<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8934" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8934?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-05T14:26:27+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19362">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/7beee66e7b01fc9ef1a476a5e33c1e0e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7f1c708fdf2d21621dd6dbcd5f56b714</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28766">
                  <text>•

Along the River

Inside

$1 oo

for Pomeroy

Testament
to a family's
enduring faith

Benefit planned
for young liver
transplant survivor

• Fntured on .-ge A2

• P~~ge C1 •

• P~~ge C7 •

Delta Queen visits
gaiUpolis, heads

HI: Mkl-808
Low: 60s
lloltly lUnny,
chlnct of rain

Details on
pageAB

•

tmes
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • August 31, 1997 .

Strike seems certain
SERB calls hearing with school board, unions
to discuss allegations of unfair labor practices
By KEVIN KELLY

The aSsociations have charged the board with state·
ments that the leadership claims 'are clearly an effort ...
GALLIPOUS -The Gallia County Local Schools' · to intimidate and threaten employees.•
· two employee unions and management will meet again
Union representatives said the board violated the
Tuesday - but not to renew talks to end the strike that state's collective bargaining law when it told the Gal,
begins that day.
lipolis Daily Tribune it .planned to make its 'last and
'Representatives of the Oallia County Local Educa- final" contract offer on Aug. 20 prior to informing the
tion Association, the Oallia County Local Support Staff assoclations.
Association and the Board of Education have been
Additionally, the board sent "threatening memoran·
requested to attend a 2 p.m. hearing at the State Employ- dums" to employees on at least two occasions. The
ee Relations Board in Columbus on the associations' memo ·promised "in specific language 'disciplinary 1
allegations of unfair labor practices against the board.
action up to and including termination' for strike activiTlnln-Sentlnel Staff

}Jo Hypel9t reallfl was·
btickgard
brawl
·Piww.!lt·

a

Section of SR 850
closes Tuesday for
bridge replacement
BIDWELL - - The Ohio.
Department of Transportation
will close State Route 850 on
Tuesday, approximately a half·
mile north of the intersection of
u.s. 35.
The closure is necessary for a
bridge replacement project and is
expected to last for 90 days,
ODOT District 10 s]iokesperson
Nancy Pedigo said.
The $LOS million ODOT project is under contract to the Shelly
Co., Thornville. Three separate
locations are included in the same
project, and the work entails
replacing box culverts and
installing large drainage pipes,
Pedigo said:·
During tbe closure, . drivers
will detour via SR 160 and U.S.
35.
Pedigo said the completion
date for the entire project, includ·
ing all three locations, is June 30,
1998.
.

Good Mornin
Ca!eadan
Clusiftecls
Comics
Eclitorta!s
A)on1 the River
Obituaries

Sports

Insert
M

C1

A6
Bl-8

0 1991 Ohio Valley Publi•hina Co,

.

.\

Vol. 32, No. 29

"Such threats and efforts by the Board of Education
will not be taken lightly by either association," Green·
leaf and Montgomery said in the statement.
Dissatisfied with the progress of negotiations for new
contracts. that have been underway since May, the associa·
tions submitted an intent to strike notice on Aug. 13.
Subsequent bargaining failed to produce an agree·
ment, and the board's last offer was rejected by the associations on Aug. 22. Talks broke off last week and both
associations will strike Tuesday.
,
Both sides· remain willing to return to the table, but
no additional talks have yet been scheduled. The board
and its attorney informed union representatives they bad
family-related plans for the Labor Day weekend, Greenleaf and Montgomery said.
"It seems to us that a settlement is far more important
ties,• according ·to a joint statement from the unions' for our community and our students," they responded,
presidents, Cathy Greenleaf of the GCLEA and Frances adding that association members did·not make plans for
Montgomery of the &gt;Support Staff Association.
the weekend in the hope a settlement could be reached.
' The board's memo ended by saying, in part, 'I wani
The associations' members have scheduled a preto be sure that each of you fully understands the paten· strike meeting for S p.m. Monday at their headquarters·
tial consequences of your actions and your decisions,"' in Gallipolis, and are planning a candlelight rally at 7:30
p.m. in the City Park.
according to the statement.

Strike preparations

·Beyond the cookouts:
A Labor Day tribute
to those who work

'i,.

f~..:..lfJ

By CATHERINE BRALEY
Tlma..Sanllnel Stell
OALUPOUS -It is often said that the meanIng behind the holidays we celebrate has been lost.
The same might be said for Labor Day. While the
weekend is widely viewed 8~ the last holiday of
summer and a time for one final cookout and sea·
son~ celebration, Labor Day stands for far more.
True to its name, the holiday was designed to
fll&lt;lOgnize thoaa who work ..:. lholinon-and wotne11
who have labored.to build their lives and our sbci·
ety.
For the past eight years Jan Bergdoll has been
a dynamic fixture at Bernadine's Clothing Store •
but don't think of her as merely aa sal~person. On
any given day she might be persbnally delivering
· an order, or helping an elderly customer select a
special gift to be sent to California.
·
. She not. only picks out numerous articles for
lhe lady to view, she'll write a letter to be
enclosed in gift, and mail it for her loyal client.
Jan Bergdoll always goes the extra length tO make
sure she gives good service.
She ·credits her parents with giving bet' good •
work values. "I most definitely have 8 very strong
work ethic. I don't want to sound harsh, and say
my parents demanded it, but each of us had a job
do to. Things weren't as easy then as they' arc
today ... we had no choice other than to work ...
and we were taught to do it well."
Her first jQbs taught her that she needed to
work around people. She is a high energy person
JAN BERGDOLL, left, from Bemadlne'a, Ia ahown with ·fellow
who knows the likes and dislikes of her clients • emp!oyH, Stacy Sl~~glll, preparing for the fall clothing line at the
and makes no excuses for taking care of their atore. Bergdoll credlta her parenta whh giving her a atrong work
needs.
ethic.
"Today you betier try different, but we have
old but has been a Gallipolis Daily Tribune paper carrier for three
one thing other people don't have and that is good service. It's years. He started working because he needed money for teenage
number one with us."
necessities.
,
Working with older
In March his life was altered when he and a friend were rough
customers is a special housing and he fell backwards and broke his back. After a month
mission with Bergdoll. in the hospital, he began lhe long process of recovery. He gave up
After she lost her own his route for four months • but returned.
mother, she · realil:ed
Hatten credits his parents with his work ethic, "I learned
what her working min· responsibility from my parents, and to take care of things. I don't
istry would be.
mind working, it gets me out of the house, and I need the money."
"Every morning I
Nancy Tawney, Gallipolis, has had a wide-ranging work his·
pray that Ood will give tory • nurse technician, photographer, professional golfer, and
me the love and the now herbalist. "When people tell me they can't find a job, it's
strength to be good to hard for me to understand. There is so much work out there. I
older people. They don't worry about myself because I can always do something."
need the special atten· · Tawney sees herself as a work pioneer in the world of golf.
tion. Everybody is spe- Playing in two U.S. Opens, she still remembers when women
cial, and I firmly weren't allowed on golf courses at prime playing times.
believe that we're here
She credits her parents for making her a worker. "When I
to help people."
wanted a new bicycle I had .to go get a paper route and work for
Her personal philos· it ~ We're meant to be profitable. You just have to surround yourophy is, "Uve life ·to self with positive thoughts."
the fullest, do some·
Being a worker for the Ohio Department of Transportation can
thing good for someone mean taking a lot of criti.Ssm and ribbing.
everyday, because God , Roger Stout of Vinton and Gene Hall of CenterVille know the
B.J. HATTEN of Bidwell, II onl~ is the one. who give me jokes and the perception. Hall says, "The only time the public
likes us is when it snows ·other times they don't. They are in a
17 yeere old, but he hal been 1 everyday."
Gall/pol/a Dally Tribune paper .car·
B.J. Hatten of Bid· hurry an,d we slow them down. I just have to laugh and go on."
rler tor three yeara.
well, is only 17 years
Continued on page A2

SchooiNet part
of Eastern's
.improvements
By BRIAN J. REED
Tlme..Santlnal Staff
TUPP.ERS &gt;PlAINS - Students in,the 'Eastern Local
School District will be moving on to the Information
Superhighway at about the same time that they move into
brand new school facilities.
Almost $700,000 in computer equipment and wiring
for the SchooiNet program will be installed during and
immediately after the completion ·of constructi.on of the
new Eastern Ele·
montary • Scl!Olll
and the renovation
of Eastern High
fli'ame .
School,
both
scheduled for com· ,dUifln«&lt;
pletion in a year.
}Iring
SchooiNet and telecom- ··\&lt;·
SchooiNet Plus are
state-funded pro· · munl~
grams designed to t/Qne.
bring telecommunications and com·
. puter technology ' roog,
into local classrooms. Students will have access to the internet as well as
other computer applications relating directly to school'
curricula and the general learning process.
Statewide, the SchooiNet program is a $95 million
expenditure of state funds, including $50 million for
wiring and $45 million for workstations, or hardware.
The Eastern Local School District, iu:cording to the
district's technology coordinator Nancr. J,.arkins, will be
required t~ spend $100,000 of local money for the instal·
lation of infrastructure: wiring, switches and other equip·
ment necessary lo connect the computers. She estimates
that the total cost for the Eastern system will be $700,000,
to be funded through local ·funds, as well as state and federal monies,
Because it ranks as a low wealth district, Eastern Local
qualified for free workstations, and fuqds available
through the Federal Communications Commission could
discount the expenditures due from the local school board
for the installation of fiber optic telephone line and other
infrastructure material.
According to Mrs. Larkins, the state will provide fund·
ing for 42 workstations in the district, which, with the
new campus, will amount to one computer per classroom
in the new high school, and with the · combination of
SchooiNet and SchooiNet Plus, which targets grades K
through four, one workstation for every- four students iii
the early elementary grades.
Mrs. Larkins noted that the school district will be
responsible for costs involved in the operation and maintenance of the SchooiNet system, specifically the ·month·
ly cost involved in using the fiber optic lines, as well as
maintenance on computers not covered by wananty. She
estimates that the computers have a five-year life, and the
infrastructure 15 years.
Among the advantages of the new system, parts of
.which are already in place, is a computer program from
the Computer Curriculum Corporation, which allows stu·
dents to use the workstations for intervention work for the
Ohio Proficiency Tests.
·
According to Mrs. Larkins, marked improvement has
already been realized by some students who used the
Continued on page A2

to
.

l

November general election will be costly endeavor for Meigs officials
By BRIAN J. REED
Tlme ..SanUnal Stell
POMEROY - The November general. election will
be.a costly endeavor for local elections officials; and, in
Meigs County, the expense will aggravate an existing
budget shortfall.
.
·
A county-wide· special election in May has left the
Meigs County Boar&lt;! of Elections in the red before con·
sidering the cost of holding the general election in
November.
·
The special election, which was held for the consid·
eration of a levy for the Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, cost the
county $10 998.18,1he cost of which is to be reimburse!!
to the cou~ty general fund, according to Rita Smith,
Director of tbe Meigs County Board of ·Elections.

Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes said
Friday that the county commissioners bear
the responsibility of paying the cost for the
MR!DD levy, and that the county. has used
the calculation of indirect cost for services,
such as attorney services, auditor's services
and so forth, to offset the cost of the election.
· Lentes said that the MR!D D board will be
billed for those indirect costs, which will
then be used to reimburse the general fund
for the cdst of. the election.
That election cost included expenses involv~d in
renting polling places, paying jonitors, office help and
poll workers, and purchasing card stock, ballot printing
services and precinct supply kits.
For the upcoming general eh;ction, the Meigs Coun-

ty Board of Elections anticipates a cost of
over $8,000 for poll workers alone, according to Smith. That cost will reflect an
increase in the minimum wage from $4.75
per hour to $5.15 per hour, which goes into
effect in October.
Smith said that she anticipates that the
reimbursement for last spring's special clec·
tion will at least help to absorb the cost of
conducting November's general election.
Adding to the expense of this year's gener·
al election are two.state issues, which must be advertised
through the newspaper. The Gallia and Meigs County
boards of elections have opted to share the cost of inse rting the ballot language in the Sunday Times-Sentinel in
order to avoid duplicating advertising costs. Smith said

that the prelimi~ary estimate for printing and inserting
the language is .~.000. to be shared by the two counties.
The State of Ohio will reimburse the counties for the
costs involved in advertising and printing ballots for the
state issues, but that reimbursement is not expected to
come in to the county boards until 1998.
Costs to local agencies who have placed tax issues on
the November ballot will be shared between the agen·
ci~s, Smith said. For instance, the county commissioners
. wtll be responsible for bearing the cosi of placing the
half-mill levy for the county home on the ballot, the
MR!DD board will be responsible, again, for putting its
levy on the ?allot, and townships will pay for placing
cemetery lev1es and other tax issues on the ballot in their
respective communities.

I

i

�•

Sunday, Auguat 31,1987

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

•

GALLIPOLIS -American Elec- land, 302 Third St., Point Pleasant;
tric ~ower will close its Gallipolis
Mason Market, Horton and Sec·
locauon at 990 Second Ave,, effective ond streets, Mason, W.Va.; Health
Oct.. 31.
.
Aid Pharmacy, 307 Fifth St., New
· "A large majority of our customers Haven, W.Va.; and Cope's Superprefer to pay electric bills through our market, 1101 Washington St.,
Checkless Payment Plan or by mail," Ravenswood, W.Va.
District Manager Mary Kent said.
Kent said these locations offer
~For those customers who prefer to extended hours, making it more conP."Y in person, we have paymcntloca· venientto pay bill$ in the evening, at
lions in the Gallipolis area that will ·night or on weekends. Customers'
allow them to continue to do so."
payments are immediately posted to
: Payment locations include Gal- their accounts.
lipolis Foodland, 252 Third Ave.;
In addition, remaining adminisbhio Valley Foodland, 1129 Jackson trativc customer services functions
Pike. Gallipolis; Big Bear, 31 Ohio will be centralized at two southern
~iver Plaza, Gallipolis; and Kroger,
Ohio locations, Chillicothe and
6ilver Bridge Plaza, Gallipolis; Athens.
:Vaughan's Supermarket, 407 Pearl
The actions arc part of AEP's
1lt., Middleport; Buckeye Foodland. ongoing effort ro improve the quali:'J039 State Route 160, Bidwell; · ty and efficiency of its operations as
f'oodland, 700 W, Main St., the company and industry move
:Pomeroy; McCullough Riffle Phar· toward a deregulated marketplace,
)Racy, 112 Main St., Pomeroy; Kent said.
. ;Kroger, 700 E. Main St., Pomeroy;
'"1be change will allow the com·
·Western Auto, 404 Main St. Point pany to operate cost-effectively and
:Pleasant, W.Va.; Twin Rivers Food- improve the services available to the
customer," she added. "And by keep-

lA queen comes to visit\
Looming oUt of the momlng fog, the Delta Queen
paeeenger aternwheeler docked at the GaHipolle parkfront Saturdalf for Ita da!flotlg atop In the Old French
City, one of a eerlea of vlllta the veaeel haa planned
for arae river communities during Ita cummt excursion up and down the Ohio River. Paaaengara and
craw were graetad with a aarles of activities, Including
a breakfast with Bob ail!l Jewell Evana and preaentatlon of the kelf to lhe city to the Quaen'a captain. A
member of the crew chatted with city and Gallla Count}' Chamber of Commerce olllclala, right, after the
docking. The Queen will be In PornBrO!f Monday and
plana a atop In Point Pleaaant, W.Va., on Tueaclalf.

Gannett News SeMce
WASffiNGTON - Labor Day
takes on special significance this
year for an estimated 6.8 million
American workers who will get a
raise to $5.15 an bouc.
Auotbcr 2 million to 3 million,
llowevcr, Will contliiue 10 make le!IS
than the $5.15 minimum wage
bcca._ of exemptions and employell wbo don't obey the law.
Despite the millions wbo will fall
through the cracks, economist Jared
&amp;rnstein of the liberal-leaning Economic Policy Institute said the Sept.
1 inacase in the minimum wage
will have a positive impact on 'up to
20 million workers.
".11 has a ripple effect throughout
the lower wage scale," Bernstein
said. "It tends to reverberate to
those making about a dollar above."
In workplaces where the minimum
wage is the starting wage, those with
some experience who make, say, 50
cents above the minimum 'l'ill often
get an adjusbncnt when the base
increases.
Monday's increase marks the
second step of legjslation passed by
Congress last year that boosted the
· wage floor in October front $4.25 an
hour to $4.75.
,
: ODOT WORKERS, Gene thlll, left and Roger Stout, vi- their
In a prepared Labor Day mes:Joba ae public aervlce - and try to make hlghwalf construction sage,
President Clinton said, "This
•proJactl81 haaale free for lhe public ae poealble.
·

.

.
Continued from pageA1
They understand why the public isn't always enamored with them. Hall
:says, "People like to see the big highways, but hate to see the orange barrels.
:And mbetween those orange barrels you've got maintance people trying to
:gel the job done."
·
·
.
On call 24 h!lurs a da)l. $tout once put in 42 straight hours of work dur·
: ing a state of emergency during a winter blizzard. Summer work, heat or no
: heat, can be just as diffiCUlt. Some motorisl understand, and stop by with
• cold soft drinks or snacks.
· If Hall has a working philosophy, it is simple. "You might as well smile
.. :and gel on with it. Wben someone is having a bad day, I say, 'Arc you
: breathing? Then you're having a good day.'
.

: ·Jmthlif 'limtt. ,~ .
.

"'
;

•.-

(VIlPS!ZUI6)

P\lblitlltd each Sunday, 82' Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio. by eN: Ohio Valley Publiahina
CompanyJO~anntll Co .. Second clau posta.ac
paid a1 Gallipolis. Ohio &lt;45631. Enlcred as
second c:lau mailin'a macter at Pomeroy, Ohio,
l'&lt;llt Ollie&lt;:

:

SchooiNet
part of .
Eastern's
improvements

Continued from page A1
CCC program last year, especially at
the intermediate elemeittary level.
SUNIIAY ONLY
SUJISCRIPTION RATI!S
For parents who might be conByC.rrlrrerMot.rllDIItt ·
cerned
that students might gain
:
ODC:Wcek,,,.,,,,,,,Noo•~"''"'" '''"'"""''''''''"'$1 ,2$
One v.............................,...,................. 165.00
access to inappropriate material on
the internet, Mrs. Larkins has
SINGLE COPY PRICE
already begun stressing to district
• Sl/ldoy ...........,. .........................,.....•......... $1 .00
teachers the importance of strict
No &amp;ubsc:riptiont by mlil permitted In .-eu
s
upervision when students are using
.
where motor·clll'rier tenice lsavailab&amp;c.
the internet.
The Sunday 'limei-Sentlrtel wiiiOOt be mpono
' The use of blocks on the internet
lible for ldvuce paynrntJ rod to c~.
is not feasible in the case of school
Ptlbllaha' raervet the ri&amp;lltto actJuA ,_. dur~
usc, M11. Larkins said, but it might
IDI dlt IUblcripdo• pmocl. Sobtcripthm rate
be possible for her or other teachers
elton,.. may be i.....,.nted by chanp,. the
~ &amp;anlloa of the subtcri~Oft.
to download material in advance and
limit
access ro only that material.
lloll7 and Sotf11117
MAILSUIISCRIPI10NS
Mrs. Larkins said she fell the
t-GoltaCoonl7
education value of the virtually lim13 Weekl ........... ,.,............................... $27.30
iUcss access io material via the inter26Weekl. .............................................. $53.8l
' 52"!Vedcc...............................................l105.56
net outweighs any danger that might
come
fmm studcoiS accessing unauI) Weeb.... ,.,.•.'"'""....... ,..................... ll9.l5
26 Weeb ......................................... ,..,... Sl6.68 . thorized sites, especially when the
$1119.72 i faculty plans such strict supervision
~-- ·
. .. .
--·
~

...

ycarlow.

Even with the latest increase, a
full-time minimum wage employee
working 40 hours a week with two
dependents will remain $1,600
under the poverty threshold of
$12.517.
Organized labor is supporting
legislation proposed by Sen. Edward
Kennedy, D-Mass., and Rep. David
Bonior, D-Mich., which would push
the minimum wage up to $7,25 an
hour by 2002.
o
Although passage of the
. Kennedy-Bonior legislation "will
be very difftcult becauSe Congress
now thinks they'.vc done their job,"
AFL-CIO legislative director Peggy
Taylor said the proposal keeps in
focus "many people still don't make

a living wage."
Besides lobbying for the federal
legislation, the AfL..CIO is supporting so-called "living wage" cam· paigns .in large cities. Boston recently enacted a law that will require a
$7.49 an hour minimum .wage for
city employees, Contractors and subsidized businesses beginning July 1,
1998. Similar legislation setting a
$7.25-hour-floor in ,Duluth, Minn.,
took effect earlier this summer.
Some states also have higher
minimums - Hawaii is $5.25 an
hour and Oregon is $5.50.
DeSPite the nation's 6-year-old
economic expansion and tHe heralded return of a national jobless rate to
under 5 percent, a significant nom·
her of t~e new jobs are low-paying
occupations.
~bout 7 percent of the jobs creatcdm 1996-129,000outofl.8million- were for cashiers, an occupation that paid an average weekly wage
of5247 for full-lime employ.ees.
The Untied Food and Commercia! Workers union, which represen.ts cashiers and · many . in the
nation's supermarket and pharmacy
chains, estimates that the federal
minimum wage currently would be
$19 an hour if it had kept pace with
the, increases in execulive com~n· sahon lhal have occurred stnce
1966.

"It's a comment on the disparity.
that's occurring in the relative share'
of prosperity," said UFCW
spokesman Greg Denier.
Adult women account for the
largest segment of workers earning
under $5:15 an hour, according to,
government statistics. Teen-agers
account for only about 29 percent.
Some states ,with higher wag~
and tight labor markets will be little
affected by the minimum wage
increase, Bernstein said. Less than 5
percent of workers in Connecticut
and Hawaii make under $5.15 aii
hour.
In the South, the story's different: ·
About 16.5 percent of workers in
Mississippi and 15.3 percent in
Louisiana will get a pay ~ise, the
Economic Policy Institute estimates:
But not all workers will be guar·
, anteed a $5.15 an hour minimum
because it doesn't apply to some
pos.itions, such as waiter and wait·
resses who rely on tips for most of
their income.
Although an estimated 6,8 mil·
lion workers will get a raise, governm.ent says there are 8. 7 million
hourly workers who earn under
$5.15 an hour. And there are hundreds of thousand of salaried worlt:
ers who receive weekly pay at or
below the federal minimum for
hourly workers,

.

;A Labor Day tribute to those who work

...

increase in the mmtmum wage
affmns our commitment to 'stand
like a rock' for our working families
and their right to jobs that provide
fair compensation."
·
.
Although Clinton's statement
referred to the number of people
affected by the latest increase as
"nearly 10 million,'' Bernstein said
thai figure includes the impact of
last October's hike. This round
affects fewer people.
Prior to last year's legislation, the
minimum wage had not increased
since April 1991, and it was, on an
inflation-adjusted basis, near a 30-

MeMber: 'nM: Aa•oeiaced .P rtu, and the Ohio
~~paper Anociadon.

--G-C..,

'2-.. . . . . ,..... . ,. . . . ,. . . . .--. .
•

•

Legislature resumes search
for school funding solution
COLUMBUS (AP)- The Ohio
Legislature is going back to school
this week - or rather, back to
searching for a new method of pay·
ing for schools.
·The Senate Finance Committee
was SCheduled to meet Thesday to
begin debate on "Plan B," the
Democrats' proposal to raise $1.24
billion for .schools by expanding lhe
state sales tax, trimming government
spending and allowing taxes on
commercial and industrial property
to grow with inflation. ,
"This plan provides a beginning
point for discussing a rational and
fair funding stream for Ohio's public
schools," Espy wrote in a letter sent
to the state's schools superintcndents. Espy asked them to review
_the plan and submit comments:
Espy first floated-tile plan in July
as an alternative to Gov. George:
Voinovich 's proposal to ask voters to
increase the state sales tax by a
penny to raise $1 billion annually. It
got little attention from majority
Republicans in House and Senate.
Conservative House Republicans
and Democrats in
of

the Legislature then killed
Voinovich's plan a few weeks later,
and lawmakers have taken several
weeks off to regroup.
Senate President Richard Finan,
R-Cincinnati, and House Speaker Jo
Ann Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg,
planned to announce this week how
they ~ill proceed with the next goround on school finance debate.
Davidson told reporters, though,
that lawmakers probably would not
propose asking voters to approve
any new tax increase,
A coalition representing most of
Ohio's 611 public school distri~ts
started the school funding debate
when it sued the state in 1991. The
Ohio Supreme Court ruled in the
coalition's favor in March, finding
that the state's formula was unconstitutional because it relied too heavily on property taxes, creating per. pupil funding differences among the
districts.
.
The court gave lawmakers one
year to come up with a solution.
"It may have appeared to the publie to have been a
time," said
Sen. Gene Watts,

local Internet access
with a smile~

---

http://www.eurekanet.com

ing our costs down, we will be more
competitive in the future ."
Former Columbus Southern Power customers may call 1-800-2772177, and former Ohio Power enstomcrs may calll·S00-672-2231. 24
hours a day, seven days a week to
apply for service, make changes in
service or repon an outage. Former
Appalachian Power customers may·
call AEP's toll-free number, 1-800•982-4237, from 7 a.m. to 7 p,m. with
inquiries and for instructions on
reporting after-hours power outages.
Kent said AEP will continue to
have a presence in the community,
although a few more reorganizational changes are underway.
In September, the remaining service employees located at .AEP's
Sycamore Street facility in Gallipolis will be consolidated with AEP's
. Jefferson Boulevard location in Point
Pleasant. Later in the year, · the
Sycamore Street site will become a
crew service center for AEP transmission employees in southeastern
Ohio.

-Vocational Board recognizes
retirees for se·r vice to district

Millions of workers get pay raise on Monday :
lllf BRIAN TUMULTY

.Regional
~EP plans Oct. 31 closing
~or location in Gallipolis ·

,. . . . 11, 1187

MEL D. SIMON, M.D., local Urologist, wishes to announce
that he Ia not retiring. As a Board Certified Urologist, he
still accepts new patients as well as still seeing his old
patients at Hillcrest Urological Clinic In Gallipolis, Ohio.
Patients with urinary problems such as stones, tumors,
Infection, prostate, bladder and kldnev problems as well
as InfertilitY. and sexual difficulties, are encouraged to
consult with him. Patients may call lor an appointment at
614-446-0021, Monday thru Frlda!f.
Office Space Rental Av~llable next to Dr. Simon's OHice ~~
446-0023

Providing Care to
Gallia County
. • Nursing

• Home Health Aide

• Physical Therapy

• Social Work

• Enterostomal Therapy • Maternal/Child Care
• Home Psychiatric Services

Please call for more infonnation on the
specific services available in your area.
BUCKEYE HoME HFALTH

1-800-322-1317 • (614) 992-7995,

~

SWORN IN\- .Gallla County Treasurer Lar'lf M. Betz,
took the oath ot ·offlca to
commence his second fullterm from Gallipolis Municipal Judge William S. Medley In a cer-

c~nter,

ELLISONVILLE (AP) -A man
allegedly shot his ex-girlfriend in the
back at a school bus stop Friday
morning, then shot himself in the
mouth, authorities said.
Adam Mullens, 18, of Pine Grove,
Ohio, was in critical condition at
Cabell Huntington Hospital in Huntington, W.Va. Christie Bowman, 16,
of Ellisonville, was in fair condiiion.
The shooting happened outside
the Short List Grocery and Carry Out
in this town about I00 miles south of
Columbus as Ms. Bowman and a
friend left th~ store to wait for a
SFhool bus, The Ironton Tribune
reponed Friday.
After allegedly shooting Miss
Bowman in the lower back. Mullens
went to a nearby park and he shot
himself, Sheriff Roy Smith said,
· '"From what I've got so far, it
looks like an attempted murder-suicide," Smith said. '"It looks like they

CHRISTl KISER
SBC GRADUATE
SPRING QTR. 1997

BEGIN TUINING FOR YOUR BUSINESS CAREER.
CALL US TODAY! 446·4367

.........

SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS COLLEGE

Look out world here I come,!

Meigs EMS runs
'; POMEROY- Units of the Meigs
· County Emergency Medical Service
·fecorded seven calls for assistance
,friday. Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
·: 2:58a.m., New Lima Road, Rut·
Jand, John Eblin, Veterans Memorial·
}lospital, Rutland squad assisted;
·• 5:18a.m., Keller Street, Rutland,
Marie Offutt, St. Joseph's Hospital;
:. 7:28 a,m., Pearl Street, Middle·
port, Lincoln Smith, treated at the
~ene;

: 8:28 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
J:enter, Middleport, Mervin Roach,
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
•
CHESTER TWP. VFD
: 2:07 p.m., garage fire on Pine
Prove Roa.;l, Gene Chaney owner,
injuries reported.
:
MIDDLEPORT
: 8:36 a.m., Lincoln Street, Hyllia
!lblin. VMII.
.
•
RUTLAND
. : 9:06a.m., State Route 124, James
l\tmer, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.

•

emony Friday. Holding tha Bible lit left Ia Betz's
wife, Linda. Betz was appointed treasurer In
1989 followlng_the death of Incumbent Myron
· "Bud" McGhee •

Two hospitalized after bus stop shooting

RIO GRANDE- Resolutions of minate the contract with Sharon King, Mike Marshall, Linda Nibert,
David Redeclcer, Greg Shrader,
:appreciation were given to eighi Hanover.
• Employed Michael Dyer as Prep David Ward, William Wells, Etta
retiring . te~~~;hcrs by the Gallia-Jack·
Son· Vinton Joint Vocational Board of Manufacturing Systems instructor, Williams and John Yates, peace offiEducation during its meeting last · and Linda Johnson as Severe Behav- cer.
• Employed Darrell Day and Re• .
;week at Buckeye Hills Career Cen- ior Disorder instructor.
Toms
as substitute teachers in Air
• Employed as teachers for the
wr.
Conditioning/Heating.
and George
Honored were Juanita Clark, .18 new school year Karen Bums, cosRowe,
Auto
Technology.
~
years; Verna Daniels, 20 years; Lisle metology, and John Sharp, social
•
Accepted
the
following
hourly
Dill, six years; Donna Gorrell, 22 studies/food service.
resignations:
Johnna
Goodwin,
• Employed Jack Kelley as a subyears; Dewey Horton, 21 years; Bet·
ABLE, which was effective Aug , 21;
ty Plymale, 20 years; JQhn Richards, . stitute bus driver.
• Employed work study students. Lisa Lee, nurse aide, which was
22 years; and Betty Stump, seven
In the Adult Education Division, effective Aug. 25; Randy Royster,
years.
Auto Technology, which was effec·
In other action, the board the board:
tive
Aug, 23; and Ro•ie Underw90d,
• Approved 'the following hourly .
. approved the tuition rate for 1997-98
MRIDD,
which was effective Aug. 3.
school year, and lhe teacher and StU• part-time contracts: Laurie Blain,
4ent handbooks for the new school Cathy Hammond, Angela Shilot,
year.
Lucinda Spellman and Cindy Wilson 1
, Physical therapy se.-.iices to be ABLE aides; Crystal Harmon, ABLE
provided by OH·l~:Y Allied Therapy clerk; Laura Baker, Ann Boyd,
~ervices were approved, as was the
Bryson Carter, Diana Drummond,
second reading of board bylaw 0141 Sherry Fisher, Helen Higgins, Lori
on membership on second reading.
Hively, Sue Holeski, Loretta Saylor
ASSOCIATE DEGREE IN
. An amendment of board policy and Jody Walker, ABLE instructors;
MICROCOMPUTER/DATA PROCESSING
~410 on substitute compensation was
Lili Roush, ABLE/OED coordinator,
presented on second reading, and the Darrell Day, Ed Evans and ReK
KNOWS THE VALUE
board gave its permission to enter Toms, Air Conditioning/Heating;
into a 1-year natural gas sales agree- LOis ·1h~ and Dana Maselkoff, · OF A QUALITY
men! with Columbia Energy Services Athens Gateway instructors; .
for the purchase of natural gas for
Jeremy Lahrrner, :Auta TechnoloBUSINESS EDUCATION
BHCC. Superintendent Kent Lewis gy; MaryAnne Green, computer
. "I alway• knew I would be going lo college after
wun'l
was also authorized to enter into instructor; Betty Finney, Gallia Counaure what I wanted to do. I looked Into 111tondlng 1 unl~ralty, but dactdld
agreement with Columbia Gas of ty Gateway instruc10r: Don Rollins,
thll was not thl right atmoaphare lor me. That'a whtt\ 1 friend .told me
Ohio for transportation of natural gas MRIDD; Lori Moore, nurse aide;
about Southeaatern Bualne11 College. I dlacovtrld that Southtatltm
Bualne11 College waa for me. It offered lht small cluaea with the
Clyde Beasley, James Howard, Scott ·
to BHCC. .
Individual
attention I needed and the ftexlbte achldutlngthll enabled me to
The hoard also accepted the ·fol kHp
my
part·tlme
job. Southtatlern Bualnen Colltgt gavt me lhe 1klll1
lowing donations: a 1997 Mercury
and
tell
confidence
to get my lult·llme job u an Admlnlatrlllve Alllatant
Sable from the Ford Motor Co.,
11 Oak Hill Community Medleat Center"
Allen Park, Mich.; five IBM PS/2
•
CHRISn KISEA,EXECUTI\IE SECRETARY,
monitors from the Area Agency on
All Narutal, Doclor
OAK HILL COMMUNITY MEDICAL CENTER
Aging, District 7 in Rio Grande; six
Recommended
yideos and a .manual as curriculum
" f~ ·'·''' o,JProducts are so
Effective, that we ·
materials~ the "Phases Hair Color
have a full 30 day
Series," from Fantastic Sam's, Jade
MONEY
BACK
. Business Concepts Inc., Oak Hill.
GUARANTEE!
The hoard also authorized appli·
cation for and receipt of funds if
Spring Valley Plaza
Fall Quarter Begins
granted for the Greater Visions ProGallipolis, Oh.
'llllt
.............
,
Oct. 6,1997
. gram, Equity School-to-Work Sys·
1·800.214-0452
Reg.-.1
)em, the Venture Capital School
.Improvement Grant. and the 1998
·bwight D. Eisenhowei)Professional
Development Grant.
: In personnel matters, the hoard:
· • Accepted the resignation of
l'hyllis Christian, head cook, effcc:live Nov. I due to retirement. .
:: • Approved·classification changes ·
; for Linda Bums, Cherie Davis, Sher·
:ry Headley. Mike Ja . s a\'()1 Pow•i:ll and Robin Sch~::cr.
· • Awarded supp menta .contracts
ic! Darrell Detty an
ila Oehler as
llionitors for the 1997-98 Alternative
School Program,
• Approved the resolution to ter-

.....r

• ...... ~ Mwi•PigeA3

They grow up fast.
First they crawl, walk
and then they are ready
for the car keys!
Ohmy!
Time ~ure flies by.

.•. .:"""11.._

• 'fO;.

"''

.

··~
~''ti::;:

Let the

HOLZER HEALTH HOTLINE
help you help them as the years roll on.

Call

1·800·462·5255 .
_, Every day of the week • 6 AM until 2 AM
.

Talk to yoNT physician about medication concerns

· had been going together and broke
up."

A.family member told the newspaper that Mullens and Miss Bowman broke up Thursday. !fe alleged-.

ly threatened her with a knife earlier ·
this week after learning she wanted ·
to end their relationship, the family .
said.

UNITY
Savings Bank
of Southeuce- Ohio

· 500 Third Avenue
Gallipolis

446-0315

SERVICE
Banking the way it
was meant to be!!

HEARING HEAL7B
CHECK LIS,.
Signs Or Symptoms Suggesting the
Need for Hearing Health Care
have any of the symptoms listed below contact
0 . ·IfanyouAudiologist
0 Trouble hearing on th~ P,hone

0

0

Turning up the TV to hear
Frequent requests lor olh.e rs to repeat

O

Family complainls about your hearing ability

0 Hearing but not understanding speech ·
0 · Inability to identify the location of sound source .

0

Family history of heanng difficulty

0

Failure on hearing screening at work or school

0

Delayed speech-language development

Known hearing loss that has not been evaluated in two
0 . .~or~m~or~e~y~e;a~rs~
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .__

Who's Who in
Hearing Health Care
An "otologist" or "Otolaryngologist" (ENT) is a doclor of

medicine or osteopathy (MD or DO). Such a physician is licensed
to practice medicine and surgery, and. may specialize in all
aspects of ear and hearing care. This specialist's education
typically includes four years of college, four years of medical
school, one or more years of general hospital e•perience in
treating disease and three or more years in hospital•based or
residency program. In diagnosis and treatment, the El'lT uses
and prescribes medicines, performs surger)o and may prescribe,
fit and sell hearing aids, direclly or thro~gh a staff audiologist.
An "aud.lologlst" is a hearing care specialist who is trained to
provide evaluation and hearing conservation services, as well as
treatments lo co!"pensate for the communication problems
created by a hearing loss. Following completion of a graduate or
pro.fessional degree in Audiology, and prior to licensure eligibility,
audiologists must .complete a 9 month, supervised clinical
internship and pass a standardized, comprehensive, national
examination in Audiology administered by the Educational Testing
Service. Audiologists evaluate hearing disorders in both children
and adults, using sophisticated procedures and technology,
prescnbe, fit and sell hearing aids and Assistive Listening ·
Dev1ces, and develop and implement complete hearing care
intervention programs.
An NBC·HIS "hearing Instrument specialist" is licensed or
regulated in most states·to lit and sell hearing instruments.
Hearing instrument specialists with the "NBC·HIS" designation
have passed a national standardized examination and agree to
abide by a code of ethics.

~----------------,
I
I H . .. 0Hear 1
1
.
. n ;e armg
For 1
1
P:o. Box 121a
life· 1
1
,43f5econd Avenue·
Altdloiotlcal ·I
· Koch, M:s.
u..,
I

GalliP!llis, OH 45631

·

HoubosC...

I Audiologist
(614)"446•7619
1
Special Offers!
1 Call today to schedule a tree 'I.-hour consultation.
Coupon expires 9/30197
L

I
I
1

1

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

�Commentary

.,

junh~ ~imes· ientintl
'Lsta6/lsnd illJ.%6
1114 4411 2342 • Fax: MIS 3008
111 Court Street, ~y. Ohio
1114-992·2156 • Fax: 982·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Robert L Wingett
Publl.tler

,..
•

llarg~Nt

Leh6w
Controller

,..,.,.. f!l file . , . , - WfiCCI'tne. TMy lltlluld,. ,... 111M 300
III'OI'A All ,.,_ - aub/«t f!l «1/t/llfl .I IIII mwt be signed llld
lnci!KM .ctdl••llld ..,.._ nurnbel. No llfl8/gn«&lt; ,.,.,. wiH
1» pubi/MHid. ,_.,.,.. lltlluld I» In IJOGd 11111111, Hdnlulllfl
INUH,

not,__..,,__

.Standardized testing
:On collision course
with political factions

'I

By WALTER R. MEAJJS
WASHINGTON- It sounds like a no-brainer or, more appropriately, a
· brainer - a standard national test to determine how well schoolchildren
;read hi the founh grade and handle mathematics in the eighth. After all, as
· Presidept Clinton said, words and numbers don't vary from state to state.
But his campaign for standardized testing in 1999, voluntary although he
'wants it to become universal, is headed for a political collision with con.gressional Republicans who want to stop spending on the project.
· Polls show overwhelming suppon for the goal of national standards, and
solid backing for Clinton's program. That consensus is not reflected in Con.gress, or in the statehouses. Six states and 15 major school districts have
·signed up for the 1999 testing. The American Federation of Teachers says
another 12 probably will join.
· · But the opposition is powerful, and not all Republican.
·
· · "Conservatives are opposed to anything that has 'national' in it and liberals are opposed to enything that has ' testing' in it," said Bill Bennett, the
·former secretary of education, who favors the idea but not Clinton's pro- .
posed execution of it.
.
·
. The liberal concern is that standardized tests will be unfair to minority
· children in poor school districts. 'Conservatives insist that school oversight
.
: belongs with local and state governments, not Washington.
"This is not a federal government power grab," Qinton said. "ll's a
: question of whether there should be national standards."
: That doesn't convince Republicans sucb as Rep. William F. Goodling of
· Pennsylvania,·chairman of the House education c:ommittee. He is sponsoring legislation to bar further spending on the Ointon program, which
: includes an offer of federal financing for the first rouncf of tests. .
So far, the administration is proceeding on its own authority; GOP critics •
: say Congress should consider the idea and rule on it.
Bennett said he..!§. for voluntary national testing, but not Clinton's way.
: He said the administration has summoned the usual suspects from the edu: cation establishment to draft the tests, instead of turning to a bipanisan out. side panel to decide w...t children should be expected 10 know.
"This approach won't work, and Congress is going to .vote it down,"
Bennett said in a television interview. "This is going to be moot."
Clinton set the goal in his State of the Union address last February. "We
: must begin a nationai ausade for educatiOn. standards," he said. The presi; dent bas been urging it upon state legislatures and governors; .c:laiming a
' growing national consensus for the effon and saying that about 20 percent of
U.S. school pupils will be tested in the states and districts.already on board.
But he ~ has complained that too many governors- 32 are Republicans- have been dragging their feet abOut ~ational standards. The gover. nors have set a two-year deadline for the creation of goals in each state and
, for tests to determine whether they are being met.
· · · "Reading is reading and math is math," Clinton said as he began his
' effon to get national standards. "No school board is in charge of algebra,
. and no state legislature can enac:t the law of physics. And it is time.wc.staned acting the way we should."
. But Republican opponents see the Clinton plan as a step toward federal
control of schools. Other critics, Bennett. among them, say Clinton has
· politicized the whole idea by having his administration decide how the tests
: will be written and what they will require. Bennett said that could lead to
: fuzzy, oddball approaches to learning.

:Letters to the editor
This is still America

'

Dear Editor:
: I'm writing as a parent and tax()!lyer to protest the Gallia County Local
: Board of Education's threat to jail parents who refuse to send their children
into the potentially dangerous and explosive environment of a strike.
No. govemmeni body should threaten law-abiding citizens for ·trying to
protcc:t their children. Indeed, no free government should ever threaten its
citizens. This threat betrays a dic:tatorial and desperate group of people. As
: tbe recent UPS strike demonstrates, people can get ' hun during a strike. I
· know that iw striking teacher would hun my son and daughter, but I don't
· know wbo these substitute teachers (scabs) are.
: I do know they are not regular teachers and that they are immoral people.
Anyone who will cross a picket line to take away another person's job is a
criminal. 1 don't want my children associating with or under the guidance of
scavengers and vennin like that.
·
The Board of Education and the superintendent are wrecking this school
· system by pushing teachers into this job ac:tion, If they cared about cduca. tion and children, they would give our teachers a decent wage increase and
· seek to improve their working conditions.
My children will J!Oiattend school. if there is~ strike and I won't~ gbinjl
to jail for it. No judge and no coun will ever puntsh a parent for puttmg then
children's S.fety first. This is still America, not Nazi Germany.
Mrs. S&lt;:ott A. Donley Sr.
Thurman

Where do our priorities stand?

'.

PegeA4

· Dear Editor:
"
This letter is in refe~nce to an incident that happened on Wednesday at
: approximately 7:15 p.m.
·
·
· There were about eight boys playing football and about seven others w~re
talking at the picnic table between the Meigs County Counhouse and the old
Masonic Lodge with adult supervision.
.
Officer Wolfe of the Pomeroy Police Depanment came up and told them
to leave and that they were trespassing. They told Officer Wolfe "yes, sir"
. politely and left.
These individuals weren't causing any harm, it was refreshing hearing
them say they were Brett Favie or Emmitt Smith. They could have been
downtown instead smoking on the street comers or vandalizing propeny.
On the way up tbe street I saw two men c:ome out of tbe Coun Street Bar
and were having a c:ontest to see which one could spit tobacco into the newly
planted flower pots.
.
.
•
People say there aren~ any· good Jtids anymore. Sure there os a park on
Butternut to play in; the grass there is only a foot high. I wonder where our
priorities stand. It's tough being a child.
·
O.le Taylor
~oy

• ..,.... :11 , 1117,

Sunday, August 31,1W7

''

'lri~iana' NeWt~s · po.lit.icaf· future cloudy
By JACK ANDERSON

··

.

·

and oWl MOLLER

aa Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio

Hobmt WIIMn Jr.
e-.tlve Editor

!

'•

WASHINGTON- August, Washington journalists often complain, is a month when nothing
mdch happens. Anybody who matters in the capital is usually out of town.
•
' What better time for the most WlpOJIUiar politician in America to make bis re-emergence on the
public stage? House Speaker Newt Gingrich has
been doing just that, trekking dilig~ntly across the
land in ao effon to rehabilitate his shattered public image.
Tanned, rested, and at least,! 0 pounds below
his peak weight, Gingrich bas been arriving at
podiums with Indiana Jones theme music playing
in the background.
Message: Like tbe movie hero, Gingrich has sur·
vived tbe many near-death experiences he's come
across since becoming speaker in 1995. Despite
two government shut-clowns, a· tawdry elhic:s scandal and a mptiny among his mbst trusted lieutenants, the Georgia Republican remains inaster of ,
the situation. He's liVed to fight another day:
But how much longer?
.
A senior House RepubliC~¥~, speaking to an old
friend back in. his home state recently, confided
that if an election were held right now, the clear
choice for speaker would be Rep. Bill Paxon, RN.Y., a top fund-raiser and one of the few Republicans who can unite the moderate and conservative wings of the pany.
'
P~on, of course, was the only panicipant in last month's· coup attempt who
emerged with anything resembling dignity. Once the back-stage shenanigans
came into public view, Paxon offered up
his resignation to Giqgrich, which was
promptly accepted.
·
"II is lnie that my life on some days
sometimes seems adventurous enough to
be an Indiana Jones movie," Gingrich
allowed during a recent appearance on
"The Tonight Show." But if Gingrich,
whose forte has never been modesty,

almost did ~ enlist
tbe GOP leadership in
a coup attempt against
their leader? After all,
it was Gingrich who
recruited these zealots
in the first place. He
coached them to be
guerrilla warriors, and
then acted surprised
wben they turned

those iac:tics against him. .
But we suspect that Gingrich's Indiana Jones act
may have been inspired by ail incident from his
1996 re-elcc:tion campaign, when he spent a
morning beinjl chased around Georgia's 6th Congressional District by a wooden duck..
Cookie magnate Michael Coles, Gingrich 's
Democratic opponent, invented this campaign
gimmick as a way to ruffle the speaker's feathers.
Thus was born the duckmobile, a bright yellow,
1982 Ford Tempo with a wooden duck and loudspeaker affiXed to the roof.
As we teported last fall, the duclcmobile provided the Gingrich-Cales race with some " risk"
filled moments.
On one occasion, Indiana Newt and the duck·
mobile were involved in a high-speed chase down
an Atlanta highway. The duckmobile had been in
hot pursuit of its quarry all morning, following

•

.•,

.

..

. ..

va..:.
.

..

'

'

·:. Union drafts rank and file
to learn ways of lobbyi'n g

experiment in the union 's future, sai(j desire to spend less time discussing Gary Hubbard, the steelworkers' full - party affiliations and more time on
WASHINGTON - Don Lance is . time Washington spokesman.
individual issues.
"We
lost
50,000
members
in
four
Although he is a practicing Demoa sman guy.
yea!'s
in
the
1980s,"
he
said.
"We
crat
who has been a delegate to his
He keeps up with the news, is
have
to
organize
20,000
new
memparty's
natidnal conventions, Lance
active in his local political party and
in his union. On occasion, he has bers a year to maintain our 750,000. believes organized labor has been
gone to Columbus, Ohio, to talk to And that means we ' ve got to find wrong to reflexively· endorse · any
local representatives about bills being ways to help our members , under- Democratic p61itician and idea.
stand the issues better that affect their
"Party-line politics is hi story and
considered in· the Statehouse. ·
it's not a sman thing to do," he said.
, He thought he knew how things lives.
"We have to learn how to reach
Ney - who is angry about orga' Worked.·Then came a crash course in
out to others and bring new blood. nized labor's campaign against his re·
the ways of Washington.
election - said he makes appoint·
"There's a lot of stuff going on Otherwise we die."
The steelworkers, like the rest of meniS with steelworkers from his
here that you don't hear in your
senior government class," Lance said organized labor, backs Democrats in eastern Ohio district but has no time
as he ended a .IO..week internship in elections and actively works against for any of their Washington repre·
sentatives, even one on temporary
the United Steelworkers of America · Republicans.
Hubbard describes the union's duty.
·
lobbying office.
"The steelworkers. they don't do
· La11ce and seven others drawn goals in terms of electing more
from factories in Maryland. Indiana, Democrats but Lance and fellow anything for the people, 'they just
Texas; Virginia, Tennessee, Iowa and intern Bettye Ridgley of Baltimore agree with Bill Clinton," said Ney. ·
Pennsylvania spent the summer rub· said they went home with an appre· "If I' m supportiQg stopping Bill
bing elb9ws with the Gucci loafer ciation for the need to ignore party Clinton on clean air regs and they're
for Bill Clinton on clean air regs, I'm
crowd, waiting pati~ntly for appoint· lines.
Both said they had a difficult time on the side of the rank and file and
ments that didn't always materialize
competltlvenesa of two General Motors Corp. • and taking notes in hearing rooms.
CASTING HIS BALLOT - Jim Clark, an offigetting appointments with Republi· they' re not.' They have become the
suspension plants in Kettering. Clark voted at
cer with the lnter!lltlolllll Union of Electronic
Gucci crowd to these working people
It's a side of organized labor the can members of Congress. ·
the Local 755 hall at Kettering. (AP)
Workers Local 755, cast hla ballot Friday on a
Only one GOP lawmaker con· and they better wake up to it."
rank·and-file doesn't see except in
coat-cutting proposal dallgned to lnC1'811se the
the form of newsletters and "action sen ted to see Ridgley- Rep. Roben , Not all of the lawmakers who sent .
.
Erlich, from her home state. He staffers to sec the temporary lobby·
alens" faxed to union halls .
isiS were making a political sta(c·
Instead of reading paperwork • turned her into a fan.
"I dori't want to make this guy .menl; sometimes, it's just prioritizing
from Washington, they researched it. ·
Instead of asking the union what sound real great, now, but he told me, in a busy time. said Rep. Sherrod
was up with. say, the flextime bill 'Come up and see me any time. our Brown, D·Ohio.
Normally, Brown said, "I'll sec
(which some hourly workers fear door is always open,"' she recalled.
"It
was
very
very
refreShing
to
think
the
Ohio person first , I'll sec the
would mean a loss of.overtime pay,
they
were
open
to
all
ideology."
Washington
person that's speaking on
though the authors insist that wouldLeaders oflntemational Union of n't happen) the interns quizi ed comKETTERING (AP) - Union · effect for four years.
Lance was taken aback by .how behalf of the Ohio people second."
workers have voted to approve a cost·
"'We consider it an important step Electronic Workers Local 755 mittee staff and the people writing the much longer it took to see his Repub- During a busy session day. there usu·
culling plan designed to make the two in making the plants in Kettering endorsed the proposal as a way to bill .
lican senatm than his Democratic ally isn't enough time to sec people
General Motor.;· Corp. suspension more competitive," .he said. "This reduce financial losses at the plants.
,
Bringing in people such as mill· senator, and by an outright refusal dropping in from other states.
Union leaders handed out a flier wright Lance and crane operator from Rep . Bob Ney. R-Ohio.
plants in this Dayton suburb more has been a long and difficult process
~rown spent a lot of time with
competitive.
for both the union and manage· saying the proposal includes cost-cut- Bettye Ridgley to do those jobs is an
Still, hi: left Washington with a Lance because they' rc both from
ting measures such as' incen,ives for
GM spokesman Jim Hagedon said ment."
~ortheast Ohio.
81 percent of those union members
Union officials were not immedi- early retirement. Workers said new
employees will be hired at lower pay
who voted Friday night cast ballots to ately available for comment.
approve the memorandum of underAbout 2,500 hourly workers are rates .
The plan also features penalties
standing that will be tacked on1o the · employed at the 1wo plants, which
designed
to discourage the sale or
existing contract between the . make struts, shock absorbers apd sustors and public officials. Petro ·
his audits.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Two
joint
operation
of the plants.
automaker and wmkers at the GM pension systems for GM and non-.
"From
the.
beginning,
we
have
found that contraclors were paid
northeast Ohio judges who tried to
Delphi Chassis plants. II would be in GM vehicles.
taken
the
position
that
these
judges
'hundreds
of thousands of dollars
stop state Auditor Jim Petro from
cannot
control
either
the
content
of
for
construction
work they neve,r
releasing an audit on a local water
this
repon
or
the
liming
of
its
performed,
or
were
paid excessive
district had no authority to do so,
.
release,"
Petro
spokesman
Tom
rates.
Petro's office said.
.
Prendergast said. ·
In their order filed Thursday, ·
NEW LEXINGTON (AP) - Two 7:30 a.m. Friday after their stolen Thursday.
Judges Andrew D. Logan of
Logan
and
Maloney
had
filed
The
two
had
claimed
to
be
fugiLogan
and Maloney crit.icized
Trumbull County and Judge Timteenagers from Alabama Me facing truck crashed near Corning, a Perry
an
order
Monday
forbidding
Petro
tives
from
an
Alabama
detention
Petro
for
exceeding his authority
othy P. Maloney of Mahoning
delinquency chMges of kidnapping County community about 55 miles
from
releasing
the
final
version
of
But
Alabama
Depanment
of
center.
by expanding a 1996 reque~ (or a
County, who have jurisdiction over
for allegedly abducting an off-dity southeast of Columbus.
his audit of the district, which sup'
limited investigation of the district
Sheriff's Capt. Travis Key lor said Youth Services Director James
the Mahoning Valley Sanitary Dissheriff's deputy who later escaped
plies water to about 300,000 coninto an audit investigating alleged
trict, on Thursday ordered Petro to
· when the boys stopped to buy sneak- Friday that the pair was suspected of Dupree said Friday that no youths
sumers
in
Trumbull
and
Mahoning
·
had
been
reported
escaped
from
a
abducting
Franklin
County
Deputy
fraud.
appear
before
them
on
Sept.
16.
ers.
detention
facility,
counties.
But
the
order
came
about
·
La1e Friday, Attorney General
Rick
Smith
at
gunpoint
as
he
drove
They
also
ordered
him.to
hand
over
Kenneth Larrivee, 14, and Joseph
Hocking
County
deputies
·
said
four
hours
after
Petro
had
released
Betty
Montgomery asked the·Ohio
to
his
Hocking
County
Cabin
on
the
final
ver.;ion
of
his
special
audit
Wrightson, 15, were caught about
Larrivee and Wrightson were each
the 70-page repon.
Suprelne Coun to prohibit Logan
of the district.
·
charged with one delinquency count
The audit seeks nearly $2.7 mil- and Maloney fmm enforcing their
put Petro's office said they
of kidnapping. Additional charges are
lion in repayments fmm contrac·
order. I
have no jurisdiction over Pelro or
pending and the boys could face fedwonh $1.
· By The Asaoclated Praaa
eral charges, Cpl. Don Jackson said.
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
The following numbers were
They Me scheduled to appear in
Match the name with the.picture of the Ohio
selected in Friday's Ohio and West S473.425to winners in Friday's Pick Hocking County Juvenile Court on
3 Numbers daily game.
TueSday. The two are being held in
Virginia lotteries:
Valley Bank representative. Correct entries .
Sales for the game · totaled Five-County Joint Juvenile Detention
OHIO
will be placed·in a drawing for a $25.00 prize.
$1,552,218.
Center in Marysville, Jackson said.
Pick 3: 3-0..9
In
the
other
daily
game,
Pick
4
Perry CountY Sgt. Eric Newlon
Pick 4: 4-7-3·7
Numbers players wagered $419,206 said the teens confessed to the carBuckeye 5:. 13-15-20-24-37·
Last week's winner was:
jacking and kidnapping after they
There were no tickets sold listing and will share $144,800.
Sales for the Buckeye 5 game were captured.
all five numbers selected in Friday
totaled
$368,123.
Our
An...,__,,
The two · allegedly kidnapped
· night's Buckeye 5 ~rawing. the Ohio
The
jackpot
for
Saturday's
Super
Smith
about
II
:30
a.m.
Thursday.
He
Lottery said.
said he thought they were stranded
There were II 0 Buckeye 5 tickets Lotto drawing was $8 million.
WEST
VIRGINI.:\
motorists,
with four of the numbers, and each is
Daily 3: 9-2-9
Smith said the youths told him
wonh $250. The 3,709 tickets showDaily 4: 1-0·3-1
they had been stealing to finance their
ing three of the numbers are, each
Cash 25: 4-6-17-18·22·24
wonh $10 and the 39, 149 tickets
escape fmm Alabama.
showing two of the number.; are each

·GM workers OK cost-cutting
· proposal at.Dayton area plants

Petro raps judges for blocking audit

Teenagers held for abducting deputy

On Labor Day, be thankful for -those who work
employees. Safety
concerns · in ·the
workplace
were
often lax or lacking
altogether. Workers
making 28 cents
per hour c:ould be
dismissed
and
replaced because
another was willing
to work for 27 cents per hour.
In an effon to creare·a more level
field, labor unions grew in numbers
and strength. Contracts were signed
to cover wages and working condilions. When agreement c:ould not be
reached by bargaining,. strikes of
major industries brought business to
a bait, or other workers were hired to
The way we work and the object replace the. strikers and violence
of our work has changed greatly in often occurred. ·Government began
this century. Earlier, just keeping to regulate what were fair lahor
food on the table and a roof over our practices and assumed the power to
heads was objective number one aild step in and settle cenain unresolved
everyone, except the very young, disputes.
had a role to play. Other than the
Other companies sought to develpower of horses, most of the labor op policies and practices that met
was with the hands. We would spade the needs of their workers· without
t~e garden, milk the cow, slop the the necessity of unions. They lispigs and weed the com by hand. As 'tened to the concerns and worked to
kids we c:ould only go play after all provide a good workplace environour chores were done. Being a pan ..~, ment. We have plants today where
of a family that loved you and ~red owners walk through the factory and
about your future made that sacrifice make themselves available to
se~m small. All that we learned in employees to share concerns on a
thiS process turned out to be very daily basis. This is commendable
helpful as we became adult.
and serves to diffuse . problems
For those who worked outside the before they get out of hand.
home, labor was often difficult.
Just as with government, some
Heavy work with few labor-saving union leaders spend a great effon to
devices was more the rule than the maintain the necessity of their posiexception.
Some
employers, lions and salaries long after the benwhether because of the nature of the efits being sought were obtained.
work, competitiveness, or greed Maintaining an adversarial relationwere harsh in their treatment of

ship seems to accomplish their
As long as we have ownership of
goals, even though ·it may be counter companies who are looking out only
to the-interests of the members orthe for themselves, for the bottom line, ·
industry. There is a narrow line that for their own prestige, there will
Separates increased worker benefits continue to be a need for someone to
from company insolvency. If that look out for the individual worker. Is
line is crossed we know that every- it ·not true that the most imporlant
one loses. In a world of global mar- pan of any company are the people,
keting that line may be difficult to all the people? When we treat them
discern.
as being that imponant, will peace in
In recent times. several of the th~ workplace not be commonplac~?
major unions' leadership have taken · Will that worker not be more m?llon concern for certain social issues vated to company loyalty an~ h1gh
and have been using dues of the productivity when he or she IS valmembership to suppun political can- ued an.d esteemed ? The Colden
didates. They justify this by assen- Rule sllll works best.
ing that businesses also supply
There will always be points of
money to candidates who suppon contention between employer and
their views. The problem with this is employees, that is.. human nature at
that business is cohesive regarding work. The . main concerns today
their objectives, while a significant seem to be pensions, part-time
number of union members object to employees, and out-sourcing of
their money being used for those work. The needs of a growing variwhose principles they OJli&gt;Ose. The ~ty of businesses create also a vari·
coun's Beck decision affirnls the ely of needs in that business. We can
members' right. Currently, they must expect to see this trend to continue
ask for money not used dircc:tly for for years to come. More and more
bargaining activity, but political, to we see those who work out of their
be returned to them.
own hoine. With the advancement in
computers this is practical as well as
We have come a long way formore efficient in the use of time and
ward from some of the practices of
travel cost~. ll is often more "familythe 19th century and early 20th. II
friendly," especially for the "work·
was said in those days that if a coal ing mom."
miner was negligent and caused a
Work is honorable and .should be
mule to be killed, he would be fired.
However, if a miner was killed, they upheld in that way. Economic .
would just hire another one. An advancement m America came
uncle's body was beaten into the about because of the work of hunconcrete floor when his clothing dreds of millions. Families have
became entangled in a flywheel on a been provided for and many needs
machine. There was no guard have been met. We arc thankful for
around the equipment, and the near· t6ose who work.
est breaker ·switch was on another
(Robert Weedy Is a columnlat ·
floor.
lor the Sunday Tiines-Sentlnel.)

