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•

'

Page16 • The Daily Sentinel

FDA, margarine
maker in showdown
By LAURAH

NE~RGAARD

AP Medical Writer

WASHINGTON - A new margarine touted a.&lt; a way to ~elp Americans reduL-c their dto!e,terol level,
ha."' a pmhl~m : The gn\'emm~nt '-ays
its maker i&lt; trying h&gt; .ell it illegally.
~~.:Neil

Con,umer PrnOucl' plan~

10 scll Benecol margarine nationwi&lt;k
nell year. and had set the tir't h!,t marketing for next week in Pont and.

Ore.
But the FQOd and Drug Administration warned the company Thursday that it is violating the law in
al!empting to sell Benecol as a
dietary supplement insttad )lf a.&lt; a
food subject to government approval.
If McNeil persi•l&gt;. FDA said it could
even seize the product from grocery
shelves.
It is a matter ··that. we rel!ard .as
very serious:· FDA IOod chief-Joseph
Leviu wrote Thursday to McNeil.
McNeil spokesman Ron Schmid
&lt;aid the company still plans to go
ahead with the test marketing but will
me&lt;! with FDA to try to resolve the
illsue.

.. Ben&lt;col ha.&lt; been proven to be
safe in numerous clinical studies and
through the consumption of over 120

million ~. rvings in Finlanu.·· Schmid

said ... This provides remarkable
htalth henetits ...
Benecol margarine is a low-fat oil
mixed ·with an ~ngredieri1 derived
from pinetrees,"called si.(os!anol,thal
appears to help prevent the bddy l'rom
absorbing a~ much di~tary c.:holestcrol
a.&lt; it normally would. Created in Fin-

land. 11 j, ... uch a

hug:~ «ll~r

tht!r.: Ihat

'ror~'

\."annot lc:ep ~hdve~ Moclied.
e\c:n ;.U priL:c:~ !&lt;.IX limes higher than
regular margarine.
McNeil has o,aid it plans to sell
Benecol as a dktary supplement nnl a fc•xl. That is imponant•legally,
because Congres. in I\1114 lan·ely
exempted dietary supplements !~om
FDA regulation.
. Until now. mo'l dietary supplements have been pills. powder. nr
1onics. Benecol.. ip L:OntrJ't. i' a yel ·
low spread for pe-ople to put on their
lPaslthat will sell right next to regu l~r buller and marg~rine . in lhe g"ffi.
eery store.
That is not a dietary supplement,
the FDA in&lt;isted. Benecol is clearly
a food. and it i., made: from an ingredient never be(ore !-.old in this country. the regulators said.
.. We don't actually know what
this sull1&lt;tance is." said FDA Deputy
Commissioqer William Schultz. .. To
a.&lt;Sure·lhe safety of the food supply.
... give FDA that data and let us look
at.it.''
Federal law·says that to sell here.
new food ingredients must either win
FDA approval or he cenilied by qualified expens as a generally safe substance. something the aJ;enL:y saiQ has
not been June:.
If a food advertises . itself as
improYing hcallh - suL:~ as by low·
ering cholesterol ;_ the law says
FDA also must agree there is proof of
that claim.

•

Elderly face confusing choices
as their HMOs quit Medicare
"They have In go

Yellow smiley
face top choice

Good Tunes presents·
-Mr. Mid-West · All Male Review
sda N vember 3rd
7pm to lOpm
.ts on sale ·'now!
992-7986

ELECT

er
Leadership for Southeast Ohio
94th Ohio House District " ... to put the people of the 941h House District above all else and strive
to protect the work force or Southeast Ohio."
.
.

/

. Paid for by: Oiler for Stale Representative Committee Karen S. Williams Trees .. P.O. Box 321 Rutland, OH 45775.

St nnewhere.

these older people who can't really
affonJ everything," she "lid . .. It's so

scary.··

Crafted with Saturday's college results
pride
Celebration concert slated

than 7.400 Medicare customers in
Maryland. Nonhem Virginia. the
District of Columbia and Delaware
that it' will cut them off Jan _ I.
.. The truth really i' that there is a
long le.ad time... Sammi' ~aid. n~ing
that hrrcmnpany is offering dero.uled
advice. including former com(&gt;(tiiM·
phune num~rs .
However. ~ome adv,x:ates for the
elderly and disabled worry nul all
in ~tum nee com·Panies will be as forth-

- Feature on C1

•

tmts":'

Many retirees and disabled Amer·
icans have heard about HMO closings in tile news, bin others are still
in the dark. The plans are required to
provide wriuen notice directly to coming.
.
.. If people ~on't get the right
enrollees by Nov. 2. Service willter·
informalion. theY may nut knoW
minale on Dec. 31.
"One of the things I would want their rights." said Diane ArL:her of
consumers 'to do is not panic when New York\ Medicare RiJ;hls Center.
Fur about 47.(XXl nf those affectthey get the leuer," said Beth Sam·
mis, spokeswoman for Mid Atlantic . etl by HMO dosing., nationwide!.
th.!re Will be no "chuice bul to return
Medical Services Inc .
The company's Optimum Choice 10 traditional Medicare
cuvemge.
. '
health plan ha.&lt; already ,notilied more

are

NOTICE LADIES

'

Argento .aid she will he able to
manage if she ha.' to spend a lillie
more. but 'he is worried about friends
who are not as healthy or well niT.

Most HMO&lt; offer more benefits.
WASHINGTON !APl- C~ther­
ine Argento i~ among about ~UXIO often including prescription drug and
olderly nr di.abled Am~ ric an' who--.: dental coverage •.and lower out-ofhealth plan&lt; are leaving Medicare by JN&gt;Cket ~osts than the traditio)lal
Jan. I. Lile lnany in th~ same 'ilua- Medicare ;ystem. in which doctor's
~ills go dir&lt;ctly to the government.
tiun. 'ht: i.'\.nnt sure what to lio.
Th~ plans limit 1;ovemmenl costs,
··Jt\ nerite·wrac.:bn~ . I've been on
the phone for IWU weeks, .. said the too. because they provide all the care
75-year-old grandmother from White a patient needs for a fixed monthly
cnntr;Jcl pri1.·e. Lawmakers have bee•n
P.lains, N_Y.
,
People whose ~ealth plan~ are keen tu encour.1_ge enrollment
But at the 'ame lime. Congress
leaving Medicare still will have
health insurance. But they race con- and President &lt;;linton Ia.&lt;~ year agreed
fusing choices: for many. the change In hold down payment~. to the HMOs
and other health care" providers to
will he costly . .
Like most , of -- the 6 million prup up the ca.&lt;h·JNX&gt;r Medicare proMedicare beneliciari~s who haYe gram.
As a result, som~ HMOs
joined the private health plans.
known as health maintenance orga- annuunL:eJ. this year .lhey will stop
nizations. in rece:nt yeo.~rs. Argento . serving the elderly and disabled in
19'!9 in parts of 30 states where costs
was looking to save ~oney.
ilf~ high Or CUS(Orriers
SL:arce.

WASHINGTON (APl - . Asked
to pick th~ symbols an~ event.' thal
best retlectthe 1970s, AIJlericans' top
choke wo.~s the yellow smiley face.
Have a nice day!
The popular children's telev.ision
show "Sesame Streel" finished s.econd,trailing by nearly I(Kl,!XXl votes
in balloting sponsored by the Postal
Service.
Americans acro,ss the country casl
their ballots in post ollices and via the
''
Internet for the subjects to be portrayed on a set of 15 stamps to be
issued next year.
.
Eanh Day was third. followed by
the disco dance craze and videocassetle recorders.
Among the subjects that failed to
through the local CAA HEAP oflkes. get enough votes to become stamp
Applications are also available for subjects were the Watergate s~.:andal.
the Regular HEAPwugram. which is the oil shonuge and the opening of
add!tional funUing assistance of a China.
, •.
non-emergency nature. Regular
"The Smitey Face hils endured
HEAP is a .federally-funded pro- over the years as·a very simple. recgram, designed 10 help eligible ognizable icon of hope and happiOhioans meet the rising cost of home ness... said . Poslmaster General
heating lhi~ wi·nter.
William Henderson. _.. It is appropri·
Total household income must be at ate that we continue this friendly traor below 150 perc; nt of the federal . dition on the nation's cards and letpoveny level. HEAP tiolps the area's ters. as we celebr.ate the 1970s on
neediest ~itizcns who may be on postage stamps." ' I
tixed inc.omes or among the working
The 1970s stamps will be part of
poor.
the post ortice's Cekbrute the CenHEAP helps senior citizens and tury series with stamp sets being
families with children avoid the i!tisued to con1memorate ea~h dt!cacJe
choice of "heating or eating" lhis oft he century. The public will 01lso he
winter. Regular HEAP applications in vi led In pick subject.&lt; li1r the 19KOs
will be acc~pted through March 31, 'and 1990s.
1999. The income guidelines are the
The smiley face collected 469.867
same for bolh programs.
votes. 'Postal officials I rt!ported.
Both Emergency HEAP and Reg- . "Sesame Street .. got 37R.7K5: folular HEAP applications can be com- ·lowed by Earth Day, 366.626: disco.
pleted at the Galli:t CAA HEAP 365.221: a11d VCRs. 344.729.
oftice. R59 !hird Ave .. Gallipolis, ur
The' rest of the 15 stamps to be
the Meigs CAA HEAP office at io.;sueJ are; the nation\ Bil·entenni~tl.
33105 Hiland Road: Pomeroy. '
344,134; televised .. Monday Night
Applkations will he taken from 9 Football," 33~.572; Pinsburgh Steela.m. until noon and I to 3:30 p.m .. ers football dynasty, 323,070; travel
Monday through Thursday.
via jumbo jets, 320,147: new devel. , This year. CAA is implement in~ opments in ' medical imaging.
the appointment system to apply .-.;-,. 292.K50;
Emergency' HEAP. To scheuule un
Also, women's rights movemem.
uppclintment. contact 9lJ2-Ii62'1 in 285.217; fashions of the 1970s,
Meigs County and 367-7341 in Gal· 2K4.555; Pioneer I0 spacecraft.
lia County.
·
256.330; racehorse Secretariat.
For more infnrrn~ttion, l'ontact the 251.370; television show .. All in the
Cheshire office nl 367-'1341/992- Family," 209.752. ·
6629. the Gallia County Outreach
In February the public picked dri - ·
Ollice at 446-6849, ur the Meigs ve-in,movies as the top stamp subject ·
County Outreach Oflice at992-2222. to commemoraie the 1950s

Pomero , Ohio

Friday, October 30, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Emergency HEAP application
period will begin on Monday
Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency announced that Emergency
HEAP forthe 1998-\111 heating se;Lo;on'
hegins Monday and will continue
through March 31. 1999.' ··
Emergency HEAP was created to .
provide tinancial aSsistance to lowincome households that are threatened with UisL:onnection of their
heating source. have already had•ser·
\lice disconnected. or have less than
a 10-day supply of bulk MI.
Emergen.;y HEAP funds can he
paid on behalf of an eligible household once per winter heating season.
The total payment of up to $175 must
be sulficienl 10 restore or continue
home hea!ing services.
·"
To he eligible for the progmm.
both the income guidelines and th~
c:mergcmcy re4Lilrement~ must be
met. Household income is de lined as
gross income for everyone living in
the home, except earned income of
dependent minors under 18.
Allowable income for size of
household is $12.075 for one person;
two persons. $16,275: three people.
$20.4J5: four people. $24,675: live
people. $2K.R75; six people. $33,075.
For households with more than six
members. add $4.2!Xl for each individual member.
Written proof of income musl be
provided for the current three or 12
months prior to th~ date of application. Examples of documents that
provide proof of income are payroll
stubs. statemerit li1r employers. public assistaflf..'~ paymenl histories or a
be.~etits leuer from Sodal SeCurity.
workers compensaiion. unemployment compensatinn, etc. Social Se~.:u ­
rity for each household member is
required.
·
A cnpy nf the applicant's fuel hill
or u. document verit'y"ing thl! pri rnary
fuel supplier must · be provided .
Applicants are also asked to provide!
a copy 1&gt;f their dectric bill. even if
they don't have electric heal.
A household wi,th heat supplied by
PUCO-regulated utilities · must be
enrolled on the Percentage of lnliorm:
Plan (PIP) to be eli~ible for emer·
gency benelits. Thi~ can he done

•

.'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

IDIOII wb

I. In t997 the department members logged 600 man-hours in equipment maintenance and repair. A
conservative estimale of the cost associated with these repairs if performed by an 'outside source would
, be $15,000. Equipment dov.nlime has been kept to a minimum by perfQrming these repairs in house arid
avoiding the delays associated with scheduling an outside service to perform these repairs.
2. The department spends epproximately $15,000 • $20,000 of its own money from fundraising in operating
and maintenance of department equipmenl each year. These are necessary expenditures which · the
d~partment absorbs which decreases the vUJa8es costs to support the department.
,
3. Ftre (.lall man-hours for 1997 were I 037. This does not include lhe time for clean up after, the caD.
4. All new members are required by the state to complete a 36 hour state firefighter class.,ln addition, the
department requires all new members to complete an in house program before being accepted to fuU
membership to the department. This program requires approx. 50 hours of the new members time. A
minimum of one ~ hour trainina class per month is held by the department for all members.
5. All fire pwnps, fire .hose and breathing epparutus are required to have yearly performance lests. These
tests are performed m house by the department members which is a direct lirwlcial savings to the village
versus contracting these tests out.
.
6. The department visits the schools within its response area during fii.e prevention week and talks to
students about fire prevention. Information is distributed to students in aU grades. Kindergarten students
are giveit "Child Finder" window emblems to aid in fire SC!'ne reseues. All kindergarten students are also
gtven a smoke detector to take home. The department spends approximately $1 000 each year on this
public education event.
7: The department is required to submit reports to the stale fire marshal on all calls ll\e department responds
to. The department is required 'to participate in the state reporting system to be eligible for state grants
which the department has applied for and receiv,ed in past years. In 1998, the department applied for and
refeived a grant for nearly $6000 to 'purchase three breathing apparatus to replace three outdated units.
ThOse units would have been purchased by the village if the grant had not been received. In 1996, the
department applied for and received a grant for nearly $5000 to purchase 5 !lets of turnout pants and
coats. This equipment would. ~ve been purchased by the village ifthe grant had not been received.
1 8. The departments sponsors 'the Easter egg· hunt each year. In addition to the man-hours involved, the
department spends approximately $1 000 a year on this program which is. also supported- by local ;
merchants.
·
9. The depahmenl sponsors a youth league team each year.

News
Watch
Hollister camp
looks to district
anger in letter
.to older voters
',

Did you know?
' I. The cost to equip one firefighter is approximlltely $2,000. This equipment is mandated by the state of
Ohio.
· '
2. The dept. currently has one certified instructor and 5 other members have taken the required pre testing
to aUow them to enroll in a 40 hour fire instructors class. This will allow the department to better train its
members in house.
"
3. Th~ dept. maintains a street book which aUows Ill! address to be looked up to aUow for our quickest
amval.
4. The dept. hoses dowp the streets in t!le downtown area yearly.
5. The dept. flow tests, flushes and paints aU hydrants in the village.
6. The department has 30 members who commit a large amount of time on a completely volunteer basis.
There is no compensation to dept. members.
·
7. Department equipment is cheeked weekly.to 6ixJ and .correct any problems.

Ohio 457f~

. M.AKING PREPARATIONS - Jane Frymyef
and Barbara Smith are seen preparing materl·
als for poll workers Friday at the Meigs Coungeneral election,' the last to ·include
statewide candidates, incluping the
governor's office.
\
Republican Patty Goeglein Pickens and Democrat Mick Davenpon
are the two candidates for county
commissioner. The winner replaces
Fred Hoffman, who was defeated by
Pickens in the May primary.
Voters will choose from four candidates for governor and lieutenant
governor: Bob Taft and Maureen

.

ly Board of Electlonti, while Rl" Smith, the

board'a director, tested the ballot tabulation
equipment.

O'Connor, the · Republican candi- and J. Ke.nneth Blackwell. a Repubdates; Lee&gt; Fisher and Michael B. ' ltcan. and Democrat Charleta Tavares
Coleman,the.Democratic candidates: will vie for the open seal in the Secand John R. Mitchel and Lawrence. retary of State's office.
Anderson, and Zanna Feitler and
A new state treasurJ:r will also be
John A. Eastman, the Refonn and elected. Joseph Deters is the Repubindependenl candidaies, respectively. lican candidate, and John Donofrio
Richard Cordray, a Demoerat. · the Democrat:
challenges Allomey General Betty
Gov. George Voinovich and
Montgomery, Democrat Louis Strike Democrat Mary Boyle are seeking
will face incumbent Republican Jim the U.S. Senate seatbeing·vucated by
Petro for the office' of stale auditor,
·(Continued on A2)
.

-·

.l

By KEVIN' KELLY
Graham said the site hu.• been sub·
Times-Sentinel StaN
di~ided, but can be modified to meet
BIDWELL- "It's great to know a customer's requirements.
now that you have the tools" is how
.. We' II custom every marketing
the senior vice president and chief package, be it manufacturing or othexeculive officer of the Gallia Coun- erwise, so by having it ready and
ty Chamber of Commerce described" available, it can be tailored to that
local development officials' feelings section of the industry." he explained.
about the completed development of
Chamber staff are no·w updating
the county's first industrial park.
and compiling information. ranging
Electric, water and sewer are now from wage structure to quality of life.
available at the Dan Evans lndustri· to answer questions for firms that
al Park, explained R.V. "Buddy" may be looking 10 locate in Gallia
Graham .
County. Graham added.
'
The park covers approximately
The chamber was chosen for a
200 acres off State Route 850 in · pilot marketing project by the Ohio
Springfield Township and already ha.' Department of Development duripg
nne tenant com mined to the site. ·
the summer. preparing ofticials to
The culmination of cooperative answer questions that may come
efforts between the chamber, Gallia from major manufacturers and busiCounty Community Improvement nesses.
Corporation and local government,
"It's beginning to work because .of
the park is n01w entertaining inquiries the pilot project a~d' lhe COIT\OJUnily
for potential tenants. through the being involved," Graham said.
chamber office. Graham.said.
In August, the chamber announced
"We. just got a call from a that Foster Sales &amp; Delivery Inc ..
prospect. and for the first time, we , Gallipolis, would be .the park's .first
can say that we have an industrial ·tenant. Because the site was devclpark in existence." he noted. "We can oped with local business retention as
tellthemthallhisisthetypeofprod· a goal, the . park is helping solve a
uct we have to aurae! busmess."
(Continued on A2)

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
congressional candidate is tryi~g to
use anger at Pre.lidenl Cl1ntoh
against one of his fellow Democ"
rats.
Ohio Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister,
a Republican, outlined in a leuer
sent this week to 9,000 older voters in the 6th Congressional District the rea"nns she believes Cl inton should resign. The lener goes
on to take to tusk Rep. Ted-Strickland, the DemtJCrat Hollister is trying to unseal in Tuesday's election.
Strickland has not · demanded
,•', Clinton's re~ignation. though · he
has said that if the evidence 1\'0S
sufficient he would consider votiilg
to impeach should that time come.
Generally. he believes Clinton has
done a good job.
Strickland\ , suppor,t of Clinton
.. should concern us all deeply."
Hollister's letter said ... Ted Strickland is simply out of touch with the
. needS of our country."
·
H?llister camp;1ign aide Scott
.Milburn said tht! mailing was an
opportunity to demonstr~lle an.area
cor dis~·greemc:nt between .the! candidates.
The issue hadn't been ;t visible
,part of the campaign before. but .. I
think it has been un underl'urrent:··
Milburn s;~id ... It could affect
By JILL WILLIAMS
turnout."
,
Times-Sentinel Staff
Strickland tried to shnog off the ·
BIDWELL - A near-extinct skill
whole thing, calling the leiter &lt;111
made it.&lt; way into Gallia County last
example of the "silly season" thai
week for the purpose of refurbishing ·
comes at the end of many camgrain mills at the site of the Jewel
.paigns. "I have decided to handle
Evans Family Foocl&lt; Mill.
in good grace their feeble attempts
After discovering that the live
to gel voles they so desperately · mills used to process grain were in
· need." he said .
need of repairs , tho Evans family
. called upon the 'xpertise of mill ·
wright John N. Lovell of Belvidere,
Good Morning
Tenn.
Believed to be one of three
rl!maining millwrights who practice
Today's tlliuu•·"adhttl
12 Sections '. 136 Pages
the an of dressing stones. Lovell was
contacted by Steve Evans through the
Calendars
C4&amp;5
Society for Preservation of Old Mills.
Classilieds- - -D3: Z
A 14-year mill-owner, Lovell
Comics
Insert
began to practice the trade to keep
Editorials
A4
keeping operating his own business ·
Along the River Cl
endeavors, and to assi st other mill
Obituaries
AS
owners in repairing their equipment. '
Sports
'
Bl-8
"It'll take three or four day s 10
0 1998 Ohio Valley l'ullli shing Co.
make any significant changes on this
one ~ill." Loven explained. "It's in

-

~·

.... . .

~

··~·

..

.'

about the county as they update data lor potential tenants ol the Dan Evans Industrial Park.

CHECKING THE LIST- Meredith Smith, )eft,
and SamanthJ Rumley of the Gallla County
Chamber of Commarce check Information

Meigs gears to stem
domestic violence ·
By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel StaN
POMEROY - November i~
' Domestic Violence Awareness "Month
and a series of c-la)ist!~ and workshops
will be held in Meigs County to help
recognize this under-n:ported crir:'e.
The Meigs County pruseL:Utln£
Attorney's Otlice. along with the Uni- .
versity of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Meigs Center.
are both sponsoring event ~ with
domestic violence and healing as the
primary focus. said Prosecuting
Anorney John R. Lentcs.
"The goals are twofold, " Lentes
said. The first goal is address the
•
issue of victimization, whil~ the se,cond goal is to address dependency
issues. lhc factors which trap women
PROVIDING EXPERTISE- John Lovett visited the Jewel Evans
and their children in violent domes·
Family Food Mill this week to provide his expertise on reshaptic situations."
Ing mill stones. A member of the Society for Preservation of Old
The events, which will be oiTered
Mills, he Is believed to be one of very few millwrights who still
free of charge to wpmen ages 16 and
practice the skill.
older will be in the hum of work·
shops.
seminars and a women's selfsuperior
by
millers
for
grinding
worse shape than we originally
defense
course. all to be held at the
wheat, Lovell explained that modern
thought. ..
Placing himself level to begin ll'ills cr1.1sh lhe grains. ~uring the URG/RGCC Meigs Center in Mid·
resurfacing the face of the 2.000 grinding process, causmg them to dleporl. Dates and times are as fol lows:
(Continued on A2)
pound french burh stone. considered

I

.

GALLIPOLIS -The outcome of a bond issue for the Gallipolis City
Schools is one of the highlights ofTuesday's election in GalliaCounty, which
will also decide contested races for two county offices.
Polling places in all 36 precincts will he open at 6:30 a.m. and close at
7:30p.m .. the Gallia County Board of Elections announced.
..
The 7.4-mill bond issue. calling for the construction of a new high school
. in Green Township. conversion of the currei11 Gallia Academy High School
into a middle school and other improvements, has been the subject of an
intense passage cam!'l1ign organized by a citizens' committee: Concerned Area
· Residents for Education.
The current GAHS is.overcrowded and unable to r(leet the demands of a
technology-based educatipn. the bond issue's propOnents said.
A rally in suppon of the bond issue. appearing on ballots iri 24 precincts.
ha.' been scheduled by the CARE Commi.nee for 4 p.m. Sunday in the Gallipolis City Park.
_ Also. voters will choose the witmer in races for a seal on the county board
of commissioners and for the county auditor's office.
Harold G. Montgomery •.,a Republican seeking a third consecutive term
as commissioner, is opposed by Democrat Ca.sby "Skip" Meadows Ill . Meadows, who entered the race after the f1ling deadline for the May primary. won
· the nomination with 298 write-in ballots.
·
Larry M. Betz, a Republican who's been the county treasurer since 1989,
is seeking the county auditor's position that will be vacated next March by
Ronald K. Canaday. who c)1ose not to seek re-election after four terms. Betz \
is opimsed by Democrat Don Holcomb. an employee of the auditor's office.
Running without opposition for a second tenn is Common Pleas Judge
Joseph L. Cain, while Dr. Daniel H. Whiteley- is running unopposed to till
an unexpired term as coroner. He was appointed by the Republican Central
Commillee in 1997 following the resignation of Dr. Edward Berkich .
Regionally. incumbent State Rep. John A.Carey. R-Wellslon. is seeking
a third tenn representing the 94th District of Galli a, Meigs. Jackson and east· •
em l.aw!J'nce counties, and is opposed by Democrat Bill Oiler of Gallia County, a loeal United Mine Workers. of America otlicial.
Stale Sen. Michael Shoemaker. D-Boumeville. appointed to fill the unex(Continued on A2) .

Industrial park ready
t~ attract prospects

Millwright steps in
to refurbish stone
at local business

•
•

'

.

Practicing
a rare skill

.How Will we P'"'.." a Dew trui:k and what will It cost me?

2J6 Race St.,

Vol. 33 . No. 38

Attention focuses on·school
bond issue outcome in Gallia

'·
By BRIAN J. REED
Times-Sentinel StitH
POMEROY - A county-wide
levy proposal for the Carleton School ·
and Meigs Industries and the election
of a county commissioner top the
local ballot for Meigs County voters
on Tuesday.
Statewide offices, and races for .
state representative. state senator and
represenlati ve to Congress wi II also
be decided.
.
Rita Smith, director of the ~igs
County Board of Elections, projects
a 40 percenl'Voter turnout for Tuesday's election, despite attempts by the
Ohio secretary of state and the local
board of elections to encourage vot, er turriout.
Secretary of State Bob Taft said
f.r.iday that5!l percent of Ohio voters
statewide were expected to go to the
polls. Just over 57 percent of
statewide voters participated in the
1994 general election.
ln comparison, 70 percent of vot·
ers turned oullo vote in the 1992 general election, a recent record, com~
pared to 55 percent during the 1994

W..t we do lor tlte community.

Pd. for by Middlcpcrt Fire

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant· November 1, 1998

Meigs voters
face Carleton
School levy, ·
commission
race at polls

I. The truek is 18 years old. Normal lite is expected to be 20 years. The reliability of the truek will continue
to Iiiii as its age increases. A new.truek will take 2 years to receive once ordered.
2. The lnlcks pump has jUJt. barely passed' its pump lest the last two years. These tests are for a short
duration of time, approximately one hour. If the truck was needed to perform under these conditions
during an actual erpergency, it could not for any length of time.
3. The trucks enaine had jUJt enough power when originally pwchased. W'tth age, its power has fiillen off
and it struggles to provide enough power for 100% pwnping.
4. The trucks body and water tank are steel and are beginning to rust. New pumper bodies are constructed
of alwninum or stainless steel and water tanks are construcied of several norunetallic materials.
S. The trucks cab is open in the area firefighters ride to the fire ~ which eKposes them to the elemenls of
the weather and decreases their safety. When purchased in 1980 this was the standard, however
'
requirements now call fur the cab to be enclosed 10 protect all occupants.
6. With Engine 12 nearly 20 yean old and outdated, pirts availability has been a problem. J'his problem will
only incn:asc: as the ttucks age passes the 20 year mark.
7. Engine 13, our other pumper, is 12 yean old. Presently this lruck goes out first on virtually all calls as it
is the salest most reliable pumper we itave. However if this truck continues going out first on all calls, ·
then its reliability due to the normal wear and tear will drop. We will eventually have two pumpers which
are not reliable.
·

PLEASE SUPPORT THE .DEPARTMENT BY VOTING
YES ON THE PROPOSED 1 Y2 MILL LEVY ON
NOVEMBER3

Details on
pageA2

ttdittt

'

tltg truck Pm'l Rpja«d;

A new truck will cost approximately $300,000 - $325,000.
.
The department plans· lo contribute IIPProximately Y. of that cost. The department has been saving for
several years in order to assist with the replacement of this truck.
• The d~me?t will, if~ially able, continue to contribute toward the cost ofihis replilcementlruck.
• All majOr equtpment will have been purchased for this truck by the department and viUage. This would
include supply hose, breathing apparatus and radios along with various other smaller equipment This
equipment costs between $30,000 - $35,000. '
·
• The department proposes a I V. mill tax levy to as~ist with the purchase of.the new tru~k. A 1 y, mill levy
~ cost. the owner of a $60,~ home appro~tely $28/year (less than $3 a month) according to .
info~tton li'om the county audttors office. This levy will generate approximately $22,000 per year, all
of which .would apply to the replacement truck which would be lirwlced for approximately 15 years.
• Money currently ge~rated ~m l~es fur ~ protection is paying for other depanment equipment with
no excess funds available. This equipment will not be paid off for 8 more years.
• The department has not had an increase in funding for moR than 15 yean. ·

81
C2

Voters to decide Jocal, state races on.Tuesday

THE MIDDLEPORT FIRE DEPARTMENT NEEDS
YOUR SUPPORT. PLEASE TAKE A MOMENT TO
READ THE FOLLOWING FACTS
Tbe dept. leedllo !!place IIIIIC ll. Tbe lo!'PIII 111 tlte

HI 60s
LOW40s

•

· Nov. 12 - Women's SelfDefense Course, 4:3tl-5:30 p.m.
• Nov. 14 - "Memory and Healin{' Journal Workshop, 9 a.m.-noon.
• Nov. 24 - "Dealing with
Depress ion and Building seirEsteem " Workshop. 1-3 p.m.
The· events re4uire ~arly registration as space is limited. Wnmcn ·may
sign up ~ for thl!se workshops at the
URG/RGCC Meigs Center as well as
the prosecutor's oflit·e in Pomeroy.
All m:oterjal will he provided.
A gun safety course is also
planned and the lru=ation and time
will be announced at a later dale. Other activities for the month include
radio interviews, as well as a seminar
en elder 'abuse slated 111 the Meigs
County Senior Citi zens' Center on
Nov. 10 fmm 11 - 11:45 a.m.
"We have found a lot of women
huYe tuken to COJrrying guns," Lentes
said. "They need to know how to handle them safely."
A formal announcement will also
he made on another program coming
to Meigs County on Nov. I R. focus(Continued on A2)
i

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH ·· Poln1 Pleasant,

Clouds will increase
across state Sunday

pelr:IIDr. • Lcntes said. "It's a vastly
Lynch. program director for the unreported cnme: ~peeling no age
\'iclims and prevenlion of domestic Me!igs Viclim~ Assi~lance Progr.1m. or social b-.urier;." lbe only common
violence.
In Meigs County. an aver.1ge of97 denominator, he -.aid. i&gt; about~ perLcntes said it wa. only throogh the domestic violence ca.~ have been cent of the case' involve alcohol. the
joint efforts of the Violence Against reponed per year, according to fig- 'arne a.' in 1110'&gt;1 crimes in Meigs
Women Program and the Meigs Vic· .ureo from the pro&gt;eeutors office. County.
In Ohio. the liN dome"ic viotims Assistance Progr•ms. which are l11e average age of domeslic viole""-e
administered through his office. and vi&lt;'lims is 31. with males commiuing l~nce cnnviction fur~ person is con~
sitlered to be a misdemeanor. but &gt;ecthe URG/RGCC Meigs Center that 77 percent' of the offenses.
ond
and 'ub&gt;equent offeno;es are
this month of acrivities is madr
Of those report.•. appro•imately
available to the women of Meigs 20 per year result .in guilty convic- con&gt;idered Jelonies. he uplained.
County.
,
In addiii~n. new federJI regulations. whi~h can have serious. longCoordinwors are Gina Pellegrino- lasting rejkrcussion.s on the offend- · tion~ 'lay anyone convicted of a
domestic violence·related offense.
Pines. director of the URG/RGCC er. Lcntes said.
Meigs Center: Connie Dodscln, pro"Tflere is no typical viclim or per- 001 nece&lt;..arily dome&lt;tic violence. is
ineligible to pos'iess a firearm_
gram director for the Violence
"That's any firearm. • said Lcntes.
st,ressing 'he law includes sporting
.arms like rifles and 'hotguns. "It
(Continued from A 1)
ong on the safely or domestic violence

Audience rips i.nto Taft,
r,·sher du,.;ng .#ina
' I Ui
,leba·II"'e
I II
r1

'·

I .I

CLEVELAND CAP)- Lee Fishe;and Bob Taft didn 'i have to attack
each other at their third and tinal
gubernatorial debate on Fri~ay.
The audience did it for them.
One of Fish&lt;r's Democratic supponen;wentafterTaftontheissueof

whether could be provided for in
some lesser-skill facility.··
The questioner and Fisher both
too~ th'a lto mean Taft wou ld consider removing sen ior citizens from
nursing homes.
But Taft said that's not what he

nursing home care during the forum

meanl.

sponsored by the City Club of Cleveland.
A Republican Taft supporter asked
Pisher to explai9· hi s " !lip-flop"
from being againstlhe death penalty
in the early 1980s to supporting it
now. ' .
.
'
. "Astheywereattheirtwoprevious
debates. Taft and Fisher were joined
by Reform Pany candidate'· John
ll!fitchel and ZlnnaFeitler, the Natural Law Pariy's candidate .who is.on
Tuesday's ballot as an independent.
Neither Taft. whom . polls have
shown either leading or in a statistical tie with his Democratic opponent.
nor Fisher mentioned each other in
their opening statements.
Tat! promised to l]lake education
his top priority while Fisher said he
will stand up for "real people, with
real problems."
But the debate then shifted 10 a 25minute session during which the
candidates took questions from the
audience. That's when the attacks
began.
A Fisher supporter pulled out a
story from Wednesday's edition of
The Plain Dealer in which Taft was
q'uoted a.s saying he wauld try to sa~e
m\)ney for education by makin g cuts
in· Medicaid spending.
The story 4uotes Taft as saying
"one of the fssues,that may bear looking at is whether all the patients who
are now in nursing home ~ really, in
. fact. need nursing home care or

' The GOP candidate said he was
suggesting more op1ions shou ld be
available to patients. so peop le who
would be better off in anassisted-living center. rather than a nu rsi~g.
home. would have that choice avai lable to them .
•·1 reject the premise of your
question," Taft sa id to the audience
member. Later. Taft told reporters he
has " no plans to rem ove any per~ooo
from a nursing home who is there
today." But Fisher said he planned to
keep bringing the issue up in the campaign's final weekend.
Fisher had to defend homself when
a Taft supporter asked him to explain
hi s change of he&lt;~rt on the death
,penalty. The Democrat sa id hi.s work
with crime victims led him to sw itch
hi s position about 10 years ago.
· · .. I came to br lieve there are some
crimes so vicious, "" heinous. they
dese rve the death penalty." he said.
Feiller got the biggest audience
reaction of the aftern&lt;ivn. She sugges!ed early on that the crowd refrain
fro'!' applauding. which could interrupt the.debate, but instead cheer like
the hearing-impaired by waving their
hands ovenheir heads.
,At first. the crowd did as 'she
asked- prompting ripples of·]aughter as the audienco. of about 650,
mostly business people, waved"their
hands.

imiball ~imts- ientintl
Reader Services

,
(USPS .525·800)
Comm unlly Newsp•~r Jluldlnp, INc.

I

Correction Polley
·

Our main concern in all stories is lo be
accunf.e, n you know or' an error In 1
.nory, call the newsroom at: G•llipolls:
(740) ""'-lJIJ; nr Pom•ruy: (740) 9'!2·
11.5.5. We will check your in rormalion and

.

makr a correction ir warr.anttd.

News Department
Gallipolis
The main number i~ 446-2342. Department extensions art:
•
E~r.ecuclve Editor...... ......., ........... E~r.t. 123

Manoglna Editor. .... ........:.........:. Ext. 118

Puhl i!ihc:d every Suntl ay, R 2.~ Third Ave ., Gallipo"
lis, Ohio by the Ohio Valley Puhh~hing Company.
S~a:umJ daM pustagc p&lt;Jid at Gallipolis, Ohio
4563\. Entered as ~cun d das..~ mailing mancr at
Pomeroy: Ohio Pnst Office:.

Membrr. The A~'ilteiatcd l'rcss an d the Ohio

Newsp~pc::r Association. '
Poltm•lter: XnJ ~r.klr~ss 'corrcclinns 10 The
Sunday Timc.~ · Scn l incl. H25 ThiuJ Ave .. Gallipo·
lis. Ohio 456J I.
.

SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATF.S
By Carrier or Mulor ROute
One Wtck ............... ... ... : ....... .... $! .2.'i
One YcHr ... ....................... ,...... .,$65 00
S I N(~U: COI'Y I' RI CE
Sunda):. .................... ........ ..........$1 .00
No subscripl ion by mail pcm1incd ln arca.'i who.:n:

, City Editor. .............. ~ .... .... .. ........ Ext. Ill
Ufutyle ......................... ...... ....... . Ext. 120
hume ~arrier ~rvkc 1.~ available .
Sports. ..................... .. .. ........... ~... Ext. 122 . The Sunday Times.Scntincl will nul

News. ............................. ...........,...E~r.t. 119

To Send E-Mail
gal111bunr@curckand.com

be rcspom;[.

blc for lklv •lll.·c p~ymcm s m.ldc It) carm: r~ .
.Puhlishcr rt~rvu the right to odjus1 rat~s dtrring
lhe, suh5el lpllon pc111lll. Suh~cripltllll rate , hangu
m1y

be tmp l cmcnt~d ny changrng the Juration(){

lhc sutll&gt;CripiiiiO.

ne

News Department
Pomeroy
main number Is 991-2155. Deplrt·

ment exlensions are:

Ge nual Man1ger......... ...............EX1. 1101
NewJ .................. ......... .... ............ .. E~r.t.J I02
or: Ext. 1106

Dally •nd Sumby
MAlt SURSCRIPTION
ln~de Gallla County
!3 Wc,eks. ....................... .... .S27 JO
26 W~ch .......... .. .... ............ S53 R2
52 Wcc:ks ............... ..... ........ S!fl5 .5r1
R•lt~ Outside G1111ia County
JJ W~::ch....... ................... ...S29.2.."i
26 Weeks.....
.. ........... .S.'ili.M
.52 W~,;ck\,

... ....... SI0\1.72

&gt;et.

• .

"Law enforcement is aware of
what is going on." Lenir&lt; said, "but
officer- are frustrated by going out
lime and lime to the sa~ hotL~."

Meig' County dollle'llic violence
victims can calll-8774-CRJMES 24
hou"' a day, toll-free anywhere in
Meigs County. Lenres.
.
The Violenc~ .Against Women
Program will offer a wide range of
~rvices.

including transportalion.

...,fields E.cavating. Kitts Hill.
began work on the sewer install inion
pliase last spring, one of the final
cqmponents in the site's developmen!&gt; Creation of the park's infrastructure was as overseen ori-sile by
Bob Condee. the former interim Gallipolis city manager. ,

cost itl!ms indude labor anti trans-

GALLIPOLIS- The li~rary sys'
tem in Gallia COunty is noting its
IOOth annivefSllry on Sunday. Nov. I.

The history of the county's libr.uy
10erviL·e began with a donated collec·

tion hous~d in lhe Lupton Building
on Second Avenue in G.allipuJi,. The
library was originally staffed by vol·
The liN library building appeared
in 1'! 03.ThisCarnegiebuildingwas

financed by lm:al funds and a

Camej1ie grant. and was operated by
local ta'"s and donations. In 194M.
the facility officially · became the
Gallia County District tiorary. oper• ating on a countywide property tax
and state funding .
The 1940s saw lib!ary services
expand to a new level with the addi.. lion of a bookmobi le. In 197R. the
library remained th~ county .district

Pr~~n~~~}~1~ a rare ski II

Industrial park ready
(Continued from A1)

·

"It's been a lonl! ~nd drawn-out
process, but when you work with
government p;ograms, it takes time ,"
·
Graham said.
growth problem faced by the firm 's
owners that could have meant its
moving out of the county.
Foster Sa le~. currently based ow
Ea.stern Avenue. is finalizing plans 10
move to the park in lhe near future ,
Grahani said.
The placement of the, trucking

Eleci

LEGAL NOTICE ·
The Puhli ~.: Utilities Commis-

sion of Ohi o hus set f'nr public

hearing Case No. 98- 10 1-EL-

, EFC to rev iew the cakulnti on
of Ohio Power Company·~
proposed mid-year &lt;ldjuslnlcnt
to th~ c i C~t ric rue.I cunlponc~t.
Thi s hcming 'is sc hcLiult•d to
hcgin at the t.:ommission

oiTiccs ul llt :llO a.m., on
Nuvcmhcr 2, 199.8, ISO East
II road Street, Columbus,
Ohio 43215.
Fur &lt;-t&lt;.klitnlnlll inl'or111ati on
regard in£ this math.:r. View the
Commissio1l's wch p:1gc at
htlp;Uwww.pur.stah:,nh,us

Ill'

the Cmnmbs inn 's
llullinc at 1-MOil-686· I ;70 or

t:n nta c t

in Cotumhus til 461i·8180 .
P;articipnnts in the prot..:l;cding
may request n sign lnngUagc

Don
Holcomb

portation," Graham said.
The industrial park concept was
first proposed earlier in this decade.
but gained momentum when it was
HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION, CAUV, AND DOG TAGS
reactivate(( by the chamber and CIC
HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION- Homeowners 65 yeafi or older or permanently
in 1994.• Fund ing from the county,
disable&lt;!
are eligible if their househoi&lt;J income is $16,500 or less per year. This
city of Gallipolis and Bob Evans
progmm reduces the taxable value of the..properly, thereby reducing the tax,es
.• Farms Inc.; formed the loca l basis o( owed . Currentl y, appl ications can be filed betwe~n the first Monday in January
a financing. package for tbe esliollat - ' through the fir st Monday in March in the Auditor's office.
·
ed $2 molloon cost of de v,ltop ing the
CAUV (Current Agricultural Usc Valuc)-This allows for property ownerS who
site that grew to include federa l and
have 10 atres or more or have produced an annual gross ii"icome of $2,500 to
. state money. '
receive lhc CAUV These applications arc also riled the firS! Monday in January

Auditor

Meigs voters face levy

Attention focuses on .bond issue

lasl ruur yea rs.

means no hunting . You can 't carry a

The root cau~ of dome&gt;lic vioJeon are usually ~wed in childhood.
when the perpelrliiOB and victims
frequently willieS.• violence between
their parents. Lentes .aid.
"Every perpetra1or has a reason.
They always think they are justi(oed
jn it and that it\ nobody'• bu.•ine.s;
he •aid. "You can't &gt;Oive that mind-

gun or have' a gun in your home. You medical euminatiuns and child can!.
cannot be a gu.n-carrying police offi- . all wit,!Joul the filing or charge.,
cer or join the military.· he added. ~,.., 'Lcntes .aid.
library, but changed its location an~ · ' In Meigs County, the bulk of ca.&lt;"Even if they just want someone
name by he~oming the Dr. Samuel L. · e. involve l)larried couples or Jive -in to talk to. we are there for them,· he
Bos&lt;ard Memorial Libr..y at 641 boyfriend.&lt; and girlfriends, Lentes added.
Second Ave.
,
said.
Homebound services became an
. additional service provided by lhe
library in t 988.
By 1991 . the demand for library
for demon stration purposes." he
~rvices deemed it nece,sary for a
The grain mill which Loven tendbuilding expansion. funded by com- ed to during his near week-long outadded:
munity support and a federal grant. ing in Gallia County lias been at its
Loven and his wife, Jane. are th~
This expanSion a llowed for an entire current locati on si nce / he construcowners of the 1873 Falls Mills in
department dedicated to reference tion of the Jewel Evans Mill in 19&amp;3.
Belvidere. Featured un the National
~rvices to library patron".
Lovett suspects ihat due to tile
Register of Historic Places. the oper"We don't know ·what the future type of stone that its' origin 'was posation features a warer- ~wei"ed grain
holds for library service. but our goal .&lt;ibly at a stone quarry in Paris.
mill and mu:;cum. country store and
is to grow wi.th the 'ne~d s and interHe explained that hundreds of log cabin bed and breakfa.&lt;l.
e~ts of th~ communi l i~s we serve,'' years ago, the 'stones were impuned
The Jewel Evans Mill. additionalLibrary Director Betty Clarkson said. to the United States f~om Europe to
ly, has' six operating mills lhat are
"We invite everyone to join us Nov. offset the weight of the mast.
used in its production plant.
I to celehrate reading in Galli a Coun"This is samething I do on the ·Jose nutritional value.
ty."
side." Lovett said of his northern trip_
Lovell believes that the difficulty
"There is such a renewed interest in of finding someone to perform mainthe investment of mills right now.
tenance on the age-old equipment ha.&lt;
"So many owners would like to given way loJhe contemporary-sty le'
.
get them back in\o.,working condition mills. · · ·
firm at the park is a plus for its devel opment because low-costtranspunalion is ava11able 10 future tenants. he
added .
"It's a real coup and a great
attraction for a trucking operation to
be based at the site. because when
you look at manufacturing. the high

(Continued from A 1)
John Glenn.
In a closely-watched regionalr.ce.
U.S. Rep . Ted Strick land, DLucasville. is challenged by Lt. Gov.
Nancy Hollister.
In statehouse races. Slate Sen.
Michael Shoemaker. D-Bourneville.
who was appointed to replace· Jan
Michael Long, is chaHenged by
Republican Lee Thatcher. and State
'
Rep. John Caroy, R-Well stnn, will
(~ontlnued from A 11
face Democrat Bill Oiler.
The chief justice of rhe Ohio
pi red term of )an Michael Long. who resigned his 17th District seat in 1997
Supreme
Court and two· Supreme
to become a probate judge. is seeki ng election to a full four-year term. A forCourt
justices.
and a judge for the
mer slate rep resentati~e. Shoemaker is opposed by Republican Lee ThatchFourth District Court of Appeals will
er, a Portsmouth _bus inessman.
.,
also
be elected. The political afli lia Gallipolis attorney David T. Evans, a Republican, and Athens County
liQn
of those Guldidatcs , does nut
Common Pleas Judge L. Alan Galdsberry, a Democrat, arc vy ing for a seat
appear
on the ballot .
'
on the Fourth Dostnct Cuurl of Appeals thai will be vacated by Judge Earl
The
Village
of
Middieporl
has
E. Stephenson ,or Portsmouth .
I
placed on the ballot a 1.5-onill pcrLocal tax i.s~u:s. appearingon the ballot an·additional 3 mills for fire pronwne.
nt levy for the p.urpose or fire
tection on Spnngt1eld Town,hop. and renewal s af a. 1-milllire protection levy
prot~c tion, and the Meigs Board of
for Hamson Tuwnshap and a three-tcnlhs of a mill fire protection ll!vy in Rac Menial Retardation and Developcoon Township.
mental Disabilities is asking fnr the
Guy an Township is seeking passage of a live-year, 1-milllevy for garbage
approval of a I:H- mill, live-year levy
and refuse disposal.
•
·
for nper:ation. cap ital improvements
. Ri~ Grande h;os put before village voten; a one-quarter of I percent increa.se
m Its ~ncome tax fur fire pr:ott;ct ion equipment, suppli e;s and apparatu s, to

. In Gallipolis. voters wi ll decide a charter amendment increasi ng Ihe spendl~ g a~ount for the ci ty manager without a pproval frum the Ci ty Commi ssoon trom the current limit of $2.500 to the maximum al!owable by slate law.

Again&gt;! Women Progr~: and Chri!&gt;li

Gallia's library system
, notes 1OOth·anniversary

untt:ers.

.

Sunday, NOvember 1, 1998

Meigs gears to stem domestic violence;

By The Alaocllted p,...
. lbe Nwional W~ath~r Service forecasc increa&gt;ing cloudiness Saturday
Rlghlm Ohoo a.' ""me moisture wa.' pushed up from the MJUth. Temperatures remamed on the ~ool side with low' in the upper 30 and 40s. slightly above normal for this time of year.
Skies will tum mostly cloudy from west to ea.'l Sunday with highs from
the mid 50s to the mid 60!;.
Th~ threat of precipitation ~ill return late Monday ~sday a.&lt; moi'ture os pushed nonh onto Ohoo.
· /
Temperatures atross ibe state varied greatly Sajurday. At4 a.m .• Cleveland Hopkins Airport reponed 34 degrees, while it wa.&lt; 5 1 a few mile&lt;
away at Burke Lakefront Airpon on the Lake Erie shore had a temperature or 51. Elsewhere. temperatures r•nged from around 40 in the Akron .
·
area to near (lO at Cincinnati Lunken Airpon.
The recooi high temperature for Saturday at the Columbus weather station wa.&lt; 83 degrees in 1950. The record low temperature wa&lt; 20 degrees
in 1887.
Sunrise Sunday·will be at 7:01 a.m.
Weather fol"ft'aSt:
Sunday...lncrea&lt;ing cloudiness. Highs 60 tel 65 . .Nonhw"'t wind 5 to
10 mph.
Sunday night. .. Mostly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s.
Manday,.. Cioudy with a chance of rain. Highs near 60. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Monday night... Cloudy with a chance of rain. Lows in the lower 40s.
Extended forec:ast:
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain . High• 55 to 60.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. Lows 40 to 45 and highs 55 to 60.
Thursday... Panly cloudy. Lows 35 to 40 and highs in the mid and upper
50s.

•

wv

and maintenance at the Carleton
School and Mei'gs Industries.
.
. In the county's only school le vy
o ~s ue , the Meigs Local School Di ~­
trict is ask ing for the renewal of a
five -mill, fi ve-year permanent
improvements levy.
Polls will open in Meigs County
at 6:30a.m. and close at7 :30 p.m. on
Tuesday.

through the first Monday in March.
.
A1~othe~ serviCe that my boss a.nd cu~rcnt Auditor, Ron Canaday, has always
prov.Jdcd IS ~h~, s,alc ~f D~g Tags 10 vanous locations lhroughout1Gallia County.
HaYmg parUC!paled m thiS myself, I know dog owne rs often express how much
they like this serVice. f want to assure you that if I am elected Auditor, 1 will
continue in the same manner.
I realize the importance of these services to all of you and if J·am elected
·
Auditor, I pledge to provide a fast ahd courteous response to anyone who would
like to tlctcrmine if they. arc eligible for .the Hoinestead Exemption or CAUV.
Anyone may, call or stop by the Audi'tor's office far a review of indi\:idual .
circumstances.

Elccl DON HOLCOMB AUDITOR for COIIIinucd prompt, courteous,
and reliable se rvice.

'

Paid for by the Candidate

No·~- 1 .1..

On November 3, 1998, voters will go to the poils and cast ballots to eleCt people
at the Local, State and National levels.
'·
One race that sometimes doesn't get much publicity is for the Court of Appeals.
Judge~ races are traditionally more reserved and low key, and in fact, are,
·
required to be so.
. There may have been a misunderstanding that I am endorsing David ·Evans in
the upcoming election. Let me make it perfectly clear that this is not so.
Two names will appear on the ballot next Thesday for Judge of ourFourth
District Court of Appeals. As a practicing attorney for many years, and now as
Prosecuting Attorney for Meigs County, I have had occasion to know both men
And even though "Negative Campaigning" seems to be the direction too many
campaigns have gone, I can't say anything bad about either man.
My personal cho'iee for"Judge of, the Court of Appeals is Judge Alan
Goldsberry.
.. Alan Goldsberry i.5 a Judge and Has presided over hundreds of cases in his own
A.thens County. He has served with distinction as a visiting Judge here in Meigs ·
county. He has even served as a visiting Court of Appeals Judge.
An attorney who has practiced before Judge Goldsberry can attest to his
honesty, integrity, fairness and intelligence. He knows the law and applies it fairly.
Judge Goldsberry is. a .capable administrator. He court has become a model of
organization for other courts all Qver the state.
It is these qualifications that will make Judge Alan Goldsberry an outstanding
Court of Appeals Judge.
.
So if you haven't heard a lot about the Court of Appeals race, it is still one of
the most important votes that .will be c.ast on Thesday. For a .)udge of the Court of
Appeals we nee~ the BEST. Judge Alan Goldsberry is the BEST. He is my
personal choice and I encourage the election of Judge Alan Goldsberry as Judge of
the Fourth District Court of Appeals.
·

GALLIPOLIS - The body. like
fine-tuned cw. need., atune-up every
now and then.
With thai ~timent in mind_ Holzer Medical Center &lt;oiJ.;erved Ma.sage
lber"Pf Week &lt;ki. 2S-31 to inlroduc&lt;.' ma.•sa:;e thcrap1 to the community and .J!are some of it. benefit•.
lberapeutic ma.s.age is the •ystematoc manopulation of the 'Oft tissues of the body.by a licensed ma&lt;sage. therapist.' The therapist is
~uored to :utend a two-year program ·
at an ac.:r&lt;:Jited college and then p-. .«
a locensong e.am given by the Slale
Medical Board.
. Massage therapy is not a single
·· dJscoplone. bot a groop of related an.~.
each offering various advantages.
Th~se include manual . lymph
drasnage. spons therapy. myofa.o;cial

John R. Lentes
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney

Dcpt~rlrncnt

al :tn y of the
numbers :1hov'r.:: Ut lcn st 4H
hours hcforc till; h e;~ ring .

==

di-....,. Swedish ma.&lt;&lt;age and ener-

gy work.
HMC has three licensed ma.sage
therapist• on its wff.
Karen Me3dows. LMT. advanced
sport.&lt; therapist i s a member of the
Ohio Spons . Mas&lt;age Team and
work.• with many athlele&lt; of varying
ages in !;Otlthea&lt;;t Ohio.
· Mali Has..,man. LMT. Black
Sa.&lt;h Chuan Dim Mak. i&lt; an in&lt;tructor of the Chine&gt;e martial an tai ~hi.
He stndi"' acupres&lt;ure and •pecializes in energy work and qigonji.
Amy Albert. LMT. utilize&lt; deep
tissue · ma.sage lll HMC and the
Jenkins Memorial Health Clinic of
HMC. She also ha.• an intere't in
infant massage.
Stress and ten.&lt;ion can have debilitating effects upon the body. cau&lt;ing

-Tri-County

Briefs:~-

phy,i.:al symptom&lt; which. unJe&lt;,
alleviared. may lead to more &gt;~Criou,
conditions.
Ma.&lt;&lt;age therapy has many u'lt&lt;l.
It benefits the circulatory &lt;y&lt;tem&lt; of
the body, mu&lt;eulO&lt;keletal system.
pregnancy. P"Ychological and emo- ·
tiona! dillicultie&lt;, comfort' the elderly. pain management and sport.' med-

icine.
·
According to the American Ma&lt;sageTherapy Association. 75 million
vi&lt;it&lt; are made to ma&lt;&lt;ajle therapist.&lt;
annually. Clearly. the demand for
mas&lt;age therapy increa.'"' as.society
turns toward preventative medicine.
Con.•umer demand through health
and fitne« movements in America
for professional ther.1peutic ma.&lt;saEe
. ha• been overwhelming. Doctors are
now prescribing massage to help
patjents manaJle pain and stress. In
many cases. insumnce companies

was
on
rial Field Friday
prior to IfNI GAH5-Polnt
Pleasant football game. Parent&amp; of all Blue Dev·

Holiday parade
slated for Dec. 5

and some HMOs now share the cost
Ca.se studies have proven that ma.&lt;GALLIPOLiS - The annual
sage reduces the bean rate and presChristmas
Parade in downtown Gal- ·
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Count,r Health Department will provide free su re . boosts immunity. enhanl:'es
lipolis.
sponsored
by the Gallipolis
weight gain in preterm infants.
flu shots at the following locations thos week:
Retail
Mercha~ts
AsliOCiaJion
and the
'' Monday. Nov. 2. at the Centenary Townhouse. .2-3:30 p.m.. and Thurs- increa~s circulation and reduces
Gallipolis
Kiwanis
Club.
will
be
day. Nov. 5. at the Vinton Village Hall. 9-11 am_, and Cheshire Village oflices, swelling by using manual lymph
held
Saturday,
Dec.
5.
The
theme
of
drainage. among other benefit~.
1-3:30 p.m.
this year's par.de. carried on from
As a pan of sport.&lt; medicine. ma&lt;la&lt;t year. will be ''A Dickens Christsage reduces delayed oqset of musmas.··
GALLIPOLIS - An application transferring a liquor· license from one cle spasm wl!l:n adm,inistered . two ·
The parade's sponsors are inviting 1
Gallipolis business 10 another is being processed by th~ Ohio Department of hours after termination of exerci&lt;e.
participants
to regisler for the event's .
Commerce.
,
For more information. contact the
,
lineup:
RGM Enterprises Inc .. doing business as The Stowaway, 300 Second Ave .. HMC Physical Therapy Department
Participants
will form at various
·'
ha&lt; app lied to transfer its D5 license (sale of spiritous liquor for on-premis- at446-5121.
locations.
Floats.
trucks. etc .. will line
es consumption only, beer and wine for on-premises and off-premises in origup
at
Gallipolis
Developmental
Ceninal sealed containers until 2:30a.m.) to the Reisa Corp.. doing business a&lt; Student,dles from fall
ter
(one-way
entrance
from
Mill
Lc Marquis. in the same location.
LANCASTER lAP) -A FairApplications are processed in about six to eight weeks following an inves- field Union High School student Creek Road): motorcycles. horses.
tigation of both the applicant and intended premi""s before a decision is made died from injurie' he suffered from etc.. at Spruce ·Street: and all walking
to issue or deny a permit, state Commerce Director Donna Owens falling to a gymnasium floor, author- unil&lt; at Duke Cleaners.
Line-up begins at 9:30 a.m. and
e•plained.
.·
ities said.
~
the parade is schedu led downtown at
· 'i'aul Edward Hill. 18. of Pleas- I I a.m.
·
antville, was climbing on a support
GALLIPOLIS - Booked into the Gallia County Jail following arrests
Entr.mts will not be permitted to
cable along the wa ll of the school
by authorities \\(ere:
throw candy, etc., from noal&lt; or vehigymnasium Wednesday when he fell cles_
o Morris F. Blazer, 39,607 Second Ave .. Gallipolis, Saturday at 2:24p.m.
about 15 feet. ac"ording to a state'
·
The registration deadline is Friday,
by Gallipolis City Police for dome.cic violence,
ment from the Fairfield County Sher- Nov. 27. No late entries will be
·· ~Jonathan E. Russell , 19. Bidwell, Saturday al3:17 a.m. by deputies for
iff's oflice .
accept«). Participants can register by
underage alcohol consumption.
He was taken tO Grant Medical calling the Gallia County Chamber of
• Joshua A. Shaflei, 19, 1794 Shoestring Ridge Road. Gallipolis. Satur·
Cent~r in Columbus, where he died
Commerce at446-0596. or by returnday at 3: 17 a.m. by deputies for underage alcohol consumption.
Thursday
afternoon.
• Jeremy A. Drummond. 20. Ketr, Saturday at4: II a. m. by deputies Tor
ing the entry form to the Gallia County Chamber of Commerce. P.O. Box _
driving under the 'i nfluence.
·
·
·
.
465, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 '.
~Kathy M. Reed. 42. 238 Vanco Road, Gallipolis, Saturday at4:41 a.m.
by deputies for domestic violence.
o Tony A. Reed. 40, 238 Vanco Road, Gallipolis, Saturday at 5:23 a.m.
by officers for domestic violence.'
·
.

Free ""·shots slated for this week

. Liquor license transfer processed

Authorities lodge six In county jail .

IIIIIIJ#IZI:I4.011.0.0.01113/I.O.O.O.Oil

Troopers issue citation after accident
PATRIOT .:.__ Robert H. Rush II, 17,436 Centerpuint Road. Thurman. wa.s
cited for unsafe vehicle following a two-vehicle cqllision Friday on .County Road 50 (Hannan Trace), the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported.
·
·
.
.
.
Troopers said Rush wa.s westbound. 212 feet we st of Hamson Townshop
Road 716 (Bush) at4:50 p.m. when his vehicle "di!veloped brake problems,
was unable 10 stop in lime and struck the rear of a stopped Access Head Start
bus driven by Billie D. Marcum. 39, Tick Ridge Road, Thurman .
Damage to both vehicles was slight

Two-vehicle .crash yields citation
CENTERVILLE- PaulL. Hai§Jop Sr., 51, 748 Tick Ridge Rqad r Thurman. was cited for assured clear distance by the Gullia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol following a two-vehicle crash Saturday on State Route
279.
'
: Troopers said Haislop was eastbound, 35 feet west of U.S. 35, at9:40 a.m.
when he was unable to stop in time and struck the rear a car driven by Dawn
Y. Faye. 27. Oak Hill. Faye's car had stopped at the time of the crash. according to the re port. 1
'
· Damage to both vehicles was slight.

units log seven· calls

POMEROY - Units of Meigs
Emergency Services answered seve n
c)lll s' for assistance on Friday. Units
responding were:
:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
: 8: 12 a.m .• assisted by Racine.
County Road 2R. Elizabeth Bar- ·
rlpger, Veteran s Memori al Hospital : .
: 12:43 p.m., Overbrook Center,
~rthur Scholderer, Hol zer Medi cal
Center:
1
. ,4:35 p.m., assisted by Pomeroy,
~acksprings Rehabilitation Center.
Martha Clon ch, Veterans Memorial:
RUTLAND

12:56 p.m.• Powe ll Street, Middleport. Kathryn Metzge r. Veterans
Memorial. .
· sYRACUSE
8:22a.m., State Route 338:·motor
vehicle acci dent . Lena Yoacham.
Veterans Memorial . Ryan Hill. treated at scene.

TUPPERS PLAINS
7:08 p·.m., state routes 7 and 681,
motor vehiCl e accident. Tonl Co lbin.
treated at scene:
'
8:45 p.m., Eastern Hi gh School.
John Thomas White. St. Joseph's
Hospital.

