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.......

OCTO.B ER I
• •.fii.H
IIT.H
IIT.H
lfllla.l
lflllc.cl
CHEVY
TRUCK
ONTH
•• 1-1
•• 1-1
I
ATC &amp;0 MOTOR •
CHECK OUT THE · ·S AVINGS
l998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
EXTENDED CAB 414
IIPII

'

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OSU stadium

Remembering.
thosewlto
served
• l"wturtd on pege C1

slated for
$150 million
renovation

Mr. Bean
demands
precise
anarchy

•PegeU•

anP-CI•

HI: 50s
Low:40s
Details on
pageA2

• Entertainment

'

'

$

LOW
i' '

AS

• ,,,

tmes

'

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Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chr,ome Bumpers, Chrome
Appearance Package and Morel

AS

•

1998 CHEVY\
5·-10

.

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Gallipolis • Middleport· Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • November 9, 1997

•

6th District race shaping up as a hot one • again·
By PAMELA BROGAN
College, and Mike Azinger, an insurance agent from
Gannett N.- hrvlce
.
West ViraJnia who now lives in Marietta, said they will
WASHINGTON- The race to win Ohio's 6th Con- raise $200,000 and $100,000 respectively to win the primary.
gressional District is on.
A ·slate of GOP candidates who arc challenging · So far, the candidates' c:ampaign' are reporting the
Democratic incumbent Rep. Ted Strickland next year following amounts in their treasuries: Strickland,
already arc mappina out their strategies and collecting $127,000; Hollister, $90,000; Cremeans, $25,000;
c:ampaign cash.
·
·
. Sharpe, $10,000; and Azinger; $7,000.
Ohio political analyst AI Tuchfarher, director of the
Former Republican Rep. Frank Cremeans, Gallipolis,
and U. Gov. Nancy Hollister, two of four GOP candi- University of ~ncinnati Institute for Policy Research,
dates who want the Republican nomination in May, say which publishes The Ohio Poll, said it is a toss-up
they will need to to raise $600,000 in the primary and between Cremeans and Hollister for the GOP nomination. Tuchfarber said Sharpe and Azinger have no
another $1- million in the general election to win.
Strickland s8id he will ask the GOP nominee to agree chance·of winning.
to limit campaign spending to a maximum of $600,000
"Sharpe has got no chance, none, zero," Tuchfat:ber
in the general election.
said. "And who is Azinger?"
· · The two other Republican candidates, Tom Sharpe,
Tuchfarber said either Cremeans or Hollister will win
an English professor at Washington State Community the GOP nomination because their names are known to

Restyled Front Grille, Instrument Panel,
Bumpers, and Increased Horse Power! I

'~ Tef/Strlclctind.Nidhe ,
.wOuld Tither run 9/n.f'c;..
IJIHftl thl/l Holt/Iter,
'
~UH Holl/lfl.r, hi Nld,
wflo /1 blc/ced by NVII'I/
of Ohio'• GOP oon·
dtleglflon, ,, •' '
voten, and.they will raise more campaign donations.
Sharpe and Azinger said it is far too early to dismiss
them.
Sharpe said he is running because the GOP "needs to
end the pins-pong" game in the 6th Congressional District, a reference to the district changing hands between
Cremeans and Str~ckland in the past three elections.
"I expect to win this race," said Sharpe, who said his

I

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LOW

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Saturday's college
football results

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*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

1998 CHEVY 5·1 0
EXTENDED CAB
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Air Conditioning, Alum. Wheels, LS Package~
· AM/FM Radio, W/L Tires, and Morell ·
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Editorial•

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0 1997 Ohio Valley Publllhln1 Co.

*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

·IOIUID$
All PRICES INCLUDE

REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR

ST. ALBANS

Good Mornin

Soorts

AS

MOTO

.
(AP) - Bob
Taft will begin his
campaign for the
.Republican nomina·
tion for governor
next wee~ with · a
two-day, nine,city
trip around Ohio.
Taft, Ohio's secretary of state, will
formally announce his candidacy
Wednesday in his hometown of
Cincinnati. He then will fly to
Dayton, Toledo and Clevelan\1.
On Thursday, Taft will take his
campaign to Canton, Akron,
Youngstown and Zanesville
\. before winding up ·the trip in
Columbus.
· Taft faces a possible primary
fight from Treasurer Kenneth
Blackwell, who has said he is con·
sidering his options for 1998.
Fprmer Attorney General lee
Fisher. is the only Dc!ll~l to
annoulk:e a run for the state's
highest office.' He faces a possible
challeng~ from Toledo businessman Bruce Douglas, who is
sidering a Sc:IMunded campaign
for the Democratic nomination.

AJoulhe Rlyer
Obltuarlu

LOW

AND

campaign for
governor with
state
· nd

Comlq

AS

UCENSE FEES.

T.aft to begin

TOYOTA
&amp; LEXUS

campaign slogan is to protec;t life and jobs.
David Azinger, the candidate's brother and campaign
manager, said Mike Azinger has a good chance of win·
ning a district where there's a history of voter discontent
and 'Victories by dose margins. In 1994, Cremeans beat
Strickland by 3,000 votes. In 1996, Strickland ousted
Cremeans by 5,000 votes.
, "Mike is similar to Cremeans in that he's pro-life,
pro-family and pro-guns," David said. "But the one big
difference is that Cremeans can'J heat Ted Strickland.
Mike is the one to beat Strickland," Azinger said.
The brothers aren't strangers to politics. Their father,
Tom Azinger, is a Republican state legislator from Wood
County in West Virginia.
Strickland said he would rather run against Cremeans
than Hollister, because Hollister, who is backed by several memben of Ohio's GOP congressional delegation,
Continued on pag41 A8

•
·Judge rules ,
0 S t. • WorkAmerica

·~

•

Vol . .32, No. 39

Gall ia-Meigs
patrol unit
selects its
best for ·1997

misused funds

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia-Meigs
Post of the · State Highway Patrol
selected its trooper .of the year and (jispatcher of the year, • patio! announaed
Friday. .
Troopei Bryan D. Pack, 33, waa choeen
the post's top trooper of 1997 in re~i­
tion of outstanding sen-ice during the year.
He was chosen based on his leadenhip
abilities; professional ethics, courteous
treatment of others, enthusiastic work atti·
tude, and cooperation with supenrisors,
peers and the public.
·
Pack is now in contention for the district and state trooper of the· yeu awards,
to be announced at·a later date.
Pack joined th~ patrol in 1985 and has
served at the Gallipolis Post since · his
graduation from the patrol academy. Originally from Louisa, Ky., and a 1982 gradu·
ate of Lawrence County High School,
Pack has received the patrol's Safe. Dri·
ving Award with over 10 years of accidentfree driving.
Pack and his wife Rita reside in Gal·
ilpoiis with their child(l:n, Kaitlynn, 5, and
Jared, 3.
Radio Dispatcher II William K. Brown
was chosen to receive' 'the 1997 Patrol
Telecommunications Award at the Gallipolis Post.
Brown's selection is in recognition of
outstanding service during the year for his
work at the post. Troopers and dispatcHen
.
.
stationed at Gallipolis chose Brown for the
TROOPER BRYAN D. PACK, ltllndlf111, and Dlaplltcher William 1&lt;. Brown were
award based on technical knowledge and choHn !he trooper ol the ye.- lncl diiJIIItCIIer ol the year, rnpectlvely, at the Gatability, enthusiastic work attitude, team· 111-Melge Pollt of til• State Highway Plltrot. Pack hae been with the Jllllrot lor 12
work, and prompt and courteous Iresponse YHI'll and Brown hal worklldllt the Gattlpotll Poat lor 28 ye1n1.
to the public's rcque~t for information and assistance. . ·
emy High School.
Brown joined the patrol in 1969 and has since served at Gal·
He and his wife Dian reside in GaliiJl!llis. They are the parents
lipolis. f. Gallipolis native, he is a 1966 graduate of Gallia Acad· of Kent, 30, and nm, 22.