Ohio, W.Va. lottery results

Get to Know

OVB
125th

Cynthia Taylor of Gallipolis

.-~~~--------------~----------~~~~

o.bstelricS • .:iynecology + lnfenllity • Complete Women's Healthcare
:\fL'\\" 1\llil'l liS. \il' l'LIJ"IL'llti\'
1\l'lll .: ! .\lll'j'!L'd

• Obstetrics

De Klerk put freedom, dignity above politics
WASHINGTON- F.W. de Klerk deserves a
favored place in history.
- The white South African leader who freed Nelson Mandela from prison and then negotiated an
end to that country's pigmentocracy is retiring
from politics next month. .
"I know that the time has come for me to go,"
he said in announcing his decision to resign as
head of South Africa's National Pany.
Actually, be should have stepped aside three
years ago whep Mandela was chosen president in
the first South African election open to all races.
Instead, he lingered on the political scene- f!ISI
as deputy vice president and then later as an oppo·
sition leader.
Naively, he believed there was a place in the
new South Africa for, his National Party - the
architect of apanheid, the system of government
that foi more than four decades violently suppressed the country's black majority.
But de Klerk should be remembered more for
what he did to transform South Africa from a bastion of white sup~macy to a model multiracial
democracy, than for his slowness to leave the
political stage. .

1. ••

· otJ.io~
.

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Aaaoclated Preu Writer

...

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM

t

,.

'

Gingrich as be was ferried around the district to
various campaign stops. .
.
According to duckrnobtle captam Tamm~ Go!·
don, Gingrich's car eventuB:IIY be~ speedmg .m
an obvious effon to shed Its quacking nemesiS.
Unable to shake the duck, Gingrich's vehicle then
began a ''slow, O.J."Style chase ... they'd go real
slow to see if we'd pass them," Gordon said.
Eventually, the car pulled off at the exit to Gin-.
grich 's district office, ending the chase.
But there was still more to come.
Later that same day, the duckmobile followed
the speaker's car through an affluent suburban
neighborhood, startling the afternoon bikers and
walkers with the IOlld quacking sounds emanating
from its roof. Finally, the speaker had had
enough. His car pulled off into a local municipal
center which also houses a police station. The
Capit~l Police officer driving Gingrich's car summoned a local police officer, who 'hen
approached the dudunobile.
A Capitol Police officer also approached the
duckrnobile, informing its occupants that their
activities were creating a "seeurity risk."
No doubt Steven Spielberg would have found
a spiffier ending to this little tale. Then again,
Harrison Ford would never find himself b'eing
chased by a wooden duck.
(Jack Anclem!n and Jan Moller .,. c:olumnlsts for United Feature Syndicate.)

weren't
busy fashioning
himself
as the
real-life so
version
of a Hollywood
hero,
he r'=========~=======::;
might realize just how silly he's being.
Unlike Indiana Jones, Gingrich has
had to dodge political boulders that were
largely of his own making.
Nobody forced him to shut down ,the
government in a fit of pique after being •
snubbed by President Clinton aboard Air
Force One. And the speaker has nobody
but himself to blame for flouting the tax
laws by forming a series of political organizations thinly disguised as non-profit
ventures. .
And who can blame the rebellious
young Republicans who tried to - and

By ROBERT WEEDY
Labor is that human.activity that
provides goods and services to the
.economy. Wages are given f\)r this
effon because the laborer is wonhy
'of bis hire. We have this special day
set aside each year to honor those
who labor not only for the advancement of the economy, but who thereby provide for their family. It is right
and proper that 'we should do this.
We are to enioy the good of all
our labor. Rewards are an essential
outcome when labor is performed.
Sometimes thi~ may not be only in
monetary form, but praise for a job
well done adds appreciably 10 the
satisfac:tion of doing our best.

'·

• GyneCology
+Epidurals

With or without him, apartheid was doomed. place today than it was just a few years ago
By the time de Klerk became the last National . because of de Klerk's vision and courage. But he
Par!y president in 1989, South Africa's economy . h~s paid.a heav~ price for his b~eak with ihe past.
was being squeezed by an international divesti- Right-Wing whites consider him a traitor and
ture movement that sought an end to the nation's most blacks view him as a political relid. His
racist policies. Pressure was mounting both in'side attempt to tum the National Pany into a multira.
.and out of the country for change.
cial alternative to the African National Congress
To his ~t, de Klerk chose a peaceful transfer of has failed miserably.
power rather than a bloody civil war. The death and
Like an aging boxer who doesn't know when
destruaioli from such a conflict would have been · to quit, de Klerk continued on as leader of his
enormous. Tens of thousands would have died, South pany after Mandtla replaced him as president.
Aftica'seconomy would have been devastated.
Now, three years later, he has come to his senses.
I.nstead of fighting a losing battle; de Klerk It's time for him to go.
plotted a course for lasting peace. He legalized 60
But he shouldn't go very far.
anti-apanheid groups. He freed Mandela, the
. As an .elder statesma~, d~ Klerk can play a
African National Congress leader who had been vual role.m South Afnca s st1H evolving democin jail 27 years for opposing white-minority rule .. racy. He IS well regarded by moderate whites and
. And he negotiated with Mandela a transition to respected by most black politicians. From his
.democratic government that enfranchised blacks soon-to-be-assumed position above the political
while protec:ting the rights of South African fray, he can help keep South Africa's. multiracial
whites. For their effons, de Klerk and Mandela democracy on course.
were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.
He can also assist Mandela in bringing politi"I would like to be remembered positively as cal stability to the rest of sub-Saharan Africa, in
one P, the leaders who at the right time did the much the same way Jimmy Caner helped Bill
right thing," he said two years ago.
Clinton end the coup that ousted Haiti's first
And so be should. South Africa is a far better democratically elected president.

.Infertility
• Preventive care
• t.apyroscopic Swgeries
• Gynecological Swgeries
• Complete Women's Healthcare
1b Schedule An Appointment
With Mark W. Nolan. MD.
Please Call. (304) 675-3400.

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

MATCH THE NAME WITH THE PICTURE
Diana Barnette
Hugh Graham

Sue Ann Bostic
Bryan Martin

Katrinka Hart
Tom Shepherd

Nancy Lusher
Scott Shockey

Name:_________________________ Phone L__)_ _ _ __
_________________________________________•·

Add~s.

CONTEST RULES;
1) Completed entries must be receiVed at an Ohio Valley Bonk office no later than noon each
Frtdoy. The winner will be published In next Sunday's newspaper. .
.
2) Ohio Volley Bane Cotp. employees and their Immediate lamllles are not eligible to win.
Person may only win once.
4 One entry per person tor each week.

3j

cd~ cff~wid Wwe CV/~
I•

••
•
'
•~
••
•

�•

Sunday, August 31, 1117

Pomet oy • Middleport • O.IUpolls, 0H • Point PlaaMnt, WV

Nation/World

Recalling fun times, bad times on the road
By MAX TAWN£Y
As ill almosl everything we do, lhere are both aood IIIII bad expencnc:cs.
While lbe bad experiences arc o~n more exciling in n:trospect, I would
not like to n:peat any of them. I will tell you about lbe
bad experiences ftnt.
I used to go to old Mexico every year, and one lime
when Mabel and I were in Acapulco, going to our hotel,
a Mexican stopped us and asked if we wanted to take a
sightseeing trip on his boat at no charge. We told him
"no," because we had just arrived, and wanted to check
in and have lun~h. We did tell him that we woold go with
him the next day, Early the next morning we ~ard that
he had talked an elderly couple into going with him IIIII
that he had robbed and killed both of them.
On another trip to Mexico, I was on a small plane from Toluca to Morelia when something went wrong with the plane. The pilot landed the plane
on a small strip of flat ground on top of a mountain - he barely got the
plane stopped just before we would have gone over the edge and dropped
down lbe mountain, which would have killed all of us.
Ano!her lime I was alone in Taxco taking photos of a gang of young fellows and they were yelling at me in Spanish. I didn't know what they were
saying, but then realized they were saying, "no photos." They started to
throw knives at me and one went through my shin and took a small piece of
skin. I staned to run and so did they. I ran into a grocery store and the owner
would not let thein in. He saved my life. There were a]l drunk on tequila and
would have killed me if I hadn't run into this store. I gave the man 500 pesos.
In Guatemala I met two boys in an old car and asked them to take me up
into lbe mot,intains to a large market called Chichastenango. The driver and
.his friend rode in the front seat. I got into the back seat and half-way up the
mountain, "the friend" got out of the car, and I moved up to the front seat.
We· hadn't gone very far when someone started to shoot at us. The driver
pushed the "pedal to the metal" and soon got to the market. I counted six or
seven bullet holes in lbe car and if I had stayed in the seat back sea~ I would
not be writing this anicle. Later, I found out that Ibis boy was messing
around with the shooter's wife. You bet I got a ride back witb someone else.
One time in Burma, I was waking down the street and saw about 12 fellows having a good time, so I stopped to talk to them. I soon found that they
could not understand me and I didi\~ understand them. They were all drunk
or smoking opium or whatever they smoke, and they had begun to push me
around. One man had his little boy with him and I picked up the boy and
gave him a whistle that I had in my pocket. I blew it, then had him to blow
i~ Those fellows wenf crazy. They all shook my nand and hugged me. I let
the little boy keep the whistle and I gave the others American quaners to
keep. When I left, I was their hero. Later I was informed that if I had not
done what I did, those fellows wQuld have robbed me.
In Africa, when I was on a trip with J\l"k Hanna, I just missed getting bitten by one of the most poisonous snakes in the world. Our guide shot the
snake just before it could strike. In Egy~ I got stuck out in the desert on a
camel with a guide who did not know where he was going.- We got lost and
~ to stay all night in the desert. I lay down beside my camel and tried to
go to sleep and the-camel rolled over on me the camel almost smothered me.
I almost died.
In Manila, we heard the radio say there was a terrible fire at the hotel
where we were supposed to have stayed. Forty-nine people were killed. If
we would have stayed there, all of us would have died. It just. wasn't my time

Gallia County court news
'

'

.

Municipal '
Jason L. Mercer, 19, Bidwell,
GALLIPOLIS - The following charged with underage alcohol concases were recently resolved in Gal- · sumption, was fined S150, two years
lipolis Municipal Coun:
probation and .120 hours coinmuniry
Michael T. Hurt; I9, Rio Grande, service.
charged with operating a motor vehiBilly J. Harrington, 45, 14255
cle after underage consumption, was · State Route 7, Gallipolis, charged
fined $250, two years prob llion and with underage alcohol consumption,
80 hours community service.
was fined $750, three days jail, three
· Gary L. Cox, 40, 23 Berger Dri- years probation and 180 days license
vi:, Gallipolis, charged with driving suspension.
under the influence, was · fined
Frederick L. Sexton, 40, Hunting$1,100, 30 days jail, two years pro- ton, W.Va., charged with DUI, was
bation and 180 days license suspen:.. • fined $450, three days jail, two years
Jlon. .
probation and 180 days license susM~hael S. McCoy, 19, Racine,
pension.
. ·
·charged with DUI, was fined $500,
Jeffery A. Sexton, 28, Huntington,
three days jail, two years probation W.Va., charged with disorderly conand 180 days license suspension.
duct, was fined $100.
.
' · Douglas R. Dickens Jr., 26, South
Allen V!f. Burke, 19, 124 Founh
Webster, charged with reckless oper- Ave., Gallipolis, charged with disorjition, was fined $450.
derly conduct, was fined $150, two
· Patricia L. VanMeter, 29, Bidwell, years probation and 80 hours com'i:harged with disorderly conduct, was munity service.
lined $100. ·
Nonnan L. Plumley, 32,381 Buck
. ·l Elliott 0. Knight, 55, ·Madison, Ridge Road, Bidwell, charged ~i~h
);.&lt;:;., charged with DUJ, was fined DUI, was fined $450, three days Jatl,
:S450, three days jail, two years pro- two years p&lt;obation and 180 days
,ation and 180 days license suspen- license suspension.
sion.
John D. Altizer II. 29, 504-1/2
: Tammy F. Champer, I9, 76-1/2 Second Ave., Gallipolis, ch¥ged with .
Nine St., Gallipolis, charged with petty theft, was fined $100, two
~nderage alcohol consumption, was
years probat,on and 40 hours comlined $150, two years probation and munity service ..
;o hours community service.

Ph•l•
I Ip W• B UHen

Mason T. Morgan

Anna Ours

-Local News in Brief:Meigs deputies seize 3·wheeler

Police end standoff peacefully

J..ETART FALLS- Meigs County sherifl's deputies impounded a threewheeled all-terrain vehicle around I :30 a.m. Saturday on East Letan Road
CLEVELAND (AP) - Police they expected 10 lind more weapons
near Letan Falls.
,captured an 82-year-old man '\'ith a when they searched him home.
Deputies on patrol observed the three-wheeler on the Cemetery Road, ·shotgun Saturday following a nearly ·
Thomas has been diagnosed with
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said. They attempted to stop the vehicle, which 45-hour standoff.
Alzhcimer's ·discase. Hastings said.
went into the gravel pit behind the cemetery where lbe cruiser was unable
He was taken to St. Luke's HosPolice wel'!l called to Clinton
to follow.
pital
whe~e . he was listed in stable
Thomas' east side home Thursday
Upon returning to East Letan Road, Deputy Brian Holm110 carne upon afternoon after a social worker told condition with no injuries.
the three-wheeler, at which time a passenger jumped off and ran into a com- them Thomas waved a 20-gauge
Thomas fired at least live shots
field. Charges are pending against the operator, Soulsby said.
from
the house, Hastings said.
shotgun at her when she came to
Soulsby said his office has received numerous complaints from th~ Letan check on him, Sgt. Mark Hastings
Thomas' three daughters tried to
Township area concerning the illegal operation of ATV s.
coax him out during_the standoff by
said.
·
·calling
him on .the .telephone, and
Thomas was standing behind his
pleading
with hom in television news
front door and talking to police on the
GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizations will be provided by the Gallia phone when he was caught Saturday broadcasts.
County Health Depanment io the counhouse lobby from 4-6 p.m. Wednes- morning, Hastings said. Police ; Police used tear gas and sprayed
day.
the door and look him into water through a window Friday hopChildren in need of immunizations must be accompanied by a parent and opened
ing to force him out.
custody without a strugglo.
bring an up-to-date immunizalion record with them.
A police tactical team surrounded
Hastings said Thomas left the shotgun in another room. Police.said Thomas' house Thursday
RIO GRANDE - The September meeting of the Rio Grande Board of
Public Affairs is Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. in the Rio Grande Municipal Build-

Free immunizations scheduled

Board of Public Affairs slates meeting

-- -

.
The meeting is open to the public, Cleric. Sheila Arrowood
said.

NAACP branch meeting this week

GALLIPOLIS- The Southeastern Ohio Branch of the NAACP's monthly business meeting l"ill be Thursday, Sept. 4 a1 7 p.m. in the Di. Samuel L.
Bossard Memorial Library, 7 Spruce St., Gallipolis.
The branch conducts its business meetings on the first Thursday of each
month, rotating meeting locations between Jackson, Gallia and Lawrence
counties.
·

GAHS Band Boosters meet Tuesday
GALLIPOLIS- Galli a Academy High School Band Boosters will meet
at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the high school band room.

Building, library closed Monday

GALLIPOLIS -Offices in the Gallipolis City Building will be closed
Monday in observance ofthe Labor Day holiday, City Manager John LeBlanc
announced.
In addition, the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library will be closed
Monday for the holiday.
.

Oliver E. Stover

Two ticketed by Gallipolis officers

GALLIPOLIS - Cited by Gallipolis City Police Friday and early Sat: GALLIPOLIS- Beloved father and grandfather, Oliver E. Stover, 103, urday were Kristi M. Fife, 1529 McCormick Road., Gallipolis, theft; and
. ~f Gallipolis, died Friday, August 29, 1997 in the Scenic Hills Care Center Shelly A. Cox, 18, 1175 Kriner Road, Gallipolis, underage alcGhol con~n Gallipolis.
: sumption.
, He was born May 6, 1894 in Gallia County, son of the late Jubal M. Stover
end Charlotte Saunders Stover. He was a relired building contractor, and also
GALLIPOLIS- Booked into the Gallia .County Jail following arresL'
:worked for over 20 years at the Gallipolis Developmental Center as a car' by authorities were:
penter and painter.
• Clayton Morrison, 55, Bidwell, Friday at 3:36p.m. by the Gallia Coun·
He was a member of the Christ United Met~odist Church, and a member
ty Sheriff's Department for left of center and occ~pant res!faining dcvic'cs.
:of VFW Post 4464 and American Legion Lafayette Post 27. He was a vet• George W. Taylor, 22, 130 Paxton Road, Galhpohs, Fnday at 5:49 p.m
):ran of World WI( I and World War D. and was the last surviving World War
by deputies for contempt of court.
·
·
.
' veteran in Gallia County.
.
.
• Bobbie J. George, 36, Vinton, Saturday at4:23 a.m. by deputies for felo, Surviving are -a son and daughter-m·law, Eugene and Manan Stover of
nious assault.
'
bdessa, Texas; two stepdaughters, Betty Skipper of~uisville, Kentucky, and
Esther Braun of Sidney; a stepson, Dan Guey·of Srdney; and a daughter-mJaw, Tressa Stover of Chesapeake.
CHESTER - Members of the Shade River Lodge 453 F &amp; AM wanti• Also surviving are grandchildren, Rick Stover and Linda Stover, both of ng to march in the Chester parade Monday should meet at I p.m. at Chester ·
Chesapeake, Greg Stover of- Clio, Michigan, Christine Stover of Oscoda,
Elementary School.
t--fichigan, Joanne Stover Campbell of Fhnt, M1chrgan, Larry Stover of Gallipolis, and Connie Stover and Gary Stover, both of Odessa, Texas; step~children, Phil Mason of Louisville, Kentucky, Phylhs We~ of Hous·
OKLAHOMA CITY '(AP) everyone in the counroom to tears.
ton, Texas, Mary Ann Hunt, Beverly Forsythe .and Diane Ellis, all of Odessa,
Once
jurors
cried
at
the
teslimony
of
"There wasn't anything we could
Texas, and Keith Cottrell of Cincinnati; several great-grandch1ldn:n; severvictims
of
the
Oklahoma
City
bombdo
about
it," Jones said. "The jury sat
al nieces and nephews; and many wonderful friends.
· He was preceded in death by three wives, Edith M. Lewis Stover, in 1936, ing, there was virtually no chance of there and cried."
Prosecutors have said the victims'
Nellie Plymale Cottrell Stover, in I 968, and Susan Guey Stover, in 1989; acquitting Timothy Me Veigh, his
testimony was necessary to illustrate
two sons, James 0. Stover and Lewis M. Stov~r; three brothers, Wilb~r former attorney says.
Stover, Oakley Stover and Emsay Stover Sr.; and three srsters, Vona Agnstt,
The accounts of children, parents, the human cost of the bombing that
husbands and wives killed in the killed 168 people. Their accounts
Roma Burcham and Retha Gates.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, September 3, 1997 in the Willis Funer- bombing, plus news stories that broke up drier testimony about phone
al Home, with the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be in Mound McVeigh confessed, helped prosecu- records, .mangled truck .pans and
Hill Cemetery. F'riends may call at the funeral home from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, tors overcome a weak case, Stephen explosives residues.
The jury convicted McVeigh in
Jones said Friday in an interview two
September 2, 1997.
·
.
.
.
There will be a military flag presentatron at the graves1de by Amencan days after he was taken off June on murder and conspiracy
McVeigh's case.
charges and condemned him to die.
Lesion l.afayette Post 27 and VFW Post 4464.
His formal sentence was handed
One
of
the
first
witnesses,
a
young
· The family would like to thank the Scenic Hills Care Center staff and Dr.
mother who lost her 16-month-old down Aug. 14.
Carlsen for their loving care.
son in the blast, brought nearly

THE WINNER- Robert Shamblin ot Point Pleasant, W.Va., was
the winner ot a new Harley-Davidson .SoltaU Custom motorcycle·
in a promollon held by the Harley Owners Group Gallipolis Chap..-. The promotion was conducted during the chapter's first Classic Bike Show, held at the chapter's clubhou11 on Proapei:t Road
near Bidwell, on Aug. 17.

Gallia deputies lodge three In jail

_Parade participants to meet at school

Jones: testhnony sank McVeigh case

~

'1---~' :'•PagtA7,

MOII'ITAL

I'ATIINT LIJU

WMIIL DMAtlll

OXYOIII

COMPLETE HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES

SALES • RENTALS • REPAIRS
FREE DELIVERY&amp; SET-UP
• HOSPITAL BEDS MEDICARE
• WHEEL CHAIRS

•
•
•
•

LIFf CHAIRS
BATHROOM AIDS .
NEBULIZERS
STAIR GLIDES
t. \1111'1111"'

I lf1--; 2:::;
70 1'1'\1 ., I .

'

MEDICAID
PRIVATE INSURANCE

"We Treat You
Like Family"
lllllllill

1-::uo 1.-; :: -t,:: II

HOME

OXYGEN
2'1--HOUR
~MEHCt:NCW
~F.KVICE

RESPIRATORY
THERAPIST

I II 1, " II '\
.,!;:f, :- I ;: I
~ '"I

\l\1\

Rally
targets
alleged
torture
By RICHARD PYLE
Anoclated Prna Writer
NEW YORK - An estimated
5,000 marchers protesting lbe tonure
of a Hailian immigrant, allegedly at
the hands of police, Friday walked to
City Hall where they staged a peace- ·
ful rally against police brutality.
The march, dubbed "Day of Out.rage Against Police Brutality and
Harassment," was held in suppon of '
30-year-old Abner Louima, who
underwent another round of surgery
Thursday as a result of a ruptu!N
colon and bladder. He claims officers
beat and sodomized him with a toilet plunger.
The 11111n:hers crossed the Brook.lyn Bridge Friday afternoon, forcing
police to shut down the lanes heading into lower Manhattan. No arrests
were reported.
"The problem is the police think
,they are the only ones that count no one else," said Haitian immigrant
Jean Bernard, a toilet plunger in ~ne
harid and a Hailian flag in the other.
The brutality ;'is not affecting line
class- it's affecting everybody, ~ · he
said.
Hundreds of police officers in riot
gear surrounded City Hall as the protesters gathered in a small park
across the street. The marchers, at
least one supponive police officer
among them, sang "We Shall Overcome" and listened as a prayer ·was
read in Creole.
·
,
. "We're here 10 make S\II'C the
Looima family gets justice," said
Officer DeLacy Davis of the East
Orange, N.J., Police Depanment.
· . "We're here to send a message to
America that people of color will not
sit idly by when someone' is brutal' ized."
Some marchers held signs reading
· "Justice for All Victims." o!hers
mocked a police campaign dubbed
"Counesy,
Professionalism,
Respect" with placards that said
"Criminals, Perve~. Racists."
"Crime is going down everywhere but in the New 'York City
Police Department," said mayoral
candidate and civil rights activist AI
Sharpton.
.
. ·
Dr. Joseph Baptiste, chainnan of
the National Organization for the
Advancement of Haitians, came from

.

,•

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

to JO.
Thal'aenooaho.fll.bad times
. • Now letmetellyoo of the many pleasant
times I have ad in lbe 70 foreign countries I have vi$.4 ed.
I had the honor of being invited to the largest'Lions Club in the world
..
.
died
whilo I was in Mexico City. The members gave me a standing ovation when . RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.- Philip Wilham Button, 76, Ravenswood,
they introduced me. I met some very wealthy men who invited me to their -Friday, Aug. 29, 1997 in the Ravenswood Care Center.
.
beautiful homes and I stayed about a week longer, wining and dining in peoBorn Jan. )8, 1921 in Old Mystic, Conn.. son ~f the lateR~ J. and
pie's homes. Most ofthe natives are poor. But there are many ·well-off" peo- Alice McGowan But~n. he reti!N in I 972 as a engmeenng techn1c1an from .
pie in Mexico City, the largest city in the world. I will always have pleas- the U.S. Navy Nuclear Power Unit in Washmgton, D.C.
kL.
ant memories of lbe many times I have been in Old Mexico.
A World War U veteran, he was a past presrdent of the Rapphannac 1005
.· I met six men in Austria one Sunday morning and they invited me to go Club in Washington, Va., chairman and deputy district governor of the N~!t
to chun:h with them. I accepted \heir invitation, and later had lunch with em Virginia Lions, and a member of the Port Malabar Country Club, m
them. I attended many Lions' Club meetings in Indonesia and Malaysia. All Bay, Fla.
·
.
.
.
'
Surviving are his wife, Christine Wigal Bullen, whom he marned Feb._ 8,
I had to do was shQw them my club membership card.
Those wen: happy days that I will always remember. I visited many 1947; two sisters-in-12w, Evelyn L. Lewis of Ravenswood, and Alene S~n~
schools and was always welcomed. I enjoyed talking to the students and Wigal of Belleville, W.Va.; three brothers-in-law, Harver A. Wiga o
,answering theirqueslions about the USA.
Belleville, Charles J. Wigal of Parkersburg, W.Va., and Wilham L. Perry of
In Bali, I had the pleasure of meeting a radio announcer.! stayed with him · Stonington, Conn.; and three nieces and four nephews.
in his lovely home for four days and nights. He sure gave me an education
He was also preceded in death by a sister, Doris Butten -Perry, . ,
of his country. At the airpon, when I was leaving, all the workers there had
Services will be I I · a.m. Monday in the Roush Fu~eral Home,
my picture taken with·them. I gave them all a gift from the USA. I can slill Ravenswood, with the Rev. Ed Taylor officiating. Bunal w1ll be 1n the
see them in my memories as the pilot circled the airpon three times, watch- Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-8_p.m.
ing all of those nice people waving me goodbye. My memories of Bali will Sunday.
be with me all of my life.
When I was in Switzerland, I met a fellow by the name qf Freydoun
Mavaddat from Iran.
· ·•
He was crying and I put my around him and asked him what had hapRAVENSWOOD, 'w .va.- Maso11 Tell Morg~n. 77, Ravenswoa&lt;), died
pened. He told me- his fiancee was killed in a car accident and he was thmk- Thursday, ·Aug. 28, 1997 in Camden Clark Memorial Hospital, P¥kersburg.
irtg of committing suicide. I asked him to have a cup of coffee with me, W.Va.
which he did. I stayed with him for two days. He was feeling better and I
Born May 8, 1920 in Ravenswoo4, son ofthe late Han Hayden and Julia
told him if he ever carne to A~erica, to come and_ st~¥ with me. Three weeks Ball Morgan, he was an employee of the U.S. Bureau of Public Debt in '
later, I got a call from a rna~ m New York who sar~, th1s .•s ~our frie~d from Ravenswood, and was also a police officer in Ravens':"ood for se~en years.
Iran." He wanted to know 1f I could meet him at the Cmcrnnah A1~n. I
A 1940 graduate of Ravenswood High Schopl, he JOmed the Crv1han Consaid, "I sure can." Upon mee!ing him, I brought him to my _home m Gal- servation Corps and later in 1940enlisted in the U.S. Navy. A veteran of World
lipolis. He stayed for a month. I took him to many schools, Lrons Club ~nd War n, he was awarded the American Defense Medal, and the American Cammany other places to make speeches as ftc: was well-educated and a very nch paign, European African Middle Eastern Campaign, the National Defense
person. I still correspo~d with him. He now lives .'" C:mada.
and Occupation Service ·medals.
.
.
In Copenhagen, Denmark, I met a man and h1s wrte _who had a bakery
He was a life member of Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053, and Amencan
where they made the best cookies rve ever eaten. They mv1ted me to the1r Legion Post 200, Charleston, W.Va.
home on Saturday night and I went to church with them on Sunday, where
' Surviving are his.wife of 43 years, Mary Matlack Morgan; three broththey introduced me to many o~ their frie~ds.
.
ers, Jay Morgan of Oceanside, Calif., and Mark and William Gene Morgan,
. In all of my travels to forergn couqtnes, I have tned to meet and talk to both ·of Ravenswood; and two sisters, Amy Bachman of Wilmington, Del.,
the natives out in the country. This is especially true for the peopl~ who have and Lois Sheppard of Colorado Springs, Colo.
·
to work for a living like I did down on the farm. They are m_ore fnendly th_an
He was also preceded in death by an infant son, James Mason Morgan;
city folks, and are able to offer a better perspectiVe on the hfe of that panrc- and two brothers, Han H. Morgan Jr. and Evan Morgan.
.
ular country.
.
.
.
.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood,
Wl)en I "hit the road again," I hope two of my good fnends, Ern1e Null, with the Rev. Wallace Wilson officiating. Burial will be in the Ravenswood
who i~ 90, and Morris Haskins, who is 85, will join me in,my world '"!vels. Cemetery. Visitation was held at the funeral home on Saturday.
I could·write about inany, many other pleasant memones of my years of
Military graveside rites will be conducted by Tuppers Plains VFW Post
travels in 70 foreign countries. But it is now 3 a.m. and I am tired and sleepy, 9053.
·
-and I must get some rest. So good night until next time.
(Longtime bualneuman Max Tawney occ..IOMIIy contrlbutn articles to the Sunday Tlme•Sentlnel about his world travels or memories
GALLIPOLIS - Anna Ours, 39, formerly of Galli a County, died Friday,
of p81t days In Gallipolis.)
Aug. 29, 1997 in the Ohio State University Hospitals, Columbus. ·
'
Arrangements will be announced by the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home.

1,;-:-;~~~'l · City

------------------------~--~--~~------------------~------:
•••• 11,1117

Congress faces spending
bill battles as recess ends
approval ratings after he co-opted is unconstitutional and untested.
ByTOMRAUM
Analysts suggest, however, the
many tradilionally GOP issues like
Assoclatacl Prell Writer
WASHINGTON - After the crime, tax cuts and welfare-reform . hard-to-find people typically are:
summer's budget.euphoria, Congress
" We want to make it a pattern 10 minorities or low-income youth -:·now turns to the nitty-gritty of pass· have a tax cut every year,'' says and that Republicans' hopes of holding the laws needed to keep the gov- House \Speaker Newt Gingrich, R- ing l)n(o the House are better if these
ernment functioning for another year. Ga. He's spent the last two weeks on people are not counted when conIt could prove to be a shon fall a nationwide to~r to rehabilitate his gressional districts are redrawn.
1
session for lawmakers, still savoring image after a botched attempt to
R~publicans pyt the meQSure in. ,
passage of the biggest taX cut in 16 unseat him earlier this summer.
last spring's disaster relief bill for vic-.-,
Gingrich also say's he'll push this tims of flooding in the Dakotas and ';
years and a plan to balance the federal budget in five years. Many seem fall for a further revamping of wel- elsewhere but pulled back in a veto
eager to quickly wrap up 1997's fare, suggesting Clinton administra- confrontation with ~linton. They've. '
work,
tion's implementing rules have attached it now to the spending bill. ~
Despite the biparlisan bliss, how- undermined changes e.nacted last for the Commer&lt;:e Depanment.
,
year.
Another fight is ~xpected over the ,
ever, major pcilitical battles loom.
Republicans also will try to revive Bc2 stealth bomber. The House ;
Trade, defense spending, campaign-finance reform, welfare, Pres- a GOP proposal_to give tax-breaks to defense spending bill includes $505 ., .
ideQt Clinton's first-ever exerciSe of -students in private schools, blocked million for the program, $331 million
.:
· the line-ilem veto- all presage con- by Clinton during budget negotia- more than Clinton requested.
While Gingrich Fust reassert his_·;
nict after Congress returns this week tions.
Clinton will get more chances House leadership i~ the aftermath of: .
ftom a month-long summer recess.
The Senate comes back Tuesday, the ftom all this to wield his potent new the abonive coup attempt, Senate ,
line-item veto autbority, which he Majority Leader Trent Loll, R-Miss., ,
House Wednesday.
The main business at hand is pas- used for the firs! time in early August. also faces leadership headaches.
Once.Congress gets back, in fact,
At least two filibusters are threatsage of l3 spending bills needed to
keep the government in operation the clock stans running on the three ened, one by Democrats unhappy. ·
after Oct. I, the stan of fiscat ·year items Clinton vetoed- two narrow- with the continuing Republican ·
ly focused tax cuts and a Medicaid investigation of last fall 's contested ,
1998.
So far, none has been passed .and provision that would have benefited election of Sen. Mary Landrieu, D; .
sent to the president - meaning a lot New York. Congress has 30 days in La., the other by Sens. John McCain, .
R-Ariz., and Russell Feingold, D-. ·.
of wort confronts lawmakers right which to override the deletions.
A further coun test is expected as Wis., chief sponsors of a law to
away. Neither side is interested in
repeats of the ugly government shut- well to the power to reject individual change campaign-finance rules. ··!
BRUTALITY PROTEST- Men carried a mock coffin, with a toi· Lou also must deal with a fcucf.',
projects or spending and tax items. In
downs of two years ago.
let plunger affixed, as they protested the alleged pollee torture
"I think the attitude is, 'Get it June, the Supreme Court turned back between two senior Republican sen- ·
,.ell Haitian Immigrant Abl)er Loulma during a march Friday In New
done; get out of there,"' said Norman a challenge but did not rule on the ators , Jesse Helms, R-N.C., and ..
York. The march, dubbed "Day of Outrage Against Pollee Brutality
Richard Lugar, R-Ind.
·
Ornstein, an analyst with the Ameri- · statute's constitutionality.
· and Haraument," was held In support ot Loulma, who authoriHelms,
chairman
of
the
Senate
Meanwhile, a renewed battle is
can Enterprise lnstitu!e who specialties MY w.. aaaaulted and IIOdOmlzad with a atlck Inside a 70th
expected over a GOP-sponsored Foreign Relations Committee, has sc/
ius
in
congressional
affairs.
Precinct bathroom after hla arrest Aug. 9 outside a Brooklyn
Majority-pany Repoblicans also move to bar the Census Bureau from far single-~andedly blocked action on'
nightclub. (AP)
are looking for ways to differentiate using modem sampling techniques to Clinton's nomination of former :
Massachusetts Gov. William Weld to"
themselves from the White House, make its count more accurate.
Republicans charge that sampling be ambassador to Mexico.
Washington with several dozen fol- dition after surgery to ·repair a bow- cognizant of President Clinton's high
el
obstruction,
but
doctors
said
his
life
lowers.
"When something happens .we · was not in danger.
Anti-police senti111ent' has been
want to show unity," Baptiste. said.
brewing
in the 70th Precinct since
"Hopefully the mayor's office will
Louima's
attack and e'!fiY Friday, a
.,
hear our cry for justice. We hope that
single
shot
was fired at a police cruispolice will recruit more minorities \O
.
'
er from a rooftop, said Officer Joseph
reflect the community."
TOKYO (AP) - Smiling and
Victims were injected with dis- istry's power to screen and censor
The attack on Louima; who is Cavitolo, a police spokesman. No bowing deeply, an 83-year-old histo- eases such as typhoid, or dissected textbooks. The co~rt ordered the
·
black, haS become a rallying cry for officers were hit, he said. ..
rian acknowledged his victory Friday without anesthesia, and allowed to. ministry to pay lenaga $3 ,360 in.
The surgery · forced Louima to in a coun battle that has taken three die without treatment. The disputed damages.
those who contend police are abusive,
· ·,
parlicularly to minorilies. Four white postpone a hospital reunion with his decades: Compelling Jap!IR to tell section has since been restored to IenBut the court unanimously upheld
officers from Brooklyn's 70th 6-year-old _daughter, Abnia, who schoolchildren the full story of its aga's textbook.
the EducliHon Ministry's right to
Precinct stationhouse were charged arrived from Haiti on Thursday night. aclions in World War II.
"The education minister illegally keep screening all textbooks befm:c"
At the rally's staning point in
with assault or se•ual assault in the
For the first time, the Supreme stepped beyond the boundary of they are used and removing anythini
Aug. 9 attack, ~ federal officials Brooklyn, Borough Pesident Howard Court limited Japan's power to appropriate screening," .the coun. it finds objectionable.
•
began their own investigation into Golden told the crowd that Louima rewrite history - ruling Friday that said, accusing the ministry of "erroJudges ordered the ministry to
whether Louima's civil rights were only "wanted a job. He wanted a the Education Ministry broke the law neous judgment." ·
censor schoolbooks"'' little as poss!-.
decent place to live and to raise his in removing mention of a Japanese
violated.
However, the Supreme Court jus- ble so t~cy arc not distorted by eac~
Louima is seeking $55 million in family and to live his life in peace and atrocity from historian Saburo len- tices dismissed or rejected claims by government's political outlook.
:
civil damages from the city, and his harmony.
Fifty-two years after World War 1.1;
aga's high school textbook. ·
Ienaga that seven other portions of
"If Abner can't live that way," he
auorneys said they plan to raise that
Moments aftePihe ruling, dozens his book had been illegally censored, Japan has not come to terms with tlwi
said,
"no one is safe to live that · stood in the packed courtroom ·to
figure to 1465 million.
including ·one about Japanese soldiers war crimes its troops commiuc'd
·
He was in critical but stable con- Way."
applaud Ienaga, who rose to thank raping Chinese women during World against Asian and Western soldiers
and ci\lilians.
'
them.
· War II.
Opponents
of
textbook
censorin_
g
"Today's ruling was not a com·
Friday's decision marked the first
plete victory," he said later at a news time Japan's highest court had ben·:ve it is important to underiitand
.•
conference. "But one more case of declared there was a limit to the min- the mistakes of the past
screening has been judged illegal. ....
In other words, the Supreme 'Court
has admitted that textbook screening
effective way to protect consumers. Administration have all the powers is illegal."
"Recall authority shifts the they need to enforce food safety law9.
· "I see positive light there," said ·
Although food recalls arc volun· emphasis from punishment to prelenaga, who has sometimes !llquired
vention," he said. "Closing a plant, tary, the association said USDA can police protection from right-wing
the basic recourse under current law force a processor to issue a recall by thugs who believe he disgraces Japan
that dates back to 1906, can leave pulling inspectors fr~m a plant and and its old Imperial Army.
tainted products on the shelves. publicizing the food safety violations.
Riglit-wing activists outside the
Bernard adyised the Agriculture court denounced lenaga through
Mandatory recall is the fastest way to
get products off the shelves when we Department to "focus its resources on loudspeakers, waving Rising Sun
prevention of food safety problems,
know there is a problem."
flags.
.
However, the National Food Proces- rather than on greater recall authoriThe justices ruled 3-2 Friday that
sors Association said the legislation ty.'!
the Education Ministry acted illegalFor· example, Bernard said, the ly in 1980and 1983whenitremoved
is not needed.
In a written statement, Dane · Agriculture Depanment should press from a te•tbook that Ienaga was writ- ·
Bernard, the association's food safe- the Fond and Drug Administration to ing a description of Japan's biologity programs vice president, said · approve irradi~tion for red meat, cal experiments on 3,000 people in
USDA and the Food and Drug which would ktll E. coh and salmo- northern China during World War II.
nella.

STOP

Japanese courts compel government
to limit rewriting of WWII's atrocities .

Ag secretary plans to petition Congress · ·
for· additional power in light of meat recall
By ELLYN FERGUSON
Gannett NewS Service
WASffiNGTON - Agriculture
Secretary Dan Glickman said Friday
he needs the power to levy civil fines
up to $I 00,000 a day and order
recalls of meat and poultry products
to keep contaminated food off Amer~an tables.
.
·
Glickman will ask Corrgress next
· week for the two new powers as well
as broader grounds under which the
u.s. Depanment of Agric~lture can
pull or withhold federal Inspectors
from poultry and meat plants ..
Glickman wants the authonty to
withdraw or refuse '? provide inspectors in cases involVIng deliberate or
repeated food safety violations.
His announcement came a week
after Hudson Foods Co. ...Called 25
million pounds of its ground beef
liecause of possible con.tamlllallon by
virulent E. coli bacteria. The meat
I'I'Call is the largest in U.S. history and
was prompted after Glickman threatened 10 remove federal inspectors
from the Hudson plant in Nebras_kn.
USDA is continuing to rev1ew
Hudson records to track down the
source of contamination. The meat
coUected in the recall is barred by law
from being used fo~ human consumption in the Umted States or
overseas.
·
A.USDA spokesman said the meat
will either be incinerated or go
through high heat rendering that
would kill bacteria and allow the
remnants 10 be used in animal feed.
Mindful of recent events, Ghckman
said he thinks Congress will act on
~is request.
"We have asked for these authorities before," he said. "But lthink the
lfynamics of the debate have changed,
~ bit in the light of recent events:
"My sense is that the vast maJority of people have no idea that industty and not federal food safety expe~
ljltimately (jecide whether food IS
r~alled when ·the ~ublic saf~ty is
~·~mpromised. That s somcthmg I
~ n't think sits i'eal well with people
1 ross the country. "
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-VL, former
~,.airman of tile Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee, called
tjte legislation a more efficient and

Make the·
Bank-At-Work CD
work for you.

Pomeroy
Proudly presents

The Histo.r ic

DELTA
QUEEN
Monday, September 1st, 1997 9 a.m. ·4 p.m.
Activities will.include · ·
•
•
•
•
•

TOurs of the Delta Queen
CalUope Concert
DeJta Queen Band concert
Walk.lng TOurs of Pomeroy
Flower Show

•
•
•
•
•

Ice Cream social ·
Arts &amp;. Craft Show
M,erchant Sidewalk Sales
Costumed Guides
Quilt Show

Join us For All The Fun

Parking will be available at Bob Roberts Football
Field and the Municipal Lot, Behind Pomeroy Fire
Dept. with shuttle service provided, the upper &amp;
lower Riverfront Parking lots will be closed to traffic.
DELTA QUEEN DAY IS SPONSORED BY FARMERS BANK

Introducing the New 1\vo-Year .

Bank-At-WorkCDfromPeoplesBank.
IJ'bo doesn't Wtl"llbeir - . y lo rrort liS INIIYIIIS tbty Mf
ll's ea.o;y money and worry free. Simply sign up for electronic deposit if you haven't already, and specif,i the amount you wanl automatically
deduaed froni your Peoples Bank checking account. You have lhe Ocxibllity to adjust lhe amount lhat you inYeSt Into this tiered rate, two ye-..r

certificate of deposit. As your btllllnce Increases so does
your: Interest rate! Stop at your ne-.u-est Peoples Bank or call for
I

· more information.
Minimum dt'JIOS~ In (I[K'fl an au1JUnl;... S~!KI .IMI. US.IKI minimum :unnunl iktdoctt.'ll pt'flrmsJC!kll'l .
AJk'llalry klr carlywithdr.iWJI m~ Ill· impost:d. An~lahk :d rdl Pt.,.IJII~ Hank kiCtions. tlliC ln~ul't'd

AU.\0001 PM: .W.OPfiCF."i IS j61.)
(;a(llpol~

Middleport

Pnmt'l'tl)'

416-II'JOl

99Z-6bfll

~Z-ZI .B

Rutltnd TOll On!~
74l-2Kt!S _m ,-7 1B

1\lnk-By-Pimnc
I -~KJ- ,74- 612J

'

.

�p

WV.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

Sunday, August 31, 1997

=
Sports

Geologists question if cou~try
learned lessons from '97 floods

OHIO Weather
Sunday, Aug. 31
Al:cuWeather0 forecast for

think govemmeot assistance is going to bail them
At a recent gstiHHfng of gov· out in the case of a disaster, said Vicki Stenbouse,
WASHINGTON - The controversy over dison flooding with the group..
.;
ernment officials, Insurance an expert
But most of what FEMA provides after a disaster aid in Congress bas passed but geologists
·, and environmental experts question whether the
agents snd consumers in Grt1nd aster is in the form of loans, not handouts, and the
country has learned the most important lessons
yearly payments on a government disaster-loan
Forks, N.D., near the site of can be more than ten times higher than the cost !Jf
from the floods that ravaged the Midwest earlier
this year.
,
,
hesvy Red River flooding, one of flood insurance, she said.
At a recent gathering of government officials,
The lessons begin with residents of those areas
the mQSt tslked about Items wss insurance agents and consumers in Grand for~
not falling into the trap of thinking they won't be
hit
so
hard
again
anytime
SQiln.
.
•
N.D., near the site of heavy Red River flooding.
Columbusl82"
a survey showing that even one
Earth scientists say the more they learn about
of the most talked about items was a survey
the planet, the less predictable they fmd it. And
showing
that even when people knew floods were
wheiJ people knew floods were
. that's especially true when it comes to climate.
coming - due to heavy snow - only 20 percent
coming- due to heavy snow- , , were willing to purchase flood insurance.
" You can't say you've had yours for now and
The attitude " it will never happen to me" was
its over with," said Jill Schneiderman, geologist
only 20 P.fi'C#HJf were willing to
at Vassar College in New York.
persistent among those who refused to buy it,
purchase flood Insurance.
Some of the other key lessons of the floods of
officials said.
Comn'tunities where river Hooding is a threat
1997, experts contend, are the need to put even munities but make life worse for those downmore emphasis on disaster planning and flood stream by making a river's flow even more pow- need to take a hard look at how they can be recon;
figure themselves to mitigate the damage when
insurance and possibly creating more incentives erful, he said.
·
for people to leave flood plains.
Schneiderman said a major goal ought to be the next one hits, others contend.
"Society is .recognizing that engineering canWhile the major disaster bill has passed, law- getting people out of flood plains.
not
solve all of our problems," Shirley Las~
makers are still putting the final touches on other
" I find it hard to sympathetic .... with people
environmental
sociologist at the University of ·
measures
that
would
fund
studies
of
hard-hit
Ice
su::ny Pt. Cloudy ctou:ty
who choose to live on flood plains," she said.
New
Orleans,
said
of dams and other earthworkS.
areas and help with construction of levees and
· "People shouldn't live or build permanent
Towns
need
to
do
a better job of incorporating
other measures.
structures on flood plains."
flood
considerations
into their zoning and planThose items are contained in a major appropriBut those who do live in areas classified as a
ning
decisions,
she
said.
·
ations
bill
for
energy
and
water
programs
that
will
Suaday: fog early, then mostly sunny with a chance of showers in the
flood risk by the Federal Emergency Management
Laska
applauds
the
recent
shift
at
FEMA
be
addressed
soon
by
House
.and
Senate
conferafternoon. Highs in the lower and mid 80s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Agency should purchase protection, insurance
toward more disaster prevention and mitigation.
ees.
·
Extended fori!CIIst
·
agents say.
FEMA is requesting an increase from $2 milBut
Rep.
Lee
Hamilton,
D-lnd.
,
said
Congress
Sunday night: considerable cloudiness with a chance of showers.
In the Ohio River Valley, less than 20 percent
lion
to $50 million in its pre-disaster mitigation
needs
to
·
start
looking
beyond
traditional
Lows in the lower and mid 60s.
of the businesses and residential structures that
budget
for 1998.
·
approaches
to
flood
control.
Labor day: mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. Highs in the
are classified as being at high risk are insured,
The
taxpayer
who
funds
government
flood
Hamilton's southeast Indiana · district was says the Independent Insurance Agents.of Amerilower and mid 80s.
assistance
deserves
no
less,
·
agency
officials
say.
among
those
along
the
Ohio
River
bit
by
floods
Thesday: partly cloudy. Lows lin the lower 60s and highs from the
ca.
This
year's
disaster
bill
was
close
to
$6
billion.
this year.
.
upper 70s to the lower 80s.
Nationwide, only 26.9 percent of high-risk
"It's pretty apparent that the 'increasing num" I think we. have to look at this from point structures are insured, and that's after this year 's
Wednesday: mostly clear. Lows in the upper 50s and highs from the
ber
of disasters and disaster declarations is a cost
zero, so to speak,- working with the river rather flooding.
upper 70s to the lower 80s.
,
·
that
is difficult for .the American taxpayer to
than containing it," he said. ·
People who live in flood-prone areas loci often
bear,"
said Vallee Bunting, FEMA spokeswoman.
Levees and flood walls can protect some comBy The AHoclllled Prea
Cloudiness will increase Sunday as a high pressure system pushes off
the Eastern seaboard. Temperatures will climb into the 80s and humidity
levels will be on the rise. This combination will bring a threat of showers
and thunderstorms.
By The Aaaoclated Press
Pacific- now brewing off equator- puler analysis, statistical moolels and lures are predicted throughout the
Low pressure and a warm front will start to push up from the southern
Thanks
to
the
weather
system
ial
South America ..:.. known to dis· El Nino's history, it's likely the phe- northern half of the nation and along
~"•••·;,,. on Sunday and Monday, continuing the threat of showers and thun·
known as "El Nino," forecasters say rupt global rainfall and wind pat- nomenon will last through the win- the California coast, with slightly
derstonns Monday.
cooler-than-usual
temperatures
Ohio could have a drier-than-normal terns.
ter.
Skies were clearing across the state overnight as temperatures settled
Scientists predict this year's El
winter.
along the Gulf Coast.
In
1978,
El
Nino
dumped
41
into the 50s. Early morning temoeratures ranged from 50 in Youngstow
That's good news for everyone Nino will be the most severe in ISO inches of snow on the · Cincinnati
The aberrations could mean tro'lto 59 in Cincinnati and Columbus. Winds died down and were calm in
years, and some fear it will cause area before the end of Janijary. But ble for farmers and fishermen. But
but
snow
enthusiasts.
many areas, allowing for patchy dense fog to develop in several loca"El Nino is probably not going to droughts, floods and storms in some the last time a major El Nino hit, in the Ohio River Valley, heating
tions.
during the winter of 1983-84, the bills could be lower.
cause grief in Ohio unless you run a regions of the world.
ski resort," said Russell Martin, a
Its name, a Spanish reference to area had a warmer winter than usual,
"Over the 90 day period (of win·
meieorologist
with
the
Climate
Prethe
Christ
child,
comes
from
the
hiswith
the
first
real
snowfall
arriving
ter),
the temperature will average
· By The AHoclllled Prea
toric
Chrishnas-time
arrival
of
the
diction
Center
of
the
National
Feb.
II.
two
degrees
or more above normal,"
Another day of foul weather was forecast Saturday 'for the Southeast,
Adminissystem
's
·
warm
waters
in
South
Oceanic
and
Atmospheric
Fall
and
winter
seasons
in
the
Martin
said.
where predictions of storms Friday gave way to little more than scattered
tration.
America. But with water tempera- South are expected to be wetter than
" If we're talking two degrees
showers·and cloudy skies.
·
"We
thinlc
it's
a
very
good
likelitures
already
rising
off
the
coast
of
normal.
Unusually
dry
conditions
over
the average temperature, the
Showers and thunderstorms were forecast from Tennessee and the
hood
it'll
...
lead
to
a
warmer-thanEcuador
and
Peru,
this
year
the
sysare
expected
in
the
northern
High
difference·
in temperatures over a IJO.
Carolinas to the Gulf Coast and Florida, sometimes producing gusty
usual
winter
in
the
Ohio
River
Valtem
could
be
more
powerful
than
Plains
and
some
sections
of
the
Midday
period
starts to add up to a sigwinds, small hail and heavy rain. Highs will pe in the upper 80s to the
ley and a drier winter with less usual.
west.
nificant difference in the heating bill
90s.
.
snowfall and less cold weather."
Martin said that based on
if it's warmer."
A similar forecast Friday was met with only isolated thunderstorms in
El
Nino
is
an
abnormal
churning
the region.
·
and warming of ocean water in the

By MAn HARVEY
half, we dido 't have it at all. "
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
At least not until Terry·took over.
- The lesson from the f irst He took the ball away from
Marshall-West Virginia football Colclough at the Marshall 26 with
game since 1923: A lot has changed 12: 57 remaining. Four plays later,
in 74 years.
West Virginia went ahead 35-3 1 on
. The Mountaineers beat Marshall Marc Bulger's IS-yard touchdown
81 -0 the last time the teams played, pass to tight end Chad Wahle with
and 92-6 the time before that. But on II :fTTleft.
Saturday , Division 1-A rookie . Terry, a junior college. transfer.
Marshall lost just42-31 , and held a intercepted his se;:ond pass on the
startling 31-28 lead in the fourth next series at the Marshall 35 and
quarter over Hi-point favorite West Amos Zereoue scored on a one-yard
Virginia.
·
run with 7:561eft.
" I' ve never seen so much hype
"He's an outstanding young
for a football game before ,' ' said guy," Neb len said of Terry. "He's a
West Virginia coach Don Nehlen. joy to be around. Between returning
' 'It was a good game for the players, punts and kickorfs, he played almost
but a much better game for thll every single play: ·
crowd.' '
Zereoue rushed for 174 yards and
Said .Marshall receiver LaVorn three touchdowns , while the
Colclough, "We showed everybody Thundering Herd, 1-AA champions
what Marshall's all about. "
last season, lost for the first time in
Randy Moss led Marshall into 1- 16 games.
A with two touchdown catches, but
"We've been Division I for three
state rival West Virginia got key weeks now," said Marshall coach
fourth -quanei interceptions from Bob Pruett. " I think we saw some
Nate Terry to regain and then build good things today. We'lljust have to
on its lead.
·
work on our tackling , and our
West Virginia built a 28-3 lead turnovers , and I think we'll be all
, late in the second quarter. Marshall ·right.
thundered back to go ahead 31-28 on
"I think we might be a little furMoss' 25-yard touchdown reception ther along than some people
. from Chad Pennington with .three thought," Pruen-said, '.'at least the
seconds left in the third quiuter.
point-spread people.''
With a Mountaineer Field crowd
Marshall was anywhere from a
of 65,492 loolcing on, Marshall then two-louchdown to a 17-point underforced the Mountaineers to punt and dog.
looked like it was on its way to a
" We had our chances, and that's
monumental upset
the key, " Pruen said. "Any time
, ' We went from an excitable you have a chance to win in th"
football team to a team that was just fourth quarter against one of the top
. like, ' uuh,'' ' Nehlen said.·''The first teams in the country, you know your
:quarter, we came out and played program has come a long way .''
strong on both sides. In the second
West Virginia built a 28-3 lead

I

\

Southeast Ohio zone forecast

Showers possible through weekend

Warmer, drier winter could be in store

I

Storms forecast for $outheast

·

.'·.

\S NO

Thursday, September
Noon to 4:00 pm

'.

'•

•
•

••

••
•

•

"Celebra.
t
e
Healt
Third Annual Health Information Fair!
Sponsored by:

•

THE MEIGS MULTIPURPOSE CENTER

•

and The Retired Senior Volunteer Program

.1995 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM

Auto., air, 49,000 miles.

Auto., air, V-6, 19,000 mHes.

1994 FORD TEMPO

1992 DODGE DYNASTY

Auto., air, 34,000 miles.

Auto., air, V-6, power locks &amp; windows, 11,000
miles .

. •a,aoo
8

7,900

•

•a.aoo

•a,aoo

------------

grana Opening of the
}Vlu.ltipurpose 'jitness Center!
WMPO (Jroaacasting Live- Come &amp; Enjo1:1

•'

.,•
••

PARTICIPANTS

co-SPONSERS
Middleport Trophies &amp; Tees
Vaughans Supermarket
Brown Food Service
Fanners Bank
Peoples Bank
Home National Bank
Norris-Northup Dodge
Hobart Sales &amp; Service
Broughton Foods Company
Rutland Tire Sales
King Hardware
Valley Lumber Company
Brogan Warner Insurance
G &amp; M Fuel Company

ACCESS, American Cancer Society, Area
Agency on Aging, French City Foot Clinic,
G-J-M Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction &amp;
Mental Health Services, Health Recovery
Services, Inc., Healthy Steps Wellness
Center, Holzer Medical Center, Holzer
Horne Care of VMH, Karr Audiology,
Kroger
Pharmacy,
Meigs
County
Chiropractic Clinic, Meigs County Health
Department, Meigs County TB Clinic,
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, OSU
Extension Office, OU-COM Arthritis
l'rqgram, OU·COM Community Service
Programs, Overbrook Center, Prescription •
Oxygen, Rx 02, Inc., Racine Dental Clinic,
Rocksprings Rehab Center, Veterans
Memorial Hospital, VMH Behavioral Health
Unit, VMH Day Treatment Program
Woodland Centers, Inc. Rocksprings
Rehabilitat.ion .Center, Schmoll Optomitrics

~~~~~!~sa::l:s:o to the the numerous area

_'

who donated door prizes

1994 2500 GMC CLUB CAB 414
All Power.

SAVE 11

•
••

'11,500

1996 GRAND CAUYAN

1995 1500 CHEVY CLUB CAB

Auto., air, V-6, all power

4X4. CLEAN

MUST SEE

*All prlcoo ore notlneludlng tax, Utlo end llcon11 1111.

•

Come See: Mike Northup, Dwight Stevers, Pete Somerville,'
AI Durst, Erie Blackburn, Neal Peifer, Tim Conwell,
Steve White, Jamie Adamson.

NORRIS

UP DODGE, I C
Gallipolis, Oh.
Free 1·800·446·0842

252 Upper River Rd.
1614) 446·0842

992·2161

•

Auto., air, 350 V·8

900

MUST SEE

Loccated at: Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, OH

..

Stock 1144:25T8

•

•

•

Comets

•

~efeat

By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
HOUSTON (AP) ~ League MVP
Cynthia Cooper scored 25 points, including
eight straight free throws down the stretch, as
the Houston Comets captured the fir st
WNBA championship with a 65-51 victory
over'the New York Liberty on Saturday.
The Comets, who beat the l,.i berty only
once in four regular-season meetings, fought
a tight defensive battle for a 28-24 halftime
lead, then used a 10-0 run early in the second
half to take control. The Liberty went score-

Major league
baseball
roundup

1993 DODGE SHADOW

on touchdown runs of I 0 ansi 51
yards by Zereoue, II yards by his
backup, Curtis Keaton, and a 28yard return of a blocked punt by
Giry Thompkins.
"'
But Marshall, now of the Mid American Conference, scored the
next 28 points on touchdown catches
by Moss, another touchdown receplion by Colclough and a 54-yard run
by Llow'Tumer. Moss, mentioned as
a. Heisman Trophy candidate, didn' t
disappoint. He had seven catches for
85 yards, kept alive at 16 his streak
of games with a touchdown reception and also returned a kickoff 49
yards.
· '' He's a great player,' ' Pruett
said. " He did what we expected him
to do.' '
·
Moss did not make himself available to media Saturday.
West Virginia"s special teams, a
problem in 1996, opened this season
with a flourish on Thompkins ' block
and return of the punt in the first.
WVU had seven punts blocked a
year ago, and had not returned a
blocked punt for a touchdown since
1994.
·
But the Mountaineers showed
they still have problems on special
teams when Marshall's Moss had
the long kickoff return and WVU 's
Bryan Baumann later shan ked a 6yard punt
West Virginia, which gave opponents just 13 points and 223 yards
per game as the nation's No . l
defense in 1996, surrendered 381
yard s to Marshall ~ including 266
passing.
Marshall's offensive totals also
were below its '96 averages of 44
points and 486 total yards.

Lopresti column

Coaching
in today's
NFL isn't
for lifers
By MIKE LOPRESTI
Gannett News Service

Free agency to swerve around ...
salary caps to sneak under ... impatient own ers to soothe .. . luxury
boxes to fill ... .cranky media to mollify ... goofball talk shows to ignore
... broken quarterbacks 10 glue back
together ...
Oh, don't
mind me. Just
trying to count
up all the reasons why NFL
coaches now
enjoy the same
stability as,
s a y ,
Hol.ly.wood
matrimony.

Pro football sets sail·
this wee.kend with 30 head coaches.
It can be said with near absolute
.safety that 'it will be the last cruise
for some.

44!

BLOCKS PASs-- West VIrginia linebacker Jason Williams (
· blocks the I)aaa by Marahall quarterback Chad Pennington (1 0
looks for the pigskin to fall in the first quarter of Saturday's
Mountain State battle in Morgantown, W.Va., where the host
Mountaineers survived the Thundering Herd's second-half challenge and won 48-31. (AP)
-~;;.;;==--==.,;;~---------.~----Pennington was 19-of-48 for 266 eight carries for 106.yards.
yards, with three touchdowns and
Bulger was 11-of- 22 for 114
four interceptions, while Turner had yards and a touchdown:

The cost of the modern business
of football? The legendary coach.
Hardly any one gets time to be
one anymore .
Ten of the 30 arc new tn the job
thi s s.cason. One of every three.
Of the other 20, II arc in their
third year or less.
Barry Switzer is \&gt;arely into his
fourth season of constant controversy and occasional jurisprudence in
Dallas, arid there now are only six
coaches in the league ahead of him
'in longevity.
.
"Ten years in one spot is a great

------------------------:---------.,.-----------------------1.-----, .

2

.446-08·42

·

1

B

Sunday, AuOult 31, 1tf7

West Virginia rallies
to beat Marshall 42-31 ·

By PAUL BARTON
O.nMit ~ Service

•I

Section

Liberty 65-51 to win .WNBA title

less for 6:27 in one stretch·.
.
when she struck her head un the floor in
That gave the Comets a 40-281ead with Thursday's 70-54 semifinal victory over the
13:35 left,in .the game, and they had a 50-38 Charlotte.
advantage with 4:36 to go when the Liberty
Kym Hampton led the Liberty with 13
made its last charge, closing to 50-43 with points, arid Vicl(ie Johnson had·l2. .
3:05 to play.
It was clear from the start it would be a
But Cooper, the league's leading scorer, defensive battle . Houston's Janeth Arcain
came through at the· free -throw line with millie the first basket of the game as the shot
eight straight over the final 4:36. Tina clock ran down after aggressive defense by
Thompson scored IO·of ber 18 points in lhl!''""111ef..iberty.
second half for the Cornets.
Seconds later, Rebecca Lobo and Tina
The Comets played without starting center Thompson were on the floor battling for a
Wanda Guyton, who suffered a concussion loose baiL
.
.