ITHE POMEROY MERCHANTS! d
PROUDLY PRESENT .

i ·
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~TAKES US ON AMUSICAL JOURNEY BACK TO ~
4'.fHE GOOD OLD DAYS.
· .,
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i
SATURDAY NOVEMBER 7, 199S
~
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~

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5:00P.M _
THE TRINITY CHURCH
EAST SECOND, POMEROY

~'

·

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given a free personal and professional evaluation and
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Vertical Volume Control
Save $150 p.w.o.
Void after 11127198

-------------~-J

i

Paid for by John fl. Lentes, 1t 7 W. 2nd St., Pomeroy, Ohio

•

1122 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH
(740) 441-1971
or (800) 434-4194

'
I •

~

Ja

~~~~~~~·~~~·~~~~~~~4411~

Want Friendly, Professional Service
Lookj.ng For Reasonable Prices?
Give Mel·Mock A Call Today!

I

interpreter hy call.ing I he
PUCO Con!-.umcr Services

Regional

HMC promotes mas·sage therapy
benefits as part of observation

~MS

TO THE EDITOR:

·

We worl&lt; with
UMWAend

griddttrs, cheerleaders and band members
- • Introduced and all seniors were recognized for their efforts during the past lour
years.

�-

Commentary

Page·M :

•

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
825 Thin! A•e., GaUlpolis, Ohio
(614) 446·2342

111 Cour1 SL', Pomrroy, Ob10
(614) 992·2156

ROBERT L WI~GETI
Publishrr
HOBART WILSON JR

DIANE HILL

Exrcutlvt Ultor

Controller

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than
300 words long AU lerrers are subject to editing and mclude address and
tdephone number. No unslgned lt rters Will be publuhed Letters should be
rn good taste addressmg tssues, not personalmes

.

Elections will ·shape rest
of Bill Clinton's presidency
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Sp~cial Correspondent
WASHIIIIGTON - In elec110ns thai wtlllurn less on tmpeachmenl than
unpea,hmcnt may htnge on them , the verdtcl of Amenca's v&lt;Jier&gt; tue sday
Will shape !he balance oflhe Btll Clonlon era - and perhaps the puntshmcn!
fOr Ills ra~l
: Rcpt.Jbl1cans count on rcmforccments for thc1r maJnntlcs m the new Con g~ess. and anyt.hong but GOP Housergmns would upset pubilc opmton polls.
qnd the paucrn of off·year htslory, tn a ume of prestdenl~al sex scandal
Democrat&gt; are trytng 10 cut lhctr losses, and loss of scats has been the lot of
lf)c prcstdcnt's party m every off. year elecuon but one s1nce the CtvJI War
· The a\erage loss lo !he preSident's party on mtd!errn elecuons SJnce World
War II h.- been 27 seats m Ihe House. four m the Senate
; Thai may be wnhtn the GOP's reach 1n Senate conles!s thiS year bul prob·
ably he ynnd Ihem m the House. already remodeled polt!tcally by thetr land·
s~dc takeover four years ago The consensus guess IS of R~publlc dn House
gilt ns m the range of I0 10 12 seals, although pant san GOP predtcuons run far
hjgher And DemocratiC exaggeration docs lhe same, atmed a! mflalmg
e&lt;peclallons, the beller lo clatm success m narrower defeat.
: Pollsters report that mosl people say !he Momca Lewmsky case wtll no!
hi: a fac tor m thetr chmce of candtdales- 63 percent tn an AP poll complel·
ep Oct 25.
.,
: Nonetheless, party gams and losses mevnably wtll be read as a signal on
tbe tmpcachmenl outlook m the new Congress, and a message to what ts left
of !he current one about deahng wtlh Clmton This Congress IS adjourned but
npl ftmshcd, wnh tmpeachment heanngs due later lhts month 1n Jls House
Judtctary Commmee.
: The more sealS Repubhcans add to lhetr maJonty margms of II tn the
House and I 0 m the Senate, Ihe more hkely Ihey are. lo push ahead on
tl)lpeachmen! Should qemocrauc hncs hold. or close 10 11. the process could
ilc slowed, even compromised 10 censure or repnmand short of an tmpeachnienl vote Let the Democrats defeat all !~e odds that pom! 10 GOP gatns, and
Ibe While House could argue that the case 111 Congress should JUS I be closed
· In Ihe final week of !he campatgn, Repubhcans began broadcas!mg !elevlston commercmls raiSing the Lcwmsky affmr and Clinton's &lt;IJShonesly
about n as an 1ssue.
Few cand1da!es have been that confron!allonal on the scandal , and a hand·
fiii of Democrats have med to capualize on the presumed backlash among
voters who !ell pollsters Ihey ' ve heard enough of II
: The sca ndal factor already has been up and then down. ftrs! rat ~mg expec·
!allons of an mcreased turnout of wrathful Repubhcans after Clinton admll·
tod on Aug 17 h1s sexual misconduct and lies, then cncrg1ztng Democrats Jn
a backlash after the Oct 8 House vole for an unhmt!ed tmpeachmenlnJVesuga!JOn
"And now 11 seems to ha ve seuled down and not be much of ~ factor at
aU. ' analyst Thomas Mann of lhc Brookmgs Insll!u!ton sa1d He also speculqted 11cou ld he havt ng an tmpacl, below the surface
. That can' ! be gauged, especially Wllh the House Republican campatgn
c~mmlttcc takmg It to tele \ 1s10n w1th confrontational ads
•
. The Whne House tnsJS!S that Chnton's own campatgn role has no! been
affec ted by the Lewmsky scandal, hultl cenamly'has changed He v.as "nonslop c;nnpatgncr 101 c,tgh! days before the last mtd!eim elccuons. ,Now ht s
appearances arc at IImned·access Jund·rniS Jng affans - mote than 100 so f.tr
th'L~i year - and con t10ll ed &lt;.:ampa1gn stops, hkc h1s appearance Sunday lot a
gel-oul· lhc-vmc push at a prcdommantly black church tn B'alttmotc
· Stm~nn g at fund-raiSers and a! ralites to stlf party volet s and urge them 10
!~e poll s arc lradlltonal prestdenual roles tn off-year campat gns. 111 whtch
turnout ts low w1th estunatcs th1s year at about one-th1rd ol ehg1ble votc1 s
Chnton ,Ji ways has reliShed the tumult of polutcal ralites. the handshakmg
and bac k·pa!ung of porsonal poht1cs But not !hJS year
Accordmg •to the Wht!e House, us s!ra!Cgtsls dectdcd that he co uld be
most cllcc uvc by helpmg Democrats ra1 sc money and concenu atmg on policy mstead of campd.1gn road shows
Butm a. season of scandal there al so was the n; k !hal a mm e ac!tve Cltn!On ca mpatgn !hiS !tme would backfire by mak111g hJS conduct and the
l!llpeachm cnt case agamst h1m more of an 1ssue
That's what !he Rep~bhcans are trytng !o do on telcvtston

By TONY SNOW
Creators Syndic;ate
WASHINGTON -· Candtdales
have h11 the hustmgs Pohllcal parttes
have hurled more money than e&gt;er into
campa•gns Ad men have pelted voters
overywhere Just one quesuon Why?
,ThiS JS the Mtlk Carlon campmgn · the JSsucs are mtssmg The president
has been }unnmg around the country
wt!h a paper bag on hJS head-- appear·
mg a1 fund·rmsers. but duckmg cam·
eras And Rcpubhcans are on the
defenSive. 100. beggmg their fanhfullo
believe they're not a bunch of empty
sutts
In some elecuon years', an ISsue gal·
· \'an01.cs the eleclorale In others, personaluJCs gtve people rooung Interests.
But there's no orgamzmg pnnc1ple !hts
lime around -- and Ihat may be the
btggcsl elccuon-year shocker of all
As 199R dawned, maven&gt; lt.recast a
baulc royal Democrats talked breath·
lcssly ol rc!akmg Captlol Htll and
mounimg a lwo-year SJcge on Reagan·
Gmgncht &gt;m Repubhcans cl&gt;wercd m
J J!&lt;Iarray after an abortl\ e .ltlf'mpt to
ousf the Ho~se speaker
Then an m!cm made headhncs Out
wcnl !hough!&gt; ol Dcmocrd!lc domm·
ton, dt!lo fo r GOP amhiltons of nauon-

altzing lhe elec!too over a sel of Btg
Ideas
. Handed
a
wmdfall, RepubII cans sel about
squandenng 11.
lbcy decided to
lei Btll Chnlon
lwtsl in lhe wind,
figunng a weakened prestdenl
would cut deals
wnh them Sure,
he
Wouldn't
Snow
agre'e to slash
taxes or demolish miscellaneous
bureaucratic rabbt! warrens, bul he'd
do enough 10 gtve them some modest
bragging nghts headmg tnlo Novem·
ber.
Once they agreed upon lhe strategy,
they buSied themselves wtlh domg as
lmle as posSible They scheduled JUSt
89 days oflcgJSiauvework They proposed nolhtng b1g
They watched the economy head
upward and !he Momca story sptral
scwerward , and-they sm1led Thus we
have. as a byproduct of acctdent and
dcSJ gn. what my Fox News colleague
Bru Hume calls the "Semfeld clec·
!ton" -- a vole filled wtlh suspense ,

minh, drama and btg money, but nev·
enheless about no!hing
lluscampaignhasevenrefuledTip
O'Neill 's ofH:iled adage lhal "all pol·
111cs IS local " As 1 wnlc, Man Fong
clings 10 a shghl lead over Democrat
Barbara Boxer tn Cahfomta's Senate
race, while Republican gubematonal
l:andtdale Dan Lungren IS looking up
from \he boltom of a well at his foe,
Gray DaviS
AI D' Amato and Chuck Schumer
are duking 1t ou1 for the Senate seal on
New York, while tncumbenl George
Pataki seems likely 10 wm by a tf1;ll'gin
large enough lo quahfy him for canontzallon
Nobody has coa!lmls m the
Plebtseue of '98 Today, all polntcs IS
mdivtdual .. and wherever possible,
personal In the absence of msptrauonal ISsues or hfe·or·death cnses.
voters have no reason lo demand radt cal change
Pollster Kellyanne FtiZpalnck calls
il a "shru gged·shoulders electorate "
She sees very few incumbents of cnher
party on the ropes -- although like
most m the opmiOn·survey busmess,
she predicts modes! gams for Repubh·
cans 1n both chambers of Congress
Don '1 let the dullness fool you,

I . DON'T

I

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist
for The Assocmted Press, has reported on Washington and national pol.
ttics for more than 30 years.

SIGN AUT~K'APHS,

KID

•

however. This year's ballotmg may be
more 1mportan! than anybody lets on.

While lhe Nov 3 elecuoo woo '! provtde a referendum on any speciftc
1ssue, n could sel lhe lone for American poliucs in the next century
1bc key lies in local races. Republicans seem potsed to lake control of
the legJSialures m Texas and Aonda;
they very well could duplicate lhe feat
m another historic Democrauc stronghold, Mtchigan GOP governors are
likely 10 sweep to VICtory throughout
most oflhe South and Wes!, while only
a handful of Democrats, such as Vermont's Howard Dean, enjoy Similar
job secumy
1bc upshot could be that Repubhcans :-will control cpngresSJonal reappontonm~nl tn many pf the natton,'s
maJOr states-- and at worst could wm
one house of the legJSia!ures 1n Cah·
fomta and New York Those lawmak·'
mg bodtes wtll draw congrcsSJooal
boundartes m two years, and lhey 'rn
hkely lo produoe maps far more con:
gcmal 10 Republicans than lo Democrat';
Ahhnugh Blil Chnlon has whiStled
pas! the graveyard many umes in
recent years. he may have found pero
manem lodgmg there lor hts party,
Democrats had stout maJOnlles every:
where when the Man from Hope frrsl
look the oath Now, they countll a VIC·
lory tf they lose only a dozen sealS m
the House.
As the new century dawns, the
GOP wtll hold more congressional diS·
tnc!S than tiS percentage oflhe popular
vote wtll JUsufy .. the very advantage
Democrat• enJoyed throughout most
of the postwar era. ThiS kind ofbUIIHn
edge enables par11es 10 dommale the
pohllcs of thetr ume.
Ftlzpalnck says of this elecuon:
" It's a yawner. We 'll all be glad when,
t!'s over" Thai only deepens the trony
that the revoluuon that began with
1 Reagan and con!mued wllh Gmgnch
' may reach ns apogee m the Year of
Apathy ,·
"
Write Tony Snow, C,reators Syndicate, 5777 West Century Blvd.,
Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif. 90045,

·Government of the polls, by the polls ....·
By ROBERT WEEDY
Freedom depends upon a culture
worthy of freedom A watchful eye on
our leaders and opmton makers ts
mandatory tf fteedom IS to be mamlamed m a self·govcrn111g soc tcty llke
ours Polhng of others and hellevmg
them IS no subsll!u!e for staymg
mforrned or for the rule of law If the
future of our nat mn 1s to he dclctm!ned
by polls, and II seems so JUS! now, then
we need to know who" talkmg 10 lhc
pollsters and who " no!
It" no wonder !hal the Cons! uuuon
docs not p1 ovtde for guvemmcm by
polls Placmg the future of our people
m the hands of unelccled polls!eJS ts
dangerous Why should any poll be
behevcd when tcpo11cd response t.l!cs
ha\ c dlt)pped !o about 33 pet cent'
How could anyone a.ssumc !IMI the
non-respondents have the same \-rcws
as the tcspondems ' 1l1erc ate lcwct
wtllmg !o tespond to polls percentage
WISC !han !hose wtl lmo lO vote 1l1e
polhng ptofcsSion ts lud•ng behmd the
problem .mJ tclustng to dtvulgc the
response rate when then data~~ g1vcn
When a people fat I 10 rccogmze the
value ol honesty and forthngh!ness
they hccome a vtc!tm ol decep11on and
mf!ntpulallon Let us examme some
tllus!J,J!Jons of !hts .11 sevctallcvcls of
our culture
·- A loc al nurse wrote m a lcuet 10
the cdl!or !hat 'statemen t&gt; have hecn
made to the elfecl thai I wtll not gt vc
10 !he Unued Way because !hey sup·
po11 Planned Parenthood ,\ntl tim 01oantzauon pcrfom1s abort tons
'

for several years,
I have been pnvi·
leged lo work
wtlh the employ·
ees and chents of
Planned Parent·
hood Pertonnmg
abortiOns JS no!
lhe,mtsston ofthJS
orgamzation."
"PPSEO does nol
Weedy
have abortion ser·
VJCes
The fdc!s are that the Planned Par·
emhood orgamzauon performs more
aborttons than any other m the Umted
Stales Over one mlillon are performed
yem ly and they do lhe htghesl percent
ol alii hose 111 !hJS ktlllng mdustry But
the falsehood IS mt!tga!ed, m her vtew,
because the SEQ branc"- refers !he
c!1cnts to a SISter group that actually
docs 1he,abo11ion.
-- The remammg strength thai Pres·
tden! Clinton ha.&lt;eomes from the polls
Lc! us examme 1how thiS tmpacled
the so·called budget negollaltons and
1tcms mc!Uded m th1s ommbus bill At
the 111SJS!ence of the While House, and
a threat of shuumg down the govern·
mem, the followmg had 10 be dropped
111 order to oblam hJS signature I A
ban on adopllon for non·mamed cou·
pies 111 Washmgion, DC, 2 A school
chotec program m Washington, DC
(whtch has one of the worst pubhc
school systems m the coumry); 3
Rcslnchon on lax dollars !o overseas
orgamzauons that perform/promote
aborttons, 4 Parental nollficalton for

mmor can not be gtvon an asptnn in
school without permiSSion of a parent,
but can have an abortton and the parent
not know about il· wtth your tax dolIars
Published poll results thus have
allowed pro·famtly bills to be scunled
111 the so·called negoua1mg process
wllh Congress.
At the fam1ly level , we have an
tlluslrallon (author unlinown) that
speaks for Itself about what the future
holds
Dad. "Son, come m here, we need
!o talk "
Son. "What's up, Dad?"
Dad - "There's a scratch down the
stde of the car Dtd you do 11 '"
Son . "I don't beheve. 1f I under·
stand the delim!ton of 'scratch the car',
that I can say. truthfully. that I
sc1atched the cat''
Dad . "Well, 11 wasn't there ycster·
day, and you drove !he car last mgh!,
and no one else has dnven 11 smce
How can you explam the scratch J"
Son - "Well, as I've saftl before, I
have no recollection of scratclung the
car Whtle 11 JS !rue !hp! I dtd take the
car out Jasl mghl. I dtd not scratch 11"
Dad - 'But your SJS!er, Momca, has
!old me she saw you back the car
agamst the matlbox a! the end of the
dnveway. heard a Jocrd scrapmg sound,
saw you gel outlo exam me lhe car, and
!hen dmc away So agam I II ask you.
yes or no. dtd you scratch the car&gt;"
Son- ' Oh , you me.m you thmk you
have evtdence to prove I scm!chcd n
Well , you see, I understood you !o

my earlier statement, !hal I did not
scmlch the car"
Dad. "Are you trying 10 tell me you
didn't dnve the car m!o the mmlbox?l'
Son. "Well,eyou see Sir, I was try··
mg to drive the car mlo the street I
mtshandled the s!eenng of the car, and
11 resulted m dtrecl con!acl wllh the'
mailbox , though that was clearly not
my mtcnt."
Dad • "So you are then saymg thai
you d1d hlllhe mailbox?'
Son • ' No Str, thai's nol my stalemen! I'll refer you back lo my ongmal
sla!ementlhall dtd not scratch the car."
Dad . "But the car d1d h•llhe mad·
box, and the car dtd gel scmlched as .a
result of thiS contact?"
.
Son - "Well, yes, I suppose you
could look all! that way."
Dad - "So you hed 1o me when you
sa1d you d1d not scratch the car?"
Son . "No No, that's not correct
Your question was 'Dtd 1 scratch tlie
car'&gt;'. From a Slllc! legal defint!ton, as 1
understood the meanmg of that sen·
tence. I dtd nO! scratch the car the
mmlbox d1d I was merely p1cseOt
when the sctatchmg occurred So my
answer of 'no' when you asked Dtd 1
scratch the car ,. was legally conecl.
allhough I d1d not ,olumcer mfortna·
lion'
Dad - "Whc1e dtd you lcru11 10 talk
hkc a complete tdto! '"
Son .. From the Prestdcnt ot the
Umted States "
Is thiS really the way we wan! IO
change our country&gt;
Robert Weedy is a corresponde~tt

Indeed, al ltmes,
to be snookered
he IS downnghl
Her Ken, she says 111 her non·
maladrou .. such
mterv1ew Interview, has been
as the day after a
"maligned" by crtllcs who elatm he
federal
court
IS sex·crazed because of the raunchy
threw !he Paula
delatl s he mcluded m hts report 10
Jone s lawsuit out
Congress about Clinton's alfatr wuh
of court, when he
Momca Lewinsky
d1d one of hJS
"The facl IS, he IS a very lo\lng
patented strolls
father, and our marn age wlll be
acros~ lhe dnve·unaffected by lhts," smd Mrs Starr
way and paused
Spear
Ken always leaves hts work a! lhe
10 say a few words Ht~ commentary office and never d1scusses It wnh
dragged on for 25 mmules, and he her, she smd "He feels strongly
cndcJ up ramblmg about the lclevt· about protecung hiS family from
sum show Dragnet "You all are too any!hmg and eve1y!hmg he knows"
yo un g to remember a wonderful
More than that All thiS talk about
prngrJm called 'Dragnet "' he sn1d
how much Ken's Investi gation IS
· Jus! the facts. ma'am ' Jack Webb t.:ostmg 1s nonsense "Ken has not
would say And I had lhc pl casute of taken a wcek('nd on in the four years
aJV.lllL C ICX l ll! ht"i l~llhllks "ill &lt;l'i tO
mceung Jack Webb. . And thai's he has war ked on th e case," she
ensure tn .\X lmum press nn01.tg:c He su rncthmg I always remember Just smd "l don t know anyone more
used lO amhlc .ICt oss lu ~ dlt\ c\\ ·'Y 111 the fnch "
honest than Ken Anybody "
the TlHliiHng L:.J~u.tl!y C:Uil yt ng ,, hag
Perhaps because of hts lack of PR
Ol course. the 1C;_tson he may be
ol ,g.u h.tg('. Jnd too.;s oil .1 kw spon· sktlls hts wife has now gone pubhc wo1 kmg on weekends rs he cause he
tc~ncou..., 1cmarh tor the mcd 1a moh
111 Ken\ defense A lite Starr ch111n s
has hccn pullmg down ovc1 a nHIthat rcgu l.uly . . t.tkc s out lll'i IHl lllC
hc1 tcmmks pubhshed m Mtrahella Iton doll .us a ye'll ($ 1 252.73 1 1n
Now he ICII L's on .1 s p nkcs m ,\fl
m.tgtlt mc wc1c off the record bu1 19Y7 to be exac t) !tom ht s l.l\v pr.tc Clt:ulcs B.tk.tl y to pnch !he f'J\\ scc~· , hc.u 111 mmd !hat she 1s a puhlt cM tJtc even Jo.; he pro hc~ B1l! Clmton's
!Dit.d 'tcwrmnt bdm c 1hc L'.H I1 (' J,\o.; 1clauons specialist who works 101 a sex l1fc le..H the t.lxpayc ts Many ot
.uulmltrop hnnc . ._
,
rc.li estate lrrm 1n the Vug1111.t suh- us nught he WJihng 10 woak weekTh1.., 1.., not In"·') lh .tt St.u r Jo,; p~u­ ur bs She 1s very sav\} ,thout med1.1 ends fm tll.lt krml ol dough
!J cul .ul y ad&lt; I'! 111 !h e I'R .11 Is methods and IJJ t.:ks. nnd ts nn~ l1kcly
But th.n's ncJthcJ il eac twr lh ('rc

The poml IS, all !hose people wh.O
tell the pollsters lha! Ken IS a6
obsesstve, parusan, scary dude are
wrong, wrong, wrong. He IS, m fact:,
a peach of a guy .. and we have his
wtfe's word on !hal
For what n's worth. I would hke
to mforrn all you people who wnte
nasty lellcrs to me that Mrs Lmda
Spear believes her husband IS not
such a bad dude, CJ!her, although her
opm1on about her spouse IS decided·
ly more mtxed than Mrs Starr 's
" He always bnngs hiS work
home wnh htm," Mrs. Spear sa1d In
a fnend the o1 he1 day
I
" He works every weekend and
never shttfs up about 11 He ye lls at
the TV and once 111 c1 wh1lc even
uucr s words that I can't tcpeaL
Evcty so often, I have !o take htm
down a peg or two. and then he's nol
such .t bad guy I wouldn 't call hun~
peach , but he s defmncly a pcmm·
mon."
She now cla1ms her remarks wer&lt;
olf the tecord but I. Joseph .. an
unpnnl:lpled med1a fmk dill pub~
li ..,lung them anyway '
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for. Newspaper Enterprise

Today in history c~,~~~"';i"' "K~~~~~i'h''S~r;=;pi~-s·th~ ';P"in';;;~
By The Associated Press
Today IS Sunday, Nov f, Ihe 305th day ol 1998 There are 60 d,tys Jell 111
the year Thts IS All S01n1s Day
Today \ Htghhgh! tn Htslory
On Nov I, 1952, the Unncd States e&lt;ploded the ftrs! hydrogen ho111h 111
• a lest a! En twctok 111 the Marshall Islands .
' On lhts dale
. In 1512 M•chelangelo's pamungs on the ce tiln g of the S"''"' Chapel
'\'ere first cxhtbued 10 the puhl1c
· In 1765. !he Stamp Act went 11110 effect. promptin g sl tfl re&gt;~ s tancc lrotl)
Amcncan co loni sts
: In 1861 Gen George B McClellan was made Gcncral-m·Chtcf of the
limon Arm1 e~
.
: In 1870, the U S Weather Bureau made 1ts llr -.t mct coto!O!! Jcn l ~)hscJ va­
l[ons, using report s gathered hy telegraph from 24 foc.tt •ons • In 19 36, 111 a speech tn Md dn h .tl) . Bcntlo Mu"o hnt dc sc11bed the
aihance between h1s co untry Jnd NaZI Gcnn,my ns .m ax1o.;' 1unnmg•
lie tween Rome and. Berlon
: In 1950, two Pucno R1can n~tJon.tll~ts' tncd tn l lll C~ 1he1t ''"'Y 11110 Blmr
House In Washtngton 10 ao.;saSSIIldtC PI C" Id~nl numan The attempt t.ulcd.
aitd one of the patr was ktlled
: In 1954, the west ~1 n Aln can na110n ot Al~cna bcganu-. J ~bdl!_pn agmns(
French rule
'
: In 1973, m !he wake ol !he "SotUJJay N 1 ~ h1 Mass.tCJe Ac!m~ Au or ncy
Ocne1.11 Robert H Burk .lppoJntcd Leon Juworsk1 to h.: the new W.1tc1 gate
spectal prosecutor. succeedmg t\J chJhald Cox
• Ten years ago Israeli voter"' W!.!nt to 1hc r o!ls 111 parhamcn1a1y eh:::t:llons
tftat resulted 1n a narrow \lctory for the nght-w1n,g L1kud hl oL I L' (jUIIIIl g the
cteauon of a coa litiOn govctnmcnl
•
: Fn e years ago The space "hunk Co! umhl.t landed ;It Edw.Jrdo.; Au Fna:c
aasc In Calltormu. cndmy a tv. I ,. \1, l'd 1111 ... ~ lUll
I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, November 1, 1991

Issues are missing in this election campaign·
'f.si4/J(ufui"' 1966

SUnday, November 1,1998

By Joseph Spear
So Btll Chnlon ts supposed lo be
the great spmmcastcr. ch'1 A siMper
of fact s. a mampulalor ol Iruth' A
Spm Dot:Lur nunpc~reii'l
Well. he tsn'! th e on ly one.
f11ends H1s arch enemy. mdcpcndcnl co unsel Kenneth Statr, docs a
fa1r amount ot spmnm g l111n sc ll
Indeed, l would .trguc thai he ts the
most publlc-rclau ons-co nscJous :-;pccml prosecutor ever appn~ntcd, w11h
the poss1ble cxccpllllll ol Don ald
Smaltz -M the publlcuy hou nd nwes1Jga ttn g form er .tgtt t: ultul ~ :-.cu t::lmy
Mtkc Espy
'
Starr routtncl} rc~ponds t\) Lrlll·
u sms With p1~~o.; Jcic.t"il'"i He has
given scVl' J,ll spccLhc s .mJ on ,It
lema one on:.lStnn. he dtStl thutcd .111

-

~ssodation.

Jtunbav 11!imnt-Jtmtitul • Page A5

$1 million
may spur
resolution
of lawsuit

Margaret 'Peg' Burfield

GALLIPOLIS - Margaret "Peg" Reese Burfield, 70, Aemmg, dted Sun·
day, Oct. 25, 1998 m Manetta Memunal Hospual.
Born Aug. 2, 1928 m Galhpohs. d:lughler of the late Dan T. and Annamae Gtlls Reese. she was a graduate of Vmcent Htgh School and of Mari·
WASHINGTON (AP) - A New
eua College tn 1950.
Vorl. real e~tate magnate IUrned ovt:r
. Surv1vmg are her husband, Irvin Burfield. whom she marned in 1950; a a $1 nulhon che&lt;klo Paula June- on
son. Daniel G (Susan) Burlield of Parkersburg. W.Va.; a daughter. Stacte S.t!urday lha! coutd become pan ot an
(Mauhe;ov) Johnson of Flemmg; a grandson; a bru!her, Tim (Conme) Reese overall seulemen! of her se xual
of Flemmg; and a "sler. Ehzabelh Reese (Ed) Cicotu of Utica, Mtch.
harassment "iUit agamst Pre, tdent
Area surVIvor.; include Bess Davis and lim Evans both ofGalhpoh&gt; and Chn!un, although the president's
Jo and Fred Gill s of Pomt Pleasant , W Va
'
'
lawyer sa1d the 1wo s1des were no
Graveside services were held Wednesday, Oct. 28, 1998 in the Barlow dDser !o reachmg a deal.
Cemetery. Arrangements were by the McClure-Schafer Funeral Home, Man~!.be Hirschfeld escorted a sm1itng
ena.
Mrs Jones by the ann before a roomMemorial con!nbuhoos can be made lo the Barlow Volunteer Ftre Depart· • ful of televiston earner..,. She kiSsed
ment, P.O Box I 21. Barlow. Ohio 45712.
htm on lhe cheek and he handed her
a green check made out to 1he former
Arkansas stale employee and sever·
al of her lawyers
The paymem. Hirschfeld's lawyer
DOVER- Eugene B Marcmko Sr . 67. Dover. dted Thursday. Oct. 29.
1998 m the Country Club Retirement Center, followong an extended tllness. sa1d. was condationed on her reuchM
_ Born Feb II , 193 I 1n Tuppers Plams. son of the late Charles and Virgte mg a seulernent with the president
Bailey Marcinko, he reltred m 1982 from the Ttmken Co m Canton after 25 Mrs Jones ' spokeswoman, Susan
years of sen ice
Carpenter McMtllan, satd she hoped
He wa.&lt; a member oft he Sl Joseph Catholic Church. and the Dover VFW, , 11 would prompt Cl1111on to "negoll·
ale 111 good fatlh "
Moose and· Eagles clubs. He was abo a veteran of the Korean ConHtcl.
Htrschfeld said he promtsed her
. · Survtving are a son. Eugene II (Norma) Marcinko of Dover. a daughter.
the
mone:Y so thai Chnton could
Momca (Richard) Bonng of Dover; five grandchildren, three brothers, Robert
"have
a dear head" in dealing with
(r:vftck) Marcmko of Tuppers Plams, and Thomas Marctnko and Mannmg
(Giona) MarC)nko. both ol Reedsvtlle; and two ststers. Mary Marshman of the nallon's problems.
The preSident's lawyer. Bob Ben·
Columbus, and Georgtanna (Donald) Trussell ol Mount Vernon.
He was also preceded in death by hi s wife. Margaret Kozar Marcinko, on neu. satd he had not been 111 lauch
wllh Mrs Jones' attorne)'s tor severM
May 3, 1988, a daughter. Cynthia Marcinko; and 1wo brothers and a sts!er
iii
weeks and was s1ill walling to hear
A funeral Mass wtll be held 10:30 am. Mond:ly in St. Joseph's Catholtc
from
!hem about Cl m!on's !ales!
Church. Dover, wtlh Father William Arnold officialmg. Bunal wtll be mlhe
Calvary Cemetery. Dover, where !he Dover VFW wtll conduct mtlilary grave· olfer $700.()()(); ·The Jones camp
s1de servtces Fnends may call al the Toland·Herzig Funeral Home, 803 N. wams $1 mtllton from Cl1111on 111
Wooster Ave. Dover, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m Sunday, wtth Ro sary serv tces aJJ1tton to any money she gets fr,om
HJrschfeiJ.
s,tar!ing at 8.45 p.m
' I don'! know how !he event
Memonal contributions may be made !o Tuscarawas Central Catholic Htgh
toduy wrll Impact on any future set·
School.
tl ement f.1i~cuss10ns ... Bennett told
The AssocwteJ Pre ss " I' II proceed
very cau!lously. I've made it
absolutely clear !hal we will not go
11110 any package deal w1th Mr
Hirschfeld."
said they expect the move 10 begin
&lt;;:LEVELAND (AP) - Briush
Another lawyer close lo Chn!on
Petroleum Co. has announced il will '1some lime'" 1999 al'ld ftntsh by the smd talks wnh the Jone s allorneys
end of the year.
dose lis suburban Cleveland chemt·
could resume early this week.
The relocat1on surprised some
cal research unit and move it 10
Chnlon \ lawyers have sough! to
Warren sville He&lt;ghts offtctals who dtstance the1r negotiations trom
Chteago
thought lhe company mtghl sl.ty in Htrschfeld smce he first made the
·'The relocation of BP Chemtcals
Ihe suburb southeast ol Cleveland
·Inc. wtll cosl Warrensville Heights
otfer to Mrs Jones. to avmd any legri.l
" It's news to me. The last infor· repercussions hts offer could have on
230 JObs and reduce the company's
mat1on I r!!ce1ved from the manager the deal and - more tmportanlly local employment to about 1&lt;)0 work·
over there. shor!ly alter the ongmal to diStance Clinton from Htrschlelu.
ers
1nforrnauon came oul about the o!h· who is facing 123 counts. of income
BP and Amoco Corp. announced
er departments movmg. w.ls they tax evasiOn .
a merger Aug II , but ofticm\s at the
were staymg." said W.trrensvllle
Joe Cammarata. a former Jones
time mdicated thai BP Chemtcal
Hetgh!s Mayor Wtlham Pegues.
attorney whose name 1s also on the
mtghl stay in Cleveland. Now ofti·
AI one ltme. BP Chemtcul w"s · check. satd the Htrschfeld·Jones deal
cials say that only the roughly 100
Warrensville
Hdghto.;'
largest would probably be structured lo aile·
employees who servtce BP's local
employer It has stnce been p.tssed by vmle any Wh1te House ;concerns.. "I
re.tail operation will remam
Mendia South Pointe Hospual. bulns don't think Clinton Cilh tind a link
BP spokesman Tom Koch said lhe
company would like lo relocate
impact on the cd'mmumty remams between the lwo now," he said.
everyone, wuh the exceplton of lhe
Htrschteld htmsel~seemed a lillie
substantial.
3Q.member support and secretarial
"The Joss of any tndustry or bust- uncer1a111 about the details, at first
slat!
ness tends to cause some financial saymg a sen Iemen! had already been
"Our pohcy is not to offer reloproblems becatlse you don' I wan! lo reached and then backing off that
cauon lo employees whose skills are
lose the money that's coming in," statement after Mrs. Jones ' lawyers
readily available al the new loca.said Pegues. "But hopefully another declmed to comment.
He smd the money had already
llon," Koch said.
busmess w1ll come 1n and take Its
BP has nol sel a spectfic date for
been tran sferred But hts lawyer.
place."
the relocation, but company officmls
Harvard Hollenberg. later cauuoned
that the payment to Jone o.; was condiuoned on her reaching a settlement
wuh !he prestden! H~rschleld also
declmed to say \\hal would huppen lo
The tollowtng cases were recent· the mone;:r 1f no settlement i!&gt;i rem:hed
Common Pleas
The followmg cases were recen!- ly resolved m the Galhpolts Mumct ·
The $1 nul lion wtll be held'" lntsl
: ty filed in the Gallia County Common pal Court·
by Mrs Jones .tllorneys until the par·
Keith A. Queen, 31 , Galhpolts, ties r~ach a o.;ettlement, her L.1wyers
Pleas Court:
Dtvorce filed '- Fred B. Paxton charged wt!h dnvmg underthe mllu· sa1u Fnuay "The check wa, made out
from Cynthia G. Paxton, both of Vm· .. ence. was fmed $1.500.41 days ptl, to Mrs Jones. !he Dallas Jaw firm ol
ton , Carolyn S. Bu~ess. 2003 Gallia two years probauon and five yeurs Radar, Campbell. Ftsher &amp; Pyke. and
Ave .. Gallipolls. from Elbte Eugene ·license suspension.
other parties, mcludtng John Wh1!e·
Mtcahel S Thterer Jr , 23, Beth·
Burgess, no address available; Shel·
head of the conserva11ve Rutherford
don M Frunklm, 32 Bonme Lane, Jehem. Pa. charged with cnminal Insll!u!e, whtch has helped' finance
Galllpolis, lrom Tylana M Purtee. damaging. was tined $100 and two her lawsuit.
Lewtston; Allen A Cox. 59 Solar day s JUII
Mrs Jones smtled throughout the
Robert R. Morgan. 33. Norman. news conferent:e and thanked
Dnve, Gallipohs from Karen S C~x.
Okla .. charged wtlh, DUI. wus fined Htrschf~ltl sevetul !tmes for ·your
same addre~s.
Dissolution ftled Paullne $550.three days jail, three eyars pro· generous offer You're a wonderful
Spencer aod Ea~l Spencer, both of ba11on und 180
. days hcense sus pen. person ..
Bidwell. Teresa K Whtll. 5072 'iiOn.
Mrs. Jones' lawsuit wa" d1sm1sscd
Glenn A Ferguson, 34. New
Bladen RQad, Gallipolis. and Charles
by
a judge e.1rller thts year, anJ an
Haven. W Va. charged with DUI.
E Whtll, Crown C.ly
"ppeal
ts penumg.
. Dissolution granted - Norma J. was fmed $550, three days j.ul, lwu
In
her
law sUit, Mrs. Jones clauns
Peare from Donald A. Peare, no years prob.J!ton .md I Hll Jays hcense Chnton mdde a crude pass at her tn
suspension: charged with tallure to
addresses avmlable
a Linle Rock hotel room m 1991.
control. he 'was lined $5()
Municipal
when he was governor ol Ark.msas

Eugene B. Marcinko Sr.

BP will .move chemical
research unit to Chicago

,ht

•'!&amp; .,.h
;

p

I&lt;.~. ~~ b -. ~

CASBY "SKIP" MEADOWS
FOR

M

Gallia County Commissioner
Paid for by Moodowo for Commluloner, Kim Y. Canaday, Trooo., 1999 Duly Rd., Bidwell, OH

'

~j ,___:-............; •., ,
around the state were on hand to help with
crowd control at Saturday's annual Athens Hal·
loween street party. (AP)

Police brace for party, Hillary visit
ATHENS (AP)- Police ollicers re.., tncllons. Students llvmg 10 dor- th1 s wed:.cml. and no on-campu..,
prepanng for Athens' annual hal· nHton..:s are allowed only one guest parkmg penntb will be issued
loween party may he Jmng double;
duty over the weekend when Ftrsl
The Tuppers PlaJns·Chester Wafer Dtslnct will be fl ushtng thetr ltnes m
Lady Htllary Rodham Clinton VJSJ!s
the week of November 2nd. Listed below are locatiOns for th1s week
About 30,!XMJ people ,JI!ended the
uptown street party J.ts! year and
Monday, November 2:
about 199 were arrest ed Th1s year,
MEIGS COUNTY From the tntersectJon of Pomeroy Ptke &amp; Flatwoods
p&lt;tilce wtll have lntle ume lo rest ahcr
Road to the Flatwoods Booster. Gold Rtdge area and Pagevtlle From
Saturday night"s party near the Oh1o
McKenzte. Tank to SttversvJIIe and the Dorcas Area From the
Umversny ram(&gt;u'i
tnterseclton of SR 681 and Co Rd 50 to near Hockingport
Pohce also have !o be al Athens
'
M1ddle School Sunday afternoon lor
Mrs. Clmton. who wtll anend a cam·
Tuesday, November 3:
pa•gn rally lor Rep Ted Strickland,
MEIGS COUNTY From the Flatwoods Booster to Carper Tank
D·Ohto.
ATHENS COUNTY Hocf&lt;mgport
"Those thai don'! have 10 be here
are al horne reslmg. tl)'mg to get
Wednesday, November 4:
some sleep." .dtspatcher Dee Gray
MEIGS COUNTY Carper Tank to Gold Ridge Booster, and Burlingham
satd Fnday
ATHENS COUNTY lnlersectton of At. 50 &amp; Bnmestone Rtdge to South
Gray satd there were no probl ems .
Canaan Road
Fnday afternoon. but otf'tcers sllll had
to tag meters for when roads were
Thursday, November 5:
;
closed to !raffle Saturday mght.
ATHENS COUNTY IntersectiOn at At so and South Canaan Road to
Fewer crowds and arrests marked
Stnngtown and Canaanv1lle At. 50 to Best Photo Tank Vtllage of
the begmning llf the ,cdebr~uon ~
Stewart
Last year. about 30,000 people
al!ended the uptown street party and
Friday, November 6;
"
about 200 were arrested.
MEIGS 'COUNTY: From the Tackerv11le MPAV to the Dorcas Booster
On Fnday mgh!. pollee reported
R2 arrests , compared 10 119 last year
and 109'" f996 Poltce satd •I "the
Some of the flushmg, Will be done at ntght and some customers may
easie~t Friday in four years." m par!
expenence low pressure Please be aware that the water may be
because of more parktng hmttalions
dtscolored for several m1les around these locattons It fhe water IS
and umversily reslncuons.
dtscolored tor longer than a few hours, please contact the ot11ce so w~
Allendance al the party could be,
will be aware at the problem.
shghtly lower tht s year

tha~·n~k~s~t~o~th~e:._~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;:::;r

ON NOVEMBER 3 YOU HAVE A CHANCE TO
IMPROVE OUR COUNTY
MAKE YOUR VOTE COUNT WITH A VOTE FOR

PATTY , pJ~KENS
•Elect a County Commissioner that Knows the Issues that are important
to Meigs County and knows how to searc~ for Grant opportunities.
'

•Patty has the Experience working with state legislators and is Willing to
Travel and Attend Meetings, both locally and at the state level.
•Elect a County Commissioner that is Willing to Work Full Tjme for you,
40 Hours Plus, Elect Pauy pjckens, ,\he right choice for Your County
Commissioner.
Endorsed and paid for by the Meigs County Republican Executive Committee

.

#

.

READY TO PATROL - Athens Pollee Lt.
Emle Antle, left, led a horse patrol through
downtown Athens Friday night. Twenty·five
horse units from nine police departments

(;allia County ecourt n·ews

TO THE VOTERS OF GALLIA COUNTY
.E"
"IT'S
,w
"I Don't
Your
Have
All
Support
•
the
Means A
Answers
New
But I'm
Beginning
Willing to
In Gallia
Listen"
Count~
VOTE FOR

.

October 29, 1998
'

TO THE RE.$1DENTS OF MEIGS COUNTY:
'
After we learned Ted ,Strickland pleaded with President Clinton to block Lt.
Governor Hollister's plan to build Route 33 we were compelled to tell you
this.
Those of us who have spent many years and hours of our time to obtain
funding and construction for Route 33 from Darwin to Athens and the
Ravenswood lntestate-77 Connector were devastated by Strickland's act. It Is
hard to believe that Ted Strickland would kill funds for these badly needed
highways. Ted Strickland's excuse for his action is that his home county, ·
Scioto, would lose some roads. This is not accurate. Six Projects are
Included in the Hollister Proposal including funding for the Portsmouth
Bypass in Scioto County. This is done by leveraging 120 million dollars of
Appalachian Regional Commission, Federal Funds,wlth 200 million dollars of
ODOT State funds over a 6 year period. This proposal is ingenious and
builds our ROADS!
•
Please call Representative Strickland, phone number (202) 225-5705 and
ask him to stop blocking Route 33's progress. We need to work together to
get this done.
Steve Story, Chairman of the Rt. 33 .
Corridor Committee

Horace Karr, Member of At. 33
Corridor Committee

Paul Reed, Member of At. 33
Corridor Committee

Eugene Triplett, Member of At. 33
Corridor Committee

'Robert Eason, Member of Rt. 33
Corridor Committee
Pa1d for by the RoUte 33 Corridor Committee, Steven L. Story, Co-Chairman

�•

•

Ohio/W.Va.

Putting
on the
squeeze
Gas stations feel
bite from retail ·
centers' pumps

•

Familiar faces try
.. to make comeback
in the Legislature
j

,.,.....

ij

'

t.

~

--~

••

•

' .

- ••

·--~-

By JOHN SEEWER
Associated Press Writer
BELLEVUE - Used to be thai

.. IJ
..

.leum station

s~lls fre~h

fruit. lottery

:tickets and Blimpie sandwiches. but
·doesn ' t offer oil changes.

· "This is what the oil company
·wants you to have. these profit centers," he said. "We pul the lollery
machine in to su bsidi ze the gasoline."
·
.

But ·even with these ·· protlt ce'n-

·lers. ·· independent gas station owners
like Fre it'i1g fear they are being
:pushed out of business by mega.srores
:and groceries that can afford to sell

.fuel cheaper. sometimes below cost.
· "They can undercut me by 8 cents
:a gallon and still make a penny." Fre·
·itag said. "This is the worst it'&gt; been
:in 20 ye·ars. I've been thrnu'gh some
bad times. but this .... "
Discount supr:r~tores are open ing
'gas stations in test markets around the

. c()untry, adding 10 t~e one-stop shopping t:ont:epl that Ju .'i revolutionized
·the retail world. '·
Wai·Mart is gelling into the ~as
1m sines~ . trying the concept at a limited number of stores. So is Albert·
.o.;on's, one of the nat ion's largest grocery chain s. Its gas pumps advertise
the weekly food specials and dis'pense store coupons.
.
.
"If you get a certain number of
fill-ups, you can get a free dozen
eggs," said Jenny Enochson, a
spokeswoman for the Boise, Idaho·
based stores, "The response has been
very positive."
Costco. the warehouse-club giant
with nearly 300 stores, often sells its
gas below a $1 a gallon - for discounts as great as 15 cents a gallon.
MOst of its stations have no restrooms
and no air pumps. And they don't
Jake cash, only allowing member... to
use a special gas card or Costco cred·
card.
. Tim Hamilton, a. spokesman for
-~he Automotive U n.ited Trades Orga-nization, which represents gas station
:Owners in Washington state, says
:Costco's motives are obvious.
" If you could figure out a way to
increase membership cards, you're
going to increase sales," he said.
·"One of the ways to do that is to offer
~heap gqs."
The megastores can strike better
,deals with wholesalers than can lhe

"t

Over in the House. former Re·p. Ray Miller is vying for comeback in
his old Columbus district. f(e is seeking to replace fellow Democrat Charleta
·. Tavares, who is running for secretary of stale.
'· •
•
· Altogether, 18 of 33 Senate seats and all 99 House seat• are up for grab$
this year, with Republica!" likely to maintain comfortable majorities in both
hou,ses. That means a continua1ion of the l..egislalure 's pro-business lilt as.~
tackles what probably will be the top issues next session: the budget and elc;_c.
tric deregulation.
,
•
Right now, Republicans control 60 House seats and 21 Senate seats. :
Senate President Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati, said a swing of two se~ts
in either direction wouldn't surprise him.
·
"A lot depends on what kind of voter turnout there is." Finan added. On
that score, he sees potential good news for Republicans in Hamilton CoWl·
ty. where incumbent Sen. Janet Howard. R-Forest Park, is facing a stiff chal·
lenge from Rep. Mark Mallory. D-Cincinnali .
A referendum on the location of the new Cincinnati Reds baseball stadi·
urn, a competitive congressional race between incumbent Republican Rep.
Sieve Chabot and Cincinnati Mayor Roxanne Qualls and the factlhal three
of five Republican candidates for statewide office are homegrown figure 10
•
. boost turnout there, he predicted.
.
·'
Another
thing
Senate
Republican
calldidates
have
going
for
them:
moh·
i.
ey. Lots of money. The caucus already has com milled severai'hundred thousand dollars to television advertising for Howard's and other targeted distriers.
.
·
•
"I have spent just huge amounts of time out raising mo·ney." Finan said.
"'One of the reasons we're leading the Democrats is we've worked it a Iii tie harder than they have." .
,
·
Senate Minority Leader Ben Espy. 0-Columbus, has no illusions of mat&lt;;h·
ing the GOP's fund-mising prowess.
"We're always outspent." Espy said.. 'That doesn't make us panic."
Espy is banking on the political savvy and name recognition of some for·
mer members to overcome the gap in fund raisjng. Senate Democrats are pin·
NEW FEATURE- Scott Henderson filled up
try, adding to the one-stop shopping concept
ning their hope·s on Gene Branstooi, _Eric Fingerhut and Ronald Nabakowswith diesel fuel a_
t ·the Meijer pumps In Toledo
that has revolutionized the retail world. The
. last month. Discount superstores are openln.g
ki.
/'
Meijer store Is an example of a retailer adding
gas stations ln 'test markets around the coun·
gasoline to the mix of products It sells. (AP)
Fingerhut is given the best shot of making a comeback in his old district,
He would replace Sen. Judy Sheerer, who did not seek re-election. in at~a'"
ditionally Democratic area in Cleveland's eastern suburbs.
.
i ndependents~ who don't carry much
But he said lhere is nQ evidence costs to their gas when they deliver
clout and are often collared by long· that prices will eventually'go up . He it to their independent dealers, who '
•
I
)
term .contrilcts with the oil compa- ~aid the same argument was made own their stations while !lying the
nies.
and di.sproved when supermarkets company flag.
"They're totally reliant on being invaded the territory of mom -and-pop
Megastores and low-cosl stalions
able to buy gas at a signitlcantly low- groceries:
can buy the gas directly from lhe
er price than the ga~ station down the
"For consumers who can plan refinery for a cheaper price and then
street." said Hamilton . " It's all based ahead and buy their gasoline at_these undercut the owner-operator stations,
on the price schemes set by the oil stations, lhe price will ·be lower " Ver- putting those dealers al a disadvan·
companies. "
leger said. "On balance. I think the tage.
He · believes that the megastores consumer will be-a lot better off. ''
' " I can't continue to buy from the
will drive out the smaller gas stations
Meijer Inc., with superstores oil company as long as they 're going
and eventually increase prices. Inde- across the Midwest. has gas stations to sell it for a lower price to the guy
pendent liealers fear that if. the big at 100 of its 117 locations - giving down the street," said Freitag. the BP
chains sell fuel at a loss long enough, customers a chance to pick up a loaf pealer, who started out pumping gas
they'll be forced to close.
of bread, T-shirts and luel in one stop. in high school and bought his tirst
Petroleum economist Philip K.
"It's where I buy all my gas,'' said Slalion al age 1.9Verleger Jr. of Concord, Mass., thinks James Mitchell, 62, of Toledo. "II
. " I don't think the oil companies
the fru stration «pressed by the inde- seems to be good gas and it makes it are trying to put us out of business,' '
Thank You,
pendent-owners is understandable.
convenient because you get ever:r;· he continued. "I just don'llhink this
Raccpcfi.. Twp. TntStees &amp; Clerk
" You sympathize with these guys, thing at one spot."
is an issue with them . This isn't just
but the fact is the economy is changAll big oil companies such as a BP thing. it 's going on with So noRuth Ann Millhone, Clerk
Amoco
Corp. , British Pe,troleum, co dealers, Shell dealers. It's indus·
ing,"·Verleger sajd. "It's a !rend that's
Shell Oil and Exxon Corp.' add extra try wide."
occurring across the country."

The fullowing numbers were selected in Friday's Oh io and Wesl Virginia
lolterie . . :

. -._,.

OHIO
PidJ .H- 1-5 .
Pick 4~ 2·3-4-9 _
Rucke ye 5: IK- 19-29-31-33
One
Hudeye 5 enamt! th:ket had
.
ttl I I 1 vt: numht:r\ dra\'.·n FriU~y, und its
flWncr Li..Jn cltJ.i m the Ohio Lottery
~o m c\ li&gt;p pritc of ) IIKI.OIJII.
The winnin g game tilkct was
\() ]d Jl Dt!ano\ Minim;u t in Toledo.
, Tht.: Hu(.;keyc 5 numher\ were I X.
I ~- 2'1. l l anJ ll.
. In the Pick 3 Numhc" game, the
wmmng number wa&lt;., XIS.
. ln. the P1d 4 N umhc r~ game. the

wm·mng nl,lmher wa-.. 2141) .
Sale, for the _Buckeye 5 game

By JOHN KELLY
·Associated Press Writer
INDIANAPOLIS - A week after
an_ abortion provider was shot by a

~

Renewal Only

Please vote YES for the Renewal
of the Fire Levy for Raccoon
"Township

Ohio, W.Va. lottery selections
totaled $360,113 . Players will share
$2 13.542.
There were 128 Buckeye 5 game
tickels wilh four of the numbers and
eac h is worth $250. The·4.063 with
three of the nu.mbers arc each. worth
$1 () and the 110,912 with two of the
numbers are each worth $1 .
The Ohio ' Lollery will pay
$6 I6.354to winners in Friday\ Pick
'3 Numbers daily game. Sale s for the
· game totaled $1.308.216.50.
Pi ck 4 Numbers players wal!ered
$420-K:\3 and will share $263.300. ·
The jackpot fur Saturu ay"s Super
Lotto dmwinu was $K million.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily l : 1-3·3
Daily 4: 9-6·1·8
Cash 25: 3'4-8-20-2 1-23 '

I :1 Bii0 t:! :Itt

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL
.,.
-: OFFICE HOURS • • '
·lt'~nday ~nd. Thurs~ay, 8:30 a.m.·6~00 p.m.
. . . _· T~~sday, 8:30 a.m.• ·7:~0 p~m. .
Wednesday &amp;·friday, 8:30 a.m.,12 Noon.
· ' .·NEW PArtfNtl ~ 'wAUc·INSWELCOMI • ,.
,1)

g

g you_can .move around much more ea,il~. l'vebee~.bumping my head a 101
on thongs a' I float around here. but that ' all nghl.
H I· hed
· h
k d ·f ·
..
e aug
agaon w en a., e ' II wa&lt; wonh wallmg 36 yeaN for a 'iOC·
on~.chance tony'" ~pace .
h fiYe&lt;! A one-word an,wer. I gue" I should ju,t &lt;top there ... 'aid Glenn.
I e orsl Amertcan lo orbit the Eanh
Aft 1 d . . rb' Gl
h_. '. .
.
.
,
~~
ay• on ot. _enn ad hos firS! blood samples takenby D"·
covery_s choef doctor. Scott Pa~.uyn,ko. He al-.o gulped down an amono acod
poll bel or~ be•.ng mJect~d w_uh ~no~h&lt;r ammo acod. R:searchers want to see
~ow well alanine and h&amp;sl&amp;dlnt are ab..,orbed b)' Glenn s W(Jght le,~ mu~le....
and how f., ., proten · h··
· 1 b 'ld ·
b . k · -'
·
;'
' '" ~s ~usc es ua sup _or r~a ~ ':'tlwn.
.
The Nauonal Aerona~to&lt;., and Space AdmmiSirdllon "''d lhe findong• m,ay
provode a beuer understandmg of the agmg process on Eanh and"-""' doctors in treating bedridden patients whos.: muscles become shrive"led.
Glenn
· samp1e' as· part
· o f I he mu..c 1e-prolem
·
. also
. began collect"ong unne
expenment and ~ol ready for the most complicated"'' of all : a sleep study

:"?

°

Abortion .clinics in seven states
get anonymous anthrax threats

Fire Levy

eral Hospital from 1979to 1983, con· round guilty of harassing a hospital
fessed to the slaying during a prison superintendent who fired him for
interview when a prosecutor told him padding overtime expenses.
the Olaes family deserved to know
the truth, a prosecutor said.
check the
" He dropped his head," Prosecu·
~.unbap
tor Dean Holman said, recalling how
Ho had responded lo Assistant Prosm:tme~- ~entinel
ecutor Scan Salisbury's interrogalion
of him at a Pennsy lvania prison.
"Then he raised his head and starred
1
talking."
Holman said H6, who was fired
HOME OXYGEN &amp;
from Medina General Hospital after
,MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
stabbing a surg~on in the forehead
•Hospital Beds •CPAP/BIPAP
with a pen in 1983, mistakenly sus·
•Wheelchairs ·Bathroom Aides
pected Olaes was responsible for hi s
RENTAL • SALES • SERVICE
disnissal from thai hospital and nearFree Delivery • Medicare
by Lodi Community Hospital.
Medicaid • Insurance
Ho was brought to Medina Coun·
Home Oxygen Service "
ty. where he pleaded guilty Friday
70 Pi~e St., Gal llpolls." .............. 740·446-728l
belorc Common Pleas Judge Judith
765 E. Main, Jockson" .............. 74D-286·7484
Toll Frto ....................................... "800·4~8·6844
A. Cross. She senl t:!n..:ed him to 18
years (o life in prison, He lirsr must
tin i. . h serving a two- to six.-year term
in P~nnsylvania .
Ho was convicted in Pennsylvania
of threatening Dr. Regnaldo Puesan
and hi s wife with a gun in a hospital
purki'l,g lot in 1993. Ho also was

g

I"""

Raeeoon Township

found in the front yard of his Medi·
na County home. Detectives said
there were no witnesses to the daYtime shooting.
Shou Chao Ho. 56. who had been
an anesthesiologist at Medina Gen-

g

• The 77-y.rar-old senator. blis.• fully b"ck in _....,, a'ter 36 years "''od be'ore
1'
•
. h
.
"
~u
"
·•~
' h. e tl og l_lhal he found II no more demeaning than "laking
in some
research on a hospital someplace."
,
The worlo.l's oldest space traveler took time out from hi s round-ihe-dock
·geriatric tests to answer questions from middle and hieh school srudents al
John Glenn Hioh School ·,n· New C
rd ·oh· h' hnd
.
e
onco .
10. os ometown. a
at•lwo
· museum~\, one in Columbus. Ohio. and the other in Arlin ron Va. Commander
·curtis Brown Jr. joined in the 30-minute discussion g ,
Glenn laughed when a.sked if h ~ I
. ..
"I guess I feel young all the, . e Thee s,.youhrger m slpacel.
ned . .
·
orne.
a
s
t
e
reason
vo
untee
to
he ~
Ide f lk bee
. come
lip here .. he said "It's an ad La
•
· ·
·
van ge up re oro r o ·s . ause m zero·

..

.

By The Associated Press

takmg ammo acids.

1

Guilty
plea entered
in 1992 slaying of physician
.
.
. MEDINA (AP) -A former anes·
thesiologist has pleaded guilty to lhe
slaying of a doctor "i ix years ago.
Dr. Carmel ito Olaes. 48. was shot
lo death Sept. 14. 1992, {viih a largecaliber machi'ne gun. His body was

AP Aerospace Writer
SPACE C"NTER Houslon
John Gl
h
d ..
1
.,.
·
enn p1unge mto t e 1ea.•t gam·
orous pan_of his space &lt;huttle job Saturday: savin urine. ivin blood and

.
a

.

Jtiiidlac tla--Jtmtiad • Page A 7

~~!!!~ tackles least glamorous part of shuttle mission

8y PAUL SOUHRADA
AsSQCiated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- There will be plenty of new - though not necessarily
unfamiliar- faces around the Statehouse after Election Day.
The leading contenders to win four of five open Senate seats on Nov. 3
are three current House members and a former Senate member. In addition.
another House member and two fonner stale senators are the Democrats' best
hopes for taking away two seats from Republican incumbents and holding
onto the tightly contested seat yacated by Democrat Alan Zaleski of Ver~~

Dave Freitag's Sohio gas station had

three pumps. a rep:tir shop and a candy bar rack. Today his British Petro-

Nation/World

SUnday, November 1,1998

..

•

-

a

"

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE, .
WE .ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. Ott-TUESDAYS .·
(POINT, PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER) .

1

smper. ~bortion clinics in severn!
Jaates received leiters claiming to
contain the deadly bacteria anthrax,
'llnding at lea.st 33 people to hospi··
·
tals.
. · Employees and patients at one ,
clinic. were stripped and scrubbed
down Friday ,by e':flergency crews
after a small, powder-filled envelope
was opened.
Authorities planned to spend the
weekend testing whether the letters
sent lo four abortio(Lclinics in three
slates really contained anthrax as
threatened in note's inside the
envelopes.
"If you wanted to give people a
scare. antho;ax would be the thing to
use, whether you actually use it or
just invoke its name,"· said Michael
Moodie, president of the Chemical
and Biological Aims Control lnsti·
tUie, an Alexandria, Va.-based non·
profit group. ·
Those who may have been
expos~d we're g-iven antibiotics as a
precaution after clinics in lndianapo. ) is. New Albany. Louisville, Ky .. and
·Knoxville, Tenn .. received envelopes
'containing the brown, powdery sub·
'stance and threatening notes. federal ·
;authorities sai d. All of the letters bore
·Cincinnati postmarks.
"You have just been exposed to
anthrax," said the note inside the let·
;ter sent to 'the Indianapoli s clinic,
1
•authorities said.
; Preliminary tests on the contents
·of the Louisville and New Albany

envelopes were negative for anthrax.
a strain of bacteria that can be used
as a biological weapon. FBI agent
Charles E. Riley Ill said .
Coments of a letter sent to the
Knoxville Reproductive Health Cenler will be sent to a lab for testing.
FBI agent Scott Nowinski said.
~- Authorities in IndianapoliS said it
may be Monday belore testing proves
whether the envelope sent to a
Planned Parentbood clinic there con·
lained the bacteria.
If the powder is anthrax, those
exposed will have to lake antibiotics
for four weeks. and possibly ' an·
anthrolx vaccine. said Virginia A.
Caine. Marion County Health
Depanment director. Anthrax: can
kill if left untreated. but antibiotics
usually cure the disease.
None of the 31 people treated in
lndiao;tapolis complained of any
symptoms. but authorilies look them
to hospitals after they were deconla·
minaleo.l in alent put up near the clinic. They were given antibiotics as a
preventative mi!a.su.re and released.
An employee of'Women's Health
Services. a private clinic in
Louisville. and the Jllail. carrier who
delivered the lener there were taken
to the University of Louisville Hospi tal as precaution. They were treat- ..,
ed with antibiotics and released.
The· clinic in~ New Alhany. across
the river from Louisville. was not
evacualed because th e Idler was
inlel'cepled before it was delivered.
authorities said.
The letters arrived ~~ \YCek after
abortion provider Dr. Barnett.Slepi·

a

an. 52. was shol and killed by a sniper
in his home in sul&gt;urhan Buffalo. N.Y.
Delbert Culp. executive directprof
Planned Parenthood of Central and
Southern lno.liana. called the acts
despicable.
" These are just poliiical exlremists who call themselves pro-life ... he
said. "Thi s is pulting 29 people's
li ves at risk. and 1 just find that
absolutely appalling . I thin)&lt; society
just has to begin saying this is total·
ly unacceptahle."
Ann Minnis of Haubstadt. Ind ..
president of Gibson County Right to
Life. an anti -abortion group in suuth-

western Indiana. denounced the mail·
ings.
"We're about !'aving lives. not
about anything like thatllhe anthrax
threats)," she sa id . " Heavens. it's
horrible." ·
Also Friday. a fake bl&gt;mb was
delivered to the s01me abortiun clinic.
in Birmingham. Ala .. that was the ia•:,:
gel of a bombing Jan. 30 that killed
an off-duty. police orticer and seriously injured a nurse. Eric Robert
Rudolph is wanted in the blast b"l has
eluded a mussivc manhunt.
A bomb squad examined lhe pack·
age delivered to the New Woman All
Women Healthcare clinic but found
it to be a hqax. It conaained a video·
tape sleeve wilh wire inside, f~deral
aurhoriries said .

requiring thai he bew~reo.l up with 23 sensor; for four nighh \larting late Sunday. The sen-.or. woll noea,ure their breathin• ,norin• eye and chin-muo,cle
·
,..
e-·
movement,. ano.l brJm wavO'o.
_
_
.
The fir..,t 'tep of the \leep 'tudy mvulved swallnwmg. a mdm tran"mtter

and thermometer encap'"lated in a lan•e pill. Radio si•nals from the Iran,.
·
'd" he d
- · . !'
e
.
miller. provo 10£ I
etaols ?I Glenn sont~rnal body lemperdiUre, were beong
recorded nonstop~· u specoal belt around his waisl.
. . Japane"' phy'lcoan-a,trunaut Chiaki Mukai, the Olher sleep-study subject.
wolltake the hormone mel.atoni n lo see if it helps her sleep. Glenn wa&lt; barred
IWlJ numlh' a~t) ln•m tak&amp;nt! mc:latonin ft•r undisclo\ed medi··al rea'"''
•
• ·
·
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'··
Researchers hope the c:xpenment will help e~plain why so many a'tronauts lo-;e one to three hou" of sleep each night they' re in orbit; and why
the elderly tend lo have trouble sleepino down on Earth
Di scovery's seven-member c;..,w had to deal with fe~ equipment prnh
1ems Saturday. one ut· them ·onvolvong
· a new water purilier !hat leaked and·
.
then made the water ta.•te bad.

RE-ELECT

~ HAROLD G.

MONTGOMERY
GALLIA COUNTY .COMMISSIONER
'

VO,.E FOR PROGRESS

Will Continue" To Provide Unprecedented Manage~nt

I

. .Of The Taxpayer's Dollars. County General Ye~ End Fund
•

Balances:
1992 - $213,090.99

&gt;.

'

1993-$235,307.29

1994 :.... $803,890.88
1995 - $1 ,371 ,282.97

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1996 .:... $1 ,293,828.59