By JIM FREEMAN
Tlmei-S.ntlnel Slafl
POMEROY - A M'eigs County judge ruled last
week that trustees of WorkAmerica, Inc. misused the
organizations charitable funds by retaining an attorney
for a Pomeroy man in a criminal case.
Now the fate of the organization, which provided
tutoring services for Meigs County residents, is in the
hal\ds of the Ohio Attorney General's Office and the
Meigs County Pro ~::r Attorney.
OliicJ~
.
filed suit .
on June 18, 1996 in
M'elp .Clltnllj 0..!11001 Pial
Court of Judge Fred W. Crow III alleging that
WorkAmerica, Inc., a non-profit subsidiary of Freedom
Road Ministries, Inc., and six trustees of its board of
directors breached their fiduciary duiy to a charitable
trust.
The focus of the state's case was on how the board of
directors carried out its duties in administrating the nonprofit corporation, said Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes, who had worked with the Attorney
General's office during its investigation.
The civil suit deals specifically with approval in February, 1996 by WorkAmerica's board of trustees to
release $2,000 in WorkAmerica funds to retain an attorney for Brad Robinson who was ·indicted on Feb. 14,
1996 for .the Jan. 15, 1996 robbery of the former Salvation Army offices in Pomeroy. He was later found guilty
and is now serving time in prison.
In the civil suit, the state sought the immediate
removal of all trustees and officers of.WorkAmerica and
appointment of a receiver until successor trustees are
named by the Court, a permanent injunction against all
the defendants, prohibiting them from engaging in
·WorkAmerica activities or practices and an accurate
accounting for all trust assets which have been in
WorkAmerica trustees possession and control during the
time relevant to the complaint.
The state also asked that the defendants be personalty accountable for the $2,000 check drawn from
WorkAmerica funds to pay for Robinson's attorney, and
order the amount returned to WorkAmerica. ·
Crow held that defendants Walter Robb and Ralph
·Scarmack should pay damages in the amount of $2,000
to the Ohio Attorney General through her charitable
foundations section.
'
Funhermore, Robb and Scarmack are to be removed
as officers and board memben of the board of trustees.
Continued on page AS

0

....,Mosfrntry

Middleport man recalls 'Little Waco'; gives his version of '93 raid on home
By JIM FREEMAN
by Meigs County and Middleport lawmen who
Tlmei-Stlftlnet St.rr
confiscated thousands of firearms, thousands
MIDDLEPORT - Motorists who drive in cash and other items ranging from power
through Middleport on a regular basis . arc· tools to electronic goods.
probably accustomed to the tombstone-like
In the days that followed, Sheriff James M.
sign reading 'Uttie Waco Memorial" at the Soulsby and Prosec:uting Attorney John R.
South Third Avenue residence of Robert D. Lentes claimed to have seized about $188,000
Fife.
in cash and up to 3,IJOO firearms. Fife was
The marker is Robert D. Fife's way of com- ~ accused, but not charged, by officials with
memorating the July 9, 1993, raid on his home . racketeering, running a fencing operation-

serving as a repository for stolen goods - and
running an illegal pawn shop, ·
Soon afterwards, Fife pleaded guilty to a
charge of trafficking in food stamps and two
counts of receiving stolen property and was
sentenced to three consecutive 18-month
terms which were suspended. In addition, Fife
forfeited his firearm collection, $185,000 and
$60,000 from bank accounts.
Fife now says he was innocent of any

wrongdoing, but agreed with the plea agreement because he had to take care of his ill
wife, Gladys, who even now is hospitalized in
Columbus.
'The reason I had to do what I done was I
had to weigh ... are riches worth more than my
wife's health and my being there with her?" he
asked.
ConUnulld on paga AI

Marker to recognize Meigs birthplace of Ambrose Bierce
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
TIIIIII-Sintlnet Slafl
.
POMEROY _ A historical
marker in recognition of the birthplace of noted satirist, short story
writer and journalist Ambrose
Bierce, born June 24, 1842.on a farm
near Bashan in Meigs County, will
be placed at the intersection of State
Route 7 and Eagle Ridge Road.
Necessary approval for placing
the monument there and the inscription it is to carry has been secured
from the Ohio Historical Society.
that followed the agency's review
of facts documenting Bierce's birth·
place submitted by the Meigs Coonly Historical Society.
Approval has also been received
from the Ohio Department of High-

•

ways for locating the sign near the
intersection. For safety and security
reasons, it must be placed at ieast26
feet off the state highway.
Margaret Parker, president of the
Meigs County Historical Society,
has been working on the project
with Kristy Blazer Wpodall, a
teacher' at the River Valley Hip
School, for more than a year.
The $1,550 cost of the marker
has already been raised.
About half of it was provided by
students in area $Choois through a
variety of money-making projects.
The rest of the money came from the
balance in the treasury of the J75th
Anniversary of Meigs County Committee.
The project of marking Bierce's

,.

birthplace started several yean ago
when Woodall, teaching Junior
American Literature at the formct
Kyger Creek Hip School, had the
class read Bierce's "The Occurrence
at Owl Creek Bridge. •
There was a mention in the
author's background section that he
was born in Meiga County, and in a
discuasion on that one of the stu·
dents, Keri Black, said she was cer·
tain hi&amp; birthplace was on Eagle
Ridae Road off State Route 7 north
of Pomeroy.
Woodall said she wasted no time
in confirming the information and ·
'was shoc:ked to discover that there
was no historical marker there to
recognize his birthplace.'
She immediately began extensive

research on the author, and said it
was soon apparent that he, indeed,
was born in Meigs County, the
youngest of nine children born to a
poverty-stricken farmer originally
from Connecticut Y(ho had come
here and setded on a farm on Horse
Cave Creek. The family left Meigs
County for Indiana when Bierce was
about four years old.
"It was in the fall of 1993, that
my River Valley High School Junior
~erican Literature I~ class agreed
wtth me that. somethmg should_be
done and dectded to start the proJect
to raise money to erect the historioal
marker,' said Woodall.
'They formed the Ambrose
Bierce Memorial Society' with
Contlnulld on pege A8

,.

THE MEIGS COUNTY BIRTHPLACE of .Ambrole Bierce will be
marklld with a hllltorlcat monu1111nt at the lntei'MCtlon of Slllte Route 7
lnd Eagle Ridge ROid n..r Pomeroy. Fundlntl for the projlc:t wae elllrt·
eel by Krlaty Woodall, right, and h" River Yatley High Schoolllttratul'll
IIUdlnta, and wa1 comptetlld recantty wltlf • donetlon from the 1781h
Annlverury of lotelga County Commlttu. Rev. William Mlddluwarth,
trulun1r, I• lhown here with M•rgaret Parker, prealdent of the Melga
Hlatortcat Society.

••

�~.

PageA2•~ ••u---~ lbwl •

Pomeroy • Mldd~ • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pluunt, WV

Clinton considers taking lead on tax o~erha~l

OHIO Weather
Sunday, Nov.-Sl
MICH.

IMansfield !54• I•
IND.

W.VA. •

Ice

sun:z

Pl. c~cucty

C/oudt

Sunday set to offer brief .
respite from -cloudy skies
By The Associated Press
'
·
The National Weather Service says a high pressure system will move
across Ohio on Sunday, with mostly sunny conditions in the west and pan·
ly sunny skies in the cast. Highs will range from the upper 40s to the mid
50s.
It will be partly cloudy Sunday night with lows in the 30s.
A cold front will approach from the no,rthwest Monday, bringing increasing cloudiness with a chance of rain, mainly in the afternoon. Highs will range
from the upper 40s to the low 50s.
Low pressure from off the New Jersey coast brought clouds and some rain
in eastern Ohio on Saturday afternoon. A high pressure system centered over
Illinois was bringing partly to mostly sunny skies to the western half of the
SI31C .

Afternoon temperatures were in the mid to upper 40s in most areas but
had reached the low to mid 50s in northwest Ohio, where the sun shone for
much of the day.
Sunrise Sunday at the Columbus weather station will be at?: 10 a.m. Sunset will be at 5:21 p.m.
·
Weather forecast:
Sunday... Becoming partly sunny by afternoon. Highs 50 to 55. Northwest
wind around I 0 mph .
·
Sunday night...Mostly clear. I,.ows in the upper 30s. '
Monday ... Becoming mostly· cloudy. A chance of rain . in the afternoon.
Highs in the mid 50s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
_
Monday night... Cloudy with a chance of rain. Lows ncar 40.
Extended forecast:
Tucsday... Partly cloudy. Highs ncar 50.
Wcdncsday ...Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain. Lows in the upper 30s
and highs in the upper 40s. ·
•

Poa Office.
M.._btr: The Assocllled Praa. aad lhe Ohio

rle_A_.

SIJNDAY ONLY

suasqumON RATES
JyC.nlto-or-Ont w..t........ ... ....................................... $1 .2.5

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SINGLE COPY PRICE
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No subscriptions by mail pcm1itl.ed in Dtea•
whtfe mob CArrier lm'ice is auillblc.

The Sunday limes·Senti~~rl wiU not bt mpontible lor tdvuoe plymtnlS !Tilde to ewrien.

