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• ..fii.H
IIT.H
ltllla.l
• . 1-1

OCTOB.ER IS
.l.·fii.H
IIT.H
CHEVY TRUCK MONTH IREI_.
•• 1-1
AT C &amp; 0 MOTORS!
CHECK OUT THE SAVI.N GS
1998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
EITEN·DED CAB ·414·
IPEI

'!/f(e ~utter:
sttrJJng
expenence

'

• Featurtd on page C1

Beth Nlll18n
Chapman
fighting back
with "Sand
and Water"

Ssturdsy's

• P•ge C1•

•PageB1•

•

I

•

·• •J.

•

Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chrome Bumpers, Chrome
Appearance Package and Morel
.•'

AS
LOW

AS

'·

Restyled.Front Grille, Instrument Panel, ·
Bumpers, and Increased Horse Powerll

AS
LOW

AS
*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

1998 CHEVY.S-10
EDENDEDCAB
.

'

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

t

Air Condltlonipg, Alum. Wheels, LS Pac~age,
AM/FM Radio, W/L Tires, and Morell

AS
LOW

AS
*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

9~ CHEVY BlAZER

·4 WHEEL DRIVE .
Air, AM/FM Radio, Tachometer,
Lockl~g Differential

by AARON MARSHALL ·
nme..a.nttntl Columbu• Bu,.tu
COLUMBUS- 7-4..() are still the numbers to know
for Gallia and Meigs County residents as the Public Utilitics Commission of Ohio ·approved the area code swap
for local residents scheduled to begin this fall.
Included in the 740 area code will be all of the current 614 area code except the immediate Columbus metropolitan area - essentially just Franklin County, the
PUCO ruled Thursday.
.
. That ·is a s\Yitch from an earlier plan that was
appealed which had left some counties adjoining
Franklin in the 614 area code and others in the new 740

Businesses checked
for sale of tobacco,
alcohol to minora

Calendan

qwlhedl

AS
*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

Comh;s
E!lltor!als
Along the R,lver
Obituaries

Soorts

Cl&amp;7 ·

03-7

Insert
M
Cl
A6
B1-8

c 1997 Ohto Vtlley Publlshina Co.

lODE"'"

All PRICES INCWOE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCWDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
UCENSE FEES.

Detllls on
pageA2.

J

entittt

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • November 2, 1997

zone.
"The f~.ir t~ing to do is ~o treat all. the ou~lying areas
the same, sa1d PUCO cha1rman Cra1g Glaz1cr.
F~r. residents i~ the newly created 7~ are~ ~e. the
trans11Jon to theu new area code ~II begm ~n late
November or early December, accordmg to Glaz1er.
, ~rom that future. starting point to ·June 6, 1998 those
d1.ahn~ the old 6!4 area code to reach Southcast..Ohio
still ':"11\,hav~ the1r calls oonnected -a so-called doublc nng penod.
However, following that date, callers dialing 614
instead of 740 will receive a reoording informing them
the number has changed area codes.

• For rtlldentl In

Originally, the "double
the newly created ring" period was to begin
740 ar.. code the next weekend, but the
tranaltlon to their ap.Pc~ll of the original Comnew area code will m1ss1~n order pushed back
haft(
1 lat thalllmeframc.
Novem'b:r ~r "earle · ~e e~act ~ate th~ "douD
~ ble .nn~ penod wJII now
ecem r begm IS u.nknown because
.
. the plan still needs the routme . approval of a national telephone number plan
administrator. •
•
,
The double nng penod would begm two weeks after

Vol. 32. No :JB

the area code split is nationally aPJ&gt;roved •
Implementation of the new area code will have ·no
affect on the existing cost of a phone call.
Local calls will remain local calls billed ala montbly
rate, even if their oomplction requires the usc of the .W
area code according to a PUCO relcuc
Unp~cnted growth in the te.l~uaicatkw
industry is responsible for the 614 area code spliL CoiDmunication tools such as fax machines, oompvter JDIIdi.'
urns, pagers all require numbers making the area code
split imperative.
The assignable 740 area code numben are expected
to last1S years, according to Glazier.
.

Charter changes among issues Meigs _voters
to be decided in general election to dec1de · ·
races
•ss
·
nmG~~~:t.rr
I
ue8

and

ll Sections - ll4 Pqes

LOW .

,.

POMEROY - Six Meigs
By,JENNIFERRICHTER
County businesses made illegal
Gallia County voters will
sales of tobacco to minors during
Jbe first round of compliance
decide local isssues on Tuesday - two on the
checks in oonncction with sale of
countywide level, and two in Gallipolis .repre·
aloohol and tobacco products to • senting proposed changes to the city charter.
Propollld Chlrttr Amtndmtntt
youngsters,. according to Meigs
The
first 'ballot issue calls for members of the
County Pr0secuting Attorney
Gallipolis City Commission to re&lt;:civc $3,600
John R. Lentes.
·
annual &lt;;ompensation for their work as commis· Bui most of the businesses
sioncrs.
checked, 25 out of 31, complied
These positions have always been on a volwith laws conceming the ~~Ulc of
untary basis and therefore, no compensation has
tobacCo to minors, he noted.
ever been received. The oompensation would go
Lentes said his office, in coninto effect on Jan. 1, 1998, for all oommissionjunction with the Meigs County
crs taking office on or after that date.
Health Department, has completThe i!isue says "increases to such annual
ed the first round of compliance
compensation
shall be passed only upon unanichecks, . funded by the Ohio
moua COIIICIII of ihe City Commisaion and that
Department of Health.
· The · eompllanee checks look , ' no commissioner vo\bl&amp; on any such incre8ac
shall benefit from the'"lncrease during thati:Obifor proper posting of 'notices
missioner's current term· of office. •
warnings and \l&amp;e minors to deterThe second issue asb to allow the city manmine whether businesses will &amp;ell
ager to enter into contracts or purchase supplies
to an underage person; Lcntes
said. The minors used in the
or materials, or provide labor for any work in
any
department, not involving more than
checks were IS and 17 years old
$10,000.
Contracts and purchases in excess of
and busincsacs checked included
$10,000
shall
be subject to an advertised bid and
departments stores, food stores,
the approval of the city oommission.
pharmacies and other types of
Propollld Tu Levlet
stores, he added.
Ubnlry Rap/M:emMt Tax l.al')f
Lentes said six illegal tobacco
The Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
sales were made out of the 31
Ubrary
is seeking a replacement 0.3 millle.-y.
businesses which were checked.
The
levy
is up for renewal by vote every five
He said he is warning the busiyears. The levy has been in place since the late
nesses that failed that a seoond
1940s, but through the years, the library haa had
violation will result in prosecudifficulty
passing the levy contiquously. The
tion.
levy
began as way of providing funds
original
All of the violations involved
for the Gallipolis .City Library .to be&lt;;omc a
tobacco, he added, commenting
county district library.
'
thai any alcohol violations will
· Tlie last time the levy was defeated was in
result in prosecution.
Businesses which did not make
1991: Since ~he library,'s levy did notp~ in the
THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR of the Ollila County Chlldrtn'l Homl, Dwnnl
the sales to minors will be receiv19~1 campa~gn, the hbrary suffered w1th cuts Cook, llllndt with 1 quilt commemontlng the home'aMrvlce. Chllclrtn'ISir·
bemg made m hours of operation, the bookmo- vleet 1, -king 1 .a mill levy 10 lnau,. continued Optl'ltlon of the home.
ing letters recognizing their com·
bile stopped and staff was cut. !:'urtding was
pliance.
again approved in 1992, but did not start again in 1993.
"We see a lot of growt'b at this library, • said Clarkson. 'There
"While I'm disappointed that
"It is an important levy for us," said Library Director Betty have not been a lot of changes, but there has been a tremendous
any business would sell (tobacco
Clarkson. 'It shows us that we are maintaining community sup- growth in the use of ~mputers. We see a lot of arowth potential
or alcohol) t0 minors, there w~re
port. It has been an example f&lt;\r other libraries in the state.'
but we need this support for this to continue. •
, I
2S businesses that were doing
In 1986, the levy went from a .S ·milllevy down to .3 mill levy.
ClarkSon added that if the levy does not pass, the libJ:arY will
exactly what they should be doing,
Although the library is state-funded, the replacement levy pro- oontinuc services, since it is state-funded, but some of the extraa
and did not sell either tobacco or
vidcs for over 13 percent of the library's costs. With the local tax, the library offers may be cut.
·
·
alcohol products," he said.
"Sale of alcohol or tobacco
ProiiCtld Ubrary Income for 1987
extra resources such aa additional hours of operation, technology,
products to minors can result in
library staff, services and book requests are achieved.
1
Sourct
.
substantial fines, license suspen'In order to maintain services, the levy is still a large income Ubrary Replactmtnt Fund
13.38%
sions or revocations and forfeiaddition." said aarkson.
Property Tax Levy
.38%
tures," he said.
If the levy is pa~, it would oost the owner of a $50,000 Fldtral Granta-IIHid
5.38%
The inspections will continue
home $5 per year extra in property taxes. The projected library P1tron F11111 and Fill
1.88%
every six months, according to
income shows that with this tax, nearly $150,000 will be netted Etmlrigl on lnwltmlntl
Lcntes.
for library resources.
Contlnuad on p6fl' M

Good Mornin
Tod•y'l Gl:im Jladbwl

AS

college

7-4-0 ·is the number to know for Galli a, Meigs

News Watch

1998 CHEVY
S-10

.

tmts

HI: SOt
Low:40t

'

By JIM FREEMAN

n~1111 Stiff
POMEROY- If, as the old saying goes, all politics
are local, Tuesday's election will be very political indeed
as Meigs Countians head to the polls to decide local candidatcs and issues.
.
·
Meigs County Board of Elcctiqns director RitA Smith
alld election board member Henry Wells ran a test of vot·
ing equipment Friday morning, finding all the equipment
in working order.
·
'"'tcrs will decide three countywide property tu
levies including an additional tontinuiliJ 1.8 milia for
the purpose of maintenance, capital conatruction lad
operation of Carleton School and Moip I~
Workshop for penons with mental retardllioa and devcl·
opmental djsabilitlea.
~ ce.a.,wkle,...,.._n 1"da111lb¥ m,
five-year levy for m•l ti - IIIJd ~ Ill tile
county home 111!1• oae-llllll. ti~JNI' -.!Joyy fur
current expenses at the Mclp Couaty Oencrai Health
District, known aa the Meigs County Hollth Deputmcnt.
Other property tax isa- include:
Eastern Local School District - Additioaal 4. 7 mlll,
two-year levy for the operation and pel'DWIOnt improvemcnts of the school district; ·
·.
Southern Local School District -· Renewal 4 mill,
·three-year levy forocurrent expenses;
·
Rudand Township •• Additional one-mill, five-year
levy for maintaining and operating cemeteries;
Olive Thwnship - Renewal one-mill, five-year levy
for m~ntaining and operating cemc.terica; .
·
Raanc Village •• Renewal 1. 7 mdl, five-year levy for
cum:~t expenses;
.
Mtddlcport Village •• Renewal two mill, five-you
levy for fire protection;
Columbia Township •• Additional half-mill, five-you
levy for maintaining and operating cemeteries.
. 1n ad~itill!'• Columbia _Township .voters will decide a
local opt1on tssu~ approvmg.or ~~g the sale of.alcobol for ~IJ-pre~tse oonsumpt~n WJthtn .the townah1~. .
Cand1d~tes tn local races mcludc, mcumbents 1Jid1·
cated by (1):
TOWNSHIPS

Bedford •· Trustees, two to be elected: David M.
Bricklcs, Robert. F. Hawk (i), Virgil C. King (i), Jack R.
Wells and William Edward Kauff (write-in);
Chester •• Trustees, two to· be elected: Da.vid J.
Koblcntz (i) and Blair Windon (i); ·
.
Columbia •• Trustees, two to be elected: Don OJeadlo
(i), James Gaston, R. Jerry Hanning and Granville ·c.
Stout (i);
Lebanon •• Trustees, two to be elected: Elson Dalley
(i), Lawrence Hayman, Lawtence Johnston Jr., John P.
Krider, .Charles R. Lawrence, Howud M. Lawrence Jr.
and Bruce E. McKelvey (i);
Letart - Trustees, two to be elected: Zane A Bup,
Continued an page M

Conservatives keep close eye on 6th District congressional race
COLUMBUS (AP) - The former head of
the Christian Coalition says oonservativcs are
closely watching the batde developing in the 6th
Congressiooal District across southern Ohio.
"This is one of the top House races in the
country, and it's a major priority, not only for
me personally, but for conservatives nation·
wide," said Ralph Reed, who has become a
Republican consultant since his departure.
Reed has been hired by former Rep. Frank
Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, to try to regain the

seat he lost to Democrat Tcil 10,000 Christian coaljtion members in the dis·
Strickland or Lucasville.
trict along with members of anti-tax and anti·
Cremeans narrowly defeat- abortion groups;
ed Strickland in 1994. ·
Cremcans'is the.kind of candidate voters in
Reed told The CoiiiJIItiib...,~e socially conservative district want, Reed
Dispatch for a story Thursday said.
that he is worki?g for . Cre"Those people who share those values are
means and not a~amst Oh1o U. 110ing to want to seo somebody like Jlrank
Gov. Nancy Holhstcr, the other emerge from this primary and get this seat
prominent Republican running for the seat.
back in November " he said.
Reed said he wants to mobilize 5,000 to
The campaign ~pokesman for Ms. Hollister

said Reed does not have the same clfect he did
when he ran the'Christian Coalition.
"Ralph Reed· obviously is a ;alcnted iadividual, but his focus in life bu chanpd,"
Chris Baldwin said.
"He is nd longer doing the altruistic work
of the Christian Coalition; he is now 1 paid
Washington political consultant."
Baldwin said he expects Ms. Hollister to
receive Christian Coalition support, too.

Paul Reed named Meigs County's SEOR.c ·'Person of the Year'
AND

OTORS TOYOTA
ST. ALBANS

&amp;LEXUS
'

Reed is the third generation or his
By BRIAN J. REED
"Paul Reed is an exemplary oommunlty leader,' Maifamily
to serve at the Farmers Bank
nme•Stntlntl Stiff
son said about the nomination. 'His work. not only as a
POMEROY- Paul Reed of Middleport, president of oommunity banker, but also as 1 member of the oommu- and Savings Co., ·Which was founded
thc Farmers Bank and Savings Company, has been nity, has helped us achieve much of the progress that by his grandfather.
He has been associated with the
named Meigs County's Person of the Year and will be we're beginning to sec. •
bank
since 1976, when he started as a
honored by the Southeastern Ohi.o Regional Council on
"Paul's work to develop the CIC site at Tuppers
part-time
employee after school. In
Wednesday evening.
Plains, and his service aa a member and past president of
1981,
he
joined
the bank full time, and
Reed also serves as the president of the Meigs Coun· the chamber of commerce have been invaluable." Mai·
ty Community Improvement Corporation. He is one of son said. "He is a good ambassador for Meigs County served aa executive vice presblent
prior to his appointment as president in
13 people and organizations who will be honored at the because he 'oves his community.•
SEORCs 29th Annual Person of the Year Awards Ban· .
Over the years, SEORC honoreca have been business 1992.
He is a graduate of Ohio Universiquet in Chillicothe on Wednesday evening, according to leaders, industrialists, educators alld community leaders.
ty,
and
he attended the Slonicr Graduate School of Bank·
Sam Crawford, SEORC director.
Awards by the Council are made on th~ basis of contri·
ing
at
the
University of Delaware.
The honor was bestowed upon Reed by Sue Maison, butions to southcaatcrn Ohio by involvement and lead·
Reed also serves a.s the president of the Meigs Counpresident of the Meigs Counly Chamber of Commerce. ership in community affairs.

r
1'"-- '" - - - - - -- - - - . . . . , . - - - - ---,-----___j---:..----,-

ty Community Improvement Corporation and ill member of the board of directors of tbe Mcip County Ch-ber of Commerce, which be serves as treasurer.
He is also on the board of tbe Ohio Banken AIIOCiation Service Colp. He is a member of Jllc Grice Epil'c»- ·
pal Church, where he is the Director of ChristiaD Bduaa·
lion.
·
An active Mason, Reed is 1 member of the 1'oa1erv7
Masonic Lodge 164, F&amp;i.M, alld i11r: muter of the
lodae. He has serve!~ as the treasurer n the Meip C:OU.
ty Agricultural Society and served on the Meip Coulllf
Metropolilan Housing Authority. ·
He and his wife, Lauric, live in Middleport, with their
daughter, Katie, and their "'?n, Ben. ·

----~--------'--.:..__

...

�..
Page A2 • Jhabu ..._.,. Jbial •

Wall Street ends shaky week on upbeat no!e

OHIO Weather
Suncbly, Nov. 2
AccuWeather• foretUI for daytime coadltions
MICH.

•

IToledo I 51' I
PA.

,,,,,

•leolumbusl52" I

By BRUCE MEYERSON
AP Buelneu Writer
NEW YORK - Wall Street
closed its rockiest week in 10 years
with a few more gyralions Friday, as
another turbulenrtrading day ended
with modest gains and signs of
encouragement.
The Dow Jones industrial average,
which tumbled a record 554 points on
Monday and bounced back a record
337 points on Thesday, rose 60.4 I to
7,442.08 on Friday. That trimmed its
loss for the tumultuous week to just
273.33. or 3.5 pen:ent. Along its
twisted path, it rose 8 points Wednesday and slid 125 Thursday.
Traders were heartened Friday as
markets stabilized around the world
and fresh signs of noninflationary
growth appeared at home.

Visiting C\linese Pnosident Jiang
Zemin rang the hell at the New York
Stock Exchange to open Friday's session. The Communist leader then
gridned broadly, flashed a thumbs-up
and shouted to the weary traders on
the floor below, "Good morning! I
wish you good trading! "
The Dow opened with a 114-point
gain, but retreat~ to a loss of nearly
29 points as ·investors seized on the
opponunity to remove some money
from the volatile market at a better
price.
"We' ve got a bunch of confused
Investors out there," said Ned Riley,
chief investment officer at Bank of
Boston. "People would prefer not to
stay fully invested over the weekend
for fear we could have replication of
last weekend's Asia crisis or any oth-

Clouds, scattered showers
dominate weather pattern
By The Associated Preu
The National Wealher Service says skies will continue to be mostly cloudy
Sunday and Sunday nigl)t with a chance of scattered showers. Highs will be
from the mid 40s to the mid 50s with lows between 35 and 45.
.
It will be mostly cloudy Monday witiJ scattered showers ending, possibly mixed wilh a few flakes of wet snow. Highs will be in the 40s.
.
Skies were ge~rally cloudy across the state on Saturday afternoon wnh
patches of showers. The rain .was being fueled by a north-south cold ~ront
across Indiana which was expected to move eastward mto Oh10 overn•ght.
Temperatures at 3 p.m. ranged from 59 degrees at Cincinnati Lunken Airport to 52 at Toledo.
.
.
Sunrise Sunday at lhe Columbus weather station will be at 7:02 a.m. Sunset will be at 5:28p.m.
Weather forecast:
Sunday...Panial clearing early in tho day, then clouding · up again by
evening with a chance of showers. Highs in the mid 50s. Southwest wind
10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
·
Sunday night...Showers likely. Lows in the lower 40s.·Chance of rain 70
percent.
Monday ...Showers likely, possibly mixed with snow showers. No snow
accumulation expected. Highs in the mid 40s. Chance of precipitation 60 percent.
Monday night... Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain or snow showers.
'Lows in the mid and upper 30s.
Extended fo....,ast: .
Tuesday...A chance of showers, possibly snow showers during the morning. Becoming panly cloudy during the night. Highs in the mid and upper
40s.
Wednesday ... Panly cloudy during the day, then a chance of showers during the night. Morning lows in the lower 30s. Highs 50 toSS .
'
Thuncllly...Pjll'tiy cloUd,. Momin&amp; lo- from llle upper 30s.,to
40s. Highs around 50.
·

lho......,

E. coli recalls prompt USDA order .
closing Neb. beef processing unit

By JOHN NOLAN
Associated Press Wrher
CINCINNATI - A barge transpon company and a former executive
convicted of conspiracy to dump oil
into the Ohio and Mississippi rivers
were fined a total of $272,500 Friday
and placed on two years of J'robation.
U.S. District Judge Herman Weber
fined MIG Transport Services · Inc.
$250,000 but said it could face additional fines if found guilty of any other violatipns during the probation.
The company could have been fined
up to $700,000.
Weber noted that the company
also agreed to pay a $3.9 million settlement'to the federal government,
which prosecuted the case.
were
Company employees
accused of dumping bilge slops,
burnt waste and other kitchen and
industrial garbage into. the rivers
from 1972 to 1991. Defense lawyers
argued that the company follow~d
industrywide waste-disposal methods.
J. Harschel Thomassee, of Paducah, Ky., who retired in 1992 as the
Cincinnati company's vice president
of operations, w.S fined $22,500. His
sentence includes six ·months of
home incarceration, when he may be
electronically monitored to ensure his
compliance.
He could have been sentenced to
up to six years in prison and fined as
much as $350,000. He knew of ille. gal oil dumping from MIG Transpan's towboal5 into,lhe river 1111d did.
nolhing to stop tile practice: the. government said.
Thomassee deClined to make a
statement in court or to a reporter. He
will not appeal, his lawyer·Thomas
Smith said.
·
. The company will consider
whether to appeal its sentence,lawyer
Glenn Whitaker said.
On July 3, Weber lhrew .out six

WASHINUTON (AP) - The ~· vour corrective actions have
Agriculture Depanment took ~eli on been ineffective," Siores wrote. "You
Friday to shut down a beef process- have failed to prevent d-irect product
ing plant in Nebraska Chat had recent- contamination and adulteration."
ly recalled more than 600,000 pounds
of.meat because of E. coli contamination.
USDA withdrew its inspectors
from the BeefAmerica Operating Co.
plant in Norfolk, 'Neb .. after discovering repeated violations of sanitation
rules governing fecal contamination
and other problems that the company had previously been warned
about.
Removal of federal meat inspectors effectively closes a processing
plant.
"This decision is based on your
inability to maintain and operate
your facility in a sanitary manner, "
said Fernando Siores. USDA's
inspector in charge, in a letter to
BeefAmerica.
Pd. for by Taoehtra for Qutltlty Education,
Among the. proble'ms cited by
Ca111t Langfanf, Treaourer
USDA were contamination with ani·
mal fecal matter- the source of E.
coli and other dangerous bacteriaon finished beef products and some
ready for shipment.
In addition, USDA found peeling
paint on surfaces that come into contact with meat and hydraulic fluid and
blood was observed dripping on
equipment.

e

1-88&amp;-3 ·FLORINE
~·

~
We've just made dlet~ng as easy asl ;,j.
...
Afeet/ngs and Times ...
GALLIPOLIS
ST. PETERS EPISCOPAL CHURCH

541 Second Ave.
.
TUE 6:00pm • WED 9:30am

Green Township
TrustHs encourage
support for the 1 Mill

JACKSON

.

CoMFORT INN

for

605 E. Main
MON 6:30pm

PROVIDiNG FIRE
PROTECTION. This Is
· a RENEWAL ONLY of

•

'l

This is especially true in skilled nursing care.
Technical and mf\iical expertise may be difficult to assess. But everyone knows
when they have been treated well. With dignity. With respect. Quality nursing
and rehabilitative care does not merely meet expectations. It exceeds them.
It does not merely please. It satisfies.

VOTE FOR

o.v-................................................ 16$.00

----· -·
..... ........ ,,,.,.......,.,
.,.,.. _,
---eo.r
11o -pd0111 by 111111 .,.,..m..t In .,..

.....

Dt-,lllwas o.ldwlDnotbo....,.._
Jllr far ......FJ
_.., c:aricn..

~-riJ,hiiO .... ,.. ..,_
t t; to. period. Sa~ rw

...._ctar t

.Tom Wood
Green Township

-a... eo.,
......_ ........ _, ...................S27.l0
......,_,_,............................SI3J2
~
SIG:5Jt

sa-.- . . . .. . ..........._. .

IJ - .................... - ..................J29.ll

rd

The Arbors at Gallipolis is committed to customer satisfaction.
We exist to help people ;_ to make their lives better. Fuller.
And more satisfying. For our patients. Our families.
"Or anyone who steps inside our center.

TRUSTEE

:tpdan.

MAILIIJIIalmONI

Gallipolis officers cite. two local men ·
GALLIPOLIS -The following citations were issued by Gallipolis City
Police: Nokey J. Kimbler, 33, II Garfield Ave., Gallipolis, stop sign violation; and Billy J. Williams, 40, Cheshire, DUI, speeding and driving
.under suspension.

Gall/a authorities lodge seven in jail
GALLIPOLIS- Booked into the Gallia County Jailfollowing arrests
by authQ\ities wero:
• olbra J. Snyder, 43, Cheshire, Friday at 10:47 a.m. by the Gallia
County Sheriff's Department for contempt of coun.
• Bette L. Bonice, 32, Bidwell, Friday at II :03 p.m. by deputies for
. disorderly conduct and misconduct at an emergency.
• Dana A. Sargent, 19, Bidwell, Saturday at 2:57 a.m. by deputies for
underage alcohol consumption.
• James M. Allen, 19. Bidwell, Saturday at 3:40a.m. by deputies for
underage alcohol consumption.
• Tara M. Block, 19, Vinton, Saturday at 4:19 a.m. by deputies for
underage alcohol consumption.
• Joshua S. Dixon, 18, at large, Saturday at 5:13a.m. by deputies for
underage alcohol consumption and disorderly conduct.
• Jeff.W. Collins, 19, Vinton, Saturday at 6:28 a.m. by deputies for
underage alcohol consumption.

RODNEY- A Gallipolis area youth was injured in a one-car accident Friday on State Route 588 ncar the Elks Farm. the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the State Highway Patrol reponed . .
Guilhcrme M. Gayccz, 16, 239 Fairfield Church Road, wa&lt; transported by the Gallia Counfy EMS to Holzer Medical Center from the scene
of the 9:50p.m. crash. troopers said. He was later treated and released
for a scalp laceration. a hospital spokesperson said.
. Gayccz was a passenger in a car driven by Denise L. Dailey, 16. 45
: Ponerbrook Lane, Gallipolis, that was westbound when it went off right
rside of the road in a curve, according to the patrol.
· The car came back onto the road and. went off the left side. where it
:struck a tree and overturned onto its side, the report said.
The car was severely damaged and Dailey was cited for failure to control.
The patrol reported that a Jackson man was slightly injured in a two_car collision Friday on SR 325 near the on/off ramp to U.S. 35 at Rio
·Grande.
Raymond L. Boothe, 44. was not treated at the scene, according to the
repon.
Troopers said Boolhe was stopped nonhbound Ul 2:02 p.m., waiting
for southbound 'traffic to clear, when his car was struck in the rear by a
car driven by Donnie N. Newsome, 17, 8224 Bull Run Road, Vinton.
Newsome was unable to stop in time. according to the repon. Damage was severe to Boothe's car and slight to the N~wsome vehicle.
Two Indiana residents were slightly injyrcd in a car-deer collision Sat'urday on U.S. 35 in Jackson County's Madison Township, the patrol
reponed . .
Driver June M. Stierwalt, 57, and her passenger. James R. Stierwalt,
· 61 , both of Chesterfield, were not treated at the scene of the 7: 15 a.m.
accident, troopers said.
: The Stierwalts' pick~p truck was eastbound when it struck a deer
.0ttempting to cross the highway, troopers said. The deer was killed, and
:the icku was severe! dama ed.

RIO GRANDE - A contract
wilh lhe LoCal Government Services
Division of the state auditor 's office
was approved by the Gallia-JacksonVinton Joint Vocational Board of
Education at its meeting last week at
Buckeye Hills Career Center.
The contract will allow for the
division to review the NSD's financial statements.
, The board also approved application and receipt of funds if awarded
for the Region 7 School-to-Work
Block Grant and the 1997-98 st.ale
STW continuation grants. A resolution in suppon of the School-to-Work
initiative also received the 'board's
nod. ·
Additionally. the board adopted a
resolution in support of the Ohio
Coalition for Equity and Adequacy
School Funding checklist, and
approved work to be perfonned as
pan of the Urban/Rural School-to- 1
Work Opportunities Grant with the
Ohio State University. Center on
Education and Training for Employment.
Donations from the following
were also accepted: Area 7 Agency
on Aging, Rio Grande; Jackson-Vinton Community Action Inc., Wellston; State Farm Insurance Companies, Chillicolhe; Ford Motor Co.,
Allen Park, Mich.; and the Medical
Shoppe Inc., Gallipolis.
·
In personnel matters, lhe board :
• Designated Jane Ann Jordan as
head cook, which was effective Nov.
I.
• Employed Crystal Harmon as the
Adult Services Financial Aid secretary, which was effective Nov. I.
• Accepted the resignation of all
hourly contracts as submitted by
Crystal Harmon.
• Employed the following substitute teacher for the 1997-98 school
year: Jack Richards, marketing.
_ • Employed the following noncertified substitute personnel for the
remainder of the current school year:
Danny Browning Jr. and Lance
Reese, custodian; Sheree Jenkins and
Bobbi Jo Warrington, educational
aide and cafeteria; and Carl Tackett,
bus driver.
In the Adult Education Division.
the board:
• Approved the Train-lhe-Trainer
for Environmental·Control program .
• Approved the following pantime hourly contracts: Margaret
Basehore, Bob Collins, Larry Marr
and Don Rollins, Pre-Employment
Training; Larry Bumgardner; Industrial.Maiijtenance; Emily Dailey, Displaced Homemaker/CSS; Sherry
Fisher. ABLE After School; Susan
Garten and Rex Troy, Train-theTrainer for Environmental Control;
Steve Grant, Computer and Electricity; Jeremy Lahnncr, Auto Technology; and Cindy Wilson. PETE Program aide .
• Approved the employment of
Robert Jacks as a substitute in the
Peace Officer program.

n:I•PIIIA3

Nettle Ann Warren lathe shop owner. The shop
will offer an a11ort of name brands - Lee
Duckhead dress and sportswear, plus sizes In
ladles, D-161n girls, men and husky boy sizes
top-ol-!he-llne shoes, Fila, Reebok, Nlke and
Adldas. The telephone number Is 441-4016.

NEW SHOP OPENS- Grand opening ceremonies for tl)e Variety Shop, 356 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis (formerly Thomas Clothlara), were
held Saturday at 9 a.m. Hours of operation will
be from 9 a.m. until 8 p.m. Monday through
Thursday, and 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays. The 1hop will be closed on Sundays.

College Night program slated Tuesday
RIO GRANDE - More than 50 juniors and seniors, arc encouraged to
colleges and universities are joining attend the program. College Night is
together Tuesday to present the Col- presented in cooperation with the
lege Night Program in the Lyne Cen- University of Rio Grande, and is
ter gymnasium at lhe University of sponsored by guidance counselors
Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community from Wellston, Jackson. Oak Hill,
College from 7-8:30 p.m.
River Valley, South Gallia and VinCollege Night helps students get ton County hi~h schools.
information about various college
For more information, contact
admission requirements and financial local high school guidance counaid options so families can make selors, or lhe Bank One Education
informed decisions on selecting a college.
The program includes two financial aid presentations at 6:30p.m. and
7:30 p.m. Each session lasts approximately 30 minutes with Mitch Baker, counselor from Wellston High
School, serving as facilitator.
Dr. John Hill. director of financial
aid at Rio Grande, will present an
overview of college financial aid.

Finance Group at 1-800-487-4404,
extension 5994.

Kate Me Kenzie. marketing represcn~

tative from the Bank One Education
Finance Group, will specifically discuss loan products. College admission officers wi II be located in the
new gymnasium in Lync Center.
Private, public and technical
schools will be represented. A few of
the schools attending include
Cedarville College. Georgetown College, Hocking
Colegc.
Johnson the
&amp;
Wales,
Kent State
University,
Nashville Auto Diesel College,
Shawnee State University. the University of Rio Grande, Ohio State
University, Miami University, Ashland University and the University of
Cincinnati.
Parents 'and students, especially

Cllll Dl' stop by totlay!

~ 360 Second Ave
F
446-0699
. ~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~

eace of mind

......... in a stressful time.

Hospital news

~at's a

Veterans Memorial
Friday admissions - Bonnie Ransom, Racine.
Friday discharges- Ruth Hysell.

good reason for
State Farm's

Final Expense
Policy.

COMMERCIAL LENDER
Regional bank has opening for a commercial Lender
in the Athens County area. Handle all phases of
making. and servicing commercial loans including
portfolio management. Assist in credit analysis and
preparation of loan documents. Must actively
participate in business development and retention.
Some travel required . If you have a four year degree,
3-5 years commercial .lending experience, 1 year
credit analysis experience and are computer literate
with expertise in spreadsheets; send resume and
salary history to Human Resources CL, P.O. Box 738,
Marietta, OH 45750.

If you are between the ages of
5o and 80 and qualify. this
$7.500 whole life insumm:c ·
policy can help ease your loved
one&gt; financial decisions at
your death.
f;1r j/I•Jui/1 •'Hcr~I Wll.l:''.

EOE

Deputies report
deer-auto crashes

~one speaks louder than a satisfied customer.

lrc.nt.r ... -ROot.

$1 .00

COLUMBUS- A quarterly dividend of 8 cents per share on the corporation's outstanding common stock (I cent par value) was declared Fri'
day by the Bob Evans Farms Inc. board of directors.
The dividend is payable Dec. I to shareholders of record at the close
. of business on Nov. 14.

Patrol reports three injury accidents
'

•

•mh. ~~·Miil·liom mu/n·Jit' lltJM!ih.
lf'j '

Slalj' f imn ,t 1./('IJI:

John K. lk:hmln, AQtnt
342 S8cond A'"'""",

P.O. Box~

Glllipolil, Ohio &gt;15831
Oil.: 61&lt;-446-4290 Of
1888) 1170-2345
Aeo.: (814) 441-1420
~1ltl~

l.niii Jk IIN II.t!lo.•' ( ·,~lljlolll~ •l h 111: 1/llh,, l\kll~ll111fhll1 . lllflll'll'

'•

OneWooii................................................. II .:B

SINGLE COPY PRICE

RIO GRANDE- The annual advisory committee meeting oflhe Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational School District will be Thursday, Nov.
13. Dinner l)egins at 6:30 p.m. in the cafeteria at Buckeye Hills Career
Center.
.
Currently, 44 advisory committees serve as a communication channel
between the school and occupational groups in lhe community, Superintendent Kent Lewis explained. Each committee consists of six members,
and advise on the type of skill, knowledge aud attitudes that are needed
' to prepare secondary and adult students to enter into a specific occupa-

GALLIPOLIS -A Gallipolis woman was citeil for failure to yield by
. Gallipolis City Police Friday.
According to officers, Barham S. Long. 47,.1837 Chestnut St., was trav. cling east on Central Avenue at 8 a.m. when she pulled from the Eastern
Avenue stop sign into the path of a SJlPrt·utility vehicle driven by Mark
E. Dillard. Pomeroy. Dillard swerved t'o" avoid Long's vehicle. but was
unable to avoid a collision.
Long was transponed to Holzer Medical Center by a private vehicle.
A spokesperson for the hospital was unable to be reached on Saturday.
Damage to Long's vehicle was moderate, and damage to Dillard's vehicle was slight.
·

'

-y. . . . .:. . . . . -.. . . . . .

GALLIPOLIS- State Sen. Michael Shoemaker, D-Boumcville, will
be in Gallipolis on Friday, Nov. 7 to meet wilh constituents.
Shoemaker plans to attend lhe Veterans Day program at Washington
Elementary at 2 p.m., and will be atlhe school library from 4-5 p.m.
"I am anxious to meet wilh constituents who want to voice lheir concerns about stale issues," the senator said.

Injury reportet;lin two-vehicle crash

..

SUI'iDAY ONLY
SUJ8CIIImON RATES

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TISFACTION

hbUibeil each Sunda,, llJ Third AYe.,
Gollipoli• Ohio. by,.. Ohio Vallo)' PllbHihina
CompanyJOIIUXU Co.. Seco.dl ellis pottl&amp;e
pe&amp;d t1 OaiUpolit, Ohio ·45631. Entered aJ
teeODd clw •llina man.er • Ponwroy, Ohio,
PtNI Offtce.

Shoemaker plans Gallipolis visit .

· BEF declares quarterly dividend

"'

GREEN TOWNSHIP
RESIDENTS

TaxA~

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy Band Boosters will meet at 7 p.m.
Tuesday in the band room.
On the agenda is a discussion of the Can11111 Valley ski trip.

Members serve a three-year term and represent some 200 businesses,
industries and government agencies in Gallia, Jackson and Vinton coun: ties.
For more information, call 24S-S334.

J~3

'sSl

RIO GRANDE -The November meeting of the Rio Grande Board
of Public Affairs will be Tuesday at 4:4S p.m. in the Rio Grande Municipal Building.
The meeting is open to lhe public.

tion.

Introdudng...

~

Tri-County Bri.efs:--. Contract
Board of Public Affairs meets Tuesday
with state
approved
GAHS Band Boosters slate meeting
by board

·JVSD advisory committees to meet

'linus- jeutiutl
!USPS 5J5.IItl

I

•
omy managed 3.5 percent arowth •
from July to September without stir- :
ring up inflation. An inflation mea- ;
sure linked to~ government's tally :
of the gross domestic product · ,. revealed the smallest rise sinceJ964.:
And, in lhe first taSte of bow the :
economy behaved during October. a :
manufacturing trade ,group reported •
that factory activity slowed in the
Midwest.
Taken together. the data reinforced hopes that the pace of business
may be moderating enough to keep
inflation in check without an economy-choking boost in interest rates

..

other convictions in the case - for
dumping without a permit- against
the company and Thomassee, reversing lhe jury's December 1995 verdicts. The judge also threw out convictions of two tow boa! captains.
Weber upheld sJefense arguments
that evidence submitted during the
two-month trial did not support those
guilty verdicts. The Justice Depanment has appealed that decision to the
6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. No
hearing·had been scheduled.
The judge left intact convictions
against Thomassee and the company :
a felony charge of conspiracy .to violate lhe Clean Water ~ct by spilling
oil into rivers and a misdemeanor
charge of failure to report a spill to
the Coast Guard.
Weber's July ruling cleared tow.boat captains Fred E. Morehead of
Vienna, W.Va., and RobertS. Montgomery of Racine of dumping pollutahts wilhout a permit, Four other
captains indicted on conspiracy
charges were acquitted a1 trial.
MIG Transport, a subsidiary of the
Midland Co., operated hundreds of
barges and towboats until it WjiS sold
in 1994.

We Orge fill Voters
to Choose Qualified
"" School Board
Candidates Who Will
Provide Quality
Education to 8LL
Coanty Studenb.

I''
ill.._

er international 'event.''
Volume slowed again from the torrid pace seen Thesday, when a record
2.86 billion shares were traded, but
was still quite brisk on Friday with
I .49 billion shares changing hands on
all U.S. markets.
Major indexes rose in Asia and
changed little in Europe. An International Monetary Fund bailout package for Indonesia, with lhe United
Stales joining the 'rescue effon,
helped bolster confidence in that
region's shaky economics.
Investors were also heartened by
a report showing lhat \he U.S. econ-

Court fines M/G Transport,
ex~exec in dumping .case

W.VA.

~

Regional

Sunday, November 2,1997

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

You C8.f\ see that satisfaction in the fl!ces of
the Arbors at Gallipolis. Take a closer look.
Then decide. We invite you to come
see us. Face to face.

Your Full 'l1me Trustee
four Vote Will If Creatl,
AppreeitJUd

· - -·--··-..................................$!6.•

ARB O.R

ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
Skilled Nursing Center
170 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis, OH 45631

(614) 446-7112

Plld by elildtdate: Tom Woodwlnt,

- -- --·-·- ..•···•· IOI.n

• ---

---~-------

•

-- --,·-· __ .. _________ _ ___.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..L__-f-....

:: POMEROY- The Meigs County Sheriffs Department investigated
three accidents involving deer on Frid¥Y and early Saturday.
Stephen A. Hamilton, 42,
Coolville, was southbound on State
Rbute 7 in a 1973 Toyota Friday
morning when he struck and killed a
deer that ran into the roadway near
Sumner Road. Damage was li~ted as
li)O(Ierate.
On Friday at 5:30p.m., George R.
LucaS, 31. Richmond, was southbound on SR. 7 near Chester when he
struck and killed a deer. Moderate
damage was reported to the station
wagon Lucas was driving, which was
owned by the Indian Creek Local
School District of Wintersville.
. Jennifer Doczi, 28, t:ong Bottom,
was driving west on Eagle Ridge
Road on Saturday morning when she
sttuck aud killed a deer that ran into
h~;~ path .

on proper safety and
good health habits.
If you have questions
•
concernmg
your
child's health, call the

hildren
need to be
·nstruuted...

HOLZER
HEALTH HOTLJN
1·800·462·5255
PLEASE ASK YOUR PHYSICIAN ABOUT MEDICATIONS

Speak to a RN, any day of
the week • 6 am until 2 am
(

I

•

�t

_:commentary
iunbKU'

~imtJ,. itntinil

PageA4

.GOP revises tax message

l

sional subsidiary of tbe AFL-CIO.
Every lime the president crosses
union chieftains on one issue, he has
to kowtow on another. This practice
of serial appeasetnent has kept bosses quiet, but at the cost of saddling
the president with policies that an:
incoherent even by Clinton standards.
.
After pushing for tnade measures
that labor abhors, for instance, he
backed campaign·finance reform
bills that preserve unions' powers to
extract political contributions
forcibly from members. This decision strengthened labor's ideological hold ,over tbe pany, especially in
the House.
Unionists are now calling in their
chits. One Democrat reportedly told
the White House he wouldn't help
with fast track because "this is a
$200,000 vote for me."
Normally, this kind of setback
wouldn't phase the nimble Clinton.
But this isn't just another vole for
him. If any policy in this administration qualifies as a profile in courage,
it's the president's dogged and confident advocacy of free trade. He
took on labor to pass the North
American
Free
Trade Agreement
and ratify the most
recent
General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
The recent gyrations in the world's
bourses confirm
the w'isdom of his
position. Although
some politicians
pretend that trade
wars don't have
consequences,
now
investors
know that a mere
case of indigestion
in Hong Kong tan
cost U.S. workers
tens of billions of
dollars in pensions.
savinj!s and investments. ·
Clinton
surely

understands that his tr!te policy
alone gives him a shot at posterity,
because it's the only issue on which
he has comliined constancy and
courage.
Now, with his party's congressional leaders in open rebellion, he
alone can sustain his proudest legacy. Republican leaders in the !fouse
informed pro-fast-track Democrats
last Tuesday that tbey must produce
70 votes -- roughly one-third of the
Democratic caucus -- to secure victory for the president. As things now
stand, that won't happen.
Senate leaders were even more
blunt . They warned the issue proba- ·
bly wouldn't even come up for a
voie.
In any event, the fight exposes a
looming showdown within Democratic ranks over whether to be a
1930s-style labor party or to
embrace the vaguely moderate
"New Democrat" path Clinton has
chosen of late.
The pre~ident and fellow Democrats have been able to avoid facing
the issue in recent years because
they had a common enemy -- the
Republicans-- and a common goal - Clinton's re-election. Neit year's
congressional vote will mark the
first time in this presidency that Bill
Clinton hasn't been the chief issue in
a federal election. Union poohbahs
intend to fill the wid by demanding
tribute from their political sharecroppers .
It thus transpires that actions do
have consequences, and the bargain
for labor money last year now has
forced Clinton to make a hard
choice. He can save fast track, but
only through tough, aggressive promotion. Otherwise, labor will insist
that he repay its generosity by surrendering his one unique accomplishment as leader of the free
world.

..

.

RIDE'S END - An FAA Investigator lookad
Inside the wreckage of e small helicopter that
· crashed Frldlly with three people ebolrd on the
Cleveland Memorial Shoreway. The helicopter,

•

'

"Scalpel."

:Today in history
· :By The Associated Pren
: Today is Sunday, Nov. 2, the 306th day of 1997. There are 59 days left in
:the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
•
Fifty years ago, on Nov. 2. 1947, Howard Hughes piloted his huge wood• en airplane , known as the Spruce Goose, on its only .flighf, which lasted
: about a minute over Long Beach Harbor in California.
: : On this date:
·: In 1783. Gen. George Washington issued his "Farewell Address to the
:Army" near Princeton, NJ.
. : In 1795. James Knox Polk, the lith president of. the United States. was
-·born in Mecklenburg County, N.C.
; • In 1865, Warren Gamaliel Harding, the 29th president of the United
: States, was born near Corsica, Ohio.
:
In 1889. North Dakota and South Dakota became tbe 39th and 40th
· :States.
; In 1917, British Foreign Secretary Anhur Balfour, in what became known
the Balfour Delcaration, expressed support for a "national home" 'for the
• ;Jews of Palestine.
•, In 1930, Haile Selassic was crowned emperor of Ethiopia.
: · In 1948, President Truman, in an upset for prognosticators, won re-elec. : tion by a narrow margin over Republican challenger Thomas E. Dewey.
: . In t9S9, Charles Van Doren admitted to a House subcommittee that he
- ~ad the questions and answers in advance of his appearances on the NBCa.me lltow "Twenty-One."

:as

:rv

and it is nice to know it's a natural
thing.
I also learned that climate scien- ·
tists believe you will stay drier if
you run, rather than walk, through
the rain . ·
Oh, and one more thing on the
apocalypse business.
The more secular-minded will be
pleased to hear that it is not due for
about 10,000 trillion. trillion, tril lion, trillion, trillion, trillion. trillion,
trillion years. At this time, according
to astrophysicists Fred Adams and
Greg Laughlin of the University of
Michigan, who used the latest computer models to make this determi nation, nothing will be left in the
universe except scattered subatomic
particles.
Actually, the stars will bum out
and the heavens will go dark long
before that -- in about 100 trillion
years -- but thi s still gives
humankind the time to find some
alternative living arrangements.
OK? So, the heck with Wall Street.
Invest, as the analysts say, for the
long term.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Assocbttloo.

CLEVELAND (AP) - TI~roo
people aboard a small hclko'ptor that
cra.&lt;hed on a downtown highway
were not seriously injured.
Donald Jancic of Piusburgh anrl
his girlfriend. Tammy Gknn of
Cleveland. were passengers on hoard
the Hughes three-passenger helicopter.
Officials at Burke Lakcfront Airport. where the flight starred Friday.
identified the pilot as Richard Demchuk. owner of Northern Ohio He.licopter Inc.
Cleveland Fire Battalion Chief .

Jnhnn~ Browin~tnn

s;tirl nn nne nn
h&lt;wd Wits sori,•usly hun but Jande
and Demchuk \\WC taken In St . Vin - _
~..· cnl Hospilul :.1s ;.1 pi~:~:autinn . A hnspita! spnk~swom:tn said lh~y w~rc
lat&lt;r rckas~d.
.
The "''upk sairl they hild purcha""rl a h,•lic&lt;lpl~r ride to cclehrat~
Jancic's 39th binhrlay. But the hcli,.,,pter t&gt;cgnn 10 ha"e truu~lc after a
few passe~ over the city.
h came to rest on the Cleveland
Memorial Shore way. about a quancr'
of a mile from the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame and Museum .

CLEVELAND (AP) - A man money spent on responses to the fake
who pleaded guilty to making 10 distress calls .
The calls began May I, with a
phony distress calls to the Coast
Guard apologized to the Coast Guard repon that 21 people were on board
an~ to his family shortly before a sinking pleasure craft, and coolinbeing sentenced to 15 months in fed- ued through July. Goodmanson was
eral prison.
arrested July 2 after a detective spot"! never intended to hun anyone.'' ted him dumping a radio transmiuer
said Gary Goodmanson. "I can't tell into a garbage can at a McDonald's
you why I did it, but I am ashamed restaurant.
.,
that I did it"
·
In responding to the first call,
Goodmanson, 43, of Mentor, was Coast Guard personnel from the
sentenced Friday by U.S . District United States and Canada searched
Judge Solomon Oliver. Oliver also for the boat amid 15-fool waves.
sentenced Goodmanson to three _ Goodmanson pleaded guilty Aug.
years' probation and ordered him to II ID one count of making false dis·
undergo outpatient mental health and tress calls. The count in,luded all 10
drug and alcohol abuse treatment.
distress calls.
He also must make restitution of
Both Goodmanson and his attor$139,245 to the Coast Guard for the ney; James Farrell, asked the judge to

Ohio, W.Va. lottery selections
By The Asaoclated Preas
The following numbers were
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
OHIO
Pick 3: 9-8-5
Pick 4: 0-7-8-8
Buckeye 5: 5-12-32-33-34
The owner of one Buckeye 5 ticket with the correct five-number combination may claim an Ohio Lottery
prize of $-100,000, the lottery
announced Saturday.
The winning ticket was sold at
Country Carryout in Powell.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$369,899.
The 114 Buckeye 5 game tickets
with four of the numbers arc each
· worth $250. The 3.707 with three of
the numbers arc each wonh $10. The
38,50 I with two of the numbers arc
each wonh $1.
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$345,1791o winners in Friday's Pick
3 Numbers daily game. Sales in Pick

3 Numbers totaled $'1,454.945.50. In
the other daily game, Pick 4 Numbers
players wagered $431,181.50 and
will share $53,500.
The jackpot for Saturday's Super
Louo drawing was $8 million.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 8-2-3.
Daily 4:5-7-1-1
Cash 25:2-5-10-13-19-20

DAYTON (M) - State and local
environmental officials want the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency to
clear up their confusion as they try to
dear up the air.
Officials will meet with agency
leaders next month in Washington
D.C. to address proble"ls in complying with tough new clean air rules
that could cost Ohio billions of dollars.
John Paul of the Regional Air Pollution Control Agency came up with
at least I 02 question s he has about
making federal clean air regulations
work in the Dayton area.
He isn '1 alone.
Donald Schrcgardus, Ohio EPA
director, who lauded the progress the
state ha' made in air quality in the last
25 years, has questions as well .
"I wo.nder about how flexible it is
going to be." said Schrcgardus, who
will go to the meeting with the U.S.
EPA along with the National Gover-

nors ' Association.
"You hear EPA Director Carol
Browner say not to worry, that they
want flqibility, " Schregardus said.
"But if some environmental group or
·community challenges the implementation, the EPA won't be able to
allow flexibility."
The Ohio EPA estimates that it
will cost the state three quarters of a
billion dollars to implement the new
regulations for ozone and $2 billion
to meet the standards for soot that
comes from factories, electric plants
and cars.
Schregardus said he worries that
some factories won't w.ant to install
costly pollution control devices.
"Companies are not goin~ to sit
there and say, 'Sue me,' " he said. "I
think you are going to see some fac tories shut down in the face of tens
of millions in new regulatory costs."
Eight states in the Nonheast had

I

I ·~--~-J~IJoiiiKII..t' • Page A5

complained that Midwestern states,
including Ohio, sent too much pollution their way. In October, the federal government ordered Ohio 10
reduce its emissions of nitrogen
oxides by 43 percent by the year
2002 .
This is in addition to old standards
requiring the state to cut emissions by
about one-third.
The U.S. EPA in July al so issued
new regulations on haze, holding
Ohio accountable for visibility problems over large national parks in
West Virginia.
The new regulaiions would put
every melropolitan area In .the state
back in violation of the law, which
brings sanctions on new industry and
the possible !oss of federal highway
dollars.- ~
Currently .. every city in Ohio
except Cincinnati is meeting the old
regulations.

Pet shop leaves customers in lurch

"He (Demchuk) was yanking on
the throttle and everything and we
SOUTH CHARLESTON, W.Va. qwners are found.
As many as 240 buyers had paid
went straight down like an elevator,''
(AP)
The
owners
of
a
pet
store
Charleston,
have
the
Alkires for various pets, includThe
Alkircs.
of
Jancic said.
·
left
town
and
are
believed
to
be
in
the
ing
a rare, $1 ,000 African Gray parin
the
night
and
left
town
packed
up
Motorists saw the helicopter and
Clarksburg
area,
Miles
said.
rot.
Others gave them more than
with
more
than
300
animals
and
stopped in time to avoid it. The land$1,200 apiece for 280-gallon tanks
birds,
leaving
hundreds
of
customers
had
leased
the
Petland
franThey
ing gear on the pilot's side of the hcli'copter was crushed, and the body of empty-handed, a deputy attorney chise from Charleston doctor Gerald they were scheduled to pick up,
Love but had trouble . with unpaid Miles said.
general said Friday. '
the aircraft had several dents.
bills and bounced checks, Miles said.
Pelland has 146 stores around the
Among
the
victims
was
the
senior
The helicopter had taken off from
Love
plans
to
reopen
the
store
soon,
~ountry.
with headquaners in Chilli Burke Lakefront !112: 10 p.m., airport class at Charleston Catholic High
she
said.
cothe, Ohio.
. School, which paid $500 for two sugcommissioner Mike Barth said.
ar
gliders,
a
type
of
flying
marsupiThree lanes of the four-lane eastbound Shoreway were blocked by the al. The animals had remained at Pet- ..- - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
helicopter, backing up traffic for land in the Southridge shopping center while the students built cages, said
several hours.
Deputy Attome~ General Jill Miles.
A store employee was told to leave .
. Tuesday night when a mover showed
up at closing time, Miles said. The
employee suspected Michael . and
Sandra Alkire were doing something
wrong and reported them.
Kanawha County Circuit Judge
take into account that Goodmanson Tod Kaufman on Friday ordered the
was affected by a combination of Alkires not to sell any of the animals.
emotional problems and prescription He also ordered a Charleston animal
drugs that he was taking for health hospital to keep 12 pets the couple
problems. Those dru~s included had boarded there until the legitimate
painkillers and a steroid that Goodmanson said affected his mind and
judgment
Oliver said while he took into
account lhe prescription drugs and
emotional problems, he could not
downplay the seriousness of the
GALLIA COUNTY JUNIOR FAIRGROUNDS GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
repeated hoaxes.
"That was a lot of people who
would normally be there to respond
to legitimate calls," said Oliver,
HOURS
8 A.M. TILL 5 P.M.
referring to the amount of search perOVER
41,000
SQ
FT.
INSIDE
DEALER
SPACES .. UNLIMITED OUTSIDE
sonnel required to respond to the fake
calls. .
·
FREE PARKING AND ADMISSION
Goodman son could have received
six years in prison and a $250,000
LARGEST &amp; OLDEST FLEA MARKET IN SOUTHERN OHIO
fine. The judge said he would not
impose a fine in light of the restitution that Goodman son was ordered to
SEDDNII AIINUAL DHIIISTIIIIAS MZAAII ·~
S ·II· T ·
make to the Coast Guard.
Rear Adm. John F. McGowan said
FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATION : 614·245-5347
Friday that he was satisfied with the
sentence.
"I did hear him say he didn 't
intentionally plan 10 put anyone at
risk," said McGowan, commander of
the Ninth Coast Guard District, which
oversees the Great Lakes region.
"The bottom line was he did. so we
arc satisfied with the sentence."

-Vote For-

Mentor man's bogus distress
calls earn him prison sente_
nce

Write Tony Snow, Creators
Syndicate, 5777 West Century
Bl•d., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045.

So, what is the politically correct 120 decibels. Ear plugs would be
solution to this, and why? Condoms, required in an industrial setting
'safe sex', or 'safer sex'. Why? where such noise was present, or
Bec!Wie tlbltinence until marriage is so11nd control dcviFe• "'ould · be
said to be "unrealistic". Young peo- installed. Who from Hollywood will
ple have a drive that they can't con- come out to campaign against heartrol. This goes back to the "since we ing loss?
evolved from animals we must act
The political system is awash in
like them" thinking. These diseases so-called 'soft money'. contributed
could be eliminated altogether if by the fat cat elites with agendas for
uninfected people would postpone America, or those wanting access to
sex, find and marry one partner, and the elected officials. The McCainremain mutually faithful for life. Feingold Campaign Finance Reform
Where did that philosophy come Bill wa&lt; supposed to dean up this
from '!
mess. But, did you ever hear anyone
Every day we live we prove this on the evening news say that grassphilosophy to be correct. So why do roots voter informalinn guides
we do the opposite? Have you.ever would become illegal'? These voter
heard: "No one is going to tell me guides simply state how each candi what to do, I'll do what I want to date voted on certain roll call vou:s.
do"? Docs this not· expose a weak- or positions they have taken on
ness of the way we are pro- issues. Citi1.cns going to Ihe polls ·
grammed? Except with our own can make their own decision which
bodies, how else do we follow such candidate is best for America. So.
policy? Do we place sand in the oil when a few folks found out about
spout of our automobile? Do we put the elimination of voter guides. the
water in the gasoline tank? Do we voiced opposition to McCain-Fcinremove an ignition wire from the gold. Leaders who I istened. and
engine? NOl The designer and man- likewise voted it down, were characufacturer has advised against those terized by the evening news and the
practices. We paid .for the car and pundits as terrible people, being
we're going to take care of it. We sec ' unwilling to fix the mess. Why?
it is rustproofcd, polished, and that Obviously if voting records arc
. liquid levels are proper. But with our made available to the general public •
bndies, follow the designer's advice? then the evening news wouldn't have
Naw.
total control of the peoples' minds,
We don't even follow common now would they?
sense with music. We have at least a
Robert Weedy is a correspon·
generation whose hearing is dam- dent for the Sunday times-Sen·
aged by sounds, self-inflicted, over tine!.

