SAR annual
banquet set
ATHENS - Ewings Chapter,
Sons of !he Amer.ican Revolutio~,
will hold its annual banquet tn
honor of lis 55th anniversary on
Friday at 6:30 p.m. at !he Sports·
man Res1aurant in Alhens.
Speaker for the evening will be
State Representative Mary Abel.
Reservations are ~quired no
later than 5 p.m. on We~nesday .
·Call992-7874 for reservauons.

The Radiology Department at Holzer..Clinie's Main Facility has
received the American College of Radiology's

·-

MAMMOGRAPHY ACCREDITATION
This coincides with National Breast Cancer Awareness
Month- the
'
idea1 tirqe for ladies to schedule a Mammogram at ....
'

"

SWEATER COATS

$5900·
ALL WOOL PANT COATS 25 4
.
QO/
and LONG COATS •••••••••••
•
/0 OFF
Regularly $1 00 ,

· NOW

·aa JACKSON PIKE

. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
448-8281
LAFAYETTE MAL.L

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

(614) 446-2477

"THE .,. .,............ ERIN WOMEN'S HEALTH CARE''
...,
t

"

..

OGRAPRY

POMEROY - An adult educa. tion class for basketball officiating
will be held Wednesday at 7 p.m.
at Meigs High School. For furlher
information contact Dave Jenkms
or any olher local basketball offi·
cials. The class is sponsored by the
Athens Basketball Officials Association.

·

I.

Sug. Retail

Ye must be born again
To come from dark to light.
You must make a choice:
The wrong, or Christ the right.
CRoberl L. Harper
9118191

CONNIEGI

YtCAUTOF
.DIAMONDS

••

---In the service---

UNIQUE DESIGN

'

There's no / ~Q.~~:.---need to pay l·s...,
-~ ~.r.e n";::1
a fortune for a great haircut, penn I .'J.'::,::::,:.. $ "Uf 1
or color. ·
· I ·eo.,.,":' c., ll;,..
95· /
At Fanlastic Sam's, you'll gel l~
'""'·
f
everything you expect from an ex- ~r~~~~~ •t--::;
pensive salon, except the price.
' ~$.~~;./
You don't need an appomtment, /.s.
-~ ~.r.e'fl~we're waiting for you now.
/:~'?:,
$ "Uf 7

-

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-S~

Air Force Tech. Sgt. Jeffrey.D.
Mundell, an apprentice materiel
storage and distribution specialist,
has arrived for duty a1 RAF Upper
Keyford, England.
He i&amp; the son of Pall'ick and
Ernestine Mundell' of Bidwell.
The sergeant is a 1985 graduate
of North GaUia High School, Vinton.

CHRISTI ADAMS .and PAUL HENSLEY.

Joclt•••

For That Special
Occasion •••

'

....

Arrives for duty

11 .atte.nd .fellowship meeting

.

, ,_

.. · GALLIPOLIS - Members of
Natures Garden Club of !he Gallipolis Developmental Center met
recently in the activities building
with 13 in altendance. · •
' The meeting was opened by aU
members r~ting the pledge and
Esther Doeright gave !he roll call.
· F~r devotions, Euhice Neihin
read "God 's Gifts," Edith Adkins
read "God's in Control," and Glenna Williams read "Songs of Earth." .
Charlene Young read "Leaves" and
- Betty liubbard read "Should I Go
· · ··
. First."
Happy Birthday was sung by the
group to Theresa Pappas and
Martha Klulh.
· Program of !he day was presented by !he French City Garden Club.
Club president is Mrs. 'Jerold Par-

- · Wedding policy _ _

Special oc:c:aalona require special pr•
plll'lltlona. If you ara planni11g a wedding, annivniii'Y or prom, then you
ehould come ' " Ul at Hatklnl· Tannil'. .
You will havp ovtll' 190 atyln of tux·
edoa to c:hooaa from. We have a large
!lllection of the latlllatyleland com·
plimentary ecceaorln for 1hil tpeclel
OCCIIlon.
Quality Formatwar
· at Affordable Prieea. .
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 8 OR
MORE IN WEDDING I ARTY

__ ...

Gardeners make flower basket~~~·

Zirkle-Warth

NEW HAVEN· Brenda Gay
Zirkle and David Andrew Warth
were united in marriage on Aug. 24
at the First Church of God in New
Haven, W.Va. The double ring cer·
emony was performed by Rev .
David Fields Jr. Reir. Fields also
married Warlh's parents.
The bride is the daughter of Ann
and David Zirkle, Racin e. The
groom is the son of Jenny and
Charles Warlh, Pomeroy.
The bride was escorted to the
altar by her father ·and given in
marriage by her parents. She wore
a white satin gown of intricate
embroidery and sheer illusion net
that led to a richly detailed front
bodice. Simulated pearl dangles
fell from the center neckline and
from !he satin sleeve bows. Scalloped satin-covered buttons down
the back led to a large satin bow
and then to the chapel length train
which was embellished with
embroidered cut-outs. Her sheer
illusion veil was decorated with
satin white roses and tiny pearls.
She carried a cascading bouquet of
Navy Seaman Recruit Jason L.
During the training cycle, burgundy roses, white carnations,
Hall, son of Rebekah L. Hall of recruits are !aught general military sweylheart roses of burgundy and
22924 Bticktown Road, Racine; subjects desif!lled to prepare !hem mauve and white stephanotis.
OH,
t1
1 ted · ·
for funher academic and on-lhe-job Small pearl beads were intertwined
recen
y
comp
e
uammg
at
Recruit Traming Command, Great trat'nt'ng in one of the Navy's 85 with !he flowers and burgundy and
mauve ribbons flowed from the
l,.akes, n..
occupational fields.
bouquet.
The groom wore a black cutaway wxedo wilh white shirt and
black satin vest. His boutonniere
GALLIPOLIS - The following . scriptions; speaker from Holzer- was of burgundy and mauve sweetare activities and menus for the Peggy Lee-pharmacist.
heart roses and while baby's
week of Oct. 21-25 at the Senior
5 p.m. - Potluck, with food brealh.
Citizens ' Center at 220 Jackson and entertainment. Everyone welThe maid of honor was Samancome.
~e.
tha Maynard, Mason, W.Va. ,
Monday, Oct. 21
Friday, Oct. 2!
cousin ,of the bride. Her dress was
10 a.m.- Walking club
10 a.m.-noon, 1-3 p.m. -Art of burg.ulldy taffeta with pouf
· 11 a.m.- Short subjects
and craft class.
sleeves, a fitted bodice and accentI p.m. - Chorus
10 a.m.- Walking Club.
ed wilh a large bow in back. She
; 9-11:30 a.m. and 1-2:30 p.m. Menus will consist of:
Flu shots to be given by !he Gama
Monday - Pepper steak with
. County Health Department. No rice, cooked cabbage/carrots,
appointment necessary.
bread, chocolate;
Tuesday, Oct. 22
The Sunday Times -Sentinel
Tuesday- Ham and beans wilh
10:30 a.m. -STOP/Physical onions , couage cheese, tossed regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason counties as news and is
d salad, cornbread, jello cubes;
Fitness
. .
10 a.rn.-3 p.m. - Qm1ung an
Wednesday - Country fried happy to publish wedding stories
steak, au gratin potatoes, kale/vine- and photographs wilhout charge
pool
'
12:30 p.m. - Video maunee
gar; bread, sliced peaches;
However, wedding news must
Wednesday, Oct. 23
Thursday - Turkey tetrazzini, meet general standards of timeli·
10 a.m. - Walking club
cauliflower, bread, pumpkin ness. The newspaper prefers to
10 a.m.-noon - Crochet circle
squares;
publish accounts of weddings as
10 a.m.-noon - Blood pressure
Friday - Shepherd pie, soon as possible after the event.
check (Heallh Dept.)
whipped potatoes, garden salad,
To be published in the Sunday
1-3 p.m. - Cards
bread, fruit cocktail.
edition, the wedding must have
Thursday, Oct. 24
Please make reservations by taken place wilhin 60 days prior to
10:45 a.m. - Bible study
calling 446-7000 before 9 a.m. on. the publication, and may be up to
II a.m. - "In the Know" pre- the day you wish to auend.
600 words in length. Material for
Along !he River must be received
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m., prior to tile date
of pubtication. .
PATRIOT - The Patriot Sun- gene Edwards, Gladys Cast, Cindy
Photographs of eilher the bride
shine Fellowship Circle niet at the Cochran, Mary Crews, Mabel
or
the bride and groom may be
0.0. Mcintyre Park with seven Mahan, Marie Hobbs, and Carolyn
published with wedding stories if
members and four guests present.
Larnben.
desired. Photographs may be eilher
Roll call and dues were taken
Guests were: Rev. Pearl Casto,
and the secrewy/UCaS~~~er's reports Freemont Edwards, and Ryan and black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
wen read and app1oved.
Donnie Cochran.
Poor quality photographs will
• Old and new business was disThe next meeting will be held
not
be accepted. Generally, snapcussed, followed by Bible qucs- , Friday, OcL 25 at lhe home of CarLions.
olyn Lambert.
shots or insiant-developing photos
are not of acceptable quality.
Members present were: Emo-

---... . _....,.,_

.Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, 'OH-Polnt P.leaeant, WV

Feeney-Bennett Post to
host Halloween activities

I

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•
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-·

�Page-84 .Sunday Times-Sentinel
'

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

'

.

'

'

'

HMC initiates National Diabetes
Education Week; screenings slated

MR. and MRS. ROBERT SCHAEFFING

;:.,Couple celebrates 50 years

GALLIPOLIS · Mr. and Mrs.
· Robert Schaeffing of Lower Route
7, Gallipolis, celebmted their 50th
, wedding anniversary on October
II.
The couple was married Oct. II ,
,: 1941 at the Christ Episcopal
·. Church, Springfield, Ohio.
They are the parents of one son,
Raben Schaeffing of Wilmington,
Ohio, and one daughter, Deborah
Polcyn of Gallipolis. They have

five grandchildren, Kristy and Seth
Schaeffing; and Kim (Polycn)
Thomas, Rob and Josh Polcyn of
Gallipolis. They have one greatgmnddaughter, Megan Thomas.
Mrs. Schaeffing is an active
member of the Volunteer Services
League of Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Schaeffing is a retired towboat chief engineer on the Ohio and
Mississippi Rivers.

.HOMECOMING • The Rutland Church of the Nazarene will
have its homecoming on Sunday, Oct. 27. Sunday school is at 9:30
a.m., morning worship at 10:30 a.m. Rev. Lloyd Grimm will be the
speaker and a dinner will be held at 12:30 p.m. in the· fellowship
hall. A ''sing·spiration" will be held at 2 p.m. Rev. Sam Basye
Invites the public.
·

· GALLIPOLIS • Holzer Medical
'
C~nter will be observing National
Diabetes Education Week, OctOber
28 through November 3, in a spe-.
cia! way, according to Nancy Brun· .
ner, vice president of Nursing Ser·
vices.
On Monday, the hospi.t al's
mobile unit will be parked in
downtown Gallipolis, on the city
park side of the 300 block on Second Ave. Nursing personnel will be
. in the ttailer to perform blood sugar
screening and distribule educational materials, as a special service
from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
,
Under the direction of Bonnie
Simms and Mary Harrison, coordi·
nators of Staff Development, mem·
bers of the hospital's n'ursing staff
will conduct this convenient and
important screening and informa- ·
tiona! program.
·
Assisting during the screenings
will be members of the local Dia- bctes Support Group.
The theme for the week, "The
Rewards of Teamwork", was cho·
sen to highli~ht the benefits a dia,NA TIO~AL OBSERVANCE_· Bonnie Simms, (right), and
betes educauon program can proMary
Hamson, (left), of the Holzer Medical Center Nursing StiifT . ·
vide. Working with a diabetes educator helps· diabetic individuals Services, discuss literature with Ruby Evans for the upcoming free
blood sugar screening~..Qn Monday, Oct. 28. in Gallipolis. Evans is
develop the skills and attitudes
a member or the Volunteer Service League at HMC.
needed to lead independent and fulfilling lives.
Simms and Harrison both stated, about their blood glucose level, or diabetes and the professional devel·
"Throughout this past summer lind learning about diabetes and how to opment of its members.
early fall, our mobile unit was on manage and cope with this disease,
Locally the Holzer staff works
the scene at county fairs and festi- to stop in and see us."
with patients to develop an individ·
vals in Gallia, Mason, Meigs and
Anyone who comes by for a ualized diabetes management plan
Jackson Counties. This event pro- blood sugar screening should fast and represents a variety of profesvides the residents of this area with for two hours in advance of the sions, mcluding physiclllns, nurses,
another opportunity to have a free test.
dieticians, pharmacists, social.
blood sugar screening and help
Nationwide, over 7,000 health- workers and other health care prothem maintain a healthy life sty Ie." · care professional's are dedicated to ... fessionals, who take a team
".W,c encoura~e and invite any- promoting the quality of this spc· approach to helping their patients.
one interested m knowing more cialized education for persons with

LUCKY LEAF .

·~J .&lt;Atch Great .

, . Buys In The

STORE HOURS . - .

Monday thru Sunda.y
·. 8AM·l0 PM .

(//ems for tht community cal~
eiUMr appear two days prior to an
'event. They must be received by
·the Gallipolis 'liaily Tribune iii
advt1nce for publication)
Sunday, Oct. 20 ·
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Bob and Lou Grubb will be performing at the Gospel Lighthouse
Church at 9:30a.m.

Tuesday, Oct. 22
GAj..LIPOLIS - Running cl ub
meeting, 7 p.m., at Charlie's &amp; Co.

RIO GRANDE - Open Gate
Garden Club meets at the home of
Brenda Coven, Linwood Drive,
Rio Grande at 7:30 r,.m. Program:
"Js Fall for planting." by Mary Jo
Dodson. Bring a wrapped trick or
GALLIPOLIS -A euchre tour- treat
nament will be held at the American Legion Post 27 beginning at 2
p.m.

3 s1

298 .SECOND ST.

POMEROY, .OH.

PRICES EFFEOIVE 00.20 THRU 00. 26, 1991.
'

64 Portraits
4-8x1 0

a-oz.

4·3x5

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Hangmg Contest, Education Dept.,
Home Life Dept., OFWC Fund
Raising, Women's History
Resources Center, Adopt-A-Teacher, 100 percent Clubwoman Maga·
zine Subscription, and for con·
tributing more than ·$100 to schol·
arships in momllirium.
On an individiual basis, Gallipo·
lis Junior Woman's Club member
Mary Ellen Robineue placed sec·
ond in the Clubwoman Essay Contest
The awards were received at the
OFWC State Convention in
Columbus. The Gallipolis club has
been fedetated since 1958, and this
is only the second time in the history of the club to take lOp honors.
The Gallipolis Juniors are a mem·
ber of the Centtal Ohio River Dis-

FOODLAND DOWNTOWN
GAWPOLIS, OHIO
FRIDAY, OCTOIER 25TH
HOURS 1 TO 7
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SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26th
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GtH Oily At Powell's S.,. YaiM

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OHer Gtt4 Oct. 20 tin Oct. 26, 1991
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GALLIPOLIS - Divorce Support Group meeting at 7:30 p.m. at
New Life Lutheran Church . Call
446-4889 or 441-15 I6 for more
information.

Coiner of Second at Grape St.

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CROWN CITY • Shamah will
.be singing at the White Oak- Baptist Services begin atl0:45 a.m.

· The highest .point in th~ United
States is Mount McKmley m Alas·
ka at 20 320 feet; the lowest is
Death -Villey, Calif., at 282 feet
below sea level.
The Nile is·the longest river in
the world, flowing fdr 4,180 miles.
At 3,912 miles, the Amazon is the
leCOnd longest.
The Caspian, at 152,239 square
mUes, is the world's largest lake.

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News briefs

$119

·.

Sp
·

W!h Pun:hllt of Ad¥- SpociO

GALLIPOLIS -:- Scenic Hills
Nursin$ Center will hold an open
house m observanc e of its lO th
anniversary. The center will be
open from 2 to 4 p.m.

CENTENARY • Centenary
United Christian Church revival
begins at 7 p.m., with Rev. Sarnpy
Hart. Featured singers arc the
Visionaires; Tuesday: Rollins fami. ly. Everyone welcome.

JIFFY CQRN
·MUFFIN
MIX

.

-.fitquisitwns fine Jewelry- ·

Monday, Oct. 21
GALIPOLIS • The Episcopaf
Church Women will meet Oct. 21
at Jl:l5 a.m. i~ the parking lotto
form a car pool to Oak Hill.

15.5 oz.

.

Ariel Players to hold auditions
The Ariel Players, a community
theatre ensemble based in the historic Ariel Theatre, will be holding
auditions for the upcoming production of Agatha Christie's "The
.. Mousetrap." Auditions will be held
at the Ariel Theatre on Monday,
Oct 28 at 7 p.m. The auditions are
open to the public. There are 3
female and 5 male roles to be cast
by director, Charles Stapleton.
Performances will be on Saturday, Dec. 21 at 8 p.m. and Sunday,
Dec. 22 at 3 p.m. For more infermation, call the Morris &amp; Dorothy
Haskins Theatre at446-ARTS.

APPLE
SAUCE

Claosifiedsl

Gallipolis Junior Woman's Club
receives state achievement award
The GFWC/OFWC Gallipolis
Junior Woman's Club recently was
honored as the state of Ohio's number one club.
This award, called the "Jessie
June Magee Club Achievement
Award, is presented to the club
having the top number of points on
the OFWC slate reports.
Club president ·for 1990·91 was
Cindy Saunders.
·
The club was also awarded the
Hope Hageman Membership
Award, having gained the most
new members. The Gallipolis
Juniors placed second, to Avon
Lake, on the GFWC/OFWC Junior
Scorecard.
The following citations were
also awarded to the club for out·
standing work in Membership,
~yal Jonquils, Public Affairs Wall

Pr;~20~·~·1;99;1~~!!!~~~~~~~~~~P;o;m;e;ro;v;· !M:Id:dile;po;rt:;:o:al:llpo:U.:•·~o:H~P:o:ln~t:P:I•a:aa~.~nt~,·:wv------~sru~-n:day Times Sentlnei-Pige-85

October 20, 1991

J

1360Z•

:
Gtetl o.ly At Ptwtl' I s.p. Vllw
• OHtr Gtetl Oct. 20 tin Oct. 26, 1991 ·
liMit IP«C.1t-

••• : CO(J.P(W

·'

MAXWELL HOUSE

MASTER aLENS co~~E
34.SOZ.

3

CHUCK

FLAVORITE

GRANSSUGAR
4

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Page-as-sunday Times-sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllp~lis,

OH:-Pqlnt Pleasant, WV

October 20, 1991
•

Community ·Calendar Item$ · Vielllll!,W.Va. There will alsb be a
appear two days before an event youth trio from St PauL The public
and the day of tbat .event. Items is invited to attend.
. most be received weD in advance
to 85SIIrli publication in the cal·
R.A,CINE- Ohio Valley Draft
endar.
Horse and.. Mule Association Trail
Ride will be held at 10 a.m. on
SUNDAY
Sunday. The ride will be h.cld a
BASHAN • The Ohio Valley quaner-mile south of· Bashan Fire
Draft Horse and Mule Association House on County Road 28 near
will have a trail drive on Sunday Racine. There w1li be a potluck
beginlling at 10 a.m ., one-quarter dinner after-the ride. The public is
mile south of Bilshan on County . iqvited.
Road 28. For infonnation caU Mary
Rose at 614-949-2822 or Tim
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun Bearhs at 614-992,7880. There will ty Genealogical Society will meet
be a poUuck dinner with meat fur- Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Meigs
nished by the association.
County Museum in Pomeroy, The
public is invited to attend. ·
MIDDLEPORT· The First Baptist church of Middleport will be
MONDA¥
celebrating Bible Sunday on SunPOMEROY • "The Hoosier
day when the church wiD focus on Schoolmaster" by Edward Eggle"The Gifts of Love" bibles for the ston will be presented by Professor _
USSR, Central and Eastern Europe. Ronald Grosh, Superintendent of
Springfield Christian Schools, on
~- REEDSVILLE· The ReedsviUe
Mondayarthe Meigs· County PubUnited Methodist Church will hold lic Library as a part of the "Heroes
its first homecoming on Sunday. and Heroines of the Ohio River
NEW LIFE SIN9ERS
Rev. Charles Eaton, pastor, will Valley" series.
speak and several local musicians
wiD perfonn. A potluck dinner will
REEDSVILLE - The Eden Unit.
begin at I p.m. and the public is ed Brethren Church in Reedsville
Va.
Choir
has appeared numerous
The
Antioch
Missionary
Baptist
invited.
wiU hold revival services Monday Church Mass Choir will be the fea- times around the region lifting their
through Oct. 27 at 7 p.m. nighll y
in song and singing God' s
POMEROY • Rev. Eddie Buff. with Rev. Bob Wiseman, Point tured ensemble at a Gospel Music voices
praises
and inspiring all those who
Concert
to
be
held
at
the
historic
ington will be the guest minister at Pleasant. W.Va., as evangelist.
Ari~.J Theatre on Sawrday, October hear them.
the Naomi Ba_ptist Church in There will be special singing each
Also
at tM Ariel is
26 al 8 p.m. The Huntington, W.
Pomeroy on Sunday at 10:45 a.m. evening.
The Hocking District Sunday
School and B.T.U. Institute will
RACINE - The American Rcct..
meet at the church at 2:30p.m. and Cross Bloodmobile will be at ·Rev . .Buffington will be the guest Southern High School on Monday
$peaker. .
frol)'l 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Everyone
who is eligible to give blood is
POMEROY - Former Meigs urged to do so.
County resident Bruce Stone will
. perform a gospel concert at St. Paul
MIDDLEPORT - Revival at the
-_· Lutheran Church in Pomeroy on Old Bethel FreewiU Baptist Church
:-·sunday at 7 p.m. The public is at Route 7 and· Story' s Run Road ,
invited to attend .and refreshments south of Middleport, will be held
will be served.
Monday through Saturday at 7:30
•
p.m. mghtly. Marvin Markin will
MORNING STAR · Homecom- be the evangelist. There will be
- ing at the Morning Star United special singing. The public is invit·
· Methodist Church will be Sunday ed to attend.
_
at 9:45a.m. Sunday school is at 11
a.m. and a carry-in meal will begin
RACINE - The Southern Local
at 12:30
Afternoon services Board of Education will meet Mon- are at 1:3 p.m. Kenny Baker, min- day at 7 p.m. at the high school.
,ister, invites the public.
POMEROY - The Salisbury
' ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock PTO will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
~ :s11rings United Methodist Church Candidates for Meigs Local School
a hymn sing on Sunday at Board will speak. All parents arc
with the Harmony Gospel urged to attend. A pumpkin judging
~ ::ltJ:;l from Coolville. Rev. Keith contest will be held prior to the
·;.~
invites the public
meeting.

·· ·~

·'~

~
.Jii!J

Rlj:CIPIENTS • Pictured ore recipients or First Family certili·
cates and pins following the Second Annual First Families of Gallia County banquet, held at the Gallipolis Elks Lodge. Among
those-a~cepted into the soeiety were: Front, (I tor), Jeanne Davis,

til.

1
•
·
GOEST SPEAKER • Tacy Arledge, cbalrmiD of First Faml· .
Carolyn Qavens, Rose Mary Rudy, A,my .Mkins~ Elaine Brown · lies or Ohio, was the featured speaker at the receat Second Aonual .
and Dorothy Frazier; Back, George Woodward, Tom Woodward,
First Families of Galli&amp; County banquet. Arledge spoke about
CarroU Brown, Ricbard Brown, Myron Jones, Robert Frazier and
cemeteries, entitled "A Grave Matter:''
Ralph Frazier.
·
---~------------.;..--:o---i

r---------·

First Families banquet pays tribute
.to Gallipolis settlers and ancestors
GALLIPOLIS - "A Tribute Families of Gallia County, welHonoring Our First Sculcrs" was comed Area District Vice President
the theme for the recent Second Barbara Rutledge from Proc Annual First Families of Gull ia torville. Mrs. Rutledge made a surCounty banquet held at th e Elks pmc presentation to this year's
Club-in Callipolis, with 86 in allen- winner of the state Ohio Genealogi·
dance.
cal Society essay contest, senior
During the last year an addition· division, William Plants of Gallia
· al 37 members proved their descent Academy , who won the award
from a pioneer ancestor who lived based on his essay on ancestor
in Gallia County prior to 1820, Charles Russell.
bringing the total number of ancesFeatured speaker was Mrs. Tacy
tors now proven to 390 by 291 Arledge, a CGRS, a member of
members.
NSDAR , First Pioneers of Ross
Mary Ann Wood, president of County, Soci ety of Mayflow er
the Gallia County Genealogical Descendants, and NSUSD of 151.
Society, welcomed the guests and
Mr.&gt;. Arledge currently serves as
· the invocation was given by state chairman of First Families of
· Michael Trowbridge who came in Ohio, un organi zation of O.G.S.
· Civil War coswme.
She gave a humorous talk on cemeHenny Evans, chairman of First teries, entitled "A Grave Matter."

A VALUABLE WEAPON
Mammography is a val~ble weapon in_the war against cancer and
is one of th~ wide range of services available at your Hometown
Hospital-' VETERANS MEMORIAl:.,
The technique can reveal changes in the breast before th~y can be
dis~covered b_y_a woman or her doctor. Mammog-raphy is a common
diagnostic technique.
,
. Screening is recommended for women starting as early as age 35 and
is available at Veterans Memorial Hospital simply through a request by
your physician.

Following the program, First
Family certificates and pins were
presented to those newly accepted
into the society. The local commit·
tee includes besides Woo4, Evans,
Mrs. Martha Lear. Mrs. Pat Compton was thanked for typing the certificates.
A song prepared especially for
the occasion by Charles Murray ,
was sting by the entire group before
dismissal.
Everyone is invited to anend the
Third Annual Banquet in 1992 and
is encouraged to submit applications on their ancestors within the
next year.
Documents must be included
with the application which provide
proof of descent through each generation from the ancestor l'O the
present.

(M-bJ

,,

•: a

11 SE. Memorial Drive Pomeroy
992·2104

~

JUST·THINK •••

POMEROY - Carleton Church,
:: Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy, will
·· host special speaker Rev. Gene
·..Skaggs, on Sunday at 7p.m. Pastor
Clyde Henderson invites the pub·
' lie.

. (1992)
Cbrlstma. comes earlier evecy-yearl Plan ahead by opening
your 1992 Christmas Club at Peoples Bank today.
S~ply make 49 weekly payments and we'U make the final
payment for you ... It's a great way to save! ·

LARGE SELECTION

:
:
··
.
·
.·

OPEN A

$5, $10,
s:oo a.m. 'til ,.:00 p.m.

Other Houra by Appomtment- 693-66811 or. 441i·l!327

STANLEY A. SAUNDHS MONUMENTS
Ul Tlllrtl Awe.

.

l'h. 446-2327

TUPPERS PLAINS - The St.
Paul United Methodist Church in
Tuppets Plains ~ill observe its
annual homecommg on Sunday.
Sunday school is a 9 a.m. and worship is at ·10 a.m. with Rev. Sharon
Hausman. Carry-in dinner at 12:30
p.m. 'Afternoon sing at 2 p.m. with
the Fellowship Baptist Trio from

$20

Galllpoll1, OH.

POMEROY· Meigs County
Garden Clubs are remitided of the
upcoming £all meeting on Monday
at 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs County
Extension Office. Officers Of all
clubs are urged to attend to draw
for the schedule for the Christmas
flower show to be held Nov. 23 and
24 at Royal Oak Resort. New officers win be installed and Janet
Bolin will be demonstrating new
trends in arranging for the Star
Club. The Middleport Am ateur
Club will host the meeting.

667~6092
BASEBALL, BASKETBALL, HOCKEY and FOOTBALL CARDS

WE NOW HAVE IN
STOCK....

.,
·-- '

1992 CHRISTMAS ·CLUBS
'BEGIN OCTOBER 21ST! . ..

•1991 Pro Line Portraits Wax

R~duce,

Packs
•1991 Leaf Stu.io Wax Packs
•1991 Topps Stadium Club Wax
Packs .
.
•1991 Leaf Wax Packs
•1991 Upf)er Deck Wax Packs
•1991 Bowman Football &amp;
Baseball Wax Packs
•1991 To"s Footbaii.Wax·Pocks
•1991 Pacific Pro Football Plus
Wax Packs
•1991 Pro Set Platinum Football
Wax Packs
•1991 Maxx Race Cards Wax
Packs
•1991 Score Baseball Sets
•1991 Upper Deck Baseball Sets
··1991 Pro Set Platinum Sets
e1991 Leaf II Sets

Reuse, Recycle!

.
•

PEOPLES

POMEROY

MASON

992·2284

773-5514

POINT PLEASANT

NEW HAVEN

675-1121

882~2135

. Slil&gt;otllllllll'oniiJ.IOI Eooty -~~or F-.re to CofrPo1e Club
;!,

MEMBER F.O.!.C.

~
Ferrellgas

On State Route 7 (Look for Sign)

·Using It Once Is
Never Enough ...

11991 Christmas Oub Checks wUI be ••livered the week of October 2111

II 0 WEST MAIN

4) 446-2264

TH~CARDBOX

ARE ALSO AVAILABLE

THE FABRIC SHOP

Call us at

boundary between Pennsylvania
and Mar~land .

$1~ $2, AND $3 CHRISTMAS CLUBS

SEE US FOR•••••
- •All QuDt Supplies •Fabric •Patterns
"'Porcelain Dolls "'Craft Supplies •Paint
•Jumbo Creative Twist

Ferrellgas
State Route 35
Gallipolis, OH 45631

---------------Mason and Dixon's Line is the

(Quantities are limited, so don't delay!)

hy•w•y Til Chrlllmu

Ferrellgas gives you a lol more than just whal we pul in
. your tank. You get propane PLUS...
"

we wanl to give you better service while we help
you control costs. ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL
CUSTOMER·PROGRAMS. including our Level Payment
Plan and the Ferrellgas Installation Review.

. MAGICAL DISPLA • . Jacobs, magician,
lisher and mail order magic supplier, has many of his magicul
items and memorabilia on display at Clark's Jewelry Store. Jacobs
operates his mail order business • Lee Jacobs Productions " from
his home in Pomeroy . This is. the fi~st time in man~ years th~t
·J acobs has displayed any of his magical paraphernalia. Jacobs 1s
pictured as he overlooks the items in the display.

Ajestfve touch for your holiday entertaining!

FREE DEMONSTRAT ION AND
ONE YEAR FREE SERVIC E'

Ferrellgas provides you with a long-term
commitment to safety and quality service.

SPECIAL SERVICES ...Because we value you as a

CHRISTMAS COASTER SET
WI'tH CURRIER AND IVES DESIGN

PRICES START AT $14.9°0

ANYONE CAN SELL YOU
- PROPANE!

1% Mile South of Tuppers Plains

OR

Invites You}) Shop FIRST For The Best
Prices On Singer and White Sewing
Machines

@)

ct~slomer,

Perfect for your Christmas cookies and candy!

IN POMEROY

~

delivery teams in the business. We give yol! more for your
money when il comes to safely and qependability. ,

October 1991

3 POUND COOKIE TIN
Wl'I'H SANTA CLAUS DESIGN

THE FABRIC SHOP

'

SAFETY..•we have one of the most experienced propane

OHIO RECYCLE MONTH

CHRISTMAS CLUB NOW
AND RECEIVE A
FREE GIFT!

Flock of Agee offers you a choice of 6 different colored
grenitee. Whatever your requirements may be, complete
.Mtlmctlon Ia 111ured with Rock of Ages.

Open Mon .• Tues .• Th_urs. &amp; Fri.

OR

POMEROY - The Ohio Eta Phi
· duet specializing ,in contemporary Chaptcr, Beta Sigma Phj Sorority,
and Southern gosyel mu sic , will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
"Shammah," meanmg "God is Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
here.:· has performed at_ a variety of All member~ are urged to attcnd.
pubhc events m the tri-state area.
Shammah members Debbie Johnson and Kim Herdman will be
joined by Rick Towe ·and Jim Singleton for some quartet music.
Rounding out the bill or fare is
the New Life Singers, a mixed
POMEROY DRIVEU
quariet from Pt. Pleasant W.Va.
EDUCAnON CWSES
Gospel fans might already have
one of their recordings "II You Had
START NOV. 4th
Known Me," "Live Up In Heaven"
GALLIPOLIS CWSES
or "Some Old. Some New."
The concen is open to the public
STAll' NOV. 11th
and admission is free. For more
Call Your @&gt;office
information , call the Morri s &amp;
Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatre at
446·0699
446-ARTS.
.
.

g.m.

THERE'S ONLY 41~ ll
MORE SHOPPING DAYS
UNTIL CHRISTMAS!

AWARD WINNER • Patricia Kapp, (left), has been selected as
the October Employee of the Month at the Pinecrest Care Center.
Kapp bas been employed as a nursing assistance since March of
1990. She is described by co-workers as "always concerned about
the residents' welfare, caring, patient and very helpful. Presenting
the award is Debbie GuUey, (right), Pinecrest assistant director of
Nursing.

SHAMMAH

Area gospel musicians to perform at Ariel

VETERANS
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Velerans Memotlal llospllal

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

October 20, 1991

•
••
•
•
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Funded by the Dlvllion of Litter Prawntion &amp; Recycling,
Ohio Departmem of Natural Reaour'als,
George V. Volnovlch. Gowmor.

AVARIETY OF 1990
BASEBALL and
HOCKEY WAX PACKS
STILL LEFT.

_,

'
A variety of Sports Memorabilia....
• Autographed Baseballs of Players Past
and Present
•Autographed Picture Plaques
•Autogr~phed Bats
•Autographed Jersey of Chris Sabo

'l

REGISTEil FOR WEEKLY DRA.WINGS
NOW THRU CHRISTMAS:
• Autographed Baseball and Picture Plaques '
••
• Boxes of 1990 Wax Packs ·
,o Eric Davis Picture Plaques
••

.'
CALL 614-667-6092 FOR SPECIAL APPOINTMENT .:'
.

'

~or

more Information contact:
GALLIA COUNn LinER PREVENTION ·
AND RECYCLING
.,

'

.

·

'

.,

•

�•
•

'

•. '
Page-88-Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

Pomeroy.;...Middlepart-Galllpolls, OH-Palnt Pleasant, wv

October 20, 1991·

·sports

.
•

~intt, - jttitintl SeCtion
·

C:

OCtober 20, 1991

No~

18 Ohio State hands
Northwestern 34-3 loss
Turkey.F~anks
LOUIS RICH
REG. &amp; BUN
LENGTH

SNO•WHITE
CAULIFLOWER

lLB.

48 oz.
JAR

~

99¢head

PKG.

Pizza Sauce
RAGU ORIGINAL

ARMOUR STAR OSCAR MAYER
SLICED BOLOGNA
REGULAR, TIUCK
TIUN,LIGHT

SLICED
PEPPERONI

$179

59¢ 3 oz. pkg.

THOMPSON
WHITE SEEDLESS
GRAPES

12 oz. pkg.

79~ lb.

BONELESS

LARGE SLICING
TOMATOES

89

English
Roast
USDA CHOICE
PORK SHOULDER

$ 29

PARK FARMS USDA GRADE A

.

1

Thrifty Pack Chickens.... La. 4
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SANDRIDGE

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$ ~69

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2 II

By CHUCK MELYIN
The crowd of 73,830 was more western 279-78 on the ground and AP Sports Writer
. than tWice as large as Northwestern . 354-151 overall.
.
CLEVELAND (AP) -It was . expected to (,!raw in Evanston, Ill. _Nil. 11 NCSU 15, Marsballl4
just like old times for'Scottie Gra- Ohio State was playing ·at CleveAt Raleigh, N.C .. Charles Davham and Carlos Snow.
land Stadium for the first time enpon ran under a 34-yard touchGraham rushed for 109 yards since 1944. .
,
down pass from GeQff Bender in
and three touchdowns and threw a
Northwestern's undOing was the the back of the end zone with 24
, block to set'.up Snow's touchdown . punting game. On Northwestern's seconds left as No. 11 North Carrun as No. 18 Ohio State routed first series, Ohio State's Walter- olina erased a nine-point deficit in
Nonhwestern 34-3 Saturday.
Taylor blocked Ed Sutter's punt, the final three minutes to beat DiviThe touchdowns were Graham's and Dante Lee recovered and stum- sion I-AA Marshall ·15-14 on Sat- .
ftrst of the year, and they surpaSsed bled to the Wildcats' four-yard urday.
·
the two he scored all of last year, line. Two plays later, Graham
The winning strike was made
when he was hampered by a scoredfromtwoyardsout.
possible when Damon Hartman's
sprained ankle. Snow has scored
In the secpnd quaner, Sutter was onside kick .was recovered by
three TDs this season after missing unable to.seoop up a low snap from Sebastian Savage at the Marshall
1990 beca~se of a benign rumor on Conrad Jones in time to get the 48 with one minute left. Bender
his hip.
,
punt away,_giving Ohio Sta.le the threw four incompletions but got a
"The most exciting thing that ball at the Northwestern 16. Five . reprieve when Marshall was called
happened for rite today was block- plays later, Graham scored from for being offside on fourth down.
ing for Carlos on his touchdown · the one-yard line.
Bender hit Ledel George at the 34
run," Graham said. "We're pretty
Graham added a one-yard for the first down and then found
close friends, and it sure felt like touchdown run on the Buckeyes' Davenport in the end zone.
old times again . I wish people opening possession-of the second
The touchdown capped an
would count the blocks I give, half, settine un the score with a 2Q. unlikely. scenario for a Wolfpack
because those are just as important yard run to the Northwestern five.
squad that was offensively impoto the team as the touchdowns."
Northwestern moved the ball tent much of the game.
Graham's fust two touchdowns well at times in the fust half, stunN.C. State (6-0) was pinned
capped short drives after North- ning Ohio Sta'te when Le n deep in its own territory when Benwestern botched a couple of fust- Williams hit Mark Benson with a der was intercepted by Shannon
half punts. The Wildcats never led 49-yard pass on the Wildcats' sec- King with 3:32left. King's 15-yard
CAN'T GET AWAY~ Northwestern quar~
WUliams• legs and gets a sack foran ei2llt-vard.
in the game, although at one point ond possession of the game. That return put the Thundering Herd (4terback
Len
WiUiams
(12)
tries
to
get
away
from
losS du.J:ing Saturday's Big Teo game
in the first half they held a 98-7 put them in position for Brian 2) on N.C. State's one and Orlando
Ohio State defensive end Jason Simmons (91),
land,
Ohio, where the Buckeyes posted a
advantage in total yards.
Leahy's 32-yard field goal, cutting Hatchett punched it in for a 14-3
but
Greg
Smith,
.
_
Simmoos•
teammate,
grabs
victory.
(AP)
''We certainly cannot make · Ohio State's lead to 7-3.
lead.
mistakes against a good football
But Graham's two first-half
The Wolfpack came back for a
team," Northwestern head coach touchdown s, coup led wi\h Kent 64-yard drive, with Aubrey Shaw
Francis Peay said. "We shot our- Graham's 15-yard scoring pass to scoring on a one-yard fun . But an
selves in the foot and were not able Cedric Saunders, put the Buckeyes auempted two-point conversion
to do anything offensively· to get ahead 20-3 at halftime . Ohio · pass fell short and N.C. State
back in the game. The mistakes State's defense then took over, lim- trailed 14·9.
were indeed fatal."
· iting Northwestern to 37 yards in
Marshall, ranked No. 8 in DiviNorthwestern (1-5 overall, 0-3 the second half.
sion 1-AA, led, 7-0 at the half on
in the Big Ten), the home team for
Kirk Herbstreit replaced Kent Michael Payton's 41-yard scoring
the game. agreed to play it in Graham at quarterback midway pass to Brian Dowler. The Marshall
Cleveland in return for an estimat· through the third quarter and defense, 19PS in the Southern Coned $1 million share of the gate. directed Ohio State's final touch- ference, kept N.C. State out of the
Ohio State (5· 1, 2-1) beat North· down drive, capped by Carlos end zone and Hartman missed field
western for the 16th straight time Snow's six-yard run. •
goal attempts of 44 and 25 yards in
since-1971.
The Buckeyes outgained North- the second half. His40-yarder with
II :56 left in the third quarter made
it 7-3.
N.C. State's only threat of the
half came after Marshall's first TD.
The Wolfpack moved from their 28
to the Marshall 22, but Hartman 's
39-yard field goal attempt missed
to the left.
In a scoreless first quarter, Marshall defender Joe Chirico jarred
th e ball loose from Bender and
Mark
Mason recovered for th e
1 Florida State beat Middle Tenn. State 39-10
Thundering Herd at the Wolfpac k
2 Miami beat Long Beach State ............. 55··0
43.
3 Washington beat Callfamla ................ 24-17
Payton scrambled for 22 yards
and hit Ricardo Clark for a 12-yard
4 Michigan beat Indi!IJla ....................... 24-16
pass to reach the 9. But Ricky
5 Notre Dame vs. Air Force ...................... late
Turner
picked off a Payton pass
6 Florida beat vs. Southern Illlnois ....... 41·10
intended for Clark in the end zone
7' Callfomia lost to Washington ............ 17-24
to stop the drive.
8 Tennesse lost to Alabama .................. 19-24
W. Virginia 3J,.noston Coli. 24
............_ .. .), .r{"i
At Newton, Mas s., Darren
9 Nebraska beat Kansas State ............... 38·31
D.IVING TD CATCH -Michigan wide
sive back during Saturday's Big Ten contest in
Sludstill passed for three touch10 Penn State beat Rutgers ................... 37-17
receover
Desmond
Howard
dives
for
this
Elvis
Ann Arbor, Mich., which the Wolverines won
down.s, the last a 40-yard despera11 N. Carolln·a State vs. Marahall ..... ;...... l5·14
Grbac
pass
in
the
end
zone
for
a
four·yard
24·16.
(AP)
tion heave to Michael Beasley in
12 Oklahoma lost to Colorado ............... 17·34
.
touchdown
catch
in
front
of
an
Indiana
defenthe end zone with 24 seconds left
13 llllnols lost to Iowa ............................ 21·24
as West Virginia rallied past and
then held off Boston College 31-24 appeared set to pul away the game rcmai'ning. Wilh the help of a cou- verting three consecutive third14 Alabama beat Tenneasee .................... 24-19
in
the Big East on Saturday.
after forcing a punt that carried to ple of Studstill passes, they moved down opportunities en route.
,
15 IoWa beat Dllnols ................................ 24-21
Boston College (1-5) came the West Virginia 46.
to
a
fir
st
down
at
th
e
BC
40
.
a
sophomore,
carried
Studstill,
16 Baylor loat to Texas A 8r: M ................ 12·34
within a foot of a touchdown on 1he
The Eagles, stay ing on the Studstill then dropped back and four times for 35 yards and com- '
17 Georgia loat to Vanderbilt .................. 25·27
final play on Glenn Foley 's 46- ground, charged Lo a first down at fired a strike to Beasley, who got pleted a 15-yard pass to Ed HiU in
18 Ohio State beat Northwestern .............. 34-3
yard pass to Micha~l Campbell , th e six, but the West Virginia behind BC defender Jay Clark, and the march. Adrian Murrell helped
who was kept out of the end zone defense stiffe ned . On fourth down, took the ball in the end zone. with I 7 yards in five carries before
19 TeJ:U A 8r: M beat Baylor .................... 34-12
by
three
West
Virginia
defenders
.
Sean
Wright
attempted
a
20-yard
BC
took
the
opening
kickoff
Sludsti
II faked a handoff to Garrett
20 Pittsburgh lost to Syracuse ................ 27·31
Studstill , who completed 15 of field goa l, only to have 1he chip and marched from ils 34 to the Ford and raced !!round right end for
21 Clemson .................................. Did not play
24 passes for 166 yards, pulled shot go wide to the left.
Mountaineers' 22 before Scan four yards and the touchdown.
22 Colora!fo beat Nebraska .................... 34-17
West Virginia (5-2) into a 17-17 tic
Taking over at its 20, West Vir· Wright's 45-yard field goal attempt
A 14-yard punt by the Eagles
23 East Carollna ........................... Dld not play
with an 11 -yard scoring shot 10 ginia wcnl 80 yards in 20 plays (O sai led wide to the right
gave West Virginia possession at
Alex Shook in the third period.
Lie the score. Studslill hit four or
West Virginia then unleashed a the BC 40 late in the fust period.
24 · Syracuse beat Pittsburgh ................... 3~·27
Boston
College
stormed
back
to
five
passes
for
40
yards,
covering
powerful grou nd auack to go ahead However, an advance to the 21
25 Arizona State vs. Washington State ...... late
lead 24-14 on Foley's third tOuch- the final 14 yards on a pass to Rod- 7-0. After the field goal attempt, stal,led and Mark Johnson' s 39-yard
down pass, a 4-yard toss to tight ney Woodard.
West Virginia was penalized five fi eld goal attempt in the opening
end Mark Chmura at 13:37 of the
The Mountaineers regained pos- yards to its 23, then drove 77 yards minute of the second quarter was
third quarter. Then the Eagles session at their 28 with 1:46 in 14 plays for a touchdown , con·. (See FOOTBALL on C·S)

II .
II
II
II

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Sale Prices Effective Sun., Oct. 20 thru Sat., Oct. 26, 1991. We Reserve The Right To limit Quantities And Conect Typographical Errqrs.