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1997 - $1 ,499,284.27 '

1998 .... $2,226,432.84 (as of 9/30/98)
Paid for by the candidate, 2624 St. Rt. 141 (Green Township)

•

Mourning follows fatal disco blaze .
:· . GOTEBORG, Sweden (AP) Outside the gulled dance hall where
(oo young people djed in a raging fire.
h~ndreds of people stood quietly Sat!)rday amid flowers and candles.
atieinptinglo come to grips with cal;,;trophe.
;: In lhe parking lot thai a day
.!1efore had been a tumult of ambu·Jnnces and screams, mourners laid a ·
~ong pile of bouquets. candles and
~·ants uf remembrance.
i.: The cards' ·inscriplioois. were brief
:... "I will see you in heaven." "We
miss you" - and lhe people who
slooil reading them al so had few
•
words.
:. "I just wanted to show my sym·
f)athy. I think about them. There's
nothing else we can do." sa id Caroline Ericsson, a resident who didn't
!mow any of the victims.
• · For Lasse Gustavsson ..having the
'right ·words wasn ~ . us important as
~howing his face, which was severe·
disfigured in another tire. The for . Goleborg tiretighter losl his
hi s eyelids and most of his nose

in a gas explosion.
· By showing up, he said, he wanted to show th~ victims' relatives and
friends that spirit can help them pull
through despair.
" I can,'t give them hope . Consolation is enough." he said, as people
nearby cast uneasy glances at his

... '
Digital phone

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Many ofthe'l73 people injured in
the blaze may have lu ertdure similar
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Digital: 180 minutes
or Cellular: 150/1000 minutes

YES
FOR THE

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YOUR SUPPORT MEANS SO

MUCII,BUT COSTS SO I.ITI"I .E
PrnJXriY Vnu!
MHrlct Vllluc
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MEIGS INDUSTRIES·

e-EVY

' '

VOTE

WHEN YOU GIVE HELl',
YOU GIVE HOPE

YES

Fur more inform at inn, please contuct Steve llchn
al (7~0) 992-6681.
WHICh ('hannt:.l27 Oi l

i :JO

prn . or 10::'\0 p.m. \0 k;un

Senate

CARLETON SCHOOl

more.

~

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Paid lor by the Carleton Schooi/MIIga lndustrlu Committe• lor lhe L•vy, Shar~n Ctrd, Tre11urer

David

:Mi/{e Shoemaker,
..•
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J{e's rr'ruly One Of Us!

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Paid for by The shoemaker Comm1nee, Dwight Radcliff, Treasurer, 330 Sylvan Circle , Circleville, Ohio 431t3

~----.....,;;.....

'

for by Evans fpr Appellate Judae. Ji:an Saunders. Trea., 436 Second Ave., Gallipolis. OH 4~631

off peak

.

�Sports

.
juttbaJl 1rimn • i.entin.el

G~dlipolis

•

Bowl~ng

·r

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QUESTIONS &amp; ANSWERS
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at

The following information helps to answer many questions, but if you have fl'lrther questions, please visit our headquarters (he Park .
' . Central Hotel, 403 Second Avenue, or call us at 740-339-8084. Our ~eb page address is: htttp.//www.alannet.net/gahsbondissue
WHAT IS THE BOND ISSUE?
The district last voted on a new high_fichool
bond issue in 1985. That issue, which was
defeated, ·would have assessed 8.4 mills. In
· 1998, the proposed millagll is on.ly 7.4 mil.ls ·,
for ll new liigh school.
,..
WHY DO WE NEED A NEW
HIGH SCHOOL?
WHAT ABOUT THE OTHER SCHOOLS?
According to current educational standards, the
district serves 960 more students than it should be
in our existing K-12 facilities. Since the 1940's,
. Ohio added requirements in special education,
foreign language, career education, health and ·
safety education, keyboarding, computer
.
education, and more. In addition, the district began
offering ali-day every day kindergarten last year.
Each new program requires time and space which
crowds our classrooms. We want to see students in
bright, pleasant classrooms which encourage
project-based; active learning.

Euch new program requires tilne and space
which crowds our classrooms. Classrooms
lmve ·been ·s ubdivided to accommodate more
classes ... Every inch is used. It's time for a
new solution ..A new high school. '

WHERE DID THE MONEY COME FROM
TO BUY THE LAND"?
Fintr ncially responsible mamigement
combined with recent savings to .provide the
jiuuls for the purchase of 100 ~cres ' near
GrPt'll Elementury Schqol ..·. Bond issue
revpnues will reimburs·e the district for the
lllnd.

•

"S 60(J,OOO for O[leratirrg Expenses"
'

t

The proposed bond issue will finance the
construction of a new high school. The issuance of
bonds results in a propertx tax, and th~ proceeds
from the taxes raised can only be used to retire
these bonds :&lt;The money raised through a bond
. issue cannot be used for salaries or other operating
q:penses.

It will take 7.4 mills to raise the
$18,780,000 necessary to build a new
comprehensive high school.:. The total
'effective millage rate in the school district will
be 2 -7 .9 mills (it is 20.5 today) which is still
lower than the Ohio state ave.rage of 30.9
mills.

HOW WILL THE NEW SCHOOL ENHANCE
LEARNING FOR OUR CHILDREN?
This is the most important question. The
percentage of students graduating from Gallia
Academy High School with an honors diploma is
higher than the state average. This i11ustrates that
· teachers and parents are striving to help all
students develop knowledge and skills. We make
classrooms as comfortable and attractive as
possible, but we do not have sufficient space for
SchoolNet compute{s, book collections, and the
supplemental materials that enhance learning.

IF THERE ISA NEW SCHOOL, WON'T
THERE BE A NEED FOR MORE
OPERATING MONEY?
Because 'bond issue revenue will reimburse the
district for the purchase of the land, the district can
operate with additional personnel at the new high
scllool for at least two years after the high school
·opens. However, until the new school _is in
operation, it is impossible to prediCt th-e operating
costs. And , it is impossible to guess what-will
happen to state and federal funding in the years to
come.
Better schools will bring more families to our area,
which may reduce the need to ask for additional
operating funds. An operating levy will not be
placed.on the ballot before our needs are
determined. Jt.is estimated that a new school could
be designed, constructed and opened as early as
2001-2002.
.·.

How much will the bond issue raise

For example., the cutrent science lab facilities in
Gallia Academy High School were state of the art
in the .1950's, and they will support more hands-on
science learning for our middle schoo'l students. ,
But today 's 'high school students require expanded
learning opportunities. The class of 2004 is
· required by lawn to earn at least three liigh school
units of science (today 's requirement is two units).
Higher education expectations for teaching and
learning require important facilities- especiafly in
the area of science and technology.

my taxes?

If your home ·has a $70,000 market value (not assessed value),
your additional yearly property tax will be $158.64. That is only
$13.22 per month, 43 cents per day! Rarely does su'ch a . small
Investment promise,such a great return.
This tax amount cannot increase for the 26 year duration of the
bond. Witti business and indu.strial growth, which almost always
· foll .o ws. the opening of a new school,. your tax amount could even
be reduced .
·

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WHY DON'T WE GET STATE AID LIKE
NEIGHBORING SCHOOL DISTRICTS DO?

PROPERTY
MARKET
VALUE
$10,000
$20,000
t30,000
$40,000
$50,000
$60,000
$70,000
$60,000
$90,000
$100,000
$150,000
$200,000
$250,000
.$300,000

TAX
VALUE

ANNUAL
COST

(35%)
$3,500
$7,000
$10,500
$14,000
$17;5oo
. $21,000
$24,500
$28,000
$31,500
$35,000
$52,500
$70,000
$87,500
$105,000

$ 22.66
$ 45.33
$ 67.99
s 90.85
$113.31
$135.98
$158.64
$181.30
• $203.96
$226.63
$339.94
$458.25
$566.56
$679.88

I

,.

MONTHLY
COST
$ 0.44
$ 3.78
$ 5.76
. $ 7.55
$ 9.44
$12.28
$13.22
$15.11
$17.00
$18.89
$28.33
$37.77
$47.21
S56.66

.

DAILY
COST
$0.06

'

$0.22
$0.19
$0.25
$0.31
$0.40
$0.43
$0.50
$0.56
$0.62
$0.93
$1.24
$1.56
$1.86

Last year people who served on a ·community-wide Schoolhouse of Qual ity committee studied the ways in
which the best use of current facilities could deliver on the educational values they considered most important.
They determined that building a new high school would be the most cost-effective way .for the community to
provide an improved learning environment for all of its young people .
·
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It's Time
VOTE FOR·

Some of the advantages that a new Gallla Academy -High School wttl be designed to provide_are:

''

·Full-size classrooms that allow for indivioual help , group activities and an expanding curriculum
•Wide hallways with student locker bays' located away from quiet classrooms
•Heating Ventilation and Air Conditioning throughout the building
•In-class voice , video, and computer systems to s _u pport student learning
·Better fac ilities for handicapped and/or disabled students and visitors
•More laboratory faci lities- inside and out - to help students meet Ohio's higher expectations in life, earth,
physical and agricultural science
•Easily accessiole practice fields that will reduce scheduling confl icts for all athlet ic, band and community
activities
·Cafetena space where students can safely enjoy healthful meals
·Ample parking and safer bus loading/unloading areas
.
·
·
.
SQme of the advantages that a "new" Gattla Academy Middle School (current GAHS) will be renovated ·
· to provide are :

our schools &amp;

•Separate facilities and programmi~g for students in the sixth, seventh and eighth grades
•Kitchen and eating space necessary for a clo.sed'campus lunch period for all middle grade students
·Increased opportunities for student participation and leadership in developmentally appropriate. activit ies _ a
sense of pride in their own school
Some or the advantages that all students from preschool through fifth grade will benefit from better
utilization of currently available space to provide are:

our community

•More _hands-on learning opportunities and ·access to technology across the cu;riculum
.
•Reduced need to use closets or subdivided classrooms for special programs, volunteering tutoring, etc.

for our children

the first down instead of punting the
ball away. Akron had convened on a·
founh-and shon in the first quarter,
bul this time Williams stuffed Gray •
for no gain.
. The Chippewas (5-3, 4-1 MidBOWLING GREEN , Ohio (AP) American) needed eight plays to go
- Bob Niemet ran for one touch- 47 yards. capped by Flowers' onedown and passed for two more a:; yard 10uchdown.
•
·
Bowling Green played keepaway 10
' Pete Shepherd was 21-of-36 for
beat Marshall 34-13 and hand the 277 yards with one interception for
Thundering Herd their first loss.
Central Michigan. Greg Lomax 1&lt;:&lt;'
Niemet opened the scoring with Akron (3-5, 2-4) with ·174 yards
nolimeleftinthefirstquanerwilha rushing on 21 canics. He also had
nine-yard run. then hit Kun Gerling two catches for 85 yards.
,,
on touchdown passes covering 16
The Zips opened a 24-1 1 halftime
and four yards in the t)lird quarter for lead as Lomax scored on runs of II
.
the Falcons (3-5 overall, 3-2 in the and 21 yards, Jim Washington ran for
''
·
·
Mid-American Conference).
a six-yard score and lac Derr kicked
another as the Galors (7 -1, 5-1
Bowling Green domin ated up a 23-yard field goal.
Southeaslem Conference) stayed one
front. holding lhe ball for 38:23 comThe teams e.changed field goals
game behihd Tenne ssee in the chase
pared 10 Marshall"s 21:37.
.
in the founh quarter before Central
·for lhe SEC East title.
The Thundering Herd (8· 1. 6!1 pulled wi.&lt; hin a touchdown with
MAC ) took the opening kickoff and 12:37 left.
Florida avenged last year's 37-17
loss lhal snapped il s seve n-ga me
drove to the Bowling Green nine , but
Toledo 16, Northern Illinois 3
Doug Chapman- who totaled 116 • At DeKalb, Ill ., Todd France
COLUMBIA , S.C. (AP)- Who winning streak in the series and sat
yards rushing on 13 carries -was kickcdthre·c ficld,goals SaiUrd ay and
needs Peyton Manning? Tannessee "s bad all year with Spurrier. , ·
Tee Marlin set three NCAA records ·
Georgia (6-2, 4-2) all but fell oul
stopped on a fourth-and-one running Toledo inlerceplcd. six passes wh1le
with 23 slraig~t pass comP,Ictions of lhe SEC and national title hunls
play.
\]Cating Northern llli iwis 16-3.
and threw for four touchdowns as the and will ~pend a year thinking about ·
Bowling Green then fumbled the
Northern Illinoi s (2-6 overall , 2-3 ·
third-ranked Volunteers · handed mi ssed -opportunities at · "The
ball away at ils own 32, but didn't Mid -A merican) had won twostraighl
SoUih Carolina its eighlh straight World.'s Largest Outdoor Cocktail
give up a yard on three plays before after snapping the nation's longe st
loss, 49·14 on Salurday.
Pany."
Jason Witczak missed a 49-yard Divisi on 1-~ losi ng. slreak al 23
· Martin ended last week's vicloty
Texas 20, No.7 Nebraska 16 ,
field-goal a!letiipt.
game s. But this time the Huskies
over Alabama ·with a completion,
At Lin co ln, Neb. , not even the
The Falcons limiled the Herd, to couldn' t overcome six mterccptions
1hen hil 23 more in a row to surpass home field advantage can help
89 yards rushing and only 14 first off quarterback Craig Hannon, who
Manning's school record ( 12). the Nebraska anymore.
downs . Meanwhile. Bowling Green compclted 21-of-40 for 197 yards.
_ Southcaslern Conferencce mark o[
Major _Applewhite's two-yard
was piling up 181 yards on Ihe
France boOicd field goals of 34,
bie Miss" Ken Auslin (20). and the touchdown pass In Wayne McGanly
ALL THE WAY_ Ohio State's David Boston sprints toward the ground on 56 auempls and picking 23 and 37 yards. Toledo (6·3, 5-1)
NCAA. record for two games of 23 with 2:47 lo play gave the revived end zone on a punt return during Saturday's Big Ten mati:hup up 26 first downs.
·
scored the game's only touchdown
Niemet completed 18-of-27 pass- on Chri s .Wallace's seven-yard pass
shared by Southern Cal's Rob Texas Longhorns a 20-16 upset of against Indiana at Bloomington, Ind., where the top-ranked
Johnson and Maryland's Scott the seventh·raQked Cornhuskers on Buckeyes won 3&amp;·7. (AP)
es for 233 yards wilhoul an intcrcep- to Mel Long wilh 5:07 left in the
Milanovich.
Saturday, coding Nebra ska 's 47'
tion. No nne for lhe Falcons gained half.
.
Marlin 's 23 in a row broke the game winnin·g sjreak al Memorial ' for an interception and a losl fumble 1986.
more than John Gibson's 59 yards,
Brian Clark.kicked a 41 -ya~d fleld
· one-game recoid of 22 by Iowa's Stadium.
• .
as No. 16 Notre Dame beal Baylor
Bu'l Mmnesola still. wi ll e'nd a but Adam .Lige added a one-yard goal in lhc third quarler .for
Chuck Long in . 1984 and the final
Wilh Ricky Williams enliancing. 27-3 on Saturday.
.
decade &gt; winle ss
against
the scorjng run in the founh quarter.
Nonhero 's only .poinl s. He mis.sed
completion percentage. of 95.8 (23- his Heisman Trophy chances by runDenson , whose previous best was Wolver(nes for the firsl time since
Jason Strasser chipped in wilh from 52 and 37 yards.
of-24) broke 1he mark of92.6 (25 -of· ning for 150 yards, the Longhorns · 162 yards against Michigan in the the early part of lhe ceinurx. After field goals of 22 and 39 yards.
Marietta 28, Hiram 14
27) by OCLA's Rick Neuheisel in handed Nebraska its first home loss season opener, ripped offruns of 37. playing 70 straighl years, the 'teams
Marshall's Chad Penmngton ran
At Maricua. Kenneth Sasu ran for
1983. Martin threw for 315 yards.
si nce Sept. 2 1, 1991 , when 32 and 24 yards as Noire Dame (6·1) won) meet again until 2001 because for one score and passed 10 yards to 206 y&lt;!rds and a pair of touchdowns
Last year, Manning and his NFL Washington wo n 36-21.,
-ran for 329 yards, ils highest total in of the BigTen's,rotating schedule.
Jerrald Long for the other. as Mariella beal Hiram 28·14
legs ran for his life .. against the
Texas (6-2. 4-1 Big 12), though. two seasons.
ButMinnesotadidn'tgoaseasily Pennmgton completed 19-of-26 Salurday.'
·
Gamecocks' press ure. fimshing only seems ro fiave the Huskers (7-2. 3-2)
But hi s mistakes also hun the as lhey .have lhe last II · years. lis passes for 175 yards with one inler~asu carried 27 limes and scored
8-of-25 for 126 yards and a intercep· figured out. The Longhorn s beal Irish and helped Baylor (2-6) score defense held Michigan IO minus-24 ccplion. Byron L, ftwich relieved on t~ns of five and 16 yards as the · ·
tion. Bul right from the start, Martin Nebraska 37-27 in lhe 1996 Big 12 its only poinls . His fumble e.nded yards rushing in lhe first half and had him on the final series and complet- Pioneers (4-4, 3-4 Ohio Conference)
couldn't miss against Soulh Carolina tille game the last time the teams Notre Dame's first drive at Ihe four sacks.
cd all five of his auempts for 73 rushed for 358 yards on 51 attempts.
(1·8 overall , 0-7 Southeastern played a los s that ended Baylor 29 and his halfback · pass
The Wolverine s managed on ly yards.
.
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. Hiram (2-6. 1·6 OAC) managed
Conference). .
Nebraska 's bid for a third S\raight irrtended for Jarious Jackso)l was Streets' 76-yard touchdown catch . Pennington came into the game just 37 yards rushing ~n 31 tries.
. He was 3-b ,f-3 on the ope~ing national championship.
intercepled by Gary Baxter and early in the first quaner and Jay averaging 295 yards passing a game,
Heath Hinton added 72 yards on
drive for Tennessee (7-0, 5·0).
With first-year coach Frank returned 59 yards to the· Notre Dame Feely's shorl field goal to. forge a 10· while Marshall was averaging 33 13 canies and an eight-yard scoring
including a 21-yard touchdown pass Solich taking over for lhe retired · 10. Baylor slalled at lhe one and Matt 10 lie until Hall's sack gave poinls and 429.4 yards of tolal run,
while
quarterback
Lee
to Jermaine Copeland.
'
Tom Osborne, the. streaks conlinued Bryanl kicked an 18-yard field goal Michigan the lead f0r good.
offense.
·
Kuberucki had 40 yards on six
No.4 Kansas State 54, Kansas 6
10 fall for the Huskers, along wtth . with 9:441eft in the half lhaltied il3 On sccond-and- 16 from his four,
MiamiJS, Ohio 7
attempls i~cluding a one-yard run. ;t
At Lawrence, · Kan., Michael lheir shield of invincibitiiy. Earlier 3.
Billy Cockerham dropped back and
At Oxford, Travis Prentice ran for
Kuberacki comp leted 11 -of-22
Bishop scored two touchdowns and lhis season, Texas A&amp;M beal lhe
After shaking off its early prob- couldn'l find a receiver. Hall slormed four louchdowns Salurday to lead · passes for 86 yards.
amassed 320 yards of offen se and Huskers to end their 19-game win- lem s, Notre Dame, which oulgained in to hlind side Cockerham for a 12· Miami of Ohio to a 35-21 viclory
Dwayne Pavkovich hil on 17-of·
Martin Gramatica kicked a school· ning streak as well as their 40-game Baylor 462 yards lo 172 , scored three 10 lead.
over Ohio as the RedHawks (7·1. 4- 32 passes for 246 yards wilhotit an
record four field .goals, leading No. 4 conference winning slreak.
times in a 5-minute, 47-seconds
Michigan managed a 43-yard 1
Mid-American . Conference) interception for Hiram, including
Kansas State 10 a rain-drenched 54-6
No. 10 Penn State 27, Illinois 0
stretch to take conlrol.
field goal by Feely on the ensuing improved 10 their best start in '21 scoring strikes of one and 15 yards lo
rout of Kansas.
at Stale College, Pa., Kevin No. 22 Michigan 15, Minnesota 10 possession, and William Petersonh years.
.
Bryan Moure.
The Wildcals (8-0, 5-0 Big 12), 8· Thompson threw for 269 yards and
At Minneapolis: Minn .. an awe· intercepted Cockerham's pass WJI
Prentice rushed 44 times for 237
Malone 31, Geneva 28
yards as he e&lt;tended his school and
i\1 Canton, Brian Magrctl's ]5;.
0 for the firsl time in their hi story, touchdown as, No. 10 Penn Stale some defensive perfonnance helped 3:22 rematntng.
totaled 556 yards despile lhe cold showed off an impressive passing No: 22 Michigan defend lhe Little
Michigan couldn 't move the ball, conference IOuchdown record to 50. yard touchdown pass to Bubba
rain thai fell throughout the game.
game for the first time this seaso n in Brown Jug once again.
and the Gophers got anoi,f1er chance He scored on' runs of six, 18, one and Cosla ntin i with 50 seconds left gave
Q~arterbaek Zac We gn~r. for the a 27-Q victory over Illinois on
James Hall's sack in 1he end zone -and nea~ly converted, JUSI like in . five yards, The 44 carries was one Malone a 31-28 comeback vict~ry
second week in a row, was knocked Saturday.
for a safety early in the fourth quar· last week s comeback oyer the shon of the Miami record.
, over Geneva Saturday.
out of the game with a concussion on
Thompson , who finished 19-of- ter broke a punchless 10-10 tie and Spartans.
.
.,
John Scolt kicked five extra
Magrcll. who passed for, lhree
Kansas : second possess io~.·
26, hit two big passes to Chafie' led the Wolverines to a 15 - 10 victo- · · But Tony Hendersori bobbled and poinls, extendi ng- his Mia"mi and touchdowns, completed 2 1-of-44
Fonn~r walk-on Jay . Alexander, Fields that set up touc hdowns on lhe ry, Michigan's 12th straight in one of dropped what would have been a 36- MAC record 10 94 consecuti ve con· passes for 293 yards wllh one toterwho rallied Kansas to a 33-17 victo- Niltany Lion s' first 1wo drives: one 1he nation 's oldesl rivalries.
yard touchdown with I :38 remain· versions.
ception (or Malone (5-3 overall and
ry over lhen-No. 17 Colorado last for 47 yards -on lhird-and- 17, Ihe
Although thctr offense con tinued · .in g, and Jhmes Whitley's intercepSteve Hook fin had touchdown 3-1 in the Mid-Slates Football
week, was overwhelmed along with olhcr for 53 yards.
the struggles thai have plagued 11 all tion wllh 1:19 remammg sealed the runs of 14 and eight yards for Ohio Assoc i~tion ).
.
The quarterback. criticized much season, the Wotvennes (6·2, 5-0 Big win. .
(2·6, 2·3). He rushed 29 times .for
f:li s other touchdown passes covthe rest of the Jay hawks by a Kansas
Stale unit ranked No. I. 2 and 4 of the season for Penn State's spouy Ten) slill won their sixth straighl
Minnesota led 3-0 after Adam 173 yards. Kareem Wilson rushed 23 ered 30 yards and 17 yards to Shane
nationally in 'scoring, rush a nd tolal offen se, also hooked up with Cordell game heading inlo a brutal three- Bailey's field goal on its firsl drive , times for 132 yards, including a one- Hosteller. who had ci"ght catches for
1
defense . The Jayhawks (3 -6, 1-6) had Mitchell on a 36-yard 'shovel pass· to game strclc.h. Michrgan play s t-Jo. I 0 hut the Wolverines needed just one yard touchdown run, for Ihe ·Bobcals. 137 yards .
·.
only 44 yards on 48 play s.
set · up his seve n-yard touchdown Penn State. No. 9 Wi sconsin and No . play to answer. Streels beat Craig
Wilson gav!' Ohio il s &lt;;m ly lead
Geneva (5- .1, 2-2 MSFA) buill a
David Winbu sh, who had 268 pass to Corey Jones as Penn 'Stale (6· 1 Ohio Slate before fini shing the reg- Scruggs 1-on- 1 to hau l in a 76-yard when he scored ,wi lh 17 secqnds left 2 1-3 lead on touchdown r4ns of one
yards againsl Colorado, had just 19 I, 3- 1 Big Ten) moved to a 21-0 lead. ular season at Hawaii.
touchdown pass, Michigan's longesl in the fiht. quarler. Miami pull ed yard by Tim McGrnw, seven yards
yards on 14 carries: •
Fi eld s had three calchcs for 11 5
1~1i Strecls had six catches for 192 scoring play of the season.
. even when Jay Hall scored on a nine· by Mike Holarcn and three yards by
No.6 Florida 38, No. II Georgia 7 yard s ·and Jones caught six for 63 yards and a wuchdown , but ' (he
· The firsl of several Michigan yard touchdown 'pass from Mike Melvin Cobbs. Justin Myers, who
At Jaeksbnville, Fla., a victory yards. Aaron Harris and Eric McCoo Wolverines survived 1hc 83rd meet- errors gave Minnc sola a 10· 1 lead Bath midway thlough the second.
complclcd 20-of-29 pa sses for 251
.. over' Georgia is no good if Steve each had a lwo-yard touchdown run. ing for the jug because of a defen se late in the first quarter. Punter Jason
Bath was 13-o f-17 for 119 yards. yards w1 thout an mt ercc ption. hil Jon
Spurner can'l rub il in a little.
Coach Ron Turner juggled quar- lhat held Minne sola wilhoul a pass Vinson dropped a snap and the hall and Hall had •.ix catches to move into Stevens on a 11-yard scoring pass
. ' He got his chance Saturda y, call ' lcrha2ks after the lllini (2 -7, 1-5 ) lost completion in the f1rst half and to jusI ho~nccd into the end zone when ·a lie for lhird place on "Ihe Miami midway through the tlmd quarter t~
ing an end-around for a n.1caninglcss three g•tmes by a combined 120- 12. six first downs after the fir st £juarter. Vi nson was hit by three Gophers. Cilrccr receptions Jist with 109.
put Gc ~1cv_a ;the ad 28-17 .
.
eight-yard touchdown w!th 38 sec - Kurt Kiu'ncr, who managed a lone
The G_o phers (4-4. l -4)."who beal Tummy Hendri cks whiffed on an
Prentice gave Miami a 2 1-7 lead , . Bur Ma~rdl passe\~ to Hosle llcr
onds lefl in No. 6 Flonda s Jg-7 Vll:- touchdown pass and threw six inter- Michigan State last week, were try- attempt to kick the hJII out of the end with touchdown.'\ late in the half and rm tlw '"' 17-ya rd ~~.:o n.:- · wtth 6: 10
tory over No. II Georgia.
ccpti ons thi s season, was out l&lt;iirk' ing for their consecutive confcrcm:c zone. and Graham rc&lt;.:ovcrcJ for a late in the third quarter. but Hoo kfin rcmai nin ,g tu cut the lead to 2X -23.
·
Just minutes heforc. Spurrier had Johnson , \Aiho hJd four passes pi cked win s for the f1r."t t1m c sinl:c 1993. touchdown .
scbrcd twice to tic the game Hgain.
then foun d Costalllint for the ~o- ...
called a trick play that re su lted in an off in hi s on ly other college st art ~ They led 10-7 nrtcr Trcvis GrJham
The Wolvcri'nc s ti ed it with
P.rcntii.:e scored agni n with 5:34 ahead s~or'!.:. Magrcll !.:onncctcd With
eight-yard toul:hdown catch - hy was 11:1.
·•
recovered a botch ed punt for a touch- Feely's 18-yard field goal in t~1c sec- rcrilai ning, and with 1:OTto play fol- Hoste tler on the two-poi nt convc rNo. 16 Notre Dame 21: Baylor 3
down in the firsl qu arter. and they ond quarter, but they also tmssed a lowing an Ohio turnover.
q.;-arterback Dou g John son - for th e
51 on pas&gt;
" clinching score again st the t ~am- th e . AI South Bend. Ind ., Aulry came closer to healing Mi~higan chance at a touchdown .w hen Torn
Central Michigan 28, Akron 27
Mount Union S8; Capital 7
Florida coach love s to beallhe most. Denson rushed for a career-be st 189 than any year· sin ce their lasl victory, Brady fumb led a1snap on third-and At Mounl Pleasanl. Mich .. Eric
At Columhus, Gary Smeck threw
John son also threw for two first- · yards ;,~rid ·~, ~~mchdown, maki~g up a 20-17 decision at ·M1ch1 gan 1n goal at the Minnesota one.
Flowers scored 011 a onc~ yard run three to uchdown passes and Ryan
quarter touchdown s' · and ·ran for'
.
with 6:10. left in the ga me to lift Gorius and Da·vc Hassey ca..:h sco red

Top 25
college football

A very important issue will be on the November 3rd ballot.
A vote YES is an investment in our schools, in our children, in our community and in our future.
'

stan 1he second half. He caught No.
30 on a 2-yard toss from Gennaine
midway in the founh quaner. giving
the Buckeyes a 38-7 lead. · .
Germaine. who was 32-of-45.
threw for three 1ouc hdowns and 3~ I
yards, · his school-record founh
straight 300-yard game, fifth of lhe
season and sixth of h1s career. H1s
career yardage total in creased to
5,254, 2,293 shy of An Schlicter's
school record.
Indiana (3-5, 1· 4) has losl. eight
straight to Ohio State since 1988.

'
en ness
. ee, Pen.n
.
M
.
•
h
•
.
•
.
e'
I·C
I
g
an
w
·
.
In
Stat

.. .

~

Green .
slays Herd 34-13;
Miami beats Ohio

T. ..
I

City Schools Bond Issue
I

B

Sunday, November 1, t 111111

No. 1 Ohio State
beats Indiana 38-7
BLOOMINGTON. Ind. (AP) David Boston returned a punt 70
yards for a louchdown and padded
his school record for touchdown
receptions with two as top-ranked
Ohio State defeat~d .Indiana 38-7
Saturday.
Boston's punt return put lhe
Buckeyes (8·0, 5-0 Big Ten) ahead to
stay with 8:33 left in the opening
quarter. His 29th touchdown catch
on a 3-yard pass from Joe Germaine
gave the Buckeyes a 28-7 lead fol·
lowing a 69-yard. eighl -play drive to

Section

a

NFL Hall of Fa mer 'Bulldog' Turner dJes at 79

B CHRISTY LEMIRE
father suffered fron1 cn1pli~se~a and
• YDALLAS (A P) - Pro Football was diagnos ed wi lh lung cancer in
Hall 0 1. Farner Clyde " Bulldog"' March. He di ed Friday on hi s ranch
Turner. a two -way star on four in Galesvil le, Texas. surrounded by
Chicago Bears championship teams ramil y members. ·
who once defied demanding coach
Turner, who al 6-J'ool-2 and 240
George H·alas, has died . He was 79. pounds was exccplionally big forhi s
Turner's daughl cr, Pal, said ~er era and also fasl, played cenler and

linchacker. He was C hicago's firstround draft pick in 1940. Ihe year lhc
Bears beal th.c W
__ ashtn_gl_on Redskm_s
7_3-0_for lhe1r l1rst ol lour c h ampt ons h1p~ u I t I1at d ccad c.
.
Turner was chosen aii -NFL SIX
lime s, and was known lor ht s llawle ss snapprng and blockmg ah1illJ~ S ·

;~~~L~~:~~:~~~:l7:~~ :~~~ ,:: ~~:~~~:~~~:~~~~~~~~~~;i~:;.~~rk"~~~~~

He led lhe NFL in inlcrccplions with
eighl in 1942. and picked off four

after defensive back Shawn Williams
stopped Akron's Jimmie Gray for nu
gain on a fourlh-and-lwo to gtvc the
Pa s·s~s in hi s five ch ~tmpion s hip Chippewas the ba ll allhc A k·ron 47 .
games - rcturnmg
• ·· fo1·
· o ne 24 y·trds
Ak·ron 1c d 2',,- 2 1 tl ucc 1tl 1.t\Ui c~·
a louchdown in lhc roul of lhc into the fourth quancr when Zips
coach Lee Owens decided to go fu r
Rcdskins.

Capital Saturday.
Smeck compl eted 16-of-2 3 passes
for 174 yard &gt; with nn interceptions.
H.ts sconn•
·
tosses wen1 1·or t\t.rle
yards· 10 H·,·,s·s·cy. \0 yards lo Gorius
(See FOOTBALL on B·8)

NCAA Division I football scores
Ea~o1

Brown 20, Cornell 7
COlgate 38, Bucknel l 21
Connecticut 32, Northe:lSicm 22
Duquesne J7, lona 14
Fairfield 38. Siena 0
GeorgetoWn, D.C. 54, St. l'eter's 7
Harvurd 20. Dartn'l oulh 7
Lufayeue ·2H, Holy Cross 17
Lehigh 26. Wofford 0
Maine 39, Delaware 27
Mnrist 41 , S1. Francis. Pa . 6
Mnssac hu setts 27. New Ba mpshirc 26
Monmouth, N.J. 57 , Sacred Hcan 7
Pe nn 34, Ynk 21
Penn Sl. 27, Illinois 0
PrinceiOn 20. Co lum bi~ o·
~hodc Island 2H . Jllmes Madi son 21
Rutgers 21, Temple! 10

St. John ';;, NY ·' 0. Cnnisius 14
SyracuSe 45. Piusbur ~ h 28
Towson 27, Sl. Mary's, Cal. 2\
Vi llanova 45. Fordham 12
W.lllinois4 1, Buffa lo6
Wagner 14. Stony !hook \3
Wraynesburg 20. L~ Sallt' 19

South
JU, Southt'nl Miss . 20
Appalnthtnn S1. 2tl, C hnu~ noog a 7
Al~bamA

Arkansas 24. Auburn 11
Austill Pl'ay 29. Cumbcrlnnd, Tenn. 21

llethune-Coo kman 34. N Caroli na A&amp;T 27
Davidso n 23, H;unpd~li · Sydney 7
E. Kemucky 47, Ten n.-Martm 29
Elon J6, Liberty 14
Flondn 38. Georgia 7
Georgia Southern 47. E. Tennessee St. 26

Georgm Tec h J \ , M~ryl rmd 10
Howard 54, NQrfnlk Sl. 20
Louisv ille 63, W. Kemucky 34
Memph i~ 15. Arknn5as Sc 19
Mi ss. Valley S1. 38, Praine View 6
Mi ssissippi 37. LSU 31 (OT)
Morehc::~d

Sl. 56. Bethel, Tenn. 0

N. C:irolmn St. 46, Clems..on 39
S. C::~rolma S1. 31 , Dclnwure St 14
Samford 20. Mars Hill 2
Soulh FlnmiA 24. Chartes10n Southern 0
Tenne:ss~e 49. South Caroli na 14
The Citadel 32. Hofstra 30
Troy St. 14. NurthweSiern St. D
Tulane 72, SW Louisiana 20
V:mdcrbllt J6, Duke JJ {2 OT)
Virginio Tech 27, Wesl VirgiuiA 13
W. Carolina 39 . VMI 17
William &amp; Mary 41 , Bampton J4

Cent. Michigan 18. Akron27
nmkc 1.1&amp; l . Butler 7
lllmnis S1. 42. S. Uwh 14
Knnsas S1. !t4. Kansas 6
Miami (Ohio] JS . Ohio 21
1\liclnganiS, Minne sota 10
Midug.an St. 29, Northwestern 5
Middle Tcnnes~f'C 21. SE Misso un 19
N. Iow a 31. Indiana St. 28
Nom~ Dome 27. l:hlylor 3
Ohiu Slate: .~8 . lmJ iana 7
Purdue :\6, Iowa 14
SW Mrssllun St. 28. S lll iMi$ I J
Te nnc ~see St. 27. E. Illinois H
Texas 20. Nehraska 16
Toledo \6. N. lllinoi5 J

.,

. ,.
i

Mld"'t.'SI

'.

South"fst

Bowhng Green J4. Marshal! 'I J

McNees e S1. J5 , Sum H o u ~w n St. l J
f\h ssoun 2tl. Tc"~s Tech 26
Ok.l~h o ma 17. !own St 14
Rrcc J5 . Colorado St .!.'1
t' arWe!oil
• Air Force J I, Somhcm ~ l cth . 7
CS Nllrthmlgc 26. Wchn S1 10
Frl'SIW St. :ZH, New Me&gt;.iCtl lO
Mon1 nna ~0 . Idaho St. 1.'
Ml)lll nna Sl J~. N Amon.1 25

'

Nt"\ nda 52. Bmse Sl. 24
l'onland St. -t I. Cal Po l y-S~O .\4

�..
Page

B2 •......., '11!-.-jlmtm.t

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

Sunday, November 1,

WV

1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

WV

/

Meigs wins eighth straight game, closes in on Ohio Division crown

.

.

Marauders IJandle Vinton County 33-25j"
/

H•Vtland 42. Notthmor 1
H1lhard Davu1son ~I.Gw~qKlf121
H1ll~ 42. \\ntern Bro'*n 11

Football

Hollarw:t Spnn!fidd ~6 N011h Lima South

NFL's Week 9 slate

!Unp- 21
Huron 42. Pon Omton 14
lndtptndtnu 49. BrOoklyn 6

Today'• games

lnd1an Lakt 27. West LJbcny 20
Jacbon 10. Lopn 7

Anzona :u Dfti'Oit. I.OJ p m
Dr:n~·a- 11:

CINCINNATI. I 01 p m.
J.ackioavdlt a1. Ra.ltnnOf('. 101 p m
~hanu a1: Buffalo. I OJ p m
~hnnnota at Tampa B;ay, 1 OJ p m
~w Enrla.nd atlndranapohs. 1 01 p m
New Orleans at Carolina. 1·0 1 p m.
New Vorl: G1anu. at Wa.;h•n!IOI1. 1.01 p m
St l..ou11 ar Atlanra. 1 OJ p m
Ttnome(' a1 Puuburgh. I 01 p m
N~w York Jc:u at Kanu.s Cuy. 4 O!'i p m
San Francuco Ill Gr«n 8a)·. ~ 15 p m
Oakland 11 SQI:tk. 8 20 p m
OPEN Cht,.ago. San D~go

Johnilown-Monrot 11. Col

Kc-nwn 21. UITlil Bath lo&amp;
K1nland 13. P.tldd~field C.vdinal 6
Lane~

Fishn" Cath .B. M•llerspon 21
Lea,·msburg l..oiBr¥ 21. YO\! I.Jbcrt)' 14
Ubanop 42 . GoWn 1&lt;1

l«coma 28. Haoo\'erton Urui.N 47
l.e.lan!lon )5, Cunon 1imUn 24
l1bnty Ctnlet 55, Della 14
Udcin~ 1-k-i!htJ 46. &amp;me Un1on 0
L•ibon 15. Columb•arg 14
L•sbon fka,-er Local19. WdJs,dk 12
Lockland 31 On. Hill s Chnsllan Ac~m) 2S
Clrc~\'lllc 17
(,..or11n 8roob1de 19. O~rlln f•reiM'Ids 18

Logan Elm SO.

Da!l:u a1 Ptu ladtlplua. 8 20 p m

L,.Orai n Caaholic 38. S Euclid Lu1trran WI 7

Ohio H.S. scores

~ ~~ Cle;m·~ew

18. Fredrm:k l~ n 0
Lucas,·J!Jc V;}ll.e ) 25. Portsmoul h Nocrr Dame 7
Mantua Crestwood 1-t Riw~nna Sou!hta~t II
Mant-llil 49, Atbem 0
'
Manon Elgin ..a1. Mr Gtkad 0
' M:~ri on Hardmg 42. Ashland 21
M:mon Lo.;"l 27. New Hrc:men I~
Marion l•ka~anr -10, Rtchwood Norrh Umon 0
M;lrion Kn· ~r Val H. Cardmgmn 15
Martms l·erry ~- 7..oar\t llc Tu~cJra-...a\ Va lle} 0
Marpvt lk 19. Rtg Walnut 7
Mason 22, Km g~ Mrll Krngs 21
Maull io n Jad:~o n .15. Canton GlenO.tl 21
MaurHCin Tu slaw 12. E Ca nton 0 ,
Mantllon W:nhinl!lun .16. AL.r~m S,l Vrnrent-St

.~4 .

Wanen Kennedy 13
,\kron Manr !Y§tf'r 57. Magnnha Snndy Val~ y 0
Aluon Spnnglie!U 48. Alhanc~ Marlmgton 21
.Aihanct -'7. WooJler l~

Amandil·Ciearcreek 47. Bloom-C arroll 0
Amhent 4.1. Rocky R1\er 6
t\ rxkwer Ppnaluning Vall.-y -' l. Conneaut 0
Ansonra 20. Bethel 1J
An t..,..erp J.t. W:~)IIC Trace 0
Apple Cr c:.~k Waynedale 42. Dalro n 0
Arc~ JWm 27. Bradford 0
Arrhbold 14_ WauS&lt;."on 1J
,\rlmgu&gt;n :'2. VanJue- 0
,\~htabula Harbu1 16. Ashtabula 20
,\urora 7 PelT) 0
A\·on Lat e H. Olrnstt'd Falls 14
Ayersv1Jie .::!K. Tin&lt;;JrJ 1
Barht-non 19 . Ra\·rnna 1
H;ucom Hopev.e ii -Loudon· .tJ. Carey 12
ll~ta~ • a 2;'i. Chmnom North Ea~r .II
lkdtord t).hc h J l&amp;.:fo! Wf:ntmcr ~ ro·n
llcdlord Chane I .rt. Cl1!'\'elail.1 Ci!'m C:uh 7 ·
Bell aire St • ~ o h n·~ 1S. Newro mcrstow n 1.'
Bcllbmok ~ 4 . Nonh ndge _,1
Ekllefu nr :lint· 19 . Spnng Shawnl'&lt;" IJ
Ek lott West Branch .ll:l. Lmmvt llc .1 .~
Berea 21. Bred :mlle 6
Ill'\ t'dy For t 'Frye 16, SarahH·1IIc: ,. Sh ~· nando:t h
'
B e d ~y .~ 4 . London 12
Blark Ruer 32. Clear Fork 21
Rloomdale Elmwood 4K. N&lt;:nth.,.,·ooJ 11
llluffton .'iS. Uma Perr)' 0
Bowli ng Green 49, PtiTysbtJrg 6
Bru nswtck 49. Nonh R1dgcnlle 14
Bryan 19. Swanton 10
Bu cyru s 14 Vwer Sandusky 7
IJyes ,·tlle Meadowbrook J4. Caldwdl 21
Campbeii-Memorial42. Brookfield 7
Canal Fulton Nonhwest .l~ . Ca iTollton 7
Ced~~rvllle 28. Covingrou 0
Celi na 41 . Limn Shawnee 6
Cenrervrlle .17. Wayne 10
Chardon 42 . Madison 7
Chesaptnke 7. South Point 6
Chesrerlnnd W. Geauga 44. Orange 7
·.. CHillicothe H R~ynoldsburg 29
Ci n ,\ tken 16. ~i n . Taft 20
Cin Anderson .10. Cin Turpin 0
Cin. Colerain 40. Hamihon 21
Gin Coontry Day 48. New Miami 0
Cin. Madeira 18. Finneytown t27
Cin. Manemo111 .13. Tay lor 6
Crn. Oak Hills .18, Bata,·ia Ara:l1a 0
Cin. Princeton 42. Mi lford 14
Cin . Roger Baron 61 . ~inle Miami 14
Cin. St. Xavier 23, Cin. Moeller 21
Cin . Sycqmorr 43 , Lima 26 ,
Cin. Winton Woods 49. Cin. Withrow 14
CLn . Wyoming 41 , Cin. Indian Hill 13
Cle. B ~ nedict i ne 34, C l~ . Villa Angela Sc. Jos eph

Mary 7

Maumee 14. R m~fmd 26
Ma)·field 2!1:. Kc-n)lon ~2
McComb .JO . I.Jht.'fh' lk nron I-I
McDonald .15. lad.iun-~lthon I~
Mt"duta Hu::bktnd .1 \. Coplc) h
M etg~ I l Vrnton Cou nl ) ~ -~
Mcruor 28. Garfield Ha 27
M.: l~ffil)fa 1-:\~rg.rcen 16. Monrpclwr I-I
Mt :umsbu r~ .l'i. C:rrrulllli

Cle. East 42, Cle. Hay J6, 2 (OT)
Cle. M8uhall 28, Cle. Kennt:dy 12
Cle. South 34. Cle . East Tech 20
Clmton· Massie 22; Sourheastcrn 19
Clyde 30 , Mtlan Edrson 0 ·
Coal Gro\'e 8. Prbctorvi lk Fai rland 0
Col dwat~i'd 9, ~l. Henry 9
Col Academy Js. Col. Cente nnial 21
Col Refc hcroft .\ 0. Col. Nor1hland 24
, Col. Bishop Wanerso n- ~S. St Charles 0 '
Col Bnggs 48 , Linden 12
Col. Brookhaven 6. Col Indepe ndenc e 0
Col. DeSales 40. Sandu sky I~
Col. East 41 , Col. Whetstone 20
Col. Mifnin '19. Col Eastmoor 16
Col. West 21. Col. South 14
Col. Westland JS. Newark .H
Col. Whiteha11 21. Franklin Hei ghts 19
Co lumbus Grove 27. /\ lien East 0
Cory- Rawso n 28. Van Buren .14
Coshocton I J . New Phil adelphi a 9
, Cre5ton Norwaynt 45, Jeromesvi lle 1--h llsditlc Zl
Cuy. Falls Wahh Jesuit 41 , You Woodruw
Wilson 13
Cuyahoga Falls 35. Stow 18
Cuyahoga Ht s..'12, CoiL1mb1a 6
Cuyahoga Valley Chri s11:m 1\cndc my
FRirpOn HaJding 0
Day. Colonel While 50. Day. Ounb;rr 16
Day. Oakwood 2 1. Middletow n Madi s_o n 6
Day. S tebb in ~ 28. Danville 7
Delph o~ Jefferson .15. Pauldmg 10
Delphos St. John 's 62. Mmster 14
Do~er 50. lnd1an V~lley 15
E Paleshnr 52. Scbnn@ 2 · .
Ea~ 1 Knm, 21. Na\·arrc Farrles\ 7
'·
Easr Lrverpoo l J I. Wlnt cl~\' tllc: lnd1~n Cr~ck 1-t
Eatnn 51 , Carlis i ~ 21
Edun 28. \\.';rldron 1-t
Elgin 42. Mt Gilead U
.
.Elyria Midvkw -1 2. Lora~ K c;.~ l mt.: 0 ,
Euclid 28. C lcoeiJnd Hrs

·

Midd lcb u r~ Hr ~

Mu.lpark S-t. N Ru):dttth Jl
Mrlhury La ke 21. K an$~~ Lakor:~ . 20
MiltOn· Union 1·1. BJ.Jamtn Lor~n 6
Milrt ral RtUiw 66. Wc~ t ern Rcst•ne 12
Mu~&lt;:rva 77. C mrnn Snurh h
Minford ~ .t . Gret."n1idd 1\.lcCiar rr 1-t
Mu~;rdul't.' 42. K uGbiUWII 6
Mogadore Field Zl . Garn·un·lllc 1 1
1\.·lorral RtdgedaJe J2. IJe la.,.are llu.:k,..~.: Vnllo:)

,.

14

.

Lu~:;u

Aluon Fifeswne .U. Akron Cem rai -Howrr 8

J

A~·on 21

Lowelh•i llc 44. Marht-wJ J

Ada 16, Uppc"r Snoru Val 0
Akron East18. Akron N0t1h 21

I

27.

Loodon\·1lle J5. W0011er Tnwa} }

Friday's action

I·

Rrady •20

Kem Roaiev~ll .\7. Hudsort '6. 2 tOT!

. Monday's game

Akwn HobJ.n

R. ,~q~

'"

R111man 60 W SMrem Northw6tmi 32
Ru tr Valle) 47, Cardln!(on I~
R1vet Vlt"W H. PMo 22
Rockford Park:uy n. Ft fkcovay 14
S..hnr'"tlk Soudxrn J5, Con'oy Crn.''K"'' ~'
Sandusky Petk.lnJ :,\4. CatW1a Marpretu 2.\
Shrrwood Fa~rvJC'Ilo 54. EdgiCI!on 7
Smuhvrllre 28. Do) l«tOwn ChtpptWa 18
Solon 41. Twmsbt.lr! 7
Sparta H•thland 42 . Gallon Northmor 7
Spnng Nonht"auern 47. Spong Nonh~~rtslm1 8
Spnnc: S&lt;.oulh 88, Spnng Nonh 8
Spnn.:boro 28. Lemon Mot;U'ot 20
St ClatnvtUe 21. Bilnlt'.i\'tllt: 14
St Mary 's 28, Wapakoneta :21
,
Stn~bmvrllt 41 . Stnat..;.m·•il(' Calhohc Cc-ntr'lll 0
Strnbu rg 63. Jewett ·Siro 0
Str«Uboro Ul. P~niruula Woodndgt 2~
Sttonpvdle 35,'Mahna .14
StrutMs -'1 , Salem 14
Syh·ama Nonln·iew 28. Holland Spnnsfield 17
Teays Valley 14. Canal Wmd)ti!C"r 0
.
Thomas WorthtngJon .\9. l:kla-...are 10
ThornHIIt Shmdan 30. New Lex•n,;ton 12
liffin Cah·e n 37. Syc;amore Moha-...t 14
liffrn CDlumbtan 7. lklk:\~ 0
lippecanot 24. Lehman Cathohc 0
Tol Scott 16, Tol Rogers 16
Tol St Francrs 41 . Tol Rowsh!:r 6
Tol St. John 's 20. Tol Want 1-1
Tot Start 46 . Tol Woodward 0
Trr-County N 19. Nahonal Tra1l 16
Tnmblc 20. Federal Hoc lung 0
~Troy M . NorthiTI(lnl 7
Twtn Va l~ y S 56. Mr~msinawa Val h •
Uhnchs11ilk Claymont .~6. Cambndge 6
Un1on Uxall6 Catltz 1.\
UmontO\Io'n L1ke 2-t. Mau 1llon Pert) 7
Umotu J4. Ridunondale Soulhc"s!L"rn 6
Upper Arlington . a 1. Uubhn Sn&lt;&gt;1o 20
Urbana 42. Enon Gn•enOn 20
U11ca 27. Lakcwuod 12
Valle) Vu:~-...· 42 . Brooku lk 7
Van Wen 21. Defiance 1-t
V;tnda ha Uutler -l9. W CJITollron 20
Venmlhon .::!J . I.orru nAdm1ral K1n ~ 14
Vcru1 lle~ 60. Mramr E:m 0
Y111Cent Warren 0.::! . Cheshrre R I\Cr Val U
W Holme541. Medina Buckeye 7
WatbwOJrh .1 1. Lodi Clo\·erkaf 22
Walnu t Rtdge 25. Manon-Frankltn H
Warren Champron 1-t. Cortland L:~kr v re"' ll
Warren HaQ;lwg 42 . Ashland 21"
WMhFngro n Cnun 1 J-IoU ~ 16 ..1.tdo.lnJ! Vall.-) 7
Wan-rly 41. Sdotll N~hwr s t H
Wa )'nel''tlle Zl. lllandlcil~:r tl
Welltng ton Vi . O ~: rltn 0
Wdlstun 70. Alcx;mdcr 16
W~·st U o lmc:~ -'I. Med111a Hudeyc 7
Wt•st Jel(&lt;"r~lll ~ 4 . Mad1snn ~,lam~ I~
Wl.'ster\'dlt! Nonh J8. Lant.'asu!r 21
We~to:n1llc Sout h 21, Wonlu ngwn Ktlffi1ut uc.· 17
Wcstlflkl' 47. Fatn·•ew 14
Wlw:elt•rsburg ~9 . Pons t'rluUih W.:st 0
Whcc hn~ Ct'nt (W Va I .IJ. Hanmb:rl Rnct H
Wil·kl111e 44. Ch:rgr m Falh 20
Wrlham;~burg 4!&gt;!. Crn . Non h Colleg~ Hrll 6
W1lhamspo rt Westfall W. 7.ome Tr,.~· e 0
W!lmtngron 21 . Norwood 12
Wrndham l~. Atwmer War~loo I I
~uodmurc .W. Danbu ry 16
Woodmore .W. L1kestdc IJanbury 16
Woodsfield Monme Cen tral 50. New M r t i DI I Mrn~
Fnm11c1 0
Woo~ tcr Tu sl &lt;~w 11. E. Carnon,O
Xcni~ 20. Fmrbo rn 14
You ll t•~rdnmn ~ I You. AUsunw wn-Htl'h 0
Z.mc:H·illc ~ 6 . Hrook, W Va 1-t
Zan&lt;:S\tlk Moys \·i ll &lt;' JJ . Mc.·Connchv •lle
Morga n () fOTJ

Mou nt Vernon 27. WarktnJ ~·1 cmnf1J I 10
Na~KJ ieon .~5. Akron CoH•mr} 21
NdJon~ •ll e-Yot k. l7. Bdpn: 16
Nt•w Carlrsk Te~·1umrh 15. Spnngftd t.l Kcnl on
Rtdge l 2
.
New Rtchmond \4 , Belhei·Tate 1.•
Nt&gt;wbury 17. Bunon Berkslmc 21
Newton Fa ll s 26. Hubbard 22
N1lcs Mc Kinley 21. Gir&amp;rd 8
Nordonia 48. Lyndhurs t Bruih 1.1
Non h Cnnton .\5, Eastlake Nonh 14
Nonh Cant on Hoo\·er J~ . Eastlake Nonh H
N_on h Olms r~d 27. Bay I J
Oak Harbor IR , Sandusky ,S t Mary's 0
t&gt;nk Hill D. Funklin Furnace Grl'Cn 12
O:,kwood 21.' Middletown M ~ di son 6
Old Wash m~t on BuCkeye Trai l 25, Beallmllc 0
dlent angy 62. Hill ia rd Darby 20
"'
Omatio 40, Mt Bl:mdklrd Ri ve rdale 0
Oregon Slritl·h 17, Otr ~wa Hill s 14
Orrvrlle S2:-Lanton C!'nt Carh 21
Ouawa-G I:wdorf 20. Elida 0 · .
Odord Talawallda U!, Tremon Etlgewood 16
Painesville Harvey .\.l. A~hra bula Edgewood 8
Painesville Riverside 21. Willoughby South 20
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Paint Val . 26, Huntington 16
Atlantic Oivlsion
Pandorn - Gilbo~ 62. Arc adia 0
fum
l!'l. I l'lJ. Iii liA
Parkway 23. Fon Recovery 13
Philadelphia .. .
5 2 2 11 2 1
Parma 59. WarrenHille 22
Pittsburgh ...... .
.4 2 2 10 21
Piqua 41 , Trotwood·Madi5on 7
N.Y Rangers .. ,... ~1 ...... J ..t ~
9 16
Point Ple:~sanl. W.Va.. 16. Gallipoli s 6
New l crst:y
-1 40
814 li
l'oland Semiflary 16, Canfield 7
.. ·.. ·4 5 0
8 17 20
N..Y lslatJtlers ....
Portsmouth 54, Ironton ROCk Hill 0
Preble Shawnee 26. Dixie 20
Northeast 1Jivl5lon
Ra ~ me Soutltcm ~ 9 , Waterford 27
Toro mo
.l
I II 27 ' 2:'i
Ra)'land BucK eye l oc al 21S. Wheeling Park Hosron
... :...
.A
2 10 lj 17
(W.Va J 7
Oil awn
4
0 , i lO 17
Ren~re 14, Tallmadge 0
Buffalo.
J
2 8
16
Ric hmond Hts. 12, Gates Mill s Gilmou• 0
Morn rcal ...
........ .J 4 2 i 20 l&lt;
Ridgedale J), Buckeye Valley I B
Ridgemont 21. Mechanicsburg 7
Southeast Oi~is\M

Hockey

n...u

•1 2

Cartolma
Washington

J J J
1 J J

~

I'

I

-·-

9

l~

28

9
9

19
19

21
16

9

IS

18

Ct'ntr.al

Di~.._

OAKLAND AllfLEllCS~ Named Krn MKfur , 0t1YIIJra 10 a fhe-)·e. CW$X1
btnc'h cl*h and ln\e Hudp-M hltbo&amp; n~h
NEW UllUANS SAINTS Stped T
TAMPA BAY !.&gt;EVIL RAYS furctsed theu St&amp;~ toJ ooe-)t:ar mniJ'ael _
1999 opuon Oft 38 Wadte Sow and ultllded htJ

l!L I 1:1&amp;. Iii liA

Jam

lktron
St lwri

I .6 3 0
4 J I

12
9

I
I

9

•l

0HCJ!O

N:uhvtne

4
~

~

No11htt·HI DMtion
4 4 I
4 4 0
2 I 2

V.:anrot.~\er'

Edmonton
Cal!afY
C•loooolo

l 5 I'

Dallu
Lol An!f'kl

PacifiC Oitkion
5 I l

I

z
•z

.I J

J\Raht'lm
San Jaw:

0

ll

zz

20

25

8 29

•
5

21
21

11

19

25

eonuxt by add!Of a 2000 opl!O.l.

26

ll

21

)()

Jl

l

14

835kelball
Nalional 8ukdball AMOC ialion
SEATTLE SUPERSONICS S!JMd Wally
Walker. prnrdent and general nl.iiiUft:l. 10 a COOltiJret
! :lltenston through tht 2001-02 ~"'"

26

"~ .

Ritt!•
•

Hockey ·

National LHcut
·
HOUSTON ASTROS Named Tony Pena manllJn of N~ Orleans of the PCL
MILWAUKEE BREWERS 1 Named TOm
Gau5den VJJ;.C presrdem.,.and ceneraJ ooun~l Apecd
to temu .,.llh RHP Qa\'•d Weathers 011 a one-ye•
con~
~
:

12 22 14
10 21 ll
9 ll 14
8 19 11

• 4 l

4 2

l'ho&lt;n"

9

l9

Friday's scores

Nationai Hedley Lnpr
NI;:W JERSEY DEVILS: SiJned
Nlederrmyn to a muluytilr coo~~a~;~
PHOENIX COYOTES· Antped
Hthner 10 l...af. Vep.f. of !he IHL

•

'

•

lntt'mationat ....., l..a:pre
CH ICAGO WOLVES. RuaUed RW Corr
8;uuta from Muikq:oo ullhl: UHl
.
~ •
KANSAS CITY BLADES· R«all&lt;d 0
Melnydwk frMI Atbftw of lht WPHL.
•

_M"'' :
;

DALLAS BURN· Wa~ved F JLWI Stiloqut aad ~

Washmgton 0. Cal,!!ary 0 1U~)
P111~rgb 2. Vancou\er '2 (lie)
T~rnpa Dar ,l, -!.;?'!Angela 0

GRABBED - Meigs fullback Justin Roush is grabbed by two
Vinton County defenders during Friday night's Ohio Division ~me
!n McArthur, where ·the Marauders won 33-25 to claim their e1ghth
~traight victory. (Times-Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

They played Saturday

Caralma :n n~~tull. 7 J1 m

Uuff.alo a/ Toronlo. 7 p m
Monueal a1 Ona.,.,·a. 7 p m
t'hlladelplua ar N Y h landc:rJ. 7 p 1)1
Florrda :11 New J cr~y. 7 '\0 p m
Anahcrm ar St Louu. 8 p m
Col01ado at Nouh\'llk. 8 p m
IJtotroll at Dalla5. 8 p m
Ptct sb~J!h ~ t Edmonton. 10 p m
Tampa Uay :11 S~ n J o~. IOJO p m

Tnday's

Miller ·tallies 29~12
:w in over Eastern

~ames

Ollaw:t a1 Plula.klplu a. 7 I'm ·
Cali!ar} at Chtcago. 8 p m.
Phocmx a1 Lo~ At\~dcs. 8 p.m.
Washm@tOn at Vam'&lt;'IU\'e't. 10 p.m

Transactions
Au to raciiJ'g

,'

('ART llarrcti i'Jul Tra~y dnvl'r: fr om .:ompct·
1111! 111 rht" ~CliMJII ·npctii iiM- r;ke 111 March l iJ9'i for
ullju~ tllm hk n~J,:. and unspons manhke 7ondu(·t ilfl.:1
till' lnd) rare 111 Austr~ha on (kt 18

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H&lt;"mlock ,.1tllcr 1~. ReedH1Ih: 12

Team statistics
Department
M
E
14
First cowns .................... 17
Total yards .............. ..... 283
193
Rushing att.-yds .... .45- 181 39- 193
0
Passing yards.. ............. 102
0-1()
Comp.-att .................... .4-7
lntercepliotis thrown ....... 0
2
none
Fumbles-'no. lost .......... 2- 1
Penalties-yds ..............6· 70 I t -73
. Punts ......................... .3-17 , 3-19

RiO GRANDE - Here is this
week 's schedule for events at the
University o'i'. Rio Grande 's Lyne
·.center.
Fitness center, gymasium
and racquetball courts
Today - S-9 p.m.
Monday- 6 a.m.- 10 p.m.
Tuesday- 6 a.m.- 10 p.m.
· wedn~sday- 6 a.m.- 10 p.m.
Thursday - 6 a.m.- 10 p,m.
·F riday- 6 a.m.-9 p.rn ,
Saturdav- 1-6 p.m.
. Sunday,"'Nov. ,S - 5-9 p.m.
Pool
·' Today- 6-9 p.m.
·• Monday- 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday - 6-9 p.m .
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday - 6-9 p.m .
Friday - 6-9 p.m .
Saturday- 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, No~- 8- 6-9 p.m.

42

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' VIIH Llale lA... M

• PUMffirlhf'" 11.-

• Metlfllly,..... 111rh

Gref'nr1 1ev. IQ . E CltllhlltiJ
Grecn'' lll~ 1-t . S1dnc1 10
Grmc C1t y IJ IJu hl;n Cnl fm,m 16 ·

HJmrlton Ro s~ :! I C'tn l. o\dan o.l 7
H:mnn n. W Va . 1-t Sourh G.rlltn 0
Hardtn Northt"rn, .1 4. l .e,l p ~t• 21
Harmo n 41. Ctn W ~ ln u l Htll ~ l~
Henth H. Baltrmore l.rbl.&gt;rt ) Umun 21

quarterback 'D.avid Riley. Riley
added the. kick lor a 29-6 tally atrhe
1:10 mark.
,.
Midway through the fou rth quarter, Sanders found the ertd zone for
Eastern on a 21 -yard run. The tWO·
point conversion pass failed. and the
score stood 29-12to the tini.sh.
Cox broke the I00-yard mark
with 25-102 and Ray Stanley was
12-50. Riley passed 3-5 for 77 yards,
while Cox tired one pass for 25 yards
and a 102-yard passing night overalL
Karr was 0-9 with two interceptions
and Sanders 0-1.
Brian Bainter was 2-52 receiving
fflr Miller.
"
.I Easl~rn seniors in action for
senior night were J.T. White , Beau
Bailey, Joey Dillon, Jason Mor.a,
.Josh Hager, Mike Tuttle , Adam
Sanders, and Jeremy Casto .
Eastern goes to Waterford Friday.
Quarter !!W!b
Miller ............................6-16, 7-0=29
Eastern ............................ 6·0·0·6= 12

•

1VC Ohio Division

w

:.t9

I

o.11

ll'rlb~...: ...ry

,.,..

Clllt5 niH) ]n(l ...&amp;~~

IIUS ~aiM)

,

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Olltf MIICI• d\enll wllrlLIIVJkt Ml:lnltltf llfOIJili!WIWlg II 'tll1 ftQio(STAA'I. "Btlli Du/ Ewf" irl lril' . . . . ll Yl!w lt... on 1n 1V
AcliiiNnll drta •*"lllt.t~tl»gg1" 1. .. C.. dltdil!lfY app~. ~- IUft.n
Oc1ahl Jl, ttl. f« 11M flltdln\111 Mlllmll\
ody Mly!Qbec....,tilwfit"I'WllletlltJ¢liMPRIMESTAA IlK,

ClAw,.._

•

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0 127
109
2• 79
2 129
2 106
4 81

71
66
94
104
123
173

L

7
4

2
4
3
3
8

I

Th!m .

· ff

6
I

fA

234
233
174
310
302
153

I

6

TVC Hocking Division
w
lY L .ri fA
fum
24
•Trimble .............. ..4
0 131
~
.
I 95
.............',....·.,. 3
62
3
M1ller
Federal Hocking .... 2
59
59
4
~
Southern ............... 2
2 69
lOS
3
· Waterford ............... I
3 58
88
2
4; 24
Eastern ..................O
118
0
*Clinched minimum of share of cOn ft:rcncc,tiLJc

165 ·
173
225
195
22
301

Overall

L

ri

I

fA

23'1
168
171
143
119
62

'4

5
,6

7
9

I01
190
217
231
252

Locally owned with low ml!es, V6, auto trans, tilt, cruise,
ar:~d mucb more.

261

Selected non-league teams

w

Wahama ········ ..... , .................. ................
.. .5
,. Hannan .. ;........................... ..................... ..... 2
South Gallia .......................... .." ................. ..... 0
Friday's scores

SEOAL
Poinl Pleasant 16, Gallipolis 6
Warr,en Local 62 . River Valley 0
Marietta 49, Athens 0
,,.
Jackson 10, Logan 7
•·

.I K
Meigs 33, Vinton County
25
, Nelsonville· York 27, Belpre
16
Miller 29, Eastern 12
Wellston 70, Ate.ander 16
Trimble 20; Federal Hocking 0
Southern 29, Waterford 0
Others
Hannan 14, South Gallia 0
Wahama 23, Win County 2()

L

ri

4
6
9

fA

187
47
46

172
192
,%

Week 10 slate
SEOAL-Friday
.Gallipolis iu River Valley
Point Pleasant at. Jackson

Alhens at Logan
Warren L.oc.al at Marietta

Drag~n

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1996 OLDS.CUTLASS CIERA

JVC-Frjday
Belpre at Meigs
Federal Hocking at Southern
Trimble at Miller
Alexander at Nelsonville-York
Eastern at Waterford
Vinton County at Wellston

•

Others·Frjday

Hannan has open date
South Gallia at Guyan
,, Valley
Wahama at Hamhn

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Auto trans, air conditioning, AM/FM stereo, locally
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Austmh an

Peter Lonard Hred a 6-.undcr-par 66 tor a
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Sports briefs

t)l lc.

A lawyer

'

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(Set' !\1ARAVDERS on

· Overall
w
8

(68) in their battle for the
~u ropean PGA Tour's money. winning

II years as common pleas JUdge
NO common pleas judic1al exper ience
Elected three times as common pleas judge NEVER elected as judge
Presided over nearly 100 jury tnals
NEVER presided .at any jury trial
Visiting common pleas judge in seven counties
NEVER a visi ting commC'ln pleas judge
Visiting judge on the 8th and lOth District
NO cou rt of appeals judicial expe ri ence
Courts of Appeals

and pu1 together an t:'1ghl·pla~ .56
'ard dme tu tal.~ tho: ledd
. Quartcrbacl Plul Luh hoxok&lt;J ur
""11h R~an Caudill una lhtrJ ~ntl goJI
from the "'I'&lt; for the 'tj.,Of(' R' .m
Ram;burg' blocked th&lt; ~~-~ on -the
extra pomb. but the V1km~' hold d 60 lead "11~ 2: '6 left m the liN pen

•

' WeSiwood.

ALAN GOLDSBERRY

th.; ~~und h..tll \'mwn
Count~ rcceJ\Cd the n~nm~ kld..tlli

Notes: A Lyne Center member·
Ship is required to usc these fac ilities.. ,

lrtti..JrJ

PRIMESi\R&amp;

Faculty, staff, students and adminis·
trators will be admitted with their ID
card.
Racquetball court reservations
can be made. one day in advance by
calling .1-(740)-245· 7495 or 1-800·
282-7201 (extension 7495) toll free
in Ohio and West Virginia.
All guests mu st be accompanied
by a Lync c'e.nter membership holder. ($ 3 fee) .

!. ri

*Meigo .•...•~ .......,•...4
Nelsonville- York.. .. 3.
Vinton County ....... 2
Wellston ................. 2
Belpre .................... 2
Alexander ..............0

Lyne Center slatE!

P, :tt~~ Mrll ~ u ~\1 ken ~5 ()JI\~il {il. md \alk) )J

Genc\':1 11 . Jdfcn&lt;~n Arc~1 7
Glh!ionhurg fl Tnn1o~nn) u,,,.~, !J
Grah:nn W. Sprtng C~rho lt . f ~
Gmn(hlcw J I. Jnn~th:tn Altl~:! 12
GmnHik· 47. Ne\1. ,, Jh,,n\ I.
Green .'iO. Nurron 12
·

. EAST MEIGS
The Mill er
f:ali::ons won the baule of the .fowls
Friday· night at Eastern Shade River
Stadium, as rhey defeated. Eastern
29-12.'
'
Eastern drops ro 0-9 and Miller
moveno 3-6.
Eastern outdid the Falcons in the
stat depanment. but failed to put as
•. many points on the board. Eastern
scored first on a Garrett Karr 29-yard
-'tun at the 8:40 mark to put Eastern
up 6-0 after the kick failed.
Moments later, Mike Spencer tied
jhe game at 6·6 with the Falcon kick
also failing . The score stood tied
with three minutes left in the first
period.
A couple gf interceptions helped
Miller along . David Riley scored on
a seven-yard run then added the
. extras on a run to put M,iller up 14::6
at.the 7:5.9 mark of the s~ond frame.
JUst minUtes Jat'er.,' Clifton Cox
scored from one-yard out and also
added the extras for ·a 22-6 lead at the
3:32 mark .
Besides the dismal second quarter, Eastern did a go,od 'job. Garrell
~an, a freshman signal caller ran for
8; iouchdown, and had a 16-85 rush·
ing night to give the Eagles promise
for the f urure. Butch Sanders had a
memorable senillr night with a 16·
&amp;2-yard effort and a touchdown.
: After a dogfight in the early pan
d{ the third quarter, Eastern lost its
chance to regain momentum when
Cox penetrated the end zone for the
s~pnd time on a 25-yard pass from

Imn '

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Auto. , PS, PB, air, tilt, cruise, VB
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$500.00 REBATE AND 2.9%
UP TO 48 MONTHS (OR)
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I

., •

dd~rrcd to

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GGanh..._ty '

Buffalo 4. TlKu..o I
N Y Rangers I. Carohna 0
Florida 7. Ch•U~go J •
Anahmn 1, Dallas J lueJ

461 SOUTH THIRD

NHL standings

Area gridiron standings -

o sOOU·

Major LragueSoccor

a

Koene&lt;ke Memnnat Field on ball with one of those commg m tho:
T-S Correspondent
McArthur.
Southeastern Oh1o Athlcllc Leagu&lt;
McARTHUR - Granr Abbott
The win gives the Marauders a1 A Marauder wm nelt v.eek \\Ill gJ\e
hooked up with John Davidson for least a share of the Ohio Division I hem then first' outright champithree long 1ouchdown passes. to lead crown, Meigs with a win at home onship since 1986.
the Meigs Marauders to a 33-25 win against Belpre next week would win · Meigs orer came a ;lugg~&gt;h fi"t
over Vinton County in 1VC football the tnle outright. The title is 1he third balf that found tile Marauder&gt; lookaction Friday evening at Marvi n in the 31 year history of Meigs foot- ing at a short end of a 13 -12 ball
game . Bur in 1he secood half. Meigs
looked like the team that h., h.:cn
playing the l.,i several week,.
•· The Marauders on the toss. but
SEOAL
OveraU
Imm
w L ri fA w L ri fA
Logan .....................5
I 108
54
7
2
189
147
Jackson ................... 5
I 140
57
8
I
230
69
Point Pleasant ......5
I 152
59
7
2 m
93
·' Warren Local ....... -.4
2 120
86
5
4
161
161
MariciUI................. .3
3 78
7
5
4
188·
79
~allipolis ............... l
60
108
2
7
102 lOS'
Athens ... ,................ I
5 151
147
7
245 215
2
River-Valley ..........0
6 n
273
0
9
397
56

f..._.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

'

By DAVE HARRIS

a.EVfJ..AND P..'OIAN5 AtNI Dill O 'l&gt;oa-d.
Football
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KANSAS CITY ROYAlS. So!ll'd C Tom Spdw 1MJo OwJ&lt;n CB T,.._ S11n- JIO,OOO r.. ...,:
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Page 84 • ,.,.. ~ 1 GIU....-~

Sunday, November 1, 1998 .

Po!!"eroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

PPHS gains share of first place in SEOAL

• l

•

Big Blacks top GAHS, earn spot in post~season playoffs
GALLIPOLIS - Coac h Steve
Safford's Point Pleasant Big Blacks