BBy Joseph Spear
Dallas-based consex crisis is just around the corner.·
gregation/mail·
The
sexual harassment case brought
Not being a financial reporter, the
order
by Paula Jones against President
bes.t I can offer in this frightening
Clinton is approaching trial. Ms.
period of undulating stock markets ministry/moveJones intends to prove her case by
is meat loaf and mashed potatoes, ment/parody called
identifying a Clinton quirk.
metaphorically speaking, of course. the Church of the
SubGcnius, is July
Searching for comfon news in a '5, 1998.
Clinton is crooked, Paula says,
time or crisis is one o~the multifariand she is not referring to WhitewaWhile researchous tasks a columnist must perfom1,
ter loans or campaign finance abusing whether the
es. We have to decide soon on an
- and I take the dutY- xery seriously.
When the market went south, I end is ncar, I
acceptable euphemism to describe
tripped across many
Speer
the alleged presidential abnormality
immediately began investigating the
miscellaneous items
without conjuring up images that
apocalypse, to see if it is imminent.
that should lift your spirits.
could
damage the tender psyches of
The main thing I discovered.
It might gladden you to know, for the pure and virtuous.
which should come as very soothing example, that the unslccping
news, is that it's not happening yet. guardians of all that is righteous
As I rummaged for comfort news
Pinning it down, moreover, is a remain on top of the sex crisis. For to help us through the stock crisis, I
dicey business. The Jehovah's Wit- example, Brigham Young .Universi- also discovered that Tupperware has
nesses first predicted the Cataclysm ty, which is owned by the Mormon been redesigned and, is still alive and
would occur in 1874. When that year Church, recently yanked four sculp- burping. Last year, 14 million Tupcame and went pretty much in nor- tures from an Auguste Rodin exhib- perware panics produced S1.4 bil·mal fashion , the date was revised to it. Rodin was, of course, from lion in sales. The relief that I felt
1914. Then it was changed to 1925. France, which we all know is where upon learning this makes me think I
Then to 1975 -- after which the sex got its start and where that tart had been subconsciously concerned
church suspended all predictions.
Brigitte Bardot lives. One of the about the once homely but now
Just last month, according to Har- pieces pulled was "The Kiss," in handsome and always handy ·Convard professor Stephen Jay Gould, which two naked and Iicentious tainers, and my guess is you were,
too.
we survived the date prophesied for pieces of stone embrace.
the end of the world by Anglican
I also found out that men lose
While this is comforting news
Archbishop James Ussher in 1650. indeed, I would be remiss if I failed brain cells raster than women, which
The next scheduled day of ruination to alert you to the fact that a major is comforting because I realize I am
that) can find, this one divined by a
getting ever dumber than my wife

on e birthday celebration flight, crashed on a
highway that rune through the downtown. The
people aboard were not seriously InJured. (AP)

Birthday jaunt goes haywire
when 'copter hits highway

Comfort news in a time of crisis

•

~

..

Americans need a dose of reality

Barry's
.. World

Ohio/W.Va.
·confusion over new clean
air rules prompts meeting

2, 1817

Bargain has forced Clinton to make hard choices

By TONY SNOW
35,2 pcn:ent ill
Creatora Syndicate
1994 and 47.6
WASHINGTON .. Bill Clinton's percent
last
825 Third Avenue, Galllpolia, Ohio
charmed life lost some of its pixie year.
614 446-2342 • Fax: 446 3008
dust last week.
These figures
111 Court stnet, Pomeroy, Ohio
He got hammered by Hollywood don't take into
614-9112-21!56 • Fax: 992·2157
for courting China. The stock mar- account "indeket got venigo. And Republicans on pendent expenCapitol Hill informed him -- through ditures," such as
channels -- that he has approximate, labor's
ultraly zero chance of getting "fast expensive ad blitz for Democrats
track" trade authority, which he pas- before the 1996 election. Nor do
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
sionately desires. Fast tnack would they include "soft money" donaR9BERT L WINGE1T
deny Congress the power to amend tions of the son that seem likely to
Publiaher
trade agreements negotiated by the earn a few union bosses some time
president and permit legislators only in federal prisons for campaign·
to vot yea or nay.
finance felonies.
·
Hobert Wilson Jr.
Margaret ~
Republicans aren't the problem.
If you add these cash ·gushers to
Executive Editor
Conll'OII.Democrats ·have given him the the ·political equation, Big Labor
Latrers to the editor- ~- They should be IHs ltuln 300
thumb. House liberals in panicular likely controls more than half of all
words. All/titters .,.. .ubject to editing snd must be signed snd
have no desire to get on the free- Democratic Party giving, even
Include address snd lelep/tone number. No une/gned letters will
trade
side, since such a stand would though it represents barely 10 perbe published. Letters should be In good taste, sddrwulng
estrange
them from · their chief cent of the private-sector labor
Issues, not personalities.
.
source of campaign funds, organized force.
·
labor.
The president and his key aides Labor unions account for a grow- - especially Harold Ickes --willingly
ing proportion of the pany's elec- cozied up with unions as pan of their
.tion-year tilL Unions accounted for win-at-all-costs quest for a second
By WALTER A. MEARS
34 percent of all political-action- Clinton term . While the strategy
AP Special Correspondent
committee donations to Democrats worked brilliantly last November, it
WASHINGTON - Republicans have been making issues of debt and
in 1992. That percentage jumped to also made the White House an occataxes since Ronald Reagan showed them how. Now President Clinton claims
Democratic credit for plunging deficits. And in the odd-year election campaign in New Jersey, GOP tax cuts don't seem to be selling the way they
once did.l
COUlD I
So the arguments of past campaigns are being revised as they are readied
.SEE
TilE
for the 1998 congressiOnal election season.
CKCJ&lt;ENS
. First . the Republicans are pushing their bill to overhaul the unpopular
!IIE'DICAL
Internal Revenue Service. which Clinton endorsed after first opposing it.
HISTORY?
.Then . their congressional leaders say, they 'll settle on a flat tax or a forn1 of
national sales tax and propose it to supplant the current income tax system.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich said they will have a consensus by April
or May, and "we will he able to move toward bold tax reform afler that. "
Rep. Bill Archer, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, said that will
be their focus in the 1998 campaign.
The Reagan script was an across-the-board income tax cut, which he got
• enacted in 1981. He also promised' to rein in the deficit- and early on, 10
- balance the budget within one term. Instead, deficits soared during his eight
years in the While House.
_ That mix already has changed. This year's tax cuts, the biggest since Reagan's, were not rate reductions but selective tax breaks, for families with
: children and to help wi.th college tuition and retirement savings.
•
II was a compromise, a bargain between the Democratic White House
: and congressional Republicans. So Clinton gained a share of the political
: proceeds in the $152 billion, five-year tax cut.
·
Last Monday, he announced the lowest budget deficit in 23 years, $22.6
billion. and said the Democrats did it, beginnin~ with his tax-raising eco• nomic program in 1993, enacted without a Republican vote in Congress.
• · "Well, it's time for the naysayers to admit they were wrong," he told the
: L)emocratic Leadership Council. " II worked, and America is better for it. "
There'll be no such concessions, of course. The Republicans say the
declining deficits are a product of economic expansion dating from their By ROBERT WEEDY
smaller.
White House days.
Facing reality is often a lot hard:
Victims of ·AIDS
But Clinton has the numbers to boast. He said the deficit has fallen $267 er than just deciding to be optimistic
deserve our combillion- 90 percent- since the day he took office, '"The Democratic Party without lookinB a1 c"""itions. Wtpassion and help,
gave that to America," Clinton said. · ,.
we face · reality we make it possible
this is a terribly
There are signs of the eroding impact of the Reagan-style tax issue as to be optimistic because we can
debilitating disGov. Christie Whitman contests a closer than expected challenge for a sec- uncover the cause of the problem. A
ease. But so are
ond term in New JerSey. She won her first with a campaign pledge to cut person who knows what the problem
many of the othstate income taxes by 30 percent, and delivered as promised. But those cuts is could be halfway to a solution.
Weedy
ers. . Very unfonuare notlhe prime issue now; her challenge~ claims they 've pushed up other
Very often today we the people
nately, some if not
taxes and pension fund debt, and is concentrating his auack on the high price allow Hollywood stars, the electronmost comes from an unhealthy
of automobile insurance.
ic media, the organized political lifestyle and choices. One could
Republican Bob Dole tried the tax cui script in an attempt to jolt his pres- activists to set public poli~y for argue that some who suffer from
idential campaign out of the doldrums in 1996, but it was no he.lp. He said . America. Although these do not heart disease and cancer may have
at the time that he wanted to do for the nation what Whitman had done for come close 10 representing Ameri- chosen an unhealthy lifestyle by
New Jersey.
cans' views. they have tremendous over eating, poor diet, smoking,
inOuence in gelling their agenda doing alcohol and drugs. But, is this
passed into law.
true to the same degree as with HIV
As one example, look at the pub- infection?
lic funding of biomedical research.
Included with the AIDS epidemic
Americans have a long list of seri- arc the remaining varieties of sexuous diseases for which too little can ally transmitted diseases (SIDs):
be done. adequate treatments are chlamydia, herpes simplex, human
unknown. Logic would lead one to papilloma virus. hepatitis B, syphilis
-'
believe that funding would go to and gonorrhea. Gonorrhea has
those diseases that involve the most become leaner, meaner and widely
people. where the most good could resistant to penicillin. Syphilis has
be rendered. This would reduce now made a comeback, occurring at
•
•
health
care costs for the nation.
a frequency not seen since the
•
•
But. this isn't the way it is done. 1940s. Chlamydia is estimated to
•
A strong lobby, made up of homo- have infected 30 to 40 percent of
sexual activists and Hollywood sexually active young adults. sms
stars, with the blessing of the elec- caused by viruses have a disturbing
tronic media, have obtained a dis- habit: once on board they never get
-.
proportionate share of the research off. In fact they may even sink the
dollar pie for AIDS research. The ship. Herpes Simplex has infected at
••
other diseases, hcan disease, cardio- least 25 percent of sexually active
•
vascular disease, cancer, Parkinsons, adults. rwo out of three newborns
diabetes, etc. do not get the funding who pick up a herpes infection from
they need because the pie is now their mothers at birth will die.

'E.st41Jllslid in 1966

New•••

Sunday, November 2, 1997

THOMAS M. THEISS
Sutton Township
TRUSTEE

THE FRENCH 500 FLEA MARK.Eif
AND GUN SHOW

NOV 7-8-9

Your Vote &amp; Influence Appreciated

STEVE LAMBERT
Candidate For

Rutland Township Trustee
Pd. by condldote:

Sto"" Llombert, 359t0 C-ons Rd., Rutlond, OH

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wlthdrawet within the ftrst 182 cloys. No penalty thereafter. No po111a1---

�page All• ~

"'

a..._,

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

tWJ

Sunday, November 2, 1997

Mary L. Smith ·

Noutmber

REEDSVILI.E- M~ey Lucille Smith. 89, Reedsville, died Saturday, Nov.
I, 1997 in Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Pll'kersbura, W.Va.
Born April 20, 1908 in Reedsville, daughter of the late John and Melissa Congrove Boring, she was a homemaker, and a life member of the
by Bob Hoeflich
Reedsville Church of Christ.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Daisy Lee Brown, 8S. Point Pleasant. died
Surviving arc her daughter-in·l•w. Elizabeth Smith of Reedsville; lllld three
Saturday, Nov. I, 1997 in the Overbrook Center, Middleport.
grandsons, three great-grandchildren and two great-great grandsons.
Born Jan. 6, 1912 in Southside, W.Va.. daughter of the late John R. and
She was also preceded in death by her son, Gran! Smith; her husband,
An air of sadness prevailed at Vet- Flatwoods area Baileys, and Bertha
Elizabeth Jones Crump, she had been employed at Lakin Hospital for 20 years Alpha Allen Smith; a great-granddaughter, Mary Beth Smith; and four broth· erans Memorial Hospital Friday as married Henry Bullard of Missouri.
as a psychiatric aide.
crs and one sister.
employees said their goodbyes to By the way, Mabel's husband, Olin,
She and her husband were owners of Brown's Coal Yard, located on LinService's will be II a.m. Monday in the White Funeral Home, Coolville, Administrator Scott Lucas and was also a teacher here. Both Mabel
coln Avenue in Point Pleasant for many years.
'
with Phil Sturm officiating. Burial will be in the Reedsville Cemetery. Friends Administrative Assistant Doris !hie. · and Bertha are now widows with
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Claude Brown; a sister. muy call at the fune111l home from 6-8 p.m. Sunday.
Friday was the final work day for Mabel residing in Willoughby, while
Florence H. Viers; and a brother, Charles A. Crump.
,
. the two, who have something like a Bertha calls Tampa, Fla.. home these
Surviving are three sisters, Martha Mae Harvey of Dallas, Texas. Flossie
combined 56 years in service in the days. They are sist~rs of the late Ada
Clark of Ashley, and Sara K. Noland of Lawton. Okla.: three brothers. Eu~enc
administrative field at the .Pomeroy Holter, who was a Meigs resident,
(Editor'• note: The following IaUer wee eubmiUed tor publlcllllon In hospital.
E. (Viola) Crump of Lawton, Anhur R. (Eulah) Crump of Meadville. Pa ..
and are aunts of the late Jim Freck•
and Thomas L. (Doris) Crump of Ashley; and several nieces and nephews. the Sunday nmee.S.ntlnel.)
For the past week or so, Doris and er.
On Monday, Sept. 22, 1997, I lost my darling husband, Darrell, and our Scott have been honored with social
· Graveside services will be II a.m. Tuesday in the Kirkland Memorial Gar·
Mabel and Bertha are traveling
duughlcrs lost a loving and caring father. He fought a heroic battle with can- events. Last week a public open with Mabel's son and daughter-indens, with the Rev. Louis A. Hussell officiating.
There will be no calling hours. Arrangements are by the Crow-Hussell cer.
house was held at the hospital to bid law, Bob l!!td Joan, and their grand,
We would greatly appreciate your publishing this letter in the Sunday the two goodbye and on Wednesday, daughter, Nora. So do make that
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant.
limes-Sentinel, so that!, his wife, of 28 years, and our two daughtors, Eliz- a dinner was held at The !ton Gate in Monday wave an enthusiastic one.
abeth and Jennifer, can state the following : we did not write, nor did we autho- Point Pleasant to honor the two .
Steve Beha.. administrator at the
rize the obituary of Darrell E. Smith that was published in the Sunday Times- departing employees.
Carleton School/Meigs Industries,
CHESHIRE - Vina Casto, 91. Cheshire, died Friday. Oct. 31. 1997 in Sentinel on Sept. 28, 1997.
Doris and Scull were so pleased at has issued a letter to supporters of the
the Overbrook Center, Middleport.
.
It was Darrell's stated request to us that if he passed away, his obituary the various gestures from employees, tax levy requesting that no more pro·
Born Oct. 14, 1906 in Jackson County. W.Va .. daughterofthe late Thomas not be published in your local newspaper. We honor~d his request and feel the hospital hoard and the public. motional signs for the levy be placed
Rufus and Georgia Chase Morrison, she spent most of her life in Jackson strongly about it.
They received scads nf cards and on utility poles and instructing perand Putnam counties in West Virginia, and was a member of the Ripley BapOmitted in his obituary was that he was a 19-year employee of Fede111l were sh«,wcrcc.J with gilts a' everyone sonnel on proper removal of the signs
tist Temple, Ripley, W.Va.
.·
Mogul and later, Borg-WarnerGBllipolis plant. He was proud of his job and attempted to give them a proper send which were placed on such poles.
She l"a8 also preceded in death by her husband, Opha Casto, in 1980; a place of employment.
niT. They will he missed at the hosAEP, as you may remember, has
son, Junior Casto; a brother. Wade Morrison; and two grandsons.
.
Thank you for publishing this letter.
pital and und&lt;MJhtcdly arter such long asked that no signs be placed on utilSurviv1ng are a daughter, lris (Ronial) Jividan of Cheshire; and six grandImogene Gaye Smith and years of service they hoth will miss ity poles hecause they do create a
children, 10 great-grandchildren and a great-great-granddaughter.
Elizabeth and Jennifer Smith the hospital . So w~erc is the "good" hazardous situation for utility workServices will be II a.m. Monday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
.Gallipolis in g&lt;»Klhyc '1
ers.
Wetherhoh Chapel, G·allipolis, with the Rev. Harold Tracewell officiating.
The saying goes, "Time marches
Thanh, Steve . Your response is
Burial will be in the Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call at the
on," hut their leaving d1&gt;es note the refre,shing.
chapel from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
end of an era.
,
And thanks to Opic Cnbb for his
lloh
llower.
s
of
Jackson
has heen note in trying tn get me straightened .
Municipal
named interim administrator at Vet- an1und a hit with the change in the
The following cases have recent·
Commoa Plea'
erans
Memorial and will a.sumc his time last weekend . Your en"&gt;urage·
The following cases were recentSNOWVILLE · - Memorial services for Ernestine Lucille Wood ly been resolved in the Oallipolis
new
duties
the week of Nov. 10.
Municipal Court:
ly resolved in the Galliu County
ment was much needed, Opic, and I
Cousineau. who died at her reside.nce in Naples, Fla .•.dn Wednesday, Oct.
So
wishes
for good health, go&lt;Kl appreciate your tact.
Raymond M. Litchfield, 46, 520 Common Pleas Court:
29, 1997. will be held Sunday (today) at2 p.m. at the Snowville Methodist
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, charged
Dissolution granted -Cathy D. lw..:k and good times to Dori~ and
.Here we arc in November and the
Church, State Route 681. Snowville .
with disorderly conduct, was fined Decker, 11960 State Route 7, Gal· Scott flow frnm many.
annual Sacred Heart Church bazaar
SIOO.
lipolis, and Brian L. Decker, 121il
You'll want to g1vc an extra wave wilfbe coming up on Thursday, Nov.
Paul B. Campbell, 21. New Wash· Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
to the Dc!ta Queen Monday when it 13. Chicken and ham dinners will be
ington, charged with driving under
Dissolution tiled - Brett D.
served beginning at 4:30 in the
BIDWELL- James McKee Denney, 61. Bidwell (Evergreen Commu- the inlluence, was fined $500, three Hutchinson, Gallipolis, and Rhonda pa"cs by Pomeroy cnroutc to Pitts- church auditorium
-.:.::__
hurgh.
. nity), died Thursday, Oct. 30, 1997 at his residence.
days jail, three years probation and R. Hutchinson, 6662 SR 588, GalOn board will he two former
Quite a drop on Wall Street a fclli
Born July 16, 1936, son ofthe late Gertrude Enola Earles and Ernest McK- 180 days license suspension.
'
lipolis; Pamela C. Nibert, 46 Central Meigs County natives. They arc days ago. Good thing none of us
ee Denney, he was a 1954 graduate of Bidwell-Porter High School and attend·
Roy A. Phillips, 36, Crown City, Drive, Gallipolis. and RobertS. Nib- Mabel Frccker Bailey, 94 years old, jumped out of windows isn't it, since
ed Rio Grande College. He retired from the Transportation Division of Bob charged with reckless operation, was crt, Patriot.
and her sister, Bertha Frccker the market did make a strong comeEvans Farms in 1994, following 28 years of service.
fined $450.
Divorce filed - Teddie Hanna Bullard, 92.
back the next day? Guess it docs
A U.S. Army veteran, Sergeant 4th Class, he was a member of the Vin·
Joseph A. Pollock, 22. 633 Fourth Justice, 171 Kraus Beck Road, GalBoth
Mabel
and
Bertha
were
forprove !hal often, a little time docs.
ton F &amp; AM Lodge 131, Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite Valley of Colum- Ave., Gallipolis, charged with driving lipolis, from Keith D. Justice, Hunt·
merly
teachers
in
Meigs
County.
indeed, change things. So do keep
bus, VFW Post 4464, and he attended the French City Baptist Church.
without consent, was fined $150; . ington, W.Va.; Amy B. Armstrong Mabel married Olin Bailey of the smiling.
Surviving are his wife, Barbara Ann Ross Denney, whom he married Sept. charged with assault, he was fined · from William A. Armstrong, no
2, 1965 at Bladen; two sons, James R. (Jamie) Denney of Bidwell, and Rus- $100 and six months probation; addresses available; Jack E. Curry
sell Lee (Jennifer) Denney of Columbus; a daughter, Patricia Ann (Mike) charged with offensive conduct, he from Darlene A. Curry, no addresses
Allen of Columbus; a granddaughter; a stepbrother, Thomas Treleaven of Bid- was fined $100.
available; Regina D. Masters from
well ; and a stepsister, Elenor Jane Batt of Denver, Colo.
David .Lee Masters, no addresses
He was also preceded in death by two brothers, Charles·William Denney
available.
an~ Harold Cecil Denney; and his stepmother, Evelyn Denney.
jServices will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, with the Rev. Charles Stansberry officiating.
POMEROY
Entombment will be at the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens, with military serN•r P-y-Mnon Bridge
vices to be conducted by VFW Post 4464. Visitation was conducted' at the
112-21118
POMEROY - Seven calls for Daisy 'Satterfield, Veterans Memori: chapel Saturday, with Masonic services conducted by the Vinton F &amp; AM assistance were answered by units of al.
VINTON
G•llla
County
Display Yard
; Lodge 131.
·
POMEROY
Meigs Emergency Services on Fri.
155
Main
St.
Pd. by condtdoto, 43410 Dut&lt;htown Ad.,
12:50 p.m., assisted by Central
day.
Aoctno, Oh. 45771
Dispatch, Meigs County Courthouse,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
8:34 a.m., State Route 124, Jose Diane Walker, refused treatment:
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -Richard L. Haycraft, 53, Point Pleasant, died Mascorro, Veterans Memorial Hos7:47 p.m .. West Main Street,
Saturday, Nov. I. 1997 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·
assisted by Central Dispatch. Quinton
pital, assisted by Rutland;
He was the director of the Mason County Vocational Technical Center in
12:12 p.m., Overbrook Center, Lee Oliver. VMH.
Point Pleasant.
RACINE
FAMILY PUCDCE
. Arrangements will be announced by the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home,
7:22a.m., SR 124, motor vehicle
Point Pleasant.
accident, Frank and Ruby Ludwig,
car owners, no .injuries.
RUTLAND
COLUMBUS (AP)- It's about
12:42 p.m., Depot Street, Mary
WINTER SPRINGS, Fla.- Phyllis Hennessy Poulin, 73, Winter Springs, three months and counting for Day, VMH;
changes in the teen driving laws.
formerly of Pomeroy, died Thursday, Oct. 30, 1997 in Winter Springs.
3:18p.m., Strongs Run Road,
Gov. George Voinovich on.Fri&lt;lay James Bayes, dead on arrival.
. Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
signed the bill that sets up graduated
steps for teen-agers who are learning
to drive. ·
The bill and one increasing the
MARIETIA- Charles L. Sherlock, 80, High Street, Marietta. died Tues- penalties for voyeurism, which
day, Aug. 21, 1997 in the Arbors of Marieua.
Voinovich also signed, go into effect
.
INSURANCE
Born in Center Township, Morgan County, son of.the late Charles and in 90 days.
TO ACCOMODAD THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
Mary Simcox Sherlock, he retired from the Heiby Co., and was employed
Full Hnt of
T"!'n-agers will be able to get temby the Covert Baking Co., Middleport, as a bookkeeper, a!ld by the Marie!· porary permits and begin driving at
lnlinnct l'loductl
WE ARE OPEN 'nL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
ta Concrete Co.
t
FIIIIIICIII
age 15-Ifl as long as they are with an
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
A graduate of Manchester High School, he attended the Mountain State eligible adult, which includes parent,
StMctt
Business College and Rio Grande College, and spent two years in the armed guardian, licensed driving instructor
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
AGENCIES Inc. ·
services. He volunteered as a construction supervisor at the new Humane or licensed driver age 21 or olde~ who
POINT PLEASANT
Society of the Ohio Valley. and attended the First Presbyterian Church of · is in a position of authority, such as
(304) 675·1675
Marietta.
a teacher or coach.
Surviving are his wife. Virginia Fulton She,rlock; and two granddaughAt age 16.teen-agers will be able
ters.
to get a probationary license. after r••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••··~
Private services were conducted at the family's convenience. Entombment passing a state exam.
was in the East Lawn Mausoleum. Arrangements were by the McClure-Shafer
The bill also includes a driving
Funeral Home, Marietta.
·
curfew between I a.m. and· 5 a.m ..
Memorials may be made to the Humane Society of the Ohio Valley, P.O. effective until age 17, except in cerI
..
Box 5, Marietta, Ohio 45750.
tain cases. including emergencies.

Beat of the Bend ...

Daisy Lee Brown ·

Letter clarifies death notice

Vina Casto

Gallia County court news

Ernestine Wood Cousineau
James McKee Denney

ELECT

EMS units log seven calls

KENNETH
WIGGINS

Sutten Tew•shlp

CLERK

.

Richard L.

H_~ycraft

·

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

Voinovich signs

Phyllis Hennessy Poulin

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

teen driving bill

Charles L. Sherlock

·Davls·Qulckel .
Agency Inc.

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Nation/World

z. 1117

,. ' 1 • . . _ , . , I • Page A7

Chinese
president
balances
economic
concerns
By TED ANTHONY
AP.Natlonal Writer
NEW YORK - The Chinese
president's visit here was, like much
of his U.S. trip, a balancing act seen clearly in his speech to business
leaders. where he 'spotlighted his
nation's juggle of state-controlled
economy and global free market.
China must, he told a sympathet·
ic crowd Friday, ''unswervingly follow the road of a Chinese-style
socialism." In the same sentence.
however. he spoke of "an all-around
advancement of reform. openin~ up
and modernization."
"We must ensure !hat our people
will enjoy full access to the fruits of
economic prosperity," Jiang said at a
dinner sponsored by the U.S.-China
Business Council and the China
· Chamber of Commerce in U.S.A. He
· then affirmed his commitment to China's "socialist market economy."
Jiang was sche~uled to visit
Boston.Saturday and Los Angeles on
Sunday. He spent the first part of this
week in Washington meeting with
Presideqt Clinton and Congress, and
returns ro Beijing on Monday.
His eight-day stay is the first state
visit by a Chinese leader since Chinese president Li xiannian visited 12
years ago during the Reagan admin·
istration.

Prosecution looking to bar Unabomber
case mental defense
By LINDA DEUTSCH
AP Special Correspondent
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Prosecutors said Friday they will try to bar
Thc&lt;&gt;&lt;iore Kaczynski 's law ye rs from
offering a mental ddfcct defense
hccausc the Unahomber suspect
won' t ' ubmu to the government 's
psy~:hulog it.:altcs ts .

·

PROTESTS CONTINUE - Proteltlll'l critical
of Chinese Pre1ldent Jiang Zemln gathered
outalde the Waldorf·Aetorla Hotel in Ntw York,
Despite the apparent c~ution his
remarks reflected, Jiang's IS-plushour day of immersion in American
capitalism Friday appeared to play
well.
From the New York Stock
Exchange to company visits and a
. banquet, however, business lenders
gushed at his presence and waxed
enthusiastic about the opportunities
of a market of 1.2 billion people wait·
ing to be tapped.
.
"For him to come here and see
this, it can only help improve rela·
tions," Ford Motor Co. chief Alex

where the president stayed Friday during a
stop In hla tour of the U.S. (AP)

Trotman said at the stock exchange
Friday morning as a trader elbowed
him aside.
Jiang rang the e.change 's opening
bell, then made his way across the
frantic lloor on the arm of its CEO,
Richard Grasso. "The New York
Stock Exchange has a lotto offer in
financial management that we can
learn from," Jiang said.
He drew protests, as he has in oth·
cr cities, about human rights and
Tibet. Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
refused to meet with him, citing his
concern about human rights in Chi·

na.
Gov. George Pataki also did not
meet with Jiang. A spokeswoman
said it was a scheduling conflict.
"It's not very polite. Neither the
mayor nor the governor greeted
(Jiang). The Chinese community is
very disappointed with' the behavior
of New York City and its government," said George Hua. general secretary of the United Chinese Associations, an umbrella·group that represents about 60 organizations.
Later, Jiang visited IBM in, Manhattan and AT&amp;T Corp.

King's eldest son chosen to lead SC.LC
By CHELSEA J. CARTER
ABIOCiatad Prtll Writer
ATLANTA - The eldest son of
Martin Luther King Jr. was elected
Saturday to follow in his father's
footsteps as president ofthe Southern
Christian Leadership Conference . .
Martin Luther King Ill. who just
turned 40, faces high expectations as
he tries to revitalize the civil rights
organization co-founded by his father
in 1957.
"I want to make some kind of
impact," he said in an interview
before the election. "I can't tell yoli
what that means this day. I want to
leave a legacy, if it's nothing more
than, in a major wqy, continuing niy
father's legacy."
The SCLC has Iiii led to recapture
the prominence it enjoyed before his

father's assassination in 1968 at age was the SCLC executive director
39. The Rev. Joseph Lowery. outgo- before being ousted by Lowery in
ing head of the organization, believes 1979, said he is unsure about King's
King can live up to the name.
abilities.
"He's certainly been exposed to
"Marty has his father's last name,
the civil rights community in an but I doubt he has his father's knowunparalleled fashion," Lowery said how,'' he said.
Friday, adding, "The name Martin
Martin Luther King Jr. served as
Luther King still has some magic."
SCLC president from 1957 until his
King tried careers in public speak- assassination in 1968. He was foling and politics but failed to find his lowed by Abernathy untill977, when
niche. He was I 0 when his father was Lowery took over.
·
gunned down in Memphis, Tenn.
Lowery announced this summer
He was elected by the SCLC that he would step down. His sucboard of directors as the founh pres- cessor had not been selected at the
ident of the group co-founded by time of the SCLC anniversary banLowery, Ralph David Abernathy Sr. quet held in his honor in July. so he
and others.
· agreed to 'stay on until one was
Not everyone is so sure the ~ ·mag­ named.
iC'"is enough. Hosea Williams. who
Lowery denied the board delayed

making a decision on his -successor
because it questioned whether King
had the clout to lead the organization.
"I think (they ,waited) hecause
they still 1had others to interview ...
and at the time Mr. King was still
weighing the possibility himself," he
said. "His experience has given him
mor~ training than anyone else."
King served as a Fulton County
commissioner from 1986 and lost his
race-for chairman of the commission
in 1993. His political career was spotted by allegations of improprieties,
including allegations that a staff
member, who was also his cousin,
misappropriated county-owned cars.
Since 1993. King has heeh alecturer on human rights and community activism.

With the trial due to start in less
than two weeks. defen se ' law yers •c losed doors.
:ISkcu U.S. Di strict Judge Garl and
Burrell agreed that some issues
Burrell Jr. to resolve the iss ue as &lt;hould not have been argued out of
quickly as possihlc . They want to call public view. and he agreed to release
ex pen witnesses to say that Kaczy n· transc ript&gt; Monday from at least one
ski suffers from paranoid sc hi zo. heanng held in hi s chatpbers. But h9
phrenia.
declined to rule on relC'l!sing doc u·
But the 'defendant last week · ments sought by the media, including
refused 1&lt;&gt; be examined by govern· th e dc·ta ils of uncharged crim es
mcnt psychiatrists. and prosecutors all eged ly committed by th e defensay they can't counter defen se evi- dant.
dence without such examinations.
Burrel l appeared on the verge of
"It is my understandin g that the accepti ng defen se and prosecuti on
government plans to bring a motion argumen ts that the publi c should not
to exclude defendant 's mental status know ahout evidence that might I at·
defense. Is that still ynur position?" er be ruled inadmi ssible.
Burrell asked the prosec ution te am.
Kenyon, citing es tablished Fi,rst
"Yes it is," said Special U.S. Amendment law, said "the fact that
Attorney Rphert Cleary, who asked the coun mi ght not admit evidence;
for a week to prepare a legal brief.
and wh y. is critical to lhe public
But defense lawyer Judy Clarke undcrstandmg of the trial process.
said the government has had lhis plan
"The public is not the jury here,"
for some time and should i)e ready to said Kenyon. "The public is trying to
file sooner.
determine how trial s work."
"We ought to get moving on that,
Referring to evidence that was
or we could be well into trial without excised from the public version of the
a ruling." she said.
government's trial brief, Burrell said.
Burrell scheduled a hearing for " It could unnecessarily incite inflamNov. 21.
matory publicity on the eve of tn al.
Individual questioning of pros pec· But I'm not persuaded it should be
tive jurors is scheduled to begin Nov. scaled."
12 and it could take several weeks lC1
seat a jury.
Details of the defense c~idence on
Kaczynski's mental history have not
been revealed.
Kaczynski is charged with being
the infamous Unabomber who sent
mail bombs throughout the country
for nearly 18 years, ~illing three people and maiming 23. A 10-count
indictment in Sacramento charges
Kaczynski with sending bombs that
caused two deaths and seriously
Paid by Canclidate

Vote for

JOHN

COFFEE

Raccoon Twp
Trustee

ElECt

Paul Dill

Salisbury Township Trustee
- 23 Years Exp. In Road ~
Maintenance &amp; l:onstruetion -

Life sentence for.British au pair shocks many
By LESLIE MILLER
Aaaociated Preaa Writer
BOSTON - Loretta Buonopane
sat in her office cubicle with a tiny
TV on, transfixed as a 19-year-eld
British au pair was sentenced to life
for murdering the 8-month-old baby
in her care.
"The judge told them if there is a
doubt, you have to acquit, and there's
obviously a doubt. So how do you
come up with a guilty verdict?" said
Buonopane, a worker at the Newton
Housing Authority.
In workplaces, coffee shops and
especially playgrounds throughout
New England and elsewhere iw the
United States, many on Friday shared
her shock at the jury's verdict that .
Louise WoOdward was guilty bf second-degree murder in the death of
Matthew Eappen of Newton.
The round-faced girl from a small
town near Liverpool received a
mandatory life sentence. She will be
eligible for parole in 15 years.
"I never did hur1 Mally and I don' t
know what happened to him." Woodward said at her sentencing, lrCJllbling hut cairn compared to her
howling cries of "I didn't do anything" when the verdict was
announced Thursday.
,
Calls io Boston talk station
WRKO were running 50-to-1 in
favor of Woodward. The MSNBC
network reported that 75 ,percent Of
the more than 26,000 calls it got from
9 a.m. to 5:30p.m. Friday disagreed
wilh the verdict.
While the infant's parents talked
of their sorrow and their 3-yenr-old
son's piercing questions about his
baby brother "in heaven," prosecutors warned that child abusers may
not look like monsters.
"That's always the problem in
child abuse cases," said prosecuting
attorney Martha Coakley. "The
abusers do not always appeat like
people who would do that."
.
Deborah Eappen, Matthew's
mother, told the court of her anguish.
"I am sickened to think he was crying for help but was instead beaten by
hands that were supposed to have
been caring for him," she said.
PeopJe astounded with the jury's
decision flooded British eml!assy
l!ld consulate switchboards from
Washington, D.C., to Los Angeles,
offering Woodward support.

"They've been calling to express .
"I don't think ·she intended to do
shock and dismay and apologies," it . l don 'tthink it was premeditated.
said Terri Evans, press officer at the But I think she was responsible for
British Consulate in Boston . it," said Jody Gastfriend, who lives
"They've been feeling a need to apol- in the Eappens' hometown and who
ogize."
liad hired au· pairs to help with her
The case, with no eyewitness and three children .
sharply copflicting medical opinion,
The possibility of a manslaughter
was closely followed on hoth·sidcs of' conviction was eliminated when
the Atlantic.
Woodward's lawyers limited the
In Woodward's hometown of jury's choices to just first- and secElton. England, residents we~c furi- ond-degree murder verdicts or innoous that .the girl they watched grow cence.
up was now facing the possibility of
Many experts had considered that
life in an American prison.
a bold stroke, and one that would
"We won't give up. I'll tell you lessen the chances she would be
that. We will make these people think found guilty. The guilty verdict
twice," said.60-ycar-old Ron Deegan. showed that to have been a miscalwho hung sheets outside his Elton culation.
home bearing the slogan "JusticeMiddlesex Superior Coun' Judge
No Way."
. Hiller B. Zofx11 set a hearing for TuesThe second-degree murder con- day to consider defense motions to
viction meant the jury believed set aside the verdict. He said he also
Woodward intentionally killed. the will consider motions lor a new trial
infant and acted with malice. Prose- and a reduced charge.
cutors said she slammed .his head
Legal experts said chances arc
against something hard.
slim the judge will overturn the ver-

diet.
be more
to
reduceZobel
the might
'conviction
to likely
a lesser
charge such as manslaughter, which
carries a lighter sentence. said Norman Zalkind, ·a Boston defense anorncyRichardAfrikian,ancnginccrwho
lives in the Boston suburh of Wakefield, was not one of those shocked
by the conviction. He said he knew
Woodward and did not trust her.
Afrikian said he hanned her from his
home because he felt she was a
manipulative. hoy-crazy party girl
and n bad inlluencc on his fam1ly 's au
pair, whom she hod befriended .
"She was a miserable person.
unhappy. screwed up. unstahlc,
manipulalivc, '' he suitl. ·:I hclicvc •
thnt she did this."

injured two men.
Mos t of Friday's three-hour hearing foc used on secrecy an d hCiw
much of the trial evidence wil l be
kept behind closed doors.
Anorn ey Charity Ke nyo n, reprc:
se nting The Associated Press and a
coalit1 on of news media covering the
trial. argued that too much of t he case
alread y has bee n going on behmd

Paid by Clndldate: Paul Dill, 33189 SR

33, Pomeroy, OH 45769

*************************
·
**
DLDI'1T

*

.-;.,

.-;.,'-'

*

*• CAROL ED CLONCH •*

*** for Addison Township Trustee ***'
*
*
**
***
*
** '
·
**
***********************
Member of Silver Memorial F.W.B. Church
US Army Veteran
Member of AMVets Post 23
15 yrs Heavy highway and building Trade Construction

13 yrs Maintenance Gallia County Local School
5 yrs Self-employed- .Carpentry
Your uoto will H approciGtoll
Pdlor Cycandidate P.O. Box537 Gathpohs, OhtO,

Need more dougli
tliis lio{icfay season?

VOTE &amp; ELECT

RAY St.ONE
CLAY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
I will work lor flte people and
wlllt flte p-'ople.
Pald1or by Ray Slone, 1105 Teona Run Rd .. Crown City, Ohio

•

•

LEVY

'

(Renewal)

PERRY TOWNSHIP

•

A Majority Affirmative Vote Is Necessary

•

A renewal o.f a tax for the benefit of Perry
Township for the purpose of PROVIDING FIRE
PROTECTION .at arate not exceeding one (1) mill
for each one dollar of valuation, which amounts to
ten cents ($0.10) for each one hundred dollars of
valuation, for a period of five (5) years, commencing
1997 tax year.

•

I

Interest

9.95%
r!

Ma;ltim,~tcr~tt~l

I

~te

5\.nnu.a{ Percentaae 'Rate
•

10.83%

48 montm and minimum loan amount of $2,000.00 available with credit approval.
: Amount financed $5,000.00 at 9.95% - 48 monthlv oayments of$128.82 .
processing fee of$85.00 ·10.832% APR.) RATE IS S!JitJECT ro CHANGE.
MEMBER FDIC

�•

Page A8 • Jluabav IIJ-..Jiadbul

Sports

Sunday, November 2, 1997

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

Charter changes among issues to be decided in electiorw
Continued from pege A1
Gltla end DonltiOftl $1 ,800
·
.14"
Misc. revenue
$16,000
1.44"
Totlll
$1,113,513
G8U/8 Counly AddlliOM/ Tax L8vy

This levy asks for funding for the benefit of the Gallia County Children's Services and Children's Home.
The. .5 mill levy would be.an additional levy to insure
the continued operation of the Gallia County Children's
Home that cares for, houses, and protects children ages
6 to 18 that have been neglected, abused or are dependents. The· home places the children in foster care and
adoptive homes.
This first-time levy would be up for renewal every
five years and would cost the owner of a $50,000 home
$8.75 a year.
The levy is needed is for the continued operation of

the Children's Home since on Oct. 1, the home's federal
funding decreased by $50 per child peT day.
"Our federal funding for next year based on our bed
count from last year will be decreased by $190,000,'
explained the Children's Home Executive Director
Deanna Cook. "To this point we are o!&lt;ay, but we are
running on last year's budget. •
Cook explained the cuts by the federal government.
The federal government runs its budget from October to.
October while the Children's Home budget runs from
January to January. So although there are cuts to federal
funding, the budget from the home is still in effect.
Although the home houses the Gallia County name,
it's completely funded by the state apd federal government and no local money is used for the operation of the
home. The county does, however, pay for the executive
director's salary.
Cook explained that Gallia County funded the home
up until about four years ago to the tune of $400,000, but

since then the home has operated on state and federal
funds only. Children Services has been funding the
home since the county commissioners made this decision.
"This levy in no way will affect Children Services,"
said Cook. "The biggest consequence if the levy does
not pass would be how long we could keep the Children's Home open without getting the funds. We are just
trying to think positive. We won't make any cuts until
our money runs out."

The Children's Home has been in operation for over
110 years. This home is one of only a few children's
homes left in the state. At lllltimes, there needs to be a
minimum of two staff members working during a 24hour period.
Bed Count
19!15
2,214
1996
4,194
Jan. - Aug. 1997
2,675

Section

lundly, Nowrhw 2, 111f

"I think we run a really good program," said Cook.
"In many cases, we have a short time to make a difference in a child's life.''

Erin
Nehus

"We are supported well by the community but it really does not pay the bills," said C\lOk about the need for
this levy.
Currently, several local businesses and local government agencies have endorsed this levy including: Family and Children FI,RST Council; Gallia County Health
Department; Gallia County Board of MR/DD; Gallipolis City Commission; Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association; Gallia County Commissioners; Uons Club;
Rotary Club; Gallia County Prosecutor's Office; Gallia
County Trustees and Clerks Association; Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services; Kiwanis; Gallia County Juvenile
Court; Gallipolis Municipal Court; and the Holzer Clinic Administration and Pediatrics Department.

Jonior·Gtlllia Academy H.S.

'

~·it

downtown, which has been hit hard
by urban flight. Thrner, 'who originally supported the idea, declared it
too expensive when cost estimates
put the price of a new downtown stadium at more than $20 million.
• The Cincinnati mayor's race is
not a mayor's race at all. The top
vote-winner among City Coundl
candidates will become mayor.
Voters have a choice. Eighteen
candidates, including incumbent
Mayor Roxanne Qualls, are running
for two-year terms on the nine-seat
council.
LOCAL ISSUES
• Elephants never forget and
backers of a levy that would pay to
build a new elephant house at the
Hamilton County Zoo hoped voters
would remember to go to the polls.
Backers say the zoo will have to
send the pachyd.erms packing if voters fail to ,pass the five-year, .7-mill
levy, which is designed to generate
$52 million.
• Cincinnati voters w.ill decide on
a chaner amendment that will allow
the city manager to hire an outsider
over the highest-scoring Civil Service applicants for chief of police

Aug. 25-at Raccoon Creek County Park ............................... 20:21 (I)
Sept. 6-at Warren Invitational ............................................... 20:44 (.1)
Sept. 9-at Gallipolis lnvitational.. ....................................... 20:02.3 (2)
Sept. 13-at Meadowbroqk Colt Invitational .......................... l9:53 (5)
Sept. 18-at Jackson lnvitationa1 ............... :............................. 19:30 (I)
Sept. 27-at Lancaster lnvitational .......................................... l9:08 (2)
Oct. 4-at Rio Grande lnvitational .......................................... l9:1~ (2)
Oct. 11-SEOAL meet at River Valley H.S .......................20:17.3 (I)*
Oct. IS-Division II SE district meet at Rio Grande ......... l8:51.2 (2Q)
Oct. 25-Division II regional meet at Lancaster .................. 19:41 (SQ)
Nov. !-Division II state meet in Columbus ......................... l9:48 (29)

KS.

Meigs voters to
decide races, issues
Contlnutd from Plll)e A1
Dave Graham (i) and Bob Morris;
.
Olive -- Trustees, two to be elected: Ernest Barringer (i), Kenneth
Larkins, William R. Osborne (i) and Ronald G. Wilson;.
Orange -- Trustees, two to be elected: James A. Bernard, John Rankin,
Roger Allen Ritchie (i), Benjamin "Benny" Upton (i), Lewis F. White and
Robert S. Marcinko; Clerk, Osie M. Follrod (i);
Rutland -- Trustees, two to be elected: Charles D. Barrett Jr. (i), Steve
Lambert and Charles Williamson (i);
.
. Salem -- Trustees, two to be elected: Stanley Hutton (i), Harold Dannie
Lambert and Cecil L. Stacy (i);
·
Salisbury -- Trustees, two to be elected: Paul Dill, Edward W. Dutst (i)
Bill Spaun and Bernard D. Gilkey (i);
'
S~ipio ·: Trustees, two to be elected: Robert D. Butcher, Philip Lee
Erwrn, Dante! W. Lantz, Joe N. Sayre and Thomas D. Nicholson I;
Sutton -- Trustees, two to be elected: Larry Ebersbach, Kenneth R.
. Guinth~r, Grover Salser Jr. (i), Don P. Smith, Thomas M. Theiss, Roy F. Van
Meter (r) and Denme E. Hill; Clerk, Kenneth E. Wiggins (i).
SCHOOL BOARDS
Eastern Local, two to be elected-- Frank Ihle, Pomeroy; James R. Smith
(i), Thppers Plains; Roger Willford, Thppers Plains, and J. Greg Bailey (i),
Pomeroy;
·
Meigs LQcal, two to be elected -- Scott Walton (i), Pomeroy; and Maureen Hennessy and Wayne Davis, botb of Pomeroy, (write-in candidates);
Southern Local, three to be elected -- Thomas R. Cammarata Pol'tland·
Doug!:" W. Little (i), Racine, and Marty L. Morarity (i), syracus::;
' '
Mergs County Educational Service Center -- Robert E. Barton (i),
Pomeroy; Howard B. Caldwell (i), Reedsville, and Jeanette M. Thomas (i),
Middleport.
VILLAGES
Syracuse Village Council -- Larry W. Lavender (i), Donna M. Peterson
(i), Eber Pickens Jr. (i) and Kathryn H. Crow (i);
Syracuse Board of Public Affairs-- Gordon Winebrenner (i);
Racme Village Council -- Robert E. Beegle (i), Alfred Henry Lyons Jr. (i),
Gregory W. Taylor, Joseph L. Evans, Bobbie E. Roy and David Henry
Spencer;
Racine Village Mayor, unexpired term-- Julian Scott Hill (i);
Racme Bo.ard of Public Affairs-- LeeS. Layne (i);
.
Rutland Vtllage Council, four to be elected -- no candidates filed;
Pomero~ Village Council, four to be elected - Frederick "Cbip" Werry
Jr., Re~ubllcan; George L Wright (i), Republican; William A. Young (i),
Republican; John F. Musser (i), Republican; Larry Wehrung (i), Democrat;
David Ballard, Independent;
Mid~leport Village Council, four to be elected- Sandra K. Iannarelli (i),
Republican; Rae A. Gwrazdowsky (i), Republican; Robert Pooler, lndel?"ndent; Roger L. Manley Sr. ~ Independent.

~._
•

• - aii-SEOAL runner as result of finish
Q- qualifier for next meet

Dizziness is a symptom,
not disease!

GOOD JOB, GARY! - Several Ohio State players congretulate 't he flret quarter of Sllturday'l Big Ten m~tchup with Michigan Stete
teammate Gary Berry (1) after Berry'a tecovery of a blocktd punt In In Eaat Lanalng, Mlcb., wh-th• Buckeye• won 37·13. (AP)

Feel a bit lightheaded? Have difficulty
concentrating? Become disoriented in a familiar
place - as if the room is spinning? Feet unsteady?

Ohio State downs Michigan State 37-13

Dizziness is not a disease, it is simply a symptom - an early
warning sign. Although there are many potential causes of
dizziness, 85% can be attributed to a change in the vestibular
system - the part of your body relating to the inner ear and brain
th.a t helps control balance, eye movements, and body
orientation.

a

The first step in determining if you are suffering from vestibular
disorder is to have a comprehensive evaluation. Working with
your physician, the Dizziness and Rehabilitation Center will
conduct a complete evaluation, take a history and perform
specific diagnostic testing.

Green Township Truste~

•

get his name on the ballot for city
school board. Elections officials
declared him ineligible because he
didn't sign his own name to his candidate petition. Anglen won a ball\)1
spot when he argued that he autho·
rized someone else to sign for him.

So ... if you feel unsteady or disoriented, don't just attribute your
symptoms to fatigue, stress, depression, eye strain, or
hormones. While these factors affect your health, they may not
be the culprits ·for your dizziness symptoms. Be sure to seek the
proper healthcare to determine the tru~ cause of your dizziness
and the ways you may control it - and give yourself a better
quality of life.

RB-ELEC,.

j

and fire. Police and fire unions
oppose any chanee to current rules,
which require the city to hire the
highest-scoring eligible applicant.
• In Columbus, voters will be following the fate of Reggie Anglen, a
blind candidate who had to fight to

'

Top 25 college
football
EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) Gary Berry turned two Michigan
State mistakes into touchdowns in a
2:07 span of the first quarter as No.
9 Ohio State beat tile No . 21
Spartans 37-13 Saturday.
The 'Spa'nans (5-3, 2-3 Big Ten),
who turned the ball over six times in
a 23-7 loss to Michigan last week,
gave up two int.c rccptions and a
blocked punt against the Buckeyes
(8-1, 4-1) who kept alive hopes for a
return trip to the Rose Bowl.
Michigan State's dream ·or an
upset fell apart when Ohio State
S&lt;:ored 17 poiqts in the final 3:17 of
the first quarter.

"/

DE KALB, Ill. (AP) -Steve
Hookfin ran for three touchdowns
Saturday in leading Ohio to a 35-30
victory over Northern Illinois.
extending Div. 1-A's longest current
losing streak to 16 games.
Hookfin •s one-yard run put Ohio
(8-1 overall. 5-0 Mid American
Conference) up 35-24 with 3:59

Tour vot. wfll be deepl)l appreciated
Pold IOf' by Mork S. Mooney 21548 St. Rt. 101, Golllpollo, OH. 45031

Introducing Our "Best Rate CDs"

/o

0
APY

*APY
•

20 Month CD
• Annual Percenta~e. Yteld. Minimum balance to open and obtain AP'11s S500.
APY accurate as of the date of publication and subtect to chan~e w1thout nottce.
~thdrawal .

MOUNT PLEASANT. Mich .
(AP) - Chad Pennington threw for
261 yards and three touchdowns and
Randy Moss caught two touchdowns. giving him 20 on the season.
as Marshall defeated Central
Michigan 45-17 on Saturday.
Pennington completed 22-of-35
passes for 261 yards and score~ of
II, seven and 28 yards before giving
way 10 Mark Zban. Pennington now
has 31 touchdowns this season.
Moss finished with 193 yards on
seven catches.
Marshall (7-2 overall, 5-1 Mid.Amcrican East). which entered the

RIO GRANDE - A banner season for the University of Rio
Grande women's cross country
squad continued Saturday as the
Rcdwomen unseated six-time
defending champion Cedarville to
capture the Mid-Ohio Conference
championship. Four Rcdwomcn
placed among the top 10 finishers
and ju~i()r Ann Marie Hynes picked
up her second straight inidvidual
title in the meet held at Walsh
University in North Canton .
' · Hynes outpaced former Rio
Grande runner Stacey Wenger. now
competing for Malone College. by
34 seconds 1,0 win the individual
crown. Hynes' time was 18 :45
while Wenger. sister of former Rio

TONY L. BECK

Eo !I

Boston College 22. Pittsburgh 21
Brown 37.Cornet112
Bucknell 21. Leh1gh 14
Colgate 42. Holy Cross 1
Columbia 17. PrincetonO

ExPERIENCED
CONCERNED

Connecticut 45. Boston U. 7

Delaware 14, William &amp;Mory 0
Duquesne 41 . lona 0
Fordhllltl 12. Towson 7
Harvard 24. Dllrlmouth 0
Hofstra 51 . Mauachusetts 13
Marisl26. St. Francis. Pa. 10 ·
Mercyhurit 17, Roben Morris tO
Monmou1h, N.J. 43, Sacred Hcan 0
New Haven 38, Lafayette 0
Penn 26, Yate 7
St. John's. NY 6. Canisius 0

My life and my job are in Green Township. I will dedicate myself to
, maintain better roads and cemeteries, including snow removal for all
residents in Green Township.

--

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-

St. At. W

-- - -

I

, Gallipolis. OH 45831

..

remaining. But the Huskies (0-9, 0- bv Tevell Jones as time expired.
6) scored on a 13-yard pass play .
Hookfin had scored earlier on a
from c;::hris Fin len to Justin . three-yard run in the first quarter
McCarcins with 24 seconds left.
and a one-yarder in the secood.
Northern Illinois recovered an
Finlen finished 16-of-23 passing
on-sides kick on its 45 and moved for 297 yards and two touchdowns.
the ball to the Bobcats' 19. McCareins caught seven passes for
McCareins caught a Finlen pass but 130 yards and Deon Michell had
was forced out of bounds at the two nine receptions for 190 yards.

Mitchell caught a four-yard pass
from Finlen to open the scoring.
McCareins grabbed a 27·yard pass
from halfback Ivory Bryant that put
the Huskies ahead 14-7.
Ohio's Kareem Wilson was the
game·~ leading rusher with 147
yards on 19 carries.

game leading the MAC in passing
'yards per game with 308, threw for
355 yards to·Central's 254.
The Thundering Herd outgained
the Chippewas in total yards 578415 .
•
Marshall took a 14-0 lead early
behind a Doug Chapman two-yard
and a fumble recovery in the end
zone by Nathan Poole.
Central's Tim Crowley, who finished 15-of-31 passing for 254 yards
and one interception, got the
Chippewas on the board with a 59yard pass to Reggie Allen with 5:22
left in the first.

Pennington answered before the
quaner expired, hitting Jerrald Long
on an 11 -yard scoring pass'.
Chapman, whO finished with 116
yards on 16 carries. added another
touchdown, this time from six yards
out, in the second as Marshall took a
26· 10 lead into halftime.
Pennington finished his scoring
in the third quarter, first finding
Laverne Colclough on a seven-yard
touchdown pass with 7:20 left. then
hitting Moss on a 28-yard score in
the quarter's closing minutes.
Moss and backup quarterback
Zban finished the scoring for

Marshall in the founh, hooking up
on an 80-yard score in the quarter's
opening minute.
Chad Alexander added a fourth
quarter score for Central (2- 8, 1-6
West) on a three-yard run with 7:49
to play.
Alexander finished with 113
yards on 22 carries while Allen finished with 139 yards on four catch•
es.
Zban finished with 94 yards on 3of-7 passing.