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BIDWELL;OH
446~0818

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Mon·Sat. 7:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
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AND FOOD STAMP

CUSTOMERS.

KYGER CREEK HOMECOMING COURT
Conkle (center); a member or
l(yter Creek's voiieybaU and softball teams, was
crowned Kyger Creek's 1991·92 homecoming
queen prior to Friday nlgbt's game against visit·
~Senior Michelle

DANCIN' DAYS arrived once again· for
Kyger Creek, as these KCHS Band members
strut their stuff In tbt second half of Fr,day
night's homecoming game against Hannan
Trace. The Bobcats, who won 24·0, joined

ing Hannan Trace. Flanking her are queen
attendants Heather Hudson (left) and Jenny
Gardner. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)
·

J

Soutben and collf'ereace co-leader Oak HID as
the SVAC's llome-team victors· of llomecomlag
contests Friday nlgbt. For tbe !aside &amp;tory oa tbe
· weekend's footbaU action, see C-2. (Times·Sen·
tine! photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
-

'

�•

P.age-c2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, QH-Polnt .Pleasant, WV

Qcto~r. 20, 1991

C&gt;ctober 20, 1991

Pom!)roy-Middleport-Galllpolle, OH-Polnt Pleatant, WV

'

------

l(CHS
blanks Hannan Trace
·.
~4-0 in ~omecoming contest
~

...

~

.

.

• STOPPED lN MID-GALLOP - That's where Hannan Trace
: derender Jeremiah Waugb (55) stops Kyger Creek fullback Adam
: Denney (34) during the Iauer ~ rushing attempt in Friday night's
• game on the Bobcats' home field. Denney, who had 33 yards on the
; night, was part of tbe society that cleared the way for backfield
: mate PbU Bradbury in the Bobcats' 24·0 win. (Times-Sentinel photo
• by G. Spencer Osborne)
.

•

1Friday's

high school football scores

I
I

,

.

Ohio IIIah School Football

"
By The A.uoc:lat~ Prua
• Akron Ellecl31, Akron Cmrnl-Howc:r 0
~ Akron Hobin 23, ~Benedictine 7
• Airm Manchelttr 16, McDonald 10
: AVon North 21, Akron Garfield 19
, Altron. S1. Vincall40, Wan-en Howl1nd 0
~ Amanda-C!earcreek 42, HI milton Towtt~h.ip I

i
t

~

•
;

Amelia4 l , Cin. Tafl.6
Ansonia 43, Covin100n 0
A1ht.abull Hlrl&gt;ot 20, Painervillf- Rivtt~ide 0
Aycnvillc 34, Wayne Trac:e 8
Bay Village 40, Avon Lalte 20
Beallsville V, Sa111hJville Shenandoah 14

~
~ Buvei-creclt2 l , Oa~ . Waync20

ft.;.-_.._ ' Bedford 17, M1 1cld 14
• Bedford, Mieh
-~enual
0
cllairc 23

,.

dow

• B
S, Va.llcJ View 1
• BeloitW. Btll1ch62,DovcrO
' ~cnjunin l.o&amp;IJI47, DcOraff' Rivmide 1

.... Br.rr.a :21, BreckMUc 10
Bane Union 12, Liba1y Union 0

' Bi&amp; Walntn 20. OIC11tan&amp;Y 13
: 81ac:lr.Rivct3l,P1ymouth 14
t
Bloom-Carroll 24, Canal Winchcm:r 7
• Bluf'ruxt. 46, Ada21
• . -Bndrant 28, New Paril Natiooal Trail 0

Bridgoport 30, Buol&lt;oyoTraill2
• 'BI'DOkvillc 28, D•Y· Nor\hridac 7

; BIWIIwic:k 41 ,l.odi Ooverlca.f 27
8\ICyna 14, Bdlcwc 7

•

~
~

'

:.
,·
,

Bull'alo. W.Va. \4, Fairland 0
Caldwell 28, Fc.tFry_
e1
CambridJ e41,Coahocton 8
Can\01\ Ccr\1. Cath. 20, Lorain C.th. 14
CaniOn South 20, Mldinglon 14
Canton Timken II , Wooa.er7
C1rdinp:lDft 42, Buckeye Vall. 24
Carey [3, Fn:montSt. JQI.CPh 10
Carlisle 14 Middletown Madison &amp;
Cedlrville 39, Yellow Springs 12
Celina 34, Elida 14
Cc:nterViUe 29, Fairborn 0
Ch•&amp;ri.n Fallii-1,0Janac 13
Chardon 42, W, Oc.aug• 35
Chcupcalte 20, Coal Grove 14
Chilliedhe UniCito 44 Frankton Adena 22
Cin. AikCil 32. Cl.n. Withtaw 20
Cin. Anderton 23, Cin. Glen Eate 21
Cin CAPE 20, lovt.land 6
Cin: Counuy D1y 45, Cin. Landmadl: Chr. 1Cin. Elder 42. Cin. Roger Bacon 0
Cin. Hurls on 21, Norwood I9
Cin. M•ric:mont34, Cin. lndim Hill 14
Cin. MoeJJcr 27, Kct1crin1 All.cr 7,

Cin. Princeton 35, W. O!e~tet Lakott6
' (:in. Radinf 14, Cin. FinnoytOwn 0

: Cin. SL X.Vlcr 40, Col. Eaatmoor 22
Cin. Sycamore 17, Lima Sr. 14
Cin. Wa tnutllilb II,Cin. Nonhwe~~t 16
cu.. w....., IIilli 32, Olio Hilla 19

Cin. Winton Woods 28. Cin. ~uaha 8
•' Cin. Wood•ud U; Cin. Turpan?
·• cu.. w~ 8 34. Cin. Door Pari&lt; 24

Citcleville 3S , Tcay• Vall. 20
Cll)'mont 16, St. Clainville 13,
ClaJlon Northmont \6, Vandalia Butler 8
·~ Clcrmon1 Northcutcm 19, Bcthel·T•te 14
t
Cle. Central Calh. 24, Parmi Padua 21
Clc.. Glenville 26, Oe. Collinwood 6
C1c.. Linooln·Wut 12, Ce. Wc=~t Tech 6, OT
Clc.. S01.1lh 16, Ctc. Rhodu 6
Collins W. Re~ervo44 , Aahland Creawiew 0
l Colonel Crawfll'd 17. OnLiriO 6
r Col. Brookhaovcn 21, Col. Beecherof114
f Col. DeS1IC1 22, Newadl: 0

t Col. E1a 26, Col Wen 7

Col H•rtlcy 23, Bdlville Clcarl'ort. 0

;. col lnclcpeudcuce I, Col. MUCin 0
• Col. Liftdcn r7, Col. C.ntcnnial 0
, Cal. Nonhland 2'1,Col. Soutll_21

.' Col. Re~dyl3,Coi. Acld~y1 2

.

t Col. Walnut Jtj4f&amp;o 21, Ma.oon·Fn.nldin 6
·' Cal. w.. ~..,., 22. o.wopor~ 20
ol Col Whcutone·2S, Col. Briaa• 21
~ Col~mbul Orovtl4, Cridcnvillc Perry 14
CcnAtaUt 29, Gcncn\'2
Day. ChaminadooJuliennc 35, Day. Sltbbirul6
Day. Donbor 31, Oay. Paumon )2
()efianOt 47,
6
Delawarc31, WhitehaU 12
I: DclphOIWTeriOII n, Allcn F..ut 0
Deljohoo SL Jolln'a 33, Monon Local&amp;
I Dubllo 30, w......w. South 7
E. Ctnton 14 Akron Cavl!l!.tl)' 6
' E. Cbntali6, CU....Maao~O
E. Knoa 21. Cal. Nonltridp

'""wn

,. EudabNoM tc,Mea&amp;or1
Eaaat&gt;ood 34, JCwu L.ai&lt;OII 6
: Eaton37,0Wc0

• El&amp;in 36, lliclo.edalo 14

• Blyria W. Z71.onin Ocarviow 17
• Enan ar.crJ, 41 , SliM.&amp;- ShiYtneoO
'. Erio(Pa.) l'roo2l , Clo. VASJO
,• Eucllil SO. Walouahby South 12
Pailblnka 26, Mee"hat!icsbur&amp; 0
Fairpoat Hardin&amp; 13, Middlc:lield Cardinal 0
; Fedln.l H~J 40, Aloundelll

• FU.U.r :ZO, CoL Wa~ 7
~ FOit&lt;~n~ l O, TC~l,..W!Utmcr-7

.

• Fredcriebown 3S,BuckeyeCcnualO

..,.

-

{.

GaliCI'I 28, Norwalk 6
Oanway 34, Conotton VaU. 12
Ginrd 7, Poland SemUury 0

Goshen 49, Blanchwcr 0
Gran(i Vall. 36, BllltOn BeD:shi.rc 34
Grove City 17, Wo~at.on Kilbourne 14
Hannib&amp;l Rivcr28, St.. Mary's, W.Va . 0
Hardin·Northcm 33, Libert:r·Bent.oo 7
H01oh 30, Millcnpm 0
llilUudl4, Chilioo&lt;ho 6
Hotl&amp;nd Sprinlfidd 13, Rcmbu•i 12

Hubbard 13, Youna. Ubeny 6
Hud1011JS, No11oo 10
Huntin&amp;ton 19, Richmond Dale SE 6
Huron 14, SanduU:y Perkins 7
lndepend;ence 26, Richmond Hts. 7
Indian LakeS l, Waynesfield·Go.hen 9

lrornon 49, Greenup County, Ky. 13
Jacklon SO, Ather!• 12
Jeffenon 30, Ashtabula IS

·

Jcwcu·Scio 3S, Ncwoommtown 6
Jchn (jJcnn 10, Croobvillc 7

~ Bexley 44, Lickin&amp; Vall. 7

"

Frement N.on 34, ~gon Clay 13
Oah&amp;MI 18, Thomu Worthington 2

Kent Roosevc.l.t21 , Stow Wahh Jeswt 0

King120. Muon 6

Kyger Creel: 24,111Man Tnce 0
LU:ewood 24, Wmm 11~rding 20
L&amp;ltewood St. Edward 14, Clc. St. Ignatius 10
Laneuter 3.5, Z..ncrvillc 0
Lemon-Monroe 26, l..cbanon 7
l.cpsic4 0, Van Luc 0
l...e.-.inJton 21, Ashland 0
Libety Ccnt.cr 42, Wauseon 6
Liclr.ing Hcighu 12, New Alhlny 0
Lma Shawnce20, W1palr.oneu. 16
Uul e Miami 12, Greenfield McClain 8
LOdhnd 7, New Miami 6
Logan 21, Wamn loc•l20, 0T

logan Elm 42. F•irficlc! Un.ion 6
London 21, Johnstown 0
Loudonville 42. New Lo ndon 14
Lou.isvil.le ~0. C.ntoo Nonhwat 0

loula...Ule Aquinu 42, Oi.lmou.r Academy 14
Lucu 20, Cm~rg 0
Lyndhum BNSh 14, Maple Hu/ 7
..._,
Madi&amp;on 42, Alhtabula Sl. JoM 0
Madilon Pbina 20, Grandview 1
f-h n1 . M1dil:on 36, Muion Hudinj 1
Mana. Senior 28, Younp. Raycn 2
MapletOn 33, Monroeville 32, OT
MlrJimtl. 31, Pan Cllinm ll

Manetta 21, Gallipolil 20
Marion Flgin 36, Ridgedale 14
P.brion PIAAnt 27, River Vall. 6
MaryiYillc 21, MI.. VcmaJ 0
Mmillon Jadcaon 14, N. Ca ntoo G1enO'ak 6
Muaillon Wuhinpon 76, Yoona. East 26
McCcmb 35, An:adia 0
Mentor Lake Cath. 13, Puma Holy Name 3
Mett)'hiU'St (Pa.) 41, Brookfield 20
Miami Trace 4S, Wilmington 9
MiddlebutJ Uta. Midealk 9, Slrongsvi.llc 3
Middletown 28, }hmilton 7
Middl..wn Fonwlol&lt; 13, Miamisbong 0
Milford, 20, Fairlield 7
Millblry La.ko 19, Soolhview 6
Minerva 36, Carroll!on l
Minfon:l X1, Porumoolh West 26
Minllt:r46, UpperSeioto Vall. 21
Mohawk ll, North Baltimore 6
Nebooville· Yod: 14, Belpre 0
New Bmnt2'127, Coldwater 14
New Carlialc Toaunsd!. 14, Bdll'on11ine 6
New Rlehmood 3S, N. CoUcgc Hill 0
Nordorua 7, Cuyahoaa Fal!J 6
N. BendTaylor2l, Cin. Madler~ 20
N. Cartton Hoover 19. New Phili dclphl1 0
N. Roy•ltM 12, Medina 6
N. Unun 35, Nanhmor 27
Nonhwood ~. &lt;nbaonbu'129
"
Oak Glen, W.Va. 22. Liibut Bencr l2
Oak Huber 34, Edilon 0
Oak Hill22, R.dtville Eancm 8
Oberlin Fi.rda.nd• 20, Obr:din 14
Olma...t Falh 24, N. Olmow! 0
O&lt;seao 54, Oonoo o
Ott.awa.Ollndorf 18, Bath 7
Chltwd Tala"Wanda 31, O.l:_CatroU 3
P.U.:.vWc 14, Aatn.abuh U,cwood I
Pandon-Gilhol29, Cory·Rawson 14
Panna Vall. Forp 1 ~. E. Ocvcland Shaw 0
Patrick Henry 28, Delta 11
Piuldin&amp; 28, Spencerville 0
Philo lS, Maysville 12
.Pikctoo 26, Zane Tncc 12
PiqL1141, Sidney 6
Poru. Ban 26, Lucuville Vall. 13
Porumouth 3S,1Joyd CounLy, ·Ky, 24
PreblcShawnoe 21, OAkwood 0
P)mltUninJ Vall. 31, Newbury 3
Raclrle South em 46, PaLritM. Soulhwestcm 12
Ravcnn• SO\lthcast31, Mantu1 Cn:stwood 14
Rayland BllCitcy_c 37, Wintersville 20
Reynoldsbura28. Col. Franklin HLJ. 14
RJchficld Revere 31, Medina llighland 6
Riverdale 45, Lima CnJt 6
Rock Hill40, Wellston 6
Rocky Rivcr40, Fairview Padt 7
S. Point-40, Magnoll1, W.V1. 3B
S1lcm 22, East livcrpoo113
S1nduaky 28, Tot Stott 7
SandyVaU. l9,Fairlcu7

'

•

Scncc• East 43, Tiffin Calvert 14
Sh•dyside 20, Belmont Un.ion 0
Shelby 42, Titrm Columbian 22
Solon 35, WickWTe 8
Sptr\1 Hi&amp;hland 20, Mt. Gi.lead 0
Spring. Cath. 37, MillOn Union 13
Spring. Kent.M Ridge 56, S ~g . Notthwellcm 0
Spring. Nonh 22. Kettering Fainn orn 20 OT
Spring. South 2l, XCilU 6
Sprinaboro 20. Hamilt.on Rou 19
S1. Henry 30, Rocl.fQI'd Pariw• y 7
SL MuyJ 70, Van Wert 0
S!.CUbcnvillc 21 , Steubenville Calh. Ccnl 1
Stow 20, Akron Sprinsfield 14
·
Strutaboro 30, Peninsula Woodridge 0
SLNI.hcn 19, Canfield 9

Symmea Vall. 30, NoM QaW• 12

TaUm•dge 3, Copley 0
Tipp Ci1y BeU!el7, Tri-County l\on.h 0
Tol. Sl. John'• 28, Tol. St. Fnncis 14
Tol. Stan 39, Ragen 0
Tol. Wahc 57, Ubby 14
Toromo 26, Edison S. 6
Tri-VaUey 21, Shcrid•o 14
Triad ~3. Ridg011ont 0
Troy 22, Trotwood· M• diso n 6
Tuscii'IWU V11l. 35, Tusla wO
Twinsburg 14, Kennon 7
Uniontown Lake Z7 , Massillon Pert)' i
J)pper Arlington 23, Westerville i\onh 21
Urban.t 28, Spmg. NortheaSicm 6
Utic1 55 , Hebro n Lakewood 0
Van B u~ 27, Arlin gton IS
Vinton Co. 19, Trimble 0
Wadswonh 28, Grotruburg Ciroen 14
Warrensville 14, Garfield-,illll. 7
Wuhinaton C.H. 28, Hillsboro 6
Wallin&amp; Memorial 21, l'llekcringtnn 16
Waverly 40, Mci&amp;sl4
Waynod•lc2 ), SmithYilleO
W•yncavi.Uc 35, Greet~ view 14
Wetnon CW.Va.) Madonna 22, l:!dison K 14
Wellsville 23, Cadiz 21
W. C1rrollton 14, GrccnviUe 7
W. llolmcs 14, OJVi.lle 7
W. leffcnon 13, Jon1than Alder 7
Wes,tr.m Omwn 44, Willi•msburg 0
Wesllalte 10, Amherst 7
Whtc:I Cl$~ri 39, M"Dcrmott Northwc!H 0
Wha:Ling (W . V~o . } Cent. 18, M;m ms Fen)' 14
Willud 50, Upper Sa ndusky 0
Windham 21. Atwncr WILcr1oo 0
Woodsfield 1_1, Bamcavillc O
WOI'l&amp;lcr Triway 13, lndi1n Va U. 11
Wyn(ord 24. Cn:.nlinc 21

~

Oak Hill ties Eastern; Symmes
Valley for first .place,in SVAC

.

conversion run gave the hosts an 80 lead.
..
The Wildcats, 0-7 and loscn of
their histl5 games, fumbled on the
fii'St play of their fii'St~
.
ion at
their own 27 aild didn t get the ball
back until there were 16 seconds
left in the first quarter. But SIX
plays later, it was no cigar. So with
8:50 left in the second frame, the
Bobcats got the ball back and
mllrched from their own 38 to
Trace's 47, whe~ Bradbury was
abOut to shine agam.
Covey dropped back to pass, but
with the entire left side of the
Wildcat front coming in his face,
he threw an almost lateral forward
pass to Bradbury on the left side
(KC was heading toward the west
end zone in this quarter). Bradbury
slipped past several Hannan Trace
defenders, broke into the clear and
scored the touchdown with 4:24
left. The two-point conversion run
by Mau Rhodes gave KC a 16-0
lead.
·
Cheshire put an end to the scoring when with 2:21 left in the fust
half, Bradbury, making use of a
block by fullback Adam Denney on
a defender at the comer in front of
the Bobcat sideline, scored a 51yard touchdown on the fust play of
KC's next·to·hist possession of the
first half. Covey's two-point conversion pass to Jay Johnson fleshed
out the final score.
Trace ran 13 plays in the first
half and made only two first
downs, compared with Kyger's
seven first downs in the same lime.
The Bobcat defense ended
Wildcat tailback Heath Hutchinson's streak of having at least 100
yards per game at three games by
holding him to 67 yards. "We were
trying to shut (him) down," Coen
said, "but they slipped the fullback
in on us." The fullback to which
Coen made reference was former
guard David Spurlock, a 5-9, 240pound junior who rushed for 26
yards in his first start in the backfield.
This week's datebook has Kyger
Creek hosting its last game of the
season against Southwestern, while
Hannan Trace will entertain Oak
(See BOBCATS on C-3)

-

With.22-8 win over Eagles Friday night,

'

:•JIY G. SPENCER OSBORNE
contrOlled the bal41&gt;ut we shot our·!· Times-Sentinel Staff
selves in the foot with penalties (in
:•:cHESHIRE - Control of the the fli'St half) until Bradbury's long
on both sides of the ball, a con- run (in the second quarter)."
g defense and Phil Bradbury's
The Bobcats, who ,tfiroughout
touchdowns - two by land, the night had considerable success
OIIC by air - were the ingredients running the.ball between the guards
~ger Creek needed to secure a 24- and the tackles as well a' on
O'Victory over Hannan Trace at the sweeps, had the ball first and on
~beats' homecoming game Friday a16-play, 73-yard drive that tasted
nt$ht. .
8:44. Bradbury, a 5-10, 175-pound
"We had a good team effon on senior who gained a personal- and
defense, especially from our se- team-high 160 yards on 22 carries.
niors," said Bobcat head coach Mel .powered his way into the end zone
whose troops boosted their from the Hannan Trace one-yard
~oro to 3•5 overall and 2-3 in the
line to put KC on the bOard. QuarAC: "On offense, 'we basically terback Paul Covey's two-point ·.·

Sunday 'rimes sentinel P8gt CS

a

PLOWING THROUGH TRAFFIC - Kyger
Creek running back Phil Bradbury .(20, partial·
ly obscured by Hannan Trace's Jeremiah
Waugh, No. 55) p!ows bis way through a sea of
Wildcat defenders io the second quarter or Fri-

By SCOTr WOLFE
followed.
.
run, his third of the night, for 22T·S Correspondent
The next several possessions ,8 score. He fell shan on the ex- ·
OAK HILL - Standing broad were hard fought, especially in the tras.The key to the nigh' most likeand tall like its' oaken naniesalce, trenches where a grueling batde de· ly was Oak Hill's abiliiy (o limit
the.Oalc Hill oaks won the battle of. veloped: Both clubs worked to es- Eu~ to just 101 yards rushing,
the league unbeiltens here Friday . tablish a running game and con- while controlling the clock itself
night as they defeated the previous- trolled offense, but opposing de- with 229 ·rushing yards.
'
ly unbeaten Eastern Eagles 22-8 in fenses countered to ta1ce valuable ' Eastern .had only three first
the SVAC football showdown.
seconds off the clock.
downs and 149 total yards, while
Eastern is·now 7-1 and 4;1 in
Eastern continued to hold the Oak Hill dominated with 284 overthe league, while Oak Hill is 5-0 • ed~e after the first frame, 8-0, as all yards.
and 6-2 overall.
ne11her team hinted at entering the · · Eastern's Tim Bissell was limitWith two games remaining end zone.
ed to 33 Yards on 10 carries and
Eastern still has a legitimate shot at · J.ust as Eastern took advantage Terry McGuire had 49 yards on
the 'league crown, but will need of the.big play, it likewise gave up four carries, while a hostof others
·some outside help. Also diminished some very crucial yardage as .Oak made of the difference in the 16
;ll'e Eastern's playoff hopes, which Hill .quarterback Allen Potter hit rushing attempts.
took a setback with no primary huge tartget &amp;-7 Chris Simpson on
Bill Potter had 28 carries for
point$ this week.
a 55 yard pass play,. That set up a 115 yards, wljile cousin Ryan PotCoach Randy Churilla of East· Ryan P"otter score two plays later ter bad 27 for 88 yards and three
ern stated, "Besides a few mental on a one yard run at the 8:46 mark ·ros.
errors our team did a really good in the second quarter. Allen P()lter . Savoy was 3-8 passing for Eastjob. ?te had to .overcome adversity took in the extras hims~lf to knot em and Allen Potter was 1·3 for 55
and we just came up short. Our the score at 8-8.
yards.
kids can be proud! They can keep The ·rest or the ltalf was .hardBissell caught one-pass for 32
their heads high. No excuses here. hitting ·control football. astern yards and Durst 2-10.
When we wio, the kids do it...when fumbled once inside its 30, but
Eastern hosts Symmes Valley
we lose it is my fault.' We need to mimaged to .stave off an Oak Hill next week.
regroup and prepare for a tough · score with ·some ·great ·defensive Score by quarters
Symmes Valley t~am . We'll be play. Neither team knew the mean- Easrem .................... 8 0 0 0 = 8
back."
ing of the word "yield" as evi- · Oak Hill...... .'........... 8 0 8 6 = 22
In the fll'st frame Eastern wasted denced by their unyieldiil~ ways.
no time as it took the opening kick- Oak Hill established a solid, conoff a long way via some good trolled running game that saw 64 Statistics
moves by senior Jeff Durst. · Fol- carries on the night.
E OH
lowing a five yard penalty and a
Oak Hill made some adjust- Department
First
downs
......................
3
12
five yard gainer by Tim Bissell, ments at the half and jockeyed
Rushing
yards
..............
IOI
Terry McGuire burst through the , some personnel to its benefit. That
55
line and won a footrace to the end· set up a drive that ended when Passing yards .................48
Total
yards
..................
.l49
284
zone for the game's first score at Ryan Potter rambled two yards to
1-4
II : 12. Chad Savoy drilled a pass to paydirt at the 7:06 mark in the third Comp.,att ..................4-12
Interceptions
thrown
.......
2
I
Mike Newland for the extras and frame. Ryan Potter added the extras
Fumbles
........................
l-1
0
Eastern was oil top 8-0.
.
·· for a 16-8 score.
Penalties
...........
,
.........
6-60
9-70
That had to be a great boost for
In the fourth frame Ryan Potter
Eastern, but perhaps created some added another score; a four-yard Punting ....................... 2-40 3-113
false securities in the moments that

day nigbl's SVAC game at Cheshire. Bradbury
gained a game-, personal· and team-high 160
yards to help the Bobcats win 24·0. (rimes-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne) ·

Symmes Valley tops North.Gallia 30-12
AID - North Gallia kept the
game tied at 6-6 after Rob
Canady's interception of an Eric
Wall pass late in the second quarter
of Friday night's SVAC game
against Symmes Valley, but the Pi·
rates' failure to capitalize on that
turnover gave the host Vikings the
break they needed to press forward
in the second half and win 30-12.
It took a little more than eight
minmes for anyone to get into the
end zone, but the Vikings did it
first on their second possession
when Wall, Valley's quarterback,
completed a seven-play, 61-yard
drive .with a 14-yard touchdown
run. But North answered with a
pair of touchdown runs - one for ·
72 yards and one for one yard from quarterback Charles Peck in
the last two minutes of the first
quarter and in the midway portion
of the second quaner, respectively,
to post a 12-61ead with 7:03 left m .
the first half.
.
Valley needed only two plays
covering 59 yards to get into the
end zone, with Wall's 43-yard pass
to wideout Chris Gates tyin~ the
game atl2-12. But after the Puates
got the ball back, they lost one yard
on a three-and-out series that saw
Valley take possession and lose it
or\ an interception to Canady, one

of the Pirates' defensive ends. But
two incompletion.s resulted in an·
other three-and-out series for
Nonh.

Statistics
)

Department
NG
sv
First downs ......................?
17
Total yards ................... l65
368
Rushing yards ............. .l50
311
Passing yards.. ............... 15
57
Comp.-att. ..................2-12
2-3
Interceptions thrown ....... 1
I
Fumbles-lost ........ ..... ... 1-0
2-1
Penalties.................... A-40 11·75
Punting ....................... 3-26
0

Individual leaders
North Gallia
Rushing- Peck 9-73, 2 TDs;
Staton 10-50; Smith 11-19.
Passing·- Peck 2-10, 15 yds.,
1 int.; Smith 0-2.
.
Receiving- Canady 2-15.
Symmes Valley
Rushing- Copley 29-240, 2
TDs ; Dillon 4-34; Wall 5·29, 2
TDs.
Passing- Wall 2-3, 57 yds., I
TD; 1 inL (caught by Canady)
Receiving- Gates 2-57, 1TD.

After halftime, North got the
ball, and once again, another three·
and-out possession. Then, Symmes
drove 66 yanK in seven plays, with
Wall scoring from five yards out to
put the hosts ahead 18-12 with 6:35
left in the third quarter.
North Oallia then set up shop at
· its own 33-yard line, and in a drive
that consumed the rest of the quarter and ended in the first minute of
the fourth quaner, the Pirates got to
the Vikings' seven in 13 plays be·
fore an incomplete pass - ·one of
(See VIKINGS on C-3)

SVAC grid standings
(Overall)
Team
W L
·Eastern ..................7 I
Oak Hill ................6 2
North Gallia .... ...... 5 3
Symmes Valley .. ..4 4
Southern ............. ..4 4
Southwestern ........ 3 5
Kyger Creek ......... 3 5
Hannan Trace .......0 7

PF
273
223
200
216
213
106
97
44

PA
80
120
113
153
103
246
191
206

(Conference)
Team
W L
Eastern ................. .4 I
Oak·HilJ ................ 4 I
Symmes Valley .... 4 I
Nonh Gallia ... .......2 3
Southern ...............2 3
Southwestern ........ 1 4
Kyger Creek ......... 2 3
Hannan Trace ....... 0 5

PF
183
175
204
135
106
64
70
36

PA
68
82
86
106
124
192
142
173

RG coaching clinic set Oct. 26
RIO GRANDE- New techniques in basketball will be offered
to area coaches at the coaching
clinic sponsored by the University
of Rio Grande in Lyne Center on
Saturday, Oct. 26 from 9 a.m.-3
p.m.
The clinic will conclude with a
meeting for District 13 men 's and
women's coaches at 3:30p.m. The
district includes coaches from Gal·
lia, Lawrence, Meigs, Jackson,
Vinton, Hocking and Athens counties.
Registration for the clinic begins
at 8 a.m. Guest speakers include
Jim Hammond, men's coach at Tif·
fin University, on defense ; Jim
Derrow, coach at Wellston High
School, on building a high school
program; Doug Foote, women's
coach at the University of Rio
Grande, on quick hitter offense;
John Lawhorn. men's coach at Rio
Grande, on timing aild scoring; Jeff
Lanham, Rio Grande assistant

men's coach, on the fast break; and
Earl Thomas, Rio Grande defensive coordinator, on a trapping
defense.
Members of the Redmen and
Redwomen teams will be on hand
to demonstrate .what the coaches
arc teaching.
The pre-registration fee for the
clinic is $20, .and the fee will be
$30 at the door. For more information, contact Lyne Center at 2455353, extension 293. The toll-free
number in Ohio is 1-800-282-7201.

Friday's scores
Oak Hill 22, Eastern 8.
Kyger Creek 24, Hannan Trace 0
Symmes Valley 30, Nonh Gallia
12
Southern 46, Southwestern 12
This week's contests
Oak Hill at Hannan Trace
Southwestern at Kyger Creek
North Gallia at Southern
Symines Valley at Eastern

Carhartt

•

w . ....

t-Lined Bib Overall
Leg Zipper

Built'better than it ha'S to be.
•Heavy-d uty 100%·cotton t2-oz. duck
with plied yarns
,
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•Wind resistant and snagproof
• Red nylon lining quilted to
3.3 ounces of polyester
• Extra-strong, triple-stitched

No sports. No parties~ No dating. No phone calls. Like
12,000 other high school kids this year - get caught just
once doing the wrong·drug or the wrong combinatio~ and
you're grounded. Thai's final.

Waverly hands Meigs 40-14 defeat
By DAVE HARRIS
T-S Correspondent
WAVERLY -Junior Bill Sowers and freshman Issac Ransdell
combined for 249 yards rushing
and •four touchdowns as the Tig~rs
defeated the Meigs Marauders ~0
to 14 in non-conference action Friday evening.
The win gives Coach Ed J3olin's
crew a 4-4 mark on the season,
while the Marauders drop to 3-5 on
the season.
Sowers put Waverly on top with
a two yard run in the first quaner,
Jason Walleue added the extra
points to give Waverly a 7-0 advantage, Ransdell made it 13-0 in
the second period, when he pulled
in a nine-yard pass from quarter·
back Mark Swinning, once again
Wallette added the extra points and
the Tigers held a 14-0 at the half.
Frank Blake, who finished the
night with 45 yards on 10 carries,
cut the Tiger lead to six on a oneyard run in the third period, Robby
Wyatt made it 14-8 as he ran the
extra points, but the Tigers came
back to score on a eight-yard run
by Swinning to give the Tigers a
20-8 lead heading into the final period.
Sowers added two five-yard
runs in the fourth period and ran
for the two-point conversion after
the last score to give the Tigers a
33-8 lcad.
Kevin Musser scored for the
. Marauders on a 68-yard pass from
.. Jeremy Phalin to cut the Tiger lead
to 34-14 as the two-point conversion failed. Swinning closed out the
scori ng for Waverly with a one
· yard run to give ·the Tigers their
founh straight win over the Ma1
· rauder men.
· Sowers led the Tiger ground attack with 134 yards in 28 carries,
and Ransdell added 115 in 15 car: ries . Swinning was eight of 17 in
'

: Bobcats victorious ...
(Continued from C-2)
'. Hill.
· Score by quarters
: Hannan Trace .........O 0 0 0 = 0
: Kyger Creek......... ..8 16 0 0 = 24

: Statistics

main sea ms
•

n9

•Thread bar tacks at stress points
•Hea vy-duty zipperto knee for
easy on and off
•Tool pockets and hammer loop
• Reinforced back pockets
• Double knees

6!!,

, Department
HT
, First downs ...................... 7
: Total yards ................... l98
· Rushing yards.... .......... 100
: Passing yards ................. 98
; Comp.-atL ..................6-13
·Interceptions thrown .......2
: Fumbles-los!.. ............. .3-3 ·
' Penalties .....................?-85
;Punung ...................... 2·27

.

:Individual leaders

A Publl&lt; Servlte Me01age l'rom Bal..vllle Ca~kel Compaoy and the Fisher

' Ins. U"nion

made In U.S.A.

Rugged as the.men who wear them.• •

Funeral Home.

FISHER

•
Kyger Creek
• Rushing- P. Bradbury 22, !60, 2 TDs; Denney 8-33.
: Passing - Covey 3-5, 68 yds..
· I TO.

: Receiving- Walters 2-2 1; P.
·• Bradbury 1-47, I TD.
Hannan Trace
Rushing - Hutchinson 14-67;
'Spurlock6·26.
,
: Passing - R. Dillon 6-13, 98
· yds., 2 inl (caught by P. Bradbury
.and Johnson)
.
Receiving - Cox 3-68; Smtth
:1.12; Penwell 1-10; Hutchinson 1•

FUNERAL HOME .
Middleport
992-5141
Bruce R. Fisher, Owner/Director

RIO GRANDE - A tired Uni·
versity of Rio Grande volleyball
· team went back on the ioad Thursday for a triangular match with
Central State and Defiance, but
returned with a set of victories in
District 22 play.
The Redwomen, who have not
lost a match since Sept. 24, handed
Defiance's Lady Yellow. Jackets
losses of 15-5, 15-1, while host
Central State took a 15-1, 15-4
defeat.
Against Defiance, Billina Cooper had 12 kills and five digs and
Teresa Zempter added 10 ldlls to
the offen se. Robin Sharp and
Tiffany Neff provided two kills
apiece, while Sharp was also
responsible for two serving aces
and seven digs. Freshman Shelley
Wray boosted the Redwomen
offense with four serving aces and
Michelle Speru;s led the defense ·
with seven digs.
The Lady Marauders folded on
an attack of eight kills each from
Cooper and Zempter, an effort
which also saw Zempter add three ·

1 ~1

Statistics
Department
M
W
Firstdowns ......................7
24
Rushing yards ................68
271
Passingyards ............... J58
102
Total yards ...................228
373
Comp.-att .................. 6-15 8-17
Interceptions thrown ... ,...3
0
Punting ....... ,.............. .3-33 2-48
F1111lbles·lost ......... ,... ... 2:2
2·0
PenaltieL .............. I0-122 10-75

block solos and three serving aces.
Cooper had two serving aees.
Sharp provided two kills, and
joined Cooper, Spears and Neff in
each posting four digs against the
hosts. Andrea Hedges provided
three digs. ·
"Again, these were two wins
and I was pleased with the effort."
Redwomen Coach Patsy Fields
remarked as Rio Grande s record
improved to 29-5.
The Red women. ranked first in
the Mid.Ohio Conference with a 9·
I standing this week, were set to go
for all the marbles Saturday afternoon when they hosted Tiffin and
Shawnee State at Lyne Center.
Fields said a win over Tiffm would
give the Rio ladies the championship, but should they lose to the
Lady Dragons, Rio Grande must
defeat Shawnee to share the MOC
title with·second-place Tif(tii.
The Redwomen have twice won
the conference crown - in 1987
and 1989 - under the stewardship
of Fields, the former teacher an!)
coach at Kyger Creek High School.