~~~~~~E~~}~k~r~~·~=;~~:,i~~~~

Used to be different, of course.
Used to be a man could sit and stay
awhile . Long enough to make a
legacy. Maybe get something named
after him. A stadium. A steakhouse.
Tom Landry spent 29 seasons in
Dallas. Don Shula, the last enduring
legend to leave the stage, 26 with
Miami . Chuck Noll 23 with
Pittsburgh..
.
, - _
And now? Now it's best to pack
light, and rent. Tbo many people to
please. Too little time to do it ·,
Chan~in~ times: Dallas has had
three coaches in 38 years, thanks
mostly to Landry. Indianapolis, New
England, both New York teams, St.
Louis and Tampa Bay each have had
four coaches lhis decade. And the
At Boston, Fred McGriff home- decade has many more defeats left
red twice and Nomar Garciaparra in it.
didn't get a hit at all on Saturday as
Once upon a time, a successful
the Atlanta Braves beat the Red Sox coach stayed for generations. Now
15-2.
we have Dan Reeves. .
Garciaparra 's hi I streak ended at
No. I among active coaches with
30 - a record for AL rookies and 149 victories. Three Super Bowl
tied filr the longest in the majors this trips. And coaching his third differyear - but short of Be nito ent team in six years.
Santiago's rookie record of 34.
Or the Bill Parcells Shuttle. From
Kevin Millwood (3-3) got New York to New England to New
Garciaparra to hit three fly balls, one York . .
of them a sacrifice fly, and reliever
Where have· you gone, Curly . .
Mike Cather got him on a line drive Lambeau?
to left in his last at-bat, in the eighth. . "That's what this ·society is
McGriff was 4-for-5 with five now," Parcells said. " The sporting
.
RBis.
industry is no different than what
Chipper Jones was 3- for-4 as you sec in many other industries.
Atlanta tagged Tim Wakefield (9- It's a trqnsient type of nature. You
15) for seven runs on eight hits and sec lhe same thing in baseball and
two walks in 3 213 innings.
basketball.
Marlins 4, Blue Jays I ·
"I just think the whole aspect of
At Toronto, Alex 'Fernandez the game has changed to the point
allowed three hits in eigftt innings where the environment and what the
Saturday in the Aorida Marlins' 4-1 · game's about and what's importAnt
viclory over the Toronto Blue Jays. in the game has changed. So as a •
Fernande1. ( 17 -9) gave up one re sult you ' re not going to see
run . struck out sev.en and walked longevity."
on"C.
. Apparently not.
Robb Ncn pitched the n~nth for
Marv Levy 's II years at Buffalo
his 32nd save. The Blue Jays fin - may pale nc•t to Landry, but he ' s
ished with three hits, all by Shawn the current longevity leader in the
Green.
NFL.
Chris Carpenter (1 -6) shut out
"There 's got to he a feeling that
Florida on live hits untillhe seventh, you ' re together in your organizawhen the Marlins took a 1-0 lead tion,'' Levy said. " If you ' ve got to
wilh an unearned run .
Sll down. and spell out exact rcsponstbiltlle s and say , "Don't step in
there,' you' re going to have problems. I honcs.tly feel, .with our organt zatton , 11 s a untquc thing . 1
haven't seen a lot of it elsewhere:
so nally, showed up for training And the credit for it goes to (nwner)
camp in shape and averaged 7 yards Ralph Wilson.''
per.carry .
Wilson has said Levy is safe at 0" I feel real good about where 1 16. "I ' m not going to try and lest
am personally and with the .way the him;' ' Levy said.
offense is goin g," Carter said.
The NFL has had 81 head coachll 's more diffic ult to fi gure the es in the 1990s. And counting.
defen se, which is trying to learn
It is a merciless business, surLeBeau' s blitz- zone sc hemes. The rounded by mincfields and critics.
Bengals co uld be very erratic until Not an easy place to put down roots.
the defen se comes together.
Especially by men with healthy egos
" It 's looked good at time s and and hard drives.
it 's lo oked poor at time s,' ' Coslet
" When you ' re talking about a
said . " Wc "re going to have some $200 million company and being
growing pains. I thirtk our defense finan ctally sound, tt's a lot different
overall , even with some of th e .than at the beginning of the league,"
glitches we ' ve run into, will be a said Miami ' s Jimmy Johnson . " It
bet{er defen se overall than j{ was was more family -oriented, and the
last year.''
coach was part of the family .
The schedule features four road
"If you're going to last that long
games out of the first six, balanced now , you have to approach the job
by four of their last qve games at so that you have a life outside of the
home. If they can stay in contention job. Some people can do that, some
while the defense jells, the schedule can't. A lot of people put in tremenwill be in the Bengals' favor at the

The ·trend continued as the Comels took
the early advantage led by Cooper, who had
II points at the half, despite. strong defense
against her by Vickie Johnson .
Hou ston pulled to a 19- 10 lead , it ' s
biggest of the first half, with 9:31 left in the
opening period, but the Liberty rallied on
-three straight baskets by Johnson, making it
19-16, and New York closed to 23-22 with
3:3lto go.
,
Cooper followed with a pair of free
throws and Kim Perrot hit a three-point basket to preserve the narrow halfti111e lead.

Cubs beat Tribe; Mets &amp; Braves also win
CLEVELAND (AP) - Doug
Glanville homered and had two
other hits, and Mark Grace hit his
I Oth. homer and an RBI triple as the
last-place Chicago Cubs defeated

the first-place Cleveland Indians 9-4
on Saturday.
Kevin Tapani (4-3) , who spent
portions of eight seasons in the
American League with Minnesota
and the White Sox, pitched 5 213
innings in his eighth start after missing four months with a finger injury.
He allowed four runs and eight hits
while improving to 5-6 in his career
against Cleveland.
·
Glanville was 3-for-5, including a
leadoff double in the ninth. He
· scored on Grace's triple off th~
right-field wall for Chic.ago 's final
run . Grace was 2-for-4 and scored
twice.
David Justice hit his 30th homer
for the Indians, giving him his second 30-homer season.
.
John Smiley (2-4) had his second
poor outing in six starts since he was
acquired from the Cincinnati Reds
on July 31. He allowed five runs and
eight hits' in five innings, including
homers by Grace and Glanville.
Marc Pisciotta relieved Tapani
with two outs and tw.o on· in the
sixth. He loaded the bases by hitting
Marquis Grissom, who deflected the
ball away from his head with his left
arm. Pisciotta then walked Brian
Giles to force in a run, making it 6GOTCHAI- Cleveland catcher Pat Borders lays the leather on 4, bul got Omar Vizquel on a liner to
the Chicago Cubs' Jose Hernandez In Hernandez's attempt to right to end the threat.
scora on a basee·loaded single In the eighth inning of Saturday's
In the Cubs efghth, Scott Servais
11ame In Cleveland, where the Cubs won ~. (AP)
sacrifi.ced runners to second and

third with no outs. Jose Hernandez
walked, and Lance Johnson hit a
two-run single off Eric Plunk to
make it 8-4.
The Indians, trying to stay ahead
of Milwaukee and the White Sox in
the AL Central, dropped to 2-.f
while wearing knicker-style pants, a
trend that started last· week on the
West Coast. Smiley spurned the
fashion statement and was roughed
up.
Mets 13, Orioles 6
At Baltimore, Bernard Gilkey had
three hits. including a three-run
homer, as the Mets beat the
Baltimore Orioles 13·6.
Edgardo Alfonzo tied a careerhigh with four hits and drove in two.
He is 17 -for-29 in his last seven
games.
Chris Hoilcs had two singles and
a homer for the Orioles.
New York rallied from a 5-2
deficit to tic it in the fifth . Aflcr
Butch Huskey hit an ·RBI single,
Todd Pratt doubled in two runs In
chase Orioles Slarter Rick Krivda.
The Mets took the lead in the
sixth against Terry Mathews (3-3)
when Carl Everen hit a one-out double and scored on a single by
Alfonzo.
Brian Bohanon (4-3) got the win
despite allowing a season-high five
earned runs in five innings.
Braves IS, Red Sox 2

Bengals poise themselves to make run for playoffs
SyJOEKAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Bruce
Coslet is tired of the profiles, weary
'o f the way his coaching style has
·been dissected and analyzed .
· "Oh. God, we don ' t need any
more of that ," Cos let implored as
the exhibition season ended. "Let's
just play the regular season.' '
Little chance of that. Coslet
pulled off one of the most successful
turnarounds in NFL history when he
took over the Cincinnati Bengals last
season and led them to a 7-2 finish.
The spotlight's going to follow him
throughout his first full season as.
their head coach.
. And why not?. The players give
Coslet most of the credit for their U. tum after Dave Shula was fired following 4 112 dreary seasons .
They ' re counting on this year as
more of the same.
"I think this is a good team, "
said Boomer Esiason, who rejoins
the Bengals as the backup quarterback. ,"I think it's a team that can

leap off of last year's confidence. I
sense that we have."
If history is any indicator, lhe
Bengals (8' 8) could very well make
a run at their first playoff spot since
1990, which is also the la st lime
they had a winning record.
Since the NFL merged with the
·American Football League in 1970.
there have been 43 midse ason
coaching changes. Coslet ranks near
the top for sudden impact.
Ron Meyer had a better winning
percentage (3-0 with Indianapolis in
1986) and Don Coryell won more
games with San Diego in 1978 (8-4),
but no one lias done substantially
better. Art Shell went 7-5 with the
Raiders in 1989 and Ed Khayat finished 6-4-1 with Philadelphia in
1971.
How did their teams do the n~xt
year? Very well. for the most part.
Meyer led the Colts to a 9-6 record
and the AFC East title in strikeinterrupted 1987; Coryell took the
Chargers to their first playoff
(

appearance in 14 years with a 12-4
record in 1979; and the Raiders won
the.AEC West with a 12-4 mark in
Shell' s first full season. · -Only the Eagles regressed, falling
to 2- 11 in 1972 under Khayat, who
was replaced.
In Coslet' s case, there's reason to
think he'll be more than a one-year
wonder. The Bengals play in the
AFC Central, which lacks a dominant team. And they've finally stabilized the ro~ter after years of patching holes and 'rebuilding.
Their season probably will hinge
on three areas : quarterback Jeff
Blake's development, the running
backs' effectiveness and the
defense's grasp of D,ick LeBeau's
system.
Blake struggled through the preseason. leading the Bengals to only
one touchdown -on a running play
- in 12 series, while completing 44
percent of his passes. Blake, entering his third season as the starter,
still stniggles when teams take away

the long pass.
"He's got to get his completion
percentage up. He .kn ows that ,"
Coslet said. " He knows lhat if it 's
not there, he's got to tuck it in and
run or find an alternate receiver.
That' s an area he' s got to work on.
"He's a good athlete , but he
·hasn't arrived yet. ··
Looking ah ead to the se as on
open er at home against Arizon a,
Blake said: ' 'The real thing starts
this week. The important thing is
that I know how to make my reads
and what needs to get done ."
With leading •usher Garri son
Hearst gone through free agency, the
Bengals need Ki -Jana Carter - the
first overall pick in the 1995 draft to have a breakthrough season. He
averaged only 2.9 yards per carry
last season, his first coming off of
reconstructive knee surgery.
The Bengals were so concerned
about Carter's lack of offseason conditioning that they drafted Corey
Djllon in April. Carter took it per-

(See BENGALS on B·7)

(See LOPRESTI on B-7)

•

�. . . 82. , . . . . . . .,

lbul

SundiJ,Augult31,1887

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

By DAVE HARRIS

sideline · 10 Jeremiah Bentley .
Bentley caught the ball at the seven
yard line and went into the end zone
untouched for the score . Jeff
Fowler's kick for the extra points
was wide right, but Meigs held a 6-0
lead with I :50 left in the first period.
Gallia Academy drove to the
Marauder 17 yard line after the
ensuing kickoff. But on fourth and
seven, Fowler stopped Blue Devil
quarterback Chris Lewis for a two
yard loss giving the Marauders the
ball at the 19.
' With the Marauders mixing up

from four yards and followed with a
By SCOTT WOLFE
By SCOTT WOLFE
30 yards on the end-around and into
kick to make the score 14-0.
T-s Corraspondent
.
the west end zone. A Ore&amp; Shrader
T-8 eorr.ponc1ent .
Chris Stewart, caught a 43-yard
Colby
Street,
BEALLSVILLE
RACINE ~ The Ross- kick followed for a7-0 score.
highly· recruited by most of the pass from Street at the 5:12 mark,
Southeastern Panthers made a grand
Less than three minutes later, at
nation's major colleges including followed by a Street kick to mak¢
appearance at Southern High School the 7 :46 mark Southern had a pass
Nebraska, really put on a clinic as he the score 21 -0.
in one of the Harlem Globetrotters' intercepted. On the next play, quarThen came the 53-yard punt
led Beallsville to a 35-0 lead in the
fonner rour buses.
terbatk Jerrod Lloyd threaded a 60first quarter. then sat out the rest of return (28-0), followed by a six yard
There must have been some yard pass to Steve Danicki, then
the game as Beallsville defeated Luke Caldwell run with 34 seconds
magic inside the sparkling Lloyd himself ran it in for the score ·
Eastem 47 -0 Friday night
. remaining in just the first period .
Greyhound, as the Panthers razzled from four yards out. A Greg Shrader
In the second round , Trevor
Eastern is 0-1 and 8-vi{te 1-0.
and dazzled the nice crowd in Iitten, kick followed for a 14-0 tally.
Schaeffer
had a si• yard pass from
On the positive side . Eastern
Southern got a break when
dance to the tune of a one-sided 35-0
Chris
Caldwell.
The kick failed and
tacklers
were
Abe
Rach
with
15,
victory over the Tornadoes in the Michael Ash made a hard pop and
the
score
stood
41
-0.
(12,
Shaun
Long·
(six
)
Stevie
Durst
season opener for both clubs.
knocked the ball loose from the SE
MAKES CATCH- Rosa Southeastern's John Daniell (88) wraps and Billy Schultz (five) . Adam
'
In
the
final
round,
Steve Lemley
Fullback Matt Castle ran for two running back. Ash then recovered
hla henda around the football lor tile reception In front of Southern Sanders had an interception.
had
a
one
-yard
run
and the kick
touchdowns and rambled for 66- the fumble, but Southern stalled in defender Ryan Hill during Friday night's season opener In Racine,
failed
at
the
II
:54
mark
to make the
Billy
Schultz
had
a
fumble
recovery
.
yards to lead the Panthers, while three plays, then a bad snap on the where the visiting Panthers won 35-0.
·
score
45-0.
Eastern's
leading
receiver
was
Southern's Michael Ash cracked the kick forced kicker Jason Writesel to
Four incomplete passes stifled the
This week's agenda: Southern Jeremy Kehl who caught four passes
Caldwell. the· backup quanerback
100-yard mark with a 15-119 rush- scramble for an eight yard gain, far drive.
hosts Huntington Ross Friday in for 30 yards from Steve Durst, who was 6-14 for 97 yards and Trevor
ing game, a great effort in i'" own short of a first down.
At the 4;03 mark, Shrader scored Racine .
was one Of Eastern's leading rushers .S~haeffer was 3-59 receiving.
right.
SE took over at midfield, then
on a 70-yard pass play that caught Quarter 1!!iab
This week's agenda; Eastern
with 20 yards.
The Panthers amassed 438 total five plays later, a Lloyd to John
everyone by surprise . A Greg RossSE .. ............. O 21 7 7= 35 . Adam Sanders was 8 for 40 yards plays at home Friday.
yards with combined success on the .Danicki pass play of 25 yards ended
Shrader kick followed for a 28-0 Southern ..............0 0 · 0 0 = 0 rushing. Matt Bissell was 2-6 passground and in the air. Besides a with another .score at the 3:36 mark.
tally.
ing fot' Eastern in a decent effort .
Team statistics
good stan in the first quarter and a A Greg Shrader kick followed for a
In
the
final
quarter,
Castle
scored
Team
statistics
Street. passed 4-6 times for 88
brief stint to begif\ the third quarter, 21-0 score, a score that stood at the
his second touchdown of the night to
yards for l wo touchdowns and ran Deoartment
E
D.
·
the Southern ,defense succumbed in half.
cap
the
35-0
tally
,
culminated
by
a
Department
"
Sf;
14
~ for two others for 80 yards rushing . First downs ................... .. .5
much the same· way it did last seaSouthern· threatened just before
. 8 He also had a 53-yard punt ·return
First downs .................... 10
Rushing yards ..........25-29 30-58
son-being very susceptible to the big half. Jonathan Evans, the fteshman Shrader kick.
JC!!m
Danick.i
was
5-80
receiving
Rushing att.-yds . .... 32-220 31-153 and kicked the extra points at 3:21 Passing yards .......... ....... 43
185
play .
· quarterback showed much poise and
for SE. ,writesel was 3-54 yards Passing yards.. ............. 238
left
in
the
first
quarter.
129
243
Total yards .................... .7,7
Southern did not have a bad promise for the future, but a seri~s of
receiving, Dill 2-21 and Josh Davis Total yards ................... 438
With 9: tO left in the initial round. Comp.-att ................... 7-16 10-20
282
offensive outing, but it did come in near-misses throughout the mght
.
4-14.
Street passed to Luke Caldwe.ll for a Interceptions thrown ..... .. 0
Comp.-att. .................. 9-15 13-41
I
slreaks and· was bolstered somewhat provided some misleading stats.
Cumings was 7-36 carrying for . Interceptions thrown ,...... 1
nine-yard
touchdown
reception
and
2
3-1·
.................
4-2
Fumbles/lost
by a 60-yard run by Michael Ash Passes totalling 61_yards to Matt Dill
Southern. Matt Dill deflected a pass Fumbles-lost ........ .. ...... 1- 1
Street kick to make the score 7-0.
2-1
4-.45
Penallies ......... :......... 11 -31
late in the fourth quarter. Overall, and Writesel took Southern to the
that was intercepted by Scooter Punts-avg ................ 3- 30.1 6-34.6
At lhe 6:31 mark , Street ran il in Puhts-avg ................ 4-23.5
N/A
_Southern gained 282 yards, I 53 four yard line, first and goal where
6-45
Penalties ............ ........ .4-25
rushing and 129 in the air.
they stalled and came up empty Fryar.
Southern defended its own goal, banded.
hard pressed against the goal line for
On the second series of the secmuch of the first period. Each time ond half. Southern ·made three first
in the frame, the dike held, but final- downs with 18 yards accumulated
ly burst at the 10:39 mark in the sec- by Adam Cumings, a couple of Ash
possessions; the Rebels crossed mid- 52 yards in nine plays .
ond
period,
when
Castle
passes
to _
Dill_and
Rifne.
MERCERVILLE
- Huntington
_.;,
___
__
_ _scrambled
_ _ _ _ runs
_ _and
__
___
__
_,Vinson
saw quarterback
Josh field only once in the contest. ·
This week's ag~nda: The Rebels Scoring summary
,
are
scheduled 10 play Ross
That happened in the second
Vergenz pass for two first-half
Southeastern
Friday in Richmond
touchdowns and run for a third to quarter, when South Gallia made it
Vinson: Vergenz 1-yd . run (kick
Dale.
lead the Tigers to a 40-0 victory to Vinson's 25 -yard line before
failed), Ist qtr.
,
junior quarterback Rufus Stanley Ouaner ~.!!tab
over the host South Gallia Rebels.
Vinson: Burt 25-yd. pass froiq
While the Tigers' roar was fueled threw the second of his three inter- Vinson ....... ........ l4 14 6 6= 40
by touchdowns on their first three ceptions to end a series that covered South Gallia ......... O 0 0 0 = 0
(See REBELS on B-4))
Overall
. League

. : :_. . . :::....:===============!!!!!!!!!!.J

L._ _

TURNING THE CORNER - Melga running back Matt Williams
(30) tum• the comer •• two· Gallla Academy defenders close In on
the plays drove to the Blue Devil 12 him during Friday nlght'l -•on opener In Pomeroy, where the
yard line in 17 J)lays. ·But Fowler Marauderawon1~.(Timaa-SentlnelphotobyDaveHerrla)
just missed wide right on a 28 yard ~~~~~~~~~iF~~;;;;;;,;.::;;,;;;;.;;;~.;;;~~;;.;.;;;,;.-,.....,..
field goal attempt.
Meigs the ball at the Blue'Devil 38. in the game to take borne the win. In
On the play before the field goal
Three plays later the Marauders the second half the Marauders used
attempt Davenport threaded the nee- were facing a fourth and two at the ball control to keep the football
·die to Chad Hanson in the end zone; Blue Devil 30. Davenport then hit a away from the Blue Devils. Meigs
for an instant Hanson had the ball, wide open John Davidson across the ran 33 plays in the half racking up
but was hit hard by two Blue Devils middle and he took it to the two yard eight first downs and held the Blue
and was unable to hold on to the line . One play later Williams Devils to only 16 plays from scrimpass.
cras.hed over right tackle for the mage and only two first downs.
The Blue Devils drove to their score. The Marauders went for two
"This was a well deserved win on
own 40 yard tine, but Lewis was on the exira point~ . but Davenport's Meigs' part," Brent Saunders, the
sacked by Jason Roush as the time pass was high and sailed through the dean of the Southeastern Ohio
expired in the. half and Meigs went hands of the Marauder receiver and Athletic League coaches said after
into the locker room with a 6-0 lead. the pat was no good. But with 9 :38 the game. ''This is the first time in
several years they have defeated us,
After an exchange of punts Meigs left Meigs held the 12-0 advantage.
drove to the Galli a Academy 20
Once again the Blue Devils went the last couple of years they really
yard line. But Davenport's pass on on the move, driving to the played good enough to win. We
second and eight was intercepted by Marauder 19 with a second and nine. knew we could move the ball on
Bert Craig at the one yard line. But the center exchange was bad them, but mistakes cost us early.
Craig returned the ball'to the seven.
and Payton couldn't find the handle Right now our goal is to score. This
But the Marauder defense stiff- on the ball. J.T. Humphreys pounced is the fourth game in a row that we
ened and Meigs forced a punt. A 31 on the loose football and the haven't scored."
yard punt from Payton and a five Marauders took over at their own
Saunders went on to say that the
yard return by Justin Roush gave 20.
Marauder line play impressed him.
Meigs then ran Ollt the final 6:46 "They lost most of their line from

••

TRYING TO GET AWAY - Gallla Academy running back Joah
Bodlmer (45) trleli to ~ away from an unidentified Meigs defender
during Friday night 1 •eaaon opener In Pomeroy, where the
Marauders won 18-0. (Timaa-Sentlnel photo by Dava Herrla)
last year including their outstanding him to halfback when Bodimer got
tackle (Adam Barrett). but the kids hurt. Josh is a tremendous defensive
that replaced them really stepped it player and a good running back."
up and did an outstanding job. I con"This was a great high school
sider Mike Chancey one of the best football game," Chancey said after
young coaches in the area. He has the game . ''I'm very proud of this
football team . It was great team
done an outstanding job."
The Blue Devils lost the services effort . We talk all the time about
of 5,9, 180-pound sophomore run- being a family . sticking together and
ning back Josh Bodimer in the first playing four quarters of football and
half due to a possible turftoc injury . we di~ that tonight. Gallipolis
In the second half Galli a Academy ·· played hard . We beat a very good
moved quarterback Chris Lewis who football team tonight."
had an outstanding first half to runSophomore fullback Justin Roush
ning back to replac e' Bodimer. led Meigs wilh 21 carries for 81
Sophomore Jeremy Payton took : yards. Matt Williams was right
over behind center. "Lewis had an behind him with 18 carries for 78
exciting first half, but we .moved
(See MARAUDERS on 8-3)

a

Vinson blanks South Gallia 40-0

SEOAL gridiron standings

Scoreboard Basebal l
AL standings
F..astem Dlwision

.r...
ll'.
· lrahi~~~~n .................... .........IS

L

46
· New York ............................ 78 54
,Botoon ............................. 67 68
T.....................................6S 68

ra.

.649

!ill

.591

7' ~

20

71

.496
.489
.466

CeatnJDMiion
• CUOVEU.ND .....................69 61
• Mi-tee...........................67 66
,p.iu,o .... :-: .........................66 68
~CIIy ........................ 54 77
. Mi~~~aD~a .... ,_,,, ..................S.t 78

.S.H
.S04
.493
... 12
.409

.

Deaoit ................ ,............... 62

'

.

Wdtnn Divisio•
Seattlr ........... ....................... 74 61 ..148
lAoahehu ............................. 73 62 .541

,-Te•u .................. ................64 71 .474
•OatiiiMI ......................,, ....... S3 82 .393

.,.._
, ..

21
24

.l ':

5
IS'!

. 16

I

10
21

· Friday's scores

·,

(AL•s.NL) ,

,, .' Devoi'
'· Phil*'ri•l,
Atlanta 9. Boston

:.• CLEVELAND 1. Chkaao Cubs 6
Moorrtal ... N.Y. Yaakees 3
Aorida 8. Toro1110 0
I
Milwaukee 4. Pittsburr:h I
:.; CINCINNATI$, Millntsota -~
Chicap White Sox 5. Hoastoo 4
Sl. Loui1 9, Klnw Cily 7
Cokndo.6. Sellltle S
.
Baltimon: ~.N . Y . M&lt;u J (12)
"~ · Aftlheim ). San OieJo I
los Anaeles S. Ookt.nd 4 {10)
San FnnciiCO S. Tuu4 (12)

They played Saturday
· Albnla (Millwood 2-JJ at Boston (WI1Uiiel4 914). I:OS p.m.
ChicaJo Cub1 tTapani 3-31 al CLEVELAND
(Smiley 2-,3). I'OS p.m,
N.Y. M~ll (Bohmnon 3-31 at Balti~ (Krivda
2-0). I:OS p.m.
Montreal (P.M.anlnez 1~...6) at N.Y. Yankee1
(Wells 14-7). 4 p.m.

· Florida (A .Fernandez 16-91 at Toronto
·
Saule fWokort S-S)al l.o~·1 Anfeks fR.Martinez

!Carpe:n~er 1-!iJ, 4 :0S p.m.

7-l). 4,05 p.m.

AftWim (Sprin'n 8-6)

3l

San Francisco (Estes

J7-4l4:0l p.m.

Philadelphia (B«ch 2·8) ar Ortroil (Sandm 411), 7mp.m.
Houston (Hamp~on 11-8) at Chicago While SGx

(S...

2·01. 7,05 p.m.

OaklaM (Haynes 2-.\ 1 :n. Colorndo &lt;Cutillo 10. 111.8mp.m.
Pit11burch ~Lieber 8- 12) a1 Milwaukee
IMm:edn 6-7). 8:05p.m.
CINCINNATI (Morgan !1-10) at Minnuo11
(Hawkhll 4-91. 8:0S p.ll).
St. Louis (.a.ybar ()-~)at Kanw City (Belcher
• 11-11). 8:0Sr.m.
TUIU (Clark 1·6) :II San ()iep:G (Ashby 6; 101.
IO~p .n1 .

Today'• pmes
A«id.'l :u TGI'onto. I :OS p.m.
PMO'Idc:lphia II Pctmt. \ ·~ p nl
01tc:lf.O Cubs :11 CLE\IF.LAND I OS p m
Mont~al at N.Y. Yankees. 1 : ~~ p.m.
~ . Y . Mtts at Baltimore. U~ p.m
Piusburgh 'at Milwiluk«. 2 :0~ p.m.
HousiOn a1 Chica.go While Sox. 1:05 p.m.
CJNONNAnat MinnciOta. 2:0!i p.m.
St. Loui• .al K.:n lW Ci1y. 2:05pm.
Oakland at Colonado. J:M p:m.
Stank llf Los AIIACIH. 4:05 p.m.
Teaas at San Dicso. 4 :0~ r .m.
.a.nat~eim at S4n Fr:meis~.-o. 4lO!i p.m.
, Atlanta Ill 80!\lnn. ItO~ p.m.

NL standings

·.

A.dama ........... ,...

Aorida ....... ...........
New VOlt ..............

»:
RJ

L Ea.

51 . .619

...... 7ll ~s
71 62

Monueal........... .... .. ..... .. 66 67
l'tlil:adelphin ........... .... ..... .&amp;9 81
Crntrll DlvW.

HOUIIon ............................ .. 70
PinsburJh ..... ..................... 67
St Loois ................... ........ 62
CINCINNATI .................. .. S9
Chicqo ........................... .54
.

Oe. IMcpc:nclence 21, Rocky River 8

Philadelphia 111 N.Y. Gianls. I p.m.
San Dic&amp;o at New Ensland. I p.m.
Jacksonvillr at Ballirno~, 4 p.m.
, Karuas City at Derwa, ~p . m.
N.Y. Je~s 11 Staule. 4 p.m.
San Francisco a~ Tampa Bay. 4 p.m.
.Washinaron at Carolina, 8 p.m.

Clear Fort 31'. Fredmcbown 8
Ointon-Mu1ie 50, Willianu;bur&amp; 14
Oyde :W, Fmnonr S1. Joseph 6
Coli Gro:---e 3~. Waverly 6
Col. Acldemy 28. New Albany 1
Col. Bcecllcroft ll. BiJ Wal11ut 0
Col. Bishop Wllte110n 27. Hamillon Badin II
Col. Brookhll\len 14. Col. Eas1 IJ (QT)
Col. Eutmoor 22. Walnut RidRC 0
Col. Miftlin 25, Col. S1. OmrlesO
Col. Ready 21 . SpriRJ. Nortbeastern 7
Col. Wanmon 27, Hamilton Badin II
Coldwater S6. BrookYilk: 0
Columbiana JS. Minenl Rids~e o
Columbiau Crestview 54. CII)'QhoJO Vall. 7
Columbus Growe 21. Pandora..Oilboa 14
Cortllnd-Lakcview 28. Ashtabula Edpood 8
Cory·lb.WIOII 6, Bluffton 0

Monday's gam(
ChiCIJO at Green Bay•.9 p.m.

Ohio H.S. scores
Friday's adion

Coshoctoo-t2,1ndian Vall. 6

Covilll'on 13, M~ E. 0
CrestWood 22. Crook1ville 19
CuyllhoJI His. 14.1WoodridJC 12
Day. Chaminade.Ju1ienne 28. Day. Northmont

1.1
Dl)' . Jeffenon 14. Cin.' Undmark ll
01). NortltridJc 3I, Day. Curoll 24

Day. Oakwood 48. Waynesville 8
Day. Stdtbinl42. c;::in. AikcnO
Dearborn 21. Madison 13
Dtfiaacc 36. Napoleon 6
DrGraf'f Riven! de 42. npp City Berhel6
Delphos J~fftno11 )4, P•kway 6
Delpbos St. John 22. Olseao 1
Delta 28, Eric (Mich.) Mason 0
DiXie Hts. 29. Cin. Norwood 0
Duvn SS. C)e. John Hay 14
Dublin Coffman 24. Olen&amp;angy 18
E Cmlral S.\ . Cin. Andmon 30
E. Clinlon 14, Batavia 6
E. Knoll 10. Ulica 1'
Eas1lolo: N. 21. Madison 7
Eaton 49. Midd~own Fenwick 0
Edrenon 18. Hilltop 6
Elmwood 26. Ubcny Benton 14
Elyria. C.ath. 35. Lorain Midv~w 7
Euclid 64. Elyria 20
F:airf1~ekl 42. Beu-oercreek l
Falrl:and 20. Ponsmoulh W. 10
Fairpon Hnn:li"''l4. Painesville Harvey 0
lialrview 21 , WauSCC!n 14
Fiadloy 44. Elida 9
Fon Frye 20. Federal HoekinJ 6
Fon Rfcovery 48, Miuiuinawa Vall. 0
Fottoria St Wendelin 35, Crin&amp;ton-Uileoln 0
· Gahanna4J , Day. Cololtt'l White 12
(J.JI\oway WeMiand 21 . Col. W~t f\
Garf~eld His. 31 . Maple Hu. 6
Garreusvillc: 9. Middlc:ridd Carclinnl7
Gates Mills Gilmour~~ - Lor.Un Brookside 14
Gtncva 34. WillouJhby S. 6
Genoa ~7 . Pon Clinton 14
GibsonburJ68. Onawa Hilll14
Gratlam -10. W. Liberty S.lcmO
Gnufd Vall. 42. Jcffemm 8
Grllhdview 28. Col. Centennial 6
Granville 28. Joh11110wn Monroe 21
Grccnon !i I, F:Lirbom 44. lOT
Groveport 28. Marion ffllllklin 6
Hamilloa41, Cin. Wnletn Hills 0
Hamilmn Ron .19, lemon-Munroe 3
Hann1b11.l River 21. Meadowbrook 0
H:ardinJ. Nortbr:rn ]S. Ada 14
Hawkea 21 , Mop:lore Field 0
Hebron Lakewood 29. He.11h 7
Hickmy. Pa. D . Brookfield 14
Hilliard Davidwn 18. Cin. Harri1on 15

64
61
72
73
81

.586

.534
.496
.377

.m .

lil
4\

II'~

16'~

12

.496 '

311

.463
..U7
.400

8
10

16 '~

WntemDt~

los AnJCies .......... ........... 77 59 .S66
SuFtanc;iiCCI .................. ... 1'4 61 .s.s
Colooado .........................66 70 .48S
s... Dle-o ........................ .. 63 73 .461

srAn •uM

NFL slate
Today'• ltUOil openen
Arizona • CINCINNATI. I p.m.
A.lluta II Oecroit. I p.m.
Ooltu •
I p.m.
lodiiOipO(io • Mlomi. I p.m.

Pi-.

MilllleiOU • Buffido1 I p.m.
~ OrleiN ll St. Lolit, I p.m.

INIUUNC"

Moum Gilead ~- Col. W~1one 27
N. Can10n HO()\'ft JO. LouiJ'Iille \6
N. Olmslfd -10. N. RidJe,ille 1'
National Trail 20. Prtblr Shawnct 0
Nel10nvillc· York 48. A1nm11
Nrw Bn:men 2l.lndian lake 14
~w LuinJion ll, t.oaan6(0T)
Nc:w Richmond 3-4. Cin. Summil7
Newark 44, Mount Vernon 6
Nrwbury 22. .Berbbirc 21
Newcomentown .\4. BuckeyeTrail13
NewlOn Falls J.l WindhJm 14
Northmor I4. Buckeye Cettral8 (OTI
Ont Harbor 4.\. Rossford I~
Oak Hill I&lt;4, Minford 0
Oberlin .ll. Columbia 14
Ofttario 14. Lnin1101 0
On!JOII Clo.y I 3. Tol. Bowsher 0
Omille 29. Akron StV·SI.M 7
On:awa-Giandocf 31 . Pauklins 6
·
OxfOJd TalawoodD 43. Franklin (Ind.) Co. :12
PaineJYiUe Ri.....nide 18, Amhmt·Stcclc 7
Parma J4. Garlicld Ht1. Trinity 6
P.-ma Padua Ml.korain Adm. KinJ 21
Patrick Henry 63. L.ripsic 7
Perrysbln'J 8. Tol. R08"1 6
Philo 27. Col. Brigp 24
Pikeloo ~ Ponsmoulh E. 1
Piqua 24. :)prins. North 0
Plyroouth 2.~ ; Crullinc 19
Pymarun.lftl \Iall S-4. Cor!neaut28
Ravenna 31. TwinllMJ 7
Reynoktsburl26. Pfcktrinlton II
·
Richmond Dale SE 15. R.xi~r Soulhtm 0
Ridsedale ~5. S~a HiJhland 21
Ridgemont 14. Upper Scioto Vall. 0
Rivet" View 41 . W. Holmes 20
Ri~erd.alc 26, ArlinJIOR 7
S. Ranae 28. E. Palesliae 0 •
S.alint:svi\le Southern 22. Jew~en-Scio 7
S.11Ddusky 16. Poland Seminar) 7
Sandusk~ Perkin• 24. Woodmorc 21
Seneca E. l!I ..Colonel Crawfo~ 0
Shadyside 16. Co.ldweU I~
Sllaron, PG. :!$. Younf. Ursuline 22
Sbr:\by 31. Clovulea 3
ShenandoAh J2. Wa~crford 0 ·

--- ·-

•lliSteemg
• 4CIJII(ainl Cllaln
• Rea Sola
• Alumlntrn Amng

·-lod&lt;s
•NllfM Cassetlt

·-Brakes
• Cldlan

·AuiOmalic

•Nt Condition

·-Wlndciwi
·-tacl&lt;s

•WtiE~

Oolllnteriar

•""'"" MirrOIS

• Dual Aitags

·~Outrt·

• Loodtdl

• Cn;oe Conid

·-Siotring

Wi-

• RtmMble Taik)ale
•T245175R t 6" Steel
Beltoil Tres

State Farm Understands Life.™
Olflc8:

Bloomington, Illinois

....

•• Wheel Anli-I.Jx:ll'
Brakes
•At.fFM Stereo

• 1i! Sleering
• Sljled Whtols
• Loodtdl

: .1111 : : ~~

Iiii i

· \I~

fA

l

' 0

ll

0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

I
0
0

0
I
I

49
6
0

15
12
28

0

0

0

0

0
0

0

21
18

Warren Locai .: .......O

0

0

0

I

I
1
0

19

River Valley ..........0

0
0

30

13

Selected ~~Qn·league opponents

lYLl.ElA

Coal Grove ........................................................ I
Fairland ....... :..................................................... !

0
0

35
20

6
10

Jronton ....................................... ;....................... x

x
0

x
18

x

x

Other SEOAL teams open 1997 football season

(Continued from B-2)

Statistical leaders
. Rushing
Meigs: Justi.n Roush 21-81,
Williams 18-78, Bentley 3-15,
Davenport 1-0
Gallipolis: Lewis 16-44, Davis 740, Bodimer 5-22, Craig 2-6, Payton

By ODIE O'DONNELL
T-S Correspondent
If the' entire 1997 football season
closes in October the way it started
August
the
eight-team
in
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
is in trouble, as the league won only
two of eight non-league contests
Friday night.
·
Defending champion Jackson
crushed Wellston 49-15 and Warren
Local handed Belpre a 30-14 loss,
but the other six teams earned an
"L" on opening night. Meigs defeated Gallia Academy 12-0, Lucasville
Valley beat River Valley 18-0,
Ripley squeeked past Point Pleasant
21-19, Morgan shut out Marietta 28Nelsonville-York whipped Athens
48-7, and New Le&lt;ington pulled out
a 12-6 overtime victory over the
Logan Chieftains.
No details on the Warren victory
and Marietta defeat were available at
press time, except that Belpre gave
the Warriors fits until late in the
game before going down. That co~tesi was played on Belpre's home
turf while Marietta traveled to
McConnellsville to lose to the
Raiders. ·

o,

No Credit, Slow Credit
Bad Credit, Bankruptcy?
Bankruptdes Must Be Di.seluUJed
At

Dutch Miller Chevrolet,
WE CAN HELP
a month Income

(304) 529-2301
$ SAVE THOUSANDS $
Oon't Pay Thooe High Kentucky
ond Ohio tntoreat Rate&lt; I
Many Vthlctea Are Avalloblo With
NO MONEY DOWN I
CALL 24 HOURS .A DAY·
70AYSAWEEK

HOLLEY BROS.
CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.

· Deportment
GA
.M
· First downs ......................8
16
: Scrimmage plays ...........40
54
Rushing att.-yds ..... 32-114 43-174
74
Passing yards .................23
Total yards ................... l37
248
Comp.-att . ................... .1-5
5-10
Interceptions thrown .......0
I
Fumbles-lost) ..........:.... 211
110
Penalties-yds . .............4130
8145
Punts (no-avg) ......... 3-22.6
1-17

"

1 ~_! 1 1{-,r ,
I'

'

~(.?-

UP ON THE HilL

RODNEY, OHIO

•Backhoe
•Dozer
Work

•Team statistics
I'

Jackson 49, Wellston 15 .
yards and three touchdowns while yards to the Panthers' 270, but boih
At Jackson , the back-door neigh- the. Buckeye defense held Athens to teams saw scoring drives halted time
bars rolled up 671 yards in total 'just four total rushing .yards and 47 and again inside the 10-yard line by
offense, mostly on the ground led by net yards for the con1est. Glass fumbles, penalties or missed kicks.
Jackson's Shane Wolford, who car- scored on runs of one, one, and three
Logan got on the board first early
ried the ball 34 limes for 189 yards yards and Darrin Lawson kicked six in the contest when'Niclr. Thompson
and three touchdowns . Wolford's extra points for the winners.
streaked 69 yards with a Panther
scoring runs were 10 · and :20 ya~;ds,
. The lone Bulldog score came ·on punt to give the Chiefs a lead that
. and he added a 76-yard punt return a pass from a former Galli a stoOd until midwa~ in the third quarto the end zone in the second period . Academy athlete, Ryan Perdue, who ter. A two point converisoQ run
Jay Blankenship booted a 22-yard . connected with Chad Thomas on a failed .
field goal and kicked four extra 22-yard score. in the fin.al seconds of
The host team tied the game in
points for the winners.
the first half.
the.third period when Josh Dixon h~t
The Golden Rocket touchdowns
The Buckeys finished with 487 6-5 Jesse DuParow, who leaped over
were scored by Mau Hatten on a 79- total yards even though they were a Logan defender, to complete a 79yard first quarter dash and a 10-yard penalized 12 times for 110 yards
yard scoring pass. An extra point
run by Chris Hutchinson in the final Quarter llWib
kick sailed to the right, leaving the
one minute of play.
Athens
0-7-0-0= 7 · score tied at 6-6 for the remainder of
Jackson recorded 341 yards rush- Nelsonville-York
14-7-20-7=48
regulation play.
ing and Wellston had 299 on the
---'In the overtime the Chiefs drove
ground. The Ironmen completed one New Lexington12, Logan ti (OT) . to the Panther seven-yard line before
of four passes and Wellston one of
At New Lexington. fullback sophomre kicker Matt Shaw's 23seven .
Adam Finck busted into the end yard field goal missed, giving New
Quarter 1!!iab
zone from the one-yard line in the Lexington life, and setting the stage
Wellston
7-0-0-8=15
overtime period to break a dead- for Finck's game winning touchJackson
14-6-16-13=49
locked contest that featured numer- down.
ous muffed scoring opportunities by Ouarter ~
6-0-0-0,-0=6
Nelsonville-York 48, Athens 7
both teams.
LogJn
0-0-6-0-6=
12
At Buchtel, Eric Glass ran for 231
The· Chieftains finished with 293 New Lexington

Holzer Clinic .
Saturday Morning
Sports Injury Clinic

If You Have At Least $1,300

1-(- 1) .

Passin!!
· Meigs: Davenport 1-5-1, 74
yards, I TD
Gallipolis: Payton 1-4 -0. 23
yards: Lewis 0-1
·
RHeiving
Meigs: Bentley 2-41, Hanson 2,
24, Davidson 1-29, Humphreys 1-9
Gallipolis: Saunders 1-21

;:

Jackson ~nd Warren ··Local record victories·

Gallipolis ............O o o o= o
: Meigs ................:.6 0 0 6 = 12

.

':'. II ·

. 48

0

Quarter 1Cdlll

Friday: 10 1111 -10 ,.. • Sallrdlly: 9 1111 - MldniPl
Slltlay: 1,_ • 8 ,_ • WISI!DMOriDAY

I

7

0

yards. Jeremiah Bentley added three
carries for 15 yards .
Davenport played lin outstanding
game at quarterback. for Meigs,
completing five of I 0 m the atr for
·74 yards with one touchdown. He
had' at least two passes dropped.
Bentley caught two passes for 41
yards, Hanson two for 24. John
Davidson one for 29 and J.T.
Humphreys one for nine.
·
For Gallia Academy •. Lewis carried 16 times for 44 yards. Seth
Davis seven times for 40 and
Bodimer five for 22. ·
Payton was one for four for 21
yards and Lewis failed to complete
his only pass. Alex Saunders had the
Blue Devils' one reception .
This week's a11enda: Galli• ·
Academy will host Coal Grove next
Friday in their home opener. The
Hornets rolled over Waverly Friday
qvening 35-6. Meigs will travel to
Athens next week to tangle with the
. Bulldogs for the first time since
. 1984. Athens lost to NelsoRville. York48-7 Friday. ·

~­
FOil
......

Country

1 1~ 11

r.E

I

Marauders win •..

..

Tom Peden
Iiiii

L

0

bold - denotes home team

t\'dm·,,,;,.,...,.,

~

:»:

0

1lw' plavecl Saturday
. Ironton at Ryle (Ky.)

Cole&lt;~
..
By

&amp;Jntatr&lt;l"*'' tiT.,. 'spr&lt;181 nnant1rjflf.&lt; problem cmlt·bul unlr a few III!Olt,., T1111
Sian .,,,..1~"1sj!,I)Ud .."'"'
..... tnn .. ""' oo the tot.. """ .. """-IIIII tllm's ntm'IMJIIRltnl PIUII.&lt; llmS!alll'loool~lll Wit OOOIIZ!0417tllill and"'* r.,oot
T1't l'rah swn ~ Spodall:il." •1911 'll.m t-QIJntry tu1o1 t&lt;l "'P 1W a rl'l'llh .C.II "''"' rood to a bdter looJolrur,!-

342 Second Avenue, P.O. Dox 906
GaRipolls, Ohio 45631 ·
Off.; 614-446·4290 Or (888) 970· 2345
Res.: (614) 441-1420

rA

Meigs ...... ..............................................,. ........... !
0
12
0
FridaY'$ KAm
· Illia "$'k's wnda
Melp 12, GALLIPOLIS 0
Coal
Grove
at
Ripley (W.Va.) 21, POINT
GALLIPOLIS; Point Pleasant at
PLEASANT 19
Roan~ County; Fairland at
Lucasville Valley 18,
~rvER VALLEY; Meigs at
RIVER VALLEYO
Athens; Waverly at Jac~son;
Nelsonville-York
. 48,
Nelsonville-York at Logan:
Athens 7
Cambridge at Marietta;. Fort
Jackson 49, Wellston 15
Frye at Warren Local; Ironton ;
Lucasville Valley .
New Lexington 12, Logan 6
(OT)
Morgan :ZS, Marietta 0
Warren Local 30, Belpre l3
Coal Grove 35, Waverly 6
Fairland 20, Portsmouth
West 10

•.................. ShnJD,.....-a~IIOIIICLdld.

TPC Fmb Start Flnaadng

0

Lucasville Valley ................................. ............. 1

Br11• Nrw ~~~7 nrwy ~ - 1500
• 4 Wheel Anli-lod&lt; Brakes
• Dual Aitags

0

.o

I1am

SJ8,950*

Em••r• c•• txt Plr~•'

L r.E
0

Jackson .................. 0
Logan ..................... O
Marietta ........ :......... o
Point Pleasant.......O

n

Mnrp 28. MariCitA 0

5

See State Farm Agent:

State Farm life Insurance Company • Home

Mmor 29. Clc. Glenville 8
Mentor Lake C01h. 20. Stow Walsh Jesuit 0
Miami Trace 20, Fronklin Hu. 0
MiamisbuiJ ll W. Cbeun Lako1a II
Mil:tn Edison 26. Norwalk 2~
Min.sin 28. Spellm"Ville: 0
MoaOOore4J.Usbon 12
Mohawk 14. KanSD.J lakota 7 (2 OT)
Monrot\lillc 35. Keystone 0
Mon1peliu 19. Hicksville: 0

Athens ............ ...... ..O

Inventory Clearance! Extended Sale Hours!
2.8°/a APR Up Dl BD Months!**

John K. Schmitt, Aaent

Football

:»:
Gallipolis...............o

IWo

Sheridan 25. Lick.inJ \la\1. 14
Sidney Ldlman 32, An59nia 0
Solon 12. Lyndhurst Brulh 0
Spring. Catholic 41 , Spring. NorthwHII:I'TI 14
Spring:. Shawne-e 41 . S. Olru~ston SE 0
Sprin~ . South .1\, Grove City 6 ·
Springboro 26. C:arlisle 7
St. Clllirsvillc :4. Ricluoond Edison 21
St. M:arys 49. Sidney 0 ·
Streetsboro J4. Aurora 14
Strons:sville 41 . PllfmD Vall. For~e ·o
Sttull~en
New Middletc.wn Sprin,:. 0
Symmes V~ll. ·" '· Gloustt'l Trimble 6
Tallmadt:c 29. Akron Kt:n~6
Te~ys Vall . JO. Westfall 0
Tecumseh .~I. Tipp City 17
Tiffin Colun1bian ~2 . Fos!Ma 6
Tal. St. Fmnci~ 7. Lirm Sr 6
Tol. St Johns 10. Col. DcSales 0
Tol. Swrt 21 . Tol. Whilmer 13
Tol. Woodw31'd 21 . Anthony Wayne 7
Trenton Edgewood 41 . Middk'lown Madi'IOO 12
Tri-Vallt'y J}. Cllf'(OIIIon 19
Tri...t 46. Arcanum 2(1
TrOiwood - M~tdilon 7. D-oty Mc.:tdowdak 6
Troy 31 . Cin. Sycamore 28
TuscarnwDII Vult: 46, CantonS. b '
Tudaw 36. Rimn:an 21
Twin Volt. S. 20, Di1ie 13
U1ioO L.ocn.l47. Aieundcr 0
Unionto•n Lake J2. Akroa Ellc:t 14
United 21. E. Can1on 1
Upper fPil.) St. Oair 22. Youne Muoncy IK
Upper Arlinaton ~.Col . lrt&lt;k!pcndtncc 6
Upper Sandud:)' 14. M.arion El&amp;in 11
\laJiey View 60. Tri-County N. 0
VnUey, W.Va. 14. FrontierO
\l:tn Wen 20, BT}'an 0
\lancblia Buller 26. Mihon-Union 0
Vnmilion Jl!. Obtrlin Fnlands 14
\lcB:Lillr! 11 . Mnrion l.Oc:tl 14
Vienna Ma1hew1 35. Lcdacmonl II
\limon Co. 19, S. Poinl 12
W. Branc:h41 . Snkm 7
W. Jeffmon $), Hamilton Twp. 20
W. MuskinJum 42. Hemlock Miller 6
Wadswonh 38. Hudson 12
Warren JO. Belpre 13
Wtarrcn Ch~mp1on .\5, Ashtnbula Hubor )2
Wwn:n Han:linJ 1'.\. Cle. CollinwOIXl 0
WIUT'Cn Kennedy '27, Howland 1
WayriC'dalc Jlloudonvillc 0
W:ayneslield Goshen 28. L1ma f\'rry 0
Wcstuville N. 21 . Mansfield Sr 1,2
Westerville S..11, laftcostcr 6
Westl.akc47, Ctmncl20 ·
Wheeling (W .V:..) Central 29. Be:avn Locnl14
Wickliffe 40. Olmste-d Falls 0
Will:wd I 3, Marion River Vall 1

[1r[rrrrrrrLL [1~[Lrrcr~~

• AuliJIIIatit
•NtcadiOII

2'.;
14

Meigs 12. GallipOii1 0

1r11• Nrw ~~~7 c•ny
Fill Slzr Cmrrslll VII.

State Farm Lne has the top financial
strength rating from the followif)Q- · ·
independent rating services:
A.M. Best- A++
Moody's-Aaa
Standard &amp; Poor's - AAA
Duff &amp; Phelps - AAA
· Weiss Research - A+