Grande men's cross country star
S.cotl Wenger. turned in a time of
19:19.
Rio Grande's Dehbic Linn. April
Nickoli and Tricia Cunningham
filled in spots eight thro~gh 10 to
pace the Rcdwomcn to team title.
Linn's time of t9 :49 was good
enough ii&gt;r the eighth slot. Nickoli
placed ninth with a time of 19:53.
Cunningham was the lOth place finisher in a time of 19:56.
Beth Aleshire and Leslie Bales
llnishcd 12th and 13th. respectively.
Aleshire 's time was 20:06 while
Bales finished in 20:08.
Tcsia Cole placed 24th in a time
of 21 :04. Jessica Rohcrts was the
33rd place runner with a time of

22:39. Beth Bales rounded out the
Redwomen team triumph with a
43rd place finish in 24: 18.
Malone finished second to Rio
Grande in the team standings while
Cedarville placed third. It's the first
time the Yellow Jackets have ever·
lost in Mid-Ohio Conference cham·
pions hip meet competition.
Walsh was liwnh and Tiflin llnishcd fifth.
With the win. the Redwomen.
currently rated lOth in the NAIA
Top 25 poll, should vault past
Malone. the ninth mted squad. Next
up_for the Rcdwomen. a trip to the
NAIA National Cross Country
Championships in Kenosha, Wis.
on Saturday, Nov. 15. Rio Grande

·placed eighth in the team standings
at Kenosha last year with Hynes
and Linn picking up all -American
honors.

On the men's side, Malone's
Mike Almond won individual gold
with a time of 25:19. Malone run'ncr.; posted six of the top 10 limes
in this year's MOC meet.
The Rcdmcn squad fllaced fifth
in the MOC meet. Ryan Finch
turned in the best time finishing
26th in 28:33.
· Shane Ricker placed 30th
(29: 19), Tim Divens was 31st
( 30:20), Joey Rodgers placed 32nd
(31 :42) and Denny Hammond fin ished 33rd (32:40).

Craig
Swisher
I

Sophomore
Gallla Academy H.S.

IliM"

MHl
.
ftDIIb
Aug. 25-at Raccoon Creek County Park ............................... 17:58 (I)
S&gt;cpt. 6-at Warren Invitational ................................................ l7:39 (,3)
Sept. 9-at Gallipolis lnvitational... ....................... ... ............ l7:09.2 (I)
Sept. t3-arMeadowbrook Colt lnvitational .......................... l6:41 (7)
Sept. 18-at Jackson Invitational ............................................. 17:32 (I)
Sept. 27-at Lancaster.Invitational ....................................... 17:09 (4)
Oct. 4-at Rio Grande Invitational .... :.................................. t7:07.1 (6)
Oct. I 1-SEOAL meet at River Valley H.S .......................... 11:29 (I )0
Oct. IS-Division II SE district meet at Rio Grande ......... l6:30.6 (2Q)
Oct. 25-Division II regional meet at LancaMer .............. :... 16:52 (9Q)
Nov. !-Division II state meet in Columbus .......... ............... l7: 19 (81)
1

...

• - all-SEOAL ru1111cr as result of finish
Q- qualifier for next meet

Mogadore Field wins
two state CC titles;
Nehus, Swisher run
in Division II races
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Mogadore Field swept the
Division II events Saturday to become the first school to win both
boys' and girls' Ohio high school cross country titles In the same
year. ·
Three of the other four team champions - Pickerington in
boys• Division I, Cincinnati Colerain in girls' Division I and
Barnesville in girls' Division Ill - also were first-time winners.
Cortland Maplewood won the bc:&gt;ys' Division Ill crown, its first
since' 1972.
·
Sean Kdly of Mentor Lake Catholic had the fastest individual
time of the day on the 5,000-meter course at Scioto Downs; winning the Division II boys' title in I 5:28.6. Field, which also won
the boys' Division II title in 1994, had 9.1 points and Kettering
Alter finished second with I09 as the teams swapped the positions
they held last year.
Gallia Academy's Craig Swisher finished less than two minutes
behind Kelly.
Clayton Northmont 's Joe Barnes was the individual winner in .
boys' Division I in 15:33.8. Pickerington's 99 points put the ligcrs
far ahead of runner-up Cleveland St. Ignatius with 146. .
Attica Seneca East finished second for the fourth straight year
in boys Division Ill, with 119 points to Maplewood's 101. Senei:a
East's Vincent Fries was the top individual with .15:50.3, winning
.
his third title in four seasons. He finished second la.~J year.
Seneca East also was second in girls' Division Ill wilh 107
points . Barnesville had 85. The individual champion, Seneca
East's Briana Shook, had the best girls' time of the day as she fioished in 18:01.4.
·
Colerain. which was second last year, dominated the girls'
Division I race with 56 points, with second-p.lace Kent Roosevelt a
distant second with 127. Alliance senior Jen Wollam won her second straight individual crown with a time of 18:02.5 .
Field had 96 points and runner-up Pemberville Ea.~twood 123 in
girls' Division II. Canal Fulton Nonhwest's 1\elli Linten took individual honors in 18:35.
Gall ia Academy's Erin Nehus. making her third trip to Scioto
DOwns, finished a Iittle more than one minute after Lint en.

College football scores

Green Township Trustee

Paid fot by Tony L. Bock: 2G51

the fourth quarter, turning Amp
Campbell's interception of Mark
Garcia's pass into a 47-yard touchdown pass from Schultz to Scott..
Stoltz kicked a 38-yarder with
6:01 remaining.
In other Top 25 action:
No. 2 Penn State 30
Nor1hwestern 27
At Evan,ton, Ill., Curtis Enis
gained 100 yards for a fourth
straight game and No. 2 Penn State
held off a late rush· to beat
Northwestern 30-27 . Saturday.
extending the nation's longest
Division 1-A win streak to 12.
Penn State (7-0, 4-0 Big Ten)
also captured the school's 400th vic·
tory sinee ·Joe Paterno joined the
coaching staff as an assistant in
1950. Paterno has 298 as coach.
Anthony Cleary had two short
touchdown runs for the Nittany
Lions, including a one-yarder.

Redwomen claim ·MOC c~oss country title

13 Month CD

VOTE

Your vote and support is apreciated.

yards and Gardner was short from
52 yard~ as the defenses took over.
Late in the half, Joe Germaine
engineered a 71-yard drive in eight
plays, ending with a 11-yard touchdown pass to David Boston and a
24-6 halftime lead. Germaine, who
was 13-of·l8 for 134 yards with one
interception, was 5-of-6 fqr .49 yards
in the drive.
A driving rain hampered both
teams in the second half. Stoltz
kicked a 43-yard field goal late in
the third quarter.
Schultz, who was 8-of-22 for 118
yards, had ·a pass intercepted by
Damon Moore with six seconds left
in the third quarter, giving the
Buckeyes the ball at the Michigan
State 31. Four plays .later, on the
third snap o~ the fourth quarter. Pepe
Pearson scampered in from three
yards out for 34-6 ICad.
The Spartans turned the tables in

Marshall ~hips Central Michigan 45-17

Penalty for earty

QUALIFIED
HARDWORKING

The Spartans had opened the
scoring on Chris Gardner's 49-yard
field goal. A 25-yard field goal by
Dan Stultz tied the game 3-3.
On the next play from scrimmage, Gary Berry picked off a pass
from ·Todd Schultz and returned it
45 yards for a touchdown with 2:52
left in the quarter. Schultz, who
tossed five of Michigan State's six
interceptions against Michigan, was
trying to hit Gari Scott, but the ball
hit Berry right in the chest.
The Spartans were stopped and
tried to punt Marcel Willis blocked
Paul Edinger's kick and Berry
scooped the ball up at 'the one and
stepped into the end zone for a 17-3
Ohio State lead with 45 seconds left
in the quarter.
Michigan State responded with a
55-yard drive ending in Gardner's
30-yard field goal early in the second quarter. Stultz missed from 51

·O hio defeats Northern Illinois 35-30

Hon_et$1., ...
• Hardworking

:n. &amp; lllilla

ltktl

Ballot issues, local levies not. expected to bring out heavy turoout Tuesday
By BETH GRACE
, the state ballot since 1939. While an favored to win. Ms. Smith has blastAssociated Press Writer
amendment changes an existing law, ed White as a "downtown mayor"
COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP)-1Wo a referendum submits a law to the who has ignored the needs of resistatewide ballot issues, some hotly direct vote of the people.
dential neighborhoods.
The issue asks voters to approve
• First-term incumbent Toledo
contested mayor's races and a host
of local levies will be decided on or reject the workers' compensation Mayor Carty Finkbeiner, a DemocNov. 4, but don't expect long lines at reform law. A "yes" vote approves rat, will try to keep his job for anoththe polls.
the reforms that backers say will cut .er four years. He faces Republican
A big turnout isn't expected abuses of the system and speed up businessman Nick Wichowski, who
hardly a surprise during an election claims prQcessing. A "no" vote , was picking up support as the elecyear that features no presidential rejects the reforms, which opponents tion approached. Recent polls gave
races or campaigns for statewide say favor business and punish work- Wichowski a slight lead among likeoffice.
ers who file legitimate claims.
ly voters.
" What's hot on the ballot usually
By far the more visible of the two ·
Finkbeiner has come under fire
v~ries from community to commu- ballot questions, Issue 2 has general- for his temper and gaffes in ,officemty, and local rssues usually drive ed some heat - and confusion among them a suggestion, for which
turnout," said Shelly Hoffman, among voters.
he later apologized, that deaf people
spokeswoman for Secretary of State
Backers, led by Gov. George should move into homes near a
Bob Tllft's office.
Voinovich, ran ads that featured noisy airport. Opponents also have
Taft's office said it expects about actors portraying lawyers hovering claimed he has not done enough to
3 million of the 7 million registered over a hospital bed, nagging an fill empty downtown stores.
vote~ to go to the polls. This year's injured man to sign documents.
• Republican Dayton Mayor
predrcted turnout of 42 percent com- Another shows benefits to recipients Mike Thrner is seeking a second
pares to the last off-year election in who appear to be physically fit.
four-year term against Democratic
1995, when 43.35 percent cast a balOpponents, including labor union Councilman Tony Capizzi in what
lot- the lowest turnout since 1985. groups, countered with ads focusing could be a close race.
In last year's presidential election, on injured workers who say they
Turner was ahead in the polls but
won't get their benefits if Issue 2 Capizzi was capitalizing on baseball
turnout was 67.4 per.cent.
Here are th~ key rssues and ra~ passes.
as a campaign issue. He strongly
voters Will decrde:
Each side has accused the other supports a plan to bring in minor
STATE ISSUES
of clouding the real issue.
league baseball to revitalize the
1Wo issues will appear on every
MAYORAL RACES
ballot in the state.
• Cleveland voters were to turn
Issue 1, a proposed constitutional their attention from baseball t6 poliamendment, gives judges more tics. Democrat Michael R. White is
pllwer to deny bail for dangerous seeking a third four-year term in a
felony suspects. The amendment lets · contentious race against fellow
•
' I
jddges deny bail in cases where Democrat, Councilwoman Helen
f' •. i'
there is a strong presumption that Smith. Both were top vote-winners
the suspect committed the offense in the September mayoral primary.
and that he or she is a threat to the
White has been a popular mayor,
public.
touting the city's economic and
, ' Issue 2 is the first referendum on development renaissance, and was

•

B

~

Temple 49. Rutgers 7

Villanova 37. Rhode Island 15
Wagner tO. Stony Brooi&lt;O
Waynesburg 41. 1..4 Solie 1
Soath
Appalachian St. 41. Ch•nanooa• 7
Citlldet 7, Wofford 3
Clemson 33, Wake Forest 16
Davidson 43: Hompden·Sydney 0
E. Kentucky 49. Tenn.·Martin 0
East Carolina 4S. louisville 31

Florida A&amp;M 42, Morgon St. 13
furman 38, Elon 20
Georgia 37. Florida 17
Oeoral• Southern 38. E. TennesKC St. lO
Howard 32. Norfolk St. 24
Liberty 49, C•l Poty-SLO 32

Louioi•n• Tech 26. Alabllma 20
Memphis 24. Houston 3
Mississippi So. 20. Auburn 0
Northell!tern 21. Richmond 17
S. Carotin• Si. 37. Delawore St. t7
SE MisJOIII'i 31. Aullin Pcay 0
Samford 17. Jacksonville St. 14
Tennessee 22, South Carolina 7
·Tennessee Tech t6. Murray St. 1310T)
Te.,s SoUlhern 21. Grambling St. 16
Virginia 45, Moryland 0
Virginia Tech 37, Ala.·Binningham 0
W. Carolina 24. Vl\41 0
Mldwllt

Ball St.31 , Akron 14
D•)'lon 49, Enn,.itle 7
Droke 45, Aurora 0

E. Illinois 21. lndiono So. t4
Indiana 23. lllinms 6
tow a 35. Purdu&lt;: I 1
Kansas 34. Iowa St. 24
Kent 29. Bowling Green 20
Marshatl45. Cent. Michigan 17
Michigan 24, Minnesota 3
N. Iowa 23, SW Missouri St. 22
Nebraska 69. Oktahoma7
None Dame 21. Navy 11
Ohio St. 37. Michigan St. 13
Ohio 30. N Illinois 26
l'onn St. 30. Northwesacrn 27
San Diego ll, Valpar•iso 35
Toledo 35. Miami. Ohio 2R
W. Illinois 31. S. Illinois 26
w. Michiaan41 . 1i Michilllll 38
Younastown St. 13.111inois St.0

,

SOIIIhwest

Bayl&lt;lf 23. Tc•as 21
Kan~as St. 13. TClas Tech 2
New Mexico 40. Ttus Chrisuan I 0

Tulsa 21. U!4h 13

ForWat

California 33. Orep St. 14
E. Wuhin~ton 24. Idaho 21
Missouri~ I. Colondo J I
Montano 2 t. CS Norlllrida&lt; IJ
Montana St. 28. Weber St. t4
Nevada 4S. New Muico Si. 24 .
S. Utah 37. UC Davis 27
Washing101127. Southern Col 0
Wyomin&amp; ~ t, S•n Dieao St. 11

•

•

�•

Sunday, November 2, 1997

Roush hits 1,0DO-yard mark again

Wahama defeats
Wirt County 26-21

Meigs gets 18-0
win over Belpre
By DAVE HARRIS
T-S Correspondent
BELPRE- Justin Roush rushed
for 20 I yards to go past the 1.000yard mark for the second year m a
row and Matt Williams added 101
yards as the Meigs Marauders posted an 18-0 victory over Belpre
Friday evening at Ralph Holder
Field in Belpre.
Belpre took the opening kickoff
and went three plays and out. A 48yard punt by Chris Kerns put the
ball at the Marauder 22-yard line.
With the Marauders mixing their
plays they drove to the Golden
Eagle 10-yard line. On fourth and
four Brad Davenport hit Matt
Williams out of the back field for a
10-yard scoring pass. The snap was
high on the extra points, Davenport
was able to pull it down but Jeff
Fowler's kick was blocked, but
Meigs held a 6-0 lead with 2:56 left
in the first period.
The Marauders held the Golden
eagles ·on downs but Belpre faked a
punt and Kerns hit Brandon
Burn field for .\8 yards and a (trst
down to the Belpre 48-yard hne.
Meigs then held and Kerns punted
47 yards to the Marauder four-yard
line.
Meigs then drove 96 yards in just
three plays. On fJTst down Roush
picked up I 0 yards. then Davenport
hit John Davidson for 41 yards with
Davidson dragging a Belpre tackler
15 yards down the field to the
Belpre 45. On the next play Roush
went 45 yards for the score making
it a 12-0 game with 9: 18 left in the
half. Meigs went fpr two on the
extra points and Davenport's pass
was broken up in the end zone.
After another Belpre punt the
Marauders scored their thi rd and
final touchdown with 4:51 left in the
half when Roush' scored from 18
.yards out. That run capped off a
eight play, 56-yard drive. Once
again Meigs went for two, bu_l
Davenport's pass was incomplete.
Twice in the second half Belpre

drove inside the Marauder 20-yard
line and once inside the 40, but each
time the Marauder defense came up
with the big play to end the threat.
The Marauders drove to the
Belpre nine-yard line w.ith just over
two minutes left in the game. But
just like he did in the Alexander
game, Marauder coach Mike
Chancey in a show of sportsmanship
took a delay penalty and then fell on
the ball three straight times so Meigs
would not score again.
Roush picked up 20 I yards in 25
carries to put the sophomore over
1.000 yards for the second time in
his young career. He finished the
season with 1.088 yards in \68 carries.
Matt Williams finished off nn
outstanding career with 101 yards in
15 carries. The senior will finish his
career as Meigs High School's all
time leading rusher with 3.911 yards
1
in 672 carries.
Brad Davenport was five of eight
passing with an interception for 74
yards, giving the ·senior 1,074 yards
on the season .

For Belpre, Barrell Ring and
·Brad West both ran seven times for
37 yards. Steve Sprigg added seven
for 24 yards. Josh Strothers was 10
of 20 passing for 96 yards. Jan Hines
caught four for 34 yards.
"This was a great team win ,"
Marauder conch Mike Chancey said.
"It was a great way for the seniors to
end their career. They have done so
much for our program. It has been a
great four years. To all the seniors I
simply say thank-you.
Nine seniors played in the
maroon and gold for the last time .
They were Jeff Fowler. A.J.
Vaughan, Vincent Broderick. Brad
Davenport, Chad Haryson, Brian
Young. Jason Roush, Nathan
Halfhill and Mau Williams
Meigs finishes the year with a 6-4
mark overall and 3-2 in the Ohio
Division. The Marauders finished in
third place behind conference champion Nelsonville-York and

the moment for Meige fullback Justin
whose 201-yard effort
Frldsr. night was good enough to help the
win 18-0 and
get h m his second straight 1,0DQ-yard ~ason. (T·S photo by Dave
Harris)
Wellston,' which finished in second Total yards ................... 373
177
on the strength of a 21-14 win olier Comp. -an .....................5-8 10-20
Vinton County.
Interceptions thrown ....... \
0
Belpre finished at 3-7 overall and Penaltics-yds .............. 2-15
4-30
1-4 in the Ohio Division.
Fumbles-no. lost ........ none
3-1
Ouartermtm
Punts-yds .................... 4-82 3-126
Meigs ................... 6 12 0 0 = 18
Belpre ..................0 0 0 0 = 0 Individual statistics

Scoring summary
Meigs : Williams 10-yd. pass
from Davenport, (kick blocked),
2:56 1st
Meigs: Justin Roush 45-yd. run,
(pass no good), 9: 18 2nd
Meigs: Justin Roush \8-yd. run.
(pass no good), 4:51 .2nd

Team statistics

.

Department
M$W Belpre
First downs .................... 18
.9
Plays ............... ,.............. 56
48
Rushing att.-yds ..... 44-299 35-81
Passing yards ........... :..... 74 . 96

Rushing ·
Meigs: Justin Roush 25-20 I.
Williams 15-101 , Jeremiah Bcnilcy
1-(-1), Davenport 3-(-2)
Belpre : Ring 6-37 , West 7-37.
Sprigg 7-24, Keith 3-7, Strothers 6(-41)
Passing
Meigs: Davenpon 5-8-1, 74 yds.
Belpre: Strothers 10-20-0, 96 yds.
Receiving
Meigs: Davidson 1-45, Bentley
1-18, Williams 1-10, Humphreys 15, Justin Roush 1-0,
Belpre: Ian Hines 4-34. Bradford
3-22, West 2-24, Keith 2-20,
Burnfield 1-18

Scoreboard
NBA standings
EASTERN CONFEilENCE

~-1::00
.
.. lf t Fg;
Miami ... .
........ I 0 1.00

New JerK~ ...
. I 0
Ntw York ................. ........... l e 0
0&lt;1...., ........................ ......0 I
Phibdtlphla.....

Wsshibflon .

_ o·

..................... 0

I

I

Ctt'lral Oiwiliea
Allanta ... .:. ..................... !
0
Detroit
................. ! 0
Milwaukee ....................... ! 0

1.00
1.00

.000
OOJ
.000

Cbarloete............... 0
Clucago ......................... 0
CUVEl.AND .., ..................0
lodiana ..............................0

I
I

_(XX}

I
I

.000

TOf'OliiD ............................0

I .000

Tonight's games

WL&amp;s.

. ......... .•........... 1
~1on ....................... ....... :!
Muml:tota .............................1
Sal! Antonio ....................... .!
Denver ., ........................... ,... 0
Utlh . ... ·.................. 0

0
0
0

0
I
I

Vancou~·er .............................. 0

I .000

Padfk Division
l.~ . t..km .......................... 1
0
POOtniJ.
.... .1 0
S...le ............................ I 0
Solcramnuo
.............. 0 0
Colden S1att
............. 0
I
LA Clippers .................. 0 I
. 0

Portland

1

I 00

Today'• games

Balli more :u N~w York J~ts. I p.m.
Miami at Buffalo. 1 p.m.
New England at Minnl!sota." l p.m.
Oakland at C:u-olina. I p.r:n.
St Louis lll Atl&lt;mta I p m.
San Diego at CINCINNATl. I p.m.
Tamp~ Bay atlndiMt~polis, 1 p.m
Washington at Chicago. I p.m
O:all:11 at San Frnn.cisca. 4 p.m.
Jacksonville at Tennessee. 4 p.m.
Phil3dc:lphialll Arizona. '\_p.m.
~aule a1 Denver. 4 p.m.
Detroit at Green Bay. 8 p.m.

r

JERRY L. HANER

.00)

FQR

1.00
1.00
1.00
.000

CLAY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

(D)

Stick With What Works

000
(D)

YOUR SUPPORT WlU. BE AI'PII.ICIATED

Friday's scores

PaKI For By Tho Candidate, "758 Sl. At. 7 S. GaMipol~ . Ohio 45831

Nnw Jmey 97, Indiana 9S
Milwaktt 103. Phibdr!Dhi:. 88

**

4.8Dfa APR IP.TD 80

s19,9so·

14,85o·

5

•Color TV
•Autmllc

• ,., Condlatl

·~­

·~LDCb

Bnn• New l!m PIDIIIr

Brut Nrw I.U
Uny C-15110 PlUM'

lrl.. NPW 1!!7 CteYY ASirt
RIIR.IIIf t1mrsl11 VII

DONP.

Grll• AI SUII Or CIU,P

Falcons win ...

Btllle$

• Power Sl8eli1g

•!ll.fMC..
• CUio Cdttf

Trustee of Sutton Townshp
I want to work for you!

,
·

,·I

Paid for by candidate. 48405 Morning Star, Racine

.. •'

,,

.

' .

1997 JEEP WRANGLER: Air, Stereo ................................................................................................$1.4,988.00
1997 NISSAN SENTRA: GLE Pkg,loaded, Only 6000 MUes.............................................................$13,988.00
1997 FORD CONVERSION VAN: Loaded, Only 4900 Miles ............................................................$18,988.00
1996 NISSAN EXTENDED CAB 4x4: Air, cruise, aluminum wheels.:..........:.................................. $16,988.00
1996 DODGE RAM 2500 4x4: Auto, air, V8 magnum .................,......................:.............................. $18,988.00
1996 EXPLORER AWD: VB, XLT pkg,leather, moonroof ................................................................. $23,988.00
1996 ESCORT LX: Sport pkg, 2door, air, spoiler, low miles ...........................,.....................................$9,988.00
·, 1995 CROWN VIC: 4Dr, Full Power, Loaded ..................................................................................... $13,988.00
1995 TAURUS GL: All Power Equipped, Super Nice Car...................................................................$10,988.00
1995 EXPLORER SPORT: Power Equipped,Air, One Owner........................................................... $17,988.00
1995 EAGLE TALON AWD: Turbo, Leather, Moonroof, CD, Loaded ...........................................:.... $13,988.00
1995 GRAND PRIX: 2Dr, All Power Equipped, Only 22,000 Miles .................................................... $13,988.00
1995 GRAND MARQUIS: GS Pkg, One Owner, Power.....................................................................$13,988.00
1994 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE: Auto, Air, Power Equip....:..............................................,...................$7,988.00
1994 AEROSTAR WAGON: Air, Till, Cruise, Only 28,000 Miles ........................................................ $11,988.00
1994 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE: VB, Lealher, Moonroof, On~ 39,000 Miles ................................ $17,988.00
1994 AEROSTAR XLT: Power Windows, power Locks, Equipped .......................................................$8,988.00
1994 TAURUS Gi.: 4Dr, All Power..................:.....................................................................................$7,988.00
1994 GMC JIMMY: 2Dr, Auto, Air, Alum. Wheels, Loaded With Equipment ......... ~ ................ :....... $14,988.00
1994 FORD F150: 4x4, Long Bed Wort&lt; Truck ....................................................................................$11,988.00
1994 'FORD EXPLORER: Eddie Bauer Pkg, Auto, 4 Dr, Loaded ....................................................... $15,988.00
1993 MERCURY VILLAGER: Loaded With Options, One Owner .........................................:.............$9,988.00
1993 FORD EXPLORER: 4 Dr, Air, One Owner ...............................................:.................................$10,988.00 .
1993 FORD CONVERSION VAN: Full Power Equipped, One Owner.............................................. $11,988.00
1993 MERCURY TOPAZ: 4Dr, Power Equipped .............................................................................:... $5,988.00
1992 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL: Leather, Loaded With Options............................................................. $7,988.(10.
1991 FORD F150: XLT Pkg, Auto, Air, Power Equipment, One Owner ......................... :....................... $8,988.00
1991 BUICK LESABRE: 4Dr, Loaded With Options ..............................................,.......:.................... $6,988.00
1991 PONTIAC LEMANS: Sunroof, Stereo. Only 69,000 Miles .......................................................... $2,9118.00
1997 FORD F1!!0 SUPERCAB 4X4 LARIET: Leather, Joaded ....................................................... $23,988.00
1995 CHEVY BLAZER LT: 4 Dr, leather, loaded, ONLY 18,000 miles .............................................. $20,988.00
1993 FORD F150: Auto, air, 351 VB ........ ...................................................................................... $10,988.00

Friday's action
AdaJ~.

Adena 41. Richmond Ollt: Southt:adem 20
f.kron Buchtel .l!i. Akron Firestone ll
Akron Garfield ~8. Akron Ct:nr.·Hower 0
Akron SprinJ. 48. Carrollton 0
Amonda-Ciean:..,k J I. LoJall Elm 0
Amelia 48, Milford 6
Anbenl 36, N. Olmatcd 16
Aa~a

Country

Monday • Saturday: 9 am • 8 Pill
Slmday: 1p11 • 8 Pill

li=el••

01 I • • II

'6

39, Milliu6uwa Val. '

• ' 'Anthoay Wayne 21. Rossford
• Antwrrp 29, Hol&amp;aee 14
• ArcwtUm 40. Bethel 0
"
Arlingtoa 4(), Vanlue 0
Adll.abula Edgewood I~. Painetville. Hw-vey 12
Ashtabula Hlfbor ll. Ashlabulllll
A\'on Lake 41. Fairview 0
Ayersville 27. WmyneTrace 21
Bllrberton 14. Ravenoo 0
811avia 46. Western Brown 0
B•h 14. ElidA 13
Beamcreek SO, FWrbom :B
Bt:llt:fontlline49. SprinJ. G~non 7
Bellevue 26, Bucyrus 16
Bcn:o 6. Midporl&lt; 0
Bechel·T~tte 21. Oennont Northeastern 0
Black River 62. Medina Buckeye 38
Blurflon 17. Allen E. 0
Bm:ksvillt: 2.1, N. Royahon 6
Brookfit.ld 11 . LaBrat: 20
Brookville I0, Prtblt: Shawnee 7
BruMwlck 25, Strongsville 12
Bryan JS. Mon1rlier 29
8tiekeye Val. l . , N. Union ,O
Cadiz 20. Danville 14
C~m~pbeii-Memorlllll4.

You. Wilson 0

CWUll Fullon NW S.', CutOI S. 7
CMfield 21. HowlandO
CIUKon Cath. 17, Louisville ..\quln~t~7
CMton Tunkt:n 34. Akron Covtmry 0
Corey 27, Mohawk 21
Carlisle 43. Dixie 14

.•

.

14

Ctuudon 24, Mayftekl6
Che"1"'ake 4l, S. Poin&lt;7
Cin. Colerain 28, Cin. La Salle 0
Cin. Deer Park 42. Cin. N. ColleJt: Hillll
Cin. Elder .iO, Cin. Oat Hills IS
Cin. Huahes 28. Cin. Woodw.-d 20
Cin. Indi1111 Hill 10. On. men Este 7
Cin. LoYdand 22. Kina• Mills 14
Cin. Mndeii'D S6, On. Landmark Chr. 0
Cin. M:ai~mont 45, On. Summit Coontl")' Day
Cm. Moeller SO, Cin. Princt:lon 36
Cin. Mount Htalthr53, Cin. Aiken 0
Cin. Norwood 13, Springboro 9
Cin. Reading 26. Cin. Country D.o.y U

fJmwood 46, Gibsonburg .U 12 OTJ
EJyria Cu.th. ,6, Clc. Catltolic: 14
Euclid 41. Lynct.urst Brush 0
Fnirbanb 20. Waynt:sf.eld Goshen 8
Fllirtit:ld Union 28. Teays VII. I3
Fllirvit:W SS. Hicksville 0
Findlay 37, Fos1oria 22
Fon Frye 21 . Buckeye Trail 19
Franklin His. 21, Bi&amp; Walnut 20 (OT)
Fredericbown 7, Ontario 0
Pmnont Rou 11. Sandusky 6
nontier 14, Bellaire SUohn 7
Gahanna 29, Galloway We11land 14
Galion 32. Norwl.lk 21
Oallipoli•23. Olesbirt River Val. 1
G. .WilY 6. StnsbuiJ 0
OIWfttld Hts. Trinity, 42. Cbanel21

Geneva 20. Painesville Riverside 14
Genoa 40, Ot~ego 28

Gilmour Jl. Brooklyn t4
Grand Val. 24, f'ymatuning Val. 6

Graaville 67, Mifietwon.(i
Grt:tnfit:ld McClain 29, Day. J~frerson 8

Gm:Mbwi Grm~ 27. Clovedeat'7

Grove q.t)' 30, Hillilrd Dnvidson 14
Ouyan (W.VL) VII. 48. S. Galli• 18

HamUtc.46.Day. .PaaenaaO

Hamilton Rnsi 56. WiJminJ'Ion 16
Hamilton Twp. )5, Bloom-Carro1134 (0T)
Hannibal River 5S, Shld)'side 13
Hardin Northero 39, Lciptic 7

llealh 47. Berne Uoion 0
Hebron Lakewood 61' London lO
Hillsboro 42. BlandleJtcr 19

Col. Bligp. 27. M:ll'ion fnlnklin 2.5

Ctll. Brookhaven 24. Col. Eas1moor 20
Col. O!:Snlc5 .21, Unsly, W.Vm.0
Col. Ensr 47. Walnul Ridsc 18
Col. Mifnin S6. Col. Linden·McKinlcy8
Col. Northland 14. Col. Soulh 27
Col. Ready 10. Col. Jbtl~y7 ton
Cot StCharles 41 . Col. Academy 20
Col. Wauerson 24.1ronlon 17
Collin5 Wt:Aem Rtscrve 18. Mapleton 0
Cnlumbtana 2H. Lisbon 10
Columbimn:&amp; Crrllvit:w 2.1. S11lineville Sou11M:rn

LARRY
WEHRUNG
Your Vote Will Be Appredated

10
Day. Dunb11122. Day. Mcadowdale 19
Dny. Nonhrid&amp;~ 35. Middletown Madi•on 7
DefiiUICe 3,. Um:r. ShawDt:e 0
DeGmtf Riverside 63. MtthanitlburJ 14
Oelpbbs Jeff~rson 22. Sptnccrville 6
Delli 10. Wauseon 2
Dovtr 49. NN Philadelphia 7
Dublin Coffman 20. Weswrville S 7
Dublin Sdoto 42. Watkin• Memorial 0
E. Clintoall, S. C'hlrk1ton SE 14
E. KDOl 27, Colonel O.wfOI'd 1.5

I_'_' 11,-,r,

~gewood

I

'•

14, MiamllbUIJ 13

Power windows, power locks, tilt,
cruise; . V6 engine, low miles and
much more • .

V6, auto. trans., air cond., tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cassette and more.

1995 FORD
CONTOUR

1994 MERCURY
TOPAZ

Tilt, cruise, .air conditioning.
Payment Car.

Power windows, power seat, power
locks, tilt, cruise. Low Payment Car.

Pd. for by cudtdate: Uncoln Hill, Pomeroy

State-Of-The-Art
_.,..roU1erapy
..._.

-:-.

CIEU

1993 FORD F·ISO

Tilt, cruise, AM/FM cassette, air
cond.," and much more. Low
Payment Car.

XLT Package, . air cond., AM/FM
cassette,. aluminum wheels, dual
tanks and much more.

Relaxation is only steps away when you own a Hot Spring·
Spa. The Smart}et· and Comfort Control'" Systems let you
customize your hydrotherapy e•perience.
• Moto· MassaHt.' )t•t'rcla:n-s t'\'t'ry musclt• in your 1:!•1ck.
• Drt•amjct Dry Nt.'Ck Mnssagc Pillow diss..,ln•s nt.~.k
tL•nsinn.

• Soothing S!!wn )lots gently rcla• tight shoulder musck•s.
• )t•tStrci"'m High·output jl•ts sootht• aching fL&gt;ct and cal\'cs.

For more information on Hot Spring spas,
just call or stop by.

•

1995 CHEV.
BERETTA

CUTLASS

1993 OLDS

Ck:. Glenville 28. Cle:. Easl 23
Cle. Kcnnt:dyl9, Oe. Colli~ 22
Cl~ . VA-SJ 3~. Lorain Soulh~tt:w I"
Clinlon-Mauie 44, Waynesville 0
Clyde: 3S. Pon Clinton 7
C~l Grovr 26, Fllirland 6
Col. Beecberoft 40. Col.lndel)eldcntt 14
Col. B~xl~y .11, Uek.ing Val. io