-----Sports briefs----cer raining rights and lefts to his
face.
Basketball
PARIS (AP) - Magic Johnson
delighted the Parisian crowd with
his showmanship as he led the Los
Angeles Lakers to a 132-101 victory over Limoges in the McDonald's Open tournament.
Johnson played just 26 minutes
but had 21 ass1sts while scoring 7
points.
·

1967 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE

Bought New By Jack Webb of
TV Series "Dragnet"
$
.
GOOD CONDITION

.13,500

MAX HILL'S COUNTRY
CORVETTES
614·247·4861

:S.
()

eral Hocking last night 40-14 the fll'st Lancer win after 33 consecutive losses.
Score by quarters
Meigs......................o 0 8 6 = 14
Waverly .................. ? 7 6 20 =40

the fourth quarter of the Oaks' bol!lecominc:
gameFriday night. Oak HiD won 22'8. (Photo by Z
Tom Hunter)
'•

·.••
••

Vikings win ... ;.:,&lt;C::o::::nu='nu=ed.:.f:.:ro:::m:..;:C:..;:·2~)-----------....,..~---';.:..;....
three thrown by the green force in 10 face Eastern, while North Galli a Score by ~uarters
.;
the drive - by tailback Darin will head to Racine to take on North Galha ...........6 6 0 0 .. 12
Smith ended the 14-play march.
Southern. ·
Symmes Valley ......6 6 612 = .30
Symmes Valley iced the victory _,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"'!.io..
with touchdown runs of 22 and 58
'•.
yards from running back Chris
•
••
Copley, who led all rushers with a
1991 conference-best 240 yards on
•
29 carries, in the last five minutes
of the game.
· SupoR•IItock 11 romplettly weotherproof. No m&gt;tterwbaube
apo~W&lt;. !iin. wind OISOCIW.It simplrWOII't b,.;ok doonund.....,
On this week's agenda, Symmes
iiWOl'· Every pound Ia coDIUIDO&lt;i. 10 you.,.. '"""'l'·
Valley will travel to Tuppers Plains
SupoR•IItock i1 oloo 10if.\lmlllnJ Ill etdUiiW! potett&lt;M procaoact..Uy
••
helps contmlo caw'11DW. tluough abalwtd t&gt;tio of~ ""''Y·
•
viwninl utd mmmla. ADd btault it comes in a coovtDJeat bLxk foRo.

.

Not alick of it goes to waste.

-Sports briefs-Tennis
FILDERSTADT, Germany
(AP) - Martina Navratilova
defeated Nathalie Tauziat of France
6-4, 7-5to reach the semifinals of
WTA tournamenL
No. 7 Helena Sukova beat
defending champion and second
seed Mary Joe Fernandez 5-7, 6-3,
6-3 in two hours and 14 minutes.
Sixteen-year-old Anke Huber of
Germany overpowered Zina Garrison 6-2. 6-1.
Auto racing
SUZUKA, Japan (AP) - Gerhard Berger of Austria. averaged
135.991 mph in a McLaren-Handa
to earn the provisional pole for
Sunday's Japanese Grand Prix in
front of Aynon Senna of Brazil and
Nigel Mansell of Britain.

a

sb• g•ts all tbt cntialoutrtent•lbt needllor muimom performonct
wttliout your coutant supemston.
_
B6t cit all. Supol•Blod II ftom l'ullna Milb.
tbt rume ttusto&lt;! fonop nlue p.oducu ..d
,
prognmo in lh• c.ttlolndUIIry for illmaa
lOOytilrL
Stop In ;mel lot ., shaw you bow to llCk tho

ptobt.m of aupplement ,._for p&gt;otl.

l'l

·•·

·•

••

:.•

•

•
•
•

.'

..
..

•

Rio ladies net pair of District
22 wins over Defiance, CSU

Boxing
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)
- Unbeaten heavyweight Ray
Mercer scored a fifth-round knockout over previously undefeated
KC Tommy Morrison to suddenly end
10 a scheduled 12-round bout for Mer291 cer's World Boxing Organization
223 title.
68
Re[eree Tony Perez finally
3-5 stepped in to stop the bout 28 sec· 0 onds into the round as Morrison lay
2-1 defenseless on the ropes, with Mer11-80
1-16

full r;~~nse of

·

the air for 102 yards and a touchdown. Shav;n Adkins led the Tiger
receivers with four catches for 68
yards. .
Phalin crossed the 1,000-yard
passing mark for the second consecutive season . The 5-11, 207·
pound senior was 6 of IS in the air
for !58 yards, giving Phalin 1,008
yards on the season. Phalin went
mto last night's contest as the
area's passing leader with 850
yards passing on the season. Shawn
Hawley had two catches for 73
yards.
Meigs will play host to the
Alexander Spartans next Friday
evening in the season's final home
g31)le. Alexancter was upset by Fed-

USING HIS BLOCKER, In this case, right
guard Brook Morgan (79) to muim~l erfect,
Oak Hill taUback Bill Potter (42) beads uprwld
and away from Eastern's Jeff Durst (34) during

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Dwight N. Stevers Jr.
461 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

'

See: Dwight Stevers or Bob Ross
- Call992-2196

.

~-

--

�.
Page-C4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

October 20, 1991

.

October 20, 1991

Po~~roy-Middleport-Galllpolls,

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Sunday Time$-Sentlnei:..:.Page
'
.
.

~outhern
.
'

:·'
By SCOTI WOLFE
·- RACINE - Breaking a scorel~ss deadlock in the first quarter;
tlie Southern Tornadoes whirled up
a:storm to claim a 46:12 homecoming victory over the Southwestem Highlanders here Friday night
b¢fore a lllrge crowd.
Michael Evans threw for three
tdu_chdown~ and ran for another,
~hlle Russell Singleton and Jeremy
Pill each hit paydirt twice as every
Tornado rose to the occasion for
t!Je win. Tucker WiUiams and Nick
Ad~ms had other outstanding
games.
· Southern is now 4-4 overall and
2.3 in the SV AC, while Southwestetn drops to 3·5 and 1-4.
• SWHS mentor Jack James always has his troops hitting hard
aod Friday night was no exception,
as the Highlanders engaged in a
tdrrid battle with the Tornado frol\1
.

'

beats Southwestern 46-12 in homecomin-g game

Marietta records 28-20 win over visiti........ Gallia Academ

'

line in the trencbes. The result was
a scoreless deadlock after one
round.
Southern stlllck early in the second period, however, as Singleton
blasted through the line for the
game's first score at 10:17 on a
five-yard run. Singleton added the
· e~tras and SHS was off and run·
ning. The score stood at 8.().
.
Southwestern lried to establish a
combined pass and running game,
with the turf as its mainstay, but
Southern's defense clamped down
hwd to end the Highlander drive in
the second frame. That took a bile
out of Southwestern's intensity; a
setback that they never recovered
from.
Meanwhile, Coach David
Gaul's Tornadoes sizzled from a
mere simmer to boiling mode as
Michael Evans drilled a pass to
J~remy Dill in the end wne on a

pass play of 16 ywds. The extras
failed and SHS led 14·0.
Five minutes later just before
half .Evans again threaded the needle to Dill for a 29-yard TD scOre
with I:03 left. Dill also caught the
extras and SHS led 20-0 a score
that stood at the half.
.
SWHS injuries and miscues fed
the Southern fire as Steve Davis
was unable to untrack his SWHS
offense. Davis, Willie Gilbert and
Kevin Gillman all had steady first
halves, but the above mentioned
woes plagued their efforts.
Gilbert rushed 32 times for a
game-high 181 yards, and Gillman
had 21 yards on ·ll carries.
At 10:08 Abe Haislop almost
turned things around for the Scotsmen, by picking up a fumbled and
rambling 62 yards to paydirt and a
20-6 score as the ;EPs failed. That
momentum was thwarted almost

Southern hosts North Gallia
before a Highlander celebration for 165 yards, was followed pi-inext
week in a game where the
co.uld begin as Adam~ rambled 30 marily by Adams (6-94) and Scott
SHS
field
will be dedicated.
"'
yards for a score at the'9:52 mark. Grace (5-38). ~lop had 80 yards
Score
by
quarters
·
Dill gathered in a pass for the rushing plus a 62.yard fumble reSouthwestern ......... 0 0 6 6 = 12
,. u,un and.two TDs.
.
PAT's, the score 28-6.
. Evans pushed in a quarterback
Dill had a great game and again Southem ...... :.......... O2020 6 = 46
sneak for the next score, while at proved his great worth as a receiver
the 5:04 mark Singleton rambled in with five catches for 89 yards, and Statistics
27 yards for his second TD jaunt to Williams hall one for 27 yards,
put Southern ahead 40-6. From that while Smith had one for three.
Department
SW Sou. ·
II
point on Gaul substituted freely. ·
Adams had I 7 tackles as· a First downs ...................... 9
410
In the fourth round at the 7:2~ebacker, Singleton had l6 and a Total yards ...................290
291
mark Evans hit Williams on a 27- blocked punt, Rober.t K1.mes 11, · Rushing yw:ds .............. 283
119
yard pass play for the 46-6 score. Trenton Cleland two mtereepuons, . Passing yards .......... :......,.?
7-23
At 5:36 Haislop burst through the a fumble recovery and seven tack- Comp.·att. .......... :......... 1'9
I'
SHS line and rambled 61 yards for les, .Evans_two mtercepuons, and Interceptions thrown .......5
2-2
the score for the finale of 46·12.
Jam1e Sm1th and Gl~nn Young Furnbles-lost ............... .3·3
Gaul stated:"The boys played each fumb'e recovenes. Young Penalties ................... 9·115 5-45'
really hard tonight. This was anoth' also had an mtercepuon.
Punting ....................... ~28 5-199
er total team effort. Every player
excelled at his position. It nice for
the seniors to claim a homecoming
win."
Singleton, who rushed 18 times

MARlETT A · Marietta took
advantage of early Gallipolis mistakes to pile up a 21-7 halftime
lead, then held on to post a 28·20
Southeastern Ohio League football
victory over the visiting Blue Devils onDon Drumm Field Friclay
night.
·
Tfie Tigers took the opening
kickoff and marched 70 yards in 16
plays. Pat MacRae tossed an 18·
yard pass to Bent Kroft (4:53) and
Joe Smith split the uprights to
make it 7-0.
· Secon'd Tiger score was set up
by a GAH~ fumble, _recovered by
Brad Hartlme early m the second
_penod._ MacRae follo":ed one play
later w1th a ~8:yard strike (8:59) to
Adam, M~Kilrlck to make 1t 13-0.
Sm1th s kick was _good.
: The-Blue J?evlls drove 7.3 yards
m 13 plays w1th Chad Barnes blast-

ing over from the one (3:56). Tim
Slone's kick was good.
. A pas~ interception .set up the
Ttgers thud score late 10, the first
half. Tim Mullen returned a Barnes·
pass eight yards to the GAHS 46.
Following a Blue.Devil penalty,
speedy Chad Lincoln raced 29
yards (0:46) to make it 20-0.
Smith's kjck was perfect.
. Gallipolis .took the second half
k!ckoff and _marched 64 yards in
mne plays w1th Jason Kopack scar-'
ingJrom me two. Slone's kick was
perfect.
After an exchange of punts,
. GAHS .marchetl 62 yards in 10
plays w1th Barnes tossinga ll·yard
· strike'to Bryan Hall (1:00). Slone's
kick was wide to the left · ·
Marietta scored the game's fm;~l
touchdown -with 9:·29 left when
Lincoln raced over from five yands

Capitals beat Devils 6-5; Sabres top Canadiens 3-1
,

By DAVID GINSBURG
AP Sports Writer
LANDOVER, Md. (AP)- The
Washington Capitals are off to the
best start in their 18-year history
thanks to a balanced scoring attack
that relies on everyone and no one
at the same time.
"I think we've got four lines
that can score," said center Mike
Ridley, who had two goals and a

pair of assists Friday night to lead
Washington past the New Jersey
Devils 6-5. "We've worked hard
and scored a lot more goals than
people thought we would."
Twelve different players had at
least a point for the Capitals, whose
6-1-0 record is the best in the NHL.
In 17 previous seasons, Washington had been over .500 after seven
games only once.
"Sure you dream of starts like

this, but it's nothing more than
dreams," coach Terry Murray said.
"You never really think it will hap·
pen."
This team bears little resemblance to Capitals' teams of
. yesteryear, which is one reason
why the current players have not
felt weighted down by the franchise's history of early failure.
"Year after team there are so
many changes," Ridley said. "I
look at team posters from three or
four years ago and there's only a
couple of guys left. "
One of the faces on those old
posters is Scott Stevens - now a
member of the Devils.
"The big difference is that
they're getting scoring from different people," Stevens said. " It's not
just one ~uy anymore."
In Fnday night's other NHL
game, Buffalo beat Montreal3-1.
Down 5·1 , New Jersey battled
back behind David Maley, who
scored three goals in the final periad. His third goal came with 70
seconds left after the Devils pulled
goalie Chris Teneri, but it proved
to be New Jersey's last gasp.
The Devils let defenseman AI

Iafrate alone in the slot in the first
period, and the resulting goal gave
Washington a l.Q lead. Ridley then
stole the puck from Stevens at center icc and skated in on a break·
away for a shorthanded goal.
Washington goalie Mike Liut
was ·accidentally stlllck in the face
by an elbow early in the second
period with the score 4-1. He was
replaced by Jim Hrivnak, and after
the game said he was woozy but
feeling OK.
Sabres· 3, Canadiens 1
Doug Badger and Dale Hawerchuk scored in a 3:33 span early in
the third period to give the strug·
gling Sabres only their second vic-·
tory in seven games this season.
Badger converted a feed from
Hawerchuk to tie the game at 2:11
of the third period and Hawerchuk
put Buffalo ahead at 5:44 when he
fired Dav e Snuggerud 's pass
behind Patrick Roy.
Pierre Turgeon added an insurance goal at 10:19.
·
Montreal got its only goal when
Denis Savard slapped a loose puck
between the legs of goalie Clint
Malarchuk just as the second peri- .
od expired.

TURNING THE CORNER - Southern quarterback Michael
Evans sprints around the corner for some yardage during Friday
night's homecoming game against visiting Southwestern, which the
Tornadoes won ~-12. (Photo by Steve.Bowen)

KOPACK STIFFARMS TIGER ·. Gallipolis' Jason Kopack
(23) stiffarms Marietta defender Chad Lincoln (16) during Friday's SEOAL Parents Night grid battle at Marietta. Clint Davis
(10) leads tbe play. Kopack led GAHS runners with 95 yards in 21
carries. MHS won, 28-20.

Scoreboard
This week's NFL slate

N.Y. RanaCr. atPiwbuiah, 7:35p.m.
MonUNI n Philadelphia, 8:0S p.m.

Torotioa~ W.innirq, 8:05p.m.
Callll')' a~ Vancrover, 8:05p.m.

Today's games
Houstoo at Miami, 1 p.m.
New York Jeta at lndw11polis, l p.m.
Seauleat Pinabutgh, 1 p.m.
Minncsou at New England, 1 p.m.
T amp.a Bay at New Orleans, I p.m.
Atlanta 11 PhoeniJ., 4 p.m.
Cleveland al Sin DlegOt 4 p.m.
Detroit at San Francisco, 4 p.m.
Kansas City at Denver, 4 p.m.
Las Angeles Ram! 11 Los An geles
Raiden, 4 p.m.
OPEN DATE: Ddlu, New York Gi·
anlS, Philadelphia, Washifgton

CRASH AND.SCORE- New Jersey's David Milley (left) crash·
:es into Washington goalie Jim Hrivnak after seoring a goal In the
!third period of'Friday night's NHL game at Landover, Md., which
:the Capitals won 6-S. (AP)

(ClASSIFIID IDS aure to uet ra~un&amp;)

Cbi.~10 ItS'- Louis, 1:35 p.m.
Minnesota It l.ol Anaelea, 10:35 p.m.

801ton at San l01e, Jll:35 p.m.

Monday's game
Torootoat Vancouver,l0:35 p.m.

Transactions
. Baseball

Cindn11ttl at Buffalo, 9 p.m.

ln the.NHL ...

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CAMPBELL. CONFERENCE
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Team

W L T Pll!l.CFG A
1
9 32 24

Chicago
4 ·2
Minnesota
.... 4 l
St. Loud
...... 3 3
Deuoit
"""" 2 3
Toronto
...... 2 S

.

EACH

0
0
1
0

8
6
5
4

21
19
20
24

14
22
22
V

Smythe Dlvlslon

· Vancouver

... S I I

It 26 19
8 35 22
I 26 23

WinniP&lt;&amp;

.... 2 3 1

l :W 22

Edmontoo
SanJ01e

... 1 5 I
...... I 7 0

3 15 28
2 26 46

Calgary
...... 4 3 · 0
U. Angeleo ... 3 1 2

-a-

Auto, air.

to-.)

1988 CHEVY MONTE CARLO;....S145 pll' mo.

aa-

5

Friday's S&lt;ores
Buffalo 3, Montreal 1
Wuhlngton 6, New Je.rsey 5

0

-""'

They played Saturday
Buffalo atllartford, 7:3S p.m.
·Wuhlngton al New Jersey, 7:35p.m.
Edmonton n N.Y. hllnden, 7:35

p.m.

DETROIT RED WINGS - Aoquired
Vincent Riendeau. golll.ender, from the
St. LoUis Blues for Rick Zombo, deferucman.

SAN JOSE SHARKS - T10ded

Mike McH~gh . lefl wing, to the Hanford
Whalen for Paul Fenton, left wing. RecalJcd John Ca ner, left wing, from Kansu
City of the lntcmaLional Hod;ey league.

-

SPE(:IAL!!
: FREE VIDEO TRANSFER

a-

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1991 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME.....'24S p.r mo. w
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1991 OLDS DELTA 88,_...............S304 per 110. ""'

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L
I
2
3
3
4.
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5
7
8
8

P OP
209 ·133
307 173
147 116
148 137
158 126
123 156
98 98
185 215
141 187
37 226
58 333

SEOALONLV
Team
W L
P OP
Mariena .............. .3 0 90 53
Logan ..................2 I 62 55
Jackson ......... .......2 I 97 55
Gallipolis............ .! 2 - 55 62
Warren ................ 1 2 77 57
Athens .................0 3 34 133
TOTALS
9 9 415 415

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Oc~ 18 results
Marietta 28 Ghllipolis 20
Jackson 50 Athens 12
Logan 21 Warren Local20 (ot)
Huntington East 27 Pt. Pleasant 0
CoL DeSales 22 Newark 0
Chesapeake 20 Coal Grove 14
Ponsmoulh 35 Boyd County 24
Waverly 40 Meigs 14

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SAME Q.AY SERVICES ON RELINES AND REPAIRS!

Hunting Season Is Here: Go places you haven't
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LAST OFTHE 1991's- Was S4,09S
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HONDA

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NR IVDY IUDIB'rf
992 661·1

Team
W
Portsmoulh., ........... 7
Jackson ..................6
Logan .................... 5
Col. DeSales ......... 5
Gallipolis ............. ..4
Mariena ................ .3
Coal Grove ............3
Meigs ................... .3
WarrenLocal ........ l
Point Pleasant.. ......O
Athens ...................0

Custom F'ltted Dentures In One Day At Our Teays Valley Office
By Our Professionals And Trained Staff.
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Placed Terry Long, guard, on injured ~­
•erve. MO\'ed Dean Caliguin:, guard-center, from the practice ~q~~ad to the acti¥e

Hockey

(Overall)

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY

PITTSBURGH STF.ELERS -

Natlonalllocby LtiRUe

...

SEO grid standings

Oct. 25 games
Following .· three weeks of
SEOAL competition, the Marietta Gallipolis at Athens
Tigers ane in the ilriver's seat with Jackson at Warren Local
a perfect 3·0 record following their Marietta at Logan
28-20 triumph over the Gallipolis Huntington High at Pt. Pleasant
.Blue Devils Friday night. In other Alexander at Meigs
league games Logan edged Warren Trimble at Ponsmouth
Local 21-20 in overtime and Jack· Coal Grove at Rock Hill
son smashed Athens 50-12 tore· DeSalcs at New Richmond
main tied with. Logan at 2· I with
two games to play.
In order to clinch an outright game tying extra point with 1:10
championship the Tigers must now . left in regulation play to knot the
win their final two games on the score at 14-14 and send the game
road, at Logan this week, and at into an overtime period.
In a high scbool overtime period
Warren in the season fioale.
the
team winning the coin toss gets
Logan 21, Warren Local 20 (OT)
first
possession of the football. on
At Vincent Jason Harris threw a
the
opponent's
20-yard line. Logan
41-yard touchdown pass to Dave
Glover. and.Justin Gi-ay kicked the
(See SEOAL on C-6)

Football

rosoer.

Friday's SEOAL rootball game at Marietta.
Tigers held on to win, 28-20. MHS defenders are
Kevin Schlicher (2 1) and Chad Lincoln (16).
·' ·

0
0

-

(61·~)

Logan,
Jackson
•
wtnners

TOUCHDOWN • Gallipolis' Bryan Hall
(42) scored a third period touchdown on this
play with a 11-yard pass rrom Chad Barnes in ·

Detroit at Quebec. 7·35 " ·m

1991 GEO PRIU,........................ 172 per mo.
1991 CHEVY CAVALIER ..............}I7S per mo. 00'
w
1991 OLDS CALAIS....................5185 per 110. ......
'
1987 CADILLAC DEVILLE................,2S pll' mo. 0..0
.
$
1988 OLDS 98..- .....................- .. 229 per mo. .....
""'

VVhfta

Deput.ment
G
M
First downs ............... l7
15
Yards rushing .......... 207 190
Lost rushing ..............41
43
Net rushing ............ .166 147
Pass attempts ............ II
9
Completions ...............6
4
Interceptions by ..........0
I
Yards passing ............ 75
91
Total yards .............. 241 238
Plays ........................ 55
47
Return yards ............. 88 I07
Fum.bles ......................4
0
Lost fumble's.. ............. !
0
Penalties ................ 7·80 8-80
Punts ..................... 2-72 3-123

Nallonal FOOlballlueue
ATI..ANTA FALCONS - Activucd
Eiben ShclJcy. cornerback, orr the injutcd
1e1erve lin. Placed Gary Wilkinl, tight
-end, on inJUred reserve lin.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS - Placed
Bobby Morse, fullback , on injurt d rclel'\le, Acti¥ated F~ McAfee, ruMing
back, from th e~ practice roster.

0

.-... 1991 OLDS CIERA............- .........5237 per mo. -'
-00""'•

I

8 30 24
8 Zl 'Il
5 24 28

Vance Uw, infielder. Sent Troy Afcnir,
catcher, and Bnd Kommiruk , outfielder,
to Tacoma. Reinnatcd Camcy Llnsford
and Walt Weill, infielders, from the dil·
abled lilt.
j
National Le.gue
CHJCAOO CUBS - Fired Jim Eaaian, maruaer; Phll Roof, bullpen coach,
and Joe Altobelli, bench coach.
CINCINNATI REDS- Aulanl!d
Keith Brown, pllchtr, and Sian JeiTerIOn, outntlder, l o Nuh¥ille of lhl!
Amrrlcan Auor:laUon.
SAN DIEGO PADRRS - Exercised
their 1992 cmtract optiol15 for Tony Fernandet, 1hort11op, and Ed Wh iuon, pitch -

ouL Smith's kick was 1111e.
· .GAHS drove to the Tiger 24;
but penalties, and sacks by MHS
defenders ended that Weal .
A last:minute Blue Devil threat
fell by the wayside when a fourth·
· down Blue Devil pass fell incomplete. Brian Ours had blocked a
Tiger p.unt on the Marietta 46.
OAHS took over on the 37. Earlier,
a Barnes to Aaron Seamo!J pass on
first down was tipped by a Tiger
. defender, but bou"ced into the
hands of Seamon, who was unable
to hold onto the ball.
Kopack led GAllS runners with ·
95 yards in 2 I carries. Mike AdaiJI
had 47 in 10, including 211 to set up
the Gallians third touchdown;
Barnes connected on six of 11
passes for 75 Yards Wid ooe touch·
down with one interception. GAHS
had 241 total yards from scrim·
mage in 55 plays and 17 first ·
downs.
Jason Matheny, who returned
.three kickoffs for 55 yards, was ·
injured late in the contest and had
to leave th~ game.
" Lincoln, who missed several
games earlier in the year due to an
injury, !ed all rushers with 130
yards in 16 attempts. MacRae connected on four of nine aerials for
91 yards and one touchdown. MHS
totaled 238 yards from scrimmage
in 47 plays from sctimmage. ·
. Gallipolis fell to 4-4 and ~ 1-2.
Marietlll improved to 3-5 and 3-0.
Friday, (}AHS plays at Athens.
Marietta goes to Logan .
Statistics:
Score by quarters
Gallipolis ........... 0 7 13 0 =20
Marietta .... .........714 0 7 = 28

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�'
'

Page-C6-Sunday Times-sentinel

October 20, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH'-Potnt Pleasant, WV

Pomeroy-MI~dleport-Galllpolls,

Wahama records 15~~~14 win
over B-uffalo~~~ Putnam Friday
By Gary Clark
Sports Correspondent
BUFFALO-John Zuspan, with
help from Travis Johnson 'lind
Shane Grimm, came up with the
defensive I,Jiay of the game with
2:50 remaoning Friday night by
forcing an errant pitchout by Buffalo quarterback Jason Hill with an
alert Rocky Stewan recovering the
loose pigskin at the Wahama 17
yard line as coach Don VanMeter's
White Falcons dodged a bullet and
edged closer to the 1991 Class A
playoffs with a thrilling 15-14
Southwestern Athletic Conference
triumph over !he host Bisons.
Zuspan and Grimm, the senior
leaders of the Bend Area interior
line, along with cornerback
Johnso~
stacked the Bisons
quarterback up at the line of
scrimmage to force the Buffalo turnover' and preserve the narrow
SWAC triumph as Wahama improvllQ to 6-2 on the season while

Huntington East posts 27-o ·victory over Point Pleasant

the Bisons fell to 3-5 on the year. . touchdown run by Brent Larck
The stellar defensive play thwaned early in the third period. The White
what appeared to be a 75 yard Falcons led by a 15-0 margin
march to the end zone for the go before Buffalo staged a relentless
ahead touchdown by Buffalo in lhe second half comeback effort which
games closing .minutes before a almost sent the WHS playoff hopes
large gathering of Wahama fol- into oblivion.
lowers at the Putnam County · "It was a typical Wahama-Bufschool.
·
falo contest," an exhausted
-The victory, while not assuring Wahama head coach Don VanMeter
·the White Falcons of its fourth trip · said following !he emotional trilO post- season competition in six umph. "I !hought we'd let it slip
years, certainly enhanced the Bend away. We-had things going our way .
Area teams chances with two after taking the second half kickoff
regular season contests remaining and marching down the field for a
on the 1991 grid season.
touchdown and a 15-0 lead but then
Wahama forced Buffalo into both our inside linebackers suffered
committing three turnovers in the injuries and we just couldn't stop ·
exciting ·SWAC grid affair with the them once they got the momenwm.
White Falcons turning one of those They (Buffalo) ·played one heck of
into a second period touchdown a game. I'd hate to play _thcm every
and haltin$ Bison drives fo~owing " week because they are always
the remaonmg two Buffalo mtscues. tough to beat but our kids deserve a
The Bend Area teams margin of lot of credit for hangin~ in there
victory proved to be a successful and coming up with the big play
extra pomt kick by Tommy Mayes when we needed it most, added the
following a determined 15 yard veteran WHS coach."

Shane Grimm
SENIOR, LINEMAN

John Zuspau
SENIOR, LINEMAN

DEFENSE AT' WORK-Point Pleasant High School's Matt NeviUe (#33), Chris Lyons (#76), and Jon
Beattie (#90) work some heavy defense Friday night In an effort to slop Huntington East's Charles
Abraham, who finished the game wlth117 yards on 17 carries. The Big Blacks' efforts were to no avail,
though, as the Cabell County team posted au incredible 27-0 shutout over the locals at Fairfield Stadium in
Huntington. With the win, the Highlanders raised their record to 2-6 overall, while Point Pleasant's record
now sets at 0·8. (Register photo by Dan Adkins.)
·
·

delay the trial.
rescheduled for early next year, but
Tyson is charged with rape, the time was uncertain.
criminal deviate conduct and crimiDuva said he hadn't talked with
nal confinement. He was indicted Holyfield, who was training in
by a special grand jury after an 18- Houston.
year-old beauty pageant contestant
Tyson lost his undisputed title to
claimed Tyson raped her July 19 at James "Buster" Douglas on a
an Indianapolis hotel.
I Oth-round knockout in February
Tyson and Holyfield were to 1990. Holyfield then took the title
have met Nov. 8 in an outdoor by knocktng out Douglas in the
arena at Caesars Palace in a fight third round in October 1990.
that was e~pected to gross more
It's the second time in two years
than $100 million and pay the two that injury or illness has affected a
combatants a combined $50 mil- Tyson fight. He was supposed to

'