II

Hillsboro 21, Paint Vall. 26 (011
Holland Spring. 28: Swanton.0
Hopewell -Loudon 27, Artad1a 18
Hubbard JS, Canfield I J
Huntinatoa (W.\Ia.) Vinccnt40. S Gallia 0
Huntin,:top Rou 18, Berne Union 12
Indian Creek 21. Cin. Hughes 7
J:atklon 49, Wellston 1S
lllLkson·Millon J2. Rootstown 28
Jotm Glenn 20. Hornesville 6
Jona1han Aldtr 19. Fairbanb 7
Kent Roosevcll 14. 0ran8t' I J
Kenton RidgeJ6. Wilmins10n 11
Kl:tttrif!Jf4irmor!ll9, KenerintAitn I)
Kinlund 4). Beachwood 0
Lakeview 28. A5btabula Edgewood 8
L.aktwood I.S. Nilet McKinley 12
· L.aU:wood St. Edvt-ard 32. Shaktr lj1s . 19
W01:a E 48, Huber Hu. W3yllt 39
lakotA W H. Day. Paumon 8
leb:1111on 42. Franlbn 20
Ubcny Cenlet ~- Tin!X'll 21
Ucking His. 23. Johnstown Nortbridge 0
Unu Ba1h 7. Allen E. 6
Urna.Catb. 28. WayneTr¥e 12
LimaSh:awnee4l UtbanaO
Logan 6, New l.A!Kift!lon 12
Lop.an Elm SJ, Zane Trace 0
Lorllin Clearview 4S, Cle. Eas1 Tech 6
· Lonlin Southview ()1, Cle. Lincoln·Wesl6
Louinillc Aquinas 3!i. Campbell Memorial 7
t.ovel.:u~ 26. Cin. Nonhwest 22 .
Lucas 12. S. Central?
Luusvllle Vru\. 18. Cbcshire River \Iall. 0 .
l.tJthetan W. 35. Fairview Park 27
Mqoolia, W.Va. I9. MonrocCelllttll18
Moocbester 28. C:anal Fulton NW 1
. MCIIlsfltld M:ldison SO. Cle. South 14
Mopleton .19, Hlllida.le 0
Marpre:~ta 42. Collins Western Reserve 7
M1111on Hanling21 . Dublin Scioto 9
Marion Pleasant 54. N. Union 14
M:Jrlins Ferry ~- Cambridi~ 19
Marysville 29. Benjamin LoJan 0
M:JIOII 7:1. On. Tutpin 7
Musillon 72. Cardoza. Washineton. D.C. 6
Massill90 Jaekson 29, Greensburg Green 7.
Mauillon Perry 42. Stow 3
~~~5.Ltdgemonl 8
Maumee 14. Toi.Wilitc IJ
Mayf.e)d 40, W. Gemugn 34
Mnysvillt 30. F:airfield Union 1.\
McCio.in 28, Adenn 21 lOTI
McComb J1'. N. BohiltlOf'e 0
McDermon NW 42, Portsmouth Notre Dame 18
McDonald l4. Sebring 8
MechlllttsblltJ 21 , Mlld1 ~nn Plain~ 0 ·
Medina 41'. Akron N. 18
Medina Hicllland 36. Fairless 8

,950*

Fsrm for life lnsul'lftt».

E.sttmDMA•

Jam

OaJi.Jand at Tennmee, I p.m.

Alaoo E. 16. Copley Il
.
Akron Firestone ll, Cuyahoga Fnlh 14 (0T)
Akron SJrin8. 11. N[Ifon 1
Alliance41, B.wrton 1
Amanda·Oearcrcft 36. Wasbinaton C.H. 0
Andenon4l. Milford ll
Antwerp21. Edon 12
Atdlbold 27, Sflvania Southview 0
Asfllnnd Cm1v1tw 40. W. Salem NW IS
Ashtabula37, LaBrae 7
Avon .l6. Lomin Ca1h. 14
Avon Lakt 21. Revere 1
Aymville 44, Millbury I.* IS
!By Villq:e 20. 'Cie. Kennedy 14, 20T
8t-allsville41', Eas1em MciBJ 0
Bellbrook H. Gree~tew 14 •
Bellefontaine 26. Wapakonrla 1S
Bellevue 24. Huron IJ
Berlin Ctflltr Weslml Rt21Vt 28. Maln!rn 0
Bethel·TalC 20. Uttle Miami 0
.
Bexley 14, CtWI Winchestn 7
Bloom-CatrOJIZI. Uberty Union IJ
Bowlin&amp; Green 42, Eastwood 13
Bradford 63. Ydlow SpringsO
BrteUvillc II. Ncrdonia 6
Brooklyn 21 . Cle. Rbodn 6
Brunswick 16. Canton GlenOak 0
Buckeye Local .S2, Nt:w Philadelphia 0
Buckeye \Iall . 26. D:llwarc Hayes 7
B~s II. Wytiford I 3
Cadi160. Sand)' Vall. 0
Caaton McKinley 45. Akron Oarfirld 0
Cruey 12. Van Buren 7
Cedarvllle ;\9, Wesacm Brown 8
Ctlina27.Grtenville 18
CeftterburJ 11. MiUenpOn 0
Chagrin Falls JS. Kenston 20
Chardon 28 , Bedford 18
CbnapeOike ~I . Fmnlclin Furnace Grccn6
Chillicotht 28. Watk.ins'Memorinl 21
Cin Anck111on -'2. Milfm:l J ~
Cin. COlerain 29. Holmes 6
Cin. Coontry Day 22. Bl~chrstet" 16 (0TJ
Cin. Elder ~2. Middletown 14
Cin. Fimll!ytown 36, Cin. N. CoUetr Hill 25
Cin. Glen Este 38. Oennonc NE 6
Cin. lndiu Hill64. Cin. Hilh Olr. A~:nd. 7
Cin. KinJt .' 5. Cin. Our POifk 0
Cin. Madeira 19. Ludlow&amp;
Cift. MtNichobs 22. Cin. Mllliemont 9
Cin. Oak Hills 37. Ccnlmfille 2.1
Cin. Princeton 28. Cin. La Salle 21
Cin. Purctll MIW\on 32. Amelia 8
Cin. RmdillJ ll. On. Lockland 14
Cin. ROJtf 8DCOD 29. Cin. MI. Healthy 11
Cin. Tmylor 48. New Miami 14
Cin, W:alnut Hlllt34. Cin. ·woodward 14
Cin. Winton Wood• 56. Goshen 0
Cirtleville .l l. Unioto 19
Cle. Benediclint: !"'.' Midpark 0
Cle. Heighls 20, WB~TH'sville 0

Beallsville defeats
Eastern 47-0

Ross SE gets 35-0
w·in over Southern

Marauders gain
12-0 triumph
-~ver Gallipolis
T-S Comttpondent
: PQMEROY- The
Meigs
Marauders scored in the firs! and
fourth periods, and· behind a good
defensive effon and a ball conuol
offense the Marauders went on to
defeat the Gallia Academy Blue
Devils 12-0 before a packed house
at Bob Roberts Field in Pomeroy
Friday evening. It was the season
opener for both teams .
· The Marauder win broke an It game losing streak, spanning 17
years over Gallia Academy. i1te last
Meigs win was in 1980 When the
Marauders defeated the Blue Devils
by the same score of 12 , 0 : The
Marauder coach for that game was
Charles Chancey, father of current
Marauder mentor Mike Chancey.
Gallia Academy won the toss and
received the ball on the 20 after Jeff
Fowler's kickoff sailed into the end
zone. The Blue Devils drove to their
own 48 in 10 plays before the drive
stopped .
On fourth down the snap was
·
bad, Jeremy Payton did a good job
recovering the ball, but his punt was
partially blocked. The Blue Devils'
Chad Frazier caught the ball on the
fly behind his line of scrimmage and·
ran it II yards, but was stopped
short of the first down at the Meigs
45 yard line.
It took Meigs nine plays to drive
55 yards to take the lead. With the
Marauders facing a founh and four
and t!le Blue Devil 15, Brad
Davenport fired a strike fo the far

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

SUnday, Augult 31,1887

RBSIDENTfAI. • COJDIERCIAL

LIMESTONE
TOP SOIL
RIVER GRAVEL

MUSHROOM
COMPOST

Open Monday thru Friday 7:30 em til 4:30 pm.
Saturday 7:30 am-12 noon

Yo~ Pick Up or We Deliver

446-2114 or 245-5316

Sports injuries need prompt attention . .
.Holzer Clinic's newly expanded Sports Medicine Center will be ·
providing Sports Injury Care beginning Saturday, August 30, 1997
and continuing through Saturday, November 1, 1997.
'
Walk-ins are welcome beginning at 9:00am.
The goal is to provide a comprehensive program .
to return the athlete to the previous level of competition.
The Sports Injury Clinic will be staffed by Dr. Kelly Roush
(Chiropractic and Sports (~jury Physician), Nationally Certified
Athlrtic Trainers, an x-ray technician and support staff.
Parental consent is required for evaluations.

Holzer Occupational Health,
Sports Medicine and
Rehabilitation Center
4th and SycamClr~ Streets
Gallipolis, Ohio

(614) 44~5244
Holzer Clinic...
11ere for Your He8Jlh. 11ere for Your Lifetime!

.,
',

�I',
:Lucasville Valley downs Raiders 18-0
Page84·~ ) ·---~

Sunday, Auguat31, 1997

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

8y G. SPEN~R OSBORNE
went wide to the rig~t. and the
Jlmee Sentinel St.ff
Indians hid to settle for a 6-0 Ield
· ·LUCASVILLE - Senior run· with S:06Ieft in the period.
iting back Jason Swoids tallied two
Lucasville recovered its onside
.second-quarter touchdowns, and kick seconds later, but had to punt
)Ienior quarterback/safety Chris after moving the ball one yard in a
Lundy ran for a third to pace the three-and-out series.
Lucasville Valley Indians to an 18·0
River Valley lost two yards on its
:l!ridiron victory over the visiting first full drive of the period. The
River Valley Raiders Friday night in series died when fullback/linebacker
the season opener for both teams.
Jay Stout fumbled and Lucasville
. : The first quaner and the first six lineman B.J. Henry recovered the
minutes of the second quarler were pigslcin on the Raiders' fi've.
&lt;levoted to defense. The Raiders, in
Two plays later, SwarM went
;their first possession of the game, behind left guard for his second
·were the only ones to get a first · three-yard touchdown of the night.
~own in the ftrst quaner. But River Swords' two-point conversion run
:Valley moved the ball 17 yards w,as short of the ~nd zone, and
'before giving up the ball . at Lucasville settled for a 12-0 lead.
:Lucasville's 48-yard line four min- / Each team get one first down in a
:utes deep into the contest.
scoreless third quarter marked most. River .Valley's defense then con- ly by three-and-out drives that didn't
'rained the Indians to the degree that cover 10 yards. Lucasville's longest
'the hosts ' two first-quarter ·posses- drive of the frame covered 18 yards.
"&gt;ions were three-and-out affairs that But it . was short-circuited by
~idn't mov9the ball 10 yards or Lundy'sfumblingandStout'srecov.
ery at the Raiders' 31 at the 4:54
;cross midfield. ·
\, IJ'he second quarter was a differ- mark.
'
:ent matter.
With I :09 left in the quaner,
. The Raiders' three-and-out pos- · River Valley set up shot at its own
session that straddled the first and one following Lundy's line-drive
'second quarters. Lucasville's first punt that rolled to that hash mark.
:drive of act two, which lasted 6:47,
The Raiders saw halfback Jimmy
covered 77 y•rds in 17 plan. This Gilmore get them out the goalpost
'!!rive ended with Swords' three-yard shadows with a 21-yard run.
up-the-miQdle touchdown run on a Halfback Brian Bradbury )lad five·
trap play that pushed the Raider line- yard run before Stout's two-yard run
:men to the right side .while Swords ended the quarter.
:went left. Lundy's ntra·point kick
·The, fourth quarter began with

Gilmore running a sweep off left
tackle and outrunning all the Indians
except for cornerback Matt Perlcins.
Perkins brought Gilmore down at
the Indians' eight to end a 63-yard
run. the Raiders ' longest of the
night.
Four running plays that combined
to move the ball two yards put the
Raiders in a fourth-and-goal situatiorr. RVHS quarterback Jeremiah
Triplett dropped back and threw in
the direction of tight end Jeremiah
Donilet in the left corner of the west
end zone. The ball was out of the
reach of Lundy, who was closer to
catching the ball than Donnet, and it
fell incomplete. The Indians took
over on downs on their own six.
· Two plays later, Lundy scrambled to his left &lt;in a second-and·l3
situati'on from the Indians' three .:_
Lucasville's illegal procedure penalty moved the ball hillf the distance
from the goal line -and outran the
River Valley defenders en route to
' the end zone. Lundy's two-point
conversion pass fell incomplete, and
the Indians had to settle fo~ the 18-0
lead that stood as the final.
This week's jlgenda: The
Raiders are scheduled to host
Fairland Friday. Whether· the
Ratders play that and/or any future
games. depend~ on the stat!" of labor
negottattons tn . the Galha County
Local School ~tstr1~t. If the threatened teachers strike goes on as
planned, no athletic events involving

Sunday, August 31, 1997

Just in time
for football

'

River Valley or South Gallia will be
held for the duration of the strike.

O.wr!tr 111111

-·-

Scoring summary
Luusvllle Val.: Swords 3-yd.
run (Ieick failed), 5:06 2nd qtr.
Lucasville Val.: Swords 3-yd.
run (run failed, 1:17 2ndqtr.
Lutuvllle Val.: Lundy 97-yd.
run (pass failed), 9:27 4th qtr. ·

I

eam Stat StiCS

.BY · LY

Drpartmcpt

First downs ......................5
8
Total yards ........·........... l70
231
Rushing att.-yds, .... 35-148 39-220
Passing yards ................. 22
II
Comp.-att. ........ ............ 4-8
2-8
Interceptions thrown ,......0
0
Fumbles-lost .... :........... 2-1
2-1
Penalties-yds .............. 8-65
5-38
Punts-yds .................. S-176 5-215

GRABBED - River Valley halfback Jimmy Gllmora (21) Is
81capas one Lucasville Valley defender (lower right), but Is
Statistical leaders
grabbed by another of the Indiana during the flrat haH of Friday
night's 1111011 opener In Lucasvllla, where the Indians won 18-0.
River Valley Raiders
Gilmore led all rushers with 96 yards. (Photo by Ron Caudill of
Rushing: Gilmore 12-96; Stout River Valley Photography)
· 10-19; Boso 2-12, Tripleu 8-11
Passing: Tripleu4-8, 22 y'ds.
Receiving: Locke 2-11
Lucasville Valley Indians
Receiving: Gilmore 2-9, Boso 1Fumble recoveries: Henry 1-0;
Rushing: Lundy 7-127 &amp; I TD;
10 Stout 1-3 ·
Sconl3-61 ; Swords 14-31 &amp; 2 TDs unknown Indian 1·0
'Fumble recoveries: Stout 1-0
Passing: Lundy 2-8, I I yds.

-Ripley outlasts .Point Pleasant
Big Blacks 21-19 in opener
.
.

.

teams, especially in key situations. added 66.
That is what happened to the Point
Point drew first blood with just a
Pleasant Big Blacks here last night little over a minute remaining in the
in their season opening 21-191oss to opening quaner when Rollins kept
the Vikings.
the ball on an option play and scam"Death Valley definitely had its pered 80 yards for a touchdown.
advantages tonight," said an obvi- Sophomore Eric Hanning split the
ously disappointed Point Pleasant uprights with the extra point kick to
coach Steve Safford after the game. make it7-0.
"Nothing seemed to go our way."
The Vikings tied the game in the
:~
The Big Blacks won nearly every second quarter when sophomore
.' RIO GRANDE - Here is this statistical category, but just did not corner back Morgan Clendenin
: week's schedule for events at the score enough points to win the returned a Big Black punt 67 yards
·'. University of Rio Grande's Lyne game. "We won the baJtle, but lost for a touchdown. Steve Shockey
', Center.
,.
· the war" is how Saf(ord explained it. added the extra point Ieick that made
'
Fitness center, gymnulum
The Vikings play a brand of football it 7-7. A little over three minutes
~
and racquetball courts
commonly referred to as "smash later, Dusty Higginbot~am broke
, Today _ 1-5 p.m.
mouth," which basically means they through the vaunted Ripley defense
~
Monday- closed for Labor Day like to keep the ball on the ground for ti 15-yard touchdown run. The
, Tuesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
and make you stop them . The extra point kick was no good, but
-"--"-y
9
9
Blacks adopted that style last night the Blacks took that 13-7 lead into
a.m.- p.m . .
Wauo..... Thursday- 9 a.m.·9 p.m.
and out rushed the hosts by a 195- the locker toom.
Friday -9 a.m.-9 p.in.
yard margin (353 ·to 158). Point
Ripley took their first lead of the
. Saturday- l-5 p.m.
added 13 yards through the air for a night on their first possession of the
Sunday, Sept. 7-:- 1-~. 1!-~·
366 total yard effort. Ripley picked second half. Adam King scored
• - up 4? ylli'Cb through the airfor a 205 from 12 yards out with eight mintotal.
utes remaining in the third quarter
Junior quartcmack Brent Rollins . with Shockey's kick giving the
Pool
Today- 1-3 p.m.
and junior tailback Dusty Vikings a 14-13lead.
Higginbotham both went over the
That lead held until the Big
Monday
-closed
for
Labor
Day
.
coveted
I
00
yard
plateau,
with
Blacks
put together a nice drive that
Tuesday6-9
p.m.
'..
- -Rollins leading the way with 156 was culminated by Higginbotham's
Wedoesday- 6-9 p.m.
yards. Higginbotham picked up 101. second touchdown of the evening.
Thunday-6-9p.m.
Jeremy Rickard chipped.,in with 85 This one came from 13 yards out
Friday- 6-9 p.m.
yards. Big Brian Roark led the and with just seven minutes left in
Saturday- 1-3 p.m.
Vilcings with 68 yards while Adam the contest. The decision was made
Sunday., Sept. 7- 1-3 p.m.
King, their leading rusher last' year, to try for a two point conversion
Home athldk events
. Tuesday - Soccer vs. Salem: Teikyo at4 p.m.
. By RICK SIMPKINS
·T-S Correspondent
. RIPLEY, W.Va. -The Stadium
: at Ripley, known throughout high
·school football circles as Death
Valley, has a mystic effect on foot. ball games played there. Unusual
"things tend to happen to visiting

Lyne Center slate

.

which would give the Blacks a seven they had many outstanding' individupoint advantage. That would either
force the Vikings to go for two if
they scored, or the game would be
tied if they kicked. But, the conversion failed and the Big Blacks led
19-14 .
Ripley received the ensuing kickoff with 6:55 showing on the game
clock and they moved the ball well.
They were successful on two third
ST. AT. 7
down conversions and one fourth
down play to keep the drive alive.
The game winning drive consumed
six minutes of the clock and was
capped by Roark's eight yard run.
Shockey's extra point kick set the
final score.
.
The key to the game, according to
Safford, was turnovers. "You can't
give the ball ·away five times and
expe·ct to win football games."
explained Safford. "We had nine
fumbles and lost five of them. You
can't be successf11l at any level by
putting the ball on tile ground that

******
THE ·

(Ste BIG BLACKS on B-S)

***

·

BIBBEE MO_TOR CO.i
*
COOLVILLE, OH.

·~~********************

many times."

'

"This was a very, very disappointing loss," continued Safford.
"Our kids played 'their guts out and
they deserved better. But, it seemed
like every time ·they needed a break,
they got one. But, it's time to put this
one behind us and concentrate on
Roane County. We'll find out next
Friday what we are made of."
Defensively for the Big Blacks,

'

~ Area sports in brief .. ·------~-.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
• Marauders continues to pull away
: from the rest of the pack in the Ohio
: Division of the Tri- Valley
Conference golf race.
Meigs posted a win last week at
: Fairgreens in Wellston to keep a 15· 0 record in the conference. Meigs is
' 39-11 overall. .
Meigs posted a 159, slipping past
Wellston who had a 160. Behind
them were Alexander (163), Vinton
County with (183). Belpre (186) and
Nelsonville-York (225).
Corey Smith of Wellston and
David Kidder of Alexander were
match medalists with a 38s. Clay
: Crow and Mick Barr led Meigs each
'

1988 BUICK CENTURY LIMITED

4 Dr, 2.8 V6, auto brQwn w/burgandy cloth interior, a/c, stereo
cass, pwr seat-windows-locks-mirrors, tilt, cruise, rear defrost ,
83 K miles. LOCAL TRADE.

Notes

• A Lyne Center membership is
: required to use the facitit.i~s.
. : Faculty, staff, students l!lld admtnts; tration will be admitted with their ID
·.cards.
: • Racquetball coun reservations ·
·'can he made one day in advance by
: nlling 245-7495 or 1-800-282:·7201.
.
· • All guests must he accompanied
: by a Lyne Center membership hold- .
:·er ($2fee). ·

1995 MERCURY TUCER WAGON
I

4 Dr, 1.9 l~er. auto, White w/gray cloth Interior, AC, stereo cass,
Pwr windows-locks-mirrors, tilt, cruise, rear defrost, 40 k miles.

''

:-Rebels lose ••.
!Continued from B-3)
:.vergenz (Bun .pass from Vergenz),
ISl qtr.
, Vinson: Dean 1-yd. run (kick
·failed), 2nd qtr.
Vluon: Brown 6-yd. pass from
·vergenz (Berry pass from Vergenz),
2nd qtr.
: VInson: Berry 10-yd. run (kick
·failed), 3rd qtr.
· VInson: Koslow 10-yd. run (kick
failed), 4th qtr.

with a 39. Other Marauder scores
\
were Dave Anderson· s 40, Steve
CHESHIRE - The Gallia
McCullough's 41, Jared .Warner's County Local School District has a
junior high football preview sched42 and Zach Meadows' 43.
uled for Tuesday at River Valley
High School.
OhiO Division
On the four-scrimmage agenda is
StandingS
Kyger Creek and Hannan Trace tak. ing the field at 5:30 p.m. North
·
I.wo
&amp;inti Gallia and Southwestern will play at
IS
about6:45 p.m.
· Meigs
Wellston
II
The winners of both scrimmages
io will play the third scrimmage. The
Alexander
5 losing teams will play the final
Bel~re
4 scrimmage. ·
Vinton County.
0
In all instances, the scrimmages
Nelsonville· York
will be controlled affairs that will
last for two eight-minute quarters.

: U.S. Open continues...

~ Williams

1993 GEO METRO LSI CONVERTIBLE
1.0 l~er, 5 spd, green w/gray cloth Interior, stereo cass, SHARP

CARl

.

·

·
Menno Oosting of the Netherlands.
Woodforde and Woodbridge~ the
Woodies - were going after their
third straight U.S. Open doubles
crown.
In other men's second-round
matches, ~o. i Michael Chang beat
Jeff Salzenstein 4-6, 6-2, 6-3, 6-4;
No. 7 Sergi Bruguera stopped South
Africa's Grant Stafford 6-4, 6-2, 7-6
(7·3); No. 10 Marcelo Rios outlasted
Denmark's Kenneth Carlsen 6-4, 5·
7, 3-6, 6- L 7·6 (7-3): an{ No. 13
Patrick Rafter stopped Sweden 's
Magnus Norman 6-2.6-1,6-2. ·
In women's third-round matches,
No. 2 Monica Seles defeated Miriam
Oremans of the Netherlands 6-1, 6·
I; No. S Amanda Coetzer downed
Flora Perfetti ofJtaly 6·2, 7-5; No.9
Mary Pierce beat Natasha Zvereva
of Belarus 7-6 (7-2), 6-1; and No. II
Irina Spirlea stopped J.. ilia Osterloh
of Canal Winchester, Ohio, 6-2,7-5.

·Department

·

HY . S!i

Baseball

7
28-57
72
6-12
3
129
4-3
5·35

Amtritan l.apt

:Individual statistics
Huntlngtoa Vlnlon Tlgen
Rusblnc: Vergenz 7-48 &amp; I TD;
PISIIng: Vergenz 3-9, 56 yds., 2
:TDs &amp; I conversion
. RecelvJna: Brown 2·3 I &amp; I TD;
·Burt 1-25 &amp; I TD
•
South Gallla Rebels
. Rushln1: Callahan 10-40; Queen
7-26
: Pusln1: Stanley 6-11, 72 yds &amp;
.:3 ints.
• Rec:eivlna: Bush 2-48; Staton 2:17,;But.er2-7
: . Fumble nconrlea: Perry I -0;
:J'oth 1-0

Open every Friday till 8:00

Setvice Department Open to Public
8:00-5:00 Mon thru Fri. 8:00·12:00 Sat
Oil &amp; Filter $17.95
See: Jerry Bibbee
Clark Reed
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman

tne

~ Big Blacks...

I

r--~-

.
'

'

Nlltional Lu~ur
CINCINNATI REDS : Claim~d IIJ M:uk
Johrlson cff w.Uvcn fron1 the l'in~bur~h Piru~es nnd
'
NEW YORK YANKEES: Rc~:llled infielder: Andy F(ll from Columbus of Ilie hucrnationml optioru~d him to lndinnapolis of the: ~mericnn
olcafue. Optioned infiC'Idcr Hon1tr Bush to Assodllliun
FLORIDA MARLINS: ActitaiC:d LHP AI
·Columbus.
Leitrr from
S-d::ly dbabled lin Sern RHP Donn
·OAKLAND ATHLETICS; Acli\':Utd OF Scou Pt~lltq Omrloue1of
tlw: International LcaJuc.
:ero1ius from the 1.~-d,:,y dist~b1cd list . Oprioncd
HOUSTON ASTROS: Purchased the conm1cr
of C Randy Knorr from New Od~ans of lh(
American Auoc:iution Wld pbced Koorr on 1M ISd:ly dislbled list.
·
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES : Signed OF
Derrick Maddox 10:1 minor-ltague contrnct
(Continued from B-4)

4 cyl, 5 spd, Black w/lvory cloth nterior, AC, stereo, cass, CD
player, Pwr wlndows-locks-mirrorst tilt, cruise, rear spoiler,
LOCAL TRADE!
.

'

BasketbaU
:al perfonnances. Jamie Buskirk had
. Nadonal Balkclbal Auodllion
:nve solo tackles and five assists,
ATLANTA HAWKS: A@lftd 10 tt'm15 wi1h G
Blaylock on a low-year c:onuact Ultns.ioo.
. ;Mike Roach had three solo, includ· Mookie
N1med Chris Tudc.er trainer.
-ing two for losses and eight assists,
:Matt Young had three solos and nine
Football
Jlssisis, Adam Campbell (in his first
NotlonoiF....,.ILe.op•
-varsity game) had two solos and a.~~ 1,AJ!::~~.;.?;.r~~..~~=d FS Joson
eight assists, Jimmy Hall had a solo
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: Rtteaoed or Mit•
tackle, an interception, and four Tho...,..n.
Slined OL Glenn,.....,,,,, ..,...,...
coottact.
assists, and Jeremy Rickard had two
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Exiended lhe ''""'" or
solos and eight assists.
C John Bock thr~ah 1998. SiJned CD Den~rse
· .
. l Mosley 10 lit&lt; pncacc oquod. Retcaacd s Earl un~
: This week's agenda: Potnt wtl lromlhepncti&lt;uquod.
at Roane County Friday. Ripley .
l'lltL.Ail£LPiftA EAGW: R&lt;tcaacd s Blli~
Play
'II ak
H rbert Hoover· .
McEI""'"Y· Sl8fl&lt;d LB DeShlwn Foa~ from'""'
WI t e on e
p••cticuqwtd. ·

'

much so for Huber.
"I just knew I would have to
break serve or go to· a tiebreak,' '
Williams said. "I really wasn't
interested in losing my serve."
Williams didn't have to worry
about that in the second set. She
gave up only five points 'on her
serve. For the match, she won 81
percent of her first-serve points, a
dominating percentage.
And she had lots of help. Huber
had trouble finding the court, mak·
ing 34 unforced errors.
"I'm disappointed because I
played terrible," the German said.
·'I played very good my first two
matches. Today, I couldn't find any
rhythm." ·
It was Williams' biggest career
victory. She didn't play junior tennis
and, since turning pro, has not
played more than a handful of tournamenls until th1s year. Before

Friday, her top victory came ag4inst
Iva Majoli of Croatia.
"She was serving quite well. I
think that was the best part of her
game," Huber said. "So if! lose my
serve, it's very hard to-come back.
"She was never unqer pressure. I
never took advantage of her second
serve or anything .... She took the
ball very early; she hit very hard."
Chang was surprisingly stretched
in the night's final match by Jeff
Sal&lt;enstein, a 24-year-old Stanford
graduate from Englewood, Colo.
The left-bander had enough firepower to force Chang to raise the level
of his game.
In one of the best points of the
day, Chang raced to his left and
towards the net. At the last possible
moment, he flicked the ball deep
into .the lefi corner, the ball never
rising more than a foot off the court,
for the winner.

MD

Board Certlfi$d Internal &amp; General Adult Medicine
.' '

RHP Eric Ludwick to Edmonton of the Pacific

Coan Lea,uc.

•
CHICAGO WHITE SOX: Recalkd LHP M1kC'
• SirotkB from Nnsh\'i llc of the Americllll Auoci:uion
• Optioned RHP Nelsnn Cruz to Nash\·illc.

1989 HONDA.ACCORD XLI 2 Dr

'

Ram·Ia'DE.......

Transactions

First downs ......................9
;Rushing yards ...... :.28-225
·Passing yards ...............,.56
:comp.-att .......... :.: ........ 3-9
",lnter:cpetions thrown ....... 0
·Total.yards ................... 281
:Fumbles-lost ................ 3-3
:Penalties-yds..............6-55

.

Williams··
game is with
base aonhuge
raw .I · - - · · • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
power.
She begins
serve: her fastest Friday night was
timed at 113 mph. And her ground· .
strokes are deep and heavy . too

•'

·Team statistics

·.·

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
Marauder boys' basketball program
will be holding a gol( scramble at
the Meigs County Golf Course on
Saturday, Sept. 20 at9 a.m.
The format will be a four man,
bring your own team scramble with
only one player with a handicap of
under five and a team total of at least
40. The cost of the toUrnament will
by $50 per player with an optional
skins game and calcutta.
All proceeds will benefit the
Meigs boys' basketball program.
For more information call Chris
Stout at 992-21~8 or atl992· 7689.

beats Huber to enter fourth round

; By BOB GREENE
NEW YORK (AP) - Perhaps
: Venus Williams is for reaL
• In her U.S. Open debut, the lanky
• 17-year-old has reached the fourth
: round with a 6-3, 6-4 upset of
: eighth-seeded Anke Huber. ·
Her success ·doesn't surprise the
: right-hander.
• ."1 know I can play well." she
· said after Friday's victory. "A lot of
; time l just don't play well in the
: matches. A lot of times I'm just not
·· able to pull it out, not able to stay
.; calm, not able to stay focused. I
·: : make~ lot of mistakes.
.
''But I just had to bear down and
· say, 'Man, I can't do these t~ings.' I
: think it's definitely a beginning."
:
In Friday's other upset,
· Aus1ralian Mark Woodforde, best
·: known as one-half of the world's
· best doubles team , knoclicd off
: third-seeded Ycvgeny Kafelnikov of
: Rus.ia 6-3,6-4.7-6 (7-4).
· Woodfordc. teamed with Todd
. Woodbridge. was surprised in a
: first-round doubles match, losing 6·
, 4, 3-6. 6-1 to Tom Kempcrs and

•

il

b1

·---Jkwtbael•

Page BS

Wahama gets 16-6
win .over Hamlin

By SAil WILSOtl
By GARY CLARK
capping the drive with a six yard
Tim• Sentinel Comepondent
. Sports eorr.apondent
touchdown gallop during the first
. I want to thank all those people in the commuMASON, W.Va. - David minute of the second period. Senior
ruty for the kindness and consideration you have
Tcnnani ran for a pair of second quarterback David Mitchell hooked
shown my wife and I on tbe birth of our son, James
period touchdowns, while Aaron up with Keith Cundiff to complete
Trevor. We greatly appreciate the support you have
Scott and Tyson Reitmire supplied the two point con~ersion to give the
given to us during this past week.
the big plays defensively, as -coach White Falcons an 8-0 advantage.
For those who continue to ask what items be needs, James decided a new Ed Cromley's Wahama White
Wahama added its second score
: van to go with his Wmnie the Pooh carseat would be just fme. He also said Falcons held off visiting Hamlin for just before the half ended with a two
. he wou!d accept four season tickets to Ohio State or Marshall games if they a 16-6 season opening grid win play, 74-yard series when Grant
: are available. After all, he did arrive just in time for football season.
Friday. The game was played at the Huff rambled 28 yards to the Bobcat
: This week, Inside Sports listed the top candidates for position awards in Bend Area school.
48-yard line before Tennant broke
: college football. Naturally, a quartcmack. 'ICnnessee's Payton Manning, is
Tennant scored on runs of six and free on a 48-yard touchdown dash.
. the lop choice for the Reisman Trophy. But the Butkus Award for best line- 48 yards, while rushing for 148 Once again, Mitchell tossed the two: backer had Ohio State's Andy Katzenmoyer listed third behind two upper- yards in 19 carries to pace the White point conversion to Cundiff to give
. classmen. Funny, I was disappOinted, because I expected him to he higher. Falcon offensive attack, as Waharna WHS a 16-0 edge.
"Hamlin was big and they were
· Katzenmoyer, who has made fans forget the controversy over wearing won its seventh straight regular season
contest.
The
gridiron
triumph
strong,
and their game plan was to
· N?. 45; was so impressive .as a freshman that everyone expects greater
also
marked
the
first
victory
over
stop
Mitchell,
and although he didn't
thmgs from him this year. But to be considered the third hest college line·
the Bobcats since the 1994 cam- possess outstanding numbers, his
backer in the country is outstanding.
He'll probably win the Butkus Award twice before he enters the NFL. Of paign, with Hamlin taking the past leadership qualities were an enortwo outings between the two mous boost for us and that allowed
: course, that's if he decides to stay all four years at Ohio State.
·
schools.
our other weapons to shine," comYes •. Notre Dame quartemack Ron Powlus was once picked to win the
"Tennant
looked
impressive
runmented Cromley.
He1sman Trophy twice. But Katzenmoyer is not held back by a conservative
While Wahama failed to dent the
ning
the
football,"
Coach
Cromley
system like Powlus was under Lou Holtz. Unlike Powlus, Katzenmoyer
end
zone during second half play,
said
following
the
season
opening
won't have to be a fifth-year senior to prove his hype to he true. ·
·
the
defense
held down the Bobcats
win.
David
made
a
nice
cutback
on
Credit must also be given to Marshall's Randy Moss, who was Inside
celebrated
aerial
attack until late in
his
48-yard
touchdown
run,
but
a
Sports' choice to win the Fred Biletnikoff Award for best receiver. Like
the
game,
when
quarterback J. R.
great deal of cre~it belongs to the
~tzenmoyer, Moss is a sophomore. He dominated Division IIAA in helpShull led Hamlin on a 66 yard, 10offensive
line
because
they
opened
mg to lead Marshall to the national championship last season.
play drive that culminated in a
nice holes for our backs."
But in the first year of lA football, Marshall's standout player is consid- some
While Tennant stole the spotlight three-yard scoring pass to David
ered t.he best in the country. That in itself shows a great deal .of respect fQr offensively, it was Scott and Walls. WHS held Shull· and AllMoss talent. It.'s also a boost for Marshall's program.
Reitmire who led a fierce defensive State wide receiver Josh Miller in
Moss, like Katzenmoyer, is capable of winning this. award more than attack for the Bend Area team. Both check until the Bobcats' scoring
once if he stays at Marshall for the duration. But the Jure of NFL dollars is players swarmed to the football and drive with 2:21 remaining in the
'inore tempting than a ~liege degree. Katzenmoyer may stay, but I believe recor&lt;led 10 plus -tackles ea.ch as contest. The extra point attempt ·
Moss leaves after this season.
Wahama held Hamlin scoreless until proved unsucces~ful when Cundiff
Penn State fans shouldn't take .all those preseason 'polls too seriously. late in the game.
sacked Shull to make the tina! tally
After all: the same peQple who voted the Lions to the top spot also voted
.
"I was pretty happy with our 16-6.
Wisconsm 24th. After the Badgers were destroyed by Syracuse in the sea- effon, but although 'we played well,
"We played pretty wefl for our
son's opener, it seems that the experts might have oveHxaggerated the I think our defense needs to get first game against a quality oppo. strength of the Big Ten conference.
.
involved more," Cromley stated. nent in Hamlin, but we still need to
: The Michigan-Notre Dame game should show the Big Ten's true colors. "They had the ball more than we did improve in several aspects of our
: After all, the Buckeyes' victory in South Bend last year was a powerful and I feel we need to reverse that game," Cromley said.
·statement. Since Michigan is back on the Irish schedule, it's now time for the trend. Both Aaron (Scott) aod Tyson
This week's agenda: 1)le White
:Wolverines to defend Big Ten honor this fall.
(Reitmire) made some big stops for Falcons will play away from home
· One thing is for certain, it's nice to have football back.
us, but then again, several players the next two weeks. They will iravel
: Som Wlt.on, PII.D. 11 •n •IIOCI8te pooll nor of hlotory 81 the Unlverwlty o1 steppe!' up for us at different times to Federal Hocking and Eastern on
successive Frida)\ nights before
:Rio GNnde. An f1ln ol oU aporia - and • ._ , 1118ni8C81 rottoww of 111111&lt;11· during the game."
home
to
face
Wahama drove 82, yards in II returning
• blllt - he •• • lllllve ot Gary, Ind., •nd • gqdu... of Ind..,. Unlvlnlty -which
: allould tall ..-ra ~lng •bout wheN hlo heMI (•!1dltoo8ler lleertl Io.
Ravenswood.
plays for its first score with Tennant

River Valley .......0 0 0 0= 0
Lucasville Vai ....O 12 0 6= 18

1i

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

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Cardiology
Stress Tests
Echo Cardiography
Diabetic Management
Cholesterol Counseling
Blood Pressure
Thyroid Disorders
Critical Care

NOW ACCEPfiNG NEW PATIENTS

Medi.cal Office Building, Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV

PRICE

1991 CHEV. CORSICA 16847, A/T, A/C, tilt, AMJfM, custom •
wheels ...................................................................................$4995
1992 FORD FESTIVA 16836, 2Dr., red, one owner, great gas

mileage ...................................................;............................. $2995
1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM 16655, A/T, A/, AMJfM cusette,
custom wheels .......................-~ .............................................$3995
1996 GEO METRO 16851, 23,000 miles, bal. olfactory

warranty, A/T, AJC, AM/FM ..............................~..............;..... $8195
1995 HYUNDAI ACCENT 16779, A/T, A/C, AM/FM, bal. ol

warranty...................................................................$8500
1993
TEMPO GL 16741, Red, 48,000 miles, A/T, A/C,

cassette, sport wheels ........................................................ $6995
1993 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM 16742, Ll pewter, AfT, A/C,
AM/FM, tilt, crulse ................................................................ $6748
1997 GEO METRO LS116852, 14,000 miles, bal. olfactory
warranty, A/T, AJC, AM/FM ...............:...................................$9995
1993 FORD PROBE 16m, Red, A/C, cass., tilt, eruiss, power

windows llocka..................................................................$7995
1994 PONTIAC GRAND AM 16691, Blue, A/C, cassette, tilt,

. ................................
.
cru•••

,,,;,,.,,,~

.....................................;. .$8995

1994 OLDS CUTlASS SUPREME 16751, Red, A/T, A/C,
caaaette,t lit, cruin, power seat • wlndows.................... $8995
1995 HYUNDAI ELAHTRA GLS 16718, 36,000 miles, bal. of
factory warranty, A/T, A/C, tilt, cruise, PW.........................$9665
1996 HYUNDAI ELANTRAI6840, 24,000 mNes, bal. olfactory

warranty, A/T, AJC, cassette ................................................ $9665
1994 MERCURY COUGAR XR716819, White, A/T, A/C, tilt,
cruise, power windows • locks, sport WIMitis...................~IJ9IJ
1995 CHEV. CAVAUER LS.I6810, Reel, A/T, A/C, cassette, tilt,

cruise, PW, PL....... ~ ...........................................................$10,150
1993 CHRYSLER LEBARON CONVERTIBLE 16780, All, A/C,
cassette, tilt, cruise, V-6 eng., power seats, power windows •
locks, cuStom wheels ................... ~•........:............................ $9595
1996 PONTIAC SUNFIRE 16850, 2 Dr., All; A/C, AMJfM,
custom wheels ..................................................................$10,887
1996 PONTIAC SUNARE 16849, 2 Dr., A/T, A/C, AMJfM,
custom wheels ..................................................................$10,887
1994 FORD PROBE GT 16785, Red, A/T, A/C, AMIFM cess:, tilt,
cruise, power sunroof, power sea~ PW, leather saats,
sport wheels ......................................................................$10,986
1996 FORD TAURUS GL 16781, 29,000 miles, bal. of laclory
warr., A/T, AJC, cais., tilt, cruise, PW, PL..~ .................$13,195
1995 PONTIAC ~RAND PRIX SE 16738, AlT. A/C, casette, tilt,
cruise,·power windows, power locks..............................$11,775
1994 CHEV. CAMARO Z·2816809, V-6 eng., T·tops, A/T, A/C,
caas., til~ cruise, PW, PL, spoil wheels, 34,000 mlles •• $13,603
1994 FORD MUSTANG ~ONV.16794, A/T, A/C, tilt, cruise,
cass., sport wheels, P. seats, windows &amp;locks............$13,610
1995 CHRYSLER CIRRUS L.Xl16814, Green, A/T, A/C, cass.,
tilt, cruise, leather seats, P. seats, windows • locks,
sport wheels ...........................:.....................!""'"""'""""l12,275
1994 FORD T·BIRD

16857...... ~..........................................................................$10,690

ftDCD •lUI• 414'1
1993 CHEV. S.10 16673, White, AMIFM.cass., bed liner,
custom s~rlpes,' sport wheels ....·.........................................$6495
1995 GMC SONOMA 16823, Red, sport wheels, bed liner,

AM/FM cassette, A/C ............................................................$9995
1993 CHEV. LUMINAAPV 16678, v.&amp; eng., A/C, A/T, AM/FM,
tltt, cruise, power seats &amp;locks .........................................$8495
1995 FORD RANGER 16764, Ali/FM cass., rear slide, bed

liner, sport wh'eels ...............

! ...............................................

$8995

1995 FORD RANGER XLT 16696, AMIFM cass., A/C, bed liner,

sport wheels, 32,000 mlles......................:.........·..................$9565
1994 FORD RANGER SPLASH 16716; 35,000 miles, cruise,
A/C, AMJFM call., rear sllde ......... ;.................................$1 0,231
1994 FORD EXPLORER 4X4 4DR.I6825, Ali/FM cauette, tilt,
cruise, A/C, A/f .................................................................. $15,588
1995 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB XLT 16839, A/C, AMJFM
ctiss., sport wheels, tilt, cruise, rear slider, bed liner, rear flip
seats, 38,000 miles............................................................$11,875
1995 FORD F·150 4X4 EDDIE BAUER 16841, V8 eng., A/T,
AJC, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cass., PW, PL, lumbar support. bench
seat, air bag, running boards, bed liner, dual mlrrort, 19,000
milta, balance Of factory HT~nty ..............................$16,644
1995 FORD WINDSTAR GL 16842, V-6 eng., 7 pass., A/T, A/C,
AM/FM cass., tilt, cruise, power windows •locks ....... $14,900
1995 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 16835, V-6 engine, A/T, A/C,
AM/FM, tift, cruise, 7 passtnger....................................$10,930
1995 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 16834, Green,
39,000 miles, V-6 eng., .7 pass, Atf, A/C, Ali/FM caas.,
.

tilt, crulse .............................................~ ..s..........................$11,986
1995 DODGE DAKOTA 16712, Green, SLT Pkg.,AM/FM
cassette, A/C, A/T, tilt, sport wheels ..............................$10,995
1995 DODGE CARAVAN 16698, Green, V-6 eng., A/C, A/T,
AM/FM, cloth interior ........................................................$10,550
1992 SUZUKI SIDEKICK 4X416663, JX Pkg., A/C, white,
AM/FM, sport wheels ...........................................................$6995
1996 CHEV. S.10 EXTRA CAB N68848, LS trlm,A/C, CD player,

bed linar.......................................................! .....................$13,428
1992 JEEP WRANGLER 4X4
16856..................;...................................................................$7495
1990 GEO TRACKER 4X4

16858..................................................................................... $4495

�Page88•1' t ,.._.,. r '

Sunday, August 31, 199'1

,Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolle, OH • Point P1111ant, WV

Outdoors

Indians get by Cubs 7-6 in clubs' first 20th century meeting.
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Chicago Cubs' first reguiar season
game in Clevelud since 1899 was
overshadowed by a bunch o( socks.
Not Sox, mind you. Just plain
socks.
Continuing a fashion statement
that began as a binhday present 10
·lim Thome, the Cleveland Indians
donned lrnicker-style pants and high .
·socks for the second straight game
and beat the Cubs 7-6 Friday night.
For those counting - and these
·guys are - the Indians are now 2-0
.when employing this baseball ver.sion of haute couture.
"HiJh soclcs are undefeated,"
said swting pitcher Orel Hershi'!tr,
.who wore a pair of 27 -length pants
and sported the style for the first
lime in his 14-year career. " If we
keep winning games, we ' ll keep
, going with them."
The AL Central-leading Indians
.staned pulling their pant legs up like old-time knickers "'- on
Wednesday in honor of Thome's
27th binhday, Thome always wears

his pants that way.
The Indians scored I 0 runs in an
inning that night and beat the
Anaheim Angels, so they're slicking
with it.
"There's· no sense changing
now," said Matt Williams, who was
3-for·5 10 extend his hilling streak to
IS games.
David Justice, high socks and all.
capped a big night for Cleveland's
cast of ex-National Leaguers . He
drove in former Atlanta Braves
teammate Marquis Grissom with a
tiebreaking, bases-loaded single in
the eighth off left-bander Bob
Patterson.
·
·Justice's clutch hit came after the
Cubs tied it at 6 with four runs in the
top of the eighth against three
Cleveland reliev.ers.
Hershiser, the 1988 NL Cy
Young Award winner, pitched seven
strong innings and was backed by
Williams and Grissom, who was 1for-3 with two runs and two stolen
bases.
But amazingly, the High Socks
Factor squeezed out discussion of

the first regular season meeting
between Cleveland and the Cubs in
98 years.
"When my leg kicked up, it was
kind of distraclina to see all that
red ," Hershiser said. " The other
thing I noticed is. I kept reaching
down to pull my pants down, and
they were already way high so I
didn't need to pull them down ."
Mmmm-hmmm.
Hershiser also explained how big'
leaguers don't have to pull their
pants down and fold their socks over
tbem to achieve the knicker lookthe way Little Leaguers do. They
simply ask the clubhouse staff to
pull some shoner pants out of the
storage room.
Eventually. Hershiser said. " So
with all that, we did play a baseball
game tonight."
It was the first non-exhibition
game between the clubs since 1899,
when Cleveland was known as the
Spiders and played in the National
League. The ·Cubs held a 13-1
advantage.. before Cleveland joined
the AL in 190 I.

Grissom led off the eighth with a with a runner on in the ninth to end
walk asainst Dave Stevens (0-1), it.
and Brian Giles sacrifiCed. Patterson
"We're playing hard even though
walked Manny Ramirez intentional- it seems like we've lost thousands of
ly, and Orie couldn't handle games," Chicago third baseman
Thome's· arounder at third for an "Kevin Orie said. "All year we've
error to load the bases for Justice, shown determination and character.
one of the hottest hitters in baseball. That showed through when we tied
Justice was 2-for-5 and is batting the-score"
.398 in Auilust with 10 homers and
Leading a tight, NL-type game 327 RB!s. He is batting .350 this sea- 2 in the seventh, the Indians seemson against left-banders, and is a ingly put it away with three runs .
.296 career hitter against southpaws. Justice and Williams both singled
"It surprised me early on, but not and scored on Sandy Alomar's douanymore," Indians manager Mike ble. Alomar advanced on Houston's
Hargrove said of Justice's prowess passed ball and scored on a balk by
against lefties. ,
Stevens to make it 6-2.
The Indians needed tbe victory , But Chicago rallied in the eighth.
because the two teams chasing tbem Shawon Dunsto~ and Mark Grace
in the AL Central- Milwaukee and singled off Jackson, and pinch-hitter
Chicago - both won. Cleveland Scott Servais singled in a run. With
leads Milwaukee by 3 1/2 g\lffieS and two outs and runners at first and
Chicago by five.
. · third, Orie lined a shot that hopped
· "That would have been a Iough past first baseman Thome for a twoloss for us," Justice said.
base error that scored two to make it
Mesa (3-4) got four outs for the ·6-5.·Houston singled up the middle
win despite allowing a game-tying to tie it.
single to Tyler Houston in the
Cubs starter Jeremi Gonzalez
eighth. He struck out Sammy Sosa allowed five earned runs and 10 hits

in 6 '113 innings.
N"oles: Cubs second baseman
Ryne Sandberg fouled a pitch off his
left beel and came out in the sixtiJ.
He. probably will not play Saturday,
manager Jim Riggleman satd.... 1'l)e
Indians and Cubs are both 6-4 Ill
interleague play . ... Cleveland's
Omar Vizquel got his career-hi~
36th stolen base in the fmt. ...
Grissom reached 20 steals for the
eighth straight season.... Hershiser
ha:d his longest outing ·since going
eight innings against the Yankees,on
June 27 .... A long list of CubsIndians ties includes the six-player
trade involving Joe Carter and Rick
Sutcliffe in 1984. Other connections:
Cubs pitching coach Phil Regan,
while in the same job with
Cleveland in 1994, was instrumental
in convening Mesa to a relief pilcl)er.... Lou Boudreau, manager of
Cleveland's last World Series champion in 1948, managed the ·Cubs to a
54-83 record in 1960.... Indians first
base coach Dave Nelson was a radio
analyst for WGN .in 1988-89.

,,

•

'

•

ByRON LESKO
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - For a
few moments. all he knew wa,o; that
:· his head bun. Really bad.
,,
As Eduardo Perez lay writhing in
; the Metrodome din, no one - not
' even him - knew which part of his
: ·head the fastball .~ad slammed into.
,,
"All I knew was that it hit me in
the head," Perez said. "I didn ' t
; :know if it hit me in the eye or where
i&lt; it hit me."
. ·
.
, -: Perez eventually walked off the
; ·· field, and after the Cincinnati Reds
• :had finished their 5-3 interleague
:·; victory over the Minnesota Twins
~.· on Friday night, a cracked helmet
:; :and ·Perez's wisecracks brought
:··:relief.
:::: "look at this head. You think I
~-; haven't been hit before?" Perez

.

joked, showing off a lump above his
left C!lf. "It builds character."
The eighth-inning beaning was
the .second scary moment for the
Reds. Rookie starter Brett Tomko
took a line drive off the knee in the
sixth, and he also had to leave the
game.
In a span of two innings two
important parts of Cincinnati 's
future came close to serious injuries.
Losing Tomko or Perez - or both
- would have been crushing blows
in what ha!i been a frustrating season for the NL's third-worst team.
Neither injury was serious, although
manager Jack McKeon said he
would rest Perez today as a precaution.
'"We caught a break, and we won
the ball game," Barry Larkin said,
pointing out two things that haven't.

•

I

•

happened that often for the Reds.
Willie Greene gave Cincinnati a
lead it never relinquished with a
three-run homer off Frank
Rodriguez (2-5) in the fourth. Jon
Nunnally drove in the final two runs
with a single in the seventh and a
double in the ninth, extending his
hitting ·streak 10 13 games, his career
best and the Reds' longest of the
season.
But the two close calls dominated the postgame chatter. McKeon
cannot afford to lose any players,
especially with Deion Sanders on
loan for the weekend to the Dallas
Cowboys.
The injuries were frightening,
"especially when we've only got.23
lit players now," McKeon said,
referring to Sanders' temporary
absence.

By JEREMY PEARCE
The Detroit Newa

.Goose hunters to start .
hunting season- rJionday
.

Can you feel it in the air?
play their trophies should contact
Those cool autumn-like morn- Bill Spaun at 992-3992 or Doug
. ings, the light morning fog hovering ·Swann at 992-6091. The building
over the fields and woods, it can will be kept under surveillance and
only mean one thing: hunting season lock and key during tbe off hours so
is almost upon us.
the trophies should be safe enough.
It's lim~ to get out the guns and In addition, exhibitors will be given
bows, make sure they are in gond a number whjch they will have to
working order and sighted in, and present when .retrieving their dis.play.
· then practice, practice, practice.
Hunting supporters will have the
Goose hunters will stan off the
season Monday and squirrel hunters opponunity at the Expo to purchase
will be able to hit the woods Ohioans For Wildlife Conservation
Thursday morning with dove "Save Our Heritage" Sweepstakes,
iickets with the grand prize being 40
hunters following on Sept. 15.
To help keep tragic accidents acres of prime hunting land and a
from marring an otherwise beautiful log cabin kit in Morgan County surtime of year, remember the three rounded by thousands of acres of
rules of safe gun handling: treat state hunting land. The prize drawevery gun as ·if was loaded, always ing date is Nov ..20.
As 1 mentioned earlier, proceeds
point the muzzle in a safe direction,
be· sure it's game before you aim . from the sweepstakes will go toward
The5e rules also apply to bowhunt- defeating a proposed animal rights
ballot initiative next fall to ban
"ing, too.
Area hunters will no doubt want mourning dove hunting. Regardless
to check out the display of Meigs of how individual hunters may feel
and neighboring counties hunting about mourning dove hunting, it is
trophies at the Town &amp; Country important to remember these groups
Expo '97 to be held at the Meigs are out to stop all hunting and are
County Fairgrounds on Sept. 20 and. starting with what they: feel to be the
easiest "sell" to Ohio voters.
21.
. Some groups and individuals still
The hunting display will likely
occupy the entire center section of have sweepstakes tickets and need to
· the youth building and include otber get their money back in so it can be
wildlife stuff. People wanting to dis- sent back 10 owe . .

Sanders for the team lead with 19. McKeon said.
put Cincinnati up 3-2. That was the .
score when Tomko took the liner
from Paul Molitor off the back of
Notes: The Reds are 7-3 in interhis right knee and had to leave with league play. The Twins arc 4-6....
one out in the siKth.
Chris Tynes' torrid road trip cooled
Stan Belinda came in with run- off a bit. The Reds left fielder.went
ners at first and secml!l and one out. 0-for-5. He entered the game hitting
He promptly advanced them by .524 (11-for-21) in the last five
sending ,his first pitch skidding to games and .483 (14-for-29) in th.e
the backstop. But he struck out Ron first seven games of the 10-gamc
Coomer and then retired Terry trip .... Coomer's throwing error
Steinbach to preserve the lead..
after a tough fielding play at third
Belinda. again was protecting a base in the founh was just his scvone-run lead (4-3) in the eighth with enth error of the season.' He entered
one out when he faced Coomer and . the _game with a .973 fielding per- .
~Ieinbach again. Coomer fanned for centage, third-best among AL third
the thir,d time and Steinbach ground- baseman .... Molitor's eighth-inning
ed to third.
sacrifice fiy was his lith of the seaJeff Shaw pitched the ninth for son, moving him one ahead of
his 28th save.
Baltimore's Cal Ripken for the AL
;.Belinda did a hell of a job," lead.

'•

defeat Red Sox 9-1; Orioles and Dodgers also win

Angeles 5, Oakland 4 in 10 innings;
and San Francisco 5, Texas 4 in 12
innings.
Orioles 4, Mets 3 (12)
AI Baltimore, Cal Ripken tied it
with an eighth-inning homer and
singled in the winning run in the
12th.
Tbe Orioles won their eighth
;.~,
strai2ht extta-innin2 ume. and
•::·AP BuebiiH Writer
ended the Mets' streak of eight con:•.: It was as odd a sight as there's secutive wins in extras.
;:::_ever been at Fenway Park- both
With the bases loaded, Ripken
F·teams had 'Boston on their jersey drove a 1-2 pitch from John Franco
~&lt;fronts.
_ (4-2) to the base of the wall in left•.::::· With both teams wearing throw- 'center.
.
~;;-back uniforms dating to the year
Arthur Rhodes (10,3) pitched
. :j: : ~y got their nicknames, the Atlanta two innings for the win.
;..•.Braves returned to their binhplace
Expos 4, Yankees 3
::::;Friday night and defeated the
At New York, Doug Strange
reached on second baseman Rey
!"'.Boston Red Sox 9-1.
t':·; Boston was a two-team town Sanchez's throwing error and scored
· ~ · through 1952 when the Braves split on Mark Grudzielanek's two-out
! ':cor Milwaukee. But for their first double in the ninth.
;,; :appearance back, the club wore
Montreal improved to 8-2 in
~;&gt; replicas of the city's 1912 Braves. . interleague games, the NL's best
;-:·: "It took a little getting used to in record.
.
:the beginning, throwing to a Boston
Strange's broken-bat gro11nder
;uniform," said Atlanta staner John off Mariano Rivera (4-4) was fielded
,'::smoltz (13-10). "You get used to barehanded by Sanchez, who threw
:":seeing your symbols, the 'Braves' past first for a two-base error.
•&gt;and the tomahawk. You see that Grudzielanek followed with his
~t :•Boston' and it's lcind of different." · major league-leading 46th double.
Smaltz pitched seven ~hutout
Anthony Telford (4-4) got the
:::&gt;innings and home runs by Fred win.
Marlins 8, Blue Jays 0
t·•I'' :McGriff and Greg Colbrunn led
At
Toronto,
AI Leiter (9-9) carne
1:0: :Atlanta.
h.:· ' Boston rookie shortstop Nomar off the disabled list and beat the·
!~ :Garciaparra hit in his 30th consecu- team he played with for ~even sea·~ .:tive game, extending his record for sons.
Charles Johnson homered, dou:~·AL rookies with an infield single off
bled and drove in four runs and
~· :smoltz in the third.
;:;· ·The Braves played in Boston Edgai Renteria went 4-for-4 for the
f :!from the time the franchise was Marlins. Robert Person (S-10) took
the loss.
1 &lt; formed in 1871 until the spring of
Tigers 7, Phillies l
,:;:•19S3, wben sagging attendance conAt
Detroit,
Willie .Blair (14-6)
. : : ~vlncecl ·owner 'Lou Perini that he
pitched
eight
innings
to win for the
:•~couldn't compete with the Red Sox.
I
Oth
time
in
12
decisions,
and
·~ · He moved them to Milwaukee to
~·:play in a brand-new County. Stadium Philadelphia fell to a major league;.: .'and then, in 1966, moved them to worst 1-9 in interleague games.
Blair allowed four hits and
:: Actanla. Except for a couple of exhi:: bition games in the '60s, they had improved to 11-4 since his jaw was
broken by a line drive on May 4.
· · not been back since.
·,
Aaron Sele (I 2-11) gave up six Brian Hunter was 3-for·5 with two
doubles for Detroit.
: ·of Atlanta's 16 hits.
Tyler Green (3-3) was the loser.
.
Elsewhere in interleague play. it
Cardinals 9, Royals 7
•: was: Baltimore 4, the New York
At
Kansas
City,. Mo., Willie
·" ·Mets 3; Montreal 4, the New York
McGee,
the
only
man in the game
: :Yankees 3; Florida 8, Toronto 0;
who
played
in
the
19&amp;5 World
:, ·Detroit 7, Philadelphia 2; St. Louis
Series.
hit
a
bases-loaded
triple in
: :9, Kansas City 7;· the Chicago White
the
eighth
as
St.
Louis
won a
:· :sox 5, Houston 4; Mtlwaukee ,4,
rematch
of
the
clubs'
seven-game
:· ;Pittsburgh I; Colorad~ 6, Seattle 5;
..Anaheim 3, San Otego I; Los classic.

f·
i::

:&lt;:

Sports briefs
Baseball
. NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball
.;:'Owners, preparing for next month's
::::vote to realign the American and
&gt;·National leagues, proposed eliminat~; jng tbe designated hitter.
: • Management negotiator Randy
• Levine told the players' association
: ·:m.t owners wanted to eliminate the
· DH in several years but did not set
an exact time, saying it was a sub, Ject fot negotiation . Union head
'Donald Pehr did not immediately
.;_ reject the proposal, but said his side
:: )lvas unlikely to accep1 it. .

......
;::.

~:

KALISPELL, ].font. (AP) -

Former major league pitcher Steve
Howe was charged with drunken
driving in connection with the
ll]Otorcycle crash that critically
injured him on Aug. 19. Howe, 39,
suffered collapsed lungs and a ruptured trachea in the accident. He was
also charged with operating a motorcycle without the proper license.
· Foodlall
ASHBURN, Vi. (AP) -:- 1\IPL
ticket prices went up six percent for
this season, according to a survey by
·Team Marice tins Repon, a spans
industry newsleuer. As a result, a
family of four will pay an averase of
$221.1710 see the pros in person.

The all-Missouri matchup drew
36,006, about 16,000 above the
Royals' season average at Kauffman
Stadium.
Rigo Beltran ( 1- I) pitched a perfeet seventh for his first major
league win. Dennis Eckersley got
his 31st save.
Hector Carrasco (1-4) was the
loser. Mark McGwire hit his 43rd
homer for St. Louis.
White Sox.S, Astros 4
At Chicago, Robin Ventura hit an
RBI triple in the eighth and scored
on Mike Cameron's single.
Jorge Fabregas added a two-run
homer for Chicagoc Jeff Bagwell
and Craig Biggio homered for
Houston.
.
Keith Foulke (1-0) earned his
first major league victory with 2 113
innings of relief. Ken Karchner got
his lith save.
John Hudek (1-3) took the loss.
Brewers 4, PU:ates l
· At Milwaukee, Scot! Karl won
his eighth straight decision and Jeff
Cirillo hit a two-run double for
Milwaukee.
Karl (10-10) became the first
Brewers pitcher ,to win eight consecutive decisions since Cal Eldred and
Chris Bosio both won 10 straight in
1992.
Doug Jones got his 29th save.
Esteban Loaiza (10.9) was the loser.
Rockies 6, Marbien 5
At Denver, rookie Todd Helton's
game-winning singled followed
roo~ie Neifi Perez's tying triple.
Jerry Dipoto (4-2) struck out four

' of the five batters he faced.
Vinny Castilla, Larry Walker and
Andres Galarraga all homered for
Colorado, which swept the lwo game set. Paul Sorrento homered for
Seattle.
Aoaels 3, Padres 1
· At San Diego, Ken Hill (7-11)
took a shutout into the nimh inoing
and hit a two-run double before
60,230, baseball's largest crowd this
season.
Hill, a .148 career hitter, doubled
off -Pete Smith (5·5) i.n the fifth
inning for his first' hit since July 9,
1995, with St. Louis.
Dodgers 5, Athletics 4 (10)
· At Los Angeles, Otis Nixon hit a
two-run single with one out in tbe
lOth offT.J. Mathews (4-2).
Antonio Osuna (3-3) was the winner despite giving up a run in the
I Oth.
Giants 5, Rangers 4 (12)
At San Francisco, Barry Bonds

lined a double off the first-base bag
and Jeff Ken'! hit an RBI single in
the 12th.
Bill Mueller drew a leadoff walk
from Brian Eversgerd (0 .. 2) in the
12th. Bonds followed with a double

1997 FORD F250 414 SUPERCAB ILT
7.3 power stroke turbo diesel, auto., air, till, cruise, PW, PL.

. that sent Mueller to thil'Q and Kent,
who homered earlier, met reliever
Eric Moody with a single to left. '
Rich Rodriguez (4-3) got three
outs for the victory.

. opCHOO~

«::,0
Arw

'

1995 BUICK
PARK AVENUE

$15,300

Charcoal, leather,
low miles.

':

INSURANCE
Full tine ol

lniUIIIICa ProdUCII
t Fllllndll
Setvlcn

AGENCIES Inc.

(Continued from B: 1)
.
.
It s a hosltle ~orld; where ftve
,. 4jous hours and don't have much of
•· I! life. For someone to do that for 20 years are a long It me and I 0 years
:: years is problibly not realistic." .
an eternity.
~,:
Fickle fans to appease ... spoiled
Watlmg for the next Don Shula
•. players to comfon ... greedy agents to come past? Could be a long watt.
·;; to resist strangling ... drug suspen;. , ~ions to cope with ...

'95 CAD. SEDAN DEVILLE

Air, T.C., P.W.,
.
P.D.

Lealher,
fully equipped.

SJ 900

$20,295

P~OSHOP
'ITEMS:
NEW &amp;USED

AM/FM stereo cass .. cast alum. wheels, all terrain tires, trailer
towing, sliding rear windows, 40/20/40 seats, spare tire &amp; wheel,
roof clearance lights, rear privacy -glass, manual hUbs, 3.55
limited
rear axle, swing-away mirrors. chrome step bumper,

, BRANCHINSTRUCTORS

Ted Siders ... 4th Degree Blackbelt
Pam Siders ... 4th Degree Blackbelt

(304) 675-2009 or 1-8CIO-SS1-83g1
.
426 Main Street
Point Pleaaant

1997 FORD F250 414 SUPERCAB ILT

,..

7.3 Powerstroke turbo diesel, auto, air, tilt, cruise, PW, PL.
AM/FM stereo cass, cast alum. wheels, all terrain tires, trailer
towing, sliding· rear window, 40/20/40 seals, spare tire &amp; wheel,

: 13engals peek•..
..·- (Continued from

roof clearance lights, rear privacy glass, manual hubs, 4. 10
Limited Slip rear axle, swing-away mirrors, chrome rear step
remote
deluxe two-lone.

..
B-1)

Qfld.

"In this league, .you see an injury

Teen

idols.

her~ or there from another team and

'94 SONOMA
4X4

'93 CHEVY 1SOO
4X4

Black, S.W.B., V-6,

L.W.B., V-6,
Std. transmission.

-"Ylhing can happen," Esiason said.
"Everybody's close, talent-wise. It's
usually a question of who can la~t
the longest, and that's usually who s
left standing."

.. Sports deadlines

1997 FORD F350 414 TRUCK XLT
7.3 Powerstroke turbo diese( 5-speed, air, lilt, cruise, PW, PL.

·• · The Gallipolis Daily Tribu11e and

Thr••

to
ntllest • Callaway plant your
Ping • Ram•
herbs!
Taylor Made
mADINGPOST
I Trade/Bur/Sell Anrthlng (of valueJ

Cross lows, Muzzle Loaders, Honda
Generator, lTV's, Trailers, etc.

A.........,

1997 FORD F250 414 SUPERCAB ILT

7.3 Powerstroke turbo diesel, auto., air, lilt, cruise, PW, PL,

PARENTs: BENEFITS OF TAE KWON DO
v Children improve grades vRaises Self ESteem
vIncreases Self Confidence
· ADULT BENEFITS OF TAE KWON DO
vStress relief vPhysical Frtness vSelf Confidence

,

Bill Quickel 992·6677

J"Difl" C~EEK
GOLF ~fi"GE

.a.ll Dispelun"

l.oclted at the JackiOII/Gallla line. Take Exit 279 and
then an Immediate lilt on Buckeye Hills Rd,
Rio Grande (Exit right), then (Left) Buckeye Hilla Road

Owners:

BIG CATFISH -

;~ ~opresti. ~.

'95 PONT. GRAND PRIX

~

of Point Pleasant
under the Direction of:
Grandmaster- Sok Ho Kang
8th Degree Blackbelt

•'J

Davls·Quickel
Afiency Inc.

•ao

KANG'S
TAE KWON Do ACADEMY

Le8ler WIH Jr. of Cheehlre took lhla 40-pound
.: flathead catfish from the Ohio River at Cheahire Wedneaday.
~: Jpetead of winding up In the aklllet, the jumbo cet found a new
· home In a nearby firm pond.
.
,
\

SJ

Slllrl UP nR I MOI¥1 ~~

AM/FM stereo cass,· cast alum. wheels, all terrain tires, trailer
towing, sliding rear window, captain's chairs, spare tire &amp; wheel,
roof clearance lights, rear privacy glass, manual hubs, 4.10
Limited Slip rear a axle, swing-away mirrors, chrome rear step
deluxe two-tone

S.H.

a

.--

'94 BUICK USABRl

~~

.

Receive UDiforiD

.

¥

".Featurint th

~

..

PROGRAM AND PR~·OWNED CARS &amp;tRUCKS

Maroon,
leather,
fully equipped

In the Great Lakes, Lakes
'Michigan and Huron hold the
largest numbers of salmon, and
catch rates for fish are highest in
July and August, according to DNR
figures. Last year, more than
250,000 Chinook, Coho, Atlantic
and pink salmon were caught by
sport anglers on the two lakes.
State officials have no estimate
of the value of the total catch, but
calculate that every fishing day
each arigler spends $25 to SSS, a
sum that results in millions for the
state's economy.
Danmouth researchers say their
next step is to test isotopes from
compounds other than strontium, to
make fish identifications even more
precise.
Future experiments. they add,
will also probably shift from young
salmon to adult fish.
"This information is just waiting
to be applied in the Great Lakes anQ
the Pacific Northwest." said
Chamberlain. '' And it will work."

Fall Clearanee Sale! f~

• 1 ",

~::Braves

streams are deposited in fish tissue.
They believe strontium enters fish
through their diet of alaae and
aquatic insects, and from stream
water flushing through gills.
"Basically, it's the idea that you
are what you eat," Chamberlain
said.
Measurement of the strontium
leads to a unique signature that
resea-rchers say distinguishes·
salmon from different streams. The
process also may hold true for other
elements such as nitrogen, and provide biologists with an even more
exact index of a ·fish's 'native

their stream's water and there are
large differences in streams even in
For anglers and scientists alike,
the same watershed," said Brian
the salmon still holds riddles waitKennedy, a Dartmouth graduate stuing to be solved.
dent who worked on the study.
Observers long have marveled at
·Of 20 fish tested, all but two corthe homing instinct that draws
rectly were matched to their stream
mature salmon from the lakes back
of origin. Ten different streams
were involved in the study, and
to the rivers and streams of their
birth. But measuring that return and
Dartmouth's researchers concluded
eight streams had strong and unique
explaining salmon habits have
posed problems.
·
strontium signatures.
In Michigan. the salmon's prime
But Michigan fisheries biologists
say it likely will be some time
growth years are spent feeding and
ranging out of rivers and in open
before the method is used widely
lake waters, unseen and unaccount·
for Great Lakes salmon. For one
thing, they said it is expensive.
ed for. Shon of lagging individual wat~rs.
fish in vague hopes of one. day
Fishermen believe the inforrna" You'·re talking thousands of
recapturing them, there have been tion could have wide applications, dollars for analysis even for a small
few tools to son one salmon from possibly leading to ma~ers beyor.d experiment," said Dave Fielder, a
Michigan Department of Natural
another.
the salmon themselves.
·
Researchers now believe· they are
·~If we know which streams pro- . Resources - DNR research
on the brink of a new age in sillmon duce the most salmon, we can give biologist who nonetheless is excited
studies, work that could bolster the legal protection to the habital that about the technique ' s potential.
spans' fishing industry, improve the most deserves it," said Andy Pelt, "The state doesn't have the money
salmon harvest and tip environmen- director of the Michigan Steelhead Or the personnel for that at the
talists of potential problems before and Salmon Association. "There moment."
th~y become catastrophies.
could be real value in this
By reading a chemical "signa- research."
ture" . found on fish ear tissue,
Recent research has concentrated
r~rchers say they are able to pin- on salmon otoliths, also called "ear
point each salmon's home river. The stones" - bony tissue near the
discovery could reveal which rivers fish's brain that grows new calcified
are best suited to the fish and pro- material daily. The otoliths become
vide a huge trove of information a record of a fish's environment,
about salmon destinations in the just as the rings in a tree mark its
health and growth.
Great Lakes.
"This information is just waiting
OartmouJh scientists removed
to be applied in the Great Lakes and otoliths from young salmon, dis- ·
the Pacific Nonhwest," said Page solved the otoliths in acid(and sepa·
Chamberlain, a. Dartmouth rated out the strontium. AI the same
University geochemist who's been time, water samples taken from
working on the research. "And it home streams were· scanned for
will work."
strontium.
The Dartmouth team recently
Scientists found similar proporpublished its work in the journal · tions of strontiu'11 in the fish as in
Nature: They studied bony tissue of their home streams, enabling them
young Atlantic salmon. in tributaries to pair fish tissues to water sampl_es
of the Connecticut River.
and put a name to the fish's home
Danrnouth scientists discovered turf.
that traces of the element strontium
"We think it's an accurate
from bedrock underlying salmon method. Salmon refiect what's 'in

~Staff

•

Minnesota is not, at least on the
field.
The Twins have lost IS of 18 and
are beUer than only Oakland in the
AL. They entered Friday night 's
game after consecutive victories
over Detroit, but they wasted a solid
pitching performance by Rodriguez,
a rare clutch hit from ·Marty
Cordova and excellent scoring
chances late in the game.
· "We tried to come back, we had
the chances," Twins manager Tom
Kelly said. "We just can't seem to
gel the ball in play."
Cordova carne into the game hitless in his last 17 ill-bats, including
10 strikeouts. But he hit a 1-0 pitch
from Tomko (9-S) for a two-run
homer and a 2-0 lead in the second
inning.
-Greene's homer, lying Reggie

Information on Great Lakes
salmon grows
.

In the Open
By Jim Freeman

. Reds survive Perez's beaning and notch 5-3 win over Twins

Allglltlt 31, 11117

Ste.ve &amp; Judy Betz

614·245·5747

'89 BUICK LESABRE
UMITED

995

'94 JIMMY
4X4
2 Door', 35,000 miles,
t nwnAr

I

the Su11da1· Times-Stlllilltl value the
; contributions their readers make IO
; the spans sections of these papers,
; f~d they will continue to be pub·
• lished.
:
However, certain deadlines for
• -lubmissions will be observed.
:
The deadline ·for submissions of
• local baseball· and softball-related
photos and related articles, from Tball to the majors, as wei~ as other
• ijlring and summer sports, ts.the day
; 0 { the last game of the World Senes.
•
The deadline for photos and relat; ed articles for football and other fall
•; \POrts is the Saturday before the
., · $uper Bowl.
; · The deadline for photos and relat: : qd anic les for basketball (summer
·::: basketball and related camps fall
.: yoder the summer spons deadhne)
~: itnd other winter spans is the last
day of the NBA finals.
·
. These deadlines are in place to
:: 1111ow contributors the time they
. · t~ed to acquill' their photos from the
: lthotography studio/developer of
;': &lt;i~oice and to give th~ staf~s the
c~ to publish these ttems m the
· 'fPropriate season for those sports.

,, .

AM/FM stereo cass .. cast alum. wheels, all terrain tires , trailer
towing, 40/20/40 ·seats, spare lire &amp; wheel, roof clearance lights,
manual hubs, 4.10 Limited Slip rear axle, swing-away mirrors.
chrome rear step
deluxe two-tone.

1993 FORD

Groovy prices for your cool teens.
Free activation. Free local air time.

..Phones starting at .$15 . Pagers starting at $39 .

Eastern Avenue 614/4 41.054 7

l'oli1e&lt;'oy 204 'Wett2nd Street 614/992-7070
Jackson 384 Main Str..t 614/286-6073

()II.--~ 30,1997 C.min Nllric~ opplp. New bt of

~required . Oft.

Sp•eial

•4995

CELLULA
~llpclli1 ·1502

TE~2DR.
4 cyl., auto., PS,
PB, air, AM/FM
stereo, rear
window defroster,
local one owner.

.:.me..

12 month (CXM!ilrMfltond tftdit
monlfl $2U5 ra1e plonlncWet 15 loc.t mi111M. Two 11101t1t1 $39.9.5 ~ UCIIocal llllnulll.
CUIICIINr ~1iblt b ~. IIlii o!!d roonll"'; S,. '!" Jor dml:r..

1991 DODGE
1991 FORD
COLT 3 DR. H.B.. TAURUS 4 DR. Gl
4 cyl., aulo., PS.
PB, air, AM!FM
stereo, rear
defroster~ Low
miles!.

,,.•.

$3495

6 cyl., auto, PS,
PB, air,titt, cruise,
AM/FM stereo
cass., PW, PL, cast
alum. wheels.

Sp•eial

$2495

�····~"

sunday,

Along the River

It

.,,••.
'

AIR CONDITION, CAST ALUM WHEELS,
AMIFM CASS, SAW, LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$15,230·00

112011
CONVERSION
.VANS
IN STOCK.
REBATES UP TO
$4,000

$10,988·

FULL POWEQ-EQUIPMENT, KEYLESS
·ENTRY, CLIMATE CONTROL, LOADED,
'PKG 113A
·
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$25,955·00

1997 RANGER 4 X4 .

as picturesque

AIR CONDITION-, CAST ALUM WHEELS,
.
AMIFM STEREO, .
V6 ENGINE, FOG LIGHTS
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$18,035 00

reminder
of simpler times
.

1.9o/ci APR
FOR

--.48.MONTHS

CELEBRATION PLANNED· Tile 176tllann/veraary ot lila Our udy ot Lcwlto Cllthollc Church
In LOIIQ Bottom will ba ha/d tomonvw. Tlla
church, located on State Route 248 at Succa..
Road, wa• built In fila 1870,'1 and wa1 vacated In
117:1 when a new church wa• built at Tuppe,..
Plalna.

1997 ESCORT LX

.

AIR CONDITION, REAR DEFROST,
FLOOR MATS, CD·CHANGER,
REMOTE ENTRY, AUTOMATIC
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS

..

$14~

'

.

'•
'

.• '

1997 F150 4X4 XLT
''

'

\

'

.
'' .'

..

AIR,CRUISE,TILT,FULL POWER,ALUM
·WHEELS,LOADED .
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$23,545·00

--LARGE SELECTION...__,
OF PRE· OWNED
AND FACTORY
REPURCHASED
VEHICLES

.$18,988·00

1997 TAURUS GL WAGON
AUTO,AIR,POWER EQUIP.,V6,
THIRD SEAT,KEYLESS,LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$22,880·00

$18,888·00

'

'

.1997 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS
AUTO, AIR, V8,CRUISE
CONTROL,ILLUMINATED ENTRY,
WELL EQUIPPED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$24,04Q.!Xl '
' ''

$19,988·

00

GREAT NEW SELECTION
OF BRAND NEW
CONVERSION VANS.
SAVE THOUSANDS ON THESE
111 ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS

1997 TAURUS SEDAN
AUTOMATIC,AIR CONDITION,4 DR,AM/
FM CASS,FLOOR MATS AND MORE
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS ·
$18,775·00

$15,988·00
.r

1-77
EXIT 132
RIPL:EV.
,
' WV
.

On its 175th anniversary
Our Lady of Loretto Catholic Church
still stands, still serves
By BRIAN J. REED
Tlmt.sentlnal Btlft

$12,388·00
'

Sunday, Augu.t 31 , 1887'

Small church serves

$14,988·00 '

00

· · 1997 CROWN VIC LX

C

a

-.. -Jfew location

1997 RANGER XLT

Section

TODAY • Tille group ot tllmlly and

frlandl worlr1 hard to maintain the m/aalon

church. at Long Boltom. Tllay are, 1-r, Marie
Johnton, Me/IIU Marcinko, Roxie and
.
Mary Marcinko, Joe Sayre and Winnie and
Rl1barl Mlrclnko•

Sacred Hean Church of Pomeroy. During
the "boom' years, when the congregation
LONG BOTI'OM- A small church
numbered in the thinies, mass was held
outside of Long lloll\1111 is a picturc!lllue
onc,e a month, eith,er on Saturday or Sun~in!acler.Of simpler times, an~ Sj:tves as
day.
.
a lestament to a family's faith.
Most of the rongregatlon lived
On the eve of its 17Sth anniversary,
beyond walking distance of the church,'
, the Our ·Lady of Loretto Caiholic Church and in times of im:lement weather, the
is still standing, still setving as a mission priest 'Often found a near-empty church.
church, and still bringing at least one
It was one such instance - on East·
extended family together.
er - when Fr. Frank Patala traveled to
The church, located at the intersection Long Bottom for mass and found an
empty church, that inspired him and the
of State Route 248 and Success Road at
Long Bottom, was closed in 1972, when congregation to move the mission to a
the J!ew Our Lady of loretto church was new facility in Tuppers Plains.
built in Tuppers Plains.
Before deciding to move the location
of the mission, the oongregation at Long
It began as a 'station." in the 1870's,
Bottom had discussed the possibility of
meeting out of the Andrew home across
enlarging the original building, but
the road from where the church now
decided that improving the building
stands. In 1896, the church itself was
would be too costly, and determined that
built, and continued to operate as a misTuppers Plains offered more chance for
sion until the Tuppers Plains building
growth.
was closed just a few years ago.
Fr. Patala pastored churches in ·
Among the families attending the
Chauncey and Guysville during his
church in the early ·years were the
Andrews, McAvoys, O'Neils, Gallaghers, tenure at Our Lady of Loretto, and had
Kerwins and Devlins. Priests setving the seen the construction of new churches at
church took a circuitous route .. crossing those missions, as well.
Members of the church recall that the
the Ohio River by ferry boat from
Pomeroy, boarding a train from Mason to decision to abandon the old church in·
Parkersbuig, getting off the train at Mur-· favor of the new brick edifice in Tuppers
Plains caused a split among the congreraysville and then ·crossing the river to
gation.
Long Bottom by row boat.
SOme abandoned Our Lady of Loretto
• Now, mostl)' for sentimental reasons,
in favor of Sacred Hean in Pomeroy,
the church hosts four special masses a
while the rest went to work on building
year: in May, on July 4, Labor Day, and
the
new church, using money borrowed
in November for All Soul's Day.
Midnight mass at Clristmas would be from' the Diocese and providing much of
a moving experience in this beautiful set· the work themselves.
Several years ago, the church building
ting, but it Is not an option • the church
in Tuppers Plains was closed and sold. It
is without heat or electricity.
. As hard as it is for some small church · now houses a fire equipment business.
congregations to believe, the church still Most of the Marcinkos now travel to
Pomeroy to attend church.
receives plenty of attention and repairs,
To celebrate the 17Sth anniversary of
performed mostly by the members of the
the
establishment of the mission, those
VIRGIN llfARY • Among the Interior
Marcinko family,.who live nearby, and
remaining
in
the
old
oongregation
are
furntahlnga
at Our Lady ot Loretto
who have attended Our Lady of loretto
Church
11
IIIIa
peper m•che madonna,
planning
a
homecoming
of
sorts.
On
for generations.
the
age
ot
which
11 unknown. Tile teen
Labor
Day,
the
church
grounds
will
once
Last year, the exterior of the building
was
moved
to
the
churclt at Tuppers
again come alive for an anniversary celewas painted. In 1992, Margaret NesselPlains,
end
wa•
returned
to Long Sol·
road of Long Bouom spent several thou- bration. Mass will be conducted by Rev.
tom when tile church at Tuppers Plalna
Fr. Walter Heinz of Sacred Heart Church was c/o1ed. It 11 ona of aeveral •••tulia
sand dollars on foundation repairs and
interior improvements, in memory of her in Pomeroy. The mass will be followed
which grace the church ..nctuery.
by a covered dish dinner on the grounds.
late husband, Manin.
An afternoon of games
In 1972, the Nesselroads were married in the last wedding cere111ony to take and fellowship is
planned.
place in tbe old mission church.
The public is invited
The cemetery adjacent to the frame
to
bring
a covered dish,
church is also maintained, by Danny and
and
any
photos or
Roxie Marcinko, and is still in use.
mementos
relating to
Graves are dug by church members.
the
church
and attend
Proceeds from the sale of the Tuppers
the
celebration.
Plains church were placed iri a cemetery
For Our Lady of
fund and that is the only financial assisLoretto
and its faithful
tance for maintenance and repair that the
membership,
things
Marcinkos receive from .the Catholic
have
come
full
circle.
Diocese of Steubenville.
This
small
frame
The church itself is primitive, with a
church in the country
small sanctuary, a storage area and a
has seen many
confessional near tbe front entrance.
changes,
but still testiThree loons dating back from the earliest ·
fies
to
the
faith of a
days of the church are still in place at the
family,
its
ancestors
. ·altar - one a paper mache rendering of
STILL /lfAINTAINED • Tlla em•ll cemetery at Our Udy
and,
in
all
likelihood,
the Holy Mother and Christ.
of Loretto 11 1tlll m•lntalned by ,Danny and Roxie
its
future
generations
As a mission church, Ou~ Lady of
Marcinko, and I• etlllln u,. by parlef!.oner• and their "'m·
as well.
Loretto was, for years, setved by the
11/ae. Greve• •re dug by memba,.. ot the congregaUon. ·

•

�"'

Sunday, August 31, 1997

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

Marev1 Endicott 1nd Christopher Page

· POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. The bride elect is a graduate of
Elmer Lee and Vivian Endicott, Jr., Point Pleasllnt High School, and
of Point Pleasant, W.Va., announce attended Marshall University. She
the engagement and forthcoming grnduated from Ohio University in
of the University of Rio Grande, and marriage of their daughter, Mareva . 1994. She is an accountant for Copis employed by Cardinal Health in Vema, to Christopher Wellington pers &amp; Lybrands in Columbus.
Dublin.
Page, son of James D. and Vema
The groom to be is a graduate of
Her fiance is a 1993 graduate of Page, of Point Pleasant.
.·
Point Pleasant High School. and a
the Miami University, and is also
•The couple will be married in 1996 graduate of Ohio University.
employed by Cardinal Health.
September 27 at Trinity Episcopal He is an ·accountant for The Ohio
The ceremony will be held on Church in Columbus.
Company in Columbus.
October 4, at the Pump House Art
Gallery in Chillicothe.

DRUMMOND-DERSHEM
THURMAN - The engagement
and approaching marriage of Tabitha
Sue Drummond, daughte·r of Mabel
S. Copley and the late James N.
Copley, to Brian Dershem, son of
·Becky and Glenn Kiefer of Troy,
and Don and Becky Dershem of
:Ottawa, is being announced.
The bride elect is a 1992 gradaate

CROWN CITY - Danny and
Kandy Collins announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Amber Rae Miller, to Michael Brent
Harrison. The wedding date of
December 1998 is being planned .
The bride c.lect is a senior at
South Gallia High School. She plans

----Meigs Community Cale.n dar---Park with lunch at 12:30 p,m, Bring
· The Community Calendar is pub-· craft item for auction.
~ished as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
POMEROY -- Eagle Scout cere;and special events. The calendar is · mony for Wesley Thoene, son of ·
'!lot designed to. promote sales . or Dale and Nancy Thoene, will be
:fund raisers of any type. Items are held Sunday, 2 p.m. at the Pomeroy
:printed as space permits and cannot United Methodist Church.
:be guaranteed to run a specific numPOMEROY -- Meigs County
;ber of days.
Cooperative Parish hymn sing Sunday, 7 p.m. at Pomeroy United
;SUNDAY
, BURLINGHAM -- Alexander Methodist Church. All welcome.
•and Hannah Lewis Chaney family
:reunion Sunday at the Burlingham · CHESHIRE -- Fife family
;Church with a basket dinner at noon. reunion Sunday at the Kyg_er Creek
- -club_ house .. Dinner at noon.
REEDSVILLE -- Descendants of
.
:Ernest Imboden and Neva Imboden
RACINE -- Southern Local
;Grimm reunion Sunday at the shel- OAPSE '453 meeting Tuesday, 7
;ter house at Forked Run State Park. p.m. at the high school to decide
contract.
. HOBSON -- Silver Run Grade
;school reunion on the schoolgf\Jund MONDAY
•"flat" Sunday, I to 4 p.m. Bring lawn
LETART FALLS -- Leiart Township Board of Trustees meeting
:chairs and memorabilia.
Monday, 6 p.m. at the township
. MASON. W.Va.-- Johnson farni- office building.
·ly reunion Sunday at (he Mason·City

CARPENTER ·
Columbia
Township Board of Trustees meeting Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the fire

cil meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the.
Racine Municipal Building.
THURSDAY
POMEROY -- JEWELL home
slation.
''
PAGEVILLE -- Scipio To,;_,nship school support group meeting
Board of Trustees meeting Tuesday, Thursday, 7 p.m at the home of
SYRACUSE -- Regular monthly 6:30p.m. at the township hall ..
Brian and Kim flupp. Plans will be
meeting of the Sutton Township
made for school year activities. ·
Trustees Monday at 7:30p.m. at the
DARWIN -- Bedford Township Those interested may contact the
Syracuse Municipal B11ilding.
Board of Trustees will meet in spe- 'Hupps at 992-0045.
cial session' Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the
TUESDAY
township hall to consider bids.
RUTI..AND -- Rutland Township
CHESTER -- Pomeroy OES 186
Board of Trustees regular meeting
meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport Thursday, 6 p.m. at the Rutland Fire
Shade River Lodge. Potluck dinner Lodge 363 F&amp;AM regular session Station.
at 6 p.m. Members urged to attend. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m . at the Mason1c
Temple. Refreshments.
SYRACUSE -- Syracuse Board
of Public Affairs meeting Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the Syracus~ Municipal
Building.

The Living Word Outdoor
Drama, Ohio's ·only Outdoor Passion
Play announces performances for
area residents the evening of September 6th.
Entrance into this -unique drama
by bringing a canned good to the
box office.
This canned good will be
exc hanged for a 50% discount ofT
the full adult ticket price of $10.00.
This program was started during
'the 1996 season and was a huge suc-

box office at 614-439-2761 or write:
The Living Word, P.O. Box 1481,
Cambridge, Ohio 43725.

Over 3.000 canned goods were
collected for the area needy and the
drama saw a 56% increase in attendance.
The Living Word will show "the
greatest story every told " as the
Bible comes to life.
Set outdoors, the sunset, sounds
of nature and moonlight add to the
real ism of the 400 foot stage which
authentically
recreates
old
Jerusalem.
An authentic horse-drawn chariot, roman soldiers, live animals, stirring music and colorful costumes
help transport the audience back in
time to old Jerusalem . .
Audience members will witness
the Sermon on the Mount and The
Last Supper, and watch as Christ is
brought before King Herod and tried
by Pilate.
They will watch as Christ is crucified, but later conquers the grave.
Thousands have watched in amazement as He ascends into Heaven f01
. the finale.
The Living Word will be held on
Saturday evenings during the month
of September (6th, 13th, 20th ad
27th) at 7: p.m.
·.
The Living Word is the only outdoor drama open during the fall season.
For more information phone the

•

Bc~uty.

The groom is the son of Jack and
Maria Harrison of Crown City. He is
a graduate of Gallia Academy High
School. He holds a degree in auto

YOUR CHILD
A SHOT OF LOVE.

BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE
VACCINATE! ·'

Free Vaccinations
For Gallia County

Gallia County
Health
·Department
. 446-4612,
ext. 292

RACINE-- Racine Village Coun-

NEW SHIPMENT

RC!C!bdk
~:.&gt;e::
~~-

MEN'S AND WOMEN'S

THE SHOE CAFE
Lafayette Mall • Gallipolis

•

ciating.

Music will begin at 2 p.m. with
the ceremony following at 2:30p.m. ·
A reception will follow at the home

'"Your Next Step T(:) A Healthier Llfel"
(at The Prescription Shop)

•

•

Brothers/Sisters Class 1:30-2:30 p.m.
Infant/Child CPR 3-5 p.m.

:Gospel music makes your
~aerobics class a heavenly
:workout experience
:By CATHY HAINER
:USA TODAY
_ If your body is a temple, what
, better way to worship than at a
:gospel aerobics class?
,
: "Gospel Moves" is the name of
·the Sunday morning fitness class at
:trendy Crunch Fitness in Los Ange: lcs, but regulars just call it 'Sweatin'
to the Holies.'.
. Every Sunday, a choir sings and
the faithful line · up as instructor
. A.ngc Buckingham, 33. warms up to
tunes like "Amazing Grace" or
.:'This Little Light of Mine."
"The live music helps create an
~tmosphcrc that inspires even the
laziest couch potato' to see the light
-and get moving," Buckingham says.
. Apparently, a growing number
qrc seeing the light: the 7-month-old
Gospel Moves was recently voted
best aerobics class by Los Angeles
magazine. Crunch is planning to
brin2 similar classes to its New York
City-locations.
. Warm-up is followed by 30 minutcs of high intensity leg lifls and
lunges done to ·rousing tunes like