accomplished three mossions before.
approximately 3.000 parents night
fans on Memorial Foeld Fnday night.
Retirt Rotary Trophy
One. the West Virginians assured

ohctnseh·es of a spot in the 1998
WVSSAC Triple A post-season playoffs for the second straight year.
Two. they moved into a three-way
.tie for first place in the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League grid standings
with Jacksl'n and Logan.
Three. they defeated thei.r arch
river-nvals for the third consecutive '

year, and retired the Rotary Club's
Traveling Trophy for the third time
since the series was renewed in 1977.
The trophy goes to the team" inning
three games in a row_ Rotanans of
the two communities then purcha.c;;c a
new trophy and the baule for the
award starts all over. GAHS has
retired the tmph y once during the
past 21 years. Purpose of the trophy
is to promote gOod sportsmanship
~t ween the two school s.
Defense shines
Defense was the name here Fridav
night.
•
"We had our chance ·, but weren' t

Marauders ...

able to l·api1ali1e on any . breaks,"
said GAHS mentor Mark Fcnik.
.. Our ddcnswe uml pia} ed an outstandmg game, \\'c·,,e still gm to
learn to take advantage of opportunities when lhey come up,""' Fenik said.
Neither team mounted a threat
early in the first period with Jeremy
Paylon and Eric Ha'1nmg exchanging
·
-t
pums .
Midway through lhe initial stan1.a,
Poi nt Pleasant mounted a 11-play,
4!)-yard drive to the Blue Devils 15.
but a 32:yard field goal attempt by
Steven Gustafssun was w1de tO the
right at .the I :44 mark. Jerry Buskirk

-

gave PPHS good field position to
stan the drive by returning a Payton
punt 19 yards to the Big Blacks 41.
Gallipolis moved from its own 20
to the Blue Devil 48 where Jeff
Mitchell was stopped inches short of
a first down.
Payton's third punt of the game on
the first play of the second period
rolled dead on the PPHS 26 yard
·
line.
lmprossive drive
From here. Point Pleasant managed its most impressive drive of the
game, moving 74 yafds in just seven
plays to make it 6-0.

'

.J

. Gallia Academy bounced right back. Arter Ben Craig returned
Gustafsson's kickoff from the GAHS · ·
13 to the 33, Gallipolis marched 53
yards in 15 plays, eating up 7:07 oil
the clock along the way. On a third
and I 0 situation. Higginbotham
sacked Payton for a four yard los,.
On fourth dow n. Jamie Buskirk
intercepted a Payton pass in the end: ·
zone and returned it to the PPHS I 0 ·
to end the threat.
·
Point moved quickly to the GAHS ·:
34 where Joe Darnbrough and a host
of Blue Devils sacked Rollins for a
(See BIG BL-ACKS on 8·5)
'

&lt;Continued from B-3&gt;

od.

)

Dusty Higginbotham got four,
Following a five-yard Big Black
penalty, John Bonecutter broke off a
six-yard gain. On third and five,
quarterback Brent Rollins completed
his only pass of the game, a sixyarder to tight end Shad Roberts for
a first down. Tailback Jeremy
Buskirk ripped orr 20 yards around
right end, then Higginbotham galloped 23 yards to the GAHS eight.
Bonecutter got three. then scored
from five yards out at. the 8:58 mark
to make it 6-0. Gustafsson's extra
point attempt was no good.
. Devils bounce back

drive for the score. ·Roush wen t the 25 lead with 2:05 remoining .
picked up 133 yards in 24 carries
Meigs put toget.her a seven-play final 32 yards for the score. Justin
Adam Bullington's kick sai led before suffering the rib injury at the
93 yard score to tie the game in the went up (he middle, broke three tack-' into the end zo ne , for a touchback start of t.he founh period. Bentley
second period. Abbott hooked up les and broke out into the clear for giving the Vikings80 yard' to go in added 18 carries for 47 yards .and
with a wide open Davidson over the the score. This time Justin was true lhe final 2:05. Four plays, and four Abbott three for zero.
. 1middk from 39 yards out for the
on his extra poont and Meigs hcid&lt;a in complete passes later Meigs took
For the Vikings. Claar carried 15
," score. Justin Roush 's ki ck · was 27-13 lead with 2:48 left in the thi rd over and ran ouphc clock.
times for 88 yards, Tracy • Kirby
hlock~d at the 5:59 mark of the peri- . period.
•
An emotional Davodson. WJIO added 13 for 68 and Lash 10 for 46.
od. but Meigs had tied the score at
The Viking s came n e: ht back played an ou tstanding: game for Lash was five of 15 in the air for 86
SIX.
however a[Jcr.._ the- kickoff and put Meigs, spoke to hi s teammates after yards . Kirby caught two for 51 ,
Meigs look the lead late in the logether a five play. 78 yard drive for th e contcs1. "Two years ago we came Caudill two for II and Travis Bethel
tirst half They received the ball with the score. Adam Claar went the final up here and played a game for Man one for i4.
only I: 12 left in the firsi half at their 27 yards for the touc hdown. the pass Ault." Da,·idson sa id . "Well. this
Meigs (8- 1 on the year &amp; 4-0 in
own 42. Roush gai ned five yards_on for the extra poims was no good af1d game and win 1s for Man also." the Ohio Division) will host Belpre
,first down to the 47 , On the next play Meigs held a 27-19 advantage wi th OaV1dson was refcrrin!l to h i~ former - the Golder, Eagles lost· 27-6 to
teammate that co l lap~~cd and died Nelsonville-York - for the outri ght
once again Davidson was open, and 14 seconds left in the thi rd period.
Abbott cof1nected with him for a 53Mei gs was on the drive at the stan after a game at Wavci,ly .two years divi sion title Friday. Vinton County
yard touc hdown pass. The pass for of the fourth pero od. when Roush ago. Meigs went to Vinton and Jos ~ to wi ll travel to Wellston .
\
the e~tra poi nts was no good. but was Injured ~t ft cr picking up three the Vikings j ust two days after Au lt's Quarter l2t!!h
1.
. ........................ 0· 12-15-6=33
'
Mei-gs held a 12-6 lead wit.h just 31 yards on a . first dow n carry with fun eral. That loss to the Vikings was M cogs
sec9nd s left in the half.
10:28 left. Aftcr .laying on the fie ld the on ly con feren ce loss of the year Vinton County ...... ......... .6-7-6-~=25
1
But back came the Vikings. La sh for several minutes. th&gt; talented • for Meigs. as the Mamuders tied the
hooked up with Travis Bethe l for a junior was helped to his feet and Vikings for t.he crow n in 19%.
24 yards gain . One play later Lash went to the bench for the remai nder
"Th is w"' an emononal win fo r Scoring summary
sc rambled for 25 yards · to the of the contest with a nb 1njury.
us, Mat t was in al l of our mind s co mVinton Co.: Ryan Caudill six yard
Mar~udcr five yard line. Lash then
. Meigs looked to &lt;.:ome up wi th a in g ove r here toni ght ," Meigs coac h
pass
froTI) Phil Lash, kick blocked
found Caudill for a five yard scoring bog play later in the drive. when Mike Chancey said after ohe big win .
9:221
st
toss as time ran ou t in the half. This Abbott hit. Davidson for an 18 yard 'Tm very proud of these kids, at
Meigs
: John Davidson 39 yard
time Caudill made the extra points gain on a fo urth and sox play. But the tim es we didn 't play very well
pass
from
Grant Abbou , kick
and Vinton County went into the official ruled that a Vinto n County toni ght, and at other times we played .
hlocked
5:59-2nd
,
locker room with a 13- 12 lead.
defender took the ball away from JUSt terrific. But th e kids stayed
Meigs:
John
Davidson
53 yard
Whatever Marauder coach Mike J;&gt;avidson. as the sc no or battled for toge ther, we talked at halftime to
pass
from
Grant
Abbott,
pass no .
Chancey saod to his troops at half- extra yardage. Vint on County' wos come out in the second half. stay
good
:3
1-2nd
·
time. must have worked, because ,g!vcn the ball at their 27 yard line.
toge ther and play team foo tball.
Vinton Co.: Ryan 'Ca4dill five
Metgs was a dtfferent team on the
The Vikings put together a 10 These kids de se rve the chanlpi·second half.
·•
, play, 73 yard drive for the score. onship. but we don't want to share it 1 yard rass from Phil Lash, Ryan'
Just in Roush got things goi ng by Adam Claar, we nt. the ·final three so we have to work hard and get ·Caudill kick. :00 2nd
Meigs: Justin Roush six yard run ,·
returning the kickoff 33 yards to the yards with 5J J left in the contest to ready for a good Belpre team ne xt
Grant
Abbon fumbl e recovery, 7:26Marauder 43. Ten plays later Rou sh pull to. withi n 27-25 . The Vikings week."
3rd
went the fin al s i~ yards fot the score. went for tw o on the extra points, but
M e o ~s had se ve ral players ' that
Meigs: Justin Roush 32 yard run.
played outstanding games. The com'The Marauders went for two on the th!' pass fell incomplete.
Justin
Roush kick, 2:48-~rd
extra points , but Roush fumbled the
The Marauders took the kickoff binat.ion of.Abbott and Davidso n was
Vinton
Co.: Adam Claar 27 yard
ball after he was hit hard at. the line. afler the 'Vikings score , and. put the.. cli ckin g all evenin g. Abbott missed
run
,
pass
no
good, : 14-3rd
·
Grant Abbott alertly ' picked up the icing on the cake. With t. he on hi s first three passes and ihen
Vinton
Co.
:
Adam
Claar
one
yard
. loose ball and went around his left Marauders facing a third and six, went eight of nine the rest of the
end for the two points and give Abbott once again found Davidson game fini shin g eight of 12 for 189 run, pass no good, 5:31-4th
Meig s a 20-13lead.
.
open. The senior end bubbled the yards. Davidson fini shed with five
The Marauders held the Vikings ball a few times and finally pulled it catches for 163 y'ards and three
to four and out and fo rced a punt, inashe fellintotheendzope(ora44 touchd owns. Je remiah Bentley
Caudill 's 30 yard puhl.rolled dead at. yard scoring.play. Brant Dixon's kick caught. one fo r 19. J.T. Humphreys
t.hc Mei gs 48. Thc .Marauders qui ck- · for the ex tra points hit .t he left one for six and Roush one for one.
ly put together a s ix play, 52 yard upright, but the Marauders held a 33Roush with a, strong third period

Meigs: John Davidson 44 yard
pass from Grant Abbott, kick no
good, 2:05-4th

Team statistics
D~partment
~
Y!,;
First doow:ns .................... ) 0
13
Rushing •att .•yds . .. ..45- I 80 40-204
Passing yards ............... l 89
86
Total yards ................... 369
290
Comp.-att ................... 8- 12
5- 15
o·
lnterce pli ons thrown ....... 0
I:umbles-no. lost .......... 2: 1
1-0
Penalties-yds . .... ...... ... 6-30
5-45
Punls-avg ......... ,...... .4- 123 6-2 17

Individual statistics
•

'

Sunday, November 1, 1998

'

..

Rushing
.
Meigso Ju st.in Roush 24-133• ·
Jeremiah Bentley 18-47, Gran\ .
Abbott3-0
Vinton Co.: Adam Claar. 15-88,
Tracy Kirby 13-68. Phil Lash 10-46
Passing
Meig s: Grant. Abbolt 8- 12-0 189
yards, 3 TDs
·
Vinton Co.: Phil Lash 5- 15·0 86.
yards. 2 TDs
. Receiving
Meigs: John Davidson 5-163,
Jeremiah Bentley
1- 19, J.T, ;.
Humphreys 1-6, Justin Roush 1- 1 • ,.
· Vinton Co.: Tracy Ki'rby 2-5 1(;.
Ryari Caudill 2- 11 , Travis Bethel I ~&gt;
24
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Mit.chell , · 9-52-0;
Rogers, 10-21-0; Payton, 9-(·18)-1;
$aunders 5-21-0; Lane, l - l -O;
BrypapnJ.ls· O-~, T~ta~s ~6:iTo\l. 0 II'
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2- 19-0; Craig, 2-64-0. Totals 6-99-0.
PPHS •· Roberts, 1-6-0. Totals I·
6-0.
Passing
GAHS - Payton, 6-16-1-99-0.
Totals 6-16· 1-99-0.
PPHS -'Rollin s 1- 1-0-6-0. Totals
1·1·0·6·0. '
Recove.. d fumbles
GAHS -One , unidentified.
PPHS -One, unidenti fied. Pass intercepfions
GAHS- None.
Totals 0-0-0. •
PPHS - Buskirk, 1- 10-0.
Totals. 1-10-0.
Blocked punt returns
GAHS - One , unidentifi ed, no
return, recovered by Siders.
PPHS -Non e.
P!lnts - GAHS - Payton, 4- 145
(36.2)
Totals- 4-145, (36.2) " '
PPHS • 2-40, one blocked,(20.0).
Totals 2-40, one blocked, (20.0)

sCOrmg
· summary
·
PPHS ·.John Bonec utter, 5-yard
run, kick fail . 8 57 second .
PPHS - Steven Gustafsson, 32·
h
. yard fi eld go al , II :06, lour! .
PPHS - Brent Ro11 ·on s. I -yar d o·un ,
Steve Gust.afsson, kick, 5:38 fourth.
GAHS J .
p .
1
d
~ etemy a) tOn, -yar
run , puss fuol , 0&lt;35 fourth .

Gallia Academy had a gteat GAHS threat. Rol lins fumb led with
\.:hancc to knot th e score early in the an unidenti fied Blul' Devi l recoversecond half. but .Point Pleasant's inQ on the PPHS 46.
slonc wall defense proved to be ," the
. . Payton then hit Bert Craig with a
difference. After tak in g ove r on thc1r 53 yard pass to the PPHS one. Payton
own 16. Gallia's Travis Reed stuffed ramm ed it in t.wo pla)'s later with 35
Hi gginbolham for a four-yard loss on ~cconds left . A pasS for the extra
second down and ·'long fo llowin g a pomts laded GAHS tried an onsode s
Big Black penalty. On fourth down. · kick. hut Poi nt rccovc rcd,and ran out
two or three Blue De.vi ls blocked a the cloc k.
Hannin g: punt with Gallia's Tim
Statistics
Sid'ers recovering on the PPHS 15 .
Poont Pleasant lion it.ed the Blue
PPHS defense stiffens
Devils to minus II yards rushing in
From thi s point on, Point 13 attempts durin g the fi nal two periPleasant 's defen se stiffened . T.R. ods. Gallipoli s finished wit.h 77 net
Rogers lost one, then got. four, then yards on 36 attenpts. Mitchell led the
Jeff Mitchell was tagged fur a four- Ga llians with 52 yards in nine caryard loss, A Payt.on to Rothgeb pass rics . Payton completed sox of 16
fell incomplete at. the 7:54 mark . passes (one intcrcpcted) for 99 ya rds.
"This was the key to our win. sort of Craig caught two for 64 . The
t.he turnin g point," said Safford, "Had , Galli ans had 176 total yards.
Gallipolis put. six on the board here ,
Higg inhothem caoi-ied 26 lim es
it could have been a different ball for 186 yards for PPHS. Th ~ Bog
game. When these two teams get Blacks fin ished with 307 yards rush·
to~ether, anytliing can happen . We i n~ in 56 pl ays. Rollin s compl et.ed
were fortunate to stop them , then one pass g9od for six yards. to Shad
cont.rol the ball the remainder the Robens. The Big Blacks compi led 15
quarter." ..
·
fir St QoWn s and permitted nin e.
Safford was referring to the fact PPHS had 313 total yard s.
t.hal after slOpp in g GAHS p n the
Point •. Pleasant improved to 7-2
Point Pleasant 15, t.he West overall and S- 1 in conferenc~ play.
Virginians used 8:08 of the clock ~o Gallipolis dropped to 2-7, and 1-5 . . ·
march 70 yards in 17 plays. Gallia
This week
Academy's defense stiffened on the
Friday, the Blue Devils play at
GAHS 15, ·forcing Gustafsson to River Valley in the season finale .
bQol 32-yard fic))i..g'*l ..ow:i.tll H:06 Point Pleasant trave ls to Jackson
left to play in the fourth period. That where a Big Blue~ victory would.
made it 9-0.
assure them of at least a co- league
GAHS almosl handed the Big' championsh ip , and a home berth in '
Blacks anot.her score seconds later the slate playoffs.

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'

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EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J .·
(A P)
Defenseman
Scott
Niedt.mnaycr ended a holdout after
mi ss mg the first three weeks of th e
NHL season and sig ned a muhiycar
d'eal with the New Jersey Devil s .
Niedcrmayer. a SC\'Cn·vear veteran. was pia) mg for U(ah of the IHL . ·
a linle over a wc~k .

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Sports briefs

The National Wild Turk..y Federation and the Local
Gallia County Longlleards Chapter, would like to
acknowledge the following People, BIIBim sses and
OrganizationS; for their Outstanding Support in
&gt;"Jwe)pi:nll to make our first Membership and Super Fund
Banquet a Great Success •

Our Future ...
Let's Do the Right Thing!

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Ren,ember ro Vote ~r tha Si!hoaJI.avy
· It's Our Town and
·
It's Time

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WILDTRAC

South Gallia Rebels
Rushing: Clary 21 -75. Rus;ell
I ~ -62. Bickle 4-21
Passing: Bocklc 6-23. 51) yds. &amp; 3
mL
Receiving: Shafer J. 18. Staton 2·
33. Bush 1·8
Fumble · reco,·eries: Rutt 2.
Mumpower &amp; Shafer I each
Interceptions: Duty 1·26

when Jeff Mitcheli fumbled a hand- .,._...;~;_--------------------------"""----..­
off on a reverse . Gallia Academy's
defensive unit, playin g perhaps its
best. defensive game of the year, then
-dug in and held the Big Blacks in
check on t.he GAHS 10.
I
However, the Blue Dev ils offen-.
sive unit was unable to move the ball
once ·ctgain 1 forcin g another Payt on
punt, thi s. o.ne a 48 -yarder to the
GALLIPOLIS CITY SCHOOLS
PPHS 31. .
Unable.this time
ISSUE
This tim e, GAHS defenders were
unable to conta-in Hi gginbotham and
Rollins t.hi s t.ime as the Big Blacks
moved 69 yards in five plays to put
the game out of reach. Hi gg inbotham
got. four, Roll in s 16. Hi gginbothom
45 before behind caught from behind
by J.T. Spencer. Hi gginbotham got
three to the one then Rollins blasted,
over from the o~e at the 5:28 mark to '

Spec1aiAt

WILD TRAC

Passing: Jordan 1-1. 2 )ds ..
Cordell 0-1 &amp; I int.
Receiving: Canterbury J. 2
Interceptions: Henry 2-27: Gohbs .
1-25

Big BlaCkS.·..

&amp;i.partment
G
PP
First downs .......... 9
15
Yards rushing . ...... 120
328
' ' •J ~.shi-!18:. , , . ; .. _._, 43 . , · 2~
3
h ushing ......... 77
ss attempts . . . . . . . . 16
I
I
Completions ....... . . 6
fqtercepted by ........ 0
I
Yards passi ng ........ 99
6
TQtal yards ......... 176
313 ·
~Jay s .......... .. . . .52
57
{l.etum yards ... ...... 3-33-0 4-34-0
fumble s............. 2
1
lNt fumble s ......... I
I
Penalties .......... 3-25 · 6-50
funts ......... ·.. 4-145 1-38

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By MICHAEL TAYLOR
Hannan coach Kent Price said .• of the ball and South Gallia's Dylin for us," Price said of the stop at the South Galli a .....................0-0-0-0=0
Timea·Sentlnel Staff
"South Gallia played their hearts out. Ruu pounced on the pigskin for the goal line. "I was real pleased with the
MERCERVILLE
Seth It's the best I've seen them play."
Rebels .
defensive effort by our team. They Scoring summary
Canterbury's 11 -yard touchdown run
Rebel coach Jack James agreed
Hannan had lwo solid chances in came through v.hcn we needed big
with I :05 left in the game broke a 0- with Price's assessment and weot on the first half to score. but turned t.he plays."
Hannan: Canterbury 11 -yd. run
0 tie and gave the Hannan Wildcats the say t.hat this loss was perhaps the ball over both times. In the"first quarHannan's winning score was scl (Cordell kock) · l :05 4th qtr.
their secOnd win of the season in a worsl one of the season for winless ter, the Wildcats drove down inside up by a 26 yard run by Canterbury
Hannan: Cordell 2-yd. run
14-0 decision ove r South Gallia South Gallia (0-9).
the 20 yard line on an eight. play along the left sideline that put the '(Cordell kick)- :26 4th qtr.
Friday night at Rebel Field.
"We felt the game was ours. We drive. but South Gallia's Mumpower ball on the four line on first-and-The junior halfback's score on felt good goi ng int.o the fourth quar- rollcctcd a Hannan fumble to stup goal. Cord~ll added IWU short run s Team statistics
third-and-11 capped a seven play ter," James said. "The kids played the threat. Late in the second quarter bcfore Canterbury rushed around the
drive that. staned at the South Gallia extremely hard . h comes t.o a point Hannan again had the ball inside the left side for the score ..
S!l'
Sout.h Gallia really never threat· Department
II
45 yard line. Josh Cordellt.hen boot.- where you've got to hun first before 25 yard line, but South Gallia's Josh
14
ened
in
the
second
half
as
t.hey
had
First
do"
ns
.......
...
..
...
1
0
e&lt;t the extra point to put Hannan up you can grow as a team ."
Duty intercepted a Cordell pass to
179
two
punts,
two
turn
overs
and
tWO
Total
yards
............
.......
2
13
7-0.
South Gallia was stung all end anolher drive.
. On South Gallia's ensuing drive. evening with poor field position as
South Gallia's best chance to loss of possess ions on fourth down ,. Rushon g att .-yds ..... 49-2 11 42' 140
59
PasSing yords .................. 2
t.he Rebels were forced to punt after many of the drives Martcd deep in its score came with one . second left in pl ays.
6-23
This week's slate: Hannan will Comp .- an ..................... 1-2
they were sacked twi"te and commit- own territory Hannan's problems the hal( when t.hey had t.he hall with
3
ted three straight penalties. On amounted to costly turnover~ inside first-and -goarirom the 10 and co uld· play at Clarksburg Notre Dame . lnterceptoons thrown ...... .. 1
none
whi
le
South
Gallia
will
visit
Guyan
Fumbles-no.
lost
....
,
....
.4-4
fourth -and-38 from their own two the red zone .
n't convert .. The Wildcats stopped
Penalues-yds ....... :.. I 1- 110 12-90
Thb Wildcats lost four fumhles on them on a third-and-four play as time Valley.
yard line, the Rebels gave up a sack
Punllng-y ds .. ............ 3.106 7-193
to Ha~nan's Chris Sturgon thus giv~ ihe evening and threw one interccp· · ran ou1 in the hulf wilh the score 0-0. Quarter~
... 0·0-0· 14= 14
"That was a big momentum swing Hannan ..
ing the Wildcats the ball on the two. tion deep in Rebel territory in the
Two plays later Hannan 's Josh first half. South Gallia didn'tlose any
Individual statistics
Cordell plunged into the end zone fumbles, but t.hrew three intercepcconti nued· from B4)
from two yards out to gi ve the tions.
•
'Hannan Wildcats
Wildcatsa 13-0 l~ad with 26 seconds .
Each t.eam turned the ball over on 12-yard yard loss as the half ended.. make it 15 -0. Gu&gt;tafsson's ki ck split
Rushing: Cordell 23- 125 &amp; I
left on the clock. Cordell t.hcn added their first series of downs. Hannan's
TD: Cant.crbury !6-90 &amp;. I TD;
t.c
. ~,.
the extra point. Hannan's Korey Korey Henry picked off a Dana Ga11ia's HCath Rothge b prevented a the u prights.
sure
PPHS
touchdown
on
the
fourth
Gallipoli
s't.ook
to
the
air,
movon
g Gibbs 4-6
Henry snagged hi s second intercep- Bickle pass iJW four .pl ays into the
play of t.h at dri ve. by catchin g from its own 30 to the PPHS 41 in
rion of the evening on the. final pl ay, game . Hannan \th en turned right Hi gginhothaoil from hchind fo ll ow - nine plays. but tw o Payton to Cody
of the game.
around and gave the ball. back to
mg a 36,yard jaunt from the PPHS 25 Lane passe~. fell ' incomplete to end
"I was real ple~sed wilh the char- So uth Gallia on its first play from
to
the Blue [)evils 39.
the threat.
acter the kids showed tonight," scrim mage when Cordell lost control
'
Great chance
On Pomt's llrst play oftcr that

Quarter Milb
Peint Pleasant . 0 6 0 10·=
G~llipolis ..... '0 0 0 6=

1998 Cadillac DeVille

.

TDs help Hannan defeat South Gallia 14-0

Point-Gallipolis statistics

.I

. ... _

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • .Point Pleasant, WV

· BECKNER STOPPED- Point Pleasant's Justin Beckner (32) was
stopped on thls play early in the second half by this unidentified
Blue·oevil. GAHS defender on ground on right is Kelly Painter (45).
. Beckner gained 29 yards on nine carries, most of them in the first
halt.

.'

..... .

•

LeSabres, Park Avenues,
Bonnevllles, Grand Am's, Skylarks,
Centurys, Sunflres, Regals.

BIG.SAVINGS!

•
•
•
•

•
•

•

•

••

.,

�••
•

..

•

•
Sunday, November 1, 1998

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Warren Loca1 ............ 27-7-15-13o-62
nmes-Sentinel Staff
VINCENT - In Friday m~ht's
Scoring summary
!&gt;outheastem· Ohio Athletic League
Vllrsity football game at Warren
Warren: Wil son 3-yd. run
L«al High Sc.hool's field. the host
(Westerman
kick )-9:26 Ist qtr.
Warriors scored' on their first four
Warren:
Taylor 11 -yd . run
poSsessions and nc\'er looked back
(Westerman
kick)-6:21
I st qtr.
en rOute to a 62·0 win over River
War"'"'
D.
Wetz
40-yd.
pass 10
Valley.
Taylor
(pass
failed)-3
:37
I
st
qtr.
The \Varriors, whose viciOl)' on
Warren : Taylor 11 -yd. pass to
their senior recognition night assured
Leslie
(Wolfe kick.)-: 10 1st qtr.
them of no worse than a .500 season,
Warren:
Wynn 6-yd. run
used their smothering defense to
(Westerman
kick)-:55.
2nd qtr.
hold the Raiders. losers of their last
Warren: Taylor 19-yd pass to
ID games. to two first downs in the
Sprague
(Westerman kick )-8:20 3rd
first half.
qtr.
: The first quarter belonged to
Warren: Venham 40-yd. run
se nior quarterback Jason Taylor, who
(Wolfe
pass to Vcnham )-: IS 3rd qtr.
ran for a touchdown. caught a touchWynn 27-yd. run (Wolfe
Warren:
. down pass and thre.l" a touchdown
kick)-7:
19
4th
qtr.
pass in ·a 6 1/2-minute span. Those
·
Warren:
Cunningham
29-yd. run
·scores. coming on the heels of full·
(kick
blooked)-2:
II
4th
qtr.
tiack Donald Wilson 's ice-breaking
touchdown run. put Warren ahead
27-0.
Team statistics·
In its first three possessiOns, River

Vallev moved the ball seven net Department
RV
yards and never crossed midfield in First downs ......
. ........ 8
t~e opening act. The Raiders, who Total yards ................... l86
didn't cross into Warren terri tory Rushing att.-yds ..... 53- 146
until the second quarter, faked a punt Passing yards ................ .40
an their llfth offensive series to drive Comp.·all .................. 3-9
29 yards from their own 47,yard line. Interceptions throw n .. &gt;.... 1
Quarterback Jeff Gardner's 18- Fumbles- no . lost. ......... S-2
Y.ard 'pass to tailback Jeremiah ·
Donnet on a fourth-and -nine situa -

By SCOTI WOLFE
and treacherous field to put up some
T-S Correspondent
impressive numbers on the boards. :
: · WATERFORD - Three Josh Waterford (2-7) had 294 total yards ·
Davis touchdowns and a J.B. Booo offensively, but 211 "big play" yards,
score stined the "big play" Waterford including 136 yards on kickoff .
Wiidcats 29-27 Friday night in an returns. resulted in three sco.-es.
exciting Tri-Valley Conference
The game's first score after •
Hocking Division football game at Southern established ball control on
Waterford.
a 13-play, 73-yard ~rive that saw .
The win gave some clo~ure to a Josh Davis dive into the end zone
healing Tornado club, that was smit· . from ,two yards out at the 5:47 mark
ten early by the injury bug and suf- of the f'irst quarter. The Herb Ervin
Cered some disappointing losses two-cartwheel score was capped by
throughout the year. Now, Southern an Andrew Coffman kick and SHS
(3-6)
has a chance to have a led 7-0.
GETIING AWAY from River Valley defesnive back Jared Taylor
respectable
season, but sub-.500 seaNo sooner did Southern begin ill;
(right) is the objective of Warren Local tight end Evan Wetz during
son
if
it
could
finish
strong
thi
s
week
celebration,
did Waterford spoil the :
Friday night's SEOAL game at Vincent, where the host Warriors won
Federal
Hocking
.
party.
Travis
Lang . snagged a
against
62·0. (Photo by Ron Caudill of River Valley Photography)
Both clubs overcame a·slick ball
(See SOUTHERN on B-7)
Pcnalties-yds ... ........ :..6-45
6-65
Rushing: Wynn 5-63 &amp; 2 TDs;
Punt~ng-yds ......... .'.. 6-129
1-52 Venham 3-45 &amp; I TD; Gray 7-34;
Cunningham 1-29 &amp; I TD: Taylor 2·
nun\ lOin
23 &amp; I TD; Wilson 4-19 &amp; I TD; D.
Individual statistics
Wetz 4-15.
·
TICOI . IH.I~S
Riwr Valley· Raiders
Passing: Taylor 8-16. 146 yds &amp;
Rushing: Terry l7-54; Jeff 2 TDs: Ven.ham 1-1.40 yds &amp; I TD;
Gardner
12-3 1; Tavlor 7-29 : Shaw 5- Wolfe 1-2, 3 yds &amp; I con . .
WL
·
Receiving: E. Wetz 3-50; Leslie ·
12 19 · ... · . . .
3-30 &amp; I TD; Taylor 1-40 &amp; I TD;
l9 &amp; 1 TD w
Jclf Gardner 3-9. 40 yds S
c 1
457 . &amp;' IPasstng.
int.
, prague 1.
. ; aggon r ·
31 -26S
Receiving: Donnet 2-28: Jeremy 12: Venham 1-3 &amp; l_con.
189
The
Gardner 1-12
·
Fumble recovenes: Cui ver 1-0:
10-19
·
Con kl e &amp; No. 48
(player
unknown)
Furn bl e recovenes:
·
f
w. Mc1-0
Gl
h
0 Rose
1nt en:ep
eaGh
1-0
mns:
ump y
. 3-2
Warren Local Warriors
1-8
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~~~ug~urf~is~:ke~~~e~·:~~ d.~·~~~ . Jackson

beats Logan 10.-7;
t:~~u~~~ ~:: . ~~t o1r~~~e~et~i;;al:~ M
. ar 1· etta tames At.·hen· s 49.;;,0 .

a11ainst River Vall ey moved the
glicsts back to Warren 's 29. Then
~arrcn laFkle . Derek McGiumphy
sacked Jeff Gardner for a four-yard
lOss on a fourth-and-five situation,
&gt;fhich gave Warren the ball on
doWns.
. : The next time the Raiders got
within arm ·s length of the red zone

'i

By ODIE O'DONNELL
OVP Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - With just one
game remaining in regular season
play the SoutheaStern Ohio Athletic
League football championship is still
up for grabs among Point Pleasant,
was in the last minutes of " game
Jackson,
and Logan, all of whom are
played mostly by barely-dirty sophobunched at the top of the standings
/ mores and JUniors. They drove 42
with 5- 1 league records.
.
· ' y.ards to Warren's 20 in the ' last
The three ·time defending chamJflinutc, but were turned away when
pion
Jackson lro~ en shook off
sophomore ttght end Clark Walker,
their
disappointing
loss to Warren
getting his first carry of the season,
Local
last
week
by
edging
Logan 10\113S taken down for a two-yard loss
7
Friday
night
while
Point
Pleasant
on the last play.
survived
an
upset
bid
by
·Gallipolis
. This week's agenda: The Raiders
will fmi sh their season at home to post a 16-6 victory. Marieua
waxed Athens 49-0 while Warren
Friday against Gallia Academy.
Local
thumped on River Valley 62-0
Quarter l2tl!h
River Valley
............. 0-0-0-0=0 in other le ague games.

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A strong possibility now exists 28-20 wins the past two years.
that the IY98 season wtll produce a
Jackson 10, Logan 7
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Point
At Logan, it was the bulk of the
Pleasant travels to Jackson while Jackson line that permitted their runAthen s makes the short trek to ners'totote the ballS I times for 212
Loean thi s week. In other season yards, while limiting the C~ieftain
finales River Valley will host Gallia runners to just 15 yards on 24tries .
After Jackson had taken a 1'0-0 ·
Academy for Gallia County bragging righ.ls while Warren Local clos- lead on Jay Blankenship's 26-yard
cs out at Marieua for bragging rights field goal and Casey · Chamberlain
in Washington County. ,
fired an eight-yard pass to Jeff
Jackson has beaten Point Pleasant Malone and Blankenship's extra
four straight times since Point point kick in the final period,
earned a 21-9 victory in 1993. Since Logan 's Joey Conrad went to the air.
that win the lronmen have posted
The Logan signal caller had seen
victorie s by scores of 19-14,. 41-6, a sure touchdown pass intercepted in
42-S, and 48-19. The Logan-Athens the third period, and three others that
rivalry shows the .Bulldogs with a killed drives when his receivers
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Chieftains came back with 32-0 and ·
(See SEOAL on B-7)

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NBA strike calls halt to
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The Dropoff Recycling . Site 'on
Texas .Road in Gallipolis will
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People who recycle at that site
can use the Dropoff Recycling
site at the silver Bridge
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Tailback Ryan Francisco carried
12 times .for 115 yards and scored
Marietta's lirst touchdown, a 25yard sprint in the first period. In the
second quarter Nathan Swartz
scored from the three , be fore Levi
Weppler returned a White aerial 30
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Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2 .

,,

Marietta 49, Athens 0
At The Plains, six dtHerent Tiger
- players scored touchdowns and M.J.
Metts kicked seven extra points as
Mariella moved to 5-4 overall and 33 in the league. .
Athens quarterback · N~than
White. one of th e league 's premier
·passers, was thrust into agony when
two of hi s passes Were intercepted
and returned for touchdown s d.uring
a 22-second s.pan of the,second quar·

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The Gallia Landfill (Gall ill Co.) phone: 740-388-9740
Beec~ Hollowlandfill (Jackson Co.) phone: 740-384-4400
THE GALLI~, JACKSON, MEIGS, VINTON
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(Continued rrom B-6&gt;

Conrad finally found tailback one back 24 yards for a 28-0 halfJoey Hankinson with a 33-yard scor- time lead. ing strike in the final period and Man
Aaron Clark scored on runs of 20
Shaw kicked the EP. Conrad com- and three yards in the thirct' quarter
pleted I 0 of 30 passes for 139 yards · and Russ Lacey added a 30-yard
with one. intercepted.
touchdown run in the fourth p~riod.
The · Jackson ground game saw
The Tigers rushed for 287 yards
Marcus Meacham with 80 yards , while holding the Athens runners to
Blankenship with 75, while 46 yards. For Athens, White finished
Chamberlain ran for 58 yards and with 12 of 23 passes for 134 yards
completed five of II passes for 73 but saw four 'picked off by the Tiger
yards. ·
defense.
Ouar(er l2lllb
Quarter ll!1!!b
Jackson ..........................0-3-0-7=10 Marietta............. :........ 7-21-14-7=49
Logan .... ...................... ,. .. .0-0-0-7=7 Athens ..............................0-0-0-0=0

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(Continued from B-6)

8

.. .'

duate with

Southern ...

Coffman kick at the 25-yard line and 30-yard pass to Jar~d Crock. setung
returned· it 75"¥ards for a !l&lt;:ure at the up a first and goal fo.- Waterford right
5:34 mark. Danny Jones' luck was before the half. Josh Ervm, who perBy SAM WILSON
good, and the SHS enthusiasm formed two miracles this memorable
nmea-Sentlnel Co"espondent
dcnated at the sight of a 7-7 tie.
night. intercepted the ball in the end
Well. my Thanksgiving plans are shot! Yes,
That score would foreshadowed zone to end the half after Southern's
there wil.l be _turkey, a parade, football games, and
several other denating experiences as go;tlline defense held on four downs.
the Tornadoes again would have their
After a slow moving third round.
all the tnmmmgs, but we planned our trip to be in
Indianapolis for two NBc:\ games.
leg• knocked out from under them.
Southern established the upper hand.
· The Rockets were to be in town Thanksgiving
All was quiet for much of the a score that may have defined the
night and the Clippers, with the Candyman, this year's first-round pick, were remainder of the first half. Southern game's outcome at the I: II mark of
to play the following night after an impressive tree lighting ~remony in ·established a well-balanced ground the third round. Davis plunged into
downtown Indy. The can~llation of all November games has severely hurt game that saw three figures make the end zone from one yard out and
our holiday plans.
significant gains. Davis, Boso and Coffman added the kick. A 39-yard
I thought Commissioner David Stem and the owners wer~ too smart to freshman Matt Ash were part of a Jonathan Evans to Adam Cumings
allow the game to be hurt with·thejr lockout. 1 guess 1 was wrong.
.
great control game, consuming 39, reception set up the score .. The score
Unfortunately, the tendency is for fans to pia~ a majority of the blame ·52 and 29 yards respectively the first stood 22-7. but it didn 't last long.
o~ the players, those high profile athletes who make millions to play a game. half. Overall. Southern had 137 fit'$!
Like clockwork. just seconds later
.When we see Minnesota's Kevin Garnett signing Sl26 million contracts, it's half y~d~.,
f
.· (:59) Crock added an 81-yard kick\J!Io 0
.ool as 3 1 o o great s1g off return for the score. Jones added
difficult for us to bave sympathy with the players' cause.
; .fi
'- hw
s 0 he h- the kick and tHe S&lt;ore stood 22- 14,
1
The truth be told, I ~a~~r the players in this.fight. First, they have a con· ;;:i~~anc~a~n ~r~~a~~;im~:ge. i~ . After Southern punted on the
tract. The owners have mmated thiS confrontation. They have locked out the appea~d the junior 's return may ensuing possession .. Southern had
ll!,ayers.
, have ended prematurely with a sig- freshman speedster Zach Mounts
~· The players .wan~ to play. They ~w they are .•xtr_emely fortunate. to lie nificant .ankle injury. Boso returned, twice in his own backfield. but the
11!,111etes and to acquue great wealth 10 the process. Wtth the can~llatton of however. with a small limp 10 punt . unarmed Tornadoes let him go. and
J94 ga?JeS, the players have lost ~hout ~200 million.!" salaries. The p~aye':', for over 200 yards. 6-242 and also he rambled 54 yards to pay dirt
p~or~tng_to umon prestden~ Patnck Ewm~ realtze tt need.s ~o be a wm-wm rushed for 88 yards on 19 carries.
Waterford went for the ti c at this
sttuatton. They are also wtl.lmg to negotiate. They are wtlhng to compr&lt;&gt;·
A Boso kick pu~hed Waterford point in the game . 'on what was to be
mise. They know the labor dispute is bad for business. After all, look at what into their own territory and a three a pass play. quarterback Mark Waller
~appened to baseball in 1994.
.
and out possession forced a punt. rolled out uf the pocket ' and was
: A second reason why I favor the players is the economic realities of the Southern blitzed ~n ~ Waterford'S' stopped short of the goa l Ime to make
game. like the owners, the players want to control the rookie salary caps. Jone s was faced wnh four whtrhn~ the score 22-20.
T'ne veteran players don't like rookies dominating the salary pie. This is a Tornadoes. Da vts and Adam
Southern tutned -away Waterford
qegotiated item.
Cumings blocked the punt and DaviS deep in SHS territory in the fin.al
' What the players don't want to trade is the Larry Bird ex~plion, which ran it back 45 .yards for a touchdown. ruund. hut later after Southern wa.'
allows teams to exceed the salary cap to sign their free agents. I like the Bird Davis added the end-around two- forced to punt. Jo~ h Ervin picked up
exception·because it allows players to stay with their teams. You don't have point try and SHS led 15· 7 -with I :34 , hi s second save of the day. Ervin
left before half.
•
' recm•cred a fumble on th ~ punt and
the baseball problem of players changing teams every year. The Bird ex~pThe two point try was ironic in just three plays later Boso hit the end
tion allows Michael Jordan to remain a B,ull for ll,is entire career. This is •. that a kick was in order. however. /.one froll] one yard out at the I :58
good for the game and its fans!
..
.
. Southern lost the kicking tee and had .mark . Coffman's kick split tho,
More importantly, the ow·ners claim that they lost money with the play- 10 usc a time out to set up a run. The uprig~,ts 10 make the score 2'}-20.
Yes. you guessed it. The very next
ers receiving 57 percent of designed revenues last season is not totally true. two-point play would later become a
To prove my point, I will use the Pacers as an example.
,
factor, because Waterford was forced play/ Waller hll Crock for a SS·yard
The Simon brothers paid $13 million when they boughL the franchise m 10 go for two later in the ~ame and touchdown connection at the I :46
1983. I was informed by a Source in Indianapolis that the present value of failed. A kick by SHS and a kick by mark, and tension increased as WHS
the team wa~ estimated at $200 million.
Waterford could have set up a 28-28 tightened the score. The Jones kick
Yes, tile Pacers may have lost a million dollars last season, but the build- tally at the end of regulation and a was good, and the score stood 29-27.
ing of a new arena with a high number of luxury boxes should help them possible overtime.
As time waned, Southern had to
recuperate that amount in the future. However, the return on their investment
Waterford came back with a big
(TORNADOES end on B-8)
has been astronomical. How could they be losing money when their investment return is so high?
·
· When George Steinbrenner bought the Yankees in 1973, he also spent
S.JJ million for his franchise. There were estimates that today, George could
sell the Yankees for close to $1 billion. It is Certain he will take 110 less than
half that amount:
,.
Say what you will, athletes played a vital role in increasing ·the value of
sports franchises. What's the loss of $1 million when compared with a 1,000_·.
percent return on your investment? I might add that these investmen.ts con·
tinue to rise in value.
· Here, I've organized a bus trip to the Pacers-Lakers game in March,
which might be canceled" That doesn't bother me as much as the r~duced
•
~hedule from 82 to 68 games with the loss of November's games.
·
If the Bulls don't repeat there may be those, like my siblings, who will
look for the excuse that Chicago lost because the season was shortened.
After all, baseball fans don't recognize the Dodgers ' 1981 world champi·
onship. There may even be a claim to even put an asterisk at the end of this.
, year's basketball season. I thought we buriedlthat concept a long time agoc ·

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96 CHEV. CORSICA 11588, 30,000 miles, bal. of fact warr., 1111,
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tilt, cruise, PW, PL ...............................................................$8995
94 PONTIAC SUNBIRD 17553, Green, A/C, cass ...............$5995
90 PONTIAC GRAND AM 175441 AfT, A/C, tilt, cruise, cassette,
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95 FORD TAURUS GL 17584, While, AfT, A/C, till, cruise,
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97 PlYMOUTH BREEZE 17497, AfT, A/C, till, custom wheels,
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96 PONTIAC SUN FIRE 17493, 4 Dr., A!T, A/C, cass.,
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96 PONTIAC GRAND AM S.E. 17534, A!T, AJC, PL............ $9995
95 CHEV. BERETTA Z-26 17481, V-6 eng., sport wheels, AfT,
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windows &amp; locks ........ ,............................,............................ $9995
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windows, locks, power seat.............................................$12,995
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power windows &amp; locks ................................................... $10,995
97 CHRYSLER SEBRING #7604, 25,000 miles, bal. of fact.
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95 GMC SONOMA#7602, Blue, sport pkg......................... $7995
95 CHEV. S-10 EXTRA CAB L.S. #7601, A/C, can., sport
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97 FORD F-1 SO #7573, 18,000 miles, bal. of fact. warr., A/C,
rear slider, sport wheels ................................. :.......... ,,:...$14,985
96 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB 17452, Sport wheela, V-6,
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sport wheels .................................:.....................................$1 0,995
96 FORD RANGER XLT #7466, 23,000 miles, bal. of fact. warr.,
AJC, bedllner, rear siltier, sport wheels, 1111, cruise,
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V-6 englne...................................,................................._
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95 NISSAN TRUCK #7576 .......................................... ,.........$8495
94 CHEV. S-10 L.S. 17546, Tonneau cover, sport wheels,
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PW, PL,P. seats, sport wheels, roof rack ....................... $18,745
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Outdoors

1

Along the River

November 1, 1998

Ohio college football... (Continued from B-1)
and 19 )ards to Chucl Moore.
lh!i"') al•o ..:orod on a lhc-yard
run and Gonus on a 15-yard pass
from Roh Adamson for ,,.o-time
defendong NCA~ 01\ tston III champoon Mounl t.:nion !S-O overall, 7-0
on the Ohou Conference).
The Purple Kaode" also scored

'

twice on defense, with Jeremy Yoder
retuomng a fumble 12 yards for a
score and Rich Goebeh returning an
' Interception 25 yards for a louchdown.
Shawn Wheeler completed 19-of34 passes for 192 yards wilh one
interceplion for Capilal ( 1-7. 0-7

OAC). Thc Crusaders' onl) poonts
came on Wheeler's one-yard Pi"' to
Man Hawk 10 close the r.conng early
in the fourth quarter.
Witrenberg 14, Woostu 7
At Springfi~ld, Anlhony Crane
threw two touchdown passes and
Wiuenberg's defense came up woth

Tornadoes ...

&lt;continued from s -7&gt;
JUit hang on to the ball. Jones. who Friday..
Coffman kick 5:47 Ist
\\un an l)\Cr1J me game again~l Miller Quarter ll!.Yb ·
Walerford: Travis Lang 75-yard
"o th a field goo I. wa&gt; set up for Southern ......................... 7-8-7-7=19 kick-off return. Jones kick, 5:34 Ist
another po"1blc fate, this time in Waterford ...................... 7-0-7-13=27
Southern : Josh Davi &gt; 46-yard
reg~latwn Southern held on and
pun! block return: Davis run, I :34
~.:on . . umed as much clock as possible,
2nd
,.
Team statistics ·
mtennmentlj taking delay penalties
Southern: Davis 1-yard - run.
to take fu!l JS,o,ccond chunks off lhe
Coffman kick. 1: II 3rd
Department
S2li.
dock.
Waterford; Crock 8'1-yard return,
7
For Soulhcrn. balance was again First downs .................... 12
Jones
kick. :59 3rd
·
294
C\ 1d~n1 m the "in. Davis was 25-82 T01al yards ................... 285
Waterford: Mounts 54-yard ·run.
rushing ......... 59-213 15-136
ru&gt;htng. Jlu'" 19-XM and Ash 11 -35. Yards
run
void, 8:10 4th
Yards passing ...... ., ... ,.... 71
158
ban&gt; ""' ~,5 passing wi1h Bosn Comp.-att
Southern:
Boso 1-yard run ,
..... :..... ."......... 4-6
7-20
pa,~1ng one('. 0~ I . ~umi ngs hauled
Coffman
kick
good,
I:5S 4th
I
, tn t""o ca.tchc!-1 for 50 yards, Davis ln1ercep1ions thrown .... .. .0
Waterford
:
Waller
to Crock pass
Fum~les-lost ................ 1-1
3-1
""' 1·14 and Mall Warnet 1-7.
55
yards,
Jones
kick
good.
I:46 4th
Pena~ties ..................... 6-35
3-42
Waller""' 7,20 passing for 158 Punts-avg
...............6A0.3 5-38
~ aru .... \\ hllc Mounts was 4-65 rush on~ anJ LJng 5-21 yards rushing .

w

Cr&lt;K~ v.J.,
1-1~-

4- 103 receiving and Lang

lhree f~nh-quartcr stops as the
Tiger; stayed perfect with a 14-7 victnf) over Woosler Saturday.
Crane completed 10-of-16 passes
for 130 yards withoot an interception
for Wiuenberg (8-0, 6-0 Nonh Coast

Conference). Casey Donaldson ran
for 156 yards on 28 attempts.
Crane threw scorin_g passes of II
yards to Mtchacl AIJancJc and 23
yards to Kris Gerken, the latter comtng with 46 seconds lefl in the third

MEADOWS

GILLII CODN!Y
Pekl tor by Mtadowa lor Commlaaion•, KJm Y. Canaday, Treuurer, 1999 Durham, Bldwll, OH

Scoring summary

Southern pia)' Federal Hocking

Sunday, ............,., 1,1118

By Catherine Hemm

II GALLII COUN!Y ·
. ELEC'

P~'

Southern; Josh Davis 2-yard run,

4JfJ!~

', .#&gt; :,,kJt·

hear from some people. Be patient ."
Times Sentinel Steff
Karen did hear from
GALLIPOLIS • Her fingers move
quickly with a needle and yarn to fashion. someone, in the form
dolls , pillows and decorative home fash - of an invitation to
the
Main
ion items. Her labors produce a variety of attend
Strasse Village show.
articles.
Karen Buffington is an artisan. She is When she replied, the
also a business woman gaining state wide show organizers•• "told
her they didn't" issue
recognition for her talents.
As the letler
invitations.
owner
of But, when Karen P!OK~ren's
• vided the invitation,
Korner,
a they were perplexed,
thriving busi- but told her she could
ness featuring indeed
be
an.
crochet items, exhibitor.
located at her
"II must have been
·home at 93 divine intervention,"
Pine
Street, Karen says with a
Gallipolis,
laugh .
Karen BuffinIn fact, her ent.ire
gton
was · business has been .o ne
recently invit- of, "God's providing
ed to show- e'verything I need."
case her crafts
As the wife pf
at the 20th . Eddie Buffington, the
anniversary of minister of Provi·
·
d ence
·
M.1sswnary
· '
. · KAREN'S KORNER CROCHETING • l(jlren Buffington poses .o ublde her shop, located at 93 Pine Street, Gallipolis .
M a•n
.1 h e
items : Dolls make up 'a substantial part of cutting down a 1ree, she saw the "blocks ot
Buff· Strasse . Vii- ' Baptist Church, . in
lngton holda one of her lage Oktob~r- Bidwell, she also• gives credit to her bus- her business. Her 'Baby Beau' and 'Baby wood as something more - wa1ermelo~
afghani fa1hloned In patriot·
.
•
lccolora.ltlljuatonaofmay fest craft ·fa~r band for hts support.
Leeza' dolls have been well received, slices to be. used as dol!lrstops.
.
flag lnaplreddealgn11he ere· at Covington,
"I couldn ' t do it ~ithout him, and he Customers often remark that each doll,
As her business grows , both by word of ·
Ky.,
during never complains about me crocheting. He although made from the same p_attern, mouth and by the exposure of craft
ate1.
September.
went with me to the Strasse Village show, take on
person11lity of their own. "You shows, Karen finds herself venturing
During the three day fair, 350,000 people and helped me get everything ready ."
look at them and they really look like down a new path.
·, passed throtgh the craft booth • much to
The magnitude of the show was a sur- · children, right down to thei ~ socks and
Since the an of crocheting is most
the amazement of t~e first. time demon- prise to both of them.
. shoes."
··
associated with aniique table d'o~~dQb.
. strator.
"Ther~ were so many people - i.t was
Karen's Victorian inspired Edwardian lies and arlicles of clothing, Kare'tl_.!ind~
"I had never shown my work at a craft like a blur in a way. I really didn't have dolls have been popular with 'customers mo.re people coming to hec.for the repa·i~
much of an opportunity to look at the wanting old fashion collectibles .
of their precious he'irlooms , '' I really did : other exhibits."
,
'··
Dressed in mauves and browns, they n't plan to !let into that line of work, bu!
The show was an a chance for Karen to capture the innocent charm of a long ago once I did a few pieces, I found it to b~
gain faith in her talents, and the value of era . "People like them both to .· collect, enjoyable, and a challenge. "
·•
her work.
and decorate . with for Christmas," says
For th·e repairs, Karen tries to restore
Taking' crochet accent towels to sell, Karen .
each item lo its original beauty, without
Karen noticed the adjoining booth featurIncluded among her other dolls are the hyman eye nolicing the improvement. ·
ing them - at a ch~a,p,e.r PJi~!l·
fashion dolls, Jack and J.ill dolls 'and the When recently presented with an antique
Her husband ca.me-,,bacJQ..III·rid•'·· info'rmeCI pin'afore Patty musical dolls featuring a multicolored child's tam that was worn
herfhere was anotlfel vqJI.dO,r -With towel"s hidden music box.
·
with small" holes, Ka·ren used the 'o riginal
-.at an •even cheaper ,price. Eddie . asked
Whlle Karen likes to follow patterns to thread to make the repairs,
her if she was going ' ~o lower her price. make many of her items, she has started
"You can'.t always fix every piece, but
1
Karen held fir~l.
to design her own crafls . ·
·
· you do the best you can. E,veryone has
"I knew what they w.e re worth, and I
A self- described 'cow enthusiast', she
knew how much
came up with. cow
illy
labor
was
dolls and, laler,
BABY DOLL • Thl1 baby may look real, but worth, I wasn't
pig dolls : some
don't expect ar\y crying from him. Ha Ia one of going to lower the
dressed
in
the many craatlon'a Karan. Buffington sella at
price just becau.s.e
delightful outfits,
her shop•..
of · the competiothers fashioned
show before, and I really didn't know tion."
from printed fabDuring
the
ric. · "I don't realwhat to expect," said Karen modestly .
Content to run her business in Gallipo- remaindered
of
ty kriow wh.y 1
lis, fate stepped in during August 1997, the show, Karen
though! of it, bul
when Jan Davis, a sales representative and
Eddie
they were fun to
for Giflcraft, saw Karen's sign.
watched in am us~- ·
make.
•
CHRISTMAS BOOTIES - Need a nice .Chrlat·
Stopping to tak·e a look, she was men! as the other
Everybody ·,
mas gift exchange Item? Karen's Korner offers
impressed with the handcrafted items fill- vendors engaged
likes stuffed ani- these decorated booties as part of the holiday
ing · the· shop - some which Karen in a price war mals , and these articles.
designed .herself.
slashing prices to
really · appear to
'
people ." '
heirloom piece s . and they are usually
" She told me I ougM to b-e a millionaire, · attrac.t buyers. '
and she'd be my agent. I just laughed at
"I
couldn't
As . Christmas thrilled that they can look forw'ard to
the idea."
·
believe what they
draws near; Karen using them for more years ."
But, Jan Davis- had other plans for the were doing, bu·t J
as started to make
Her work on the tam was so precise, the
business. Witt( ·promises of putting the made up my min.d
·Admlttlngthatherstyleof
more
· §e·asonal tam will be lovingly displayed. "A lot of
word out about Karen's handiwork, Jan · that
I
wasn t a
11 unique, Karen crochets several hours items such as people like 10 take old dollies an.d put
told her,"
Don't be surprised if you going
to
get day•andalwayalooksfoi'Wardtomaklngnewltems siockings ,
bell them under glass as a piece of art.
involved .w ith that forhershop.
· shaped .potholders · Its nice to have something like that.
sort of thing. I dio;l
with ho kly accents and Christmas boots because of the 'family history that each
really well i~ selling mine, and 1. was decorated with flowers .
piece has ."
happy with what I offered."
The Christmas items are popular for gifl
Kar e.n Buffing to n isn't sure where her
Karen · grew up watching her mpther exchanges an~. those need 'I'm thinking business will go . She likes hav[ng the
crochet,. ·but did not learn the art form of you• · gifts. She is ~aJse working on shop in her home, ~nd the opportunity to
until 's he was an adult. "I didn ' l learn stuffed footballs and soccer balls, as well gel to know each of her customers.
until I was about 30 . I guess I was always as bears, many with movable parts,
Looking around her shop, filled with
While seasonal items are popular, some her labo.rs, she says qui etly , "I'm not the
too busy doing other things.
My mother taught me some very basic sell well ·year round.
,
, best in Jhe world , but I'm proud of what I
stitches, the granny square and daisy
"I do a , lot of patriotic things, like do."
chain. Learning it was never a struggle Afghans, and the Yankee Doo - r;;_;;:::-_::-=-"_:_'
for me. I caught on fast and wanted to die bears .. Red, white and blue
learn more."
things are always in style." ·
Her firs.t major project was a multicolHer latest seasonal creations
ored afghan for her husband . "He almost · is a mixture of creativity and
wore it out because he used it to cover up art - pumpkins mad·e from dis for a long time."
carded dryer hoses. Wilh
Karen soon found that crocheting was painstaking detaili"g, Karen
rela 'x ing . "It really keeps me sane and paints them , and us es an
helps me unwind. l enjoy it and still look antiquing p.rocess before she
forward to picking up my yarn and •nee- decorates each one with raff!a
dles aQd making something . It's like mak- and fabric leaves to make a
ing magic to create something with a nee- stunning table cenlerpiece.
dle and yarn,"
Karen also des igns a creation
As she became more proficient in cro- entitled ' Railroad Man' , a
cheting, Karen and her m·other started to modern art styled slick figur e
sell afghans and other items at yard sales . fashioned from railroad lies :
In !994, she obtained a business license
She · admils Jhat she sees
FOR PLAY AND COLLECTING • and began to turn her hobby into · a propotential
in many ev eryday
Ksren'a Komer Is filled with many dlffafent
typea of dolls " 1ome for children to enjoy, oth· fession.
items - in wh at they could STOCKING THE SHELVES • Karen Buffln1atc•n
The shelves of. her shop are ·stocked become . When a neighbor was shelves at her store, with many types of aous.
lr1 to bit placed under glall for aerloua collec·
tors.
with a variety of dolls, pillows 11nd other

a

-·

TROPHY BUCK - Orlyn Cochran of Vinton killed thla 20-polnt ·
a PSE crossbow on Oct 28 st Cooper Hollow Wildlife Area
tn eastern Jackson County. Cochran, who said he tracked this deer
for the last two years, shot him from 30 yards away from a deer
stand. (Tiin~s-Sentinel photo)
.
~uck with

I

.
I

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C

Crafted with pride: Karen's Komer finds success at home

. quarter 10 break a tie al 7. Crane
threw onto 1riple coverage to Gerken ,
who appeared to lose the ball as he
was tackled in the end zone. But the
officials ruled that he had the ball
long enoogh for the louchdown.

IT'S TIME FOB A CHANGE

,CASBY "S

Section

1

'

l!!'!•il"C:;;;;::--

�: Sunday, November 1, 1998

Sunday,Novernber1,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

.

Anniversaries

Celebration concert planned
to honor life of Matthew Elliott
GALLIP.OLIS - On Saturday,
November 14, staning at 7:30p.m..
the Ariel Theatre in GalliPolis, will
be filled with musi&gt; and praise as
Ordinary 'People and f!ryan Hitch
pcrfonn in celebration of the life of
ten-year-old Mauhew Ellioll, who
recently died after an eight-year battie with leukemia.
'
As a contemporary praise and

in September, Mcame acquainted
with Mauhew and his mom in lhe
waiting
room
of
the
hematology/oncology clinic at Chitdren's Hospital in Columbus around
two years ago.
According to Pope, "The concen
will be a very positive, up-beat