Publiiher reteO'ItS the right to adjull rates dur·
ina the •ubKription paiod. Subtc:riptlon n1tc

chanJa muy be implcmcnlcd by dJanainathe
dunlliOft of the subscription.

Dolly ood ......,
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
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26 Weeb.. ............................................... $Sl .82
52 Woeks .......... ,.................................... $105.!6
lloln Oulllde Colllo c....,
llwm. ... ,, ............................................$29.2.5
26 Wtelu ............................. :................... $!6.68

•

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RATE~ ~GE.

c
~----,--_:__

Galllpoll1' Hometown Deal1r

•

GALLIPOLIS, OH.
1-800-521-G084

~

--

~lm W.ttoer

"PPyment tiaMd on 72 moa. amount fllllncecltt 0,100.!10, 10.50% APR with approved Cl'ldlt and r11bllt
to dealer with eoo.oo Clllh or trlda. Payment doH not Include 1a1t &amp; IIIIa.

'·

Financial aid director attends seminar

Legislation aids mobile home owners
POMEROY - A bill has been
. pasied by the Ohio Senate which provides forthe waiver oftaxes on man-.
ufactured homes damaged by Oooding: earlier chis year, according to
Mejgs County Auditor Nancy Park·
er C::amp~ll.
.
·
Senate Bill 123 authonzes county auditors to issue refunds or waivers
of lhe current year's taxes on any
manufactured home which was
destroyed or suffered damage in the
March Oooding this year.
Until the passage of the new legislation, there was no relief provided

for damage to manufactured homes,
Campbell said. Under the new law,
the owner of such a home or two
unrelated individuals may submit an
affidavit to the county auditor stating
the home was damaged or destroyed.
This affidavit, which must be
filed with the auditor no later than
Jan. 31, 1998, asks the county audi·
tor to review the damaged property
aml-rcas'(Css its taxable value, she
said.

,.

Meigs County mobile homt owners who have sustained such flood
damage to their homes should contact
the county auditor's office at 9922698 . •

GALLIPOLIS - Alice Farley, director of financial aid at Sou1hcastcrn
B'usiness College, attended fiscal officer training through the U.S . Department of Education on Oct. 30-31.
The two-day training seminar was held at the Embassy Suites in Columbus.

1995LESAIRE
Auto, V6, green

Gallipolis officers cite four people
GALLIPOLIS- The following citations were issued by Gallipolis City
Police Friday anti early Salurday:
Joe Voreh Jr., 29 Henkle Ave., Gallipolis, assured clear distance; Melvin
J. Stewart, 26, Gallipolis, attempted theft and obstructing official business;
Bridgette A. Stover, 21, Southside, W.Va., DUI, failure to dim headlights and
improper lane usage; and Nak4ma J. Roberts, 19, Vinton, no operator's
li'cense.

Eight placed In Gall/a County Jail
GALLIPOLIS - Booked into the Gallia County Jail following arrests
by authorities were :
.
• Rob B. Liffick, 34, Vinton, Friday at6:24 p.m. by the Ohoo Depanment
of Natural Resources for contempt of court.
• Johnna M. Comfort, 36, Bidwell, Friday at9:~7 p.m. by the Gallia County Sheriff's Department for aggravated assault.
.
.
• Donald E. White, 40, Bidwell, Friday at I0:20p.m. by deputoes for cnminal damaging, vandalism and criminal trespassing.
..
• Larry S. Wildermuth, 25, Gallipolis, Friday at II :48 p.m. by deputoes
for domestic violence.
·
·
·
• Shelby A. Clonch, 34, Patriot, Saturday ~t3:25 a.m. by deputies for oper·
atirg under suspension.
· ·
.
• Daniel E. Clay, 39, Bidwell, Saturday at4:22 a.m. by deputies for D';Jl.
• William S. Sowards, 33, Patriot, Saturday at 6:57 a.m. by the GalhaMeigs Post of the Stale Highway Patrol for D~l, no operator's license and
reckless operation.
• Phill S. Unroe, 19, 45 Redwood Drive. Gallipolis, Saturday at7:48 a.m.
by deputies for underage alcohol consumption and possession of drug paraphernalia.

CALL ABOUT OUR RATES.

5
1997 CHEVROLn lWEI

~ITY

222 Mulberry Street· Ravenswood, WV 26164

GYM

•Dip
•Smith Machine
•Two Story Gum
Lose
•Double Tricep
•Power Rack
•Aerobic Studio
Wc1gl1t. •Hip Sled
•T·Bar
•Boxing Room
GZll ll
•Bench Press
•Leg curl
•Physical Therapy
Muscle
•Military
•Leg Extension
•Tanning
Jnd Se lf
"
•Incline
•Sealed Calf
•Personal Training
Esteem
•Decline
•Cross Over
·Power Lifting Tea,m1
•3 Flat Bench
•Pee Deck
•Stack Weigh!
•Seated &amp; Floor Lat •Ab Machine
•Free Weight
•Preacher Bench
•All Olympic Plate &amp; Bars
•3 Pro-Sets Dumbbells
(1 0 to 1oo lbs.)
Speed Bag • Heavy Duly Bag Gloves
•Treadmills •Steppers •Bikes
•Wraps
•Cardia Gliders •Ab·Rollers Belts • Step Boxes • Weights • Mals
•Resist-A-Ball
Provided : Sports Drinks •Blender Bar

Monday ............. 10:0D-I:OO
Tuelday ............ 10:00-1:00
WldnHCioly ...... IO:OD-1:00
Thurldoy .......... 10:0D-I:OO
Frtday................IO:oo-7:00
Saturday ........... 12:0Q.a:OO
Sund1y ............... 1:CJOo.$:00

POMEROY - Units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service
recorded six calls for assistance Friday. Units ~sponding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:31 a.m., Vine Street, Racine,
Ronald Hart, Veterans Memorial
Hospital;
12:14 p.m., Old Dexter Road,
Langsville, Edward Hlad, Holzer
Medical Ccnler, Rutland squad assist·
4:33 p.m.. Sisson Road, Rutland, .
Allen Gerlach, O'Blcness Memorial
Hospital, Rutland squad assisted.
POMEROY
2:18p.m., Fisher Street, Samantha
Wilson, VMH.
.
RUTLAND
7:26 a.m., Goose Creek Road,
. Mary Glover, VMH.
SYRACUSE
2:15 p.m.,. Colle,ge Street, Karl
Kloes, VMH.

t.

• _,f- ~-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___j_ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

$1

1994 GMC JIMMY
1992 FORD CROWN VICTORIA
4K4, 4 dr, SLT, leather, CD
ILOS!ded, RED, AUTO

0.1~ *7 900

Jud

1992 PONTIAC FIREIIRD
6 cyl, 5 spd, nice
0.1~

s

s1

1990 fORD XLT BRONCO

Red/WhHe, 4x4, ve

0111~ . ,
1990 DODGE DYIWTT
V6,auto

00 .,.., s3 900
1996 OLDSMOBilE AURORA

I"3 CHRYSUI LIIAION CONY
V6, auto, Red

Loaded, Pwr sunfoof

.,.., $

.0111~ *7 900

1995 CHEV 5·10 PICKUP

1994 TOYOTA T1 00 P/U
6 cyl, auto, long bed

5 spd, 4 cyl, air

0111~ s
Loaded

Loaded, clean
Onl~

995

1997 OlDSMOBilE 88tx

1996 BUICK RIVIERA

(304) 273-0036

"Your .rriaula, Fitness c.nr.r"
"YOUR BODY WILL THANK YOIJ!" HOURS:

$1 900

1997 OlD5 CUT CIERA
Now

Patty Brandy's

IRON

OniJ

V6, whHe, clean

Auto, Lt

.,.., s1

$

1993 CHEVROLET 5·1 0 PU

1994 FORD EXPlORER

$

995

0111~ $

900

4X4, 4 dr, 6 cyl, auto,
leather ·

V6, 5 spd, air, sharp

1990 FORD TAURUS STA WAGON
seats, 6 cyl, auto

Conversion, 4 Capl chairs, 6
cyl, auto

50

.......................,........ .......
;GALLIA AUTQ SALES .
',.

'

•

..

,:

'&lt;

'

I

2141 J•~klon Pike

"' 11'

':'

446.0724· •{
·on proper safety and
good health habits.
If you have questions
.
.
concernmg your
child's health, call the

Meigs EMS runs

ed;

• GEO •

EWINGTON - Due to the Thanksgiving holiday, the regular meeting
or the Huntington Township Trustees will be Tuesday. Nov. 25 at6 p.m., Clerk
Verna Easter announced.