Ea1on 24, BeUbtool! 10

1994 OLD.S

RE·ELECT

Baum Lumber
State Route 248

Chester
985-3301

E. U&gt;&lt;rp00128. lndi., c... k 22

_1:: II

1993 FORD
T·BIRD

~~~~.;~~~==~

Ck. Eu1 T"h ll. Cle. Sou!h. 24

Eullakt: N. 1.5, Winou&amp;hb~ S. 14

:,_'

BRENT BILLINGS

1996 DODGE
INTREPID

Cit:. Benedictine 28. Lakt:wood S1. Edward 1:1

E. Patestint: 40. Scbrina6

,,11, II II I . 1111 ;;_'_' 1111 i

~ELECT

Let Me Work For You"

Cin. Ro~r Ba~:on 42, Cin. Nonhwell26
Cin. S1. Xavier .\S, Cin. Anderson 18
Cin. S}l(twnare 26, Cin. HIU1i1011 21
Cin. Taylor 28. Cin. Lockland 1
Cin. Turpin 7. Cin. Wilhrow 0
Cin. Walnut Hi016.l Cin. T4ft 0
Cin. Winlon Woods S4, Fairfield 14
Cin. WyominJ.46. Cin. McNitholu I~
Circ.lt:viUt: 21. Canal Wit~ehesler 7
Cla)1on Northmont27. W. C~~~tollton 0

Dl:ly. Chaminadt:-lulieant: •U. Kt:nerinJ Aller

372-3673 ..
(372-FOIDJ

period was scoreless. Both clubs put first down on a 22-yard pass play to pass, but Jason Writesel was.
together a couple lengthy drives, but Adam Cumings. Jab Jackson inter- Writesel raced 50 yards to pay dirt
each time, the opposing defense cepted on the following play.
to tie the game with just .074 showwould hold. ·
On the very next play with under ing on the clock. The two-point conSouthern dropped a pass in the 15 seconds lfm the clock, Federal version pass was incomplete to
end zone on fourth down early in the became perhaps a little greedy and make the score 6-6.
game. That misfiring pi~ looked as opted to pass. No Federal Hocking
After a scoreless third frame and
though it might haunt them.
players was close to the path of the a scary 14-yard Southern punt that
Then with 6:33 left in the second
frame, Chuck Vogtlaunchcd a short
pass down field to Jason Sharp, who
turned the play into a 67-yard touch·
down connection by outrunning
everyone to the goal line. The play
was the first from scrimmage after a
36-yard Southern punt . The twopoint conversion kick was void, but
Federal Hocking led 6-0.
·
Justin Edwards of Federal saved
a Southern touchdown by deflecting
a pass on the next drive.
11
Sobthern fumbled deep in its own
wouldn't surrender as Mitchell
tossed a 24 yard scoring pass to territory, but Fedeml went four and
Pd for by car&lt;lidate, 40 Dewitt Dr., Goillpolio
Keith Cundiff that did stand to put out. Southern took over and gained a
Wahama in front once again by a
26-21 score with 3:50 remaining in
the third quaner.
Defense dominated throughout
the remainder of the contest as neither team threate~ed until the Tigers
staged a drive that carried the visi·
tors inside the WHS 20 yard line
before Reitmire's fumble recovery
terminated the Wirt County comeback bid.
In addition to Mitchell's offensive
statistics were Tennant with 79
yards on the ground an&lt;!J 130 reception yards by Ryai'Y Russell.
Defensively the Falcons were led by
Reitmire with Aaron Scou, Corey
Roush, Grant Huff and Joe
Finnicum also turning in fine performances for Wahama.
"I was glad to see our ,passing
game step it up a notch and produce
for us," Cromley ~aid. "When we
started having stltEss throwing the
football it helped our running game
immensely and that's what we've
been looking for all season long."
Aluminum wheels, AM/FM cas·
Wahama will now prepare for an
Automatic trans., V6 engine, tilt,
sette, tilt, cruise. Nice car, locally
extremely tough regular season ending contest next week at Winfield.
cruise, low payment carl
owned.
On the line in that gridiron
encounter will be the possibility of a
home field berth in post season playoff action.

POMEROY VILLAGE COUNCIL

CtdnrvUit: 34, Grtent:Yit:w)
Ct:lina48. kenton 19

'WI!- 0... t.orlli C«&lt;lic!!I

Tom Peden

Rid&amp;emontO

Columbus Growe 41. P:mldin,:6
Cortl.:and La.kt:view ll Newton Falls 6
Coshocton 41 . St. Onirsville 2.5
Covington 7, Bmdford 3
Crt'sthnr 21. BuckryeCt:nl. 0
Crti!Wood 24. Q;wmuville 12
Croobvill~ B. River View 0
Cuyahoga Falls 3S. Kt:!Jt Roosevelt 6
CuynhoJa Htlt. 7; Richmold HIJ. 6
DGy. Carroll 21. Day. Sltbbins 6

1

Evans broke the 1,000-yard mark in
passing as a freshman. Wrilllsel also
had 5ll-yard interteption return for a
touchdown and another 42-yard
interception return. Josh Davis had
an interception as well.
Closing out their careers for
Southern were seniors Michael Ash,
Jason Writesel, Matt Riffle, Scooter
Fryar, Tyson Evans and Matt Dill.
Most of the first half, Federal
Hocking controlled the tempo with a
great running attack, however, when
the Tornado defense was pushed
near its goal line, the Southerners
dropped an iron curtain. The first

G·RE'EN TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE.

(ContinuedfromB-2)

20 margin and that could have been version auempt failed and Wahama
the emotional lift that Wirt County trailed 14-12 with 8:10 left in the
needed. "What more can you say half.
about Reitmire. He's been our defenOn its next possession a pair of
sive leader all season long and his long runs by David Tennant, one by
fumble recovery was just another in Chris Roush and another pass from
a series of big plays for us," stated Mitchell to Russell highlighted a 71Cromley,
yard, six-play drive that was capped
Win County took a 7-0 lead late off by a five-yard Mitchell run.
in the opening period when Tommy Mitchell then passed to Keith
Ferrebee scored the first of his three Cundiff for the two point conversion
touchdowns on the night with a one to give the White Falcons its first
yard plunge. David Drennen booted lead of the evening at 20-14.
the point after to give the Tigers a 7Wirt County answered in the
0 edge.
opening miriutes of the second half
Wahama answered on its next . when Ferrebee picked up an errant
possession when Mitchell scam- WHS pitchout and ran it in from 26
pered into the endzone from 13 yards out. Once again Drennen
yards out with the first of 20 second kicked the point after to stake the
quarter points for the White Falcons. Tigers to a 21-20 advantage.
The two-point conversion pass
Following the kickoff things realauempt was unsuccessful and with Jy got bizarre as Wahama scored
I0:35 left in the half Wahama trailed two apparent touchdowns but both
by a 7-6 margin.
were nullified due to penalties. The
The Tigers extended its lead to first came on the opening play when
14-6 a minute later when Ferrr.bee Tennant broke free and went 51
burst through the middle on a 26 yards to paydirt but a holding penalyard touchdown jaunt. Drennen's ty brought the fooiball back to the
kick made it 14-6 but the White Falcon 46 yard line.
Falcons w~ren't finished yet.
Eight plays later Lloyd came up
Following the ensuing kic~off with the steal after the Tigers had
Mitchell uncorked a bomb to Ryan picked off a Mitchell aerial to retain
Russell with Russell breaking free of possession for Wahama. Two plays
the defender and racing into the end- after that Tennant scored from 14
zone to complete an 83 yard scoring yards out, but once again a penalty
toss. Once again the two-point con- negated the play but the Falcons

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• Pooor Door lDCb
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really proud ofthem."
Barr added, "This ended up as
one of the better seasons around
Southern for a while and it was all
because of the kids. They worked
hard all year long to achieve success. I commend our seniors for
being great leaders and never saying
die. They always worked hard and
set an upbeat tempo for our younger
kids."
Adam Cumings had a great
defensive game and a I 00-yard
offensive game on 17 carries. Jason
Writesel caught four passes for Ill
yards and a touchdown. Jonathan

----Ohio H.S football scores-.;..._-

.

RE-ELECT

I .00
1.00
JKlO

STEWART- The Southern
Tornadoes terminated a late season
skid by scoring a dramatic comefrom-behind 12-6 win over the host
Federal Hocking Lancers Friday
night in the final Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division
match-up.
Southern ends the season at 5-5
and 2-3 in the Hocking Division,
while federal ends at2-8, 2-3.
· Southern coach Dave Barr said,
"I felt like this game was a stepping
stone for our program. Our kids
found out what happens when you
play hard for all four quarters. I was

Then Elect

Dollar. ade-lnl

NFL's Week 10 slate

!il

I 00

ACTION FOR SLICK ROADS
BETTER ROAD MAINTENANCE
CEMETERY UPKI;:EP IMPROVED
. DITCHES CLEAN AND MOWED

..

MMI.wtsf DivWM

Da.Jb.s.

Voters of Sutton Township Want:

r

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Iaa

CALL 24 HOURS A DAY •
7DAYSAWEEK

Southern downs Federal Hocking 12-6 to finish at .500

Pinsb\lflh at Kaasas City. 9 p.m.

tl'oustott Ill SIK'hmtnto. 'IJ p.m.

Dtnv~r :u Ut:lh.-9 J'l.ln.
Dallas at ~allle. 10 p.m.
Sacrnmc1to at Vancou\'er. 10 p.m.

to be the play of the game when he
By GARY CLARK
stole the ball away from a Wirt
T·S Correspondent
MASON, W.Va. - Senior quar- County defender following an interterback David Mitchell ran for a pair ception to set up the White Falcons
of touchdowns and passed for two go-ahead touchdown. Reitmire then
more as the Wahama White Falcons helped seal the win by recovering a
unofficially locked up its second Tiger fumble deep in WHS territory
consecutive playoff betth with an with just 2:51 remaini?g to prevem
exciting 26-21 grid victory over vis- Wirt County from entertaining any.
iting Win County Friday evening.
thoughts of a comeback rally.
Mitchell threw for 170 yards and
"Lloyd has came up with so many
ran for S3 more as Wahama big plays for us this year but none
improved to 7-2 in the 1997 home was bigger than the one he turned in
finale for the lOth-ranked White tonight," Cromley said. "If he doesFalcons . Wirt County, despite a n't steal the ball and retain posse~­
courageous effort, saw, its playoff sion for us we're still down by a 21hopes suffer a severe blow as the
(See FALCONS on 8·3)
19tl\ rated Tigers fall to 5-4 on the
year.
•
. "I knew it Would.be a real struggle for us because they just won't
No Credit, Slow Credit
· give up," a relieved Wahama coach
Ed Cromley stated following the
Bad Credit, Bankruptcy?
nail-biting triumph. "Mitchell played
BankruJI(ciet Mll8t Be Di~tharaed
an outstahding game and we gave
At Dutch Miller· Chevrolet,
them several opportunities to take
control or the game, but we fought
. WE CAN HEI.P
back and our defense came up with a
If You Have At Least $1,300
couple of big second half stops for
I
• a montlt Income
us added the WHS gridiron mentor." ·
Both teams experienced difficulty
(304-) 529-2301
in achieving what could be classified
as having a good outing but in the
end it was the play of Mitchell and a
couple of prominent fumble recover$ SAVE THOUSANDS $
ies by Joel Lloyd and Tyson
Don't Pay Tholl High Kentucky
Rcitmire that turned the tide in the
and Ohio Interest Rettal
Bend Area teams favor.
Many Vohlctta Are Available With
Lloyd tumcd in what would have
NO MONEY DOWN I

Monday's game

Deuoit u. New Yark. 6 p.m.
Orlando n1 Boston. 7 p.m.

Golden Slate Ill Indiana.. 7 p.m.
Miarru at WllShin110n. 7:30p.m.
Toronro :u Atlanl:r..7JO p.m.
Charlort~ at M1n!M'sota. 8 p.mCLEVELANO at S:u~ Antonio. 8:.'0 p.m.
Philadclphlll :11 ChicOIJO. 8:30p.m.
New kr5t:y • Milwaukee. 9 p.m.

(XX)

Open date: New Orleans. New York Giani~

Portland at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.

They played Saturday

I 00

1.00
1.00
000

-·-

kl

Allanta lOS. ~lando 99
Miami 114. Toro1U0 101
Boston 92. Dlicaao 85
Dettoi192. Washin110n 79
Milltlt:SOta 129. Golden Staat: 11 ~
Ntw Vol\ 9'7. CMriollr: I~
Houston 94. CLEVELAND 86
San Amonio 107. Otn,·er 96
Phoenix 110. L.A. Oippers 100
Stanle 91. Panbnd 83
L.A Lakt:rs IOC. Utah 87
Oallll5 90. Vancouver 88

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Polnt .Piea..nt, WV

Sunday,Novewnber2;1997

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

Built for a lifttime of relaxation.~

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conditioning, fog lamps.

�Sunday, November 2, 1997 ::

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolil, OH • Point PleeMnt, WV

Page 84 • J)IUd)ag llta..-JI..tbW .

GAHS downs River Valley 23-7; Blue
Devils, Raiders &amp; Logan tie for third
GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
Academy High School's Blue Devils
turned in their best defensive game
of the 1997 campaign on Memorial
Field Friday night and the result was
a 23-7 upset victory over River
Valley before appro~imately 2,5001
parents night spectators.
The triumph, coupled with
Logan's 28-20 win over Athens, left,
Gallipolis, Logan and River Valley
in a three-way tie for third place in
the final Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League standings ·with identical 4-3.
records. Overall, GAHS improved to
4-6. River Valley dropped to 4-5.
'Proud or senion'
Jackson clinched its third SEOAL
PACES GAHS ,..... Gallla Academy's Bart Craig (2) caught four
pasaes lor 49 yards and one touchdown, and returned one Inter· .
caption tor a touchdown In the Blue Devils' 23-7 win over River
Valley Friday. (Photo by Ron Caudill of River Valley Photography).

grid crown by downing Point
Pleasant 48-19 at Sandel'$ Memorial
Field in Point Pleasant. The lronrnen
finished league play with a 7-0
mark. PPHS finished second with a
5·2 record.
"I'm proud for. our seniors."'
remarked Blue Devtl mentor Brent
Saunders. "They've had their ups
and downs this year. It was nice they
could bow out on a winning note."
Playing their final game for the
Blue and White warriors were Chris
Bowman , Josh Atkinson. Seth
Davis, Ben Sheard, co-captain; John
Hornsby . Frank Faudree and Josh
Bodimer, co-captain.
"The team making the fewest

Area grl" diron standings
»:

Iwn

Jackson .................. 7
Point Pleasant.......S
River Valley .......... 4
Gallipolis ............... 4

Logan ..................... 4
Warren Local ......... 3
Athens .................... l
Marieua ..................O

SEOAL

L

fE

fA

2 202

160

3
3
3
4
6
7

136

0 325
143
139
157
167
109
46

51

L

I
3
5
6
6
4
9
9

9
7
4
4
4

154
161
193
267
166

6
I

I

fE

394
286

ISS
161
194
267
151
8.9

»:

.

Lucasville Valley .. :......................................... 10
Coal Grove ........................................................7
Wahama ...........................................................7
Meigs ................................................................6

Southern...........................................................S
lronton ........................................................ ....... 5
Eastern ............................................................. )
South Gallia .....................................................O

TRIPLETT SCORES - River Valley ace Jeremiah Triplett (7)
slams Into the end zone for River Valley to give the Raiders a ·&amp;-0
lead In the eecond period Friday. Paving the way Is Justin Terry
(20). In pursuit is Bert Craig (2). (Photo by Ron Caudill of River
Valley Photography)

Lyne Center slate
RIO GRANDE- Here is this
week's schedule for events at the
University of Rio Grande's Lyne
·Center.
Filaeu unter,IYIDDillliand racquetball courts
Today- 5·9 p.m.
Monday- 6 a.m.·IO p.m.
Tuesday- 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
Wednesday- 6 a.m.- 10 p.m.

Tornadoes win ...
(Continued from B-3)
set Federal up for a good scoring
chance, Southern still managed to
prevail. With 4:15 left in the game,
Federal tried a 30 yard field goal
auemptthat went wide left.
Later at the 2:38 mark, Federal
tried again, but missed when
Cumings made a game·saving
block. Southern took over at the 21·
yard line, where Cumings dashed for
four yards to set up the ne&lt;l play.
Quarterback Evans, in professional
fashion, appeared to call an audible
at the line. The audible worked .
With I :50 left in the game,
Writesel caught a pass of about 20yards. He raced another 55 to com·
plete a 75-yard Evans·to-Writesel
· co nnection . The extra·point kick
was blocked.
Federal then passed four straight
times incomplete as Southern held
on for the win
Ouarter Wall
Southern ..............O 6 0 6= 12
Federal Hocking .. O 6 0 0 = 6

Thursday -6 a.m.·IO p.m.
Friday- 6 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday - 1·6 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 9- 5·9 p.m.
Pool

Monday- 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday - 6·9 p.m.
Friday- 6-9 p.m.
Saturday - H p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 9- 6-9 p.m.
Home athletic events
Tuesday - Volleyball vs.
Cedarville at 7 p.m.
Notes
• A Lyne Center membership is
required to usc the facilities.
Faculty. staff, students and administration will be admiited with their ID
cards.
• Racquetball court reservations
can be made one day in advance by
calling 245-7495 or 1·800-2827201.
• All guests must be accompanied
by a Lync Center membership hold·
er($2 fee).

L

0
2
2
4
5
5
9
9

fE

337
277

205
250
136
179
63
76

fA

85
208
189

Z21

...~t\-Coun t ..

255
242
408
253

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'l,a

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

Big Blacks finish second in league

.

.

.

Jackson blasts Point Pleasant 48-19 to claim SEOAL title
league crown and 19th overall-most
by any team in the league, And,
more importantly, the win also
secures a spot in the Ohio Division
m playoffs for Jackson.
Wolford, who broke touchdown
rons of 76 and 96 yards, is according
to PPHS head coach Steve Safford,
"probably the best back we will face
this season. The only other running
back that I can think of who puts up
thatlcind of numbers against us was
a guy named Boggess who played at
Sissonville in the late '70s. We didn't
do a good job stopping him either."
For the Big Blacks, senior fullback Jeremy Rickard rushed for .a
team-high 121 yards. giving him
1,077 for the season. Backfield mate
Dusty Higginbotham reached the
cpveted
I,QOO.yard mark two weeks
(Continued from B-4)
ago, giving tbe Big Blacks their fil'$t
66-yard touch.h-..wn, but the play pair of I ,000-yard rushers in one
was called back -tleeause of a clip· season. "I've had a couple of pairs of
ping penalty on the Blue Devils.
backs who came close, but this is the
Crail scores for GAHS
GAHS finally got on the board
with 3:22 left in the half when Bert
Craig intercepted his seventh pass of Ouarter ll!llll
the season on the Raider 30, and River Valley ..........0 7 0 0 = 7
returned it . to the end zone for six Gallipolis...............0 13 7 3 = 23
points. Payton's kick from placement tied the score at 7-7. .
Gilmore returned Payton's cnsu· Scoring summary
ing kickoff from his own five to the
Gallipolis: Craig, 30 yard pass
Raiders' 41, but a quarterback .sack interception
return, 3:22 second,
by Frank Faudree on third down Payton kick: Craig, 23,yard pass from
forced another Raider punt with Payton, :41 second. kick fail: Faudree.
I :38 left in the half. Josh Atkinson 46-yard pass from Payton. 8:48 third,
broke through the tough RVHS line Payton, kick; Payton, 32-yard fi,eld
and blocked Boso's punt. Seth Davis goal, :59 fourth. I
scooped it up and raced 17 yards to
River Valley: Triplell. 1-yard run.
the Raiders' 37.
8:00 second, Boso, kick.
· After Payton hit Craig with a 11 yard pass, Payton got seven on a Team statistics
keeper. Jay Stout, who played a
whale of a defensive game for the DeiiMrtment
B.Y
1lal.
Raiders, threw Payton for a four- First downs .................... II
II .
yard loss.
Yards rushing .............. l43
102
With 41 seconds left in the half, Lost rushing .................. 30
39
Payton hit Craig deep in the left cor- Net rushlng .................. ll3
63
ner of the end zone to give GAHS a Pass auempts ...................8
14
l3-71ead. Payton's kick was wide to Completions ....................3
'6
the left. The Raiders had the play Intercepted by ................. 1
l
113
defended perfectly, but Craig made Yards passing ............... .41
176
a leaping catch .as he and the defend- Total yards .................. 154
er fell to the ground.

By RICK SIMPKINS
T-S Corrnpondent
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.The Jackson lronmen rolled up
some 564 yards of total offense.
including an amazing 348-yard
effort from tailback Shane Wolford,
enroute to a surprisingly easy 48-19
win over the Point Pleasant Big
Blacks in an SEOAL game played
in Point Pleasant last night.
The win gives the Ironmen and
1997 SEOAL football champi·
onship, their second consecutive

Blue Devils
bea.t Raiders...

first time I've ever had two backs turned the lronmen away, thanks 10
with a thousand yards. It not only a failed fourth·and-one situation on
speaks volumes about the two backs, Point Pleasant's 11-yard line. .
but also about our offensive line.
Those scores were preceded by
That group has played well for us all the play that Safford called "the
season." said Safford.
turning point of the game ." Facing a
A pair of second quarter touch· · third and I 8 .from the Jackson 27downs that came only two minutes yard line, quarterback Bttnt Rollins
apart proved to be very cost!y for the lofted a deep sideline pass to split
Big Blacks. Jackson took their first end Jimmy Hall . The senior receiver
lead of the game on the first of the caught the ball, but was ruled out of
two scores, a 24-yard g.allop by . bounds. Instead of having a first and
Wolford, and then added to that lead goal from the Jackson four, the Big
when
quarterback
Casey Blacks had a fourth and I 8 from the
Chamberlain connected with tight 27. The locals failed to convert on
end Rodney Campbell on a 13-yard fourth down and Jackson took the
scoring ~lay. The second score was ball and marched downfield for the
a result of a Point Pleasant fumble g_o-ahead score.
which Jackson recovered at the Big
"That play definitely turned the
Black 27-yard line.
game in their favor," said Safford.
1\nd, it could have been worse . "We thought we ca ught the ball
Following the second of those two inbounds and we were preuy high.
scores, the Big Blacks fumbled But, when it was called incomplete,
again, this time on the kickoff itlcind of deflated us. That play was
return . B!ll the Point defensive unit very big . If we score in that series,

River Valley-Gallia Academy game statistics .
Plays ....... :................ ...... so
50
Return yards: .......... 7-91-0 7·108-1
Fumbles .......................... . I
3
Lost fumbles ................... 1
I
Penalties .....................2·20
6·70
· Punts ........................ 5·155 4·171

Individual statistics
Rushing
GARS • Davis, 9-40-0; Painter, 319-0; Bodimer, 3·9-0; Mitchell, 4·8-0:
Lewis, 8-8·0; (-10)-0; Payton, 6·(·1 1)0. Totals 36-63-0.
River Valley: Gilmore, 17·68-0:
Triplell, 11·49·1 ; Terry, 8·17-0; Stout,
1·2·0; Boso, 7·(·23)·0; Totals 42-1131.

Gallipolis
wasdrive
ableofto the
hallsecond
River · - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .--~---~~~~~.,
Valley's
initial
half. Taking over on the Raiders' 45,
The Tuppers Plains-Cheater Water District will be
Chris Lewis got two to the 43, then
flushing lines beginning November 3rd. Since It
lost three on a fumbled pitchout in
will take ,three weeks to complete there will be
which he recovered with Gabe
Saunders in pursuit.
another listing next Sunday's paper. Listed below
On the next play. Payton
are locations for this week.
uncorked a 46-yard strike to Frank
Faudree with 8:48 left in the period
·
to !l!~ke it 19-7. Payton's kick (a42·
Monday, November 3: Long Bottom, Riverview, BJgley
yar~er because of back-to-back 15Ridge, Mt. Oliva, Curtis Hollow, 19 Road, ahd Oaborn Road.
County Road 48 and the New England Area.
yard penalties against the Blue
Devils) made it 20-7.
The Raiders weren't done. With
Tuesday, November 4: Treatment Plant to Riebel Road on
the hard-running Gilmore an'd
.State Route 248, and County Road 28 to Lyon. Den. From
Tripleu taking turns, River Valley
the. Intersection of Riebel Road and State Route 248
moved from its own two to the
through to Cheater: From McKenzie Ridge to Stlveravllle,
Gallipolis 40 in 10 plays, but the
Co. Rd. 35 back to Apple Grove Dorcae Road to East
visitors lost the ball on a fumble
with 6:33 left in the period when
Letart.
Alex Saunders pounced on a loose
ball along the RVHS sidelines. Thi.s
Wedneaday, November 5: From the lntarsectlon of Success
may have been the game's turning
Road &amp; State Route 7 to the fire hydrants In Tuppers
point.
Plains. Succeaa Road, SR 7 South to Sumner road, and h
Gallipolis then staged a time ·
Sliver Ridge. Cheater to Five Points, Eagle Ridge off State
consuming drive to begin the fourth
period, moving from GAHS 42 to
Route 7, Sand Ridge, Pine Grove Road, Vinegar Street, Roy
the River Valley 19 in 12 plays.
Jonea Road, Amberger Road, Morning Star Road, Court
JeremY Webb intercepted a Payton
Street, Salaer Road, Foraat Run, Yoet Road, Mlneravllle
pass in the end zone with 7:20 left to
Hill, and Welchtown·.
end that threat.
After forcing another Raider
Thursday, November 6; Route 50 and Vanderhoof Road to
punt, Gallipolis concluded the
game's scoring when Payton booted
River Road, VIllage of Stewart, and aurroundlng area. Five
a 32·yard field goal with 59 seconds
Polnta to Crew Road (Includes Royal Oak Resort area,
lefllo play.
Wippel Road, Crow Sub-Division, Golf Course Hill, Forest
Gilmore praised
Run Road (off Route 7 to Block Plant). From Lyons Dan to
Saunders praised Raider back Jim
Beahan, from Bashan to Tackervllle.
Gilmore after the game . "Jimmy
Gilmore is a hard runner and hiller
like his dad Jim was when he
Friday, November 7; From Tackervllle to the Dorcas area.
played for Gallipolis back in th,e
I
mid·l960s," Saunders said.
Some of the flushing will be done at night and some
Final game for nine Raiders
customers may experience low preaeure. Please be aware
Playing their final high school
that the water may be dlacolored for several mllea around
game for River Valley were Bryan
these locations. If the water Is discolored for longer than a
Davis, Gabe Saunders. Jay Stout.
few hours, please contact the office so we will be aware of
Jer.emy Webb, Nate Polcyn, Tim
Wellington, Zach Stanley, Jeremiah
the problem.
Tripleu and Jimmy Gilmore.

by T&amp;R Portraits at

WAYNE'S PLACE
13.7 N. SECOND

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
SUN., NOV. 2ND, 11 A.M.·MIDNIGIIt
Inside/Outside poses available. Motorcycle are welcomer
A $16 setting feegives you (1) 8x1 0. Packages range from
setting fee package to their largest of $75.

Your Taylor Sales Team:

1

River VaHey: Boso 3-8·1·41·0.
Totals 3·8·1-41·0.
Recovered fumbles GARS· Saunders.
River Valley: ~akcr.
Interceptions
GAHS • Craig. t·30· I. Totals 1·
30-1.
River Valley: Webb. 1-0-0. Totals 1·0-0.
Blocked punt returns
GARS • Blocked by Atk10son,
returned 17 yards by Davis.
River Valley: None. ·
Punts
GAHS- Payton. 4·171. (42.7)
River Volley : Boso, 5-155 (I
blocked); (3 1.0)

Hair and cosmetic makeovers FREE If desired.
For details and appt. contact VIcky 61'-4·992·5884 or 992·6742.
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

COM.I.JOJN JN TID FUM

Re-Elect
Dilley L. Dalley
for

Gallla County Loeal Sehools
Tour uote U sup,.rt ,.....,,, •nawciGW

fall Festival Of Savings!!
o
w
~ · e:·~ riiilGea

1.

I

.

DtE\IRDLEr PoN\IAC.ICllmXje BVICK•

'

(!) ~

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1994 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 2Door, loadect .............................. $7,400
1995 FORD MUSTANG Low miles, clean, auto, air, UH, crulse.........$12,850
1996 GEO METRO 5speed, air, 40,000 miles, stereo............................. $5,900 .
1989 PONTIAC GRAND AM Runs good, low miles, extra clean ......... $3,200
1994 GEO TRACKER 4x4 stereo, caonvertible, more.......................... $7,900
1996 CHEVY TAHOE VS, auto, 4x4, all power, alum wheels ............... $27,500
1995 FORD RANGER 32,000 miles, stereo, 5speed...............:..............$7,800
1993 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE All power, vs, leather...............$14,900
1994 CHEVY S·10 PICKUP Ext cab, auto, air, more ........................... $11,700
1995 CHEVY K1500 PICKUP 4x4, 5speed, air ................................. $15,600

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MON-FRI.

9-8
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SAMPLE PHOTOS AT WAYNE'S PLACE!

.

the sophomore looked anything but
like a rookie. He made a great play
just keeping his feet in bounds on
the touchdown pass, and snared
another aerial in the fourth quarter
and almost turned it into a touchdown.
It was a glimmer of hope for the
Big Blacks but it was quickly extin·
guished by .the Jackson squad. The
Jronmen took the ensuing kickoff
and marched 79 yards on 15 plays
with big fullback Marcus Meachum
getting the touchdown on a four·
yard run. That play snuffed out what
liule hope the Big Blacks had for a
rally.
Later in the game. Point drove to
the Jackson one, but could not put
the ball in the end zone and turned
the ball over to Jackson just three
feet shon of the goal line . Wolford
put the .finishing tou ch on the
evening two plays later when he
rambled 96 yards for the final score
of the game .
The Big Blaeks led twice in the
game, both times after scoring runs
by Rickard . The senior fullback
opened the scoring with a 73-yard
(See BIG BLACKS on B-6)

Pd for by Bllley L. Halley, t93 Halley Rd., Crown City, Oh

THI:t l'llliKillit; INiiliUUt;5 YOUR BXIO,
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Left to Right: Steve Riffle, Terry Walbum,
Ralph Lott, C. R. Henderson, Doug Winland

it's a 14 point swi ng. It could have
changed the complexion of the
whole game ."
The Ironmen added another score
on their next possession, the first of
the second half, when they went 65
yards on seven plays. Jay
Blankenship capped the drive with a
4-yard plunge and then tacked on the
extra point to make it 34·13.
Things looked bleak for the good
guys at that point, but the Big Blacks
put together an impressive scoring
drive of their own to cut the deficit
to 34·19. A seven-yarp Brent
Rollings to Joe Marcum pass provided the points, but it was another pass
play that was the key play in the
drive. On a third and nine from the
Jackson 42, Rollins dropped back 10
pass but was flushed from the pocket.
After e-iuding several would-be
tacklers,
Rollins
found
Higginbotham for a 17·yard gain to
the lronmen 25. A late hit moved the
ball inside the 13, and three plays
later, Rollins hit Marcum in the back
of the end zone for the score. It
should be noted that this was
Marcum's first action at split end and

Receiving
GARS - Craig, 4·49-t; Faudree, 146-1: Saunders, 1-18·0. Totals 6-1132.
River Valley: Bradbury, 1·23-0;
Terry, 1·14-0; Gilmore, 1-4·0. Totals
3-41-0.
Passing·
GAHS - Payton, 6-14·1-113-2
Totals 6-14-1-113-2.

GLAMOUR SHOTS·

Team statistics

Rushing: Southern: Cqmings 17·
100; Federal- Jason Sharp 25-88,
Barl Kasler 16-40.
Receiving: S- Write,el 4-111,
Adam Williams 1-6, .\daJII Cumings
2-Ui. Matt Rifflo J-3., ijaderal
Hocking: Sharp 2-71, Wllitlatch 110.
P.salpg: !!vans I-HI. Cumings 01; VoJ(3-II.SiwpQ.I.
·

1995 FORD F150 414

351 VB eng., auto., PS, PB, air,

.

Federal Hocking: 67·yard Vogt
10 Sharp pass play. two·point 'convcrsion void. 6JJ second quarter
Southern: 50.yard Writcscl interception return. two-point conversion
pass incomplete .. 074 second quartc
Southern: 75·yard Evans to
Writcsel pass play. two-point conversion kick blocked. I:50. fourth
quarter

Individual statlatlc:s

244
382

LAWRENCE

HAY

PHONE 992-2196

226

VOTE FOR AND ll.t:CT
.

6'imt"

C61 SOUTIITHtRO .

411DDLEPOR"T, o\'\

70
94
96
173
216

IF I MISSED TALKING TO
YOU BEFORE ELECTION,
I WILL STILL NEED
YOUR SUPPORT.

Scoring summary

Department
Sgg.
w
First downs .. ................... 7
12
Rushing yards ...... ....23· 75 43-168
Passing yards ............... l4(i
81
3-12
Comp.·ntt. ... ... .......... 8-17
Jnter&lt;eptions .................... 1
3
Fumblesllost ................ J-1
0
Penalties .................... .3-15
6-~5
Punts-avg ................5-36.1
2-33

fA

Friday's K2t§
Galllpolis·23, River Valley 7
Jackson 48, Point Pleasant 19
Logan 28, Athens 20
Warren Local 16, Mariella 0
Eastern 18, Waterford 8
Meigs I 8. Belpre 0
·
Southern 12, Federal Hoclcing 6
Guyan Valley 48, South Gallia 18
Wahama 26, Wirt County 21
Coal Grove 26, Fairland 6
Columbus Wallerson 24, Ironton 17
Lucasville Valley 14, Minfond 0

'

(See BLUE DEVILS on B-S\

ROCK SPRINGS -The Tri-Vallcy Conference will hold its all-star
volleyball game Monday at Meigs High School's Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium.
.
.
.
...
The contest will feature the top sentor gtrls from the Hockmg Dtvlston
against the top senior girls from the Ohio Division. Game time is 6:30p.m.

Selected non-league teams

Iwn

Bradbury, who carried the ball to the
GAHS one." We never really had
good field position after that."'
Triplell said.
Gallipolis' Jeremy Payton's punting
kept the Raidel'$ bouled up most of
the night - he pu.nted four times for
171 yards, good for 42.7 yards a
kick.
"It was a hard-hilling, but clean
game," remarked Brent Saunders.
"You could hear the pads cracking
on both sides of the field tonight."
Gallipolis ma'de its sh:ue of mistakes, too. With 5:42 left in the second period, Payton hit Seth Davis
will) a short pass over the middle.
Davis twisted, turned and slipped
through the Raiders for an apparent

TVC all-star volleyball match Monday

Overall

»:

mistakes usually wins a game like
this ," said RVHS coach Merrill
Triplell. "We made more mistakes
than Gallipolis and got beat," he
said.
Ralden score first
After a scoreless first period ,
Gallipolis spotted River Valley .a 1·0
lead when the Raiders, behind the
hard running of Jimmy Gilmore,
Jeremiah Tiipleu, Justin Terry and
the passing of J.B. Boso. marched
61 yards in 10 time-consuming
plays.
Tripleu blasted over from the one
with 8:00 on the clock to make it 60. Boso's kick from placement made
it 1:0 in favor of the visitors.
The big gainer in the drive was a
23-yard pass from Boso to Brian

Sundlly, November 2, 1997

'

NEED AFRESHSTAR17
lonluuplrf • Slow Cretlil
• No (,..(. We may ill
able Ia help!
Asidor Mr.114rtus

�•

PAil!..

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

B&amp; • Jlwdlau

The world.revolves
around a
full-court press

Guyan Valley
tallies 48-18 win
over South Gallia

By SAM WILSON
nme• S.mlnel eo~

)By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
It's difficult for me to believe it's November.
. TimH.S.ntlnel Staff
What happened to this year? Do you feel the same
MERCERVILLE - In Friday
way as 1do when you fmally realized that there arc oo!y two months left'? night's gridiron finale at South
this year? Have you seen the signs WI how many slloppmg days are left unlll Gallia High School. lhe host Rebels'
Christmas?
turnovers bore enough fruit for
Of course, 1 say the same thing at the end of every month. But I look at Guy
Valley that the Wildcats
the bright side: Halloween is over, so I can now look forward to the Thanks- scored early and often en route to a
1 4K-18 victory.
giving Day football extravaganza.
·
What would the fourth Thursday in November be without watching both · How dominant was the cast from
the Detroit Lions and Dallas Cowboys battle opponents as we. pic~ the fin~l West Hamlin, W.Va.?
morsels off our holiday turkeys? I only wish they played outsodc '"Detroot.
• Guynn Valley had only two
It just doesn't seem like football when it's played inside a dome.
possessions out of 10 that didn't end
The weather is cold and now that baseball and soccer have finally con- in a touchdown or a turnover. Both
eluded their playoffs, .:e can finally concentrate oo a less than.exciting f~t- came .after hal fti'!'e, when , t~e
ball season. It's just difficult to get thrilled when you see Balumore playmg Wtldcats put m thetr second-team
Tennessee as the featured game of the week.
.
·
players.
.
.
One thing is cenain, the Pittsburgh Steelers and Coach Boll Cowher arc , · . • The Woldcats scored ~n t~etr
amazing. 1 keep telling myself that this can't be the same team that was Ttrst possessoon but short-corcuoted
blown out by Dallas during the first week of the season. Every year they lose the or neu two posscssoons wtth
I
t free a ene and still manage to compete for and won tbe Central turnovers. Bu'. they overcame that
P ~~e~ 0
g Y
by gettong theor defense m on the
Dovosoon.
. ·
d k'
h f'
"
ld be h d
d to find another coach wbo could face this sit- sconng act an rna mg. t e o •e~se
.ou wou
ar pre~
.
.
.
. h . · d score on three of theor next fove
uation every year and contmue to build champoooshtp teams wot a 1omote d .
th
pay roll That's why Cowher is the best in the business. For him, failure is not 1 nveAs.ft S th G 11 .
·
fi 0 d
be'
k · · th d.1·e~ 10
·
•
cr ou
a 1a go1 on c
an option, and the only place you
success ,ore wor os on e
' . scoreboard with senior halfback/cornary.
.
. . .
· nerhack Steve Queen's six-yard run
Let's not forget that November also means the begmnong of basketball . . in the first minute of the second
Yes, that purely American game w~ich is the real world spon. No offense to quarter. Guy an. Valley scored 19
all you soccer fans, but bask~tba!los number one. After all, no soccer play- unanswered points in the second
er was asked to make a movoe woth Bugs Bunny and EI111er Fudd.
quarter to put the affair out of the
Of course, I'm probably wrong, but you have to understand that it's a cui- Rebels' reach.
·
turalthing for us folks from Indiana. Our world revolves around the fullThe Wildcats (7-3), who
court press, the half-court offense and a few Bob Knight tantrums. Well, rebounded from a 38-6 loss to Burch
probably more than a rew!
the previous week, scored on the
It's at this time of the year that we gauge the chances of our teams becom- opening kickoff when lineman
ing champions. The burning questions continue to revolve around tbe Chica- Freddie Watts stole the ball from
go Bulls in the NBA and the Arizona Wildcats in the NCAA. Both arc odds- Tommy Sanders after Sanders
on favorites to repeal as respective champions.
caught the ball ncar tbc Rebels' fiveThe Wildcats will face a more difficult chore than the Bulls in their yard lm~. From the Rebels' 22-yard
attempt to cut the nets down for a ~nd straight year. Single elimin~tion hne. Watts ~mved '" the end zone'
tournaments are so difficult to predoct. After all, who could have predtCied woth only eoght seconds gone from
that Arizona would defeat three number one seeds on their way to this year's the game clock. .
championship? Remember that only Duke has been able to repeat as chaniAbout four monutes later. the
pions since John Wooden retired from UCLA in 1975.
Woldcats scored agam when quancrWith Minnesota losing valuable players to graduation, the Big Ten seems back JR. Adko~s ended a sox-play •
· .or
• p urd ue to once agaon
· assume .the position
51-yard
to be npe
. of top
. dog· 1 really
.
down rundnve woth
· a 23-yard touch' .
like their returning sophomore forw~d Bn.a~ Cardinal.. He's rour typocal
Befor~ its third drive of the game,
Gene Keady player: tough and physocal, wollong to sacnfice bts body and South Galli a had ventured into
ego to win.
.
.
. .
. .
.
Guyan Valley territory once in the
Purdue's three straight Bog Ten champoonshops m ~e 199_0s 15 ompre~tve, first quancr, but had not gotten closbut overlooked. Keady os a great coach who doesn t receove the credot ~e er than the Wildcats' 48.
deserves. You face such problems wbe~ you atte~pt to share the •!age Wtlh
Spurred by Queen's interception
Knight. It's wonde~l, because Purdue s most senous challenge wtll proba- of J.R. Adkins' pass at the Rebels'
bly come from lndtana.
.
.
38, the hosts began a series that
This is a crucial year for Coach Knoght. More and more fans are gettong staned in the last 2: 16 of the first
tired of his antics, and his lack of anention to recruiting quality players. It's quarter and continued into the secacceptable to be a jerk if you win, but Knight.has f~iled ~o reach 20 wins for ond period.
• the third straight year, and has lost three,stratght umes on the first round of ·
Queen had runs of 2(), 10 and six
:: the tournament
.
yards to finish the Rebels' push into
··
Fans are already looking towards a replacement. Their search has taken the end zone.
them to ·Southwest Missouri State and former IU player Steve Alford. Ope
more year like the past three could fond the unthinkable at· Indiana: Knight
being pressured to leave.
That's why I expeCI him to win big this year. Bob just loves to prove people wrong.
- .
_.
,
.

an

• - of hl*lry 8t the Unlwtally of
RID
An 8VId 1M ofllllfiCII'Ia - - • ,_. 11111111c1t lolkhllr of bllbt·
IIIII- M i l l - o f = Ind.,- 1 gt8dullle oflncll11111 Umv.wlty-lhoUid llllflldl,. -~~~~ llbout- h l l - (lnd Ita ester helrt) IL

o,....

(See REBELS on B-7)

Jlnltla~

and helped bring Into the
township approximately $200,000.

Your Vot• Willie Cnatl~ Apprecfat.d
Pold lor by lhlln condldot•:. 4217 TNno Run. Ad., Gotnpollo, Ohio 45131

1998 FORD RANGER XLT 16113 A/C, cautllt,
bedllner, bal of fact warranty, sport wheels. ..........$9220
1998 NISSAN KING CAB TRUCK 16938 Black, A/T, A/C,
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1992 FULL SIZED FORD VAN CONVERSION 16927
Blue, VB, A/T, A/C, 4.Cap chairs, rear bench, ........ $8995
1991 PONTIAC TRANS PORT 1611411 Blue, aport
wheels, V&amp;, 7 pass, PW, PL .................... t ............ ; ... $5995
1995 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER 18850 7 peas, cassette,

ale, tilt, crulse ................, ....................................... $10195
1994 FORD AEROSTAR VAN 18932 V&amp;, A/T, A/C, caaa,
tilt, cruiH, PW, PL, 7 pau..................................,$1 0545
1994 DODG! CARAVAN GRAN VAN LE Lt Pewter,
w/Wood grain 7 pa1s, A/T, AJC, AMII;M caaa, tilt, cruise,

Pwr seat, PW, PL ...................................

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

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1996 DODGE CARAVAN 18839 Green, 7 pan, A{T, A/C,

tltt, cruiH .....................................................

t .........

o$13375

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1895 FORD TAURUS GL 16951 Green A/C, A/T, tilt,
crulaa, Pwr seat, PW, caaa, 1port wheels ............ $10995
1993 MERCURY SABLE 161148 White, V8, A/T, A/C, tilt,

cruise, PW, Pwr seat, PL .........................................$6995
1990 PONTIAC GRANDAM 16937 2 Dr, A/T, A/C,
AM/FM caaa, aport wheels, tilt, cruise ................... $4595
1995 FORD ASPIRE 11!103 26000 miles, 4 dr, A/C,

cassette, dual mlrrora.. ........................

$6995
1994 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 16751 Red, AfT, AJC,
caSMttt, tiH, crulee, PW, PL ................................... $7995
o....................

1895 DODGE SPIRIT 18901 Dk Pewter, V&amp;, A/T, A/C,
cruise, caasette..:..................................................... $8995
1997 GEO MEnlO 168991700 miles, bal of laett1rv
warranty, 2 dr, AfT, AJC, AM/FM .................................$8!119
1895 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA 161167 V&amp;, A/T, AC,
cruise, PW,
.
1998 PLYMOUTH
18902 Red, 4 Dr, A/T,
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1993 SATURN M6885 Whitt, A/C, tilt, AM/FM

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92 FORD £.SCORT 4 DR ............................$4995
4 cyl .. auto.,

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94 FORD IISPIRE 2 DR............................. $5495
5 speed. air ccnd., air bag, only 42,000 miles.

89 BUICK LESABRE 4 DR........................ $3995
3800. V6, load !Iii with all options.

88 CHEV. c:ORSICA 4 DR .......................... $3995
V6, auto. trans , air cond.

89 BUICK REGAL 2 DR ............................. $4995
V6, auto. trans., all power.

·

89 FORD TAURUS 4 DR............................ $1995
V6. auto. trans:

88 PONTIAC SUNBIRD 4 DR .................... $1995
4 cy1 .• auto .. air cond.

87 DODGE CARAVAN ............................... $3995
V6, auto. trantr., 7 pass., extra sharp.

76 CADILLAC ELDORAD0 ....................... $3995

n,ooo actual miles.

M HYUNDAI EXCEL..................................$3995
4 cy1., 5 speed, 54,000 miles

12
, 210
93
303
S-12

HASKELL SAUNDERS
SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE
VOTE FOR

WILLIAM "ROGER"
HOLLEY
GREEN TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
Your Vote Will Be Appreciated!
45831

· GOTCHA!- South Gellle'• John Summere (61) gets a waistline
grip on Guyan Valley quarterback Josh Davlcl•on In the third quar·
ter of the. Rebel•' aee.on finale Friday night In Mercerville, where
the vi•ltln!i Wildcats won 48-18. (Times-Sentinel photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)
.

Rebels lose ...
(Continued from B-6)
this week to secure a spot in the
: · West Virginia Class A playoffs.
Ouarter lRIU
GuyanValley .... l5 27 0 6= 48
SouthGallia.........O 12 6 0= 18

Scoring summary
Guyan Vaitey -Watts 22-yd.
' rift urn · on fum lite recovery
(Blankenship pass from J.R.
Adkins), II :52 1st qtr.
Guyan Valley - T. Adkins 23yd. run (Messinger kick), 7:50 1st
qtr.
.
South Gallla - Queen 6-yd. run
(run failed), II :02 2nd qtr.
Guyan Valley - !'arsons fumble
recovery in end zone (kick failed),
7:59 2nd qtr.
Guyan Valley- T. Adkins 2yd. run (Messinger kick), 6:45 2nd
qtr.
Guynn Valley - Joseph Clay 7yd. run (kick failed), 5:20 2nd qtr.
South Gallla- Callahan 63-yd.
run (pass failed). 2:48 2nd qtr.
Guyan Valley- Frye 4-yd. run
(Blankenship pass from J.R .
Adkins), :10 2nd qtr.
South Gallia - Callahan· 88-yd.
run,(pass failed), 3:46 3rd qtr. ·
Guyan Valley- Davidson t-yd.
run (run short), 7:15 4th qtr.

Team statistics

Statistical leaders

Eddie Bauer trim, 4.0 V6, auto, loaded with all extas. 7 passenger

VOTE FOR

E

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92 FORD AF.ROSTAR 4X4 VAN ................ $7900

Departm,nt
lfiL
First downs .............. ........?
Rushing yards .............. l38
Passing yards ................. 60
Total ............................ 198
Passing .......... ... ..........7-17

Rushing
Eastern : Josh Hager 7-72; Adam
Sanders 12-64: Steve Durst t2-45;
Waterford: Dustin Jones 7-94;
Passing
Eastern: Durst 4-9, Sanders t-3 .
Waterford: nla
Receiving
Eastern: Kehl 1-7, Buchan an 213 , We s Sanders 1-20, Adam
Sanders 1-49.
Tackles
Eastern : Nate Radford 12, Abe
Rach 7, Durst and Shaun Long 6.
Waterford : Brian Miller 10, Joe y
Huck 6, Luke Crock 6, and Allen
Schaad5.

I'll do the best job I can!

88 &amp; 89 FORD BRONCO II 4X4'a
5

.Individual statistics

Team statistics

.

Dc:oar!menl
GY
SG
First downs ..............'...... 16
6
Total yards ...... .. ....... ....329
233
Rushing au.-yds ..... 49-293 25-191
Passing yds ................. ...36
42
Comp.-att ................... ..4-~
4-15
Interceptions thrnwn ....... 2
0
6-5
Fumbles-lost ................ 1-1
Penaltics-yds ............. .7-70
3-35
1-29
Punts-yds ................... none

Auto trans.,
air cond., tilt
wheel,
cruise,' PW.
PL. much
more.

sion run failed.
, Interceptions .................... I
I
Waterford took advanta~e of the Fumbles/lost.. ............... 2-0
1-1
big play for its lone score. a Dustin Penalties ...... ...............7-85
6-45
Jones 64-yard touchdown run with Punts-avg ................3-29.0
2-20
I:50 left in ~ balf. A pass to Kun
Reed accounted for the two-point
conversion and the score stood 18-8. Scoring summary
The Eastern defense wAs led by
Eastern: Steve Durst 1-yd. run,
Nate Radford with 12 tackles. Abe
Rach 7, Durst 6 and Shaun Long 6. 2:07 Ist qtr. .
Eastern : 20-yd. Durst pass 1'0
For Waterford, Brian Miller had 10,
Joey Huck 6, Luke Crock 6 and Wes Sanders, 8:51 2nd qtr.
Eastern: 49-yd. pass from Durst
Allen Schaad 5.
to Adam Sanders, 4:03, 2nd qtr.
Quarter mJa11
Waterford : Dustin Jones 64-yd .
E1;15tern .................6 12 0 0 = 18
run
(Reed run), I :50 2nd qtr.
Waterford ............0 8 0 0 = 8

$12995
1995 GMC SONOMAI6823 Red, sport wheels, bed
liner, caasette, A.C ...................................................$9995

0 •••

A. Filion, 11211 81. Fll.141, Pltrlot,

.

Josh Hager, Adam Sinders and
Steve Durst. The Eagles put together
a long, sustained drive of 58 yards,
using the success of the bootleg and
blast off tackle.
The initial touchdown drive
ended in a Steve Durst one yard run
at the 2:07 mark in the first quaner.
The two-point conversion run failed,
but Eastern led 6-0.
Eastern had only five passes, but
two went for touchdowns. The first
was a 20-yard pass from Steve Durst
to Wes Sanders at the 8:51 mark in
the second quarter. The two-point
conversion run failed and Eastern
led 12-0.
Eastern ate up huge chunks of
turf with its ground game and also
collected 12 first downs throughout
the night.
After an aborted Waterford drive,
Eastern scored again, this time on a
49-yard pass from Durst to Adam
Sanders at the 4:03 ·mark in the second quaner. The two-point conver-

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1994 FORD RANGER 16928 GREEN, A/C, AM!FM can,
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1995 NIS::.AN
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1998 CHEV S-10 EXTRA CAB H848 LS. Trim, A/C, CD

playir, bed liner........

'
was good team effort tonight.
Hopefully we cal) build on this win
for next year."
"I'm very excited for our kids.
Sometimes losin1 and how you take
losing makes you a better winner.
We're going to enjoy .this win for a
Ions time. We've got a full winter,
spring and summer of work to do,
but the experience we gained this
year will be very valuable. Our
seniors have helped lay a solid
groundwork for the future."
All the scoring took place in the
first half. Defense prevailed in the
second. The Sanders boys, Adam
and Wes, excelled in a great offensive effort.
. Eastern found much succe~s in its
running game with a good mox from

$31115

1995 DODGE CARAVAN lri669a Green, V&amp;, 7 paaa, AfT,

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1994 FORO EXPLORER XLT County Wagon m54, PW,
PL, sun roof, Green, A{T, A/C, cruise, AM!FM

PERRY. TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

EAST MEIGS -The Eallern
Eagles went IS games without a victory, but Friday night's homecominR
was a very sweet one as the Eagles
posted a hard-fought 18-8 Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division win
over the Waterford Wildcats.
Eastern ended the season 1·9
overall and 1-4 in the division, tied
with Waterford for fourth place.
Waterford is also 1-4.
Eastern seniors Abc Rach, Steve
· Durst, Wes Sanders, Nale Radford,
Shaun Long, Jeremy . Kchl, Chris
Buchanan, Lamar Lyons, David
Bigley and Mike O'Nail closed out
outstanding careers.
Eastern coach Casey Coffey said.
"I'm very proud and happy for our.
. kids, especially for our seniors. It

1993 NISSAN KING CAB 411416147 ·Whitt, aport
wlleela, aport ltrlpe, bed liner, I'Hr flip Hlls .... $11,400
1990 JEEP CHEROKEE 4x416948 A{T, A/C, tilt, cruiH,
PW, PL, V&amp;, aport wtleela ........................................ $5995
1998 CHEV BLAZER 4X4 4 Or, Wllltel 18953 A/T, A/C,
cruise, pwr Slit, aport wheele .............................$17875 ·
1991 GEO TRACKER 4X4 4 Dr 16953 Sport Wheele,

bel of factory warranty ............

FOR

RE·ELECT

CARL RANDOLPH

IIQIIIIDI

LARRY A. FALLON

Big Blacks fall ... (ContinutidfromB-5)
led the charge with four solo tackles
and six assists while fellow senior
Adam Campbell had five solos and
four assists. Freshman Josh Burris
had four solo stops and five assists.
Also, Mike Roach had three solos
and four assists. while Jamie
Buskirk had a pair of solo tackles
and five assists.
That concludes the regular season
for the Big Blacks, who finished
with a 7-3 record. They must now
wait until next week to find out their
playoff opponent. lllere are still several teams with a mathema.tical
chance of getting in, so anything at
this stage would be pure speculation.

...

M~n DO•w•r~~

a 15-6 margin, South Gallia, though
pushed by Guyan Valley's running
attack to the Rebels ' 13, got a
breather when linebacker Nick
Cremeans recovered Todd Adkins'
fumble on a handoff at the South
Gallia IS. But three plays later,
Rebel quarterback Rufus Stanley
fumbled between the hosts' 10- and
fi vc-yard lines. Chad Parsons batted
the pigskin in front of him and
recovered the ball in tbc end zone.
The Rebels cashed in on one
more of their guests' last two
turnovers. Later the second quaner,
Queen picked off J.R. Adkins again,
but this time Queen returned the ball
13 yards to the South Gallia 34.
The Rebels saw senior
haltbackltackle Amos Callahan gain
three yards before breaking free on a
second-and-seven situation for a 63yard touchdown run with 2:48 left in
the half.
Guyan Valley, seeing its lead
trimmed to a 34-12 margin,
answered with a four-yard touchdown run from Danic I Frye that
cam,e 10 seconds before halftime.
Midway into the third quarter,
Guynn Valley lost the ball on downs.
Three plays later, Callahan. on a
third-and-five situation on the South
Gallia 12, went off right tackle and
cut across the field toward Guyan
Valley's sideline. Since no Wildcats
caught up to him, he had an 88-yard
touchdown run that trimmed the
Wildcats' lead to a 42-18 margin.
Notes: The Rebels ' 0-9 finish

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

Eastern beats Waterford 18-8 to notch season's first win

10

RE·ELECT

s- - . , Ph.D. IIIII IIIDelllle jNUI

burst right through the bean of t\le
Jackson defense and then added a
five-yard touchdown after Wolford
tied the game with his 76-yard
touchdown run.
"Our inability to stop them was
the key to the game," said Safford.
"We wanted to keep them from
breaking tbe big play and we weren't
successful to say the least. They
made several big plays which hun us
in more ways than one. But, tbey are
a biB play team and they demonstrated that tonight."
Defensively, a pair of seniors and
a· freshman had big nights for the
Big Blacks. Linebacker Mike Jeffers

Sunday, November 2, 1997

1995 MITSUBISHI MIRAGE 18916, 4 Dr, A/T, AJC,

Guyan Valley Wildcats
Rushing - Richmond 12-60;
Joseph Clay 7-48 &amp; I TD; Frye 5·
40; Vance 6-37: unknown No. 34 126; T Adkins 5-27 &amp; 2 TDs: Parsons
6-23: Davidson 5-0 &amp; I TD
Passin&amp; - J.R. Adkins 4-8. 36
yds. &amp; 2 con.
· Receiving- Pennington 2-30;
Blankenship 2-6 &amp; 2 con.
Fumble recoveries - . Watts 122 &amp; I TD; Parsons 1-0 &amp; I TD:
J.R. Adkins 1·0; Vance 1-0; No. 22
1-0
South Gallia Rebels
Rushing ~ Callahan 6-168 &amp; 2
TDs; Queen 9-17 &amp; I TD
·
Powln1- Stanley 4-15. 42 yds.
Receiving- Staton 3-34; Butler
1-8
Fumble recoveries - Cremeans
1-0
was the first such showing by a
Gallia County varsity crew since
Hannan Trace turned in an 0-9
record in 1991. It was also the fint
time a varsity team had failed to win
a game for Jack James sfnce he
entered the coachins ranks in
1980 .. .The Wildcats itced a victory
laten:eptlou caupt - Queen
2-13 .

GETS 300 GAME - Dave Sommerville (center) of Gallipolis
bowled the first 300 game of the year on Sept. 26 at Skyline Lane•
In Kanauga. Flanking him are Skyline Lanes operations manager
Mark Burns (left) and L.D. Pyles of Wholesale Meats of Gallipolis.
Burns and Pyles presented Som""'rvllle checks for $50 for hla feet.

~l:o«:

Santa Claus is coming to town!
App1kations for toys.to be donated by the Meigs County Bikers
Association will be taken at the Mdgs County Health. Department
beginning November 3, 1997. Applications will be taken for two
_we~ks. The Anal day to- apply for to" is November 14, 1997. No
exceptions. Applicants must apply in person (ABSOWTELY NO .
PHONE CAW). Proof of hicome is required to verify eligibility
(Medical card, pay stub, unemployment, etc)

*THE

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See:
Jerry Bibbee
Ma.rvin Keebaugh

Clark Reed
Doc Hayman

---------1
Just 20 Mlnutel Drive Streight Up
Rl 7 Nor1h thru Tuppn Plllnl

42945 State Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio 45723

(614) 667-3350
I

**

�•
•

•

..........

t

1e

..

Outdoors

n

In the.Open
By Jim Freeman
Times-sentinel Stiff

even fatally injured, can run a long
As most any veteran deer hunter time; leaving the animal alone will
~¥ill tell you, ~he really hard work allow it time to rest and stiffen lip,
begins after the kill; not beforehand often close to where it was shot.
as all the hunting magazines and
Tracking a wounde,d deer is a
videos would have you believe.
subject for books. one !bat cannot be
The moments immediately fol- given justice in an 17-inch column.
lowing the instant the hunter pulls The best way to track a deer is to
the trigger or releases an arrow are start with a good shot placement,
largely overlooked by most outdoor making tracking almost unnecessary.
scribes ... sometimes with disastrous Bowhunters, finding your arrow at
msults.
the site, assuming it passed clear
Remember, safety is the single through the deer, or along the trail
most omportant thong to keep on . can give you a good indication of
mond before, dunng and after the where in the body the animal was
hunt. There are plenty of ways t~t hit. Finding the complete arrow,
hurt after the hunt; some excited shaft and broadhead intact, also lets
bunters have literally ran right out of you know pieces were not left
their stands 10 claim their trophy, behind in the animal.
temporarily forgetting they were
Appro.aching a fallen deer is
about 20 feet off the ground in a tree another time requiring caution stand.
more than one hunter has been
This time is critical: relax a injured by a deer he or she assumed
moment. make sure your gun or bow was dead. A dead deer will usually
is "safe" and wait until your nerves be lying with its eyes open. Watch
settle before coming down from closely for any motion; you can also
your stand.
try prodding the animal cautiously
This lime of relaxation is espe- with a long stick ..Occasionally, it
cially critical for bowhunters who may be necessary to render a coup
may need to wait an hour '""more de grace. or fOllow-up shot to a
before tracking their game. This wounded animal. If it needs done, do
allows time for the deer to lie down it. Hesitation at this point isn't fair to
and bleed out. A hard-pressed deer, the animal.

The hunt is now over, so unload
your fireann and carefully place it
aside -it's time to get to work.
The first order of business is to
establish temporary ownership of the
animal by "tagging" it. On bucks the
tag will go around one of the ant len;
while on a doe around one of its
front legs is a good place.
The next step is field dressing ,
removing the internal organs from
the animal. This helps insure good,
quality meal and also makes the deer
a lot lighter and easier to handle an considerable factor if a long dra,g
out of the woods is in your future.
Once again. volumes can be '!'fitten on game care. Just make sure
your knife is sharp and get on with
it. Watch out for broken bones or old
arrow shafts and broadheads that
cause a dangerous cut. Keep your
blaze orang'e on while gutting and
transporting the deer out of the
woods.
If you are not in good physical
condition, get help to drag or haul
your deer. Local hunters have died
from over·exenion.
After taking the deer to a' check
stati&lt;;lll for permanent tagging, many
people prefer to.take it to one of several deer processors in the area. And
for the person noi accustomed to
butchering their own meat, going to
a deer processor can be money well
spent.
Ask around to find a reputable
deer processor. Many of them adver·
tise in The Daily Sentinel or
Gallipolis Daily Tribune during this
time of year. Most will custom-process your deer, cutting the meat to
suit your needs or tastes.

Along the River

November 2, 1887

Logan, Warren Local record wins
By ODIE O'DONNELL

scoring dash and Shane Richards booted
the point after. Todd Costin scored on a
GALLIPOLIS - Football teams eon. one-yard plunse in the soCOIId quarter and
eluded play for the 12nd consecutive sea- R~chards nailed a 34-yard field goal four
sun in the Southeutcrn Ohio Athletic minutes later to c:ontlude the scorins at
League Friday night. with Jackson earning 16-0.
.
a ohml straight championship, and bound
Tho frustrated Tigers came up empty
fnr the Ohio high school playoffs that stan on a 16 play drive in tho second half when
this week .
~
The lronmen (9-1, 7-0) whipped run·
nor-up Point Pleasant (7-3.5-2) 48-19 as
senior ouilback Shane Wolford entered the
magic 2,000-yard rushing kingdom and his
total of 32 for the season.

Point Pleasant als.o has a chance to rep·

r~scnt the SEOAL 1n th~ West Virginia

h1gh school playoffs. and should the Big
Blacks be chosen. it would mark the fino
time in over 10 years that two learns from

the league earned playoff spots.
Logau 28, AthenslO ·
. AI The Plams. a bizarre run or"Bulldog

Warren Local

•

••

For eoatlnued Improvement of AddiHn
Township's Road• and Equipment

While. a junior, completed 14 of 30

passes for 25 I yards and all three of the
Athens touchdowns, but lost out to the

.

powerful Logan rushing alla&lt;k down the

stretch.

~i4way

through the second period
While found Chad Thomas with an I R·
yard touchdown pass for a 6·0 halftime
lead . Logan's Chris Yates scored 1hc first
of his three touchdowns on a two-yard
blast in the 1hird quaner with Malt Shaw's
extra point kick making it 7 ~6.
Just 40 seconds remained in the third
period when White nipped a si:~t -)'ard scorIng pass to Asa Eslockcr and 1hcn hit Matt
~rippa with a two poin1 con_vcrsior\ pass to

RE·ELECT .·

.

FRED BURNETT
ADDISON TWP~ TRUSTEE
I will continue to seek any grants
available to Improve Addison Township
Your Vot.r Will B.r Appr.reiGt.rd

g1vc Athens a 14-71Cad.
The clock showed just J:SO left in the

Pd. by candidate:

gam~

when Dan Cook passed 14 yards to
Dav1d B90kman with Shaw's kick knotting

.

14-14. A1hens ohen fumbled
pl~ys

vklueiJitrs. lhown .,.,. .,.
Cltrotyn lelllr (etlrrlng), Jllne
Harrl1, Mllry Bell Warner, Mary
NeiM, Mtlrcla Amold (hidden)
and ROMII'IIry I&lt;MIIr.

Marietta

VO,.I

Nathan While.

ered no ohe Athens 20. Three

l"er

left.

Just 20 seconds later White hit the
streaking Chad Thomas with a 48-yard
tou chdown pass, but Ryan Perdue was
stopped on a two-point conversion run. An
onside kickoff by Athens wu botched
when Logan recovered, and two plays later

·-

890 Burnett

----···· - . .

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In the first quarter Earl Tidd dumped a
short pass to Rob Callahan, who raoed
through the Tiger defenden on a 61-yard

I

You PU:k Up or We Deliver
446-2114·or 245·5316

I
Please Re-Eieet ·

DAVE GRAHAM
. FOR

Letart Township Trustee
Paid for by lhe candidate, Dove Graham. •n94 soaoe Route 338, Racine. Oh

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DAV~DSON

!'!'

•

By JIM F~EEMAN
Tlmea-Sentlnel Staff
RACINE - Magic happens when you combine
apples, sugar and cinnamon together in a copper kettle,
boil over an open wood fire and .stir, stir, stir.
You get apple butter, a sweet spread made of stewed
apples, ranking somewhere between appleuuce and
apple jelly in lerms of consistency, but number .one in
popularity with many folk h~re in southern Ohio.
Of ooune, apples play a considerable role in our history and folklore, for it was around these parts that .
Johnny Chapman, known as'Johnny Appleseed roamed
the land, barefoot, wearing homemade clothes and an
old cooking pan for a hat, planting apple trees and sharing bis ministry with all who would listen.
Ac:c:ording to tradition, it was an apple with 'which'
Eve tempted Adam prompting their eviction from the
~n of Eden. William Tell gained fame aftef he
shot an apple off his son's head, and an aPII}c

Recently, the community associated with Forest
Run United Methodist Church, a "little white church in
the vale" tucked ·away.behind Minersville, made apple
butter, blessed by clear blue skies and moderate October temperatures.
The event was ordinarily unremarkable ... but was
made significant when one considers church members
have not combined to make apple butter since 1963. To
put it in perspective, when the church IJISI made apple
ootter, John F. Kennedy was in the White House and
"Vietnam" was just beginning to become a household
word.
Cburch members used to make apple butter every
year as a fund raising activity, but as the old helpers
passed away, the annual ritual eventually stalled, acqui·
eseing to ice cream socials which themselves have
yielded to an election day dinner, now the church's
largest, single .fund raising event.
But recendy, members of the Forest Run Qullters,
~:~r.~~~~=~,:;:; IC)I J!!;t........ 111119- IINbe eN c:b, decldJd 10 . . . . 11J!!1C .apjlle
po
•-·-·· •• tile
of YO!!' eye".
b~•.. not so IDU~ ""a fund railer, but ~ stock
,r~':,~:i~~! that llie maki,ff. of apple their oWI1 cupboards 'aitCI to give u p~d ~~~· How·
4!
llleanlng-oag Sqce ji'Oupa evil; tltc qullten ·did . ~ eorlalder the pOPcl~ty of
cooking. It's more ot'fj commu- a)iple butter,.so the Idea pw and pw, lnvolvidg more
evidenced by the food~ fellow- · and more of the local residenls.
·
eiltl:iil'.lluril!giln apple butter making.
The festival-like' event gave many cause for reflection.
·
"It skipped a generation, • according to long-time
church member Mary Nease who watched a grandson
playing outside while she recalled her own children
playing during past apple butter makings.
"We useil to do it every year," she recalled.
Marcia Arnold, who lives near the church,.recalled
tbe last year in which apple butter was made -· when 40
bushels of apple~ were peeled and stewed.
Although many of those who made the apple butter
prior to 1963 are now gone, some of tbe older women
recalled the days when when up to five copper k&amp;ttles,
rented for 10 cents a day, were employed. In comparison, the kettle used during the recent session cost about
$460, new.
It used to be a family... a neighborhood affair, Nease
recalled. It used to be a big fund raiser for the church.
She said work would start the night before with peeling
and washing the apples with all the next day dedicated
to cooking th~!ll down to apple butter.
·
At that time, the church did not have running water
or.a complete kitchen. Water, mostly used for washing
the fruit, was hauled onto the site in a large storage
tank..
The older members even' recalled when the appie
butter was stored in stone jars, topped with cinnamon
and sealed with wax.
STIRRING - Spry nonagenarian Kathleen
The work was labor intensive and the resulting
Scott, 1 lite-long realdent of the Fortlt product sold for about 15 cents a quart. Now apple bulRun/Mineravllll Hill community, Ia lhown he,. ler costs around $4 to $5 a quart ... due in part to
lllrrlng apple butter. Scott, wearing a practical increases in the price of apples and sugar.
bonnet, wa1 a teacher at the former For111
The process of m,king apples into apple butter is
Run School and playa plano at tht church.
even ritualistic in nature.

~-·: alo!..Q( , _....,
noa-110p stl._,•around tile
bt~ aad th'roiigh thll mid-

dle" with a lit 'clil IJIPie but•
ter stirrer reaembllng a larp
·paddle mounted at the end of
a long pole. The paddle is
always made of maple or
some other type of wood lhal
will not impart a taste to the
concoction; the pole is long
enough so the person doing
lhe stirring can stand away
from both the heat of the fire
and the occasional hot splat·
ter of the boiling mixture.
_~ere's even ~n art 10 t~e
AN INEXACT SCIENCE - Adding lngrecllanta to appll butter II an
slmm.g, to k~epong the mox- Inexact 1clence, requiring plenty of cere••• and umpllng, .,.,. Jane
lure _10 molt on to pr~v~nt Harris of Five Points addl 1 mlxtu,. of auger and cinnamon to tht·
burnmg; endlessly storrmg 1ppl11 atewln" In the kettle purchalld recantly by htr eon D.A.
around the kettle and back
•
'
.
through the middle, over and
·
with, little waspa that are always drawn to the aroma of
over again until a fresh set of arms takes over to begin fresh cut and stewing apples. Keeping the yellow jack·