"When the Saints Go Marching In"
and "Amen." For cooling down, the
'choir sings a soulful rendition of
·"Swing Low, Sweet Chariot."
•:[ get people who have hectic
·schedules, but they're religious or
spiritual people arid they want to do

Sunday, Sept. 14
• Brothers/Sisters: Open to children 3
and older. Includes a film, tour of unit

--

and safety instructions will be given.

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

CPR Class to. follow . . '

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

Both helJ in the Third Floor
Prenatal Classroom on

HMC's

Maternity &amp; Family Services Unit

To register cal/ 446-5085
Walk-ins welcome
Refreshments served

(304) 675·1675

Unlimited
weekei1d calling
until the end of
tl1e year.

if's rush
hour. Bur more .
rha11 likely, ir's
rhe grear deals
from Unired Srares
Cellular• rhar are
causin~ all rhe ·
rraffic. So come
in now. and rake
advantage of rhe
besr cellular
package nrou1rd.

Mayb~

Pho11e,
activation and
your first mo11tlt
of service for ·

___,.

UNITED STATES

·cELLUlAR.
WIRELESS COMMUNICAriONS

The way peop/r talk

~rcu"J hert~

.

. ,.. '"' ,,.;,.,
~eed

u extra line7

~k

us 1bout our

'11.00 Access

•.

for siJt months
Sllari!TIIII" option.

'

Set dim for cldliiL

1

.4.Healthy Steps ~:!~~ss

•

Downey sues over smoking claim

l

Call Janice Haynes, Lkensed Mauar• Therapist,
at 594-2227 for an appointment today•

COOLVILLE -- Mr. and Mrs. Middlcpon and the late Andy Do"i .
Arnold Spencer of Brimstone Ridge,
The wedding will be held Sept. 6
Coolville, announce the forthcom- at 2 p.m. at the Camden Avenue
ing 111arriagc of their daughter, Churc~ of Christ . in Parkersburg,
Cecilia Lynn Spencer, (o William D. W.Va.
Doczi, son of Ms. Charlene Doczi of

"He hasn't picked up a cigaCLEVELAND (AP) - Morton
Downey Jr. , once a chain-smoking rette," Downey's publicist, Les
talk show host, is , fuming over Schecter, said Thursday. "He very
claims that he has started smoking much fears this wiif, jeopardize his
credibility."
again.
As host of television's syndicated
He even quit his call-in radio talk
show to work· full-time on suing the "The Morton Downey Jr. Show'' in
subject of his wrath: shock-jock the late 1980s, Downey, 64, usually
Howard Stern. In a recent letter to had a cigareue in his hand. SomcWTAM, Downey ·said Stern hau 'timcs he blew smoke at guests.
something to acknowledge that. · falsely accused him of smoking.
. -·--- ·
With gospel aerobics , they can fit in
exercise and spirituality," Buckingham says. Gospel Moves attracts
ages from early 20s to late 60s, she
says. .
. .
FAMILY PUCTICE
Buckmgham often smgs along
with the choir and invites the students to do the same if the spirit
mo\'Cs them .
. There arc no· aciual prayers said
during Gospel Moves, and t~e class
has no specific religious component.
. "We use the gospel mus1c to g1ve us
a boost and uplift us," Buckingham .
says.
Regulars say they like the change
of pace. "I've gone to a lot of differem aerobics classes," says Amelia
Patterson, a 42-ycar-old marketer
based in Los Angeles. "Usually they
TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING 'PEOPLE,
play loud techno muSic. But thts
music, it reaches your soul. ·•
.
WE ARE OPEN 'nL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
For Patterson, Gqspel Moves IS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
about more ,than JUSt workmg out.
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENI,IE
"The Bible says make .a joyful
noise, anp that's what we're doing."
POINT PLEASANT

NEW YORK (AP) - Ed Koch.
1he mayor-turned-TV judge, awardtid $1 ,500 to the owner of Babette ~he California Chihuahua that
became a snlll'k for a runaway boa
1:onstrictor.
The decision, reached Thursday
1!uring a taping of "The People's
.~ourt." was a partial victory for
.li'lossie Torgerson, whose tiny pet
)ooch was c~ten Aug. 9 by Angus ·
Johnson's 7 1/2-foot snake. Mrs.
Torgerson h~~ sought $5,000 for
~~abette's vah1c a~d emotional dislress.
·
"I awarded her the value of the
\lug," cxplailted Koch, who has
replaced Jud!l¥' Joseph Wapner on a
tlew version of the syndicated show.
•'Under California law, there is no
10mpensation for bereavement over
~~ dead dog."
Johnson qad countersued for
~~ famation of character. Both sides
reed to let [i:och, the former New
ork mayor, 1ettle the dispute and
ere flown IP Manhattan by the
, ow:
.
· Koch con,litdf:d that Johnson
1yns negligent in lotting his snake ~~lissss - slit~er out_ the door of his
~rme. Johnson was' given until Satljjrday to find the boa a new home
~~tside Los Angeles , .
.

Benefits of Therapeutic Massage:
• physically relaxes the body_ •. increases circJ.Ilation
• reduces chronic pain
• reduces mental stress
• relieves tired &amp; ac,hi!lg
• promotes bettersleep
muscles
• improves concentration
• reduces tension headaches • reduces anxiety
• speeds recovery from ·
• promotes a feeling of
injuries
· well-being
• lowers blood pressure
• enha.,ces self-image

•

·MCGINNIS-MARCINKO

Ed Koch makes
:ruling against
~og eating boa

The Weekend Athlete, The Home
Gardner. The Over-Stre55ed Executive•.
Secretariee, W11itreeees, Laborers.
VIrtually Any Active Person Can Feel. a
Need for Ma55aqe Therapy.

540 W, Union Sl, Athens

POMEROY -- Kristina Marie Grande where she is maJonng '"
and Todd Marcinko
Warner and Matthew Todd Finlaw business management.
He is a 1991 graduate of Eastern
announce their engagement and
·
High
School and is employed at
upcoming marriage.
A.A.
Baldwin,
Goldsmiths in MariShe is the daughter of Mark
etta.
.
Warner of Pomeroy, and Rick and
ton Original Dolls ;n Belpre and the Cindy Koblcnt' of Pomeroy. He is
An open church wedding will be
·bride-elect is employed by Chester the son of Steve and Debbie Fin law held on Saturday, Sept. 13, at 2 p.m.
Quick Stop in Chester.
Pastor Sharon Hausman will be conof Long Bottom.
The open church wedding will be
The bride-elect is a 1996 gradu- ducting the ceremony and a recepSept. 20 at the St. Paul United ate of Eastern High School and is tion will immediately follow at the
Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains attendm'g the University of Rio Pomeroy Gun Club.
with the Rev. Sharon Hausman offi-

•

Maeeage TheraPY Provides Relief
to People from All Walke Of Life.

•

Rebecca McGih!Jis

TUPPERS PLAINS -- Mr. and
Mrs. Rick McGinnis of Garden City,'
Ga., announce the engagemrnt and
upcoming marriage of their daugh.}er, Rebecca Valerie, to Todd
-Marcinko, son of Steve and Tammy
Marcinko and Karen and Karl
'Kebler JII, all of Tuppers Plains.
Both are 1994 graduates of Eastem High School. The groom-elect is
,currently employep by Lee Middle-

I Need A
Massage!

cess.

WARNER-FINLAW SPENCER-DOCZI

to attend the Huntington School

ALFRED -- Orange Township
Board of Trustees meeting Tuesday,
7:30p.m: at the home of Clerk Osie
Follrod.

:Living Word ·Outdoor -play
·to have September shows

Cecilia Spencer and ,William Ooczi

Kri15tina Warner and Matthew Finlaw

Amber Miller and Michael Harrl1on

ENDICOTT-PAGE- MILLER-HARRISON of.

Tabitha DNmmond and Brllln DereiNim

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

Sunday, August 31, 1997

Visit us on tit! lnt!l'lll!t at www.uscc.com
,
Offtf requirtS 3 new 18-month Strvict agrttm!fll, Roaming charges, taxes, tolls and Rfh'o'Ork surct1arges not induded.
Othtf rntrictions and dalrges may awtf. 5!! start lot detailS, Ofttr expires Septernbfr 10, 1997

Cltllllcotlle

Ctllllcot••

Unrtad States Celular

Southern Ohio Communtcations

m:mt ,

656-5000

Zale Plaza Sho1111ing Center
1084 N. Bndge SL .

·

ShiiWIIIt Squat~
62A ConsUIIIOf Drive

.........
Southern Otlio Communications ·
Classic Plaza
408 E. Huron
285·5001

..._...

Southern Ohio Communtcationa
Hi~DI! Center
2475 Scioto Trait
285-5000

·

-

...t ..

New Boston Shoppmg Centef

United States Cellular

Atso. come ••d wilit ou of our
Wat-Man tac1ti1111: Chillitothe,

4010 Rhodes Ave.

New Boston. Jackson.

456·8722 or (8001824· 7775

�Sunctey, August 31, 1997

Sundey,Auguat31,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolla, OH • Point Pleuant, WV

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

~oc=--_,miWI

• Page CS

•

ei\JOYTHe
FrUITS OF
r

·. %f·

10 LB. PKG.
·w· '

Mr. and Mrs. Bozldar Kurtovlc

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Caruthers

POTTER-KU RTOVIC GRAY-CARUTHERS

.

Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Back, Jr.

~. SEXTON-.BACK

t:

'

.. PORTER • Jamie Michelle Sex- honor. Lori Cremeans. sister of the
·: ton and Jerry L. Back, Jr., were unit- bride was the matron of honor.
.: ed in marriage June 28 ao!he Trinity Bridesmaids were Susan Phillips
: United Methodist Church in Poner.
and Arigie Powell. They wore ·floor
•
The bride is the daughter of Mr. length princess style navy salin
: and Mrs .. Richard Sexton, and the crepe gowns. The necklines were
•. granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs: ·Joe adorned with rhinestones. They
!. Phillips and Mr. and Mrs. Orville wore wrist length navy gloves and
·: Sexton.
·
pearl and rhinestone drop earrings
· · The groom is !he son of Paula that were a gift from the bride. They
:: .Baek and Jerry Back, Sr. He is the carried arm bouquets of red and
• grandson of Janice Hanman and white roses, accented with navy and
; :Mrs. Eva Back, and the late Verlin ivy, and wrapped in navy tulle and
: Back..
· tied with gold moire ribbon.
:
The double ring, candle light cerThe best man was SRA Mike
•. emony as officiated by the Rev. Meek. Groomsmen were SSGT
: · Edward Back of Columbus, cousin Mike Stare go, SRA Tom Sudol, and
:: of the groom. The invocation was SRA Richard Snlilh:-ttshers were
i: given by the Rev. Jack Berry.
Alex Fernandez and ATC Christo!· Pianist for the ceremony as Gwen pher Smith." The groom wore his
: Phillips, and vocalists were Christy tuxedo style, formal dress uniform.
! Mock and Jason Stout. Musical The best man, groomsmen, and ush• selections included, "Always", ers, all serving in the United States
: "When You Say Nothing", and 'The Air Force, wore formal dress blues
: Rose"..
uniforms.
.
The church was decorated with
For her daughter's wedding. Mrs.
; brass vases of red and white roses Sexton wore a pearl gray floor
1 accented with ivy. A brass arch of length evening suit adorned with
: candles and spiral candelabras were- -cryst~l beads. The groom's mother
! used at the alter. Palm trees and fig chose a tea length navy chiffon dress
• trees and Boston ferns were also with a white lace bodice: Both wore
·: used. A unity candle display was corsages of red roses with ivy
:: placed in front of the arch of can- accents, tied with gold moire ribbon .
:; dies. Tulle ·and gold ribbon bows
Registering guests and passing
:• marked each pew.
· out programs for the ceremony. was
·j Before the entrance of the bride Matt Cremeans. brother- in - law of
; was escorted by her .father. and the bride.
:: given in marriage by her parents.
Following the ceremony, a buffet
·:
The bride's gown was a white. and dan•e reception was held at
;; sleeveless formal creation. with a Buckeye Hills Career Center Dining
:; fittcit bodice. Hand beaded seed- Hall. The tables were covered with
:i pearls and crystal sequins covered satin brocade table cloths of navy.
·; the bodice. The full skin and cathe- gold and burgundy. Vases of noating
: ~ drallength train were layers of tulle
candles adorned with ivy and gold
; ~ and appliques of peafls and sequins hcljum balloons wcrd placed on the
;; with a border of white royal satin.
tables.
f!- The bride wore wrist length white
The hridal table was decorated
;: gloves with appliques of pearls and with arrangements of red and white
:: sequins. Her tulle veil was a tiara of roses and crystals candelabras. The
·; pearls and sequins." She carried an wedding cake consisted of six tier
! arm bouquet of long stem red and baskci weave cakes arranged in a
i white roses with navy accents and cascading fashion . The cakes were
~; English ivy. The bouquet was decorated with red and white roses .
;: w·rapped in tulle to match her gown accented with ivy. The cake top car:: and tied with moire ribbon edged ricd the theme of the bride and
:; wiih gold. Her jewelry consisted of groom with the groom in an Air
; pearl drop and rhinestone earrings .
Force uniform .
For something old the bride. wore
After a honeymoon in Gatlin ~ an antique diamond wrisi watch that
burg. Tenn.. the couple resides in
.~ belonged to her mother..Shc carried Oklahoma City where the groom is
.; a small white Bible that belonged to stationed with the United States Air
:: her sister.
Force, and ·the bride will continue

z

:~

..

Cindy Greenlee was the maid of

her educatiOn as a dietitian.

~ Las Vegas gets tough with

}new regulations for children
:: USA TODAY
·•
Nevada casinos are increasing
: safeguards for kids who tag alon.g
! while their parents roll the dice.

And they come at a time when
the world 's gambling capital is trying to downplay its kid-friendly
image.

• Starting Sept. 13. unaccompanied
·children under 18 are ·barred from
. amusement arcades and small game
· rooms in Las Vegas. Laughlin and
~other Clark County jurisdictions .
• between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. week! nights and midnight and 5 a.m.
: weekends.

About II percent of Las Vegas'
estimated 30 million visitors arc
under 21 , up from 7 percent five
years ago.

•

.
In addition, arcades must be
. staffed with security auendants.
• Las Vegas already bans unaecom:.,Snied minors from the Las Vegas
:Strip after 9 p.m. weekends and hol:idays, and I0 p.m. weeknights. ,
:

The new restrictions. which
apply to bowling alleys, shopping
centers and other businesses as well
•as to casinos, follow the May 25
:,;laying of a 7-year-old girl at·a casi:no in rural Primm, Nev., while her
. lather was at the gaming tables.

•

While Dcke Castleman of the Las
Vegas Advisor newsletter estimates
about half the maJor Strip casinos
offer game rooms or arcades
designed to occupy children wh1le
their parents gamble. he says a
growing number of propenies are
appealing to an adults-only clientele.
Case in point: Mirage Resons'
upscale Bellagio. which opens next
September. Rescrvationists at lthe
3,000-room
hotel-casino
are
instructed to steer families with
young children to other Mirage
properties, says spokesman Alan
Feldman.

ATHENS • Kelli Jo Pouer and
Bozidar Kunovic exchanged wedding vows at Galbreath Chapel in
Athens, on June 29. Minister Larry
Boggs performed Jhe double ring
ceremo 0y, following music by Linda
. Fink, pianist and organist.
Potted ferns and a bean shaped .
candelabra adorned with white and
purple decorated the chapel for the
wedding of the daughter of Elwin
and Judy Potter of Oak Hill, and the
son of Jean and Zdenka Kunovic of
Osijek. Croatia. The bride is the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Miller of Jackson, and Jimmie and the late Martha Pouer of
Oak Hill. Kunovic is the nephew of
Chris and Mira Smith of GallipOlis
and the grandson of Marija Prosen

of Gallipt&gt;lis and the late William
Prose'n.
., \
Serving as maid of honor for the
bride was her sister, Sherri Metzger.
and bridesmaid was Michelle Bradford . Mike Dyer served as best man,
and Byron Burke was groomsman.
Ushers were Jason Potter and Chris
Metzger.
Following the ceremony, a reception was held at the Lewis Family
Restaurant in Jackson.
The couple spent a month in
Europe honeymooning and visiting
family.
They are now at home near Holland, Mich., where the bride is a
·product engineer at Donnelly Corporation and the groom is an assocLate engineer at Lithibar Malic.

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Gibbs

TAYLOR-GIBBS
PARKERSBURG .. W.Va . .. Sandra "Pat" Taylor of Parkersburg and
Gary Gibbs of Racine were united in
mamage Aug. 2 at the Trinity United Methodist Church in Parkersburg.
The double-ring ceremony was
olhciated by the Rev. Thomas Malcolm. MuSic was provided by Steve
Kimes . organist, while Harold
Stockwell sang "Keeper of the
Stars" while accompanying himself
on guitar.
The bride was given in marriage
by and csconed to the altar by her
son. Todd Taylor.
Li sa Coplin. Parkersburg, daughter of the bride, was matron of
honor. Bridesmaids were daughters
of the groom: Sandra Ohlinger, Ashland, Ky.; Tammy Spangler, Evans,
W.Va.; Sherry Harris. Syracuse, and

.

Julie Randolph. Racine.
The nower girls were Alisha Taylor and Taylor Coplin. granddaugh·
. ters of the bride. The greeter was
Becky Gibbs. daughter-in-law of the
groom.
The best man was Greg Gibbs of
Hurricane, W.Va., son of the groom.
Groomsmen were: John Epple, Middlepon. nephew of !he groom; John
Coplin, Parkersburg. son-in-law of
.the bride; Steve Randolph, Racine.
son-in-law of the groom; Jeff Frank •
Racine, friend of the groom.
A .reception was held in Trinity
Hall with Senta Webb, Peggy Stuan,
Donna Lyons and Janice Garner,
friends of the bride, assisting.
The couple honeymooned on a
week-long cruise in the eastern
Caribbean. They will reside in
Racine.

MIDDLEPORT -- Danielle Rae
Gray and Robert Steven Caruthers
were united in marriage July 28 at
the Middlepon Church of Christ
with AI Hartson officiating the dou·
hie ring ceremony. .
The bride is the daughter of Scott
Gray of Fresh""'ter, Cali f., and
Phyllis Johnson o( Shade. The
groom is the son of Diane and Herman Lynch and Bob and Judy
Caruthers, all of Middlepon.
Decorations included an archway
with ivy. tulle and purple tiger lillies
and roses. Two nine-tier candelabras
were decorated with ivy and tulle
and purple candles in brass holders
were placed in each window. Pew
bows were made of purple ribbon,
tulle and Ivy. The unity candle was
placed under the archway.
. The bride was given in marriage
by her father.
The bride wore a traditional
white floor-length gown with short
sleeves, ·a lace top accented with
embroidered flowers and pearls. The
back was open with one bow across
the center of the hack lined with
pearls. A six-foot-long train with
three bows was lined with pearls
down lhe center. One laree bow was
in the back at waist levef
The bride's bouquet consisted of
purple and violet tiger lillies, roses
and ivy.
Maid of honor was Tara Gray.
sister of the bride, and bridesmaids
were Tracy File; Heidi Tucker. sister
of the groom; Heather Hawley; and
Joy Church. They wore violet and
purple dres.,es.
Al!endants carried brass' candle
holders accented .with ivy, purple
roses·and ribbon . ·
Flower girls were Alexandra
Mitch and Cassidy Tucker. niece of
the groom. Their dresses were violet
and they carried tulle baskets with

purple and violet ribbons and flower
petals.
The best man was Robcn W.
Caruthers, father of the tzroom.
Ushers were Randy Hawley ol
Pomeroy and Frank Blake of Middlepon. Groomsmen were Phil Hovauer, Shawn Hawley, Mau Haynes
and L.l. Mitch, all of Middleport.
The bride's mother wore a shansleeve, cream and mint ankle length
dress and' a corsage with a. purple
tiger lilly, white ribbon and ivy. The
groom's mother wore a one-piece,
calf length ivory suit and ·a corsage
with a purple tiger lilly, white ribbon
and ivy.
. The reception was held at the
Pomeroy American Legion Post and
the bride's table was decorated with
a violet table cloth and sham. The
four,tier cake with white ' icing,
accented with silk purple and viole\
roses and tiger lillies was made by
the groom's sister, Heidi Tucker. The
cake was topped with a crystal bean
and swans surrounded with lace.
Seated at the table were the
bride's aucndants and groomsmen.
Tiffany Haynes and Kim Hawley
registered guests.
The couple honeymooned at Caesar's Pocono Rcson in Pennsylvania
and will rcs1de in Middleport.
The bride is a graduate of the
University of Rio Grande's Hol1.cr
School of Nursing while the groom
is employed hy the Pillsbury Company in Wellston and is a graduate of
Meigs High School.
Out-of·town guests included the
bride's aunt. Pat Tate. and cousin,
StiiCie Tate; the bride's father. Scull
Gray; groom·~ aunts and uncles
Mike and Renee VanCooney, Bot
and Jean VanConncy. Jim and Jod~
VanCooncy: groom's cnusins Mike
and Kristi VanCooncy. Justin anc
Brook VanCooncy.

*
**
**
**
**
* Help Vs Help A Good cu,. *
**
**
***********************
*

:

''AKA" CRAZY LEGS
The St. Paul United Methodist Church Is having
a benefit for Ralph Parker on Sept 6 from 4-8
p.m. We will be serving food and will be having :
live entertainment, held it Tuppers Plains
Elementary School. Good music, food and fun.

s

s

For info.: Teresa Talbott 985-3807,
Connie Rankin 667-6329, Barb Roush 985-4134

· .

10-S Tuesday-Saturday

271 N. 2nd, Middleport

Visa, MC, Layaway

992-5205

CHOPPED
SIRLOIN PATTIES ·

SJ

90

10 lB.
PKG.

99

All FLAVORS

DELl FRJSH

10 POUND

RAINBOW
ICE CREAM

. MEAT

SPREAD

Y2 GALLON

POUND

WHITE
POTATOES

407 PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
45760 .

Wicker Buggy

GIIT0.:..
NEW PEWTER fR L\"ME.Q1.? IN 1.?..Q.IT10CK
1
.

LOAVES.

_,a

~1 .MOUNTAINEER SAUSAGE

.

.

SJ

OR

SECOND AVE.
614-446-9020
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS (Across from the City Park)
Open 7 Days A Week
10To 6:00P.M. Mon.-Sat.; 12 to 5:00 Sundays

M A. Q.
0AVE EARLY ON CHRI..Q.I"Jl
1.? tt'll\1.?

16

s
oz.

LB.(HUCKWAGON BACON

The news groups's opposition to
ratings echoes the stance of its colleagues in television. TV news organizations arc exempt from rating
their shows.
Movies shown on TV. on the
other hand, warn viewers of violent
or sexually explicit content.

0

ITALIAN
BREAD

10 LB. PKG.

tion.

GQE1A\.IT (Jt. 1n~~ 1!'or
everyon.e!!
(

ORLAND

10 LB. PKG.

·wESTERN
RIBS

~·~~ FRENCH CIT~ MALL rt,~,
ll{j Crafts &amp; Ant1ques ~

The

10 LB. PKG.

PORK STEAK

***********************
.
:
* "OTICE *
: :==::=:::::::r:::=:::!
: RALPH PARKER BENEFIT:

10 LB.
PKG.

10 LB. PKG.

ing decided against the ratings.
"Our refusal · to rate news sites
underscurcs .tloc critical nature or
news and the importance of its free
now in what promises t() be the most
powcrfulpuhlishing medium in history." said Neil Budde, editor of The
Wall Street Journal Interactive Edi-

SoacesSt/IIAva/lable

UBE
TEAK

HOT DOGS

News producers refuse to rate stories
By DAVID E. KALISH
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Despite
White House pressure. major online
news producers refuse to start a rating · system to llag objectionable
cont~nt.
.
The Clinton administration ha.'
pushed the induslry to ·adopt a vol- ·
untary plan to combat. indecency on
the Internet. But news organi1.ations
worry that ratings may keep people
from viewing their sites because stories routinely contain news items
about' violence and sex.
About 25 news organizations
attending an Internet Content meet,

BONELESS

CHICKEN
LEG
QUARTERS

I

UNLIMITED
DOUBLE COUPONS
EVERY DAY UP TO 50 C

~~ IVI~ I
OPEH 24 HOURS
7 DAYS f1 WEEKI

'

SJ99
Old Fashioned

SERVICE VALUES...
I

•

�•
'

....._"""*bwl •Page C7
Mary Greene's role as first woman.captain of a steamboat rich in Gallipolis~
history - Greene line made many stops in this river community
:

sundly,Auguat31,1997

Sunday, Auguat 31, 1997

:Western Oregon is timber
:country and much more
The day in Eugene was spent
with two aunts.
It wns wonderful to talk and .
Dorothy
laugh with them. and catch up
Sayre
news. But, with dayhght still wtth .
us we headed south· on Interstate S:
inio Douglns County. the largest :
county in western Oregon, and home,
During
of the Timber Capital of the World,
our late June and county seal, Roseburg.
·
trip to Oregon for a school reunion.
AI. we approached my former
my husband, George, and I spent a childhood home north of Roseburg •.
day in the county seat of Lane Coun- in the northern part of the .county,
ty, Eugene, before heading south.
the area appeared unchanged, yet
Eugene is the home of the Uni- different.
versity of Oregon ," the "Oregon · Logging ·had taken evergreen
Ducks." The collete campus is old timber from hills that once had
. and beautiful, not unlike many other abundant stands; other hills .were
campuses throughout the United reforested with the timber appearing
States.
to be a harvestable age. I hadn't
Large deciduous and evergreen been gone that long. or it didn't seem
trees shade 50J11e of the old, ivy-cov- so. Yet there was a marked diffcrered buildings, as well as modern cnce in the vegetation growth.
buildings. Some of the wide streets
We located my sister and hrother·
are canopied by these trees.
in-law in a county paik. set up in
Squirrels run !rom activity to their fifth wheel for the next few
activity in hopes of a handout from a nights. We settled into the only
caring person. Bicycles. backpacks. available motel to await our •chuol
and a variety of dress completes the reunion in two days. Next door to us
picture of a typical collegiate cam- in the motel were my favorite
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Keeton ·
pus,
·'
teacher and his wife.
We had Oown into Eugene during
In the county park were more
darkness and weren't able to view alumni; we had an impromptu cookthe spectacular, wide Willamcttc out in the park of local and traveling
COOLVILLE -- Lester and Imo- Mary Naylor Keaton of the NewValley on our descent.
panicipants that evening. Hot dogs
gene Keaton of the Coolville area ton, W.Va. area and she is the
The next morning dawned into never tastc.d so good!
celebrated their 50th anniversary daughter of the late Hoyt. and
another of ·the Chamber-of-ComThe next day childhood fiiends
on Aug. 23 and were greeted by Matilda Walker Kelley of the
merce-typc days I love so in Oregon . went to the ·coast and returned with a
friends and past fellow workers and Spencer, W.Va. area.
A few puffy clouds, blue sky, Dungeness crab for me.
Their son and daughter-in-law,
rela\ives at the Holiday Inn in Parkclear air, and a perfect temperature I ate half of it for breakfast the next
ersburg, W.Va. on Aug. 24.
Robert and Patsy Jane Keato~ . and
with "just right" humidity made me morning. I offered to share. but I
He is the son of the late A.N. and children hosted the celebration.
homesick. I had grown up just south secretly knew I wouldn't have tn as
of Eugene and it was a homecoming. most people .wouldn't want crah for
It has grown into a city of breakfast! It was the first fresh ·crah
120,000 citizens, with the greater I had ealen in years.
metropolitan area close to a popula- ~
Then came cherries from a
liOn of 250,000. But, there IS still a friend's cherry orchard and smoked
small-town atmosphere with easy salmon, also fresh from the coast.
comfon to the terminally ill, hetps .access to streets.
By CAROL TRAPANI
No, 1didn't become sick, far from it.
the people in their lives deal with
The Poughkeepsie Journal
I think it would be almost imposIt was great to be back to childWhen the faithful family dog death. It also provides support siblc to become lost there. At least hood friends, memories and Oregon .
dies, the pet's owners can feel real groups to help children come to not on a sunny day. With the rivers, Our visit ended too soon. But,
grief. The wond~rful companion terms with the death of a parent or Cascade
Mountains, Coburg "home is where the heart is ," and
could even be buried in the backyard other loved one.
foothills , and west to the Cj)ast range mine is with George along the banks
or a pet cemetery.
.
"Even though they go through · of hills; !here arc always landmarks of the Ohio River in our "Room
When a digital pet dies, the the rites, lhey will still say, 'When is available to point out the correct With a View."
owner pushes the reset button and Mommy. or Daddy. coming back'' "
Fido's back beeping for more atten- Barrow says.
tion.
G~ANDOPENI
That doesn't mean children
Digital toys - those palm-sized shouldn:t have digital toys.
electronic pets that die if they are not
But Barrow suggests using the
· cared for properly - can be great toy as a tool to explain real death to
devices for teaching kids responsi- ·your child, and keep reinforcing that
bility and even assessing whether a the toy is not alive.
child is·ready for a pe,t.
·
"As with TV. you have to explain
But because the _pets return after over and over again what that means
FINE LINENS &amp; GIFTS
death with a press of a button the in terms of not being real," Barrow
message they send to children about says.
death could be confusing. .
But most kids arc bright enough
• Stop by tor your complimentary Bello Cremo Coppacclno.
"The problem \\'Osee in support to figure it out, anyway, says Ken• The first 100 customers receive o Stevens linen cloth calendar.
groups (for bereaved children) is neth J. Doka, professor of gerontol• Register to Win on IriSh linen Damask tablecloth valued ot $300.
children don 't sec death as final ," ogy and senipr consultant for tHe
• Free Gift Wrapping DuMng Our Grand Opening I
says Carol Barrow, a bereav.ement Hospice Foundation of America.
coordinator fnr Hospice of Dutchess
"A 7-year-old may still be strug28 Ceiar Strut • (jaflipo{is
County, N.Y.
g_ling to understand the concepts of
Hospice. in addition to providing death, he says.
HOURS: 10 A.M.· 8 P ..M. MON.-FRI.
10A.M.•6 P.M. SAT.

By:

By:
JamesSa_nde

?":

On June 26, I93S
at II :30 p.m. about
I00 Gallipolis citizens gathered at the river lanlding,
opposite the City Park, to greet
Capt. Mary Greene, piloting the
Gordon C. Greene packet boat ·on
her maiden voyage from Cincinnati
to Pittsburgh. The Greene Line of
packet boats had been a big part of
Gallipolis history from 1892 to
about 1920, tll,e years the Greenes
offered regular packet service out of
Gallipolis.
In 1935 when the Gordon C.
Greene brought packet service back
to Gallipollis, the boat was the only
boat that ofered overnight lodging
between Cincinnati and Pittsburgh.
The Grcenes did have other boats
that went from Cincinnati to the
west. Occasionally even the Gordon
C. Greehe went west and south. it
making the trip to New Orleans
from Cincinnati for Mardi Gras in
1938, 1939, 1941 and 1947.

Golden anniversary observed

,..,.......

-Mr. and Mre. Larry Long

~nniversary to be celebrated
~~

.

~'•GALLIPOLIS

- Larry and Cathy
~ng of Gallipolis will celebrate
~ir 30th anniversary on Tuesday,
$i:ptemhcr 2.
t;. He is the son ofthe late Reuben
{;ling and Margaret Long ofGallipo~ Sheis the daughter of Darius and
f~lva Mae Underwood of Gallipo-

on September 2, 1967. They are the
parents of three children - Lisa
Hogan. Lori Owens and husband
Ken, and Larry Lee II. They are the
grandparents of Derek and Cssie.
They are both members of of
Addison Freewill Baptist Church,
where he serves as a deacon.
In honor of their anniversary, a
family celebration is planned.

!·They were married in York, S.C.

••

Proper food hand~ing
tne key to a safe picnic
..•

;. _

By DONNA ABU·NASR
::: Asso&lt;iattd Press Writer
~ ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) - As
.::Labor Day's big cookout weekend
;irrives, few shoppers seem conj:~med about safety problems with
~hat they eat.
!,'; . Government experts say the latest
t'seare over contaminated. hamburger
tshould not make Americans hysten-:!l:At about food safety.
:; : But, they caution, there are prac~itcal, common-sense ways to ensure
&gt;)afe picnics.
"I don'tthink people have to fear
eating their foods," said·Janice Oliv'* •

tJ:

ters and sinks are clean. Never partially cook food to finish later. Never
put cooked food on a platter that first
held raw meat or poultry.
And wash, wash, wash: your
hands with hot soapy water ·before
handling food and after handli.ng
raw meat; fru1t, even the cantaloupe
rind, because it can carry salmonel~a; vegetables to help loosen dirt.
Finally, to the cooking. The first
thing you need is that tricky kitchen
gadget, the thermometer.
Meat and poultry cooked on a
grill often bro\\'n very fast on the
outside.

er. foOd' safety chief for the Food and

f'"Je~d.,';~~!~~a~it?: just

The Gordon C. Greene was
named for the founder of the Greene
Line, the husband of Capt. Mary
Greene. Gordon was born in 1862
near Newport, Ohio. At age 16 he
had built a square bowed• rowboat
with a flat bottom (called a John
boat). Gordon used the boat to go
from Newport to Marietta and up the
Muskingum River 6 miles to his sister's home. She was the wife of Dr.
J.H. McElhinney. At this place Peter
Becker ran a general store.
Becker's daughter Mary would
eventually become Mary Greene.
Gordon served an apprenticeship as
a "cub" pilot and received his first
class pilot's license at age 21 . By
another decade Greene had bought
his first steamboat- H.K. ·Bedford
and married Mary Becker. In order
to compete with the other boat companies Greene decided to buy a second boat. In 1897 Mary Greene
became the fiist worn"!' !o captain a
steamboat.
Mary Greene ran a tight ship a•
she always made sure her deck
hands were ready .to load or unload
even before the boat landed. The
boats that Mary Greene captained
also got the reputation for having the

best food and the cleanest cabins on
the Ohio River. In 1904 one month
after giving binh, MaJy Greene perfomed her greatest navigation feat
by piloting the Greenland from
Pittsburgh to the St. Louis World's
Fair, a distance of t 200 miles.
Other boats run by the Greene
Line included: Greenwood, Greenland. Evergreen, Chris Greene. Tom
Greene, Neva, Leroy, Cricket and
the Henry M. Stanley. lonically no
boat was named for Mary Greene;
because of the river superstition that
held that any boat that had an M in
the name was jinxed. The M is the
13th letter in the alphabet. The
Greenes.made that mistake with the
Hemy M. Stanley, a boat that had all
sons of problems before it sank at
·Gallipolis in 1907. Gordon Greene
died in 1927. Mary and the 2 sons.
·Tom and Chris earned on the Greene
Line.
The Gordon C. Greene boat was
built in 1923 and originally known
as .the Cape Girardeau operating out
of St. Louis. Mary Greene bought
her in 1935 and relit her to comply
with expected new federal codes
that affiected all places that provided
overnight I~ging. The Gordon C.

~

' 1

Greene could accommodate 175 Major Bowes' Amateur Hour that
passengers and a crew of 60.
was then touring on the Goldenrod
In July of 1936 the Gordon C. show-boat. The Goldenrod was tied
Greene stopped at Gallipolis with up at Pt. Pleasant. The Daily Tribune
143 passengers, many of whom took wrote of the Gordon C. Greene,
the opportunity to tour the Our "Not in many years hns a packet
House," the boyhood home of Odd received such a royal welcome
'Mcintyre, the Ohio Hospital for here."
Epileptics, Holzer Hospital and
In 1943 the Gordon C. Greene
. M?und Hill Cemetery. Unfortunate- landed at the Old French City with
!~ the temperature was over I 00 that · 160 passengeu, most of whom were
day.
newspaper. editors and publishers
In the evening the passengers from· 22 diffierent states. "With one
were given the opporlunity to sec accord1 it seemed~ the visiton

wished to visit the grave of 0 .0. ;_
Mcintyre and enjoy the thrilling ·
vista of silvery waters and lush hills !
and valleys."(Tribunc)
•
In 1948 The Delta Queen :
replaced the Gordon C. Greene as,
the packet boat from Cincinnati tl1~
Pittsburgh. The Gordon C. Grcenl&gt;_:
then served as a Mississippi packet,
.,
a hotel, a nighlclub and a rescau~
raurlt. It sank in 1967 at St. Louio!
Mary Greene died in 1949 whi~
on board the Delia Queen

.

profit groupa wlahlng to
announce meetlnga lind apeclal
eventa. The calendar Ia not
dnlgned 1o promote selea or
fund-raisers ot any type. Hema
er. printed 11 apace permltl and
cannot be glllll'llnteecl to run 1
apecltlc number of dsya.

Digital toy poses real-life
questions about death

Sunday, August 31

·~·· Kyger FWB
CHESHIRE -Old
· ·ChufCh, Sunday school ~~ 9:30 ·
a.m ., picnic to follow.
'

CADMUS - Homecoming at
CroS$roads Church, I 0 a.m . morning services, dinner at noon, special
singing in afternoon .

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5TH

•••

ADDISON - Rick Barcus to
preach at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, '1:30 p.m.

•••

RJO GRANDE - Richards family reunion for descendants of John
and Ann Richards, at Tyn Rhos
Church, Basket dinner at noon.

•••

•••

***

service.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Samuel
Lewis family reunion at 0.0 .
Mcintyre Park, Bob White shelter
house num~r#. 5, lunch at I 2:30
p.m.

•••

1\;IORGAN CENTER - Morgan
Center Christian Holiness Church
with ~eith Elbin preaching, Sharon
Eblin, singing; 7:30p.m .

•••

CHESHIRE - Homecoming at
GALLIPOLIS - Paint Creek
Poplar
Ridge Church. Preaching by
Baptist Church, annual Sunday
Geo'le
Menshouse in morning,
School homecoming, beginning at
.
dinner
at
noon, singing in after9:15 a.m. Dinner to follow ~oming

r1£~ r~~ 1fovs~

noon.

•••

RIO GRANDE- Hunt-Wood
reunion, Bob Evans shelter house,
10 a.m. until dark, bring covered
dish .

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Hymnsing at
Christ United Methodist Church, 7
p.m.

•••

KANAUGA - Worship service at
Silver Memorial FWB Church,
Rand Ave., 7 p.m.

...

GALLIPOLIS - Elizabeth
Chapel Church, 6 p.m. service with
"Proclaim He Is Faithful" singing
group. Nursery provided, Rev.
Alfred Holley, pastor.

• •••

GALLIPOLIS - Loaves and
Fishes to meet at St. Peter's Episcopal Church, noon, for the free meal.
Everyone welcome.

•••

Benefit concert slated for liver transplant survivor

CLOSED SUNDAY

~

CHESHIRE - Fife family ·
reunion at Kyger Creek Club
House, dinner at noon.

Monday, September I

•••

CHESHIRE - Addison Freewill
Baptist Church's Labor Day
Songfest, Kyger Creek Shelter
House, 4 p.m. Singing by God's
Ambassadors, New City Singers,
Johnson Family, and Addison Choir
·and Qu'l)'let,

•••

TueSday, September 2

•••

•

GALLIPOLIS - GAHS Band
Boosters, 7 p.m., band room.

***r
KANAUIJA • Gallia County
Aame monthly meeting, change in
day due to holiday. Meeting at
Am Vets, 7 p.m. Speaker will be Pat
Thomas, president of
Gallia County
. d
Chapter. .
The largesi herds on record
were those of the springbok during
migration across the plains of the
western parts of southern Africa in
the· 19th century. One herd estimated to be 15 miles wide and
more than 100 miles long was
. reported from Karree Kloof,
Orange River, South AfriCa, in July
1896.

THE GOOD LIFE CAN BE.YOURS NOW

-.-., ~ "i :---

i:.nd don ' t cross-contaminate.·'

-

L·
I t

.
Custom made to increase
and enhance the living
space of your home.
• Quality vinyl clad

.

"
Seasons Best alum~­
inum awnings and
marquees should do
more than just · look
good,
· it· should
provide you
with
energy efficiency as
all
our
products.
Todays homes need
beauty and durability.

·-••
'

..

,

,

'

,.., .

aluminum construction

• Easy sliding w;·~CIOw·s wil:h I
buiiHn screens
• Color co-ordinated lo
vour home
• Siurdy. fully hinged

RIO GRANDE. There will be a benefit gospel concert on Saturday, September 6 at the Fine Arts

with security locks
• Ready lor you to use
within two days or less
• fully warranted malerials

'ulldl~ at The University of Rio Grande, to raise money for the family of T.J. Stevens. The two year

ld Gant lis resident, son of ·'Tim and Tammy Steven!!, recently underwent a liver transplant at Chit·
llren•e H:pltal in Cincinnati, and Is recovering at home. He suffered from OTC - ornathlne transcarba••lyse deficiency. He Is only the 154 parson In the c~untry to s~rvlve with this condHIOf!- ~II money
••ttllld will be used to offset the $750,000 In medical billa the family has as a result of 'f.J. s fll/8 opera1lone He atlll feces more surgery to cloee muscle tissue.
·
• Ad laelon to the concert Ia tree but-a love offering will be taken. Performing will be the Sis.F 11 mTh Sh Family Eternity a~d Ted and Sue Collins. Donations may be made to the fund In
~~e~.J)o':.nte1uhnson: 2018 C.;,tenary Road, Gallipqlis, Ohio, 45631-8532. For more Information
i8ii 448 304f.
.
.

anct Consuuclion

ll:. 0

Academic
.
'

~onors .

PAMILCO,. N.(:. Jason Polls and

l~andy Potts, son~ of Mitchell and
l~onni Potts qf P¥1111co, Co .. N.C., .

I

'

r

.
:I
ll.
,j

lllhll .m:t?Uitl'li,j JIIO.•t.otJ:~~U'

~OWJIII~

f'JO. RUJ.S

'111

-a-··
a

•

if"d grandso1111 of Shirley Potts, Jr.,
~i"d Helen P~itcrson of Vmton a_nd
l,.awrencc and Doris Lemley of Mid~pcport were recontly honored lilr
~fademic achievC!IIent by the URJI·
ql! States Achievement Academy.
The ·lirothFrs are students at
Ilamilco CountY [\igh School ..
Randy Po,:s ~ been named a
United States Na~nal Award Wm~f:r, and an A~i·A~aerican Scholar.
· Jason Pot~l hf been named a
\)nited States Na!ional Honor Roll
~~ward Win111~r. fn AII-Amer•c~n
'fcholar. Their nn. .s wiU appear ·•n
11ublications 11f te Umted States
~~chievement ~a4emy. .

Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2

.t

·'

~

--Gallia Community Calendar·The Community Calendar Ia publlllhed aa a tres· service to non-

·'

The Gordon C. Greene packet boat made reguter etopa In Glllllpolla between 1935 and 1948. Ma~
Greene, tlie firlt woman pilot on th• Ohio River, wu frequently on board In those years. This boat wn~
named for Mary's huaband who atsrted the Greene Line In 1880.

.-------.:_-------------------'-------===-=-~'="':""-:"':"::'::"""::-:"':'="'="="~~~'::''::"":':-::~:----:-J

like what
f.-Iom used to ·say: "They should
j&lt;ecp their hot foods hot, cook food
jlppropriatcly. wash lh~ir hands -

: It's not a• simple as just avoiding .
pink hamburgers. It 's what you do
~ith food from the minute you take
)t from the supermarket shelf to the
jnoment you put it in your mouth.
! So, getting ready for that big picnic or grilling.get-together''
: Start with how you stack the
i;hopping cart. Contamination could
$tan there.
: If. for instance. you put the trays
pf ground beef for your hamburgers
next to the lettuce and tomatoes
f.ou're buying for that healthy salad,
the meat juices could drip on the
vegetables and contaminale them
"'ith bacteria.
; Instead. raw meat and poultry
Should be placed in s&lt;parate plastic ,
~ags and should not touch other
~s. the Agriculture Department
says.
: And the eggs for your favorite
potato salad'! When you liuy ihem,
f9ok for clean, uncracked shells.
Then cook them thoroughly.
: As for meat, safely is determined
OY how you cook it. says Tom SkinlJCr. spokesman for the Centers for
E&gt;isease Control and Prevcntwn.
: Avoid packages that arc tom or
leaking. Pick up refri~eratcd or
tozen ite~s last - jusl before
. 'eading to· the checkout counter.
!nd, when loading y·our groceries,
Keep thoSe perishables inside the airc;onditioned car, not in the trunk.
- If you plan to run errands before
heading home. bring a cooler wuh
ii:e.
; At home, immediately place hot
dogs, burgers, ice cream and berries
in the refrigerator.
: If the wrap on the meat and poul10' is clean, you should keep it on to
W.oid introducing bacteria.
: And if you feel' like having a
!fke-out picnic - fried chicken or
barbecued beef, for example - and
you won't eat the food within two
hOurs, buy it ahead of time, chill it
tljoroughly and if you want to reheat
it. make sure it's 16S F. or steammg
'
.
hot.
.
• Make sure cutting boards, coun·

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

Holzer Clinic
Welcomes The
New Additon
To Our
OB/GYN FamiJy,
Dr. Bridget Cottrill-Skinoer!
'Dr. Skinner is a Vinton County native
wfio lias returned to tier hometown area to
practice medicine. 'Dr. Skinner earned fier
G
'Bachelor's 'Degree at Oliio University
and tier 'Doctorate 'Degree
a~ 'T'Iie Ofiio State University.
Welcome Jlome
'Dr. Skinner
allll11inhi~ent, cafl 446·s3S1

. ~ Holzer Cliolc... Here fur \bur Health, Here lor 1bur Uktime!

'

�Entertainment

fi9CI• .. ' , • . _.. II I

Farm/Business

Auguat 31, 1117

Are you ready for the real movie season?
~ MARSHALL FINE
·
fllSt eist!t months of the year don't exist
&amp;.a ..a SUburban~
When you think about the movies released so far this year, is pretty much
As labor Day ~pproaches, it's becoming toug)ler and tougher ~':'t to think true. Does anyone re':1ember anything about "Batman and Robin" (other
o{ the ";St one-third of the year as the real ~ov1e "7ason -. the !•me ~hen than the overwhelming sense of relief when it was over?).
the studtos and the mdependent trot out then presttge movtes. It s as tf the
With rare exceptions ("Face-Off," "Men in Black"), this has been a year
.....,u
"ou Do"). ,
Ilia
·
·
•
SEr, .... BER
,
. ,,
Wi ... _ ms, Vtvlca Pox and Mekhi of Otina over a murder case.
. "TM Anlpmenl": One of two
"&amp;ean": Rowtul Atkinson Ph~.
· · "SlldlnJ Doon": A thriller
fllllll tlals fall about the late terrorisl reprises hlS role from the bit BBC da ~t Fromf 111e Seah
. c":, ~ about a woman whose fate is decid-'
"Culol 'file Jacbl", this one liar· series. as the ne'er-do-well for a ptat10n o a 1osep
onra.. ed by the sliding doon of a subway
rill8 Donald Sutberland, Ben whom everything turns out fine.
story, ~~ the allalr be~n a' train. Gwyneth Paltrow stars.
tciDjplcy and Aldan Quinn.
"lloope Nipll": The 1970s' servant prl and ~ ~way m a
"Stanhlp ' Troopers": Robert
"Bud....,.": Life on the IOid porno &amp;aiiiC, grapbically depicted 19th-century English village.
Heinlein's sci-fi tale about llarth's
for a oewly formed rock band.
by Mark WahlberJ, Julianne
"'lillbla ~ In ~e.rica": ~ struggle against an invading insea
-1a~DI•
et»
•
Moore, Bun Reynolds and oqters..
Hlll!ganan ~mtgrant 15 race is adapted by director Paul
10
•• ,....,_,..
"Ciaabwu or tile Board": ~ilated mto Amencan pop ~1- Verhoeven ("Robocop," . "Total
tum staJriDg Russell Crowe and The tona-awaited movie debut of lure 1D '!10 19fi(la by an Amencan Recall").
Salma Hayek. ·
Carrot )bp. '
D1 (lCeYin Blcon).
S
"''11e Barcber Boy": A YOUII3
"Cdllml Care": James Spader
"'l'wiiiPt of die Gelds": A
" wltcb Back": Dennis Qqaid
·lloys atruggles with a hi.'gbly dys- and Albert Brooks star in this Sid· family drama about genetic engi· plays an FBI man whose target-a
fllncllional family in this lrisl1 film ney Lwnet drama about the ethical neeriD&amp;. starrins Garry Marshall, serial kill~r - has now 'kidnapped
dilemmas of _~·-po"'rv
Quaid's son.
by Nell Jordan s••..;n,.
-·•-. .,._,en
,....,...
.....u. ·-• m·edi· Faye Duuwav
-, and Brendan. F~
· ..
-r.
._
__
.
·
"
.
cine.
•
"U·Tun1'•,
An
""·•hr
cast
•·
"Welcome to sara;evo":
The
....ou ....
'
· 'IDII'eit:ent for Glda":' A c;:om·
""'QQe DnU't AdYocate~': A , (~Penn, Nidi: Nolte,' Billy Bob war in 'Bosnia is the backdrop for 8
·~y lbalata pair of Brliisb'buddles young lawyer might ba':'e joined the ThaiDton and more).in an Oli;vcr story about journalists who get
1--'- -~ 20 .,...,.. ·•·r ·-"'·•"~- bell. 'an this """"'
'""'"-r Stone film """"
....... t con man and bad involved in the co_nftict. .,,....;""
'""'...,.... ,_.""" ...--""" law fum """'
~·....,.
.:... after one has become a li'IDIIeX· starring Keanu Reeves and AI Paci- guys in the U.S. desert,
Woody Harrelson.
aaJ.
no.
"Wub1Jta1ua Squre": Henry
"Tile Wlnga of lhe Dove":
"111e Dllappearaltl:e of Gar- . "Eve's' Bay•": Southern James' novel,~ the source of the Another Henry ~ames adaptation,
• - -.· ": ~3
"'"""' n....:..
.,..._ _.._.
-'--·
da ...,._
~...., .,..,.
u
w..... aboul one family's proble~•
....., p'·y
.. "'"'e
'" HI"'...,...., " is ada'"'""
...- by thiS' one s•·-'-g
uuuu Helen "-•-...,........
J - Olmos and Eaal Monies in as told tJnou&amp;b the eyes of the Ill- Agnieazka Holland starring Jen- Carter and Linus Roache.
the story ofl )'011111 writer ohmed year-old daughter. Starring_Samuel nifer- Jason Leigh and Albert
DECEMBER
with solving the mnrder of the areat L Jaclalon and L¥on Whitfield.
Finney.
"Afterglllw": An unlikely
SpniM playwri&amp;llt.
"FIIIi'J'hll: A 1'nle Story":
"Wish••""~: A wicked genie romance between a rich, bored wife
"TTie Edp": David ~amet Houdini and Sir Aithur Conan is at the ct:Dler of this Wes Cravend
·
• this 'corned f
W101c thil tbrillor lbollt IWO ,men Doyle investlpte photognlphs of
"Wolldmand": A ,documim- ::'ars~·=~Wcl'(o;teandJ~~ ~
·g , f!! 'the Wllclem~~; one ll!!aht , fairies, iq lh~' (jlnJ, ~ fl!rvey tary about the history of Levittown. Christie from director Alan
'lltllll10 ldD the other lfof his wife Keitel and Petc:t O',Toole.
--•
"Year !If the Hone": A year oli Rudolph.
·
llllll'a..IWle. Sfllmw~!Wuy ilop- · ·"Fat, Cheia'p uid !)vi or C11117 · the roa!l with Neil Young and Cra,zy
"Bent": Martin Sherman's' play'
i:f!lillld.Aioc~.;.," ,
tm": An ErrOl M~ ' documell•• llorse,direcledby'JilltJarmU$ch.
,
· "Tfie IIMt DI"VIirlwn": Bill tuy alx,tut foUr men wiihiiif{ctent '
NOVEMBER'·
about a gay mlln imprisoned .in a·
Pi!Jh~ and Oabrie1 Byrne Air ID obleris'ms that control their.lives.
"Anii1Uia": 'An animated Na2:i work camp comes 10 t11e
IIIII. Wim '-' •4aas liblllbout two
"Goa R"•ted": Jim Beluahi musical about the lost heir to the screen. starring Jan McKellan and
willl
dlfteteat and the late: Tupac S~ 111 a pair Russian empire features the voices Mick Jagger.
to llblm '"'I*
of cmolced cops whose schcines go, of Meg Ryan, Joh!l Cosack and
"Tile Big Lebn-.vskl": Jeff
. "'lre lllnna Jlllaw"1 Stewn astray.
,
Angela Lansbury.
Bridges. John Goodman, bowling,
'$lip! llllliel ~ pol· · "GaUUIca": Genetic discrirnina"nubber": It's Robin W'illiams the Coco brothers - neejl I say
ltenl damplug l6tliC ~ clown lion ia tbc theme of this lillurillic rathe1 than Fred McMurray in this !JIOre?
·
ell 4ned ·K•••• ky ·miat lllafts. iale of a young man (Bdllll 'llawttl) · Disney remake about a befuddled
"Tbe· Dour": Daniel Day· ·
, i it could llltppell. '
and bls dream .ofspace trav4J.
scientist wllo invents an anli.,gtavi- Lewis relearns with directOr Jim
"'l''ii G_,: Mictdl!ll'lJlull'•
"TTie Glbp_~ . Mu": ty substance.
·Sheridan and writer T~rry George :
ll ~ • ~ tM!h Ill&amp;
. wliO Kenneth · -l'!ranagli 'and · Robert : ,,' "DltoWa": Prug~aling turns ("In the Name of the Father") for
........ . wmd out ot ·l!la
Dnylllstar·in this RObert'~ ugly in this drama by Nidi: GQmez another drama about the s~e iD
Cllirolled.ln -.U tPtiJ!Cili· IJjrlller; ~ on .~the ~ 1 0rlkiUJ starring Mir;hae' Rapaport altd LUi · Northern Irelahd.
·' · '· .· .
•''JIIIIC" that 1 prlllllilcitl '10 -play by}obn.Grillbapl. ,''1 - ' ' 'hy)9r. . ' ,., ',
' ' ',', , ,,
· ,;For Rimer or~!':
"a.-~: · Written .ad·direct· , "1be Jackll": Bruce WtlliS and · Allen and Kirstie Alley play 'ylipo
All lila ...,..: Du ed by HarrnOily ICql:ine (wilD wrote Ri~ Oere star in this· revamped pies ducking tbe IRS by hiding out
aqyel ofliiinid'. . . "Kid&amp;"), this film loOks at life 'vondooof_"'l'he Day of~c Jackal," 1111tmg the Amish.
,
lo the,-l!l50J illtlill*il Jrt!111o 11DDD8 diisolute yOU)b in a middle· alloul the late tenoriat ". Carl!Js the
''Good Will HIIJlllaa": A.p&amp;it.
· ff •hlllelemy 1&gt;11lili!lllil Aqrican town. .
Jac:bl."
,
tiine thief and genius~ beljl try,
'lWtldl. ·
• · t
!"'Il* &amp;-. of
' "Kill or·lUll": 1\iro lovc;rs on . ing to slay outofprisotj from'athet- ' .
tttiiilii
POilr.t.' 1 Ia '1lfil of drlllll'at 'IbanbpvinJ. ihl&amp; .the run flom 'police tum on, each apist, in this Gus VanSantfilmBIBr..-........~lli&amp;IJUQ~D&amp;!Uiit .DIICinvolvingafamllywhoscfatbcr .~rin)bisAU8trallan_thrillcr. ,
· " M
D
__ _. n-b·
~· ofl 'botiJ ln dila.low-IJucllet cliupJjemd Nov. 22, 1963. , .
' "1'be I u3BI MD": Jon BOn ~fu~11 ~
m.
II!Q ' ; ,
.· . .
·.
·~ stt Ill"; A)'OI!IIg lovi, ~ an,American llflor in Lon-

'!t:

15 UJ:,'.l!t

Yffi!l'4

...,. +'1

•••'WI

beiDi

11in '

llfl.* ' . '

-itt-"'""""'

rr

'

Dril ..

.1 ~ ii)i Olt";
J*f)'.Ciirllfltll flnda-~ hk ufe•biida
'*a 'Ill' •eboql ·~Who enricbed and complicated by a~
ll ...S bJ I lbnnllr ,aiqdent In an affair With a Latina 'Jf0111811.,.
,
0.:. ~ ip«:b. · , '&gt; , , , "' .Kaow.•~ Yojl DJtLillt

'iii...,.,..

~:.· You can ~": From ' thee aQibor 'of
"Saeam", comes uother bonor
111m. this time about four~·
awf1il secret -and ,, the mysterious
stalker who knows it.
·
"Kilt die Girls": Morsan Freeman plays a police detective seuch·,
ing for b1s missing niece outside of
bls jurisdiction.
"AUfel.eaOnllaary": Ewan
• McO,regor and Cameron Diaz in a
nr-· .........._.
~
romantic comedy abotlt two oppofclr ~ ll!le ~nina of sites brought together by "celestial

Cut lhe'*lllltenskm Witii aladfllii
t. dlila dllk comedy illiOur.blillky•
..,..,. d I B!:itiiJI bOudilla lloue.
"~ Po": Otriltian- Slater
·plays a c;lpher who toms. up In a
. aaWl town and causes excitement
wben be is D'istal'ett for ~
eile.
"1ffcl.ed Ia tile lllllld":•Thia
lndependent film focn-1111 on a

doa. •'ftlllniag • -a~~lioally · amok

wil1! bl8 CXISIIll'8.

.

".. "Liiu:": 11m Roth and Renee
Zelwcp ~ -.• thriller about the

games a bnlhant murder suspect

plays.
"'llle UUie Mermaid": The

...., _,...,

' ~Gftl!l ~llqJII"; ,1:;~

Hawke, Anntl - Ban~ft, GWyneth
.Paltrow and Robert De Niro in ,a
new adaptation of Dickens'~"Helme Alone - 3": New ~ad ;
guys, new kid ' - same ballkrupt .:
premise.
"Tbe Horse Wblsperer":
Robert Redford and Kristin Scott
Thomas star in this film version of
the best-seller.
''Tbe Mighty": 1Wo outcast
youngsters tetul) up to form .an
unbeatable team.

Oacar·winning' 1989 animated film
that put Disney on a roD returns to
th~ bJ&amp; screen.
"Mad City": Dustin Hoffman
and Jolm Thwolta in a story about a
dCipCrate TV reporter who sees
career salvatiou wbcn be's caught
in a hostage sitilatioo.
"Moute Doni": Nathan Lane'
"Magic Boat": Robert Bento~ and Lee l;vans play brothers who
.
'
directs Pau,l ,Newman and ' James inherit a mansion _ and a very:
ll,fe in J)rookl)'ll.
,• , '
folces. . ·
Gamer io a dc;tectivc story about t•naclous mouse.
~'!'l'lle ·' "''""": Dirk curtenta . ,,., "Most Wanted": Keenen Ivory, · Hollywood's faded past.
'
.
qf runl aeiiJalily,.ln t i 'fihD'$1U'· Wayalis as a soldier oftonwie ·try· . , "The MID Who Knew Too Lil·
"Mr. Magoo": The 'cartoon
~ Kille ClpAaw ~ a ~ ing to gc:t over ,on the guy&amp; wbo de": Bill ¥in-,ay plays a bumbler character- a myopic senior citiZen ·.
tllin wife aad Nbi!le \'augh!l as the dc)uble-crosaed bUD• .'
·
in London wlio l;lecomes involved - gets the· live-action treatment
' , wilD~
~ IIWC. ,
"~a(191eon": 'IJve-'llC\iOD ·fiml in internationil lispionage without . starring Leslie Niclse~. · . .
~ ill' 1 ,...._,: fcaniring animals with l)uman vojc:.. ever _!mowing it. ·
·
"Old Frieads": Jack Nicholson
l'lolb W,leo luU...• MoOre, Roy , ea ia the story of a puppy lost in the
"''hhi Mftchmaker"; Janeane and Helen Hunt in a romantic com~
B1J!1tio
ill a Australian outback.
.
Garofalo in a romantic comedy . edy by writer-ditCj:lor iarnes
drama lbou&amp; a -.e New &amp;t&amp;Jt!M
"Niclt md Jane": A cabbie about a presidential campaign Brooks ("Broadcast News").
fllpiJy teimloli at 'fllanllltliviDg.
falls for a financial analyst in lilagi• worker who unexpectedly finds
"The Postman": KeVin Costner
...............,, ,.!\ bqipita1 aiPt cal New York in this romantic com- love.
·
'
plays the one m~ who can bring
bee- the mspcct In a edy.
.,
• ,"Mn. Dalloway": Vanessa people together after a nuclear
lit f11. tllrial Jdill.... in, this film
"l'llantoms": A mysterious Redgrave stars in this adaptation of holocaust in this sei-fi thrille~. ' , ,,
with Ewan M~~ Aaild Niclc foJCC wipes .out a small C!Jiorado Virginia Woolf's novel about a
"The Sequel to ScftaQJ":
NQ!te. ~
. ,, .
town, in this adaptation of II Dean WOI!IIIIC~&gt;nfronting her past .,
Same director, same writer, some~
"Tile Peaceiiltlller": George KooniZ novel. Stars' Peter O'Toole.
"Oae Night Stand": Wesley the same cast _ and the Wile 1
Clooney and NillOie)Cjdqwi,battle
'!Play,ng'
God":
David- Smpes Qd ,,NaBIBssja Kiosld in ,a
?
• ,
a itrtori&amp;t wbo wan.ts to explode a Ducbovny and TIDiothy Huttol) in. a story•about the repercussions of one stozSpliere": Barry. Levinson'
·nuclear weapon in the United story about a doctor who becomes night of infidelity.
Still&amp;
_'
·
involved with mobstefll.
:"Oiatr and Lucinda": Ralph Michael, Crichton reteam to adapt
"Ridilll lhe a.Bs": A docu·
"Rocket Man": A Disney com· · Fiennes stars iit .this story about a Crichton's extraterrestrial thriller,
mentary about life on f{eighl trains edy about goof-up who becomes minister wbo decides he bas to starring Dustin Hoffman and
during the Depresaion.
pan of the first manned flight to build· a glass 'cathedral in the Aus- Sharon Stone.
"Wide Awake":- When his Mars.
tralian outback.
"Tomorrow Never Dies":
grandfather dies, a young boy
"Seven Yean In 11bel": B111d
"Tile Rainmaker": Francis Pierce Brosnan is back as James
decides to find outfor himself what ' Pitt stars in a true story about an Coppola tries his hand at a John Bond, this time battling a medii
bappc~ after death. , . '
Austrian mountaineer (and SS offi- Grisham adaptation, in this film mogul played by Jonathan Pryce.
,
OCTOBER . ,
cer) who becomes tutor ·to , lhe starring Matt Damon and Danny
"The Winter Guest": A mothHAn Amertcu Werewolf ID ·young Dalai lama.
' DeVito.
.
er-daughter drama, starring lllalcUfe
, 'P'tlrill"; A follow-up to the 1981
"Saul Food": Strife in an
HRecJ Comer": Richard Gere mother-daughter · team Emma
hOrror CQmedy, this one starring African-American family, in ' this plays a man who confronts the judi- Thompson and Phyllida , Law, ·
i ~- Everett Scott ("That Thing
family drama starring Vanessa cial system in the People's Republic directed by Alan Rickman. . " r

=.t...1!181l ,-·•. ....-)

\nta

a

o-r

to forget, studiowise, and not all that much more memorable o~ the ind_e·
pendent-film front. But now it's almost fall and hope once agam rears ItS
badly beaten head.
. . ·
Fall, as always, is the season of literary adaptations. Look f?r more of a
Henry James revival (two more films based on his work), desptte the rather
large nail through his coffin represented by last year's "Portrait of a Lady.".·
. And others as well: Virginia Woolf, Joseph Conrad..Don't forget the various contemporary writers whose work is finding its way to the screen: Jo_lu)
Grisham, David Mamet, Nicholas Evans, Michael Crichton, Robert HemIein
1~ Hollywood getting more spiritual? Perhaps, if the fact that there a~
two films about the Dalai lama means anything.
•
Other causes for optimism? Well look at the who's who of directors who
have films coming out in the next four months: the Coen brothers, Martin
Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, Woody Allen, Francis Coppola, Peter Weir, Ang
Lee, Oliver Stone, Quentin Tarantino, Clint Eastwood and James Cameron,
. What follows is a highly volatile list; inevitably, within the next montli,
. some of these films will be bumped to the beginning of 1998 -or later. But
here's a list of the films you can expect between labor Day and the end of
1997
·
A doztn io wakh for
· ear1y
•"LA. Confidential": Film noir about police corruption, set an
1950s' Hollywood, based on the James Ellroy novel and starring KeviB
Spacey,_DaMy DeVito and Kim Basinger. September.
.
:
•"A Thousand Acres": Jessica Lange, Jason Robards an
. If Michelle
Pfeiffer star in this modem adaptation of of "King Lear,'' based on Jane
Smiley's novel of Iowa farm life. September.
• "Tbe Ice Stnnn": The film that will open the 1997 New York Film
Festival. Ang Lee ("Sense and Sensibility") directs Kevin Kline, Sjgoumey
· · Ricci in a story of family implos1on
· dunng
· the sexuWeaver and ,..._
u•rtSilna
at revolution of the 1970s. October.
. .• "Allen Resurrection": Sigourney Weaver returns (as a clone of Ripley) with Winona Ryder as a droid in the third sequel to the landmark sci·fi
series. November.
•"The Truman Show": Jim Carrey gets serious in a Peter Weir film
about a man who is onty ·beginning to realize that his life is a TV sbow.
November,
• "Amistad": Steven Spielberg directS this film, bilsed on the true story
of a legal battle over slaves who mutinied and took over a slave ship in the
summerof1839. December,
·
,
•"Deconstnacdng Barry": Woody Allen wrote and directs this comedy .
about the erotic turmoil of a writer's life, in a film that also stars Kirstie
Alley, Richard Benjamin, Eric Bogosian, Billy Crystal and Robin Williams.
December.
• "Jadde Brown": Quentin Tarantino's first film since "Pulp Fiction"
is this adaptation of Elmore Leonard's "Rum Punch," starring Pam Grier,
Samuel L Jackson, Michael Keaton and Robert De Niro. December.
•"Kundun": Martin Scorsese directS this chronicle of the' early life of
the Dalai lama, which might or might not anger the Chinese government
enough to get them to sever ties with Disney, the film's distributor. Decem·
ber.
·
•"Mkialghtln the. Garden of Good and Evil": John Cusack and Kevin
Spacey star in Clint Eastwood's film of J!Jhn Berendt's best-selling book
about a murder case in modem Adanta. December.
•"The Sweet Hereafter": A small town's life changes after a bus accident leads to a major lawsuit in this Cannes Film Festival award-winner,
starring Jan Holm and directed by Atom Egoyan. December.
•"11taBic": It's the most expensive movie ever made at $200-million·
plus and counting. But is it any good? Don't bet against James Cameron
("Terminator," "True Lies"). Still, you'll have to waitllDiil the end of the
year to find out December.
.

H0 IIyw00 d'S bl OCkb USt er ment 8 llty
transforming European filmmaking

LONDON (AP) ~ Think of can make a good big movie also,"
European cinema's heyday, and French director Luc Besson has said.
images flood in from Italian neorealHis $90 million "The Fifth Ele·
ism, the French new wave, brooding ment" was ·critically panned but
Scandinavian works with pain so proved commercially potent after
intense it induced a startling aesthet" opening the 50th Cannes Festivit in
ic pleasure.
May.
·
Talk European cinema today, and
Indeed, European directors
you might as well say American.
shared significantly in this summer's
Hollywood films dominate the American blockbusters. ·
market as never before, with many
"Con Air" was directed by Engblockbuster5 earning more money Iishman Simon West. And . the seaoutside the Unite4 States than at son's other midair action leviathan,
home.
"Air Force One," was the work of
There's been a shift in icons: Germany's Wol~gang Petersen, who .
Woody Allen has always wished he long ago forsook artier homegrown
were lngmar Bergman, and Martin fare like "Das Boot" for the HollyScorsese speaks worshipfully of wood big time of "In the Line of
English directors Michael Powell .Fire" and "Outbreak." ·
and Emeric Pressburger. But
Big movies- good or not- are
younger Europeans are emulating what play, across Europe and elsethe high-octane· Hollywood where where.
special effects are big and money is
bigger.
"We have a 5111aller country than
America. It is good to show them we

•••""'*n

Family Night Is
Back ... Only Better!

EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT
4 P.M.·9 P.M. ONLY

arid

LOS ANGELES (AP) - We
don 'I mean to overs)ate this, but we
can't escape the feeling all is right
with the TV world: Bob Newhart is
coming back.
· After "The Bob Newhart Show"
In the 1970s, "Newhart" in the '80s
and the short-lived "Bob,'' the
comedian is paired with Judd Hirsch
as odd couple in-laws in "George &amp;
Leo,'' debuting this fall on CBS.
"I was playing golf three times a
week, and I didn't want to do that for
the rest of my life," Newhart said.
Irt "George &amp; Leo,'' to air 9:30
p.m. EDT Mondays, Newhart pl~ys
a widowed bookstore owner hvtng
on Martha's Vineyard. Hirsch is
Leo, a rascal who blows into town as

his daughter is about to marry
George's son.
After the _misbegotten "Bob" of
1992-93, whtch took Newhart out of
character and made him brassier, the
new series is a return to form.
Newhart's deadpan double-takes
and cautious stammer have been

part of television for so fong with
good reason: He and the medium are
well:suited.
.
.
Ltke a towenng comedtan of the
past, Jack Benny, Newhart's tiny tics
are perfect for the small screen. So is
his timing; like Benny, he is a mas·
ter of the pause that amuses.

By HAL KNEEN
l
In recent years, the introduced German yellow jacket has largely displaced
POMEROY - Buzzing bees. wasps, hornets and yellow jackets are the ground-dwelling Eastern yellow jacket in Ohio. Some consider the Ger~onung more prevalent as the fall season approaches. Nests are expand- man yelfow jacket, which nests in structures, to be more aggressive. Destroymg and numbers of insect occupants are swelling. The extension office does
ing yellow jacket nests can be difficult if not outright dangerous. Since the
bave informational sheets to assist you in the proper and safe way to con- nests do not survive the winter, if possible, avoid the nest area and let Nature
trol these Insects.
kill off the critters.
· The yellow jacket fact sheet describes the life cycle and dietary habits of
If you are allergic to bee and wasp stings. this can be a dangerous time
the msect.
of the year. Dave Shetlar, Extension specialist at Ohio State University, sug. Did you know that yellow jackets are meat eaters? Their main food sources gests the following to reduce your risk in getting stung,
are caterpillars and flies. Yellow jackets are beneficial insects that destroy
Don't wear brightly colored and patterned clothes. The bees and wasps
. many pests hazardous to shrubs, trees and animals. In the fall, yellow jack- think you are a flower/plant and will explore around you looking for food.
ets swtlch from h1gh protein diets, needed for raising the developing larvae, Avoid heavy perfumes, hair sprays, body odor or bad breath as they attract
)o htgh carbohydrate diets, fo~ '/Je maturing, breeding_adults,
and annoy bees and wasps, You are assumed to be a predator of the insect
, Only· the new queens surv1ve the wmter as they h1de m protected areas (i.e., bear, raccoon) and their only defense is in stinging you . So if you are
away from the current nest site. This change in diet increases the foraging enjoying the outdoors for a day: wear plain, light-colored clothing, brush your
workers' irritability. To find carbohydrate sources, the workers do not kill . teeth, bathe and use an unscented deodorant .
insects. but are attracted to ·sodas, pies, cakes and all other sweets found in
Are you interested in raising bees? Ohio State University Extension is
our late summer picnics.
offering a Beekeeping Short Course on Sept. 13 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at our

I

By STELLA GIBSON
BIDWELL - The 1997 Farm
Focus Day, sponsored by the Gallia
County Soil and Water Conservation
District, will be held at the farm of
Donnie and Ruth ~nn Shupe at 2198
Upereek Road in Morgan Township
on Saturday, Sept. 13 from 10 a.m ,
until 2 p,m.
In the fall of 1925, Donnie's par. ents, Isaac and Sally Shupe. carne to
Gallia County from Chilhowie,
Smythe County, Va. They arrived
with their three children. Mozelle.
Lewis and Willard, in a taxicab·and
bringing with them their possessions
in the car. They came to' Gallia
County because they were told that
Isaac could earn $3 a day as a farm
hand. In Smyttie County, he earned
$1 a day.
. They remained in Gallia County
working for one year, where Donnie's
brother, Clarence, was born. They
then relocated to Meigs County,
where Kathem and Isaac Jr. were
born, After four years in Meigs, they
returned to Galli a, where Donnie was
born.
In 1933, Mr, Shupe bought 60
acres of the old Miller place. He
worked for the WPA and farmed.
When Isaac bought the property, he
owed $300. As he was making these
payments, he realized that he needed
$30 for the taxes- extra money that
Isaac did not have.
flowever, near Mr. Shupe lived a
farmer who offered to loan Isaac the
money if Isaac would sign a note saying that if the money was not repaid
within 90 days, then lsaac would forfeit the property to him, Isaac and
Sally fretted about borrowing the
money, but also realized they .would
have to agree to the deaL
Isaac and the other farmer went to
the courthouse to pay the taxes. On
the way, they stopped at an attorney's

FARM FOCUS DAY HOSTS- Gallla County
Farm Focus Day will be held Saturday, Sllpt 13
at the Shupe farm In Morgan Township. Members of the family Include, from left, front,
Brook Taylor, Bryce Taylor and Brandon
Shupe; second row, Dale Taylor, Ruth Ann,
office to make the transaction legal.
When they arrived at the clerk's
office to pay the taxes. Mr. Shupe
was told that the taxes had been paid
only a short time before he got there
(possibly while they were at the attorney's office making the transaction
legal).
.
As Isaac and the very ·upset fanner
were leaving the courthouse trying to·
figure out how the taxes had been
paid, another fanner who lived close
to the Shupes called out to Donnie's
dad. He said that he heard Isaac was
having trouble getting the money 10
pay his taxes, so h~ thought he could
use a small pension tbat he received
to help them out.
He also told Isaac that he could
repay him anytime, because he 'knew
the Shupes didn't have the money
right then. Needless to say, the other
fanner who wanted the land was
extremely upset by the whole outcome.

Bridget Shupe, Donnie and Brent Shupe; third
row, Geraldine Shupe, Paul Snyder, Melody
Shupe, Donald Shupe, Valerie Taylor, Blaine
Taylor, Donna Jetm Taylor, Paul Knlalay tmd
Karen Knisley.

As the farm developed, Isaac
raised chickens and hatched eggs. For
two years, he had the best laying·and
hatching record. His eggs were sold
to Walter's hatchery. At one time,
agricultural agents were interested in
the method Isaac used to produCJ:
such record chickens and eggs. They
visited the farm and found that the
chicken coop was a log shed,' but that
each fall, the shed was surrounded by '
cornshocks.
In the spring. the comshocks were
removed and burned. The agents felt
that perhaps the Shupes were pro•
· tecting the chickens from diseases or
parasites by collecting any vermin
that might be near the chickens in the
comshocks and burning them, thereby keeping the chickens free of diseases and parasites .
It was Donnie's brother Willard
who wanted to be a chicken farmer
and talked their dad into raising the
900 chickens on the farm. During

Self-employment offers share of
.
.
By BRUCE WILLIAMS
company' Being self-employed
DEAR BRUCE: My husband means constant attention to details,
delivers snack foods and is consid- taxes and so on. - PT., lndepen- .
ered an independent contractor, He dence, Ky. ,
'· ·
works on commission. His average
DEAR P.T.: Most companies
gross commission is $850, but he has make folks independent contractors
to pay his own expenses and maintain for one reason: to avoid workers
his own truck as well as pay all the · compensation insurance, the employtaxes- inciuding, of course, a 15 er'sshareofSociaiSecurity,anystate
pereent Social Security tax.- His med- or local unemployment taxes, and
ical benefits are paid ( 100 percent) by federal unemployment taxes. lf I had
the company. At what weekly salary to guess what these benefits would
would it be more beneficial for him cost the employer, I would have to
to work as an employee for another . figure at least $l00 per week over

and

The economy refers to the expen-

diture of a country's resources. and
the creatibn of goods and services.
·The ~overnment 's monetary and· fis-

INGUOI/NO
POOL S

I.:~T~GK

cal policies, among other factors,
exert great inflUence on the financial
markets.
Monetary policy is designed to ·
regulate the money supply in the
banking system and ensure that a
steady supply of credit is available
without causing high inflation, The
· Federal Reserve Board, or "the
Fed," sets monetary policy and can
fulfill its mandate in three ways:.
• Buying and selling Treasury
securities through banks - buying
increases bank reserves available for

Looking for some enjoyable local activities this month? Plan on attending: The celebration in conjunction with.the arrival and docking of the Delta
Queen 10 Pomeroy on Sept I, ·Rutland Village Homecoming on Sept 6,
Racine Fall Festival on Sept. 13 and 'the Town &amp; Country Expo '97 on September 20-21 at the Meigs County Fairgrounds .
(Hal Kneen Is the agrleultural extension ~gent for Meigs County.)

'

By JENNIFER L. BYRNES
GALLIPOLIS - Among the
fungicide and insecticide applications
to vegetable gardens , flower beds and
landscape ornamentals, trees are
often overlooked and assumed selfreliant.
The calls to the Extension Office
suggest that even these independent
· plants are in need of attention . Insect
damage is a major complaint. with
bagwonns at the top of the list. An
Extension article printed last spring
warned homeowners about bagworms and strongly suggested insecticide applications.
Problems still .persist because
these sprays must be applied before
physical damage to the tree is obvious. Homeowners are misled during
the summer months, as feeding bagworms camounage themselves by
constantly addi.ng green material to
their bags. This false sense of secu-

World War II, Willard was killed at
the age of 19 and was awarlied the
Distinguished Navy Cross.
.
After World War II, the Shupes
began milking five or six cows and
selling Grade B cream in cans.
Around 1952-53, they began selling
Grade A in cans and after 1959, they
sold Grade A in bulk. Donnie liked
cows a lot better than chickens and
was glad to see the farm change from
a chicken to a dairy operation.
On March 17,1956, Donnie andRuth Ann were married in Richmond,
Ind. They have four children- Donna Jean Taylor, Karen Kriisley, Donald and Geraldine. All reside in the
Bidwell area.
,
Today. Donnie and Ruth Ann Dlilk
38 cows twice a day. They currently
own 250 acres and rent 48. They
attend the Danville Holiness Church.
(Stella Gibson Is the education
coordinator for the Gallla SWCD.)

~ps,
.

~mall webs can be pruned out of
small trees. Larger trees may require
chemical controL Resist the tempta~
tion to blow the nests out of the tree

with ·a strong jet of insecticide:

Although this is effective , it require$ .
much more pesticide than is reall!
necessary.

Wet the nest with a properly;
labeled insecticide, and as the larvae
walk on' the web or incorporate new
material, they will come into contact
with the chemicaL Also, abandon old•
er methods, such as -burning th~
webs out of the tree . The nests and
webs are very flammable. and thus 4
highly infested tree may result in a
larger fire than desired. ·
'
For chemical recommendations;
or to discuss present or potential dis-.

ease and insect problems, call tho
OSU Extension office at 446-7007. ·
Ag news
Blue Mold Forecast: Blue mold
rity ends soon after the larvae stop is still, plaguing most parts of the
feeding and the bags turn brown and country. The late-set, young crops are
at the highest risk for yield loss to this
noticeable.
By this time, chemicals are not fungus. Wi~h the recent rainfall, keep
effective, If practical, hand picking is in mind that the crop will be growthe only remedy for this time of the ing more vigorously, making it more
year. This method of control is war- susceptible to outbreaks of blue mold.
ranted because eggs encased in the
Acrobat MZ applications are still ·
bag will overwinter and hatch in the warranted for protection of these
spring, infesting nearby evergreens. young crops. RemeQlber that Acrobat
Collect the bags in a bucket of soapy · is not labele&lt;;l for after topping. In
water to terminate the eggs. Then addition, cases of systemic blue mold
mark your calendar for early June have been identified in the area. The
applications' of a properly-labeled number of these cases is likely to rise,
insecticide.
,
because minor injury caused by hard
Another popular tree insect is the · rains ha• allowed blue mold spores to
fall webworm, which are character- enter the plant's vascular system,
ized by large silk webs enclosing the causing the systemic infection.
tips of branches. Caterp(llars inside
Pepper
Producers:
The
the webbing feed on the foliage and Riverview Fanns pepper station is·
widen their webs to consume more open Thursdays and Saturdays to
leaves.
receive the first peppers of the seaUnlike the bagworm, homeowners sdn.
'
can take comfort in the fact that web(Jennifer L. Bymee Ia the agrl. worm damage is minimal, with the cultural extension agent lor Gatlla
biggest problem being the unsightly County.)
appearance of the webs.

downs

and above what they are payin'g your over and over that in your opinion,
husband - and that's why they do younger people should not pay off
this,
their mortgage early. My mom says
It would be difficult to tell you you arc wrong and that I should pay
where the break ' point -would be for · mY mortgage off. Our mortgage
him to go elsewhere. There is a good interest is 8-112 percent. - M.M.;
deal more involved in the decision Eureka, Calif.
than just the construction of the pay
DEAR M.M.: There is a fallacy in
schedule. Does he like what he's this line of thinking. If you didn't pay
doing? How are the working condi- off the mortgage early, would you be
tions? These are also issues that taking that money and throwing it
should be considered along with the away in Las Vegas instead? If so, then
taxes and expenses.
by all means pay off the mortgage
DEAR BRUCE: You have said quickly.

Investment Viewpoint:

how it works can
help you develop
wellinformed invest·
mem decisions.
the key· to prudent investing,

Wooster, Ohio; research campus,
Presenters include James Tew. OSU state specialist. beekeeping. and his
assistants , Dave Heilman and Bob Napier. The class is designed for people
who are just beginning the beekeepin g craft or for those who are considering getting a hive. Pre-registration is necessary. The fee is $60 per person,
$100 per family.
,
The booklet, "Starting Right With Bees," will be given to participants.
Lunch will be on your own. For further information contact Sherry Ferrell,
OSU Honey Bee Lab, OARDC, The Ohio State University, Wooster, Ohio
44691 , phone (330) 263-3684 .
·

Ridding trees of pests
.requires some caution ,

'97 Farm
focus Day
scheduled
on Sept. 13

economy

446·1370

VIDEO
TRANSF.ERS

Hate bees and the like? Just let Nature kill the critters

By RYAN SMITH
GALLIPOLIS - Where will
stock prices be six months from
now? No one
knows for sure,
but having a
good
understanding of the

For All Your.
Video Needs!
Weddings, Insurance,
Special Events.·
Let us put this on
video tape.
446·6939 or

D

SUnday, Auguat 31, 1917

Economic knowledge key to sound investing

a

Here's, uh, a real TV bright spot: Bob Newhart has a new sitcom

Section

•

-re.

DAIRY SWEEPSTAKES WINNERS - Winners of the Dairy
Sweepstakes at the Gallla County Junior Fair
front row, from
left, Tad Browning, Amy Stout, Beth Payne and Beth Roberts;
back row, from left, Scott Payne, Matthew Roberta, Craig Payne
and Nikki Mills.

Towne House Gift
Shoppe opening set

demand determine the interest rate Provided quarterly by the Bureau of
paid on these securities.
Economic Analysis, GOP measures
' When the federal budget deficit is the nominal value of all goods and
increasing, it means the government service~ produced in a given. year,
requirement. This is the percenlage may demand more credit (and there- minus exports and government
of assets ·that banks are required to fore issue more securities) to meet spending, When GOP increases. corGALLIPOLIS - The Towne House Gift Shoppe at 28 Cedar St. is the
hold as non-interest bearing assets its financial obligations. The short- porate profits and interest rates tend
newest
establishment I!) join Gallipolis ' business scene.
teflTl implicaHon is a rise in rates, to increase as well.
under federal banking laws,
.
Owners
Russell and Catherine Cheadle have planned a grand opening
The Index of Leading Economic
• Adjusting the discoulll rate. The because larger Treasury bill auctions
for
Friday,
Sept
5.
discount rate is the rate charged by would be needed to additional Indicators (LEI) is another: It con·
The
owners
have
promised that by "carrying only upscale merchansists of II economic indicators, such
the Fed to banks that require financing needs,
dise
that,will
appeal
to
the most discriminating clientele, the store offers
The long-term implication of · as initial u~employment claims. new
overnight loans.
a
unique
shopping
experience."
Fiscal policy refers to how gov- continued borrowing is increased' orders for consumer goods, money .
Several styles of fine linens will be featured, along with imported Irish,.
ernment spends money - and inflation, which negatively affects supply and business permits. Invest·
linen,
Batten burg and Heritage lace, Park kitchen textiles, Avanti embroiment professionals use the LEI to
finances such spending, For exam- the financial markets.
dered
towels,
Victorian Manor embroidered sheets, and Pure Country 100
Inflation is the annualized help forecast if a business recovery
ple, if the government reduces taxes,
percent
cotton
throws.
.
the economy may benefit, because increase in the cost of living. When -or general economic downturnBaby
shower
gifts
include
appliqued
hopded towel and wash cloth sets,
Americans will have more money ·to inflation increases and salaries do will occur within the next six to nine
embroidered diaper bags and crib blankets ready for personalization.
not increase proportionately, con- months.
spend.
according to the owners.
There are many other key ecoAt the heart of the government's sumers curtail spending, which hurts
In addition to A shby Tea and McStevens cappaccino, Ashbourne bisnomic terms that can help you better
fi scal policy is the federal budget, the economy.
cuits and William Lusty cakes will be available for those looking for speTo track the nation 's inflation understand the direction of the marwhich equals all revenues and
cial 0ccasion items, The store will highlight a full line of Greenleaf home
expenditures of the federal govern- rate , follow the Consumer Price ket Confer with a'n inve·stment profragrances, Greenbrier ~ome accessories and framed calligraphy. Cusment. When the government spends Index (CPI). It measures price fessional today for more informatomized Hancock gift baskets can be illade-to-order for birthdays. anniver·
more than it collects in tax revenues, changes for a fixed basket of goods tion. He or she will identify those
saries, weddings ~nd tlousc wanrt.ings,
it is said to have a budget de[ici1. ·
and services, such as transportation economic report&gt; worth following
During the grand opening, visitors will be treated to a complimentary
To cut the deficit. the U.S. Trea- and housing. The CPI is released and describe their importance as
Bella Creama cappaccino. Other promotions arc scheduled. and free gift
Sury auctions securities (e.g .. bonds, monthly by the Bureau of Labor Sta· they relate to your personal financial
wrapping will be available.
notes, bills, etc,) to individuals and tistics and is widely reported by the situation.
·
Store hours are I 0 a,m. until R p.m. Monday through Friday, and I 0
broker/dealers who sell the bonds to business media.
(Ryan Smith Is an Investment
a.m. until 6 p.m. Saturday. The store will be closed on Sundays until Octothe in vesting public and institutions,
Many other economic reports are executive with Advest Inc. In Its
ber.
such as pension plans. Supply and worth following in the media, such Gallipolis office.}
_as Gross Domestic Product (GOP).
loans, causing interest rates to

decline; selling decreases reserves,
causing rates to rise.
• Adjusting the ·banks' reserve

�PageD2•~

'

··---~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea.. nt, WV

"e1

I

~iidau •--~ 11w1• Page 03

Sunday, August 31,1997

_11_0_He--'-lp_w_a_
n ted
_ _ 180 Wanted To Do
ACROSS
1 Cwgame
6 - firma
11 Embrace

16 Supplies wilh
nourishment
21 In Hight
22 Like college walls
23 Game of chance
24 Banefit
25 Kttchen ilem
26 Fight
27 Seelhlng
28 Freight
29 Feel sick
30 Sert
31 Not at all cooked
33 Braid ,
35 Bite
38 Rachel's sister, in
Genesis
38 Destroy lhe inside ol
39 Abbr. in business
40 Explosive stuff
41 Saulte - Marie
42 Aim
44 "... let- ring"
48 Ten: prefix
51 Playground items
54 Toboggan
55 Body struclure:
abbr.
57 Chops line
· 61 Grasping tool
62 Leg part
63 Wall painling
65 Coral island
66 Gaelic
67 Nonprofessional
· 70 Crea!ure with eight
arms
72 Farrow lhe aclress
73 Opp. ot WSW.
74 Cincinnati team
75 Broken-down horse
77 Sheer
79 Cooking vessel
80 Division: abbr.
82 Speak
83 Think highly of
85 Clergyman
87. Tool lor boring

.,

89 Psychologic;al self
90 Conlend
91 Heaclclress 101 1
Down
92- Kind ol copy
94Y118111ed
96 Steal from
97 Wound 1rom a knife

1oo Wonglil(e part
101 Leg bone
I 04 Waler: Fr.
105 Painful spoc
106 Gibson or Torme
107 Com on lhe108 Swear al
110 Kind o1 delive.y
112 Big sandwich
f 13 Cily in Oklalloma
• 116 ExplOsive sluff, IOf
short
118Bun ·
119 Fear
120 Slanderds ol
perleclion
122 Endorse
123 Neighbor ol
Thailand
124 Flavors
125 Cried
127 Most 'wilh-il"
129 Foolbail kick
130 Mil. add. part .
133 Branch
135 Frozen dlissert
136 Certain club
member·
137 Dog's CIY
141 Precious stone
142 Animal's young.
colleci1V81y
144 Fining
145 Neck part

160 Conducts
161 Requiremenla
162 Conaecrate

69 Male sheep
71 r.teasure o1

DOWN
1 Of !he bishop ol

Rome
friend

3 Auslralian "bear"
4 Newt
5 Hinera.y: abbr.
6 Peper hankie

7 Occurrence
8 - of passage
9 On a pension: abb&lt;.
10 Made more beautKul
11 Talon
12 Tennis shot
13 On the summ~ of
14 Pole lor walking tail
15 Part of Europe
.16 ActuaNiy
17 Ms. Peron
18 Merils
. 19 Toe or linger
20 Incline
.
30 Breaklast tare
32 High e~~rd
34 Particular
37 Row ol shrubs
39 Peace goddess
43 - Plaines, Illinois
44 Derts
45 Water berrier
46 Burden
47 Theater-enlrance
canopy
49 Govt. org.
50 Emmet
51 Horse
52 Actor Greene
53 Joined IQgelher
54 •Not qutte legal
56 Tense
58 Pigeonhole
59 George or T.S.
60 Blackboard
62 Smudge '
64 Selafire
67 A poison
68 Notllnlshed

147 Hippodrome
149 Outer garments
151 Gel away florn
153 Muck
155 Zoo anraclion
156 Bar legally
157 Jocl&lt;ey
158 Cargo ship
159 Fill wilh gladness .

'

loUdness

76
78
81
63
84

Quit 2 wds . .

SUNDAY .PUZZLER

Furrow
Val
In lhe pasl

Disencumber
86 Legal maner
88 Acquired
89 Rubber band

2 Kukla .00 Fran's

146 Clock numerals

VOCA Corporation, A Ltadar In
Providing Support And Astis·
tance FCH' tndivkll.l&amp;ta With DrMI·
opmental Di aebtlities Ia Looking
For S...eral Habilbarion Special·
i111, Pan Time And Emergenc~
Coverage (Various Sf'lifll) . You
Will Receive Full Train ing And
Banaflta. All Applicants t.lus l'
HIVO A High School Diploma Or

Equivalency And Driver's Ll·
c:ense. Apply In Person At Uld·
dle1Dn Es1a10~ II20ol Carla Drive,
Gallipolis, Ohio -45631 (Phone)

91 Ethical
92 Spiny plants
93 Audibly
95 Fuel tor cars
96 Slirs up
98 Nest on a heighl
' 99 Groups of .nalions
102 Bake.y llem
103 A flower
105 Dart off
109 Therelore ·
111 Remove, in a way
112 Done hurriedly
114 Perceived
115 Pub drin.k
117 Lennon's widow
119 Peler121 Pole on a ship
123 Reeding desk '
124 Melody
126 Bricklayers' lool
128 Back lalk
129 Carbon and blotting
130 Playing marble
131 Danger
132 Last Greek letter
134 Code name .
138 Grew dimmer
138 Banishmenl
139 Juicy fruits
140 Landing places
142 Naked
143 Kind or prilcessing
144 Snakes
145 Unclothed
148 After deductions
150 Seed container
152 Untruth
153 Weep
154 - Abner ollhe