POMEROY- Annual Veterans Day services will be held Tuesday in front
of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy, organized by members or
Pomeroy's Drew Webster Post 39 of the American Legion.
·
Services will begin at I0:30a.m. wilh special singing followed by the ringing of church bells from 10:55 to II a.m.
The program will begin at I I a.m. with the call to order ~y Legion Post
39 Commander George Harris Sr. and the invocation by Rev. Father Walter
Heinz followed by the Pledge of Allegiance and the Star-Spangled Banner.
Retired Rev. William Middleswarth will give his thoughts on Veterans Day
followed by the program by Rev. George Koster.
The event will closed with Taps and by the benediction by Rev. Roland
Wildman .
·
All veterans and all veterans groups arc asked to bring their color~ to the
event.

The following numbers were
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
OHIO
Pick 3: 3-4-8
Pick 4: 4-6-5-0
.
Buckeye 5: 2,-Hi-22-35-37
No Ohio Lottery player came up
with the right five-number combination in Buckeye 5, so no one can
claim th~ $100,000 prize, the lottery
announced Saturday.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$382,838.
The 146 Buckeye 5 game tickets
wilh four of the numbers are each
worth $250. The 3,854 with three of
the numbers are each worth $10. The
41 , 166 with two of the numbers are
each worth $1.
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$750.279.50 to winners in Friday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales in
Pick 3 Numbers totaled $1 ,467 ,325.
In the other daily game, Pick 4
Numbers
players
wagered
$415.888.50 and will share $142,500.
The jackpot for Saturday's Super
Lotto drawing was $4 million.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 1-0-5
Daily 4: 1-5-5-0
Cash 25: 4-9-14-17-18-20

. •'I

Trustee's switch November meeting date

Organization sets activities
for Veterans Day in Meigs

By The Associated Prall

.

,. This Is Not ALease ,.

era' Dlatlngulahed Service Award
to County
Administrator Karen Sprague, right, for
·
untiring
efforts and grant·wrltlng expertise" In launching the Bidwell·
PC?fter sewer project. Sprague's work netted $3.7 million In fund-Ing for the $5.4 million project. Ground waa broken lor the pr0r
ject on Oct. 22. Making the presentation WAS Commissioner
Harold Montgomery, left.

'•,

PER 10.

Dual air bags, anti-lock brakes, AM/FM stereo, air
conditioning, 100,000 miles spark plugs, and much more!

•
,

.

Lottery results

I NEW CAilLIER nR 0

.

~=-.fee

0

.,

(No ElCIIclty u Pictured)

.

crash at the intenection of state Williams was cited for failure to
CHESHIRE- Parent-teacher conferences al River Valley High School routes 325 and 554 here Fnday left a yreld.
.
. .
have been set for Monday, Nov. 24 from 3:30-9:30 p.m., Principal Patrick Middleport woman slightly injured,
The patrol c1ted a Galhpohs
Stout announced.
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State wo~an for assured clear dostancc foi To schedule an appointment call the high school at 367-7377.
Highway Patrol reported.
lowmg a two-car accodent Fnday on
u• ._
/. ._
11. •
J
Tracey L Smilh 29 24A Railroad SR 160 near the mtersectoon wnh
vtnaOn S 8c6S !f6&amp;6r8nS By paraue
St., was tra~sported t~ Holzer Med- County Road 35 (Jackson Pike).
VINTON - A Veterans Day parade has been scheduled in Vinton for ical Center by the Gallia County
Troopers satd Mchssa L. Adams,
Tuesday, Mayor Donna DeWitt announced.
·
EMS from the scone,of the .I :15 p.m. 36, .1675 Centenary Road, was westThe parade forms at Vinton Elementary School at 4:45p.m. and will be crash, troopers said. She was later bound at 6:55 P-~ · when she was
in the downtown by 5 p.m.
treated and released, a hospital unable to stop m tunc and s1ruck the
A program and light refreshf':'ents will be at the village hall following the spokesperson said.
rear of a car driven by,Jessc W. C~rparade. Anyone w1shmg to parttctpate m the parade should be at the school
Troopers said Smith northbound nngton Jr., 35, 13895 SR 554, Bod·
by 4:45p.m. Tuesday.
on 325 when she collided with a truck well. ' .
Board schedules Information session
driven by Robert L. Williams, 47,
Camngton had stopped fonraffic
Wellston,
that
had
turned
from
554
at
1hc
tome of the crash, accordmg to
GALLIPOLIS- An information meeting has been scheduled by the Galonto
325.
the
report.
Damage to both cars was
lipolis Historic Preservation Review Board for Thursday, Nov. 20 at 7 p.m.
Damage to Smilh's car was mod· slight.
·
'
in the multipurpose room of the Gallipolis Developmental Center's Activicrate
,
and
slight
to
the
truck,
owned
- ~B~- '111e meeting is to inform property owners from Vine to Pine streets, and Minor injury listed in car-deer crash
First to Fourth avenues, about the proposed listing of historic propenics withTUPPERS PLAINS - A Reedsville woman received minor visible
in this district.
injuries in a car-deer collision early Saturday on Stale Route 68 I. the GalFor more information, contact the Ohio Valley Visitors Center at446-6882. lia-Meigs Pos&lt; of the State Highway Patrol reported .
Carey plans open door meetings
Martha J. Baker, 44. refused treatment at the scene, according to the patrol.
Troopers said Baker was eastbound in Orange Township at 2 a.m. when
GALLIPOLIS - Open door meetings for this month have been set by
State Rep. John·A. Carey, R-Wellston, for the following dates and locations: her car struck the deer, which was attempting lo cross the roadway. The deer
• Friday, Nov. 14 - Eastern Briggs-Lawrence County Public Library, was killed, and the car was severely damaged. the report said.
Proctorville, 2:30-3:30 p.m.
• Monday, Nov. 17- Rutland Village Hall, 2-3 p.m.
• Friday, Nov. 21 - Oallia County Courthouse. 2:30-3:30 p.m.
• Monday, Nov. 24- Oak Hill Village Hall, II a.m.-noon .
Anyone with questions or concerns about state government is encouraged
to attend.

.

1111110:

J\nnuafPercentaee

Parent-teacher meetings set at RVHS

at home

:Neea more dougfi
.tfiis fio{Ufay season?

9.95%

-Tri-Couni)' Briefs:- c!!!~D}~~!v~~ ~~~~n~~g~-~~dcn.

'tj~

~5~2:W.~Cetu~....~....~...:....:....:...:....:....:...:....:....:....:.. s:t09=.72~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ '

Interest ~te

ional

Noulllllll I, 1111

#

Republican will be short·lived," said changes in the agency in 45 years. undep;mine education · spending.
Cliristina Martin, spokeswoman for The Senate will vote on the measure Republicans used the remark to raJAP Polltlc81 Writer
WASHINGTON - Fearing !hat House Speak.· Newt Gingrich.
next year.
.. ly lasi-minllle support for Oil more.
Two leading Republicans, House
Republic111s may monopolize the
Clinton . at first dbjected to the
And questions about Gov. Christie
national debate on tax reform, Pres- Majority Leader Dick Armey of overhaul and defended theIR'S until Whibnan's 'ability to tame New Jerident Clinton's economic and politi- ltxas and Bill Tauzin of Louisiana, polls illuminated widespread support sey's 1a1t burden almost allowed lit·
cal advisers are considering whether just completed a five-city debate for changes among voters.
tle·k!'own Del!'ocnt Jim MeGreevey
to inject a tax overhaul initiative into tour designed to whet the public's
Tuesday's elections confirmed to ousl her.
next year's Siate of the Union appetite for tax reform. Anney wants voter interest in tax cuts, as RcpubliRiding the anti-tax wave, Gingrich
a 17 percent "flat tax" on incpme, can Jill) Gilmore swept into the Vir- has proposed mailing to taxpayers an
address.
Although no proposal is close to Tauzin a 15 percent national sales tax. ginia 'governor's office on the "IRS customer satisfaction survey" ...
After Republican-driven congres· strenglh or a promise to abolish the to gauge support for tax reform .
taking shape, the fact that presidential aides arc giving thought to find- sional investigations uncovered inci- state's property tax on cars. On elccWhite Hbuse press secretary Mike
ing a taX measure they can call-their·. dents of abuse by the IRS, Gingrich 's lion eve, Clinton suggested that Vir- · McCurry said Friday there's no need ·own underscores a near-uni versa] party spearheaded House passage of ginia voters would be selfish to sup-· to spend millions of dollars to deter- . ..::
concern amoni Democrats: GOP a bill that would make the broadest ponthetakcut,whichhesaidwould mine the obvious: Taxpayers don't ';,
candidates are set to benefit from
~ .....;!!.- ".,
anti-tax sentiments in the 1998
midterm elections.
.. ,•
"We can't appear to stay behind
the curve forever," said a Clinton
•
administration official involved in the
preliminary talks.
·,•
Republicans have aggressively
•
. pushed their tax-refonn plans to the
forefront of the national political
agenda, sponsoring a five-city debate
•
tour, passing an IRS overhaul bill in
•
the !touse and making tax cuts a win..•
ning issue in last Tuesday's off-year
elections.
Proposing some type of taX reform
is one among dozens of ideas cropping up in White House brainstorm·
ing sessions on 1998 policy ·plans.
The talks are preliminary - part of
early-stage efforts to shape Clinton's
'Victori••· J Mlrooms, 2 112 bdlhs
S.n 1\!!lDIIio,
3 bothoom1, 2 IH!ths.
domestic agenda for a nigh-profile
~
unveiling at the State of the .Union
address.
Tax reform "is a high-level
'·
abstraction at this point" and is not
This holiday season, see how easy II has
late your monthly payments to fit your budget.
guaranteed to be endorsed by Clinton
beCome to build ~ new Jim Walter home.
. Each llm Walter home Is traditionally built
in the end, said a White House offion your lot, Not Prefab/Not Mobile. We'll
cial involved in the planning.
completely
ftnish the 'ext~rior of your new home,
It could be weeks before Clinton
decides whelher to devise a tax
with your chola! of a variety of Interior option
reform plan, embrace an existong·one
packaces to finish the ln_terior up to i00%
·and 8.5% APR•
- or do nolhing.
complete.
Still, the idea has beep mentioned
We Invite you to visit our model home
in several meetings, including at
are
available
to
every
qualified-property
owner.
center
and select a home that wtlllnsplre very ·
least one chaired by White House
Get approved quickly with our 48-hour aedlt
special celebrations for you and your family for ·
chief of staff Erskine Bowles, aides
check.
Best
of
all,
your
representative
will
c:alcu·
said.
many years to come.
.
.
Officials-discussed the possibility
of lessening the tax penalty that two
'·
wage earners pay when they get married. They also talked about the mer·
Tltl ~l'IOII'a LAIIGIIT ()H."'IUUM..f HO II U1U111t 011111-.aao -.TIIICI1MI
its of a "Gephardt-like proposal,"
Call I•I00-492•51J7 eD 60 for a free brochure, mail the coupon, visit our
one official said. In the version of tax
web site at http://www.jlmwalterhomes.com or vtslt your nearest model home center.
reform· being pushed by House
Minority Leader Richaril Gephardr,
Sid Plilt, 011 389 Cutp 1. . 120 5ollll
70 percent of workers would pay a
" - - m e I'U he llml:lluM """\mcnltlon :iO I'IOmt
I'll: 614/194-3181
flat rate of I0 percent.
dooigno lllllltbn-&lt;lll&gt;cU building on"'' popeny.
N1187
Republicans expressed deep susCrusLc.es,WV 414NtwGoffMILR...
picion that anything Clinton labels
~·--------------------~-­
tax .reform w,ould be a political stunt.
Ph: 304/776-1700
~·--------------~-----i
"Unless Bill Clinton intends to
Cpon7do!Wio---Jbn.loo.IA.M... IP.M ....... 1 P.M ... IP.M.
~--------------;~~~----endorse a flat tax or a national sales
TolephcHto
tax, his charade as a tax-cutting

- ,.....----------.....;.-.;;,;;;;,i:;;;____

Published each Suad11y, 825 Third Ave.,
Oaltlpoli• otao, by 111e ()ljo Valley Pubtilhlaa
Company/Ganneu Co.. Stc:ood ellis pos1.1ae
plid 11 OaUipolls, Otllo 45631. Eateml
.one~ c:lus mailina maaer It Pometoy, Ohio.

"

By RON FOURNIER

Ac:cuWeather• forecul for

(USPS~

,..

Sunday, November 8, 1997

hildren
need to be

HOL·ZER
HEALTH HOTLIN
1·800·462·5255

d...
PLEASE ASK YOUR PHYSICIAN ABOUT MEDICATIONS

Speak to a RN, any day of
the week • 6 am until2 am

�•

Commentary

PegeA4

•

Jltriq C&amp;u.-Jimtiul • Page AS

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpollt, OH • Point Ptea..nt, WV

Sunday, November 9, 1997

Sunday, November 9, 1997

junb~ ~intts· ~entiaw
.

'Lstlzitund ill 1966

Ill ·

825 Third Avenue, Gllllpolll, Ohio
814 448 2342 • Fax: 4411 3008
111 Court SbHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992-2158 • Fax: 992-2157

••

•
His Pork ness was right about one
thing. The line-item veto has always
been a sham issue, an oratorical
chiffon pie that sounds substantial
but is mostly air. In an age of trillion-dollar budgets, pork barrel
excess is peanuts, and the idea that ~
line-item veto will eliminate deficitS
is laughable.

A Gannett Co. Ne.wspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher ·
Mlrgii'Wl LIMw