the task anew. Rookie stirrers who do not meet the ciS away while avoiding their stings is a 1Uk in ittelf,
exacting standards of the veteran apple butter mabrs but forlunately they seem more preoccupied with get·
niay simply find themselves replaced at the pole earli- ling food for lhe upcoming winter than in actually
er than usual. ,
• stinging.
In time, after a day of non-stop stirring the mixture
When the apple butter is pronounced "done" it is
becomes something other than applesauce, it becomes poured, ladle by ladle, into canningjars thal are then
apple butter. During the course of the day, the occa- boxed for distribution. Then the cleanup beJins.
sional molorist will stop and ask to be "put on the list"
Homemade apple butter always sells well.
.
to purchase the completed product
"You can buy apple butter in stores... but it's not as
Going into the kettle at F&lt;lrest Run that day were 10 good as homcmao:te." seems to be the popular sentibushels of apples, 50 pounds of sugar and 12 ounces of ment.
'
cinnamon. Combining lhe proper proportion of apples,
Somehow, store-bought apple butter conjures
sugar and cinnamon is a matter of personal preference, images of a factory and apples stewing in a huge, stainbut somehow the right blend is attained, but not until less steel vat with stainless steel automatic paddles over
after everyone samples the fresh apple butter... general· gas or electric heat taking the place of copper kettles,
ly slathered on a hot, fresh light roll.
wood flame and smoke, maple paddle's and bumaa
During the day there are yellow jackets to contend arms.

96 HONDA REBEL
ONLY

3,250

Come See: Mike Northup, Dwight Sievers, Pete Somerville, AI Durst, Eric Blackburn,
Ne•l Peifer, Tim Conwell, Jamie Ada111aon, Jim Hamilton.

ORRIS ORTHUP DODGE, I .C.
~52 Upper River Rd.

(614) 446·0842

Galpohs, Oh.
Or Toll Freel·IOG-446·0842

•

Start with a big copper
kettle (no Qther type of kettle
will do) and clean it beforehand with a mixture of vine·
gar and salt, right before
putting the apples in. During
the day, the fruit acid in lhe
apples turns the inside of the
kettle into the shiny, pink
color associated with clean,
new pennies.
Of course the apples have
to be peeled, cored and
sliced, a task that remains
labor intensive even with the
aid of mechanical peelers
that always seem to miss a
spot or two.
, Tl!o.IJ1I&amp;ic of apple butter

Teal, Dyna supergljde, 1340cc, 2,000 250cc, extra clean, like new, 795 miles.
miles, extra .chrome.
8

MUST SEE

r•• ;.;.~

' !' ·:I

-

95 HARLEY

... '~of-

A stirring experieilce: making apple buttei

I

•Backhoe
•Dozer
Work

yards and three touchdown 's to pace
Lo!l"n's ground auack oo a 329'ynrd night.
Ouarlerll!lll:i
logan
0·0·7-21=28
Athens
0-6·8-6=20

t

•. ,

CONSTRUCTION ·CO., INC.

Yates raced S l yards 10 paydin and Shaw
booted the e~tra point to close out the
scoring wi1h I :38 remaining.
.
Yares finished with 24 carries for 197

Warren Local 16, Marietta 0
At Vincenl, the Warriors scored all of
their points in the first half and then
thwarted several Tiger drives to preserve
the shutout' victory. At the end Marietta led
in every 'O{fensive statistic but never
scored a point.

Rd., Galllpolla, Ohto

HOLLEY BROS;

1

Yates scored from the eight Shaw's kick
gave the Chiefs a 21 ·14 lead wi\h 2:45

FIRST BOW KILL - Doy
Nltz II of Syracuse chalked
up his first bow kill
Thursday morning with this
eight-point Meigs County
buck, using a Horton Stag
cros•bow. Meigs County
Game Protector Keith Wood
estimated the deer was.
about 3 1/2 years old.

'

blr 2, 1117

ON NOV. 4TH

m1stakcs enabled the Chieftains to score
21 points in the final four minutes to offset
a sensatinnal perfonnance by quancrback

the ensuing kickoff. and the Chiefs recov-

C:

ALMOST DONE- One of
the ftnal . . . In .,.. butter
ll'llklng t. tnrwr.t.Ttng the mix·
tun from tht IWttle Into lncll-

News Hotline News Hotline
News Hotline News Hotline
448-2342 992-2156

rour touchdown performance ga~c him a

a1

. , . . , . Nchlll

Drew Gilmore's 43-yard field JDII was
short. Another 17 play march d1ed when .
Ryan Francioeo fumbled on the du&lt;e·yard
line, and this is the way it went for liH
winless Tigers.
Ourtcr lRllll

OVP CO""POfldlnt

the score

Section

LABOR-INTENSIVE TASKMilking apple butter Ia 1
llbor·lnten11ve tllk. Shown
here coring and allclng
applll are, from left, Juanita
Will, Miry NHH, Either
fr.cklr end Wilma Reiber.

"

.,,

,

•

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

Family Seminar slated at Holzer for clergy and lay leaders

Spotting and treating mood disorders
in children - new hope for parents

GALLIPOLIS - The Continuing
Education Comrnine6 of the Volunteer Chaplains Association of the
Holu:r Medical Center 1111nounces
an all day seminar on "FAMll.Y
SYSTEMS: A VITAL TOOL IN
MINISTRY or All Those Begats Are
Important After All".
This special presentation will be
held in the French SOO Room at the
Hospital on Tuesday, November 4.
from 8:45 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Registration and refreshments
will begin at 8: IS a.m.
According to the Reverend Donald
Johnson, Chairperson of the Volunteer Chaplains Association Continuing Education Commil!ee, the program will be presented by The Rev- ·
erend Robert L. Mathis, M.Div.,
B.A..
Pastor Mathis is the Minister of

By HAROLD S. KOPLEWJCZ, their peers. They may be tearful or children and adolescents.
mend that children should not be put
M.D.
unusually sad. .
Further clinical siUdies ~under- on antidepressant medications
New York Ulllw\'llty School or
School-age children and adolcs- way to assess the efficacy of the var- unless they meet the diagnostic criMed_ldae
~nts may display diSJ'IIfll!ve behav' ious SSRI medications in treating teria for depression and have not
Etght-~ear-o,td Matthew, shortly tor and have dt.ffic~lty wuh school- m'ood disorders in children. as well respMded to behavioral therapy.
However, if an antidepressant is
, U'ter ~tartmg thtrd .grade, began hat work and fn~ndshlps: Adolescents as their effect on future health and
mg dtffic.ulty gettmg up and out m · may be chromcally ·~table.
.
development.
prescribed, parents should underthe mommg.
.
.
Depresst_on also ts charactenzed
What has made the SSRis so pop- stand that mood disorders frequently
He would Irati after his mother by sl.eep diSturbances~ change in ular is their relatively mild side have a biological component for
as she made the be~s and p~parcd ~ppellle and a decrease 1n concentra• effects when compared to older anti- which these medications 'have been
meals, even standtng outstde the uon.
.
.
depressants, which have be~n linked effective.
'
bathroom do?r until she came out.
Symptoms of an anXIety dtsorder to heart problems, sleepiness,
For Mauhew, treatment with
When thmgs were at A
rd'
t
rts
'
weight gain, dry mouth medication has made a huge diff~rthetr worst, . he woul.d ceo mg 0 ex~M:
,. as many as 14 and constipation.
ence.
hover over hts mother s
Fluoxetine
of
After six weeks of behavioral
bed in the middle of the percent of American children experi- course. is not co~pletely therapy and a low daily dose of an
ntght to make sure she was
problem-free. It can cause- SSRI . antidepressant, Mauhew is
bre~thmg.
' .. . ence a major episode of depression insomnia, nausea and attending school without a problem
We had no hfe, hts
·
headaches, which tend to and making new friends.
mother said. " Our fa~Hy before age 15 and three minion hit- go way within two weeks
"It has taken time, patience and
turned down every mvtta·
'
C
of·use.
commitment," said his mother. "But
lion. My son couldn't go ·d
·
5 t0 18 h
d'
More than two we now have a glimpse of the
to birthda~ parties." . . ren, ages
'
ave a Jagnosed decades of tracking the healthy. well-rounded and happy
Followtng a psychtatr!c
,
,
; effects of fluoxetine in child we once knew."
consultation•.Matthew was anXIety disorder, SUCh as SOCial phObia adults have shown the drug
dtagnosed wtth severe septo be without serious comoration anxiety disorder and separation anxiety
plications: it appears to be
and . a secondary depresnon-lethal (you can't eversion from his lack of contact 'l"ith in chHdren incl~deexcessive worry- dose), non-addictive (you don't
Dr. Harold S. Koplewlcz,
the world.
mg. bemg overly shy or self-con- crave higher doses), and is not a Profneor and VIce Chalrm11.1
He felt that something was terri- scious, fear of going to school and "feel good" drug (you don't get of the Department of Psych..
bly wrong with him- something he worry that something terrible is high). The medication works only try, Is Director of the Child
couldn't control. If Matthew's par• going to happen to their parents.
for \hose who need it.
Study Center at NYU School of
ents hadn 'I seen the need for a conIf signs of depression or execs.
Nevertheless, physicians recom- Medicine.
sultation, chances are he wpuld still sive anxietY continue for two weeks.
be anxious !l!ll depressed. .
~ts . should seek help for 'their
Vote mghway
Many teSearchers _believe that child as soon as possible.
·
depression and anxiety disorders in
Many experts say that the most
ELECt'
Mr. and Mrs. Jamea Dur1t
chHdren and adolescents represent effective therapy is usually a combiI I -.;I~TH
GU~ft
one of the most underdilignosed and nation of psychotherapy, antidepres~1-.1-..-:..
IJ.-. I
undertreated groups of illnesses in sant medication and family intervenl:ANDiD-'TE FOR
lion.
psychiatry. ·
According to experts, as many as
The new antidepressants, known
SUlTON TOWNSHIP TRIJSTEE
MIDDLEPORT - Pamela Lynn girl.
.
14 percent of American children ·as SSR!s (selective serotonin reup- JITIIl .....uate Sell .._ QJclt kloHI •
Zirkle, daughter of Michael Perry
Tim Durst served as best man for experience a major episode of take inhibitors) include fluoxetine
- 14 Vean ~rl.... Melp c;., HJcltway ..,._Zirkle and stepdaughter of Joy his br01her, and groomsmen were depression before age 15, and three (Prozac), the oldest of these drugs, .
- ....... At.,...,.. rere•••Zirkle of Nitro. W. Va., and James Brent Zirkle, Kevin Ven\)y, Duane million children, ages 5to 18, have a and a handful of related medications
. . " .... "···· ....... c..e~~ . .
William Dorsi, son of Edward and Weber. and · Todd Evans. Gabriel diagnosed anxiety disorder, such as that help regulate mood by adjusting
Ruth Durst of Middleport, were Perry Starcher, nephew or' the bride social phobia and separation anxiety. the brain chemical serotonin.
married on Oct. 4 at the Middleport was the ringbearer.
Tragically, these disorders lead
The U.S. Food and Drug AdminChurch of Christ.
Music for the ceremony was pro- an estimated 2,000 ·teen-agers to lstration (FDA) has not approved
AI Hanson, pastor, perfonned the vided by Lisa Moody and David commit suicide each year.
any drug to treat depression in chitdouble-ring ceremony.
Rinehart, pianists. Lucinda Rinehart
Parents who recognize the warn- dren, but once a drug is approved by
The bride is the granddaughter of sang "Parents' Prayer" and "In This ing signs of depression and anxiety the FDA, doctors can prescribe it to
Lenbie Haptonstall of Middleport, Very Room" as the groom's mother disorders and quickly seek medical anyone for any purpose. Thus, the
and the late Paul "Happy" Hapton- and bride's grandmother lighted the attention can help a troubled child new antidepressants have flowed
stall. and the late Perry and Ruth candles preceding the lighting of the become a happy, well-adjusted per- quietly into the children's market.
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES
Zirkle. The groom is the grandson of unity candle by the bride and groom. son.
Nearly 600,000 children and adoJim and J'ltkie Reed and Roland
A reception was held at the FamThe warning ·signs of depression lescents took SSRI medications last
Durst and the late Mary Durst.
, ily Life Center in-Middleport. Music in children are subtle, requiring a year. A recent study at the Universi1930's
The bride's father was presented for the reception was provided by certain
level of awareness. ty of Texas School of Medicine has
with a slide presentation of the Jared Stewart.
· Preschoolers may appear somber, found fluoxetine more effective than
MAHOGANY
bride's childhood playing wilh her
The r,.t dance was shared by the even sickly. lacking the bounce of placebos in treatinl depression in
CHINA CABINET
,father and duririg that presentation, bride and her father to "Butterfly
Bonne Smith sang "Because You Kisses." The bride dedicated the
Bowed glass on 3Loved Me."
,.
theme song, "Green Acres" to her
drawer, 2-door base.
Matron of honor was Michele husband.
Sue Starcher, sister of the bride.
The groom is currently employed
This beautiful
Bridesmaids were Bridget Hensler . by UPS in Athens County._The bride
Victorian cabinet
Lynnelle Smelser and Mtchelle Cas- - ts employed by the Metgs Local
GALLIPOLIS ·The Galli a Acad- Landra· Brehm , Kelly Broyles,
came from the home
se!ly, college friends,.and Whitney School D'istrict The couple resides in emy Madrigals will present the Vari- Amber Davison, Becky Drummond,
Haptonstall, cousin of the bride. Middleport .
ety Show Friday, November 7 at 8 Christine Vaughn, Beth Allen,
of Hester Lee White
Emma Rose Perrin was the flower
p.m. in the GAHS Auditorium. The Brandy Bahr, Denise Dailey, Jessica
of Logan, Ohio.
program will include a wide array of Kickens, Stacy Franks, Bruce Beemusical styles and choreography.
gle, Tyler Burnell, TJ Mathews.
Presale
tickets
are
available
for
Steve Tacke !I, Graham Wood yard.
'
$4
from
any
Madrigal
or
in
the
choir
Chris
Althoff, Dusty Cox, Jessie
The Community Calendar is published as 'a free service to non-profit
· CARPENTER
Columbia room during school hours. Admis- Edwards, Aaron Epling, and Steve
groups wishing to announce meeting Township Board of Trustees meet- sion will be $5 at the door the night McCormick. Adam Bush will be on ·
and special events. The calendar is ing Monday, 7 p.m. at the fire sta- of the performance: A reception will drums, Charlie Weaver on bass, and
follow the pefonnance in the school Andy Tirado and Valerie Cbead le
not designed to pro~ ote sales or tion. ·
cafeteria.
will be masters of ceremonies for
fund raisers of an y type. Items are
.
The
1997
-98
Madrigals
include
the
variety show.
printed as space pennits and cannot
CHESTER - Cllester Elemenbe guaranteed to run a specific num- tary PTO meeting Monday, 7 p.m. at
ber of days.
the school. .

This last and final day
Sunday,
November 2nd
Store will close Friday at 5 pm In
preparation for this last &amp; final dayDoors open Sunday Noon 'tll5:00 pm

•a.:.

ZIRKLE-DURST

Galli a
:-community
Calendar

SALEM CENTER - Meigs
POMEROY - Meigs Band'
County Pomona Grange 46 officers Boosters will meet Monday. 6 p.m.:
conference Sunday. 1:30 p.m. at the at Meigs High SchOol to peel apples
Star Grange Hall on County Road I . for their apple butter project. Alii
nonh of Salem Center. All Meigs parents asked to attend.
,
County Grangers encouraged to
l
attend.
TUESDAY
MONDAY
ALFRED - Orange Township
POMEROY - Friends of the Board of Trustees regular meeting
Meigs County Li brary meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Monday. 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Clerk Osie Follrod.
Library.
POMEROY - Eagles Auxiliary
RACI NE - Raci ne Village meeting Tuesday, 7:30p.m. RefreshCouncil regular meeting Monday, 7 ments after meeting.
~ _" '
p.m. at the munictpal building.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
SYRACUSE - Sunon Township Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will meet :ruesBoard· of Trustees regular meeting day, 7:30 p.m. for election of offiMonday. 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse cers. All Master Masons invited.
Munidpal Building.
·
POMEREY - CHOICE Home :
PORTI..AND - Ponland Ele· Educators November meeting Tuesmentary School PTO meeting Mon- day, 1-3 p.m. at the Pomeroy
day, 7 p.m. at the school.
Library.
LETART FALLS Letart
Township Board of Trustees meeting Monday, 6 p.m. at the office
building.

POMEROY - Internet users
meeting will be held Tuesday, 6:30
p.m. at the Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy. '

first of the

Sale

Where: Rhoiecin's Reflections
354 East Mal• St.
Po11eroy

When: Nov. 3rd·7th

ftme:
I0 am·5 pm
.
DISCOUNTS UP TO

70%

~arry

Ebersbach

Candidate For
TRUSTEE
Sutton Township

KANAUGA - Worship service at
Silver Memorial FWB Church,
Rand Ave., with Rev. Charles
Neece, 6 p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Good News
Baptist Church kick otf to twentyfifth anniversary celebration, Son~hine at· II a.m. service.

Sugg.Retall
$230.00
Our Low Price 1
$18U5
Rebate $50.00
YOUR LOW PRICE

12 MONTHS SAME AS CASH

Washer&amp;
Dryer

Thfle~

Paul Bunyun Queen
bed, n~e table, door
chest, hutch mirror, door
dresser, medium pine

•••

- CHESHIRE - TOPS at Cheshire
United Methodist Church, weigh iit 8:30-9:45 a.m. Meeting 10 - II
a.m. Call Janet Thomas at 367 Q274 for infonnation.

D/R

$ '99

BRIDGE APPROACH liON. THRU I'RI. N
SAT...5:30

421·1065

...

"

24" or 30" Bar Stools .
Oak Finish
NOT$199.95

I

Oak NOT $799.95

·
79

$

•••

Swivel Roc~r Recliners
Soft Velvet Fabric

POINT PLEASANT - Macular
Degeneration support group, Christ
BpiJCopal Church library, 12:30
p.m., Speaken Mary Beth Carlisle
'" 8lld 'Ibm Youna from M~i • Home
Health Care. Call (304) 675 - 4097
for iafonnation.

$J03~!day
~95
unday

SJ 9995

Sunda~

NOT $1199.95

Sofa- Loveseat

NOT $399.95

Pie Safe Oak finish

15 cu. ft. white Tappan

$89995

Oak Trim Contemporary
Multi-colors NOT $2199.95

NOT $599.95...... ............... $299.95
54" Hutch &amp; Buffet Oak finish
. NOT $1 599.95.................. .$849.95

Glider Recliners

Sunday

SWivel Rockers
Velvet cover in 3 colors
NOT$499.95
TV VCR Combo
27" Toshiba
NOT $1099.95
Traditional Sofa
Pastel Stripes
NOT$999.95

$21995
Sunday

Sunday

.

Ek&gt;okcase headboardDoor chest- Nitc tableMirror- Dresser
Oak finish w.faux marble
chair
NOT $1399.95

$249!~day
Refrigerator

$14995

5 Pc. Bedroom Suite

NOT $399.95 .................... $199.95

Sofa- Loveseat· Chair
Black &amp; Gold Trim
Black- Mauve- Teal
NOT $1899.95

B~!0~1ue in

Oversize Colonial light
back grund Blue &amp; mauve
NOT$19999.95

249~u~day

w/2 foam bunkles

medium finish

Sofa &amp; Chair

Table &amp; 4 chairs
Formica top in lite pine
NOT$599.95

$

BunkBed

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Friends of '
Bossard Library, 7 p.m., at the
library.

'
I

Corolla Corner Hutch

Glider Rockers

$8995

t
f

Wing Back Chair
Mauve- Blue-Green
Not$499.95

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
l;'lame, 7 p.m. at AMVETS Building, speaker Suzie Hammersmith.

back Solid Frame
Drowns

Large capacity

LECTA - Lecta Church of Christ
in Christian Union, worship service,
6 p.m. with Christian Family
preaching and singing.

Twin Sunday $279.95
Full
Sunday $299.95
Queen Sunday $399.95
Kin
9 .

Alllurnlture•
Beddblg· ~·
AppliancesElectrtonics
All on Sale

Recliners

5 PC. BEDROOM
SUITE

GALLIPOLIS - Community
Cancer Support Group, 2 p.m. at•
New Life Lutheran Church. For
information call 446- 0713 or 446 •
3538.

_New p._tterns $· 99

Video At~alla6)e

ORTHO BALANCE

..__,;,..___;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _____,
. LAST AND FINAL DAY SUNDAY

•••

•••
Monday, November 3
•••

How Jo Hang Wallpaper

iances &amp; electronics!!!.--------.....

Caywood- Living Room- Kemp-Rose-Fiordia Bedroom- Corolla- CaldwellCramco Dining Room- Action Lane- MA- National Recliner- ZenithTapJliln- Frigidaire- White Westinghouse- Samsung ·

Frigidaire

. BIDWELL - Rev. Calvin Minnis
to preach at Prospect Baptist
_Church, 7 p.m. Carl Basham, pastor.

•••

Un'lt

12 o'clock
noon 'til
5:00pm
Mattress Sets

•••

Hundreds of Rolls.....Now

OFF

worth of furn

•••

GALLIPOLIS - The Beaver
Family Singers at Mina Chapel
Baptist Church, 7 p.m.

Borders . ·

To

ADDISON - Rick Barcus to
. preach at Addison Freewill Baptist
:Church, 7:30p.m.

Pd. tor by - o l o: Lony Ellonbach, 2341 'l1llrd It, lox 147, s,_..., 011 45779

Thousands of Rolls....Now

Up .

) Last Day ·(

••• •

LI.G~~=~~\~110
• • • Your Vote &amp; Influence Appreciated• • •

HOUR
SALE

GALLIPOLIS - Gospel sing at
Church of Gnd of Prophesy, White
Road, off State Route 160, II a.m. .
Gospel singers "By Faith" from
Manchester, Tenn. a~aring.

••••

Purchase

Free Delivery- Free Set up- Free removal of old

-u,-1 - Sunday, November l

MCARTHUR - I Oth annual
· Engle Construction reunion, noon
. until 4 p.m. at Vinton Community
•Building, State Route 93 North.
Bring covered dish. Drinks and
table service prcovided.

$599.95 Minimum

Purchases must be paid for by cash, personal checks, VIsa, MasterCard, and/or acceptable credit application.

•••

Meigs Community Calendar

Last and Fmal
sBoursThis
. Sunday!

onths
Free Financing

· The Community Calendar 11 pubo
llahad •• a free Mrvlce to nonprofit group• wlahlng to
announce meeting• end epeelal
events. The eal.ndar Ia not .
daalgned to promote 81111 or
funcl-raiMI'I of any type. ltema
are printed 11 apece permlta and
c11nnot be guaranteed to run a
apeelllc number of dr;s.
·•

·. All merchandise in store and warehouse
will be placed on sale Sunday

12

Mathia

Gallia Academy Madrigals
to present Variety Show

SUNDAY

Family Life and Christian Education Somebody and I Am"; and "Comof Meadow Park Church of God. munity: lheory and Practice in the
Daily Places"
Columbus.
He holds a Bachelor of Ans
Participants at the seminar will
degree from Anderson University learn lhe basic guiding principles of
and a Master of Divinity from the systems theory, understand the uni lliffSchool of Theology. Reverend versal nature of those principles, and
Mathis is a Fellow in the American learn to apply Family Systems TheAssociation of Pistoral Counselors, ory to their ministry.
licensed social worker in the State
They will also see how Family
of Ohio and a former Staff therapist Systems Theory is supported by
at the Pittsburgh Pastoral institute.
Scripture, begin their own
He has also studied with the late genogram, experience the imporRabbi Edwin Friedman at the Center tance of your own genogram, and
for Family Process in Bethesda, Md. receive a bibliography for further
Pastor Friedman who is a well study.
known speaker and workshop leader
Books relating to the day's topic
will make four major presentations · will be available for purchase at the
during the day. They arc entitled: seminar book table. Seating is lim"Differentiation: The God of Sys- ited so an immediate reservation is
tems"; "Anxiety: The Demon to recomlmended.
Anxiously Watch"; "Genogram:
The cost of the seminar is $25
Somebody Beget Somebody Beget which includes coffee breaks, lunch,

E111pirc· Furnilun· and \pplian•·.- l.a~ pul all fui'Bitun·, appliaiH'4'"'• mul •·1.-.·tt·uni•· on

r"'{'---,;:::-;;:::;iEx;::::i:::----,
ft.

Pomeroy • Middleport• Gallipolis, OH • Point Plt111nt, WV

Sunday, No~ber 2,11117

Sunday, November 2, 1997

$
Queen headboard- nile table- chest

3 Pc bedroom
Wicker NOT $999.95

Sofa &amp; Chair

499

Transitional Plaid
Burgandy-Green-Brown-Gold
NOT $2199.95

Group of small pictures
$2.00 each

$39995Sunday.

THE WT 5 HOURS SUNDAY
Frigidaire

Both for only

Gallery Front loading
Washer &amp; Dryer
Energy saving ·

95
$1199
Sunday

95

�., '
Pagee4·~

• , ......~ lbwl •

Sunday, November 2, 1997

Sunday, November 2, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleil..nt, WV

Details of opening of Diana's
home to be announced in January
NORTHAMPTON,
England the island, but will not be given
(AP) - After being swamped with access to the site itself.
inquiries. Princess Diana's family
Althorp's ironstone stable block,
said that details of next summer's which dates to the 1730s, is being
opening of her childhood home and converted into a museum dedicated
burial site will be released in Janu- to Diana's life. The Spencers have
ary.
. not yet decided on a memorial to the
Althorp Park will be opened July princess, which will be established
I, coinciding with what would have in the park.
been Diana's 37th birthday, and will . .- - - - - - - -. .
remain open until Aug. 30, the day
before the anniversary of her death
in a Paris car crash.
Admission to ihe estate will be
limited to preserve the beauty and
dignity of Diana's final resting
place, the family said, and would -be
visitors will have to apply in
advance for tickets. The family has
not yet decided whether to charge
for admission, but said any entrance
fees would go to charity.
Details on the opening, including
a telephone number to call for
inquiries, will be announced Jan. S.
Diana was buried on an island in
an ornamental lake, known as the
Oval, 100 yards from her childhood
-Pidlr_Teo_IWI!(Iioft
home . Visitors will be able to view

Vote for

for

Marla Roque

ROQUE-ASH
GALLIPOLIS · Maria Elena of Wahama High School and a 1995
Auguelles Roque, daughter of. Ros- graduate of Marshall University
alida A. Roque of Mason, and the with a degree in accounting. She is
late Dr. Edilberto D. Roque, is the employed by RPC Mechanical in
bride elect of Robert Ray Ash, son Blue Ash.
of Freddie Ash of Letart, and the late
The.groom elect is a 1990 graduOrlena Ash.
ate of Wahama High School. and a
The wedding is set for November 1995 graduate of Marshall Universi8 at the First Church of the ty with a degree in business and hosNazarene, Gallipolis, at I p.m. A pital management. He is employed
reception will immediately follow as a U.S. Customs Inspector at the
the ceremony at the Holiday Inn in Cincinnati Airport, Hebron, Ky.
Gallipolis.
The couple resides in Florence,
The bride to be is a 1990 graduate Ky.

Neavoda Chambers and Kevin Birchfield

Township
Trustee

The bride elect is a 1991 graduate
of Oak Glen High School in New
Cumberland, W.Va .. and a 1996
graduate of Mt. Vernon Nazarene
College. She is employed by Woodland Centers, Inc., Gallipolis.
The groom to be is a 1993 graduate of Ohio Valley Christian School.
He is employed by l and E Lumber
in Patriot.

By LAUREN K. NATHAN
Although it sometimes takes liberties with tbe plots of well-known
Camelot tales, John Matthews'
"Secret Camelot: The Lolt Leg·
ends of King Arthur" (Blanford
Books, $29.95) is a must-have for
fans of Arthur and his Knights of the
Round Table.
TWelve retold short stories, illus·
trated with as many vibrant color

'The .Importance of Being Earnest'
coming to Ariel Theatre November 6
.
GALLIPOLIS - ''The lmpor: tance of Being Earnest," a trivial
· comedy for serious people, will
: open at the Ariel'lWtre on Thurs·
·. day, Nov. 6.
'"'
.
Other performances include Fri ·
: day and Saturday, Nov. 7 and 8, and
Thursday through Saturday, Nov.
13-15. Curtain time is 8 p.m. for all
performances.
Directed by Callie Cockerhallt;
this three-act Oscar Wilde play first
appeared on the London stage in
1895, the same year that the Ariel
opened.
George Bernard Shaw once wrote
Of Wilde, "He was the finest talker
of his time - perhaps of all time."
Wilde is known for such witty
tidbits"' ·111e truth is rarely pure
and ·simple," "All women become
like their mothers. That is their
tragedy. No man does. That 's his.''
. "In matters of great· importance,
• style, not sincerity. is the vital
: thing."
·
Such dialogue and comedic interaction between the characters make
· "The Importance of Being Earnest"
one of Wilde's best-known plays.
The cast includes the following
local residents - Paris McClanahan
(Algernon), Greg Shrader (lack),
: Lynne Hopkins (Gwendolyn).
· Suzanne Bapst (Cecily), Rusty
: Walker (Lady Bracknell), Roger
Walker (Canon Ch!lusade), Standel·

Ia Mundell (Miss Prism) and P.J.
Gauze (Lane Merriman).
Oscar Wilde was educated at
Trinity College in Dublin and later
tlltended Oxford - w~re he discovered the dangerous distinction of
being different than others.
Although be won many academic
prizes, he wasn't interested in the

est challenge at the university, he
would often confide, was "learning
10 live up to the blue china he had
installed in his rooms."
Tickets will be available at the
door all six nights or the performance. College students will receive
a 50 percent discount on the ticket
price if they present a student ID.

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and his lack of passion for becoming
one of Arthur's knights.
Some stories have introductory
notes about their origins and plots.
Matttlews adds his personal feelings
to these notes, along with sources to
guide readers who want to pursue
topics of particular interest

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GALLIPOLIS • Neav"oda Jane November 8 at I :30 p.m.
Chambers of Gallipolis, daughter of
Rev. Richard and Harriett Chambers
of Ma~. W. Va., and Kevin Scott
Birchfield of Crown City, son of
Burl and Doris Birchfield, also of
Crown City, announce their forthcoming marriage.
The open church ceremony will
be held at the Point Pleasant Church.
of the Nazarene, on Saturday,

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, 0H • Point PleiNnt. WY

Sundly, November 2,1997

·Entertainment

•

November 2. 11t7

Northup village has close ties to McCaHs
~

By:
JIIIIH

Sendl
About 193S the
McCall School in
Harrison Township was closed and the building
sold to Earl Cremeens, who moved
ihc school to Northup. Mr. Cremeens used the building as a store
and a post office.
': Today it is a part of a house that
~ts in the heart of Northup. It was
~:hll(1S fitting that a school named

after the McCall family should be
relocated 1n Northup.
James McCall Jr.• wh~ began .one
of the _first schools m Hamson
Township 1n 183S, was the .son of
James C. McCall Sr. and Elizabeth
Jane Northup McCall.
His mother was the daughter of
Daniel and Ann Northup, who carne
to Gallia C?unty in 1804. .
. It IS believed that the v1llage ?f
Northup was named to honor th1s
pioneer couple. The village was
actually laid out by a grandson
before the Civil War.
According to the book "Gallia
County One Room Schools, The

..

•• This houM In Northup was once a store and post office.

Cradle Years', James M~all Jr.
taught about . 2S sludents tn a log
school, fum1~hed w~th seats made
of spill logs w1th leg msets.
The second McCall School, the
one mov~ to N~up, was proba·
. bly butlt tn the 1880 s.
The most common last names of
the students at McCall School were:
McCall, Queen, Shoe~aker, Nida,
Bemdge, Tope, and Wh1te.
The last te~chers at McCall
School were Ijffie White Trotter and
L.M. Trotter. About 1935 the students at McCall and Martin Schools
joined the_ Lincoln students in the
new Clayhck two room school.
The McCalls were descended
from the Clan McColl of Scotland,
they being a branch of the MeDonaids.
.
.
· The farmly moved to Ulster, Ir~land and from there to Martha s
Vineyard in America before the
Revolutionary War. .
. . . then moved mto Pennsylva. nia ":rd eventually Ohio. The third
white child born in Ohio( Sallie
Blake) carne from this family. ·
The wife of James McCall Jr. was
Martha Phelps, she being de.scended
from John Daggett who came to
America in 1630 with Governor

Winthrop.
Mr. Daggett w_as one of the ~~t
~ttlers at Martha s Vineyard, which
.IS off~ coast of Massachusetts.
Dan1el Northup was a ~1rect
descendant of Stephen Northup who
was a follower of Roger Williams,
the founder of Rhode lsland.
In fact Stephen Northup was one
of the signers of the Original Cornpact which established Rhod~ Island
as a colony. Dante! was born 1R 1738
and from 1777to 1779 fought in the
Revolutionaly War. He came to
Ohio in 1795 settling at Marietta.
In the early 1800's Daniel
Nonhrup p~rchased 12,000 acres of
land m Calha County and he and his
.w1fc carne here m 1804.
Some time round 1800 Hampton
Northup, son of Daniel and Ann,
-yas captured by the _lndtans. While
hvmg w1th the lndtans, Hampton
learned the Native Americn Janguage and culture.
, lt1s sa1d that even after Hampton
retured to live in the white world, he
would often go back to visit !he Indians with whom he lived for a few
years.
James McCall Sr., who married ·
the daughter of Daniel and Ann
Northup. had 10 children by her.

-In and around Edinburgh: SuZie Hammersmith to be
Places explored and not Flame speaker.on Monday
or down, to strangers. It was akin to
being frisked.
By:
I did attend the much touted MilDorothy
itary Tattoo, which is a major part of
Sayre
the International Arts Festival lield
•
each summer in Edinburgh.
••
Perfonned in the Edinburgh Cas.:
"Too
tie yard, each year the performance
:
many places, changes.
.
too .
linle
While I reveled in the pageantry,
.:.
••
time ... " seemed 1 was disappointed the pill"r bands
;:a, be my theme this summer while in weren't given greater prominence.
: Edinburgh with an Ohio University
I went to hear the pipes and
: olass.
drums, not watch dancers and other
:~ I worked over 70 hours per week. military bands. But, I'm glad I
:lVhile the work involved travel by attended .
I, also, saw the International Arts
. ;loot, bus, and train, most areas visit·
;'Jd were part of a photography Festival Parade, with 250,000 other
:"1Ssignment.
people. However, I viewed it from
•- . Twice I journeyed to the Royal high on Calton Hill. The music
~jotanic Garden in Edinburgh. wafting upward was wonderful.
::.Q..andscape. flowers and animals,
One place I wanted to visit most,
:;for animals sake, weren't ex.aotly and didn't, was St. Giles Cathedral.
~hat I was supposed to be shooting It was not open the times I was
"With my camera, but they were my there, and open for lunches and
Javorites.)
organ concerts when I wasn't there.
• The 28 hectares (about 70 acres) But,, our love for Scotland will
~f buildings and grounds, which return us to Edinburgh.
·comprise the garden, is one of the
St. Giles, perhaps the second
:most visited of all tourist attractions most photographed church in the
;jn Edinburgh. And, admosswn IS United Kingdom after Westminster
Abbey, will be our first stop.
:free.
_
: However. vnce inside the lovely "Setting, visitors would gladly pay an
:'admission price for the privilege of
'seeing such diverse beauty.
The glasshouse experience with
Do&lt;othy sayre an&lt;lhor h u l - George,
:iropical pools and giant palm trees formtrlr
of Meigs County, moved back
ltanspot:ts the viewer to other cor- 1bout thrM re-s ago and now f'Hkle In a
hOuM teeing lhl Ohio River lu.t betow
"'ers of the world.
Syrecuee.
A Chinese garden complete with
·:rwo babbling brooks, bridges, gaze~ ho and pond are a photographer's
• dream. One building is devoted to

-·

GALLIPOLIS - Suzie Hammersmith will he the guest speaker at the
Gallia County Aame meeting to be
held Monday, November 3, at the
AMVETS Building, beginning at 7
p.m.
She is currently ministering in the
Christian Women's Club, president
of Alleluia Fellowship, home prayer

group leader, dance leader in her
church, and Ohio State Overseer for
Aarne Fellowship. She serves as an
elder, and guides a home Bible
study. She is aoointed to make banners. She is learning to minister in
interpretive dance and worship
dance.

VOTE FOR AND IETAIN •••

Sutton Township TRUSTEE

ROY F. VAN METER
Wrlling &amp; Able to Devote the Time it Requires
'28 years experience in road work. ·
Your Support Would Be Appreciated
Pd. lot by candidate! Roy Ven Miler, \1CMS1I5 Mitchell Rd., Reclnt, OH

When she died in 1830J James Sr.,
then 48, remarried.
His second wife was Jane Dean
Northup, the widow of his brotherm-law. From this union two more ·
children were born, William and -a
daughter with the wonderfully poetic name of Onnazinda.
To add to the genealogical confusion this family there are some
Northup/McCall marriages in sueceeding generations as well.
One of the best known Nonhups
at the turn of the century was Ansel
Northup. Even up to the age of 79
Ansel was still buildingbams.
In fact most Gallia County barns
in Green, Hamson, Gallipolis, Clay,
Springfield and Cheshire Townships
put up from the 1870's to 1907 were
the work of Ansel Northup.
Ansel 's bam building work was
later carried on by his son Hebard
Northup and by Ben Gillingham.
In 1883 the village of Northrup
had a population of 150. The town
had a general store a blacksmith a
shoemaker, and a ~ill .
'·

RAY SLONE

I

I will worUor th people
om/ wlrll th people.
P1kllor by Ray Stone, 110111!!!'1 Run
·
Rd. Crown Cny, Ohio

By RICK HARMON
The Montgomery AdvertiShe was as surprised as anyone.
1'rying to make it through the sorrow, Beth
Nielsen Chapman somehow had discovered
joy.
In 1993, it seemed as if the singer-songwriter from Montgomery, Ala., was living a
Cinderella story. Then the fairy-tale life suddenly shattered like a glass slipper.
Hers was the sort of success story o{ which
so many musicians dream.
In 1980 she released "Hearing It First," a
debut album on capitol Records. Its sluggish
saleS seemed to signal a quick end to her musical aspirations.
·
But they say "talent will out," and in Chapman's case it did.
The songs she kept writing started being
· recorded by, and then becoming hits for, artists
such as Alabama, Willie Nelson and Kathy
Mattea.
By 1990, she'd signed with Warner Bros.
Records and released "Beth Nielsen Chap-

.

YOUR \..nlll... u
A SMOT 01" LOVE.
BEFORt ITS TOO LATE·
· VACCINATt:l

man.''
It ;.vas an album that helped Chapman create her own hits on tbe adult contemporary
charts with songs such as "Walk My Way,''
and "All I Have," earning her comparisons to
singer-songwriter Carole King in the process.
Her second Warner Bros. album, "You
Hold the Key,'' released in 1993, seemed as if
it woulll cement her stardom.
·
Then death changed her life.
In late 1993, while Chapman was touring to

~£K9DSeOUfl]tC
VOTE YES FOR GALLIA COUNTY
CHILDREN'S SERVICES LEVY
BALLOT WORDING
An additional tax for the benefit of GALLIA COUNTY for
the purpose of PROVIDING CARE AND PLACEMENT OF
CHILDREN BY CHILDREN'S SERVICES at a rate of five
tenths (0.5) mill for each one dollar of valuation, which
amounts to five cents ($0.05) for each one hundred dollars
of valuation, for a period of five (5). years, commencing
1997 tax year.

Yes

*
BUnONS &amp; BOWS

I

FDY DRIVI 1997" Prontotio"

I

Receive Up to 20% Off

Any Item In stock when you donall a new toy.
(For the underprivileged ehlidren of Melga County).

*Food Donations Being Accepted for Thanksgiving

Mo~~~~

Join Peoples Choice For A
"8c~t TLc Wit\tcr BI~Ls" Four·D~y Cruise
Aboard The Royal Carribean Cruise Ship 11 Sovereign Of The Seas 11

February 9-12, 1998
Yow wiU lkpllrt from Ptoplts Natiolllll Bank trill 11 ddrae tC~Uring motorCOIICh compltll with ref Cllrptt !Dtlcomt, btlggage luurdling and lllllet Jlllrking •
and bt whisked f111111Y for 11 lraurioJU Cam'btAn cruise wilh your frierulsl
Tour cost illduda:
Roundtrip motorcoadl transportation to Columbus Intemational Airport. Depending on the
.fllght schedule, which is oot released until the week before the cruise, we will spend the
night (February 81 in Columbus if~ (included).

1

• Roundtrip airfare to Miami, including alltaxes,tips and transfer to ship.

• Four-day auise includirig all port charges, me lis, onboard activities and entertainment. ('lips
are optional to service penonnel, as well u on shore excunlons.)

• The ship will dock for a day In the ports of Na:•sau, Key West, and Cocoay Island, where you
will have free time to explore if you wi5h; or you may choose to stay onboard to relax or enjoy
the activities. (Shore side trips ue offaed at additional cost.) ·
1

'

Baggage, trip cancellation, intem~ption or delay inllurance is included. NOTE: The only
acceptable reasons for cancellation ue non-exisiing Wne~t or injury ocauing prior to
?eparture: If you have a disease such as heart, diabetes, etc., then a letter from your physician
IS needed stating that your condition is atable. If your traveling partner has to cancel prior to
departure, then you are also eligible to receive a cancellation benefit.

• Trip will be eKOrted by Mary Fowler, Peoples 0\oice Coordinator.

PRICE PER PERSON: $995 double occupancy; $1,250 lingle occupancy. Non-members please
add$100. DEPOSIT: ~per~~S.l??Z;ftnaldepoei~dueby
Deoember 11,1997. for
lion 11111
,
m11 MMy Powler at (3CH) 674-1028.
Peoples Otoke is a di~ of the Peoples National Bank
of Point Pleasant, Maton and New Haven, Member FDIC.

By SUSAN STARK
The Detroit News
Fairly soon after "The ,Ice
Storm" begins, you get the sense
that this is a film much ~ore interested jn th~ mood of an era, the zeitgeist if you will, than in character or
story. Such ftlrns t~nd to be cool,
distancing, somewha' clinical.
"Stonn," adapted from Rick
Moody's admired novel, conforms
to the rule.
Under the carefully nuanced
direction of Ang Lee, a superb
ensemble led by Kevin Kline, Joan
· Allen, Sigourney Weaver and
· Christina Ricci offers compelling
psychological insight into a way of
life coming apart.

By JACK GARNER
Gannett Newa Service
·"SwitchBack" is a serial-killer
thriller that works much too hard to
be clever.
The results are an overworked,
overly contrived narrative whose
only lasting appeal is a mysterious,
colorful performance by Danny
Glover.
He plays an eccentric drifter who
somehow holds the secret to a cross·
country murder spree.
.
Pursuing an unknown killer is a
relentless FBI agent, played by an
especially glum Dennis Quaid.
''SwitchBack" is the directorial
debut of Jeb Stuart, a screenwriter
whose hit si:ript credits have included "Die Hard" and "The Fugitive."
For his initial bOw as a director, Stuart chose the first script he ever
wrote.
And "SwitchBack" features all
the convoluted plotting and overthe-top melodrama of a freshman
project.
For one thing, "SwitchBack"

sot. 10-3

A Gre11t ChristmiiJ Gift Idea!

Doubt falls on everyone everywhere IS Mulder
(David Ducbovny, wonderfully lortured) and Scully
SO!JI-searcb tJ!eir way through a labyrinth of manipulative revelations. What they discover, if they can trust
tbtir ears and eyes and boggled minds, makes them
question the very beginning of their partnership - a
smart stroke of timing considering that so many fans arc
reliving the early episodes on cable or in syndicated
repeats.
Have they been pawns from the start? Have Mulder's ·
eyewitn':'S experiences witli alien phenomena all been a

setup? And are those responsible also implicated in
exposing Scully to her otherworldly disease?
Carter's writing aims, sometimes strains, for poetic
effect, IS in this Scully voice-over: " The cruelest ironies
arc those oonsecrated by lhe passage of time, chanced
and occasioned by shocking discovery."
Yet "The X-Files" admirably sustains its unique tone
of suspense and skepticism, finding an abyss at everj
dead end. The show is a world unto itself. Enter, enjoy;
and don't expect me to explain any of it.
'

support the "You Hold the Key " CD, her hus'!Wo people convinced her to include the
baod, Ernest, went to the hospital forwhat was songs on her CD.
to be a routine checkup.
One was musician J'-odney Crowell, one of
Doctors discovered a rare form of lym- Chapman's and her husband's best friends,
phoma -· too late.
She played one of the songs while Crowell
Her husband, a clinical psychologist to visited her, and he said she had to let other
whom she'd been married for 16 years, was people hear it.
given only a short time to live, but survived
The other person who convinced her was
until August 1994.
her husband.
Although some 'might have argued that a
There was a period after !he failure of her
new album was crucial for Chapman's career, Capitol Records album, when Chapman began
she bad no problem putting the music on hold. writing ba6 songs. ·
"Th tell you the truth, when you or your
"I was writing these he•left-her, she·left·
spouse is facing death, you really realize how him songs that had nothing to do with me or .
unimportant something like success is, " says my life," she says. "He (her husband) said all
the 40-year-old musician, who now lives in I had to do was take what I was really experiNashville.
·
·
encing and put it into my songs."
"I love being popular. I love to have people
During the time they had together before
like me, but something like this makes you his death, her husband told her that one day
realize how much more important some things she would write about what they were going
are tban trying to be successful and trying to through, and that doing it would help her and
please the public."
help others.
· "I remember laughing at him and telling
Through it all, she kept writing songs.
But they were for therapy instead of the him that he was nuts," she says. "But I guess
he was right again."
public.
When Bonnie Raitt, who performs on the
"I was writing them for me," she says. "It
was part of my healing process. I never CD, heard a tape of one of the songs, she not
only wanted to be involved with the CD, she
planned on taking them out of my house.
"I believed that I'd do these songs for me, wanted to be friends with Chapman.
"She called and · said 'she just basically
and then eventually go on and do happy songs
wanted to be a part of my life," Chapman says.
for everyone else."
But the songs she wrote - songs about "It was wonderful of her. She's an incredibly
love, loss and life's rich but fragile beauty - · supportive person, and it's been wonderful
are on Chapman's new Warner Bros. album having her as a friend." •
.
· While it didn't come from a superstar, another
"Sand and Water."

reaction was just as meaningful for chapman.
After she had performed " Sand and
Water," the album's title cut, at a benefi~ a
young woman approached her and started talking about the song.
"f felt her tears on my arm," Chapman
says. "She was crying so hard my arm felt wet
and I could hardly understand what she was
saying. "
The woman's husband had died the year
before, shot while driving a bread truck.
"She had felt so much anger and shock that
she had told me she had not cried a single
tear," Chapman says. "She said when I sang
the song it was like I had unlocked it all.
"I started to apologize to her, and she said
no, that now, she felt as if she could finally
address what had hap~ned to her and begin to
move on. She said tbat before sbe had worried
whether she could cope well enough to take
care of her children, but now she finally
believed she would he all right."
Despite its subject, Chapman said, the CD is
an uplifting one tbat deals not so much with
death, but the beauty of life.
Uke most of the songs she has written, it
mirrors her own experiences.
"There were certainly moments of grea1
sonow in what I experienced, but in a way it
has also been very uplifling," she says.
"Something like this gives you a real understanding of how precious life is."
·

Just as Watergate . eroded the
Nixon presidency, the early ' 70s
revealed the sour truth behind the
high-gloss veneer of suburban life.
Wife-swapping made the news. So
did the Qhemical and sexual adventurism of suburban youth.
Lee's gift for metaphoric
imagery, beginning with a go11eous
but deadly crystalline glaze left on
the Connecticut countryside by . a
storm, inspires long, long thoughts.
Both the key and supporting actors
.give luminously truthful perfor·
mances.
Allen, lovely but pinched, and
-Kline, cheerfully dishonest, have
been married for 17 years. They live
in afllucnt Westport and are parents

of a semisonambulent son (Tobey
Maguire) and a sullen, sneaky, sarcastic daughter (Ricci).
Kline is having an affair with
Weaver, his neighbor's ·bored, studiously provocative wife. Weaver is
the mother of a pair of sons who are
quite adrift (Elijah Wood and Adam
Hann-Byrd) and the wife of a
reserved, rather baleful man who
lives so far inside his head that he's
almost ghostlike (Jamey Sheridan).
Wlten, finally, tbe film makes
you notice Sheridan's character, it's
through a conversation between a
couple of other men about his latest
invention - plastic foam peanuts
for packing perishables. Wow, you
think; ·is he gonna make a pile.

That's typical of the way "The Ice
Storm" works, by the way; its revelations constantlyfoster esthetic distl!ftce, throwing you back on your
own thoughts.
The film looks in on the two
Westport clans during the Thanksgiving weekend. For most families,
stress and all, that's the most warmly tnditioaal lime of the year. For
these families, however, it is a time
of mounting suspicion, of confroptalion and, finally, of numbing
tragedy.
.
Lee and screenwriter James
Schamus do a superb job ~itb ~e
structural and thematic m1nors m
Moody's tale. In sometim~s eerie,
sometimes plain terrifying ways, the

PURPOSE

The tax is levied for the benefit of GALLIA COUNlY
CHILDREN'~.SERVICES AND CHIWREN'S HOME for the purpose
of supporting the Children's Services and the care, protection and
placement of abused, neglected, and dependent children,
including the· operating expenses of the GALLIA COUNlY
CHIWREN'S HOME.
COST
$30,000 tax evaluated home wiU cost J5.25 per year.
$50,000 tax evaluated home wiD cost JS. 75 per year.
SBO,OOO tax evaluated home wiU cost 114.00 per year.
' ENDORSED BY:
GaUia County Board of Commissioners
Harold Montgomery, Harold Saunders, Shirley Angel
Gallipolis City Commissioners
Bill Davis, james Mullins, Dow Saunders, Carol O'Rourke,
and Herman Koby
Gallia County General Health Department
Gerald Vallee, MD, Health Commissioner
Gallia County Family and Children First council
Robin Harris, lntersystems Coordinator
Gallia county Board of MR!DD
Rosalie Miller, Superintendent
Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association
Rotary Club
Lions Club
Kiwanis Club
GaUia County Prose(:utors Office
Brent Saunders, Pros. ~omey
GaUia County Trustees &amp; Clerks Association
Joe Foster, President
Gallia·Jackson·Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addition, and Menial
Health Services; Ronald Adkins, Exec. Director
Holzer Clinic Administration ~ Pedi2trics Dcparunent
Gallia County Juvenile Court
Tholii2S Moulton, Judge
Gallipolis Municipal Coun
William Medley, Judge
Ohlo40113t

masks its biggest surprise - the
identity of the killer - through · a
complex, poorly explained dramatic
device.
(i'm sorry to be vague, but I don' t
want to give it away.,)
Quaid plays ' PBl agent Frank
LaCrosse, who haS been actively
pursuing the killer for several
months. As the film opens,
LaCrosse's son is kidn1pped by the
killer, so the bureau takes him off
the case. ·
·
But we know t~at won't work;

he'll be even more relentless as a
free agent, beqiuse now it's person·
al.
Th·e usually reliable Quaid doesn't have a clue how to breathe life or
interest into the character. It's a
gloomy, Qne-note, teeth-clinching
performance;.
, Glover is far more appealing as
Bob Goodall, a one-time railroad
employee who drifts in and out of
the film as we impatiently wait to
learn his purpose.
Along the way, he picks up a

Little things
are Worth A lot
•

·'"

~PRING

VALLEY CINEMA

446· 4524

7

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the Classified Section!

young hitchhiker, another underdeveloped character, played by Jared
Leto.

0

Paid lor by ALL KIDS COUNT, ..., and Maraha Smllh, r-.
22

Beth Nlllaen Chapman

four young teen-agers exactly reflect
the style and impulses of their par- ·
ents. Paired scenes, the first for
. Ricci and the second for Allen, at the
town drugstore pinpoint the film's
dark, surprising bursts of wit as well
as its disturbing candor.

Glover makes 'SwitchBack' worth watching

NEW CHRISTMAS ITEMS ARRIVING DAILY.

. CHRI61'MM\ HOUR6
COMING COON!

.

'The Ice Storm'·command-s movie-goers' atte_
ntion

H•Jp Tourulf, B)! B•Jplnl Othersf
11

coins a new catchphrase in the opening credits: "All lies
lead to the truth...
.
But which is wbich? By the end of next week's second episode, with a shOcking assassination that appears
to erase one of the show's most notable characters (but
don't count on it), I'm less sure than ever. Carter has
done his job magnificently.
Sunday's episode retraces the 24 hours leading to
Scully's (Gillian Anderson) declaration of her partner's
alleged suicide, clearly a lie designed to expose liars
onknown.
·

Chapma11 fighting back with "Sand and Water"

~· cacti .

· ~ Outdoors. the country's longest
.herbaceous border is beautiful with
..•a beech hedge backdrop.
• : The numerous benches through" I!Ut the acreage serve as temporary
~ resting places for readers, or weary
: .walkers, who find the sheltered
· peace of huge trees, breeze-hobbing
' Howers and perfect landscapmg.
• The Edinburgh Zoo was close to
the college where I stayed. 1 walked
by it often and spent one Sunday
afternoon hiking the hills of the
compound.
It is a wonderful zoo, with open
fields accommodating zebras, antelope, all kinds of deer and camels.
Gorillas, rhino, monkeys, giraffes,
large cats. penguins and many more
animals are housed in traditional zoo
enclosures.
Aowcrs are artfully planted with
!he existing trees to create a hillside
selling of a colorful , dense forest.
The only negative aspect is the
admission price of six pounds,
which was slightly ovei $10 (at that
day's ex.change rate).
Princes Street (no one ever states
whether it is singular or plural) is the
main anery of Edinburgh. Princes
Street's Garden parallels the street
on one side and borders the rising
hill to Edinburgh Castle.
People-watching and photography are pastimes with the many visitors, pipers clad in· tartan. multitudes of flowcrbcds, a carousel, food
vendors, slatues, and the Scott Monument.
The monument is a Gothic tribute 10 Sir Walter Scott and soars 200
· feel into the sky. Started in 1840. it
hll 287 ascending steps for daring
vitilors.
One clear day I paid my three ,
pounds and ventured to the top to
take phOIOgraphs.
~ a _ The view was spectacular but the
' ' dark, windin1 staircase was the most
dlrilling part. Claustrophobics could
new:rmakeiL
At limes when meetina others on
die Jblircl$e, space WIS SO tight that
[ bid to pass my camera case on up,

By MATT ROUSH .
USA TODAY
When last we looked, Agent Mulder was pronounced
dead (of a self-inflicted gunshot wound) and Agent Scully was dying (of a mysterious cancer).
. And we, the poor mystified fans, were drowning.
In a quicksand of paranoia. Treading through layers
of lies, hoaxes. betrayal and sinister subterfuge.
As the fifth season begins witb a dense and at times
emotionally wrenching two-part conclusion to May's
downbeat cliffhanger, "X·Files" creator Chris Carter

Gallia County
Health
Department
446-4612,
ext. 292

CLAY TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE

••

'X-Files' season opener: 'Enter and enjoy'_a wo.rthy show

By the late 1890's th~ town had a
doctor, wagonmaker, a stonemason,
a broommaker, a piano salesman, a
poultry broker, rwo blacksmiths, a
mill and a general store. ·
.
The population however dropped
to 100 by the tum of the century. For
much of its history Northup was
known as a wonderful place to have
a picnic as the Hl!iriniton Mill at the
edge of town was a favorite spot for
horse drawn and horseless carriages
as well as hikers and bikers.

Free Vaccinations
For Gallia County

YOTEI.ELEq

, , ' .......,,J.II,J.oll .... or•

_____ .,_,
Willi I

Qllleiltllt,

Now llollon. J -

�-.....
•

•
•

•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaaa"!t,

.

WV.

Sunday,Novernber2,1997

.

!Holiday tun in Gallipolis' Lafayette Maul

The Shoe Cafe employees in Gallipolis' Lafayette Mall were
holiday spirit Friday. Pictured are,
from left, Kim Fowler, Shannon Fallon, Pam Shockey, and Cathy Montgomery.

Quick ·Qooking:Cranberry
Onion .Chops for easy·meal
By The Associated Press
Fruit paired with fresh, lean pork
makes a quick and tangy main dish.
Just add dry onion soup mix,
i'educed-calorie French dressing and
whole cranberry sauce to lean pork
chops. Cranberry-Onion Chops can
be served with mashed canned sweet
potatoes. green salad and dinner
rolls. Preparation time is about IS
minutes.
Cranb,erry-Onlon Chops
4 boneless pork chops (about 4
ounces each)
8-ounce bottle reduced-caloric
French dressing
'
I package dry onion soup mix
16-ounce can whole cranberry
sauce
In large, nonstick skillet, brown
pork chops on one side over medium-high heat.
In medium bowl, stir together
remaining ingredients and mix well.
Tum chops; pour cranberry mixture over chops in skillet, bring to a
boil. Lower heat, cover and simmer
for 10 minutes, until chops are just
done and still tender. Makes 4 servings.
Nutrition facts per serving: 448
cal., 24 g pro., 11 g fat, 1, 136 mg
sodium, 7.4·mg chol..

C. C. K.

Farm
Business
-

Section

Slnllry, NoiiMiber 2, 1117'

Study says

... .

Animals' welfare 'must include
physical, and mental we,l-being'
By GEORGE ANTHAN
Technology at Ames. Among its of recent trends in livestock producmost significant conclusions is that tion ." Roger Caras, president of the
The On Moine• Reglettlr
WASHINGTON - In ihe bam- animal welfare must include "both American Society for the Prevention
yard of the children's stories, happy physical and mental well-being."
of Cruelty to Animals. has written a
animals scamper about, living out Controversies abound
new book in which he chronicles the
adventurous lives in harmony with
But the definition of animal well- journey humans and domes.ticated
their chums, their environment and being ;nvolves ethical, scientific, animals have made together from the
their great-hearted human masters.
Paleolithic Age to the present.
legal and political controyersies.
The reality, of course, has always
He contends the world would not
How does one, for example,
been
different.
Most
chickens,
goats,
have
advanced beyond the Stone Age
assess the possible anxiety, frustra-ATTEND CAMP • Six memberti of the Galllpolle FFA "C hapter
pigs
and
"
cows
eventually
are
sheep,
tion,
discomfort
and
pain
ot
a
domeswithout
this partnership. But Caras
recently attended Graenhand Camp at FFA Camp Muaklngum
sold
into
slaughter
for
profit.
ticated farm animal? What is the dif- also states:
near Carrollto. Left to right are Wendy Abrahllmaon, Loria Pr•
But the rise in American agricul- ference morally, legally and practi"Our present farming and husston, Robyn Warren, Kete Seundera, Serah Jividen and Jordan
ture of factory-style ·operations, cally between animal "welfare" and bandry practices are the epitome of
Shaffer. Theae members attended a leadership eemlnar which
replacing the family farm with its rel- · "rights?" What is .the definition of cruelty. Killing animals in order to eat
wes conducted by State FFA officers and two Nlltlonal FFA offl·
ative few animals being raised in animal "suffering?" And, funda- them is the least of it. It is the way we
cera. Members from across the state worked to develop their
barnyards and pastures, is resulting in mentally, do humans have the 'right to treat these animals from birth until
leaclarahlp akllla and set goala for their FFA carHra. Be~ldea the
IBIIIInara, the FFA members participated In numerous other leadmounting concern throughout society use agricultural animals?
they must die that is most abhorrent.
erahlp activities.
for the welfare of animals.
Dozens of philosophers, journal- Animals need natural foods, not
A group of experts in animal sci- ists, social scientists and concerned · chemical concoctions; they need
ence, veterinary medicine, agricul- citizens, CAST notes, "have pub- space; they are frequently social ·and
tural economics, law and even phi- lished essays on the ethical basis.for requite room to interact.
losophy spent months studying the reform of animal agriculture, as well
· "Animals need consideration in
well-being of farm animals, including as.on the moral basis for relationships transport and, yes, in dying. We
whether they "think" and "feel," and between humans and ... animals gen- have the technology and we have the
CHESHIRE - Glennard F. Davis, Gallipolis, hascbeen promoted
room. W)lat we don't have is the care
from equipment operator to unit supervisor in the operations depart- ··• how the American public views their erally."
·
treatment.
Among
these,
says
CAST,
even
and compassion."
ment, effective Oct. 18, atthe Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger
The
study
was
organized
by
the
defenders
of
current
attitudes
toward
Business prevaUs
Creek Plant.
animals
Council
for
Agricultural
Science
and
have
been
somewhat
critical
In U.S. agriculture, the CAST report
Davis joined OVEC in 1979 as a laborer in the labor department.
In 1980, he transferred to the operations department as a utility operator. In 1981_. lie was promoted to auxiliary equipment operator, and
in· 1994, to equipment operator.
Davis and his wife Susan, reside in Gallipolis and are the parents
of two children.
By JENNIFER L BYRNES
is too acidic, the nutrients may be in sight.
GALLIPOLIS - The post harvest the soil, but the pH makes them
Soil samples are accepted by the
season is the best time to evaluate the unavailable to the plant. Applying county Extension office all year
BIDWELL- Champion Hill, Bidwell, ranked second largest in regfertility of the soils. Right after har- lime to correct acidic soils is most round, at a cost of $7.50 each for
istering the most Angus beef cattle in Ohio, having recorded 185 head
vest, farmers are more aware of the effective if done in the fall of tlie year. agronomic samples and $10.50 for
of Angus with the American Angus Association during the fiscal year
prol&gt;lem areas that need attention Lime is much slower acting than fer- lawn and garden samples. Results are
1997 which ended Sept. 30.
before the next planting season. Con- tilizer, apd may take several months known within two weeks. and help is
Angus breeders across the nation in 1997 registered 239,476 of
vimience and economics are two fac- to react with the soil and raise the pH. available for interpreting the results.
Angus cattle compared to 220,586 in fiscal 1996. This is an increase
tors to consider.. Producers who soil Fall applications of lime' give soils a For more information on soil testing,
of more than eight percent from a year ago.
·
test now will not have to wait on fer- chance to react before the next crop please call the OSU Extension office
tility ·reports in the spring before is planted.
at614-446-7007.
applying fertilizer and setting crops.
Producers who plan to soil test this
TOBACCO PRODUCERS: Pat
CHESHIRE - Earl F. Mayo, maintenance mechanic-S at the Ohio
The past couple of years ~ve fall thrpugh the County Extension yourself on the back -- Gallia CoonValley Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek Plant, recently received his
proved that just waiting on thew ili- Office may want to consider the fol- ty producers have received $9,500 in
30th anniversary award according to Ralph E. Amburgey, plant maner has been enough of a complica ion lowing procedures and guidelines: To grant funds from the Farm Income
ager.
·
and delay. Furthermore, the recom- test the soil for specific crop of for- Improvement Foundation for tobacMay() joined OVEC on Oct. 2, 1967, as a laborer in the labor
mendations (rom soil tests will allow a41e area, take samples in at least 10 co curing structures built this year.
department. In 1972, he transferred to the maintenance department as
producers to apply exactly what Is dtfferent parts of the field to make This amounts to 31 percent of all of
a maintenance helper.
needed to their fields, thus eliminat~ one representative sample. The sam- tbe money that was allotted to Ohio
During lhat same year, he advanced to maintenance mechnanic-c,
ing tbe aue&amp;swork an&lt;! ov~rapcndi.n.l1;. plins doPib is ei&amp;hl il\lihcs, lllld it is . tobacco produ.;crs. Coi!S'awlation•.
, antl,.iu..J913 be,.w.as promoted to ·rnainkma!lill6 mechanii»b. ~· · ·•· • '
~ Tho.C~osoll iest · ln~n will , besl"to exc~ude !he tap inch bf soil .,
SHEEP· PRODUCERS: .Mark
Mayo and his wife, Vada, and granc;lson (!ami!) reside in Bidwell.
be able to buy their fertilizer early, at because it may be the sight of a high your calendars for the annual Buckoff-season prices. Fields that have nutrient deposit such as manure. This eye Shepards Symposium scheduled
been fertilized for the past couple of would not be repreSentative of the for Dccelftber S-1 in Columlius,
DUBLIN - Ashland Chemical Company· has named Diana R.
years, and not soil tested may have an field. For fields with one specific area Ohio. For more information about the
McCune senior att9rney in its law department.
acidic pH. The availability of the pri- of concern that needs problem iden- agenda, please call the Extension
In her new position, she will be responsible for general commermary nutrients (N-P-K) is affected by tification, take 10 samples that are office at 446-7007, or contact Roger
cial matters for Ashland Chemical including c()ntract drafting and
the pH of the soil.
representative of just the problem High at 614-292-0589.
. negotiations, acquisitions, employment matters, legal training, claims
Therefore, in cases where the soil
and other general legal advice.
'
She previously served as staff attorney in the law department, a posiThe Investment policy:
tion she has held since joining the company in 1989.
, ·
She is a Meigs County native, the former Diana Baer, and is a 196S
graduate of Eastern High School. She earned a bachelor's degree at
Franklin University and a Juris Doctor from Capital University Law
sonalized model for asset allocation.
icy statement is
By' MARK SMITH
School.
The benefits of asset allocation
like
a
"blueprint"
GALLIPOLIS - Have you e~er
She is the daughter of Paul Baer of Chester and the .late Ruth Baer.
·are clear. According to an article in
sat down and thought hard about for your wealth
Other Meigs County relatives include her sister, Linda Curtis King,
the Financial Analysts' Journal by
your financial goals? In many cases, building, with the
and a nephew, Matthew King.
Gary Brinson, Randy Hood and Gil
when we are asked to put pen to investment execuBeebower, asset allocation accounts
paper and write them out, we find tive in the role of
for
more than 90 percent of your
that they're not as clear as we might financial "archiportfolio's
perfonnance. However,
tect." By working
believe they are.
the authors also point out that makThis lack of clarity is no accident. together, you and
Smith
ing the key decisions necessary to
In the book, The Excellent Invest- your investment proment Advisor, author Nick Murray fessional will be able to identify create the right asset allocation
says financial goals aren't only about your risk parameters and set rehlistic model for your investment program
is not easy. It requires teamwork
.
saving a specified amount of money. goals.
Al-Ataie completed his internal According to Murray. most people's
GALLII;'OLIS
between
an investor and a financial
Your investment executive will
medicine residency training at Mar- financial goals represent their most ask you a series of questions to learn professional.
M. Bashar Al-Ataie,
shall University School of Medicine primal emotional needs, such as more about your· attitudes toward
After all the information gatherM.D: recently joined
in Huntington, W. Va., where he ensuring a long, comfortable retire- risk. your current and future income ing is complete, your investment
Holzer Clinic's Inter· completed rotations in primary care ment, being able to help their chil- needs, how much liquidity you'll professional will be well prepared to
. nal Medicine Departand general internal medicine. He dre~~, educating their grandchildren, need. your expectation' for perfor- recommend specific investment
ment as a general
also worked in the emergency providing quality care to their aging . mance and. rate of re·._ urn, and the strategies for achieving your goals.
internist.
at the Huntington Veter- parents or leaving a legacy for their source of your assets. Your current The advantages
department
Dt. Al-Ataie com- Dr. AI-Atale
ans
Administration
Hospital.
pletcd his undergraduHow can having an investment
loved ones. It's no wonde~ we feel investment mix also will be
Board
eligible
in
internal medi- uncomfortable quantifying our reviewed to ensure that you have policy statement help you?
ate studies and earned his doctorate