~~~~~~~~~~181t-446-.S14.
~W~Nn&lt;~~D~IM~M~E=o~~ff~~=:----!aliVe To can Dn Now &amp;

ear-

ear-

Drivers

. $2,000.00 Sign .on

All Yard Sll10

Bo Paid In

M~at

Advann. De-line: 1:OOpm the
d•J before lhe ad la to run ,
Sunder 6 Mond•r edition·
t:QOpm Fllclay.

lost pair ol lovebirds, Union
vitiri!y, 614-9112-8591.

Big yard sale 11 Voa1 residence,

of Welch town Hill, UinersviUe, ·
Missing; Calico Call.argo"ln Sizo top
Sop~:S.4, Bam-4pm.

Near Bulaville Pike, 814-•&amp;48·
IW38.

Crossword Puzzle Answer ori Page C-7 .

and Flea Market

-1'1110 VACATION

-40tK

-RIDER PROGRAM
Ohio's largest Aafrigera1od
carrier II U&gt;oklng For Drlvofl
WI HAZMAT &amp; DMonlho
Recen1 OTR EJII&gt;Irienct

Wedemeytfl Auction Service,

GaiUpols. Ol'io 614-379·2720.
Rick Peerson Auction
lull
auctioneer,
1ervice.

CALL DAVE OR USA

114-876-40011 or 80o-1127.o431
. EOE

Community yard sale- Willow 90
Wanted to Buy
Creek Rd. (beside Pamida store), 1.,--,-.,--,....,.,.,...,.;-~

. Yard S&amp;le

70

Auction

PAY UPTO 35CPII
-MEOICAI. IDENTAL

september '-3, cloflel of aU liZ,·
es from baby to adult, furniture,

IOoiO. tralll, andquoo,

General otrlca wiWord perfect,
lang term ai1lgnment. Peraonal
Complete Household Or Estatesl Temporar, Servleea. 304-428·
Any Type Of Furniture, Applianc-0_1;;.7;;.7·----·

,_.--=---

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

Foor lam'lr carport sale· Monday

Absolute Tap Dollar: AU U.S. Sll·

Start $12.8..,11,.00/HJ. For More

ran a Thru Aduf11, Named Brand Yallowt:IJsh Rd. Rain or shine.
Ckti'lg, Toys.
I__:___:______;___________
Four llmll1· 3 m1e1 out SR. 1.c:J D
120 Bu1iani, Tu11 •. Wed, i .· 3, Wolf Pen Rd. Furniture, baby &amp;
Boys 20• Chrome Bike, $75; 2 kids and lduil clothes, walerbed,
Suuaepers, Need Work. Clothes.
dishes, etc. Any queallona call
81+982-5401.
3 Family: 30th, 31at, 111, 3 l/2

Rings, Pre·1 930 u.S. Currenc~.

fora Saturday 8/8/97, 818-506·
5354, Ext' t 70.

"BREATHE EASY"
an educational support
group for adults with
chronic lung disease will
meet Wednesday, Sept. 3
2 p.m. French 500 Room
Holze·r Medical Center

21st Century Male

:·

Review

•

Thurs Sept.

I

'
: I

Tickets

:I

4th

on sale now!

.Call446-4801.

SPEAKER:
Angie Richards, RN
Gallia County Health Dept.

IS YOUR CHILD
AWAY AT
COLLEGE?

CLASSIFIEDS

Send them what they
need to get through
those tough first
couple of weeks ...
A "CARE PACKAGE"
from the City Perk:

RERL
ntl!

1Call 441-1770
for details.
PUBLIC
,• By: MalOn County Pu~~lo I
,. Service Dlatrlct, 101
,: cam~ an Avenue, Polnl
" Pltaunt, WV, 255110
': For: Wllltr Cu-re on
.: lha Lllkln Syetam, which
'• fncludft the ar•• ol
~ Columbia,. Broad ·Run,
:• Saaaafru and Union

,•' Fadera'
· and Slall
In compliance
wllh
• ragulatfont, tht Maaon
: County Public Sarvlco
·, Dlatrlol hereby natlllaa Ill
;~

cuatomera thlt nltr1t1

I

PUIUC NOTICE
The VRIII' of .RUlllnd II
now accepting Profl"ala
for Grant Admlnfltrlltor.
lluat have exparlance with
Federal Grenta, AacounUng .
and Rul Etlllte. Muat hiVe
office houre at lull U....
daya 1 week at the Rulland
C"lvlc Canter.
Send

~:concentration• In "' Lakin
:' ...llfltld hiYt IXCHdad the
': tllowablo contaminant
:•ltvala ol 10.0 mllllgramt par
'Iller (mg/f.. The currant
:reading of 11.3 mg~ luat
'barely axctada the
,,contaminant ltvtl, but
'...-lhelaaa poeaa a health propoa~la Md tafwaettcea to
.'rtak to children 8lx monlha the VIllage ol Rutland, P.O.
~·nd YOUfiiJII'·
Box M, Main 81., Rutland,
o' EXOIIIIVI amountt of . Ohfo41175.
:nnrate can cauae Infant (8) 29, 27, 28, 29, 31; fTC
mathamoglobfnlma, I.a.,
:"blue babr.". Thla 11 an
AWJO Ut JCE f.1 Et JTS
1 acute
In that
, eymptoma can dtvalpp
' nipldly. In moat Cll. ., 005
Pti'IOnlls
:· h..lth deterloretta over a
': parlod of deya. Symptom• Gentl8mon Seoklng eon-lion: Include ahortneaa of breeth ship Nom - Famllo For Tall,
,. and blueneaa of akin. Walka I Frltndlhlp. Send fie.
,' Clttrly, eicpart medlool pliel To: CLA 3011, cto GoiUpOIIo
125 Tlllfd Awnuo,
' advice ahould be oought
o,OHdll31.
, fmmadlttaly II th111
: eymp1om1 occur.
l D. CUto. will ... Ill ..
., Parenlt •111! reaponalbll aponaible far any debt. other
:~ perlita are encouraged to than iho10 mrfOCI bf ..,1111 u
o'provldt lntanla wllh an ol Augull211, 111117.
·:alternate oource of drinking Llvo Girlsl can Howl 1-1100-255··water unlll the problem Ia 0700 oxt 2882. t3.t8 por min.
Mu11 bo 18Jr"- Sorw.U 1111_..5: reeolved.
· The PSD It working wllh &amp;434.
, 111 engineer, tht State MEET NEW PEOPLE Tilt Fun
,:Heattll llepartmtnl and the war Todoy, 1·800-211to3&amp;, En
''landowner• aurroundlng 1714, 12.80 ,., Min. Muat 8o 11
:the wtlfflafd to determine·
oource olcont8mlnetlon Yrs SoN-U ··-~
Slttro Your Tllouthla W1111 Glrll
'~nd ooMCI the pralllam •• 1 On 1 Llvotll 1-1100-216-0700
:aoon
11
poaalbla. ELl 2M3 I:UI Min, 11+, S...U,
'Cuatomtrt will bt kept
'Informed of the progre11
,milda. Qualllona may be LIMfr' llolttllftr? 'fo1i - 11M
rour opoolal - I I 1·
·dfrectad to our ofllce In Pt. 800·281·1077
.. ~ 2487. 82.8111
PIMunlll875-&amp;388.
min. Mu1t be tlrra. Sor•·U·
(8) 26, 'Z7, 28, 29, 31; fTC
(118)141 1434.

dl•••••·

g:t!lbuno,

1·800·462·5255
Antique- Garage Sale 50% off
crystel and colored glass by
Heisey, Imperial, etx. (125 pes)
Also
Pottery, porcelain, auto
acoessories, plants, custom
bedspread, drape.
274 Magnolia Drive
Sept. 5, 1997
For early sales call 446-1459
AMVETS
108 Uberty Street
Kanauga, Ohio .
Phone 446-9051
7:30·1 0:30 pm
Hoe-Down, Two·Step, Clogging .
2nd Sat of the month· Adams
Couniy Pickers
3rd Sat. of the month. Country Grass
4th Sat. of the monthU.berty Mountaineers
BINGO
Wed. &amp; Thurs. 7:00-10:00 pm
Country Une Dance Lesson's
every Friday Night at 7:00 pm
With.Jamie &amp; Debbie Moore.
Eve one Welcome

Family Retml~ln
Sept. 7. 1997
10:00-3:00
0.0. Mcintyre Park
Killdeer 113 Sheher

I::J~~~~~~~l

TOPIC:
· Heart Health
For more information call
HOlzer Health Hotline

THE CANDLE
COMPANY
Invites you to its .
1ST ANNIVERSARY
CELEBRATION SALE
10-6 Tuesday-Friday
10-4 Saturday
Buy 1 candle reg. price get
2nd candle 50% off!
10·50% off
All craft and gift ~ems!!