expression of l.hanksgiving for
Mauhew's ..life."

worship leader and concert artist,
Bry3n Hitch travels ac'ross tile country with·a message of hope in Jesus

· Brian Hitch sings. "Lean On
Me" , which Says. 'lean on me when
you're not strong. and I'll be your

Chris!·
friend. I'll help you carry on.' Pope
Ordinary People is a group of • commented. "Life can be so hard.
thinecn members from seven differ- When you are in the dark middle of
ent churches. Under thc'direction of the tunnel, it docs help to know that
Christian S&lt;.:Oll of Gallipolis. they others are thinking you and praying
usc their voices and instrum~nts to for you. We want lhe Elliott family
share the gift of salvation. Their · 10 know that there are many of us
message is one of ordinary people who arc here to help."
serving an

· Mr. and Mra. Warren VanMeter

Golden anniversary
planned
"
'

ALFRED - Warren and Charlotte VanMeter of Alfred will celebrate their 50th anniversary, at an
open reception to be held Saturday.
2-4 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars.

:couple to note' anniversary .
CHESTER - Robert and Joann
of Chester will celebrate
their 25 th wedding anniversary on
Nov. 8. 2-4 p.m. at the Masonic Hall
In Chester with an open hou se
reception hosted by their sons.
· TI1ey \\ere married Nov. 2. 1973
~alaway

and Sandra Wilson.
The couple rcqucsh !:! i h~ he
omined. All friends and J'amilv arc
invited to join the cclchrat ion. ·

God.

._ Candace Pope and 1 tccns at the
Vmton BapUsl Church are or~amzin~ the concen. She and her son.
Ben. ~&lt;·hojust completed three and a
half years llf lrcatmcnl for leukemia

at Lottridgc by the Rev. Guy White .
They have lwo sons and a daughterin-law. Robert· J. and Stephanie nf
Belpre and Jeromce of Chester.
Mrs. Calaway is a home maker
while Mr. Calaway is a mcchaniC'a1
Elkem Metab. Mariella.

NEW YORK (AP) -

Did he

counse l a down-"on-his-luck .Frasier
Crane '.' ' Advise NBC executiveS to
send "Wind on Water" outlo sea'.'

Spiritual guru Deepak Chopra
ran a two ~hour seminar for NBC
progratnming executi·vcs in California earlier· this month. the network
acknowledged today.
The New Age author-lecturer
cou nseled them on how to live up to
their potential, and recognize opportunities , according to an . executive
: SAGINAW. Mich. (AP) - A federal judge ordered the Army 10 rccon- who aucndcd and spoke to The
5ider the ~_;onviCtion ·of a doctor who treated presidential assassin John Associated Press on. condition of
.
Wilkes Booth 133 years ago, giving a legal victory to the doctor's 97-year- anonymity.
old grandson.
Chopra. whose best-selling books
. Dr. Samuei'Mudd was sent to prison for helping Booth escape. Hi s grand- include "Seven Spiritual Laws of
son. Dr. Richard Mudd of Saginaw, has been seeking to clear his grandfa- Success" and "Ageless Body, Timeiher's name since he was a young' man .
.. • less Mind," talked about the impor"
: On Thursday, !J.S. District Judge Paul Friedman in Washington, D.C ..
ordered the Army to reconsider the request. sayi ng the Ariny's recent rulings
on the case were arhitrary.
TACOMA, Wash. (AP)- Scicn" I hoped I would live long enough to sec my grandfather exonerated,"
tists
are trying to figure out why 300
~ichard Mudd told the Detroit Free Press. '.'There arc not enou ~ h words in
starling
dropped out of the sky and
Shakespeare lor me to descnbc how I feel.'
·
\.
died
two
weeks ago.
. .. " h 's one of the worst instances of injus)Lcc in American hi stor~\ and I'm
11
They
haveruled
out poisoning or
glad it 's com ing close ro hcing scu led , Mudd.said.
bacterial
infection
.
New theories
The morning after Booth sho t President Lincoln in the head at Ford's
Theater in 1865, he came to Mudd 's home in Maryland seek ing treatment for include the hirds hilling the side of a
the leg he bru~e while j umpmg from the president's h()x tinto the stage. Iargc truck. a freak wind storm slamming tl·lcni all to the ground or', since
Booth was killed by federal troops II days later.
A militar~ commission conVi cted Mudd of aiding Booth in h ~.., escape.
But Mudd sm(l he d1d not know of Lincoln's assassination and failed to rc~.: ­
ognizc Booth. a popular actor. when he put a cast o.n' Bouth·s le g.
· Mudd later was pardoned hy PreSident Andrew Johnson. bot hi s' convicIn an effort tu provide our readtion was not overturned . How we ll Mudd kn&lt;;w Booth ant\ what he knew
ership with current news..the Sun~1bou t hi s plans have been thp subjec t or historu.:al debate; amf con trov.crsy
day Times-Sentinel will not accept
ever smcc.
weddings after 60 days from the
Lawycrs·for Richard Mudd argue that Mudd's grandfmhcr. a civilian. was
dutc of the event.
'
entitled to a CIVil trial by a JUry of his peers. In 1992 , the Army Board for
Weddings submittCd after the ·
Correc tion of Military Records cn n&lt;; ludcd that the military trihunal lackctJ
60-tJay deadline will' appear during
j uri sd ict ion at the t,imc ~md recom mended that Mudd's l:o nvktion be sci
the week in The Daily Sentinel and
(ISidC.
,
.
the Gallipoli s Daily Tribune.
An assistant secr:ci'ary of the Afmy dc~ ln1cd to adtlpt the rccomml!tH.Ia-·-.
All club meeting-s and other
tion, say ioJ~ .the jurisdictional chnllcngc 10 Mudd 's ~.:onv td ion had been . l:. nc\\o's art ides in tl1c society ~cc tion ·
heard and reJected by a fcdcrJI court during his lifctinu:.
must he submillcd within 60 days
On appeal, Sara Lister. another assistant Army sccretat'y. rul ed in IY96
of occ urrence. All birthdays must
that the military trihunal had th..: proper constitution d!' authority.
he suhmi11cd within 60 days of the
•
Last year. Mudd's grant! so n filed his la wsuit a~:1inst then Army Scr.:rclary
OC(;UITCn(e .
. '\ Togo .West Jr .. say in ...i! Lister's r.lccisio n was arh ilrary a11d should he reversed
_All material submi!lcd for puh.
1 f&lt;ncd.man ag .~cc d , and n:manll~:d the case to the Army.
·.\ .
lication is subject to editing.

Judge orders Army to rethink Mudd c,ase

they ny in close formation, the birds
.forming an arc between two power
lines, causing mass electrocution.
"The only thi~ they have in
common is blunt trauma," U.S . Fish
and Wildlife Service spoke sman
Doug Zimmer sa id . "Either something hit t,hem very hard , or they hit
something very hard."

.
The birds had crunched chests
and blood clots in thcii hearts and
ll(ngs.
. The mystery arose wh'en people
began noticing dead starling's in
Tacoma's Tidenats industrial area . .
"This may end up in' th,; 'XFiles,'" Zimmer said.

•All alzo extra lo~g
lor added comiort

your

.-JelliNUlt Valley Hospital
Medical Office Building
Suite 214
· 2520 Valley Drive
~oint Pleaaant, WV 2.5550
- Appointments -

'

the type of

conservative
Judge we
need to protect Southern
Ohio."

Mr. and Mrs. Eric Cunningham ·,

Mr. and Mrs. C. Michael Sharp

(304) 675-3400

--YOST-SHARP--

- Office Hours -

RACINE - Deborah L Yo;t and
. C. Michael Sharp were uni.ted in
mafriagc Oct. 9 in Catlellshurg, Ky.
The Rev. Martin Gutc officiated
t.he double ring ceremo ny.
The hridc is the daughter of Janet
R. Camden of Co lumbus and the

,·BRUMFIELD-CUNNINGHAM Macy's . balloons
. • SYRACUSE Sandra K. Academy High School and the Uni·Brumfield and Eric D. Cunningham versity of Ri o Grande . She is
were united in marriage on Oct. 17 employed at Burlilc Oil Company in
at the Liule Log Chapel in Gatlin- Gallipolis.
burg. Tenn.
The groom is a graduate of
Rev. Dennis Colwell performed Southern ·High School and Souththe double ring ceremony.
eastern Business Co llege. He is
The bride is the daughter of Wen - employed by Colc-Layer-Trumble
•. dell and Karen Brumfield of Gal - ·Company .of Dayton.
,;: lipolis. The groom is the son o{ Lois
The couple resides in Syracuse.
&lt;::unningham of Syracuse and the An open house honoring the couple
late Raymond Cunningham.
will be held at the Sen ior Cit izens.
: The couple spend their honey- Center jn Pomeroy on Nov. 8, 2-4
moon in Nashville, Ten h.
p.m.
The bride is a gradua~ of Gall ia

NEW YORK (AP)- Babe is in.
So's the Wild Thing.
The characters are among three
new helium-filled bal,loons in thi s
year's Macy 's Thanksgivin~ Day
Parade. The balloons are less than
50 feet tall, below the 70-fqol guideline a city panel proposed after the
Cat in the Hat balloon injured four
people as it was blown around in
high winds last y.ear. .
Kathy Caronna. 34, who suffered
Assemble
an
emergency
kit
for
power
outages
a fractured skull and spent weeks in
'· I
.
~
a coma after a lamppost fell on her,
The Detroit News
Winter's snow and heavy ice are a threat to power lines . So it pays has filed a $393 million lawsuit
against Macy's and the city.
to be prepared when stormy weather mikes' and the power goes our.
Under new regu lations. veteran
Start now by assemllling an' emergency kit that ca n also tide you
balloons
of Bugs Bunny;· Woody
over if you're snowed in for a day or two. It should include: a bal!eryWoodpecker
and the Pink Panther
operated radio. fresh replacement baueric s,
fla shlijlhl, candles. a
were
cut
loose
because they exceedfirst-aid lilt, bottled wate~ and non-perishable foods in a central locaed
the
length
and
width guidelines.
tion. If you own a fondue pol or chafing di sh, keep so me Sterno on
are
fewer
balloons and '
There
' hand sq you can heat t;anned f~ods such as soup, veget'lblcs, hash and
handlers
will
have
to
watch
traitfing
such.·
Detroit Edisori offers the following tips if electrir.:a l service is inter- tapes and practice. Big balloons will
also be pulled if winds reach 23 mph
rupted:
hit 34 mph.
&gt; - Don' t open refrigerators or freezers unles s absolutely necessary. A or gusts
Babe
is based on th e movie pig of
&lt;closed refri gera tor will keep cold for 12 hours . A well-filled freezer
the
same
name and the Wild Thi.ng is
·:wi ll preserve food for two to three days . Dry ice 'will help in a pinch.
from
Maurice
Sendak's children's
: : - Turn off lights, unplug all" appliances and se nsiti ve electron ic
book "Where the Wild Things Are."
;-devices like compute rs . Thi s avoids an electrical overload when powe r
Th
e third addition is bespectacled
· ·Is ,restored .
.
S~; i e nti st Dexter, based on a Cartoon
'
- During low-vo lta ge co nditi ons - when li ght s dim and TV pictures
1
shrink -s hut off molor-dri'ven ap-pliance s such as refrigera tors 10 pre- Network charac ter.
Mrs: Caronna was hit by the
, vent overheati.ng and po ss ible dainage .
:
. ·-Stay out of llood ed or !lamp basements if water 'is in con ta&lt;.:l with falling lamppost mom ents after she
· outlets, a furn ace or any· elect rically opcrate'd appliance that is encr- handed her 8-month-old son to her
: gized. The water could serve as a conductor of clccirtcitY, Yqu could he husb and . Her. lawyer. John Q•inlan
1
Kell y. said tod ay that hi s client st ill
:clet trocutcd even irwcaring rubber boots.
_,
receives
th erapy twice a week.
, Listen to local radi o stati ons for upd ate s on restori ng powe r.

Accepting New Patients :

mrl 'Pleas~~ Valley
IL&amp;I Hospit~l .
2520 Valley Drive at Point Plu•ant, WV • 675--4340

Christmas Open House

and Wild Thing

November 3; 4 0 5
.

·~

10-6 pm

Prizes
·
Refreshments
Free Candle with Purchase
(while supplies last)
New Scents, New Crocks.
Alot of Snowmen!!

'

Credit cards Accepted Layaway Available

THE COUNTQY CANDLE ~HOD
Rt. 124

Minersville, Ohio

992·4559
'

. The Robert M. Holley Cholesterol Center ·
Is this whl!re they make cholest~rol? What's this all about?
The Robert M; Holley Cholesterol Center is NOT where they make cholesterol, but
where they treat cholesterol and all tho other risk factors that contribute t9 cardiovascular
disease, 'which le~ds to heart attack, stroke and premature death.
I

. Abnormal levels of cholesterol and its various'f6nn~ (Triglycerides, LDL, HDL etc.)
have been shown through medical research to b~ strong predictors of a heart attack or
stroke. The NCEP, National Cholesterol Educqti1n Program, has established guidelines ·
foi all patients; in other words, certain levels that cholesterol and all of its various forms
should be at or below in order to reduce the patients risk of a heart attack or stroke.

. ,•I·'

David

The Robert M. Holley Cholesterol Center, the first of its kind in this region, is a
Center that spe~;ializes in helping you identify all -of your c.ardiovascular risk factors, and
then works with you to design a personalized program to help you reduce your risk of a
heart attack or stroke.
'
·

'

·'I

Dr. Robert M. Holley is a certified lipidemiologist, which means he has had special
training and is an expert in identifying and treating all the various cardiorascubir risk
factors.
·

'&lt;

Remember, even though
your cholesterol level may
be low (less than 200), with the
' j) •
.
newly identified risk factbrs you may still be at risk. ·
· . ·

•

Call the Robert M. Holley Cholesterol Center today for a FREE Initial Ev·aluation
and let us design a personalized program to help you reduce your risk of the unexpected .

•

MEET OUR MOM, PATTY PICKENS
I

'

WE KNOW SHE'S A DEDICATED MOM SO WE
KNOW SHE'LL BE DEDICATED TO . THE
RESIDENTS OF MEIGS COUNTY. SHE TRULY

for Appeals Court Judge

RUSTICA ARMOIRE

Working to Protect Southern Ohio

CARES AND WANTS TO SEE MEIGS COUNTY
GROW AND PROSPER. SHE'S CONCERNED
ABOUT OUR YOUTH AND OUR SENIORS AND
WILL WORK HARD TO IMPROVE OUR
COUNTY. PLEASE VOTE NOVEMBER SRD FOR
OUR MOM, PATTY PICKENS.

.

.

Ask About Our Line
of Rusiiea Pieces

• Former Chief Assistant !'rosecut~r in G_allia County.
• ~2 Years Courtroom !rial Expenence, zncluding work
rn 10 of the 14 counties within this 4th Court District
• .Ded~cated family man and community leader.
·
• Busrness ~nowledge and e.ducational experience.

DINING ROOM
SUITES

Ptud for by Evans for Appel laic 1udg!l, Jean Saunder1, Trea .. 436 Second Ave .. Gallipolis, OH 4.5631

Endorsed by Ohio Republican
Party, Senator Mike De Wine &amp;
Many of Southern Ohio's
Top Prosecutors &amp; Sheriffs

NANCY &amp; NOELLE PICKENS
Paid lor by the PGP Election Team, 36215 Texas Ad., Pom~roy, OH

.'

According to national data, less than six percent of patients are at or below these
established guidelines, meaning that many patients are still at risk. Remember, choles' terol is pot the only risk factor. There are maily other well know risks such as high blood
pressure. diabetes, family history of heart ·disease, smoking and many newly discovered
risk factors. So even though your cholesterol level ma·y be good, you may still be at risk.

NANCY

'
l

Monday - Friday
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

to feature Babe

Sen. Mike
De Wine

MOM

Chari"' L Camden of Bidwell.
The groom is the :on of Mark
Sharp of ShernKisville ·and Rhonda
Shaffer of Ravenswood. W.Va. He is
employed hy Kanawha Rivpr Towtng .
The couple will reside in Racine.

a

"David
Evans will be

OUR
.

-Office-

I

Gallia &amp; Meigs Counties

MEET
PATTY

~ Board Certified Obstetrician &amp; Gynecologist ~ :-

Boy Scouts of America to kick off
annual popcorn sale today

News policy

NOELLE

'liehael \f. Cot•bin~ ~J.D.

:

$10.00 at Washington E!ementary
SciKml and Galha Academy . Htgh
SchooL·
Call ' 740-38~-8454to order tickcts for indi viduals or gmups.

Scientists trY to come up with answer for deaths of 300 starlings
.

CHINLE, Anz. (AP) - A; many as 200 youngster&gt; may have hec~
exposed to mercury when some of them handled the poisonou; liquid i'l a
junior high school science laboratory.
· Schools were closed in the district- which draws young,ters from l_ar!lC;
ly rural Navajo India~ far01lies - ;o that authorities could dctcrmme hr;w
widespread the contamination from Thursday's e~)iosure may have been . ~;,
injuries were reponed .
·
:
It was unclear how the youngsters first came iil contact with the mercury
or how it was spread among students at Chinle Junior High School. A &gt; maoJ.
as 200 children were exposed, police said.
. · •.
Schools will remaiitcloscd Until they arc dec(&lt;led safe. said School Board
President Philip Bluehouse. Buses and cl"l'srooms were to ·be checked. he
said.

Tickets 3rc on sale now for

· GALLIPOLIS - The Tri-State through the United Way and from
Area Council of the Boy. Scouts of communit y support through the
America will kick off their annual United Way and from the Su~taining
sale of Trail's En~· Gourmet popcorn Membership Enrollment program of
Sund~y. Nov. I.
the Council.
tance of tel evision as a medium and
The sale running: t~rot~ g h Nov.
Last year the Tri-State Area
told them to be mindful of its inllu- 22, helps sco uts with suppl emental Council so[d $200,000 wonh of the
cncc, the cxer.:uuvo,said. ·,
incorn~ to finan'c aclivitics for lhc '· '\rail 's End Popcorn which raised
The seminar was arranged by a council, as well as individual scout- more than $130,000 for Council and
friend of Chopm\, Jerom e Conlon. ing unil s ~ according lo H. Ray Local Scout Troop atid Cub Scout
who's an exeCutive in NBC's mar- Franks. Seoul Executive for the Tri- Pack activitii!S. The Council has set
keting department. NBC spokes- State Area Council.
a goal of $250,000 this year.
woman Pat Schultz said.
"Wi th co ntinued growth in youth
. Attendance was voluntary, she Jlarticipati Qn. along with corre said.
sponding programs. the escalating
NBC executives could usc some program cost, the need for camp
help visualizing suc&lt;.:ess; the ·once- equipment and m~intcnance has
dominant network linished in fourth prompted the E~elmtlve Board of
place in last week's prime- time rat- the Council 10 -Seek" additional
ings for the first time since 1992. Its sources of support," Franks said.
two top entertainment executives.
Executive Board President.
Don Ohlmeyer and Warren 'Lillle- David Lunsford, empha.,ized the prificl.d , announced thi s week that they mary ifH:o m~ for scouti ng will con·
were leaving.
tinue from community ' support

'

As many as 200 school children
may have been exposed to mercury

Weddings

Spiritual guide talks to NBC executives

Mr. and ~rs. Robert Calaway

,, .

ThC cclebralion is hcin~ hosted
hy.their two Uaughlcrs. Joyce Burke

cxtraordin~1TY

...--

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV;

"Reducing your risk' of the unexpected"

..

2500 Jefferson Avenue
Pt. Pleasant, WV

(304) 675-1675

..

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Page C4 • ~~a--~ .

•

Sunday, November1,1998.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

~unday, November 1, 1998

•

Travels with Max

- - - - - Gallia Commuf1ity Calenda,:...-----:.

The Community Calendar 11 publislleciM 1 free MrVk:e to f10n1II'Oilt
By MAX TAWNEY
wllhlng to llllllOUilCe - ·
GALLIPOLIS
I have hecn u&gt;ked mun) · group8
lngs lltld IJII!CIII evc:nts. The Clllll:tun~' · ''In all uf )nur "'"rid lraH'I'. 'ololu~h ·~
dar II not dftlgned to promote
your fa,omc t.'oumry!''
.
!lilies or funckal-. of any type.
My rC!'~JlOOM! i) I ha\'C thoroughly cnjuycd Items are printed as ~ permits
and cannot be guanll1teed to run 1
C\'Cf)' 1..' tlUillf) r\•C \'1!\IICJ and Cai,.'h ~~ the
fa\nrit~..· 10 ~orne

specific number oi daya.

way ...
h&lt;~!'&gt;

_

•••
. .

.
GALLIPOLIS- Lions Club mecung.
6p.m., at Holiday Inn.

'·

r\'c tr;I\L'Icd wold Mexico more 1han any
largc~t LHm'l Cluh 1n
the world . I wa~ m)l.:c a J~UCSI "hen they ~ad
over SOO in attendance at a mcctin~t I wa.' 111 \'it ·

01hcr tlccausc it

GALLIPOLIS - Community Cancer suppon group, 2 p.m., New Life
Luiher.m Church. For information call
446 • 0713 or 446 - 3S38.

lhc

•••

•••
Sunday, No~ember 1
•••

•••

...

•••

•••

•••

•••

: (Max Tawney, lo~gtime Gallipolis businessman, occasionally con·
(i'ibutes columns to th~ Sunday Times-Sentinel about his world travels
~nd memories of Gallipolis.)

•••

nOQn Until 4
p.m.: at Vinton County Community

lluildmg. SR Y.1N. ·snng covered

·

Jt~h . Dnnk~ and 'table ~crvicc pnlvid -

'

•••

f!IDWELL - Poplar Ridge
Fret' will B;lptist Chun.:h scrvil.'c. 6
p.m. " ith Interim pa.stor John

•••

GALLIPOLIS - SnnshinC'to sing
at II a.m. serv i c~ at Dehbie Drive
Chapel. Billy Zu&gt;pan lo preach al 7
p.m.

~c rv1~c .

***

\
Monday, November 2

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Narcolies Anonymous Miracles In Recovery Group.
St. Pclcrs Episcopal Church, 7:30
p.m.

***

T~esday,

•••

•••
•••

Friday, November 6
GALLIPOI.:IS - Alcoholics
Anonymous meeling, 8 p.m. St. ,.
P~lers.Episcopal Church.

•••

PORTER - Bible s1udy al Clark
Chapel Church, 7 p.m.

•••

. EVERGREEN· Springfield
Townhouse c~urch service, 7 p.m.

201·8 6th Street
Pt. Pleasant, WV
Phone (304) 675· 7600
www.galllpolls.com/karat.html

· · "I

l\l\1.!~! 1l.

I was so stunned . I

was tru ly sJlOc.ked." Mi S&gt; Midlcr
Sa1d

•

I

J

Business Hours
Mon.-Fri.
· 9:30 AM·6:00 PM

Sat.
9:30AM-4:00PM

(Across frGm the Mason County Courthouse)

Jeannie Saunders -Owner

.)
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I

INHEARING
435

Second Ave. Galllpoll•, Ohio
446·7819

'

1·800-987·3277

Usa K01h, M.S., C.C.C./A.
' Clinical Audiolaghl

CHESTER - Lisa Artrys of Cir·
Clevillc will sing Sunday. 10 a.m . at
1~e Harvest 'Outreach Church in
Chesler. All welcome .

.

WE NEED TO SET
.
THE R'ECORD STRAIGHT

' '

OUTPATIENT. REHABILITATION SERVICES
·Where should ,ou go1

Physical, Occupational and
Speech Therapy:
All are available in our large, modern faeilit,, with

licensed, caring therapis~s right in Meigs CountJ.Stop in and see our faeilit' or give us a call:

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club meeiing Monday, 2
p.m. on Npyembcr 4 at the home of
Martha Hoo,vcr. Leah Jean Ord will
review the book "Angela's Ashes,"
by Frank McCourt.
POMEROY - Chesler Garden
Club will meet al the home of Twila
Buckley on November 4 at 7:30p .m.
RACINE - Regu.lar meeling of
1he Pomeroy -Racine Lodge 164
F&amp;AM will be held Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at the lodge hall in Racine .
Election of officers will be held. .

WOrking hard! ,
.Helping People!
Making a 4ijforence!

· POMEROY - Br~dford Church
of Christ, located at !he corner of
Bradbury Road and Route 124 oul ·
~ ide of Pomeroy. will be hosting a
concert by Thomas She lion on Nov .
4. 1 p.m..

Pilei for by Cltlztnl for C•r•v~ Don Wilton~ Tr•••· ~
111 01k Aldg• Add1Uon 1 Wtllllon 1• Ohio UM2

'.

This proposal would not have brought any new money Into
southern Ohio for highways. It would Si!flply have shifted the money, around to one
project at the expense of another,
'·

FACT THREE:

This proposal, if it had been adopted, would have been done
without any hearings and without following the proper procedures of the
Appalachian Regional Commission.

FACT FOUR:

Nancy Hollister has been lieutenant governor for over 1200
days. If this was such a great plan, then you must ask why was It presented only
. after she decided to run for Congress.
· ·.

FACT FIVE:

Ted Strickland has already obtained $25 million for southern
Ohio in the transportation bill .. He has also obtained $5 million for highways to be
used here in Meigs County.

Candy

'·

-·

POMEROY ....,. The Meigs Coun·
tY, Agricuhural Society will hold its
annual election for members of the
board of direc lor~ Monday, 5-9 p.m.
a( 1he Grange · Hall on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.

QUANTITY CODE I
KEY. Ill CANOY

500
851
552
1104
·$11&amp;

SIU
508
553 .

~
·'
i POMEROY - The Meigs Bund
B(&gt;oslers will rhecl Monday, 6 p.m.

110
111

20
110
110

FROSTED PRETZE~S
VANI~LA CR PNUT C~USTER
MAP~E CREAM PNUT CLUSTER

21.10
U .IO
'1.60

CANDIES
M051

CHOCCARAME~NUTPATnES

2q

CHOC MILK CARAMELS
CARAMEL CRISPIE CLUSTERS

110

~ADYFINGERS

42.00

110
' 110

20
20
10

CARAMEL PNUT C~USfERS
BUTTERSCOTCH ~OG
CHOCOLATE COVERED PRETZE~S

'8.10

120

31.10
21.75

110

t6

140

II

61'

20
20

CHOCOLATE PRETZEL PETITES
FROSTED PRETZEL PETITES
FUDGE PEANUT CLUSTERS
· MILK CHOCOLATE DROPS

CS Wf

DESCRIPTION

30

MI~K CHOC CREME DROP

3~

·~~ HARD MIX

WASHBURN

'8.10
'8.10
41.10

531

sao

COST
36.50

I

35.50

BRAD~EY

lUll

31.50

600
310

- 31 .10
45.50

130'

&gt;10.10

SPANGLER CANDY

26
30
30
30
30
26
• 30
, 30
30
25
30

SANTA H"RO MIX
ORANGE SLICES .
JUMBO JELLIES ASST GUll
CHERRY SLICES
SPICE JEL~IES
COCONUT BON BON
COCOi!UT BROWNIES
SOUTHERN CREME DROPS
DANCY MIX ICREMEIJE~LIESI
FIL~ED HARD MIX
DANDY CREMES

25 .00
22.00
22.00
22.00
• 22.00
35.00

44.00
2S.OO
24.50
30.60
25.50

•n

20

OPERA CREMES

45.00

104
101
106
107 •
404

25
25
25
25

30

VANILLA HAYSTACKS
CHOCOLATE HAYSTACKS
ASSORTED HAYSTACKS
HAWAIIAN HAYSTACKS
PEANUT SQUARE$

38.75
38.75
38.75
38.75
48.00

24

P~ANUT

BRITTLE
PECO FLAKE

37.50

CHASE CANDY
. lftACH'S CAKQ¥

; RACIN E -

Raci ne Vii lu ge
C~ undl rcg ulur mcuting Mnndny, 7
p.ln. nlthc mun ic ipal huilding.

21 .
70t
706

:SYRACUSE - Suuon 'lilwn&gt;hip

701
I

·t

K:1c11c n... · Whul"!!" which provicJcs

ME~STER

10
20

COD~*

QUANTITY

110

- Leuf pickup
in• Middleporl will hegin Monday al
rill, Pomeroy Corpora1ion Line on
S~~ond Avenue . .

Srnninnr " Home Schoolin g &amp; Thu

COST

100

'
l' MIDDLEPORT.

humc of Brinn nnd Kip1 Hupp. Gny

DESCRIPTION

500

iii 1he school calcteria 10 peel apples
f'l.; the annuul apple huller project.
All parents arc asked lo help.

StJydcr will he prc.•c nung her CHEO

cswr

70

; REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Trustees will hold a regu·
I~ meeling on Monday at 6:30 p.m. ,,
a1 !he ·township garage, located on.
Jcippa Road .
·

TUESDAY
; POMEROY - JEW EL iJc•u•
E~l11mcing Wise Euucllli&lt;~nn1 Lcnrn·
inJI will mccl Nov. "1. 7 r m. nl Ihe

·

. P.O. Box 772
IIi polis, Ohio 45631
740-446-6174
~: 740-446-8328

''
RACINE -

T1i!stL!cs 1\.::~u lnr !llCL! ting Mond ay.
7:,0 p.m. nl Syrncu&gt;C Villngc Hnll.

SUPPORT TED STRICKLAND FOR CONGRESS.
liE HAS PROVEN Tlli\T HE CAN DO THE ·JOB

Valley Warallausa

..

FACT TWO:
I

IS

·
Regular meeting of
Racine Chapter . 134, Order ' of lhe
Easlern Star Monday, 7:30 p.m.
,Fifty· and 25-year membership pins
:t~ be prescn1ed. Refreshments.

•

,

••

LETART FALLS - Lelart Towns ~ip Boa rd of Trus1ees meeling
Monday.
6 p.m. al the office build· .
.·.
mg.

c

Paid for by Rita Slavin , P.O. Box 28!, Syracuse, OH 45779

ALFRED - The Orange Town·
ship TruJteeJ will meel on Tuesday
at 7:30p.m. at the home of the clerk.
Osie Follrod.

' POMEROY - Meig~ Cc)umy
. ~oard of Revi sion; 3:30p.m., audi·'
l~r·s office. New values for :Ya• Year
1998 will be reviewed.
.' '
'~
· : CARPENTER
Columbia
Township Board ofTrus1ees meeling
Monday. 7:30 p.m. nl the fire station.

Here is the actual language of the redeslgnatlon highway proposal submitted by
Nancy Hollister.
·
.
. "There Is hereby designated as an addition to Corridor B in Ohio in the
· Ap'palachlan Development Highway System the segment from Chillicothe to Jackson ·.
along U.S. Route 35' and the extensi.on of Corridor B,on U.S. route 52 from east of ·.
Portsmouth to Route 7 to.include the . Chesapeake Bypass and connect with
Interstate 64: Provided, That the section of Corridor B connecting U.S. Route 23 to . ·.
u.s. Route 52 fn'Scloto County Is to rel)laln Intact for completion of a Portsmouth
Bypass: Provided further, That the Corridor B section from Peebles to Lucasville
along State Routes 73 and 348, and the Asheville Bypass section on Corridor shall
be subtracted from the syst~m: Provided further, That such designatlbn addJtlon
shaH not affect estimates of the cost to complete such system nor shall the number ..'
· of eligible Appalachian Development Highway System miles be Increased."

FACT ONE:

practi c~ l information aboul home
schooling organization. For more
information call the Hupps a1 992·
7779.

' MIDDLEPORT - Friends•of !he
Mrigs Coun1y Dislri ct Public
!Jbrary will mccl Mond ay, 7 p.m. ul
t~e Middleport Library.

'

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!

~ONDAY

Nowhere In this proposal is there any mention of the Ravenswood
Connector or the completion of the Route 33 project from Darwin to Athens.

I

36759 Rocksprigns Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740·992·6606

SjNDAY
l MASON. W.VA. - Special ser·
vi!es at Agape Life Center in Mason,
· W.Va., Sunday morning, 10:30 a.m. ··
R~v. CW Clay1on will be the special
sP!iaker from Dillsboro, Ind .. to min·
is1pr in preparation for a . trip 10
K&lt;ii'ea. where he will lead a pastoral
cohference wilh 400 olher pastors. A
sptcial b~by dedication will also be
held. Pilsl\)rs John and Patly Wade
in~ite !he public .
.
;MIDDLEPORT - Victory Bap·
tist Church, Middleport, will observe ·
its : 21st anniversary Sunday with
special auest speaker Dr. Bruce D·.
Clli'nlnins. A fellowship ~inner will
follow.

I .

•••

•••

:

0. What Is the Problem?
A: Falls at:nong the elderly

November 3

"The 'NEW' ·Jewelry Store In Town"

gro up !he. Harl el lcs.
im: luJi ng Meliss-a Man i.: hcstc r.
:. " I can· ! helicvli !his. This IS
r;.1hulous." th e · D1vine Mi!-t s M.
said whcl1 the old ga ng came on
~t a\!c at "The Roseanne Show."
Th~ seg me nt wi ll he hroad Cas t
Mund ay.

~

Saturday, November 7

Mcth1tdi!-tt C hurch.
-'

~ackup

: The Community Calendar is pub·
li,g,ed as a free service to non-profil
g'l'ups wishing to announce meel·
i~s and special events. The calendar
. s 01 designed to promole sales or
f d raisers of any type. Items are
p IJ!d as space permils and cannol
guaranleed lo run a specific num. of days.
·
.
•. falls cause 90% of the 300,000 hlp fractures treated annually ·
,. In the United States {according to the American Academy of
Orthopaedic $urgeons)
·
• Dizziness is one of the I!lading reasons why elderly patients
consult their physici~ns
' .
.
• fear of falling is one of the greatest fears of elderly persons
Q: What Ia the Solution? ·
• Call us todayffor information about our vetltiOIUI~~...
· ·
rehabilitation program
• 30-40% of all falls can be prevented!

Page CS

through paJJcngen·.lussasc. •IJ!arn· panic• below Charle&gt;ton .
guinoa p1g• fed on lhc brew k1cked
boa! ow~~~:,.. were forced lo ban all
When 1hc enlerpmc got greedy hullfrng• m !he ta.c.
Labeled liquor carried by pa,;senger.. OI)C day and tned to h&gt;dc 27 barrel•
There wa\ one man from ncar
or couru some entrepreneur. of whi&lt;kcy in one sh1pmen1 of hay. Clay Charcl Mcthnd~&gt;l Church
switched labels and packaged !heir lhe ...:heme wa&gt; du•:overed.
(nce:tr EurckaJ. ~ho made ht~r. own
home brew with medicinal label&lt;.
lndi vtdual&lt; wnuld alw bootleg brc"' '" the htll• b"'k of !he church.
Liquor was al"' transported by rail. liquor hy lrain. There wa&gt; one Huot· He called &gt;I "Old Hen Liquor."
In one celebrated ring !hat in\'Oived inglon lady by the name of Hatuc
He chn-c ih" n~me hccaut;C he
liquor dealers in Gallipolis, a !rain who would ride !he 1rain lo Gallipo- '-'.atd il tonk three wcch for hi,.
agent in Vin10n. some Gallia County lis.
mocmtihlnc ltJ hatch. Ht~ recipe
. farmers and busineumcn in . She would buy .cveral bottles of called for cornmeal. brown sugar.
Charleston. ·barrels · of whi•key · whi&gt;key and hide ll~m on her per- ramw.atcr, tJOll cayenne pepper.
would be placed aboard a rail car at """. She had sewed britcbes !hat
nu, man wnuld htdc h" h&lt;&gt;me
Gallipolis bound for Vinton.
contained 16 pocke1s. Into each hrcw in wagnn load' of ~ravel . ~lc
Along lhe way to Vinton. 1hc pockcl &gt;he- would place a hottlc of wuuld Ia.kc 1hc gravel tn the ferry at
1rain would stop al several Gallia whi&gt;kcy.
. Chamher.hurg rEurc~a1.
County places and pick up hay. In
Over her brilchcs Hattie would
The fcrryhual wuuld 1ran5port
· eff""t the hay would be used 1&lt;&gt; pide wear a long dreS&gt;. A• long a.&lt; she htm aero~~ the nvcr 1o We,., Vir1he whiskey barrels,
walked very carefully and 1hc train ginta. Then at ~c rta10 place!. altm~
At Vinton the train ~tar ibn opera .. d1dn'1 make any &gt;udden •trops. &gt;he the hi ~ hway !he• man wnuld hury h" ·
tor. who must have been in on !he _1wal! all right. Hreltte W41'i 4:au8ht una liquor. h wuuld la!Cr he rc1ncved by
cnterpri.C, 'WOuld labe l the car a&gt; numhcr "f uc~a,ion, .
a~.:c-omplu.:c.., he ha.J un that ~ide Hf
,
•
conlai ning nothing hut hay. He
' In fact once she ,wao pla"cd in !he the rt\' Cf.
would lake the car off lhe nnnh- jail al Gall"ipolis when Galli a au1hor·
ll1c'c h1llcr men would then &gt;e ll
bound train.and hold !he car unlil a ilie&gt; 'honored a warranl placed for the lllmtn,.hmc in the ~rnall, town'
The Vlnton ,depotlooked like thia about 1915 • 16, when a bootsoulhbound train came to Vihlon.
her arrc"t hy the Huntington pollee. a lon~ the Ohtn R1vcr.
leg whiskey ring waa run from here. For four years, in t!le World War
Thai car was lhcn hooked to 1he Hallie was guarded by .three Gal·
.Unfnrtunat&lt;ly for lhi' man when I era, several Gallien• would bootleg liquor Into West VIrginia •
southbound trai ri which usually lipolis jaile".
he him~lf gut drunk . he hccarne
ended -up in Charles! on. Most of the
Durin~
!he n1~111 Hallie'&gt; \'Cry truthful. h "''"' in one ul hiJo ""·
time hootlcggers could soeak sever- hoyfricnd 'lipped inl&lt;&gt; 1hc jail. mchnalcd 'late' !hal he happened lo
al barrels of whiskey in10 each ship· · relieved the MlotJ!mg Jailer ul the he caught hy the pnhcc.
men! of hay.
key and let Hallie out.
He· hraggct.! to th~ ;~ulhodtic) the
II was · suspected. hut never
Hallie advcru,cd !hat the orew whole plan and ll'l.tcd for them cvcrr.
proved thai !he money behiQd !his "he ho,Jtlcggcd from Ga ll ipuli:r- to all ol lw. t:ohort,.
fi ng came from the gianl coal com- Hu~tingwn was sn pmcnl !hat

Meigs Community. Calendar

•••

***

-

•••

There will be a card shower for
Ada Haye&gt;1 Slst birthday on Nov. I.
Card' may be sent to her a1 984 SR
325. Thunnan, 45685.

CROWN CITY - Revival mec1ing
at Big - 4 Church Nov. 2 - 8, 7 p.m.
•••
Preaching by Gordon Simpson HaJ.cl
Clark
1,;_,
rcquesrro a card ·
Monday. .Walter Wood .. Tuesday and
,howcr
for
her
brother.
Luke (Ted)'!,
Wednesday, Richard Graham - Thur.day. Terry Call - Friday and Saturday. · Lambert. who t"iii!Urn 80 on Nov." .
.3. His address ,.·267 Lakm Road,
Special singing each niglu.
Gal lipoli s'. 45631.
•••

Anonymous al New Life Lulhcran
Church, 7 p.m. For infonnalion call
446 - 4889 or 367 . 7475.

GAL LIPOLIS -Choose To Lose Diet
Grour. 9 a.m. at Grace UnitcJ

fAPI

•••

From 191~ to 1919 the whole
stale ofWeol Virginia wa• dry, thai i•
1t was illegal to sell or buy alcoholic
beverages there.
During that same time frame
Gallipolis was wet. Hence for about
fou r years some Gallipolitans mOde
great fortunes bootlegging liquor
into West Virginia.
There were, of course, two main
ways to do this-by rail and by boat.
During !his lime frame, steamt&gt;oats
ran from Gallipolis to both Huln·
inglon and Charleston.
In 191 S steamhoal passcnse rs
were allowed ~o carry 1heir own
liquor on board . Some passengers
carried neil only suc h booze as they
Jl)ight consume. bu1 some to sell a•
w!ll.
· :: Sieambo.at caplai ns. already in a
ff4hc for survival againsl railroads,
were somew hat hesilanl 10 anger
p~se ngcrs. Bu1 when Wc's1 Virginia
liquor officials began conducling
raids on sleamboats and even going

•••

ITlt'tin g. St. Peter's Episcopal Church. 8 p.m.

ANGELES

OAK HILL . There will be a
revival at Victory Lighthoo.c Church.
Ocl. 29- N"". I. 7 p.m. nighlly,
except Sunday at 6 p.m.

Thc;-re will be a card shower for
Shirley E. Bosler who willlum 96 on
November" I. Cards may be sent to
her 111 553 ·Firs! Averue. Gallipolis
451"&gt;31 - 1212.

•
GALLIPOLIS
- Ovcrcalcr's

. GA LLIPOLIS - Alcoholics

: LOS

•••
•••

.. • I

•..

POINT PLEASANT · Narcmi-.
Anonymous meeting Tri - Couhty
meeting. 611 Viand S1rcc1 (usc side
cntr,ancc). 7:30p.m .

Anunymuu~

Rosea nn e o rc hes tra ted a littl e
1-;cunion foF .Bell e Midl cr wi th her
l~nmcr
piano player. Barry
~1anilow . and memhe rs o f her old

•••

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Miracles in
Recovery Grvup Narcolics Anony -

***

Bette, Barry and
Melissa together

•••

CaniSbowrr

...

CHESHIRE - TOPS (Take Olf
Pounds Sensibly) mecling. at
Cheshire United Methodist Church,
10 - II a.m. Call Alin Mi1chcll at 388
- 8tX)4 for information.

the president of the Mexico Lions

6.

room.
· Revival

Jemes
Sande

Thursday, No"ember S
.
BIDWELL- Garden or My HcaL1
Holy Tahemade prayer service, 7
p.m.

CROwN CITY -'Gospel quane\
·Released' lo sing at Crown City
Mclhodist Church, 7 p.m.

Max Tawney, pictured
Club.

GALLIPOLIS · River&gt;llle St "lly
Cluh member!. invitcd 10 I(Xlh
anniversary c.:lebration for !he Nelsonville GFWC Cluh, 2 p.m. Nelsonville Public Library community

By:

•••

('1 H l .~o truction reunion.

EhWIL'k.

•••

~ ~IIIIH-~intl•

Gallipolis bootleggers kept liquor flowing into West Virginia

VINTON . Revival mming
..., at
Vin!On town hall. spon.ored vr evan~ehSl Don Payton Miniwia. Theme
'M&lt;KC and more of Jesus !han ever
before'. 7 p.m. nightly. Nov. 2. ~.and

5255.

MCARTHUR - II ann ual Engle

&lt;d.

copaJ Church.

•••

POMEROY · Narc:o!ics Anonymbus Living in lhl: Solulion Group,
Sacred Heart Catholic Olurch, 161
Mulbeiry Strecl, 7 p.m.

-·-

Enslish. f;fc wa~ \•cry friend!) anJ I ldok lmn 10 l unc h and paid
Uh.· ,hdl. He enjoyed lhat and he ga\'c me sc\·craiJ!Cm!'l out uf hi!'! store "'orth
mm:h moi'L: than what the meal cost'.
· I 'Pl' llt four dJys in Taxco and spent rnan) h our~ '''lth htrn as he took rnc
all al\tund Taxcb and oth er parts of Mcxld1. H~ told me ahout th~: history of
~WI pa rt of Mexico. whid1 was u lnt hclll.'r than gntng on~~ gu ided tour ·wllh
:l gJ'(Iup nf people.
.
· ·
: I \\CI'll oa,k to Taxco fou r year~ later and ~topped~~~ ht' ... torL'. \\(J1C fl he
{m\ lll l'. h,c dropped the dishes he was carTy1ng .and broke th..:m ;dl. H4.' gave
nu: a hUll that took my breath for some time ·
: H~.:: G~llcd severa l of hi!-. fn cm.ls in ·ror an L·,cning co( I~ ; lU I at lli, home .
wh 1ch laSied· until I a.m. I wi ll never forget it.
· Dt~n't tell me itldocsn't pay to he guod HI pt'oplc from ,·Hher pan!- ot t.h~
.;,orld whl'n you travel abroad . I know I haw h~l' ll th~rc.
: ("!) n&lt;xt s10ry will be about China.

. 'I p.m.. SI. r•oc••
......._ Ep'
meetmg,
• IS·

Wednnclay, No•rmber 4

cJ tn sH ;.II the PrL~:-.u.kn!'s Tah1C anJ rctci\'Cd a standmg- uva11on when I"'"'
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. · Nar·
Jntrodu(CJ. a!lcr :-.ho" mg 111~ Lion~ Cluh ~:atd from the USA .
lot.it.:s
Anorlymou~ Tri - County
' ·
I '';b unlu:J In some o( t~ 111\JSt plca"anl home) I hi.I\'C cu~r ,i,JtcO m
,,JJ Ml'\1\.·n. ;md lhcy msi~tnl I he 1hc1r guest for two or thrcc ·d;.t)"''· 'JliC)' Group meeling, 611 Viand Street.
7:30p.m.
·
V.llUIJ t:t~c m~.· .-.ight!iccing :md introJu~c me to their rich friend~ . Most of
, HENDERSON. W.VA.- Weslem
'
.
'(
the p('ttpl~- m Mc,. iL'(J arc nttt in that income ratcgory.
'
square dancing at Henderson RccrePORTER·
Rev.
Jake
Fry
10
preach
I \\a' 't:r\ fonunatc· to rnakc gooJ friends and I have ~mended a total of
mion Building, 7:30- 10 p.m.
at Clark Chapel Church, 7 p.m.
111111.' tlh.'L' IIni:o- 1Wt:r tHe years in the Lion!t. Cluh.
•
'
I \\a' ut-U \ 111~ aslcd by a doctor or Jl&lt;lli ti cian. in go1;J finan cial..,tanding.
GALLIPOLIS · Divorce Recovery
ADDISON - Preaching scr"ice
ht b..· thl.'tr guc.-.1. One member was from A~apuh.:n. whorn I ' flL'III :1 wee~
·
Support
Group, Nazarene Church, 7 ·
v.uh Hl' 1.1 H~cd me into huying &amp;I piece o f lan&lt;J in Acapt.dr;tt. I lcpl It fpr "11h Rev. R1ck Burcus, 7:30p.m.
p.m. Nursery provided ..
lluw ~ o.trs. so ld it and doubled my monq·. IIA had il tnda). I ." ould he hr;tg·
KANAUGAWorship
service
at
fl ng ,,f hL·ing :l millionaire .
.
'
GALLIPOLIS · Btcalhe Easy and
1
·, ha,·~.-· 1\J und uut thm i.f you :.1rc ph:asan t antl h'a\'C a link g1ft from the SilverMemonal FWB Church·. 6 p.m.
Heartline
oolli:alional suppon group, 2
· widi .R~v. Charles Neece prcat:hing.
USA fm people you meet. they will he kind to you_ .
, "'
p.m.
at
Hol1.cr
Medical Cenler. ·
I h.t\l' lll'\t:r taken advantage or anyone Ill a fon:iin r..:(J unt'ry :\ nJ I llC\'Cr
French
500
Room.
Speaker Nancy
GALLIPOLIS . Chris! L'niled
\\!II . Htl\\L'\1.'r. I ha\'e see n some tourist~ pull thing' they ~hou ld ndt have
Childs, RN , BSN, CIC on "Avoiding
Mcthodi~t Ci1urch carry - in jinncr, 5
Jon~ .
lnfe&lt;:tions." For infonnalion call
p.in
.
Scrv1ccs
at
6
p.m.
with
David
\\'hL·n I \.\J~ m Mrx1ro in 197Y. wh~rc th ~.:) 11110~ sih·c:r. J rn~l a young
Holzer Health Hotline I - KOO - 462 StinlCr
"~lngi
ng
.
·man \\ ho ou·ncd a stort:. He so ld several ih.· ms made out .o f si iYcr ,and he
l'nu iJ ... peJI\

J1lOU&gt;

.

Pomeroy • Middleport
• G1lllpollt, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
.

7t0
711
11 r

r
30
32

·32

NUT GOODIES
MILK CHOC. PEANUTS
MI~K CHOC. RAISINS
MILK CHOC. PEANUT CLUSTERS
MI~K CHOC. STARS
MILK CHOC. MA~ TED MILK BAL~S
CHOCQI,ATE BRIDGE MIX

33
23
32

CHRISTMAS ME~LOWCREMES
CARMEL C~USTERS
PEANUT BUTTER LOGS

32
21
33
21

liP

51.7li
80.00
80.00
70.00

82.5q

IS.OG
80.00
38.00
57.60
51.00

CROWN CANDY

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

~

N316
N212

~· QlleJII..IVIIRY aual';._,.'\~ll= _
~

20

�·-

,
Page C6 • ~ .-......utind

Pioneering rock 'n' roll station in Cleveland is changing its form~t

Beat of the Bend ...

By

Bo~

CLEyELAND CAP) - Back in
the '70s, WMMS-FM was the radio
stalion all the cooi!Uds liSltned to It
played records by rockers hardly anyone had heard of: David Bowie,
Hean, some guy named Bruce
Springsreen.
.
·
It put on midday concerts you
could check out if you had the gut&lt; to
cut class. Ai.d it helpCd whip Clevelanders into a frenzy thai won the city
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and
Museum.
On Sunday, afler 30 year&gt; on the
air, the pioneering station, I00.7 on
your dial, is dropping iL&lt; longtime
nickname - "the Buz7llrd" - and
changing its "classic rock" format

them were Springsteen, Bowie, Rush .
"l gO( chills." she said: .. All the
One of those conceru was
the Cars and the Tuhes. Sanders "'ld. replayed recently and Konopka heard ,tJdden I'm ba&lt;k in my commerital
The strategy woded. So Jl"J"'I•r her fncnd; yelling tn her aero;&gt; the an dass, and I'm thinking. 'Why am
wa.&lt; WMMS thai when il urged "" year&gt;.
I not 16 again'''"
tencrs get behind a campaign to lure
the Roc~ and Roll Hall of Fame to
Clcycland in 1985. locals signed
650,000 petitions and Ooodcd a
phone-in poll with I I0.00 calls in less
than two day&lt;.
Not long after that , the station
stancd its decline. WMMs' changed
hand&lt; several time' and many longtime members of the programming
.
and on-ai r staff left.
(A nd after winning Rolling Stone
magazine·, reader poll fpr bc;t station
year after year. WMMS admiucd in
Station execulives won 'l say whal , 1988 that it had &gt;tuffcd the ballot hnx
lhc new format-will he or whether it by buying hundred&gt; of «&gt;pic' of the
will be a _slight change - say. more ma~atine and ha \'m~ ~tlalion employ·
alternative rock, no Led Zeppelin ccs fi II out the formq
(ir somet hing more radicaL ·
The biggest problem may he the
They say they have no chmcc' hut muoic it&lt;elf. A recent half-hnur on
to make a move. Ratings arc way MMS featured early ;ong&gt; hy Acrndown from the 1970s and .80sand the &lt;mith. AC/DC, Led 7'-'ppchn and Van
audience bas changed. ·
Hule n.
The station 's fa ns arc disrraught
''The 'generation-they wcrl' reach·
For Cyndi Konopka. a listener ever ing is not in the same mental place .
&amp;:
si nce "I got my quadraphonic, eig ht - anymc,rc:· R~oad s ~aid. ···me mu .. ic
track ' tcreo in 1974," the, Buu.ard 's duc.'\n ' t scr\'c the ir current need~ ."
. Saturday, 10 a.m. • 6 p.m.
death is like- the passing of an old
For those whose mcmoriCs an.: lied
Sunday, Noon • 4 p.m. "·
friend.
up with the stat inn "s glory yc~r.... it \ a
"It's a Cleveland icon. " said "'ad moment
Konopka. a 35-year-old photographKonopka recalled that her friend,
cr. " It 's like tearing down )he Termi- would •kip cia&lt;&gt; to -.c WMMS ' mid Rt. «52 North, Point Pleasant, WV
nal Tower.'' a Cleveland sky,craper.
day "coflcc break conccns." whkh
SPONSORED BY:
In its p~ime, WMMS wa1 sec~ as a were broadcast live. Between &lt;.,ongs.
MASON
COUNTY
EXTENSION HOMEMAKERS
trendsening station. both by radio, her pals would gel dose 10 the mkroMASON COUNTY VO-TECH FOOD SERVICE
·industry inJiidcrs and listeners.
phones and ye ll , " Hey Cy ndi !" .
,,
GFWC
- POINT Pr.il:ASANT JUNIOR WOMAN'S CLUB,
"The Buzzard was probably the knowing she would be li s!el)i ng bac.k
most powerful brand name a radi o mschoo L
'·
. stat1on had in the counlry, " said B.
' Eric Rhoads. publisher of the industry
' magazine Radio Ink. " It was not just
a .radio slation , It stood for a
lifesty Ie."
When WMMS slartcd playing
rock 'n' roll in 1968, FM radio was
less common and was just starting to
rise ·in popula(ity. Simullaneously,
somt young people were turry_ing
away from Top 40 to"(ard album-oriented rock and groups such as the
Grateful Dead and Pink Floyd that
could fill a record side with a single
song.
·" We were very lucky lo catch a
culturaf and technological wave,"
said Denny Sanders, WMMS disc
jockey from 1971 to 1986.
· The station also took risks, playing
little-known anists and groups the
Buzzard staff liked and trusting listeners would like them, too. Among·

Hoeflich

Don't you lov~ happy cndtngs?
For &gt;evcral ,weeks, the column has mentioned some old photographs of Meigs Countians found in LaWrence County. There
have been several qifferenl versions of the "fi nd", the latest being
that a couple auending the church served by )he Rev. Randy Thomp&lt;on saved lhc aged photographs which had been thrown into the
trash by neighbors, The couple had kept the photos for about 10
year&gt;. They recently too~ them to Rei'. Thompson w~o passed along
the word of the availability of the photographs to Meigs County
through l1m and Susie Soulsby.
Smcc one of the family names noted on some of the photos was
Karr. the pictures ended up in the hands of Mrs. Twila Buckley. A
numher of people stopped by the Buckley home to see if any vf the
picture&gt; were of their ancestors. No one laid claim to the phowgraphs. Last Sunday, Mike Rohcns. formerly of Pomeroy and a
hJ\Inrian omd co llector for years. along with his mother. Mrs , Nonga
Rohem of Pomeroy, paid a vi&gt;it tn the Buckley home_w view the
piciUrcs.
Well. that was qui te a fi nd for Mike. Among the photographs
were picture,., of hi s great and grcal-grcat-grandparcnts not to mention several olher Iclativcs hooked into lhe Robens Family. Since
J\;hkc has _,uch,closc COMCC lions to lhe people in the ricturcs. Twila
ga1•c them to him.
.
Mike. hack in Akron. is so pleased to have the "find " and he. as
the famil~ historian. is sending copies of the photos to mhcr family
members. Incidentally, he's absolutely on cloud nine as a resu lt of
~ctting the photos of his anccslQrs.
Incide ntally, Mike is a faithful reader of" Beat of lhc Bend" so I' ll ,
u1c thi s opponuni!y to ask him to get in I ouch with Cuni s Jenkinson:
I em Vine St., Middleport. Cuni s ,wams to discuss picture

HANDMADE

HOLIDAY TREASURES
FALL CRAFT SHOW
~

NOVEMBER 14

,.

A good -deal is cooking for members of the Modern Woodmen of
America, their families and friend s nex t Sunday. Nov. 8.
, An appFeciation dinner is being held at Dalt's Smorgasbord in
Gallipolis to extend thanks' to everyone for work on special projects.
The "cat out" will be from 12 noon to 2 p.m., and the price will be
only $3 a person for those 10 and over aucnding. Those under 10
will get dinner free of charge.
·,
. Mildred Ziegler of the lodge will be slationed al Dale's to record
the names of panicipan ts and 10 make sure they receive the price
break.
•
I hope you will go 10 the polls Tuesday to exerci se your right to
vote, It is a privilege you don 't get in s~me countries you know. ·
Needless· to say we'll all have to base ourvote for the Ohio gover- ·
'nor's post on hearsay and lhe negative' ads· of the two ·candidates.
Taft and Fisher, since, ncilhcr candidate has blessed us wilh an
appearance. · Guess that says somethin g ahout our imporlance, huh?

a

'

And Aunt Maude 's word s of wisdom for the week go like this:
"Count your life by smiles, not tears,
"Count your age by friends, not years."
Thai reinforces my frequent advice that you koep smili ng.

tiour•:

,,

M-F 9·9
Sot. 9·6
Sun. 12-5

FAG to p~esent 5th annual 'Homes for 'the Holiday' tour
: GALLIPOLIS - Th e French Art
Colony, 530 First Avenue in Gallipo·
li s, along with home owners, prese nts the 1998 "Homes for the Holidays:-' The tours will be offered, Fri ~ay , 'December 4th from 6:309:30p.m. and Salurday. December 5
from 1-4 p.m. The Friday night tour
~!' ill be a cand lelight tour, with Saturday bei ng an afternoon tour.
: This years tour is different in that
(he homeowners will be sho\vcasing
rheir own homes. The tour will fcaiurc : The Burger Home , 5834 Stole
Route 7, South : The Bergdoll Home,
42 Locust St ree t: The Jindra Home.
433 First A'vcnue: The Mou lton
Home, 42 1 Third Avenue : The Galtipolis Ci ty School Administration
Office. 61 State Street: The Sham~ l in Home. 6486 State Route 7.
South and The Fre nch Art Co lony.
530 First Avenue. 1
The FAC wi ll act as tk kct hcndq unrtl! r~. Ti~,.:kcts for the home to ur

ing tour and refres hments at Ri V'Crhy,

Call the French· An Colony at 4463R34 for more 11ckct information.

l .

-

15, 1998

NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY

cxl:hangcs with 'you.

arc $H.OO, whkh includes the wa lk-

Sunday, November 1, 199~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllp()lls, OH • Point Pleasant; WV

'

.

Q

~~Tfa:S,fi~ H~atp;~
A

GAL

O •

OLIS • OHIO RIVER PLAZA
ext to Hlll1- 446·7267
.

.

'

learned, and earned. Each and every day.
Complete tru st is the cornerstone of skill ed nursi ng care. Just
imagine being cared for by someone you did not trust. It would not
happen. You would not'aHow _it. Ever.
The Arbors at Gallipolis is built on trust Each day
we must earn the trust of our p'atients. And th eir famili es.
Of the community we se rve -. your neighbors, fri ends
ari..j family. It's what· makes us different
... and· makes you special.
'

Paid forb the candidate, 2624 St. At. t 41 (Groen Twp.)

.

musicians on stage."

-

: "I go to (Our Lady ol) Lourdes
From the inswu the Squirrel Nut
; High School (in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.) Zi~s· " Hell " started in,heavy rOla,
, and the theme of our homecoming tion at rock allemati•e and Top 40 sta=dancc is swing, so l wanted to Jearn . tions last year, the swing movement
~ before the dance," says Sears. who ha&lt; been uqstoppable.
'auendcd the class wilh friend Kate,
Now. bands such as the Cherry
~ 14. and hi s parents Kim and David Poppin' Daddies, Big Bad Voodoo
~Sears.
Daddy and Dem Brooklyn Bums
',' My college-age daughter goes 10 have "'f'kcd lhei~ way into the main;
' school in Chicago and she says the stream the same way Cab Calloway.
~ big thing is swing, so we were grate- Puke Ellingron. Glenn Miller, Count
,! ful when the k1ds wanlcd to bring us Ba&lt;ie, Benny ·Goodman and Loui s
•along," says Kim Scars. fresh from Prima populari1.cd the upbeat, rhyth: her first dance da.&lt;s with inslructor mic and electrifying mu.&lt;ic 60 years
:Eric Hulhnan.
ago.
: Called the Iindy, the jiucrhug, hop. ·•· ..This is a great thing. We r~all y
•bop, whip. shag, the Savoy. the prep feel like we're a pan of people's good
! step - swi ng dance and swi ng i,, times," says "Brnccoli" Roh Ccuadi; well, everywhere lately.
no of Dcm Brooklyn Bums Big Band.
• You'll find that contagious boogie- a swing music mainstay at Manh auan
· :woogic, hom-driven pop music in ni ghl spots like Tramps and Irving
;studios and clubs_i n Manhauan. '90s- Pla1.a. "This is a great relief from the
~s tyle juke joints in California aild Top three-chord grunge 'sound. This is an
~ 40 and adult contemporary radio sla- . alternative to the alternative ...
;'tions,
Even Madison Avenue , MTV, telci In a space that serves as Unison's vision and movie producers are catch•main an gallery. dozens of teens, col- ing up - khaki -c lad GenXers wiglege student s and baby bOomers ga)h- gling to Louis Prima's "Jump, Jive
ct£d to test thei r dance legs. li ke an' Wail" in Gap 1V com mercials
iflfants moving lo toddler territory.
and the Brian Se)7.er Orchestra per::; Hands •tancd out in pockets. arms forming at award shows and sponing
~tossed ti ghtly acmss chests. Then the events.

"Radio pro~rammers are u"ng form or American pop mu"c IOOuthese wngs as lcxture records." say• enced by jau," Perry &gt;ays. "We're
Theda Sandiford-Waller, Hol 100 trying 10 make something that's not a
charts editor at Billboard, who hal. joke. It's not 1940 anymore. I have 10
been tracking the •wing revival for weserve the integrity of what we do
more than a year.
while moi.1 people arc simplifying
. Sandi ford- Waller found that this wonderful an farm.
national radio play of numerou~
"Everyone is uying to capitalize
swing bands increased in the few days on lhis, and thai's not what it 's about
aflcr MlV featured Setzer and his This is a great feeling music that's
orchestra on 1he music stalion's annu- pan of our American attitude, a real
al Video Music Awaid' on Sept . 10.
·can do' atlltudc. That's what we all
"There is definilcly a ponion of need to remember...
the listening audience who is enam0c§pite hi~ band') mamstrcam
ored by the music, but it slill remains success this year. Tom Maxwell of the
underground for lhe most pan ...
Squirrel Nut Zippers docsn 't want to
Sandiford-Waller points directly to he a pan of the "divisive and limitSet1.er, formerly of the Stray Cats. and ing" trends in music today.
the movie "Swingers" a• the '90s · · "There i) definitely something
roots for tllis music and dance reviVal. going on. but we're not a pan of it "
"For kids who were in t_he bra.&lt;s Maxwell say&gt; about the '&lt;,10, swing
hand in school. it '&gt; cool to pull out · moVement •
those horns ' now.'' ~he says. "And
Maxwell helievcs the end of the
there 's a unique dance cu lture swing scene and )b mus'c is ncar.
attached to it. People arc moving
"I can't help but think thi s trend
together; again ._ That's part o f its will pa.s," he '"Y'· " It 's grcatw lmk
uniqucnc~s and auracti vcncss.··
good and dance with your partncr..hut
Steve Perry. founder omd fruntm:.m it 's sn ngidly codified that I can only
of the Cherry Poppin· Daddies. &gt;ays be depre;scd hy it now...
it's ska music. a Ia No Doubt and the
"Thi s is j u!\1 a rcllcL:tiun of the
Might y Mighty Bosstoncs, that cyclical nature of music." Sandifordope ned the door for his I0-year-o ld. .Wallcrsays. "We' II .ce this rise to the
Oregon-based big band .
top, die dowrl and emerge again in I0
With the hand's chan-topping sin- years." '
gle , "Zoot Suit ,Riot.'' all over mainEra·n Ezell of Highland. NY , say'
stream radio, Perry is sti ll surpri!.ed the end of the disco and 'HOs rock eras
with Cherry Poll!'in' Daddies ' quick prompted her to join the ~.: um:nt
ri sc tn thC tup.
.
sw ing muvcmCnt. .. I li~c partner
.
.
, .
· He is concerned . however. that the dancing.'' Et.ell says. "I grew up in ·
IN THE SWING • Cherry Poppln Daddies, top, and Squlrr~l Nut
integrity of the musit.: and its hi story the disco age , when everyone danced Zippers; bottom, are just two of the hottest swing groups sweaplng .
may become lost with the trend and alone, so th is is a nice change. It 's a. th~ country. Teens and adults alike ar~ packing dane~ clubs to:
enroy the music that gives p~ople good Iimas. once agatn.
:
fad starved.
· nice feeling of community."
'Td like In stress that swing is a

PBS airs Ken Burns' profile of Frank Lloyd Wright
Lloyd Wrighl building, by the con·: The Cincinnati Enquirer
scious intentionaHly in every ges'· Leave it to Ken Burns 10 bring lure, every moment, every corner of
the Frank Lloyd Wrighl stuff to pub- every building he ever made,..
lie television.
·
Burns says. ,
. After PBS fihils on Thomas JefThe architect , bot:n in 1867 (two
fe}-son , exp lorers Meriwether Lewis years after 1he Civil War), changed
a~d William Clark and Abrahlm
"forever the way we look at human
J;;incoln 's torment over the Civil space, the way we live, the way we
War; Burns has profiled another consider our place in the grand
-~ 9ne of the most complic ated and . sc heme of everything," Burns says.
fascinating figures in American hi sFrank Lloyd Wright is much
lpfy," architect Frank Lloyd Wright. more than stone s .and wood and rev-:Wright, who died in 1959 at age · ·olutionary design. The PBS film .
~ 1. was one of America's mosl intlu- also details Wright's " long. dram atentia! and imaginative arc hitects.
ic, IUfbUJent, co ntroversial (and)
:: His greatest works are showcased someti mes tragic roller-coaster of a
ii(Burns' two-night , three- hour f1lm life," he says.
.;.. the Falling water house near PinsWright lived · well beyond hi s
· ~Yrgh , ~he Johnson Wax Building means in hi s personal and profesand hi s Taliesin estate in Wisconsin~ sionallife. He often was in debt, and
1he Tokyo Imperial Hote l: Unity rarely co mpl eted projects within
Temple in Oak _Park, Ill ., and the · budget or on time.
: Guggenheim Museum completed a