of medicine degree from 1he Univer- ctne, Dr. Al-Ataie is ECFMG certi- goals . It's hard to be objective when enough diversification among asset
First, by putting your objectives
sity of Damascus School of Medi- fied and holds a medical license in it comes to pursuing our dreams. classes to help you achieve your in writing, you are given the opporOhio and Utah. He is a me111ber of That's why creating an investment goals.
cine in Damascus, Syria.
tunity to clarify your goals. DocuAfter medical school. he did the American Medical Association policy is useful. An investment poliOnce you have clarified your menting your investment policy puts
research in cardiology and trans- and an associate of the American cy is a written statement that spells needs, your investment professional everything "on the record," and your
plants at the University of Pitts- College of Physicians.
ou.t your financial goals -- and the can help you set a course of action. goals become more real once they're
burgh . Following his research, Dr
He .or she will discuss the basics of in writing. Be sure to be as specific
best methods for achieving them.
investing as well as focus on diversi- as possible in terms of time horizon
The Process .
.
In many ways, ari inve~tment pol- fication in order .to develop a per- and dollar amounts.

rea farm/business briefs

Bill

St. Rt. 7

Recipe from: National Pork Producers Council

CAN

Davis promoted

Pooler· Owner
985-3700

Cheater

ONE
OAY
ONLY
.m. til 6 p.m.

•

YOU

----.

Sunday, November 2

nd.~ ••

D

.

notes, "b~sincss priorities still often
prevail over emerging ethical considerations...
While most of the American public continues to support the agricultural use of animals, tbe CAST study
team determined, many also back
government regulation to ensure their
humane treatment.
The study team cautions against

producers complacently ignoring
public concerns or dismissing them
as the rantings of fringe animal rights
groups.
They note that "Legislation in
western Europe has outlawed certain
production systems," and that in
some European countries the affected livestock sectors have suffered,
with consumer demand being met
through imports .
Animals, CAST slates, play an
essential role in the world's food supply and "global catastrophe" would
result if production stopped. Thus, the
report continues, producers, processors, governments and consumers
must resolve farm animal welfare
Continued on D-Z

It's the ·season ·t o soil test

Champion Hill ranked second

Mayo earns 30-year award

McCune Ashland senior attorney

CATILE PRODUCERS aacl
DAIRY PRODUCERS: Merial, formerly Merck Ag 'vet, announced 1
new product known at Ivomec
Eprinex Pour-On for beef and lactating dairy.cattle, uSed for both external and internal parasite control.
Advantages include application in all
types of weather, label indications of
less protective wear, season long lice
control, and zero days for slaughter
withdraw and also milk discard. For
more information contact your local
veterinarian.
Any reference to a specific product in this article is not intended to be
promotion of the product.
HOMEOWNERS: So far so
good with the Lady Beetle calls. For
silent sufferen, tbe VICUUD\ ia !lie
· most approved method of cqllirol.~
and caulking and sealin1 is rect&gt;m- '
mended for prevention.
For more information, please call
the office and request a Fact Sheet.
Jennifer L. Byrnes Is Galla
County's extension •ent In apiculture aDd natural resources.

Your financial blueprint for building your dreams

Dr. AI-Ataie joins
Holzer Clinic staff

JAN, IS THAT YOU? • Bemadlnes's in the Lafayette Mall was the
1lght ol high jinx and high fashion when Jan Bergdoll, right, met
herself In the form of store owner James Mullins, who dreaeed up
as the spirited Bergdoll. Mullins greeted customers In the ume
bubbly manner as his favorite store employee. Customers agreed
that he had the role perfectad - even offering to sale his earring•
to an lnterest~d buyer. As for Bergdoll, she was speechltla. "He
Is me - there ts no doubt about It. But after eight years of being
together It had to happen!"

Handmade Holiday Treasures
Craft Show ··

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4pm til 5pm:Purchase $60000 -19% Off= You .Pay $486°0
5pm til6pm: Purchase $40000 -15% Off= You
$34000

lpm til4pm: Purchase

·The Earlier You Shop • The More You Save!

Don't Let The Clock Beat You Out of HUGE Savings ...

November 8, 1997
10 a.m. • 6 p.m. Saturday

This Silk Ends 111 6 P.M. on S1111d11y, November 2nd, 1997
Not applicable with any other offen. Excludes previouuales.
'Excludes Electronics, Bedding &amp; Appliances which are already

National Guard Armory
Route 62 North
Point Pleasant, WV

Reduced for The Worlds Ltugest Bedding Stile!

Sponsored by:
Ma10n County Extension Homemakers ,
Mason County Vo-Tech Food Service
GIWC Point Pleasant Junior Woman's Oub

I

5 Easy Ways To Pay:
• MasterCard • Visa • Discover
Heilig·Meyers card • ln-S1ore Credi1

~~

408 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT

Barbara Williams named
disability program manager
MIDDLEPORT Barbara Williams of
Middleport recently
accepted a position
of case manager of
Southern Ohio's Disability Program. She
manages
Vinton , Williams
Meigs. Athens, Gallia,
Lawrence and Jackson counties.
She previously served as a supervisor of Gallia County's Passport

Progam and as a home health nurse
foi Interim Health Care and worked
as a private duly nurse for Mason
County Schools.
·
She graduated from Meigs High
School in 1979 and from Hocking
College's practical nursing program
in 1981 and from Hocking College's
RN program in 1991 .
She has four children, Brooke,
14. Brittany. 13, Beth, 10, and Cody,
5.

ATHENS
Jim
Tompkins,
formerly
vice-president of Southem Ohio Coal Company, has announced the
formation of JFT Consultants. Tompkins will Tompkins
offer an array of consulting services focusing on general
management and occupational
health and safety issues. In addition,
cHent-tailored instrUctional seminars

dreams : Contact your investment·

professional today to set up an:
appointment to develop a personal:
investment policy for financial success.
Mark Smith is associate vice:
president of Investments with·
Advest, Inc., its Gallipolis oftlce. ·

Make a list of yard work to be done before winter
By HALKNEEN

POMEROY- Winter may be coming, However there is still time for
yard work to be accomplished. Make
a list of yard work needing to be
done. The list may include: cleaning
gutters, raking leaves, planting spring
bulbs, cleaning up the flower &amp; vegetable gardens, fertilizing the lawn,
stockpiling fire wood, digging up
new garden beds or plaQting a tree or
shrub.
This is an ideal time to plant
deciduous
(plants that lose their
in public speaking will be available.
leaves
in
the
fall) trees and shrubs.
Tompkins possesses a bachelor in
roots
will continue to grow
The
plant
engineering degree from the Technical University of Nova Scotia, and a in the warm soil until early Decemmaster's degree in interpersonal ber. This root growth will provide
communication from Ohio UniYersi- water and nutrient uptake into the
ty. He is also a member of the Meigs plant for better spring leaf growth.
Another benefit is that it is much
County Chamber of Commerce.
He and his wife. Ronalda, reside more enjoyable to dig the dryer and
in Athens.. He can be reached at wanner soil of the fall season instead
of cold and wet spring soil.
(614) 593-6266.
Prepare your soil to meet the

Tompkins forms consulting service

Second, you can refer. to your
trusty blueprint when times get
tough and ·your emotions want to.
take over. Your investment policy.
.can help you stay disciplined in a:
market downturn because it pro-;
vides a visual reminder of your pro-·
gram. Even if your emotions arc get-:
ling the best of you, sticking with;
your plan is the best way to keep·
moving toward your goals.
'
Finally, you can use your invest-.
ment policy to measure your:
progress.
Since your goals are summarized:
for you, it makes it much easier to;
measure performance and rates of·
return, as well as make adjustments:
if needed.
By · putting your objectives in·
writing, you'll have a working financial blueprint for building your:

requirements of the tree or shrub you
want to plant. Plants such as: rhododendron, azaleas, blueberry and flowering dogwood prefer an acid soil
with lots of organic matter (peat
moss, compost, sawdust). Lilacs,
junipers aad laxus plants prefer a well
drained and more neutral (pH 6-7)
soil.
Choose the right shrub or tree to
meet your needs. The extension
office has several fact sheets to assist
·the homeowner in selecting shrubs
and trees based on site. plant size,
fruit , leaf color and flowers. Remember that plants grow in size over the
years and need room to expand. If
planting near a house, allow a minimum of four foot distance for shrubs,
ten fool distance for small trees and
fitteen to thirty feet for larger trees.
If it looks lob bare at first, fill in with
annuals or perennials. It won't be long
befor~ the shrubs and trees fill the
area. Several computer programs are

available that will design shrubs and
trees in a landscape and then project
what sizes they will be in 5, I0 or 20
years.
Ohio State University Extension's
Regional Agronomy Meeting will be
held on December 17 from 8:30a.m.
to 3:30 p.m. at the Fayette County
Extension Meeting Room, Washington Court House, Ohio. This yearly
event brings grain producers and state
extension staff together to share the
latest Ohio State University recommendations for soil fertility. insecticides, weed management and disease
control in soybeans and com. Special
guest, James E. Newman, Professor
Emeritus, Climato)ogy, Department
of Agronomy from Purdue University will present hi&gt; thoughts on the
"Potential Impacts of El Nino on
World Grain Markets and U.S. Agriculture". Preregistration is required.
Registration fee is fifteen dollars

which includes lunch and the proceedings of the 1997 Corn &amp; Soy~
bean Trials and 1997 Test Plot Trials;
If you are interested, please contac(
my office for registration materials
and possibly car pooling opportunities.

~

It's not too late to fertilize your•
lawn . A high nitrogen application at"
this time will increase root develop-·
ment, retain fall green leaf color and:
allow. for quicker green up of the'
lawn tn the spring. APPlication rates"
of five to ten pounds per I000 square
feet of 19-3-3, 24-4-8 or similar grass
fertilizer are recommended by Ohio
State University. Chemical weed ·
control is not advisable this late in the ·
year . however, raking and hand:
pulling of weeds may be beneficial. ·
Hal Kneen is the Meip County
Agriculture &amp; Natural Re80Urcell·
Agent, The Ohio State Unlvenlty
Extension.
1

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolll, OH • Point Pleaunt,

Animals' welfare...,·_Coa_tln_uecl_~_rom_D_·•_ _ _ _ _.....;

The House of the week

Distinctive one-story

BOLD WINDOWS and f'ye-catchlng masonry detalll~rlve this home an attractive, &amp;eohlook.
By BRUCE A. NATIIAN
AP Newsfeatures

Pl1111 C. -74, by llnmeStyles
1h· ... ignrr.c. !\lt&gt;IWDrk, incflrporat~s
uni 4 u~ fralure~

iniO a

~whd

tlt'sign, t•reating n truly diRlinctive

one-story home. It provldu I ,611
square reetur11vin(l ~pace.
An in•·lting, li~hl - fllled entry
intrudul'eS the mHny
reaturt•s inside.

~peclal

Flankc·d by Roor-tn-reilln! win -

Efttry
I

It Sl

Bt2

Doll

It 8d2

10.111-8

.

.

wv

Sunday, November 2, 1997

&amp;

-

dows, the fireplace serves as the
rocal polnl or the large living
room. Topped by o 13-root, 8-inch
vaulted celllns. Ills suited for any
occasion, whether formal or
informal.
The formal dlnlns room Is Ideal
for a sourmet meal, and Is sepa·
rated rrom the llvlns room by a
pair or elesant columns. A olldlns
gloss door offers access. to the
rear deck.
The modern kitchen has Inleresting angles and a pantry closet.
The adjoining breakfast nook features 8 wall or windows and provides access to a covered portion
or the rear deck. A convenient
laundry room Is nearby.
The luxurious master ·suite features a soarins 12-root celllns and
a slttln! area with deck access.
The private bath has a spa tu)l, a
dual-oink vanity and a lai'Be walkIn closet.
Two additional bedrooms share
a second f•ll bath and are nearby
a hallway linen closet.

issues.
More than three decades ago.
CAST states, a report to the British
l'urlinmcnt established "five f'ree.
d••ns" for fann animals, centered on
the premise that an animal should be
11hle without difficulty to;
Tum around.
Cin•nn itself.
Cict up.
l.ie down.
Stretch its limbs.
CAST st~tcs that in connection
with this, the American Veterinary
Mcdicinc Association has concluded
that "humans have \he right to use
agricultural animals, which should as
a common-sense rule be kept as calm,
comfortable and healthy as possible
and should be handled, transported,
cuthanizcd and slaughtered by appropriate ways and means."
Abuse and neglect
The CAST study team also cited
studies indicating that animals can
e•perience cruelty through abuse
and neglec( and, possibly, through
"deprivation of O{lportunities to
e•press internally motivated behaviors."
The report also cites extensive
studies showing that animals "consciously perceive" various physical
and psychological stresses "although
the quality and precise limits of
e•perience that engender in them
emotions of pleasure or displeasure,
comfort or ·discomfort, anxiety or
· contentment remain enigmatic."
Persons or organizations that inter·
vcne on behalf of victimized animals,
CAST says, can base the claim on
custom, ethics or law. But such a
claim, the study team believes, "need
not imply ... either support for an animal's right not to be used for human

D

a.rege

21d1-4
·I

.

G-74

i

, ·~IIJLI.IUIIT~~]) 11001\W.\Y Introduce&amp;, . ••try, v.l •, h•llds to the
li vlns nwm. A pair of tulumn• to the rig lei •IeHne 1111' lnrmal dininB
room which bas acceu to Ute rear deciL. 11~&lt; adlolntng b"'akfllll nook
ho&amp; .:,..,Uio 1 co~ pMIIon or the-· Aohcnt hallway neeftly lolnl
the laundry room and the two-car goral!" with the kilch~n. The •leeplng
quarters are on the other side or the home, where an nugled hallway
connecta the master suite, two sel'Ondary bedrooms and • hall both.
1•

·auytseu or·Trad•
CLASSIFIEDSJ
'

SUNDAY PUZZLER

, · m~~\~,~~u~~~~!!j.:\1

\

food or validation of claims by ani- restricted, are they restrained. are
mal-rights groups."
they isolated socially?)
The CAST team, which included
Also, the scientific societies
Dr. James McKean of the Iowa State declared, studies should· be underCollege of Veterinary Medicine, said taken to determine how the size of the
e~pel~ elsewhere indicates the . group in which the a~i~al is raised
issue f annttal well-being "probably and the animals's soctal mteracttons. _
will resolved politically" based on with other animals affects well-bemg.
gene~
' "attitudes, beliefs and val- Morals and ethics
ues" ther than on biological or ceo- At the core of the issue of treatment
nomic
unds.
.
of agricultural animals. CAST state~,
~ut he e~perts also emphasized isthcquestionofhowAmericansoct- ·
that scientific assessment of the issue ety views morals and ethics.
also is necessary and recommend: •
Those who lean toward a utilitar-That practices he based on sci- ian concept of morals and ethics conentitic methods designed io ensure sider policies and practices justified
humaneness.
if the results promote the greater
-Adoption of animal-care guide- good.
lines issued by lhe National Pork Pro. Those who pursue a strategy of
ducers Council, the American Veal "rights," CAST notes. might con·.
Association, the National Milk Pro- sider certain acts immoral even if
ducers Federation and the National they do produce the greatest good,
Turkey Federation.
and it cites the world of American
- That any animal-care regula- phi.losopher Tom Regan, who argued
lions be based on science and that that any organism possessing con·
consumer food costs be' taken into sciousness is "the subject of a life"
account.
and is entitled to protection of its
-That future animal production individual interests.
equipment renec(s scientific humaneAnother philosopher. Bernard
ness guidelines.
Rollin, has argued that farmers and ·
A meeting two years ago in St. ranchers already implicitly recognize
Louis sponsored by the major scien- animals rights and have dcmonstrattific societies involved in animal ed a willingness to accept lower prof:
research recommended that scientists its to improve the well -being of their
focus on the following research areas: animals.
-Resolving connicts among varBut Rollin. too. has urged more
ious interested parties and on edu- scientific work on how animals faie
eating the gen~ral public about agri- in the production, transportation and
cultural practices.
·
slaughter process and has advocated
. - Delving into any ethically "common sense" reforms.
questionable practice, including beak
trimming, dehomin~ and castration,
whtch can cause pam to an1mals; on
~·
·• ·1n:tt.e .
how animals are transported and ·
slaughtered, and on thetr general
treatment. (Are their feed and water

eslgn G-74 has a living
room,

dinlns:

room,

' kitchen, breakfut nook,
den,.two bedrooms, two full baths
and a laundry room; totallns
I ,615 square feet ~r llvlns space.
This plan Includes a standard
basement and 2x6 exterior wall
framing. The two-car sarase provides 448 square feet or addlllonalspace.
(l"or a mort IU!ailed, scaltd plan
qf lhil howe, IIICiudillif BUidel lo
ulimoll.llg co111 and JlnanclnB.
send U 'lo How••qf!M W"""· P.O.
Box IJ62, New York, N.Y. 101 16·
IJ62. &amp; sure 10 include the plan
number.

Track lights ca_
n shed a
new light on room's decor
By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS
For AP Special Features

-To figure how many lights to foot increments, usually up to 12 feet.
use, consider the room's usc and what. Longer runs can be fashioned .with
Track lighting can. change the objects, such as plants or artwork, connectors. Connectors in various
feel of a room as effectively as a fresh you want to highlight.
patterns let you run track in up to four
coat of paint and new furnishings.
-You can select fixtures that use directions, including diagonally, from
Installing track lighting requires . standard 120-volt household power. the electrical box.
only basic do-it-yourself skills. It These are ideal for general lighting
Once you have planned your track
involves disconnecting the room's because they create a wider, less- lighting, the only tools you'll need for
ceiling light fixture and conne&lt;ting focused beam of light. In the same installation are a ladder to reach the
the wires in the ceiling box to the track, you can usc low-voltage (12- ceiling; a neon-light12().volt tester to
track lighting terminals. Then, the volt) halogen fixtures wilh their own make sure the power to the ceiling
tracks are mounted onto the ceiling. transformers.
box is off; a chalk line to snap a
The lights snap into the tracks'
-Tracks attd fixtures from dif· guideline for the tracks; a pencil to
grooves with no additional wiring.
ferent manufacturers are not neces- mark toggle-bolt locations; a power
Once, track lights resembled large sarily compatible. Don't mi• brands drill to make holes for the bolts; and
coffee cans with noodlights or spot- or try to modify the fixtures.
a screwdriver to mount the track and
lights inside. Now, many systems use
-When planning your layout. make the connections.
smaller fixtures and compact, low- keep in mind that track is sold in 2voltage halogen bulbs.
Halogen lights will revitalize your
accent lighting more efficiently than
conventional bulbs. Halogens arc
gle rool. Any roofing contractor will
more like sunlight in terms of hright - By POPULAR MECHANICS
For
AP
Special
Featurea
be able to do it. as should a do-itness and color. Although halogens
Q.
I've
heard
about
the
distinctive
yourselfer who isn't afraid of heights.
cost more than incandesccnts, they
can last up to three times longer. look and durability of metal shingles. Most metal shingles interlock and are
Their rcncctors and better focusing I've worked on my conventional secured to the roof with two nai Is drienable you to usc lower-voltage shipgled roof and want to know if ven through a nailing flange.
tackling a metal roof is much differAlthough installing a seamed met·
bulbs to save energy.
ent
and
if
it
is
a
practical
job
for
the
.
al roof is a bit more complicated, it
Before installing track lighting or
can be done by a sopbisticated do-itany new electrical fixture. consult an do-it-yourselfer?
A. Fortunately, installi~g metal yourselfer if it's a pretty straightfor·
electrician if any of these conditions
shingles isn't much different from ward job.
exist:
shin-Older wiring. Its fabric ·insula· installing
- any other composite
.
tion often makes it difficult to distinguish hot wires from neutral ones,
and the insulation might be frayed .
-Improperly grounded wiring.
Make sure it has a bare copper
ground wire or a metal casing that
acts as a ground for a metal electrical box.
·
Aluminum wiring. This Wltlng,
distinguished by its gray color. is a
tire hazard, and only a licensed electrician should make the connection.
We carry Reclever Hitches, Fifth Wheel Hitches
To plan a track lighting system,
follow these steps:
,
Ball Mounts, an:l many other accesories for you~ •
-Find the nearest ceiling light
NEW and OLD cars and trucks.
fi~ture controlled by a wall switch
and use it as the power source.
-Consider the ceiling height.
Track lights hang down as much as
6 inches. A eeiling less than 8 feet
high, such as in a basement, can present a problem.
-Decide whether you want to
control the lights with an on-off
switch or a dimmer. Certain low-volt·
43lt ST. Rt 110 OAWPOUS, OH
age transformers require a special
dimmer, available at lighting retai~rs .
(814) 448-1044
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-12

Question and answer

ACROSS

1 Get on one's feet
6 Cut
'
11 Stender candle
16 Wheal centers
20 lid
21 Spotted horse
22 Conscious
23 Mytllical hunter
25 Bryant or Ekberg
26 Garret
'ZT Craze

:za F•

I

tMI

29 Grassy expanse
Kind of harmless
snake
32 Traded
34 Native of: suffix
35 Sert
37 Becomes more solid
38 Pleats
39 Long heavy beam
4 I Stuffy
43 Sherry, port, etc.
44 Actress Keaton
46 Put a spell on
49 Less
50 St. louis players
54 Tune
55 Men and boys
56 Sport
57 Journey
58 Unclose. poetically
59 Harbor towris
60 Adhesives
61 River in Paris
62 Field cover. for short
84 Excursions
65 Copper-and-zinc
alloy
86 TV part
.
67 Actress Sommer
~ Qptimistic
69 Hoisting device
70 Lila story, for short
71 Jet letters
72' Vestige .
74 Highlander's cloak
75 Pavilions
77 Branch
80 Cigar •esidue
81 Not at all ornate
30

82
83
87
89
90

91
92
93
94
95
96
97

Drench
Iridescent gem
Great lack
Not at all spicy
Head coverings
Part 01 n.b.
Monsters
Pours
McCartney and
Newman
Grow oldar
Java neighbor
Aid and-

DOWN
1 Climb
2 Musical sounds
3 Of birds
4 Alter deductions
5 Kind 01 race
6 Most lean
7 Diminutive

8 Poker stakes
9 Commotion
10 Ad -committee
11 MexiCan food
12 PriZes
13 Trousers
t 4 Cleveland's lake
15 Raise
16 Great escape artist
t 7 CoHee-lilled vessel
16 Wailed
19 Drunken one
24 '- -do·weli
31 Intense suffering
32 Something extra
33 Mild oath
36 Revelberation
38 PenaHies
40 lease signer ·
42 Boy
43 loses lreshness
44 Women of rank
45 Angers
46 Act hke a ham
47 Neighbor of India
48 Store employee
49Wed
50 Bring about
51 Zodiac sign
52 Wrinkles
53 Exhausted
55 Mickey56 Body part
59 Doggie
60 With a - of salt
61 Edinburgh native
63 Animallrieno
64 Rubbish
65 Pigtail
86 Goes down
69 Sapts
70 Rosary items
73 Dam ill
74 Factory

88 Trir!la

99 W~~d Cup game
102 Drawn out
105 Tolerates
106 Kegs
107 Fairies
· 1OB Chefs ex
109 Nice Nelly
11 0 Get control over
113 Outpouring
114 Sand
115 Cleanse
119 Poe1's "before!'
120. Turncoats
123 Wives·IO·be
125 Disapproving cry
12&amp; Heron
128 Marl&lt; with a hot iron
129 "In" .lalk
130 Best people
132 Function
133 Mammoth
134 Unit of weight
135 Was concerned
136 Colored
137 Stege direction
138 Yields by iroaty
139 long lock

.-

75
76
77
78
79
81
62
84
85
86
88
89

Implements
Weep
Sun-dried brick
Kingly
Actress Thomas
Worked at
Cnef's creations
"Give - a chance'
Heavenly being
Wanton looks ·
Checked (with "in")
Innocent ones
90 Hirsute

93 Appraile

94 Carpente(s device
96 Pennies
99 Fry quickly
100 Law: abbr.
101 Gang
103 Satiated
104 Declale
105 Meal recipient
106 Beau or Jeff
1OB Kind ol cake
109 Nobleman
1t 0 Perceives
111 Pressed
112 Smalllrult
113 Commence
114 Magnificent
116 In flames .
117 locations
118 Pays attentiOrJlo
121 Competent
122 Persia, today
123 Down in the dumps
124 Denomination
127 First woman
129 Club: abbr.
131 Guardian spirit

FOr: THE FIRSI ONE HUNDRED
CUStOMERS WE HAVE FREE
INSIALUIIONI!I

'

I

NTRACTOR

Crossword Puzzle Ans~er on Page B-6

'

'

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Ohio
state water experts don't agree with
ratings on the bottom rungs of a new
federal water quality scale. but there's
no disputing two watersheds given
top scores.
.
Watersheds around Con·
neaut in far northeast Ashtabula
County and Ironton down south in
Lawrence County earned the highest
possible water quality scores in a
first-of-its-kind federal assessment.
Other watersheds in the
state didn't fare as well, with 24of 45
deemed vulnerable Ito further harm
from farm, factory and sewer poilu·
tion running into rivers and streams.
The EPA released the data
Thursday as part of a nationwide
assessment of America's waiersheds
being made avpilable to the computer-using. public.
EPA Administrator Carol
Browner said people can access the
information on the Internet, using
their zip codes . to locate specific
watersheds.
"Pulling information into
the hands of citizens ·is the most
effective way of reducing pollution,"
Browner said.
.
The watersheds were rated
on 15 different indicators including
whether waterways were suitable for
recreation and other expected uses,
number of fishing ndvisories, amount
of toxic contaminants such as copper
and zinc, and other pollution such as
excessive nutrients, as well as loss of
wetlands.
Ohio environmental officials said they're working on making

WASHINGTON - Some days
Frank Keith works for the InternaL
Revenue Service and other days he
works for the U.S. Treasury Department. It just depends on who's asking.
"I didn't think I wanted to grow
up and be a nack for the IRS.". the
national director of commumcat10ns
for the government's most scrutinized
- if not most reviled-,- agency said
recently. He was just a little irritated
at being asked about his job.
Then Keith smiled. He often
smiles even though he has held down
one of Washington's public relations
hot spots for 10 years. He doesn't
have any of the tics you might expect
of the IRS' chief spokesman. and he
docsn 't duck and weave when he
talks- although he docs sort·Ofrock
from side to side .
His job has nothing to do with processing the $1.3 trillion the agency
e&lt;tracts from taxpayers each year.
and he has no ollicial contact with
taxpayers. What he does is massage
the Washington press corps, a
demanding, often pushy bunch that
bums up his telephone line every
time they get a chance because the
IRS makes good copy.
·
That has especially been the case
lately, with reports coming out about .
agents having collectio.n quota~. As
recently as Friday, Prestdent Chnton
outlined ways for the IRS to be more
user friendly, but that's not enough
for some members of Congress who
want to shut the place down .
Keith said he has answered many
tough questions from good reporters
- and he has handled a few odd
ones. He laughs about the day the
IRS building was evacuated and a
reporter demanded to know the exact
temperature in the commissioner's
office.
"I don't know if he wanted me to go
stand in the room and measure it or

IIIFCIIIS Ill IFOCK.-

'

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Feature•

Government provides data on watersheds

By ERICA CURLESS
Gannett Newa Service

SPECIAL SALf 011 ALL

LOWELL C.

WASHINGTON - The closing
address at Tufts University's intema·
tiona! conference onAgricultwe Production and Nutrition earlier this year
was by Lawrence Woodwanl, director of the Elm Farm Research Center
at Berkshire in Great Britain.
He began by stating his concern
- though not surprise - over the
necessity of holding a meeting to
examine the relationship between
the quality and safety of food and the
production systems used to raise.it.
Woodward said: "It seems
remarkable to me that we think this
issue is such a big deal that we are .
prepared to travel vast distances to
talk. about it. Isn't it notable that the
issue is not regarded as common·
place? Isn't this a sign of how stupid
our civilization has been? How can
this be? How. can such monumental
folly have come about?"
In his speech, published recently
by the Henry A. Wallace Institute for
Alternative Agriculture. Woodward
declared: "Of course there is a relationship between nutrition and agricultural production. Of course it is
important. and of course it concerns
everyone. Any half-wit ought to sec
that. But wisdom has been in short
supply because the relationship has

available even better information.
Laurel Hodory. state watershed coordinator, said the method
used by the federal government to
create a nationwide view of pollution
risks seems to be too broad to provide
useful local information.
For instance, the state tracks
93 separate watersheds - rivers,
.streams or lakes and the land that
drains into them. The federal gov·
emment counted half that many,
meaning that list encompasses larg-

lists that as impaired."
Another example, he said, is
the Upper Scioto watershed, which
the federal government categorizes as
a wide swath of the middle of the
state.
Rankin said problems in
one part of that20-county area earned
the lowest possible score for the
entire zone. even though it encompasses the unpolluted waters of Big
Darby Creek.,
"The Nature Conservancy
called it one of the last great places
er areas.
Hodory warned that can on Earth," Rankin said. "If you live
group a pristine stream with a pol- in the Big Darby watershed, it's very
luted river, giving the misimpression high quality. But in the northern part
... it is in pretty mediocre condition."
of widespread contaminated.
The state EPA is hoping to
"A few localized problems
can bleed through to color a whole overcome those and other data-analywatershed," she said. "To make it sis problems by compiling and makmeaningful at the state level, you ing public more localized informareally need to look at, a smaller tion. It's a work in progress, but data
on some of the 93 watersheds countscale."
Ed Rankin, a monitoring ed by the state already is available on
and assessment specialist for the the Internet.
·
Nationwide, the .EPA found
state EPA. pointed to the Little Miathat
16
percent
of the 2,000 watermi River as a watershed unfairly
scored in the broad, national system. sheds have good water quality, 36
The Little Miami is one of percent moderately serious water
the cleanest waterways in the state, quality and 21 percent more "serious
yet its watershed was given a lower problems." For 27 percent there was·
score than that of the much-morc- n't enough information available to
cootaminated Mahoning River water- characterize water quality.
shed. ·
The Web site for EPA water
That's because the Little
informalion
is
Miami. as a national and state scenic assessment
http://www.cpa.gov/surf/stinfo/OHI
river. gets judged against a tougher
The Web site for state-level
set of standards established by the
state. "We have higher goals for walcr assesment information is under
that," said Rankin. ''The water qual- construction . A few watersheds arc
ity ranges from good to e.cellent, but ready for examinati'on at http://chawe want to make it all excellent. The grin.epa.ohio.~ov/watcrshcd
EPA sort of bureaucratic approach

whal?" he said.

The 47-year-old father of two
grown kids puts a philosophical spin
on his duties. "My job is to help people understand how the agency docs
its job and help reporters understand," he said . "I've always
believed it's a job that is absolutely
vital."
But no publicity is sometimes the
best publicity. Recently, a week after
taxpayers and unidentified agents
told the Senate Finance Commtttee
about abuses at the IRS, Keith
rejoiced over the first day the agency
did not grace the front page of the
major daily newspapers.
"Look at this," he said. pointing
to a neat display of newspapers fan·
ning out across a small round coffee
tatilc that prohahly has never sup·
ported a mug.
He. plopped down on a white sofa
in his conservatively decorated office
at IRS headquarters on Constitution
Avenue, adjusted his tic. crossed his
legs and began shaking his foot
Keith is more than a mouthptecc.
Besides informing reporters - this
being Washington. "spinning
reporters" is occasionally the more
accurate word- he oversees a staff
of 40 and directs several intra·agcncy
publications.. He has witnessed drastic changes sutee 1979 when h1s IRS
career began as a spokesman in
Providence, R.I.
Besides acknowledging technology, which gave birth to 24-hour
news stations such as CNN and
MSNBC, he cited niche publications
as the main difference.
"Tax information has gone mainstream," Keith said, pushing up his
glasses and running his fingers
through his thick brown hair in one
quick motion. "There's just so much
more demand for news-you-can-use
tax information: Fifteen years ago
most of my time was spent dealing
with very technical tax -journal
1ypes." .
•

•
(

'

It's great that publications like
"Parenting" and "Glamour" have tax
columns because they incrcl\.&lt;e people's knowledge of the system, he
said.
"You can't expect people to comply if they don't have the information
upfront," Keith said.
And people do faithfully file their
taxes - · a truth that shocks Keith.,
especially in the spring when he starts
fiddling with his ow~ return. It's a
chore that takes away six or seven
hours from his trel\.,urcd hobbies of
relaxing at the beach or antiques
shopping.
"It's an absolulcly remarkable
statement of the American ta~ system," he said.
Tagging along with the IRS' high
compliance rate is a high rate of disapproval from the American public.
Keith believes the negative image
is driven by the confusion people
have between the Internal Revenue
Code, which is law made by Congress. and the Internal Revenue Service. which administers the code.
"Over the last few years there's
been a blurring of that distinction,"
Keith said. "People are confused and
have expressed it as dissatisfaction
with the ~S ."
Keith is the first to admit the
agency has areas that need improvement, a fact that the Senate hearings
drove home. However he stressed
taxpayers must undcrstana that Internal Revenue Service employees don't
write the law.
Keith has dealt with these frustrations personally, and he cringes when
he recalls the worst moment of his
career.
While working in the Providence
field office. Keith had to tell a ter·
minally ill woman and her children
they couldn 't have their $1,200 tax
refund. The woman, who was leaving
an abusive marriage, was unable to
pay her taxes. ·

.ft•••hgC.._Jta;tliW • Page 03

Growing interest in herbs? Grow herbs/

not been generally recognized.
been achieved "when organic Mars
For lhe homeowner who is de vel"NO! by half-wits, full-wit$, ordi- Bars are on sale throughout the oping an interest in herbs, the most
nary wits, nor anyone else. Our civ- world." This is despite the fact that satisfying and direct way to learn
ilization has been blinkered in the lhe modem organic fanning move- about these plants is to stan a culinary
pursuit of quantity.... The principles ment was born "before the enviro11- herb garden.
,
of nutrition upon which our health ment had been heard of as an issue"
Most of the work in ha'ving an
depends have played no pan, save by · and was based, instead, on concern herb ganlen is in preparing the soil
accident, in our agricultural produc- with health.
and planting the herbs. Give ·some
tion or in the way we organize our
Yet, he said. organic agriculture thought to the location of your garsociety to grow, process or distribute remains "our best shot so far at inte- den. The best spot should provide at
our food."
grating food production, nutrition -least six hours of full sunlight each
Most researchers, Woodwanl says, and health.''
day, be sheltered from strong winds
·seem to be 1\'0rking on designing
·But an agriculture centered on and have moderately good soil. In a
"novel".food products rather than on health is "truly revolutionary," location that meets the first two
nutritional questions. He quotes Woodward acknowledges, despite requirements, the soil can be condi·
Derek Cooper, a British broadcaster the links between our "Western" diet tioned to provide a suitable medium.
on food matters, telling officials of a and heart disease, diabetes, hyper- · The primary requirement for the
company marketing Cornish Dairy tension, obesity and, pOSsibly, cancer. soil is good drainage. For a 35Chocolate Icc Cream that their prodWoodwanl recounts the destruc- square-foot layout in which the soil
uct "didn't come from Cornwall, tion of the great Middle Eastern and has a high clay content, add one or
wasn't made in a dairy and contained Mediterranean cultures resulting two wheelbarrow loads of sand to the
neither chocolate nor cream."
from mismanagement of food pro- bed to· help promote drainage. Herbs
Woodwanl said even organic agri- duction systems.
generally require extremely rich soil,
culture has maycd from its origins.
"Is this history or current affairs?" but a moderate amount (one wheel·
"As far as I can sec, organic farming he asks. "What are the key charac- barrow load) of organic matter is the only modern agricultural pro- tcristics in the decline of these $!Cit either compost, humus or composted
duction system that has been built civilizalions? Are there any sinulari- manure- dug into the soil will sup·
from a concept of health and nutri· ties with today?"
ply all the nutrients needed.
tion. Unfortunately. the organic
He says there are, including over- .
Autumn is the best time to begin
movement seems to have for@ottcn stretched food supplies, depleted preparing the bed. If the location is
about it."
. water resources and the loss of fertile part of the lawn, remove the sod and
Instead. Woodward believes, land.
dig up the soil with a shovel or pitchorganic agriculture is concentrating
fork. Even if the area is already a garon producing food without chcmi(George Anthan writes ror The den, it's a good i.dea to remove
cals. reckoning that success will have Des Moines Register.)
weeds and tum the soil. This is also
a good time to add sand and organic

IRS communications chief sometimes
blurs the line about where he ~orks

.

I

Ag based on health desired
By GEORGE ANTHAN
The Del Molnel Reglatlr

I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea~ant, WV

Sunclly, November 2, 1997

matter (especially manure) to the soil,
so that in the spring you can start ~n­
der plants without fearing that the
manure will bum their roots.
In the spring, plant herbs after the
last frost. The beginner will find it
easier to plant seedlings, available at
garden supply stores, than to stan the
plants from seed. Look for healthy
plant stock; strong plants have rich,
green foliage and no yellowing
leaves. And generally, it's better to
use pi '!'Its that have already been sue·
cessfully transplanted into pots
instead of plants still in starter flats.
Either way, make sure the plants
appear full and strong, not wilted.
Before planting, test the soil for
proper drainage by spraying the bed
with water. If the water pools and
does not drain well, add sand and
compost, then tum the soil over, laos·
cning it tO .a depth of 10 to 12 inches. Rake out the garden bed and
remove any rocks or roots that surface.
Position and space the pots, keeping in mind the mature size of each
plant. Although you want your garden to appear full and lush, crowding
the plants will inhibit their growth
and make them compete for moisture,
sunlight and nutrients. When you are
satisfied with the arrangement of
your herbs. place the plants into the
soil at the same depth as they were in
their pots. Water the garden thor-

oughly.
For some herbs, it is useful to sink
a large pot into the garden and plant
the herbs in the pot rather than
directly in the bed. Rosemary, for
example, is a tender peren~tal that
must be brought indoors dunng wm·
ter. To' reduce transplant' shock, merely dig up the pot and bring it inside.
This treatment works well also
with members of the mint family,
which are rather aggressive plants
that will spread underground and take ·
over a garden if uncontrolled. Planting mint in a sunken pot keeps its
roots from sprending.
·
Once the plants are well-established, you can judiciously begin' to
use the leaves for cooking. Picking a
leaf here and there will not damage
even a young plant -just don't be
too aggressive.

Using the Classifieds
Is as Easy as ...

BULLETIN .BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY
LARGE SELECTION OF
LANE ACTION
RECLINERS
ROCKERS, VVALL
HUGGERS, CHAISE
LOUNGE RECLINERS
$250-$425
· FREE DELIVERY
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Mon. thru Sat. 9·5; Ph. 446·0322
3
Butaville Pike
1OB Uberty Street
Kanauga, Ohio
Phone 446·9051
7;30-1 0:30 pm
Hoa·Down, Two·Slep, Clogging
2nd Sat of the monlh· Adams
· County Pickers
3rd Sat. Qf the monthCountry Grass
41h Sat. of the monthLiberty 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.
Grand Opening Nov. 1st
The Variety Shop .
LdCated ~56 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Hours:Mon-Thur 9am·8pm
Frl &amp; Sat 9am · 9 pm .
Never on Sundays
Assortment of name brands Lee, Duckhead, dress &amp; sports·
wear, plus sizes in ladies, 0-16 in
glrls.men &amp; husky boy 'sizes, top
of the line Fila, R~ebok , Nlke,
. Addidas
Come in and view
our merchandise!
Tommy Hlllfiger Sweal shirts,
Tommy Girl Sweat shirts, assorted colors. Nike sweat shirts,
Licensed and Embroidered
3-on-3 Benefit Basketball
Tournament
Guiding Hand School

Sat., Nov. 8th
8 am to 2 pm
Fee: $10.00 per team
Age Levels: 7-13
Pick Forms at Burlile Oil
Co. or register on day

Euchre Tournament
Sun. 2 pm Sharp
Court St. Grill
Pomeroy, Ohio

Mini Mall #2
New shipment of
childrens clothing
just arrived
326 2nd Ave.

Little Kyger Congregational
Christian Church
2598 Utile Kyger Rd. Cheshire
Annual soup supper and bazzal
Saturday Evening. November 8th
Serving begins at 5:00p.m.
Public Welcome
Macular Degeneration
Support Group meeting
Mon. Nov. 3 at12:30 pm at
Christ Episcopal Church
804 Main St. Pt.Pieasant

REVIVAL
Morgan Center Christian
Holiness Church
Preaching by Rev. James Arthur
Singing nightly by Harbor Family
Service Starts 7:30p.m., Nov. 2-9
All weleeme.
Look! Look! To allll)y
friends&amp; Co-Workers, in
Meigs, Mason, Gallia Co.
and the tri-State area. I am
now employed !!N&gt;uperior
Cadillac and Oldsmobile
in Barboursville, W Va.
across fromt he Huntington
Mall. If you need an Olds,
Cadillac, Jeep, Eagle,
Dodge, Chrysler,
Plymouth, Buick or
Pontiac. Call Pete Peck if
interested at
(304) 733·1111

Computer Imaging
Never make another hair
mistake
Receive a Video Tape with
your hair style changes.

Thurs. Nov. 13
One Day Only
Call for AppointmenlsNow.

Summer
Image

I

Turkey Shoot
Sunday, Nqvember 9th

10 am til?
Stationary &amp; trap shooting
Prices &amp; Raffles
Gallia County Gun Club
300 Buckrldge Rd. Gallipolis
446-9130

GRAHAM'S
UPHOLSTERY
Why buy new furniture
when we can make your
furniture as good as new.
We offer a large selection
of sample fabrics, new
foam and quality
craftmanship. Call 446·
3438 for a free estimate.
2205 Graham School Rd.
Gallipolis, Oh 45631
Now accepting Visa &amp;
Mastercard.

Creative Baking
Ideas for the
Holidays

Hair, Nails and Tanning Salon

446-6959
Locust Posts
for sale
·$3.00 each
446"6305

Grafters
Wanted

Taste 6 Recipes
Take Home a Recipe booklet
Get Tjps on Cutting fat Tips on
Moitifying Recipes Fun,
l 1nteresting and
FREE FREE FREE
Thursday, November 6th
7:00pm
C.H. McKenzie Ag Building
Beside the Fairgrounds
Call the Extension Office at
446·7007 to
Reserve Yur Spot!

Country Store Craft Sale
Sponsored ~y Greenfield
V.F.D. and Crime Watch
At. 233 in Gallia
Dec.5,6, 7

614·379·2449
10th Annual
Eastern Arts and Crafts Fair
will be held at Eastern High
School Nov. 8th Sat. from
9 am to 4 pm

446-2342 or 992-2156

FOR MORE INFORMATION

�. '

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

/IWlOlJt lCf_ t.1EtH S

: 005
Pnonlll
: ~L-:ON:::E::~-::,::-,:::N:':IId::";To:'7:11Hr:':':"A':"':'SO:::'II,

'VIcinity

:

ook--.

·

:
:

110

Tho Doadllno For Acctpdno Ap.
pllcltiono II Friday, N o - 7,
1887 5:00 P.M. For Addllional Jn.
torma~ Clllt14-4A1-3010. ua

-1·2·3-4·5,
inlldo,
Oct 30fl. Nov.
old bonito,
Juga. old
Smiling Voice??? 1·100·255· glaoa, old .,.,., ;una. inr..o. I
0800, Ell. 17111, f3.1111111n. 11+ gal. churn.
111vor
Sorv.U II U.S.~.
coin c1oc1t; 1831 Nd punch bowl
12 pc., model 33 Aomlflllton ~n·
G k-~
_40..,.,..-=-='=""':-:w:::-•Y~-::'::':'
I
glo .not rlllo, mony more ltomo,
.,.1 Year Old Black Sheep Dog, 35275BalhonAd,814*21138.
Neutorod, All Sholl To Good
pt, Pltesarit
1 021
1
::1ot:::me.::;::.:".:.:4-255-:::..;.::~·-:--~
&amp; VIcinity

· u·

Oacer • ,.. algae eater,

• muat have 55 gallon or larger

..... 114-1192-3250.

.

2 Malt Klnens, Litter Trelned,
614-245-5485.

Help Wanted

MiddlepOrt

·5:00 P.M., Mondor Thru Friday.
Acw11 Ta Human Reaourc. 0.
volopment
lo An AAIEE"
pfoyor,
. &gt;' Em·
r

110

110

Dovolopmonl DlrKtar For lluiiiCountr FamUy Planning A;lnc'f.

I Latloa To Bo1 811111

R~~qulre1

EJperlence. Provide

Loadorohlp To C..mprohonoiVe
Fundnalolng Program Wltlt
Empnolll• on CuhiYitlrt And Jn.

creating 11o1o&lt; 01111. E-lootct

In Plannod Giving And Copllll
Camp.l;no Do~,.blo. Bond Flt&gt;ADIIHI9TAA11YE ASSISTANT
aume, 3 Ptoleukmal .....,..._.
lmmedlata opening tor Adrnlnl• And Salory Aoctu-11 To l&lt;oJ
trotivo Allllotan1to E_,.tivo Ql- R A.wra, Planriod Ptnnitoorl Of
rector of 1he PalyrMr AUiance . Southoaat Ohio, 381 Alchlond
l'Dno In Ripley. Minimum Oullll- 1M. " ' - OH 4111111.
cationo:
High School Dlpi!1mt , . EOEJ£SP
Inside Salt 2322 Jackson Ave.
neKl 10 P.P.W .S. Mon. &amp; Tu••· quirtd, but AIIOCiltel DtgrH
preferred; outstanding lkilla a,..:l Domlno'a Pizzo Now AcoepUn;
Nov. 3rd I 411. 8-3.
experience with varioua comput- Appllcadeno At: Golllpcllo &amp; J'o.
er. t.rdnr• and tott.le; Heel· IIIOfDI',ApplyktPirlon.
80
Auction
lent or.! and written communlcaw
and Flea Market
DRIVER • TAKE HOIII-._
lion eldllo required: typiOQ IP&lt;Iod

110

,,,b* 1-IOO-otS7-17M.

old lovable AKC Reg malt
IEHOIII; toy poodle, 11/'wtr, to good heme, Wademayer'a Auction Service, or eowpm minimum. Salary negotiable beltd on experience.
• prtflf older peraon. 304-.88~­
Gall~i~ Ohio 814·379·27lll.
, 3323.
Po&amp;ilion open until filled. Submit IIO£HL Hia1 4 lbp 10 Pay - ·
refilme to Thomas C. Undll", E•· 181 Por Tho NIIIOnll Sunlll' 01
Rn1pduilll
: ::::3=1d=-.--an-d:-a:-l:-orn-,.'71o-ca=tlco--ca::'t ATTENTION VENDORS: Indoor ecuUvt
Director, Polymer A.l· 0r1vor WoQ11 Br Slgnl'lloL Gnoot A modlcol olllco In Point 1'1111·
Space $5.00 OUtdoor $3.00 Open
Homo
T1mo.
85'11 No lbuch. Solo ont II Mtlting candklatll lor tho
304c882·2741 .
llonco
Zone,
Mid-Ohio
Valley
ReEverydar. Store hourt i-5. Crawgional Council. PO Box 247, Or Toom: Van 0t Flalbad. Tolk position al receptlanlat We are
Bani! Hound Puppiea To A ford·• Flea Markel, Henderton, Parkorlburg,
To Our Oriww&amp;
WV 21101. EOE.
-In; a dotoll orlon!td """""
Good Homo, 614·256-1888.
:WV:.::.:
. 304-1!:::::.::.:7S-:.::5A::DA~.-.--:--with ••catlent communfe~~tlon
An
Ohio'
all
company
needs
ma1
C8narie&amp;. 304-e7s.4003.
Rick Pearaon Auction CompanJ,
olriUa. Thlt poolllon roq~lrot ex·
WWW.ROEHL.IIET
full time auc:tianelf, complete tllra pertan now In the Pomeroy
ttnlivo "'-'edge o f - o~
Dohlla Bulb&amp; 304-875-400tl
auction service. llcanstd arN. Reoardleu at experience,
fico prOCiduroL E-lonco wlllt
wtilt
M.E
.
Rtad,
P.O
BoK
688.
1815,0hio &amp; Wtal Vlrglnla, 30tModica! lllno;or Softwaro, CPT·
Darton.
OH
454Dt
,
llrivoro
' Registered black malt Cochitr 773-57850t304-773-54ot7.
4, and ICD-8 Coding 11 a plua.
Yauw Trlod 11to Root ..
Spaniol, ho to ;ood home (only),
FuiJ.Umo lfld bonltiiL Sond r:rJY·
An Ohio Oil Company Noodo Mo·
NOW
DRIVE
FOR
'IHIIESTI
tl4·84fl.3117.
90 wanted to Buy
or illllAI&lt; and rooumo 111: Box CW·
wre Person Now ln The Gallipolis
31 c/o Point Ploaoont Roelllor
To Good Home: Beagle UIJ, Compktta HouHhold Or Estatnl Ar•a. Regardlell 01 Experleric.-;
V~EXPAE:fo'r'
200 Main St. Pt. Ploaunl, wv
Houltbrolcen, Very loving Oogl Anv- Type 01 Furnltu,., Appllanc· Write L.O. Read, P.O. BoK 898,
NEWPAYPAC
25550.
814-388-8357.
eo, Antlque'o, Etc. Aloo Approloal _o...:Y"'....;n._OH_4_540_1·- - - 1
;,_..;:.;.:_:.-::-:---:::~--:-.-·1 Availablei814-3N-2720.
Exporiot tOld DtMrl
Yaung, small beautiful mounlaln
SIIGUS Earn Up To
AVON
I
All
Arou
Shlrlay
t1ett. houl8broken, ID good harnl Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil· Spear, :114-875-1428.
3e ·112 Conti Par Mlo
Oliy. 3().t..675o-4331.
var And Gold Coins, Proolattl,
TEAMS Earn Up 111
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold
li8 ·112 Conti Par Mit
60 Lost and Found
Rings, Pre-1930 u.s. CurrenC)',
AmNTION
NO CDU NO PROILIW?
Found: 1 Calico Cal Haa Been St&amp;rling, EIC. Ac:quisltions Jewelry
11,200 A MONTH
- U.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Average Earrings
lnexp'd Dolvonr Eam Up To
Oeclawed Front Pawl Only, A~. Gallipolis. 814-446-2842.
Branch Culler Ha1 Numerou1
tee.BOPorDay
Hou• Cla~ Vicinity: At 141 &amp; Rio
OponiOQLNo ExperlonceN-.
\'He T1111rin11. Start a· Grande, Mcintyre Park, 614·3711- Andquoo. top pricoo paid, River· oary. C~lllondoy 1113rd Only, g.
Boforo 111Z4117 And Earn
• 232C.
lnt Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio, 5{614}44tJ.7441
Top Wagoo. Ctuo Stzoo All
UITitld SO DON'T DEUYI
Found : Jericho Rd, male black/ Rull Moore owner. 61-4-892- Avon $8 ·$18/Hr, No Door '-To 2528
whltei dog, neutered. 304-675'
Door, Quick Cash, Fun &amp; Rllu·
2yr,

-

1567.

Antiqu... no item too large 01 roo
ameli. Also IIUites, app.ralaals,
Loll In Rio Grande: Reward! 1 refinishing, custom orders, 8UFemale long Haired Black &amp; 882.f5576.
Whitt Cat: 1 Male long Haired
81'0Wn Oeclawed Cat, tf Seen Or Clean late Uodel Can Or
Found, Pltlll Call 814·2-'S- Truchis, 1990 Models Or Newer,
1101.
Smlth Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eas1• Loat: On LeGrande Blvd., Black ""Ner&amp;Ja. Galipolia.
Arm Bend Fram Costume Call J 1 O'a Auto Par11. Buying ultl14o448oo429t.
~ vehides. Selling parll. 304·

Loot: A..,ard, Chlld'o Pot, In tho
Vicinity 01 Gallio Academy, Block

5003.

Cal With Purple Collar, Call61444&amp;-3537.

Loll: light cotorod Calico ca~ bo·
hind vet't 11llice on Mulberry
Avenue. brawn HN collar, 81-4·
' 742-3068.

70

Yard

Sale

Gallipolis
If, VIcinity

s...

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

. StuH, T.V.'o. SWIIP&lt;tfl, Gino·
• - • · Clotllla. Loll 01·1-t 4
' Roome Full. 1et8 McCormlclt
: Road. Gllllpotio, 8:30-?

lilt.

• rr..ntory Conlol/l'urcha~....

llaek!1ound
• Worl&lt;ilg K.-JedQo 01
Compu*L
·~••Wilh....._.
SuppiO. A Plus.

Apply In Person.

Muat Ba Paid lo

Adn-. D•dllno: 1:00ptw tho
dar baton the ad 11 to run,
Iunder I llondew edhlon·
1:00pm Frldoy.

Garll8l -

ARBORS AT GALLPOLIS
1111 PINECREST DRIVE
GALUPOUS, 01145831
114-4AIH111

EOE

ACCESS To Human R11ourc1

November 3-ol, 403 DwlloprMnl Ia AccePdng AppllLatloy, 10.....pm. SwMpor, lug. cadons for The Following Poti·
gage, new por ..ble party 1011, lion:
oultl. - . mon'l jackoll.
Flaance Alllatant !Account•

-.---

11-~~
1.11L,2 .. 1l1JL

Llnablt 1b A...rl

PlouaCol:

EOE

lliF

please

1·:114·372·8067 or 1·
800-882-t3117 Ext5t39 or 1787.

Computer Users Needed. Work

Own Hro.. $20K To S50K /Yr. 1·
1100·34&amp;-711l6 x 1173.
Cosmotalogi1t Nuded, Gaurantaed Waga1, Paid Vacation,

Free CEU Hour, Full&amp; Part Wan~
od Other Benellll Included, 814·
4411-7287.
DAVII WHITE SERVICES
Ful- T11tt HVAC Nalllation
-Quali-Prr' 11fm' Dtmlnor
-EMCerC 'n
•2 Yoore Exporlonoo

DriYM

-

GOOD FREIGHT

Homolloll\\leokondol
Up To .3oiJ Par llilol
• Good-Ill
ConverMionoiol

COL-A &amp; 1Yr. OTR Exp.
Coli Kon BOO.,'!GS.1DA5
Wookondo!Evoningo

-

800-Bil3-e782

ClDI.,

318,

Gal"""' Ohio 4!11131.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wri~ht
ANo1'11EJl, C.&lt;&gt;r&gt;O ~MoN 'fo
..£.11111) t&gt;A1'5j;:

A

JAMES would like to thank

the aides, nutse5 and
physicians on 4 West at
Holzer Medlc.11 Center lor
thelr care, compassion
and assistance during his ·
su.y in the h05pital.
A special ;hanks to Rev.
Mel Mock, Rev. John
Arnold and Rev. Richard
Unroe. We m grateful to
our famlly, friends and
neighbot5 for prayet5,
visits, ards and food.
\bur
expression
of
5}'1llpathy
· and
thoughtfulnes5
were
sincerely appreciated and
your kindness will nevtr
be fotgouen.
Wife, Nanna James and
Children

aa.

... Avon. ... 8148~980011

FUN 111HIIUII

II You Havo A Groat AUIIUdo,
Love To Travel, Work In Shorlll

Sneokoro, Then Tttle .lobo For
._, Me E..,..._ N111 pgry,
C.U JoMIIoi (Toft·FfH)1-t00·
li8iJ.1129, (8 A.M ... P.M. Clny)

·-lion·---·--

412, c/o GaiMpollo Dollr, Trlbuno,
825 Third Allonuo, Gall pcllo, OH
4!1113::::.;,;,1.
JlnlodliSot•lclo

180 . Wanted To

aorvlcoa lor o buoy olllco In
Point Ploaaanl Call 1·800~22·
8130 lot~
Port·Timo Holp In Ro!tU
Store Down_,, Gllllpol' Send
Aotumo. P.o. Box 141, tlallipalio.

011451131.

ANY ODD JoBS: Extorlor point·
lng, ehrube 6 woode trimmed,
l1nd1caplng, tidewalkl edged,
IIW!I care, Oil:. Call BIU 304-8757112.
Furnlwro ropa~. rollnllh and ,..
IMtion, alao CUllOm O&lt;dorL Ohio
Volloy Alllnllhlng Shop, Larry
Pltlilipo, "4-02.0571.

••••••

Apply In Ptr1on At 311 Buck·
riiiJI Rd., - . OH.

In Mnnory ol'
'J
My Husband

'ho

1Illl/917. 71611997

}onus has you in his
arms on your
birthday. Tom, but
w~ lov~ you and
rrmrmbrr you forever

Happy Birthday
LQve,
wifo, NiM Dmnry

Nov. 2, 1995
A million times we've
wanted to talk to
you, A million times
we've cried. if love
alone could have
saved you,
You never would have
died. In life we loved I
you dearly,
In death we love you
still.
In our hearts you hold
8 place
That no one can fill.

open
He saw you needed
rest.
God's garden must be
beautiful

In life I loved you
dearly
In death I love you still.
A million times I lhink
of you
A million times I've
cried.
If I could have saved
you
You never would have
died.
It broke my hean 10 lose

$

310 HomeI for Sal e

BUY HOMES AS LOW AI
f4,DDG 1 ·5 lldrm., Locll GDV'l I

Bank Ropo'a Call 1·100·522·
2730, X1108.
COUNTRY HOME
ON I ACRES,
SCOTlOWN, 01110.

daughters Sheila

&amp;

Home In country with 38 acres.
onl)' 7 years old. with two bedrooms, living room, kilchen bafl.
udllry room, storage builclng. wilh
cellar, one car garage. Located

on Bailor Run Rood, 8th nouN on
lolL Reduced ,85,000 firm, con
614-384-2097 or 814·84fl.21138.

crea. Ideal starter home. Buc:h
St, Po-OH. 304-182·2Dn.

Red/Bik 53K miles, auto, sunroof , all options ,
recovered theft, Insurance paid oil, over $7000 First
$4500 614·949·2311 Days 614·949·2644 Evening

Expanding company needs 10
full-time people. Permanent position.
Average earnings are:

Leslie Lemley, Auctioneer

S 1200 a month

614-388-9443
Auction Barn 614·245-9886

Call Monday for details at:

.. Sates every Friday at 6:30 p.m.
.. Second Friday night is our Antique Sale

446-7441

ANTIQU~ &amp; COLLECTIBLE SALE SUNDAY
NOV. 9,1997 AT 11:00A.ML
HOWERY AUCTION HOUSE LOCATED ON
RT. 32 &amp; 50 MI. WEST OF ATHENS, OHIO.
Complete Inventory from Country Picker:
High back bed; flat wall cupboard; side board;
high mantle; wash stands; hoosier cabinet; nice
high organ; 10 cent upright coke machine model
H81A; stack bookcase; 4 drawer clark spool
cabinet; old cupboards; sets of 8 &amp; 6 chairs; ·
bedroom suite; small wriling desk; marble Inlay
dressers; highboy; small wr~ing desk; !library
IBble; church bench; 30's &amp; 40's. pes; stands;
mrrors; clocks; trunks; wooden chum; oil lamps;
arrow heads; washborads; dazBy chum &amp;
others; broad axe; cast Iron seats; sed Irons;
dolls; approx. 40 stone jars &amp; jugs some with
lots of blue writing on them; old canes; rug
beaters; glassware &amp; glass basket; cow bells;
and much much mora.
Everything from picker· no additions- cteanlng
wall to wall- nothing refinished • ALL AS
FOUND II
TERMS: Cash or check with
ID
Plenty of parking· Aefreshmenl8 available
Auctioneer: Rodney Howery
614·698·7231 or594-3780 or 1·80()..264~

The Arbors at Gallipolis it oeeklns carina, professional
lndivkluals to work as N•nlns Atllllantl. We offer the
foUowlng benefits and more:
· Shift dlfferenti.lland flexible ochedules,
• Excellent hetlth benefits including dental,
vision and prescription card.
• Paid holidays and vacation.
- Paid orientation.
• Free Uniforms.
Please apply in ·person.

Opportunities-We Are Expanding
We are expanding on another sales center and now have

several posHions open . Must be herd working, honest, and
care about oostomer. Benell1s Include Vacation, Holidays,
Family Insurance, life and dlsablllly insurance, and lucrative
401 K. + PrOm Sharing · No Sunday work.
1. General Manager · $40K to???
will consider management lralnee

2. Salespetsoo • full time avg. $23 to $40 +K
3. Used home repair and sales ·lull or part time
4. Experienced Home Service· Heating, Cooling or Seclional
satup people 'Siartlng pey range $10·$12 per hr.

poal\w.

H thla aound1 llka you then
p(- 1pply .tor Mnd 1
mumeto
37121 Hocklng Dr.
In, 0H 43138

I
f

l250tmo. DepoaU &amp; 'releranc:ea.
304-876-111171or 304-t71-4208.

ollnd, 8.11 acroo, largo building,

Mobile home lor rani on farm,
good deal for right person, wUI
accept 1 small child, references

;;.=====c.:....-2 HouMa. S04-e75-2441.

1
5111-2853.
2-3 boclroom houM In Pomeroy, 2
car
gar1ge. u•• lurnace, $400
Mini farm, building ollaa, paotur·
plus dopcli~ 81 ..742-2367.

814·84fl.3127 0&lt; 304.075-4575.

2 I 3 bedroom mobile homea
$280·$300, sewer, wa1er and
troth lndudod, 114-i82·2l67.

2bdrm. aptl., total electric, appliance• rurnilhed, ~ndry room
facUitle&amp;, close 10 schOol in town.
Applications avallable at : Village
Green Ap11. 149 Of caR 614·i92·

2 bed;oom 12J85, clean, nl;a.

required. 304-157&amp;-2950.

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN
Thurldll'f, November 6, 1997
at7:0D p.m.

320

Mobile Homes

CHRI~TMA~

'84 14185 ""' bedroom, ona both,

oU applancot, Island tlnk, cotJeo.

dtal ceil/no•. mu1t move, $QOOO

000. 114-582..a73.

12x6D 2 Bedroom Mobile Home

1078 Cleyton mobile home, 3
bedroom, 1 6 hoi beth, iocalod In
Apple Grove, Oh, on 2 ac:rtt ol

18711 Buddy, Excollont Condition,
With Soma Furniture On Aonlod
LOt, 114·441-1327, 814·441·
21105.

t1183 Country Clllllt: Houlhua 2
Btdrooml, Garden TutJ, Newly
Aomodoiod, Excollont Condition,
18.000 000. 114 381 88111, et4-

.

1883111\!alcck 14XOO AH

E~ecticw

2 Badrooma. Major Appliance,
IB,DDG HoQollbll, 114-A4W311
Allor 1 Alii J:or Jomll.

1885 14x70 Wlndoor, 110.500,
8f4-11112-3ea4 0&lt; 11111112 &amp;11113

AUCTION

Patriot Auction Barn
From Ollltporta, take Routt 141, then
left onto Route 775, turn right onto
Plllrlol Road. Watch for 1lgns.
New Dealer
Truck load of all new merch•ndln
~veryone Welcome
Tools, lots of toys, jewelty clocks, lamps,
pictures, cookware sets, doffs, lots of
ceramics, lots of Christmas Items, gloves.
pocket knives, bells, pillows, lots of
banks, remote and radio control toys, rots
of porcelain, large variept rocking
animals. Large speakers, cars and lrucks.
car AM/FM radio with cassette. 1OO's of
Items not listed. Christmas trees and
Christmas decoratiOns.
Something tor evety member of lhe family
Eats
Checks ·
Positive JD
MARUN WEDEMeYER AUCTIONEER
. UC.3615

614-379-2720

181l6 Clayton 14x70 3br, 1 beth,

heal pump. atovl, ntW r.arigtla·
Ill, llDOd oond. S12.500 nog.
1882 Oak oad 14x85 2br. 1 blft.

Not ·responsible for accidents
or loss of property

oxc. cond. 110,500. Call :104·
875-3000. 8aoHipm.

Go.-

1ge7 Modtl Slnglowldo1 Mull
11.000, 304-13113100
1ot T1mo Buyoro E·Z Financing 2
Or 3 llodooomo Around f2DO Par
..... IIOQ.251·8070.

Cuotom Built Dou-dll Ovor
250 Available Opllone, You Plclt
Tho Floor Pion, Yau Conbol Tho
Price. Thouaanda Le11 Than
Othor Cullom Bulh Homoa. fac·
tory Dlrec~ No Middleman, 304·

Public Sale and Auction

PENN'S WAREHOUSE .
2230 HONEYSUCJILE LANE, WELLSTON, OHIO

'

7311-3408.
Dl1coun1 Uoblle Home Pat11 I
ACC81:10rlet, Vlnrf Skirting

$288.85, Anchoro U .OO, Awn·
lne•. Doors, Windows, P$urnblng
Supplloo, Woter HoaiMO. Furnoc-

448·8418llomaa'o SuPPI~ 1381
Salford Schoo( Rei, Galllpollo,
Ohio.

Doublowldo Oloplayo Mull Go.
It ,DOD, 304-7311-3408.
Ooublowlde On Land U&amp;O Do·
paoli ~Ired. 3Q4. -7295.
Froo olf, koo lklrt 14x7Q 3 bodroom, 11.055/down, 1181/mo.

CII1.8QQ.881-om.

ANNOUNCEMENT S

BINGO
MON. &amp; WED.

6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST

$1,000.00
$50.00 OR MORE
PER GAME

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

1-614·384·3645

FAU YARD Slll. SAVE IIG IUCKSII CASH AND (MIIY, 110 R11111Nl
1. Wood-Beams· tO", 14", 16" 1a11, to 12' 10 48' long. Example .
1O'x48'· $20.00
2. Spruce Beams· 14· · 16' lo 20' to 30' long. 1 314 lh~k. $1 .00
per lin. tL

3. Glulam Beams, 12··15"·16" to B' to 20' long. 3 l/2 thick
$1 .00 per lin ft . (garage door headers).
4. Rim board plus mede from O.S.B. 1 t/B thick 9• and 16" wide
12' 10 24' long. Price example- 12'· $2.00, 24·$4.00
5. Prime grey wood siding, made from O.S.B. B" wide 16'1ong

S2.SO ea.
6. Short length I Beams, 6'·10'·12' .25~ per lin. ft.
7. S/8" and 314" x 4'x8' o .s .B.· $8.95 ea. so pes. or up $7.95
ea. Sq. and T.G. edge.
,
8. Painted metal rooling and siding, 38" wtde lengths, from 4' to
30' 29 guage· $39.95 sq. 26 guage $45.00 sq . 21railor loads.
9. Over 5000' pes. of paneling and lila board in stock. 3000 pes
on display. From 3/Sihick solid oak lo 5/32 mlndy board. 12 to
15 panerns of bath paneling. Prices Irom 5/32 Aul~mn Oak- ·
mindy board $2.99 ea. to 3/B Golden Oak all Oak wood $24.95.
·10. l/4.x4'x8' unfinished Luan plywood· $9.95.
11. t/4"x4'x8' 1empereo hardboard undenayment $8.95 ea .
12. Also havo114• oak and birch unfinished plywood. Lowes!
prices in town.
13. 48" Aluminum level. Reg. $8.95, Now $4.98 ea.
14. Foam insulation board 4'x8' 3/6" tltlck $2.SO ea 1/2'·$4.1l6
3/4"·$5.98 ea. SO pc lift SOt lift 50~ off per pc. Foil on one side.
15. While fiberglass bath lubs, Rag. $89.98 now $59.95. No •
Returns.

16. 4' and 5' Acrylic and fiberglass showers $99.95. Bone only.
17. White and colored lub shOwers $169.95.
18. Whlnpools from $399.95 to $1495.95. Corner whirlpools
$995.00
19. White, wall hung lavllorys, 20"x18". Reg. $39.95 Now
$9.95.
20. Pedeslallaultorys. Reg. $69.95 Now $19.95
21 .Mixed colors pedesallavilorys. Reg. $89.95 Now $13.95
22. Bldels In 3 colors Reg. $69.95 Now $19.95
23. 1 pe . commodes Reg. $199.95 Now $99.95
24. 2 pe. commodes Reg. $69.95 to $89.95. Now $49.95to
$69.95. Mixmatched col~rs . $39.95 ea.
25. E&gt;cterlor vinyl plastic shuners. Saveralslze and colors. Save
half.
26. SO lb. box palel nails. Roe. $29.95 Now $8.95.
27. Nureery sleek trees and shrubs 45% off reg. pricet.
28. 6'x9' llnoluem rugs. Reg. $19.95 t!_ow $7c95 or 21or $15.00.

Waler Furrilhed, 814--388-1701.

ioaVt2 Bedroom Mobile Home, ~ The
Country Large Outbuilding Gar· Futnlshld EHiclency S~re Balh,
don Speco On 7 112 Acre' $350/ lt80/llo., Utilltiot Pltd, 607 SecMo., 814-367-(1433.
ond Avonuo, Galllpolla, 814-4410573, Allor 7 P.M.
2 Bedroom Trailer For Rent, 61-4448.q722.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Mobllt Homo FO&lt; Ron~ et4o441- ESTATES,
52 Weotwood Drive
1;:2::.:N:.·::Stato::::.;:RL:.;7:.,__ _ __
!rom 1210 111 $334. Watk ., snap
,1 ·
Ono Bedroom trallor With UtUity 1 movloo. Call 614·441·2508.
Room, 5 Mlnutn From Town Equol HoutinQ~.
1275 Month, S2CO Oopooit. 2 filii· Smoa Elllcltnc:y Apartment Living
eroncet Roq~rod (614)446 8342
Room, Bedroom Contlinod. Klt&lt;f&gt;.
&amp; Bath, Furnllhod. Downstalra
Ttwoo bedroom mobile homo, no on
Uni~ 614-441-2802.
P&lt;tto. et4-11112·1i858.
Troller lot for rom, roleroncoa ••· Tara Townhouse Apartmenta,
qulrod. 304-87s- 1078 ,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2
1.:::;;.:::.:;.;..;,;.::..;;;;::_ _ __ Floors, CA. 1 112 Bath, Fully Car·
Two bedroom uallor, mull hovo pOled, Adult Pcol &amp; Baby Pool,
deposit and roloroncoo, 614-992· Pilla, Start S3501Mo. No Pets.
lease Plus Security Depotll R•
_2il_lll_._ _ _ _ _ _ __

L
Uke new lnaidt &amp; out. built 8 )'81111 ago. Immaculate c-.,. You'll
feel an atmolphere of openn.a and complete tranquillrty as )'OU
view tT'Ie scenic rolling countryside from the living room &amp; dining
room or this 3 bedrooms, ranch s¥e home. Share our enthusiasm
and see this 15 A. ot Wooc:ftlnd, Puture lend, &amp; Homesite for
1)"""'!_K N~e 24'&gt;40' Garage &amp; Worl&lt;lhop, Pond, 20'&gt;&lt;24'. Stora;e
more· Call- tr783
·

PHONE 446-9539
WILUS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 4411 1539

WOOD HE..UTI', INC

qui red, 814-44&amp;-3481, d 14·4•8-

32 LOCUST STREET, GAWPOUS, OHIO 45631
Allen C. Wood, Broker • 446-4523
Ken Morgan, Broker. 446-0971
lim watson 251&gt;6102
Jaanelte Moore, • 256-1745
Patricia Ross .o.,

0101.

LOGHO~ES
cuer~y

1 and 2 bedroom aniiJ'tmen'• fur~
~
nllhed and unfurrilhed, aecurlry
deposit required, no pelt, 614·

~

on 218, located appro11 . sl11 has had some up-dates. Newer
miles from GaUipolil, offers 3 siding, newer roof, plus it offef1
Br's, attached gerage, ruu khchen appliances, 3 Br's, 2
bathS, located in R.V. school
I&gt;Sml. SIO'O

district. 140'1.
1137· PRICE REDUCEDilllls
Aanctl home has an eaay care
lawn, one car garage, apro11 . ,1~ OLDER 2 STORY HOllE,
1040 BQ . ft. ot IMng apace, has 7 rooms IOtal and 2600 eq.
fl. of living space, partial bsmt,
tocated on S.A. 7 South.

home this year!
Appalachian
Slt'Uelurca has been a.

Tractors, Guns, Trucks, Autos, Boats

1 "'"uo"

several out buildings located on

lllil 62&gt;&lt; 165 lot .

lhc log home
ror over 15
ycnrtl . . ChnoFc from oVer

Take US 35, 10 miles south of Jackson,
Turn left on Vega Rd. Signs posted
47 Farmall 'Super M, 47 Farmall M, Oliver 70,
Lowboy tractor wllh plows, disc, and blade, 1979
4x4 pick up 67,000 miles, 1981 Suzuki 350
1 2 wheel trailer, trailer axels, Homelile
water pump, air compressor, bla~ksmHh Iorge,
vice, Troybuilt tiller, Trc)ybuilt chipper/Vac, 8000
generator, Homelile lellf blower, IBble saw, 5 It
Hog, wheel barrow, 10 and 12 ft. boats, boat
:::~rs: metal flle cabinets , turtle shell luggage rack,
air conditioner, camper stove and refrigerator,
lurnHure, 54 It trailer lull of merchandise, and
lmot·el

1

70 slandard mudcls or

1131 IN TOWN LDCATKlN· 1144- A Real Nice Briel&lt;·
What a Deal, Two homes for on -a quiet street offers- •
the Price of One. Main Hou11 23 baths, full basement that ·
has 210 3 Br'o, 1 112 balhl, lull partially finished , 10 K 60 deck,
bsmt, smaller houH hal 2 car gatage, woodsy beet&lt; yam.
Br's, could be rental Of guett

custmn •lcsign one

oouse. S50's.

Call ot· \'!'rite fur mort:

I
l

'

L!!l

1131 RANCH HOME locoted 1141 Thl• A•nch Sty.. Hom.

cHiciency,

durability "nrl flexibility
in design arc a few of the
rca~ona
w·lty

~2·2218.

-

114-446-1086 or 1100 fi4.1066

.

Comfoa·t, tonvenicnc:e,

Camilic&amp; n·i!l Luild a l~g

Public Sale and Auction

lnoldo, 614·742·1345, lf4·892·
8111.

2 Bedroom In Gollipollo, so 112
Grape Stroot, $250/Mo., Only

References. Otpallt. •3251mo. 3711 ,EOH.
Discoun1 with prompl payment
No PilL 304-882·31121.
3 bad room opt. 304· 773·9171