'
•'
•'

~~~·~~e~~~·t ~C:t~}0~e0~~s~ lio~yson :as ~xamined by Dr. ~~~~~:~~~;~rr"M~~~~~~

goes on trial in Indianapolis on
rape charges.
That trial is scheduled to begin
on Jan. 27. Earlier Friday, a Marion
County, Ind., judge denied a

Gerald Higgins, an orthopedic surgeon, in Las Vegas late Friday
afternoon. Higgins recommended
that the ftght be postponed.
Dan Duva, Holyfield's promo!-

fight was postponed when Tyson
developed a respiratory problem.
The match then fell through, and
Tyson instead fought and lost the .
title to Douglas.

Ba;;;;;[T;~(j;,."',;,;"";;;:ake

the

By GEORGE ROBINSON
NEW YORK (NEA) - Long
before the Oakland Raiders donned
them, John McGraw perceived the
intimidating effect of black uniforms. He put that knowledge to
good usc in the 1905 World Series,

SEOAL games .•.
(Continued from C-5)
won the toss and scored in four
plays with Bryan Lambert running
in from si~ yards out and Josh
Jackson kicked his third extra point
of the game.
The Warriors then took over at
the Chieftain 20 and scored in Qne
play when Jason Harris darted in
from the 20, but the extra point
kick by Gray was blocked by Logan's Keith Goss to preserve the
Chieftain victory.
Logan (2-1) scored in the first
quarter on Todd Wyrick's five-yard
run and Warren tied it in the second period when Ron Church
scored from the one and Gray
kicked the conversion for a 7-7
.l!alftiine tie.
• Bolh teams scored in the final
.
~riod and added the e~tra ~mts,
~ogan scoring on Lambert s one
~ard blast and Warren's coining on
\lie 41-yard scoring pass ro Glover.
I· The Warriors (1-2) led in first
downs 15-14 and in total yards
~44-214, with 225 yards via the
~ass while Logan led in rushing
173-119.
.
~core by quarters
~ogan ................ 7 0 0 7 7 = 21
y.rarrcn Local... ..O 7 0 7 6 = 20

.

·,

Jackson 50, Athens 12
At Jackson Kevin Whetstone
scored six of Jackson's. seven
touchdowns and finished with 164
yards on 24 caQies as the Ironmen
remain tied with Logan for second
(llace in league standings at 2-1 be(Jind the Marielta Tigers.
, A one yard Whetstone run and
Greg Woolum's kick gave JHS a 70: ftrst-period lead but Athens came
back on a 40-yard TO pass from
tyler Schloss to Ben Werner with a
tlvo point pass failing.
, Quarterback Mike Morgan
scored for the lronmen on a five
yard run wilh a conversion run by
Man Whetstone making it 15-6.
Jason Repp's lhree yard scoring
run early in the second quarter reduced the margin to 15-12 but
Athens would not score again as
the remaining touchdowns were all
by Whetstone on runs of one, one,
two, 14, and 15.
Jackson ftnis~ed with 227 yards
rushing and completing seven of 13
passes for 392 total yards while
Alhens recorded 138 rushing and
hiuing on four of 12 passes for 80
yards and three interceptions.
Andy Thomp'son led Athen$
rushen with 19 carries for 64 yards
with Repp adding 36 yards .on 10
aaempu.
Seore by quarters
Athens ....................6 6 0 0 = 12
Jackson ................ 15 12 815 = 50

dressing his New York Giants in
ebony hue.
It was the first e~ample of a
major-league baseball team wearing someUting special for the Fall
Classic, which had begun only two
seasons before.
The 1905 Gian!s, apparently
invigorated by their tflanager's
choice of dark uniforms, defeated
Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics, 4 games to I.
"We can't read McGraw's mind
from beyond the grave," says baseball historian Marc Okkoncn about
the notorious suits. "He apparently
thought it would give him a psy·
chological edge over Mack, or so
people have speculated."
Okkonen is the author and illus·
trator of a colorful new book,
"Baseball Uniforms of the 20th
Century: The Official Major
League Baseball Guide" (Sterling
Publishing Co.). He is a leading
e~pert on baseball uniforms.
Eventually, the creation of new
garments for the World Series went
the way of players leaving their
gloves on the field when they came
in to bat.
The last time ballplayers wore

.
1 the . C
any th mg unusua to
Fall lassie
was 1959, when owner Bill Veeck
put his Chicago Wliite Sox in white
stirrups to go along with the pale
hose that had given them their

nwrle~as aPIJropriate, at least The

1917 edition· of the White Sox had
worn one of the most memorable
uniforms .ever donned for the
World Series. They traded in their
regular pin striped garb for a red,
white and blue outfit with stars.
The change was inspired, Okkonen c
speculates, by the wave of pauiotism that swept the country as the
United States entered World War 1.
In the old days, unveiling new
fashions in the World Series not
only made hearts beat raster, it also
raised eyebrows.
For examp Ie,t he Ne'!' y or k
press was less than complimentary
about th~ Fall Classtc debut of
McGraw s . new-look Gtants.
App~ntly • tt was a shock 10 see
the hkes of Chnsty Matthewson,
R_ogcr Bresnahan and Joe McGinm.ty, 10 black.
. ..
But they w.~n the Sen es,
notes Okkonen, and you can get
(See UNIFORMS on C-7)

Two Coal Grove football
players face hazing charges
COAL GROVE, Ohio (AP) - ·
Two high school football players
have been charged wilh delinquency for allegedly hazing and assaulting other students, the Lawrence
County Sheriff said-Friday.
Sheriff Dan Hieroni mus would
not release the names of the boys.
But he said the charges, ftled in the
county's juvenile court, stem from
an alleged initiation incident for
new members of a Dawson-Bryant
High School student ~oup in Coal
Grove in souUtern Ohto.
·
Hieronimus said he was not certain how many students were victims in the incident, but believed.
there were at least two.
"Because of the nature of the
crime and because of the circumstances surrounding, some people
have obviously elected to ~uard
their statements," he said. ' So. it
makes it a lit~e difficult to determine exactly how many, if any,
more.''
He would not say exactly what

•

TYSON INJURED- Former heavyweight
champion Mike Tyson (left), shown working out
earlier this month with assistant trainer Jay
Br-ight, injured some ribs during workouts last

Ute initiation incident entailed.
The Ironton Tribune reported
that the victims were freshmen and
that they were hazed in the locker
room.
1
The newspaper quoted unidentified parents or the freshmen saying
the hazing had been going on a
long time and that their sons were
threatened not 10 tell anyone.
Hazing is a fourth-degree misdemeanor . .Penalties for juveniles
are determined by a judge.
Qawson-Bryant Superintendent
Wayne White said in a prepared
statement that the two students
chiuged have been suspended from
school and Ute team.
"There are many rumors which
were not substantiated by any of
the investigations. These rumors
and the publicity they're from have
not only hurt the students involved
but all of the swdents of the districl
and have affected their ability to
concentrate on their education,"
White said.

ByBERNIEWJLSON
AP Sports Writer
SAN DIEGO (AP) _ Don't
blame quarterbacks Bernie Kosar
of the Cleveland Browns or John
Friesz of the San Diego Chargers
for their leiuns' problems.
Kosar is the only NFL starter
who hasn't thrown an interception
and he has the second-best rating in
the league, 92.8. Yet, the Browns .
arc 2-4 and on a lhree-game losing
streak. .
.
Fnesz tS comm~ off the best
performance of hts young pro
career, 21-of-33 for 306 yards an,d
two touch~owns, yet t! wasn t
enough to hft the Chargers (1-6)
over the Los An~eles Rs!"S.
One team wtll contmue to be
frustrated after the Browns and
Chargers play today at Jack Murphy Stadtum.
Last year, in Cleveland, the
Browns came away empty when
Kosar threw three interceptions and
was sacked three times, helping the
Chargers win their ftrsi game of the
. 24
14
se~~sar ~buckled ~hen reminded
of the pounding he took.
"It didn't get much better last
year," said Kosar, who was sacked
37 times and threw 15 interceptions
in 13 games as the Browns finished
3-13, their ftrst losing season with
Kosar as the starter.
"We definitely had a lot of
problem s in that department last
year. It's getting better. The offensive line has been ·making their
blocking schemes more concrete.
Last year we did a very horrible job
at understanding and picking up
blitzes which we should have
picked up.
"Physically, I feel fine right
now," said Kosar, who has been
sacked 16 times this year.
Kosar has not been intercepted
in his last 191 attempts, the stxthbest streak in NFL history.
"We're not the type of team

that's able to throw the-ball 40, 45
times a game," said Kosar, who
has completed 107 of 169 passes
for 1,139 yards and five touch ~
downs. "We want to be smart with
the football and we emphasize
from a defensive standpoint getting
turnovers and from an offensive
standpoint staying away from
• turnovers, "he S8J'd•
"Basically it's been good judgment on his part," said ftrst-year
Browns head coach Bill Belichick.
"But from a team standpoint it's
been the discipline by the receivers,
who are runnmg the routes they're
Rubles &amp; Diamonds
supposed to run and they're in the
right place. Also, there's been a
pretty decent job by the offensive
line on pass protection.''
Rig. $185 SAlE
Friesz, meanwhile, is 1-7 as a
starter, dating back to the final
game of 1990. But, head coach Dan
Hcmling says Friesz has made steady progress.
422 Secon3 Avo.
Galllpolla
(See BROWNS on C-7)

. RING SAlE .

109

BIDDY LEAGUE TOURNEY, SEASON CHAMPS-First place In both the regular season and
the tournament for the Point Pleasant Biddy League went to the team sponsored by Sav-A-Lot,
above. Pictured are front row, from left: Gary Rollins, Nathan Randolph, Adam Pearson, T. ToUiver,
Jeremy Buskirk, Larry Myers, Ryan Edwards, and Bill Devault. Back row, from left: Jimmy
Devault, Jason Roberts, Mike Jeffers, Jermyn Queen, Nick Litchfield, Eric Myers, Todd Neville, and
Derek Parsons. Below. is· the team sponsored by Cochran's Exxon, which won second place in both
the regular season and· the tournament. Front row, from left: Shawn Adler, Jason Gilley, Chad
Johnson, Jon Casto, Brandon Sweeney, and Matt Richmond. Second row, from left: Jason Henry,
' Ronald Glenn, Doug Boyles, Mike Anderson, Malt Young, Jason Kinnaird, Jeremy Burris, Marcus
Goodbar, and Nick Cochran. In the back are coaches Barry Pearson, Matt Neville, and Eric Porter.
See Monday's Register for the league's outstanding players that were recognized at Thursday's
awards ceremony. (Register photos by Jerry Barkey.)
·
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away with a lot when you win: If
!he Giants had los t, the papers
)VOUid have made a controvc~sy
over it, and that would have b';'!'ted
apything like that in the future . .
• lrOJlically, McGraw had run mto
similar criticism when he dressed
Jlis 1901 Baltimore Onoles m black
road uniforms during the regular
season. They switched styles lhe
following year, but McGra~ resurrected the idea with the G1an ts m
the !905 World Series.
.
•· He tried his black -s u1t ploy
~gain during the Giants' next po~t~
5eason venture - in 1911. Agam,
coincidentally, they faced the Athletics. But the results were differem: The Mac'kmcn knocked off the
New Yorkers, 4 games to 2.
The !907 Chicago Cubs - featuring Joe Tinker, Johnny Evers
and Frank Chance...:...
. also sported a ·

.

."

'.,

By The Associated Press
The San Francisco 49ers would
like to believe they are better than
their 2-4 record. If they are, this is
the weekend to prove it
: In danger of slipping out of the
NFC West race for the ftrst time in
nine years, the proud 49ers have
their work cut out for them today
a$ainst the quick-starting Detroit
Ltons (5-1).
"I think the team-can still make
the playoffs, but the important
thing now is to not think about
that," San Francisco head coach
George Seifert said. "The important thing right now is to concentrate on gening a win. As far as I'm
concerned, the whole focus or Utis
team has got to be on our next
opponent."
The 49ers, who have qualified
for the playoffs in each of the past
eight seasons, are last in the NFC
West for the first time sirice ·1979,
when they finished 2-14. Their 3934 Joss to Atlanta last Sunday left
the fou(-time Super Bowl champions with their worst record since a
3-3 start in 1985.
The Lions, meanwhile, arc in
first place in the NFC Central for
the ftrst time since late in the 1983
season. Coming off a bye, the
Lions have had an extra week to
prepare for the 49ers . The Lions
staged a remarkable comeback m
their last game, overcoming a 17point deficit with three fourth-quarter touchdowns to beat Minnesota

24-20 for their fifth straight victory.
The NFL's eighth week began
Thursday night with Chicago (5-f)
beating Green Bay (1-6) 10-0 m
their 142nd meeting since 1921.
Today's other matchups will
have Tampa Bay at New Orleans,
Houston at Miami, Kansas City at
Denver, the Los Angeles Rams at
the Los Angeles Raiders, 'Seattle at
Pittsburgh, Atlanta at Phoenix,
Minnesota at New England, Cleveland at San D.iego and the New
York Jets at Indianapolis.
Cincinnati ivill play at Buffalo
Monday night
Dallas, New York, Philadelphia
and Washington are idle.
The 49ers have beaten the Lions
in three or their last four meetings
but this will be their toughest test
in recent times. The quarterbacking
of Rodney Peete and the runnin~t of
Barry Sanders have led Detrott mto
the forefront of the NFL picture.
Last week, the 49ers were
burned by running back Steve
Broussard, who gained 104 yards
on 10 second-half carries. Scifcn is

different look in the World Series.
and it w~s a style that wo~ld keep
on shownig up on Fall Class1cs.
"They had special gray uni forms made up with a pin stripe
design," Okkoncn explains, "one
the ftrst teams to have pin stripes.''
But the new Cubs uniform for
the '07 Series was gray for both
home contests _and road games.
When the Classic opened in Chicago, you could barely tell the Cubs
from the visiting Detroit i1gers,
even with a scorecard.
" Remember, they didn 't have
numbers to identify the players in
those days, and no PA systems,"
Okkonen points out.
So the National Commission,
which ran th e major league s,
ordered the Cubs to wear their regular home whites for the remainder
of the games in Chicago.
I&gt;

(Continued from C-6)
"Last week, Friesz far outdistanced my expectations for him at
this point," Henning said of the
second-year-quarterback' s performance'in a 30-24 loss to the Rams.
"The week before, he was above
my expectations. The week before
that, he was about at what I expected. The,previous week, 11 was a
tossup.
"I know what a trial he's in and
the difficulty of playing that position as a guy who ·hadn' t played
before in the NFL."
Only 13 quarterbacks have
thrown more TDs than .interceptions. Friesz is one of them, with
seven scores and six interceptions.
"He's thrown six interceptions;
three of them in a comeback cffon
at San Francisco that was futile,
and one on the last play of th e
game last week. That means that
four of the six have been inconsequential. I would say that' s outstanding for a young guy," Henning said.
Friesz"''nce had the lowest rat·
ing in the AFC, but has pulled it up
to 67,8.
Friesz said last week's !!arne
was best performance statistically,
"bOt .I still made a lot of mis-

concerned that Sanders may be do
even better.
"Broussard is obviously a good
runner, but Barry Sanders is probably the best runner in football right
now," Seifert said.
Sanders, who has rushed for
more than 100 yards in ' four
straight games and scored the
game-winning m in Detroit's last
victory, will be making his first
appearance against the 49ers.
•
Meanwhile, the Saints arc
another surprising team in the NFL
this season.
They are 6.{) for the ftrst time in
their 25-year history and hold a
three-game lead in Ute NFC West
Today against Tampa Bay , they
will try to equal Uteir club-record
nine-game overall winning slreak.
The Saints' defense, the NFL's.
best, has not allowed an offensive
touchdown in the past 16 quaners.
Tampa Bay (1-5) was idle last
week.
The Kansas City-Denver clash
features the frontrunners in the ,
AFC West. The Chiefs (5-2) hold a
half-game lead over Denver (4-2);
which was idle last week.

WEST

Browns ...

' CltHIIAH!

·.

"•

.'

- entire East team . Zban was effec- assists, Barry Pearson bad 3 and j,
. tive: though, CQnnecting oil 8 of 10 Chris Lyons had 2 and 5, Jon
passes for 114 yards and a Beattie bad 3 and 4, Brian1
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.-"We to~chdown to Matt Holbrook.
Sizemore 3 and 3, Ryan Rousll 3 •
"Mark Zban is a fine quanter- and I, and Jeb Hockenbe!Tl' 2 and l
1certairuy laid a big egg tonight,"
said PPl-IS head eoac~ Steve Saf; back,'' said Safford. "He has excel- 5
~
· The loss left the Blacks winless}
ford shortly after his Big Black had ·lent size and does a good job hanturned in a lackluster perfonilance dling the ball. And, he has one· or in ·eight attempts lhis season aud '
against the Huntington East High- the best arms we will see all year."
the possibility of an 0-10 season·
After a scoreless first Q,Uarter, looms. large on the horizon. Point.;
landers while falling to the Cabell
CoWltians 27 .{) last night here at East picked up a patr of has games left with Huntington ,
touchdowns in the second to lake a High and MillOn this season and •
Fairfield Stadium.
"! thought that with all the ex- 13-0 lead iniO intermission. both games figure to be tough ones ·
citement generated last week with Abraham hit paydirt first on a four to win. T1Je Pony Expre$8 comes to,
our perfotmance against Bar- yard run. Zban kicked the exira Point Pleasant ne~t Friday in what bousville that we would have some point for a 7-0 East lead. Later in should be the best shot at a win and
momentum going into this one, but the quarter, East struck again when after that, the Blacks travel to Mil'
we just did not do very much right. Zban connected with Man ton on November 1st 10 cloSe out
We pretty much swnk this even- Holbrook on a · seven yard the 1991 season. Milton has alway,s
touchdown pass. Zban 's kick was played the Blacks tough, especially '·
ing,' continued Safford.
off
Ute mark, but East still led 13-0. at borne and they are right in the
The Highlanders did not stink,
The
Highlanders picked up hunt for a playoff berth in class
however, and they rolled up 322
'
yards of offense including a surpris- single scores in the third and fourth AAA this fall. ·
ing ·204 on the ground. Charles quaners to put the game away.
STATISTICS
Abraham led East with 121 yards Both . of those scores came on the
Pt. Pl. Hunt. E.
on the ground while junior quaner- ground wiUt Abraham getting his Rush Anempts
38
41
back Mark Zban threw for 114 second touchdown of the night in Yards Rushing
124
204
yards and a touchdown for Coach the third quaner and Marshall Pass Attempts
7
11
Bob San's crew. The :.vin was the Henry going over from 6ve yards Pass Completions
2
9
second on the 'season for East while ·out in the final quarter to. complete Yards Passing
50
118the Blacks feU to 0-8 on the year.
the scoring. Zban threw to Jeremy Interceptions
0
o·
"Basically, Utey controlled the Turner for the two point conversion Tot ·Offen~
174
322
line of scrimmage against us and I after Abraham's score, while his . First Downs
9
16
am quite shocked that we Jet it kick failed af1er Henry crossed the Penalties/Yds
3-30
11-95
happen to us," commented Safford. goal line.
Turnovers
2
I
"We thought we could run the ball
Mall Neville again led the Punts/avg Yds
3-36
2-25
against them and keep Zban on the Blacks in rushing with 76 yards on Return Yards
82
26
sidelines, but they did not allow us 13 carries.
Score by Quarters:
to do that They whipped us up
Jason Shinn picked up 27 .yards
1 2 3 4 Tot '
front and that was a big factor in while Brent Smith and Shawn Pt. Pleasant
0 0 0 0 0·
the game. It was just a horrible per- Wiseman split 20 yards evenly Huntington E.
0 13 8 6 27
formance on our part," added Saf- between -them. Smith was 2 for 7 Scoring:
ford.
passing for 50 yards and Garry HE - CharJes Abraham 4 yd run
If not tbe victory, at least the Peck latched onto both of those (Mark Zban kick)
.
method of victory, shocked a lot of aerials,
.
HE - Matt Holbrook 7 yd pass·frorn
people. East was not supposed to
Defensively, Jimmy Barnett led- Mark Zban (kick failed)
be a team that could run the ball the locals )Vith .3 solo ll\Ckles, in- . HE - Charles Abraham 3 yd run '
well, relying mainly on the arm of eluding one for a loss, and 6 assists. (pass Jeremy Turner from Mark
Zban to move the football. But Jimmy also recovered e: fumble and Zban)
Abraham, who led all rushers in the blocked two extra point anempts. HE - Marshall Henry 5 yd run PA
game, was a spark that ignited the Matt Neville had three solos and _4 . (kick failed)

San Francisco needs victory against
Detroit to remain in NFC West race

·!-'·: •,·

•HOSPITAL BEDS
· •WHEELCHAIRS
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t &gt;
week iD preparation for h~ fight with champion
Evander Holyfield. The fight, originally slated
for Nov. 8, will be postponed and rescheduled at
a date to be a,nounced. (AP)

Friesz to lead Chargers into battle
for today's game vs. Browns, Kosar

team, according to Okkonen's book

'

J

By Rick Simpkins .
Sports Correspondent

Tyson reinjures unmended rib,
gets delay on title bout vs. Holyfield
By TIM DAHLBERG
· AP Sports Writer
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Mike
Tyson's rib injury has postponed
his fight against heavyweight
champion Evander Holyfield just
· three weeks before the two were to
meet in boxing's richest bout ever.
Tyson's doctor said the former
champion should not train for 6-8
weeks because of an injury to his
left rib ftrst sustained on Oct. 8 and
aggravated again this week.
Promoters scrambled to save the

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

New 1992 Nlsun Slntr1 XE
ALL THIS EQUIPMENT:

•Air Conditioning '
•Stereo Cassette
•Cruise Control
•Rear Defroster,
•Till Wheel
•Bodyside Moldings
•Much More

•Air Conditioning
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•DRIVERS AIR BAG
•Rear Deftoster
•Tilt Wheel
•Bodyslde Moldings
•Much More

Incidentally, as befitted a contest in which the teams were suited
Your
up almost identically, th e first
game of the 1907 Series ended in a
Choice
tic, called on account of darkness.
Thereafter, the Cubs won four
games in a row.
ot course, pin stripes would
return timo after time to the World
Series , thanks to the New York
Yankees. They made their first
post- season appearance in 1921.
The Yanks have won a total of n
pennants and 22 world champiPayment• wfth $1o0o plu1tax I title clowri-60 moa., rtbata to dMI•r
onships. ·
The success of those Damn takes.''
. ._ . ...,,
Yankees over the ~ears may actual"My progress is on schedule,"
ly have had something to do with Friesz said. "I haven't ask
their legendary wardrobe.
myself to do anything unrealistic.
Okkonen cites a fairly obvious __ put every game behind me wh€:ther
correlation between how often tt's ihree interceptions against
baseball teams lose and how often 49ers or last week. You can't
they try. new uniforms.
oil Individual things."

.

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•

�Page-CS-Sunday Times-Sentinel

.
.
~~: College footbiiJl

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

.

.

~

scores ...

(ContinuedfromC-1)

wide to the left.
Jesse Johnson had a 25-yard run yards without an interception. His
Taking over at their 22, BC in a 65-yard Mi c hig~n drive that final three pass attempts from the
·· we nt to the air. Foley completed ended with Grbac passing six yards Nebraska 11 in the final' minute
,/
"' three passes, inc! uding a 35-yard to Howard for a 14-10 Wolverine went incomplete.
heave to tight end Mark Chmura lead.
Allegheny 22, Wittenberg 16
for a first down at the goal. Howev- No.9 Nebraska 38, Kansas St. 31
At Springfield, Ohio; Stanley
er, the Mountaineers' held and BC
At Lincoln, Neb., Derek Brown Drayton, the leading scorer in the
settled for a 22-yard field goal by scored three touchdowns, but No. 9 . nation in NCAA Division Ill,
Wright.
Nebraska needed a goal line stand scored thre~ tOuchdowns as defend·
BC forced a punt less than three in the final minute to escape with a ing national champion Allegheny
minutes later and went from its 40 38-31 Big Eight victory over won its 20th consecutive game,
for a touchdown in seven plays. Kansas Slate on Saturday.
coming back to beat Wiiten bcr g
Foley got the drive under way with
Both teams started the game 4-1 22-16 in a North Coast Conference
a 27-yard pass to Chmura, then overall and 1-0 in tne Big Eight, game Saturday.
.
capped the charge with an eight· with their only losses coming to
Drayton, who rushed for a ·
yard scoring toss to Keith Miller in No.3 Washington.
··
career-high 212 yards on 35
the end zone,
The Wildcats' quarterback Paul attempts, scored on runs of 55, four
Miami, Ohio 34, Ohio 0
Watson hit 26 of 46 passes for 340 and one yards.
At Oxford, Ohio, freshman
quarterback Neil Dougherty threw
three touchdown passes in his first
collegiate stan Saturday afternoon,
keeping Miami of Ohio unbeaten in
the Mid-American Conference with
a 34-0 victory over Ohio Universi·
ty.
Dougherty, substituting for the
injured Jim Clement, threw a 42·
yard touchdown pass to Bob Clark
to put Miami (5·1·1 , 3·0·1 MAC)
ahead to stay early in the first quar·
tcr.
.Doughftrty added a five-yard
touchdown pass to Jeremy Patter·
son in the second quarter, and completed the sooring with a two-yard
pass to James Patton in the fourth
quarter.
Dougherty filled in last week
when Clement injured his shoulder
in the first half, and threw a fourth·
quarter touchdown to give Miami a
10-10 tie with Cenltal Michigan. It
: . was his first collegiate appearance.
He was on target Saturday, com- ·
plcting 9 of 16 for 135 yards with·
out an interception against Ohio (I·
5-1, 04-1). He led Miami on scoring drives of 60, 36, 57 and 79
yards.
Kevin Ellerbe carried 36 times
, for 126 yards, including a threeyard second-quarter run that helped
Miami take a 21-0 halftime lead.
Milt Stegall returned the second·
half kickoff 96 yards for a touch·
down.
Miami shut down Ohio's running game, holding the Bobcats to
127 net yards and only one run of
longer than 10 yards. Miami also
had a pair of quarter~ack sacks, a
pair of interceptions and a fumble
recovery to snuff out drives.
ELBOW TO CHIN is bow the L.A . Lakers' Magic Johnson
No. 4 Michigan 24, Indiana 16
(right) likes to play Pascal Julian of the host Lomiges basketball
At Ann Arbor, Mich., Desmond team in Friday night's McDonald's Open game in Paris, France.
Howard was, well, Desmond Johnson delighted tbe Parisians with his showmanship in leading
Howard. But it was Michigan's the Lakers to a 132·101 victory. (AP)
defense that preserved the No. 4
·Wolverines' 24-16 victory over
Indiana on Saturday.
Howard caught three touchdown
passes and set up the Wolverines'
final score with a 71 -yard kickoff
return after Indiana had made it a
one-point game early in the fourth
from people who say, ' Why is
By RUSTY MILLER
quarter.
Ohio one of the few states that
AP Sports Writer
Michigan (5·1 overall, 3-0 Big
docsn't allow non-school competi·
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP)
It
Ten) struggled all day to contain
tion out of season?' " Muscaro
no
longer
is
a
violation
of
Ohio
the passing of Trent Green, who
High
School
Athletic
Association
said. "Our member schools decide
· completed 22 of 36 passes for 236
rules
for
a
some
athletes
to
partici·
our
bylaws, so we decided to give
yards for Indiana (3-2-1, 2-1 ).
pate
in
their
favorite
sport
when
the
them the opportunity to make
Howard caught five passes for
last
tournament
game
is
over.
changes
if they deemed them nec.: • 32 yards and returned three kick·
The
OHSAA,
at
a
news
conferessary.''
offs for 109 yards, giving him 141
Among the other bylaw changes
all-purpose yards for the day. He ence Tuesday, announced six new
guidelines
or
revisions
of
existing
or
additions:
has 15 touchdowns for the season,
- A school's coach will be
' 13 of those on passes, leaving him bylaws that were voted in by its
member
schools
in
a
recent
mail
allowed
to coach athletes from his
- one shy of Anthony Carter's Big
ballot.
or
her
school
district between June
• Ten season record.
The most debated of the revi- I and July 31 if the 50-percent rule
Elvis Grbac completed 12 of 18
sions
allows an athlete to partici- is observed. If not, the coach is
·: passes for Ill yards for Michigan,
·" including TD tosses of four, six pate on teams other than those at limited to no more than 10 days of
and four yards to Howard. J.D . school prior to and after the season, instruction.
- Penalties including suspen·• Carlson kicked a 3~yard field goal with restrictions.
For
example,
if
a
high
school
sion,
probation, censure and/or a
·. for Michigan's other score.
basketball
player
wished
to
play
on
fine
of
up to $1,000 for coaches not
Scott Bonnell kicked field goals
hts.
church-league
basketball
teann,
following
the new non-scholastic
.. of 42, 32 and 27 yards and Green
he
can
now
do
so
outside
of
the
guidelines. The OHSAA bylaws
scored on a one-yard run for lndiperiod set aside for practice and had not provided for penalties
. J·'ana.
•'. The passing of Green and the games at the high school level. In against a coach previously.
- Physical examinations arc
·· powerful running of Vaughn Dun- the pas~ the player faced the possibility
of
suspension
and
the
high
now
required each ycat prior to
bar, who had 116 yards on 34 car·
school
team
was
subject
to
forfei.
participation
in junior high athlct·
• ries, helped the Hoosiers drive to
ture
of
victories.
ics.
the Michigan one late in the game.
"This is a major change as far
A proposal to allow high school
·On third and goal, Green lost a
as
non-interscholastic
competi·
football
players to also participate
" yard on an option play and on the
tion,"
said
OHSAA
Commissioner
in
non-tackle,
flag, touch or pass.. next. play, Indiana fullback Cory
Clair
Muscaro.
"We've
had
ing
football
games
in the months of
.Taylor lost a yard when swarmed
instances
where
someone
played
in
June and July was voted down 321·
under by Michigan's Erick Andera
church-league
tournament
or
their
305 by the OHSAA membership.
son, Lance Dottin and Dean Johnlocal
Y
-league
team needed a play· The restrictions in football will
son.
The Hoosie1s got the ball back er in a game, and it resulted in vio- continue to apply.
Some of the new bylaws take
once more, but couldn't pick up a lations and suspensions. This
addresses
that
problem.'
'
effect
Nov. I.
first down in four snaps. Michigan
One
restriction
is
the
so-called
then ran out the clock.
Michigan holds a 39-9 advan· 50-percent rule: that the number of Lyne Center slate
tage in the series, wpich dates to players from the· same school on
1900. Indiana's last victory in the the non-scholastic squad is limited
RIO GRANDE~ The activities
series was in 1987 but the Hopsiers 10 no more than half of a ,starting schedule for Lyne Center is as fol·
haven't won in Michigan Stadium teain. But even that restriction does lows:
not apply between June I and July
since 1967.
Gymnasium hours
31.
The homecoming game drew
Sunday
-1-3 p.m., open recreIn other words, a girls basketball
Hl6,097, Michigan's IOOth consec·
ation;
6-8
p.m.,
college recreation
utive home game to draw 1over team can participate in a summer
Monday- closed for classes
league in June and July as a unit.
100.000.
Tuesday
- 6-8 p.m ., college
But
no
more
than
two
members
of
In the first half, indiana had 10
recreation
the
high
school
team
can
partici·
third-down conversions, one
- 6-8 p.m., colfourth-down conversion and scored pate on an organized team outside. legeWednesday
recreation
twice on fourth -down situatio'ns. of the sport's season at any other
Thursday - 6-8 p.m., college
Neither team punted in the first time of the year.
recreation
The revision was designed to
half.
Friday - 6-8 p.m., open rccrc·.
give
latitu~e to student-athletes
Michigan took the opening kick·
ation
who
wished
to
participate
in
a
sport
off and drove to the Indiana 20, but
- closed for coach·
Carlson missed a 37-yard field goal outside of the sport's season as des- es' Saturday
clinic
ignated by the ·OHSAA. The
attempt.
Sunday, Oct. 27 -1-3 p.m.,
restrictions
prevent a school team
The Hoosiers then went 55
open
recreation; 6-8 p:m., college
yards in 14 plays for BonneU's 42· from practicing or playing year rccreauon
around under one guise or another.
yard fiCid goal. '
"The idea was to create a level
Michigan responded with a 77Pool hours
field,"
Muscaro said.
yard, nine-play drive for Grbac's
Closed until further notice
The
OHSAA
has
been
criticized
four-yard TD toss 10 Howard for a
by some for its inflexibility toward because of repairs - ·
7-3 Wolverine lead.
. Indiana went 72 yards in 16 out-of-school participation. In par·
(iome athletic events
plays, using uP 7 minutes, 40 sec· ticular, players and coaches in sumSunday,
.Oct. 20- baseball
onds, for Green's. on~-yard dive mer camps and prognuns in soo:er, doubleheader vs. Columbus Slate,
that put the Hoosien ahead 10-7 baseball and baskelball had argued I p.m. .
.
.
the state's sanctionin~ body for
with 10:27 left in the second quar- athletics was IOo restricbve.
Sunday, Oct. 27 - soccer vs.
Thomas
More College, 2 p.m. :
ter.
"We've ltlken .a lot of criticism

P

\

\

Farm/Business.
.

October 20, 1ltl •

'

Busine~s

sends conflicting
signals in ·earnings reports=
'

.

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'

Sales

BIG TREE CONTEST WINNERS • Win·
ners or.tbe ·recent big tree contest sponsored by
the 0.0. Mdlityre Park District and Gallia Soil

and Water Conservation District are, left to
right, Keith Handley, John Beck, Mike Conkle
and Homer M~Carty.

Big tree contest wi"JJ.ners announced
By CINDY JENKINS,
District.Forester
Gallia County
SWCD
GALLIPOLIS • The ftrSt Gallia
County Big Tree Contest Sponsored by the O.O.Mclntyre Park
District and the Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation District, was
successfully concluded on Septem·ber 20, 1991. The only genus eligi·
.ble for this years contest was oak
'(quercus). All species of oak could
be entered. The winner in this years
contest was a black oak (Quercus
velutina) nominated by Cheshire
Township Trustees Homer McCarty, Keith Handley, Mike Conkle
and also John Beck who is
employed by Cheshire Township.
• The black oak is 248 inches in
::circumference and 44 feet in height
'·with '8 crown sple8d ot 70 feet. The
total points, according to Ohio s
Big Tree Progrann, are 309.5. Ohio
s reigning black oak champion is
309 points. So Gallia County s
biggest oak is in contention for
heing the biggest black oak in the
Slate!
·
•
The tree is located about one
mile south of State Route 554 on

Farm Flashes

Poplar Church Road. It stands right and Water Conservation District
on the township right-of-way on was eslablished and began to help
the left hand side of the road.
land owners with sound conserva·
· If you feel inclined to visit this tion practices. Gallia SWCD has
tree, one glance at it s huge trunk . been one of the top five SWCDs in
might generate many questions in the state since 1983. Two years of
your mind about history in the area. that period Gallia was one the top
Since the tree is estimated to· be two Districts.
about 200 years old, that means it
The black oak, by this time, had
was alive and growing in June of witnessed a county from its early
1790 when the city of Gallipolis struggling stages to what has ·
was being surveyed.
·
become a·leading county in the
The young black oak would state.
have been 13 years old when Ohio
The O.O.Mclntyne Park 'District
became a slate and Gallia County which was established in 1975 is
became a county in 1803. As the one of the mnst modem. uo·to·date
state and Gallia County grew the parks in our area. With the Racroung sapling sent it s l'Ollts deeper coon Creek Park and the Elizabeth
mto Gallia County soil.
Evans Bird and Waterfowl Sanctu·
By 1888 when O.O.Mclntyre ary, O.O.Mclntyne offers plenty to
settled jn Gallipolis at age six, the do for those looking for a way to
tree was about 98 years old and had pleasantly spend their leisure
a diameter of about three ·feet. ~ours,. as·-ll' as:offering·educa. While Mcintyre was gaining fame .. Uonal opportuntlles for our chil·
as a journalist the black oak contin· dren.
ued LQ stand as coal was mined in
If you do get a chance to visit
Cheshire Township, Holzer Hospi· the biggest oak in Gallia County
tal was dedicated and the county · you may be SUI]lrised at the pleas: .
library opened.
·
ant feelmgs generated by this slate·
In 1938 at age 56, O.O.Mclntyre ly sentinel. You may be held in
died. Gallia County, however, con- awe by it s size and grandeur.
tinued to grow. In 1944 the Soil Whatever the case, it is a sight you
won t soon for~eL

U.S. needs to
Tax letter study course being do more for
offered ·by extension service its hungry,
By EDWARDM. VOLLBORN he offered on the·"Quicken" soft·
Gallia County
ware program. We have scheduled group says
·Extension Agent,
a class for January 22 and 23. An
4

TffiRD IN INVITATIONAL - Ohio Valley
Christian's soccer team captured third in the
OVCS' Invitational, sponsored by Haskins-Tanner Clothiers of GaUipolis and held in Septem·
ber at Raccoon Creek County Park. In the front
row are (L·R) Nathan Smitb, BIUy Miller, Andy

Brumfield, Jqson 8eaver and Mike Little.
Behind them are Tony Hughes, Jamey Black,
Shane Blain, Joshua WOOd, Noah Smith, Jerry
Back and Brian Shadle. Not pictured are Dusty
Hill, Micah Lanier, Darin Peck, Aaron Saalls·
bury and Benjamin Taylor,

Thanks to the Easy Starter Klt from Stthl. your home llfe Just Improved. For one
low prtce of 1499.85. you'Hget three powerful tools forcutttng tough. lime·
consuming chores down to stze: Stthl's FS 36 trimmer. the 09L chatn saw, and
the BG 61 hand·held blower. Plus. you·H l'e(elve 150 of accessories absolutely free.
.
Wlth a quahty work force hke thts. you'H have tjme
for more Important things around the bouse. So
stop by your nearest Stthl dealer
today and ask about the Easy
Starter
Klt.
The FS l6 sees just about
anywhere your mower ~n't
to cut back weeds and grass.

$499!5

A

&gt;FREE!~

Buy tho SUhl E"Y Stirtrr l(lt 1nd l'llll th""
a(Cessorles. absolutely frtt: • AStthl ch.aln saw
wrylhg case. • An extril loop of chain. • One
I!'Uon of.Sdhl bar·ond·ch•ln oil. •Ont bottle of
englne oll mil.• A50-fool PICk of trt~;Dmer line.

};;-CaD In an alr strike wllh
rhe band-held BG 61 blower
to dean up leaves.chpp!ngs
and other debrts.

When It comes to

firewood and trlmmln~
. the 09L Chato saw will

. cut your work tn hall.

v

All tbft&lt;! p!OducO WI be pwdwod
K()IOtely a1 the followlllJprkel: 09L
Choln .... 1199.91.11G 61 1109.91
(UO ai.....-J rmil prtco)•nd tho
FS 36 'ntlllmtf II29.9S.

GALLIPQL!$ .

--------~~u.MmER~~~-----

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
606 LMaln St.

2204 Eastem Ave.
4 6·0523

992·2094

'

additional day may be scheduled if
interest wanants.
"Quicken" is a low-cost check·
book based package designed for
personal, business and invesunent
.finances. It has a good report sec·
tion The program can record
income and expense, and has a
number of aids to simplify an!l save
time in entering data. Since it is a
general prognun,, the manual does
not have farm exannples.
Dr. Duvick and others have put
together farm examples that will be
taught in the winter session. This
software package.is priced at under
$50 and could pn!bably be consid·
ered a "starter' progrann. Versjon
5.0 of Quicken just becanne avail·
able this week. Details or the local
class will be available in a few
weeks. We need to know who is
inter.ested in attending the class
·now so we can continue planning.
Call to express an interest or to get
more details.
An annual announcement of the
service of computer beef rations is
probably appropriate as we S\Jrt the
winter feeding season. With a little
basic information, I can design a
ration for your beef cat~e. The program also allows you to get a better
handle on the cost of gain. The program is especially helpful for beef
finishing, backgrounding a growing
.replacement heifers. Call if you
would like for me to work with you
on a. wi!lter feeding program. This .
semce lS free!
A reminder of the charter bus
trip io The North American Lives.tock Exposition in Louisville on
November 20. The cost is $30 per
person. We will ftll the bus on first
come basis. . )
·

• WASHINGTON (AP) - The
• Agricultute Department has pro·
: posed adding a fifth airport - in
Laredo , Texas - to tiS list of
-approved facilities for air ship' ments or horses.
.
.
·
The proposed facility - El
Pri71ei'o Equine Export Facility at,. .

the Laredo airport- has the space
and equipment to officially process
horses and Qleets USDA standards,
said Lonnie J. King, deputy administrator for veterinary services in
USDA's Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service.

;·Ag Department propos.e~
: adding fifth airport

ST/HC.
.
...............,_

CARTER TRACTOR SALES

Agriculture &amp; C.N.R.D.
GALLIPOLIS • To help you
stay current on farm income taxes,
. · the Farm Management Staff tif the
Ohio Cooperative Extension Ser·
vice will be offering a "Farm
Income Tax Letter Study Course".
The "study" letters will be
mailed weekly starting mid·
November. The ten lesson design
will provide basic information on
income tax regulations anll procedures especially appropriate to
farmers and discuss management
choices available to· help .farmers
maximize their after-tax net farm
income. The course should be useful whether you do your own taxes
or use a tax cQpsultanl.
A special registration form is
available at the County Extension
Office. The fee is ten dollars. Registration !pUS! ~e made prior to
November I to Mr. Bryson R.
Carter at the South District Extension Center in Jackson. Call the
Gallia County Extension Office
(446-7007) to start the enrollment
process. Plan to meet the challenge
· of keeping up-to-date with the conStant changing tax laws.
A similar topic is the use of
computers for farm accounting.
According to Dr. Richard Duvick,
Extension Economist at the Ohio
State University, if this is your ini·
• tial use of comput~rs, don't start
with a complex system or extensive
set of data needs. Many people
.• have gotten discouraged and abandoned·the computer simply ~use
: · they tried to do too much too fast.
': There are hundreds of basic farm
. acCOI!ntiilg programs available!
: During ,the December • February
• time period Extension classes will

- ·--

'•

WASHINGTON (AP) - This
year's winner of the World Food
Prize ·says the United States needs
to do more to feed and care for its
hungry women and children.
Dr. Nevin S. Scrimshaw, in an
interview Wednesday - World
Food Day - said federally funded
feeding programs arc failing to
reach the poorest of the poor in the
United Statei. And immunization
programs arc also faltering, he said.
"If we're going to catch up with
Cos1a Rica, we've got to pay more
attention to our mothers and chi!·
dren/' said Scrimshaw, a nutrition·
ist and public health specialist who
has led worldwide efforts to
improve nultition for children in
developing countries.

Bidwell man natned
alternate delegate to
108th Angus meeting
GALLIPOLIS • Paul H. Hill,
Bidwell, has been elected as an
alternate delegate to the I 08th
Annual Meeting of the American
Angus Association, November 17.
I~ in Louisville, Ky., according to
Rtchard Spader, executive vice
president of the American Angus
Association.
Hill, a member of the American
Angus Association with headquar·
ters in SL Jqseph, Missouri, is one
of 262 Angus breeders who have
been elected by fellow members of
their state association to serve as an
alternate representative at the
Annual Meeting. Representing 47
states and Canada, the state dele·
gates will participate in the business meeting and elect a new president, vice president and five direc·
tors to the American Angus Asso·
ciation Board.
The Annual Meeting is held in
conjunction with the Annual Con·
vention and Banquet, and the 1992
Roll of Victory National Angus
Show during the North American
International Livestock Exposition.
The American Angus Associ&amp;·
tion has nearly 24,000 active members and is the largest beef breed
organization in the world.
'·
•

.

··;,·

· Retail

SK RUN WINNERS • Wlnnm of the Big Bend Stemwbeel FestivaiSK race, h,eld Saturday from
Mason to Pomeroy, were presented plaques at the Pomeroy levee, Pictured above, left to right, men's
division winners: Natban Baloy of Pomeroy, fitst place, with a time of 17:22; PJ. Caldwell of Mid·
dleport, second; Chris Sloan, Pomeroy, fifth place; Mike Carter of Gallipolis; third; and Bill Toundas
of P11meroy, fourth. Below are winners of the women's division, left to right: Karen Davis of Gal·
lipolis, second; .ADison Gerlach, f1iddleport, fifth; Jane Hoffman of Letart, W.Va., first, with a time of
20:45; and Tammy Engle of Letart, third pllice. Absennrom the photo was Cathy Berkheimer,
Pomeroy, fourth place winner. (Register photos by Mindy Kearns:)

'

l!y Dlltf&lt; IJEVEIUDGE
. AP Blillnesi Writer
..
NEW YORK - Sometimes, .
things just don't seem to make
sense in business.
The government put out gloomy
numbers this weelc and corporate
earnings offered mixed views on
For flnlohod goad• . •
the chances of an economic recovSea5tJtllllly adju$1Bd dlatfll• ltt&gt;1n Prior,_.
ery. Meanwhile, the price of oil,
the lifeblood of the economy, crept
ominously higher into a range
· unseen since the early days of the
Gulf War.
How did Wall Streei respond?
By pu~IJ!ng_~ Dow Jo11es· indus.trial average to a reoord high 'Close.
The Dow roared ahead Friday to
an all-time high of 3,077.15 points,
surpassing the record of 3,061.72
set just two days earlier. At the
same time, crude oil rose to $24.14
a barrel at the New York Mercan·
tile Exchange, the highesi close. 1-"-~-!!1-~'!L'!II.J!I!~
since Jan. 22.
When markets were making dra·
malic moves a year ago during the
Persian Gulf crisis, oil and stocks
usually took off in opposite direc- ~~~~~~~~~~
tions. That makes sense, because 5&lt;
high oil prices hurt the economy
and low oil prices help, everywhere
except the oilpatch.
So what's going on now? Much
of the evidence coming in this
week did not seem 10 call for the
recovery that optimists have been
touting for so long.
Higher prices for energy, food
and housing put inflation at its
highest rate smce January, while
industrial production managed only
a sluggish gain. The merchandise
trade deficit wiaened as overseas
demand for U.S. goods fell.
Construction of new homes,slid,
making some financial seers wonder again whether the much-touted
reoovery may have been a mirage.
Many experts spent the week
sifting through earnings reports.
They were all over the place.
International Business Machines
Corp. said earnings' were off ~5
percent for the quarter, at $172 mil·
lion, and the outlook for the fourth
quaner is also grim.
AMR Corp., parent of aviation
giant American Airlines, reported
earnings of $70.3 million that
Chairman Rohert Crandall called
inadequate. Wall Slteet saw things
differently; pushing the airline
HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMP - Weighing in at 10.5 pounds, tills
stocks up sharply as investors
sw~et
'potato, ~hown by Henry H. Clagg of Nor!hup, was tht llel•y·
sensed that ltoubled business may
we1ght champton among sweet potatoes grown tn a community gar·
be headed for clearer skies.
den
in Northup. (Times-Sentinel photo)
USAir Group Inc. reponed losses of $81.4 million, saying it will
seek salary cuts in an effort to
return to financial health . But
induslty analysts have said the air·
lines as a whole might not be able
to hope for a good year until 1993
LANCASTER • American 'Eiec· ducer, was third with a 2.0 IIIC.
at the soonest.
tric Power (AEP) coal mines in
The OSHLC based iii!Witiftp
The automalcers are still having 1990 had the best overall safety on data obtained from company
a rough go of it
record among the nation's major accident reports flied with the Mini:
·Analysts believe that when Big underground coal producers, Safety and Health Adminillrlll011
Three earnings co.me out· over the according to statistics released last (MSHA). The org~nlzation il a
next couple of weeks, they will weelc by the Occupational Safety public interest law firm wlllth
show a combined loss of $2 billion and Health Law Center (OSHLC) "strives to improve health and ilfe·
for the third quarter.
in Washington, D.C.
ty conditions at work," liCCOnliltl
That could bring 1991 losses
AEP experienced an accident to it! dinlcror,J. Dlviu ~- fi
higher than the $4.5 billion lost in rate of 1.5, some 62 percent lower has r1llked the salety llitllldl oldlt
1980, the worst year ever.
than the 3.9 average for the 2S largest underground milllna COlli·
The banks were a mixed bag, largest U.S. underground produc- panics in the "U.S. for tile pes1 sla
but the biggest, Citicorp, showed a ers. The figure represents the num· years.
loss of $885 million, sending its ber of accidents for each 200,000
AEP ~IlleS four~
stock tumbling. Analysts said the employee-hours worlted.
mines whach last year l)ll)duccd 119
latest profits, or lack thereof, offer
"We are extreme\!' pleased with .million.JQns of coal, teveiid. be.ia
no indications that the credit this achievement, stated J. E. amon~ underground minin' apeQ•
crunch is about to end.
"Jack" Katlic ; AEP senior vice tions m the U.S. Tile four mi111e1
American Telephone &amp; Tele· president· fuel supply. "It reflects are: Southern Ohio COil com.,..
graph Co. reported a third-qu~r the ucmendous effort our employ· ny 's Mci; No. 2 IIIII Mt ·
loss of $1.8 billion Thursday, citing ·ecs put forth in the area of safety.·
3! mines. l~at~d in Me 1• Md
a $4 billion accounting charge con·
Second best on OSHLC's list Vmton counues 111 Ohio; Sc lttt w
riected with 14,000 job cuts from was Coaslal Slates Energy. based Ohio Coal Company'a M ·
the purchase of NCR Corp. Other· in Utah , with a 1.8 rate: Consolida· Mine, Fairmoru, W. Va. : •.lid
wise, AT&amp;T would have shown a tion Coal, of Pimburgh, the Wind!at COlli COIIIl*'r' W
reco~ profit.
nation's largest underground pro- Minu W Uberty. W. VL
'

OHSAA allows athletes to
play sports out of season

.

.

October 20, 19,91

Prod
Pri.ce Index

AEP has nation's best
underground mine reco.rd

CONTEST WINNER • Winner of a Trlltlfl'
Pellet Fueled Camp Stove coatest held recently
was Wade Henson, far right. The event was
held during the grand opening of Environame
!

�.. '

Farm/Business

~imts •
t\ '

jttrlintl

Section D
'-··

_; '

October 20, 1991
''

Business sends conflicting ·
signal~ in earnings reports
. By DIRK JJEVERIDGE
- AP BusiDess Writer
NEW YORK - Sometimes, .
things just don't seem to make
sense in business.
The government put out gloomy
numbers this week and corporate
earnings offered mixed views on u~~~~~~b~illi~on~s~~~ · For flnlsl!ed·gocida
the chances of an economic recovSeasonally adjusted rl!.,.,R !.,j, '"'lot monrfi.
ery. Meanwhile, the price of oil,
the lifeblood of the economy, crept
' ominously higher into a range
· unseen since the early days of the
Gulf War.
How did Wall Street respond?
By pushing the Dow Jones indus~
trial average to a record high close.
The Dow roared ahead Friday to
an all-time high of 3,077.15 points,
surpassing the record of 3,061.72
set just two dl\YS earlier. At the
same time, crude oil rose to $24.14
a barrel at the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest close ~--!1~!1-~~!-'!'-''!'Pi~~~
since Jan. 22.
When markets were making dramatic moves a year ago during the
Persian Gulf crisis, oil and stocks
usually took off in opposite direc- I ~~5i~~~~~~~~
BIG TREE CONTEST WINNERS • Win· and Water Conservation District are, left to
ners of the recent big tree contest sponsored by right, Keith Handley, John Beck, Mike Conkle · . tions. That makes sense, because Si
high oil prices hurt the economy
the 0 .0. Mdlityre Park District and Gallia Soil and Homer McCarty.
and low oil prices help, everywhere
except the oilpatch.
So what's going on now? Much
of the evidence coming in this
week did not seem to call for the
Poplar Church Road. It stands right and Water Conservation District recovery that optimists have been
By CINDY JENKINS,
District. Forester
on the township right-of-way on was established and began to help touting for so long.
the left hand side of the road.
land owners with sound conservaGaiUa County
Higher prices for energy, food
SWCD
If you feel inclined to visit this tion practices. Gallia SWCD has and housing put inflation at its
GALLIPOLIS - The first Gallia tree, one glance at it s huge trilnk been one of the top five SWCDs in highest rate smce January. while
County Big Tree Contest Spon- might generate many questions in the state since 1983. Two years of industrial production managed only
sored by the O.O.Mclntyre Park your mind about history in the area. that period Gallia was one the top a sluggisli gain. The merchandise
District and the Gallia Soil and Since the tree is estimated to· be two Districts.
trade deficit widened as overseas
Water Conservation District, was about 200 years old, that means it
The black oak, by this time, had demand for U.S. goods fell.
successfully concluded on Septem- was alive and growing· in June of witnessed a county from its early
Consttuction of new homes slid,
·ber 20, 1991. The only genus eligi- 1790 when the city of Gallipolis struggling stages to what has · making some financial seers won·ble for this years contest was oak was being surveyed.
become a leading county in the der again whether the much-touted
'(quercus). All species of oak could
The young black oak would state.
recovery may have been a mirage.
be entered. The winner in this years have been 13 years old when Ohio
The O.O.Mcintyre Park District
Many experts spent the week
contest was a black oak (Quercus became a state and Gallia County which was established in 1975 is ·sifting through earnings reports.
velutina) nominated by Cheshire became a county in 1803. As the one of the most modern. un-to-date They were all over the place.
Township Trustees Homer McCar- state. and Gallia County grew the parks in our area. With the RaeInternational Business Machines
ty , Keith Handley, Mike Conkle young sapling sent it s ro.ots deeper coon Creek Park and the Elizabeth Corp. said earnings· were off 85
and also John Beck who is into Gallia County soil.
Evans Bird and Waterfowl Sanctu- percent for the Quarter, at $172 milemployed by Cheshire Township.
By 1888 when O.O.Mclntyre ary, O.O.Mclntyre offers plenty to lion, and the outlook for the fourth
• The black oak is 248 inches in settled in Gallipolis at age six, the do for those looking for a way to quarter is also grim.
:'C ircumference and 44 feet in height tree was about 98 years old and had pleasantly spend their leisure
AMR Corp., parent of aviation
~·with -a crown spread of 70 foot Tho a diameter of about three feet. hours, as--weU'·as- offering . educa- giant American Airlines, reported
total points, according to Ohio s While Mcintyre was gaining fame tiona! opportunities for our chil- earnings of $70.3 million that
Big Tree Program, are 309.5. Ohio as a journalist the black oak contin- dren.
Chairman Robert Crandall called
If you do get a chance to visit inadequate. Wall Street saw things
s reigning black oak champion is ued to stand as coal was mined in
309 points. So Gallia County s Cheshire Township, Holzer Hospi- the b1ggest oak in Gallia County, differently, pushing the airline
. HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMP - Weighing in at 10.5 pounds, this
biggest oak is in contention for tal was dedicated and the county you may be surprised at the pleas-. stocks up sharply as investors
sweet potato, shown by Henry H. Clagg of Nor~hup, was the. heavyant feelings generated by this state· sensed that troubled business may
being the biggest black oak in the library opened.
weight champion among sweet potatoes grown tn a commumty garIn 1938atage56,0.0.Mclntyre ly sentinel. You may be held in be headed for clearer skies.
State!
den
in Northup. (Times-Sentinel photo)
The tree is located about one died. Gallia County, however, con- awe by it s size and grandeur.
USAir Group Inc. reported lossmile south' of Siate Route 554 on tinued to grow. In 1944 the Soil Whatever the case, it is a sight you es of $81.4 million, saying it will
· won t soon forget
seek salary cuts in an effort to
return to financial health. But
industry analysts have said the airlines as a whole might not be able
to hope for a good year until 1993 · · LANCASlER. American Elec- ducer, was third with a 2.0nte.
at the soonest.
tric Power (AEP) coal mines in
The OSHLC based its rankings
The automakers are still having 1990 had the best overall safety on data obtained from company
record amorrg the nation's major accident reports fJled with the Mine
a rough go of it
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN be offered on the "Quicken" soft·
·Analysts believe that when Big underground coal producers, Safety and Health Administration
ware program. We have scheduled
Gallia County
Three earnings come out over the according to statistics released last (MSHA) . The organization is a
a
class for January 22 and 23. An
Extension Agent,
next couple of weeks, they will week by the Occupational Safety public interest law firm which
WASHINGTON (AP) - This show a combined loss of $2 billion and Health Law Center (OSHLC) "strives to improve health and safeadditional day may be scheduled if
Agriculture &amp; C.N.R.D.
year's winner of the World Food for the third quarter.
GALLIPOLIS • To help you interest warrants.
in Washington, D.C.
ty conditions at work," according
Prize
says the United States needs
"Quicken" is a lbw-cost checkstay current on farm income taxes,
That could bring 1991 losses
AEP experienced an accident to its director, J. Davin McAteer. It
. . . the Farm Mana~ement S~f of the book based package designed for to do more to feed and care for its higher than the $4.5 billion lost in rate of 1.5, some 62 percent lower has ranked the safety records of the
· Ohio Cooperative ExtensiOn Ser- personal, business and investment hungry women and children.
1980, the worst year ever.
than the 3.9 average for the 25 largest underground mining com:
Dr. Nevin S. Scrimshaw, in an
vice will be offering a "Farm .finances. It has a good report secThe banks were a mixed bag, largest U.S. underground produc- panics in the U.S. for the past six
Income Tax Letter Study Course". tion The program can record interview Wednesday - World but the biggest, Citicorp, showed a ers. The figure represents the num- years.
.
The "study" letters will be income and expense, and has a Food Day - said federally .funded loss .of $885 million, sending its ber of accidents for each 200,000
AEP operates four underground
mailed weekly starting mid- number of aids to simplify and save feeding programs are failing to stock tumbling. Analysts said the employee-hours worked.
mines which last year produced 9.9
.· November. The ten lesson design time in entering data. Since it Is a reach the poorest of the poor in the latest profits, or lack thereof, off~r
"We are extremely pleased with million tons of coal, seventh best
will provide basic information on general program, the manual does United States. And immunization no indications that the credll this achievement," stated J. E. among underground mining opera~
programs arc al~ faltering, he sa!d. crunch is about to end.
income tax regulations and proce- not have farm examples.
"Jack" Katlic, AEP senior vice tions in the U.S. The four mines
"If we're gomg to catch up w1th
Dr. Duvick and others have put
dures especially appropriate to
American Telephone &amp; Tele- president-fuel supply. "It reflects are: Southern Ohio Coal Campa:
farmers and discuss management together farm examples that will be Costa Rica, we've got to pay more graph Co. reported a third-quarter the tremendous effort our employ- ny's Meigs No. 2 and Meigs No.
choices available to help farmers taught in the winter session. This attention to our mothers and chil- . loss of $1.8 billion Thursday, citing ecs put forth in !he area of safety." 31 mines, located in Meigs and
maximize their after-tax net farm software package is priced at under dren," said Scrimshaw, a nutrition- a $4 billion accounting charge conSecond best on OSHLC 's list Vinton counties in Ohio; Southern
income. The course should be use- $50 and could ~bably be consid- ist and public health specialist who nected with 14,000 job cuts from was Coastal States Energy, based Ohio Coal Company 's Martinka
ful whether you do your own taxes ered a "starter' program.·Version has led worldwide efforts to the purchase of NCR Corp. Other- in Utah, with a 1.8 rate; Consolida- Mine, Fairmont, W. Va.; and
5.0 of Quicken just became avail- improve nutrition for children in wise, AT&amp;T would have shown a tion Coal, of Pittsburgh , the Windsor Coal Company's Windsor
or use a tax consultant.
A special registration form. is able this week. Details of the local developing countries.
reoord profit.
nation 's largest underground pro- Mine at West Liberty, W. Va.
available at the County ExtensiOn class will be available in a few
Office. The fee is ten dollars. Reg- weeks. We need to know who is Bidwell man natned
istration must be made prior to interested in· attending the class alternate delegate to
November I to' Mr. Bryson R. now s0 we can continue planning.
Carter at the South District Exten- Call to express an interest or to get 108th Angus meeting
sion Center in Jackson . Call the more details.
An annual announcement of the
Gallia County Extension Office
GALLIPOLIS • Paul H. Hill ,
(446-7007) to start the enrollment service of computer beef rations is ·Bidwell, has been elected as an
', process. Plan to meet the challenge probably appropriate as we stan the alternate delegate to the I 08th
of keeping up-to-date with the con- winter feeding season. With a liule Annual Meeting of the American
basic information, I can design a Angus As~iation, November 17stant changing tax laws.
A similar topic is the us~ of ration for your t?eef cattle. The pro- 19 in Louisville, Ky., according to
• computers for far'!! accounu.ng. gram also allaws you to get a better Richard Spader, executive vice
According to Dr. R.1chard Duv1c~. handle on the cost of gain. The pro- , president of the American Angus
Extension Econom1st at the Oh10 gram is especially helpful for beef Association.
State University, if this is your ini- finishing, backgrounding a growing
Hill, a member of the American
• tial use of computers, don't Sl!U't replacement heifers. Call if you Angus Association with headquar·
with a complex system or extens1ve would like for me to work with you ters in St Joseph, Missouri, is one
set of data needs. Many people on a winter feeding program. This of 262 Angus breeders who have
have gotten discouraged and aban- service is free!
been elected by fellow members of
A reminder of the charter bus their state association to serve as an
doned the computer simply because
they tried to do too much too fast trip to The North American Live- alternate representati·y ~ at the
There are hundreds of basic farm stock Exposition in Louisville on Annual Meeting. Representing 47
• accounting programs available! November 20: The cost is $30 per states and Canada, the state deleDuring the Decem.ber • Febru~y person. We will fill the bus on first gates wlil participate in the busi• time period ExtenSion classes w1ll come basis.
ness meeting and elect a new president, vice president and five direc·
tors to the American Angus Association Board.
The Annual Meeting is held in
conjunction with the Annual Con- 1
; WASHINGTON (AP) - The the Laredo airport - has the space vention and Banquet. and the 1992
• Agriculture Department has pr?· and equipment to officially process . Roll of Victory National Angus
osed adding a fifth airport - m horses and meets USDA standar~s. Show during the North American
' Earedo, Texas - to liS list .or said Lonnie J. Ki~g. deputy ~dml~- International Livestock Exposition.
CONTFST WINNER • Winner or a Tr~~eger Stoves on Second Avenue I~ GallipoHs. Left ..
The American Angus Associ&amp;·
approved facilities for air sh1p- istrator for vetennary semces m
Pellet
Fueled Camp Stove contest held r~ently right are store olllclals Tom Smith, Amy II'OWII
ments of horses.
.
USDA's Animal and Plant Health lion has nearly 24,000 active memwas Wade Henson, · rar right. The. e~ent was and Doug Brown.
bers and is the largest beef breed
The proposed facility - El Inspection Service.
,. held during the grand opening or EnVJroname
organization
in
the
worl~.
.
!
PriVJero Equine Export Facility a~
;
1

Retail
Sales .Producer

Price Index

Big tree contest winners announced

Farm Flashes

U.S. needs to
Tax letter study course being do more for
offered by extension service its hungry,
group says

AEP has nation's best
underground mine record

~ Ag

Department propos.es
:adding fifth airport
.

\~

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•

)

Page-02-Sunday Times-sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

WV

October 20,

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ofof-Polnt Pleasant,

1991

Lawmakers
to probe
survey

1

Yard Sale

• .The Area's Number 1 Markatplace

WASHINGTON (AP) - Lawmakers are investigating alleged
mismanagement of a $7.6 million
survey on dietary trends that was
used to set federal policies on farming, food safety a~dfeeding pro:
grams for schoolchildren, pregnant
women and the poor.
Two House Agricuiture subcommiuees plan a hearing Wednesday to review the recent results of a
General Accounting Office investi •
galion of the 1987-88 Nationwide
· ,
Food Consumption Survey.
The GAO, the investigative arm
of Congress, said the survey results
should be used only with ''the
greatest of caution.''
Due to inefficiencies. the study
was two years late and instead of
costing $6..2 million. came in at
$7.6 million. In addition, they were
lax controls over the collection and
processing of resuits, the GAO
said.
"Most imponantly, results from
the survey may not be representative of the U.S. population because
of low response rates," it said.
The results of the study, undertaken every 10 years, arc used by
the Agriculture Department to chart
policy ~~isions for its $24 billion
food asststance programs, parucu larly for the food stamp and school
lunch programs.

•malt" furniture H11ft1 ' limp~,
1184 Tompo Modo hoOd MOD.
Loto mile lllftla on 3 Milo Crtolc

NOTICE FOR BIDS
Notice is hemby givon that
bias will .be received at 84
Main Street, Vinton, Ohio or
mailed to P.O. Box 8, Vinton,
Ohio 45686 by the Council of
lhe Village of Vinton, Ohio
until November 14, 1991 al
700 O'Clock P.M. for lhe construelion of a moral pole bam
wi.th lhe following
c:ifications:
The building shall be
36'x60' Wilh IWO 10"X12' wide
doors; one 3' entrance door;
four 3'x3' windows; four roof
light panels. The roof shall be
molal wirh overhang, gunera
and downspouts. The lice(
shall be 6' c:oncrele; a roof
moisler pad The wiring is ro
be t10-220volrwilha plug at
each post to meel slale
requirements. A 200 amp
breaker box; the lighdng shall
be sufficient lighl lor nighr
work; lrusses on 16' ceniB&lt;s;
wiring in conduit and a 12'
ceiling.
Tho attention of bidders is
direcled lo the special slalulory provisions· (O.R.C.
§4115.031 governing the pmvailing ralo of wages to be
paid to laborers and mechan-

Business
briefs•..

';i~\~. f'-J-'
!(M~J'¥,·.~
?8Y ."
!

OVB EMPLOYEES HONORED • Oblo Valley Bank recog~

:

! nlzed the following empjoyees with 5 to 10 years service during an

• awards ceremony at tbe' 1991 ramUy picnic held at the Bob Evans
~ Shelterhouse at Rio Grande recently. Pictured (wllb their years of
~ service in parenthesis) are: first row, left to rigbt, Larry Miller (5),
1 Bryan Martin (10) and Joe Fields (5). Secoad row • James L. Dai·
: ley, president; CII1rlene Wade (5), Susie PhaUn (5), and Bob East:. man, director (S).

••t
•
i'

...

r

,,

•

.

improvements. ·

·

No bid will be considemd
unless il be aeeompanled by
a bond or certified check in
lhe sum len (I 01 percent of
bid to guaranlte lhat if said
bKI is accepted, a contract will
be entered into and lhe performance of its property
secured.
The conlract will be awar&lt;led lo lhe lowesl and basi
bidder.

The ·co unci of rho VUiage of
Vinton reserves the right 10
mject any .,d all bids.
By Ordinance •! the
Council of lhe Village of
Vinton.
·
Given under my hand litis
10th day of~tober, 1991.
Sandra Maskllw
Oooocil Clerk

Rd,ltlndoroon.

No Hunll!\9 or TNipllllnQ on
rho Glonn McCoy proportr on
Rt. 2, Point Pluunt,

wHh~

_
: Pome!'Qy,

written prtmlsaiOn. ,,...,....,.
will bo proooculod.
No Hunting Of TOMpooolna ·on
rho Frodonck Wobb PfiiPirtYI
the

former

Mlddlepoi't
&amp; VIcinity
Doodllno: 1:0011m rho
lloo od lo !o run,
1doy.
Sundoy odhlon- 1:00pm Frldoy, ·
llonday . ldHion !O:OOa.m. '
•lolurday.
·

UniiiOChid?

SJiiCiro

ArN.

388-9989 Slngloo All All• lnd Ll'-1•

Sandra Maskllw
Cot 20. 27: Nov. 3, 19.91

Announcements
i2==='n:::Me:::;m:o:ry:::::;
·
3 Announcement•
.IN MEMORY- ·- ·
ILOANSS ·All rypoo of lolnol
In Loving Memory
Pti"'Inal, Bualn. ., etc, Cal lor
of
Grandmother
1 frN conaultttlan with 1 loin
attic« today. 1o8QO.II2~450 No
VIrginia Fortney who
'recUt or coll•t•ll nNdedl
left us one year ago
IMPORTANT NOTICE
today. We love and
Doadllno tor chlngH lo bo
modo In 1892 Ohl9 Volley Phono
m 1ss you very much,
Book 11 Frld1y Nov. 1. Anr.ont
you will never be
nHdlng •ddlllonl, dllh ons,
chongoo In whho or yollow
forgotten.
•
pagu onllohlng lo ldvorlloo
L
S I
d
ohOuld call boiWoon I:OOAIIove, on a an Jeff S:OOPII.
1-I00-$5I ~ or mall
Christa, Jeffrey,
lnformttlon to ChlmDion Dhwa·
Tyler ~ tors, Inc, PO Box 22, Norwalk,
Ohio 44857.

Awill You. COntldlnllll; W'rho:
Slnaloo,__ P.O. llu 1043, Go~
llpolll, unlo ant.

4 .

Glvet!way
Block .Walnu1o To Glvoowoy.
614-387-0274.
Blocklwhno milo cor, 1-yr old,
. noultrod, hu oil oholo, lnoldo
pet 614 ~ 992 ' 3265
Cats and kltttna to goOil
homes. 614-843-5445
Fret

mcbllt

home

FIVE YIAitS SERVICE • Oltlo Valley BIDit recoplzed the
: follodlt •IIIDJetl wltlt five Jlll'l Mrvke duriD&amp;ID 1wardl cere; .mOIIy 11 d!i !HI fullly picnic b'ld II tbe Bob EVIDI Sllelter• 11o11e at Rio
receady. Pictured 11rt ftrll row, left to rlaht,
: Joyce MoKaea. M1117 MaiOI ucl Bread• Ht111011 • Second row •
L. DalltJ, 'l'llldat; L111 Clll, Clara Hammond and Tim
S"-1. Not Jlklli eel: Ietty Iron ucl W1yne Nlda~.

··J•-

o...-.
•

.

r

El A TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, TrM Removal, H~gt
~;.'~: Fru Eotlmallol 8ft:

'

Q.argee Portable S.:wml.ll, don't
haul your log• to .the mill just

Public Sale
&amp; .Auction
Rick PNrwon Aucllon Compony
full time· auctionNr, comp~tti
•·'luc11on urvlce. LlctnMd Ohio,
. Wear _VIrglnlo; ;104'm-~71t5.
Wldomoyor'o Aucrlon Sorvlco,
• Rio Gllndo, Ohio 11t:24WIU.

•

ipiCt,

=~-----­

laat on Portltnd Rd., 1m111
tim11e dog, t1n In coior, nama
Tippy. 11t:ll411-3088 lolvo m..
=119:!'::.·.;_·.:_
' ----..,.-~
Malo Bordor Cqlllo, 1 112 Yoors
Old, Call614-448-3003.
Mother And 5 Male Pups, Ulxld
B11od. 814-256-1525.

Employment Serv1ces

ACROSS
1 Strol&lt;e
7 Heads the pack
12 Dinner course
17 Swih
21 Sunset State
22 Apportion
23 Gor up
24 Hebrew measure
25 "-·. the People"
26 Gretsky score
· 28 Pertaining to
lhe cheek
30 Experl
32 With: prefix
33 Weaken
35 Dragnet
37 Painful spots
39 Touch; handle
40 Dude
41 You and me
43 Goddess of
discord
45 Repulse
47 Riner 10
48 "Days of and Roses"
49 NBC morning
show
52 Legal document
54 World 56 Dispatches
57 Ranges ol hills
59 Leak rhrough
61 Abound
62 Contain
63 Ms. Fitzgerald
64 "CieOparra" star:

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
auto parts malcer and defense contractor TRW Inc. blamed a 32 percent decline in tbird·quarter net
income on the slumping auto
industry.
Net third-quaner income toWed
$32 million, or 51 cents per share,
compared with $46 million, or 75
cents per share, for the same _lleriod
one year ago, the company said
Friday.
Sales were down 6 ·percent to
$1.9 billion, compared with $2 billion for the third quarter of last
year, the company said.
Q~ly sales in TRW's' auiOmotive segment were off 4 percent,
dropping from $986 million one
year ago to $946 million this year.
But operating profirrose to $53
million from $52 million.
In the space and defense segmen~ sales for the period were off
9 percent to $752 million, com&lt;~Jared with $832 million for July to
September 1990. Operating profit
fell to $58 million from $65 million.
Sales were up slightly in the
information systems and services
segment, inc,uding TRW's credit
re&lt;;ords services. Sales toialed $194
million for the quartet, up from
$192 million for the comparatlle
period last year.

inits.

66 Ocean
67 Those holding
office
68 Transaclion

69
71
72
74

Grodin ID
Shoe size
Journey
Piece of
dinnerware

76
77
78
79
81
82
83
84
85
87
89

loved one
Edible seed
Grad-to-be
Venerate
Oahu wreath
Repast
English streetcar
Rabbit
Climbing planl
Grave; somber
Ordinary
language

90 Disdains
92 Change direcrion
94 Memorandum
95 lndian 'groups
96 Drinks heavily
97 Fireplace part
99 "- for Two"
tOO Ceremony
101 Above
102 Flying mammals
103 Encountered
105 Expel air forcibly
lhrough nose
107 "Evening Sha~e"
star: lnlts.
109 Bright color
110 Pit
t1t Rips
113 ldenllcal
114 Golfer's need
115 Redgrave 10
116 Sword handle
117 Scoltlsh cap
t t8 Electrified
particle
120 " Highway Heaven"
121 Omen
122 Bundle
123 Ella was his
pen name
124 Extinct flightless
birds
126 Decayed
128 Little
130 Lightweight' outer
coat
132 French resorr
134 Hard blows: slang
135 Story
136 Exlsl
i37 Uncanny
139 Burden
141 Myself
142 Free
143 Haul
145 The populace.
147 Former Russian
ruler
149 Mournful
152 Type of bracelel
153 Heater for home
155 Medicine portions
157 Island group In
Pacific Ocean
159 Ustlnov 10
160 Mexican currency
162 Flat; even
164 Fathers
166 Sleeping-

sickness fly
168 Winrer

-ry

precipilation

169 Meeting
170 Related on ·
mother's side
171 Fashions
DOWN
1 Farm animals
2 Region
3 Note ol scale
4 Omelet ingredienl
5 Chimney carbon
6 Deception
7 Note of scale
8 Shade tree
9 Word ol sorrow
10 Grief: poeric
,11 looks fixedly
12 Anton ID
13 Limb
14 Spend time in
idleness

15 Items ol property
16 Hinder
17 On behall of
18- Early morn
19 Follows llrsl
20 Figures ol speech
27 Fat of swine
29 lleratlon
31 Spanish article
34 Rainfall result
36 Baker's producls
38 Calm
40 Locate
42 Epic sea rale
4.4 Observes ••
46 Falsehoods
48 Source of waler
49 Woody plants
50 Housron
lootballer
51 Old pronoun
53 Profound
· 55 Printer's measure
56 Floar in air
58 Waits on
60 Gloomy covering
62 Cure
65 Stalemate
68 Richard Anderson
69 Stop
70 Contests .
72 Gull-like birds
73 Personal
75 Roman bronze
76 Degrades

f350.11111DIW p,_olna Phono
0n1... 1Poilpre Coli You. .No Exporto nco
1.-al0242
.
POSSIBLY MAKE $400 WEEKLY
Sluffing Envolopoo AI Homo.
$1.00 Sill Addro- Slomr&gt;od
Envelope No~O To: DlA Suppllu, P.O. Box 144~, Falrbom,
OH 45324.
·
' EXTRA INCOII E"t1" '

77 Surgical
instrumen1

More unusual
Smooths
Apportions
Commonplace
Wishec(lor
Still
Parcel of land
Winner's reward
Almospheric
dislurbance
91 Envelop; clothe
93 Recalled to mind
95 Earthquake
97 Beer lngredlenl
98 Meadow
102 Tree trunk
104 Oecorale
106 Dine
107 Generale
108 Tears
110 Mound
111 Pounded down
112 Promptly
114 Names
116 Heallhy
117 Bind
119 Metal fastener
121 Stalk
122 Hairless
123 Behold!
125 Highlander
127 River In Siberia
128 Denudes
t29 Young lady
t30 Bank employee
t31 Full of fissures
t33 Orient
136 Constructed
138 Chemical ilye
140 Arrows
143 llallan river
t44 Raise by
assessment
146.Antltoxlns
148 Reddish-yellow
In hue
150 Church part
151 Club obligations
153 Nod
154 Legal matter
156 Deposit
158 Lock opener
161 Therefore
163 Army off.
165 Selenium symbol
167 louise ID

HaipWanted

79
80
82
83
84
86
88
89
90

!WITAAUA WANTS YOU
laaotlonl
Pay,
Bonl.\!:1.!,
Tronopcirlllllon, · 407-2112-4'"'·
Eot. 171. , llo,m.-tOp.m. Toll
Aofundld.
AVON I All Artlo I Shl11oy
:104-1175-14211.

-Plumbing
Knowrodgo

And

Experience
Proforrobloln AHoollh Clro Sol·
ring
·Fiexlbllhy
-Dopondobll

562·1065. I
Elm S&amp;-$8 an hour whh Avon.

No door to door n.cnury. FrH
gin with olgn up. 814-1182-7180
EARN IIONEY Roodlng Bookol
$30,000/!r: Income Potential.
Dol olio. I) 805-962-8000 EXI. Y·

Experienced MtdiCII A.ctpllonlot Noodod. CaN 614-892·
8800.
Fleeta Hair • Tinning, Athens,
11 looking 'tor o ,uollllld • onrhuolaollc olyllor o - k In our
fait pactd walk· 1n nlon. We gf.
tar lop hour pay plut commllo
aion paid vecaUon &amp; 1dvance
eduCation h11llh IIWUI'IInct II
avallabll ctll lynn Oll•r 814·
6112-8701
HAIRSTYLIST
NEEDED:
Qouronllld $170 W11k Pluo
Morol Pold Vocollono. 114-448. 7217.
HIGH EARNINGS.
Pan Tlmo Oo Full Tlmo. U.S.
Oovommont. OWn Hro. PrOctl•
lng FHA llortglfll Rotundo. No
Elp. t-10t·:IIIWZ42. EXT. F·
2141, Toll Aolund.
.

•

•
I

Wo Otfor:

Salary
And
Benents
~ Exc .. IMt Training Program
.C.re• Growth Oppor1unlll••
.COmp.tllivt

.Job S.tltftcdon

Forward Auume Or

LA~IIr

'

5

NEW usnNG - Quiet Country Loc1tlo~ Beaulful and Immaculate brid&lt; home rests on a
spacious lot wid! open surroundings. 3-4 biJd.
room home fealures attractive oak loors, large
lamily room, dining room. living room, 3 baths
and much more. Ouldoor enjoymenr isn't OVBf·
looked with large deck and fenced yard. Green
SchOol&amp;. $84.900.
.
11706

LOCATION LOCATION LOCATIOK- Ask anybodyi'Location is most important when selecting a home.' Here's a 6 room home on I acre
with a great view of the river and onl~ 5 miles
from town. Includes 3 bedrooms, fireplace, full
basemen!, garage and bam. $59,500. 1116

Happy Ads

' ... "

J

"Sakes Alive,
Look ,Who~

lr
~

.....

."''

.

used, llblllld.' and

living In fear? Pllue
help youreelf end
me. Am t·atone~ ~­
names requlrtd. ·

!

Please Write to.

l

SURVIVOR
P.O. Box 91.0
:
Gallipolis, OH. 45631
1. .