Hobert )'VII80n Jr.

~~~~r
~Le~Wts to 1M
well:onw. Tiley JJhould , . ,... , . , 3110
lt'OI'IU. All ,.,.. , . sullj«:t to editing 11/IQ must IHIIIgnMIIJflfl
Include iiddi urr ltld telephone numiHir. No uns/gnfld,.,..,. 1111111
be pubiiMed. L/JftfiS rhould be In good r.jfe, Midi 11/J/tlfl

editor.,.

laueJJ,not~•·

•
·,

Ill

A Reagan veto of cranberry
research would have saved $30.000
- three or four ·seconds worth of
interest on the national debt. George
Bush would have had to carve out
13,300.000 cmnbcrry research projects to balance his 1993 budget
alone. The billions that Bill Clinton '
has pared arc actually spread out
over a five-year period, during
which we will be spending $9 trillion -- .a savings of ahout .02 percent

Video Ear Inspection Camera
Comes to .Beltone Hearing Aid Center

.

Taxes emerge as .a
poten~ campaign issue

"I have railed ag~in~t this abomination. this gimmick. this legislative end run around the Constitution:· he thundered. He had voted
against it. he said, and he wondered

By TOM RAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGWN - Tax grievances arc moving to the forefront as the
premier political issue for both parties. Two odd-year gubernatorial races
provided dramatic demonstration.
In statehouse.contests in New Jersey and Virginia, unpopular local taxes
-a "car tax" in Virginia and soaring property taxes and insurance costs in
New Jersey- played central roles.
Virginia Republican Jim Gilmore rode his call for repeal of a personal
property tax on automobiles to a clear-cut victory over Democratic Lt. Gov.
Don Beyer. Gilmore made repeal of the tax his main campaign mantra.
In New Jersey, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jim McGrc~vey, a
state senator who started as a relative unknown, stuck resolutely to his message that property taxes and auto insurance have become unaffordablc.
That put Republican Gov.. Christie Whitman, who won .four years ago
with a tax-cut campaign and carried it out, on the defensive. She prevailed,
but barely.
''Taxes are always an important issue. But at a time when you've otherwise got peace and prosperity, it's easy to put it at the top of the agenda, and
voters put it at the top of their agenda." said Charles Black. a former adviser to Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush.
The two gubernatorial races provided a glimpse into the kind of issues
that likely will dominate the 1998 mi!lterm elections, Black and other political activists suggest.
More than 90 percent of voters in New Jersey said state and local taxes
were "somewhat important" or "very important," according to exit polls.
And Virginia voters cited taxes as the No. I issue, with substantially more
saying they favored Republican Gilmore's tax proposals over Democrat

®,,•., f61TWODt~'Ti\liTI'LUUN'-·itT"
Hu~

'

Another thing: Some 60 percent
of the budget is untouchable . It is
dedicated to interest on the national
debt and to such entitlements as
Social Security benefits. federal
pensions and food stumps. Put
another way. only about two-t11ihs
of the budget is even subject to lineitem veto.

Barry's World

'
&lt;97~·

,,., • .

0 1197 bfhEA, Inc.

"I've got to put you on hold now.
I'm about to have an ACCIDENT.·

Sports are certainly very popular
with most Americans today. Folks
will sit in front of the tclcvisio~ for
hours on end and become emotion. ally involved in what is transpiring
on the field or court. The stands arc
quite often tilled. although the price
of admission is no longer incxpensive. The world may be [ailing apart
all around them. but missing a game,
no way!
All sporting events arc played by
a strict set of rules. Those rules may
be changed slightly from year to
year. but the referees or umpires arc
charged with strict enforcement.
Appeals lt1 a higher authority arc
available. seldom is the verdict
changed. Instant replays'" cumputcr images arc not used 10 alter the
decision. Player complaints. bickering: whining . .or physical ahusc arc
counter produc1ivc to t~ir interests..
and they may he removed from the ·
game or penalized for unsportsmanlike conduc!.
Why is there such interest in anJ
attention given to a 11ame that has
strict ·rules. and -~trict 'ilil!lcrcncc is
expected: ·while the rules ft~r the
game of life arc desired to be flcxi hie. situational. or loose'' Is devotion
to a clear set .of standards in a hall
game somehow more important than
to standards of right living'? Is it casicr to abide by the standards of a
game than established standards in
real life'! Is it because in a game a
whistle is blown or a nag is thrown.
and in real life we don't seem to hear

the whistle or sec
tbe nag? Maybe
we don't hear that
'still small voice'
within.
Or is it
because. in the'
game of life that
the penalty is
often delayed '!
The infractions
Weedy
add up ... and then
comes payday.
Instead of a bonus. we sec all those
deductions. and our account is
diminished. We arc in spiritual
poverty.
emotional
poverty.
deprived of juy.
Ht1w many have wundcred why
the whistle wasn't hlown at the time
WC made the infraction'! That would
make it easier in the game of life.
would it iwt'! Nut really. IC&gt;r it would
tal\c..2,~l.ill!:nY.. ,J.i:ll:l"MlliJ&gt;c

pupplciioi\1)';iien'Wil\11aal!ft~o
arc accountahlc fur our decisi&lt;)IJl;.
Real life is governed hy tlic law
of sowing an&lt;l reaping. l,f this
prO&lt;...,.s we sec an cxpartsc ..r time
hc~n the t~ 'p_(.so~illllil4 th~,.
tim'i: i1f harvest. lf'follows 1Tifn' that
what we sow determines wllal we
will reap at some later .time.
The type and quality of the seed
is not the only factor in what we harvest. hut also how well. we tended to
the crop. If nourishment from the
soil is diminished by gruwlb of competing mailers in our lives. and we
fail to remove tbem from the soil.
we may have more weeds than fruit

at harvest time.
·
Can you think whm the advantagc is to follow ahsolutc rules in
sports imd not in real life? Could it
be that we know the rules in sports
better than in rcnl life'? Since the
spectator is not bound hy the rules,
just the players. mayhe that is it.
Is it not lf\Je .that our nation has
lost its moral frame of reference. its
compass·) As our society has dis·
missed an absolute. God-based.
value systell) from its conscience.
we have reaped ghxnn. doom. and
despair. And things will only get .
worse. As humanism and its New
Age cousin increase ihcir dominance in society. devastating social.
political. ccunomic. and mural cunsequences will result. We reap what
WC sow 1
By allciwing our trad~it~nal.
Judco-Christian frame of reference
UI:H!'~c ~lJil.~)' excluJ!inl! ' "Y menlion .or tl!!l.'ltvinc Irom nur schools.
laws, hOlJICll. and -- yes. even our
chti(&lt;:hcs' •• we have delivered our
future to the consequences of godlessncss. We reap what he sow!
It is obvious that. nur society is
unawurc that the world operates in
the physical -- what we sec, taste.
touch. smell. and hcnr -' hut thut the
physical proceeds from the spiritual .
Thus the visihle actions of individuals, families, and political systems
directly result from spiritual standards ur rules. We think that what
we sec IS all there is. But that is not
how God made the universe to work .
-- The dcgrudation of our youth is

who think free ·
thought is an
attack on the twoparty system.
·Brown is no
political
syco. phant.
He's a freewheeling, unprcdictahlc . political
oddball
whose Wickham
greatest loyalty is
to his own s-ense of right and wrong,
not the whims of voters. He's a registered Democrat who challenged
the re-election of Jimmy Carter, a
Democratic president. He's the former head of the California Democratic party who rails against the fundraising tactics of Republicans and
Democrats alike.
1
"As mayor,. I would open the
processes of government and create
a people-friendly city - safe, bon- ,
est and bursting with craft and entrepreneurial spirit," he said upon
announcing his mayoral campaign.
More importantly, Brown - who
twice launched presidential campaigns while governor - promises
to stay put if he wins the mayor's
office. His political aspirations these
days, he says, don'tgo beyond city

You'll SEE ...exactly what we SEE

'

directly related to the lack nf their
parents moral code.
-- The ·corruption nf our politicians is due to th~ fact that mnhcy's
more important than nwrality.
--The epidemic of drug ahusc is
due to the fact that when greed and
fleshly lust mix. they yield ·decadence.
--The American family is hreaking up because marriage ha.s hw&gt;me
a social convenience rJther than a
divine institution.
Tony Evans relates our situation
today to that of Humpty Dumpty.
Mr. Dumpty had climbed up a wall.
and fell ttl the ground. shattered in
pieces. Help didn't come from his
friendS&lt;Ir family. it came direct frmn
Washington. But all the king's hnrses and all the king's men couldn'tpul
Mr. Humpty together. again. The
tragedy isn't lhat Mr. Dumpty is in
pieces. ~uttl!jll..i!II . Lb!; ki.~~:·s hOI'liCS
and all the king's mc'n!u:Cjust as hroken as Humpty Dumpty. Mr. Dumpty put his hope in g11vernmcnt --and
it coul\ln't help hill), this is the
tragedy! .
It hin'tthat spiritual standards arc
not availahlc In us -- it is that we
have ignored them . We arc denying
t~ur God-given heritage, uur moral
fnundatinn, and it is crumhling. We
send people to Washingwn who
promise to take care of all needs
lrmn the puhlic treasury hccause we
have lost sighl of the Great Provider
and His rules of the game.
Robert Weedy ;., a rorresJHmdont
lor the Sunday-Times Sentinel.

hall.
More than anything today, cities '
With Jerry Brown in Oakland's need visionary leaders - people
mayor's nnice and Willie Brown, willing to look beyond the next clccformer speaker of the state Assem - linn ror solutions. Brown may nnl be
bly. across the hay running San the only person in thc.currcnt crop nf
Francj~o . northern Cali rnrnia may
Oakland's may1•ral candidates to