In 1909, he abandoned hi s wife
' few month s after his death.
and six child /e n to have an affair
·• "One is·always struck by a Frank with. a neighbor's wife. For the next

&lt;

20 years, through the_ sian of the
Depression , his career was in sham~les.
.
-'.
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As he approached l!ts 701h btrthday, after most men would ' have
slowed down, he was rediscovered
through the projecting balconies of
Falltngwatcr ( 1936-37) and the open
workspaccs of th e John son Wax
tower (1936-39). His last 20 years
were hi s ITJOSl productive. .
Grand son Enc Lloyd Wnght. one
of 16 on-screen commentators, says
it _was important _ to mc ~ud e t~c
pamful, cmbarrasstng detatls of hts
grandfather's' personal hfc: ..
.
. "There ~ere _many (d tfltculttcs)
tn the rel~ttonshtp .wnh the famt_
ly,
relatwnsh1p wtth · ciJCnts, w11h
friends," says Ertc Lloyd Wnght,
who spcnl etght year s wnh ht s
gra ndfather at the Taliesin Fellowsh1p center~ lor archnecture students
tn Wtscons tn and Anzona.
"Th1s man was human - but
very complex - and it's out of that

You can see that trust in the faces of
the Arbors at Gallipolis. Take a closer
look Then· decide. We invite you
to come see us. Face to face.

ARBOR

ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
Skilled ·Nursing Center
170 Pinecrest Drive

Ga llipolis, OH 45631
(614) 446-7112
\

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·:~

~:·

i..l

youra,

ere

4848 Stall Route 325 South, Rio,Granda, OH 45674
1·80o-231·2732 or 379-2025

ACE ,INTERNET

thru Thurtdlr Nov. s

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·Good Tunes presents
Mr. Mid-West All Male Review
Thesday, November 3rd
7 pm to 10 pm Tickets on sale now!
992-7986

'·

With 1J9
Prime Time '.
.
Emmr Nominati~ns
on cable, shouldn't . .
you be watchi~Jg? ·
· · • Tune-in to' Emmy-nominated Nick News featuring
award-winning journalist Linda Ellerbee as she relates the
news lo kids. Saturdays at 4pm on Nickelodeon.

•'

WELCOME TO

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THE FRENCH 500 FLEA MARKET

Installation is only $9.95.

AND GUN SHOW

Ask how to save even more
with our 'lbtal Prefet 1 ed Package.

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(,A / U&lt; CrJI .'N IT ,1/. N/OH

f~&lt;fH(iHrii!N/~~

(iA/.1.11'01./.1', 0/1111

NOV6-7-8
"WE HA ~ -E /1'EMS FOR EVERYONE, l'OVNG AND OLD I"
01'/i.\' X Ul. Ill .i P.M.

f'Hf:E PAHK/N(i ANIJAOM/.1'.\'/riN

lllrl(r.•l .t'r r~lrlt&gt;.,.fl~ll 11111rktr ;, .~"'"''~'" ,,,;,

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PL1 i'li TO ATTEND!!

todayl.

Our membera are Important to us.
We're here lor you. On the moye lor you.

PIIACU - IPG·0312:1J, 4:60, 7:11, t40
APT Plft . (R) 2:11, 4:60, 7:11, t40
. . . . . -tRI2.10, 41i&amp;, 7:20, 8:46
IRIAN l.fiBII
8'.46

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~all

humor. ''

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nt'ln

human nature that this creati vity
came ab~~t, and you can' t separate
the two, s~ys Wnght. who was
born when hJS grandfather w?s 62 ..
The grandson, who says !I s dtfft cult being a third -generation Wrighl
arch itect, praised his_g randfathcr for
open mg up space tn homes, and
refusmg 10 se al off rooms tn lmlc
cubicles ,
"He orx;ncd th at tl uor pla,n up so
that the lmn g room tl owed mto the
dmmg a~.ca, (wh1ch) Oowcd mto the
kn~ ~c n , Wnght says . .
He made n so that when you
entered the house, there _was alw ays
thts .clement of .wanu~.g .'~ - se~
what s around lhe corner, ll• says.

Sundar Nov.

It also rcllccts on the justi ce system, past and present. " It really says
something about the capital-puni shment issue.'' says Henry Czerny,
who superbly 'plays the younger
Sheppard .
In some ways, CBS' movi e might
see m llawcd ..lt was based or ShepparM 's book , yet make s large detours
for dramatic effe ct
No, She ppard says, he didn ' t talk
a cOroner int o releas in g .evidence.
That took years of coun cases.
No, he never saw his father wrestle . "That was his aucmpt at gall ows

Yes, he' ll say, hiS . mother was , , . " No. hi s fath er wasn' t a swagger-'murdered -when . he was 7. Yes , his ing drunk when he was freed .
~~ad, Dr. Sani Sheppard, was con.............................
'YiC:ted. No. he didn 't do it .
COL~N~,T~E~TRE
~: "A ll my life, I've known he did JAMIE LEE CUFITlS IN
~n't ," Sheppard says. " I've always
H20: HALLOWEEN "
' been confide ill of that. "
;: . At first, people dismissed that as
· ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
448-0023
~ den iaL Then 'things began swingin g
•to his view.
Ten years after the guiiiJr verdict.
' Jhe Supreme Coun overthrew the
: convicti on and freed S.nm Sheppard.
, ~ who later died poor. Years later,
modern tec hnology points to the
: probability that someone else - a
· ,· workman who later died in prison : aid it
, .
.
. Tod ay, th e case has hercc alt cr·Shocks itl American Culture.
• Thi s inspired the "Fugitive" TV
series and movi e. "People st ill
"ossumc we got money from th a t,~'
Pomeroy, Ohio
~ S heppard say s. "We didn 't."
.

(

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Come see
our large
display or

•

B:V JOHN KIESEWETTER

NOTICE LADIES

_@~mplete trus~. It's a quality that needs to be

support the

_ swmg.

i

GALLIA COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Literally~ serving the senior citizens of Gallia Coooty!!

to contmue to astrong

music stancd and Hollman, a IO-yw
swing dance master, loosened up the
dancing on a balmy evening earlier group with simple movements and
. -this month.
the basics of swing dance.
He
also
brought
ht~
mom.
"This dance derives from the
• Ben, 15, was just one of a class uf music
of 1920sjazz," Hollman said lo
40 dancers who conve&gt;ged on the his group of beginner students. ''They
Unison Ans &amp; Learning Center in. just used what was alwaxs !here, but
~ New Paltz, N.Y., lo learn the steps 10 danced 'in a different way, follpwing
: the_latest international dance crare- the 'swinging' movements of the jazz

:Ji.m.ET.

OMERY

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For decades , Sam R. Sheppard
·;h" s known the rou1inc .
: Someone will loo k at hi s driver's
'· li&lt;.:cnsc or ~:rcdil card , lhcn lo.ok
'ag atn.
.
&lt;
1
; "' lt's.a funn y name,' they ' ll say.
~· lsn't·thatthc same name as the doc~tor who killed hi s wi fe?"'
; . " I have 10 decide wh eth er to con~frunt the per;on in ·:1 direct way,"
\S heppard says. "or Just let it go by."
i: In a confrontational monw nt.
~he' ll tell the same story that 's in i1
;i::ss movie Tuesday (Nov. 17), 9-11

RE-ELECT

'

Poughkeep.ie Journal

Ben Sears took Kate Torelli out

ibelief in father's innocence ,

\

•lad • P.age C7

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaaant, WV

Swing back in style as the pop music du jour

'• Gannett News Service

· HOME TOUR CO ·SPONSOR Pictured Ia Mary Bea .~cCalla (left)
accepting a check from Sheila Wood (right) of Farmers Bat:Jk. Farmers Bank Is the co·sponaor of the French Art Colony "Homes for the ,
Holidays" tour to be held December 4, from 6:30-9;30 and Decarnber 5th, from -1 • 4 p.m .. Call the FAC 1or ticket Information at 446·
. '
3834.
'

[X] HAROLD"G. M

.-

:rv: 'Shadow' traces Sam Sheppard's ·

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UST

·Sunday, November 1, 1998

,.t:t : ol lll \H·: II \'111111&lt;:,\l.l-: lt l"o\1 ;.;,_. ~ I N IIt: !C \ ·w\\' . 1-' l.t: \M \ltKl•:TS .4:01~1

Now Is • great time to subscribe•

HURRY! OFFER EXPIRES 11/6/98
CABLEVISION
COMMUNICA'I: I O NS

CALL -TODAY

1·806-766·0553 or·675·3398

�•

Page C8 • ~ 11-..._,,atiad

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Su~day,Novennber1,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Farm/Business

An Open Letter to the People of
(;allia ~nd Meigs .Counties: ,

By BRUCE HOROVITZ
and GARY STRAUSS
USA Today
Lands' End ha&lt; ordered up a new
CEO.
Just in time for the holidays. But
don't look for a gift box. Or a gift
card. There's no time. Chief «!:CU·
tive officer Michael Smith · has
resigned under pressure from the
company's board of directors ·smack
in the midst of the troubled catalog
' giant's crucial Christmas selling sea· ·

(

Dear Gall,ia and Mejgs Cpunty Residents,
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People in our two counties have suffered for years as key road projects in our area have languished with little or no progress.
The Ravenswood Connector on State Route 124, US Route 33 between Athens and Darwin, and US Route 35 near Chillicothe
'
have all remained unfinished
and continue to hinder economic development efforts. These' uncompleted roads are also safety
risks, especially Route 35.
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In a plan that Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister has been developing for the past two years with the help of the Ohio Department of
Transportation and Sou~hem Ohio officials, these important projects could receive the necessary funding to be completely
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finished.
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SIGN WORKS • Sign Worlw of New Haven, W.Va., prevloualy
owned by Sheldon Gerlach, haa been purchiiHCI by Jim and Pam
Darst of Middleport, ahown here worlclng on a new algn. Both
ownership and location have changed. The buaiMJ~ haa been
ml!ved to 31280 Noble Summit Road, Middleport, Juat oft Bradbury Road toward Rutland. Sign Worlcl will continue to produce
fine quality bualneu and architectural ligna. vehicle lettering,
race car leHerlng, magnetlca, banners, window lett11rlng and
decals. The ahop will be open Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. and other tim• by appointment by calling 992.oSIGN (7446)
or 1;800-547·2744.

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Hollister's plan provides $320 million for six major Southern Ohio highway projects;

. . . . The Ravenswood Connector would receive $62.8 million ·and would be built to completion:

. ... us

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National Gas &amp; Oil
acquisition completed .

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Route 33 between Athens and Darwin would receive $81.8 mill~on and would be built to completion;
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The lieutenant governor's plan is supported by:
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Route 33 Corridor Committee
Route 35 Steering Committee
Southeastern
Ohio Regional Council
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Small business strategies

With so much support from the region, the Ohio Department of Transportation sought approval in Congress for the necessary
legat changes to implement the Hollister plan. With congressional approval, this plan would have become a permanent part of
federal law, not just another proposal or study, but law.
;

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Just days before this year's budget b,ill.:.. which c~ntained the Hollister highway plan~ was to be approved, our very own
member of Congress, Rep. Ted Strickland, asked that President Clinton block the highway plan from being passed. He feared
fhat _his opponent in this year's campaig~; Nancy Hollister, would get credit for finishing these si.x ~ighway projects. The
Pres1dent agreed ~nd threatened to shutdown the federal government and veto the budget bil~ if the plan was not removed. ·
So becaus~ Ted Strickland was afraid of the political ramifications, he killed $320 millio~ in funding fo~·
much-needed highway projects in his own district.
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Southern Ohio's highways cannot be held captive to polltics. Better roads help Greate.jobs in Sout~ern Ohio. They strengthen
the_economy and make our travel .safer and easier.
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Please call Rep. Strickland at his office in Washington at 202-225-5705, and ask him to stop· opposing ,better roads for
· ..
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Southern .Ohio and start supporting the Hollister highway plan.
Sincerely,
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Dr. Harold. Brown, D.D.S.
Robert H. E;aston, Meigs County Engineer
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Bernard Fultz, PomeroyAttorney
Howard Frank, Meigs County Treasurer
Horace Karr, Former President Meigs Chamber of Commerce
Paul Kloes, CEO, Farmers Bank
Dewey Horton, Mayor, Village of Middleport
Douglas Little, Attorney
John Musset, President, Pomeroy Village Council
Molly Plymale, Galiia.County' Recorder
Paul Reed, President, Meigs ·ere
Manning Roush, Superintendent, Meigs County Highway Dept.
Jennifer Sheets, Attorney
Glenn Smith, Gallia County Auditor
Steve Story, Pomeroy Attorney
James Taylor, Ga:tlia County Sheriff
Eugene Triplett; Former Republican Party 9airman
J:rankVaughan, Mayor, Village of Pomeroy
. Linda Warner, Attorney

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its

ma11agemenfteam. say industry ana·
lysts.
Smith is being replaced by David
F. Dyer, an industry consultant w~o
previqusly worked for Lands' End.
but who is not widely known in the
catalog industry.
Things have been shaky at Lahds"
End for much of 1998. Sales growth
i• slipping. Orde" are falling behind.
lnventoD' is fat. Its stock value is
falling. The stock fell 1/2 to 18 on
Wednesday, 48 percent qff its 52son.
How crucial? Well. this is when week high set Feb. 6.
In the second qua~er. slow domesLands' End typically racks up about
40 ~rcent of its sales and amasses up tic sales resulted in an unexpected
loss of $(&gt; UXXt
to 75 percent of its profi,~.
But the management shufOe -;Talk about bad timing. Just when
the company' s hould be focusing on which includes the resignation of the
fulfilling its most critical customer c_ompany 's sales chief. William Fer·

ry - •til~ caught indu&gt;try qb..,rvers
by surprise.
" If things are bad enough to war·
rant a changing of the guard at this
. l~me of yf:ar. the situation must be
very, very serious:· say• Kenneth
Ga..sman. analyst at Davenport &amp; Co.
Lands' End, which maib out ahout
230 million catalogs annually and last
year had revonueof$1.3 billion. ha&gt;
plenty of company in its travails.
Disappointed with sales generated
from its Milepost Four men's clothin~ catalog. Coldwater Creek on
Tuesday put that catalog on the
block: And shares of Brylane, which
opemtes Lane Bryant, ChaJwick's of
Boston and Lerner catalogs. fell as
much a&lt; 24 percent last month · on
expectations that weak sales in the
second half of the year wi II hurt prof-

it.'i.

Even more telling: &gt;ale&gt; at some
big catalog firms are currently down
as much a• IS percent compared to
rhe same time last year. estimates
Gassman. He declined to name those
catalogs. '
Clearly. the $97 billion co · mer
catalog industry is in a bi . ith the
FXception of some specoalty catalogs.
growth is ·s lowing. AI the

~ame

time .

lhe ;heer number of consumers cat·
alogs ha_' ballooned to more than
8.000. estimates lhe Direct Marketing
Ass(X:iation .

'"You go to your mailbox and and
.find five or six different catalogs si t·
ting then:.·· ':.tY!-. Tony Cri!'ltello. ana-

ly't m ,Scott &amp; Stringfel low. '"And
you t:nd up

to~sing

lh t:m all out."

Bread starter: Not so friendly
By REBECCA COLLINS
definite aroma. It's bread starter. You starter. But. "friendship bread" U)es
GALLIPOLIS -You know it's the must put it in a bowl. keep it loosely milk insteadofwater. And that makes
official start of the baking season covered and stir it once a d~yfor live the concoction very rich. say OhiQ
when one of your so-called- friends days. On the fifth day. you add a cup State University microbiologists. It's
· or family hands you a ziplock bag or of flour, a cup of sugar and a cup of so rich, in fact, that almost anything
margarine tub full of that sticky gray milk. Then you stir it with a wooden could grow in ·it.
.
\ batter known as "Friendship Bread." spoon. and stir again for the next four
Wild yeast spores almost always
Have you ever wondered if it is safe days. On the tenth day, ··you add assume control and reproduce very
to leave a starter for Amish Friend· another cup of flour. cup of sugar and quickly. generating enough alcohol to
ship Bread on the counter at room cup of milk. stir it, and divide it into pi-event other' rungi or bacteria from
tempemture? Microbiologists say that three portions. Keep one cup for growing in the mix :
all depends on how safe you ·want yourself and make bread or coffee
By Day 5. when the yeast activi~
"safe'' to be.
cake - a recipe usually accompanies ty might be ready to peter out. the
For anyone out there who hasn't the sta~er. You give the remaining additional nutrients (flour, sugar, anu
heard of Amish Friendship Bread or two cups to friends or other hapless milk) keep the alcohol production
its secular ~quivalent (oddly called victims. The ritual stops just short of going.
"Hennan"), it's a bread baker's ver· a note explaining that if you fail to
Leaving the bowl at room temsion of the chain letter.
keep the starter "alive" and pass it on perature spurs yeast growth and alco' It starts like this: A friend. co- , to at least two others. a curse will fall hol production.
worker, slight acquaintance or perfect upon your house .for a·hundred years.
· Putting it in the refrigerator would
stranger gives you a margarine ·tub
The sta~er is' simihor to sourdough actually slow the process t.hal you
'
full of a grayish. sticky liquid with a
.

hope will occur.
But Ohio State University micro·
biologists say there's no way to con·
trol that, process. The only way tq
determine if the starter is fermented
cortec tly is by its distinctive odor. '

But how uo yol\ tell by smell if the
starter contains enough alcohol · to
prevent conlaminants from taki'ng

root'' You can't. So. should you eat
the baked bread?
Most people can handle a few
nasty microorgani sm.\. But children,
the elderly or anyone on chemother'
apy or lighting a chronic condition
should probably av.oid these sta~ers
an~ just buy some yeast at the store
and bake br&lt;ad the traditional way ·
in the bread maker.
R•becca Collins is Gallia County's extension agent in family and

consumer sciences.

. ~xplore · risk factors before alfalfa harvesting
fa stands.
By HAL KNEEN
If cutting an alfalfa field. wait
POMROY - Should you take a
until
after a killing frost, there should
late .fall cutting of alfalfa? Ohio
State· University Extension Foraj?,e be at least two nights at 25 to 26
Specialist Marc Sulc suggests that degree&lt; F. fo~veral hours to ensure
each lield needs to be judged on its top growti{ stops. Remember that
o.wn set of· ciroumstances and your frozen-alfalfa forage quality mpiclly •
"risk" comfort level. There is'always declines. The. bottom line in Sulc's .
some ris~ involved in possible win- e!t.imation is that, "If you really
ter damage when an alfalfa field is don't need the extra alfalfa hay, then
cut in the fall. Sulc slates that he has leave it out there to provide insulat·
. never seen a" field with unharvested ing cover this winter. If you need the
substantial fall alfalfa growth harm a hay. cohsider buying it from a neigh·
bor instead ... prices are reasonuble
field's winter survival.
again
this year! You'll be glad you
Several negative risk factors
did!".
should ·be looked into before harTree leaves are falling in prepara·
vesting. These factors include the following: poorly drained soils have a tion for the winter season. Did you
greater tendency to heave out the know that. your lawn is preparing for
alfalfa plants in adverse winters, old- winter. too'? Unlike tree leaves, the
er alfalfa stands, especially when fer! . blades of grass will still manufacture
tility has declined, fields that have carbohydrat.es and sugars for storage
. had four or more cuttings in a given in, the grass root system into late
year and also newly planted fall alfal· November or December. In fact, the

grass root system continues to expand This test will be given on November
into .the soi I in search of water and ' · l7 at 6:30 p.m. at the M.eigs County

•

Lady beetles: Naturally occurring, not deliperate release

Firm fined

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Paid for by the Meigs County Republlcin,Party, Judy Sisson, Treasurer, 9 Fisher St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•

wir~

nutrients to ass.ist its preservation.
Ex.tension office, Mulberry Heights.
By RHONDA ABRAMS
rates may be more important to you
Homeowners can do several activ· Pomeroy. Ohio. Study materials ate
Gannett News Serv,lce
now.
ities
to increase the beauty &lt;&gt;f their available at the extension office. You
Talk to financial planners, and
And get your spouse involved! If
law~.
Rake leaves off the grussy must be preregistered to take the test.
they'll tell you: never use a credit you're using a personal card for busi·
aroa•.
c
Leaves
block vital sunlight to For further int"onl)ation please call
card to finance a new business:
ness expenses, let your spouse know
the
blades
of
grass,
reducing photo- 992-6696.
..
Yeah, right.
what your plan is. to pay back the
synthesis
and
pack
down,
thOs
suffoMeigs
County
Agricultural
Soci:
When I started an Internet com· debt. Make sure .you have his/her
eating
both
grass
blades
and
roots.
ety's
Senior
Fair
board
member
elecpany a few years ago. I even found understanding and approval; after all.
Apply lime and fertilizer (allow a tions wtll be held Monday. Novemmyself pulling out that old charge your partner's credit may also be
couple
of weeks between applica· ber 2nd at the Rocksprings (Meigs
card. The truth is, that piece of plus· affected.
,
_ll!...compensate
ti&gt;r nutrient County) Fairgrounds. Only 1998-99
tiops)
tic comes in very handy; you just
Credit cards are effective when
lo~ased
on
soil
sample
results. Meigs County Agricultural Society
need to know how to handle it care· you've got an order or contrac\ and
Consider installing stepping stones in members are eligible to vote for new
fully, or you'll quickly find yourself rieed to purchase supplies. Then you
frequently used areas.
board members. Voting will take
in deep trouble.
are using it to manage cash-tlow, and
.Want
to
be
able
to
apply
restrict·
place from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the old
ldeal.ly, credil'cards shouldn't be you know where the money is com·
ed
pesticides
in
the
greenhouse.
on
Rocksprings Grange building on the ·
your tirst or major source of money ing from. Make certain your cuslielcl
crops
or
farm
animal
s?
The
fairgrounds.
·
for a start-up business: they'(e just tomer is a good credit risk. however.
Ohio
Department
of
Agriculture
-Pes·
Hal
Kneen
is the Meigs County
too expensive and risky.
. When you're just getting started,
ticide
RegulatioQ
will
be
offering
an
Agriculture
&amp;
Natural Resources
If you have better options • an you might use credi't cards to pur·
opportunity for this region's growers Agent, The Ohio Stale University
i:nflux of money from an investor, a chase your first computer or marketto test for certification in any of the Extension.
loan or line of credit from a hank, or ing materials as a way of metching
spray categories offered.
thirteen
your savings - you're bettec off out the payment instead of emptying
spending money from those sources. savings. Just don't let this amount get
Not only do these sources cost you too big.
less than credit cards (which carry
Reme.mber. you can get "checks"
· high interest charges), but there's to write against credit cards. This
Cook wrote. The advisor)( panel "has ronmental Quality. insisted there after Democratic Reps. Ch~rles Stenoften less person~l risk.
.
enables you to pay subcontractors or By JANELLE CARTER
holrn of Texos and Marion Be.rry of
produced absolutely nothing that have been no delays.
If an investor loses money. your suppliers who wouldn't otherwise AP Farm Writer
Arkunsus wotmed Gore in March
"
I
understand
some
people
would
resembles
a
plan
or
sched-.
remotely
WASHINGTON -The Clinton .
credit rating won 't suffer. If you use accept credit. Some banks treat these
thut
rumors of imminent loss of'
like
to
move
more
quickly."
Diringer
ule
to
reduce
pesticide
risks."
he
said.
up your savings. at least you're not in , as a cash advance (often with high~r administmtion is tending off criticism
widely
used pesticides w:~ili causing
said.
"But
it's
·
i
mportunt
to
recognize
· Loretta Ucelli. a spokeswoman fqr
debt. And with a loan or line of cr~&lt;l- interest rates than other charges), so after an environmental group quit an
an
uproar
in key political states. They
it, sometimes the credit risk can be once again, use these only \\'hen advisory panel that Vice President AI the head of the Environmental Pro- that. the Food Quality Protection Act
. oome by the business or:secured by you've got a good chance of income Gore set up .to balance the interests of ·tection Agency. Carol Browner. said is a landmark luY.: thut se t in mution mentioned ·Iowa. Texas. Florida and
fann groups and environmentalists Wednesday the panel is taking its a process to estahlish the tougheSI California. needed by Gore for a presthe asset purchased and. not aiTecl coming soon to cover the e&lt;pense.
idential hid in 2000.
time in order to do the job right. Sh&lt;o pesticide standards ever."
your personal credit history.
It's tempting to . believe .that if over. pesticides.
1 Indeed, t·he 19% act chanued the
The 50-member advisory panel
said
a
report
is
due
by
August
1999.
The environmentalists complained ·
Are you planning on financing a you're able to pay the minimum
was
formed in May. The EPA :tnd
way
pesticide
toleranl·e
lt!vels
wt!re·
"This type of work is an ''norbusiness· solely with credit cards? monthly fees, you're handling your the administmtion is bowing to im.lusM
. . '
Agril.'ulture
Ot!partmenl nfticials ~aid
mous challenge. It requires a thought· set for food. Under the new law, the ,
.
Then, stop and think again.
debt. but it's still mounting up. Put a · try pressure.
" The administration "has basical· ful and fair pr01.·ess. (and) t~at's what .EPA must consider sud elements a,.; at the time that preliminary an~lyses '
Businesses almost always take limit on how much tot~l debt you'll
more time ~nd money than expected. incur before .you cut off your own ly catered Jo the pesticide industry to we're engaged in." U~.:dli said. "At the heulth impact of pesticides and irul iGated ... omr.: peslir.:id~s- known
a" organopho . . phates - eventually
and credit .ca.rd debt is a heav~ bur- credit and start paying down the total delay things. to slow things down," 1he end of 1he day we will meet the their effect on children.
will be.l&gt;onnod.
,.
Gore
"
ordered
the
A!.!rkulturc
den. Instead, come up with a total amount~ue.
Kenneth Cook, president of the. Envi· deadlines and have import.ant public
But
since
then
,
Cook
said\ ther~
Department and the EPA in April to
financing plan for your business: how
Don't be embarrassed if you're ronmental Working Group. said 'health protections in place."
In a related controversy, the Nat· use sound science. guarante~ L.1rm~r ' . have been endles"i meetings without
"
much money you need for your first using plastic as a boost in your early Wednesday.
,
'
ural
Resoun:o:s Defense Coundl peti· a transition into ahc:mativcs i f a resulls.
Cook's group sent Gore a letter
year. both for business and for per· years -just use it carefully, like the
..
'
S
ix
month
s
later.
we're
cherni~.:oJI
is
bann~d
:111d
g~l
mort!
tioned
the
EPA
last
week
to
do
more
sonal expenses. See what additiOnal limited valuable resource it is. Just this week informing him of their resnow her&lt;." Cook sa id. '"T hey haven't
'
to protect children living on or near input from uffected con~titu.:nL1 ie S.
~ources of funds you can locate because you've got a lot of credit .1gnat1on.
hannt!d
one pt!slicide. They haven '.t
The vice president moved to ~ivc
''We believe that. overall. pesli· farms fron1 halan.lous ~sticides.
mst~&lt;td of. Just u.Si n~ cred.'l ca"'!s.
";doesn't mean you've ggl a lot or
been
ahh.•
to explain th t~i r plans to
Elliot Dirlnger. spokesman for agriculture and the l.i'ht!mi"ial industry
It you r~ thmkmg ot . starung a money.
cide risks have only gotten worse
during the Clinton administration," the White House "s Co unci I Qn EnVi· a greater vOice in the: procc ~ .~ cml1\: anrhndy...
business, but .ure still employed, plan
•
ahead.
Whoops' My computer ate some
It might. be a good idea to get a of my data base. If you emailed a
, few new credit cards or increase your request for a copy of "RhOnda
cre.dit limits while you still have a Abrams· 98 Business Tips for 1998," ' By.JENNIFER L. BYRNES
Agnew
' relea~ of Judy beetles into the en vi~ doors. windows, siding, and utility
regular pay&lt;heck . Some credit card and ha~en't received it, please send
CATTLE
PRODUCERS:
Thore
GALLIPOLIS - Al\hough it is liJ· ronment. To help dispel ihe myth, pij)(s. ,Home'owner~ may al~o ..:on·
companies won't extend credit to the ·another email to tips (at) RhondaOn· tie comfort to frustrated homeowners, consider this truth: b,ecau.&lt;e lady bee·
om: sr:v~ml ..;pols bpt:n for the Novem·
si der spraying the outside of the
self-employed unlit they 've been in line .com or wri.te at 555 Bryant St., there is no one to blame for our lai.ly ties cannot survive exposure to cold
house and around windows and doors ber 2.1·25 Beef 509 Course. spon·
business for two years or more. Jusl
180. Palo Alto, Calif 94301. Visit beetle troubles. Judging from the lev· weather, they are entering wmes in with properly labeled products such sored by OSU Extension and the
be careful not to apply for too many Rhonda's website, www.RhondaOn- el of emotion on the other end of the mass numbers to overwinter.
as Kevin Liquid or DiaLinon . For Ohio C:ntlemen's A&gt;&lt;ociation. Thi s is
cards at once: i1 can make credi1ors line.com.
phone'this past week. the situation ~f
. Thereti&gt;re. la,dy ,beetle~wiU not~ inside the hous!!, thr: best pulky i.., tn an·excellent cour~e that pmviJes pi"O-n..:rvous.
swarming masses of lady bt!\!tks as ahve to se rve us u source of lood lor keep vacuuming them up nnd spray du'ccrs with an in depth educat ion on
Another thing to lhink about if
comparable to previous yeurs. While wild turkey's this winter.
with ~roducts that are registcr..:d for . mark~t ~aule evalUation. gro.\ding and
you're about to start a business or
.carcass fahrication. This is a handsunderstandinu how maddening this
Monday and Tuesday of this past
',\!ASHINGTON (AP)- Federal problem can "be. I am compelled to week were particularly b;td days for "creeping· insect" and labdeJ fllr on program that i~ Jc ~ ign~d -to
your inc~&gt;me pattern may change: get
indoor use (Sevin an&lt;\ Diazinon are
cards with lower interest rates even regulators proposed their second report that this phenomena is not.the lady beetles,. due to I he warm afl&lt;r· NOT labeled for imt,)m u.,&lt;J .
enhance producers' understan~ing nf
if they have higher annual fees. You ·largest "slamming" fine - $1.36 result of any present government pro- ·noons that I(&gt; Ilowed a few mid day s
tht: qunlity and l'onsist~ncy sh(mfalls
Fur many suffering from IaLly
may be used to paying off the total million - against a New Jersey COrti· ject. but is rather the nuturul cycle of ;md nights. Lady hcetb ar&lt; espe· - beetle inf~slations . these recommen- in th&lt; tx;ef industry today. A maj1&gt;ri·
amount due with a regular salary. but pany accused of switching people to the lady beeile.
cially attracted w lighl colored sur· dations ~.:~m be ovCrwhdming. Th!! ty nf the co~ I" ure l.'l•ven::d by OSU
that may not be possible when you're its long-distance service withOut per- . It is~ .papular, myth that ~hese bugs liKes that are eXposed to t~e alkr· style and age of a horne can llft~n E'l ten..,ion. the Ohio B~et' Coundl.
self·employed, especially in the ear· mission. •
are being· l'ele'hsed by airplane to noon sun. These pests wtll hnd the1r COJ_nplicate efforts to bug prcx1f the ami The Ohio Stall! Uni ver.; it)
The Federal Communications
ly months or years. Lo'\'er interest
Departml!nl ttf Anim:ll Science ....
serve as food tor wild turkey's way in through wall voids and attics, dwelling. So, if you were caught this
Commission on Friday accused
For
mort! infnrmation and costs to the
Amer-1-Net Services Corp. of violat- through the winter. All hOugh these through cracks, crevices. and brokl.!n year. now is the time to start p~par­ producer. please ca ll the OSU Ex ten·
insects were introduced over 20 years roof vents. The best rnethotl for ing for next ye:ar. For mnn: informaing the ugem:y's anti-slamming rules
ago as a biological· cundul. neither keeping .the111 out of the! house: is to tion. please call the OSU Extension •ion .at 7-!0--l-!6-7007 '" si&gt;on as pnsby using forged forms to authorize a
..,ihlc.
The Ohio Department of Agriculture. replace broken ruof vents and seal
change in a peo&gt;on 's long-di stance
oftice
at
740-446·
7&lt;XJ7.
Jennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia
BIDWELL - Dayid Stroud, Bid- carrier. In some cases, forms were the Ohio Department of Natural &lt;&gt;pen areas with silicone or silicone·
County's
extension agent in agri·
well, is a new member of the Amer· signed by . people unrelated and Resources. nor local ,agricuhure agenM h.alt:x caulk paying ~pe L· ia l altentinn to
culture und natural .,sources.
cies are involved in th~ pre,&lt;ent day
jean Angus Association. , ·
unknown to the affected customers .
e

Join us in asking Rep. Ted Strickland to stop blocking progress
on our highways . ~nd he~p us· get them finished instead.
.

orders. it is in!ootead me-.sing

Groups quit panel, protest White House policy

..

''

'

UTICA- Licking Rural Electrili- · available energy services beyond
cation, Inc . completed its acquisition those previously offered by either
of National Ga• &amp; Oil on Oct., company. permitting the combined
according to Charles Manning. LRE · companies to better meet the market
president and chief executive officer. demands brought on by deregulation.
LRE is an electric cooperative,
Previously. thr merger received
locally owned .by its members/cus· approval from the board of directors
tomers. As a re&lt;ult of the merger, of NGO. the board of trustees of
NGO wi II become a cooperative and LRE. and the NGO shareholders. The
its customers automatically entitled to merger was also cleared by the Pub·
the bene tits of ownership and mem- lie Utilities Commission of Ohio, an
bership in the newly formed inie- approval need~d because it proposed
gratedutility.. LRE believes it will be conversion of NGO's public utility
the firs?'electric cooperative in Ohio operations into an energy cooperate merge with an investor-owned nat- , tive. This was 'the 'first such conver"
ural gas utility. By this merger, LRE · sion ever reviewed and approved by
and NGO will expand the scope of the PUCO.

US Route 35 -the key link between Gallia County and US 23' and Columbus -would receive $69 million and
would be built to completion.
'
·

Meigs County Economic Development
· Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

Sunday, November 1, 1998

Lands End-orders new CEO

'

. .

0

Section

'

David Stroud
member of AAA

�Page 02 • ~ ~imn--'mtiml

--The House of the W e e k - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Picture Perfect
By BRUCE A. NATHAN
AP Nrwdt•lurn:
W11h 111 graceful arches, columns and
rallmgs, th1s home's fronl pord pre-

seniS a p•cture of country" charm .
Decorallve ch1mneys, shullcrs and

dormer5 add yet more allure to the
facade of Plan 1-31, by HomeStyles
Des•gncrs Network 1 lle plan offers
2,089 square feel of hvmg space
1
lllummated b) s1dehghts and a lanta1l

transom, the foyer provtdes a VICW of
the ''"'"8 room and the back porch
I en-foot CCII!Rgs crown Ihe liv1ng
room, foyer and the adJoanmg dm1ng
room and bcd·oom

TilE EXTERIOR nflhi~ lraditlunal countr,t·SI)IC home fralures decorallvt• rhimneys, shuUt'rs, kc.·,shlm''i .md u wlunmed, railtd fronl porch loppHI

.. ilh arrhts

-

Transo"ll Windows grace the formal
dJn1ng room
At the back of the home, French doors
frame the liv1ng room's grand fireplace
They provtde natural light to the area
and access to the skylighted porch
Near the llvmg room and the thnmg
room, the L-shaped k11«1tJn has a l:nge
1sland coOktup, a snack. bar and a sunny
breakfast nook A short hallway con-

nects thts space wtth a utll1ty room, a
half bath and a IWO-(.wdr garage
A Pallad1an wmdow -arranglmcnt
lt 4 ll • .f

btJghtens the Slllmg alcove m the master
tis own access to the
porch fhe garden bath has dual walk-m
closets and a double-smk vantty
Unless other" ase specrfted, the mam
fl oor has 9-foot cethngs
EKpans•on space 1s ;wa1lable on the

PUflllll

11-t lll.f

-

PUTUil

su Jic , wh1ch has

upper floor

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Featuret1
Your household appliance' woll
work more effic1ently and have an
mcrtaseJ us.:lul servoce loti! ol you
perform stmple routtne ma•ntenance

In the case of your doshwasher, for
example. y'ually all that', needed to
keep ll

lll l

good workl 1ng on.le-r 1s to

keep oL' door gasket and spray anns
clean and fish out the knchen Jetsam
from under the heaung element.
Whole the door ga&gt;ket may appear
clean where •it os plainly vosoble,
there's a good ch.:mce tts bottom

sec~

uon IS covered wuh a sh my don that
can eause the door to leak. Hold a
hand morror to the bottom of the door
to reveal any accumulation ot don.
u~

a strong. nnnabrastve house-

hold cleaner to remove the dm from
the ga&gt;ket and door panel. You moght
also loll the water level tloat lr'lm the
base ol the cabmet to check for dort.
If the lloat gets too dony, ot can stock
1n

place. 1hrowmg lhe water level out

ol whack.
Whole you're at It , check the
openongs in the spray anns for small
shreds of plasttc Remove these

shreds wnh a paor of tweezers
Also d1e~.:k the dram area regu larly 1m bread s"ck fasteners. small
measunng spoons or other kttchen

0

I 31 has a llvmg mom.

OU~O!

f:tst nook,

1-31

''lf.tml'

l P."
.. "
l l"
ll

IOihll

·-

IN FROM TilE FRONT PORCll, the

dining''"'~

1 Heavenly be.ng
6 Reaches across
11 K1nd ol wave

16 Implore
2I Word on apotogoes
22 AddiCtiOn
23 Rehnqursh
24

opens to the right or the

•

foyer, which Rows to Ihe living room nl the back o.f ITie home. A rear porch can
be entered from the li"Ying room, the master bedroom and a hallway near the
1arage. The kitchen and adjoining breakfast nook ore lo the right of the dining
'room. A short hallway connects this space with the ulllit) room, a half-bath and

(For a more detailed, scaled plan of
tlu~ lrou.s~t, wcludmg gmde~ to e.slmralmg rosts and fmancmg , semi $5 to

the pn1ge. Acro55 the ho01e, the muster bedroom h•s 1ts own bath. Two addl·
tJonal bedrooms are Jocated near a full hall bolh.
'

Yark,! NY 10116 1562 Be sttre
mclude th1 plan ,umher)

House of rht• Week P 0 Box I 562 Nt•w
10

voiuntanly
Slow. 1n mus1c

25 Actong area
26 Muse of poetry
27 Where Calcutta 1s
·28 Self-ev1dent truth
29 Sea eagle
30 Obese
31 Decomposes

33 Catch s1ghl of
35 " - I saw Elba'
36 Rope for restra1mng
39 Sets apart from
others

43 Follows Fro
44 unhappy

.Homes: Questions and answers
l;ly POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Features'
Q We love on a drought area and

latoon can usually be achoeved by
gravit y, the so-ealled thermosophon
system. Thos works because hot water

thoroughly can help minomoze thos
heat loss

I'm concerned about the amount ol
W&lt;Jier wa~t~d wh1he n.ulnmg the tap to

rises ton:tng the cooler waler down
It there 1~ a long honzunt.tl run m

get hot water on my bathmom My

the pope&lt; or ol there os bs than a 5-

Q We have a Hotpomt refngerator "oth a top lreezer Whenever the
compressor slops, we hear a sharp

water heater 1~ at one end ot my home

1oot he1ght 1..hfteren~.:e between the

and my bathroom IS at the other end booler .tnd the t.oucet, the therln order to get hot water through the mosophon system won't \\Ork and
taucets, .otleast 81! teet of cold wmer ' you'll need,, pump to corcul,lle the
has to come out ot the hot~water ltne
hot wale~
Is 11 po-sohle to wnunue the hotThos S)&lt;tcm. ol'ten used·~ huspo water lone past the bathroom and then tals where onst,onl hot water os
return it 1ntn the w.1ter hl:!'ater'1 Will reqi.nred. ll.ls the adv.mtage ot n1.1k .
th1s save a lot ot water J

tng 1l.tv.ul.1hle at.llllixturcs as soon

A. The hot-water system that you .1s you turn on the t.op Continuous
have, loke those on most residential corculatoon between the hot-water
sys1ems.

IS

a nonc1rculatmg type It

storage tank and the f.mcet does the

thuddmg nmse Thts notse r1rst
appeared abbul three momhs ,lgo as

a quiet thud whoch ha, gradually gotten louder. Now the relrogerator has
staned to rattle We're alraod it moght
explode one of these d.oys Woll ot''
And, what should we do to quoet 11
down?

A· There's no danger that your
refngerator moght explode, but your
thudd1ng and raulmg notses soUnd as
ot one of the ontern"l suspe.nsoon

is 11enerall y onsta\led because 11 costs JOb
less lor labor and matenals than a corA mculatong system woll also save

spnngs th .tt mount the Lompressor

culattng hot~ water syst~m Ev,en
lhough the n'unc1rcu latmg systenl1s

some w.ttl:!'r .Assummg you have a
thrce-qu.Jrter-lnch dmmeter water

"very common, It does have the dosadvantage you descnbe
You can convert your syslem to,,
cuculaung hot-water system by

pope between the hot-water heater
and the t.1p:the HO-Ioot pope woll hold
,obout I.R g.ollons ol w.ller Thos
would be W.lsted wholt: waoton~ lor

mg. ts the motor .md pump ass~mbly
on Its subtrarne hltlln ~ muun !-it the
s1de of the compressor ~as~ that surrounds the enttre ~.:ompre~sor U!-isem~

installing a return loop on the r.hstn~

the hot water to come through.
However .1 cm:ui.Hmu system

but1on hne wh1ch runs from the last

bly. The only re.11 cure os to have the
compressor repi.Ked

baked onto the heatong elemenl, they
may break up and .:hop the food
grindong ompellers located on the
drain.

reservoor os often held in place by a
fnctlon rong Just loft this ring and the
reservoir will detach from the agotator
You "should fasten the washerdoscharge hose to the plumbing stand
pipe. A washer doscha(ge pump ts
capable of moving 50 to 60 gallons
of water per monute That much
pressure has a tendency to hit the discharge hose nght out of ots plumbong
pipe. There are s.:veral devoces made
lor tho' problem, mcludong a frictionfit gasket
Lackong a factory-made solution.

45 Frank admiSSIOn
1
47 Carouse

49 Ocean
51 Outpounng
54 -clock
57 Most mature
59 .Counterte1t
63 Actor Holbrook
64 Tned lor off1ce
66 Cashmere

1

93 Secret agent
95 Toothed wheel
97 Walkedon
99 Pen poont
101 Turt
I 04 Touch lightly
106 Wold dosturbance
108 Young horse
110 Doscontonue
114 Made ready
117 Pra1se hoghly
t 19 Squashed
t 21 Seagort reg1on·
122

Percusston
Instrument

124 Beet
126 Nahveof sufhx
127 Cans
128 Kond ol bag
129 Quarrel
131 Thailand, formerly
133 - and haw
135 Opp ol NNW
, 136 Gonger cookoe
137 Taunted
139 Condilton
141 Sp1nnong 'round
143 Pay a VISit to
145 Fathers
147 Harangue
14~ Fall behond
152 Make onquory
154 Make courageous
157 PeUy scholar
161 "Are you a man -

68 Place 1n Peru
69 Submanne
sandwich

70
72
74
76
78
79

Car
Paved ways abbr
Bosmarck's St
Atmosphere
Therelore
Superman ~~the
olf1ce 2 wds
82 Gove all
84 Very hungry

- mouse?'
I 62 Commotion
164 Alncan plant
165 AcqUire
167 Exclude
168 Cetestoal body
170 Browned bread
173 Senes of tones
I 75 Regoon , poehcally
177 Dovert
178 Murphy or Rabbitt

DOWN
1 Someth1ng valuable

2 - Dame
3 Allow

can be energy-oneflicoent because

dallerenct: between the hot'water heut1er and the t.lUcels 1s grl:!'a1 er

you h.l\e to heat tl1e water wh11.:h lhen
cools Uown m the p1pe when you do

Bureau. 224 W 57th St . New York

not use ot lnsu latong the popes very

qlfe st tons wtll be .mswered m a

N.Y 10019

Th~

Wmt.low ~

m.tke

.:t room hrt•'ht
'

0

mg that keeps out hc.tt on sunny days,

.tnd mvtttng But In \\olnt~r they los(' .Lnd keeps olJ on on cold days. As a
.1 lnt nl he.u tu the outdoors .titer thro: IC 'i Lllt, o,c,lle~ double-p.me wtndows
sun goes do" n
'i,, v~,· morl! on tuel bills than swgle~
The lo!oi!oi hel:ome" !-ienous lor p.tnc w111dows . .111d save ~ h g htly
hou!-ics wuh large p1uurc wmdows mnre th.m smgk·~p ane wmJuws wtth
~uH.l gl.tss dotU!-i It Is .11'10 .1 pruhlcm
\ lorm Wmtlow:"'.
for pas'IIVC-'IOI.Ir Ues1gncd hou se,,
Hmvcve r. rl double p.u1e wmwhu.:h t.h!pcnll on large south-l.lung Jows hct.:ome c.: rackl!d. or II they have
wmJnws fur the1r npemllon
hel.'n tmp11lperly manuladured moi sGlass lr.m smtt~;, heat bv LOrtve~.:llnn ture wtll form he1ween the double
and ~.;ond tu.: ltnn To ,;llset thest: gl.11111 g Th"' c.m t be rernovt!d
t! ltel:ts, homeownt:r!-i h,tve tr.adlllon- \Vhcn th1.., h.1ppcns. the wrndo\\os
,,lly 1nst.lllcd 'i iOrm ...wlndu~" lor the h.tv..: to be n:pl.llt!'ll,
w1nter More re~.:ently. pcrtrhlncnt
II }nu have \ ln gle-p.me wmdnws.
Uouble·gl.tzed w1ndows have hel:ume .m mcx~ns1vc w.1y to ri!llll1:~ hc ~tt
popul;u The l.~ttcr \\ork better th.m lc h'i 1s hl ~.:ov~: r lhe Windows with
~·.lorms bel:~U'c lh i!y don't leak
dr ..tpi!~. sh.1des or shu tler ~ e.Jlh
around the et.lge"
evt' nm g hdore gomg to heLl. Thts
A typ1cal tfouhle-gl.11cd wmdow works \\ell for snuth-l.tctn g wmha s rwu p1eces ol ~las' The two l.ty- Jow .... hut ' ' lc"" ellcct1ve lor northers of gl.1s' .1re o,e.•led nlong the l.tclng o n l!~
cllg~s trapptn,g .u r ~tween lhem .md
On .!Vt:r.n!c south l,tLIIlll Wlll cn:attng .1 de.1J alr'lpat:e lh&lt;~t ,.., u. . u- d(lWS whKh ~n: n.nur.tl sol.tr~ol lec~
ally on~h.lll to threJ:-4U.lrtt:r~ ln t:hl!'i tors. g\un hc.1t dunng the day Nonhthu.:k The sp;Kc .llso t.:ontamo, .1 dry - t.,ung wmdow'i Jo not . tlu:y l o~c h..:.tt
eng agent to •• h..,orh .tny 11\0I'•turc
.tround th~ do~o.k dunng lhe w1nle1
Ol.1'is I hi;! II doe . . n llrl Mtl.lh: wdl hut So )\lU \\Ill h &lt;~vc lo kcl!p lh!.!tn ~o.ov-

•

Licensed &amp;
Bonded
20 yrs. exp.
740-388-9515

6 NY stadoum
7 Incomplete
8 Lawyers erg
9 ExplOSive stufl, for
short
10 Seat at a bar
11 Tornado
12 Wnter Flemong
13 Pertormed
14 Rara 15 Spnngs
16

R1ver 1n

Nebraska

Stack
18 Amerocan Indians
19 Old place of

17

assembly

20
30
32
34
37
38
40
4t
42

Loke the Capitol
Toand Saolor
Oven
Head covenng
At any lime
Cabbage salad
Morally bad
Reddosh-brown

&gt;

color

46
48
50
51
52

Roam
Arboreal ammal
Very pale
Hut
Sao -, Brazil

53 Communion

lable

55 Actor/dorectorHoward
56 Fashoon
58 Actress Bernhardt
60 Long-necked bord
61 Foght verbally
6~ Elk

86 Where Seoul 1s

179 Stand for a canvas
180 Nurses' asstslants

65 Noah's vessel
67 Farm an1mal

87 Wreck
89 Smudge
91 Coat shuttle
•92 Weddong

t8t
182
183
t 64

71 ~1nerats
73 Tight
75 Hoghtander'S skirt
77 Roveron England
80 Pho Beta-

•

announcement word

Delayer's motto
Percolates
Rodes on runners
Marsh plants

100
10 I
102
103
105
107

Housetop
Grassy expanse
Go aomlessty
"L1mp watches"
paonter
Purple vegetable
Roastong rods
Welles or Bean
Burke of TV
Concose
Follows Man

Confused

Issue

109 Shav1ng cream

11t
112
113
115
116
118
120
123

Flavonng plant
Meanong
One of the Fords
Looks furtovely
Tncks
Speaker's place
Gall necessoty
- Anlo1nette
12~. Make lace
130 School penod
132 Companoon
134 Fashooned
137 Tell Jakes
138 Contends on words
140 Pnckled
142 Cnmson
144 Kond of egg
146 Costa del 148 L1kely
149 Wodespread
150 Smell
I 51 Whole range
I 53 Toys that fly
155 Mosplaces -·
156 Decorat1ve transfer
158 Tolerate
159 Called
t 60 Lock of haor
163 Traveled on
166 Sn;tky fish
169 Natove of suffox
171 Fruoty dnnk
172 Dnnk
174 Ibsen character
175 Balloon basket
t 76 Rest

I?

Pd for by Oallla County Animal Welfare

BREATHE EASY

&amp;

•

HEARTLINE
educattonal support group
Wednesday,
November 4, 1998
2.00 p.m .
Holzer Medtcal Center
French 500 Room
Speaker: Nancy Childs,
RN, BSN, CIC
Topic: "Avoiding lnfecttons"
For more information, call
the Holzer Health Hotltne
1-800-462-5255

Accepting
Applications
Part-Time and Full-Time

Super 8 Motel
on State Route 7
Apply in Person
No' Phone Calls

I

'
TUR~EY-HAM Dl . NER
Homemade Noodles,
Green Beans, Slaw, Mashed
Potatoes, Roll, Dessert,
Tea , Lemonade, Coffee
SUNDAY
Adult $4 75, Student $3 50
11.00-2
at

oo

Southern High School
Takeouts Available

m msulal1on and are made .ts atrttght

as practical They should abo onduJe
L'ondensa -

lllJn woll collect on the cold wmdow
behond them
example, msulated dr.1pcs

I

stitched hke bed quoits or ple.oted p.mels save mure 'he,lt th.m l:Onventu.Hl al dmpe~ A valence cover .u the top

retards aor !low up the ,p,Ke behond

Burial Insurance
Ages 50-85
$2,500-$15,000
dealh benefit
Premtums do not change
Ronnte Lynch
336 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohto
446-8235

VOTE YES
To protect Doves and
·Restore
'
An Ohio Tradition
GCAWL

eftectovely when they ondude hu•lt-

.111

LARGE GARAGE SALE
Mon. &amp; Tues
1/2 mtle on 218 off Rt 7.
W1nter Adult's &amp; Chtldrens,
large old dolls, some smaller
ones, Barbte dolls, lots of
ltnens, sheets, blankets (elec.),
towels, etc.,2 old Fenlon
lamps, old ptpes, dishes;
lots of mtsc

The Lynch Agency

Gallia County
Gun Club

use doubl~ glazmg. East .and westt.u.:mg wmdows tall m between
W1ndow c.overml.!s wnrk more

As

Backhoe &amp;
Dozer Work

12 Noon to??

must mtere..,ung

oth~rwtse

Quock gam' on ,hon-term trades
became the vogue, whole lonJ!·lerm
onvestmg waned The Conference
Board found that the turnover rate on
the New York Stock Exchange snared
to 69 percent on 1997 from 54 percent

The Pomeroy
Elementary P.T.O. will
be having a Bake Sale
on Nov. 3, 1998,
ElectiOn Day. Thts
bake sale will be from ·
6:30a.m. until 7:30
p.m . for the voters.

Past &amp; Present
218 Third Ave
Will be open Men Nov 2
Wed Nov 4 thru Nov 6
9AM-5 PM
Good Gas Heatrola
Garno Insu lated
Huntong Pants &amp;Coat
New $35 00 tor a two p1ece suote
Swatn Furntture
62 Olive St
Gallopolos, Oh 446-3159

GRAHAM'S
UPHOLSTERY
Why buy new furniture
when we can make your
furniture as good as new.
We offer a large selection
of sample fabncs, new
foam and quality
crattmanshtp. Call 4463438 for a free esttmate.
2205 Graham School Rd.
Gallipolis, Oh 4563)
Now accepting Visa &amp;
Mastercard.
MIZWAY TAVERN
EUCHRE TOURNAMENT
Every Tuesday Noghf
Sogn up at 7'00 Game Starts 7 30
Pool Tournaft1ent Every
Thurds~y Nog~t 7·30
BOOTS
All Leather Western Boots
Reg $149 oo
Sate Pnce $59 00
Large Stock
Engoneer
$49 00
Wellongton
$49 00
Loggers
$50-55
Harness
$59 00
Caroltna-Georgoa - H&amp;H
Insulated, Safely, Gortex
SWAIN FURNITURE
62 Ohve St
THANKS
Coach T. McKtnntss
and D. Cantebury
for a great soccer seasont
The Crew and Parents

Hope to see you there!

the dmpes To lurther reduce Jlow. Ihe

bottom ol the dr.opes should he
v.. eaghted .md rest on the Jloor The

fessoonal a or of opumosm, a degree of
fear ha.' doluted the mood. Some.
such as real estate developers, arc
feeling sogns of a credn crunch.
Tho~ doesn't necess:tnly mean a
pervasove crunc h 1&lt; on the offing, but
ot suggests that ._, prudence returns.
some of the more heavoly leveraged
ondovoduals and bu"nesses moght
have a harder limes geuong the or way
Already. the onve&gt;tment commumty has been tumong sober about the
future, e:&lt;.ammong the qualuy of corporale eamangs. lowenng corporate
growth assumpuons and preparing
for a downturn on theor own busonesses

Enc Moiler ol Donaldson, Lufkm

MOVING SALE
Monday Nov. 2nd &amp;
Tues. Nov. 3rd
11 OQ--2nd Ave., Gallipolts, OH
Some furniture, mantel clock,
ex btke, h1gh chatr, bookcase,
st)1all appl 's , plus much more.
9 00--4 00
Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems wtth
your dnvtng record; DUI's
speeding ttckets, etc.
Same Day SR-22's tssued
Call for a quole.
Brown Insurance Agency
446-1960

Community Yard Sale
Ann Dr.
Sat, Nov 71h, 8 00-;3·oo
Ratn or Shtn&amp;
6 miles outside of town down
R1 7 S to Raccoon Ck Rd ,
I urn rtght, Subdtvtston 1stleft
Home lntenor, Tupperware,
Household ttems, shutters,
toys, chtldrens clothtng
Looking for that perfect gift?
Well look at

Collectible Treasures.
We have Looney Tunes,
PoGJh and Friends, Rugrats,
Ty Beanie Babies,
Nascar Beanies, Baskets,
Ohto State mugs, and
much much more.
Stop tn and see us at
62 State Street, Galltpolts.

culctly · •· At DLJ's semoannual semanar on the.. mv~stment management

husoness. the tone was clearly subdued though nnl gloom and doom "
On returnong I rom the mod-October meeung in Bermuda he reports
that

th~

pnmary caution

expres~ed

"wa&lt; not that funher shon-term pnce
nsks were great- pnly that the odds
favored a future 111 wh1ch

tnve~tment

returns would fall well below what
they have been the last 16
Public
HOOK·UP
TUPPERS PLAINS
REGIONAL SEWER
DISTRICT
(Hook-up Ia required
wtthln 80 dayo from
October 25, 1998)
Tho Tuppera Ptatno

For More Information
446-2342 or 992-2156
Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page B-6

By GEORGE ANTHAN
The Des Moine• Register
WASHINGTO~ - A blue-ribbon
group of s.:oenrl,ts and food ,afety
e•perts a.ssembled by the Council for
Agncultuml Scoence and Technology
at Ames, Iowa. ha.• updated an mlluentoal 1994 CAS.T food safety report
by taktng onto account heoghtened
public concern over the ossue and
suggestong specofoc, practical ways
for government. ondustry and consumen; to help prevent food-borne illness.

The new CAST repon was presented to Congress thos pa.&lt;t week and
thus could conunue to play a lead role
m the federal government 's evolvrng

food safety pohcoes. JUst as the 1~4
report wa&lt; central in developong both
congressoonal and Clinton admonostratoon posotions
The CAST la.•k force , oncluded
land-gr.1111 unoversoly scoentlsts, food
safety acuvosl\ and federal and tndustry o[ficoals They declared that "the
complex11y of food safety from farm
to table requor.,; many types of scoenufic experttse to des1gn se nstble
public and private" programs
CAST's stance JS firmly wothon
, today's maonstream.. on the ossue on
the Unoted States· the choef l1ne ol
defense must be scoence-based sy'tems to prevent. detect and elomonate
or decrease onvts~ble food-bQrne
pathogens
, I

drain• or foundation dralna

can be connected to thle
All roof and
oyettm.
foundation drain• muat go

to 1 etorm woter droln·oll
point
The llno from the
foundation of the houae or

eewer Dletrlct'e

tlructuro to the point of
connection mutt bt loll
npootd In tho trench unlll
to accept sewage.
All · lntpocted and paooocl by
propertfea In the Sorvfco tho Metgo County ~eollh
Aroa muot be connected Dopartmont Tho phone
Into the new syetam no later number of tho Heolth
than 90 dayo from October Dtporlmont to (740) 99225, 1998.
The 11wor 6626. lnopectlono mutt bt
connection must conform to tchtdulod 11 teaot 48 houri
the requlromtnll of tho In advance. Thtrt will bt
Uaer Charge and eewer UH
no tnopoctlont on Sundaye.
Regulatlont.
If lnapectlona occur on
Tht following typet of Saturday, there will be 1
pipe
matartala are 'charge to tho property
acceptable lor making ownor of $11 87 per hour to
connections:
tho Hootth Otpanmtnt. A
-SDR 35 PVC, Schedule 40 watortlght cloan·oul to
PVC, ABS, or Cut Iron required In ctott proximity
ASTM rated pipe and to the houae.
llttlngo are all accoptoblt.
Tho line mutt hove o
The dtamotor of ptpo ehall minimum cov•r of'~ felt
be 4" (lnatdo pipe diameter). wlth a olopo ol1/4" ptrloot.
All grey watla wltor and all The trench muat heve a
brown wooto wotor muot bt emooth bonom eupporttng
lied togothor to tntor tht the plpt. Thoro con bo no
Regional

(TPRSD) new Stnltary
oewor Syotem to now ready

sanitary aawar at ana point.

Tho dtachargo linea coming
from your house muat be
t 00% waterproof. No roof

large
atonae
or
un1upported area• und•r
tho
ptpe.
It
te

Lost and found

lest· anyone wlth _In formation on

VFW Ladies Auxiliary
Post 4464
When paying dues,
please make checks
payable to·
Patsy Campbell,
Treasurer
1062 2nd'Ave.
Galltpolts, Ohio 45631
446-7620 or 446-2674

' ,
Serentty House
serves vtcttms of domesltc
vtolence
call446-6752 or
1-800-942-9577
Thirteenth Annual Arts

&amp; Crafts

Show

Meigs County
Sen tor Center
Mulberry Hetghts, Pomeroy

005

Personals

ASK QUESTIONS,
GET ANSWERS
CALL AMERICA'S 01 PSY·
CHtCS 1-900·740-6500 EXI
3596, www thehotpages2 c:om/ns/
psychlct250291 htm $3 99 /Min
18+ $erv-U 619 645 8434

Gentleman Seeking Companion·
ship From Nice Female For Talks
Walks &amp; Friendship Send Re
p lies To 553 Second Avenue
Apartment 403 Gallipolis OH
45631
Princess V1deo Has X-Rated
Movies For Sale. S 15 Each Or 2
For $25 New Releases 740·441·
6 161
Start dating ton ig ht! Have I'Un
playing the Ohio Dating Game, 1BOO·ROMANCE, eKtenslon 9015
SWPM, Mid 40 s 6 1 230 Likes
Ollldoor Aclivltles ISO SPF 25 •
45 Send Response To CLA 457
clo Gallipolis Dally Tribune 925
Third Avenue, Gallipolis OH
45631

Crafts- Baked Goods-Food
Annual
TURKEY SHOOT
Gallta County Gun Club
Su~day, Nov 8th 10 am lol ??
Pnzes, Statoonary &amp;Trap