~~~~~~

MUST
wilh
111•SEE
owner ,"81 i an
to live, once you see ·all il has to offer.
offering approx. 2900 sq. fl. of very well decoraled and livable living space with more room
available should you need it. 3 bedrooms, cozy
den with warm f1mplace and oak ftoors. oversized kilchen wilh adjacent screened in patio,
large living room wilh very altractive fireplace, 2
lull and 2 haft baths. Garage parking lor 3 cars
plus loads of storage and sevB&lt;al outbuildings.
5.5 acre of land thai provide exellenl privacy
once you see it Price wr to St55,000. OWner .
moving to lown. Wan!S il sold! Give us a calli
j212

,

Real Estate Garieral 1

PEJICEFUl UVING ON RACCOON CREEK Perfect setting lor relaxation and enjoyment of
Racroon Creek. 3 acres, mil, with good access
10 the creek and ploinly ol room lor recreation. ·
Log home includes 6 rooms including basement Large deck ove.rlooks lhe wonderful selling. Perfect lor weekend gel-logelhera or full
time country living. $34,900.
.

Love,
The

RT. 7 LOCAnON -Very well kept home i~'
nice area includes 3 bedrooms. large lamdy
room, full basement. Easy to heat and mainlain. Great starter ho"'"l
1213

5

Happy Ads

.H•m Firtl

Annlm11ry
r. A H•m c.u,fl!
. RANIY 1nl SUE
BIUIAM

,,,., ,,,

,, ,, r,.

Jason, Justin,
Glngtr &amp; Brandy

5

Geri
'

SPECIAL AUCTION

Rothgeb!

Thurs., Oct. 24, 7 P.M.

Real Eltate General

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

.,... . .

FOR SALE
1·Acre Land wlth.;73
modot mobile homo. 2
bedroom•, kitchen, 1
both 111d llrtllllving·
room. Good condition.
Located e mlteo tram
Chtahlre on St. Rt. 554.
Cltt 11ter 4:00 p.m.
387·7517.

.

BABY FARII FOR SALE - H""''s a 32 ilcre
farm that won't lake all your time, whli!Latill
allowing you lo 'linkef" · RemG doled 2
bedroom house, mbuin bam and out;builcfing,
pond and robacco base. Localed on good hardtop road. 1 mile off Rt. 7. Priced at $44,900. . ·
1201

nRED OF LOOK·AUKES? We've got a 'one
of a kind' home for you. This eye appealing
rusiK: c:ontemporary horne has something lor
lhe entire famiy. Maslel bedroom has adjacent
loft and ample room lor the most complete bedroom suite. Living room wilh calhedral ceiling
and fireplace will welcome your guests for you .
Full basement dtat jusl '1!00'1quil has possibili·
ties lor 41h bedroom aild more. lnground pool.
Large outbuilding wilh potential to become a
guest house. 1.5 acmlotwilh a ~lew, 4 car slorage. Give us a call for an appo1nrment You've
got everything to gain and nothing 10 lose .
$125,000.
1204

YOU'VE ADMIRED IT FROII THE ROAD and
thought il would never be lor sale, bur now
we're offering rhis beauliful home for the l11st
time . Older home loaded wilh lots ol charm
·offering 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, din·
ing room, family room and large kirchen over·
looking a large pond. Alllhis siruate don 3 (mn)
beautiful wooded acres. Call Carolyn for your
showing today . $85,000.
1603
FINALLY A HOllE WITHOUT HOMEWORK It's all been done! This 2 year old home is
ready and wainng for you . Slight conlemporary
. design provides a very spacious leal. large
complement ol casement windows let the
sunshine In even on cloudy days. Beautilul
kllchen. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Nice deck
overlooking liar professionally landscaped yard .
City schools. $79,900.
•
#219
DON'T SETILE FOR A HOUSE JUST TO
LIVE IN ....From lhe moment you srep into lhe
large foyer .you can 'feel' your lamily living in
this classic. Formal living room, dining room ,
sunny kitchen, very livable famiiV room. 3 nice
bedrooms plus 2 full balhs. Slorage galore in
lhe large atlic, 1 car garage, full basement II
lhat's 110t enough, in rown convenience. Priced
Bt$69,000 .
1609

Ada

Happy
Birthday

PRICE REDUCEO TO $71,90011 Excep~onally
well kept ranch home has a lot to offer lhan
most in its case. Located in one of Gallia
Counly's best selling neighborhoods - Spring
Valley - ii'S close to shopping, hospiral, etc.
'\Home features 3 nice bedrooms, 111 barhs.
large living room, formal dining &amp; ear-in kilchen.
Full basemen! wilh family room. 2 fireplaces, 2
car garage. Large lot Home warranly backs up
house components for a lull year. Call now for
an appoinlment
. 1229

1818

Happy
Birthday!

She's StiU
Fine for 39~
HA! HA!

TO ENJOY YOUR LEISURE TillE
- Thafe·s a minimum of mainiBnance on lhio 3
bedroom bHevel. The backyard is fenaKI and
yo~ will enjoy the deck j~st qft the ctning ...._
Priced 11 $39,900.
150e
·

FINALLY A STARTER HOME y~u cbn't have
to fix upll You will need to see lh1s 3 bedroom
with recently replaced vinyl siding, roof ~d gullering, plumbing, 200 amp. •*Inc serviCO and
new gas lurnace. Large lam1ly room, 2 full
baths convenient laundry room and pnvale
patio.' This opportunity is only minutes from
rown on St Rt. 141 . City schools. $49,500.

45!"

We Wlnt to expreaa
our thonka and opprecll·
tlon to ooch and ovory•
ono thot donlttd tlmt,
,rooney, flower•, c1rd1
ond food during lho II~
nett ond d11th of our
lovely doughtor, Anltl K.
(Holll Cornwell, Grove
'
city, Ohio.
Special "Thtnkl" to
Rev. DIVt Schwondon•
nm1n for hlo coneollng
wordo ond Ia lhe
Schoodlnger Funorol
Home, Grove Clly, Ohio.
Alto everyone It
Rf1hol Myon 1nd
Kopech, Altorneyo It
Law, Or. Wolker ond hlo
a1afl In tho Oncology
Unit, UniV.rolty Hoopftlt,
Dr. Gh1ny 1nd hl1 Sraff
In tho Oncology Unit, St.
Anthony'• Hoopltll, Con·
car Society, ond the
llount Carmol Hoopfct
Society of Columbul,
Ohio.
Your klndnen and
thoughtlu!n. . will novor
be · forgotten by her
Fothor, llothtr, ond
Brothor.
Jim, Edith and
EmatHatt
Ohio

' LkuHtl &amp; lolltletlll Statuf 011111

on Page A.-7

·VAUGHAN'S CARDINAl
Real Eatate General

Sadly missed
lamlly &amp;

Of

;1=C8=:rd::O:I:T::ha::'*:::::•:;:;

VINTON, OHI~
ALL NEW MEROIANDISl
We will sell lit• of each that we put
FINHIS ISAAC 381-9370 or
ISAAC'S FEED 388·8880

•

Some ~ement Experience Necessary
Apfly Ia Person With Resume •

Real Estate General

tunhy PIIIM Forwarcl Ralumt

10188.

Answer to PuzzJe

Anniversary of file
death of
LEWIS BRYANT
GARRETSON.
You will always be
In our hearts. ·

InclUding lolory Hlllory To:
BIU Bill
Pomeroy N,.long And Rohob.
. Clnttr
31758 Rocklprlngo Rood
. Pomeroy, OH 457111
Wo Aro An Equol Oppartunhy
Employor.

v•rltilblt •xptri.nce and 1 )'Nr

.FROZEN FOODS MANAGER

'

Tlred-9f kNpllig the
secret of being

-Millnttnanct ·

'""'n;•

•xperLtnca pulling van type
lral .. rs.P"-111 Clfl e&amp;N Evan•
Trucking Co., Boyd Adklno. 304-

HELP WANTED

Eloclricol

rour

Admlnlono
Roprooonlollvo
Noodod. Locll Collogo. Send
AMumo To P.O. Box 213, Gol·
Upollo; Ohio 45831.
Drtv... oro you pold 3H 1
milo? i'hii lo whll wo poy: Uvo
load ond unlolcf pof, lrovol IX·
ptiiN odVI-. Lllo moclol •
qulpmonl, oollly oncl urvlco
owardo lf5'11o pollolltld loldl,
llojor Mldlcol lnour~nco ovolloblo. 401 K pon whh compony
matching up to 2"- at P-Y· Mull:
h•v• 3 ptra ov.r tht road

· ATTENTION .

Wo 'Aro SMklng An lndlvldUII
Wllh:
.

Eom $200·$500 Wookly Milling lnlornl Oulllnlng Quallllcollono
Holiday Trovll Brochwoo. For And Sllooy Hlllory To:
lloro lniDnnlllon Bond A AdBIU Bill· Admlnlolrolor
dmood StomDOd Envolopo To:
Nursing
And
ATW Travel, ~.0. Box 430780, Pomeror,.
Ro blllllllon Clnlor
Miami, FL 33151.
38751 Aocklprlngo Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 457U
'POSTAL JOBS '
Your ArN. f23,700 Par Yoor Pluo
Btntfht, Poatal Carriers, Sor·
1oro1 Clorko. For An AppUcollon
MODELS
Ana Eum lnlormollon Coli I·
CATALOG
Z19·7:16o8107 Ext P6432 8 o.m.
All lgM lncludl~ 'hlldren over
To 1 p.m., 7 Doyo.
rho ogo of ono tor corolog 1ypo
AVON • All areaa, Clll Uarllyft ...igi"'IHnlt. Interviewing aooil
WNVtr304-112~D4!1.
In
aru. For appointment·
col CASTING (4121 571-2004,
A Dolly Sotory Of $300 For Mond1y through Frld1y, t am to
Buying lllrcfoondloo. Buyor lpm.
Noodoil No Exporlonco NICMoory.l14-386-2012, El!l.3f83.
No Ezpe~rlanc• NecUIIry. A
Dolly Silooy Off30Hor Buying
ADIIIS8KlN8 COORDINATOR
llotdoandloo. 814-385-2082, Ext.
OUiolondlna eo- Opporlunhy 3833.
Avolloblo A'l - o y Nurol!\9
And Aohobllllollon C.nlor For R.N. Nuru lo proo.~ldt .,.I'IOnal
An Individual To Coordlnoro OUr care urvlcn to Plychl8trlcelly
Admloolono And Dl- Our dl11bled clllnta In Uaeon
Communlly Rlllllono Progrom. Counry lrN. Will ooqulro no
Thlo Poolllon Aloo Aoqulroo tJo. mono lhln 17 hourS por wook
clll loOYic• Doollllllllllllon. If and wortc may bt performed
You Aro Looking For A P*t To
and/or WMktndt.
UH Your Crtatlv. Taltnta And lolooy nogotloblo. volld WV
Nu,..o
llconoo.
Apply 11 llooon
Marketing Skill•, We May Have
A Spol Far You In Guo Oraonlz• County 11111111 Hllllh lorvlcoa,
Uon. UcenMd Socl1l WotUrt Z13 V.lloy Drivo, Polnl Ploounl,
Aro Encounoaod To Apply. To WV Z51550. AAIEOE.
lAim ltoro A'bo.- '11111 OpPDf·

•

11

s,.....

ISAACS AUOION HOUSf

The company also . is showing
sli&amp;)tt pius throug!l ihe first nine
months of the year. Its earnings for
the period wen: $105.6 million, or
$1.20 per share, compared with
$101.6 million, or $1.17 per share,
for the ftnl nine months of 1990.
Sales through Sept. 30 amounted to
$1.99 billion, up from $1.75 billion
for last year's third quaner. ·

Bull,...

Interior and txterkw pt~lntlna, 10
yeart experience, roof pelnflng,
hand Wlthlng tloUHI, lrallers,
wlndowo ..Odd jobl. Roforoncoo.