spark a political rcli•rrnatinn that possess this quality, hut he's certainc.:nuld sweep across I he country.
!y the hcst known.
As the Rcpuhlican-lcd Congress
When Brown proposed a federal
funnels money and powers to the nat tax during his ahortivc 1992
states , local government will presidential campaign, a lot of mainbecome increasingly auractive to stream politicians snickered: Now a
politicians who want to do more growing number cmhracc the idea.
than mouth party dictums. While When he used ·a toll-free number to
Washington 'fills up with androids of raise campaign funds and put aS 100
the right and left, it's in city halls. limit on individual donations, •nicknot the halls of Congress. that gov- ers turned to side-spliuing laughter.
ernment is mosl~.:rcativc.
But as congressional invcstiga·
City hall is the lap root of the · lions into campaign finances
American political system . Mayors exposed the seamy side of fund-raisarc front-line managers of our ing. nohody was laughing at the disdemocracy. While Congress and the tance Bmwn put between himself
president fight over policy, mayors and his financial supporters.
govern the things that matter most to
Jerry Brown may not be the next
people.
mayor of Oakland.
For a while, the prnhlcms of the
When voters in that city go to the
cities seemed insurmountable. But polls next year they might well elect
with a robust national economy someone else to lead them into the
spreading the hope of urban revival, next century. But his entry into the
the migration of people and jobs is race " sure to affect the nature of
starting to slow and the resuscitation politics in that city for a long sime to
of ailing cities like Oakland no come.
longer seems far-fetched.

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Gov. Moonbeam' wants to head California's eighth-largest city
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Not to mention the entertainment
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·

WASHINGTON - Jerry Brown
is back.
Back from a stint as a volunteer
in the late Mother Teresa's Home for
the Dying and Destitute. Back from
Japan .. wher,e be went to study .Zen
By The Associated Pres•
.
.
meditation . Back from the practice
Today is Sunday. Nov. 9. the :1 I :lth day of 1997. There arc 52 days left 1n _ ol _law. Back from the quJTky ranks
the year.
of talk {Udio·hosts. ·Today·s Highlight in History :
.
The former two-term governor of
On Nov. 9. 1965. tbe great Northeast hlackout occurred as several states California and three-time loser in the
and parts of Canada were ftit hy a series of power failures lasting up to 13 Democratic party's presidential
f/2 hours.
·
sweepstakes. has returned to the
On this date:
political arena a.• a candidate for
In 1872. tire destroyed nearly a thousand huildings in Boston.
mayor of Oakland -eighth largest
In 1918. Germany's Kaiser Wilhelm II announced that he would abdicate. city in the state.
He .then ned to the Netherlands.
Brown, who wa.• branded "Govln 1935. ·United Mine Workers president JohnL Lewis and other labor crncir Moonbeam'' years ago after
leaders formed the Committee for Industrial Organization.
suggesting California launch its own
In 1938. Nazis looted and burned synagogues as well as Jewish-owned space program. announced last week
stores and houses in Germany and Austria in what became known as his entry into Oakland's mayoral
Kristallnacht. ·
race.
In 1953.thc Supreme Court upheld a 1922 ruling that major league baseThat's good news.
ball did not come within the scope or federal antitrust laws.
American politics needs a face
In 1953, author-poet Dylan Thomas died in New York at age 39.
lift. There are too many people in
In 1963, twin disasters struck Japan as some 450 miners were killed in a elected office who believe that a
visionary is il politician who knows
coal-dust explosion. and 160 people died in a train crash. ·
In 1967, a Saturn S rocket carrying an unn\anned Apollo spacecraft blast- when to jump on a bandwagon'. The
cd off from Cape Kennedy on a successful test night.
.
political stage is overrun with men
In 1970. former French president Charles De Gaulle died at age 79.
and women who have never uttered
• an original thought - officeholders

Today in history

'

But I say let's keep it anyway.
Even though the savings arc minus.
culc. they arc vivid examples of
waste that we can readily understand. and the ruckus that accompanies each veto is a wonderful
reminder that we arc governed by
cynical scoundrels.

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But Democrats weren 't far behind and President Clinton even added his
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In Virginia, the hated personal property tax on automobiles and other
;vehicles gave Gilmore a clear-cui winning issue against Beyer. Gilmpre
·cashed in on public animosity toward the tax and promised to phase it out
:over five years.
·
In the New Jersey race, McGreevey blamed the higher property 'taxes on
Whitman's 30 percent state tax cut And he suggested that a governor ought
to he able to do more to hold down auto-insurance rates- fees many voters may sec a~ tax-like.
- • · ' In exit polls. more New Jersey voters said they believed .McGreevey
•would do more to lower auto insurance race than Republican incumbent
:Whitman.

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Grace Kouns Bebeau

Sunday, Nov•11ber 9, 1997

Patients, hospitals sparring
.over medical records. cost

By JOHN NOLAN
GALLIPOLIS- Grace Kouns Bebeau, 67, died Saturday, Oct. 18, 1997. AIIOCIIted Prell Writer
Born Aug. 23, 1930 in South Point, daughter of the late Samuel and Mabel
CINCINNATI -A car crash left
Kouns, she graduate from the Holzer School of Nursing in September 1951. Darlene Jackson to cope wilh knee
Surviving are her husband, Dr. Eugene Russell Bebeau of Beaumont, surgeries, memory loss and $30,000
Texas, whom she married 1953; three daughters, Cathy (Frank) Zummo of in medical expenses, Tl)cn~he got the
Beaumont, Charlotte (Lanston) Fall of Orange, Texas, and Theresa (Vince) bi)l for the paperwork.
Walsh of San Antomo, Texas; six sons, Dr. Gene (Jan) Bebeau Jr., of JackShe found the $125 bill for copies
son ville. Fla.. Sam (Marion) Bebeau of Dallas, Texas, John Bebeau and Fred · ,of her medical records so exorbitant,
(Sandra) Beabeau, both of Beaumont, TerrY (Shari) Bebeau of Pittsburgh, . she took the hospilal tq court- and
Pa., and Eari Bebeau of St. Helena. Calif; 16 grandchildren; f'ive sisters; Ruth . won.
Kinder of South Point, Clara Wheeler of Cody, Wyo., Dorothy 1isza of New
Lawyers around . the country arc
Orleans, La., Irene Moiel of Houston, Texas, and Nancy Knowlton of Atlanta, taking hospitals to coun ov¢rthe fees
Ga.; and four brothers, Sam Kouns of South Point, Donald Kouns ofLetan, they charge patients who need copies
W.Va., Glenn Kouns of Fon Myers, Fla., and Charles Kouns of Ironton.
of their medical records to tile lawShe was also preceded in death by two brothers, Jack and Lee Kouns.
suits or to pursue insurance and o';h- '
AMass of Christian Burial was.celebrated on Wednesday, Oct. 22, 1997 . ·er post-lrealment cla1ms. Lawsuits
at St. Anne's Catholic Church, wilh the Rev. William Manger officiating, fol- say patients are being charged 95
lowed by her burial in Forest Lawn Memorial Park.
:;nts. to $23 ,per pa~e, .plus tax,
Memorial contributions may be made to Some Other Place, 590 Center,
retncval fees and sh1ppmg.
Beaumont Texas 77701, or the American Cancer Society, P.O: Box 5.144,
Some hospitals even charge up to
Beaumont: Texas 77726-5144.
$15 in "viewing fees" from patients
who want only to look al thetr own
records , the lawsuits say.
Hospitals defend the charges, saying
someone must pay what it costs
GALLIPOLIS- Josephine H. Holley. 90, Gallipolis, died Saturday, Nov.
to
hire
companies or staff to handle
· 8 1997 in the Arbors of Gallipolis.
'Born May 18, 1907 in Guyan Township, Gallia County, daughter of the tl\!ndreds of requests each hospital
late William and Minnie Belle Greer Thompson, she was a homemaker, and . ~s: cach month. The task is so costly and time-consuming, hospitals
a member of St. Peter's Episcopal Church.
say,
that they have had to hire outside
She was also preceded in death on Dec. I, 1984 by her husband, Virgil
C. "Bud" Holley, whom she married July 15, 1931 at Point Pleasant, W.Va.; contractors to do the work.
, Mrs. Jackson, who wanted copies
and by five brothers and four sisters.
.
of
her records to . usc in a lawsuit
Surviving are three daughters, Virginia (Tony) Canter of Ora.nge C1ty, fla.,
against
the ather driver, took Mercy
Emogene (Jim) McCown of Port Orange, Fla., and JoAnn (J1m) Andelson.
of Charleston. W.Va.; two sons, James (Wanda) Holley of Charleston, .and Hospital Fairfield to coun after Smart
Ken (Lily) Holley of Gallipolis; and nine grandchildren, 14 great-grand- · Corp., the company the hospital pays
to handle copy requests, billed her
children and a great-great-grandchild.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, with .$J24.49for87 pages-$1 per page
the Rev. Don Woodford officiating. Burial will be in the Centenary Ceme- plus a $15 minimum charge, $5
retrieval fee, $11 for shipping, and
tery. Friends may call at the chapel from 6-9 p.m. Monday.
$6.49 in tax.
· "I don't think it's right, whatsoever," Mrs. Jackson said.
Hamilton County Common Pleas
TOLEDO - Daisy Mae Saunders, 100, fonnerly of Wardell Street, Tole- Judge Norben Nadel on Sept. 5
do, died Thursday, Nov. 6, 1997 in the St. Charles Hosp1tal, Oregon, Oh1o. declared the charge "a rip-otT" and
She was preceded in death by her husband, Clyde Saunders Sr.; a daugh- · ordered the copies provided at 20
ter. Katherine Saunders; and two sons, Clyde Jr. and Charles Saunders:
cents per page plus tax, for a total of
Surviving are a daughter, Fay Kruse; three sons, Kenneth (Finis), Don- $18.44. The hospital complied.