~~~ja t:~'=-~~oalt. r=====P;;u~b;;::l;:lc=Auctlon

1

tl, flberglata Sttpl, Call 114·

HOWERY'S

STATE TESTED NURSING
ASSISTANTS

2·1 12 acre lata, 2-1 acre Iala.
I1,8DGH. County wallr, 11-lc.
rood, •collon1 hunting • •· 304-

Three bedroam house I~ Syra·
cuae, basement, garage, new
wlndowo, dtcklnd Ill romodolod

groemd, 3Q4.2T.I-Of82.

Household items, antiques, collectibles, glassware, misc., some furniture. Good quality, clean merchandise every week!

$

Avol_...,

Eatltt Generel

p.ttt.

1300/mo., uditioo paid. 304·87588117.

----.!..::===:..;:====----~~:~I·~Sa~;t. November 8th altO a.m.

Early consignments phone
367·0416
388·0458
367·7902
Antiques, collectibles, glassware, old toots,
much more.

Lemley's Auction Barn

088 a:MJa

1bedroom. No arnoklno. no

1183 Mobllo With Porch11, 2
Bodrooma, Scone Vlow On Roccoon Crook Noor Cora, on Cora
Mill Road, 1350/llo., Senior Dlocount Avollablt, et 4·878·5532
Altar I .

2118.

mile Eut or Rae&amp;ne, 11•-a•G·

For Solo, tl4-44&amp;.q722.

Nov. 7, 6:30p.m.

ltldy by

171-55:12.

3btdrooma, basement, gal'lge.

Bidwell Auction House
Tuesday Novembar 4 7:00 pm
Open Tues 1O:oo am to 6 pm for consignments

Stanely

meror, new wlndowa.

November f, 1350 pluo dtpoalt,
nol.-poll,l14-eN-7244.
Pomoroy, 107 PIHoanl Ridge, 3
badroom, 1 and haH beilll. $312
pi d
•• ,
1 1 ov1nlnge 8f4·
ua apoet.-

1

for Sale ·

1.===:;:~~:::;~~~~~~~==~

&amp; T - fO&lt; Ronl: Troller:
2 a,.~......, CA, 1400/Uo., Plue
Dopoll~ No Po.. Houoe: 3 Bodroome. • -.. • Dopollt, 1147117-434&amp;, et4-441H18711.
Nice two bodroom houoo In J'o.

Rill

1 Btdroom Apartmtnl On Filii

Kitchen, dlnlno room, 2 bodraom,
beth, INing room. front &amp; back full.
lllngth pcrchH, gao furnace, city
water, oul buildin9, garage, 112

114-84fl.8004.

1991 TOYOTA MR2

u-~.

Apartments
for Rent

1hl5 lroUtr, 2 bodroom, 1250 Avonuo, GaiUpollt, 1250/Wo.,
por month, coii114-742-211A.
Pluo .......
...,..,lit.lfol-440-1071.
14x70 1/lllor, 2 bedroom, 1300 1 Bedroom Furnilhod 011 Sboot
por manit, Call 114-742-2714.
Parkin;, UdiiUn Pold, 814-44111883 14x70, 2 llodooomo, Cloan, 3&amp;73.
S-ao Large Yard, Coro Setting 1 Bedroom Near~ Holzer, WID
At 4844 Cora Will Road, Noed Hook-Up, Gao Hea~ I2SIIIIIo., •
Relllrtnc11 &amp; Crtdlt Chock, IU· Utllid11, No Poll. 11.._.2!157.

hllloldo
croomEaoemont
colored Nlco
2 BadHou•
Galipolo,
COIICroto bohlnd
block houoL
Kitchen
With- Appllancoo,
Wuhlr
Dryer Hook·Up. Oopollt,
NEW DOUBlE WIDE AEPO, by ntcooolty by buyor. Atkin; f4251Mo.,et 4 448 2800,
novor livid ln. Owner llnancifttl 1440 P&lt;tr aero. Wrltllcall Paul
••lrb&amp;t 304-7&amp;&amp;-56el.
Para.r, 810 L.akecrtll Drive, Sen· Two bedroom hau•• and one
oca, SC 2SNI72, (-882~871).
badraom oportmont 1n Mlddioport.
0akwood 28x&amp;e 3 badroom, 2
et4-1102·2t78.
11
bath, otartln; at 1188 por mo. Wanted to bur· acreaeoln Moi;e
Coi1.8QQ.881.0m.
County, Prtlorobly Molgo Local Two bedroom nouoa with otovo
School Dl1~ic~ etA-882·5053 •~ and rafrivoroa, dopooit roqulrod,
OUIET COUNTRY SETTING wilt Ill lpm.
n o - poll, et~-3CIGO.
bHutilul moblll homo, forDid 10
1111. FINANCING AVAILABlE.
Two Bodroomo, Aornodtlod Llu
304-755-51185.
New, Full B a - 1111uno1 Gal,
1"!'":":"'':"!'"---:--:::-~- Two Car Garage, Prlvato Drlvo
~-~ .':8:." Col Ctwtlo 410 Houses for Rent
Through Woodo, Contor of 180
Acroa Woodland 011 County
Sin;Ill Parent Program. Why Aont 2'badroom homo, cloon, r11pac~ Road and Routo 21 7 Call
When Yau can Own. Spoclal Fl· ablo. Roleroncu DopooiL $300/ (814)1143 21181, (837)111111-7185
nancln;
3Q4.-7llll5.
mo. Dlecount with prompt pay·
mtnt No 1)111. 304-182-3828.
2 Bedroom&amp;, Vinton Area, Stove,
Taka Dollvorr In Sop I No Pay· I~:--'----:--:---- A8f 1·- ., w 18 &amp; 'Jirolh Paid
mant Until Dec. 1H7 100-251· 2 bedroom. ctntrllllr, bi.Mmtnt,
• · Two bedroom ttailer, garage, cen' • .. ra '· a '
5070
no amoklng, no pttl. l-4001mo. + New Carpet, Very Neat &amp; Clean, tta1 air, quiet lol olf Bradbury ·Ret,
·
ulilltlaa. 30Wl'WII87.
1250/Mo., Pluo Dopolll~ 814·368- $300 per montil plua dtpooil and
TIRED OF WEST VIRGINIA..,...
-·
utllitlo~ no pet' 814-11112·5Cl30.
Bod
Hun
••• ~
In• 10 loxao, muot ... '"" home 2 Bedroom, Wat" Paid, Nur
•
...,
n..•• _ If' •••1100
3
room,
.,.. ac:cep-, ..rge 440
Apartments
ncwi·AoktorSid3Q4.75S.51i88.
~-. ~·
lo~ S295/mo. +deposit 304-875·
2 Houoeo· 1~br S400/mo. H!llr ~77:.:83::·~---:-----:-:-- I---,-..,
· ,..fo_r_R_en_t_....,_
350 Lots &amp; Acreage

cluded, privacv- ftnct In back,
apllt rail In lront, two porche1.

8580 St. Rt. 588 (Old Rl. 35)
just south of Rio Grande

Help Wanted

•

3bf j DOll\ . . . - . 1350/rno. •

PomtrO)' pall Hubbarcra Granhouoo on A/S. Lond locoltd on

1001
100 lo~ thrH bedroom, two run
baths, large lrldr combo, kltlfr
with -ltlng lp. utility room.
comes equlr,Ptd with IIOYt, ,.,
klglfltor, d 1h wolhor, and gar·
bttge tliopollll, conlral air, two oar
garage and atorage building In-

.,

311odooom., ..._ RDom. Don, 2•
u••..
Ballte Gildon
Tub. WIW CarP&lt;tl
Laundry RDom. Ba&amp;u~lul. 3:pm .
(1 4"""- l:pm. 1 ,_..1
3 Bldtoomo. 2 Bath HOUH On
firm In Qdla Co.. - · Dryer
Hook·Up, Dlohlollhor, IU·3711·
211311.

Pol

Mason· Modular home on

Friday,

Crestlyn ·

HELP

8 Mlloo From Proclovllle, 3,400
Sq. Fl Living Aroa, 2 Stooy, 3
ilodfDOtnl, 2 112 Bolho, Flnlthod
Baament. Fireplace, Like New, 4
Yaaro Old $175,000, 814·043·
2824, Or 614-843-2522

Hauae and property', approx. 41•

Public Auction

Sadly missed by

Nice-..,

ur.

e'n..am..

~

410 Houltl for Rent

1,.._.7fl.l171

~~·:·•;•
LEFT. 304-755-7181.
~~~~;;;~~~~.N~E~W~B~A~N~K~!p~~·

••

Public Sale and Auction

We love you Mom

Lots &amp; Acreege
IIIIIJNEIIUND

llolgo C..: O.Wilo,
Trocte,· 11 Ac:rll tfi,ODG Or I
Acree l17,000, County Water.
Dyoevllo. Why
Lot Ront? I
~ 1111 cdmn or ull!lll homll. 2 Acroo 17,000 • 1,000 Down
bodiooma. StaNte~ at f2llll5, 1128/lolo., Paid In 5 Yoare. Ntlr
Quick dtll..,y. Call t14·315- Tuppo11 Plaine, Btu 5 Acru
Homt IIlii On KHbau\h ·fOil·
81521.
lOCI Ad., I14,GOQ EL 0t ogot/tot
llobitl Hatne.. 2 os•a ... on
Calh PrD$24,5001
Pooalblt Land Can~ ~
ClOwn City, OHo, l14-2!ie-1744. · Ollila C..: o.Mipolla. Noillhbor·
Ad .. 10 Acroa -..r ~
NEW 14X80 2 0&lt; 3 BEDAOOIII. Sltta 118,000 0t 22 Acroo With
ccmu with ale I lklrting, 11711 Pond NOW 124,000. Friendly
mo. FREE DELIVERY. Call lor Rld;o 10 Acroo 114,000, 8.5 Act·
marolnlo3Q4.75&amp;-5886.
11 t7,11DQ o; 18 Acru 118,000,
Now 1888 14170 dvM bodroom. County Wallr. T11n1 Run, Lilt
lncludll 8 momhl FRfE lot ront. OnoltO Acroa 110•000 •
lncludlt skirting, deluxe atepa cau for FrH Maps + OWner F~
and oolup. Only 1187.01 P&lt;tr nanc1na lnlo. TIM 10., on Uatod
month with t1075 doWfl. Coli! · Prlcoa0nCU11PurchuHI
800-837-3238.
Imp v d
u I
Now 28180 3 or 4 bod room.
n "' 0
ocrllgl· ~• ge
County (Pomeroy): approx. d'lrH
1311,818. FrH dol lvory. f·10 ,._
- ocrtelocattd ealt pn 124 from

RE OS ON' v

Toll frH (1) 800·2111-8000 Exl
H-2814 For Cu"onl LllllngL

Red/Bik, 107K miles, 5 spd, sunroof, all options,
w/Warranpt, minor damage, repaired, $6500 OBO,
614·949·2311 Days • 614·949·2644 Evening

tor

Opportunity basis.

41&amp;-1087Wu11SHI

Card of

•

are available on an equal

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homoo

Public Sale and Auction

'lM fami!!J of!Marion£. 'Winston ·Woufi £if:! to
tfrank_ famif!J, frUnis ana newliDors for Rft.a
woris, ronis, footf, ffcwers, TIWIIe!J, pra!JerS ana all
tzyrusions ofsympatfi!J auring tk time of our foss.
)t sptc/4{ t/ipnQ to t!U (ja{[iJI. County
1
'Emlrgtnc!J !Mttfiu{ Strvius, !lfofur !lfosp!td
'Doctors ana staff. '%'rJ. Calvin Minnis, McCoy
Moore '}'U1IU4! :Homt, .hnerican Ltgion of'1/inton,
Wi[{iam 'Wra!J tk trumpetur, tk pall-6tarers ana
af( w!W fiatf part in t!U servia.
Special WmQ to tk ftzaw of ProvUhnu
!Missionary 'Baptist Cliurtli for t!U ftlUnusfUp gatft.
ering. Our sincm th4n(J ani r;oa's 6ksslngs to
all.

knowingly accept

atlvertisements lor real estate
which ;a in violaUon of tho
law. Our- are hereby
informed that 81 tlweiMngs
advertised in this newspaper

71 o Autos for Sale

Auctioneer

you,
But you didn 't go alone.
For pan of me went
with you
day God took you
home.
Sadly missed by Wife
(Wanda), Daughler
(Rebecca), Son (Gregory
· &amp; Janet)

This -.paper wia nol

From P8nnles On $1 Oellnquenl
T&amp;J, Repo's, REO'a. Your Arta.

·
Cm.
Apprentice Auctioneer Larry Saxton.

For He always takes
the best.

Brian Ntwman

110

limitation or discrimination.·

7ll02.

PUBLIC AUCftDI

The golden gate stood

]llSon Newman

e~er fill.

tor sale- van,
toolt and llreraiUrt. Cell 61,..e92·
4455 altar 5pm., aok tor Don.

locksmith butlne11

Helen M. Hicks

Sc:enlc Hills Nuralng Cinter 11
Now Ofleflng_Nuraing Potltlona
With SHIFT DIFFERNTIAL.
LPN'S And AN'1 Encrouagod To

make any such preference,

Acres Just Mlnulea From G1lll·

Will Do Houlldoonlf111, 114...111111, PIHaoloevoM-

Or Vloll Uo At www.bullotcom

baHd on race, color, rollglon,
sa. famHial status or national
origin, or any irUntkm to

polio. Galli polio City Schoola, 3
BR, DR. FA With FP, 2 Balhl,
New: Aooi,/Hoat Pump, 81......._

1987 PORSCHE 944

1085.

Groy-.

In Memory of
Ste~en H. Eblin
who passed away Nov.
• 2nd 1996
In my bean you hold a
place That none can

Earn Big $, Mult Sell Call Now,
fi00.3SQ.83e3.

Do

In

Denney
= J;;jj;;i;js;;;j;;--ll 'n onmashis 0.birthday

.:~:r:u':~ngp:'v~~=~1'::

HARTS MASOHAAY • Bloclt,
brick &amp; • - work, 30 ,.... •·
porlonco, rouonoblll rattL 304•s.aset I:GO!lm. no lob 10
..,.. or 10 BIG. WV-021208

-~-

Will Care For Eldorty 114-245-

8QQ3D Fax 847.o25-0787

Week. Send Ruume To: CLA

lhll--lloub)ocl to
tho Fodorat Fair HOUSIOQ Act
011968 wl11ch makas ~ Illegal
to odvortise "any Prellronco,
llmllatioM or dlscrlminallon

-·

Want To Star Wlllt
To Cook &amp; Clean,
114-255-8113.

Or Ploooe fill Or Send Aosumo
To: Cathy Cooney, Bulllll. Inc.
P.Q Box 2117,
II

Hyglenlot Noodod t Day Par

StrvlcH

ouronco, Bldwol~ ·Oftlo. 814-38111848,814-3117-7010.

Equal Opportunity Employor

Exporloncod Phlobotomlol ed For Earlr Morning Drawl.
Sond Rooume To: P.O. 801 :13,
Gttlllpolo, Ott 451131.

All realoslll!t odverttslno 1n

Ll¥lngstan'l ba11mtnl water- AAA GREITIHCI CARDIPotontlll 145K PIT -4l1DIC FT No prootina. 111 buemen1 repalfl
Solifttl, Acoo,... Pro~- s.;v. dono, froo oot1ma1u. lllotlmo
leo Locol StorH. 18.850 lnvoll· guaraniH. IDyro on lob oxpori·
Wttktnd band teekt vocalist mont Sacurod a Oulcltlr Ro- - ·304-1175-2141.
lnd bt11l1t, mutt hllve experi· bnod. -aoo.m-3141once ond bo opon mlndocl. Aooll
R EAL ES TATE
... 70'1 Rodr wlllt _,.. Ctwl•
IN011CEI
lion Contompomy~Collll4...7· OHIO VALLEY PUBI.ISHIIG CO.
3785 O&lt;et 484J1.30111.
recommends thll rou do busl· 310 Homes for Sale
with P&lt;tDpio you know, and
WORK AT HDME·I local P&lt;tDpio nou
NOT
to aond monay through 1ho 3 ·4 Bedroom' Optionol Family
noodod Ill de TolofMrkodng lor
until you heve lnvelllgattd 'Room, ·cA, 2 Bath'a, ln·Grauncl
local Company In tho following mall
Pool, Nnr Hotpllll I GalllpoNa,
areaa: Apple Grove, Leon, Ma· tho ollorlng:
173.000,
814-44&amp;--1711.
oon, Pt. Ploount·ll local phona FAMOUS IIILLIONAIRE·IIAK·
colla. llakl Us to ISO por p&gt;d ER R-Io E1cltln; Now Waya 4 Bodioom' 1 112 Bailll LA. DR.
reapon11. Mutt have t~tphane To Eorn 5Q.100K A Yoar Farttl24 Kllchen, UR, Fenced Vlrd, 213
lnd UGIIIont phone 1111111. Send Hr. Mog. 88&amp;-57ilodo8S.
Aero, Askin; $58,500, 814·371·
flaurne to: Box CW·30 Clo Point
PleiUnt A~tor 2DG Main St.
FREE
477 LoGrando Blvd .. NIIWir Roo
Pt.Piouon, -~
CASH
modeled Ranch Home, GrHn
GRANTS I
X.fi4Y liECH
Schools, Mual S,tl 014·441·
eonooo.
Scholarlhipl.
Poaltlon open In Poinl Pltuant.
2421 Call Anytina
·
BusNa. Wedell BilL
Cempetltlve Salary and Cam·
5 Aoomo &amp; Bath In Crown City,
piott Banoftt Pockleo. Sond reCaiiTol Froo
•ume to: Box GM·31 CIO Polnl
125.000.
814-251!-1270.
HIOQ.218-DDOO Ext Q. 21!U.
Pleasant Reglst.r 200 Main St.
Pt. PIHIIInl. WV 25&amp;110.
lacal Vending Routt For Sale. Brlchi, Ranch Family Home, 1.7

+BUFFETli,INC.+

==-----:-'7.'-:-Earn oxtro manor lor Chrlollllll,

Bualnels
Opportunity

ProfeuiOnal

Removal, Free Estlmattal ln-

lmmodlolo OpporlunKioo In
Tho Columbuo.Aiool

Aaquirod.

210

3SO

lloblle Homll
Sale

.28Mno.

F ltlMlCIAL

230

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaaaarn~t,~wv;;u;;iiil-~==~-~~·~···~·~•;·;-~•;•twl;~·~Pa~ge~D~S~

llr. 1roo altlrL ~exao a or 4
~~:'!i t1.310'Jtown.
1.8QQ.88t.om.

114'381 9535

Proillloloral T,.. Sorvlcl, Stump

• GonniWonaJIIN »48K
• Kitchen llonlgera IH5K

c~l

IIII!!.Jr'LGAN? ~ Tho Eaoy
Waf'By Phonl. f'rlo-.., Loan,

tar cerllfled nuralng aulawua.
Both luU.tlmo and .... ~.... pofllo

dono. Muot ba 11111 to work f2
hour lhlltl. holldaya, Lnd - ·
ltonda. Wuot ba a -•nod nuro·
In; aaelatant. C..ntlct ,..;II
Routh, Aaol Dlr-r ol Hurling.
:lfM.I7I.I23e. M.EOE.

320

220 Money to Loan

~75-1857.

• Unoxpoclld Salary Lavell

185135)31
ll.f, I A.ll oi!P.Il EST

180 Wlllttcl To Do

tloora•• Portabll Sawmill, den,
haul your logo ., ihe miH tu • call

• -On Tnrlning
• Compiole Bonolta Padtago
With 401K Stodt Oi*N For AI
lllnlgemontL-

For lnlormatlon and If intertsltd,

DRIVERS
Parable: Applicants Mull Have Wo are looking
tor dolvon tor our
A Post High School Degre1 In panang.r dnl In I •round the
•
•
Skat
Acccunllng
Ot
Equivlllont
Exporl·
Huge yard 11I•- Nov. _...,
.,. ence And Training. Prt¥ioua Ex- Hobaon aroa. Appllcanta mu11 be
a-y, fl.I, Tandy 1000 ccmputor
21.,,. old. r:lean driving record,
&amp; moniiDr, ln18rlor doMa. dinette perlence In Compulerized Ac- ba obit ., worlt 1 lolblt ICftod.
Ht.
atiOI' tWn. moped, bier'· counts Receivable, CIMint Billing, ulo &amp; bo doug ho. Paid VICitiori
dl far 1lfCI. __. c:lolhn &amp;
Dlreclly Worklnp The Clients &amp; lire lnlur•nct. •81hr to •tart
•••relit &amp; boxing equipment, Concerning Their Paymem Ac- with lncreau avallllbkt altar QO
"ba 1
b k 1b 11 count Status And Grant Relm- days. Full-tlmelparr-time. Call1·
beddlng, II ro Ill II e •
buraementl. Beginning Rill or
80fl.SII7·1878 M.f 101m-4pm
~-..,~;;,.;;loll-:ol~moc.:-:·
----::--:-:-.1 Pay lo $8.50 /Hr.
liard aalo, :lrd houu. on tho right
on SR. 124, _,d Rudarld. Nov. AJ)plicantl Far Thl1 Polltlon Uay
Card of
3rd 1 4th, 8·S. (woalhor pormll· Submit A Retume To Jeannie
WUIIams. Human Resource Man·
'"e).
The !amity . of FRANK
ager, Acctll To Human Rtaource Development, P.O. Ba1

w

Gallipoll

Week, App_IJ In Person At:
Swnlc Hills Nulling Center, Gal-~~=- NO\IIIIII\blr 1• 11M» 7• 01+

Wo Ollar A Competitive Salary
~~=
And Benelilo Paokago. Ploaaei-----'------

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

THE ~OUDAY INN
677 Cl1l At. 7 Norlt
Cl1l At. 7 &amp; us 35

Buutidan wanted: 1·2 Days fW

Charlatton newapapera needa
lndeP&lt;tndont contractor 10 doilvor
,_opapera ~om Ripley 10 Loon.

•To-tdouallrawlhPotontial
• No Lala Night Work Sdlodulal
•No Bar

CHILD CARE·Workln; couple
110 Help Wanted
lttkl energtUC &amp; txperitnc~
"Nood M.A., B.A. and snodonta In lad~ to cant far newborn in our
paychology and related fields to home during the day. Send In·
provide psychotherapy and teat- qulry &amp; resumes to: P.O. Box 234
Milhvood. WV 25252. RolerencH
ing. Cal :114-875-5077.'

eo.-... Should Hove:

lnaldo Aummoeo Solo: Tli1 Fri I
Sa~ Nov 11~ 3rd, 4th, 5111, Cloan

All Yard -

·

--· ~.

edition • 2:00 p.nt.
Frlday.llon4ly odhlon
·10:00a.m. Sllunlay.

AVON · $8 -$18/Hr. No Doo; To
Door. •Bonusea• Fun &amp; Eaayll 1·
tk)()...286-Qt3D.

1,.---,--,-:---:-':":'7'"-::-

The Atborl AI Gallipolis It Seehilng An ~ncillarv- Coordinator,
Who Will Be Aeiponslble For
Purchasing, Dlsrrlburing, And
KNplng lnvenrory 01 Medical
.......... ~.ThoCon

QEAQLIPE: 2:00p.m.
tho doy bob .. lho ld
Ill to run.
doy

FAEESiaHAR
ntuAS., NOV. I

1...;:;_=...:...;:.;._-,--...,.,-

ANCILlARY COORDINATOR

aLI.Yird-WIIII
loPaldlnAd......

AaondOur

1ng. 1.aoG-738..0168.

Help Wanted

Call - - VllfoW Hurling ontl ~
-tion c - hoo oponlnp

Qhlo Baaed Trucldng COfi!(IOIIY
looltlne For DTR Dmrora. ......
On T11m Orlvoro, Muot Ba Over
21 Y11ro Old Wltlt I YHre Er·
porlonco Art41 Good WVA. All
E~~ttlomant It Lato Model Con•
vontionol Troctora With Aaolor.
Woek~ Pay, Hiaanh tnouronco

Sunday,Novewnber2,1997

Sunday, November 2, 1997

Appolacbian
Structures,

~~~c~~st•e:Remlnglon

model 31 12 ga. shotgun,
model 97 12 ga. shotgun, Savage 222 cal
w/scope, 3 Blackpowder rilles. plus more guns.
I Ov.,.r: Bob Bays
.
llem8: 1973 Ford F100 4 spd V8, 1983 Toyota Cerrica
ST, 1988 Ford Tempo, Mercuty RN7 sport&amp; · coupe,
Yamaha 200 4x4 lour wheeler
Owner: Dennis Bays
Cash or local check w/ proper I.D. No out of
state pe1110nal checks.
Lunch served

Dept.

being &amp;ppfOK. 100 k
BO. Call for more details.

Home, LOI

I200a- Price Has Been
Reduced! 10 Acres mil with
ap.prox . 9 acres wooded, ulil
available to propeny, mineral

Log

'Inc.

rightS .

GOT,

1201 a. 70 acres m/\, approx.
1140 IH·GROUND ttOUSE aaet ll wOOded, mineral rights
IOCilOd on S.R. 110. Hoo bOOn With properly. S30's.
oedlclled olllo IWO 11v1n; unllll,
CX!IIId eaoily b o - back
to one dwelling, two M.H. hook

P.O. Box 614
Ripley,

f200I. Gre81 Site of r a

--·

WV 25271

l-800-458-9990

Mustards Auction Service, Jackson, Ohio •

Preston Mustard Auctioneer

Henry E. Cleland Jr..992-2259

614-286-5888
Licensed Bonded State of Ohio
Nole: This is a large sale. Many items not listed.

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357
Kathleen M. Oeland 992-6191

Public Sale and Auction

Offlce .......................... 992-2259

ESTATE
AUCTION

(!)

-LENDER

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1
10:00A.M.
Located atlhe Auction Center on Rt. 33 In Maaon,
·w. va. For your convenience we have moved the
estate of Carl and Jtaaa Mae Brannan from
Middleport, Oh to the auction center In Maaon,
WV, Mr. Brannan waa an auto mechanlc'a teacher
end 1 mechlnlc Jn Melga Co. for many yeara and
will be lelllng the following.
.
FURNITURE- 8 pc DR suite. mahogany drop leal
table, mahogany cl1ina cabinet, mahogany chatr
inlayed w/needle point seat, 5 pc oak dinette made
by Marietta .Chair Co., Queen Ann cl1atr, 2 stde
chairs, 3 antique chairs, recliner, 3 pc coffee table
&amp;end table set, 19' color TV. old viet desk, viet chair,
5 pc, BR suite, Lane Water Fall cedar chest dresser
w/metching stool. trunks, cedar line clothes closet,
chests, dressers, Tappan 18 c.l. relriger~lor. Tappan
30" range, Givson side by side relrigeralor, Whirlpool
washer &amp; dryer &amp; more.
GLASSWARE· 8 pl. sel ot candle wick china plus
other pcs.ol candlewick, pope ·gosser, fleurelte
pattern goblets, sev. pes. of Blue Willow, compode.
milk glass basket, milk glass, beautiful stemware
w/red &amp; green bases, hen on nest, Van .Briggle vase,
Fenton, Four Season Currier &amp; lves plates, Fenlon
bride basket, good old lamp, George &amp; Marth BR
lamps, &amp; more.
.
MISC· 3 old quilts, old pictures &amp; frames, ptcture
and other items given by G~tn. Hartinger, 2 nice 8 pl.
setting of William Rodger Silver, books·Meigs Co.
History· Tom the pipers son, unusual knife
w/Mermaid must seer Hunting knifes, Bulava watcl1 &amp;
other watches, lg. amount costume jewelty, old floor
model radlo, old records· Bing Crosby· Christmas &amp;
others. pots, pans, hooked rugs, Christmas
ornaments linnens, sweeper, lew post cards, whtte
sewing machine w/mahogany cablnet, exercise bike
&amp;more.
·
TOOLS· Vety lg. selection of tools, hand tools, mac
tools. Kwlk·way torque wrench, Ashland be~ch
grinder, air grease gun, wrenches , socket sets, vtse ;
some old tools, floor jack, C clamps, tool boxes, lool
cl1esls. old service manuals &amp; more.
VEHICLE· Vehicle will be sold at 12:00 noon
Beautiful 1988 Olds Cutlass Ciera· 4 Dr, air, cruise,
all powet, loaded, 32,935 act. miles. Must s8e!l

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

Executrix: Debbie Ge~ach
Case No: 30037
Terms: Cash or Check w/ID
Not Responslble For Accidents or Loss of Property

PLAINS·
Subdivision. Very well
Style nome. Fea1ures 3
carpet/Vinyl. Anderson tilt windows and 2 car bedrooms, 2 beths, al1ached 2 car garage.
garage with door opener, cement driveway. Total electric witt1 central air. Paved street and
And More. Call for your viewing!! ASKING driveway, lronl porch and rear deck. Largo
crawl spece !hat could be converted lo a bas,..
men!. Nice
wonderful neighbor·
POMEROY·

floor frame home, kHchen,

dining room, living room 3 bedrooms 1 3/4
baths , walls are drywall , floors are kepi 1 floor

IN

THE

COUNTRY·

Near ChBsl1&gt;r· Apjj&lt;oiimtitooly 3

•

I
approximately B acres wittl public water and land on the corner of Bashan Road and
an au electric home. 12 year old ranch type Ridge . Includes a very nice 1974 Mobile nome
home with full basement. There is 3 with several room additions . 4 bedrooms, 1 1/2

bedrooms , 1 1/2 baths , equipped kilchen, baths, 2 a«ached· 1 car garages. Patio room,
1 a 26'x40' barn and a 26'x 12' sh-;;ed?.!s:OCXi electric H.P/C .A., new shingle roof, newer
i I porch and dock. ASKING o
carpeVvinyl flooring . Appliances, drapes and
blinds. Very nice large nome. Beautiful yard
and localion. Golla See to Appreciate!!
ASKING $49,500
•

LINCOLN HEIGHTS· Cozy Home with 2
bedrooms, bath, carll'!ted, basement Groat
Rental lnvestml!)nts . Most homes currently

rented. ASKING 'f8,000

NE:W LISTING· DEXTER· Ouie1 Country
1243· Seclusion. This home located on Deed End
99 acres ot vacanl ground, Road hal a scenic view. This older 1 1/2 slory
some ' level, Immediate frame llomo features 2·3 bedrooms,. kitchen,
I for more information. living room, collar, batlt. 1:1: acre. Vary privale
setting. ASKING 121,000
$82,500
ROAD TWP.

AD.

Two Story Frame Home with
I ~::~~!~~VI~;;~;
l iv ing room , dining room , 3

I bedr•oon1s ,

1 bath. Walls are paneVplaster,
I dtVWtlli . Old Post Office building goes wltlt the
which W&lt;Juid make a good word worl&lt;
snopll Ask lor details. ASKING $31,000
'

VACANT
GROUND·
IMIIEDIA'R!
POSSESSION! Approximately 45 acres
located on Sharon Hollow Road, just out ol
Racine . Producing Gas Well . with small
royinies. Possible FREE GAS lo Dwelling.
Great Hunling SilO/Building Site . ASK~«]
121,1100

WE NEED USTINGSI

�•

Pomeroy•

• Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday,Novemnber2,1997

.,...for ....
2 · I 112 Ytor old b,.ldlng ogt AKC Cocllor Sponlol pupo, Smoo
NubiM trlllla USN. 301-571· o1cr. 3 femtlu, 2 blockiWhl1t,
I bull. $15011. hod tho1t. SOl·
2258.

2 ,....... _
mtlt_
' ,_
.......
IDinlldl
...dt...

F.;,_ Efficiency Al U~~~~H

PIJid, t2GCI/IIO•• Downotalll. iii Dondruoo 'S11•· 1110 ..,. lor
Sfcond Avenue. GaUipolia, 114- aalt, Studio M11111 S1t1lct1
448 3145.
I•IO'o and regullt II» lor
otlt. f howr lilt loloO~'I ~oiMng. 1 and 2 bodooom floblta "" lilt: ...... $311; Cluolt... f25: HlfiPI'· S30: Spo&gt; ... ,
- - 11 ViMIP lolonor

and

-

- - o\plrtmon1t In Middle- Sly· UO; Bltclllt- f21: Peonu1·
*From $238-$301 • Colt Gll- ..5. Cd tor lnlormodon. ., ......
1112·50111. Equal Houolng Opj&gt;Or· 3081.
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,

Ill 410 03llO
NIOa Ono Bldroom Unfurnished
o\jor-.t Rangt &amp; Regrign""
· Wltor &amp; GatbiQt Ptld.
Doposh RoQulrt&lt;l, Coli I 11·118qllo\ho&lt;I~M.

elite Bedroom Apartment For

Dreiling table, blbf' bed, cat
aaat, atrolllt, twlng, plar pen.

:301-87=-;:.:S-1:.::518=--:--77'-:--.Florlhoim Crown lmotrill winajp
lhDH 1,_1 oiZI 8.¢ &amp; 7 1/20 •
pairo, 2/palr brown, 2/polr bladt.
301-1175-2111.
Grubb's Piano· 11Ullng I ,.,...,._

Ptobllma? Need Tuned? Cal ._

Alnt. Ov., Carl'a Tavern. Newly piana Dr. 814 t t8 •s'?S
Remodeled &amp; Carpeted, Eattl
Cfoon.I25QII!o., 811-367-0133.
JET
AEIWtON IIOIORS
Rapollod, New ' Robultln - .
Cd Ron
t.-&amp;S7·1Hi21.

Twin Riwr1 TDVM', fRtf acc;epting

oppllcations fo&lt; tbr. HUD

IUb~d­

lzed apl. for eldBJI)' and flaodl·
aoppod. EOH 30U75-18711.

450

Furnished
Rooms

Kings Molt! LOW:IIt Ralet In

Town, Newly Rornodelod, HBO,
Cinemax, Showdme 6 011nt1.
_ , Rollo. Or lolon1hfy RollO,

t;onatruction Workera Wtlcom.
., .....1·511111, 11 ..... 1·5187.
Slttplno room• with cooking.
4110 tra iler apace on river. All

tiook·ups.·can afler 2:00 p.m.,

301-773-5851. Muon wv.

460 ·Space for Rent
1 Trailer Lat, Teens Run Road,

$t2Mio.. 111-2&lt;15-5938.

e..,.,

MARY K COSioiETICS.Pttty lH,
Mary K Bllutr ConouiWrL 304·
111-:1141.

o-lhtrSM~Cijf I IIIII food.

ltm.
.
Rttirod Bllrit . . _ o\loo Cur· ..,. •• " n Blue Pupplto.
-~Onto, Coli- 2 P.ll. lll· 7-.old.(e11)2SS-t8311
..... 117.
I 8tqle PU~I. IUII•blcodod.
Som Sarnorvlllo'o Armr Comou· copper noat, hunttno dogt, no
ftogt bW Sandvvlilt Poor Oftlct. poport. Roadr 1hlo wtOktncf.
Noon-5pm. frf-Sun. SmoN lndl· S50ol.l14-111·1•7.
.....,._ -273-5e55.
A Groom Shop -Pt1 Groontlng.
WARII UP: High Elflcllnqo Nail· Ft11Urlno Hyd•o Bt11h. Don
rol And LP Gao Fu•nocn. Ul• Shttll. 373 Goo•gtl C•nk Rd.
.... WorraNy On Htol Exchlntt 114 1410231.
or. 'If 'lbu Don1 Coli Uo WI Boil
Looti" frH Eotlmartol Add-On AKC Regla!Ottd Blchon Full·
Hilt Pumpo Only Sllghty Hlgllor. Blooded. 0 Wilfll Old Puppies,
Coli Uo Todoy. 1gg7 lo Tht Wormed.. tst Sh11111, P.re.nta
Twenty Seventh Y•ar In The From Mlululppl, Ao Sttn On
t-.a Bullnouii11- Kllhr I ~~ ShoW. Wonderful
44H3Ce, 1-I00-2t1..(1)11.
Chrlotmao Gift For Moml Aloo
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gollon Good With Children, Paymtnto

--..,.I

Uprigll~

Ron Evano Enwpri-

111o«8-ol053.

lflobUt home tift available bet·
teen Athens and Pomeroy, call

F·or ollt, AKC Ooohouncf pup-

piol.l-z..-.-1

-.

father an premlaea, e U -112·

I :=;...._______
AKC realo- Bo- ...ll;wn, INlndle, tails tlclcl.d,· ....
- - iWIUJed. 11...a.471D.

AKC Rllfllltrod Coclctr 8ponitl
Pu~ &amp; Fomlltt, &amp;holt I
Wormld. at.-.e712.