Froo Elllmorn. 304-&amp;75-2108.
LPN wlllloMo .. ,. ollho oldorly
Of olck In lholr homo 8:00.5:00
&amp;-doyo por wook. 1114-1140-2181
9 Wanted to Buy
·MJea "Piull't Dar Cal'll Center.
CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
attordoblo, chlldcoro. 11-F
Complete houtehold or Eatatnl Hiring IIIIV\Vomon. Up ro $800 ISolo,
o.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2~10.
,Any lypo ol lumhure, oppliinc•s, lntlt~Ue'l, etc, Alto :.:"'JALl"tJ'~~~hs.~.:i Btfol'll, after echool. Dra~lne
welcome. 6U US 8224. Ntw In·
approlllf ovalloblo.IM-245-1152. Ell. 111785.
. toni Tocfdlor Coro, 814-446-6227.
.Wanted to buy, Standing timber,
Bob Wllllamo &amp; Sono 814·892·
HOTEL
5449.
HouHiceepert,
Malntenenct
Wanted To Buy: Junk Autoo, Fronl Dook, Cooko Holpo,. To
Scrap Metal And FrH R•moval .S1Z Hour Pomo F-i', Call 1-800From Well Virginia. 614-441· 551·17311.
0013.
HOTEL, ·
Houookloporo,
Top Prlcoo Pold: All Old U.S. Malnttn1nce, Front Desk,
Colno, Gold Ring!. Sllvor CoiM, Coolw, Hlclptrl, to .12hr pt~rm.
Gold Colno. II.T.ll. Coin Shop, F·T coii1-IID0-551-1739
151 Socond A_.., OoiUpollo.
Utlntenanca Supervltor

uiiiHieo nor Included. 114-~92941

21 .

coli 304-675·1857.

'8

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Sherwin -William s Co. reported
gains in earnings and sales for the
third quarter.
The maker and retailer of paint
and telated products earned $50.4
million, or 57 cents per share, on
sales of $736.8 million from July to
September 1991. For the same peridel of 19!10, earnings were S46.7
miUion, or S4 cents Pllr share, on
sales oU638:S million.
·

'
:

, Advo~.

.foro

written perrnlalon. ,-

Do

Sunday

I

·All Yord Bolio Mut1 Bo Pold In

Chlllter Qovrtl

propll1y, Molgo Counly, Olivo ·
Township, Rood 2111, w~hou1

11

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
Edison Co.'s net income was off
about 1 percent for the third quaner
of this year, despite an increase in
operating revenues.
The electric utility said Friday
its third-quarter 1991 net income
was $68.34 million, down slightly
from income of $68.99 million for
the same period one year earlier.
Eannings per common share rose
10 42 cents from 41 cents.
Operating income in the third
quaner of this year totaled $618.45
million, compared with $572.81
million for those three months last
year.
The utility said a rate decision
by the Public Utilities Commission
oLOhio..Jiindered its-profitability.
The decision bas been appealed,
but there hasn' t been a fUial ruling.

:~01AW''
. .~t#f·:{":)--.·
_,, t,·,·,,---·~

ics employed- on public

SU.N DAY PUZZLER

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - South
Korea's Ministry of Finance has
allowed The Goodyear Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. to establish a sales
company there, a company official
said.
Hoyt Wells, Goodyear president
and chief executive officer, sai d
Fridaythat South Korea quickly
approved the request Goodyear
· amde in August for permission to
sell tire products in the Asian
nation.
He said its presence there would
enhance Goodyear's tire marketing
position in South Korea, which has
a burgeoning auiO industry.
HONOR EMPLOYEES • Ohio Valley Bank recognized the
: foUowing employees with 10 to 15 years service during an awards
• ceremony at tbe 1991 family picnic held recently at the Bob Evans
: Sbtlterbouse In Rio Grande. Pictured (witb their years of service
• In parenthesis) are, first row, left to right, Tammy Thacker (10),
; Sue Ann Bostk (15) and M1rva Dalley (10) Second row • Presl. : dent James L. Dailey, Pony Salisbury (15), and Richard Scott (15).

Ptr Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity ·
Sfg Yard Sill, ·Sun, Mon Tuea
·10:00 1111 ?. Cl!&gt;thH ol lliH, 2l
cants' IlCht _gl111ware, book a,
curtaln1, .W. lhotl ..,..

'

Wanted to

Nlld your IMvU r-. :104T/101141.
Pay Reul;;.':'~. Alu,
Will lobyoll1 loby In lly Homo. Allonloblo.1114-441:1408.
.
Solon For Solo, I llailon '-ir
And Tonnlna Ilion Goo4l ~
lion, f7,1500."Coll ii4.m1~.
FilldllCial
12
SituatiOn
• THE DWYER GROUP
NATIONALLY KNOWN Homo
· Wanted
21
lorvlct, FrMChiH Compony
Now l.....,ltwlna FDf Elol!tolvo
Soment . to live In for ihllr
Righi I For '11111 Arlo. lluotltlvo
boord. 11,000 BTU oil !Motor tor
TIMI Doon To 0w11, 0po111o
Mlo cholp. t14-44f-3418. .
And llonoao Your IMR Sullo
- . lnvoilmonl AtcluiNd. Coli
Business
Chuck Dovlo, 1~-Training
VENDINQ ROUTE: Gil Rich
Quick? No Woyl Bul Wo Hovo A
Clood, lloody, Atfordoblo1 _Buol·
nooo. Won'! Lui. 1-1..,.2848313.

,·

. • EMPLOYEES HONORED • Ohio Valley Bauk recognized the
· following employees with 30 or more years service during•an
: awards ceremony at the 1991 family picnic held at Bob- Evans
· Shelterhouse in Rio Grande recently. Pictured (with their years of
; service in parenthesis) are, first row, left to right • Billy Jo M~ad·
• ows (30) and PhyiHs Wilcoxon (30) Second row· James L. Darley,·
• OVIl president and chief executive ofriCer; Madge Boggs (30) and
Wendell Thomas (35).

18

Wanted

wv

EXCELLENT BUSINESS POSSIBILITIESII
Locared in high traffic area on Sl. At. 7 wirh eo·
lronlage and 180' deep. Includes a residence
wilh 2 or 3 business rooms · and 2 mobile
homes. Drilled well and 2 septic 1anks. Counry
water available. Owner is very anxious to sell .
Asking $54,900, but would consider any rea·
sonable offer.
1203

IDEAL BUILDING LOTS NEAR RIO GRANDE
-Located approx. 1 mile soulh on Rt. 325. We
have sBYeral very nice building lots stil avail-

able. Each has 5 acres. several are adjoining
each olher (lor a large parcel I. County water
available. Poiced $8,900 to $12,900.
1207
CURB APPEAL fan't All
brick ranch. You'll find 3
• 111 barhs,
large living room wilh fireplace, nice eat-in
kilchen, full basement plus exira nice lot w1lh
op~on ro buy addition"al lot. Better call on 1h1s
one. $5Q,OOO, or $69,000 wllh exira lot.
1612
ABSOLUTELY BEAUnFULIII Centered on
3.67 acres, litis home'oftera the finest ot cr~lts ­
manship, copper plumbing, large spac1ous
rooms, JennA1re range, cherry k1lchen cablners. large fireplace. hardwood lloors, landscaped lawn, brick and concrele paiiO, and so
much morel Call Sonny lor an appoontmenl.

1707

CUTE AND COZY - Situared on a privale lol
near Clay School. Features 2 bedrooms, eat-in
· kirchen, washer and dl)'er hookui&gt;S and aluminum siding. Call us today for appointment
.
#216

WOODED LOTS - Just off Rio Grande
Centerpoinl Road . 2.5 acres lo 5 acres.
Protective restrictions. All trao covered lots.
ldeallocabon near conege. Lei us show you lhe
loiS in this quiet. wooded setting.
1336

...

" . ...

. . . ..

216 ACRE, 11/L, FARM- Buildings consist of 2
barns and complete ser up lor mobile home. 55
acres crop, 50 acres pasture, balance in woods
and ollisc. area. Some timber value. t200' mil
of de~irable road lronlage wilh rural wa1er line.
Excellenr area to build a home. TobaccO base.
Located on Gage-Patriol Road. For sale al·
$87,500.
j307
87 ACRES, MIL- Vacant land located In Green
&amp; Springlield Townships , ju~t off U.S. Rt. 35.

FroniS on Iown ship road and old U.S. 35. Water
and gas available. Land lays mosUy rolling with
excellent building locations. Has high hill ~rea
wilh nice view. Ciry school sysrem . Basi location in Gallia Counly lo build and live. Priced at
$67,500.
#340
START FROM SCRATCH- And your perfecl
home can 'happen· when you build on one of
these 5+ acre parcels. Convenien~y localed
near At 35 in Green Township. Cily schools.
1600
LARGE COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING ON ST.
RT. 7 - Located near Silver BrKige wilh over
5,tOO sq. n. ol dean, dry space. Approx. Yo finished, II unfinished. Plus 3 bedroom apanment
only 8 years old. Finished space is heated wilh
high efficiency gas and has central air. Ideal for
many usos. Call for mom information.

WE NEED LISTINGS

Wiseman Real Estate
.-

__

.

(6.14) 446-3644 .

David Wisem11n, Broker, 446·9555

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

CAROLYN WASCH; 441·1007
SONNY GARNES.
446-'2707·
.

•

If
....

NEW VERY PRIVATE t. WOODEOI Perfecl
sening ro enjoy this newly constructed log
home. Large hont porch to enjoy cool summer
breezes· aUra clive woodbumer and hearlh to
warm yOur soul on those cold winter nights.
Approx. 2,300 sq. It of comlortableliving space
including 3 bedrooms (room or 4th), very allraotive country kitchen, living room with pine ceil·
ing, newly finished lamily room and 2:.1 baths.
large 2 car garage wirh overhead slorage.
Annmx 5 vears old. $89,900.
1211

....

- · ,,

....

.. . . . --~-·

.... ... •·

... 't . . . . . .. . '

- ~ ...

- .. . .

J.--........ . .. .... .

�.... -

....

,....

..... ___,..

...

~age-04--Sunday Tlmes-?entinel

Is, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

WV

October 20, 1991

.

3

21

Announcements

r

TRUCK DRIVER TRAINING
CERTIFIED by
1he Profeaaional
Truck Drivers
lnstiUJie of America

PATRIOT~ will prep~re you
for the new COL and Ia a Stale Approved
3rd party tilting alta.

• FiniiiC/al Aid for those !l'ho qualify
• H/llldso()n Training • No hom9 srudy
• Train ln'Bshon WHks
• Job S9an:h Assistance offered
·, Weekday and W9sk~ classBs

Business
Opponunlty

WOLFE TANNING BEDS. Com·

merclai·Home

Units.

From

1199.00. lamp~. Lotions, Ace.,.
sorl11. Monlhly Payments Low
Ao 118.00 Call T~ FREE NEW
Cclor catalog. 1
228-4129JI.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Ntw Commercial, Home UnHs,
From $199.00. Llmp1, IJ)tlon•,
Acctstorltt. Monthly Payments
Low Ao 118.00, Clll Todoy FREE
NEW Color Cllllog. HIOD-228- ,
6292.
I

i

Real Estale

I

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

·O(:tober 20, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport-:Galllpolls; OH-Polnt Pleasant,

To Better Serve You
We Have Moved!
See Us At·

. 46

'eomplolly Fumlohld mobllo
hDme, 1 mile HJow cown over·
looking rim. No Poto, CA. 114448-4338. '
.Ono
and IWo , btdroom
1partment1 for r1nt. 304..fi75-

2 bodr- houoo, Hondtroon
WV, 1221. mo. Roloronco ond
- - "· 30447S.7m.
a· boclroom houio, torgo ytrd,
nlco nolghbortlood, 304-6751213.
··

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

~

If you are selling or buying-or just have aquestion, talk to
one of our.real estate professionals. Ready to help you
with any of your Real Estate needs!

42

' REG.

1

89.00

OUR PRICE

$4500

OUI PIICE
$4C)00.$5~

WORK BOOTS
BY WALKER

•

CAROLINA

SillS 7 THIU 15
INIULATm

&amp;
IIGIIAR

0

GOLDEN
RETRIEVER
0

'

· wm
LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS

ESTATE AUCTION

·.

. Estate of the late WALDO &amp; CLARA
POSTON both pased away recently a't
the age of 88 years. Lifelong
residents of Athens Co.

SATURDAt 00. 26, 1991
AT 10:00 A.M.

Cornar Lot, 5 rooms end bath,
$24,000. 311 Htndtnon Street,
Manderson, WV. 6""-446-7523 or
304-675-1488.
GOVERNMENT HOMES From $1
(U Ropalr). Oollnquonl T11
Propenr. Repossnsloris. Your
Aroa (1 805-1162-8000. Ext. GH10189 For Cunent Repo Llsl
HOUSE FOR FREEII Mutt movo
oH lol In lllddloport. Fill In
basement, lltd and lti'IW. Mul1
sign contracll :Z·BR, Llrgs LA.
OR, Ba1h, hat new roof and gul·
ter, new copper 1nd PVC plumbIng, naad aome work. You PlY
ror the moving! Only 11rious

callers! Call 614-092·207'1 1ft1r

7:00pm.

Muhl Unh Aerial, 1 YNr Okt

Vinyl Siding, Low
Centrally L.Ocltld 1
44s.e5sa.

I

Unique 4-SR hoUH on 10.1Cfll1
Br1dbury Road. extra building,

$27,500. 114-982·2881 or 216395-2399
Very nlco 3-BR Ronch,
front, carpbrt, 112 bnement,
hardwood tloon, 'Jr10 ICI'II, 3ml from Holnr Hotpltll, SA 180,
aoklng 136,500, 114-1112·2728.
Want to buy 4 bedroom home
Gtlilpoilo school dlolrlcl. Qc.
cupanc~ by summer of '12. Box
S.1S, ·'Jio Pl. PH. R;t~r, 200
Moln St, Pl. PH., WV
.
Ntld 1omeone lo ""r down
housa for mattrilla. 614-02·
3436
Sm :Z·SR houst wll more or
lass aeras, 125,000 caah. 614·
1'12·2453

32

Mobile Homes .
for Sale

1969 2·BR mobile homt on 1.85

I acres mors or leu

IOCitld at

483 Vlno Sl., Roclno. Fully furnished Jan. 91. New Clrpet
1 washer/dryer, AC, new klleheR

tn,

~=~

Tifiil:

-L

ABOINEY: DAVID(. WARREN

A"'- Ce. PfDIII• Coun Cue Numbera: 31858 (Woldo)

AUCOONii~mEOPPERMAN ·.

P.O. ~a· 504,

.._oWe 43131-(614i 3iS·7195

46

Space fQJ Rent

Counlry llobllo Homo Pork,
ROUIO 33, North o1 Pomoroy.
Lot~1 _!.WOIIIO, porlll, IIIIi. Clll

I

PATRICK A. COCHRAN
Office Manager
Eve. 446·8655

COUNTRY SECLUSION -Offered here in lhis
elegant colonial s!yle home on over 100 acres,
wilhin minutes of Rio Grande. Spaciousness is
tho key word, with 4 bedrooms, 2l\ baths,
oHice, 1amily room, sunroom , laundry plus
basemen! wlkilchen. ba1h, recrealion room.
Also beautiful horse stable wilh six box stalls
and lack roorn plus bam. A huge stocked pond
and an in-ground pool are included. See 1his
onel
11382.
OUTGROWN YOUR PRESENT HOUE?- You
can afford to move up I 5 bedrooms · 2· baths
kitchen, laundry, patio and 2 car garage, quiet '
area bul ye1 close to town . Call for more details.
1366
NEW USTING IN VINTON VILLAGE -Very
nice one s1ory brick home wilh 2 bedrooms,
bath, dining room, living room, laundry and
equipped ki1chen, hardwood floors , 1 car
attached garage. Walk~n attic. Nice back patio
and L-shaped covered front porch. Asking mid
$'.OS.
11382
RIO GRANDE - Wilh 3 lots is this 3 bedroom
ranch which includes family room , dining room ,
in addition to living- room and kiichen . Balh, 2
car garage with opener, natural gas heal,
con~al air, deck and basement.
1360
FARM IN HARRISON TWP. - 148 acres mn
wilh 4 bedrooms, 1 balh home. Vinyl sided wilh
newer kilchon with walnut cabinets, sawmill
.and olhor equiprnenl go wllh farm. Don't &lt;lelay.
Only $70,000.
11389
VACANT LAND - 4 aaes of undeveloped
resi&lt;lential land in Jackson Coun1y bordering
Appalachian Highway. .
1374
VACANT LAND - . 10 nice acres ioi Raccoon
Twp . Has old house which could be reslored.
1348
CONDO IN CITY- All brick with 2 bedrooms, 2
full balhs, equipped kilchen, living room, ,jning
room, laundry wfwashor and dryer, .heal pump,
cent air, many ox~as . Very nice. Mus1 see.
Only $65,000. Call for more info.
1388
NEAR RIO GRANDE- Newer 4 bedroom, 2
ba1h home not complelely finished and situated
ori 9.2 beautilul acres mn wlih lots ol road
frontago and olhor buildings. See this one.
•
t3n
BULAVILLE PIKE - Is lhis 2 bdrm. home wilh
bath, kilchen, large living room and laundry,
heal wilh natural gas, wood or coal, full
basemen!, 2 car tielached garago and 16'x20'
building. All on over 2 acres. Only $36,000.
t381
CROWN CITY AREA - Is lhis 2 bdrm home
with living room. dining room, klichen, baih,
above ground pool on over 1Y, acre~ . Only
$27,500. Call today fOI' yo~r appoinlmenl. 1358
124 ACRE MIL FARM - Localed on Lincoln
Pike and lhls ranch style vinly sided home with
4 bedrooms, 2 balha, family room, dining room
and kilchen, fireplace, 36x48 approx. bam, now
foncos, tobacco base, somo Implements .
Asking $69.900. Call for your appoinlrnonl
today.
·tzn
1
UPCREEK ROAD - 67 acro s mil.
building silas. Rural waler available.
timber. Road lrontago . Call for
information.

Good
Some
more
1210

CHESHIRE AREA - 12.9 acres mil of vacant
land. Not reslricled. Has two ItalY bam. Some
limber and 700' road frontage on SIOry's Run
Rd.Calllordelai!t-AakingSt6,550. · 1335

PHYLLIS L. MILLER
Sales Agent
Eve. 25~·1136 .

ARE YOU A WATER DOG? - Hero's vour
chance to own Aaceoon Creek frontage at Blue
Lake plus a 2 bedroom well maintained mobile
home wilh deck and lots of shrubs and lrees. 3
lots, 1Y. car garage, picnic sheller, 2 docks, one
mile from rivBr. See it today I
1383
COUNTRY UVING - In this remodeled 3
bedroom counlty home featuring heal pump,
largolamily and dining room combo, 1ll balh,
small room tor nursery or sewing room, lots of
storage , rural water and much much more.
Situaled on 20 beautiful rolling acres mil. Also
horse bam.
t375
RIO GRANDE AREA - 1680 sq. h. ol living
space in this 3 bedroom, 2 balh home which
also has family rm., and loiS of other amenities.
Walch lhe birds· and squirrels as you reia&gt;~ in
your lamily room . All elec. Only $39,000. Call
now lor appoinlmonl.
1346
NEW USTING ~ 1987 14x65' Claylon Newport
mobile home, 2 bedrooms, 1 balh, tolal eloc. In
city school district. For only $21 ,000.
1356
RIO GRANDE AREA - Three ~acts of land. (1)
22 acres mn; (2) 20 acres mn; (3) 100 acres; or
buy all throe with 40x60 horse barn, 14x60
implement siO&lt;ago shed. All have road 1ronlage
on Tyn Rhos Rd. Various prices. Call for more
inlo""ation.
1359
FARM - 55 acres mil on Providence School
Rd. Large tobacco base, 32x70 barn wilh
garage, pond, wilh 1976 24x46 mobile home
plus addition, 3 bedroom, living room , dining
area, kilchen, bath. Asking $59,900.
1385
NESTLED AMONG THE TREES
A 3
bedroom homo wilh lamily room, living room,
balh. Also a large 20&lt;20 building wilh a 12x20
shod. All on 1.390 acres. City schools . $53,900.
#320
COUNTRY LIVING - Near Clay School. 2
bedroom home on 4 acres, gas floor lurnace,
rural waler. $24,900. Good starler home or
rental property. See il today.
1387
DEENIE DR. - All brick 3 bedroom ranch with
1\\ balh, full basomonl wloutside enlrance. 2
car garage with opener. Now rool and heat
pump, 12'x12' deck, city schools. On nice lol.
Asking $64,900.
11368
TIRED OF RENTING? - Buy lhis 2 bedroom
homo wilh LP gas floor furnace, vinyl siding,
and .4 ol an acre mn. Ready lo move into a~er
you cut the grass. You will wantlo tako a look
allhis one.
,,
1386
FAMILY LIVING AT ITS BE$T - 3 bedroom , 2
balh, large tamily room, all on 2 and 112 acres
mn and in city shcools. Whal me could you ask
for? Call fOI' appoinlrnenl.
1275

•

CLOSE IN- $25,000 will biJy lhis 2·3 bedroom
home with partial basemen! and delached
garage. Callloday.
'
t298
CHEAPER ONE - 2 bedroom homo and 2 nice
lots in Bidwell. Asking only $19,500 lor all .
CALLI
,
1365
CLAY SCHOOL - 3 be~room, family room,
elec. heal, attached garago, wilh opener, all on
.5 acres mn. Tool shed. lmmediare possession.
See il today'
1382

446·1066
Allen C. Wood, Raaltor/BrGkar-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Rnltor-446.0971
Moae Canterbury, Realtor-446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Rnltor-256-1745
Timothy Watson, Assoc.- 446-2027

Mobile Homes
for Rent

,44

STARCHER RD. POUERO'\' - Two ways to
buy. Houso and 82 acres mil or house and 3
aaes-mll. Eilher way you got a lovoly well kepi
1 and 112 s1ory sitied home wilh 4 bedrooms,
balh , dininQ room, den wilh woodburner, living
room and k1lchen, partial basomont, delached 2
car gars go, 20x30 barn, 8x30 covered porch,
fruit treos, and much more. Call for prices and '

814-1117-3041

Ntw/Uood

-hold lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jtrrieho Rd. Pl. PIOOIInl, WV,
eoii30W15·1480.

52

Sponlng Goods

Crott Bow, P.S. E. Foxtlro.2, Ar·
rowo OUivor Cloo; $200; Com·
pound Bow, B1n PNraan, Ar·
;.,. Quiver Elc. $50; Truck
Tool Box, Behind Cob, $60. 614448-3040.
AntiqueS
Buy or ooll. Rlvorlno Antlquoo,
1124 E. Jilin 81-. Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. lo 8:00
p.m., Sundty 1:00 IO 1:00 p.m.
114-IU-2521.
.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

info. Must see this one.

1367

POMEROY AREA -Character, style, counlty
charm. This home has i1 all. Older home,
completely relurbished. 3 bedrooms , 2 balhs.
Wrap-around porch. Several buildings. Situale.d
on approx. 1 and 112 acres. Rock Springs
Road. Asking $59,500. Will take MH for down
. payment
1345

.2·8R In lllddloport. No pols.
own uUIIII••· $200 Plf mo.
Do-IURoloroncH roqulrad.
614-992-2381 dtyt.

I.OOpm

444-2238, 814-448-2581.
) br, Aafrigerator And Stove
"Fumloh~ Alto Wolor And
•Tralh J"urnllh~. C.rpatld
Throughoull114-148-3940.

-

'BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES,, 538 Jockoon Pike
lrom $1b·mo. W1lk to shop &amp;
movies. Cell 614-446·2568. EOH .
BrooktJdl Apartments, 1

Btd·

room, Stove Refrigerator,
W11htr, Dryer Hook-Up, 614-

WHY PAY RENT - When you can own this
home. Only $20,000. Nice ranch home sitting
on t/2 acre mil, 3 bed r'O'oms , apple trees ,
grapes and raspberries. Call for appoinlrnent.
1357

448-41127.

Clean 2 bedroom ground floor
a~t, reference, dlposlt._no pets,

304-4115-5162 tHor 8;00 ~M.
EHiclency Apartment, Fur·
nlsh6di ·All Utllitl• Paid. Rio
Grondo, Ohio. 614-38H94B.
Fumllhtd 3 Roomo &amp; Bath,
c ... n, No P1t1 Reference &amp;
Doposll Roqulrod. 814-146·1519.
Furnished apartmant, 4 rooms &amp;
bath, no pttl. Sac. dep. &amp; rtf.
8t4-446-0444.
Nicely Furnlthtd Apartment,
1br. nert lo Ubr1ry, parking,

NEW USTING - St. Rt. 160 with river view.
One acre wilh neat 2 bedroom home. Must seo.
Asking only $25,600.
12B9
ROSE HILL RD., POMEROY - Is this
aluminum sided 1 and 112 story home wilh 4
bedrooms, balh, dning roorn, kitchen and living
room. Full basemen! on 1 acre. Convenient to
downlown Pomoroy. Only $28,000. Call for
detais.
'
1372

central heat, lir, reftrenc:s r•

' qulrod. 514-446-4338.
Fuml1hld 1pt. All utllltiH paid.
· 1 BR. upttlll'l, 2nd Ave. Good
' cond. 614-141-11523.
Fumlshld EHicilncy, $1S51mo.
UIIIIIIH Ptld, Shoro Solh, 607
Second Ave, Gallipo118, 614-4464410 Aft or 7p.m.

2 '\'EARS OLD - 1 story vinyl sided 2
bedroom, 1 bath with full basoment, gas heat,
large L-shaped deck. $19,900.
1243
NEW LISTING - Eas1em schools, 3 bedrooms, ·
1 and 1i2 baths, family room, extra good
condition. On approx. 2 acres. Asking $45,000.
11384

~or

50 Year Old .. Home Comfort
Rongo" Cookt WHh Got On Ono
Sidt (Four Bumors And Ovtn)
COOkl Wllh Cool Or Wood On
Othlf Side (3 Bum.,.) Excellent
Condlllonl 614-388-m4.

2br
Fur.,lahld,
$230/mo.
Referenc•, Security Deposit 01
$200. 458 Second Avenue. 614·

BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME _- 2800 sq . ft. of
3 bedrooms, 1'.\ baihs, located on 10 acres
Raccoon Creek. Green and Gallipolis schoo ls. CALL
NOWIII
COUNTRY SETnNG FOR THIS A FRAME HOME
-3 bedroom, living room, family room, ba1h located
on 2.5 acres ·. Green-Gallipolis school district.
HURRY!I CALL TODAY!FORAPPOINTMENT.
HOME &amp; ACREAGE IN HARRISON TWP.- 3 bedrooms ,
1 bath wilh deck .across lrom and size, 24x22 block
garage. Tobacco poundage. Call about this ana l
cOG HOME WITH 10 ACRES M or Lin Harrison Tw p., &lt;&gt;
bedroom , w, bath, large living room and kilchen. Large
oorch. barn and storage shed. Nice coun try selling .

MU ST SEE !!
MOBILE HOME IN COUNTRY - 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs,
larg o porch, eleclric heat, central air, 20x30 ga rage ,
located on 2 acres m or I in Ohio Twp. CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT.

LOW PRICE Of $21,000 MAKES THIS PROPERT'\' A
GOOD INVESTMENT OPPORTUNIT'\'. 3 BEDROOM
HOME PLUS GARAGE APARTMENT. LOCATED IN
CIT'\'
YEARNING FOR A BEAUTIFUL OLD HOME TO
RESTORE? LET US TAKE YOU ON A TOUR OF THIS
BEAUT'\'. FRONT ENTRY HAS BRIDAL STAIRCASE,
REAR ENTRY HAS A WINDING 3 STORY STAIRWA'\'
THAT TAKES '\'OU 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 SECOND. MUCH, MUCH MORE.
'\'OU WILL HAVE TO MAKE AN APPONTMENT TO SEE
ALL OF THIS HOME. ONLY $72,000.

GOOD INVESTMENT PROPERTY - A 2 slory lrame
double localed on Second Avenue , Gallipolis . 4 rooms
and bath downstairs and 4 rooms and balh upsta irs. Call
today.

NEAR HOLZER 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. $65,000.
QUIET COUNTRY UVING IN THE CITY - OWNERS
HAD THIS HOME CUSTOM DESIGNED. LARGE LIVING
ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, FORMAL DINING, FAMIL'\'
ROOM LOTS OF STORAGE SPACE. CARPORT,
• PEACH AND APPLE TREES, GRAPE ARBOR,
GARDEN SPACE. VERY NICE PROPEfm'. $89,000.

845 SECOND AVENUE IN GALLI PO US· 2 STORY VICTORIAN ST'\'LE HOME PRESENTLY USED AS A 4 UNIT
RENTAL WOULD MAKE LOVELY ONE FAMILY RESI·
DENCE. $55,000.

AUDREY F." CANADAY, BROKER
UNDA G. SKIDMORE
MART P. n.oTD
REALTOR 379-2686
REALTOR 448-3383

• Real Estate Gene~l ·

Reaf'Estate General

Jeannie

[H .

NICE TO COME HOME TOI BRICK RANCH, HAS 3
BEDROOMS WITH LCHS OF CLOSET SPACE. WALK·
IN CLOSET OFF MASTER BEDROOM, 2 BATHS,
LARGE LIVING AND DINING ROOMS, KITCHEN HAS
LARG E SNACK BAR. DINING AREA OPENS ONTO .
COVERED WOOD DECK WITH BUILT-IN SEATING. 2
CAR ATIACHED GARAGE, FU LL BASEMENT. HEAT
PUMP. APPROX . 10 ACRES, BARN , OTHER
OUTBUILDINGS, CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT. SUPER
NICE PROPERTY! JUST LISTED.

CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP - APPROX. 25 ACRES WITH
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOME. NICE COUNTRY
SETIING. $39,500.
THE VIEW WILL CAPTIVATE YOU, AND YOU WILL
DELI GHT IN THE PRIVATE SETTING OF THIS
SPAC IOUS HOME. WELL BUILT RANCH WITH
APPROX. 1800 SO. FT. OF LIVING SPACE SITUATED
ON ON E ACRE MIL. PRICED TO SELL AT $60 ,000.00.

Real Estate General

379-2184

L·SHAPED RANCH ON JAY DRIVE- FEATURES NICE
OPEN KITCHEN/DINING/FAMILY ROOM ARRANGE·
MENT WITH FIREPLACE, FORMAL LIVING ROOM, 2
CAR GARAGE. NICE VIEW OF THE SURROUNDING
AREA FROM THE POOL DECK. COVERED PATIO.
LOTS OF HOME FOR $58,000.

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

.. 446·4255

·446·8006

Tammie DeWitt
446·1260

'446 -6624

379·2449

446-1967

446-6624

REAIJOR •

gout~e~n 91~~s CRea~ ·8state ~ne
Judg Dewiff - 810ke,

3 BEOROOM BRICK situated on 1 acre, 5 miles !rom
Gallipolis on Bulaville Road, Kyger Creek School O is~icl.
1,440 sq. 11. Priced in e 60's.
FOR SALE .- 62 acres. Lawrence County.

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

DEBBY DRIVE'· 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH BRICK RANCH,
LARGE KITCHEN, DINING AREA, BEAUTIFUL BIRCH
WOODWORK. FULL BASEMENT WITH SPACE FOR
FAMILY ROOM. 2 CAR GARAGE, CENTRAL AIR COND.!
$.73.500. DON'T MISS SEEING THIS HOMEI

'6,500. NICE WOODED LOT WITH BUILDING. WOULD
\ KE EXCELLENT HUNTING CABIN.

Apartment
for Rent

~PI)'

738 Second Ave.

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

~~=

LOCATED IN GALLIPOLIS - Vine Slreet - 4 rental
units, good income prep arty. Call lor more inlorm ation.
HOUSE IN GALLIPOLIS - 3 rooms and balh. walking
clislance 10 schols and stores. Priced al $16,000.

NEW LISTING - Located on Sycamore Street
in Middleport. Ranch homo wilh 3 bedrooms
levollot wilh above ground pool. Only $27,500:
11381

Grocloua living. t and 2 bid·
room •Pirtmenta at VIllage
Minor
and
Rlvertldt
Apartmentaln Middtlporl. From
11M. Ctll814-992-m1. EOH.

NEW LISTING - In Pomeroy. This home was
buill in lhe 1940's and shows lhe charac1er and
quality of lho era. Four bedroom&amp;, largo living
room, dining room, full basemont wilh drive-in
garage, in-ground pool. Asking $46,000. 1378

In lllddilport, Ohio. 1 ond 2
Ndroom furnished apt, some
with utllltiN Plld, reference and
""-" roqulrod, 304-882·2566.
Uod.rn 2 &amp; 3 bldroom apart·

more inlorm ation,

RUTLAND AREA - 1985 Sizzler doublowide
wilh 3 bedroo.ms, 1 bath, liv. rm .. kitchen and
laundry, 2 car attached garage. Gas y.ell wilh
1ncom,. 2nd home has living room, kitchen ,
bath, and 2 bedrooms . Call for more
info""ation. Only $30,000,
1371

w..heridrylr hook-up, equipDid
kltchtnl.
Re,.,enci/Dapoa:lt
required.

m
....

ment In Pomtroy. 1-112 hlth,

Phono 61H85-4448
I :OOp,m.

oftor

GREAT LAND FOR DEVELOPMENT - 40 Acres lor sale
in the ci ty limils ol Gallipolis. Chock lhis one out
GREEN ACRES - Two lots, t large level home site, 140
' ft. by 148 H. cily waler, Green School, good condition.

Priced right at $10,000.00.
WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS In Rodney Village II. Call lor

~

CALL TODAY FOR AN
APPOINTMENT

To view this 6 acre mini farm . Remodeled 3

bedroom vinyl sided ranch style home with
garage, in-ground pool. large barn and
numerous ou tbuidin gs. Several fe et of road
lrontago. Beautilully mainta oned.
#2907
PRACTICALLY CITY- BUT COUNTRY!
One story frame home with over ~ acre lol, 3
bedrooms, full basemen!, auached garage, and
carport. Fireplace in livi ng room. perloc l lor
retiring coupl o or newlyweds.
#2925
SUPER LOCATION, SUPER HOME .
Very auraclive 3 bedroom hom o. La rg~ lo vong
room, fa mily room , dining room and kttchcn ,
recenlly remotieled, 2 lull balhs, 2 car garage.
aver 2 acres. Situated at Buhi-Morton Road
lust olf SA 35. Call today. Immediate possesoon.
'
#2914

N.EW LIMA RD. - 3 bedrooms 2 baihs large
spacious kilchen w~h Island ra0ge. Home has
had lots of care. Look at this one. Only
$35,000.
.
11381
NEW LISTING - Sumner Rd. is lhis nice 2
bedroom 1 bath ranch wilh aluminum siding,
living room, kitchen, family room, full bsamont,
woodburner, one car garage, and more on..84
of an aero mn. Asking o~ly $40,000. Call fOI'
. into. !i".
1393

NEW!- NEW! - NEW!
This modular is only 9 monlhs old and silualed
on over 1l\ acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
living room, sludy, lormal dining. family room,
sludy wi1h shelv ing, attached 28'x30' garago ..
Elecllic heat pump. Make an appoin lmen lloday
to view this beautiful heme with everv extra
possible. lmmedia1e posses sion. Rio Grande
area.
#2919
·
,$5,5DO.DO '
VIEW OF THE OHIO .RIVER
Wilh lhls B+ ~act olland. Wooded. Site cleared
lor mobile hom.e or house. Rural Waler and
eleclric available. Along SR 7.

APPROX. 24 ACRES - Wi1h colonial homo
overlooking Pomoroy. Execulive style home
wi1h formal enlry. Family room, formal dining
room. Basemonl has rec. room wilh atone
fireplace. There's an 1nground pool. Many more
amonili9s. -"Ising $139,900.
1294

LOG HOME PLUS 162 ACRES MIL - GREEN
- This home offers lots of privacy. Four BRs, 3 baths,
eqLIIPP•Bd kitchen with fireplace, FR, LR w/FP, full basement, heat
wllh propane ·backup, cent. air, oversized 2 car garage
att&lt;tchelld. Frontage on Raccoon Creek. Owner will sell house and
~:~mJ~IIAr tract of land. Call for details.

' Loto • - . . . Par loll. Lond

lp,m.

PICKENS FURNITURE

304-41711-3030 or 8111-3431.

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTIES

:

COUNTRY ESTATE: GIVE YOUR
. THE PRIVACY THEY DESERVE! 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS,
FAMiLY ROO . US RECREATION ROOM, LOVELY
FORMAL UVING A
WITH FIREPLACE, EOUIPPED
KITCHEN, FORMAL .
G ROOM, REAR DECK,
SECOND FLOOR BA~CO . LECTRIC HEAT PUMP,
NATURAL REDWOOD EXTER R, 2 CAR ATIACHED
GARAGE. SURROUNDED BY 9 EAUTIFUL WOODED
ACRES. SHOWN BY APPOINTM T, $125,000.

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

·Nief! 2 bedroom mobl.. home, 2
baths. l1rge living room and
•dining room, Somerville Raalty,

lolo,...,.

i c-1c1.

SIXTY ACRE F,ARII - RECENTLY REMODELED 1ll
STORY HOME. HAS VINYL SIDING, 3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS, DINING ROOM, MODERN KITCHEN HAS
CUSTOM BUILT OAK CABINETS. FENCED PASTURE
IS PERFECT FOR HORSES OR CATILE. BA~ .
STORAGE BLDG. CELLAR HOUSE . $52 000. JUST
LISTED!
•

Wood 1?J,a{ty, Inc.

7, 614 448 0508 or 44W321.

CHERYL L. LEMLEY
Meigs Co. Agent
Eve. 742·3171

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
Olivo St., Gtlllpollo. Now &amp; Uood
tumhuro, hlllo,., Wlltom I
WOik -._ 114-4CI-315t.

Real Estate General

$250.00 pluo ullllllu. HUD Approved. 304-615-40118.
.2 bod._ moblio homo, Sind
Hill Rood, 304-115-3834.
2br Mabile Horne, Reteranc ..
'And DlpaoH Roqulrld. No POlo.
814 4451BN.
llobllo home tor ronl, Uppor AI.
MARTHA L. SMITH
Sales Agent
Eve. 379·2651

Can'ada
' ~ . 0_0 ea·lty

W1atlnghouse
Gas
Fur..I~c AC. S.OO 010,
Trollor 101 $75. monlh, lull haok- nonCOIEI
hater, old NEC computer. best
up, North AI. 2, 304-e71-7853.
otfor. 114-119:!-5918

14170 111 elsclrlc on prtv1t1 lot.

RUSSELL D. WOOD
Owner/Broker
Eve. 446·4618

.

• Real Estate General

814-~·111N.

Acreage

IT'n:t='""" ...... """"' ....

Lunoll brltK'Of'Rjf:THERESA TURRILL

;;:
Slllplng rvomo whh -king.
Alao traller -.pace. All hook-upe;.
C.ll Ifill' 2:00 p.m., SQ4.77:J..
!58SI,IIIton WY.
·

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Walhert, d~ra. refrlpratora,
rongoo. Skllggo Aoi&gt;lloncoo,
Uppor .Rivor Rd. loolc!o Slono
CroOI Molt!. Colll-l-1311,.
Ktnmora refrigerator, 18 cu h,
w/lce m~r. ~lmond, f W• old,
$450, 304-e'l$-7993,
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Compliolt . homo lumlo~I~U"
Hours: llo...Sol, 11-5. 61
0322; 3 mil• out Bulavlll• Rd.
F!MDollvory.

2082.