Carport Sale- Misc. items and
clothing from Dorothy Roller
Estate plus 4 family sale.
366 So. 6th St. Middleport
Wed. Sept 3 8 am· 5 pm

Register to
WIN PRIZES!! .
1591 S.R. 160 Gallipolis
(614) 446-1603

Chester Fire Dept.
Chicken

AT. 7 PIZZA
EXPRESS

&amp; Rib

Barbecue
Monday, Sept. 1st
11:30 am
Parade at 1 :00 pm at the
grade school.
(To participate

·

call Bruce

992·9200
NEW FALL HOURS
Effective 8-27·97
Sun.-Thur. 4 p.m.- 10 p.m.
Fri. &amp; Sat. 4 p.m. - 11 pm

18" ONE

Myers at 985-3826)

$9.99

:the

··-~·

j

ITEM PIZZA

A Labor Day Songfest
will be held

4

p.m.

Milos OUt ns.

Addison Choir, God's

78 Freightliner
· 76 Mack
Owned by area
business
See Herb Smith

Ambassadors,

Smith's GMC

Monday, Sept.

1 at

Kyger Creek Shelter
House with singing by
New city Singers,

Johnson Family, .
Addison Quartet. The
Songfest is sponsored
by Adqison Freewill
• Baptist Church

SkalesvMie USA
Roller Hockey Sfgn-up is going on
NOW!
Reglsler Mon- Fri 11 :00 lo 5:00.
$25 registration lee.
Deadline is Sept. 5t~ to play in 1st
league game.
PH. 446-2925 for more lnlor111etion.
Skatesville USA looking for volunteer hockey coaches and refs.
BOOTS
All Lealher Western Boots
Reg . $149.00 •
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
Engineer ................ ........ $49.00
Wellington ...................... $49.00
Loggers ......................... $50·55
Hamess ....... .......... :....... $59.00
Carolina-Georgia - H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex
SWAIN FURNITURE

MEGA DEAL
Any Size Pizza with

6

items

Only

$8.99

·

lnlormailon IAPt&gt;llcallonl Call Be-

Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelr'
• M.T.S. Cain Shop, 151 Second
Aveooe, GaUipall&amp;, BH..,..46-2&amp;42.

Part time drivers to transport cars
10 &amp; lrom auctions, call614-;922806 bBIWBGn S.1 Opm.

Antiques, furniture, Ql&amp;ll. china,
coins. 1a~s. lamps. g!lnl, tools,
estalu; also appralaala, Oaby

· Garage salt, TUesday and Wod- Marlin. 614-9112-7441.

nesda.r. 45657 SR 124, Racine.
Good lturf, come 188. Flo and Pat MtiqU81, top prices·paid, River·
3 Family: Klda Cla1tles, Toya, Moote ~veway.
lne AntiQues. Pomeroy, Ohio,
Moore owner, 814·192•
Hou11wart Ml ac. FrI, Sape 5t h, Garage sale-- SQptember 2 until ,Run
52EI.
Sol Sop!. 8111. ()pons (&amp;A.M. 38111 all II sold, tO:OOan&gt; 5:0opm. 1.7 2
U.=lov;;.lt=PM...:;.
rrilet OU1 Hyllell Run Rd. Small liP' Clean La1e Modal ' Carl Or
~guat 2 gth, 30th, 3111. 8 TUI 1 ptlancaa, pana, dishes, bicycles; Trucks, Ht~O Uadala Or Newer,
truck 11rt11 and many more Smith Buick Pontiac, HIQO Eaat481 George a Creek Road, ChiJd.. ltema.
em Avao~ue. Gal!ipo~a.
- ..llnlors. Plus 1-----"----:---::-----:-::-:--:Large 10 tamUr· Wednesday J &amp; D's Auto Pant. Buylngaal3 Family Sale: Dawnlizlng: frtday and Thuraday, bel'llnd Masonic vage vehicles. Satllng parta. 3&lt;W·

FOR SALE

=---------

8130, Mondar 1111 lg To 5), Sun- Lodge In Racine. Clothing, mi- 773-5033.

da)' 8131 (1 To 5). Adult Clothes, crowave, dog cage, hy~raulic
Household ltema, E1erci11 pumps. hydraulic lifts, babV IIams.
Equip., Bookl, And Much More. TV. toy&amp;, unltorml, Waoner pol,
computer monliar,
11434 SR 554, (2 112 Ui. E Of
Ptlrtlw).
c
. Loll of misc. Rain or

.FIISTnME EVEAII

lhlnl.

Non-Working Washer, Dryers,
Stoves, Refrigerators, Freezers,
Air Candillonere. Color T.V."&amp;,
VCR'I, Alao Junk Cars, 814-256·
1238.

5 FAMILY SALE ·
Saturday, August 30ft.

Large thrH famllr garage sale,
Friday &amp; Saturdar. 29·30, Mon-

Wanted: Small Turret Lat118, Or
Hand Sc:r•w ·uachlne, Con11ct:

hai.:Ja,,:;'W

446-2532

'·

Monday, Sop-tal

clay, Sepitmbo&lt; 1 Rain or 1hina. Dan Yoder, 373 Wolf Run Road,
2nds:\::!"'~~218
Formerly Jo'o Gilt Shop, Syro- Patri&gt;~ OH •5858.
c:uae, Ohio. Oak like new break(watch For Signa)
last aet, large r,re11ure cooker,
to-?
'sh
EMPLOYMENT
Baby Clothes, Other BattrUema. microwave, col ae table, di ea.
SERVICES
Women's Weight Set. Nordic llilwiYTIOWtr, Iota ol'lltlat·noll. IDYl.
Track Skier, Career Clothing, l·clr~e_un._;_•~~·~·---:-and----'joanL----:---~
Help wanted ·
l!4agazinea, Misc.
Monday, labor Dar· Antique a'nd 110

YARD SALE MONDAY

8:00-1:00
Old Coo Coo clocks, cheny roll
top desk, Step 2 pool, Jim Beam;
National Geographic, toys,
household, smalf boys clothes,
name brand clothes, much more.
1/2 mile down Rt. 7 below
Gallipoiis Rain Date- Tuesday

Garage Slit: Sept 1st Thru Sth.
1,2 Wes OUt Route21&amp;.'
Huge Famllr Yard Sale: lots Of
Children• Clolhea Slz11: 0-ax.
Shoal, To~s. Wamens, And Jr.'s
Clolhing, And Shoos; And A Var-

01 Other hems. Friday. SowrclaY. And MOnday, Al17142 S1111

Computer, Keyboard, mouse,
Ast. Advatage 486/Sx33/6 MG
RAM, 3.5 GB hard drive,
Windows 95, 14.4 modem,
data, fax, voice, 2 lntemets,
Microsoft, Netscape 3.0. MSOOS, Lotus, CO Rom, Word
Perfect (97) 6.0
614-245-5255

lei)'

rard sale, 39304 Bradburr Rd.,
l.lidc:Ueport Old bottles, adverlll·
ing, women's clothing and boy's
pius. rn.~ch nore, 8am-5prn
Raine,., garage sal&amp;, Sepl !llh,
5th. Tackerville Rd., Racine. drill

fO)ntor, May1 ah
yer, gu IBr, olgun.

preu, IP" !able
dr
lag ""'""'·

IIW,

Roul8 160, Vinton, Ohio, 5th Drl· furniture, antiquea. mac.
Yf!WtiY Past Vinton Cemerary, On
Righ1 Side.
30 Announcements

Hugh Yard Sale, Saturday Thru
~onday ~gu11

30·Se91omiJ!Ir 1.

Office Chlllra, File Cabinetl, Furniture, Curtalna, Good Quality
ClalheL Slltaville Pike 112 MUea
Nom -.Follow Signs.

HappY Ad
3 FAMILY YARD SALE
Sept. 2-3 Little likes Log
cabin, dining roo1ntable/cha1irs,JII
kids clothes. 9:00 ·?
Homewood Dr. off 160

BaJ~nlotla
BirtJau~

to

Curtis

'-"""" INC.

Jen•i.uon

.ST. RT. 7
CHESTER
Rough sawed lumber
Hardwood &amp; Pine
Truck Accessories Hydraulic
hoses &amp; botts
Much More.
Complete Carry-Out
Now Open

BINGO
'RUTLAND
POST 467
6:30P.M.
STAR BURST
$1500.00
$50.00 OR MORE
PER GAME

Sept. 3,1997

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

from
his tamil

Ad

You'd better
chanSe that lawn
·cbali' lor a rock•

614-985-3700 or

Hand tossed only

DOMINO'S
PIZZA

lngchalrnow

that you are so! ·

apJIIJ' Birthday

Pomeroy and Ripley only

George!

614-992-2124

·Aren't

Reception Honoring
Jeanie Howell
Deputy Grand Matron
·
District 24
14th. 2:00pm

fun'? I

Card of Thanks

*'rrOt·apssatyouqu1etly
sent a /ovelv ~ard.
a chmr
tn

rrcrfiaps you Sptt a funeral spray,
, I( so we saw ittliere.
rrer~~ps lyou s~tlie f/ie liindest worlis,
a.1 any fritnd could say;
rrerfiaps you Wert not tfiere af all,
rust r/iou_qfit of us tliat day, .
'WfillqiVtr rou ilitl to console our fieartl,
'W, tfiani 'ou so mucli wliatever rlie pa11.

446-2342 or 992-2156

,-

FOR MORE INFORMATION

,....

Countywide Racre•tlon Program
Of Indoor And Outdoor Aecrea-

tion Opportunities And Special
Events Fca All Agea. Responai·
ble For Prdgram facilities,
Budgets, seuing Objectives,
Community And Prag-am Leader·
lhip, Start Training And. Evalua·
tiona. ~ecurea Conttact Personnei, Patt-nme Program Staff. Ofi.
clals And Volunteers. Respansible For Marketing, Promotions
And Program Publicity. Bachelors
Degree Preferred. Knowledge Of
RIK:reallon Areas And Skills Rt·
qufr"ild. Candidate~ Ale To Submit
Resume And E~N~Iovment Appli·
cation To o.a·.'.,.M~Intyre Park·
District, Gallla County Court·
house, 18 locust Street, Room
1262, Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 1• 12e2

'!'fir family of J{oward 'Fellure

ttn"li/1&lt;11•, Jantt JlugW,. '!Jill 'FtUure, ann 'Fellurt

Part-Time 2 Goqd Uen To Help
Lease Land For Ga1 &amp; Oil Drill·
ing. Green &amp; Clay Townships
(Helplul If Familiar Wilh Areas).

614-446-3373 ~·t2•7.
PART-TIME TEACHING
POSITION

Voca11on11: Praccical Nursing
Instructor (Experienced B.S.N.)
For Academic And ":linic Teach·
1ng (Hour1y Posilon).
Contact: Galli a ·.Jackson •VlnlOn

JVSD AI 81··245-5334, E". 200
For Application lntormabon.

E.E.O.
Deadllno: 91&amp;97.

'

'

'I
'

01 ..... 1-CIOOO.

ANY 000 JOBS: Ellorlor pointIng, 1hrub1 &amp; weeds ulrnmed,
landicaping, tldewalkt .dged,
lawn care, n :. CaH Bil4 :MM-075--

7112.

Certifted child care, expeJienced,
caring and atfordable, apace

ovailalio, call Bt4-G49-2142.

Exper~ed carpenuy and remodeling. Inside and oucside,
deckt, vi~l tiding, add-on addi·
tiona, cab1net refacino or newly
rebuilt. Rtferencea-Fr11 Esti·
matet.. Jim SbJY ~7S.1272.

WV.

Exper'-nced Mothar with Previous Emptoyet: Referencea wll do
bobylialng in "" homo dor•

(61.)448-205ollolw ~

GDorg" Ponablt Sawmill, don't

houl yout logs ., tho mllljull call
311&lt;.1J7S-1G&gt;7.

Houtec1eaning Dr Baby·alltlng,
Experienced, Hive References;

614-70.

NaGd a bobysi1tor'l Ghra me • try.

rm loaned on 681 tn DIII'Win. Wit

babysit any shift. Reasonable
ratll and reference•. Call and
leave massage 11614-1888-2023.
Profeasional Tree

~ice.

Slump

Yanl)rke,lnc.

MEDICAL ASSISTANT

1-800-826-3751
Or 606-327·5U&amp;

Sc:oltown Ohio Area: Yard Work.
And General Maintenance Full,
Part-Time, Min. Wage, 304-6338804 Leave Meuage.
Skareaville USA Hiring For con·
cession And Floor Guard. Must
Be 18 or Older, Clean, Neat,
Great Public Rappar, Team Player, Pick Up Application At Rink
M F 11 00 ~10 5 oo M 1 H
:
:
ua ave
O.Vn Transportation•

Som410- 1o help -1-

In
wagt

~uses

Pt p 1 ~;"1001 Mi~~~~;.,""
304-.4S&amp;-1o4z.'

·

Truck Driver Needed, Clasa ALI-

The Pillsbury Company has an
immediate opening in Cost Accounting
at its manufacturing plant in Wellston,
Ohio.
The person in this pos~ion will be
responsible for maintaining cos! systems, compile, summarize, and review cos1 data,
reporting, forecasting, an~ .special projects. An
Associate's" Degree at minimum is required, but a
Bachelor's Degree.is preferred. Lotus 1-2-3 as well es
two years of accounting experience is preferred.
Candidates mealing the above qualifications may
send their resumes to:
The Pillsbury Company
Human Resources Department
2403 S. Pennsylvania Avenue
Wellston, OH 45692
Attn: Cost Acct.
EEO!AA Employer

In

Ohio Universily is currently accepting applications
for 'the position of permanent part-time Medical
Aaslalant lor the University Osteopathic Medical
Center, Clinical Services.
JOB DUTIES: Assists physicians In patient care
tasks at the University Osteopathic Medical Center.
These tasks include; assisting wrth physical exams,
tests and minor surgeries; administering medications
within scope of practice: removing sutures: changing
dressings; observing, reporting, and charting intorma.tion; communicating to patienls and others; handling
prescription orders, refills, and requests. Performs
other related duties as assigned.
·
·
QuallllcaUons: High School diploma or equivalent
requires, Associate degree in Medical Assisting preferret!. Knowledge of medical office procedures and
clinical techniques required . Medical Assisting
CertiticatiO!l required . Education in pharmacology preferred. One to two years relaled experience required.
Excellent inlerpersenal skills required.· Starting Sala.y
is $10.79 hourly. Hours of work are to be arranged
Monday through Friday.
APPLICATION DEADUNE: Sep16fllber 5, 1997
All individuals Interested In !his posili.on ll!§
required to complete an . application available at
University Human Resources. 44 Universily Terrace,
McKee House, Athens, Ohio 45701. Applications may
be obtained between the hours of 7:30 a.m. and 4:00
p.m. Monday through Friday. II you have any questions about this position, please feel free to Call 614593-0312:
OHIO UNIVEASilY
Ohio University Ia an Equal
Opportunlty/Afflnmatlve Action Employer

THE LAST

GOOD-BYE

We want what you want.

I saw the smiles
upon her face
And the way she
moved with a gentle
grace.
Now I see the tears
AVON I ·A11 Areas I Shirley
in her eyes
Spoors. 304-67S.1.211.
As she looks at me
Accepting Applicallans For Panwith a last good·bye.
Time Faculty M&amp;mberl To Tea~h
Mathematic• And Computer SciThe stars in my sky
ence ceases. Day And Evening
grew
very dim
Cl111 Time Available. Please
Submit Reaume B1 September
For as I knew she
t&gt;th To Phyllis Mason, PHR. DIwouldn't
be back
rector Of Human Resources. Unl·
veralty .-Qf Rio ()rande, P.O. Box
again.
F27, Rio Grande, OH 451174.
The life was taken
Ellperienced Hair Stylist NGeded
right out of me
For Buoy Now Salon, 614-441'For I knew nothing, I
tSSO, 614-256-6336.
'
couldn't
see.
Experlerlc&amp;d, 10ependable Phle·
batomt&amp;l, Early Weekda~ MornMy sunshine was
ings, Compan)' Car, Reaume To: ·
taken
out of my soul.
P.O. Bo• 33. Gallipolis. OH 45831.
I could feel myself
Card of Thanks
growing old.
My rainbow faded to ·
'Perhaps you SQnf a
a gray.
I felt my life ju&gt;t sliplowly card. or sat quiping away.
etly In a chair.
She was my mother
'Perhaps you SQnf a
I loved so dear.
floral piece. if so tlX1
I was her best
friend,
so close and
saro 11/bere.
near.
'Perhaps you spoke
Memories will
lbe kindest tDOrds. as
always stay,
any friend cau_ld say:
Locked in my heart,
never to stray.
'Perhaps you tlX1re no/
My lite is complet~.
!here a! all. jus/
except one thing ,
lbougbl of us lbal day.
That is my mother to
'7ilbaieoer you did fo
mend my broken
console our bearls.
wing.
The tears swelled
'7ile !bank you so
up
in my big, blue
much robaleoer !he _
eyes
pari.
For as I knew, that
Sincerely from the
was the last good-bye.
family of
Sobbl Jo Roush
DaleW.

~.

De~re

h

Hill

ChrY§ler and Plymouth

We want what you want. You want a new car or minivan and we want .LO .l'cll yrm one. ll's thaJ .Jimplc.
That's why at your local Chry,/er and Plymouth dealer'.&lt;clearance theri' ar&lt;' all the.re way' to save.

$1,000 ~
Plymouth Ncoh Exprcsso
·0r1 new '97 stock. Encts 10J6J97.

$1,500-------cash back* ·
·

Chry~er Concorde LXi
•on new '97 stock. Ends 10161'97.

~g$2,330 ~
in total values
'

with air, 7-passenger seating and
more-all at no extra charge~

Cheshire, Ohio
In Memory

,

P)ymouth Grand Voyager

"$1 ,330 in Grand IJo)'ag8f 28€ or 2BN pkg. values and $1,0CXJ cash back oo rtew '97 stock. Ends 1ClJ&amp;'97. Umited suwtf.

In Memory of our Mother
on her birthday

Florence C.

•

. cash back*

ll'lc!Ul~niell

G

8-30·1906 to 11-2-1995
We miss you.
You are always in our
hearts and on our minds.

~ee your local Chrysler and Plymouth Dealer.

Betty Kemper, Vivien1nel
Trowbridge, S&lt;lr&gt;nvChelndler.l
Elizabeth

.

'

UnsuperviiOCI And Tho

1111all os. Antiquo's, El&lt;. Also Appraisal- GOI"TPOSTALJOBS _
DEADLINE: SEPTEMBER 12, tense With Tanker Endoraemanl
oloclrical appllanceo. gam.epm
Awi0iliel614-379-2720.
Now Hiring In Ohio Other Area's I ;::::::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;;;JLSo::mo::E:xpen::::
·"":'::•::·5:14-:2::4::S.::95::5::7·:;
10yl,

10 Family Yard Solo: 750 Sooond and Tuesday, Se9tombor 1-2, Ul&gt;-· ver And Gold Coins, Proolsots,
Av.-.ue, Monday Sept 111. Child- bv Fisher's. Racine, Johns Rd. off Diamonds, Amique Jewelry, Gotd

"Ladies"

·Bon••

tOHIO Oomlcllo)
HOM~ EVERY 7 ·10 DAYS
REGIONAL OPPORlUNIOES

Handicapped Person, In Uy

-~7S.5847
Removal, Free E11imate11 In·
To
COORDINATOR
Be A leader, Then Call For, A Now accepting applications far turanc:e, Bidwell, Ohio. 614·388-'
seeking Candidate With Excellent Coi'tfidendat Interview. four Year Fall enrollment. Magic Years 9641!, 614-:167-7010,
.Planning And Communication Marketing Or Buaineaa Degree DayCare br parents wtu care.
Llterlsod by lho Slate of WV.
Skills. Plans And Coordinates A Ptelet'red, But Not Required.

RE!:REATION PROGRAM

. KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Bar

La~n.

304·875-0860 llt. 124 Uon-Frl
8:008m-4:00pm. Deadline tor apAVAILABLE
plying Ia September 5, 1QQ7. La·
Due To Our Growth, We Are kin ia an EEO employer.
U&gt;oklng For
Minded Sal01
RepteMnlatiYes, To Suppor1 Thl WANTED : Part/lime LPN'I lor
Nation's 11 Rated Ollie• Ma- 136 bed inUH"mtdiall car&amp; facili·
thlnaa, tocallr. If You Have two. Salary com men au rat&amp; with
Salta Experience And Want A experience. Contact Sandra ReitProlouloooi
Wrlh:
mire, RN, DON, Lakin Hotpltal,
lakin, WV. 30-'·875-0860 ext.
oGood lr&lt;ome
124 Mon-Fri 8:00am--4:00pm.
•Expan181
Deadline for applying ia Sep18m·
•Bonolill
ber 5, 1997. lakin is an EEO em•Five Day WOrll WOOl&lt;
ployer.
Proleulonal
Telemarketera
•Advancement
Needed For Pollee &amp; Fire Pro150
Schools
grams Ralaed Funds For Child•ln-Oap1h Training
Instruction
rena Programs, Call 812·443· And YQu Have Good Work Hab·
8405.
ita, Communication Skills, Basic
M,agic Years DayCare--Preschool
Managemenl Skills. Work Week

SALES POSITIONS

comiCs

Umits Sports

DON, Lakin Hoopllal,

Acoounll,lt~II!O.

GalllpoiiS
&amp; VlclnHy

City

Certified nuralng ualatanta for
131 bed intermediate facility.
Contact Sandra Reltmire, RN,

I

24 Hour Cart, For Eldtrly Of

'•

'

�\

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

Sunday, August 31, 1997
REAL f:STATE
I 112 StofJ Ba_. EJn lMgo

-.au

Wa10r Hauling Sorvlcoo, ~~~--~~-:-­ Lot. 1 Balh, Gaa F~rnac., Point
•whore Purity Ia Our Ponton• 310 Homes for Sale
Pleasanr, 114·441-1821, 304Glvt Uo A Coli Todoy: ~75175-5127.
: 3711.
4 Badroom Split .._ Willi 5400
HAYES REAL ESTATE
*-'• Child e.. In .., Hon-e,
SQ. Ft Including FuR Ba11mtnl
24 H..,r Sonrlco, AI Ago. 114114-112-2401
With 2 Car Gorago, Gu Hll\ 2
441.(11$4.
llllto From Gollpotlo On llulovllo
---~-.,.-----1 'lllpporo Plolno Baoutllul 2 BR Plloa, On 1 112 Aao Flal LAt. Cilll
Will Do Babyolnllll In lly Homo homo localld on 1 """' "" will\ Schoolo, t115,000 Or - Offor,
a.- School Diolric:~ H- Rof. pond. IMIIO lR wnp. iotD1 FR 'Ill IU
Ul ~!90.
C&amp;lll~741 .
1p, bof1, kltr:Mn, otll&lt;hocl ~":'""~~-~-~~~ odcllioMI bul~ Batt of ol Froo
FCII SALE BY CWNEII:
Will hlul Junk Of trull- 1361 Gut Prlct rtctnUr roducod 10 111 Vinton COUt~ In Golllpollo. 1
pldwp lood. 304-a7S-!5035.
$15.000.
Floor Plan, 3 Bedroomt, 1 Car
lot 60lDQ, Call14-3711Will Haul Pick-Up loodo, Trot Po-: 1400 oquut bot homo Garago,
2720 For Appolnl""lll OniJ Af·
Trimming. 1 Removal, Interior I on 114 ..,._ 3 BR. I.R. DR. K•tch- II&lt;
I P.M.
!J1erkn, Palming, Landscaping,
. ' Profelllonal Upholstery &amp; en, ba•rMnt. city utilltleL Gaa
• 0ropo1y Cloonlng, cor Dllaiing "&amp; FA hoot, lnoutatod. Aoklng GOV'T FORECLOSED Homoo
From Pennlea On 11 DelinQuent
· Houaeclaanlng, lawncare And $25.000 MaMusanoftlr.
• Various Other Performances Not Cozy Gale cottage on Rt 33 2 BA. Tax, Repo'a, REO'a. Your ArH.
• llonllo!itd, Rlferencn AYallllllt, both, kitchen, LR, 8 acroa 11111 Toll Free (1) 150D·2111-DOOD Exl
•• 114 448 eeoz.
Newlr lnautawct. Septic ayatem H-2114 Fer Curllft Uollntio.
Alklng t48,000. Sklnnor Rd. off· Home For Sale (Former Waretrt oaun~1 living 'lll3ll oCtH mil hime) Baaul1ful, Ill Tho Tjpo Of
FINANC IAL
and FriO GOL Homo hu 4 BR. 1 Homo You Will LOYO. llull Sell
112 belho, LR. il&lt;ga udlily room, AI I Can Net Do Julllce To C111·
210

Business
OpportunHy
- AAA GREETIIG CAR08Patontlll $4SK ·S110K FT No

mudroom, encloHd porch with

........ -only uklnil tD1,500.

Alcina: Price juat reduced
$5.0001 Btturlful oldlt·IIPI homo

-Mih .. woodwork and greet manS.i~~ Act:ount:s Provided Serv· tala on !ropltceo. 5 BR. 3 bellll.
ICe local Slorea S8.fil50 lnvest- LA, OR, basement, additional
manr Secured &amp; Q~o~ickly At- building, 3 actH mol Now uklng
• tumerf.
llriy $54,0001

INOTlCEf
, OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO.
~

•
•
:

330

recommends ~hat you do bull·
n111 with people you know, and
NOT to 11nd money thrau~h the
mall until you haw. lnvtatigated
1M oll&amp;ring.

ing For It Oil• To Driving Into A
Large Street Pot Hole Approxlmalely 1 t• Deep, OYer 8 Ft.
W1de It Waa Said lt.c.Waa The
Hardest R111n 01 The History Of

Galhpolls, Wllhod Out Tho Solid,
Apparently Fit Ash II Wu Soli I
Flufly Tho Day Before The Witor

1171 Vlctorloll' 14X70 llobllt lUI Cloylan 14170, Sbr, lbo, fftt air, lrtt oklrl, 14170 3 bodhoot pump, ' ' 10 front porch, room, t 1,0561down, tt tetmo
2 s.,ry, 1 room houoo on doublt
oood und., t12,too. :J04-175- Colt-IOHIIt-tm.
3000...,w.
~~ In 8tllomtodo. Full alzt
1tl2 14J70 Wlndoon 2 Bod·
..._
fullj CltpOIId, yj.
Ffll ail, hot lllitL 1"150 S 01 4
rooms, 2 Futl P•thl 112 Acre. ID413 Sprvce Aldgo 1h70 mallllo "'ilidng. 304-a75-1534.
t1 ,35QicloWn, $28Dimo.
13D2 Ntlthborhood Road, home, txctl'-nl condition, nu· C111-eoo-e11.am.
IbM ti,5GO.OO. col: (114)-311MI7

3 Btdroom Brick Ranch, 1 112
Bath•. Heat Pump, 2 Car Attochld Garage, 14124 Storage

Building, Front I Rur Po&lt;choa,
loll 01 Nlct Trooa, On 2 112
AcrK, I lllloo Souill Of Golipolo
On Route 7, Upp"' $90'1, 114·
25H282.

: Businau Space For Rant 1000 LR, DR, kitchen, bath, ouachld ROjocl
Sq. F&lt; For Offica Or St0&lt;o, St. Rt. garage plua detlcl\td garage 45511.
, 33, Haw Havon, W. V/4., 614-411111- and oddiUonol bu~dlno. Cloot to
, 21113.
school, PO and rtttaurant. Alk·
· Commercial Building For Solo Or IIIII $48,000. 3&lt;d homo lo locotod
tot n oflstl 3 BR. I.R.
: Laaae, ~000 Sq. Ft, St. At 33, on a ....
kllchen, bath, basement
.. New Haven, WVA. 81 4-8518· 111-ln
Now only aaklng $31,800· but
• 2813.
awner Ill)'I "'Make an offlrr
"' Convenlenc:e Store For Le..t,
: lncludn All EQUipment. St Rt. 33, Aullond: Lllhlr Road· g2 ocrto
•. New Hawen W.VA., 814-6518- hay ground, corn around, woada
(good hunting) piiiUro. nlca born.
: 21113.
On good road . A1king only

FD&lt; Appoi11tmonl 614-446-

•'

Professional

serviCes

,.,...,...-,.......,....---1

ctllent hunting, some timber.

$128,1100 304-532-tOOO.

Rornodolod Houot Thltd Str111,
Choohlro, Rlldl To IIOYt In Fot
&amp;2D,OOO, 114-317-7114.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1 TillE ONLYI
B-1.-0-W.O.U-TI
$498 Down an Mltct linglelion. tD98 Down on 111oc1 mlill·
-

2-3., 4 8odroam modoiiiiYIItable.OoloMiod- .

N1... WV. 304-155-58115.

S-L Pomeroy, Ohio.

Jacll W. Carlly, RlaltDr.

Public Auction
Every Friday 6:30 p.m.
8580 St. Rt. 588 (Old Rl. 35) Gallipolis, OH
2 miles south of Bob Evans Farms, Rio Grande

"Look For Big Red Barn"
Auctioneer: Leslie Lemley

Bedrooms, bath, eat-tn krt,

hdw floors, garage, located
on 2 Iota It won't last call
now!

Home Phone It 614-388-9443
Auction Barn It 614-245·9866
Household items, tools, glassware, an1iques,
collectibles, misc. items.
Every week something dtfferentl Call for infol

2wt Frjday li snu:
Antique A Collectible Sale!
Food

No Smok1ng

Public Auction
1tl88 R· VotJrmry
bestl Thta 3
bath
home sits on 2 acres mA
with pond and shelter
house Completely
remodeled 1n 1992.

1Dt8 R- So much for so
little- Th1s 3 bdrm home Sits
on 5 85 acres m/1 All
appliances slay Also has a
40 x 40 Q!l'age

JAN GETTLES- "BROKER"
CALL:
STEPHANIE THOMAS KING • 992·4047
CALL COLLECT
Cindy Music614/286·1370
614/286-5952
CALL 286·1370 COLLECT
Jan's Res. 614/286·1933

---

G)

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
m 1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 (i
RUSSEll DWOOD, BROKER

~18
Mlltba Sm1L .............. .319-2651
JllliyDell'ln ......... 441-100 !llerylltrtlj .. .. .
.. 742-1171
J Memll em ............J19-2181 Dana Ada .................. ,....J19-92111
Tmt~ De Wilt.. ••••_........ 145-0022 KtnW Amslilty .... ... •......145-5855

WANT TO BUY A HOME? SHORT ON SOME
$$? THEN CONSIDER LETTING ONE OF
THESE OWNERS
YOUII

Ammo

GUNS

1 Remington 700 50 cal.
Muzzleloader
1 Thompson Renegade
1 Charles Da11y 50 cal
2 SLR 96 7 62x39
1 German 16 ga side by
side
1 HR 45/70
1 Remington Varmit
7mm/08
1 Kimber 243
1 Perazi TMJ

Browning

Remlnatpn

1 BT 99 lrop LEO
1 A 500-G 12 go
1 A 5 Ltght 20
1 A Bolt .22

1 670 LW 20 ga
1 870 W1ngmaster 41 0
ga
1 870 Express 28 ga
1 870 Express combo
20 ga
1 870 Automaster 12 ga
6 870 W1ngmaster t 2 ga
1 model 70 30/06
1110020ga
1 700 ADL 22·250
1 03·A3 Custom
1 7400 30·06 3x9
1 700 7mm.Bdl
1 90 Trap

Barttta
130312ga
1 303 20 ga
1Al212ga

MJaQ.
1 !th1ca 37 w/scope
1 lth1ca 37 Deer
1 !th1ca 51
1 Rosst M92 45LC
1 Savage M Ill 300
wtmag
1 SKB 790012 ga
6 Mossberg 500
1 Breda Brescia 12 ga
1 Pla1n F1eld 30 cal M1
2SKS
1 Mauser 1916 308
1 Hawk HP9 12 ga
1 Elgtn 12 ga double
1 M91-30 Naugant
1 ROSSI 44 mag

TIDY &amp; NEAT RANCH
HOME that offers a
country atmosphere within just a short distance of
townl city schools. 3 bedrooms 2 lull baths, formal
dining area, family room, approx 2.95 acres with
barn &amp; building. Could buy addttlonal land n would
chose sol imedlate possesslonl Allordable $40's
1916

Accessories

Date: Sat. Sept. 6th at 10:00 a.m.
Location: Take U.S. 35 3 m1les west of
Jackson, Ohto. Turn right at C.R. 84 Exit.
Signs posted (Boot v u n Club).
Winchester&amp;
3 model 12 traps
2 model 12 ftelds
1 model t 2 16 ga
1 model 97
2 model 120
1 model A 3-03 w/scope
1 model 70 30/06
1 pre 64 30/30
1 model25
1 model 23 ptgeon 20 ga
1 model 42 410 ga

3btdtoom, 21Ntlhl, a-. rtlrlt· - .. coll14-882·l'IIIO.
11asor, lklrllne, porchea, good

- · 112,500. 3D4-t75-315/i or
304-175-4211.

t8a3, Centurr Bravo 14170, 3

8tdroom. 2 Ful Bath. Conrll Air,

Full~ Furnllhtd, Ntw

Furnltutl,

111111 Sol (114)24W3111

muat ..U, no rtuarwble o,.., r• - - - - - - - - -

luood. 304-7til;.71g1,

fliWJ:

.

1 77 22 mag 4x
1 10/22 4x
1 77 MKll 306 2x7
Redfield
1 77 7mm 3x9 Leupold
1 m1n1 14 223

.asw

16ft SeaNymph w/70 hp
Johnson, Trailer and lots
of extras.
PLUS MOREl
Terms: Cash or local check; no out of state
Personal checks and certif1ed checks are O.K
Not responsible for accidents

Preston Mustard Auctioneer
(614) 286-5868
Jackson, Ohio
Licensed and Bonded State of Ohio

Now 1897 14170 IIYII bod""""'
lncludoo I monlhl FREE lot ,..._
Only 1111 .11 por month wuh
11050 down. Call 1·800-jl37·

HouH In Rudand, ret.rence

N• 21xl0 3 or 4 bedroom .
Ui, 8Dii, Frtt dollvoty. 1-100·

-

lngo, -lulling, ..... .... _

New aant Rep•'•l Only 3 left.
Acoopt HUD. 304· ownor financing ovailoblt. 304756-7111.
;;LI;;;rg.;l;;;l.;oi.;,.OC_b_o_n_o~fu-.-od-:-:-ho-m4-.z= I Oakwood 28158 3 bedroom, 2

1tt, 3 bedroom, 2 batha, very

houaa, us.ooa. call 114-Dg2. By Tho Wook, 114-441-2515.
Smolllbt houll, wo Lowlo S&lt;,
350 L~ts &amp; Acreage
S250ima. • stootdopooit 114·
1 112 ACto lot Few Sole COra IIIII ::448-::...:I::U:::..O.--::---~=
Rlocf (114)2~11
Two Bod&lt;oom, Upper rL 7, S350
MOI"'th,
Oepallt Required
122.14g Acroo In llorgon Town- (6l 4)245-!i024, (1..)245-5151
ahlp Along PIYtd County Road
(Rowlao•lllo). Sub-Divided a, 420 Mobile Homes
Survey Into Tlvo4 T&lt;acll (37.8Gt,
4t.5e3, And 43.195 Acres). Extor Rent

nice. t4!101mo.
582-5140.

3

bedroom~.

Stalling al S:WQS

Oulck dollvo&lt;r Call 1·800-837·

bath, llartlng at I10CI per mo.
~CII.;....I.;-fiOO.ID.;.....;....HI.;,.m_.~=~­

=3Zl8=.------~-l Own 1 now homo SI,OOOidown,

no parmenta atwr 7 ,.eara 30o4·
756-~.

Public Sale &amp; Auction

Building Sl1e1 And HuntIng. Prlcet 1500 /Acre W1ll Con·
lider Land Contract 814 ~ ·448·

10:00 a.m.
This IS the personal property of the late Freeman
Williams.
To be held at the Meigs ~- Fairground, Pomeroy,
0. on St. At. 7

"Toola"
Craftsman 12' band saw, Chicago Dnll Press,
Jepson 15' Planner, B &amp; D Router &amp; table, 6' vice, oil
set grinder, Makita power m~er saw, hand 8aws,
cement toolS, metal &amp; wood block planes, c-ctamps,
misc. electrical tools, pipe vice, be~ sender, saw
blades, drill bits, tool boxes, cabinet clamps, pipe
wrenches, levels, misc. nails, bolts &amp; etc., log chains,
cant hook, misc. motors, handles, misc. tools, wort&lt;
table &amp; more.
"Equipment"
F.F. 200 Dozer Diesel, 6 way blade w/roll bar,
MTD 5 H.P. bller, 524 Gravely w/rnower &amp; brush cutter, cement mixer.
"Misc."
Meat grinder &amp; table, lumber (walnut, cherry, oak
&amp; poplar), unvenled nat. gas heater, yard stiCk collection, mise, pieces of wood, platform scales, stereo &amp;
speakers, 8 track tapes, fans, Coleman stove and Iota
of misc.
"Houeehold"
Gibson 20 cu. ft. chest freezer, k1ng size water
bed, porch glider, dog &amp; bell collection, potty chair &amp;
more
• Antique or Collactor'e lteme"
Marbles, McCoy vase, cabbage patch &amp; character glasses, Coca Cola glasses, carn1val cream &amp;
sugar w/tray, misc. Stiver items, misc. glass dishes,
draw knne, lanterns, white hull small pHcher.
Owner: Mildred Williams

57

OhiO 117366

Billy Goble - Auctioneer
Cash
Positive 10
Rofreshmen1s
"Not responsible for aCCidents or loss of property"

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1897 AT 10:00 A.M.
35857 LEADING CREEK RD., MIDDLEPORT, OH
DIRECTIONS: FROM GALLIPOLIS, TAKE ST RT. 7
N TO LEADING CREEK AD GO UNTIL YOU CQME TO
A CROSS RD
DRIVE WAY TO SALE SITE IS
STRAIGHT AHEAD. WATCH FOR SIGNS.
THIS IS A PARTIAL LISTING ONLY WE HAVE THE
, HOUSE PLUS SEVERAL OUT BUILDING TO UNBOX
BEFORE SALE TIME. THIS WILL BE AN ALL DAY SALE,
THEREFORE, WE WILL NOT HAVE A NIGHT SALE AT
THE AUCTION HOUSE THE DAY OF THIS SALE AND
OUR REGULAR ANTIQUE SALE WILL BE HELD ON
SEPTEMBER 13 AT ITS REGULAR TIME
OWNER: BETTY POYNTER IS SELUNG HER
PLACE IN CHARLESTON .AND IS MOVING BACK TO
HER HOME PLACE
LG COLLECTION OF RED RUBY GLASS, CRYSTAL GLASSES, BICENTEN!AL DECANTER BOTILES,
BRASS &amp; GLASS CANDLE HOLDERS, MISC SM.
APPLIANCES, BABY SWINGS, HIGH CHAIRS &amp;
STROLLERS, PORTA CRIB, HOUSE FULL OF FURNI·
TURE, NEW KITCHEN BASE &amp; WALL CABINETS, LG
ASSORTMENT OF COSTUME JEWELRY, WICKER
BASKETS, FISHING EQUIPMENT, UNENS, BOSTON
ROCKERS, HOOVER SWEEPER, IBM COMPUTER,
IRONING BOARD, LUGGAGE, MISC. HAND AND GARDEN TOOLS, CRAFTSMAN LEAFi MULCHER, PAtiO
FURNITURE, HAND POWER TOOLS, SHOE LAST,
HYD. JACKS, 24'X28' BUILDING WfTRUSSES, 2'X6'
FLOOR JOISTS &amp; T1-11 SIDING, TRESSLE TABLE.
CHERRY DUNCAN FIFE TABLE W/CHAIRS, PLUS
MUCHMORE.
GUNS: REMINGTON 11700 270 (NEW), STEVENS
t67E 12G, MOSSBERG 111 91 16G, WESTERNFIELD
16G, SAVAGE SPORTER 25-20 W/SCOPE, H&amp;R TOPPER JR 20G, AND WINCHESTER 11120 12G. WATCH·
ES: 100+ POCKET &amp; WRISTWATCHES (7-21 JEWELS
ELGIN, HAMILTON, GRUEN, WALTHAM AND
ILLONOlS) COINS: COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION SILVER
COIN 1883, ROLLS OF BICENTENIAL 1!2 DOLLARS,
PEACE DOLLARS, MORGAN DOLLARS, SILVER
QUARTERS, WALKING LIBERTY, BARBER &amp; KENNEDY
HALFS, FOREIGN COINS, MERCURY DIMES, RARE
1/2 DOLLARS, GOLD DOLLARS (1850, 1853, 1861)
GOLD 2/50 (1908), GOLD 5100 (1899) 1952 $2.00 (RED
LEITERS), 1859S $20 00 GOLD PC, LG COLLECTION
OF PROOF SETS AND UNCIRCULATED COINS, STER·
LING SILVER BARS JEWELRY: 25+ STERLING SIL·
VER RINGS, 14K WEDDING BANOS, 10 &amp; 14K DIAMOND CLUSTER RINGS, 14K ANNIVERSARY BAND
W/SAPP &amp; RUBIES, DIAMOND PENDANTS, RUSSIAN
HAND PAINTED PINS, 14KANTIQUE PIN W/DIAMOND,
15+ 10-18 KRINGS W/DPAJ..S &amp; DIAMONDS, PERIOOT
&amp; ONYX, 14K RELIGIOUS MEDALS &amp; CROSSES, 14K
GOLD STICK PIN W/SEED PEARLS AND 18K ANTIQUE
RING W/1/4·CT DIAMOND.
REFRESHMENTS, FOOD, AND A PORTA-POTTY
WILL BE AVAILABLE.

AUCTIONEER: FINIS "IKE" ISAAC
PHONE 614-388 9370 OR 388 8880
UCENSED AND BONDED OHIO 13728
TERMS: CASH OR APPROVED CHECK
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR LOST
ITEMS
STATEMENTS MADE DAY OF SALE HAS
PRECEDENCE OVER PRINTED MATERIALS

~crtt

on Mllltlone Ret. 304-

5711-29118.

J31"W o31'H. 11/onity I oink, 1·
toilet wlv.tves 1

Hit

Apartment For Rent On Firat Gooclcond.30ot-e7"5-5711.
Averue, 814-44-822.1 .

cover.

12 ·14 Etvlt Stamps For Sale,

Ball Offo&lt;, 114-31&amp;-8810

10&amp;4 Nlsu.n 41.&amp; Wrecked Good
For Parts 1300: Baseball Carda
14.00, 15" Speaker• And Amp

S125, 8t4-2,S.SSIG

$8.000 finn C~t 304-578-28511

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Uood Furni!Uro StOro, 130 Bull·
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON villa Pika, Good UMd Bado, llo&gt;
ESTATES. 52 Woorwoad Drlv• ~ouea, Dllkl. TVa, Dnk ITitllo
Lltrj&gt;o, OlnonH, Rocl&lt;lng Chllro,
~om $260 to $334. Walk to ohop
Couchn, Hlde·A-Bada, Collec::ta·
&amp; mov1es Call 1514·448· 25158
bloo, Etc. Stop By And Checll Our
Equal Houq OpporiUnllj.

Apph.nCII for Sill, All Good
Condition: Dlsh wsh&amp;r, Double
Oven. Range Top, Range Hood,
Water TreatmenL Filters, Light
F11tures, 814--44e-2867 After 7

ID-4.
kitchen, "'lh, lR No poll $3001
520
mo $300 depo•L 30H75-578e.

Are you buvlng new rurn lture1
SeU your used furniture to the Pomeroy Thnh Shop There 11 a real
need for breaklaat and din ing
room seta We alae buy baby
Items, good used toys. Must be m
tJtcellont conchUon Good enough
lor Ctwutmaa g1ft1 Call 614-9923725 Tuesday thru Fr1day, 1Qam4pm at 220 Eaot lotaln Stroo~ Pallllll'oy

Price•, 814·ut-4782, N-F Hra.

Convement to PVH, 2bedroom,

2 Bedroom, Warer and Tr.. h,
Furn1shtd, Georges Creek Road,

Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Clnemax, Showitrne &amp;. Dl1newo.
Weekly Ratat, Or Monthly Ralel,
Conatructlon Workers Welcome

2 Bedrooma, Unlurnlahed, Air
Candltloned, No Pets, OepQ.IIt,
Relerenc:ea, Foster'a Uoblle

Sleeptng room• with cooking .
Also trader apace on river. All
hook-ups. Call aftet 2.00 p.m.,
3C)4-773-5651, Mason WV.

Sponlng
Goods

Smuh &amp; Wes1on Revolver, 357

Mag. S4CO OBO, S14-446-o218,
Q14-448..787, Any&gt;mt.

530

Antiques

P.ll.

IWW' or sell. Rn1erine Ant1qucn, Boots By Redwlng, Chippewa,
~2_. E. t.la1n Street on Rt 124. Rocky, Tony Lama Guaranteed
Pomeroy. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m m 8 oo p m., Sunday 1:00 to

Lcweat Pr~tea At Shoe Cafe, Gal·
Upolls.

6 oo p m. 114-992-2521, Ruu L:'=':=====---Mooreowner

ahlp, &amp;2D.OOO, 81~7581.
Apple

Valli)'

Grove-Scenic:

Bttutihlt 21crt loll, public watar.

C. Bowen Jr. 304·578·2336 or
Wodgo Rool1y 304-175-2722.
BRII'-ER LAND
114-771-9173

Oalllo Co.: Golhpollo,

No~hbor

hood Rd ., Laat Twol 22 Acre•
12-t,OOO Or 10 Acres $ t 9,000
Frlonrfly Ridge, tD Acres $14,000
8.5 Acres $7,500 Or 19 Acres

$18,000. Toono Run Rd (2) 10
Acre Parcels, $10 000 +

Homo Pa&lt;l&lt;, 814-441-ot81.

- - - - ·-- - -

6t~-385-4367

Three bedroom mob•le home for
rent. no pets, 614-992·5858.

470 Wanted to Rent

440

Apartments

lol•ddiopo&lt;~

Call For Free Mapa + Owner Ft·
nanclng lnlo. Take 10% 011 Lilted

Pricoo On Caol1 PurchasesI
LANO

814-992-2178.

1 Bedroom Furnished, •sa Sec·
ond Avenue, S2351Mo , Depoa1~
References, Phone Between 5 -e
P.U 614-446-2581.

Com"'ISoon

tbr furnished apt., downatalra,
Qailll County Near Olk H1ll, 20 private,
for 1 person, $285.1
llln. From Galllpoll~ SAcrot And mo Gas1daal
&amp; water pa1d. Aelerane
tip, Country Buildmg Lots, Call as &amp; rlepo~k
30H75-2651.

E.L. "Red" Miller
Auctioneer

,... ••IIOQ.213-a:J85.

Ohio Uc. No. • 622 W.Va 814
Mrs. Ruth Wilt Admlnlelnltor
Not responalble lor accidents

Pre-Owned Washers &amp; Otyeta
90 Days Fu" Watranf)'

F&lt;ench C11j May111g

1704 Eastern Avenue
Galhpohs

Phone' 814-441·77115.
Color T.V. Wa1her, Dryer, Referl·
gerator, f,eeZ&amp;f, Air Comp,esaor,
6 14-256-1238.

Woqd Realty, IQ.c
446-1066

kf\9W Call 814 Q.fQ.

32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

HI00-537-D528.

REALTORS:
Allen C Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446-0971
Jeanette Moore, Realtor- 256-1745
Tim Watson, Realtor-256-6102
Patnc1a Ross, Realtor

Pool table Syta old, honeycomb
top, &amp;xc cond. $500 OBO 304-

576-2019

Queen S1ze Wate rbed Eicellent
Condmon, Satellite, Cheap! 614 441H1709

..

1142 NEW LISTINGI Olde&lt; 2 1201 o • 70 acres m/1 of
story home located 1n Por1er vacant land woOded mineral
nght5
•
1143 NEW USTINOI 57 acre 12008 • Lot approx 100 K BO
farm w~ 5 Story home Call to located 1n Plantz Sub
12001 • t 0 acres m/1 w1th
• approx 9 acres wooded,
,m1nerat r1ghts , utU

.,

SUMMER SALE: Central Ah

Cond1tlonttr1: Full 5 Year Warranty

·u You Don't Call Us We Both

Loa1• Free Eatlmatesl Add-On
Heat Pumps Only
Call Ua Todawo.
Twenty Seventh
Healing &amp; Cooling

"'-' ··:--•nlo'

Stlghty Higher
HUn Is Thi
Year In The
Bu&amp;!n&amp;&amp;SI 614-

l·r--------•
4&lt;6-6301, 14100-2DHl096

LOG HOMES

Comfort. convcmcncc,

"SUPER SIZE HOME" · Thai
on!y two years old w/ a
grow1ng family In mind Four
br s 2 1/2 baths, real mce
k1tchen large wrap around
porch 2 car anached garage,
back ponlon of yard is fenced