ward It returned call 304·675·

5903

40

Adorable puppies pari German
shepMrd
mate &amp; lemate
wee~s 304 675 6494 alter 7 00
PM

e

Cute Pupp1es To A Good Home
140 446·6941

LOS! White long l'lalr cat, Bur·
dette Addn area Reward (304)
1
6758612 •

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis ,
&amp; Vicinity ,

3 Family Vard , Garage Sale, Oct
31 &amp; Nov 1 Taka Racco on Ad
To End. or Clllon Fld

AlJ, VoRl Sot11 Muo1

Found· p1ece ot jewelry In front ol
McCullough Rl!lle s Drug Store ,
stop In &amp; describe
Lost Gold Ring In Gallipolis Area
Gold With Red Set, $50 Reward!
740·869·9832 Call Collect

beongt handled by ledcralln,pect&lt;m.
The) 're dc"gned 10 &lt;upplcment tra'
dlltonal m~pel:tion teLhnaquc .. ~~~
whoch federal employee- vi,uall~
examtne each carca-.., lor dl!fect'-1
The

weakne~'

m lh1' argument

I\

that 'uch a policy eventually would
rc !t ult rn ltttlt! or no on-s1h: guver'nment an .. peuwn lei.lvmg food "'afety

up to employee' ol the companoes
Would 1l contanue to be cllecttve'
Al .·h.
. fcUemlldw for almoo,t a t:en~

tury has requored that food product&gt;
not only he "!&lt;oak hu1 "whnlt::some ·• lnspeciOf"i w:.ttch lor f..:ce"',
mte!tllllal matenal pu' .md tumor!-!
and other !&lt;.lgns o1 dl'•.ea..;c

Theor pre&gt;cnce on the processong
ltnes t!&lt;. Important to 111\Jinlmnmg

public confidence on meat

Public Notice
Public Notice
or othor gronutor motorial to
PUBLIC NOTICE
properly bed and tuppon
Ohlo Twp wilt bt
lht plpo. Rocka ahoufd not accepting aaattd bldo on
bo uttd lor tho romolnlng two 1977 Chrytltr pick-up
1111 lor tho trench. 'Tht trueko.
proptrty ' ownor to TRUCK t-W24BE75135281
rtoponolble lor all yord working condlllon
rtolorotton ond oltdtng.
TRUCK 2·W42BE75135257
II any lnlormotton It Non-running
needed, or ace••• to final
conalructlon drawings for

Trucke may be viewed al
James realdenel'.

prop•rtlee be connected.

Truelee• r11erve the right ta

Tho TPRSD rnorvto tho
rtght to alter, eupplement,
or amend tho condlttono
arid rtqulrtmtnle conllllnt~
In lhlo Hook·Up Notice ID

reject or rofull any or all
bldo.
:
Shirley Walllon, Cleric
October 29, 1998
November 1, 8, 1998

ttwor line depth, grade, or I·. OMO Bladon Rd. Golllpollo, ·
other tnformotton nec01iory
All eeated bide mu1t bo
to meko your eonnoetlon, rocatvod by November w,
pltaoo contact the TPRSD 1998, bldo will bt opened
ol(740)667-9805.
7:00 p.m. November 10,
Slalo law roqutroo that ott t 998 at th• . townhoueo,

eneure proper connection, a

good, working ayollm, and
compllonco with all
applicable Hoallh and
Sanltllry codtl.

Thank you lor your http
ond cooperation.
Stncorety, Tuppers plaine
Replono Stwtr Dtotrlct
(10) 25
111) 1,8 3TC

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auction Company
lull time auctioneer complete
auction
serv ice
Llcenud
t88.0hlo &amp; Weal VIrginia. 304·
773-!785 Or 304·773-5447

Wedemeyer's Auction Serv ice

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Collar All US 511·
ver And Gold Coins Pro ofsets
Diamonds Antique JeWelry, Gold
Rings Pre ·1930 US Currency
Sterling, Etc Acquisitions Jewelry
• M T S Coin ShOp, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740 446 2842
AntiQues &amp; Colleclables Buying
t Piece Or Estates 740 -446
2707
Antlqlle&amp; top prices pa.1r:l Alver

lne Anllques Pomeroy Oh 10

11 to run. Sunday
edhlan ·2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday tdiUon
·10.00 a.m. saturday.

Antlqllas &amp; clean usee !urr11ture
will buy nne piece or complete
house hold Osby Martin', 740
992·6516

Garage Sale In Patriot, Novem·
ber 4th. 5\h, 6th, 7th, 9·5, Lots Of
Girls /Boys Clothes Nice Ladies
Glle&amp;a AnCI Levi Jeans Rototlller
And Lois Moret Everything

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trllcks, 1990 MMels Or Newer
Smllh Bllick Ponllac 1900 East
ern Avenue Gallipolis

Pomeroy,
·• Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
7 family yard sale, Nov 2nd &amp; 3rd

9·5 Skala A-Way (985-9996)
furniture metal clothes cabinet
microwave, uerclse equipment
TV Nlnlendo &amp; games. carpet
winter clothes, emergency vehicle
light 89 Oodge ptc~up, lots of

Russ Moore owner
2526

Left fr ont lander, bumper radiator
tor t992 Chevy S·1 0 4 cyl • 740·
2414292
Wanted To Buy Junk Autos Any
Condition 740·446-9853
Want~ To Buy used Moolle
Homes, Call 740 446 0175, 304
615·5965

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

All Yard Sal81 Mutt Be Paid In
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm the
day before the ad Ia to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday adltlon~

1 OOpm

F~ctoy

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity
Garage sale Mon and Tue 2·3
winter coats toys, treadmill, stair
cl!m tler lledspreads cur ta in&amp;
and lots more 9 ~M 306 3rd St
Mason, rain/ shine
Sidewalk sale continUes Mon ·
day, Tllesday &amp; Wednesday, No·
vember 2 thrU 4 wnerelll Hen·
derson WV across !rom the pos1
oltlce at The Junque Shoppe &amp;
C J Leathers toam·4pm
,

740·992

J &amp; D Aui O Parts Buying
wrecked or salvaged \l&amp;hlcies
304 773 5033
°

mise

Nov 1at·41h Home Interior, pots,
pans glassware, smalltreezer
fish IInder, old rocking chair outside door &amp; frame hollsehotd
lt(tms &amp; lots mise , Nollie Sllmmlt
Ad T· 174 off Bradbury Rd '
•

Lost and Found

. the tJmt!'
tern.... wnh over"'1ght t1or

Be Paid In AdYince.
QEAQLJNE: 2:00 ~.m.
tht ctoy boforo tilt od

Large Female Calico Cal Neu
tared &amp; Oeclawecl Lovely Olspo
sltlon 740 245 5543

60

proces~ong plants
.
Th~ companu:\ nperale the\e 'Y'-

product&lt; on

Cor,nplete Household Or Estatas l
Any Type Of Furniture, Applian c
es Anllque s, Etc Also Appraisal
Avaltablel740 319 2720

Inside ru mmage sa le 1112·11/7,
tO 4, lots of winter clothes 38400
St Rt 124 west

Trees For Firewood 11 You Cut
Down 740·379·9061

Depanment and the meat and pou I·
try mdustrte!. are adupung a' the
meanb for hoth 1dent1fymg ;..md deal'
mg wrth pathogeniC l.'onW.mlnawm oi

lngs, Child a P't Lost McCorl'f'IICk Road, 74tJ..441·1983

1 Female Pllppy, Will Be Sm~ll
Dog 6 weeks Old 112 Brlltany
Spaniel 740·256·9340

MllC&amp;d breed pupp1es to give
away thi s week 740·742·2357

ard AnalyMs Cnllco.tl Contml Pnmt~
to.ystems. whtch the Agncullurt

90

2 Vear Old Mate MIK&amp;d Collie
Dog 740·446·1062

Adorable Kltlens To A Good
Home! Flea Free wormed And
UtterTra1ner:11 740.446 8390

teet and promote the punt" health ·•
c'AST thu&lt; \uppon' the new lhl·

Lost Small Chihuahua Type Dog,
Brown !Black With White Mark·

Giveaway

7 Bealllilul Pupples 7 Weeks Old
1/2 Lab Mix Alte r 3 30PM 740·
441-1707

''ght of the fOOL..I tndu•tlr) anJ to pro·

Gampolls, Ohio 740·379·2720 •

Ch&amp;a~l

Frtday, November 6th
10:00-5:00

missing rings In my home on
Ply male Ad· diamond solitaire',
114 carat , marquis shape, rtng
with two nearts, black onyx ring
.t.von ring with blue stone Re-

30 Announcements
New To Yoll Thrift ShOppe
9 was t S1im~on Athens
740.592·1842
Qual ity ci01hlng and household
Iiams $1 00 bag sale e11ery
Thursday Monday lhru Saturday
900530

CAST make' dear th•t the government agencoe' &lt;harged wnh food
,afety regulatoon \huuiJ "he 'lru&lt;•
tured appropnately and funded aJe,
quately to provodc regulator) over-

recommended to u11 eand

60

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Page 03

Food safety report gets
science-oriented update

Public Notice

Slber1an Husky to good home
740 992-0040

~tllc

edges 'hould press snugly
agam..,t the w~tll Th1s ts best aLL:Oill·
pl1'ihed w1th nMgnetll: or Veh.:ro
~.tr tp s st!Wil to the stJe hCill li .Uld
.ltt.ILheJ tc ~ I he w.tll
Conv~o'n!lon.tl shades. hhnds .tnJ
tlr.tpcs .ue .dnm~l ne gl1 g1b le a' 111,ll l. ll0t s They .uc .dsu 100 loose: to prc \Cnllarge ~...:onved1Ve loso,es hy dr.!lt s
th.lt pass unlmp.:det.l through the
sp,ILC:s hctwt:l! n• them .mtl the wnl·
dow'-;

,~

Over the pa&lt;t ,ix de&lt;ades the averag~ return on stocks (apprecoation
.mil dovodends) has been nearer II
percent than the 25 percent or 30 percent that became common dunng the
1990s' That's a huge adjustment.
Readapting osn't JUSt a matter of
exe'rting emotional doscoplone. ft
applies also to finuncoul plans, and

&amp; Jenrette descnbed the mood suc-

Any Legal Oh1o Deer Gun

ered or shuttered all wonter long, Or

a v.tpor b.1rner,

ItS

busines!'l- communaty retaans its pro-

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

Jackpot Prizes

Reducing heat loss through windows
1

gums claomed Technology &lt;lock'
?oomed even on the absence of prof-

merely moderate rate~ ol return')

1

81 Row 83 Sod
85 Offlcoal decree
90
94
96
98

Woll '"'~'to"- rangong trom people parent\, &gt;oehola.,hop&lt; by colleges,
wuh tony ponfoloo&lt; to manage" of dovodend' by corporations. retirecollege endowments and corporate ment fund&lt; by the older folks.
pensoon funds. be able to adJust In
Whole much of Wall Street and the

BULL. ETIN BOARD

SLUG SHOOT

future column

By READER 'S DIGEST BOOKS tr.opped .ur does Most double-gl.1zed
For AP Special Features
wmdnw) also hav~ a rel1 ect1ve coat-

It wa&lt; hard to argue wuh the new
approach when the market was producmg some mcredoble results, such
a&lt; muoal offenngs that doubled in a
day and market avemges that leape\l
by the hundreds of poonts
Excess and . extravagance made
moderatoon seem old-fashooned. The
pnce-to- earnings multiples of the

88 Item for a carpenter

4 Work un1t
5 Caustic soluflon

tn 11.)93 Thai'"· more than twu-lhtrU..,A'many mve'itors made plan~ based on
of holdtn!!' were o,old wuhm ':.t year unrealt'IUC assumption-. It indude~
All th1.., provoke' a huge que"'tton . tax plan~ by government, tuttton _by

'were suspect- meant less than tfle

ble your money rn u year

Make sure some ~aler remaons on
the base of the dishwasher II you seldom use your doshwasher. add waler
periodically If left to dry out, the
pump seals may leak when the dishwasher is used.
When ot comes 10 maontaonong
your washer and dryer. the best you
can do lor these apphances os to keep
them level and clean If they are out
or level thetr movmg.,parts wtll wear use w1re or duct tape to secure the
unevenly and excessovely.
hose. A loose discharge hose results
Place a small level on tlle top on hundreds ol dollars on water damfr,ame ot the upphanee to determine age.
Because dryers produce so much
solhere the probl~m hes Then, thread
the legs up or down accordongly, or hnt, you'll need to p;oy partocular
on the case of the self-levelong legs, attention to the lint trap and the dry.
loft the low sode of the apphance until er vent tube. Remove and clean th~
that leg extends to the proper height hnt trap wuh each load Faolong to
To keep the finosh on these appli- clean the hnt trap regularly can cause
ances lookmg good, wash them reg· the dryer to overheat and can stan a
ularly with a mild detergent. Cloth- fire h also afleCLs elficoency.
mg dyes can stam the ms1des of
Also, check the vent tube twice a
wa"ihers and dryers. so clean their year. especoally of your dryer vents
drums lrequently, especoally alter up, as most dryers located in basewpshmg new clothes Some compo- ments do Pull the dryer out to get
nents, such as the fabroc softener behond 11. Then pull the vent fro,n the
reservoir on a washmg mal:htne , can dryer connection Thos woll allow you
be removed for better cleanong. The to shake any hnt and debris accumulatoon from the tube

To submtt ~ .1 qu~slton. wnle to
Popular Mcchamcs. Re,u.ler Serv1ce

.aucet to the hot-water heat&lt;r II the

than ~ . l«t . ,then the hot-water corc u-

0

may have broken What you are ~ear­

'

devat10n

'

be-

SUNDAY PUZZLE-R
ACROSS

;w allable w1th ,1 standard hascmcnl,
~.:rawlspucc or slub foundatiOn, and fc,!rurcs 2x4 cxtcnor w,!ll rr:'lmmg 1 he
.ltlllchcd rwo -c.n gur.1ge and stor.tge
arc,, wvcrs 'i30 squ.~rc f~.:cl '

!11-111'1

the~ 11em:"~

Sunday, November 1st

1·31 STATISTICS

UDIOON
11-11 11-f

can

d1nmg room, kllchcn , brcak -

unfnushed future upper fluor adds 878
sq uare feet to the plan fh1s plan IS

MASTI!I
I!DIOOM
lt lllll

only~

b1gge,r compan1e~ doubled the1r hro,·

tone average&lt;. Foducianes abandoned
prudence Bank, &gt;hoveled out erect
it
Advo&lt;ers sought and got bu"ne"
by foreca.,tong amazong profit' The
quality ot corporate profits - some

.

three bedropms,
two -and -one half baths and a ultllty
room, tolahng 2.0K9 squarc'\fcct The

ll-4 I ll..f

item:"!. Not

By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Buslneu Analyst
NEW YORK- The ciaNcaloJeal of moder-~tion ha.&lt; been practoced
woth less and le&lt;&lt; fervor on Wall
Street over the past decade, subvened by the newer pholosophy of dou-

-'~mbv Cimn-jhufuul •

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Will investors ·adjust to moderation?

Household appliances usually
require simple maintenance

UID

cs1gn

_Sunday, November 1,1998

Sunday,Novem~r1,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

110

Help Wanted

'Oiflce Manager /Ma intenance
Worker" II lnt9res1ed write lo J 2
¥·35 Wa11H Asso cia tion inc
P 0 Bo• 485, PI Pleasant WV
25550 al once In clude your
mailing address and telephone
number An application form will
be mallect to you by return mall
Board or Directors
Computer Users Needed Worw.
Own Hrs $20K -$75K /Vr !·BOO
349 ·7186 EKt tt73 www amp

Inc com
Data entrytrecep!lon ls t Middle
oort area company lo okmg for
da1a anuy/receptrbn lsl, must have
above average skills wllh Wind
ows 95 hours will be 8 5 Monday
Friday with occasional over11me
send resume to Imperial Electnc
345 Sycamore Street, Middleport
Oh 45760, Allentlon Frank Upp

110

Help Wanted

AVON I AU Areas
Spears 304·675-1429

I

Sh.,lrley

An Ohio 011 Company Needs Ma
tllre Person Now In The GALLI
POLIS Area Regardless Of EK
parlance, Write M A Read P 0
BoK 696 Oaytoo OH 45401
CHRISTMAS HELP

,.

Full/Pari-Time
Men &amp; Women Needed For 10
Jobs No EKperlence Necessary

SI,200/Mo.

Call Monday 1112198
740-446-7441 CLINICAl DIETITIAN

Holze r M9CI Ical Center, Gallipolis
OH Is Seeking A Registered Or
R.eglstry Eligible D1etltlan With A
BS In Food /Nu trition Or Related
F1eld
Respo nsibilities Wo uld l nc li.tde
Providing Dietary Cons,u llallons
For Agenlctes IF~ci l llles Contact·
1ng With Holzer For These Serv·
1ces As Well As Acquiring N'8w
Contra cts Opponun lty For Professional Oevelopmem Previous
Health Care EKperlan ce In Com
mllnily Nutrlllon And Long Te rm
Care Desired Sui Not Ae,qulred
Good Guesl RelalJons S!o,lllla t:s
senllal

Hotz~ r Medical Center Is A' 246
Bed ACll18 Care Hbsp ltal With An
Addit ional 23 · Bed Inpatient
Phy.slcal Rehab Unit A JCAHO
Accredlled .Communl!y Owned
Non For Prollt Hospital Sen/lng
The Southeastern Ohio Va ii!Jy
And Located Along The Ohio
R1ver
•
EKceltenl Sa lary And Fringe B8n
eflt Package
'Send ReSume'to·
Rosie ward
Director 01 Human RMources
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jackson P1ke
Gallipolis OH 45631
Phone 740 446·5105
FaK fTDD 740 446·5 106
Company Drivers OTA [AI$0 0 10
Package ) New Busmess wl1~
Dedicated Lanes Home Mos1
Weekend;;
• Satet111e CommunicatiOn
• New ,Benefit P.ackage
Minimum 1 y1 EKpenence
Class A CDL HazMat
H&amp;W Trucking Co Inc
Ona WV
1-000 62a 35so
Randy Slewart Chns!lna King

�~

110

Pomeroy o Middleport • Gafllpoll•, OH ~Point Pleaunt, WV

-1110

He!pWanted

110

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

DAIVER • IJOflf AAY
Al fi0£HL

Roeh l s 8 98 Pay lneruu Wtll
lncreau Averao• 9! Wages To
..5 0000 \bU Can Go&lt; Homo boo
ry e 8 Oayl It You Run East Of
Ttt. Aoc:tutl Out 7 Days Homt
2 Out 10 Homf 3 OJl Ttilll'\11'\Q
o..... IOtJerfitot • 10 s1' e2 JJt
M tlt.f

E•Ct lltnl lnl , Solo

Ot

Tt am 95'r fll o Touch 48 /53
van Or Flalbtd Ta ll!; To Our

()f tvlfst Call MtU AI 0 \.11 Cayton
'tarO

Ovtt'Oroolt Ct nte r hn ~arl Ufl'\e
LPN POI 11t0 nl .1\llllablt lot a ll
5hlftJ If lnWrHted plate comact
~· • Halley It 140 992·6·472'
Part-Tme LPNS 16 to 32 Houfl
Ptr Week C all U u:ldltl on El
talef 7.40-.w6-'8 , ..

Pat! tune

needea
send res ume to Oa JI )' Stni!M I
PO Box 729 7-4 Pom eroy Oh
na n t~~man

45769

the Road dfiVIf Needtd
Frat bed hperren'f Needed!

PINKEIITON IIECU"""

Gal-.. ,..

AGcOpUIIg

The

c..

~For

'No-'IIY&lt;Otil
•Top Pay &amp;Bonofrtl
• 401K PIUS 8onuNI

,.,..,._._

• CaJdor,..~
• Horne Mo~o~ w.. ~~ancH

• ~SIOflll!d laW Model

Trac10r1
COL A &amp; 1 Yr OTR
EJ.Def.ence ReQulf$d Call

-

Nem. . , Addrtt . .a, And Telt·
phooe Nutnbtrt At Well.

tom Ewomu
.
HOLIDAY HELP NEEDED
W•lh 1J8k tng ~Ill Ot&lt;le rs &amp; Hos 1
'A0 Dtmonstraoons
• Candles - Sattt &amp; Body

• Fraorance1 •Aromatherapy
• Slun Care • Ch11dren 1 Gift$

ApplieantJ WoH Be Accoplld
For Tnt Gallipolis Arta
On Monday 2 Nov AI
SUPER 8Of GALUPOUS
AT 1 PM

EO£ IMIF/ON

c.. Tracy 140 441 1982

-

E,xpeuenced Auto Body Repa~r ­
man Apply At Larry 1 Body
Shop, 2046 Add iSOn Pike Galli·

E•penenced dell workertca&amp;hler
re~u m e only Ta zs Ma rathon
740 992 7339

EKTAA CARE

Needed Imme diate ly Personal
Care Aide$ And Sitters (Ail
Shllll} For Holzer Extra Care A
Private Duty Care Agency

Reglti«H Hur...
LlctnHd Practkel NurMI end
c.rt»'ttd Nu,..ng At,tllttnta
Frf &amp;n Chattenget a.eachno to
Professional Growthl Currently
taking applications fOr ful ancl
pan time posruone on allhifll
Rasponsibthh&amp;5 Include the d1
rect care of our re11den11 admlll
11trauon and documentatlon
mtdlcati0n1 and treatmenl6
Mut t bt lice nsed and cer~fied 1n
Ww Mtdlca i, dental, VISIOn and
l de1n sur~ nce 40 1 ~ K) and tu t11on
relmbUrseman offered
Quality, CommltrNnl The Key s

to Our S~se t

•

Aaven1wood cenaer
200 Iouth Attchte Avenue

Cofl'lC)ttitiV• Wage&amp;Offered
If lntere&amp;ted Comact
Ro&amp;ie Warct
Director 01 Human Resourc.&amp;

Reventwood. Wv 2e264

(3041273-930

100 Jackson Pika
GallipoliS 0H 4!63 1
Phone 740 446·5105

Aatatl

ITOAE MANAGER

EOEIADA Eml)60'(tr

Fotlel! College Store s Has An E•
cellant Career Opp orlu nhv For
An E•pertenced Fl ataU Manager
To Manage One Of Our College
Boo kstores Lo ated In Ath ens
Oh io Po s1llon Will Be A1uoon&amp;l·
bit For Directing AU ABPICI&amp; 0 1
The Store Require s Strong Man·
agarlal And OrganlzatiO'lBI Skllla
With Th~ Abltl!y'".To Set And Meet
Deadlines And Deleg ate Ta sks
Ideal Candidate Wlll Pou en A
College Degre e Bookllore Ex
perience I&amp; A Plus

MDS NURSE ROSITION

'

Centur ion Management Group A

Progre ul11t Long Ter m Care
Company (Medicare &amp; Medicaid
Certified ) Ia Currenttv Taking Ap
p llc a tlona For MO S Nursas E•
c el~nt Worl'ltng Environment And
Benef it&amp; Oual lllcatlons Include
Ohio AN Llcen u Bachelors De·
grtt Prtrerrtd The Suc ctufu l
Candidate WI!/ Need Strong Clln/
cal SkUJa And Experience In MOS
Submlaelon Please Submit A Re
tumt To Terry Quinn Director 01
Ouallly Au urance 215 E Wang
er Road EnglewOOd OH 40322

Needtd someone to stay with 11
derty ganueman room and bOard
small ulary prtler ma la 304
895 3942
Now Accept ing Appllcallons At
Domino 1 Pizza Gallipolis &amp; Po
mercy Locations Pteasa Apply in

.Per100

We Oller' A Ban Salary Bor us
Plan And Comprehens l\11 BenA
fl U Package Incl u di ng Pro fit
Sharing And 40 1(K) AI Well As
Oppor !tJ M IU Fo r Growlh And
Ad va ncamen1 Please M a il /Fa ~
Resum e To Folle tt Colteg a
Store s Attn 0 G Dept 111 tSM
40'o W Cirande Ave • Etmllural. lt.
60f26 Fax 6:JO· S:J4· 0IEI2 For
More Information On Follett Col
lege Stores PtM se See Ou r
Website At www fe s follett cdm

....""' •N 25260

WOO. AI Home
Gtow•ng Compa ny Net&lt;JI Help
Now, J2SO · $500 A W&amp;ek Pafl
Ttme Full Ttm.e Eaey &amp; Fun Wt
Will Tratft. No E•perU!!net Need
ed Senou1 lnqune&amp; Onty 1 800

Z04 7048

140

150

' ~ 1 nccrc1y Sadie No~tcr
,

Georges Ponabla Sawmi ll aon 1
haul your logli to 1he mill just ea11
304 e1s 1957
Mature chrlsiiBn lady w II babyal t
tn your home dependable excel

lent referenceli 140 742 2091
Will Work For S4 00 / Hour Will

Haul Truh Junk Etc 740-361
0 140

everyone wli~ helped
during her illness 1

ami lher death.
rhe foc:u
, l, Oowen,
em ourllging wonfs

n.ml hr lp

WHN

l(l"f"atly a ppn•ciiltf'tl .
She

will

)t('

rt:tull) miN:!Ictl

b y nutny.

r==='n:::::Me:m:o:ry:::::;-1
111 '/\tlll&lt;'m/11 , 11111
'J\a h/11t 'l 11d::.

011 ohu ) 1,

lu n,

1 '-)b '""

' 'H'
•
1...1}1·" h11t a' "I'"'
lw u•'/""kl) 11 &lt;1111
'kob, h/, 11 11 , ' " 11 ,fwulol
l'

fl"'

bo· ."\obod)' oould hal'o
In•• 11 but Ju
' I&gt; tlu ,,.., 11 , wnu 1111 d

:1"·
0111 l l u hUiulmi'JI/ 011(''

1

wdi j/ooo•
'

B it ll,r11flrJ

fwl'''

Unlqut Employment Opportutchool aeeklng e xperl~:~ nced mdt
¥iduals tor part lima and lull time
pos itiOn Dlrtetort Alllttant

and' &gt;l r&lt;'lll)tlt fo Rt'&lt;i' '011 1

r, l'lll I&gt;

ru lo u

\

E11Ctl1ng &amp;tr v,c:e Dll•gntG To
C omp lement Pt.Stnt p roduct
L•nu Exc.ll ent Comm•n •onsf
Fu Res ume To 881 753·&amp;33-'
Oo Cd 140-15~

3-4 Bodroomt fiAt «r .........,.
fifl-pjat41 lofc.dl u /Qal fur~.
M: foncod CQr""' 101 3f W...,_

'""Ct 304-f15-7m

Work On Vour c:.omcoltf. full Or

11100-W-1148
St~t•

Routt 33 Shade - mobll t

Llwlng•ton' e a . .tmtnf Water~
Prooffne, all buement repalr1
done frfl u ttmat" llftll m•
guarantet 12yrt on job e• ptrler&gt;ct :104-196-3817
Storm Damage? Nttd Sldt For
insurance? Call Christian &amp; 8ont
Consu uc!lon Wt Oo Roofing •
Sitting JWu~s AWnings Guntr
And All Typts Of B uilding And
Home lmpr ovemern s O ~tr 20
Years Expenence And Good Ref

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes for Sale
114 IMMEDIATE IICIPOIA~It

11 4 Bedrooms 1 800·874 6032
SacrdiCII

-r

Olf---tlloi!U oi 74().f92-

By Owntr (RtiOCIIt(l ) 3 Btd·
roomt Srieic: tvlnvl Ntw \l lrryl &amp;

Deck Grt.al CondJDon 290'2 An
nilton Duve Pomt ftluunt, WV
Pra Lowerttd To lJpp« 1(fa. WIM
Contidtr Rtnllng. 304·175·4054

!Lonl Or 740-441.0135 (lion!)
BYOWNE~

6· MHu N of Buflalo in Muon
Co 112 mil t ofl At 62 Brie•
hom• on 10 acres w/2 4001q fl
llvlng sp act o ~trs l ztd double
garage. 3 large bedroomt. 2
bath t itrgt ftm1fy room wm,.~
plact , bon'lJ t room , 1arga ulillty
room , new Ctrl)tl, eerarrNe flit in
bathl &amp; llllehtn, "ewer heat
pump &amp; I PPillne. . Large rear
deck, 24 ab01111 ground pool ,
""Y prl¥811 but oonvltnlty local·
ed on black I® roaG w/ctty water
Prlco • I 39.000

Colllot':JOWM-1135
Condo Time · Shlfl Ottdtd

Cunn ingham Altlll'f, Broker 312 ~
5969 JaCkiOI'IM810M Co Unt IO•

churche1 Pri vate brick clreular
drive brick patio modern khchen
lamlly room wlflraplace 3·4 bed

calion •Mint co ndillon• 5yr old

e

112
Aero
Mil. Room,
3 - " "Dlooog
" ' HouN
llalhl
I..Mng
Aoom2
Nlct Porch 1/2 Ba1tment With
Good Dry Conc rttt Floor Nice

IJd

ha11e a t 1eas1 o year s u ·

lng and marketing lor small bull
nesa must be detail oriented with
exctllent writing communic ation
and Interpersonal skills Ability to
manage a mul!lluda or taaks and
adhere to l ight deadlines 11 c1u
clal
..
Rt~ttur•nt Steff· Cook $10 00

Alllttlntt Sa OOAlr
Res taura nt &amp;laff mus t be e~p en
en ce wor kmg n a fa st paced
working environment ha"e a flex!
ble schedule and have th e ab il ty
to handle a multitude of tas ks
All appllcent s should oe mature
and responsi ble wl! h relia ble
transportation The Fur Pea ce
Ran ch offer s 11 drug and AlcohOl
free enviro nment In addIl ion to
dl1counts and limited benef!\ s to
all empl oyee s Interested candl
dales s~ouid sen d resu me and
refarancu to

$47 000 740 985-3582

2 bllh, Oon, 2 car 110-· plul

PO Box 389, Pomeroy, Oh •
Ann Ma Cempbell

SLUG

MATCHES
Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Every Sunday
• N 1
Starftng
OV.
af 12:30

~==:;:::::::::::::=~II

"INGO

B

MON. &amp; WED.
6:30 P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST
S1' 200 •00
$SO , 00 OR MORE
BEECH GROVE
ROAD

11621

Pri"

LOVII ocrot 1127 1!00 304•67 0•
8859
Thr•• btdroom ranch, kltchtn w/
appUancaa, baln , LA lurnlturt
c:urttlna, 1h20 blek dtC:k out&lt;
buildings ellv wattr, bla c kt o p
road Wartrloo Ad , t39 900, 1
600~· 8555

-

LPN's

Apply ln person. or call Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Human Resources
at 740~992·2104

, ,

Change Your _DI~~dlonl

CHRISTMAS HELP

Full/Part time
Men &amp; women needed for
1ojobs.
N6 experience necessary,

look to the neaon'sII doseout ~ller ror your new dlrtdlon
Consolldaled Storts Corp lilt p.etenl company or &amp;IG LOT$,
Is e ro11une ~00 compani wllh $41 billion In· aoles lUI Y~:lr
we operate 1,000 closeout slotts nauonwlde end have a
new direction ror you at out store ,ln GALLI~OLISdor .

Assistant Managers
~motional m•dlcelldental enG Ute lnsuran~ bellellb on your
rtrst day of emPloyment. with dlilblllt'l lor vaca~on, bonus
and 401(1() to follow tr you hive I+ yo1rs discount retail

'$1 ,200/mo.
•

and/or grocery management uperlence then s•t your

new direction for BIG LOTS lor Immediate constckfaUon.
sendyourrtsumUsalel'lhlstorylo. --· ~,--- ~
R.lrl~ I Stont Slllllnt
~
r~Tf
Consotlllllld st- COfD,
J
&amp;.
300 PhiiiiDI Aolll/191128512. t Lraoliio •
...
Coluntbu .. 0" 4522fOSI2
ACMI"'"Col .. , _ " " '
fu: (614)27..4770
' EOE I Dn.og ''"
!moll: RIRADYeCNSTOQ!S.COH
.....,..,.

•'BJG..

'

Call Mon 11 /2/98
740·446· 7441

Engineer

FINANCIAL AID ADVISOR

SENIOR MANUI=ACTURING
ENGINEER
(South11etern Ohio)
Borg-Warner Automotive, Gallipolis, Ohio has a
challenging pooltlon st Ito manijracturlng raclllty lor a Senior
Manufacturing Engineer
We are seeking an engineering proroaslonal with a
Bachelor a degree In Engineering or equivalent e•perlence
CN C turning grinding , dril ling Induction hardening
e•perlenca Is requ ired Candidate must possess strong
communication and Interpersonal skills, be a self olarter
self directed and have strong organizational and problem
solving skills Project management and PC skills are also
required
Borg-Warner Automotive offers Its employees an
attractive benefit package and a compet itive salary
Chicago based Borg-Warner Automotive, Inc cs a leading
supplier of highly engineered components and applications
Th e company operated manuraclurlng ra clillles In 12
countries serving the North American European and Asian

Th e Untve rslty of Rto Grande Invites
appltcat1ons for th e posi ti on of Ftnanctal Atd
AdVISOr
Responstbtlittes tnclude, but are not limited to ,
th e adm tmstr att on of federal , state and
mstttutton al form s of student flnanctal assistance
programs for an asst gned portton of studenls
atAtendtng the Untverstty of Rio Grande
8 achelor s Degree 1s reqiJtred 8 uper 1or
organt za tt ona l
computer -related and
communtcalion sktlls are necessary Preference
wtl l be gtven to candidates with a backgrouAd 1n
un tverst ty adm lntstration , ftnance/banktng or
related ft eld( s)
All applicants must submtt a letter of tnterest
and resume tn cludm g the names of three
references on or before November 17, 1998 to
Ms Phyllis Mason PHR,
Dtree tor of Human Resources,
Universtty of 'R•o Grande MCSF 27
. '
RIO Grande, OH 4567 4 '
EEO/AA Employer

automotive markets

·TO receive confldenllal con si derat ion , submit
(Including salary history and reqijlrements) to
Borg·Warn•r Automollv•
Human R11ouro• D•p•rlmtnt· MFG.
2180 E18tern Av•.
Galllpoll•, OH 415e31
Fld (740) 441·3248'
NO PHONE CALLS
I

•

res ume

-

llatM &amp; 314 N:ro L4lf For
,..., K.~ngotoy 14170 a...,.

2· ~ 1.11.211
o.,••. 740-....,·3271.
Ewnlngt.
7401tl JCII.

- Frtf
1•ll'oIll.
NOO-''""""'·
...,
fklfl 1·100·8fl
fTTI.

Aero•

+

a.8~room1, 3·bltht, wllh O¥tf

Aerts

. 12.000 .

Publtc Wl11f Oanvme Brillr
llltfgo • Goll ""' ' • 1 Acrot w..
Nl" Pond It 000 Or 8 .Acrtt

$13,000 Or On SA 325. Nlcl
Woodod 17 /woo . 18,000 CIIY
Wlltr MI"Y Mor• To Ctloote
Ffoml

0.1111 CO : Jult South ot Town,

Ffl fndly Rldgo Ad.. 1 ~ Acrot
V .500 0o e5 AcrOI N .opo. Pob-

2,000Jq II Undor f360rmo 1·
1100-261-60'10
..ae fully oqulppod, ,.. dy 1o
~.• 1200, 700.742-12112
t1 )4x70, 2 bodroom 2 bolh,
f16.000 wllh po•cnot, 7&lt;10-H2·

..

N. . 1N8 1.4ta71 nw.. bedrooin,
lncfudol I....,. FAEE lot ron!
lncludtl lklrtlna . dtluq tttpt

ond folup Onfr •111 01 por
...,.,n wtm fl076 ,.... Con •·
800-131'·3238

Wt Flnanct Land &amp; Hom• With

At Lllllt AI •500 Down 1-608·

821-3•12!1

"i

• Badroomt, 2 Bllhf U281MO,
1·800-363-U62

_ ..,

.•
••

Located at the Auction Center on Rt. 33 In
M11on,W.V.
Outslandlng collection of Ptaltsgraff 1OS pes 6 pl.
Dinner set bread box, canlsler sel. meat platters, Lazy
'\
Svsan, coffee pots, butter, mixing bowls, measuring
•
set, pitcher &amp; bowl, candle holders, salt &amp; pepper
J
shakers &amp; other pieces, Disney Winnie Pooh cookie
jar, milk glass , glauw~rs set of f!OYIII Au1trla creamer
&amp; sugar, Limoges bowl, plates. vasellne glass bsar,
beer steins. compote nice antique oil lamps, 8 "I
Fostoria glasses, tea set, lg stone pitcher signed J C.
B , pr ol old hanging lamps, round walnut table, oak
library desk , oak curved glass china, old antique
chalra, childs rocker, hi-chair, oak grandfather clock aa
I
Is, 2 sleds, brass lire screen, 1981 Prince Diane Coin,
old sheet music, nyc oil can, lg. collection of fruit jars
:
blue &amp; clear, Sunbeam elec\rt!: chum, 30+ Pomeroy • I•
Bridge Posl cards !able clolh, graniteware, toy grader,
It &amp; 32 ft. eKt ladders boK Iota &amp; much more

Maaonw. Va
R... 773:11785 or Auction Centtr 773,5447
Term•: Cllh or check w/ID.
Not
lor
or loll ol

------------~----~------------------Public Sal• and Auction

3 bldroom bouN 11ot rent. ,,..,
OIICOI &amp; dopaoil roqulrld aJf of

lor ..... T-10-7424-027
3--~(·
-......
"'1.00.1•
""'"""·
J2f5/mo,
2 2311

WV Building lOll, s lnglt wldtl
accepted , pub lic water, 20
mlnutet from new Bulltlo Bridge

Real Estate
Want.d

Oulllfy by phono,'

Wt Buy land 30 ·800 AcrtJ,

1·800-261-1!010

340 BUIInets and

Wt Por Cooh 1-600·213-8360.

Mll1ony Lond Co
I

llulldlng•

dOor)

2 bedroom in Mt41Jitpon S275
,.,_,..._1_

Urrfutntlhtd Mobile Homt On.
Cor• Mttl Aoad Off 01 325 No
Ptll Atftrtnc:•a D•Pol tl At

2'bdr m 'apta • tor.J t lt"ctrte, IP·

2----31114

TfiCO Aoiod, 01! 211, J22!tiMO , •
S.1~0tpou.

410 HOUHS for Rent
2 Bdrm Houu In Golllpollt Da·
IIOfll RoQulrod, No Poll 140·319·
ii400

2 bedfoom lrader 1r1 Raarw, good
nt,ghbo,nood car port &amp; porch
$300 per month 1300 dtPOI 11
rtler•neet rtQuu td 7-40-i-4£1 ·

2217

2' Dtdtoom ua ll•r In Racme, 3

_

3 btdtoom mobile home,
morJd'lty Ball Run no pet~ tntlde

Hoolt·up

fiHnlthod 1525
130416711-1873
Iff

·

PIUI Depotit

Hou11 For F11n1 Petr iol Aret

•

Ulofl.

noo

742·2714

3 btdrOOm hand•capped ace• • ·
Sible wattr &amp; HWtf prcwidtd tota l ti 8WIC tiiU'! &amp; half, Hud
voucher accepted Aaeine area
Sou thern School D1SifiCI 7-4 0

McCormick Road 3 Bedroom• &amp;

2 BldtOOmt $275/Mo , Plus Dt·
7-4Q--446-6844

I)Oftl

Nlet Trailer Secluded lot Ntar
Bidwell Porter 1 eaaroom $4001
Mo lncludea All Ulllllil t , 7 A,O -

apartment all new, no P4ttl 304·

.. I-Q720

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Tra iler For Aen t Beau tiful River
VIew 198 A •~e r Street Kanagua
Depollt Atferen ce~ No Petl,
740-441·0 181 FolterTraller

1 Bed room Tra lltr In Gallipollt
Nlct Yare &amp; Porch S20DIMO
f200 DI!!O tll RtftflnCtJ At·
qulrod 740 44&amp;-9342

Allred a(ea large y11d central air,
fire place 2 bedroomt $27e
month plu t 1300 deposit paid In
advance call afttr epm 140·98!4372

PUBLIC SALE

.unqiiB oa VOLI.IJCI'I•Uls&amp;LIII

1 and 2 '*froom aPM1tntf11s lur
Althea Jnd unturnrthtd H c;unty
dtDOIIf 'fQU frtd, no Pt ll 7A0·

91n·2218

1 BtdrOO!fl

Eeonom•taf Gat
...., wto
Clnoma
WII/Mo , Pluo Ulof,..., Oopoon &amp;
~ Roquold, 740-446-2957

-.uo. .,..,

BEAUT IFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES !2 Westwoo d Drrve

from 1279 10 13!1 Vlalk to fhOP
&amp; mov itt Call 7• 0-4146 -2568
Equof liQo.ulg ()pponunoly
Futni~Aed

4 AooiM &amp; Bath, Compltlety Atdeeorated Cltan New
Carpel No Poll Oo S-.ng, Rat·
erenc.e &amp; Oepotlt Raquired: Alto
F\.lrnllhed 2 Aooms. &amp; Balh Uo·
Grack&gt;ut liVIng 1 and 2 ttfdroom

Nic41 2 Df 3 bedtoorn houu In Pomero&gt;y no poll 740-i82-MM

e7s-M76

Apartments
for Rent

l Mdroom tra• ler $300 a momh
1150 depoaH no pels calJ 7-4 0

11411-4802

•300
monon pluf doPGJII and r•l·
erencet, no ptlf. one btdroom

440

. .... 740-448-1519

7.00.446-4509 Allot 5 PM

Two b.aroom full baHmtnl re·
frlgerator and 1tove lurnlthtd

QWtd, 7.4CJ..~

........ . ..., 7.00.1422319

Pa1

Trailer For Rant 740.446-1 279

Two bedroom mobile home. utili·
tlu partially pald call 30-4 6 758!512 aher 7pm
Two bed room tr a11er lor re nt In

"Gallopollt Farry 304-87&amp;-3218

apartments at V•llage MaQOr and
Rlvartide Apartmentt In Middle•
pori From S2.t9·S373 Call 7'0

992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor

ouMiol
La layt~tte Mall Gallipolis 2 Bed
roomt 2 Bath I Ait Ut11i t1e1 In·
eluded . 14 50/Mo DaPOil1 Re ·
QUifed. Pful 2 Rooma 1 Bath No
K•tcnen 1200/Mo , All Ulltilltl In·
e!Uijf(l740- 441 ·1005

MMa rn 2 Bacttoom Apa rtmen t
140 446-o390
Ntw Ap artme nt 1 Bedroom In

Rio Grande All Ulllltlu Paid,
Plu1 Ca ble Walking Oittance To

l

LICENSED AND BONDED OHIO 1372,
TEAMS: C"ll or Approved Check
Phone 140·388,11370 and 388:8880
388,8741 and 388·11186
Not R11ponelble for Accident• or Lolt lteme.

BJ!l&amp;LBII'I .t.trtm:ON'
IIUC::'I .t.ll'ODON' BOIJ'IB

8580 St. Rt. 588; Galllpolle, Oh.,

2 Mllea South Of Rio Grande, Oh.

I

F$NTON GLASSWARE:
35-40 . Pc
lnc:ludlng hand painted dresser lamps, 18"
handles pitcher vase (very rare), 11" vase,
candy jar, 3 toad bowl, 7" bon bon, 8"
cresent planter (scarce), all pea. l;lut lamps
are Hobnail.
Several shoes, other nice
pieces!
MISC:
Hull art cornlcopla (Magnolia),
Roseville Qlue magnolia vase, other Mull pes.,
McCoy cookie jars thinking dog and tea pot,
Hotn~r Laughlin Virginia rose, dogwood pes.,
hand painted Items, Fostoria, depression
glass, Avon cape Cod, Popeye &amp; Olive 011
glasses, Puritan creamer, Henry Koehler
bottle of Pomeroy, OH., Waterloo Wonders
book, Carbide light, old books, 3'x5' RC Cola
sign, Pete Rose commemorative coin by
Kahn's Meats, 2 Longaberger baskets, belt
buckle collection, old bottles, advertising tins,
Mickey Mouse dolls, Hull Old Spice mugs,
Roy Rogers and Gene Autry comic books,
much, muclt more ....

..

AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A. LEMLEY
740.388.()823 Ralldence
740.245-11888 Auction Barn
"Licensed &amp; Bonded by St. of Ohio"

Ma~onW.Va

Cuh/Approved Check Food

•'

"Not RtlpOnllble tor Accidents or Lost Property•

1•o-m

7808 .....5om

Ont btdroom furmthed • pari
mtnt rn M•ddlepon 740 992
9191

Small 1 DtOtoom fur f"lllhecl apart·
men! Ml Vernon Ave no Ptll
rtftrence and deposit 30.4 675

2651
Tara To•nhouu Apararner1.11.
V•rw Spaci ous 2 Btclrc)oms 2
FIOOrt CA. . . I 1/2 Bath, Fully Caf·
,.,.. Pallo No Pett Laa10 Plut
Secunty Otpoiit Req uireCI 740

44&amp;--3461
Twm RrYt ll Tow•t now accepli t~g
ap phca uont ror 1br HUO suba1d
lztd aot for t ldtrly and hand.
capped EOH 3()4-6 7 ~ 6679

450

Furnished

Room•

Appllanc• •

Ffecond lllontd
WUNft, D1 (fl I Aat~Qotl Aeftl·

aratotl 90 Day Gua rarUet l
Fren ch C11y M.atla:J 7-40 441

71115

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W.uhers dr yers r.tJtrrgerarort
ran;e1 Skago• Apol ancet -1e
V ~t\t Slrttl Call 740 d4f). 7:J98
1 ·88&amp;8HHII~
'
UMO Furn1h.1r&lt;t Slore ~lO w Hoh·
Clay I nn ln Kanauoa Tw1n Beds

Comphue $115 Full Sedl Com
ple1e 1 135 Hu1r:h S7S Dreu ert
Couchtt 140 448-4782

530

Antiques

Buy or 1111 Rwtr1n e An ti.QUU
112.t E Ma1n Street on Rl 124
Pomer oy Hours M T W 10 00
a m to 6 00 p m Sur\Ciay 1 00 to
6 oo p m 7-40 992 25 26 Run
MOO(e 11tmer

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
~WAR .. UPI"
- _ ft! - -

Furnace Heat Pumps &amp; Air CondthontnQ Free E&amp;llm atasl If You
Don 1 Call U&amp; We Bolh Lo~e •
740-446 6306 1 800 29 1 0098
" Hunltfl Specl•l • P111 Inn

Btd

Cirelt Mottl Lowu t Ra te s In
Town Newly AtmoGa1td HBO
Clnemax Showtlme &amp; Ol1 ney
Weekly Aat81 Or Monthly Rates,
ConwucUon Wo rkers Welcome
740·441 ·!6£18 740-441·51f7

and Bteak1a&amp;l leon wv $36!
parson or 54512 people 304 937•
2447

480 Space for Rent

zrc ublc Fee t While Sode/Side

Mob llt Mmt t ile llllileble till ·
ween Alhent and Pomeroy call

$375 00 740 256 6445

1 Crypt &amp; P~ale S3M 740 3677864
Ktnmore Relngerator Ice Water
tn Door Too B•o For Kltctlen

""' Real Eatate General

Nlce Clean 2 bedroom. refertnc·

Now

A ccet~t l n g

Appllcatlont For

Ont
Bedroom Apartmtntt,
Wu her IOrytr HOO lC ·Up, Call For
Mof e Info From 10 AM 9 PM

I

I'

740· 441-~11

''

I'

COUNTRY COLONIAL
1641 Cora Mill Rd., Galllpollt ·Newly butlt tn 98.
4 BR's, 4 walk-In closets, 2 1/2 baths First floor
master wtth bath &amp; whirlpool, fully equipped
kitchen, LR/flreplace, dlmng room, office , oak
trim, 8 panel doors, full basement, large 28x34 2
car attached garage, on dry 2 44 acres. Beautiful
area, city schools bus rt $170,000.
Call for appointment 245·5778.

1

red/white porcelain top table, oak hall tree,
tea cart, other misc. Items ....

• ••

One oeoroom I!Pirlmtnl tn Mid·
dloporl .. paid $100 &lt;ft.
PQtlt 127Q manlh CJil

Household
Goods

Wat her /Oyer Hook-Up! 304-8755162

Real Eatate General

FURNITURE: Early Empire chest, waterfall
vanity w/mlrror. small table &amp; stands,

·!

j

510

\'DTON. 0810
S.t...,...t.'Y, NOWI!M8D T. 111•
TIII,P.M.

LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN

Located on Rt. 33 In Letart,
Mrt. Opal Sayre ••
hat bean eonflned to li nursing home &amp; will be
selling the following.
1
'
FURNITURE
4 stack oak bookcase, walnut VIet dresasr w/lrult
pulls, mah drop leaf table &amp; 4 carved back chairs,
waterfall wardrobe &amp; dresser chest 2 pc LA suite,
Howard Miller grandfather clock, Zenith color console
TV, w/remote , Emerson 19" color portable 'TV, 5 ~c
t
dlnet, Kimball organ , pine 2 pc hutch, metal bed, king
I
size bed 4 barrel back chairs Gibson refrigerator,
Tappen 30 electric range lreezer, Kenmore washer,
Whtrlpool dryer
GLASSWARE
Limoges France china, American Fostoo1r~l:a~c::~~~acl
cake stand, Carnival glass berry set, so I
patlern glass, hand painted bQwls, pink depression Ice
bucket. carnival ch icken, Homer Laughlin VIrginia
Rose plates. old pitcher &amp; bowl etch pr gold leaf
lamps Watt pottery pttcher #16 apple chipped.
MISC
Early quilts, linens, dolles, viet walnut kitchen clock, · •
old coins - Sliver Doll ars. Sliver certificates old pocket
watch , universal sewing machine , small safe old
accordlan, cookware, Iron kettle, apple butter kettle,
feed scales, roll of barb wire, Hillside plow disc hand
tools, tool box alum ladder glider picnic table, 5 H P
Murray lawn mower wllarge wheels, 14 h alum boat &amp;
trailer sl ide In truck camper, 2 hay wagons as Is and
more
GUNS
t897 Win pump 12 gauge model 24 Rem Rifle ,
Eastern Arms 41 0 gauge Marlin 22 auto
HOUSE TRAILER
1964 House Trailer
•
GRAVEYARD PLOTS
4 Graveyard plots In Jackson County Memory
Gardens

-446-6515

MERCHANDISE

Campul
1375 00/Mo 740 245· ' 1·~740~
~ 100
·, -38~6~4~38~7~:-..----:-....:.!.:::::========

ana.day ~
Realty
25 LOCUST ST.' GALLIPOLIS

Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 446~3383

___

..,_

446-3636

Pomeroy Bunernut Ave Building wibaaement &amp; 2
each floor kitchen bath room In
1 lot across street tor

WOOD BEiiLTI', INC
32LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS OHIO 45631
Allen C Wood, Broker· 446·4523
Ken Morgan, Broker· 446·097t
Jeanette Moore, . 256·1745
Patrtcta Ross
740-446·1066 or 1-800-894·1066 •

15009-Apartment building located In Gallipolis- Two
apartments each wHh one bedro.om, 1 bath llvong room,
and kHchen Call for lnformallon
r
11511-Homalocated on State Route 21e has 3 bedrooms,
2 baths and 5 9 acres M or L Just listed call about this
one
1158-VERV NICE-3 bedroom 1 112 bath ramlly room,
dack, 2 csr garage located tn Ohio twp MUST SEE THIS
ONEil Extra lots for sale If desired
'

has 4 6 acres M ICU1!~t "·on Raccoon Road

1157-Brlck home with e rooms

3

bedrooms

car garage. and 9 acre s M or , L

AUCTION

Green/Gallipolis School dostr lct
Information

Saturday, November}, 1998 otlO:OO a.m.

T1k1 Routs 180 from Gallipolis, to Heneravllle,
turn right onto Bulavllle Pike, Approx. 8 miles.
Watch for tlgn1. .
RESIDENT MOVING TO FLORIDA
EVERYTHING MUST SELL
HOUSEHOLD
Pine 5 pc bedrooon suite, 6 drawer dresser w/mlrror,
che~t of drawer, two night stands, small round table,
upright 15 cu It Sears freezer, rocker 26' Zentth
color TV, w/ramole control. kitchen table with 4 chairs,
maple stand maple coffee table and end tables,
electrical swa~tper, maple twin beds electrical kitchen
cook stove, floor lamps, pictures, what-nots, small
chest, mise dishes some depression, bookcase, new
12 x 12 rugs, card tables, swag lamp Speed Queen
auto washer, 3 stainless steel sinks, small 1
refrigerator, and much much more
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLE
China cabinet and matohlng . · bt.l~et, Oriental rugs,
sewing chair, desk1 pictures or antique cars, wash
board small drop le ~f table oak table
VEHICLES
1981 Olds , 1980 Buick Park Ave, 1984 Chevy parts
4 wheel dr 1984 Chevy Pickup truck, parts tor 1977
Chevy 4 wheel dr pickup truck, new lenders fro 77
Chevy and doors new ltnders lor 83 Chevy, 1975
Jeep parts, new metal tool bo• es lor pickup truck,
Chevy truck bed lor Chevy set star alum rims, drag
disc
Good 8 N Ford Tractor
Nice 18 HP Crahsman riding lawn mower
o
TOOLS AND MISC.
20 ton press hydrau lic jack, alum extension ladders,
new 12 x 12 screen house. bird bath , ping pong table,
step ladders, mise hand tools upright 2 Stage air
compressor
gal tank, new oak doors lor kitchen
cabinets. wood clamps, new 3 boxes ceiling til e, polar
care, new running boards for Chevy tool boxes, cane,
walkers 3 leg corner table, and much much more
OWNER MR &amp; MRS. J. DARST
CONCESSION STAND
TERMS: Cl&amp;h or local check with ID. No Out of
Stitt pertonal checks, Traveler'• eheck or
Certified Chtek 0 K.
MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER
LIC. 3515
740·379·2720
Not r11ponslble lor aecldenta or loaa ol property

Won't

last long call today

PUBLIC

I'

Reai' Eatate General

14005-A 14x70 MPilllg, IWitlltill\9 bedroo ms 1 bath,

Friday, Nov,.mber 6, 1998, 6:30PM

•

"''"' Tak1ng Appjicallont- 3~
Wut 2 Btdroom Townhouu
Apartmtnll lnc:ludta Wat111
Stwagt TJIIh 129!/Mo. 7-40
"" 1· 16115 7-4 0·.t 4t&amp;·0857 , 7-40-

Apt Ot

t ~·• 0004 tef
.,,,.,,. -... u•t o. rnr?u gn HUO
a1 .lftlit 5 PM :::ll&amp;-6 7S. 1:31 t

IIUIJ'I .&amp;IJC'I'IOI'I BOIJIIII

· . PUBLIC AUCTION

ij'

fUfrviMd, Llundly room
dole 10 IChOOI It\ J(IWft
AppiblKHII ...,.,~ at V-'lagt
Gr..n Apts 141 or cal 740-tel
3711 EOH&lt;

~
~

3 Stdtoom Houfl

r,.., tn "*n

Real Eetate General

LICENSED AND BONDED OHIO 13728
TERMS: C11h or Approved Check
Phont: 740·388·8370 and 318-8810
388·8741 and 388-81H
f'lot R11pon1lble for Acoldente or Lo•t Items.

..

tn eountr y Tuppers
hlp, 740 992 7201

Etlicttnl , cltan, two bldtoom
dopotit, r. .... ,..,.. .. poll 31),1

AUCTIONEER FINIS "IKE" ISAAC

••

110

17ot

Public Sale and Auction

Junction 01 State Routt 3211end 110 VInton, Ohio.

•

fAICid~tt

.... &amp; Dot&gt;olol. No p... 7,1().4:313 740-~9

Wt~ her/ Oryer

11130-000 ,...

UOOr

2 Badroomt, 1315/Mo PluJ

AUCTIONEER F.l~l$, "I~!;" ,ISAAC

1I "

1.eo.ze rm

14,000 local Qov't &amp; Sa n~
Rapo't Call 1-800 622·2730. K

Public Sale and Auction

A Dealer's Auction will be held every Tuesday
Evening at 8:30 PM.
This will be all new
merchandise and not store returns of salvage. Our
rejjular Saturday Night aalas will continue as alwayr..

A11 Appliances. Otpotll At·
- l d. W5M&gt; 7~1 1511

F~OII

14x70 mob llt home for rtnl In

Commorcloi-Qfflca or Rttoll, 17
Mill 81 Mleldltport 1.460 SQ Ft.
1400 mo Cornor Building 740·
11112·1260 AcQultlllon• (ntxt

IPOM 1200 ~ ed 7-'0-446-

""

LO Doell, Slovo Rtfrljj 01-

~

2 BHroom TowniU:UJII "Style
Apa-.,.._ G&lt;t •
t tf2 S..

740·

••w
al'ld ttf:t h M&lt;ludl&lt;l
W.Z2UJ7

Page 05 · :

470 Wanted to Rent

213-....
- -.
eonchtl0nt4. 11"'0·1300
• .-er

bedroom
'*" .,. 2......
Plam• water
I _. eEOROOII HOIIEI

117H1e2

·~
for"-"'

440

Two tMtdroom oat11a1y furntlfttG
,...,_, t.ton ma.,-, r~d S200 M

tHH:Itoom uu., tn
-1-~M

Public Sale and Auction

AUCTION

Rea 773·5785 or Auction Center 773·5447
Terme. Caah or check wilD.
Not rnponalble lor accldef\t• or lo.. of property.

- A d , LMMI, 30U7~

Coins, over 30 rlngs- 10·1BK Diamond, Zircon,
Sterling Sliver, Tennis bracelet , bracelets,
broaches, necklaces, watches, tie clasps, cuff links ,
money ciJpe, plus mise jewelry, Pitney Bowes
Scales, Blenko, Granl te roasters &amp; coffee pot,
rolling pins. depression glass, mtlk botlles, caat Iron
llama, oak !able, plus loads of other Items coming
In too late to advertise

LARGE PUBLIC

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66

3 INd,oom eountry hou11 w1th
lawn tnd gtfC~ t fl , will PIJ' for
to~ dteo'""'"s or up"•eo

The Eastern Local School Olatrlct wlllaellsurplus
Items at public auction on two dates.
• A public auction \1(111 be held at Tuppers Plaine
Elementary School on November 7th and will
Include 'all surplus Items from that building, Including
two school buses A second auction will be held on
November 14th at Chester Elementary and will
Include surplus Items !rom that building and from
Riverview Elementary School
Both sales will ba held at 1oa.m.

~

r

AUCTIONEERS NOTE Large all day auction I

1426

onJr J.,rr• Run Ad Clydo Bow••

Houie Tralltr on Broad Aun Ad
3br, .J ·112 botn•. 2 addtd on
roomt, Porch, OlrtQI, LOI 2 AI
C't , 'houuhold lttmt 115,000
:104-fl2·:142d

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1998

wv.

lot With lneo mt In Crown C•ty
On ROUII 1 153,500 7&lt;10 25e·

tllf'O'II
l'or 6ltt
a&amp;311odroom

~

9:30 A. Mo

Cd 1-140-2611-19"13
Commtrc!at Or At t iOtnllJI Trtple

For -

IIM-~71-23311

;:============:;:=;;==:;-:--

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7,

CempJito Lol fll Slglool Park

Sctnic VaUay 11 Apple Grove.

·~

,

lor Alnt

1172 740-2.1&amp;-625 1

air/heal

Public Sale and Auction

,

$14,000 O• 8

tt

420 Mobile Homes

fMAint

Mo O..,ot•l. 8 lAtltl Ou1 S[l.te
Rout e 218 Ga llrpoh&amp; 740 ue.-

-..m

Nov. 2Ith ·

LARG
'E '

9 U ,..,.. In PIIIIOf, cal AhM I
' -" 71/J ...e ..,.

Hou11 tor Rent with option to
buy •
1112 belf&gt;l I w
garage tenctd In yard! Cenlrtl

I

' Is looking
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for caring, dedicated State Tested
Nursing Assistants. Part time a,nd full
time positions available.

Veterans Memorial Hospital Is looking
for caring, dedicated Licensed
Practical Nurses. Must have current
Ohio license. Full time positions
available.
Apply In person or call Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Human Resources

110,100

::rM.oborhooG

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66

STNA

__,,-HI
Ad ,
NHf Lima. 11 Actes

V.,y A•mott

llc Wat''· Clly Schools SOH¥
Rd .. TtlnJ Aun

!

Box CD·456, c/o The Gallipolis Tnbune
825 3rd Ave
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

,..,o

IH5 O•k Wood UIIO 4 "Bad·
rooma. 2 l1th1. ~uJt Movt ,
128.1100,7404611-1311

LON. E. NEAL
Auctioneer Since

::::;32::=0:.:::M-:-ob-::-lle-:-:H-om..for Sale

Seeking an experienced trav,l agent. If
you hav• 1 minimum of 2 yrs.' experience
In travel &amp; want a good commlaalon &amp;
benefit• package lgcludlng 401(k) &amp;
medlcallnsurancs...

1tto Spruce

olon. 740*2-tM2

Come See Neal for the Deal!

Ttvn bedroom one bath home In

363-~2

rt duced·

112 blllll, ......., ' ~- .......
rolrlgorOIO&lt;, co""of 1 ~. 1., 0111·
- llo!ldlng, lmmodlo .. , . . _

Set. Nlte tli,Chrlnn.

.....

2 -oomt1 1/Z_W... F..

420 Mobile Homes

2 Badroom MOI&gt;Ifo Homo

lEa frf.aJ ClrptnleJ, Oyesvill•
Jute Off

Ai&lt;tpo
mol&gt;tto llomo, '"'I
aoott ~. 2 btd&gt;oonta, 1

A "Nov. 2111

, .~

--

-IIINIII

..,,. co.: wo·•o Got Tht
COunty C&lt;worodl Jull 011 lA 7
..... How Hlfh Se"oot. ~o
sa.. .bough
740•316•
Ad , 6 /wo Lml • •• 000

1,.7 Cfti)'IOn 3 Badroom•. 2

,

e:oo p.m.

"''*'·

t...w'1 ,... tWlfh
1t• ft '
pt'GIIft Hud ~ ... ~
......., appWc:.t.~n ' ,,.,.renut
WI D, 740-tt2-2:31 t etwr l pm

7-1·1412

81th1. Ctnfrtl Air On H.,l

Large toy sale coming &amp; a semi
'
full of Christmas-'items.
! CASH GIVEAWAY!

12

J'r1111o z JJ11! r •gent

at -740~992~2104

EV.

New brick Ranch , 3 b1droon1

Help Wanted

110

Nov. 1111
Nov. 14th ,

Hershberger, 1! 5U State Fl out•
141 POirkol, OH ·611~

.,

or' --·lltoltnO •

OuiC* dOIIvtry. Calf

AUCTION SCHIDULE

Furnaet In BaNmtnl For Ht8t
Prlctd Jutt A Jghtl Roman 0

Twp For S•lo. 7MI-44S·· -1104- 5;00PM

tn

lMOt fJf[ f , . of ""' ,.,.,.. 2

equipped kllchon •178,000

2 bedroom 1 112 bath flrtpl acl .
gas furnace 12"2'0 1q ft of 11111ng
apace
In Chatler
Bi king

,., .... Ocala Flo .. too. -

r........ - ' Nl'flc:, ... .....
7 - -.

Truckloads of other ttems· Stereo's, VCR'a,
TV's, toys, basketball sets, household and
morel

Big Shop Plut 11 G&lt;ood Glrl jiO
Top Notch Glfelltn Blrn Hit 1
HorH &amp;IJJI Plut A Llnlt P"IU(e
County Wiler An(J Well Good

Tombltlon Aun-4 4&amp; acreh/·, 1/ 1889 Down on anv 91 model
4 mMe on rlght·l2t ,000
Doubltwldt In IIOCk Frtt Dellv•
ery Callt ·BOO·O&amp;t·enr
Home for li lt · tnree bedroom
one bath nice home prlctd right .Abandoned Home Taka Ovtr
740·949·3228
Paymtnll Or Makl Offer 1 800·

!5 N. re1 CMan Alit 1n
f:IO.OOO. 740---105
Ajlpl..,.f.ty :1 6 A&lt;:roo, Porty

Gli .. ,

brick ranch on mo 111~ levtl "
acrea 3 car gerege workthop S!IOO Down on any 14x70 In
forma l ll11lng &amp; dfnlng, canning alack, Umlled number, lrte dell~·
kltchen/ut Ji rtytpantry
fully "'Y Call 1 800-e&amp;t 8777

rooms two baths targe fmm'at LRI
OR lar ge Ioyer lour original
sta ined glau
wlndowe 30
mlnutu from Athe ns 15-20
mlnutu from GalllpOiil For appolntmonr eali 740-W2·!5696

~"~"

LARGE CARPET SALE
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7 6:00 P.M.

Locallono l. ••0.200 140·4•6· 1or110 yard now vinyl •ldlng, per
0910 S.lort 9 ~M
ftct tlarter homt 138 500, 304 1
882·33t8
II

lage of Midaleporl Stcluaed and
privata CIOU 10 SCh OO lS a nd

•t ill• NKH On W•rd ANd, ,.
G"'" And Molgf Coun•r ~

Henderson, ·WV 675·6325

I:IIQhlln Cldmul, Grtet LOelflon!

Fairfield Sapphlrt Valley NC {E•· Ntw Ha~tn good ntiQhborhood
chang11 wnn Other Tlmt·6hart ciDit 10 tchoot and public pool,

' A Lillie Country m Town·· Price
reducea large re11o red Victorian
hOme l ttuated on 12 acrtt VII·

Center

RED IRICK RANCH Sirlo

Ececlr l~!

Z l)fdri)Otlt. aM •a.dl.c MIN

ho-. 2 Ndroo01,
2 b•lll, Fto
fOOift. 2
a... l».tldd. . .

:erstJn 'Auction ..

room Jplil level. new 3 C: lf oa
rogo --~
ondllif. ­
c.,,,.,
throughout very nlct

alorao• aret All

1300•-740*2452A

· 7-40-

12100 oao. :IOU1U1112.

Public Sal• and Auction

HouH . E~nt COndftion, Ptf·
llaNy Flnlthtd Btlt mtiU, 2 Clf
Glri iJI. S.riOut lnq~oJirltt Only11
740--3385

-40 8081 nVI .. utilitiN .......,.

2---"""''-

fclr ....

OrNI ~7-76

homo. 740-742-4000

LOll · S7 000 ttptlc epprov1d

410 ....,.... lor Alnt

320 MoliN• MomN

IN : ! -. 1- . 2 - .....
8DOd Aftdltlon. muat mc:we.

" MISC"

~ 'II!U....-,....wl •

Pomeroy o Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea.ant, WV

•• -'• 'f5 Wnt fnd~• IIIOtltto
ftoml. 1w4 bedf oom. two batft .
- ·.1 - -

Refngerators, stoves, washers, dryers.
freezers, and numerous repair and
mwntenance parts
Home Nltlonel Bank, VS, Jimmie L. Young
••
Case W8CV63
Den Smith: AudlonHr Ohio 11344
Cash day of Auction • Positive 10
"Not responll!ble for acctdents or loss_of property"

IOiirl wll
telling on land contract:• 3 btd·

pond

Ulft,
742.-2 11&lt;.. fOiaf -

dt".........··~·"-s.
_, ....

1-"G - . . o.. 1 Aero 3
""'""
112 h..,..,
· 2Nlufy
c. Gorogo
12X ta 1Club
und
...,.••. •112.:100 Call 7•0·3117
o.~tt Allor 600

Pnc. ,_

WolfoPtoAood· - - olf.
ert . 20 acrtt mit , frtt oa• ana

Ll lflnftlon' t hHNnt W•ter•
Proofing, au ba.,mtnt rtpl in
qone tree .. umates llfellmt
guaran~ e 12yrs on JOb t xptn·
enco 3CM-Mii-3817

Appltance Serv!G8

Mo=-=- '

320

e. ......

"""'620..7~ 1•

lOt,

••

1....,.
Friday, November
12:00Noon
Located 11 4 W. :!nd St. Pomeroy, Ohio at

Uu The n 10 -...nul.. fwom
- · - · G ~ ~ ... Pr.... 2 112
NKO LDI Wlffl Br-ilolg FIMr
Voow Ac&gt;c&gt;&lt;.. 2.000 5q Fl 3 e.o,...,. il 112 lllh. ~ 2 F•Gwlgt
·.....
...,_Of f&gt;UH
FIOort.
2
Clf
I 1.00.

7~- 3300

homo &amp; 10 ICtOI

Service•

L-oU""'•·too-•••·
"'-"'

gat•, on

SUnday, November 1, 1998

-.... lr============~~~===:;SHERIFF PUBUC AUCTION

· - - WAC
~IY Tor.,..
814·
w.. ConUICI Oorill.
Houoo o.. , ,.,. A' lloWI

112 "''
t~•
-up. f .Oh.•Ndl
'
75.000. 740 1185·3511 or

ATHENS AEAI.TY

cuan-s PIIOYID£l)

Profe1slonal

I-

Modorn 3 bodroom houto. 2

Pert Tune Procusmo ln1uranc.e
CI4!Jml For Ooclort And Oenli1tli
lrut'ac:IM Homt Tranng

230

-

-.-.,-.-2 .

•••••••••••••••
llfDICAI.IIILUHO
•••••••••••••••

HI)Ute &amp; Lot For • •• 2

$900/hr

PER GAME
W ill fi e'''

- 1· 23

ESTABLISHED RETAIL REPS!

New R30 Prelnttallated Prefab
Homes Highest Ouallty Eaay
ConJtruchon Never E11cl8d One

Fur niture repau rel1hlsh and res·
toraUon also cul lom orderl Ohio
Vall ey "Retmlst11ng Shop Lar ry
Phillip&amp; 740 992 6576
"''

·-Buell,81- Mtlt From
. Do.GorjjiO.
HMC 740·

tlOollor"'!l

Dependable Laoy Will Oo Hoult
cleamng Ca ll Edna La nier 30 4

-;;;:;;::;;:;;;;;;;:;:=;;;;;;;;jl4578~.
The family ur
Wilma Mount
wuu~l like tu lhank

OHIO VAI.l£Y PUSUSHING CO
re-commend• that yo u do bus•
nan with people you knew and
HOT 10 oond ....,_ ll&gt;o0U9h lho
ma~l unttl you havt tnvttbglr.d

Rep ose saed /Must Sell 2 Brand

":::=;:::=:;:;::===~~
•
Card of Thanks
Fur PtiCI Ranch Inc
,.

3 8drmt 1 112 Ba..... Full F,._

180 Wanted To Do

parlan ce and or ba cM io rs de
gree In oulllde sales gra nt wm

bt' forgotten

Year~

good IITYtliiMnl,

30U7S.Sie2

erenc.u We Ha ~ e Crews Ava1l
able CaJ17A0-9885835

• Schools
Instruction

Day Care Pre
School spaces avatlallle • •ceJ
lent e; k•ll&amp; tor vour childs d e~e l
opment·CaH u1 for more inlo(ma tiOn 304 675 6847 M·F 7 30-5 30
Magtc

nltlea New Soulhern Ohio Music

Mu st

Mrr.:cttng s
Your
thoughtfulness Will never

and IIOfll

Public Sal. .nd AuctiOn

Please Send Resume To:

682-7173

cards full of such warm

Buelness
Training

Gall•pou Career Colege Spring
Valley Plaza 740 4.t 6 4367 1
800 214 04~2 Accredited Mem
ber ACICS Aeg 190-05 12748

College Stores

van ced pr ol lcl en cy In de sk top
pubU&amp;hlng abttity to handle a mu l
tltude or talks !lekible and ltkPBfl
encad In managenal du11ea Com·
munleatlont Marketing Coor·
dlnator $1 0 OOi hr

'

Buslnns
Opportunity

1100-933- UIOt Eod ill4

bruary Excellent work •ng cond1
tlOni '" a modern o«a wtlh ~eat
pay Pleau call 30-4 773 5620 or
5end ru ume Ia P O Box 380

FO~~ETT

Mus t lle del al l orle nteo

Th anks to mv many
frtend s tn Gall&amp;a County
wh o remembered me on
my H6th b1nhday What a
wond erful surpri se 10
rccel\ c so manu beautiful

2161

Wantet~ Suc s1•tUtt Hyo•entSI tor
m ou~rnt~y l ea ~~'e Oeet~mDoer 18th
lhrough lht UICO M Wtek of Fe

EOE

Oak Hill Tr ucking Company Is
Sae~ l ng Experienced Semi Trac
tor Traliar Dri vers Excellent Pay
&amp; tn1uran ce Package OYer The
Road &amp; Lo cal Driving Exptrl
e:n eed Drivers On ly Call 740

Card of Thanka

7~

mociehng 304-E74-0126

ONo Un l\ltfllty

Application Rl\llew EOE

o.ana COaiM

Electr.c mam tenance ser vic e
Y\11fl nQ breaker bOkll l1ghl itll
ture heal ng 1y11ems an d At

Fak 740-446-5106

HOl zer Santor Care Center 11 Now
Acctpli n.g Ap plic allont For So
clal Services Department Thi s
PosltlQn Is A Par t Time (32 Hour)
Po1ltlon Available To A Llcenud
Professional (I e LPN } It lnterelil
' 'h ln App lytng Pleau Stop By
380 Colonia! Onve Bldwett Inter
vtewa Will Be Conducted Aller

cal

675 8738

A Glenmark-Genes•• Facility
EOE

HOLZEA MEDICAL CENTER

Chotce ol $2 50 per hour 5ltptnd
k.utJOn Uf'Hii lor your 9'andcht'd
or a Ch ild ol YO\,If c;ho1c;t Pftd
mtlta9e and lree lunch For an
apj) IIC:ahon or mort !r'llormaMn
Of

• Provide A Ll1t Of Three Per-)
10n11 Rf,lcrenc-e1 Who Are NDI
Retatlw.. With Their Complete

800-711-5911

HOLZ~R

gram Flfletn noun pet week

• Mutt 8t Able To Pftl A
\
Otuti&lt;IMft
• Be,Ablt To PrcwiCS. CompJete
Employment Hletorw For fht
P"t 10 Ytltl With Complllt
N1m11 , AddrtJIII 'nd Tilt ·

• Aoooonat0oLQnG H.11&gt;

304 -675- ~73

wa ntitJd· per.ons 55 and. o~t r to
http ttacn reac:ltng ar Pomeroy
El.tmentouy wtlh tl'\.e STAFI S Pro

To Qu4ollly - - l..,t
-ThoF~
• Bo IIY.,. 01 Ago Or Old«
· HavoAC-PollcoAo&lt;onl

......... Opera..,

T•••1wtset

wOtk m our nt• F't Pltn~nt of·
fle e ttttlng appointmtntt GflcJ
()thee attnotphert gnd pay lOng
term employment avJtlit:lle For
•mmedtatt employment caH l04
61S-e539 11 am-5pn
O~er

• ~- HourlyW-

5ool&lt;lng Dfwel For

2 brJttfCPT.,. • doN liD ......

210

lHOTICfl

-

llJ$$fJffff$ffff
TOP! 0CARRIER

&amp;om.on. To l.Jvt: In &amp; TaU Catt
Oi Elcter ly Couple For Room &amp;
Board Pluto Salary 7&lt;10 ~~ 1
74.0-446·3117

310 HOmH for Sale

FltlAfiCIA L

I

Sunday, November 1,1998 ..

2

baths 2

loca1ed In

,,

I,
'
'

r

Call for more

•

I'

wt56-Home In Gallipolis City sch ool district 3 bedrooms,
1 t/2 baths, attached garS'ge Call lor appointment
11515-3 bedrooms 1 bath In city school district located

I:
I

1 acre M or L Call for more Information

-·-

..-

' FOR PROSPECTIVE
RARE OPPORTUNITY
LANDLORD
COUN TRY 1SIDE APARTMENTS
LOCATED NEAR GALLiPOLIS ON ROUTE 588· 1S
FOR SALE