Kitchen, DR, L.R, 2 BR
downs1alrs, 1 large BR, 112 bath
upstairs. 24x24 garage. 814-44&amp;-

Salt conducted at the early 1800's Poston
Farm house In the Athens Co. village · of 1 appliances, C.ll 114-992-2635
9:00.5:00. Aoklng
$18,000
ALBANY, OHIO, Albany IS situated on l1. S.
ovtrylhlng.
Routt 50, 8 miles west of Athens, Ohio. Turn
1161 B1ron t2165, :Zbr, 2 AC,
off
Route 50 at the east edge of Albany
Underpinning, W1sher, Dry1r,
Refrigerator. Stove. P1rt Fum.
onto Twp. R~d
travel .3 of a mile, turn
15,500, Good Condlllonl 614onto Meadowbrook Rd . (Athens co. M70),
446-2871 Aflor 5p.m.
travel under% mile to sale.
. 1970 Skyilni 121&lt;60, 2 bldroom
FRUNITURE: Walnut 12-pane s1epback cupboard w2· j mobile homt. Good condhlon,
dvtld drawers (one drawor needs repair); oak flatwall
304-417H4111.
cupboard; unusual lift top oak file cabme1 ; unusual
small oak 16, dwr. music cabine1 ; Lockhart uprigh1
1m mobile home on 1-VI
ocroo, Jonry"o Run Rood, Applo
piano wlcarvings; folding sofa bed; sal 5 pressed-back
Gro111. $15,000. Will 0111 mobllo
spindle chairs ; set 6 oak "T' back chairs ; o1her
home_ ~parat1. 304-125-5033 ·or
114-U5-4451. .
pressed-back chairs ; 2 pressed-back rockers ; rod
back and slat back rockers ; oak Morris· chair; and
1tlt2 moblll homo, 14x70 wtlh
other chairs; parlor table; 2 oak library 1ablas; camel
8dl Upout. 312. two acre tot,
$22,gQ0, 304-175-6125.
top trunk; baiVclaw organ slool; 2 iron beds; oak piano
bench; 1930 'Waterfall' chifforobe ; VIet . oval s1and.
1888 14x70 cuOiom buill, no
AS-IS FURNITURE: (In need of repair): oak ice box,
down payment, take over lolln
p11yment1 el $2G2.22 month. 1·
2-part zinc top kitchen cabine1 wlflour bin; oak
304-682·3451
lfttr 7:00pm.
sideboard; haavy oak cheval dresser mirror; 6-leg
1i88
14170
lwo
bldraorn mobile
• table·lweight clock; cabine1 tp; plus furnnure no11istedl
home, IOial elec, exc cond, lfttr
SMA L ANTIQUES I COLLECTIBLES: 3-gal.
5:00PM 304-815-7088.
Donaghho jar; 2-Donaghho wax sealers; jointed
1g111 Flomlng 141170, 3 bid·
stuffed elephant; old clo1h roos1er; oil painting of cabin
roomo 2 blthl, all electric,
In woods signed by K. Yoshil; nice sal ot early quill
centra1air, underpennlng with
framee; wlra egg basket' iron keltle; small wood
blockl lhol oxiOI. $17,000. You
llovol 304-451-20Qg,
rocking horse; tew as-is 1oys ; Hartmann black doll
• (composi11on and clo1h); few games &amp; puzzles ; wood
1m Ktntucklan mobile horne,
: etlck horse; as-Is Louwelsa jardiniere; mirrors; ki1chen
14' wide, 3 - bedroom, Pf'IYitl
ownod, novor llvtd ln!.wlll poy
• Hems; bracke1 and pattern glass oil lamps; fancy
for moving up to 1w mllaa,
· ramovaable toni vase lamp; clear Aladdin "Washing1on
Sovo $4,00; 1_!~ 1 1100. 304·312·
Drape~ lamp; fros1ed glass ' Urn' lamp shade; large
2318oHor 5:00 I'M.
Mountain Dew tin sign; few 1ools: LOTS OF GLASS &amp;
Ntw 1812 14172 2 or 3 bed·
CHINA: Old pattern glass; yellow. Red Wing ball room1 modlll 1 2 full batt11,
pllchtr: Depression Hems; Fiesta platesi dinner china ; lhlngil root, vinyl oldlng, R21
decorated relish and deep bowls; milk g1ass; tigurinas ; clillno, 21&lt;1 R20 w•J!•r sol-up
lnelucfld l17,111lOO. wol 1-1100.
atlft'IWirl and· many o1her itemsl BOOKS &amp; PAPER , nv-4045.
MI!MORABIUA: Lots of books; children's illus1raled
REBATE REBATE!
~Ia, clinics and other booksl1940'8 Aeronautical
Up
To
$1,000 Rtbtlt On StiiCI
Charta; 1940·50'1 magazines; boxes marked 'music"; Lol llodtll
AI EIHI Homo Conand morel AUTOMOBILE: 1977 Mercury Marquis, 4 1tr. Grut Selection NoWhlt'l
EIIO Sui EIIM Homo Conltr. 1·
doOr, lot of options I
.
' 11011: fniMM ......ftcll-. . . . . . . . . . . llottt, "' I00-4111W711.
._, .W. •111 Itt nii8YH fer "dltl. Dtl't bow 35 Lots &amp;
.. fiCI'H II 6ott
0.. r - c4 p•t tf
t . . . . lttclo4 •• ll!fl ..o ...., I 111 lttm
11ocroo 2 mlloo tram Loon, luro, woodllnd, IIC hunllng,
$31,000. 304-10f.tl22.
Celli ~of sale or check wlposHive ID.
Building
ond up, TP I
c ..... Etllltrn llolas Co.,
quonor milo SA ~ 114-td4114

u. s.

Hot•'·

BBIM~44f'~II~IO~.-~· .;.=_.;=

Mil.. From Galllpolle. 2br, 1
lolh, Wolor polcl, 12351mo, $235
0.-11. 114"445-1065, 114-448-

6 room 1-112 balh, .tory &amp; hilt.

Housa tor saJe by owner, 6
rooms, balh, hill bailment,
loc1ted Jerrys Run Ad. Apple
Grove, 304-576-2167.

REG . '79.00

snd

Aooma for r•nt • W.1k or momh.
stoning II $1201mo. GaiUo

12x.60 Mobile Home, Located 3

7S78.

AU SillS

home,. 2218 Jotto~

.3br Houu, 3 1111• Fii&gt;m Town,
1311/mo. Pluo O.pooll. 114-148·
0381.
Sbr Ronch, Rodnoy Village II,
$300/mo. Pluo O.paoll. 114-31188305 AHor 5p.m.
Nlco Fumlohtd 1 Bedroom
Houu, 514-141-1759.
Sooklng Ruponolblo Poofll• To
Ront Nlco 2br, Unlumlo""'
Hou• On Chathlm Av.nue,
RoforOIICo A 1111111. $3001mo.
Pl~a UIIIHI11 And 1 Month
Dopoolt, 114-44&amp;-2515.

WED., OCT. 23 -7:00P.M.

t;=s

bodroom

...... Av•3J:O· rotorenco
·a.-11,
75-2JIIg, '

For Trucking Arrangemenls Call
John Arrowood· 614·682-7263
c•uck Wilr.ams • 614·245·5096

HQusehold
GoOds

Counly ·Appllo,_ ·Inc. Good
uood opplloncoo, T.V. tOit. Opon
8 a.m. to 8 p.m. llon..Sol. 814·
448-16~1 . 627 3rd. Avo. Gol•
llpollo,...,

FurniSh~!!!

WIWICMI'W · IOK!l. OtO

OHIO APPROVED GRADED
FEEDER CALF SALE

51

PIUI

~.114-44&amp;-1340.

AUCTION EVERY MONDAY

Vl:i:J:~J~o

.
Amlna Refrigerator, Gold Color,
1bt: Aportmonl 1 Court Eicattonl
$75. 614·
Kllchon Wllh · Slovt, 3BB-4150l COndHion,
.

41 HouSes lor.Rent

TRUCK DRIVER TRAINING CENTER
A LEADER IN SUPPLVWG QUALITY TRAINING
TO 1HE TRIJCI(NQINOUSTAY.

Aft/\

·Real Eatate Geniral . ·

Solo
• 15.47 Wook, Swtvot
Wook;
Rocllrw,
Rocker, $3.113 Wook.Bunk Bod
Complolo S..41 W-.k, 4 llriW.r
Chill, P-21 WNk; Poottr Bod·
room SuHo, 1 pa., $11.17 Wook,
lnalud01 llockllng.Co&lt;intry Plno
Dlnt!to Whh linch &amp; 4 Cholro,
$10.18 W10k.GPEN: llondoy
Thrv Situ'"', lo.m. Ia 8p.m.1
Sundoy 12 Noon Till ·5p.m. •
IIIIH Ott 1101!10 7 On Routt 141,
lnContonory.
·
Solid Ook .Chino C.blnOI, WHh
Llghlo,1 '\'Hr O~eroo. Clll At·
lor 4p.m. 814"44
1g.

Merchandise

2053 or 675-1100.

Rentals

1br, ·Furnished HouH. 135 Re.1r
Third Avonuo, Golllpolls. 114-

HILLSBORO,.OHIO
"'"'"
PHONE 513·393·3424
u.-u:oc•

Household.

RENT~OWN

PATRIOT-.:

Lilli

for Rent

. GoOds ' ·

Rooms

PRODUCERS LIVESTOCK
p-;, ASSOCIATION

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-05

.

1·S00.388-1150

8

wv

ollor

lloodowhlll Subdlvlolon, :U
mllol OUI Sond HIK Rood, hoe
rootrlotld buAdlnt lalo for Mlo
u loW oo NIGO, ond ono ocro
loto tor llt::oidoo OYII!Ibio
lloo, 304-f
or 176-4100.

RAN NY BLACKBURN, BROKER 446·0008
RUTH
Aseoclate 446·7075

I· .

I.

OWNER WANTS TO DEAL!
On this acreagB, approx. 5 acres more .or loss.
Will selllniO lots. Rural wa1er and electric available. Fronlage aiong Raccoon Creek, and along
At. 325. Call for mora details!
12922
390 BLUE LAKE DRIVE
What can we aay bul well malnialnedl Very nice
2 bedroom mobile home, exira large screened·
In porcll OV«&lt;ooklng lake, &amp;torage shtdl cgmplelllly underpinned. Lake fronta~e wlth'KoaUr\g
doclt. Must ,a et to appreciate I 12931

n ~:,\n~~~~ 10 see 111~ nice
3 bedroom homo k
in lhe heart of Crown
City. Aboveijround pool wi1h nice tieck area.
Priced in lhe $40's.
12934
ATTRACTIVE RANCH HOME
ON JAY DRIVE
Oilers 3 bedrooms, living room , fam ily room,
eat-in kilchen newly remodeled, 1 ~ bath,
allached 2 car garag e, cenlra l air, Gree n
Township, city school s. Within minutes of

hospital and lawn. Call lor an appointment
$55,000.00.
.2932
YOU CAN AFFORD TO TAKE A LOOK
AT THIS HOME- ONLY $2~100IMMEDIATE POSSESSiuN
3 bedroom ranch , eal-in ~ itchen , baih, Ulilily
and more, approx. I acre lawn. Calllo take a
peep at this one!
,2g3o
PRICE REDUCED! 49 ACRE FARM
In Wal nut Township, tillable land, pasture and
woodlot A good size tobacco base and tobacco
barn. Throe bedrocm mobile home wolh spnng
development + another nice homesite with utililies in place including seplic system. A great •
hunting area. Priced today al $36,000. Please
call lor more details.
N2935
PRICE REDUCED! MULTI-PURPOSE
Excel len! location lor residential or commercial
property. 35 Wesl area. Vinyl sided 3 bedroom"·
ranch . Over 1 acre lol and approx . 1,100 sq. ft.
commercial building.
N2909

.

3ACRESM/L
.
Siluated in Morgan Township . Good home sole.
Rural water and olectric available. t2917
-ACREAGE
13+ acrns. Green Tawnshlp. Lisred at $10,000.
Lots of tievelopmont around the a~ea . Some
land is wooded. Small stre~m runnmg acr~~ s
property and has a small pond. Hofl!&amp;SIIe ts
graded off. Has eloc1ric and rural waler ·avail·
able. Call us now.
12927

'

WHAT IS THE SENSE IN PAYING YOUR
HARO EARN EO MONEY IN RENTI
When yo~ could be paying lor lhis remodeled
home. Living room, bath , lorced air, gas heat,
newer deck, nestled among shado trees on
approx. I acre lol.
12920
LOCATION IS IDEAL!
Supor builing !vis. Approx. 5 acres each, level,
rural waler available, city schools.
N2933
WHAT MORE COULD YOU ASK FOR
AT THIS PRICE, $32,9QO
3 bedroom ranch home wilh living room, eat-in
kitchen, utility, and ba1h. Nice fence d-in lawn
and attached carpon. Wilhin minules ol Holzer
Hospital. Call today,
#2875
LOTS OF RIVER FRONTAGE
Priced al $2 ,800 and up. Call for moro dclails.
.
12916
PEACEFUL &amp; PRIVATE
And comfortable l~ing is wha1 you'll find in lhis
al~active , 3 bedroom ranch, 3 baths, lormal,
dining, family room, equipped kitchen, 2 car
garage wilh and delached 23'x36' garage.
Enclosed sunporch over 4 acres, pond and
more. City schoolsl
N2926
NEW LISTING!
LIKE NEW 6 ROOM HOUSE
Full basement. double aareoo. utilitv. a~rox. 13
acres mostly woodlot not brush. A beaut1ful
private setting, a place to enjoy and relax whon
a day is done. Scenery 1s superb. Green
Township.
t2938
BEAT THE RENT RACE!!!
With lhis 2 or 3 bedroom home. Remodeled
vinyl siding , storage bu ilding, 1l\ acre plus
excellent garden area. Tobacco allotment.
Raccoon Township. Unbeatable price. $29,000.
Call loday..
12895

$3,000.00
Lot along Qlio River. Call for more inlorma

•

�/
Page-06-Sunday Times-Sentinel
54 MIICIIIaneous
Merel)andlsa

58

Peta for Sale

Drogonwjnd C.ft~ry P~rolon,
Siamet~ and Hlmaa..,an klllena.
;ne- Ford EXP PB, PB, Air, 114-446-3844 onor 7 p.m.
J3,000 111111, Elcotllnt Cond~
tlon. llnll. J3,300. 114-SA- Floh Tonk, 2413 Jackaon Avo.
Point Plnunt, 304-675-2063,
1131.
3,200 1111 ltalnlte8 ltttl water full llna Tropical fish blndo,
Of mil~ tank, good cond, 304- amallanlm111 and supplln.
171-1'511.
For ala or 1radt, Registered
Slborlon
Husky
pups,
I Ploco Ook Living Room Sot: mal&amp;lf.rn~l• &amp;14-992-son
,....o...,., Gtorgn l:l'tllc Road M1l1 Rlngnack Phea11nts, 304·
And Kolly Drlvo, Golllpotlo, 173-S878.
Dhlo. Dolly Ahor 5p.m.
Mlnloturo Pot Bolly pig• ond
15,000 BTU Fuel Oil Stove, Nice piglets. Make great Chrlltma
Clblntt 1200; Prot..alon1l glftt and exctOtnt palll $150.
BNoh CUttor, 1200 !UIId 4 114-.'143-5453
Houn)II4-25U413.
PQodll, toy1, 1nd Ill CUpl, al10
Approx 400 Ft. 01 3 Inch Oak mlnllure Schnauztl'l 11t1 &amp;
B•o Trim, Sondod Nolurolly 11 pe~r. Chlmplon Gr1nd Slrt,
Poar Ft. 114-441-2!1'15.
AKC, Coolvlllo 614·SS7-3404.
Big Dokora Fanm Homo, Buln
On Your Lat. 5 Bedrooms, 3
Bllho, $31,181And Up. 614-MN'1311.
Coal, Home Dellvtry. Minimum
. Of 4 112 Ton, 158 Par Ton, 614: 384,3331.
Camplttt camput1r aystem,
304-675-1985.

OCtober 20, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pl11asant, WV
58 .

~for

Sale

Musical

f .1111r Su~plrrs
&amp; Lrvestock

R:i~;m DolmoliGN tOr ull.

I
1'111. ,
Roglotorod fomalo Orut Dono
puppy; VICCinotld I W&lt;HIIIICI.
$150. 114-441-1354.

Roglotarad Rail Tlfl'llr PuooiHJ
111101 And -.,,.., 'llcclriotoa
And Wormed, $75 Elch. IM:I441·1354.

57

Musical
Instruments

Conn Trornbont, excellent candillon, aoklng $300.00. Call 304112-2121.
Gomalnhordt Flulo, 2-yr old,
exc. cOnd., $1ISOI Antique Ann
Arbor upright p ana wlblnch,
good cond, uklng 1400. IM·

~~ghl

58

plono, 304-312·

61 Fann Equipment

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

1 - Com Plckor, 3 Point Din
Scoopor lucklt. 114-3711-27118.

Fino Tumlpo, 8118Uihol, U.QQ • 11111 John Dlltl•lladOI B, Com·
You Pick. Aloo, Koll And llulo p!llaly Rlbulh, Excolltnl Condl·
llrd Bw Tho Buohol Or Trollot tlonltl.lilda Lobo Spoora Pans,
Load. Chatlll McKNn F1rm1, 114-441-:1358.
Folrllold Ctntonory Rood, Go~
35 IIF Tractor Wllh Dynabounct
llpollo.
llowar, IIF Bolor, $3,815;_ 30
No. 1 • 50 Poundl Of Potat011, FOfgUODn $1,885; 5000 rord
H .IO Eoch,;,_ AI Tho Ftoo llarkot $3,108. Owner Will Flnenct. 814Comor Of fit. 35 And RL110, lo- 211-1522.
oldo Fruth Phormocy, Tho
Thalor lulldlnl, Golllpotlo Ohio, 350 Kllbroo Qrovlty Bod, llko
now, UOO. 304"37·2018.
Saturdoy And onday,

81 Fann Equipment

81 Fann Equipment

Jlm'o Ponm Equlpmont1 .8R. 35,
Wool Oolllpollo, I14...W777;
wtdl.-.rorr, now I Ulld llnm
troclon &amp; mpllrnonta. Buy,
1111, trorlt, I :OW:OO WHkdoyo,
S.LUIINoon.
Now Idol com plckoro. Ono
llodal 10 ono raw $1100. Throo

100 1111 - r milk tonk. I unM
pipe llno ourgo mllklr, :104411·
11151.
1-HP.Tray lull lllllr w/ollatrlc
lion and oil on..-., wood
oplhtor thlt WOiko oil lllllr, PTO,
$'1,1100 ot • - far omoil cor ot
lulr..tu trucll. ~~--1227

lng bo&lt;l $3,100. Ona Modol 325

63

Model 323 one row taat modtl
moda 111,100. -h. Ono llodal
325 two row narrow 12 roll huak·

83

OCtober 20, 1991

uveltock

63

Livestock

two row narrow with sheller
$2,100. One N• Holland 718
chopper, 2 row held cumnt
model 13,500. One New Hot11nd
770 choppor 2 row haod 13 ooo.

441-41182".

Koollfo Barvlco C.ntor1 Stalo
At. 87, Point Plnunt ona Rlploy
Rood, 304-.'185-38111.

'64

AlllltoKlrooa Rollo $25. Froo
SIOIIIJO whh peymont, llorgon
fonm, RL 31, 304-837-2018.
.

ijome

' .

Improvement•

PELLET STOVE~\ond FIREPLACE INSOTS'

Env1roflcuno
JliT
Aorotlon llorOfl, ropelrod. Now
.&amp;, _ -onln llock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1.-.
lton'o TV-.., -'"'~
In Zonltli oliO oorv1c1na nioil
othlr bianU. Houat oalla, alto
oi!PIIInco ropel(l. wv
304ol'lt4Ht Ohio 114-141-2454.
Davis

S.W·Vac
Service, Wllllomo Houllllfl. Cool, wood
Ad. Pono, oup- ~"'VII. VoUChers lcceplld.
pUoo, pickup, ond dlllvory. 114- I
·7010
441-0284.

wur build po1ro covn, rltckl, ::f17=~Up=:-:ho=lst=e~ry~~
acr-.od rooma, put up vi~ llowroy'o Upholotoring oorvlc·
oldlng ot lrllll' ~kl~lng. 61
lng trl 00 ,.,ry aru 21 yuro. Tho
24U&amp;51.
bOll In tumnuoo upl!olotoring.
Coli 3GU75-4154 lor ~.. ...
82 Plumbing &amp;
tlmll•. .
·

HOI!'fe

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondlllonol Ufollmo guoron·
Local rsfnnc• tumlshtd.
F- ootlmotH.- C.ll colloct 1·
11+237-. rlty or night.
Rogoro Buomont Wotorpr~

D. C. Melaijalts,l&amp;
CannelburQ, Inc. 45719

Specializll'lg in Pille
Buildings.
Designed to meet your
needs. Arrl size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON .
PosiBuildings and
Package Dears. Save
Hundreds, even Thousands
o1 Dollars.
Local Sales Representa~ve
DONNA CRISENBERY
E.S.R., Box 166
Gallitpollis, Oho

Heating

t•.

Cll'llf'l Plumbing

54 Miscellaneous

Fourlh ond Plno

Gollpot~~~~o
114-44

Merchandise

258-6110.

Complotolloblla Homo Slt-Upa,
Rapelro; Commorlcol, Rnlrltn·
till lmpravamonto. Including:

84

Clolma kcoptod. 114-258·1611.

Rnldlntial or cammtrclll
wiring, new Hrvlct or rtpalre.
Matter Uctnud eiiCirfclan.
Rldtnour Etectrlc11, 304-875:~.
17Be.

Accessories

Evenings by Appointment

a_. Cnllk

ling.

Auto Parts &amp;

9-5 Mon. -Fri.
9-1 Sat.

85 General Hauling

801t

And WlveNnntr Win·
tarlutlon F1ctory Tralnld. 1514-

lleatiftCJ, Ina.

446-7.400
70 I 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.

$3M121.

1112·2721

81

lPA Certified P•'-•ca

"

Plumltl~. Eleclrlcll. Insurance

- -.
Real Estate General

' @!OlTON lqillNGS, INC.
l:MICI.JJ!n~~inf'f' 1403

Electrical &amp;
Ralrtgeratlon

13233 u. 1ao
Ashland; lr. 41101-8939
Call Tol f roe Morton, Ill.
I
7-7436

_____R_ea_I_E_st_a_te_G_e_n_e_ra_l_ _--,__

.

Real Estate General

1

~~#lua ~ (?/nut(~a/1f.dkJR.
' 'RESIDENTIAL · INVESTIIENTS • COMIIIERC,IAL

·FARMS ~

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

[H

~-

L.:J

rov•a

ttr utl'.l

O' .,., .. , . ,

REALTOFI'

.

HOFES~ONJL SUVI(E lUlU TilE ....IIIIIIU

'

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 388-81121
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR, 446 6806
EUNICE NIEHII, REALTOR, 441-1887
RUTH BARR, REALTOR, 441-0722
DEBORAH SCITES, REALTOR, 44e.6806
LYNDA FRALEY, REALTDR, 44U806
MICHAEL IIILL£R, ASSOCIATE, 446ol806
PATRICIA ROSS, 245-11575

1

CONVENIENT LOCATION • COM·
FORT ABLE HOME -Jus! al the edge of
town th is home offers 3 8Rs, bath, kllchen.
LR, DR. 24x30 garage Nrce shade frees.
Very well kept

OHIO TOWNSHIP-531 /2 acres . more or
less. 1.1ery nice ranch style home offers 3/4
bedrooms, LA ~tchen bath, lull basement
carpet, deck, garage, siding . Tobacco base
and lobacco barn. Addrlionalland
You must go I
CusiDm·morlt ~&lt;chon
3 bedrms .. 1'.t
full divided basement w/4 room1. Thi1 home
O'lerloolcl the Ohio River. City ochools, coty wotor and

OWNER WANTS THIS RUSTIC LOG LOOK COUNTRY
SETIING HOME SOLDI 111 story, 3 bedrooms, re·
modeled with large front porch &amp; deck on a 100x200 lol
ONner has reduced the price 10 $27.900 b&lt;Jt wHI consrder
any reasonable offerl
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! 1972 12x60 mobile home
with 2 acres of level ground. Includes outbuilding, garden
space wrlh leadrng Cree~ water. ASKING $18,000..
MIDDELPORT - 1 floor frame &amp; vrnyl home with 5
rooms, 2 bedrooms, located on two lots. Some new wiring
&amp; plumbing. ASKING $18,000.

LeGRANDE BCULEVARD - All brick, 3
BRs, LR, kitchen, balh, full basemen~ gas
forced air, altBched garage, cil)' schools.
THIS COULD BE YOUR UTILE FARM 66 acre• mil, Harrison Twp., 16x24
equipped shed, 8x8 shower house, counl)'
water and olecllic, some fann equipment.
EXCELLENT COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
- Presently used as Riverside Manne,
sleel burldrng wrlh approx . 3,000 sq. It,
1 057 acre
110 A., mn, along Raccoon Creek, Hunt.
Twp., appro•. 70 A boiiOms, ·front son SR
160, anesian well.
VILLAGE OF CENTERVILLE - Nrce 2
slory oilers 3 8Rs. bath , LR. kitchen. DR,
gas heat, 2 fireplaces Srluated on 1 650

acre.
BEAUTIFUL HOME ·oN THE RIVER .. rust
below town on SA 7 lhrs home offers LR,
kitchen/dining/FA combo, 3 car garage, 3
BAs, 211 baths, summer room . property
goes to river
STATE ROUTE 218- 1.263 acre mn. Very
nice home offers 3 BAS, 1 bath, livi ng
room , kitchen rango and refrigerat?r,
fireplace, city water, basement, crty
schools.

~"l"t.t~J ~";~~

1111

IIICIIDMI Couch, GE Woohor
-1; Oli Al~otOf, All Now
P!t11t. .Con lo AI 1075
Iiiii Jleulo 141, 114-441.4433.

PRICE REDUCEQ BY $6,000 ... 16 acres
plus nice Cape Cod slyle home w/4 BAs,
bath , krtchen , cit)' schools

llghtod

C-) /12.111, Froo

REDUCED TO S34,800 -Older home and
1.75 acre mil, on Neighbothod jusl a short
distanoe from 141 . 4 BAs, kitchen, LA, DR .
unanached garage, Thermopane wrndows.
gas heat.

· Plootlc 1111111 $4l50

boa. t.tcf0.1».:1451 Anytlma.

Army Comoullougo
0o1a1not Clothing, omoll ocUl Combol
· 1om lomorvlllo'o &lt;!!_11&gt;dvvlllo,
WY unoco,
Ill. 21 N. Frt, tlot, Sun, ,_,..,00
Pll tut-.r houro during
"""'"" _ _,, 304-273-5111.
Wolor bod far nlo, tol~wovo
lurp18

-r... -

Bl LEVEL - LIKE NEW
In country, 8 rooms. 3bedrooms, large lamrlyroom, nrce and
modern krtchen, drning room with French doors to a 14'xl4'
redwood sundeck, 2 car -garage, Andersen wrndows, Rae·
coon Twp., one acre level land You must see this home.
Phone now 1or app~ntm e nt .
11675

hoadboard, 1)00.

WATIR WILLS DRILLED: Foot,
..._ S.rvlco, Wot• GuorontiiiU...-'1311.
WHI1t'S IIE'IAL DETECTORS
lion Allloon 1210 Socond
A-uo, OoM{potlo, Ohio, 114-

BUSINESS OFRCES &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2nd AVE .. CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or

•

tloto: Soooonod.
UII/I.OOCI. Wo Accopt Vouc:hlro,
fOf

·coMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 2.4 A., m.~.
248 frontage along SR 7, just across from
Ohio River PlaZa.
GOOD IN·TOWN LOCATION-Just a block
from grocery store. Nice home offers LA
~tchen, BAs, bath, large front porch .

640 FOURTH - 1y, &amp;lory home ofters LA,
kitchen, dining rm ., bath, nice back porch,
gas hea~ close to elementary school.

84 A. inll, Morgan Townshrp. Some Iarin
land, all vacant $27,300.

17.5 A., mil, Perry l'Wp., Symmes Creek
bottom land, soma hill, tobacco base
$9,000
.

Building
Supplill

JUST THE HOME FOR VOU!!! Very nice
all brrck home located on Kathy St . JUSt off
SA 35, new krlchen . 3 8Rs. LA, drnrng , 1y,
bath.
161 ACRE FARM -Large brrck home, 6
BRs. 2 baths. LR. kitchen, FR. elec. heat.
carpet, property fronts o~ Raccoon Creek and
Little Raccoon , tobacco base. Can be

purchased with more or less land
ATIENTION - Very nice home on Graham
School Road - Ranch wilh 3 BAs, LR, FR,
kitchen, balh, central air, 2 fireplaces, cil)l
schools.
LARGE HOME features 4 BAs, 1:.\ barhs,
kilchen, LR, DR, unaltached 16x2g garage:
North Galha School Districl
NEW LISTING - 3 8R, all brick ranch with
lull basemen! and 1 25 acres , m/1. Green
Twp. Just a few minutes from town on SR
141 .
$35,900111 Extra nice ranch sl)'le home off·
ero 3 BR, LR, kitchen, utili!)' im .. anached
garage and a 100K300 ft. lot Great lor the
young couple.
WALK TO ALL THE HOME FOOTBALL
GAMES - Very nice home JUSt a few blocks
from downlown, 3 BAS, 1112 balhs, LA, Dr,
gas heat ·
HERMAN NORTHUP RD. - Green Twp.,
close to Green Elementary School. 34 tracts
aprox. 20 acites ea 1 tract approx . 5 acres .
ROOIIY HOME- Vrllage of Vinton, 2 story,

5 BR: LR, DR. FR. kilchen, carpet, cily
water, 2 rm. bldg., formerly used as cHico.
Sheller house.
CORNER LOTS - Very nice home oHers 3
BRS, bath, kitchen, carpel, fireplace, 1 car
detached garage.
MOBILE HOME and 82 acres mil,
$14,560 2 BRs, LA, kitchen w/range,
relng .. washer and dryer.. rural water.
.98 A. MIL (Hobart Dillon Subd 1 along
RaccOQn Creek, great for a mobile home
Large pine trees on 33 sides All level.
RIO GRANDE - vacanl lot Utilrties
available Just oft SR 325 near apartments.

36 A., mn, Spnnglield Ave ., Sect. 22 .
$45,000.
'

30.5 AC. Mil, Raccoon Twp ..Garners Ford
Rd. Pond and barn, lovely place lor a new
home.

$30,000. Near Clay School.
MOVE IN IMIIEDIATE~YI Attractive home
located on Debby Olive This one has a
beauUiul kitchen, family room with corner
hearth for woodburnar, . LR, 3 BAS. 111
baths. dining room, carpet, w•rats.

plpeo, win·
. _ , .,..., etc. claude Win·
ion, Ale Orondo, OH CoH 114·
I4H121.
• ~ lpoclolo. two cor
......
:Mx24xt43m.oo,
lloclr, llrloll, -

..-.·-·

ljl4tdJdirraiNI414111.00,Z71121ti-

UNCOLN PIKE - NEW USTING - 3 8R
ranch, fenced inJard lor pets or children,
beautiful covere deck, barn sl)'le utility
bldg., affordebly prloed.

84MUO.-IolonPM1Fromo

EVERYTHING YOU COULD WANT- This
sectional home is localed just a lew
mlnulas from Green Elem School, 4·BRs,
2 baths, LR, equipped k~clten, DR, fireplace,
central arr, 16x32 pool w/heater, covered
patio, 20x24 shelter house.
CONCRETE BLOCK GARAGE IN
VI~N - 28x32. Concrete llooro, 220
el
c ..rvtce, fOrced olr fuel o!l furnace,
two 7xt owrheld doors, one walk-in door.

,.,Ci~E!iTE·R - No need to stan your own business - just
rake this one over. This Restaurant seats 38 and a11'eady
sells lots ol great food. Included is 3 relrigeraiOrs, 4 lreez·
era, 2 deep fryers, 2 small steamero, a large grill,. and lots
more. You can even purchase supplres thai are rn stock,
also has storage buildings and a trailer hookup so you
can live right bel]iitd your business. Plenty of room lor
truckers to pe!k. Also a neat little pimic area. Give us a
call if you're ready to stan making money. Sits on 3 acres.
$82,000

GREEN TWP., PORTERBROOK SUBD.,
WITH VERY NICE RANCH - 3 BRs, LR,
kitchen, bath &amp; half, 2 car garage, firaplace
MEIGS CO., 240 A.. mil, Bedford &amp; Chesler
Twp., old original log home wilh addrtion
added, drilled well , counly · water
ava~ .• hes been owned by same family for 4
generations.

RETIRE TO A NICE LOCATION - This
home is sirualed on SR 35 near shopping
and hospital, 3 BAs, bath, LA. kitchen and
attached garage w/oponor.
TAKE A LOOK AT THISIII - Localed on
Second Ave , walk to store, church, S&lt;:hool
and shopping. 2 story home offers kitchen .
LA , OR, FR. 3 8Rs. 2 balhs, gas heaVcen·
Ira( air
·
OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE B~
· $10,000111 Very ni'l! home ofters 3 BRa, 2
balhs, LA, kilchen .. This farm is siruared on
1 Sugar Creek Road, Ohio Townshrp, and ·
has a now 28x40 bam, tobacco base. call
for mora details.
,
S2B,800.....Evono Helghlo, 3 BR, LA, kllch·
en, bath, lui basemenl

QUIET, SECLUDED setting just minutes lo
HMC and downtown. Home features 3 BRs,
kitchen w/range &amp; refng ., LA. DR. carpet.
fireplaoe, cil)' school district

1887 Cltovy Novo: high - - ·
ropllr. Good lfonlpotlo'
tlon cor. lt,SOO. fOf m0&lt;0 fnfor.
motion con 1--2342, Aol!
forPoul.
1187 Horizon $2,000. 1881 ......
cury Lynx 1700. 1881 Covollor
$100. 1818 Ch1v truck 8100. 304175-2440.
tin BOMOVIIII Pontile, V-6,
Automotrc, All P-r, U,IOO;
tllMI Bulco s-mtrMt LlmMod,
· V.ftAutomotlc, U,OOO. For Solo
Or rorlt. 114-211-1270.
19M Corolco, - tlroo, brlkoo,
63,000 mllll, $4L400. t881
Spoc~~~a 41,000
$2,110.
Both
cond, 304-18&gt;·358'1.
1818 Iuick Umllld $111115; 1Pt
Coochmon llotot HOfno 23 n.
83,3115j_ 1115 Chivy B-10 82,8115;
11111 l.:hovy B-10; $3,tt15; 1881
Fond Rangtr XL oono. $3,1100;
1W lzuzu PJckup. 1uto. $2,250;
1987 Joop Commancho plcloup

OWN YOUR OWN FAST FOOD BUSI·
NESS- Plus laundry. Located on SL At 35.
Call for more information.
RIVERVIEW FROM YOUR OWN BACK
YARD -Very nice aU brick homo offers 3
BAs, LR wnireplace, equipped kitchen, full
basement
LOTS TO OFFER-This properly is localed
just a1 the ec!Qe of town on At. t60 and has
lour traCIS, prtced separately. One features
a 2 BR home with gas heal. Three
additional lois lor sale-Call our office for
details.

mn••

NICE STARTER HOME-located just at
.the edge of town. This home features 3
bedrooms balh, living room, kilchen, dining
room and a lull basement. Five minutes to
downtown.

•

$2,995i 1181 Ford Euott S1,05;
1914 Bronco II 4x4, V-8

~,IIIS.Bomo Dldor coro buy
h1r0poyhoN.304-112-3752.

NEAR HIGH SCHOOL- Large older home
offers 5 BAs, 4 bath&amp;, LR, kitchen, sunroom
w/Woodbumer, comer lot.

1888 eomoro RB, 30,000 111111,

lllelr, Groy lnlorlor, llull POll
FUll lnjoctid, V-8, Loodod, With
All Powor, Ootlono, ~DC Whoolol
Now Tlroo, Excotllnt Condition
~,550. 114-141.0381 AnyUmo.
18P Chivy C&amp;moro, RB, ~-!11

NICE RANCH STYLE HOllE looated on
Kineon Dr. offers 3 BRs, bath, LR, kitchen,
lull basement. gat heal. Nice slartet' home
or rebremenl homo.

Aid, Aut~ AJr, CruiM, Tilt, t~w,
T-ropo, Roor DoiJDot,

PDL,

5 ACRE LOTS, Green Township, Falrlield
Vanco Rd. and Wilson Bostic Rd. Beautiful
pia~ to build a home.

AIIIFII C.-to, Hatch
-~ S~rpl 11,1100; 1881
C:hlvy 100101111, 4 Crllndor, lood,
Rod, Loodod, LIM 111111, Sill
FM Poy Of!, M~IIOI!i. 11111 Oldo
01111 88, IWIOI "ork, $100,
Ffrm.IM-441.f112.
' 1881 lluotong LX, Loorltd,
$21,000 IIUOI. Extonrltd Warrof]ly, $6,881, 114-441-1027.

FAMILY SIZE HOME - Attractrve home
located at Cenlenary, oilers 4 BAs, 2 baths,
krtcren, LA. Atlached garage and nie&lt;r
lawn
FRONTAGE ON THE RIVER- 3 BAs LR
equipped kllchen, fuel oil furnace, cenl. air'
full basemen~~ garage.
'

1tecl SIIVIN' Ford TIURIII1 4-dr,

108 A., mil, G~n Twp. Vacant land, spring
on property,
.

e,100 mlltl, SNQO. 114-111-4442
AUTOMOBILES. lAD CREDIT
011.
IIN1 No
-Down
-· Poy.-.
Guorontood
AI!Pravol,
1·
1140-233-8288, 24 Hro.

THE PLACE TO BE - Near hospilal and
shopping, Ill brick, 4 BAs, LR, kitchen, lull
basement, attached garage, largalol.

FOf Solo: 11114 Ford Tompo,
Wlockocl
lut
Ropelroblo.
Automotlc, Runo Good, $450.
114-3f7·7811.

•

near Ho~er Hoapilll. $16,000.

...

OFFICE BUILDING LOCATED AT 250
SECOND - Oifice down and 12 8R
apartment upstairs. Very nice b&lt;Jilding. Call
for details.

..'

...

BE A HOMEMAKERIII Very nice staner
home cHars 4 BAs, 2 baths, LR, FR ,
dinette, lull baaemont, gas heavcent air,
cit)' schools.

POMEROY- Blake Hill Rood -On this .fantasrrc 214
· acres the thinge you can do are endless - you can hunt,
farm, fish, or just watch mother narure at wort&lt;. Not only
all this you gel a home lhal has thai country touch with
plenl)' of room. It has 2 baths and 3 gorgeous bedrooms
with a large living room. It has 3 springs lor water and the
house sits on a township road so there's~· matnlenance.
ALL THIS FOR $111,500
TUPPERS PLAINS -Mane StrHt- A 4 bedroom ranch
wrth a large family room. Also has 2 brg lots, an outbuiltf.
ing and petio. Tho house is weU insula18d, freshly palnled,
and newly carpaled inside. Has newer roof and vinyl sitf.
ing.
oNLY $34,900
RUTLAND- Lltaher Rd. -Oh what a beautifullf This farm
has f04 acres of beautiful laying land. Approx. 30.35 acr·
es is tillable. 60-79 acres of pasrure land with a 39x60
bam and a 24x26 small bam, and a com crib. But wait the
house is so roomy with L-shaped living room and drning
area. Birch cabinets in the kiiChen, 2 baths , 3·4 bed·
rooms, and a rBCI'eation room in basement. Also has a
33K17 inground pool .
JUST$125,000
POMEROY -Union Avonue - What a great buy lor a
great family. It has 3 good sized bedrooms, nice bath, and
a lull basement. This has baen completely redone- new
wiring new fumace, new windows, new plumbing, new
breaker box, and evan a new roof It has a buill~n hutch,
cel~ng fans , and os in a great neighborhood. Has low u~li ·
ties and a one car garage Must see home.
ONLY $25,goo

.

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17.2. BEAUTY AND THE BEST. Room-Room-Room.