-...~

~:~c:=,:r:,~'l~k~

old.-mlll04.
•w~ Golden B-~-

~
~·
Checked, Firat Shots, Males Jack Au•••ll Terrier 17 Months
1200, Ftmolu ,210, 114-SN· Old F - Whlta Hod All Slloll,
2al.
~filii.

.,_,.7720.

Roawtl'"
-• we "olt
•
- 7 •"onthl SchMuzorpu-'to,mlnlotur•

Old, 11110 Or Trodt, 114·SU· ohtmplon bla~ llnoo, 1150 1
1117.
uoo. AKC, ohoto 1 groomld,
11-7-3404.

- .. ..,.,.. boodod .....~ _ ,
tiHVt, 1lz• 12. Call 304-8 75-

llllaflarSprn.

Nordic Trocll Eooy Sid Aoroblco
Elf«CCIIt Willi E10&lt;cl1t Compo~
or. Llkt Now. 301-57a-2Oak bedroom sui It W/Sooly mo~
lreaa Ht &amp; aalr. TV 1111nd. 30•·

Polr Of Dan Pool Womtns Cowboy Booll. Color: Ruu Coun11y.
Sin a112 sso. 111-25a-ins.

Woodljlllaortor rent 110 por dirt
K....,..o Sonlica Con101 301-81153874.

Walefllne Special :

~4

Poaalble land
qualified buyerll

200 PSI

UUI Po• 100; I" 200 PSI
137.00 Por 100; All Brass Com·
,......., Fittlngoln Slodl
·
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

Jockoon. Ohio. 1.alll-537-e5211

550

RACINE· Baal Buy In the County! This home ollenl
atmosphere· 3 fireplaces &amp; beautiful woodwork.
Downstal"' In LR, Dr, Kit, udy rm. 2 BR and 2 full boths.
Upstairs you'll find 3 BR &amp; 1 bath . Full basement.
Ou1bulldlng. Price has recently been reduced to only
$54,000. You mally must see this to apprec!ata ill

Building
Supplies

Pr.•·

Block. brick. aewo•
wind·
owa. lintels. etc. Clau • Winters,

Ria Granda, OH Call 151"·2•5·

5121 .

1280- SYRACUSE· very nicely remodeled and ready to
move Into. 1 FICO&lt; plan home Is very cozy and comfortable.
This home has 2 bedrooms. LR. kitchen w/appliances.
Central air &amp; heat. Attached &amp; detached garages plus
addt1. bldg. REDUCED to $45,000

1275- TUPPERS PLAINS· Great location! Reduced Prlcal
Talk to us about this home located just off SR 7. This
picturesque setting ollenl a stocked pond on 6 acres m~.
Large living rm ..w/ftreplsce, large family rm. w/lireplsce, 2
BF.!, both, attached garage, lddt'l bldg. FREE GAS. Price
reduced to $85,000. Talk to us about this onel

77115.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W111hars, dfyerl, refrigerarort,
11ng11. SkiQOI Appliancea. 71!1

l

Vlno SUN~ Coil 011-446-r.JN,
1·11XHw-3&lt;811.

National Realtor Survey·
popular home Is a 2 slory
porch or wrap around and a IOVi!lvl
entry. This home Is this and mueh 1
more. Only minutes from Hol:zerl
Hospital. Lg . flat yerd and beatulifiJII
deck. Shown by appt.
. •

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

Orr·

s.·,.

~wp.

I rm, patio, and nice front po&lt;Ch. Four lots
. 1 year warranty. Price reduced to only

contract

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

to

One acre more or less.on Fairfield·
Centenary Rd. Green Twp . $14,500
Winding Croaa Roedl· Cora Mill &amp;
Pleasant Hill Rd. Flat to rolling and
some wooded lots. Some
restrictions. Only 4 remain. 15,000·
25,000 Price range .

tUI Mo,.urr Grond Mo•qulo, 118-40l&amp;.
, _ , 302,
Rtrnonuflc- 1&amp;98 Shldow Amorlcio Cfttllc
lured En:,lnt Has Lttl Than EdWon, t 100cc, LOll Of EJUUI
IO,OOOW M
""'ear""'·,~~~ E•colltnt Condl11an, 111·11117·
num hHis, ~-P
• ··-: 7111,Aftor&amp;~l11-411-7371.
1il0 Oodgt c ....... Au-de.
2.5L. 1 Cyf. 25 MPG. croon. All-

Y.l,

•s.!.".!'.

Pleaaent Hill Rd.· Green
5
more or less. Excellant building
site.

able Vehicle, l3o~50, 114-440·
1216.

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
IB 1-800-585-7101 or 446-710~ {it
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
446-4618
Judy ~Wiu .............................. 441.0262
1. Mendl Carter.........................379·2184
Tammie DeWih ......................... 245.Q022

.

"

-

ONE Of A FEW homes that Ia
situated close to Gallipolis .
Make this one yoursl Well
maintained brick ranch that ·
has 2 1/2 baths. ~ bedrooms,
room attached 2 car garage
and so much morel 1t2e

Cldor BR $71111: Olk Curio COb.

'1150; Ponery, Mexican Blankttt,

lndllni.Et&lt;.

Sowtno Mochlnt Ovt&lt; 50

V.oro Old ltDO: o\uo1t1Uon
Shophlrd, Reglotored 5 lolon1ha
014 Coppa•/ While (811j3888011t

''

lot--·
110,000.

110 0

Y.l

Sporting
Goods

f:oatlre Craaabaw For Salt,

.._.e•••••·
•

roy~.,..

SPACIOUS LMNG ABOUNDS
THIS COUNTRY CLASSIC.
Historic two story house offers 3
bedrooms, 1 two story house
offers 3 bedrooms, 1112 bath, LR,
DR. FL, full basement and
detaChed work shop. !;Iring in the
outdoors in the window covered
kitchen with attached waik-in

pantry.

RIO GRANDE
Approximately 42 1/2 acres on
state route 588 adjoining Bob
Evans farm . WOOds, pastu•e &amp;
cropland surround this 4 BR 3

bath sectionally horne. The home
was bul~ in 1988 &amp;features LA,
kitchen with appliances, family rm,
dining rm &amp; much mora. You'll love
lhe view from a high knoll

Gmnde .

001.1' CLUBI:
Modo Tommr .,,_, Ere.

Or Custom Buill Clubs, Indian

-Golf, etl-215-5717.

530

Antiques

Anllqut- bod. -J'73.1;7lU.

lur or ull. Rlvetine Antiques,
~t2ol E. lololn S_,_ on Ill 121.
Pomeroy. Houra: M.T.W. 1D:OD
(m. ID e:oo p.m., &amp;mdoy 1:00 .,

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

1:00 p.m. I14·DD2·2528, Ruu

540

MIICtllal'leOUI

Merchandlll

1 Eloculc Furnoce 1315: I Gao
f - 100,000 B1lJ ..10.....
41e 0301, t-211HJOII8 ·
30 Ptoplt Wlntad To LOll UP
f)) II POUNDI fn Tht Nox1 30
ao,o, All Na1urot, Dr. Rtcom!Mndod, GuorontM&lt;f. Coli T,.cr
Allt+441·1882. Fret SernpiiL

a••

Apartment alze
cooking
newt, has nerrthing with It

JIOO. 11111 Muotang ICJI, IU1D,
•ono 1 looko QOOd. SSOO. 301·
115-7112.

IIW cov., lor amoll pick-up •.
1140: bod liner I bug ollltld lor
Ford Ran;tt. 175 fo&lt; both:
......-• .,:11+111124&amp;14
Boars Br Rtdwlng, Chlpp..s,

,_,ckr. Tonr La.,.. Guarantlttd

tJwtit
.,....

Prfool AI Shot Clio, Gal-

BR 2 112 bath charmer is located
next to Holzer on Lariat Drive. As you
walk through, you'll view the large
formal dining rm. LR with stone
fireplace, extra large family rm with
buil in shelves. completely equipped
k~chen with sun light, 15 x 17 sm rm
finished in cedar &amp; glass &amp; a 2 car
garage. When you step out on the
patio, you'll notice the gazebo, shop
&amp; anouther garage. Lois of fun living
here. Call for appoinbnent.

.

VINTON VILLAGE· 4 acres of level
land MIL wtlh frontage on SR 325.
&amp; electric available. Home
builders or investors call about this

water

OM. $19,500

HOMESITE IN THE CITY· This large
level lot is located at the dead end of
Neil Ave. Utilities available. Horne
builders or investors can about this

one. $19,500

COMMERCIAL LISTING- Rio
Grande area. 1.6 acres rn/1, located
on the NE ~of U.S. 4 land 35
and SR 325. Lots of potential.

~~~~-;ueo.

o14 440154&amp;.

IUY CM8 fOR ftGOIII
Soizod And lold Locally Thlo
Truclll. 414'1. E1e. filing
u,uidolld In Your AIN - · ~
l4okft 1 Madtlo Aoliloblt. Con
Tolfroo81H22·:mtll1431.

Cl1tck out our Gao u,..,...
.._,.,, (1111..-1 or Propano).
llartlng t1 IIIH.85. WI oliO
fllvt Buck • - lrand of Goo
lnttan1 Fllfl1lo... Paint Plus
lla! ·~

RIVER FRONT PROPERTY is hard
to find but you have 7.66 ecres rrVI
with thia 2 story farm house. Wtlh 3
BR, 1 1/2 beth, city schools and a
view fil for a king all located just
minutes from Gallipolis, you should
not let this ftow by without a look.
Reduced to $69,900.
FISHERMEN'S DREAM • Two miles
below the dan) you'll find thia older
completely furnished 2 BR mobile
home. There's an 8 x 24 deck
overlooking the Ohio River with a
,storage blMiding. steps going ctown to
the~

RIVER FRONT LOT· 1.368 acres rrV1
located approx. 2 mi. south of the
Eureka dam. Great potential at

$19,900.

OHIO TOWNSHIP: 82 Acres m~
located In section 28 On Gr_, Rd.

LAKE

Some tillable land but moally pastuer
&amp; woods. Old house &amp; pond on

property. $66,000

&amp;.a lqe dock. S17,900.

GUN STORE: One at aouthem
Ohio's largell dealers.
Eltablished in 1968. Large
volume. Owner retiring.
Contact Ranny Blackburn.

$49,900

lfalhtr WCitd PracHIOI Modol

1!1'10 1150: o\lplnt- w...

Allot 6. 811-116-8568.

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration ·

DRIVE SUBDIVISION· Rio

Grand&amp;- Close to Univer&amp;tty· Lot M21
has water, sewer &amp; elec available.
$12,000.

.

IDEAL SITE FOR APARTMENTS:
RIVER LOT IN THE CITY· 2.3 acres 150x207 1ot 1s located at the comer of
rrVI. Approx. 234 ft. frontage on the spruce &amp; 5th. All utilities

OhiO River, all utilitieS available. Old availabie$19,900

home on Pf opetly.

I.

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

Rtaldondol or commorcllf wirln-.
new IIMce or repair&amp;. Master U·

D. Wood, BrDker ·
510 Second Avenue, Galllpolla
1-8CJ0.58.5-71D1 Dl'
446-7101
Ruaeell

cens.ct el~trlclan . ' Ridenour

ElocUical, WV000308. 304-e75·
l780.

Mlln Ol!lce • 38B·BB26
958 Clark Chapel Rd.

"'"'"""'· Ohio 45614

11012 I tftdroam, 2.5 ba1n1, 2

car

RACCOON CREEK . PRIVACY·
This almost brand ,_ ranCh style
home rests In over 7 acres of
woods with apprax. 800 ft of creel&lt;
fronlagle. some of the many

features are 4 BAs. 2 baths, 16x21
LA w/French doors, 2 large treated
decks, vinyl siding &amp; an
unattached 2 car garage. If you
don't want to look at your
~.YOU MUST SEE ntiS
ONE. REDUCEO
PLANTZ SUBDMSION· setting
on 21o1a at 193 WindSor you'H find
this 3 bedroom ranch. The extra
large LA. kitchen , basement,
carport &amp; gas heat are included at
the bargain price of $42,000
1750 STATE ROUTE 7 NORTH.
Commercial Site. Not many left in
this an!B. Approx. 5 ao9s flatland.
Ideal for almoel any type Biz.
RIO GRANDE- COMMERCIAL
LAND- F~M LAND· HOME
SfTES.. YOU NAME IT. 147 acres
rrVI with approximately 1 1!2 miles
of road frontage on Stale Route
325 &amp; Pleasant Valley Rd. Broker

owned· $480,000 ;
EXTRA NICE BUILDING·· OR
MOBILE HOME LOT. mature
Pine Trees on the three sides.
Access to Raccoon Creek.
Located in Hobart Dillon Subd.
$11,900

NEW LISTINQf Look what
$45,000 One floor plan ranch
homo that has 3 bedrooms,
living room &amp; dining room
combination, kitchen , 1 car
attached garage, flat city lot.

-

11 ACRES appl'ox. complola
with water tap. Wooded,
cleared · off alta for mobile
homo or houae. Call today.
Cheahlre Twp. 11159

I.OOKfNG FOR SOME NICE
PASTURE LAND? Over 71
acres with lots of road
frontage on two roads. county
water available. Exceptional
tract ot land. Could be divided
easy into smaller tracts, pond,
fencing &amp; mineral rights
Included. 11M2
LOTI Ready for a mobile
homel Approx . 1 acre
complste with water &amp; electric.
Paved Road. Cheshire Twp.

-

CHEERFUUY COZYI Put
down roots In this easy lo loVe
3 bedroom ranch. Kitchen &amp;
dining room , don, 1 car
attached garage. Nice sized
lot w/fenced·in back lawn.

More. H11

flmilly
gatherings to
grand entertaining, you can do It

.~

-

I

brick ranch offers 3 bedrooms, 3
baths, tol"r'n8lllving room &amp; dining'"·'- ' '-'"-'' '
room, family room with flreplace, 2
car garage, patio room and
slorage building . Beautiful
landscaped grunda w~h 2 goldfish
ponds and lovely brk:k patio. For
your year round enjoyment, a
complolely onc:IOHd pool and hot
tuli lrtl. II you wan1 to hoi! olllhe
fun, ·then call on this unique
PIQF.riy~·prbOd II $199,000. NOS

deck, 2 car garage on lovely
river lot. $120,900 Call Wilma for
a frivata showing. ·

12122 LOVELY BUILDING
LOTS, ready to build on . On
State Route 160 close 10 Holzer
Medical Cont.,. $7500.00 eaon
lot or $20,000.00 for all, call

-- . -.

Wilma for full details.
12112 141 ac:NS ot timberland
In Jackson Counry, $145,000

...

12111 2 buUdlng Iota in

ProctorVille, ready to build n,

home wHh space for family togetherness, as well
as, space for privacy seekers. The kids can claim
the upstairs with open FR. 3 BAs and large bath.
The parents will appreciate the downstairs master
bedroom suite with whl~pool tub and walk·ll!
closet. Everyone will enjoy the LA with gas
fireplace, FR and large opan kitchen and dining
area. L·shaped front porch and back deck
ovt~rfooking a fenced yard. Dad will appreciate the
2 car attached garage. A home to fill your heart
and family needs priced at $125,000.16011

acres
garage &amp; Mobile Homol 3 more or Jess of woodland
bedroom mobile home In that comes with this
good condition, 2 baths, immaculate b~levet home. 2
open living room &amp; kitchen. Full baths,
walk·ln
Over 1.8 ....... Cell to vtewl closet oft muter ·bedt&lt;oon111, •
,];',
f.ormal dining erea. Ill!~.' ··l ~
living
room
woodburning fireplace,
kitchen With at11um doo•s
that lead to roar deck,
attached 3 .car garage &amp;
Let us show to youl
AFFORDABLE!
YOU
BET...$30,000. Cozy one
story home that Is just a few
minutes of town. Nice shop
with attached carl:·:' ·

l2flll7 Rio Grendt 1111, 105
acres wiU'I 2 !'lOuses, owner will
also split property, 45 acres,

135,000

-OWNER Wo\NTII SOLD,
3 bldloom f'anct\ on , acre more

or less, on State Route 218 just
3 mlleo off SL R1. 7.

(614)

446-~44

..
. .;A

Ji.,.JI'I

storage. Greet location on
BuloMIIe Rd. \ILS
fH11 BUSINESS ONLY PET
SHOP Equipment &amp; Inventory. ·

VLS

• 0

.. ..r.,..

w

~

205 North Second Ave.
OH
12110 Crown City er••·
executive Style, 3 bedroom, 2
1/2 bahts, large deck across
back of homa, lovely Florida

mom.

12112 . Rio Grande lrtl, 3
acres with ,2 mobile nomea and
Pld for another mobile home,

~':IS.o&amp;J""1 lnvoo,lmenl
J21ii'~rand new•. 2 bel:lroom
mobile 11omt With gu ht11ond
central air. owner wante a deal,
chock 1hl lOUt

121M All brtclc ranch 3 bedrm, t
1/2 baths, full basement, 1 car
alllehed gar. I oc. m/1. 159.500

vtS

I

,

12111 Q....., Twp. 3 bed100m
ranch with lovely landJcaped

sitting on a full

room, family
dock. 159,900

varo. 1 .., gai8Q8 sn.m
11034 50 acre~ mtt ot prime
development land close to
freeway and State Route. I2QQ3 COMMERCIA~ OR HOME
E~~:cellent tor development or ·
2nd Ave .. 4 bedrms, 2 bath&amp;, lg.
commercial uH. $155.000
garage, lol: 52'x174 ' Greet Jocation
12031 WHAT A llo\RGAINI 1·5 . for
an anti(IIJe shOp or office. VLS
Bedroom, Brick home with 2 lull

Home has 4

and an in-ground pool.

RACINE· Apple Grove Dorcas Rd. App•ox. 5 to 6 acres of

baths , 3 lots. Patty
318oi.
.

vacant land. With water and electric available. $10,000

Ha~s

•4&amp;·

$75,000

12037
land 73.5 "" m/1
in Green .Twp. Ae&lt;luc:eel to
$12.000. Call Party Hays 416·

.
~.

:;,-

12011 NEW 1996 SUnshine 16' 11
80' Outstanding mobile home witt!
a de c:k: special cabinets,
windows, and built-in music
center. 3 BR, 2 baths, beautifu
tree 11 ac. m/1. Clost to town.

VLS 388·1182e $64,000
12157 LEVEL LOT 1 1'1; m/1

3881.

utilities available, Clark Chapel

Rd . 113.000 vtS IIII-M06/3881182e.

A

..,.,..• . 3.900 sq. ft.
exleriof, formal entry,
baths, finished f8C .
blmt , WSIFP In game
den atrium rm, oak cabinets
trim In kit. , 3 total rooms, 2 car
ga rage .
p r ofes sio na ll y
'-nd~e~ped . Quality and Lu.:ury
lhnlugh-oul. olppl. only. Virginia L.

COUNTY
Clieryl Lemley

Smlln3SSII20.

742-3171

. 11558

RENT Lot to un cara etc.
buiUdings can be used tor boat

bedrm, ranch
homt, lively LA . hu~e kit,
W/ce.bineu galore, ftni,heel
benment, 2 car garage. $92,000

1

'

':.'1

ONE OF THE BEST VIEW
OF GALUA COUNTY from RIVER LOT· .603 acres.
this lovely spacious newer County water and electric.
homo. 2 slo•y with full Nice lot for MH or just tor
basement, 5·6 bedrooms, recreation. 1950
living room, kitchen &amp; lots
more approx. 3,000 sq. ft. of RIVER LOT· .982 Af;re mil
living space plus full well water (oo. available! &amp;
basement, large spacious electric . Plus block
rooms, 40' x 44' metal basement. 3 electric hook·
building, pond, fencing and ups. Lot has been surueyed.
approx. 18 acres m/1. Very Owner wants sold. 11149
well constructed. Want space
1henl01usshowthehometo GIGANTIC
PRICE
you. 1947
REOUCTfOI\(1 OWNERS
•
LOWEREO
PRICE
DON'T THROW MONEY . $10,0001 NEW PRICE
AWAY IN RENTI When you $84,$00.00 Ranch style
could spend your money home situated at the edge
$37,500.001 Georges Creek of Rio Grande. 3 bedrooma.
Road· 3 bedroom home thai 2 full boths. dining room o•
has eaey to maintain lawn family room . Lois of fruit
and large detached ga•age. trees, nice yard . Less than 2
1125
acres. Call fo• complete
listing! 1934
AFFORDABLE1 $44,900.00
city schools. railed ranch $45,000 COMFORTABLE
wilh 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, RANCH HOllE wilh 2 BAs.
garage. approx. 1.6 acre lot, LR, Dr, kit. FR. carport and
could purchase wllh 3 garage .
Immed iate
eddHional acres. ltl44
possession. 18911

/

..

1..-.-..f

• ..'..J..O I

a•ea, nica big kitchen with
plenty of cabinet space and
dlshwashar. Immediate
possession! $51,900.00
1143
.

EAGLE RIDGE
ROAD! Aluminum sided 1
l/2 story home, living room.
kHchen,
over
sized
detached 2 car garage. FA
Addhlonal

·"'

8UILDIIGS • AIWI11IIENTS TO

no:. Uke new 314
•

, _ OWNER WANTS SOLD
NOW,
uaan offer ~ta 3

living room, formal dining

FA electric furnacetcent•al
al• conditioning. anaehed
carport. Rear porch. Nice.
$45,000.00 11141

yr

f&gt;OIPI'1Y....Y- · o n State
-211.

carport. Home offers 3

room, dining room, kilchen,

•

acrw more or lesa, road on

bedrooms. 2 full baths,

Aluminum
sided one story home 1hat
has 2 bed•ooms, both, living

'

m

Mlddl_, oroo, 3
bodrDOm, I 1/2 both ,completlv
remodeded, great buy, can Shopping ctr. location. Aeiced
Wlma.
.
12101 lec'ldid bulldllg tol. 3 righ1 V1$

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, I~C.

ANXIOUS!
OWNERS
LOWERED THE PRICE OF
THIS HOME TO Sfle,SOO.~I
All ready to move Into this
roomy but oozy 3 bedroom 2
bath home. Neat &amp; clean .
Nice garage attached by
breezeway and detached
building Ideal for the hobby
person! Call today 'for PRIVATE
SETTING!
wlfl be Comtortable ranch lhat has
charm. Approx . 2 acres
detached ga•age with

4716

~I

&amp;

U121 NEW LIBTING.L
RIVERfRONT PROPEIIT¥ ·A'r
rrs BEST, 1ove1y indeed •• this
3 bedroom 1 112 bath home wtth !
large family room with walk out

MEIGs·
GIGANTIC REDUCTION OF
18,100.00 OWNERS ARE
SERIOUS ABOUT BEWNG.
This roomy Amel1can Home
that includes 3·4 bed•ooms.
large living room, dining
area/family
room
combinallon, loft area,
equipped kitchen, large deck
on rear, nice lawn being
approx. 2 acres. 34260
CREW ROAD 1840

.........-..
.

•rirlio•tlintr•, from cozy

$5,000 PRICE REDUCTION
A Crowd Pleaser at 67 Cora Mill Road. Delightful

724 Mlln Strott In
Aulfond- Remodeled 1 t/2
a1cxy home. living room with
atrium doo•s that leads to a
covered deck, Iota of
cabinet space In kitchen, 3
betlrooma, dining room.
Immediate
poaaesslon.
$29,500.00 1136

attached garage. patty Hays

.. •' ......

Rot!"•

acres more or less
this
one. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
laundry room, living room,
dining ansa &amp; khchen. Front
&amp; . rear dec.ks . Private,
excellent viewl lt81

Furniture Store, 130 lhala·

520

Roger"• Plumbing Service, E•·
perlenctd, Fr-, Eatlmatll, Call

U~;~::J~
guoron1H.
L
furnfahtd. Et·
tobllahod 1i75. Coli (1111 •••·
0870 Or 1·8011-217-0578.
W_ _,_
'""'

all at this property. This quality

Martha Smith .. ................................. 379-2651
Lemly ................................... 742·3171

t12&amp;;11t tt103liAIW5P.M.

=

1132:1.

5121

tiQI Ford Rtngor 011 cob XL. 1;:.::=~-~~-:--~:::
Cal Jamoo Alorm SOfv. liiO Joop Chorokot, 11,800
Mll11 Wl1h A 30,000 Mlio War··
GMC 11107 ••4 Sltn- oldt, rRLan~y; c. a nalllellpoSoonl'-8!iAII~.,s!.
..,
,,~ •
251hp, Vor1oc
w111. l'fOt onow . Tolar tnourancol Or oil 814·
bladt. $23,000. 301-175-1251 tl- le8115 FCit lolo,.lnlormallon.

Supor Single Pint W11erbtcl

Walnut llblt W/4 cholro f115.
Walnul sewing m.chlne llblt I
.75. SIHHie1 oofl $300.
.33fiD ahor 5prn.

OWNERS LOWERED THEIR PRICE $5,000.00
This house is 2 years youngl 3 bedrooms. 2 baths,
plenty of cabinet space in this large kHchen, Iaroe
living room , full basement, attached garage and
extra storage there is a 24'x32' .detached oar;one.
Really private treed lot being approx. 3 acres.
us show you this onel

frto t-10 call CM~ 011-H2·

~I

PRICE REDUCED- Enjoy your
weekends, vacations or all your time
fishing, skiing or watching the berges
float by. ThiS like new eyecatcher is
ready to move into. From the kitchen
&amp; living room you can enjoy the view
of the large cedar deck &amp; the Ohio
River through the rear of the home
which Is mostly glass. Also included
ia a 2 car 1J8111!111.

· bolhl,
more.
FCM'

Credit Problema? We Can lielp. .., 4pn.
E••r. Bank Fi~nclng For Used
Veh clea, No ,urn Dawns, Ca 11

Real Estate General

«

RNo 7 SOUI1, Crown City
Open D-5, Sol&amp; Sun

vlllt Plko, EltcUic S1DYt1, Bolw
- · Tr-l~or~, Racking
Chalr~, Deak1, lamps, Hlde·ABidt, Couc1111. Good Ultd loll~
....... Mon.fri, Hra. IC..O.

mobll homo ...,.lnd

I

-·-·living-·-.... -

'

lynlt Bodo CO"''J. $225: Solo &amp;
COo~ $21i; I Counvy Pine Table,
Bench a 3 Chairo $235; 7 Po.

tltld

tenanc•· Paln11ng, Ylnyl aidi ng,
c:arponlty, doorl, -

tD88 Dodge DayU&gt;.-., 2.2 U1or, I Vickie, 111....._7.
Cylinder, Auto, Block $1,300;
lloyo Murry 20 Inch Bicycle Now Stlzod Cora From St75. Paroch.Condlon, $50, 011-215-5170.
oo, Cadlllaco, Ch..yo, BMW's,
Cor¥tlttl. AIIID Jeeps, 4 WD'I.
1i88 Eocon o\u1DmtUc 2 Ooo&lt;o, Your Arta. Toll FrH 1·100·21..
52.000 llil11, Exclllon1 Condlilan. iOOO Ext A·2811 For Currtn1
$2,300 111-215i517.
Udnil.

e-mail ua for Information on our listings:
·
blgberid@eurekanet.com

ii;~;~:~:V~e~ry
nice brick home with 125 ft. of river
beautffut brick home has 3 BR, 2 boths, LR,

111-2!11-1231.

Singer

~··

CIC O.noral Horne Ulln·

Alarm-..

__..and_...

gratort; 00 Day Gua111nCHI
French Clry Maytao. 81•-••e-

'

·•-

1994· 14x72 Brandywine .mobile
home, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, garden
tub. Excellant condition. On a
private rented lot. Green twp.

Appllanooo:
Recondldonod
'"lhorl, 0rlf!'l, Ranges, Rofri.

:

o.-.,

Ku- aeooo Dloool ••• TrociDr
Hrd Fn Blodt
..._,,-,,
••I'
-Woodo
- Buoh
'"'"

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

cu:"J

720 ...........

1235- SYRACUSE· Owne• Says, "Unload this housel"
Nice comer lot, 3 bedrooms, living room, kttchen, beth,
bosement. Vinyl siding~ Now Alklng $31,900· Make an.
off&amp;•· Owner Will conalde•l Why pay your money to a
landlord when you can to Investing In yourself!

114ZIIt-

..... ' - ..

AKC Yellow lab Pupo, Sholl &amp;
Wormed a14·258·83341 Allor a
P.M.

1242· 31138 LIIIIMr Rd, Ruttond· 92 acres III/I ol nice
land aboul halt tillable and hall woods. Good Hunting.
Good Rood. Has barn but no houae. Worth much more
that the astcing price of $72,000. Call us on this one.

IUVEASIDEWHOI.ESALE

Hrdroulic ol~lowtl1 price In
-.Von! f&lt;H fill hNIMI. pro~ on otlt-.
Sidlr'sEq•'f,-wj31)4-t;75--7~1 .

AKC Rltl11trod Roawtllor pupplea, 10Wk1, tmal•• . tftmalt,
ahota I ~rmed. '200ea. 30•·
112-2131 ._. n
g·

Tht Pomoror Thrift Shop- now
buying Ltvl juno only, mtn'o.
oloolaft
Uaytag g11 dryer lor ule, like
ond tod- . S200: upright plano tor 1111. alrlo -.... toy~ dler car teats, Tueldayo through
$100;811-llll2-oo&amp;7.
~ t01m1m, 811-eQ2.3725.
New t 5" Wtl1orn Soddlo. 301·
Warm Morning wood burning
815-5010.
• - t load of 'MIOCI. 1 cNmnor
New wedding gown &amp; viii, never brush&amp; hondt.301-5ll-211111.

MERCHANDISE

•

" - Clih..,.,.- old, 1011.
11-1083.

w_,

cam.,....

SIJ7-7878

:

r.,.. -

t~~~~~~~~~

. , . - - - - - - - - - 1110 Farm Equipment

Suporheadboard,
llnglo - -·
cooo
UO,wl1h
111-DD2·
2311&amp;.

Trailer Space Far Renl Just
Above Addison an Route 7 (814)

Wllhor,

"'·-, .,_ . . .

A Ntod A Cor? No Crtdf~ Bod
Crtdlrllonkruorc,, WI Con Http
RaEotablloh Crldl~ Mu11 Iloilo
' ' 110
Tlko Homo, Dawn
f'trmontl Ao Low AI UD, To C-70 ChoY. 0ump TNdt, Sill En750 8oBtl &amp; llotora
F• Thll Flnonc:lng, ;lno, 1 Pklo 2 Trwmllllon, Aubblr on It Wl1h 3 Allo Low
Sa
11
. ~7.
.
l..,.=;..,.,,.,.-;-=~-,-­ Boy Equlpmont Trolior, All 1n ..,.,..,..,__fo..,r,.,.,,..le..,....,...,..,.,
1IDBI Ranp• 373V tr t2 ·21V
CARS FOR $1001 Tr11~ botll. Good~IU 38S IU 7·
.,.
- orool- ~
. _ _ ,.. motor hom~ furnl·
Squort Boloo 01 Good Clton
.,,., oltclronl" compur.r1 ore. I==-=-~~~~-:-::-=--- Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evlnrudt
11.8CJO, 014-8112-Zl'lU•
SIIaW, New Holllnd Hor Ralct In 11180 Mlllllblolll Preclo I op., IIIC. bW FB~ IRS, DEA. Avlllablo rour 730 Yans &amp; 4-WDa
EJctlltn1 Condl11on, UID, 814· runo vory good, 30 MPG. now.
Coli
1·500·5t:HSI3
1101
411.0103
1m. i7K. II IDS. 111 i85-13tlll.
Ellt S.ll388
'113 Fo•d Atrolllr Spor~ ruur 760 Auto Parta &amp;
lotdod. . - , Cll81.f.Accessor,.,.
•··
1gio Oldo Cudoll Suprom•,
li80·1~CIIIforl1001tt
L-..,
Slttndrud,
......,
.
Slizod
And
Sold
1877
Dodot
Plck·Up
4
WD.
Runo
TRANSPORTATION
CD, IlK, E1ctllon1 Condl11on.
~Thil Monllt
EJoollont. $2,500 080, 114-381- t 988 M.,curJ Sablo, For Ptrlt
M,110D, 81of.418.1222
.
Truckl, •14·~ Er..
8181, 811-1111Mll71.
Only, 1400, 014-3711-2751.
710 Autos for Sale
.t g;, Corllco WADA I4.375,,,..._.:.1.;;-:.:.;B22-::..:2.;.,730;;;:.;·X;;.;3DOI=:..
·_
IU3 Chtvy s-10 Blozor owd, Budget Prlco Tronsmloolano,
ts,OH; 111110 Bu1111d Sldo Kick 4 ,.
VO, 2.1 Ntor, iiiPd. 11bu1! tn(llnt Usod /Rtbu~t. All Ty~o, OV•r
1175 Cadllloc, D•ivoablo, Noodo WD fi,IDII. 114·411·21g5 Alk
w/Wa,onty, well molntaln.d, 10,000 Tronomloolans, Ac&lt;4tu
S~ COlumn for Sola, 2 Now Farvtdly.
Upton Ultd Cors Rl. 02·3 linn l3,100. 30!182-2llillhorllpm.
RlmanufacOlrod Main Shafta For
Tires, Rldia1Dr, SIOO, Ito·•• I South of Loon, WV. Flnanc~nt
Stondard Tranomlulon All
0217.
111111 Fold,._ 4 door, 4 cylln- ... 111'1 304 4N IDID.
1885 Chorokoo .loop Good Co,. 1 ~l;!-:::;:.;.,l;.;t;;,l-:;2ol;:~.:;;.77.:..__ __
--......,,......~--=--1 dtr oummotlc. olr, runo g,.l~
for
dillon, Now-~ Tlrao. UIIICk. r·
ti80 Chtvy Malibu S.W.. runo ctHn w, ltiOO 090, 11+712·
,......,..
,.
Rodio Wllh CO Playtt Col Altar
New ga1 tanka, 1 tan &amp;ruck
g.;.,ao..;t;.;S.;.56o~
,
8:-1..;1
":1111:"2-..;55:.:2i.;.·_.:.:---l
Z157.
0:00
P.M. 81 ...18-DII:!:I, Or 814- =
l o I radlt1Dtl. D I R o\ula,
'111 Ford Rangot Supor Cob XL. 215-11182.
1881 Codllloc Eldorodo Runo 1Qi2 Saturn SL·t good cond. call Jo...
11000. 1;;;.:;.;.;::;::_ _ _ _....;_ _ RlpiOJ, wv. 301·372-31133 ar 1•
Good, Rao1 Good Body I Int....,, 14,500.301-1115-7320.
:30;:..4:-;882~;;:";:•::..,..--:~~~ liS5 Chovy 110 Bluer, 114 IIJ0.273-113211.
Won'! God In Rovtrot, $600
~
Auto, Claan, Low Mlfto, f3,000
790
&amp;
Firm. 811 118 8853
1ge3 Oodg• lntrtpld ...000 1&amp;88 Chivy Cuo!Dm 30 WIUtlflty OBO.I811)11t..MIIt1, E1coltont Condl11on, For bod. 2Wd. 455 W/alrl 427 lloo 1.:;:::;::.:.:!..:.:.:..::=..;._ _ __
Motor Homea
lolortlnlof,.dan Coil (OH) 218- ...,...... ,.., tnd, ~ piL 14,000 I ill Chov•olt1 t/2 IDn plckvp
li82 Buick Rivltro, Auto, 2 111111
080. Coli 3114-e7fl.3000 or 411, ale, alltomatlc, ••••llon1 1g7e Pact Arrow, 28Ft•• Fullr
Ooo.ro. front · Whotl Orlvt.
175-8277.
condition, 17600, II•·DD2·70tl Conralntd, 57,000 Milos, ...000
120,000 Min. Good Body, Runo 1gi3 Pon1lac Grand Am SE 2 --~,__.,-,-,.,...,,.-,...,.- ahw 5prn.
080, 81....._.7110 A._ 5 P.M.
Good, $900 OBO CoiiOII-440· Oooro, AJC, Power Locks, CD 1QI2 Ford F-150 V-t full lilt
1000 If Nci Anowor, Lnvi uo.. Ployor, Now flrto And Droke" ••.ooo - · · 51Pd. omlfm, po, t98i GUC Sallrl Cuotom, 14,1110 1881 Terry 21' CllmPtr, 011 fur·
Amor. Reclng Whoelo. 15,000 pb, oc, woltonka. 't8,100. 304- 118~1~1-~11!!1~1~222~-~-·...,.......,- nace, air conditioner, llerto, ml ~
........,, now rofrigora01r, 13000,
.;;;:::;;____.,...,._,...,..-::· 1Mlltl, 1 Owntr, Rtducod Prlct. :•11-;:.::21~1~1:..·.....,~~-:-.,...,.- t·
1i83 Thunderbird Good Condl· .,......- .
19il Bluer 111 Toha Ptclctp 114-8112·11150.
lion, Runo Wtil. 11 .000 OSO,
11U Chovr 11-10 lwd, 40,000 RadiOiock, Shorpl ExoopilonlltJ
811·245-41481.
lgis Cavalltt ti.OOO, Allor 2:00 milts, oxc. cond .. 110,000. 304- Weii-Moln1alnod, Hovo All Sonl·
SERVICES
11.......o301.
=11116;;;.;;30;;;70...;;__ _ _..,..,.__ Ice Records Slnct Purchlltd • .
liSI
Good
Body,
l16~11-~11~8~0i~57~,~~~~~~~~~~!:0~S5~2.~- - ----IIi
.... ChovtiiO,
III-IIHIIS
Ahtr
1 P.ll.Law 1Di5 Sawrn SC2. o\ulomollc. Air. -1ii5 F·250 411, XLT Plcklp, I·
O --..__..
C•ulot, Aloi/FM Couotto, Trunlr Fully LOidod. Sharp, Muo1 SMf 1994 Joap Che•oket counlty, 81
.-.... ...
1i81 Chevy C - . 1550, 014- RolooU. tt2,000 Cd Allor I P.ll 117,500, CoR Afr.r 2 P.M. 114- aula, Ill, ldr, now 11ros I bot· ___;l.:,:m.;;:provements
i82·55211.
(Serlouo lnqulrlol Only I) 111· 311l-l1710.
1o•r. all powor, hl1ch. 301·1752nd cutting clovor htf, S2.21 1• 0., " - I . , -, I
- . --.111 ass 1174.
opeod, AJC, omlfm couottt,
13000, 814-W2-51371hor 5prn.
800 II. bolto of .......,, quoiiiJ
hoy, tfiJ ICOIM, calf 111-ti.. lin Ford Tornpo. 1110 - · 1WO
11$01.
awnoro. full lllod oport, bodJ
_,.;.;..;;...-~~~-~~~~ good, otrong tnUint, prlcod Ia
Squoro boloo 11.110 ID 12.25 1· Hli· fiOOO, with CD piiJfr,
.cmllo;;.;.;,N.;;.;~=2.;.;~.;.;.;~11-;.!8SI=I'-.-:-:--I 11200, 811-841J-30111 ._..,....

W1tca--.. e1~1 .

lti.SSHlll7.

•.$tfrion1Dr,
-·VCR,- .

Avo. Paint Pltlotnt, 301·t7S.

740 .Moton:yclta

FARf.1 :;uPPliES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Joct&lt;lon. Ohio. l.alll-537-esa

ll5-1.51hor 5prn.

Large' Private lal In Centar-.r1.

1137·:1733.

o\KC Gor111011 llltphlrd puppy, IOgal Ill UP optdola. Fllh
ftmlrlt, lot lht11 I wormtcl. Tonk &amp; Pt1 Shop, 2113 Joclloon

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

POMEROY· UNCOLN
A 1 1/2 story houae on a llnle
1raveled road . Completely •.emodeled downslalrs wi1h 4
rooms down and 2 bed•ooms wp. Newer heat pump, large
patio sitting on a 150x 170 lot. Vinyl siding for low
maintenance. REDUCEO $35,000

Investors!! Duplex o1ftf1 LPI, OR,
2 BAs. boih and k~chen lr\
downstai11 unit. GM roo:.d air
htat Upslalra unl1 otrer. LR With
~illinl! doorllho1 open our on1 a
n1co dad&lt;. kilonen. 1 BR 111&lt;1 1&gt;11&lt;&gt;.

ST. RT. 143- 2 acres mil jusl waiting for you lo put your very
own home or mobile on. Wate•, sep1ic, &amp; efectric are al•eady
the•e. This one won't last long. Gat il before n·a gone. $8,500
MfODLEPOAT· N. Thlrtf. .A ranch style home that Ia only 6
yeara old. Home has 3 bedrooms 2 baths, and a 11orege
b&lt;Jilding. Also has vinyl siding and Anderson Windows. ONLY
$48,500
oomE TURNER, Broker..........................ll82·5892
JERRY SPRADUNO .................................. 848-2131
CHARMELE SPRADUN0 ...........................$48-2131

BEnY JO COWNS•..••••.•••••••..•..•...:......•...812-238S
BRENDA JEFFEA9 ......................................112·7271
OFFICE ........................................................882·2881

12111 Hlatorlcelly Speaklne

74 Gartltld Ann- Anentlorl

Gaa opaco
hell.
largeAl1ootably
·
LNge
pandng
.....
priced II 137.900. 1102

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(614) 446-3 644

til'
o••&lt;•m••rv

E-Mail Address : wiseman@zoomnet.net

DAVID WISEMAN! BROKER,GRI - 446-9555
Loretta McDade • '"'-771'

Carolyn Wudl · 441·1007

Garnea446-l707 :

12101 BEGINNERS ~UCK

Chafmmg Vtctona n home 4-5
bedrma, 3 baths, kit, lormal OR &amp;
LR. Crystal chandehers through
ou. Fufl bsmt wlttl complete kl t,
atone WBFP. BA w(gas fireplace
gilra~. llndleiPed lot Exclusrve
viowlng wilh Vorglnia L. Sm&lt;th 0116-

10 school: 3 bl'. ranch, tun
tftachod garage &amp; carpon. t 1'1; 8101.
m/1 vtS 116-11801~
1100 SURPRISU. 3LY LOW
12111 HUGE BARN• very well PAtel Last lot on Llkt vlew Ct.
CDnllruc:IOCI. cemonl floor, loft tor Located where only tne best is
ttorlgt, kltCMI'\, heat, I ac. m/1, good Onoog/1 2.348 IC ..... Solljoct
Grtot tor old cara or boa1 11CraQ1 to t'81tridive coven~nts. VLS 448ole. vtS

REDUCED 189.000

.....

8101 $21 .500

1

t2MI Unlqu. lt)'le Home
w/cathld ral celllngt, balcony

12107 UKE NEW· Wondor1ul oil
brlcl&lt; rand\ rarnori&lt;ICiy opocioul,

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snap
losing streak
on home turf

Super Lotto:

2-3·23-24-30-39
Kicker:
1-G-4-1-9-8
Pick 3:
8-3-5
Pick 4:

Sports on Page 4

9-6-5·2

\bl. 48, NO. 140
01187, Ohio v.Jiey Publlohi11J1 Comp.ny

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Mbnday, November 3, 1997

•4.9% RUIICIII
OIU.IOV&amp;IIIAC
CIIJIT

TOYOTA
&amp; LEXUS.

Shower• changing to
snow showers late thla
evening. Lows In the mid
30a. Tuesday, cloudy.
Hlgha only near 40.

2 Sectlono, 111'11gH. 3 5 AGennett Co. ,..wopoper

Condition of·· Oh.io's bridges worries official.s
DA:YTON (AP)- Nearly one in every lhree highway bridges iil Ohio is l(lfeet long- Ohio has 42,890. Tlte state Is responsible for 14,930 of those
considered deficienl by the federal government.
bridges. and the rest 3ll= mainlained by counties and cities.
U.S. Department of Transportation records show that 29.6 percent of the
This year. lhe Ohio Departmenl of Transportation has spent $195 million
slate's bridges are either dilapidated or inadequate under traffic load safety on bridges; the federal government supplies $84 million of that. Cities and
slanddrds, according loa COf!lpuler-assisted analysis by 'The Associated Press. counties have spent about $95 million, including $24 million from the federal government.
The national average is 31 percent.
Even the experts admit thai's not nearly enough.
Bad bridges can take a toll on those who live nearby. When a deteriorat"We are behind in replacing bridges and rehabilitating bridges," Sprowls
ing bridge closes. motorisls are inconvenienced. But. there's a bigger problem - fire 'trucks and ambulances are rerouted, which can lengthen their said. "Given our fundin,g situation. we're not catching up. Our guys are tryresponse lime and put people in need of help in jeopardy. The economic health ing to fix lhe worst ones we've got with the money we've got. We need a
significant increase in funding to take care of the problem that we have."
of a community can plummet if access is cut off.
Nearly half of the bridges mainlained by local governments are more than ·
"Our concern is growing," said Glenn Sprowls, executive director of lhe
· Counly Engineers Association of Ohio. "I don'l fear to lravel over any of 50 years .old - older than lheir designers intended.
Local govemmenls would need $127 million a year for 10 years to make
the bridges. But I do see lhal we're going to have more bridges·closed, mor~
. the necessary replacements and repairs, he said.
bridges wilh load limits."
"I've told people I'd take money from a bake sale," Sprowls said. "We
Ohio has 27,768 bridges under the federal government's definilion can
use lhat federal bridge money up in a heartbeat."
spans at least 20 feet long. Under the ·state's definilion- bridges are at least

Record
numbers
crowd
streets
ATHENS (AP)- Police arrested
nearly 200 people Saturday as a
record number packed lhe city's
downtown for lhe annual Halloween
streel party. ·
Athens Police Chief Rick Mayer
said about 30,000 people crammed
into a lhree-block area for the celebralion in this soulheastcrn Ohio
city.
Mayer said the cr9wd was so large
thai officers were pinned in at times
and woulp not have been able to
respond quickly in an emergency.
"The evenl, with the numbers this
year, was in loo small of a confined
area," Mayer said in a slatement. "I
believe that lhc event has reached,
and possibly exceeded, the safe level of occupancy."
The crowd peaked about 10 p.m.
and did not bl!gin to diswrse until
bands slopped playing about ' midnight.
Police made 199 arresls between
7 p:m. Saturday and 3 a.m. Sunday
- down from 211 arresls in 1he same
period last year. Mosl arrests were
made for disorderly conduct or alcohol violations.
Mayer said the ·celebration is a
strain on the community and the
police department. He said lhe city
needs lo re-evaluale lhe Halloween
party to ensure safety..
Officers from many other region·
al law enforcement departments
assisted Athens police throughout the
weekend.
Thousands of people arrived Friday

But Gordon Proctor, ODOT's chief of staff, said the $84 million Ohio
receives from the federal government each year for state-maintained bridges
is sufficient.
"The slate-system bridges are generally very sound and extremely safe,"
he said.
Nonetheless, the state is working on improvements.
ODOT has created a new funding category to target the repair and maintenance of the state's largest bridges. said Chris Runyan. ODOT's assistant
direc1or for lransportalion policy. The state also is testing a bridge made of
composites and polymers 10 see if il willlasllonger and be stronger lhan convenlional concrete bridges.
That won't solve what Proctor considers one of the biggest problems: costs
for local ~overnments.
"There are probably $600 million in high-cost local bridge projects lhal
deserve to be funded." Proc1or said. "They really exhaust any one county's
ability to take care of them."

~Newchrefwekomed~ Authorities·charge

Meigs County man
.in alleged shooting

•

MASON, W.Va. -A Meigs County man is being charged with felony
wanton endangerment after allegedly firing four shots at a Mason lrailer Sat·
urday afternoon, according lo Mason Police Chief Shawn Ross.
Ross said Brian Bass, 43, of Portland, was apparently in a fight at a Mason
County bar earlier in the day. He reportedly went to Meigs County, returned
with a 9-millimcter gun ,·and shot into the lrailer on Adams Street. No tmc
was injured.
. Bass returned to Meigs County once again, where he was apprehended.
Ross said Bass was expected to be extradited to Mason County today,
where he will be charJed with felony wanton eodanJermcnt and several mis·- de~anO!'s. ~ ,
~
Ross said he was assisled by the West Virginia Slate Police-Point Pleasant Delachmcnt. The incidenl remains under invesligation.

Government reports
Chinese president wraps up slowdown .in growth
U.S. tour on a positive note qf personal -income
•

LOS ANGELES (AP) - .In his
U.S. tour finale, Chinese Presidenl
· Jiang Zemin said lhe lwo countries
will grow closer as China embraces
Hong Kong and attempts lo seule dispules with Taiwan.
The themes of his speech Sunday
night were similar to those he gave
across lhe country over eighl days.
He livened up his final appearance,
however, by humming a few bars of
a Chinese opera, much to lhe delight
of his audience, about 1,000 Chinese
and Chinese-Americans . .
"I am convinced that through the
concerted efforts of\he two governments and two peoples. China and
U.S. relations will enter into a new
stage of sound and slable development," Jiang said in Mandarin.
His remarks appeared intended lo
present a picture of a forward-looking China and 10 diminish the impact
of the protesters who trailed him
everywhere to criticize Chinese polky on Tibet. Taiwan and human

rights.
"In lhc 21 st ccnlury, China will be
built into a strong democracy ... and
lhe Chinese nation will achieve its
rejuvenation," Jiang said in his only
U.S. appearance sponsored .by Chinese- Americans. The "Taiwan question will eventually be answered."
He was · scheduled to leave for
China today.
Jiang began his visit in Hawaii
before traveling to lhc East Coast. He
mel with President Clinlon and mem·
bers of Congress, many of whom
were critical about ~pression in
Tibet and other issues. Clinlon said
Beijing's human rights policies are on
"the wrong side of history."
Jiang repeatedly defended his
communist nation of 1.2 bi Ilion and
vowed to open il still wider to oulsiders.. His was 1he first stale visil by
a Chinese leader since Chinese pres.
ident Li Xiannian visited 12 years
ago durins the Reagan adminiSira·
tion.

· After meeling with officials from
General Motors Corp.-owned Hughes Electronics, Jiang lold a luncheon
audience here that improving rela·
tions between C~ina and the United
Slates shouldn't be deterred by "differences thai cannot be ironed out for
the time being."
· The luncheon crowd included
News Corp. Chainnan Rupert Murdoch, An:o Chairman Mike Bowlin,
Occidenlal Petroleum chief Ray Irani,
opera direclor Peter Sellars and Los
Angeles Dodgers owner Peler
O'Mal)ey.
Outside, demonstrators chanting
"Free Tibet" burned three Chinese
Oags. Others dressed as Chinese soldiers "arrested" Tibetan monks.
whose faces were painted to show
they had been bloodied and bruised.
Lisa Mahoney of Amnesty International chastised Clinton foo failing
to push the human righls issue with
Jiang.

By DAVE SKIDMORE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Growth in Americans' personal incomes and spending moderated in September in a soft ending to a robusl quarter.
Personal incomes rose 0.4 percent to a seasonally adjusled annual rate of
$6.94 trillion following a 0.6 percent increase in Augusl, the Commerce
Depanmenl said loday.
Personal consumption spending increased 0.2 percent to a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of ~ · 5~trillion . That followed gains of 0.3 percent in
August and 1.1 percent ·n Ju y, the largest in six months.
Economists said the in o e gains reflect steady wage increases stemming
from tight labor markels favoring job seekers. The nation's unemployment
rate has been al or below 5 percent since the winter, the longest such stretch
in 24 years.
·The spending advance rcllccted a revival in shopping over the summer
and early fall after a temporary spring retreat by consumers.
Wages and salaries rose 0.3 pcrc~nt in September, and transfer payments
such¥ Social Security and welfare increasecl 0.5 percent.
.
All other categories rose too. These included business owners' income.
rental income and interest and dividends.
Disposable personal income advanced 0.4 percent, the same as total
income.
The fact that disposable income grew faster than spending produced an
increase in Americans' sa vings rate, to 3.8 percent in Scptcmbcr from 3.6
percent in August and 3.3 percenl in July.
All three rates arc considered low and a sign that consumer spending prol&gt;ably will slow a bit in the months ahead.

Meigs looks·for a few economic pioneers
(Editor;• note: The following
stOry was originally published In
The Cincinnati Enquirer of Oct. 12
and Is reprinted here with pennialion. The Cincinnati Enquirer, like
TIM Dally Sentinel, 11 owned by the
Gannen Co.)

AS

ALL PRICES INCWDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCWDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
UCENSE FEES.

~engals

But Athens notes
only 200 arrests
from annual bash

LOW

AS

Ohio Lottery

By GUY BOULTON
The Cincinnati Enquirer·
POMEROY '- In late summer,
this village's downtown lies between
the verdant backdrop of a bluff, hidden by dense foliage, and 1he mesmerizins expanse of the Ohio River.
The office buildings and stores on
Main Street, from Swisher &amp; Lohse
Phannacy 10 the KFC restaurant, look
our on lhe river from a dislance of
less lhan 50 yards. Behind the business district, narrow slreets snake up
lhe sleep hollows of the Appalachian
foolhills .
The setting is as picturesque as
any in the region.
lis beauty cloaks its poverty.
Most of lhe year, nearly one in I 0
workers in Pomeroy and Meigs
County is without a job. Nearly one
in .four people in the county lives in
poveny, and nearly one in five
receives food stamps.

"There's not much work around
here," says Becky Powell. an unemployed mother of three. "That's somelhing Meigs County needs - some
jobs. Bad."
The McDonald's restaurant. wilh
about 60 full-time and pan-time .
employees, is one of the counly's
largesl employers. So is lhe Kroger
supennarket, with about 80 employees. Arid so, too, is the county's social
services depanmcnl, which employs
about 50.
·
The slrongest economy in a generation has scarcely touched Meigs
County.
The unemployment rate has
dropped below double-digits. And the
poveny rale, based on rough estimales, has fallen. slill, an eslimited
22 percent of lhe county's population.
twice Ohio's average, lives in poverly - $I 3,330 or less income a year
for a family of lhree, as defined by
federal ~tandards.
Many people commute 10 Gallipolis or Athens or Marielta · for
work. Others work in low-paying service jobs - the stores, the restaurants, the 1wo nursing homes -that
typify lhe area economy.

The lucky ones get on at Ameri- get a decent job," says Mr. Tiemeycan Eleclric Power Inc . (AEP) pow- er, 50. "There's nothing around here."
er plants or coal mines. Jobs at
Yet Pomeroy is not a town withAEPs two mines in Meigs County, oul hope.
which employ 821 people, can pay
The villase, with the help of
more than $40,000 a year. But the $530,000 in slate and federal grants,
mines' employ about I,OOQ fewer peo- has renovated the downtown business
ple_th~~ in 1980; 439 fewer" than in
district restoring many of 1he facades
1990.
-=
on lhe historic buildinas. And lhe
Others, nearly 1.800 people, county has made economic developincluding I, 140 children, subsist on men! a priority, starting work on an
checks from what is now officially induslrial park, estimated to cost
called Ohio Works First but is more $1 .2 million lo $1 .5 million, with the
commonly called welfare.
hope of attracting employers.
Ms. Powell. a lifelong resident of
"Things have got(en better here,"
Meigs County, receives a bit more says Paul Reed, president of lhe
than $400 a month. Her rent is $200 Fanners Bank &amp; Savings Co., a bank
a momh.
founded by his greal-grandfather in
"If it wasn't for lhe guy I live wilh, 1904. The revi1aliZ1tion of the downwe just won't make it," she says, sit- town business district and lhc industing on her fronl sloop one evenina trial park, he add$, indicate the comlast month.
munity's ·growing confidence.
William Tiemeyer, her p811tlcr,
In his office, which looks out onto
works part-time as a delivery driver the Ohio River, lhat day's Wall Street
for Pizza Express. He previously Journal lies on his desk. Mr. Reed
worked at Jukebox Pizza. He makes says the stories on lhe booming
$3 an hour plus lips, takin1 home economy are not an abstraction to
about $500 a monlh.' Sometimes he him, despite the county's high unem"lucks into" a side job- mowing a ployment rale.
lawn, painting a porch.
(Continued on Page 31
"Usually you have to go away lo

..
.I

•

''

r

..

•

·.••
FLU SHOTS- The Meigs County Health Deplttblm1t hea
blgun admlnlaterlngllu ahota to the public. On Frklly, dlplrtment ...,.,.. at the Meigs Multlpurpoet Senior Centw. Hire,
June Duffllld of Middleport receives her shot from Beth Gaul, a
nuree with the department.

'

•

•
•
•

•
•

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