EIGHT RENTAL UNITS, ALL
PRESENTLY OCCUPIED NICE HOUSING ON 6
ACRES BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY SETIING CALL
US FOR MORE DETAILS ANb AN APPOINTMENT
TO VIEW THIS PROPERTY
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOME HAS NICE FORMAL
LIVING ROOM FAMILY ROOM 1 1/2 BATHS,
SEPARATE GARAGE LOCATED ON ROUSH LANE
NEAR CHESHIRE HOMES ARE SCARCE IN THIS
AHt::A. BETIER CALL SOC::&gt;NI

a·

1154-Home In RV school Dtslnct 3 bedrooms 1 ba th

located on 2 5 acres Priced to sell Call Soon

· ~1153·1N GALUPOLIS,3 bedroom 1 bath lull basement,
car port immediate possess1on Call for an appointment

•

to see

1152·3 bedroom t t 12 bath appro&lt; 2000 sq ft hvong
space tam11y room with fireplace wHh wood burner Call

.

to see this one NOW! PRICE REDUCED
1146· Spacious home overlooking beautiful Ohio Rover
situated on approx 54 acres Call about th iS o ne PRICE

REDUCEpt
15008· PRICED REOUCED· greet lnva,tmont
oppol1unlty· 3 one bedroom apts a 2 bedroom mobole
home easy to rent OWNER MAV FINANCE, CALL FOR
TERMS

eo

MSOOB·Commerclal Property-In Town Loc a110 n Comm
Bldg Apt BldQ 2 hou ses Get all four for one pncel Call

1or more Inform ation
12010.70 acres , more or less approx 30 acres wooded
u111 available mineral nghts

not 4· Restdentlal Lot(s)
NEW LISTING: BE THE FIRST TO VIEW THIS 3
BEDROOM RANCH HOME
LOCATED IN A
BEAUTIFUL COUNiRY SETIING ON A 1 41 ACRE
LOT CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT SOON I

'

In

Galllpolos

•2015· Vacant land· 2 75 acres more or less loca ted on

Stale Routa 2 tU
M2016-Vacant land •n Morgan Twp 8 40 ac re s, M o r L
approx 7 4 acres are woodland Call lor mformat1on

''

�•

PageD6·~·..:..~
540 Mlscellaneou•
kc:hlndiM
29PIIOC)IOTo Gee PIICI m Fot

Tho-Or-

""" w•

LOM 1ft The Nftl
300oytAINaniCai TracyA1:74().44119ft2

3 Piece l A Group S.1 Kroet.r
Trad ..,.., C.mo! Cob $500 00
Malct'nng Set M gh Back S•1vt l
Aod.tfl Mauve DotAJie Rtcfi ner
lOVINII Ntarly New Bedroom
Suft SOHd Walnut Tf pit o ' ' " '
Wt1h Mirror 1 P1eu Amt ncan
Standard Totlt t Bone Color
1300 00 Newt' Used Sl'l In Box
74(}.31J7 o()125
Almond
Wl'tl lpoo
Wail'ter
18!1 00 Two GE Was.hert $65 00
£ach Almond May[jg Dryer
$75 00 Two Othef Oryer5 Whlf1.
pool $50 00 Each 740 4411 9066
Alte! 5
Alum num frame 11orm w ndows
ooghl 34•53 .... 34&gt;.37 110 each
740-M 7836
Large Rock ng HOtH Bal)y bed
~h Chi r Sw ng Slloller
Car
Seat 31J.t-675-4.$48

Bean e Bab ies Selling Below
Secondary Ma kel Price 304

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

540 Mltcellanedul
Merc:handiM

---

...,.
.,
Rl 2""- · - I I """'
00.$2110
5altJrOav

ON&lt;"""""

JET
AERATION MOTOOS
&amp;In Stoclt
c~I&lt;!
.. Ron e.ano
,._.537-9526
Jonn DHre oozer 15 wMy blade
new eno•ne $12 500 TraMezt trJ..
u lt haavy equi pment wraUer
dove tall with ra""' S3 500 Kl'tO
Cutter 5 brush hog $250 1972
Mac truck 237 Mac motor
$2 000 7ol().742 2675

r_...,.

Oftico E - OMU Choirs
2
Oinlrov Room T' 6 Chlira 8rtakfllt Tib4t I A
Cha rs 2 Oreuera 1 CN1t Of
Or11wet1 CompiMf Prkt&amp;eor Ami
na Range Wlcro•Jvt Set AI
450 Second Avenue Galltpolll

7---

992 3575

Kurtz We1l keyboard 1000 serlts
168 preprogrammed nltrumentl
ucellenl oond1110n comes wtlh
caM stand l mu11c guide 740

992 3739
Ntw 28 TV surround sound ay

oom $1500 060 304-1174-01911
Prlmettlr $49 Installation $tOO
wonn of free pro~ram l ng free
Hofiday gift"""' !00-263-26ol0

740-992 5742

Church Pews lor sale 12 twel.,.e
loot 4 ten foot S200 each 740..
949 2217
Come Ge1 Vour Cut To Length
Slab FiiiWOOd AI The Sawmill
Jusr Out&amp;JOe Of Patriot On Patriot
Road $15 A Pck Up Load Buy
One Get The Next One Free
Thrv Oct
Electr c Scooters Wheelcha rs
New And Used Sla way Eleva
lors Whet chair And Scoote
Ulls Bowman 1 Homecatt 740

SALE Kitchen Cabinets 6~.QFF
list price f purcnau&lt;l ~ the itnd
ol Oetober Free In Mme ut
matts Trl County Olttr buto •
Inc 1 8()0.352 3147
SATELLIT~

SYSTEMS I 8 RCA

0 sh S19 99 per Montn Ask
About Free Programm ng No
Cred t Check From 8 OOAM
9 OOPM I 801l-325-7S36

Sectional Couch Wllh Outen
Size Bed In h 740..446-4255

A4&amp;7283

EnUre co ect on ol Beaf1 e Ba
b1ea! 24 curran1 19 ret ed 11
May 11 eaua and 15 1997 aM

1998 Teen e Beanies Many hare
to I nds No beart 1500 for a
Oa 1 304 77l-5t55 belween 5 and

9PM

E•tra N ca Used Furn lure Ap
pUances 0 nette 1 Freeztrt
Beds Fletrlgeratora S1oves
Washe e Oryars Elc 740 446

ol039 740 4&lt;16-1004

FIREWOOD
Cut Sp I Delivered! Ja id 740446 6568 Chad 740 446 271
For Sale Fill Dill W

304-675 6734

De lver

Good Used Refrigerator $85 00
Gas Furnace 48 000 BTU High
Etllclency 30 Gallon Gas Wa!er
Heater 1 Year Old S4!5 00 304

Small Store Inventory Mostly AI
New But Some Ueed About
$6 000 00 Worth Se 1 All For
$3 000 00 Or TraCie 740 256
1365

ows Unrels etc Claude Wlntar1
A10 G ande OH Call 740 245

Steel Build ngs New Mull Sel
40x6.0x1A Wu $17 4'30 Now
$10 671
50x120xUI
Was

Cockat~at

428(1

Was $48 630 Now $32 350
t00x 175x20 Wu $98 6~0 Now

560

peworms In Ooi)l &amp; Cats Avail
able 0 T C J 0 NORTH PRO

DUCE 74P 441 lt33 BROWNS
TRUSTWORTHY HOWE /740
448 8828
(www nappyjack

Inc com)

'8 ~upplet Full Blooded Eskimo

HAPPY JACK TRIVERIIICIDE

Sptz•$10000 Each 7 Maltl 1
Female Call 740-992 5465

recognized sate &amp; effective by US

CENTER lor VETERINARY MED
ICINE aga nJt hook round &amp; ta
peworma In dogl &amp; cats Avail
able OTC RIG FEED • SUP
PLY 740 992 2164 (www nappy

A Groom Shqp Pet Gto~mlng

Featur ng. Hydro Bath

Oon
Sl'leet• 373 Georg11 Creek Rd

740-44&amp;-0231

Grubbs P ano tun ng &amp; repal a
Problema? Need Tuned? Call
J~lano D 740.448 4525

$37 oo Per 100 A I Brau Com
pression F n1ng1 In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jadcl&lt;ln Ohio 1 800 537 9528

~-~~~~

~aler

a r pre11 tObacco

·~ipper

30oH!75-3246 / 304-67~

USED

TIIACTOIIS

wan~ to bUy Mason or O.tli.l

Flnancmg At LOw At 8 i% Wrth

area 100 Acre• Mort or l411
Farm wood/land Call (30A)

Jonn Deere Creef 1 Approval On
Used Trac1orJ Carmichae l s
Farm &amp; lawn GalhpoUs Otllo
7&lt;111 ""6-2412 0&lt; I 600-590 II II
AtJo See The 1NW .000 Set'IH

6756363

Uvntock

630

2 Angus He ftrl and 1 Angus
SWar 7AG-388-9701
..

Compact Utility Tractors Several

lnSIOdl

jacl!inc com)

AKC go den retriever pupp u
1 s1 thO II and wormed $200
304 875 1689 d!lyl 304 578
2998 after 7 pm

French City Pet Grooming by Ap
polntment •ultre W11h Bethlng
Sytttm~ 850 Second Ave Ga U

AKC Reg stered Ch nesa Pug,
Pups 2 Malas 3 Females All
Fawn Colored $250 740 446

Reg tiered to good home best

polo 740.. 48-152S
One year old female Pek ngese
otftf 304-675-2215

...., IJI1II"' ... 7-2101
Cullom Slaughter and Proceaa
lng O..r proce11ing •nd summer uutage WV Sausage Co

to741h81-- WV304M231P4

TRAt6PORTATIOJl

'

Real Ellate General

710 AuiOI for Sale

720 Truclll for Sale

720 Truclll for Sale

1187 Fotd Te- 1700 00 304

s-

1171 Dadgo Plclo-Op 8 Cytindor
R..,. Goad Rudy To

78 Ford p~up 1 cyl auto
SW8 runs verr good no fUll

117!&gt;«)311

1N7 VW Go11 5 8jiNd &lt;I ~
Gold Erl n'" Sunroof S2 000
71/J ... 0810-. 8 PM

1eee SOI•~ill LE maroon 4dr
naw Urn &amp; brakes QOod cond

U.200 304.f'IHI82-!5plt
1110 Culllll ();ora 4 ~ E&lt;ctlltnt CondiUon t Owner
12.195: 1 9 M 5 8jiNd
Great Condition $2 195 Cook

Open House

Moloti7~Ul3

1HI Bronco Uct!Jent condftlon
"000 7..,...9-2217
1978 Chevy Nova

.c Door Au

4om AIC Alwaya Beon Garaged
'140 446 9320 Aft8r S;OOPM

Frultl &amp;
Vegetables

~1110

1tto IIONOA CAlli $100

t SIOO Pollet lmp&amp;unds All
.Makes Available CaN 1-t00-!522
e730EXL ..20

1993 Gfllld W. GT • Ooor IIOd
SV 000 Mllol $5 000 740 3e70219

-

11197 Clrovy LLmlnl IU.IIFM AIC
Cturoo ContrOl E...,,.., Cc&gt;ftcU.

""" -

1997Do&lt;lgt Noon 11000 m11o1
aUiomallc Good Con

3~0

sa !OOOO 740-o44Hl337

19S2 Curtail Supr- 2 D 260
Goo a Condllion f 1 500 00 1907 Oodae Stratu1 " Doon
,trm 7-40-t92~568
PW Automatic AJC 27 000
Milos $9 300 OBO 740 379

r.m-742 241s

160 A Barko Loader/CT~ Saw
buck Excellent Cond1llon 740
682 7318
Wanted To Buy

7-

~~

610 Farm Equipment

g10e 740 448-10.52

s.a. $11,500

4 cylindet'

dlllonl

.1984 Old1 Aeoeney as Lealhtr
~.nterior Rear Oetrost. New Tlrts
'9rakes &amp; Ao1or1 Power Every
)hlng Air Conditioner $1 100

Chevy En

Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Re&amp; dental And Commerc a
Lawn Eqv pment Compact Uti I ty
Tractou From 20 To 39 HP All
S zes 01 4 WO And 2 WO Farm
Tractora Hay Equipment John
Deere Skid Steer Loaders Check
With Us About Finane ng On
Lawn Tractors And Low Rate Fl
nanclng On New And Used
Equipment CarmleMel s Farm &amp;
Lawn Galllpol s OH 740 446

I

•

o. 30oH!75-1860

' ' 817 CJ IS Jeep tor eale eall
1304l-f7~1137

Saturday, November 7u., 10-1 PM
at the Beautlfu,l New Home of Dave &amp; Sue Rauber
10104 US JS•Jackson, Oh10

740-247-.4292

(Old US 35 ActOS! from lhc State H1ghway Palrol Post)

lees

,.,th

Ptofesslonally

2412 I SOil-594 1111

1998 Ca11aiNtr Z 24 Black Only
780 M11H PW Pl Rear Defrost
Cruloo nM A/C Koy1no Enlty 5
Speed Must &amp;eel Priced Below
N ADA llooll 7oi().256-IOII

1&lt;11144&amp;-~7

f, •·

Elhuut Must SetH S3 500 080
740 441 3510 Leave Mnsaoe

~

SoboUIO

1985 Ford 4, 0 • SpNd V a
Pnco $3 000 740 387-ll21t

11193 Cho¥y 2500 4 WD SSDOO
7ol().371&gt;245t
1883 ChiYY •X4 l71 Loaded

7¥Jo'JifT 7272
1987 F 250 &amp;'*' Duly XLT Lar
Itt Ol..el h ' StO ooo "0

350 !5 Spttd Matty Extras!

su

Booke
ooo S11 ooo 14 0
245-Gi
1995 Chev Tanoe LT red with
bliCk trim OaR. red leather lnteli_.
or fapt and cj:i player 1!5 000
mil.. f•ctory' piBIIIC COVtrl
carpel """' $211 000 coli

1989 Jeep Chel'okee Umlltd A o
L power everystmg M:. 4 wheel
driVe. CD player l4200 OBO
T40-7C2 2311

1988 5-10 Plclo Up 4x4 5 Spood
/t.ll Po•er Stterln!J Elltended
Cab v.e 28 Eller Nico 13 500

199S Cho¥y 5-10 Vorl8c V S ~

Spelld

30 000 mites AJC AM

FM C111111o U eoo 7&lt;111

7.4().37V-25e8

24~

1993 Chevy c 20 Snort Wheel
Bait Conversion \tan Exce
Condlllon New Wheels And
Tlrts Maintenance Up To Oate
S6 000 oo 740-&lt;W110t3

!5180 or 7-40-245-1504

1997 Pettrbllt 379 Extended
hood Unlbllt Ultrac.ab 475 Cat
10 Spttd Stand up Sleeper

205 North Second Ave.
M
OH

5433

~~AM~~

~;~~~~r~:;:.; ~u~
00
cc
3 bedroom
home
living room kl1chen balh
Newer
roof
Quick
poesesalonl
Walk&gt;ng
dlatance to elora&amp; school
Church elc 11060

1

~e~~;~~~~h!~r.~

TARA ESTATES This one s for the EXECUTIVE Perfection all the
way through from the CURB APPEAL of Cultivated Flower Beds
Shrubs and Trees to the new y T IQd front Porch all the way
throughout Thla home has everyth nQ you cou ld poss bly want
home and more
Custom Drapes ca pet Tiled Floors
windows Doors Oak Trim and closet space ga ore All
Bedrooms have walk ln closets and chest drawers bu It n
Baths Beautlfu ly decorated Skyl ghts
Wl1lrl&lt;iOOII
Tub Formal Uv ng ~oom w/Bay Wmdow
com plete K tchen and B eakfast Room A Huge
w/Cathed al Ce ling Enterta nment Center Wet Bar A~::~~=~:
L ghllng Patio doors to lots of Decking One 8 de is a
f nlshed d9Ck A full basement Exerc1se Room
System An His &amp; He Ga ages Yes two com plete
garages Both F n shed w th lots of cab net and storage
has 112 bath
Amenities too numerous to ment on

mobile home slUing on a little over an acre 2 bedroomS/2

baths A nice yard &amp; a shed with 4 storage bays You !I love
this one NOW $32,000
MCNICKLE&amp; ROAD· Just off 338 A 1996 Skyl!na
Doublewlde with 3 bedrooms 2 baths and approx 31 8
acres perfect for hunting Home has many extras Including
ceramic tile counlertops oak cabinets garden tub bull! In
bookshelves and hutch Call for your appointment $78,000
LOT FOR SALE IN POMEROY Older building on property
Possible land contract In need ol repa rs $4 500

CHESTER Approx 16 5 acres with a unique 2 story brick
and alum num sld ng home that has 3 bedrooms 2 baths
family room w th lots ot windows dining 1oom enclosed
breezeway Also an older bank barn with attached 4 car
garage $100,000

Lvlng
Room wa
Woodburnlng Fl eplace and seve al Book Shelves
I would be a
great way 10 spend the w n1er all cozy next to the flrep a'e reading a
~ove A Fo ma L v.ng &amp; Dln ng Room Modern T1 ea K tchen w/a
pantry 3 Bedrooms and Two Baths Two Car Garage Beck Patio
Has a Heated Driveway

J .~O•IE!IO'f: A one story home that has 2 bedrooms and
has had a lot of remodeling done Has newer carpel
windows Could have more room$ in the basement or

135000

NEW
ARE
HEREI Thla owner SAYS
sail! Eye catching 3 bedroom
remodeled home within just a
few short minutes of town
Large living room formal
dining oat In kitchen large
detached garage with
possibilities of garage
apartment or Ideal hobby
area

Nice v1ew of River

11007
THE PRICE WONT STOP
YOU ON THIS LOT &amp;
MOilLE HOME $21 1100 Is
the asking price on this
14 x70 Schult mobile home
with 3 bedrooms bath &amp;
more All set up on lot
Storage building Immediate
possess on! 11053
50
NEIGHBORHOOD
ROAD YES $191100 00 Is
the aeklng price lor this
affordable home VInyl sided
2 bedroom home
Liv ing
room

kitchen

front porch

Call to see th is one Would
make a great rente! 11038
DROPPED
PRICE
$28 SOD 00 Is the new price
of this 25 acre approx tract of
land and old~r remodeled 1
112 story home Barn &amp; mise
bultdlngs
Immediate
but still needs some TLC
11008

6 75 Acree w th a ranch

NEW USTINGI MOVE INTO
CONDITION I
REASONABLY PRICED AT
$53 500 00 Large L shaped
living room w th d mng area

NEW LISTING-SYRACUSE-One Floor Plan
o der home Silting on a 50 x100 lot Has 2

loye

&amp; Euro lighting L brary/par or
Fo mat OR
w/oak floors bedroom suite shows a recessed octagona ce ling
w/tan French doors lead ng to pnvate deck Pr vate h ad rna n bath
Walk In closet FA has French doors to !he back pa o WI ots of
windows Mode n Euro KIT W/ sland connect ng !he BlasiA to K T 2
sky! ghts Oak s a rway to uppe evel 3 large 6A w wa k n closets
ned BA w/skyl ghts &amp; e)lerclsR Basement w/ga age &amp; FP 2 ca
garage att rna n eve 2 gas lurnaces 2 heat pumps Secu ty
system A iler Cleek along the r ve Beaut lui shaded I ont lawn
w/lols of plants shade trees &amp; p nes Lets se I this home AU offers
will be cons1de ed

LAND LOTS &amp; ACREAGES
PLEASANT HILL ROAD Land I sale one ac e up to 5 ac es
GeenTwp Canbesp I n25a, us or ess

FOUR CITY LOTS Bu d a new home o dup a~o:es
nvestment p openy

Gooct

FAIRVIEW ROAD Sprngletd Twp 2 714 a"es more o less
Beaut fulllat homes te C ose to new ndust a Pa ks le AEDUCED
ONLYS18 000 00

•

••.n;ur...,,
.......,
t l ectrac jan Rldertout

Re~ Of ~Qaj
,... Mf"i''l::8 Of

A.pcM ~ Parts 4nd Servsc1 AI
Name Brandt Over 25 Years e.
ptnenc• All Wor k Guarantttd
French C tr Martag 740 446

ctnleG
ES.CVJCJJ WY000306 30A 17S
171MI

7795

Real Elfale General

760

Auto Parle &amp;
ACC81eorlel

Budget Priced Tranlmi~tionf
and Eng1011 AU Typtl ACCtlf
To Over 10 000 Tranfml lllons
7.-o-245-5677

12881 .\ TERRIFIC
vahJe for some
p[enly of opace 4
balhs LR DR kil

~

NEW UBnNGI FRESH ON
THE MARKETI Anraellve
landscapmg enhances the
lawn that this 3 bedroom 2

Cute bedroom
ranch home with living room
eat 1n kllchen small TV/play
room that has sliding doors
that leads to rear deck to

fenced In back lawn 1 car
garage 1811

... ~ ..

this roomy ranch home that
has 4 bedrooma 3 baths
family room kitchen dining
room living room &amp; more
Very well kept Land well
malnlalned City schools
11047

..

&gt;

,.-.,t...

.

over 1 6 acre lot approx

Thlo Is one you muot see 10
appreclale 11011

,,

,;;

···~'

~"''

..,,., ; ,;.

IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONI
1127,too 001 Lola of house
here for the money Try this
cedar ranch on for size
Large kitchen with formal
dining area custom made

cabinets fully equipped
okyllghls French doors that
lead to deck lly!no room
den fam1ly room 4 bath&amp;
finished basement Includes
2nd kitchen rec room and

Attention All Hobbymtnl we

can you

believe $38 900 001 Ranch
style home with attached
garage lamlly room large
kitchen and liv ing room
basement
Excellent
location next to town Let us

show It to you 11037
LOADS OF POTENTIAlOver 16 acres that has lois
of road fron tage

Two large

bulld&gt;ngs (t )· 44xt95 metal
building wllh loading dock
which s curren11y used as a
veal calf opera tion (2)
50x180 metal pole building
st orage

for

machinery eiC Plus 1 1/2
story dwell ing. equ pped
k tchen balh LA 11029

have
you hLocated
n the the
R oproperty
G ando lor
area
s home
oilers a tot lor the money Nice
open LRIDR and kitchen a ea 2 3
bed oom.s 2 baths plus two bonus
rooms to f yoljr lam y s needs 24
x 20 garage ~ u s a 20 x 30
bu d ng located on approx 46
acre Th s s a g eat va ue at
$46 500 Callloday 1823

I:~~:.~:::~~~~~~)~m~

18 x 38 ar]d
w~h
f replace
bed oom suite of equal
w I p ease those tooklnQ for
elbow room 6 bedrooms In all 3
lui and 2 hall baths 2 car garaga
ng ound pool w th prlva'y fence
Best of all conveniently located n
town Now $t95 00011 f201

WISEMAN nEAL ESTATE, INC.
(740) 446-3644
E Ma11 Address w1seman@zoomnet net

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555

G een Twp

Gurn.s H6 2707

Wusch 441·1007

•

handcraHed kitchen cab1nets
&amp; oak trim
Too many
amenities to ment1on Must
call tor your own private

NEW NEW NEWill No one
your lam ly be lhe I rst

G)

·--·

fullest extent Fu ll lln&gt;shed
bsmt w th kit lovely stone
fireplace
Informal
LA

malnta n lawn living room
k tchen 2 bedrooms lots of
closet space 1n th1s home! &amp;
more 11002
has ! ved n th s nome

OPPOATUN T'l'

featu re Is th e v ew of the
Oh a Rver
Owner has
ut11ized this vtew to the

Alum s dbd ranch w th
paved drive level easy to

DOTTIE TURNER Broker ...........................992·5692
JERRY SPRADLING
949-2131
CHARMELE SPRADLING
949-2131
BETTY JO COLLINS
949-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS
992 1444
OFFICE
992 2886

Let

3

bedrooms 2 baths
v ng
rnnm
k rht::on
In!"
nf
storage space n alt c ear
and front porches
Keep
cool with the central a r
durir1g these hot summer

daysl

Yes

$54 900 00

Walnut Township

Water &amp;

electric c lose by
Deer
luckey &amp; wildlife plentiful II

lnlerested call nowl 11055

Racine Aru

Lovely ranch

home with three bedrooms

YOUR
OFFER
MIGHT
JUST BUY THIS ONEI All
Amer can Homo situated on
approx 2 acres
Lots of
living space tor your lomlly
3 4
bedrooms
area/1am ly

combination

din ng
room

equipped

kitchen
must
see
appreciate
You w1l

to
be

$45 000 00-Broadway
Str~tl'lt :&gt; t:. nrv hnmA w lk

lot You II want to v ew thts
home It s ready to move

lots of character
Dedrooms 2 baths

4
v nyl

siding electric heal pumps
&gt;nto Call now so your lamlly Central air nice level lots
can spend lhe Hohdays In
thts lovely home

$69 900 00 11081

sells for

YOU MIGHT BE
OVERLOOKING THE BEST! All

th e Wayne Nat1onal Forest

CHESTER
VILLAGE
Large well kepi 2 story
3 or 4

huge LA w/ceth edra
nice carpet new floor
rool &amp; down spoul s
etc Plus 4 1/2 Ac In Green
Priced to, aell VLS 446
M2885

20 acres m/1 situa ted at
Mc Combs &amp; Allison Ad

soldl H40

BR s bsmt and nice sized

baths
11

HUNTERS! WE HAVE lTI
Do you want to own a
pa ra dise ol your own?
W thin a lew hundred feel of

v ewlr~ 1887

"""'a "' ,., 1 5 baths

1

LIVE ON A HILL AND
LET THE WORLO GO BVI Juol
newly remodeled 3 beCirm 3

Oh io River
Nice level
60 x150 approx lot which
has cha in link fencing
Situated
al Addison
Immediate possession
$20 swill buy me 11012

fam ily room full basement
slluated on approx 39
acres Homo Is heated with
a heat pump &amp; has a nice
sheller house
Sells lor
$55 000 00 11050

RIVERVIEW
ORIVE
POMEROY This home has
Ia alii But the most excn ng

522 MULBERRY HEIGHTS!

ll i fl f'! /1/11

2 story home with view of
Asking price Is

11005

home It
leve 2
kll FA
attached garage &amp; rm aocivo.o.
fenced area &amp; bam stocked
5 Ac flll1 2 m lea f om lreewa.y
SA 325 N VLS

Ht_.. -~

AFFORDABLE MEl Older

tor a cQmmerclal corner or

just enjoy the lewn wllh a
nice pole garage/shop
Asking $55 000 00 Make
your appo&gt;nlment 11048

12817 DREAM A LITTLE
DREAM

already In tact 11004

as

3

NTIEB
INCLUDED on all most
everylhlng with this newer
home L shaped ranch with
3 bedrooms 2 bathe living
room nice kitchen w/oak
cabinets attached garage

morel Call to view this one!
RUSTI!; STYLE PRIVATE
11022
SETTING $28,800 00 Is lhe
asking price lor this 3
bedroom mobile home and 14 PLUS ACRES that would
lot Complete with delached make a 1reat weekend
garages extra storage retreat for camp ing or nice
build ing Lots of nice shede place to build a new home or
1rees set on your fronl porch place a mobile home
and
the I
11048 County water and electric

used

HOME

, etr-

Bailey Run Road and Sta)e
Roule 124 Lots ol potential

Welcome The Wh ole Ftml y 1
laws and a t And nobody w 1 be
bump ng Into each other n tl)!s
wei cared tor turn of the ceniUiy
home w th 3 stores of 1illng spaee
and then some Charac ter
abounds n lhe main pan ol t~e
that
living rooQ'l
k tchen
I
fireplaces

STORY BRICK

bedrooms 2 1/2 baths lg llv ng
m forma l entry and dmlng rm
w/crysta I ght ng Sunken tam ly
rm wtwoodburner new carpet
new k tchen w/eat m area 2 car
attached garage Only the beat It
oflerecl n th 1 atlract ve home
THe many extras w II at II the
Th s 1 your chance to own
1 mmaeulale home

bath home rests on Famrly
kitchen 3 bedrooms 2
baths newer carpetmg &amp; room k~chen dining area 2
freshly parnted
Lola of Car garage attached by
closet space
30 x40 breezeway Lat s go look!
detached
garage
110!18
lmmadlale posaessfonl

742-3171

well mamtalned Th1s land
Is located on the corner of

\

&amp;038

Refrigeration

~...

Cheryl Lemley

home lhat has been very

NEW LISTING-Bu td ng 101 Jackton P ke A ea
Natu algas s a11allable $14 500 oo

Hydraulic JICk TJpe PJayer
Good Ct&gt;ndi1lon s:lsoo 740-256-

E~land

QOOdpon&lt;oonboal

MEIGS COUNTY

WE

WatM Heattf 510'14 A

840

'

TRY THIS ONE ONE FOR
SIZE Nice private aeHing
close lo Bob Evans Farm

possession! Lots of updating

I

(7ol0)
Rag

...
-"..,- ---

over 41 acres com&amp;:J- with

WOLF PEN RD POMEROY· A little bit of country A 1987

I

car garage ASKING $15 000
wrtn workshop pool w lh deck ng H p /C A
Lots of park ng on one acre of n1ce lay ng POMEROY-GARAGE-Approx mately 3/4
ground Othe1 leatures ASKING $78 000
acre w th block garage Could have several
uses Electnc heat Water and sewer depo1•lt
RACINE-1 0 Parcels of var ous s ze acreage needs paid $500 You could be In ou!irr
l '""'"or 1
n the Tackerv lie Greenwood Cemetery Oak $18500
Grove area Some restncted for s1ng e w des
and some not Call for deta Is
POMEROY-stately two story Naw England
co onlal Th s home has many updates and
Corner of Roy Jones Road and Bridgeman conta ns 10 rooms 4 or 5 bedrooms 1 1/2 batha
StrHt- Approx mately 888 Acre of va cant 2 900 SQ It n alt plus a1t c basemenr and
Gas sewer water electr c a 1 ga age Hardwood lloors lots of space fam ly
ground
ava1lab e
Perfect home s te N ce Area
roo m rec room too many features to hst Call
ASKING $14 900
for your sh ow ng All on one acre In town with
poss ble A ver V ew ASKING $8~ 000

1975

m./1 36 acres m {l $1 :MJ 500
388

Lots more a

must su 11088

MICJDL.EPORIT:. A 2 story home with 3 bedrooms and 1 3/4
Has a living room with beautiful fireplace a dining
and a klfchen with newer cabinets Comas with stained
glass wrndows enclosed rear por,r;h and slls on a smalllol
!lOW $25000

your perroona shciwln,g.

TH~E~~~~~=

c.u 24 ...
«1.1)870 I 8D0-2S7~7S
... w...,,.ooll1g

-

77~

Full baiement

for hvntlng

POMEROY Union Avonuo 'Has had Iota ol uJ)Qates Here a
a 3 bedroom home with newer roo( and vinyl siding Would
make a great rental or starter home $12 500

IN

WATEJIPIIOOfiNO
Unc.onGdlol'llt lrfetimt gUManlN
~al retereneu turn1shed Et

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

21271

3 4 bedrOOIJlS 2 baths a ge

"'"* - '

"'""
........,.
stoneallAl10
1oom addJlJOna 91
rtgel 11C FrM es~~m~te• 30c4-

IASEIIIEHT

c.,..,.,

19S5 Coodvnan Sliclo In
An FuJnact Hold ng Tank Re
tripera~Df

SumiNirt not over• Kawasaki
STS Jet siU atiU under "Warfanly
thrtt ltller 83 houepower
bought new July or
lhfll
tnald'III'IQ kawas.aki tki vtsll Mid
trailer all go wilh • Price&lt;! ro ~
$4200 7&lt;10-949 2203 or 7.40 949
2045 wl/1 con11cttr lrade for a

Proreu10nat 20rots e•per-.nce

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

l

bedrooms I v ng room 1/2 bath Wood floors
heat s prov ded w th gas wall heatElrS
may sell on Land Contract Terms Negotiable

Gas Tankf AJC A 1 Condrllon
7ol().387 7093or 740-'JifT 7070

WtHl

e-mail us for Information on our lllllnge •
blgbend@eurekanet com

your pockelbook a1 $64 900 f295

LENDER

... SeH Conla108d Getter.a tor 2

Home

Real Eltal• General

porch 32x60 metal bam with
uveral horae stalls fencing
approx 50 acres ot woodland
&amp; paSiure combines Ideal
for a lew horses &amp; great land

Here a a nice little 3 bldraom
ranch on a 1 43 ac e wooded ~o1
lhate bound to pleaae F\.111
basement allows for extra living
space 3 bedrooms 2 baths vlng
room faml y room eat In kitchen
2 car garage. deck Pr ced to fit

Kathleen M Cleland 992-611111

&amp;

1983 Mo1of Homo Chevy Chat

20 Ft 19t5 Playboy /Chi.llenger
Pontoon SO HP Honda Ga1 Mo
lor low Moura Eacellent Condl
!ton U 500 V1ckie 740 245

Home
Improvement~

MotorH-

Gtr'll'rJ I

~·~ Pa nbft9 11 nrt W•ng

""_,.
doors
- ..., ,.,.
- Fot
lftObr't ""'"'
,..,..
, .. ~ ot• Chtl 740-W2
8323

SER•IICES

810

C&amp;.C

~~-7..,.~~~~~--_2~==~~~~~--~~--------

room kitchen covered front

Sherrl L Hart ,~ ....... 742·2357

750 Boa11 &amp; Molorl
for Sale

Camper~

790

On

e1

2S6-1578

:JCM.II7~3753

master

2259

G:t
,.. _

1114 Chevy KS Bluer Camper
Speic.J1 414 N:; AT ,_.. Tues I

walk·ln closet 2 baths living

Henry E Cleland Jr 992-

-o..l1iul
Condolon
r... 11.500 7ol().371&gt;~

·~-= x390 1

r.....,...

7ol().367.0125

ue; eeu

Dnibllt"Rulldl!r

opplop\: 'I"" ""

Ripi&lt;'~IW

"'=-

.." : . .

micll Rood
tH1 S 10 2wd New Thtt
Brakes ShoCkS Ban ClutCh u
Jolntl 4 3 ~ Air T11t Crut..
Sunroof Extras $.1 ( 00 Firm!

cno.y C..

-wette Whetlt All For S300 00

1$9&lt;t YZ15 Racin.g Ot1tb1ke Ex

Gtneso~tor Likt' NP

\niiOe' M.COO 71/J

4 AmUong T•• LT 2&amp;5

75 A-IS

1980 1990Tf'l.ICN$100 $500

WHI 3110 Of Mile Pif1 !~&lt;Cor

-on

UI(IU S t ll Co nto~~ tN-0 MO!Ot

Home

flfeplacet cenlfal JJr

1 DOD MoM&gt;on lilt;,
.J•okllon 1 Dhlo
t74C) IIBB-12101 1

hup:/l~app!o~o~m

POI\01614

1HO llO&lt;Igt O.OIIDia Wrll1 T 4 WO Can Be S..n On At 581

a

lmpiO\-m.

446-4618

1-800-458-9990

Attractive Br~ck 3 BR s
living room w/f~repiace DR
1clclse•ls. full basement $92 ooo
Call 740-446-251 o

Set

VI

&amp; body pons 0&amp;
R Auto A pley WV 30.4 372
31133 Q' 1-273-9329

•
MotorH_.

Judy OeWnt• .. ........................... 441.1J262
J Mernll Cartel
379 2184
Tamm1e OeWm
245 0022

pa&amp;d 10 &lt;Oior car.alog "''h i19"•
plani fot rMr 60 rnod&lt;l homtl

·IHenk:le Ave

95 Fotd Aero star XLT
~goo 7ol().742 1243

730 Veni64-WDI

tJ3 Mercury Topaz .c eyl 5 tp
exeellenl condition S1 600 740
742 2357

Callforourfrttb10Churco•I04

il ~.,.ij

-goo-

Horne

810

Campe~•

RUSSELL 0 WOOD BROKER

Now acceptmg
Applications
for the elderly, drsabled
One bedroom, all
electrrc1 rent subsrdrzed
apartments
740-992-3055
~ TOO 1-800-750-0750 g

die family and r,et
away rq ,..., vory
"""log al-1n Or
lrw rna lurury los
home y&lt;ar round

1W3 G«i T~ .CM PS P8 5
SpteCI All AUIFM cuuS. Sotl
Top$4,ll00 7-~7

no

Anna 'a or Jackson

Cross Pointe

[.ta,. 1ht work •«k
behind )'IU Pule up

-

7&lt;W-ttl2

21M2.

4 transmltllon needs pa nt jOb

Real Estate General

The Moment

:JCM.II75-&amp;140

to RanQtf neentnl cond1tion
PllfM, 112.100 740- 4402

1885 Chevy pick up 314 lon

..... "'"'*'e-

Real Eltate Genaral

bmdacaped by

-.g SI.SOO

- . $450 740-379-2853

1800 "' 060 '104-578 2596

Subaru Ju1ty $8!10 N•u
:1890 Geo Metro S1 650 OBO

Su for yourself how Umbill s SlAte of the 1rt miiiWfacturlng prQ&lt;Cd and D.l W's hnpec
cable111ent1on to dcta1l combined to pro-.de the Rauber s
a btaltlrul new home

2726

Trani Am Fully
j 817 Dodge Ar e6 4 ~yllndar t898 Pontla'
V 8 Will Take Pay Off
,Auto Air 113 000 M les 1700 "Loaded
Or Take Over Payments 740
.ceo 7ol().256-1233
446-4546 It No Answer Laavt
, . . _ Or 7ol().448-7764
] 988 Chevy Btrttll GT V e
iuto sfe ps pb llerto high 77 Cobra Mustang 2 389 new C..
1111it1 tooktfrun good $1575

730 V8ne &amp; 4-WDI

710 Aulol for Sale

u

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US Center For Vttermnary Med1

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after 5pm 740-643-5175

Tobacco

IN

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Sunday, November 1, 1998

620 Wankld to Buy

2378

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Coke Pepsi etc Inc udlng olt:t tin
8 gn8 74\)-992 5053
3/4 200 PSI

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$7S 650 I 100-406-5126

Pet1 for Sale

7ol0 992 3664

610 Fann Equlpmem

Turmp1 &amp; salad lomatoea u-can
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old registered $50 080 7AO
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P1ano Ktmbalf IWh11ney Good
Condllion Wllh Bench $ 1 000
7~1 1416

304-&lt;!75-2063

sa oo

Fotd 2000 3 cy1 1
eowtred ulilrty uaJJer 5x8 S150
pole barn 231:50 no ttus4!1
Sl50 4 sect10 n 12 a1&amp; metal
P•P• Mouber~ 12 gauge full
choke plus deer barrtl S25-0

&lt;11175

K1mba 1 Contolt P ano Wltn
Bondi Ui« -1 $1 000 00 7&lt;11144&amp;-9627

BloCk' bricil 1ewer plpea wmd

Uted Pal o Covers And Alum
num W Mow Awning• Of \lar ous
S zes 740-A46-2642

Waterline Spec a

570

2413 Jacksan Ave Pont Pleas

Uetd computers $100 $400 a
system baud on your nl8d&amp;
P ua used parte call 740 992
61'00 !lave mesuge If not home

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It 6 F11h Tank &amp; Pet &amp;hap

Two Matching Tapellry Arm
Chair• In Fall Colore Never
Used Very Elegant 740 448
33n More lnlormallon

675-2681

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ani

610 Farm Equipment

Stud ltrvlct AKC champion
MinO !kMauzor (Sa P!
ouarantt:e cau 7.CO 992 &amp;700

AKC adorable COcker Spaniel
740-912-&amp;112
Beaultful AKC Regislefld Mal

Building
Suppll..

Pwll for Sale

AKC
reo ttered
Miniature
Ouhound pt.lpiMI 1 r.c:t male 2
black/tan females • will old
S200 S50 depollt will hol d 1111
ntady to go 7~ 3215~

7ol().256-6733

4 Pek ngete AKC ttg11te ed 2 f

Book case headboa d lull bed
d esaer m rro chesl arge me1a

560

AXC RogifiOfl&lt;! Y - Lab Pupt
... Slloll 'Wormed $250 Eacll

Wa buy ant1quaa and pall 11 or
COfi1&gt;IN ....... baby Wid
Old FltlliWIIt Jean 1 FurnHu,.
&amp; AntiQues Tues(Uy througn Friday ttam Apm us Nottt Sec
and MiddlopM

550

Petl fOI' Sale

AKC
Reg itrtrec:t
German
Shepherd Male and Femate
Available BlacklS •~ver Blad/
Tan Bread lor good Tempera
men1 (304) tl75 -4412 Days
~304) 195-3322..,. &amp;Wwlwaidt

UNdF..-M.n:

Kenmore ga1 dry!' $50 740

S75-3090

&lt;101~

560

Sunday,November1,1998

l

vlng rm
16x16 dining m I 1/2 baths 3
bedrms fut basement 1 car Qa
attached New carpel lg closets
ran~e ref shower In bsmt Front
&amp; back po ches Gas FA
~;;:f;,;, Good ott the st eel
3 Iota Great Reduced
VLS 446 6806

&gt;&gt;''·"""'

b lck anch 3/4 bedrms 2 112
baths forma LR &amp; DR lam rm
w/lg w nCIOw9 loads of cab nets &amp;
stolaQe fu d vlded baaemenl 2
woodbu n nQ rep aces anced
yard gar &amp; ca pan attic sto age
t ac m/11 ont ng on the beaut~ut
Oh o River City schools &amp; very
ctose to town VLS 446 6808

�•

I

Monday

SUnday, November 1, 1998

Page D8 • ........-.... "-•I

Coffee rises sharply on forecast for next year's harvests
By CUFF EDWARDS
.
AP Bu•lnes• Writer
Coffee fulureuoo.e •harply Fnd.ay .
on rhc Board of Trade of the Ciry of
'l:e.,. Yorl&lt; amid fem producuon ,.ill
I all ' ha!Jll} nc&lt;r } e-M for fanner• in
Br;utl. rhe "orld\ l;uge" producer.
and Cemral Amenca.
On &lt;lthcr markeb, "heat, ..oybean
JnQ copper furore' advanced.
·Coffee furore' r&lt;h&lt;! on a repon
lrom the Brazi lian Agri culrural

-

Rc&lt;earch Corp., which prediCicd 11w
country'• ''fOIJ ...,., year will fall
dwply fwnuhis year's 33.9 million
ba( fis_ure.·
t ht gJ'Oiljl ""'" IIW rargt cropyean_typocally are followed by. poor
!lfll"'lngyear&lt;,allhoughanaly&gt;tuard
n was far too early 10 accuraaely predtCII_hat would be rhe.ca.&lt;e nexr year.
Br.atl '"the world's largesr grower.
lb,. ye-.u- prodqcing iu largtsr crop in
II years.

Coffee aloo

Wall

supporto&gt;i by

coruinlled ~ns in Honduras, which
were ~rng coffee regions and
threalenrng.IO slwply ....we., export.&lt;
of rhe ar.rbica beam used in gourmet
blend!;.

Arabica coffee for December
delivery rose 2.6 cents 10 SI.IO a
pound.
Wheal and soybean furores ro&lt;e
•ifongly on the Chicago Board of
Tr.rile amid txpcctalionslhe C'linron

admini&lt;lntion wa(byi away (rom
announcing details of a Ruuian foodaid plan.

While martd panicipants this
w«k have been leery of pushing
price&lt; higher unlit they've heatd
euctdetaiboflhcgovernmenl'•plan
lo donale grain~ and meal 10 lhe
beleaguered Russian people, a repon
from the Rlllsian news agency lnrerfax that the plan would be worth Sl
biliion in goods helped buoy lhe mar-

ket.

eri~ a1

eight-year lows as SIOtage
remains a1 eighr-year highs.
Soybeans also were boosled afrer
the Nalional Oilseed Processors
Associalion reporled lbai 33:024 million bushel• of beans were crushed

Tomorrow: Rain
High: 50; Low:40

~..~.: nl

~

.

to a level nor seen in
twu months. lhe Dow Jones industrial a' cragc "'·" ' 97.1)7 10 1!.592. 10,
«lending a ' 123-point gain from
R~ rum i ng

Thur~ay.

~

The Dow has now bounced more
than 1.100 poinrs. or about 15 per- .
cent from rhe bouom of a steep selloff thai climaxed on Oct. 8. when the
hlue"Chtp barome,.,. wa.' sliding b34'k
roward i" summer low of 7.400.
The advance gave the Dow a gain
of 139.81 poinrs for lhe week anq
7N 3H fer October, a happier conclu, ion to a month best known for the
da,he- nf 1929 arid 1987, as well as
a 554-poinl plunge ,la.'l Oct. 27. The
nne · nl onth 'gain of 9.6 percent W(JS
the l&gt; iggesr since the Dow rose I:1.8
fJC r&lt; enl in January 1987. The monlhly poinl gain wa.' the biggesr ever.

Broader stock indicators also

e~rended Thunday's rally amid signs

of rC11ilience in lhe domesric economy and progress10ward dealing wirh
financial inslabiliry overseas.
Before the open. rhe govemmenl
reponed that the U.S. ecllnomy grew
a surprising 3.3 percent annual
io rhe rhird quaner as conrinuing
.rrenglh in coll.'lumer.pending helped
offoeideclininge~port.s ro weak marketsabroad.
~
Later in rhe morning. !be Grpup or'
Seven majorindusrrial narions issued
a statement endorsing l'rel;ident Clin!on's prof'O"al 10 allow rhe lnremarional Monetary Fund to speed emergency loans 10 counlrieo facing lhe
·lhrear of invesror panic. The loan
mechanism is likely 10 be employed
almosl immediarely as pan of an
expected $30 billion rescue p-Jckage
for Brazil.
·
Also helping lifl !he market was
la.&lt;t-minure posirioning· by rmHual
funds, mosl or which closed OUIIheir
fiscal years on Friday. Fund managers

ar

r•re

were said lo be "ocking up on popular naoneo for !heir annual reports to
shareholders.
leading the Dow advance were
"merican E~press. up 2 13132 10 88
3/32; AlliedSignal. up . 2 3/8 10 38
15116; rnremational Paper. up 2 1/8
to ll6 7/16; and 3M, up 210 79 5/8.
The Standard &amp; Poor's 500 rose
12.74 lo 1.098.67, and the rechnology-heavy Nasdaq comf'O"ik! inde~
rose 14.20 lo 1,771.39.
~dvancing issues ournumbered
dechners by a 5-to-2 margrn on the
New York SIOck E~change, where·
comJ'O"ile volume ·rotated 95656
million shares, up from 841.63 million on Thursday. ,
The NYSE comf'O"ile inde~ rose
7.04 10 543.35. and the American

Farmers to get
$2.8 billion in .aid
By JANELLE CARTER
AP Farm Writer
WASHINGTON - Beginning
rhis week. $2.8 billion in emergency
""lsrance will go ou11o millions of
farmm In help offserthe agricultural Cl'onorny's worst downlum in a
decade.
The money is just a ponion of
whar was. included in a big , relief
package pa..sed by Congress.
The paymenrs. aimed 10 compensare for low grain prices, will be
i" ued sraning Tuesday 10 nearly 2
m1llion. farms eligible for "market
lransition .. payments from the govcrnmenl each year under 1996 fann
legislalion.

The $2.8 billion means aboul a 50
percent increase in the annual puymt.:nl., farmers would have received.
department officials said. Before rhe
addil iunal money. annual paymenls
were cupped a1 $40,000.
Farmers wi ll nor ha ve lo fill oul an
aprlicatinn. The lo" assislance payments will Ot! senl automatica lly to
th o~t.:

cligihle.

'

"This adminisrcation fought for
and won a final pad&lt;age thai will gel ·
I lUI sornc rcul help 10 farmers whose
·livelihoods are, on the line," said
Agricu lture Sccrelary Dan Glick·
mun.

a1
•

READ

" Eve n with th~ s c payments and other a~' i ' l.~m ~: t: wt: urc providing. there

12,90000
2,500

8

95 DODGE STEALTH

91 LUMINA EURO

38,000 miles, 5-speed,
sunroof, while and clean.

4 Dr., red, ,
runs great:

97 GUND CAUVAN
SE, 13,000 miles, fully

By BRIAN J. REED
years old, and !~at annual pump rests have revealed flow
Sentinel N-s Staff
problems, causing potential problem on long-lasling
Vorers in Middlepon will decide the fare of a 1.5-mill fire calls.
continuing levy for the rown's volunleer fire depanme.nl
·' In addition to !he flow deficiencies, the rank on lhc
on Tuesday.
rruck has begun rusting out and wilh it being 18 years
The levy was aulhorized by the Middlepon Village old, we anlicipale funher problems in gelling replaceCouncil late last summer, and if passed, would benefil ' men! pans, since most' dealers supply pans for only 20
the depanment in the purchas.: of addirional fire equip- , years,' 11offman said. "Another problem is lhallhe firemen!.
.
fighters are riding in an open cab, which has been
According to Fire Chief David Hoffman, rhe de pan- deemed a safely hazard"
menl's first priorily in spending any funds generated by
Hoffman said that the village's newer pumper rruck
a permanent levy would be rhe replacemenl of !he has a closed cab, which meers slate safety hazards, and
depanmenl's Engine 12.
a new truck which would be purchased wilh levy funds
Hoffman said that the pumper truck in question is 18 would also have a closed cab.

00

8

' Teal and grey.

18,80000

Come Look!

lit Norris Northup Dodge you'll find _
t he

TO TIE
CITIZENS OF
GALL
lA
.
·•

largest se!eetion of new, used and factory
progra01 ears, trucks and vans in .~he area.

••

. As I have campaigned thr:oughoul the county,
I've visited your homes and met many nice
people. I know it is virt~ally impo11ible to meet·
each and every voter, so ht this time I would ~
to apologize if/ haven't called on you personally.
It has been with great pride that I have served
as your County 'Commissioner. I have st!jved to
make Gallia _County a better place to live. and
raise your family, but much remains to be
accomplished. With your continued support on
November 3rd.I pledge to provide strong
LEADERSHIP and dedication to the residents of
Gallia Co!'nly.
.
~

~:t:J&lt;At
P&amp;d '"by lli&lt; ""'"'"'• 2624 St

~~

94 PONT. GUND PRIX 79 GMC MOTOR HOME 94 CHRYSLER CONCORDE
Extra clean, leather,
nice luxury.

9,9_9500

8

995oo

99 CARAVAN

J, 4 Dr., 4X4, V8,
blue, loaded.

cab, 4X4, diesel,
5 speed, green.
0
5

Air, AM!FM, 4 dr.,

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27,876°0

OnI)' 8

3,000° OFF

red

Onl)'

$18 30701lner
t

Roboto

Come See: Mike Northup, Dwight Stever&amp;, Pete Somerville, AI Durst,
Neel Peifer, Tim Conwell, Jamie Adamson, Ted 'Brock, Joe Tillis

You'll Like Our Qualit~

Wa~

of Doing Business!

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE, INC.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Or Toll free 1·800·446·0842

252 Upper River Rd.
(740) 446·0842

'

Twp.)

.

.

Our Pre-Holiday Sale sale.

$17.95
a month gets
y~u 125
minutes.

wr..: ~.:k .

ll hvur ~ I \jillion llf·rhe lola\ con'1'- l' ofw .x n.: licf: The legislation desi~ nat c~ :b i.S hillitlll for this yeur's disH..,Ier-related lnssc,, $K75 million to
~:ov a lo..;-;~.: s over the pa .. t five years
;r rrd $200 1i1illion in liveslm:k fl!ed
a. . . , isturl i.:f.:. About $200 million wi ll
:t-. . . ist dairy t'arrm:rs.
Th~.· cmcrgcn'-'Y aid would comt!
on top nf$5. ~ hill inn 111 "market tran. . itu m' ' pa y n~cut,-. rarmcrS already
\~Crc g uar ~mt cell untkr the l f.J96 farm
l.~w and ) 1..1 billion in conscrvution
p.ry tt ll! nt...· tor grower' who idle cnvi IDilrtlcnt al ly . . em iti ve a~.:n:: agt: .

.,

-or-

Avoid tht crowds, the .fines and
the chaos this holiday

$39.95

a month gets

season. Btatlhe rush
and come down to ·

500

you
minutes.

10.00

WASHINGTON IAI'l - Ameri -

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UNITED STATES

United States Ce llular's

Plus,
$'
get
off acceuories
or pho11es at time
of activation.

Just making sure
it's OK with Feds

Pre -Holiday Sale sale.
You'll gtt a gr&lt;at deal

CELLUlAR.

on a phone and a calling plan without the hassles. ·

Zane Plaza Shopprng Center

1084 N. Bndge St
775-4141

2145 Eastern Avenue
Gollipolis, Ohio 45631

(7401441 -1066

408 E. Huron

285-5001

456-8722 or (800)824-7775

7
8-9-1 ()
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2

Editorial.,
Local

.I

4·5-6
3

·Sports

Weather

I

Ntw Boston
United States Cellular
New Boston ·Shopping Center
1010 Rhodes Ave.

Sentinel

Calendar
Class ificds

Shop Unlttd SmtJ Ctlu~ on tht lnlrmtt at www.uscc.com
Offer rtqulrts 1 ntw ont-ytar strvict 19rttment. Reaming charges ta•u tolls and n tw k h
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Other rutricttons and charges may apply. See stort for detaili. OHe; expir~s Novem~~ 1S~r 19s~~~ lUge~ nol mduded .

' Jackson
Southern Ohio Communications
Classic Plaza

Good Afternoon
2 Sections. 12 Pltgcs

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Hilltop een101
2415 Sciolo Trail ·
285-5000

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Also. come 1nd wilit one of
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a

'It's trench'Work now'
Jesse Jackson
rallies for
Ohio candidates

OUCH! - More than 700 Meigs County residents, mostly senior citizens, received Influenza vaccinations
Friday 'at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. According to Norma Torres RN, ·Meigs County Health
Depanment nursing director, 70S Influenza vaccinations were given along with 130 pneumonia vaccinations.
Here, Jenny Burdette and Marnle Frey. right, give Mary K. Yost of Syracuse her flu shot. Yost said that while
the shot Is no !uri, It beals getting the flu. Flu shots will also be given today and Tuesday morning.

plans in the nexl Congress. There is
ATHENS (AP) - Hillary Rodham
work lo be done to make health insurClinlon told a cheering crowd made up
"We didn 't know much about mostly of college Sludents to vole on Tuesance more available, improve schools
space flight back in those days," day to se nd ~epublicans a message aboul
and prolecl Social Securily.
Glenn responded. "We were sorl of their mullimillion-dollar clecri.on -evc
" He·~ not one of !hose people who
feeling our way' and finding out adverlising push.
when !hey have finished climbing the
what would happen to the hum an .
ladder of success, wants lo pull il up so
The first lady made her fifth visillo lhi.s
body in space."
no one else can climb it/' she said.
southeast Ohio cily, this lime to cam paign
Glenn, a reliring U.S. se nator for Democralic Rep. Ted Srrickland of
Srrickland slressed lhe importance of
from Ohio, also told srudents he's Lucasville. Strickland is locked in a Iough
gelling our rhe· vote in one of the 6th
bumped his head a few limes race with Republican Lr. Gov. Nancy Hoi·
District's most Democratic counties.
because of !he lack of gravity. Our-' list er"in a district where voters have turned
" Mosl of you here today are !he heart
ing hi s 1962 flight , he was strapped oul the incumbcnr in rhC'Iast rhrec clec·
and .soul of what's put me where I am
into Friendship 7.
today and that is the Ohio Univcrsily
tions.
Eating has been a little lricky,
student vote," •he said.
The Republican Narional Congression· too:
• Meaga n Ke lley, a \9-ycar-o\d sludent
al Commillee has spent a large chunk of
"I was ealing so me oalmeal for the $9 million il has comm illed to local
THE FIRST LADY made from Lorain, is registered in the district
breakfasr, and some of it gol ·loose," races. The so-called "sofl money" ea n be
her fifth visit to Athens, this and will vote for -Strickland in Tues·
he said. " Instead of falling,down lin raised in unlimited amounts because it is time lo campaign lor Democ- day 's election.
my chest like il would on the Eanh. intended lo go toward ·issue-orienled ads. ratic .Rep. Ted Strickland or She said she was thrilled lo hear the
it came up and sl uck right in the Preside nl Clinlo n's 19% re-eleclion cam- Lucasville. Rep. Strickland Is first lady 's speech.
middle of my· glasses."
paign relied he avily on sofl·moncy ads locked In a tough race with " I though! she was fabulous. She realGlenn emphasized lhe sc ienlific creat ed by unions.
Republican Lt Gov. Nancy ly spoke to some crucial issues, '' Ms.
value of his mission and how hi s 1 Mrs. Clinlon said her visil would help Hollister.
Kelley said.
experimenls would help people on garner publicily for Slrickland because his campaign
At least otic person in the audience was nor impresSI'd
lhe Earth, especially when ir comes . cannor'afford 10 keep up wilh the GOP.
·- Hoilisler campaign ·spokcsm.a n Scoll Milburn. He·
to !he aging process.
" They pour in lhcs~ millions of dollars," she lold !he said ·Strickland needed Mrs. Clinton:s he lp because his
Glenn laugh ed when asked · if he crowd of aboul 800 sludenls al Arhens Middle School. suppon is slipping among rh e Democrats.,
feels younger in space. ·
"She's a popular lady. I thought !he crowd would be
jusraround the corner from Ohio University. "We have
." I guess I feel young all the lim e. lo send a message 10 the na rional Republicans I hal this bigger," Milburn said.
That's !he reason I vo lunlee~ed 10 seat is·not for sale.' '
'II is telling thai we're three days frorrf the eieclion
come up here," he said.
·
She· said Strick land is valua ble to the Democrats' . · and he's sri\\ trying 10 hold his base."

.T oday's

The way people talt

around hut~

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USee Wai-Mart Kiosk

COLUMBUS (AP) ~ It's been
John Glenn week for Levi Shegog.
The 17-year-old sludent body
president at John Glenn High School
in New Concord staned his weekend
by !raveling 10 Florida. There, he
watched Glenn return 10 space
aboard the space shuttle Discovery.
Saturday, Shegog was al school ,
lalking .lo Glenn through an audio
hookup.
"I thought it was unbelievable,"
Shegog said. "I've lalked to him .·
before, but this is different. We're
'down here, and he's in space."
Shegog was among middle and .
high school Sludents who galhcred ·
'at John .Glenn High School in
Glenn's hometown, and al museums
in Columbus and Arlington, Va., 10
interview the 77-year-old Glenn, I he
world's oldest space traveler, as he
!raveled 341 miles above Eart h.
By the time the 30-minule talk
ended, the shuttle had traveled from
above Florida to Nrica.
In Columbus, students from local
" \. J~hools and the communify of Delia
1, in north~&lt;est Ohio gathered al the
Center of Science and lndusrry.
"If i look back in the history
book, . I might say I gel a little
glimpse of the moment, and I cou ld
share il with olh~rs," said Holleh
Moheimani, 15, of Columbus.
She asked Glenn if he was more
nervous aboul being the first American to orbit the Eanh or !he oldesl
person in space.
He said the 1962 flighl was
tGugher.

WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS

3 Months
Roadside

Chillicothe
Umtecl .States Cellular

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,No Tricks, . Just Treats
1 Ton chassis, VS,
condition .

Hoffman said rharrhe depanmenl chose.lo propose a has been raising funds lhrough fund~aising events in
permanenllevy because of an anticipaled 15-year period order to help pay for !he purchase. Hoffman said !hal he
for paying off rhe new lruck, which would cost the expecls lhar rhe depanmenl could pay for approximarely 25 percenl of !he purchase price with cash on hatid.
depanmenl an eslimated $325,000.
If !he village voters do approve !he levy, !he depanThe departm'cnt also receives financial assisiarlce
mcnl would have rwo and a half year wailing period from lhe village.
before a bid could be awarded and a !ruck could be b11.ilt.
The dep~nmcnr has 30 members, and Hoffman said
During that rime. and lhe pay-off period to follow, lhe
·
Saturday
thallhe group responded 10 approximalely 125
depanment's second engine will also likely require
fire
calls
lasl year, as well as rescue and orher' calls.
replacement, Hoffman said.
"If rhe levy docsn'l pass, and we're unable to purchase
Members of the dcpanmenl spenl 600 man hours las!
a new pumper, we cou ld end up wilh IWo very unreliable year on equipment maintenance, Hoffman said, in an
allempl to keep lrucks in good condilion and 10 Save the
trucks,' Hoffman said. ·
In addition to seeking levy funds, the fire depanment depanmenr money on paying for rGpairs.

OhiC) students
talk to Glenn .

0

2 -1995 TOYOTA
TACOMA 414 PICKUPS

equipped, program car.

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Middleport voters to decide fate of 1.5 mill .fire levy

3,995°

8

Must See!

Red/blue, 5 speed. ·
Runs goodl

n.: main :-.crious, long-term. ~truc tural
pmhlcms in Arnerican agriculture."
Farm in~;orne is cxpec teJ to drop
lf1. pr..: r\.:c nt this ye;u nati'onwide
hl!cau'lie of low 'grain ili1Ll livestock
pr·j~..·c s anJ weather-rd:1teLl crop failures.
The money wns included in ~ $7
hdli on aid pa,,:kagc for farmers that
\\a ~ attached to the omnibus spendin~ bi II Prc.;id..:nt Clinton sig ned la.. t

l..'a .Onl1nt:. j&lt;)inin g nthcr l' llmpanic ~.
I'&gt; a. . J..ing federal rc g uluto'r~ to muke
'11rc that l..'nmpcritoro.; have a~.:ce so.;to
·1Cl\ hi giHpocJ cahlc TV lines "" '
t:11nd1llon for tfwtt:ompany's ntcrgcr
111 lh i\T&amp;T.
' l df.' -Cw~ r muni&amp;.::•titm '&gt; Inc.\ hig,h'llt~cd .;;1 hlc TV lint!s rca .:h uhout onctlwd ol the nation 's hnrnt!:... .
Without ,I go vcrnmt!nt-manduled
:ll'l'C ... .., rc(.juircmt'nl . the merged ~.:om ­
p.my could Jll:L'V cnt otht!r compan it":s
J'rornu , lng rcr . . high-speed lint!~ to
reach cu\tomer.., _ That would stilk
L'lliiiJlt.: lrti on for lntcrnt!t and for othCI ' l'rv rcc .... AOL says.

98 IREEIE 4 DR.

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

·

a

91 CHEVY S·10

NEWSPAPER

Volume 49, Number_127

Chrysler
Plymouth

1

YOUR
LOCAL

Meigs County's

DAX index rose 2.7 percenl, Brilain's
Ff-SE I00 rose 1.5 percenl and
France's CAC-40 rose 1.1 percent.

er companies rose 3.68 10 378.16.
Overseas, Japan's Nikkei tiiOCk
avenge fell 0.8 percent Germany's

All power, extra clean,
low miles

~

Gli ckm•tn said that because of rhe
rm yrncnt s. "many family farmers are
~ow planning for a spring f.:rop.l
Hl'.tl! ad .of a spring auction."
, j'
Bu1 Glickman warned !hat fa rn(
cf\ will ' til l need help nexr year:

Stock Exchange comf'O"ile inde•
rose 7.93 .10 645.41. ..
The Ruuell 2000 index of •mall-

Broncos
edge
Bengals
Page4

•

pow rally hit~ 15 percent; month's ·gain biggest since ·1997·
;&gt;;J-.W YORK l AP) - Stock.. rat Ired Friday 10 close anorher volarile
lkhJb.". giving the Dow illl biggesr
one -month gain &gt;fnce 191!~ and
«lending il' rapid rebound 1o 15 per-

Sports

Eastern eliminated, Page 6
Ann Landers column, Page 7
Gordon wins title again, Page 5

Today: Rain
High: 50; Low:40

inlo oil and meal las! week, which
was abovaxpecwions and year-ag!)
levels. Com fulllreS were unable 10
overcome concern aboul ample supply and weak demand.
Dttember wheal rose 3 3/4 cents
1o $2.94 1/4 a bushel; January soybeans ro&lt;e 4 3/4 cenrs·10 $5.68 114 a
bushel.
Copper futures ro&lt;e on the New
York Mercantile Exchange amid optimi&lt;m
.-

lnkrfu rqxJI1ed wheal will be the
cen1erpiece oflhe plan. wilh perhap-&lt;
3 million metric 10ru1 bein~ •hipped
OYC{ lhe ne•l 10 years. That could
help booR prices that have been hov-

November 2, 1998

Weather

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 50~ : l'irk 4: 115H2
Sup.r l.ollo: 1-2- 15- 1'! - ~O - -Il
Kicker: 9-13602
W,VA.
Uuily 3: nx Dailv 4: 7529
0 l lJ 'JK (/I i i~'

.

Valle~

'

(! uhlr, lum Cu

DAYTON (AP) - Preaching lo ' the
choir inside a labor union hall, !he Rev.
Jesse Jackson said Ohio's statewide
Democratic candidares deserve 10 win in
Tuesday's ·election and exhorled their
supponers 10 get out the vole .
Jackson, a former Democral~ presidenlial candidate, headlined ralliel Sunday in Columbus and larer in Dayron,
where he appeared wilh gubernatorial
candidate Lee Fisher, U.S , Senale ca ndi·
date Mary Boyle and o,rher Democrats ar
lntcrnational ·.Union of Electronic WorkJ
.ers Local s_of-s uniop hall.
. Jesse acks~n
· Jackson told ·the . ~udienq; of several hundred supponers that I He political
·
adveftising "wars" are about over.
"It's trenCh work nbw," said the civil-rights activist.
Fisher echoed Jackson 's message.
" The only lime in Ohio when bad lhings happen is when good people
stay home. Do not stay horne, " said Fisher, a former Ohio attorney general.
"Pass out literature. Shake· eve ry hand. "
Jackson said volers are more interested in the issues than the investigalion into President Clinlon and Monica Lewinsky.
"The prevailing wind is public policy in Ohio, nor aboul privale indiscretion in Washington/' Jackson sai~.
Fisher's oppone.nt, Republican Bob Tafl, meanwhile, campaigned with
U.S. Rep. Sieve Chabol, R-Ohio, at lwo Cincinnali bowling alleys, greeled
patrons at a restauranl in the Daylon suburb of Kellering and spoke at lwo
Cleveland churches.
·
Taft and Joseph Delers, GOP candidalc for stale lreasurer, talked locuslomers of a Damon's as lhey wa1ched Sunday's game. belwcen rhe Ci ncinnli
Bengals and Denver Broncos on giant TV screens.
As Tafl moved from !able 10 rablc asking for"VOICS, Ohio's secrelary of
slate emphasized local issues.
,
"I've historically done well in Montgomery Cou nty, and we need to do
well here again to win," Tafl sa id.
·
Tafl said he was nol concerned rharrhe vole ~Guld be dose.
" If I had a bi.g lead, people mighl slay home," he sa id.
.
Larer, he and Chabol shook hands wirh about 100 bowlers at Colerain
Bowl and Brenlwood Bowl on Cinci nnati 's west side, Chabot's home turf.
'"!'his is where we've gol 10 dq very well lo win the race," Taft said.
"We wan! a big voler turnout. It 's imporlanl to be here and tell people we
need their help."
Polls published on Sunday conl inued lo show Republicans leading in
stalewide races, but indicated the contest for governor was gelling closer.
The lalest poll, lakcn Friday a,nd Saturday, said Taft had a slighrlead wilh
44 percenllo Fisher's 39 percent. The margin of sampling error was plus or
minus 4 perccnlage poinls. Polls ~a dy laS! month had pul Tafl 10 pcrcenrage
points ahead.
·
.'
· Also Sunday~Th e (Toledo) Blade endorsed Fisher. h sa id both candidares
were capable, but Fisher Was more committed to th e needs of northwestern
Ohio.
· The Vindicator of Youngslown supporled Taft The newspaper be\ievod
he would be more effective. wilh a Republican -con trolled . Legislalure, at
keeping General Motors Corp.'s Lordsrown assc.mbly plant open . . The
aulomaker has not said whelher Ihe plan! is pari of irs restructuring plan.
Boyle and her Republican opponcnl, Gov. George Voinovich, campaigned in lheir h~ m c row n of Ckveland.

201 ·arrested at
Halloween party
enforcement agents from the Ohio
Depanmcrit of Public Safely.
He said peopl~ rocked a Iiquor
loween street p:,rty remained about
rhc same. despit e efforts lo reduce control vehicle and when officers
got our 1u confronr rhc people, one
th e crowd size, police said .
Ch·icf Rick Mayer said 2lll peo-. was punched in !he face and lwo
pic were imcsl cd Salurday night, were tackled.
At he tis . Coun ty Sher iff David ,
two more than last year.
,Police arreslcd 109 people for Redecker said crowds swe lled 10
. . an d posses-'
ahoul 20.000 lp 30.000. Alhcns
un dcragc con sumption
sion of alcohol. Sevcnly people were police officer Jame s Mann said !hal
charged with disorderly conduct there was no way to :Jccuratcly
There were ulso arrests for fa lse dcrcrm inc rhc size of the crowd, bur
idcntificatiun , drugs; resisting arrest, he estimated it wt~s smaller than last
year and wdi'-bclow ]1),000 .
thdt, assault and drunken driving.
Mayer said rhe size of rhe crowd
Thre e. liquor control offi cers were
assnult t: d in the party ncar the Ohio. peaked aboul 12:30 a.m. compared
Urtivcrsity campus about 70 miles wirh aboul 19 p.m. in the past.
PARTY ARRESTS - A few of the 201 people
southeast of Columbus, said St ~v~· StreciS were cleared about 3 a.m., a.-,ested during the Athens Halloween block party
are esconed through' the crowd by pollee on horse,llasscman'. agcnt in charge fur liquor and city crews began the cleanup.

ATHENS (AP) - The number of
arre sts at !he city's annual Hal-

"~

·l

back In Athens, early Sunday. Most of the arrests at
the evenl were for alcohol related offenses .

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