10 actll. Vlnvl 1t1d a~ne ranch is onty 2 yrs. old, 3

+
•

'tilchen wlbiautlful wood cabinets, centrallllr,
, 2 car garage, 24';.:36' building

$23 ,500.
1750. MAKE OFFER - LAND CONTRACT HANDYMAN SPECIAL .. You11 go back on umo II you
lrve '" this large 2 stOI')' home, 3 bedrm1., baJ:h, kit.,

.
I NOTICE- REDUCED TO $38,800 NEW LISTING CLOSE TO TOWN - City water, sewer
and schools, 3 bedrms., vinyl ranch, H/2 baths, tled

dining rm., utl~ty rm., cellar. Barn wtapprox. 1,(, ol an
acm $28,000

kit , dm . area, cozy living rm., hardwood noora, full
basoment w/lamny rm. and woodburner and Dl.ltslde
entry. AC.. Shaded deck w/carport, 26'x32' garage ..
Excellent to WO!'k on y: Jr cars. Storage slied.
1706. JEWEL IN SMALL TOWN. 3 bodrm .. 1~ s&lt;oty
home, llv. rin. wlhardwood floors, large eat-in krt., nice
lot. located In a good neighborhood. Close to stores

11138. LAKEVIEW LOTS - Choice lots wiSpec...,lar
vtew You will want mOfe than one .Oak, maple,
dOgwood and evergreen trees make this a subutbW1
paradise. Al so lots lronting on While Rd. For lull
parucularo caJIID inspect

and school. $24,000.
173S. COMMERCIAL or RESIDENTIAL &gt;rrm,
location. Eastern A~~e. Opportunity to combine home

1704, NEW LISTING -IDEAL FOR LARGE FAMILY
- • bedrms., 2 baths. 7 ac mil olllatlanJ. Cozy LA

and- business. Ohio River fro ntage. Very n1ce 3
bedrm. home wtapphances, lull basement. Th1s 1s a
mooev mak1ng proposition. Call lor appointment.

with fi replace, e11tra lg. kit., w•th bar and eating lfla.
Full basement and abo~Je ground pool 10 mdes outol

. RH&gt;UCED.

lrii97. SPACIOUS DOUBLEWIDE ranch with 3 6R,
LA. DR. kit. w/ber, range, rei., lg. front porch, back
deck, elec. heat pump, CIA, 2 car garage. 2 car
carport on 1 ac. mil. S40s.
1669 BUSINESS FOR SALE ONLY WALLPAPER &amp; INTERIOR DESIGNS &lt;" 1500'
of display area. Top of the line inventory and
fixed assets. Reasonable price .
lrii56. NEXT TO WAYNE NATIOHAL FOREST - 127
ac . MIL

Front• on 2 roads. Land contract

$25.000.00.
1735: suBURBAN RANCH- FHA · VA · A vory n!Oil
&gt;3
barh, country kit., lR and lam\1~ rm.
!':
1 ac. mol. 145,000. Rodney 6. Rd.

I LOG.
INVESTMENT: Good money maker IN TOWN. Large
apt. bldg. With 3 two bedroom apts., 2 one bedrm.
apts., plus a conage w1th two apts This properfV hns
been well maintained . Call lor funher Information.
f687. SPACIOUS DOUBLEWIDE ranch with 3 BR,
LR , DR, ~t. wlbar, ranae. rei .. ~ · lront9 porch , back

deck, ~fee . heat pump, CIA, 2 car garage, 21 car
carport on 1 ac. mil. $40's.

;:;:;!·

see inside. $40.000.
1728. LOCATED OUT SA 141 -Vi~~~ rane11: ,
1678. R·E·D-U.C·E·D TO $31,500 FOR YOUNG

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\\( \\IL\\1&gt;
PreltlgiOUI Nelghborhelod
5.6 Acres more or less of Woodland. Excellent
~uilding slle. Land has been surveyed.

bedrms., master bedrm . remodeled, eat·ln kit., 111
wood cabinets. bath and utility rm , t ac lot rntl. A
new home could be bullt on the rear lot REDUCED

MODERNS - Aflotdable 3 or 4 bedroom ranch With

lR eal·in kitchen, bath, rei., range, FA , gas heat,
CIA, on .9 ac. mol . COli lor location.

what you will l1nd this 3 BR ranch to be With LA ,

kitchen, w!dtn. area, range, rei., 1'A baths , elec. BB
heat ale, lru1t trees, patio and carport. Call fOI' more

850 'Bul!I Morton 1U{. (jaifipo{is

,,

COLONIAL
I
OHIO RIVER
FRONTAGE. Immar:ulate condition, 3 bodrmo., H/2
baths, kl!chen, lR..: DR with woodbumlng troplace.
This home is well cared lor Wid located conveniently
10 town and shopping. Very good garden lpot 1 car
garage. You have not idea what a nice ~e until you

lnlo.

G:t
.,....,..
r--

-\\Ill

buy
lhls exceptionally n1ce 3 bedrm., t Yt baths, 2 story
home. Lovely new carpel, ran ge, washer and dryer,
1'/w car garage. Neat and clean hOme loealed 507
Sycamore St.
1732. BARN I VACANT LOT - 78 ac. mol Ill minora!
ngtus, 6 ac of bottom land , some flat on top or the
hill. Owner will land contract to ql.(alil1ed buyer.

Real Estate General

446·4206 or 446-2885

1

!he Ohio R~iiov1~e~r l ~nr II~rall~~~;l
tum-of·the- c:entu ry
oselul anlc and compleoa
heat with central air, garage.
paooo, beaublutly lllldscaped All
Potendal bed and brealtlast or remain

1741, MIDDLEPORT ANYONE? $28,000

1715. REDUCED $3 000, WARM AND FRIEN.DLY Is

Lovely Cedar lltd Brick Ranch.
In Green Elementary School
Dletrlct. Modern and baauUiully
decorated. Large family room &amp;
den ar,a. 3 bedrooms, modern
eat-In kitchen w/alrlun1 doors
leading to a back deck. area. Lg.
ffont.decka alao. 1,680 sq. 1eet of
living space. lots of privacy at the
end of the street. Be the flrs1 to ·
view fila new home.

121,00011 Older home needs some wort&lt;
but has potential. LR, kitchen, bath, unattached workshop &amp; carpon, 3 Iota tl .
68lt181.

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POMEROY- Nye Avenue - 12 aaes of land where you
could build a home or pari&lt; your trailer there. Water Is
already flare and you have Pomeroy sewage. This land
is ready 10 go when you either tear the old house down or
maybe the fire deparlmenl could burn ~ down lor you . •
ONLY$4,900
·ooTIIE TURNER, Broker................:..............992·5692
BRENDA JEFFERS........................................ 992-305B
.DARUNE STEWART_ .............................- ....... 892-6365 .
lANDY BUTCHER............................................ 092:~
SHERYL WALTERS••• --..................................367.0421

Stutes Real Estate

EXTRAORDINARY- 112 A. mil, beautiful
large log home ,'11 BAs, 21/2 baths, LA,
kitchen, OR, FR. 3 fireplaces. Call lor more
details.

lo

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$20,000.00.

ms. RIVER BOTTOIII!ontage w/cabin. te,OOO.OO.

PORTLAND- Barringer Ridge - 79 acres of woods . II
hunting rs your game you would love thrs land. The deer
tracks are everywhere. All for lhe low price of $21 ,000

'Bonnie Stutes, 'Broker

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bodfll'•·

STATE ROUTE 248 - Approx. 48 acres with free narural
gas, and a 1983 Buddy mobile home with 3 bedrooms,
bay window, and a large front porch . Approx. 23 acres of
beautiful hayland. Has several outbuildings.
J UST$40,000

Real Estate General

'' '

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·-

two or more.
1 room. lull ball!. Now repairs hovo
been madt to make this a comfortable home.

1714.

bodrms , 2 lull balllo. cnanmrna LR, rg. FR. COIIntoy

3 A., mil, Charolaii Aaes along SR 160,

87.457 A., mil, Clay Twp.. Sect. 21 and 27,

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Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page 07

40 Part- C.rt, 71-17 MacWI,
DYor 200 Trono, 11oto&lt; A01r
Endo. Too llony Pono To r:Jotl
Building And 1.01 For Ront, 114441-3172.
.•

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614•

•' . .
-.

lor Sale

114·31U700.
11111 Plymouth Chomp, Oood
Condlllonl UOO Flnm. IM-446'1317.
, 11111
Pontile .~ ._uiO
lfoughom, 4 dr - · bolutltul
family car, tvtry option Inc.
eunroof, 301 V-1, $11.., 114-112·
67111

Dryar Shoppo. 114-441-2144.
Sako Rlllo 3001 $'100; GDDOO

55

75 Boats &amp; Motors

1110 Oodgt Dlplamat All PoWIIr,
Good Shopo, ",aaa. 614-2!11·
1441.
1811 Iuick Rogol, 6 Cyllndor,
Runo Good, Vory Cloon lnold~
Oul, 11,300, Soo To Approclota

Mt'VIct 111 makll. The W11h11 &amp;

·--

NOT A SCRATCHI
AREAL STREET BIKEI
$3,710 Firm. 114-24W588.

runo very

tm llonto Corio, T·tope, mony
tllma, rnu.l . . ta appnclat•,
30H7H1U or 11H211.
11711 Pontile Flrlillrd, now
point, ~"'!/ cond, 111,500. 01
t~··
'75-1820.

Roto Or lllco? In Your Hou10?
luy iHFOACER, Kitto roto &amp;
mloo. In only 1 loodlng,
GUAIIANTE£D1 Avolllbll al:
MINERSVILLE RD.- 2 slory frame home. 6 rooms, 3-4
Truo 'llluo StOfW, 11 Woot
bedrooms, beautilulslailway &amp; balh wilh pine woodworl&lt;
lloln - · Choottr, OH
Home needs some repair. Immediate possession!
Roll Or llleo? In Your Hou10?
ASKING $22,500. COME MAKE AN OFFERI
luy ENFORCER, Klllo roto &amp;
m1co In only 1 loodlng,
GUARANTEED! Avollobll al:
FALL IS A BEAUTIFUL TIME TO LOOK FOR THAT
O'Dotl Truo Valuo Lumbor, 634
Eoollloln Stroot, P-roy, OH
.NEW HOME I COME IN, LET US SHOW YOU WHAT WE
HAVE TO OFFER .... WE'LL DIRECT· YOU TO THE
RATS OR IIICE?
HOME OF YOUR DREAIISI
In Your Houoo? IU)' ENFOR·
CER. KUto Alii And lllco In
Only 1 Foodlno. GUARANTEED!
HENRY E. CLELAND..............................~ ......DD2-61D1
Avol- At: Cofttral Supply,, 17
mACY
BRINAGER...........................................D4D-2438
Coud Strtol; Spring Vaooy
Hordwora, 121 Jockoon Pika;
JEAN TRUSSELL .............................................D4D·2880"
Odll Truo 'llluo LBR, Vlno
J 0 HILL..............................................................Ns-4481
llrlll At Third Avonuo, Gil•
OFFICE............................................................... 9D2·2259
Npotlo, Ohio.
Aecondltlontd
Wathtrt &amp; ~---------:----------'
dryoro, -h $100 ond up. Wo

WIIOII

302

till Kowuokl IGOR Nlnlo, 1\oln

2· Door, Good Conclhlonl C.ll
1)4-146-0711.

r::, With Wllghlo. CoiiS14-446-

41414J31.

Ac:ceuorlel

Ctm, 11 Vatvt, ~~400 MIIN,

1m Dodao DIDiomot 318, Auto,

8ott1ed Gtt AI•, 1 P1lr Of Old
4l'tol- Scotoo Com·

::;::•n

81

Vory good 305 chivy """"' ond
ttpOid trono 8200 lor both 114-

74· Motorcycles

Middleport, OH

no Not nooda oomo
WOrk, 3!1~and 4-BRL, 4IILT moln, PS, PB..:.~C, CC,
11000 080. IM-tll2-6r..

Norttlkl Chine DtthM, Allin

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"

71 Autos for Sale
~.

Ponarn, 70 Yaor11 Old, 12 Pllco
Strvlct, 1350; 10 PinK Dtprttslon Cut Cryatll Wlnt Glatut,
1150; Engogomonl Ring, Hlo
And Hor llltchllltl Wldctlng
81ndl, 112 Ctr~t , Yellow AnCI
Whlto Gold "50; Corftploto PA
SyMtm, FD~tJr Ulcrophonu,
$400; 15 Cu. FL Ut&gt;&lt;lght Froozot,
1 Turo Old, Whho, $250: Goa
Orlll, 810. IM·318..168.
Olcl Fumlturt, Somt Oak; Also
Pinball llochlno. Soriouo lri·
qulrloo Only. "4·25&amp;-1155.
One Lartt Hitter, Nat_ural Or

Porlobla

205 North Second Ave.

•
1?73 Ford lluotong

882-2201
Now Wolahl lonch WMh Accooaorila, $100j Alto Match Book
Colloclton. 114-44H715.

willttn

Hay &amp; Grain

Transporlaljon

P11:t1 &amp;

lutb, -lvo, loodod, vory 79
campers&amp;
nlco, $1000 Ot' trorlt Chovy on
C!JW cob duolly. 614-1112-2V72
Motor Homes
1181 CltoVY Soto, 4x4, Tahoo
Rlmo And Tlroo, Autotnollc, Vol. 11151 20ft, Toyoto R.U., $jj1.1100;
Good ConcltJOn~.!11,000 llao,
114-371-2820.
lllcltllncl 11110. 114-4411181 Chivy Von, Now Convor· 202\
o1on K~ S1 000 Or loot
1~4'Anorlp.m.
Servrces

Alfolll hoy lot 1111. Doya 114881-31110
or 114-185-3969
ovonlnga.

985-4315

· Gtntr81 Electric coppertont
' refflg.,..or
and
ltove,

-:

76

72' T~cks tor Sale

73 vans &amp; 4 WD's
1881 fonl Convonlon Von,

OFFICE 992·2886

Nublon goot for ult, $30. 614·

nor, 2 Dolin Ou1rt Jara And 16

W/ICCIUOrlll.

72 Trucks lor ·Sale

11322.

Pint Joro. S14-441·1530.
Far Stlt: Chill, S1ov., Bids,
St1nda Tablll, Couch, Chairs,
And Etc. 114-448·11160.
For Salt: Water Heater And
100,000 BTU, LennoJ Puln Fur·
nact, Cell Batore &amp;p.m. 614-2455414.

Wllll'bld

Livestock

1813 Chovy 314 ton, V-8, ·4-SP1 11!11 Chivy pickup, oxcolllnt
:14,100 mll01, PS, PI, g - condition, 304-6711-8042:
cOnd., ...w paint, t2800 linn.
1871 Chlv.- olngto ulo .,,.P
72 Tn.tcka for Sale
614-t112ol75t
truck. to fl bod, goOd cond, 304::.~~~Iori HMwlond Bull. 1883 Bllzor, I ofieod, 82,00. 1187 Ford Rongo~ 4 cyl, 5 Bl'l-7568.
304-175-21118,
speed, exc COnd, t3,115. 304- 1877 El Comlno, 350 ong, oulo,
~~UO.
.
111 Foodor C.ll 81111
4•borrol, MOO, IW1112olll'll
hono LIVootook Sol01. Botur•
y Octobor ~~ AI 1:00 P.M.
1171, 314 lon, 3~ auto, NRI
Real Estate General
Llvootoek Acc.,.od Stoning At
good, llttlo rust, $11100, phono
4 P.ll. Ev.y Frttfay, S.turdoya
614-M2·!170, ltave IIIMIIga.
Sill All :00 P.ll. Hauling AvoU.
~blo. 1~81-3531, Or 114-582·

Cronk Type Hotpltol Bod With
Toblo,
130;
Frlgldalro,
Rolrlgllltor, UO. Con lo Soon
AI 136 Chopol Rood, Bldwort Un·
Ill Octobor 2111.
Flrowood lor ulo 120.00 per
load, 614-1112-2455.
Flrowood For Balo, 614-3e7o0117.
Flrtwood For Salt : Mostly Hard
Wood.I14-3N-2876.
liar Silt: 7 Ouan Pressure Can-

Frlardalrt dishwasher, gold.
304"-175-23111.
Glenwood Goo Coole Slovo, Uko
Brond Naw, Aoklng 1150. St4245-5113.
Log Spllltor Fat Ront. Evono
llolor11, 114-14&amp;-6582.
Now ooft oldo w~ubol king oz

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

Cloo1o._Podlgnlld Nublon Bock.
810 U&lt;hori. Good ,1111 U&lt;l
And Up. Mount Olivo Rood, 114318-6541.

Concrttt • pilll~ upllc tanks,
Ran Evant Enltrprlut, Jlck·
aon, OH 1-aoo.537-tS28.

~

I

garoga, Treed lot. lm"""'lato pouellon.

..54. LEASE or BUY GROCERY - VIdeo renlal,
game room and ather aalea rms. located in growing

area Large 2 lloty bul~ lng wrlh oho-om, 2 bodrm .
--~ attic oiDrage. Plus a nlco 2 bodnm., mObile
home. COli lor details.
1749. NOW IS THE TillE TO BUY. 3 ac: ol flat
land mk Enjoy Irving in a country homo very close
to town. Large 2 story w/4 bedrms., bath, ~t.
doning rm .. LR, 2 cement porches, bam ond
bldgs., large trees and a good garden spot.
Alfocdable price. Mid $40's
0887. CEDAR RANCH Hoa oituolod on 47 ocroo.
Thlo r - leaturn 5 BRa,llld or oltloo, pllyroom,
2~ bltha, utility room, cothtOrll c:eiH ngo ovor living
100m, dining room llld klichon, c:onvorntion pit In
l~ing ""'"'onclo-litoplaoe, ftra ond socurttY aOim
system, flnlohod tomlly 1110111 with flr11place, haot
pump and central -'r, 2: car g•age, covered N1io.
barn, stockod pool. Home has op~rox. 3,000 IG,. II.
living apice ond many other amonllitl. COli lor more..

17311. IIAKE OfFER- TrHI, troll, and mort trNIII
12 acres m/1. Also 2 BR ranch with great ~m,
fireplace, kitchen, dinette , bath, patiO and n1ce
backyard. Call 1o&lt; location and prico.
'
1738. NEW LIStiNG. IIARK OF QUALITY
Drltlnetivo llld dlffaront 4 bodroom. bl·lovol wli11 3
batho, LA, FA wli11 !replace, kitchen [with cherry
cabinets) , dinette, alec. heat pump, CIA , ret . range,
dishwasher, ·diaposal, weened-In bad!; porch, 2 car
garage on 4 acrea mA. Priced right. Take a look at

quality. Call for on appt.

1121 : PRICE ~EDUCED : Groat starter homo
loarurlng 3 BR, oath, kitchen, living room ')'ith app
1000 sq. ft. olllvlng spoco. CaJI for appl. Priced in the
1301.
174&amp;. 15 ACRE FARIIII/L. This property is localod
juSI put tho Galllo Cou~ly line lniD Jackson Coun~.
School Olatrlcl In Southwestern. Hom• fotur11 3
bedrooms, 2 bolho, App. 1152 oq. h.. bottle gao htat.
oir cond., 2 cw dollchod goroga. S.tolllta dish and
ltlldtmonta, r round obo¥o ground poat, two 8'x6'
bulkllngo, lorgo 11om shod, and collar house. Coli lor
morelnformallo!&lt;.

CONTRACT. KIIA. 3 bodrm ., ll\lloty
lill.laled on 219 loll and baument, clou to
shopping con•ro . Well kept horne and Iorge 2 ear

information.

11710. 30 ACRE PARIIIIiL with toboco kiD Ind.
born. 2 otory trome houoo with 3 bodraoma, both,
i~ng room, u"rty room. Coli 1o&lt; prioo ond locallon.
foods
pricol
""· NEW LISTING: Thlo homo lolocated on 1 ac.
mil footurlng 2 or 3 bod100m1 wilh lomlly fOOm,
kllehon boih covarad corport, largo atoroae building
Thla ,..;,.,, ri on axc*lont lllrtor homo prlcolJ In tho
130•. eon ""~ lnlormollon.

,.0.000

t702. NEW li$TING: Ronch &amp;iylo hOmt wli11 t".t
botho, lomly raom, dining room, now corpota.windowl ond - . . opp: 1384 aq. ft . ol N~ng - ·
Clll for on oppotnrmont.

•

1701. LOT FOR SAL£- I
Townohlp. Coli lo&lt; ptlco

lot lor ullinAddlean .

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Times--Sentinel

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Pomeroy...:.Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

~ . '!

I'

win a $5 prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co• . Leave your name, address and telephone
number with your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be acceptefj. All coolest entries should
be turned in to the newspaper office by 4 p.m.
each Wednesday. In case of a tie, the winner will
be chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallia County
farm will be featured by tbe Gallia Soil and
Water Conservatk!n District.

Boxers are a knockout this fall
Hy L&lt;\URA FISHER
For AP Special Features
Men's boxer shorts, once a mere
necessity. have become a star in the
gloomy retail industry.
But forget plain white or pale
snipes. To ·be BC (Boxer Correct)
requires boxers that are lou;!, with
humorous patterns in brilliant colors, and that can be worn not just
.as underwear but as outerwear.
"It's an absolute phenomenon,"
says Alan Mills"teih, pulilisher of
the Fashion Network Report, .an
industry newsletter that keeps track
of trends. "What was once the
province of lhe WASPy preppie set
1s now outerwear."
Street looks inc! ude boxers that
hang below regular shorts or peek
through ripped jeans. Boxers, especially pncier silk brands, have
become standard couch potato
garb. Brooke Shields showed up at
a recent Hollywood party in a pair
of silk boxers by Nicole Miller.
Jockey International reports a 20
percent increase in boxer sales last
year and a 17 percent increase this
year to date.
"We've moved hundreds of
employees to boxer production.
We've started second shifts. Pro·
duction can't keep up with sales,"
says Howard Cooley, president.
At the high end of the market

are silk boxers by Nicole Miller, numbers, driving the b'end.
which recently dropped its price
Joe Boxer has even come out
from $75 to $50 a pair, thanks to with a style for women. It has a
"better labor deals," says Bud sewn-up fly and patterns the com.
Konhcim, com pany president and pany considers more femin in c,
CEO. "Business is terrific. Once such as cats and perfume bottles,
yo u wear silk you never want to go Of course, that take"s the fun out.of
back."
bOrrowing shorts from a brother or
That's a matter of debate. Mill· bOyfriend.
stein, a cotton briefs man, says silk
is 100 clammy but he can appreci"What's available today comate the appeal.
pared to five years ago is stagger"For $50," he says, "every par· ing," says Chip Tolbert of the
venu can feel like royalty. That's Men's Fashion Association. "You
what silk drawers are all about. see- them everywhere from K-mart
Everyone wants to dress like the to Bergdorf Goodman.''
Prince of Wales."
Several companies, including
A ubiquitous brand is Joe Joe Boxer and Brieny Stated, offer
Boxer, credited with opening up boxers with secret glow-in-the-dark
the novelty boxer market. The messages. Sample: the word
company 's shorts have surreal, "Nice" on a pair by Briefly Stated
graphic patterns. One with swim· turns to "Naughty" in the dark.
min~ cows is called "Heifer
Williams."
·
Joe Boxer has 'doubled sales
Other companies shy away from
every year since it began six years such b'endiness. But !hey find that
ago. This year the company expects boxers are booming within their
to sell $24 million in shorts.
niche. J. Crew sold 150,000 pairs
Traditional boxers have a roomy last year, the first time boxers
"bucket bull," but newer styles appeared in its catalog, and projects
slimmer and have a center back to double that figure. This fall The
seam. Most men find the bucket Gap rolled out a new men's line to
butt more comfortable, but manu- selected stores with plans to
facturers have other customers to expand. Both brands feature conplease - namely women who are servative patterns and retail for $14
buying novelty shorts in record to Sl6.

:~

October 20, 1991 :~

Next spring's lawn will
depend ~on this fall's lawn care

MYSTERY FARM ·This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate
in the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your guess .
orr to the Daily Sentinel,lll Court St., Pomeroy, .
Ohio, 457~9, or the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, and you may

.I

~

Ohio Lottery

_Twins ~take
·2•0 lead·in
World Series

..,..'

Pic~ 3:743

Pick 4: 7562 Cards: 9-H, 4-C,
9-D, 6-S
Super Lotto:
. 7-ll-17-21-40-42
Kicker:901388

PageS

By EARL ARONSON
grass plants may lose so much through their roots. An adequate : ·
supply depends on the size of th~ :
For AP Special Features
weight th!lt life processes cease.
Autumn is the time of year ' "Autumn fertilizati.on," they root system and the volumd of SOil , ·
when the quality of next summer's conclude, "is the only means for with which the roots have contact ;
lawn is determined, according to preventing next summer's growth The more roots and the deeper tl\ey : ·
experts at the Lawn Institute in d;;cline."
grow into the soil, the beUer.
· :
Pleasant Hill, Tenn.
Lawn Institute experts note that ; .
The plant reserves that will Getting Back to Your Roots
all grasses establis~ a. balance ·:
carry lawngrasses through periods
Leave~ - ·of lawngrasses and between growth of fohage and ·.of hot weathet next summer are essentially all ornarnental plants - roots.
•
stored in plants during cool autumn get water and mineral nutrients
days. As days become sh·orter,
growth rates become slower; lawn.·,·
WANTED;
grasses make more carbohydrates
than they use to sustain them~lves,
BANK STOCKS
, so they store some for future needs.
NamlnaiQuql•uotSeptemblr30,1891
- ~ lid Alktd '~
This storage process continues into
Peapln Bancorp at Marlalla ....................................................... -..........................$ 32 st
the winter as long as leaves are
Paltl Jtoltonal8ank at Newark... -.................... ,, ......,.......... ,, ................. .................. 15 .llod&lt;lng Valley Bank oiAI~~I ............................................................................. .. 117 121
gteen. Thus, fall is the only time of
Ohio Ylilloy Bank ot Gotllpolto......... ,................... ,.. ,.................................................37 - .•
year when lawngrass plants actual·
Chtuno Bank or LOgan........................................................................................... 215 Firat Jtollonal Bonk 01 MCCiinnalavlllo.. ~ .................................................................105 ly gain weight
Chtzano Nltlonol Bank or llcConnolovlllo ........................................................ .....130
Falllawncare, then, is the key to
F""""" Bankl"!! Co. of~............................................................................. 50 •
healthy turf next spring and sum·
Wo ... thl "hlromoot bonk atock lmlkoroln Ohio.
FIRST SCIOTO COMPMY
mer.
6271BuKh Boulovord
The lawn experts point out that
Cotumbuo, ()hlo 13221
in spring, as soils warm and days
Clll8rod Smhh at 1-800-157-IIANK
become longer, most of the carbo-.
'·
hydrates produced each day are
used to replace the foliage removed
. by mowing. There is little excess to
be stored. The faster the grasses
grow, the more carbohydrates are
needed. So, although spring fertilizing improves the lawn's appear. ance as it thickens the turf, it
doesn' t help build reserves as docs
autumn fertilizing. In spring, lawn·
grass plants actually lose weighL
According to the experts: ·
"When hot summer weather
arrives and night temperatures are
higher, rates of respiration increase.
Stored carbohydrates are called
upen to maintain healthy turf. Not
enough are produced during the
CAIOU SNOWDEN
day to sustain growth and meet resCorner of Third Ave. &amp;State St.
piration needs at night, too.''
Gallipalis, Ohia
They note that in situations
where there are inadequate carboPhone 446-4290
hydrate reserves, " lawngrasses
Home 4U·4S 18
become more susceptible to diseases.
"They lose vigor, thin out, and
IU.U fAIM
weeds gain a foothold. Insect dam ·
age is more severe during these
periods because grasses cannot sur- ·
INIUIANCI
vive loss of plant parts. Roots stop
•
their growth during hot weather,
Slalt' F;~rm
and some dieback occurs: Thi s
l.ifl' lm;urancc Company
causes a less extensive root system
Ht iOit' &lt;&gt;ftit•t·: tihNiminutt•n. lllinoi~
for uptake of water and nutrients.
These conditions weaken the lawn
and cause it to become unattractive.
Like a good neighbor. State Farm is ther~ Thus, during summer, cool-season

Low ionighj in mid
40s. Tuesday, sunny.
High in mid· 70s.

-·
VoL 42, No.11a
Copyrighted 1991

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cenls
A Multimedia Inc. Nowopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 21, 1~1

'

Both sides claim· win in weekend abortion.protests
CINCJNNATI (AP) - Both arrested in connection with antisides are claimingvictory in the abonion demonstrations Friday and
weekend anti-abortion demonstra· Saturday at the Plamed Parenthood
lions that resulted in more than 100 center in·the Mount Auburn neigh·
arrests at a Planned Parenthood borhood. Most were charged with
clinic.
trespassing.
The shouting ended Sun4ay,
Tri-State Rescue, which orgawhen more than 300 abortion· nized the demonstrations, hoped "to
rights activists held a·rally in front · prevent women from baving abor·
of City Hall to mark the end of a lions at the clinic. Planned Parentweekend of marching, singing and · hood officials said the clinic conconfrontation.
•
tinued to operate during the
Police said 108 people were demonstrations, with patients ·

''Ufe.Insurance
that's right for you...
·
that's what
State Fanil is
all about''

esconed through the crowds.
. "They came out here determmed to deny people's rights, and
we didn't allow them," Kathleen
Curry, president of the local chap·
ter of the National Organization for
Women, told the rally Sunday.
"This is a victory rally to bid
farewell to Operation Rescue and
to celeblflte our total, overwhelming ability to outnumber them,"
she said. "They are a tiny minority; wearethemaioritv."

But the anli-alionion demonsb'ators also claimed victory. Tri-State
Rescue spokeswoman Kim Bush
said she believes that some women
must liave changed their minds
about having an abortion when
they saw'the large group of demonstrators.
"We feel there are babies alive ·
today that would have died Friday
or Saturday," she said. "If one is
saved, it's a victory."
There were no anti-abouion

demonstrations Sunday. The clinic
is closed on Sundays.
The demonstrations began Fri day, when 7.4,people were arrested
..:.. 73 of them on trespassing
charges for climbing a fence to
block a clinic entrance. Another
person, not one of the anti-abortion
demonstrators, was charged with
disorderly conduct.
Eight more anti-abortion
demonstrators were arrested on
trespassing' charges Saturday, and

26 Jieople were arrested outside the
gates for disorderly co nd uct or
refusing to obey a police order .
There were several scuffles
between the two sides.
One , demonstrator, Janet
Graziani of CindMati, remained in ·
jail today. She pleaded no contest
to trespassing but refused to pay a
$250 fme, resulting in a 10-day jail
sentenc~.

Some of those arrested have
·court appearances scheduled today.

At least 10 people killed, 380
homes destroyed in Oakland fire
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Firefighters today battled a roaring
fire that swept out of the dry hills
above Oakland and Berkeley and
raced through well-to-do neighbor·
hoods, killing 10 people and
·destroying more than 380 homes,
authonties say.
Ash-covered residents grabbed
pets, photographs and other keepsakes before frre chased them from
their homes Sunday. Some people
drove to safety through streets
filled with flaming debris and lined
with burning trees,and homes.·
"1 didn't take my checkbook,
nothing. There was nobody to help
me think," said 77-year-old PiccoIa White, who fled with her greatgrandson.
Among the victims were a fami·
ly of five who died trying to escape
their bumi~g home. A firefighter .
and a pollee officer also were

A

CALL ME.

~~~~~{~S~:~c:;:~:

fire made a deafening roar as it
burned terrain par£hed by five
years of droughL
Wildfires burned elsewhere in
Northern California and the West
Firefighters battled blazes in Col·
orado, Montana, Oregon and
Washington.
In the Oakland area, winds gusting to 40 mph whipped the flames,
forcing firefighters to flee along
with residents. Thunderous explosions attributed to propane tanks,
1rees or elecb'ic transformers were
heard.
The ftre in the heavily wooded
neighborhoods near the Caldecou
Tunnel destroyed at least 350
homes in Oakland and 30 to 50 in
Berkeley, said Oakland police Sgt.
Kevin Traylor. More than· l,500

acres were blackened.
As dawn approached today,
clusters of flames were visible
throughout the Oakland hills,
although the fire appears to have
been driven from the Berkeley
· hills; Traylor said from the fire
command center in Oaldand.
The winds died down overnight,
but ftre crews were still struggling
early today to contain the fire,
Traylor said.
Authorities closed highways and
halted Bay Area Rapid Transit
trains, which run through the tunnel.
At least 50 people, including
three firefighters, were treated at
hospitals for burns, smoke inhala·
tion and other injuries, officials
said.

Mezgs
• county ['lSted as
labor surplus area

J

•

·

the blaze, which was reported
about midday Sunday and moved
Meigs and several neighboring businesses located in these areas
quickly from street to street, then counties have recently been desig- wiD receive preference from federhill to hill, in Oakland and Berke· nated Labor Surplus Areas by the al government agencies in all forms
Parish on Friday. Presenting the money to Betty
CONTRIBUTION MADE • Bank One's
of procurement.
ley neighborhoods with panoramic U.S. Department of Labor.
bean
soup
and
cornbread
dinner
held
in
the
Weyersmiller of the Parish is "One-da" of Bank
Ohio Bureau of Employment
views of San Francisco Bay. The · This designation means that
mini-park during the Big Bend Sternwheel Fes·
One. With the contribution the Parish will be
Services Administrator James Con·
·tival
brought
in
approximately
$122
which
was
able to purchase approximately 854 pounds or
rad said the labor surplus area desgiven
to
the
Meigs
Methodist
Cooperative
food.
ignations are good news for Ohio.
"Federal contraCts mean taxpayers dollars coming back to Ohio,
and in particular to areas of Ohio
. F~ur Meigs County teens escaped injury after the car they were
hard-hit by unemployment. Giving
m slid off the toad on S.R. 124 near the intersection of Portland
employers
in these parts of Ohio
Road early Saturday'IIIOming.
preference in federal purchasing
. According to a repon from. the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
will mean more jobs for out-of·
Highway Patrol, Shawn P, Rollms, 16, of Reedsville, was eastbound
The International Committee of
work Ohioans," Conrad said.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - In
The United Nations and a group
on S.R. 124 rounding a left turn. He lost conb'ol of the car which
the Red Cross said 14 prisoners.
The following entire counties another step toward ending the holding two American hostages slid around backwards, went off the roadway and over an embankincluding two women, were freed
are designated Ohio's Labor Sur- hostage ordeal, Israel and its allies Allan Steen and Jesse Turner ment before coming to rest in the edge of creek.
plus Areas: Ashtabula, Brown, freed 15 Arab prisoners today, and both said a hostage release was at 9 a.m. today from the Khiam
Rollins' passengers, Michelle L. Friend, 17, of Syracuse, Eric E.
Crawford, Darke, Defiance, Shiite Muslim kidnappers said they imminent. The hostage to be freed prison in Israel 's self-designated
Powell, 16, o( Reedsville. and Brent Dccosse, 16, of Racine were
security zone. Another prisoner,
Fayette, Fulton, Gallia, Guernsey, would release an American captive was not named.
uninjured in the accident.
Hardin, Harrison, Henry, Highland, within 24 hours.
U.N.-brokered negotiations have Hezbollah activist Ali Fawaz, was
The four youths were riding in a 1988 Chevrolet Corvette, a twoAlso today, Israeli warplanes engineered a swap of Western released from a prison in Israel
Hocking, Huron, Jackson, Meigs;
seater designed to carry only the driver and one passen~er.
Monroe, Morgan, Morrow, Musk- bombed a Hezbollah guerrilla base hostages, Arab detainees under about an hour later.
Damage to the front, bottom and left-rear of Rolhns' Corvette
ingum, Noble, Ottawa, Perry, Pike, in southern Lebanon, wounding Israeli control and an accounting of . The Arab releases came eight
was listed as light.
Putnam, Ross, Sandusky, Scioto, three civilians in apparent reprisal Israeli soldiers missing in Lebanon. hours after Islamic Jihad for the
Rollins' was cited for failure to maintain control and failure to
Since August, three Western Liberation of Palestine said it
Seneca, Trumbuii ; Vinton and for a bomb attack by the Iranianwear a safety belL The patrol cited unsafe speed as the connibuting
allied
group
that
killed
three
Israeli
hostages
have been freed after would free a hostage within a day.
Wyandot.
factor in the accident.. .
soldiers
Sunday.
years
of
capli
vity in Lebanon and a The group did not say who would
In addition, the cities of Akron,
Hezbollah is believed to be an Frenchman was release.d after be freed. Its statement was accomBarberton, Canton, Cleveland,
Dayton , East Cleveland, Elyria, · umbrella group for Shiite factions being held three days. Sixty-six panied by a photograph of Turner.
Fawaz , the Lebanese freed in
Investigation continues at the Ohio Buteau of Criminallnvcsti·
Hamilton, Lima, Lorain, Mans- holding Western hostages in Arabs have been freed, and Israel
Israel,
was transported to the southgalion and Identification into a gun found in Ravenswood, W,Va.
field , Marion, Massillon, Middle- Lebanon. It was not clear whether has received word of the deaths of
ern
Lebanese
port of Tyre, where
last week.
town, Newark, Springfield, Toledo, the Israeli raid would affect the two soldiers and the body of a
he
said
he
was
held in Israel's
The shotgun was found on Monday near the mouth of Sand
Warren, Youngstown and release of a hostage.
third.
Ramleh
prison
for
five years.
•
Creek near Ravenswood by the Ravenswood Volunteer Fire Depart·
Zanesville were also listed as labor
ment.
surplus areas.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, there is
The U.S. Department of L.abor
no evidence to indicate that the gun is that used to kill Jeffrey L.
designates a city or county as a
Halley of Gallipolis, whose body was found near Portland last
Labor Surplus Area if its unemmonth.
·
ployment rate has averaged 6.6 perHowever, Soulsby reponed, all angles are being investigated by
cent or more during calendar years
BCI, including whether the gun could have been the gun used to kill
1989 and 1990. The designation
Halley.
will be in effect until Sept. 30,
Hatley's body was found on September 25 near Portland. Halley
1992.
.
had been shot in the head and authorities believe that he was proba·
bly killed shortly after he was reported missing by his family in
Febiuary.
HaUey's 8on, Jeffrey S. Hl)lley, 12, is still missing.

--Local briefs---.
Four teens escape injury in wreck

If everyone in the
U.S. recycled

A.P.R. FINANCING ON NEW CARS.

even one tenth

1991 BUICK SKYLARK

$8988

of their newspapers,·. ---=
we ·would save about

Tilt wheel, power windows, AM·FM.

.25 million trees every year.

BCI continues to investigate gun

1991 BUICK CENTURY 4 DR.

. I

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''The Hoosier Schoolmaster" by Edward Eggleston will be the
next book presented on !he "Heroes and Heroines of the Ohio River
VaUey" at the Meigs County Public Library on Monday at 7 p.m.
Dr. Ronald Grosh of Springfield will again be the narrator and
disCussion leader of the book. This is Dr. Grosh's second visit to the
program.
According to Libmry Director Ruth Powers, Grosh did an excel·
lent job on the book ''Follow the River" and his presentation was
-well received.
Dr. Grosh holds a Ph.D. from Ohio State University. an M.A.T.
from Kent State University and a B.A. from Cedarville College. He
is currently Superintendent of Christian Schools in Springfield.

The Meigs Marauder Marching
Band, under the directioo of Toney
Dingess, prevailed as the Grand
Champion Band at Saturday'·s
"Battle of Bands" competition held
at Saunders Field in Point Pleasant,
W.Va. Founeen bands participated
in the festival.
The Meigs Band also won for
Outstanding Show Desi~ over all
other bands as well-as wmning fli'St
place in Class A competition over
1 three other bands, first place for
· best field commanders, fmt place
for best auxiliary and third place
Sunday will be the fmal for the _Middlepon Park . n Putt mmla·
for percussion.
ture golf course at General Hartmger Pa.rk '" Middleport. The
The · J07-member Marauder
miniature golf course will re-open in Apnl, 1992. Regular hours
Marching Band wilf compete at ·
will be observed on Sunday, whiCh are 12 noon unbiiO p.m. ·
state contest at Cooper Stadium in
Continued on page 3
Columbus on Nov. 2 81 approxi·
mately I p.m.

Do something good
for yourself and ·do something

great for the Earth!

CALL
CABLEVISION

TODAY! (304)675-3398 .

See Mark Carman, Don Carter, Hoyt MUllins, Brett Epling
or Greg Smith

Par" 'n' Putt to close

t~l

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1\
I

Meigs bimd named
grand champion

Reading program to continue

'

an environmental organization.
__ Adopt-A-Stream
__ Rainforest Action Network
__ Renew America
n ...~, ('ha•uwl.

Israel, allies release 24 Arab
prisoners; Americans may be freed

' I

, .'

GRAND CHAMPS
The Melp
Marauders Hi&amp;h School Band was named
grand champions at the Point Pleasant Hilh
School Battle or the Bands Saturday afternoon.
The Mel1s County band was recipient of the
first place band award In Class A'(71 or more
playing · members); first
place color . guard
.
.

award; flnt pllce field commanders; tblrd
place percussion a-nrd; outstandlag show
design; and ftnaUy, graad champion band ror
tbe day. Pictured aboft, leh to riabt, Josh Bar-

tels, Holly WUllams and Stepbalie Price, field
commanders, Wendy Clark, April Hudson, IIICl
. Beth Clark. (OVP photo by.Mindy Kearns.)

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