11!i

EXCEPTIONAL BUYI

Log

~~~~1138

leader in the lug tum&gt;c 1
mclustr y Cur over 15
t-s . Clwo~c from uvea
~tlanrl1tttl muclcl!l nr

"

DON'T PASS UP THIS BUYI

Three bedroom Mob1le home,
enclosed porch, large out
,:~&lt;-&lt;••·•·"""~~""'" bu1ld1ng shade treel!i, 2 acres
m/1, lor $34,500.00. 14001
In-Ground Houa• Located
on SA 150 1140

wc, ll ctu;;lum ~lc~ngn nne
fm you
Ct~ll u1 wratc fua

mfonnalion

Appalachian

COMMERCIAL - 6 686 acres
w/a 22!5 ,; 70 Bam, located In
Patnot 15002

Log

COMMERCIAL INVESTMENT

Located on Jack!!ion Ptke
convement 1ocat1on w1th large
park1ng area Glve us a call lor
more deta1les 15000

,Structnres, Inc.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
t.OOD-499-3499
NOTICE

me

Apt•uiJH:Iuun

Household
Goods

Washera, dryers, refrigerator•.
ranges. Skaggs Apphancea, 76
Vme Straet, Call 614·446-7398,

ttll, Itt

:me

Structures ha11 hccn

MERCHANDISE
510

Buying aporta can:lst
I Will buy any Elites or new Ola·
l'l"'()ncl K1ngs. If rou have cardt to

efficiency,
1lurabihty r.!n d flcxlbihty
dcs•gn nr-~o. u few of the
rC .l .!IOJU
wily 2,000
fumiltcs \\ i!l lmi.IJ. II log
home this year!

Wanted To Rani: 2 Or 3 Bed·
Two bedroom mobile home In rooms, Close To Galllpolll, Call
MuXIIoport, c:ail814-992·5039
Chns614-478-43a1.

.. algi Co.: Near Rutland, Dan·
tor Rent
ville, Juat Opened N1ce Rolling
l(acta: 19 Acraa 117,000. 5 Acr- 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. tur,., $18,000, Or H Acres W1th rnhed and unfurniShed, aecunty
Drive And Pond $20,000. Dyes· depoe it required, no pets, e 14vjla, List Onol Cheaper Than Lot 982-2218
Rent- 5 acre• $7,500 - $1,000
Qown + $138. Mo, Yours In S t Bedroom apt-9U Viand St.
Yean. Between Tuppers Pla101 • $3501mo. UOIIUel paid 30&lt;-1175·
Cheater, Baal 6 Acres Bulld1ng 41l77 01304-tS&amp;-1728
Sltes On Keebaugh -Follrod Rd
1 bedroom furrvshed apartment 1n
$14,000 Ea.

Real Estate General

c u c r~y

Glenwood Ad 2 1/2 miles !rom 460 Space tor Rent
Aahlon Rd. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath,
14J70 mob1le home, city warer, Mobtla home alia available b&amp;t·
accept HUO. $450 plus depOIIL ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

304·5112 5&amp;10.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Concnttl &amp; PllllliC Sepuc Tanks,
35hp. '"Cia.ton'" stump grinder, 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
pull along, ucellent condition. EY&amp;nl Enterprlles, Jack10n, OH

$285/loto. Pluo Deposit And Relg 14. IIIL. Nlct Suiting Lo~ Pall oroncos (8")441-4318.
614-4418922. 814-441·5187.
In Chj, Part In Gallipolis Town- Beautllul RIYer Vklw In Kanauga,

Dept. GDT,

mii~!!~15~A!C~R=ES MOR L

_

Like new 1nside &amp; out. bUilt 6 years ago Immaculate clean
feel an atmosphere ot openness and complete tranquillity
vi8W the scente rolting countrys1de from the hYing room &amp;
room olthis 3 bedrooms ranch style home Share our enthusiasm
ancl see th1s 15 A of Woodland PaslUre land, &amp; Homes1te for
yourself N1ce 24'x40' Garage &amp; Workshop, Pond. 20 x24' Storage
bldg There's more- Cell Now 1763

P.O. Box 614
Ripley, WV 25271

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TR~
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER ......,..
1-800-894·1 066

l-800-458-9990

PHONE 446·9539
WILUS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 446-9539

Small electnc dryer, axe cond.

WASON COUNTY-20 Acres 112
milo oil Rr. 2, behmd old Sunn1

$40 304-8112 2487.

11de School @ Apple Grove Excellent hunting or homesite With
lets or pr~vacy for youf weekend
hld·a· way or permanent home

,

William Moodlspaugh - ApprentiCe

698-2113

472D.

Directions· Tum off AI 7 onto At 681 at the caution
light 1n front of the Dairy Queen. Then tum right onto
Main Street by the Tuppers Plain F1re Dept. Watch for
signs. We will sell at Public Auctlonlhe estate of Mr &amp;
Mrs. Marvin E. Walker (deceased) the following·
Houeehold- Gibson Double door ref. freezer, maple
dinette table wilh 4 chairs, Kenmore trash compactor,
matched pair Maytag auto washer &amp; electric dryer, L
shaped breakfast nook with padded seat, oblong table
&amp; chair, large maple china hutch, Montgomery Ward
wtndow atr condltioneer, (all electrtcal appliances In
excellent conditton), Ltv1ng room furniture, 2 piece
Lazy-Boy Ioveseet recliner, sola couch, TV, floor lamp,
'waterfall 3 pc bedroom su~ (bed-dresser-chest with
box sprtng &amp; mattress) (Veeneer rough)- 3 drawer
chest with mirrors, knee hole desk, walnut gun rae,
modern style hospital bed (complete) modern wheel
chatr, old dresser, iron bed frame, other household not
listed, shop tools, lawn &amp; garden tools, picnic table,
oak porch sw1ng with frame, homemade bench
grinder, old wood boxes (by Dupont), 10 gal milk can,
2 shovel horse drawn cultiVator, garden push plow,
tree pruner, old girls bicycle, canning jars, old od lamp
base, aluminum extenion ladder, wood step ladder,
concrete bird beth, old coke cooler, Iron kettle on 3 leg
stand, horse collar with hames &amp;a mirror 1nthe center
(This you must see), old sausege m1ll (by enterprtse),
tron skillets, hay hooks, plus many items from th1s
estate not listed.
Special notice- We Will sell a John Deere STX 38rldlng mower, 5 speed trans, 38 1n mower deck, 12.5
HP OHV engtne, electriC.
Start to sell at 11.00 am. Th1s w111 be a very clean
auction. No junk. Refreshments served by the Iad1es
from The Nazarene Church tn Reedsville, Oh Come
early for inspection- Posit1ve ID for bid numbers &amp;
checks Everyone Welcome
See you Saturday, Sept 6th

Dan Smith ·Auctioneer

.\patlmtnl For Rent /New Haven, 1~~--:--~-:---:-::::­
WVA. One Bedroom, Phone 114- Baltvoom fixb.lrea. 2-4ooft 2rO

Fountoln llato~ Pteaoo CaU Bat· COWI!I. EOH 304-87-711
ween 3&amp;81ot-F,11~241 .
1=:=:.:====--~-:-::-:­
Two bedroom apartment In Mld3 1/2 acres overlooking IIOCkid t•Jt70 three bedroom, 1300 per dleport. no peta, 814-QQ2·5658.
pond, GrHn Valley DriVe, Galli· rnonlt\ 614-742·2714.
Up1181to 2 Roomo Fu&lt;liohld, Ell·
poio, RlllriCtod, 81 H92 6440 or 2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homtt c:lency
Apartmenl, Utilitlaa Paid,
114-DDZ·71!SI.
$260·$300, •ewtf, water and Clean, No Pell. RlttrencH. 01'
pD1i1 Rlquwocf, B14--151D.
41 Ac:rM l.lore Or Less, South Of trulllnducted, 814-1192·2187.
Eureka, Great Hunting! W1th 2 blcfr~, lurN1111d, Clnlrli alr,
Furnished
. 4,000 llort Or ~eoo SQuare Foct oil otecrnc, largo yrurl, good doan 450
, . Shop. And Ua70 Uob1l1 Home ccnditlon, $240 pt&lt; month, 3D4Rooms
· Wllh Addlllonat lotobllt Homo 882·2411111)'11rnt.
Klnga Motel low8at Rate• In ,
Hoak·Up, 614-251H!086.

PUBLIC AUCTION

Reconditioned

77D5.

Twin R1VWI Towet, now accaptlng
applications lor 1br HUD aubsid·
t Trailer, 1 Apartment, At Slut lzed apl. for elderly and htndl-

c-'~nr

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

ond "-vtrwe, Ga!lipol!&amp;, et4..C46- gratora, eo Day Guaranr.. t
3144, Alto&lt; 7Plot
F&lt;tnc;h City llayllg, IU .. 41·

a

Nlct Furrilhod. For Conotrucdon
Work•• Or Short llfm Ren~fl,

....
wli&gt;

Household
Goods

510

Furriahed Efficiency Shale Bath, Applianc11.

Film houN • lppt'Oilimllttlt es dlpolll. no 001 of -.
..,., In u.igo County, Ohio. 15 cdl14-742-2161.
mhrtoo lovm Alhonl cw Pomoroy
onUS:SS,Sbochom,tblfl,llm- Nice 2bedroom, no ~ll Ref.,..
..... , rllj&gt;ollt 304-175-5112
lly "'""'· largo barn I out buld-

:1231.

Apllr1ments
for Rent

1185/Ma.. UDUIItt Paid, 1507 Stc Wolhoro, Drylfl, Rlngoo. Rllrl-

1173.

Saturday, Sept 6th Time: 10 am
Location: Tuppers Plains, Ohio

Public Auction

Ohio 1344 wva 515

bath, family room, c./1 &amp; hal.l
t51IO/mo. + dopooll. :104-175·

Gtonwood Rd. 3 112 miloo bom IDI-1777.
Aohlan Rd. 1 lett lind, clll wa-

IN'

Set. Sept 6, 1997

.: .,.. 304-4175-2145

2001 P· Want a country
setting with mature ptne
trees. large yard, yel close
to town. Then this 4
Bedroom home, 2 batha,
eat-tn fully equipped ktl, 2
car garage on 1 ac m/1. A
mustseel

,_CIA. gor-

balll. and much

-.WV

Offica locallrf at 382 E. Seccnd

has
been treated w/TLC 2

don IUb. ...,

colhodral

Hugo otllr, 2 beth haml, loolurino 1Dt7 fiMIWOOd. 14X52 2 BR.
all now I t t lllrough flropltco.
2 1/2 acres. 3br, 1 bath, baa• 11a1e of N an security IYitem. Lite- (114)-9112·5421
mom, 1.R. DR, lllehan, barn, paa- 12,4951-.. $341.54 pot month. 2 Acrea, Poner Area, 2 Bedalble llxer upper living uniL Onljtt
- . 1 Bath, Pardi, Shod, Haw
t&lt;D.IlOO 304-1532-tOOO.
12112 Building, Dock t15,000
cw.-odHFinn, 114 :lit Dl45
IIASON COUNTY.Jorry'a Run Rd.
117 acre, 3br, 2 bath.. double
2 BocftOOtR llobllt Homo 12.160
--711SIM
wide home, barn, tobacco allot·
ti.IOO, 114-441-1172, Or 114ment, oversize 2 car oar~~. e•· D o u - ro-po ...., liVed In, - • -

$72,000.

; Livlngaton'a baaement water·
• proof1ng, all buament repairs
.. done. tree 11tima1ea, Hfe11me
• guarantee. 10yrt on job experl·

• • Fotr..- e-. n. tu70.

lotASON COUNTY.Jorry'o Run Rd.

n..

: 230

merous ~tadtl Including:

'fAIILY DAEAII_.

Was Muddv &amp; No Reason To Believe Such A Large Hole E1d1ted

We Were Juat Moving Into The
Srracuee 3 homaa- each one Residence.
Nwer Got To Unpack
rfillaranll Brick homo locotad With Due To InJuries
Which Became
125' riYtrfroncagt on 1 112 acre• Progreu!valy Worse
(No Warm/1. 3 BR, 2 barh, LR, FR, OR,
ning Sign• Of Danger) We Are
~tchon, plllo.
Hcprng To Move To Arizona For
2nd home 11 located on ern The
Dry Warm Weather I lee&gt;M
Street, hal bean remodeled with
Tho BaauQfiA River And Sconory.
..,... and floorlll!l. c:tlli·
nata, 10me new wlndowa. 2 BR, Will Toko Ofloro With Right To

127.000. 114-441-0715.

410 Houses for Rent
440
FOf ......,..,.. .. buy. 3br, 2 112

Ferms for Sale

New llsttng
equ1pped k1tchen
dryer on ma•n floor
garage and one car carport Formal
din1ng room N1ce Ioyer area on 2nd
floor Th1s would be a wonderful r.d&lt;liti&lt;&gt;&lt;lal
hOme to fet1re In or to start your new rfamlly Close to downtown shopp1ng
and schools Grve us a call tor your
personal shOWing #404

304-532·6000

LARGE

fJidgewood Estates-SceniC t 112
acre, hilltop lot $17,500 304·
175-e648

ANTIQUE

Henry E. Cleland Jr .. 992-2259

a,evetal 2 acre lots, 5 m11es ou1

Sherri L. Hart.,.......... 742-2357

!jandhlll Rd. s• s.coooa. 30H7S. Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment.
B14-1480311l.
1941 before 9pm.
~ASH VILLAGE
RENTALS
APAIITUENTS

AUCTION

Kathleen M. Oeland 992-6191

~Laurliand

$ATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1997
10:00A.M.

'ito Houses for Renl
i

Located at the Auction Center on Rt. 33 In Meson,

Bedroom Housa U Grape
!tlfeet, GallipoliS, Basement,
Penced Private Yard, Absolutely

w. Va.

. Beautiful laoc~ rope twist top &amp; bottom oak
stdeboard, original flntsh 6 stack oak bookcase
w/hidden drawer, oak 54" roll top desk w/18 drawers,
fancy oak secretary beauttful top w~1ons heads must
see! Very unusual walnut stepback cupboard, 56"
double kitchen cab1net, new Trav1s Court Mahogany
curved glass corner cabmet, mahogany ch1nese Chip
&amp; Dale corner cabmet, fancy oak knock down
wardrobe, oak pump organ, walnut viet marble 1nsert
dresser, dresser &amp; matching werdroba, Hoos1er style
cabinet, 1930's 3 pc. walnut poster BR suite, mission
oak china cabtnet, early pnm111ve walnut poster bed
acorn tops, 4 stock bookcase, oak washstands, oak
dressers, Chip &amp; Dale claw &amp; ball feet sofa
w/ma(ching wing back chair, lg. claw &amp; ball feet lamp
table, brass bed, round oak table, bucket bench, ~ron
&amp; brass bed, mahogany tables, early walnut cradle, 6
V1ctonan walnut chairs, 4 press back cha~rs &amp;others,
early meal be~d tn old green pain, 60 drawer oak
card file, oak stacking card file &amp; cabinet comb., v1ct
table, early p1ne blanket chest dove tailed old pa1nt,
fancy Kimball phonograph, rope twist sq. oak table,
lg sptnntng wheel, 4 drawer mahogany sewng
cabinet w/lift up top, misston oak desk w/foldmg
racks, trunks, quarter solid oak economy rottary
shuttle tredle sew1ng mach1ne, oak tredle sew1ng
machme. fancy Morns chair w/ Ig claw &amp; ball feet,
oak press back rockers &amp; others, child's p1ano
Lodeon by J. Chain &amp; Co., early cast iron table
w/dragons &amp; claw feet, Mahogany Highboy w/m~rror,
8 ft oak showcase ong1nal ftn1sh &amp; others, new 9x t 2
oriental rugs &amp; more.
GLASSWARE
Fostona chintz pattern, Sherberts, cake plate, salad
plates, 3 way dtvtded relish tray, cups, saucers,
sandwtcli plates &amp; more, McCoy cookie jars, tepee,
globe, wicker basket w/pme cones on lid, owl, clown,
shoe, cow Jumped over the moon, cat on beh1ve,
great northern Dutch boy, V1rg1nta rose china, blue
Willow chtna, pope gasser (Aorence), Flo blue, ruby
pitcher &amp; tumblers, pressed glass, child's tea set
Japan, FTD Hetsey tumblers, Fostona cotn dot (red),
Fostona Amencan stem tumblers, low FTD tumblers.
FTD bowls, pear yard holder, whiSkey decanters.
Ezra Brooks &amp; others, Hummels, flgunnes, 011 lamps,
wh1te house vmegar 1ug, stoneware pitcher, stone
Jars &amp; crocks &amp; more
COLLECTIBLES
Good p1cture frames, railroad lantern, old cast ~ron
money banks-pig-horse &amp; bank, early cest ~ron match
holders, several clocks-sesslon·t~graham-grain
painted regulator school house clock· Ingraham
figure 8 clock Rosewood case &amp; others, brass
bucket, bronze style bookends old man readmg a
book signed KBW, pewter small salt &amp; pepper
shakers, Coca Cola carrier, childs manneqwn,
Pachislo slot machine not old but nice, corn sheller,
crut cutter, R.R. spltt hammer, blow torch, 11namel
blue &amp; white swi~ plus much more.
AUCTIONEER NOTE: A great selection of good
quality lurntture, glassware &amp; collectibles ready for
your home or shop. Don't miss this onell

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
Mason, W.VA.

i'jO Poll, 614-311-1 708

2 or 3 bEtdroom

&amp;n

New Haven,

ca. garage, basement $335/mo
814-158-4408.

..

3bl' in Rio Grande area $42r.'mo
+ depos1t (same), releraneos re
~uwed. 304-675-22ti0

Undcw- mona-1 Newly
"""""'ted, 2b&lt;. corpollcf, lippllanclallrnlohld, tnloh &amp; watM
pa1d, laundromot &amp; plaj gn&gt;und
on lita. Close to school &amp; atom.

llanagotlllalnttnco on lila. CaN
:104-8112 3716 Mon .frl. toam2pm. 01' by appointment Locatod
an 8th &amp; Goorga SL Now Ha-.
WV. EQual Houlif1D OpparNty.

•

~

--

I

LENDER

One bedroam aparlment In U1d·
dlopo&lt;L al uull••• paid, I27D pot
month, $100 deposit, call 814·
982-1808 8an&gt;5pm.

Etnck Home, Crown City, 3 Bed· Tara Townhou1a Apartment•.
rpoma, 2 Balha, Formal Ommg, Ver'l Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, ~
Garage, Storage Bu1ld1ng, Heal Floors. CA. 1 112 Bath. Fullj Car
Rump, $425/Mo.. Doposll, RoiO&lt;· peted, Acluit Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
.,.... 814-4&lt;6... 543
Pallo Stan S350JMo No Pet1,
laaM 'Piua 'Security Deposit Re
Country Home: 2 Bedrooms, De· qulrecl, 614-448·3481, 8~4-,ue.

Priced Balow
Rec:omme.ndatlon!l
Owner
want's it sold Nowll This spaciOUS
home Js offered at a pnce that w~l
make some sman buyer a great
buy Raised ranchd8Sign oftrs 3·4
BAs 3 ful l baths, mce eat·m
large hv1ng area anCI
room With a wet bar
••"··• ...... 3 76 acres of
and qu~el , large
deck 2 car garage,
oultluildi&gt;g,_heat pump Poce
market value to
$;~~;~~:o,;.,,~~'~n~hesllale
to call
lo
1219

,.aslt Roquuod, $275/l.lo, 814· 0101.
1158-1851

Real Estate General

Canaday~

Realty
25 LOCUST ST.· GALLIPOLIS
Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 446·3383

Just When You ThougPit It W11
lmpoaalble To Find A Home &amp;
approx 2 2 acres 1n Green Twp
lor under SSO 000, we found It
Otfenng 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, LA,
FA DR, screened porch, new
roof and sept1c system ThiS
p ro~1erty shouldn 1 tast long so
call or you'll be sorry

Affordebllltyll Here's a great
affordable home for the small home
shopper Needs a 11111e elbow
grease and sweat equ•ty 2
bedrooms, bv1ng room. 1 balh eal·
In k1tchen 2 car garage Nice large
lot $31,0001135

~·'·""" 11627

446-3636
TWO GRI:AT LOCATIONS EAST BETHEL
CHURCH AD. VERY NICE 14 X 70, 3 BR/2 BATH
ON RENTI;D LOT. READY TO MOVE INTO ALL ,
ELEC C.A.1 APPLIANCES AND F/P $14,000.
Craving 1
Southern
Eleg•nc:e In Vour Life? Then you
must see th1s homo Be
Impressed as you step mto the
overs1zed lormal 1tv1ng room &amp;
d1n1ng room with 2 llreplaces
Cozy 1am11y room, kitchen and
bath UpStairs you w11! f1nd 2-3
bedrooms, plus a large beth with
whirlpool tub Ample outdoor area
featuring large porch, sun pallO 2
car garage w1th shed and 2 horse
stalls Located on 46 acres, mtl
Call toay for your chance to own
your "Mtnl -Tara" Pnced at only
$89 900 1820

OR: ' 1 MII,.E FROM 0 0 MAC PARK NEARLY
NEW, EXCj:LLENT CONDITION 14 X 70, 2 BR,
KITCHEN APPLIANCES, CIA. NICE LEVEL,
RENTED LI)T

IKEEP Y04'R COOLI 3 BEDROOM RANCH HAS
I CENTRAL 1~1R

COND. AND IS NEAR THE CITY
POOL! FEJIICEO BACK YARD, CARPORT, PRICED
IN THE Flfl'TIEI)I

I

I

1 BEAUTIFU\ LAND .. OVER 300 ACRES LOCATED
NEAR
WA'fNE
NATIONAL
FOREST
AREA ... PR~DUCTIVE FARM, DUDE RANCH OR A
TERRIFIC PLACE TO LIVE AND ENJOY THE
GREAT OI;ITD(lORS 3 BEDROOM HOME, 3
· THEA OUTBUILDINGS POND,
BARNS, ~
TOBACCO ASE THERE ARE VERY Ff:w FARMS
THIS SIZE N THE MARKET .DO NOT MISS OUT
ONTHISONEI
LARGE COUNTRY HOME. 10 ROOM HOME
FEATURES A FIREPLACE IN THE LIVING ROOM
AND FAMILY ROOM ... FORMAL DINING. LARGE
EAT IN KITCHEN. BASEMENT...2 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE. PLUS ADDITIONAL 24'X20' GARAGE
APPROX. ONE ACRE.

Residence: 304·773·5785
Auction Center 304·773·5447
Terms: Cash or Check w/ID
Not Responsible For Accidents or Loss of Property

Office .......................... 992-2259

I~'~~,~3,;~~to catch
home on
your

I get your mn&lt;&gt;••'od
carpet &amp; nw winodows
added to
up L1vlng room, 1 1
1 bath, 2 mob1le home

I

1 1~~:;;~~[

~

at 28es
Stinders Onvell
I tl'le features you've
lor 4 bedrooms, 2
room with fireplac~.
11v1ng roo m/d1n1ng room with
l1replace, mce wrap around deck
overlooking appro11.Jmateiy t acre
lot w1th cha1n link fence, 20 K 20
garage and newer s1d1ng roof and
heat pump What more could you
want" Cali today owner IS
anK•ous ana ready to deat 111609

e

1203

IB

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
'" "oo'
( 614) 446-3644
°""""""n
E-Mall Address: wiseman@zoomnet ne1

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555
Loretta McDade - 446-7729

Carolyn Wasch • 441·1007

446·2707

�Page D&amp;. ~ ' ··---~
840 llllcelllmeoul
llln:hlndlse

seo

" tor salt

Ptta

:::-:::::-::-==-:--=
2 Al&lt;C R~lotored Co&lt;:luH Span·
1t1 llalo ~ BoW c•ot:t r-.~o w

580

710 Autos for Sale

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

A Groom Shop ·Per Grooming .
Featuring H~dro Bath. Don
SMelt. 373 Georges CrNk Rd .

~P Your Child lMtn To Read:

11~1 .

u• ·m

Apao PUPPIII, Shott. WOtmed,
Parenti On Premi111, Readr To

·==
••

JET

AKC ChornpiOn Bloodline Lhloa
Go!BIH51.Qol2!1

AERAI'ION MOTORs

Now &amp;t -SX).537-Iil528.
Rebuilt In Stock.
ACinE¥11'11..

•
,..

AKC Cream Calor Pomeranian
Male 11 Wonths Old Verr Well
Bthaved, Good Watch Dog,
Great With Children, Proven

~enm'ore Washer $100, Gibson
r9ryor 1100: Bolh Working: 275 Broedor, Up To Dolo on Snell:

tJlallon Fuel 011 Tank $85: 114·

Hou~ebroken ,

-

Ron Evan• EnterpriiOI, One Female Pug 12 Monlhe, All
R~latorod, 614·388-3228, Any·

time"
Stu-ll For your repon., Srrith
•.. corona Word Procesaar with
:·· Iiiia - · ~y 1150 080,

·~~'-~~~V2~~~~~~~:r.
WOI.FFTANIINO BEDS
••
Ton AI Homo
Buy DIFIECT or&lt;! SAVEl .
Commorciii/Homo Unlll

"::;

l&lt;"'

)•

Ftum $111U.OO

~,..
!;

Low llonlliy ~monll
FREE Color Colllog

Col TODAY 1-800-711-0158.
~~~~-.;,._~~~

: ·Twin Size Waterbed Eicellenl
•;Conclllon, Comploto With 6 IJraw.
:.~ ,.

Undernealh $200; 275 Gal.

;ifuol Oil Tonk 185, 114·3711-2720

,.

Schnauzers, miniatures, AKC,
champion bloodline, lhOll,
wormed, groomed; 1110 Toy Poo·
c:l11, black, also while; 114-867·
34l)4,

::.s121.

Young HampshlJe Boars &amp; Gilts,
Also Faedor P~~ 814-25&amp;-8510.

814-992·5990.

.

owner, excellent lntide end outoldl, 11. .2-4.

446-&lt;034.

r,4e:;~:ol'apers,$5DEach,
570

Musical
Instruments

!B .

Upright Plano With Bench 1350

CONSTRUCTED HOllE Italian

19g1 Chevy Lumina, 3.1

--·

moclol, two dorlr coupe, olr,
amlfm caatette, automatic,

73,000 mlleo, $5500 OBO.

1

SPRING VALI.EY AREA·
ROOMY HOME
OVER t
ACRES· very private
wooded setting with pond
convenient lo town! 3
bedrooms. living room, and 3 bedrooms, 2 bath
kitchen, attached garage, home that otlers .alol of living
chain link fenced in back lawn. space. large living room,
Cenlral air. Immediate lamlly room, kitchen, den. 2
car garage with guest room
Possessionlllt56
&amp; panial basement. Must
seel Call tor an appointment.
.
1951

a.

RACINE· Appi8 Grove Dorcas Rd. ApP(OX. 5 to 6 acres ot
WHh water and electric available. $10,000

v~C8l'lland.

bedroom. 2
home and you'll
In I
eldras It has a fireplace in the den; a jacuultub in master
beth and a roll out island in the kitchen. II i town living Is tor
you tool&lt; at !hie one. $51.800
.POMEROY· Main St· A commercial building with 2,000 sq.
,ft. and 3 apartments above thai was remodeled recently
and has newer lurnaces. The upstairs ren1s for $800 a
month and the downstairs Is teased on a long term tease.
. . .000
CHECK THIS ONE OUTII RAiNBOW RIDGE: I B acres
With al leaal two Nice building sites. one currently has a
mobMe home on H. 12 x 12 shed stays. All lor luot $28,500

884- Do 'you wanl some acreage end a
beautiful
Well, we've found It for you. Has 8 acres
and a brick home with a great room that has a fireplace thai
Ia beautiful. A gigantic loft bedroom and 2 others. let us
!!how Hto you. lttS,OOO .
,

DOmE TUftNER, Broker...........................892-5112

IRENDAJEFFEAS.....................................992·7275

OFFICEouo~ouuoo~oooooo oo••••••••••"oooooooooooooooooooA.. ,, 9 9 2 • 2 8

shed.s. Call today tor
complete listings. This one
won'tlaslto long. 1945

.

~~~~1943

sized kitchen, dining area &amp;

heal pump, 2 car detached, 2

.

};;if .X

'

;;)

Great room effect w/nice
living

a.

MEIGS COUNTY
Cheryl Lemley 742-3171
e-mail us for Information on our listings:
blgbend@eurekanet.com

·~~i~~;';

i

Some dlscrtminating family will
take pride owning a beautiful
BRick home. Central Ioyer entry
wJeldra large rooms through out.
2800 sq. ft 2 c._r anached
garage. Elec. H.P. loads of walkfn closets. laundry rm, kit.
w/lsland bar, oak cabinets, all
appl-. cement driveway pad
&amp; walks~ui:o:eck. VLS 388·
882e or
.

11826. $82,600.

128f2· JACKSON COUNTY,

bathS, huge lamily rm ., formal
dining &amp; living rm . w/WBFP and
window waA overlooking the c~.
Aag stone entry, first floor

laundry, lull dMded baSemern
wfrec. '!fl.' &amp; WoodbumW1g

fireplace. 2 car garage, treed 101.
Call for an appointment lo see
this exceptionally sman hOme.
U6.8800 $175,000.
120111-f1EW 1101 Sunohlno 11'
x 80' Outstanding mobile home
with a deck , special cabinets,
windows, and bulh -in music
center. 3 bedrms; 2 baths,.
beautiful tree I I ac m/1. Close to
town. VLS 318 11121 $64,000

furnace/central

air

conditioning, attached
carporl. Rear . porch .
Nlce... $45,000.00 N941

CALL FOR MORE
LISTINGS I

.Romonulacrurod !loin hill For

12157 LEVEL LOT I ac. mil

utilities avaMable, Clal1c Chapel

Ad

$13,000.00

VLS

4otl-

-.-.
11053 • 4 BEDROOMS, 2 112
baths, lOvely tlltchen w/&amp;a!t In
breakfast area. lormal dining rm.,
sunken living rm . w/fireplace.
famity rm., new furnace, attached

2 car garage, detached 2 car
garage, ingroood pool &amp; pool

724 IIIAIN ST11EET IN
RUTLAND· Remodeled t
1/2 story home, living
roomWith alriumdoors that
leads to a covered deck,
lots of cabinet space In
knchen, 3 bedrooms. dining
room.
Immediate
posB9sslon. ~.500.00

-

tast

---- ....-............

1073- PRIME DEVELOPMENT
LAND · 117 Ac. M/L Close to
freeway &amp; hospital. Old homo

together. $80.000.
12872 DRIVE BY -

Virginia ...S-68061388·8826.·
12871 SPIC &amp; SPAN hOme In
Vinton. Justlovety for a family, 3
bedrm, 1 bath. LA. DR, Kit, large
tot, &amp; out bldg. Owner wants
action on this low price. VLS 388·

8826/446-6006. $40,000
121101 Groat building lot for that
ctream home, plenty ot trees and
privacy, just off of Statfl Route 1
South on 218, cal Wilma.
12102 Rodney Aru, 3·bedroom
ranch on 1 acre lot close to tha
35 bypass, owner will pay closing
costs so better call us today on
this one, Call Wilma for all tha
details.

12037 VACANT LAND 73.&amp; AC
MIL In Green Twp. REDUCED

1217&lt; NEW UBTING

On

Side porch . Perfect tor the
t';,w!'BIIamlly. Call Patty ~"Yl
3 1.

12112 JACKSON, 011 IJind 145

ac. mt1 1,.5,000

- . . , . , . . . . !lath, -

702-2277.

-~

for an antique

shop, etc. Located orJ 2na Ave .,
4 bedrms, 2 baths, vacant,
immediate posseSSion. NeW roof
20x22 garage. Lot 52'x174'. can

VLS 446-6806.
12t04 LOCATED ONTHE
BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVER. 3

Reduced $119,000.00 Beaututul
New Colonial 2 sty. Rio Grande
ar9a. 4 1Je9rms, 2 1/2 baths,

wldean and classy '85 Oakwood
2 bedrm/ mObile, 2 bath home.
Great lot and garage. $35.000

bedroom home, LR large eat-in
kit Utility rm . ,gas heal 1 ~
porches and garage. Very large
lot 10 make a· garden. Only

AND

WOODED land in the cheshire
area. can Virginia 388·88261446·

6806.
121110 NEW USTING VACANT
lot with wa1er taP onBull Run Rd.

W1lma .

hat, central air, 3 ceiling fans,
lenced 1n back yare~ . Covered rrom
porch. Great price et $5U,900. Call

Patty 4otl-3884.

$20,000. Heat pump only 1 1/2
old. Why pay rent? Newly
River Val(ey ' School

da•,or~ataod_

T0$105,000

BuY

&amp; located approx. 4 mi. south of .

the Eureka Darn. . . .900
OHIO TOWNSHIP: 82 IV;fea 11'1/1
located in seclion 28

Ori Green

Rd. Some tillable land but mostly
RIVER LOT IN lHE CITY· 2.3 acres pasture &amp; woods. Old hOuse &amp;
11'1/1, Approx. 234 ft. frontage on the . pond on property. W,OOO
Ohlo River. All utilities available. Old
hOme on proper1y.
1750 STATE ROUTE 7 NORTH.
Commercial S~e. Not many left in
FISHERMEN'S DREAM • Two mlles this area Approx. 5 acres t1at land.
below the darn you'll find this older
Ideal tor afmosl any type Biz.
completely furnished 2 BR mobile
home.. There's an 8 x 24 deck
overlooking the Ohio Rl- with a
storage building, steps going down to

the beach &amp;a large dock. $17,900.
GUN STORE: One of 80Uiharn
Ohio's largest dealeia.
EstabliShed In 1968. Large
volume. Owner l'llliring.
Contact Ranny Blackburn.

EXTRA NICE BUILDING· OR
MOBILE HOME LOT. Mature Pine
Trees on the three sides. .Access to
R~nc~.~lnH~

Dilon Subd. $11,900
LAKE DRIVE SUBDMSION• RIO
GRANDE· Close to University· Lot
1121 has · water, sewer &amp; alec.
available. $12,000

RIO GRANDE • COMMERCIAL
LAND • FARM LAND • HOME
SiTES • YOU NA1E IT. '147 _

acres nv1 with approximalely 1 112
miles of road frontage on State .
Route 325 &amp; Pleasant Valley Rd.
Broker owned. $450,000

Cl 6 SSY

SPANISH IN THE

COUNTRY· This brick. beauty Is
nestled on a 2 acre tract lnthe ·
rolling hills of Addison Township
onMcCuily Rd. Enjoy your su;ners
in and around the pool, eldra large
patio &amp; gazebo. There are too
many features to (ll8f1tlon bt a few
are the extra large L.R, family room
with a stone FP. completely
equipped kijchen, 4 BR's, 2 1/2

baths, 2 car garage &amp;a very nice

RIVER FRONT LOT· 1.368 acres 11'1/1
located approx. 2 mi . south of the

bam. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY.

Eureka dam. Great potential at

COMMERCIAL UlmNG • Rio
Grande araa. 1.6 acres ITI/IIOcaled
on the NE comer of U.S. 41ane 35
and SA 325, lots of potential. ·
$49,000.00

$19,900.
SPACIOUS LMNG ASOUJI)S lHIS
COUNTRY CLASSIC. Historic two
• story hOuse offenl 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2
beth, LR, OR, FL, full basamellt and
detached work shop. Bring inthe
outdoors lnthe window covered

JCOZYTWO BEDROOM conAGE
high on a h!llln Green Township. this
home Is brand new &amp; localed close
to town B1 1573 Graham School
RO&amp;d. $45,000
an 8X1I's 5 nn &amp;
bath hOrrie and bam tor an extra

large cedar deck, security system

kitchen with attached walk·ln pantry.
Priced to steal at $74,900.
ECONOMICAL· $29,900. 2 Bfl 2
bath 1 stay hOme Is located Bl t573

Graham School Road. Drive by &amp;see

what you think.
IDEAL SITE FOR APARTMENtS:
GRAIN FARM- Mostly creek bt:Jttom. 150 x 207 101 is located Bl the comer
of Spruce &amp;5th. All utilities available.
·
area- no hot tSe broker $19,900.
$88,000

$29,900. Approx; 8 acres total.

'

VINTON

VILLAGE • 4 acres of .
levelland MIL with frontage on SR
325. Watei &amp; Electric available.
Don't let this one slip by. Only

$14,5001
HOMESITE IN THE CITY · This
large level lot is located at the
dead and of Nell Ave. Utilities
available . Homebuilders or
investors call about this one.

$19,500

·'

VLS 386.e626!«6-6606.
128111 NEW HOllE, 50 ac ""'·

barn, greenhouse, lowely new 3
bedrm .• LA, Kit, ulllily rm., 2 car
attached garage. Out Crown City
way. Call VLS for location &amp;
Pric:e. 388-8826 or 446-6808.

I

IN THE PAST 36 MONTHS .
WE HAVE SOLD

12009 RAMBLING TAI·LEVEL
PERFECT FOR
THE
EXECUTIVE 4 bedrooms, 2 112
balhs, formal living rm . w,lgas log
stol)e firEiplace. Formal dining
rm . very nice cabinets In the
kitchen. Huge entertaining rm,
master bedroom Is -ReaiiV Ultra,
Ultra•. ApproK. 4500 sq. ft. deck
In the rear, 2 car garaige. 1 ac.

zla

MA. level lawn. FREE GAS. Call

lor an appointment. 388·

laH2 VACANT L.ANO 13 !&gt;&lt;
MA. in Morgan Twp. Excellent
Building Site. Claude Daniels

ol46-7809. $18,000
, _ BULAVILLE PK HOMEY
ALL BRICK RANCH 18 WORTH
YOUR
CAREFUL
CONSIDERATION. 3 badnns, 1
112 baths, !Mng rm.,large ear·in
kitchen w/WOOdburning fireplace
(NEAT) lull divided basement
w/rec. rm., Patio, 1 car garage.

Appro•. I ec. WHAT A BUY!
VI.S 368·8826. ,$69,500. MAKE ,
OFFER!
· ,
12107 LIKE NEW Wonderful AI

brick randh remarkably
spacious, huge rms, through out
k)ts ol kit cabinets, LR, 2 full
baths, 3 bedrms, full basement,
FREE GAS, !g. garage, 15 10 20
ac m/1. Very , Very private VLS

~·

'-'

worth of real estate.

J.

~­
-:&gt;

IMMEDIATE '

duplicate. VLS 446-6006.

11034 50 •cr.. mt1 ot prime

d11velopment land close to
freeway and State Route. Pubtic

..

a~~~~~IF~t~il~~~· tolar~~ln:. ~

-Need we say more?

.Excellent for dawelopment or ...,

use. $155,000. can
Party Hap 446-31184.
•
120~ WHAT A BARGINI 4-1 :

commer(lal

BEDAII Brick home wJ2 full t
baths. Full divided ·basement "
w/fildures for a 3rd bath, 1,588 '
sq. ft . m/1 upstairs, 2 car
at1ached garage. Above ground
pool. Home Si1a on 3 ~ kns. •
This home Is great if vou need a
lot of space! Can Pattv Hays
today lo see what a deaf this 191
446·3884.
•
12811 NEW USTINGI Beautilul &amp; •
Immaculate 3 BA &amp; &amp; 2 1/2 bath •
home. Large master bedroom :
w/balh. lovelylormal LA w/stone "
fireplace, equipped kitchen· •
w/indOOr griH, apactous family rm . .w/bultlln booh ahetves. Lg Aorlda •
.rm, w/dry bar I entry to patio in
381M.
back. Office, 2 car anacnect gar, ioi.
wfworkahop . Shed . 24x24 : .
WClfkahop building w/electrlc &amp; -_l
12N1 NEW LIBTINQ IN CITYI """""· Thll ~a houoelhat you've , .
Brick ranch w/11nlshed ante. 4 mlo HI. Colt Patty Hays 4ot8- ,,

badrooms, 2 bath&amp;, LR, DR, gas

Acre• &amp; 14 x 60 Mobile home. For

....

new 31~ bedroom ranch, bath,
cozy living room. wery neat
kitchen wflots of oak cabinets,
basement w/family rm . &amp;
bedroom, outside entry to an
abowe ground pool. Stora,ge
bldg. 2 car. anached garage. ·

12904 GREAT RIVER VIEW·

128911 MIDDLEPORT, OHIO·

and farm animals. Build your

. home. Just a little country.

RIVER LOVERS· Enjoy your ·
-'&lt;ends fishing &amp; watching the
barges float by. This like new
eyecatcher Is empty &amp; ready tD
move Into. Special features are ·
approx. 1.8 acres, 2 car garage,

--

POSSESSKlN Brick ranch. 3
bedrms, lg. LR, lch, oak cabinets, •
21ull bathe , basement w/oulside ,
entry, deck, circle drive, 2 car •.
garage, Monon building 3.6 Ar:.. ~
mil This home would be bard to

Own to the river with this 3
bedroom h'bme, nice yard, call

CREEK PRIVACY·
brand new ranch style
home rests in .over 7 acres of
woods with approx. 800 fl of creek
frontage. Some of the many·
features are 4 BRs, 2 baths, 16x21
LR w/frenchdoors, 2 larga treated
decks, vinyl Siding &amp; an unattachad
2 car garage. If you clonl want to
look at your neighbors. YOU ·
MUST SEE THIS ONE. REDUCED

Falrfttlld..c.nt-ry Rd· 1 acre
more or lesa. Good bulldlllf sKe.

BRIGHTEN YOUR
FUTURE
WITH
A
WONDERFU~ FAMILY HOllE
located in a suburban area, like

12906 BIG!NNERS LUCK Close

to school. 3 bedrm, ranch , full
basmt, attathed garage &amp;
carport. 1 k rru1 VLS 446·600e.

~

RACCOON

Tills almost

Lot 3·2.440 acres· SOLD
Lot 4·2.440 acres· SOLD
Lot 5- 2.440 acres
Lot 6- 2.44 acres· SOLD
Lot 7· 2.440 acres· SOLD
Lot a. 1.103 acres .

~~~~

446-6806.
12105·

eaa now lor mora information.

WINDS • Four lots remain.
D6Buouru•l home sites. New homes
construction lhere also.

Lot 2·1 .50 acres

1977 Ill' CoKiwnan .._ . top, good condition, new 1ire1.

JAY OR.

$149,000.

i~E~I:• One
Church· Land can be
Ar! Dr Ten. Can have

Lot 1•1 .50 acres

•1112 Travel Matt Filth Whoot
·c:.r.-,.25 FL lAna. Now Alonila,
: Stii·Conlllnod, loii C-dontil,
E10ollonl CondiUon. Very Cloan,
.12.800,814-441-1835.

0

back deck with lots of

trees. Green Elementary
ScllOOis. Priced In the 70's. ·

WINDING CROSS ROJY)S
Galllas newest platted subljivision·l
Green Twp. Cora Mill • Pfeasenl Hill
Ada. Acreage· Flat, rolling and
some wooded. Excellent site
your new Dream Home.

Call VLS 388·8826/446-61106 "'II

TO $42,000 Grat place to hunt Ne'at 3 BR, 1 112 baths, vln~l
and several nice areas to build siding, .newly remodeled klt
yovr dream home! Natural spring, w/oak cabinets, .new roof, elec.
land level to roHing. Call Patty heat pump. Wllma.
12197 RIO GRANDE AREA
Hays 446-3884.
11012 Vtry 1\ICI home on 105.5 ac. mJI farm with timber. 2
·
Oakwood Or. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 older homes.
'1211111 TWO' GREAT BUILDING
baths. Formal entry, spaclous LA, LOTS Proctorville, Nice home
FR. OA kitchen equipped with area. WIWna.
diahwasher, refrigerator and 1211811 B&amp;G MARKET ·Business
stove. 2 car attached garage, gas only. $21 ,900 will buy you all the
heat. central air. ThiS is a must equipment you need to get you
see. Call Patty Ha~s lor your into your own buaineul
pnvate showing. ,46-3884,
Equipment included: meal cooler,
f2U3. NEW USTINGI MILUON Ice cream ffeezer, pop coolers,
DOLLAR VIEW Beautiful 3 to 4 vag. cooler, refrigerator, stove,
bedroom brick t.Jme just minutes double door commercial oven,
away hom the city park. 2 full Hobart meat slicer, Hobart meat
baths, large eat lnkltchen, dining grinder, scales, all shelves, much
room , utility rm ., fam ily rm . morel Call Patty Hays, 446·38M
w/atone fireplace, living rm, for more dotans tOday.
1200ot Vacant lend 1.13 Acres
w/atone fireplace. 2 car garage. MIL Grat plaC" for your trallor Of
City schools. For appointment, to build a home. Reduced to
cell Patty Haya 446-381M.
SIUOO. Call Petty Hays 446-

. Skidmore Ad . Spacious · 4
bedroom. 2 bath hOme. 1.!5 story.
Extra large family room, front &amp;

Atlonlltble Brick Ranch •~•:.w~ 1
All new floor COYerlngs,
painted. All vou need to do Is

il&amp;diV show you anytime.

12t03 HAVE YOUR OWN
BUSINESS IN YOUR HOME

$55,000.00
12888 COMMERCIAL

"Rial Lirlhr Truck Campot, Sl&gt;ve,
Oven, rurnace, Shower, Com·
' modo, Wit« H11111or, Tope ~or.

. . . 814-992-5182.

If you need a good 8 (oom Tri·
Level home. Offering 3/4
bedrms., 1 1f2 bath·s, COzy LR.
dining area, huge kitchen has
new hardwood IIOors IBeautWull
Family rm, Rec. rm, covered
patio &amp; fence. This charming
clean home wm make you sin~ .

you want to live in the city with all
the city with all the corwenience
than this is it, 3 bedroom 1 1/2
baths, completely remodeled
inside and out, in Mlddreport, call
Wilma for a vieW.

121185 •o JAY DRIVE Oqzy 2

a

pnoma . 1.3 acres m/1. of. Flat yard

ln. 3 BR, 2 bath,
separate dining room. ·~e::;:: 1
windows. Heat pump and
air. 1 car garage. Storage building.

-·

Commercial Bldg. 62
Olive St. COrner location. 1990
sq. ft. good rool. Owner will sell
inventory or bu l~lng separa1e or

121189 GREAT INVESTMENT, il

garden etc. Located on Clay St.
i='tood zone area. $3,000.00

12871 VACANT LOT IN
VltTON. Good tor parking,

0

· er, IRff-containtd,
, : $2500, , _ lor IUIIImlllc

11()91..

-

=3 OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE

Reduced $12,000.00 VLS 3&amp;8·

1 ton tno~ck

: '72 Shull pull btlinrl

Older 2 sty. 4 bedrms., 1 bath, 3
acres mtl plus a large barn.

$35,000.00 Call VLS 388·
8826/446-6606

AN ADDRESS TO BE PROUD
OF... 551 DEBBY DRIVE. Call
about this summer time special
today. Immaculate 3 br, 3 bath
brick home also features an
enormous family rm with a W8
fireplace, lllrge entertairvnent rm
leads to the 20 x 46 lazy L pool
which Is surrounded by custom
landscaping as nice as you'll anywhere inside a wooden privacy
fence. If you throw In a completely
equipped k~chen, a 2 car garage &amp;
a few other extras, rt's a steal at

Large covered front

Rodio, Excollont Conrlidqn, Sl4·

VlS 388·6626/446-6808.
12012 LOCATED ON SR 8&amp;0

121118 !IUY OF THE CENt\IRY,

8826-446-6808.

:Bfi0.27.J.-

cabinets, 2 car attached garage.
6 Acres m/1 With trees gBIOte.

10!5.5 acre· farm with lots ol
timber, great places to bYild 011
for development. This farm ha5 2
houses on it, live in one ·and rent
the othw, call Wilma tor full

acre lot Mil Aaccoon Awp .

and bam Gal"a Co. VLS
12032 RIO GRANDE AREA 2

e•• lanka,

·- 1 &amp; rarllatoro. 0 l R AuiO,
-Ripley, WV. 30•·372·3933 or I·

you see thiS ranch home before
you buy. Built in 1991 . 3 bedrms,
1 1/2 bathS, Huge kit. W/Oak.

today.
12897· RIO GRANDE AREA.

k.wety living rm, formal dining rm.
26 fOot kitchen w/eating area. On
the line for any school (Sity or
County) Virginia 388·8828/446·

:New

12034 EXCEPTIONALLY
SIIART We highly recommend

long. Call Claude Daniels for bedrm, ranch, LA. DR, 2 baths,
appointment at 446·8806 or «6· starage area. Close to town.
7609. Make Ofler.
Wilma.
1201111 171 ACRES MIL in . 12695
LAKE· 8 ac mn
Morgan Twp. Lets of fenced in zoned HUGE
tommerclal and
pasture land and many acres of residential. Great lor a resort or
good hunting and/or camping camp site. Build your own home.
areas. several eKCenent bulld!ng Some
older bu~dings . 63 ac. m,/1
sll". Aural water, For a M
Look·
wooded &amp; deared land.
see· call Claude at 446-6806 or 1202D 8274 CORA MILL RD.
446-7609.

~~~~~;ifi~Dlning
room features a
B
kilche'n w/beamed

All

:114-7&lt;2-2712.

oc. Call core Casey 245-9430. ·

State Route 139, priced to sell
call us tOday_for tun detalts.
121113- &amp; 121118 2 BEAUnFUL
LOTS, ready to build on,
ge.orgous homes all around,
won 'I last so bener huny and call

~ocation

:Full Uno ol auto ·body panels,

Tranamlaalon

. palnta and suppllea, alao gla11,
" l~t uHmllly. o"YGG"· onr1 ....

$89,1100.

145 acres all timberland. on

great

USTING· Ranch home that
fe;atures a large living room w/ a

Slandard

or home. 3 bedrms, LR, lg. eat·
in kit., t battt, deep lot. VLS , ""'
$39,1100 .
121100 BOAT DOCK IN OHIO
RfVERll ·sw Brandywine 2 tlr,
mobile, 2 batn, central heaVair.
sunrom, k:e deck,2cr grage, boat

3.

3 bearoom ranch on nice level lot
on Sta'te Toule ·218, abowe
ground swimming pool,
outbui!ding and more call today
and take a peek, $40,500.00 or
will s~IJ all with a 2 bedroom
mobile home included · for only
$50,5CO.CO.

:T-114-24s.sen

Vorglnla 388-11626!446-ll8oa.
11017 87 Mill Creek. gc&gt;od rental

M/l.

detailS.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

. 10,000 TranarnllliDna, Acetal

rm. with woodbu,rning tlreplace,
IQ. kll. &amp; Cherry cablnell, range,
O.W.. Rei., new carpet. copper
plumbing. Anderson windows.
oak trim. Central air. Blacktop ,
drive. SOmething SpG!::ial. Call

121102 NEW ·BRICK RANCH·

bedroom ranch In the Rodney
area, priced to sell, has 1 acre lot

$48.000 'this one WiU not

1282 DUSKY STREET,
SYRACUSE.
Aluminum
aided one story home that
has 2 bedrooms, bath,
living room, dining room,
kitchen, FA electr ic

RiVER FRONT PROPERTY iS hard
to find but you have 7.66 acres 11'1/1
with this 2 stay farm house. Wtth 3
BR, 1 1/2 beth, city schools and a
view fit tor a king all IOcaled iust
minutes from Galllpo(iS, you should
not let this flow by without a look.
R~ to$69.900

· Utod /Rtbulll, All Typeo, O.at

VALUE WITH
12177
ELEGANCE 18 OFF!RED IN
THIS QUALITY CUSTOMIZED
HOME. One owner ontyl Formal
entry, Nvlng nn., din. rm., tam.

HOllE

12102 NEW LISTING,

Morijan Twp 12 11: 16 enciQ!Ied
back porch. Formal dining room
plus B nk:e eat-In kitchen. At

AFFORDABL.El $44,900.00
City schools. Raised ranch
wnh 4 bedrooms. 2 baths,
garage, approx. 1.6 acre lot,
could purchase wilh 3
HERE VA GOt Nice sized additional acres. 1944
ranch home wilh plenty ol
elbow room inside and out. IDEAl STARTER! Priced at
Over 6 acres olland, country $39,900.00 3 bedrooms.
water. Home has 3 dining room, kilchen, living
YES, you can buy a larm with bedrooms, 2 baths, large . room. Detached 2 car
a list of machinery, t 6 cows, kitchen, attached garage and garage. Call us today to see
1B calves, &amp; 1 bull. These are so much more including lots thiS one . Situated at
Georges Creek Rd. 11125
the bast Thare are 250 acres. of privacy.caJ!Iodayl ~
m/1 in larm. Rural water, also
developed spring. Looks to be ADORNED
BY MOBILE HOME LOTI l.ot
considerable amount ·of WOOD_L.AND· Nice quiet being approx. 3/4 acre.
limber. Owner fihanclng could country atmosphere comes ideal!~ located, mobile home
be available. Harrison Twp., with this roomy home 3 Ia 14 xBO' With 3 bedrooms,
bedrooms, 2 lull baths, 2 baths, underpinning, deck
Lincoln Pike 1930
parti.al basement that and morell881
TREE·SY
ATMOSPHEREI mcludes laundry, oversized
Cool eve~lng breezes flow living room &amp; dining area, A FITTING CHOICEI Don't
across the fronl porch of this 2 atrium doors lead off kitchen pass by this 'llghl &amp; airy' 3
year old ranch home. 3 to deck area, over sized 3 bedroof11S, 2 bath home. On
yard .
being
bedrooms, 3 baths, no car garage. Be the proud large
shortage ol cabinet apace In owner of this home, call' approximately 1.8 acr.. m~.
this knchen,living room,lamiy today for your privale Calhedral ceiling , large
master bedroom, lots ol
room. basement, 3 acres. showlng. l933
extra cabinet apace in
detached 24'x32' r:;:oe. let
us show it to you.
LOCATION SAYS IT AL.LI kitchen. Detached garage.
Very well maintained brick 1939
IN TOWN lOCATION! Handy ranch home that has elbow
to just about everything. Save room . easy to maintain 1 ACRE M/l LOTS, each
gas! Family sized 3 BR home, laawn. 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 with approximately 150' of
County
Nice sized LA, kll, dining, balhs, living room, dining lrontage .
basement. Finished attic area. room , rec . room, kitchen, 2 water/electric available .
Driveway lor lots have been
Covered front porch . · car a118ched garage. 1926
lnslalled along with home
Detached .oarage. B~oker
Owned .
Immediate VACANTlOTIBuyThemAII site cleared. $7,000 per lot.
.
1922
poss..slonl Call Russell for fbr $14,900.00 3 level lots.
more delallsl
Counly water available.
County schoolsllit08

SERIOUS"'
This roomy American
lhat Includes 3-4 bedrcoms,
large living room. dining
areatfamiy
room
combination,
ton
area.
equipped knchen, large deck
on rear, nice lawn baing
approx. 2 acres. 34260 Crew
Roadl940

LUXURY

combining elegance wlmOdern
conwenience •15 BRs, 3 baths.
IOrmal DR groel rm W/WBFP, fiM
floor MBA hot tub oak cabinets in
kitche,., breaklilst area over100ks
a pond 7 yrs old, large lot, call
VIrginia 388-8826-446 6806.

carpet, paneled doors, cathedral
celtlngs, cement porch,
breeZeway,. patio, 2 car garage,

lenced yaro. $185,000
121M • BEDROOM 2 bath
dOuble wide on 6 acres MIL in

rm with catheral

ACREAGE, 25 acres mil
house, mobile home, barn &amp;
misc. buildings slt.uated at
Teens Run Road. Great tor
some horses,' cows. etc. City
schools. Purchase wllh or .
wHhout mobile home.OWNER
WANTS SOL.DI.Call tor more
detailsll931

$8,800.00 .

11013·

eal·in-kil. w/osk cabinets. lovely

house. Lovely treed yard
wJgazebo. deck in the rear,

ceiling, 2 lull baths, laundry
&amp; more. Attached oversized
garage by breezeway &amp;
detached seperate aaraao,,

Are you needing a trailer tor the river bank or tor that
hunting spot? A 1957 mobile home that is I 0 x 40 that. is
partially fumlehed. ONLY $2,500

JERRY SPRADUNG ......... ,........................ 9411-2131
CHARMELE SPRADUNG...........................Mt-2131
BETTY JO COLUNS...................................II92·23e3

barns, corn crib and misc.

acres more or less, garage,

dining area off living room,

BTATE ROUTE 884- look! We have two parcels ol land,
tach has 5 acres lor you 10 build you'r dream home or to
Ule for a mobile home. Has a water tap,'road and a dozed
site In back of a wooded lot. Each StO,ixio

EAST MAIN itT· A 2 story home with 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms,
one bath, and a nice front silting porch with a great view of
the Ohio Riv.... Could ba a commercial stte. $28,800 .

FARMABLEI Chsck this
one out, approx. 109 acres
more or less, complete with
a 1 1/2 story home that
offers alot ol Irving space, 4
bedrooms, living room, large
kitchen and more.' Pond,

CUTE AS A BUTTON! 6
l.a Salle Circle· Budget •
Stretching 3 bedroom home .
exuding warmth and charm.
Super nice equipped kHchen
.,,
.
.
,
.
:of
'"!f.
~
"
!·:0:.':,.~
with oak cabinets, central
COMFORTABlE ?
YOU air. attached Qarsge, nice
BETI Comforlable living decking &amp; patoo. Vou'll be
home that is neat &amp; clean. sold. Affordable $60's 1952

WITH NICE VIEWI
Nice home with 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, island kitchen, formal

~~=~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.::.=

on State Acute 218, 3 acres
f'nOfe or ~. lots of love!~ trees
for shade, can Wilma.

manufactured home and 1.5 ac.
MIL. ollertng 3 bedrme., 2 baths ,

12U7 INSIDE THE CITY, BUT
OUT OF THIS WORLO, ~sq.
ft. mJ1 4 lovely bedrooms, 2 1/2

I&gt;AIII&amp;1'"

UNCOLN HTS.· A t I /2 story home with a large rear deck,
a lull basement. &amp; a nice back yard. Hllll 2 to 3 bedrooms,
equipped kitchen, and a chain link fenced front yard:
Heating system &amp; root new last.year. $35,000

12870 IN TOWN IN CHOICE
MOOHBORHOODLOCAllON
FOR YOUR COIIVENIENCE. 3

building. VLS 446·6606/388·

_ . . . .,

AD- A I 1/2 story home with aluminum siding.
Has 2·3 bedrooms, two car garage, and a good sized yard.
•
A lull basement and a front sitting porch. $21,000

foyer, cathedral ceilings, balcony
·above the LR, w/IOg fireplace,
equip kh., breakfaat-rm wt bay
window, stereo throughout,
brass tight fixtures, 2 car
attached _gar.. atHc storage.
screened back porch, much
mOre. New roof the home is
molnlonance he. Call VLS 388·
11826. 1..9,1100

Bedrma., LA .. Kit., lam. rm, 1
· balh, full basement. fenced yard,
Great family hOme. I'll be there
to show you. Vlrglnla l. Smith
388-1!826. $59,000

Manha Smilh ................................... 379·2651
Cheryll.emly ................................... 742·3171
Dana Atha .........................................379·9209
Kennelh Amsbary ............................. 245·5855

NEW USTINGI 316 butavllle
pike- $54,900- Cule ranch
home that is close &amp;

-eltctdclan.
.......... -u.
censed
Ridenour

Dudfel Price Transmluion1,

Branch Office
23 locust St. CLAUDE DANIELS ..................................71011
Gallipolis, Ohio CARA CAS£Y _ .......................: ........ 2~
45631
WILMA WILLIAMSON ........................ -

Main Office · 388·8826
958 Clark Chapel Rd.
BldweH, Ohio ot5614 ·

12ese REDUCED! LOVE A 12101 GREAT ·SECLUDED
SPECTACULAR VIEW? New . BUILDING LOT, close to town

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
446-4618
Judy DeWitt .............................. 441..()262
J. Merrill Caner .......,.................379·2184
Tammie DeWitt......................... 245.Q022

wltlt • .•
18110,..... Aooidonlill or cof1WI*dal wiMa,

350 Turbo CiltYr, PonUoc, Oldo,
Buh=k llanamlllianl, over.
11oulool304o4175-4117.

VtRGINIASMITll, 8ROKER ...............311UM
6806~ ~j •• Vfo EUNICENIEHII...................- .............-.1.7

121411 SPACIOUS QUALITY

1-800-585-7101 Or 446-7101

• . •....

205 North Second Ave.

• *

446 .

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

•mall: vtamHh.com

Kawai plano, conlerr1poiary otylo,
txcellenl condition, rarely uud,

81~.

YJ
o....rr~ ;{_.
f":p) 4LYJ /.,/.

11/ . ; OR

7.60

OUR WEB PAGE IS: www.vlsmHh.com

AI

White Aurfy American FuU Biood-

Real Estate General

runs

~::a=~,~~:u~2~~ Sholllr--B-1-=G=·=B=E=N=D=R=E=AL=;::~::::;:;;:Y::,=I:::N~C-.--,

""'12000. wtl """ •11100,
.:.-:.a~lock~.-:br~i~ck::-,-::,::owe:=::r-::p:::lpe:=-,,-:w::;i::-nll-:;­ com
614-U&lt;II-23119 .. 814-742-2211.
' 'OWl, lintels. tiC. Claude Win1ers.
..-~lo Grande, OH Call 814·245·

19e5 5aturn SC2, AuiDmaric, Air,
Cruise, AMIFM Ca11eUe, Trunk
... 112.000 Col Allor 5 P.ll.
(Serious Inquiries Onlyl, 11•·
448·-4015.
7
87=.::FOf-d-:-::Th:-u-ndorl&gt;l-::-:-,.,-::-,,:-.:1,:-$:-l-,1100--,

•

: 'Watorilno Specie I: 3/4 200 PSI
.:121.~5 Por 100; 1" 200 PSI AJlo wophone, good condition,
:;.131.00 Par 100: All Braas Cam- 114-11112-7473.
:.itnllion Artlrc~etn SIDdc
"'lON EVANS ENTERPRISES Bundy Alto Sox. 8 llonths Old
Excellonl Condition 1goo
( '**- ONo, l.acJ0.53J.9528
(81413711-2721

t

~go

304-875-4192.

lion, has been shown, trade for

tracl04' or guna. 304-S62·58.o.

~wer,

. Building
Supplies

1g110

len oalt, 11.00 doz.

tions, E•cellent Condition, V1ry
Clean, New litH, $12,500, 814406·3684, Al1or 5 P.ll.

ow:."""" -27:J..t:f15.

Hollton Baby Hoilert, Somo Call·
Black Tenn. walluH 1\orao, 7 hood Vaccination, Some Olher
years old, gliding, great dleposl· Coli. 1&amp;141245-54&amp;1

Owa

1:550

1SID5 Monte Carlo lS, Uoat Op-

R~ .

'lfV!ERIPA

y•r old Sears riding' lawn15.5 hp.; alao Lawn Boy
~..... lf~propelled mower, 8 monlha
: -akl: 814--QQ2. 7175.

Holland arind•Jnixer,

Livestock

840 Electttcal and
RefrlgeraUon

'18.. Ranger 3'13V 18' 12 ·24V
Trolllnf llotor, 150 XP Evlnruda
Ou-.r, ...1100, 814-f182.2711).

GS. Lqadod, AuiO,
Cold Air, Exctllonl
In/Out $1100,

'IU9D Doria• Spirlr H~ llllaoge,
Runs, 11-. hOO 080, 814-

20 Young Holslein tau lrtlhening

I3ZI.

~81 .......381 •.

1995 Grand Cherokee llmltod,
45,000 IIIIH, 119,000, 6"·2581371,814-256-15311.

1

....... 11oft,.,...

2
FROM TOWN on
Bulavllle Pike. 4 bedroom
brick, 5,400 sq. ft. including
full basement with 2 car
garage, city schools.
1 1/z A., $11 000. 446-0390

1U87 .1111. See Imp, I!ID/Ip ller·
CNiit&lt; ..,.;ltr, 2 Ult 1.-s. 4

tgiiO Chevy Lumlno, 3.1 l, ootd
elr, ·automatic, amlfm lllftO, one

Equipment 30•·8757421 •
'-;;:;.;--,--~~---

Brown

Plymouth Sundance 4

1g92 Plymouth Sundanco, Rally
Sport, 5 Speed, am/1m Cu.....
New Ellhlun T11ning Boll. BtaMo.
82.1100 Milos, 12.300 o.ao. 1&amp;141
3-5

nOw. Sider's

CIC Ganorol Homo llaln·
tanonca. Pllntlng, wlnyl olrllng,
catplntry. dooro, .. baths,
or&lt;! ...... For
froo -~~ Cllll Chol, 114-11112·

Etaclrlcal, WYOOO:IIII, 11114-8758111 Boat /Trailer No lilotor 1788.
1t,CIDO,I14-44HII01 Anyllnll.

(814~153

Husqvarna &amp;. Green Machine
tlmmers &amp; brush cullers on sale

lllrt,

· 11 FL At1togluo Flborgtaoa

v-e, Automatic, AnVFm c ........
Power Evertthlng, n11. Runa and
Looko Grooti Alklng ....500. Col

3824.

COWL 'New

1985 Cllevroltt pickup, lull tlzo,

and -

_, -

1g92 Ford Tempo; 60,000 lllloo,

$2,200 . Economy Jim Dandy
garden tractor 14hp. Kolher en·
gln1, 4f1. mower deck.$~ ,500.
Both in good cond . 30•·875·

630

14' john -

Dooro, Raat Spo!lw, Aut11mo1ic,
Air, 85,500 lliloo, 13.350 OBO,
D14-2SS '5344. 81 ... 25&amp;6487.

8-N Ford uactor w/Sft. brush hog.

Wormed. 6,.·!167-7105.

14'..11um1Nim v-ooaorn boar wltlt
- · 1.5 Ewlntudo rno10r, 1800,
114.51283.

7D42.

Sit King Cuttor, llrag·Typo Bnllh
Cutter $325 (614)«8-1856

era. Blue 6 Gold, 1st Shots &amp;

0

.a~.

1DD1

ms.

12' ......... v bolltMn bolt, good
conclllon, 8 hp. Johnoon motor,
oxcollom conri!Uon, 18DB OBO
lt4ol82-3250.

304-475-7112.

BEAUTI'IJI. 3 BR RANCH filled SIW:IOUS FAMILY HOME - .This 3
with feiUw a growing family .-Is. br 2 1/2 balh charmer is localed next
In addtion to the 2 ful balhs this to Holzer on l.aria! Drive. 148 you walk
hOme ofl8ls a Speciou8 eat-in through. you'll view the large formal
kllchen, FA, LR and 8llached dining rm, LR with atone fireplace,
garage. A smooth and elegant Wlik extra large family rm with bultt In
through the ltl1chen leads to the ShelveS, completely equipped kllcheri
seduded back sun room CMll1ooking wilh sun light. 15 x 17 sun rm finished
a sparkling 1"1JI'OUI1d pool oflering In cedar &amp; glass &amp; a 2 car garage.
summer fun tor young and old. When you step out on the patio, you'D
Healed and cooled by a fuel etficier • notice the gazebo, shop &amp; another
heal pu:np and central air \\fly not garage. Lots of lui living hare. Call tor
·look? located on I.e Grande Blvd. appointment.
Priced at 112,8110.

franch City llaytag, 114·•&lt;18·

for Slit

excellent condirlon, 814 -8Q2-

.,..992·13l2.

V'PI.tlo or Side Walk Bricks large

,. Uprigh~

V.mana PWIO Good Shape AHI!onca Plrta And Strvlca: AI
Name 11rwta
Over Guarontood,
25 - · E•·
p«lonce
All Wor-

•1110.114-2AUIII-• Pa
750 Boltt &amp; Moton

1984 llorcury Lynx $275 080.

10' pull brush hog, 1 1/2 yllrt
old, '-Y cluty wirh atumP Jull1*,

Ill••· ou. cend. u ,ooo.

• Whallot - 1 0 1110 .,..
2111-lall Allor 6:atl P.ll

114-U411-ZID2.

61 o Farm Equipment

Couch, Love Seal, AKC Registered Rottweller,
Brown With Blue &amp; Beige, wormed, laUa docked, dew claW1
~DOd Trim, Good ~ondition, 614- removed, lhoil, champion blood:·~·~-~-;=!~·~~-:-:--:-~~~ line, S350. 81.7.&amp;2·22fMS.
•J)ak Table Wl1h 8 Chairs. Uatch- AKC Registered Yorkshifl Terri·

......_ Otolo, l.acJ0.537·9!52ll.

--···

~t

080.

197t Plymouth Oust« Roco Cot,
1.10 Soc: lllllilo Alol 01 Exrru,
814·•••·4141, . 304·175·1702

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

~ .Chllr,

One Mate Pug 11 Wontha Old,

t•.eoo

Own $10.00 Bushal, Or .!Of ,.., EYinirG&amp;
Lb. Call Douglu R&lt;Mioh, · . 1g77 Corvtllt 350 Aulll, 50,720
2237.
Actual Mllll, Whlto/Tan lnutrior,
SMot com lor lilt, pick ,... _, l-TilP&gt; A1t (1114)4&lt;1&amp;-rD21
•1 .25 dozen, Sllw11 Outen and
1981 .......... Benz 300 0. dietnr:rodblo, e.I4-~HIMM.
Hi ongtM, now uphoiollry, olk·
lng ..000. tot more lnfornw.tlon

tMat~;:hing

~STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

(814~731

Rd.,lotwtfal' ONo.

HaU Runner Bean•. Pick Your

wilh apeaketl. SotS: posal- champion aired, lhow bred, par.-blo rrodo 101 oldlf bike: elecrrlc onto O.F.~ l C.E.RF. $800. :or-illl.l25; 614-949-3228.
582·5800.

~~·,~·~·~-~~~58~~~~~~

Runs Exctllent

Canning tomatoea, S•.oo you
p1c1r. •s.oo wo p1c1r. bri'!l - .
era, Raymond Rawe, I U·2U •
4292.

~4llreo

P"":~-titJ..:....:..I8_14.;..l4_cs_oo_a_ __
American b\ollldoo ))uppill tar
aale, like Ch&amp;nce In Homeward
J...Sproult Window, Like New Bound, s1ot-698-e7D6.
- • 31141, 175; t.&amp;arble Sink, Good
~" Shape! 22x4B, $25: cro11bow. o..rie Blblal Jack Ruoson Pup• HariOn, Uoad Only 1 Yoarl $100, pill, 8 W88kl Old, ISH-441 ·
0553

till V.hama Wol-tne 414
,... 111 F"t I dro kl~

213 VI, Aula.,_.
bulh Engine, 'rrano., looks and

hoi and G'••n peppMI. Brlnt
container, Warahlll Adama,

llcAGctctll

till All12llllr1111M, .....
...... 11100 &lt;*), lt4-7..,.Zill.

conntna 10ma1- 1ot oala: aloo IUI7 ~

1150, 114--441·

'...Citchen Corl81 18.50 Sale on all AKC Dalmatian 12 WHkl Fe·
: ioom lizo wpeta, llollohan Cor· malo, 61loll, Wormed 185, 114•)lorl (81&lt;)«8-7444
.:25:.:.8:..8:.:.1104.:....
.-----·c--~~--------,·
='--OYIIUt, new condition, $75: AKC labrador 7wk old pups,

;;.ct.orryWood,ll-9.

740

ChMJ Truck. CaU lnformarlon

~
.~~~~~R-I~P~-~--~~,·~~~·~~--~~~­

~ng Chine Hule:h RoU Top. Oeak

730 Valli I 4-WOS

720 lhlckl tor Slit

(814)2•5-04

3-.

..

710 · Autos for Slle

......... w-..~adlaal• Page 07·

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaUipolla, OH • Point PleaNnt, WV

IU83 Chft\1 Truck, 198g Ford
TNcll, lllfi Chft\1 Malibu, 1g72

W $125, Elch, BI._:JZ71.

S WHk Old SIMIId Pups, lllnla·
turo Collies, Alklnf 185, AIIG I
Old Shll1l. $35. 114-

tttooktd On Phonics Sells
tJ!II.tS; Or Mlnt 1150, 814·

Sunday, August 31, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea1ant, WV

SURPIIISINOLY LOW PRICI
LAKEVIEW CT. Located where' :
qnty the bell to good enough! LOt •

•

in Gallia County; ..
Wiseman is a HOUSE SOLD WORD
SINCE 1943

2.3•8 Ac . MIL aubjee! to "
rea1rlctive convenanta. $2 1,500 ·#&gt;
Call VLS 388-8826/4 46 6806.
~

•

I

'

·i

�·I'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="403">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9788">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28768">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28767">
              <text>August 31, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6062">
      <name>butten</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="245">
      <name>morgan</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1369">
      <name>ours</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="404">
      <name>stover</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