ald (Dolores) and Dr. Daniel (Patty) Saunders; two daughters-in-law, MilMercy Regional Health System,
dred and Bona Saunders; and 22 grandchildren, 31 great-grandchildren and which says ·its .four Cincinnati-area
I0 great-great-grandchildren.
.
.
hospitals receive about 2,500 record
Services are I :30 p.m. Sunday m the Eggleston-Memen Funeral Home. requesls each month, said it did not
44 s. Coy Road at Starr Avenue, Oregon. Intennent and committal services appeal in anticipation of .legislative
will be at Mound Hill Cemetery. Galhpohs, Monday at I p.m. Fnends may
ac.tion thi~ year .on a pending bill t~at
call at the Fellowship Baptist Church, Gallipolis, at noon Monday.
sets copymg pnccs.
The family requests that contributions be made to the charity of the donor's
The bill "will include a base fcc
choice.
of $1 per page for"the first 10 pages,
50 cents per page thereafter and a
retrieval fee of $15, plus any postage- .
handling incurred," said Lesia Gold.-

...

WorkAmerica

TRIAL SCENE - Defenae attomey Michael
Tiger, right, cros...umlned Bud Radtke, left,
a Kens.. q111rry worker, about explosives that
were ltOien from his quarry, •• shown In thlt
courtroom drawing by CBS N1~11 artist Pat

By STEVEN K. PAULSON
Asaoclated Prell Writer
DENVER - Prosecutors sought
to link Terry Nichols to the burglary
of a quarrY where explosives were
stolen that could~ used to set off a
bomb like the one used to destroy ihe
Oklahoma City federal building.
An FBI scientist testifying in the
socond bombing trial on Friday said
that a drill bit found in Nichols' home
made milrkings similar 1o those found
on a padlock at a quarrY where blasting caps and high explosives were
stolen in the fall of 1994.
· Jurors watched . intently as the
cxpen, James Cadigan, displayed
pictures comparing markings on the
padlock. with those he created with
the bit found in Nichols' basement.
But lead defense attorney Michael
1igar successfully prevented Cadigan
fr~m lellil.l&amp;, illrors he believed the
dnll bit markin~ were identical to
those found on the padlock.
"What is permitted· here is to
show what'he saw through the micro-

.·. .'., ', ',:' ..' ltua·r,y:. .

Bill Quickel 992-6677

eace of mind .·

By JOHN HOWARD
Associated Prall Writer
SACRAMENTO, Calif.- Jurors
will be allowed to sentence
Unabombcr · defendant Theodore
K~czynski to death if he is convicted of a fatal bombing, a federal judge
ruled.
·
U.S. District Judge Garland Burrell on Friday denied a defense
request to block apossible death sentence, rejecting arguments that it
wa.&lt; "cruel anJ unusual punishment"
and violated Kaczynski's constitutional rights.
Jury selection in Kaczynski's t&lt;ial is scheduled to begin Wednesday.
The former mathematics professor
has pleaded "innocent to charges he
used bombs to kill a busipcssman and
timber lobbyist a decade apnn in
·sacramento. He is also charged with
injuring lwo other people.
He is charged ~paratcly in New
Jersey with a fatal bombing in 1994.
Federal prosecutors believe
Kaczynski, 55, is responsible for all
16 bombings since 1978 attributed to
the anti-technology terrorist known
as the Unabomber.
The defense contended that the
proscculion's plans to "discuss cvi, dcncc of alleged crimes not in the
indictment could prejudice a jury
against Kaczynski. panicularly dur·
ing a penalty phase.
, But Burrell disagreed, ruling that
there is nol "an evidentiary free-forall (that would) deprive (the) defendant of his constitutionpl rights or
automatically compromise the reliability of the information admitted at
the sentencing hearing."
Kaczynski's lawyer, Quin Denvir,
said the death penalty was not needed.
·
"I'm not talking about this case, ·
bul my own feeling is ther~ is simply
no reason to have a death penalty as
long as we have this alternative of
punishment of life in prison without
possibility of porole," he said .
. If convicted in any of the fatal
bombings, prosecutors said, Kaczynski deserved death because he represented "a continuing danger to society" with a "reckless disregard for
human life." They say his crimes put
others in peril besicles his immediate
victims, constituting an aggravating
factor justifying a death sentence.
Although he is charged with four
bombings in the .indictment, the gov-

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scope," U.S. Districl Judge Richard
Matsch said.
Prosecutors sought to connect
Nichols wilh the acquisitipn of components for the ammonium nitrate
and fuel bomb that destroy~d the
Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building on
April 19, 1995, killing 168 people.
Twenty-nine witnesses testified
during the first week of the prosecution's case, from · bombing victims •
and victims' relatives 10 a Kansas
rancher who once hired Nichols. ·
Nichols, 42, is accused of robbing
an Arkansas gun dealer to raise money to caiT)i out the April 19, 199S,
bombing, ,the worst act of terrorism
on U.S. soil.
His Army buddy, Timothy
McVeigl), was convicted and sentenced to death for murder, conspiracy and weapons convictions.
Prosecutors said ·Nichols, using
the alias Mike Havens, purchased
about two tons of ammonium nitrate
fertilizer, the main ingredient in the
bomb, and stole explosives from a

By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
AP Military Writer
WASHINGTON - The United
N~tions must remain fimi in dealing
wnh Iraq because Sad dam Hussein
has been "lying and deceiving''
international inspeclors as he tries to
maintain a deadly arsenal of chemical and biological weapons, Defense
Secretary William Cohen says.
"All of us has a stake in this,"
Cohen said Friday of the standoff
with the Iraqi leader.
He said it would be "a very big
mistake" for Saddam to target the
U.N ..surveillance flights set for next
week.
But Cohen, in a CNN interview,
declined to specify any military steps
that might be taken against the Iraqis
for barring Americans from participating in U.N. inspections or suspected weapons sites. "We have to
lowerthe rhetoric" amidst the current
struggle wilh Saddam, he said.
- The "defeqse secretary suggested
that some economic sanctions could
be strenglhened against Iraq. He said
these include putting travel restrictions on Iraqi officials, or even pro"viding "less relief" to the Iraqi people, an apporent reference to the oilfor-food program that the United
Nations has app(ovcd.
The U.N. inspection team "has
been very successful. and that is pan
of Saddam's problem," Cohen said.
The team, he noJcd, had uncovered
evidence of a wide-range chemical.
and biological weapons program, as
well as lhe fact that Iraq was dcvcioping a long-range missile that could
reach from Baghdad "all the way to

0
. . .

A7

Rutland, OH 45775

•

··-

emmcnt-has said it wants to introduce ·
evidence during the trial of a number
of other crimes allegedly committed
hy Kaczynski, using a coded diary
investigators found in his Montana
cabin as a guide.
Among the evidence discovered in
his tiny cabin wh~rc he was arrested
in April 1996 was a live homb,
Unabomher-rclatcd documents and a
typewriter on which the "Unabomber
manifesto·· wa!~ wriucn. according to
federal agents.
Prosecutors say those items.

sidcring military options, including a "I simply cannot accept that."
cruise missile strike, if Iraq carries
"When a strange plane enters the
out its threattoshoot down U.N. sur- Iraqi airspace, it might be shot by the
veillance planes.
Iraqi anti-aircraft facilities," he said.
President Clinton declared that the
Stale Departme~t spokesman
United States and its allies must be James P. Rubin said that even though
"resolule and firm" and thai U.N. the United States has already gone
inspections of Iraqi's weapon arse-. "the extra mile with diplomacy,"
nals must resume.
Aziz would bC given a visa to hold
Clinton.said a decision on military meetings at the United Nations in
aclion would wail until after a U.N. New York.
diplomatic delegation returns MonRubin said additional U.N. sancday from Baghdad and the United tions that could·heighten pressure on
Stales consults with its allies. The Baghdad may be consiclered next
diplomats have been unable to per- week.
suade Iraq to back down on an order
A senior Pentagon official told
expelling U.S. members of U.N. reporters that if Iraq shot at a U-2 weapons inspection teams.
the high-altitude U.S. reconnaissance
"I think it is important to be r~s­ plane used for U.N. inspection mis- .
olute, and I think it would be a mis- sions - it would he considered an act
take to rule in ·or out any panicular of war and met with a military
course of action al this moment," the response.
president told reporters.
The flights, suspended amid Iraq's
In Baghdad, Iraqi Deputy Prime threats to expel Americans weapons
Minister Tariq Aziz claimed Friday inspectors, arc expected to resume
.
that the United States has used the next week .
Neither Clinton nor the Pentagon
U.N. spy planes to gather information ·
for attacks against Iraq, and declared: offocial indicated U.S. military action
was imminent

rock quarrY near Marion, Kan .. in
either September or October 1994 .
The padlock was on a trailer coli,taining bags of a mixture of ammonium nitrate and fueJ, said. Bud
Radtke, a quarry employee.
But Radtke told defense attorneys
the burglars didn't lake the bags,
which would have provided a ready- Paris."
made bomb. Caps and explosives ,
Cohen said the United Nations
were stolen.
·
maintains s~nctions against Iraq foiProsecutors allege instead that lowing the 1991 Persian Gulf War
Nichols helped mix a bomb using and the Iraqi people continue to surmore than two tons of low-density fer because "the regime will not
ammonium nitrate fenilizer the day allow the U.N. inspectors to carry out
before McVeigh delivered it 10 the their mandate and allow them to
federal building.
inspect those areas where they may
While prosecutors maintain that be hiding and secreting chemical and
Nichols and McVeigh were motivai- biological weapons." He accused
ed by lethal hatred of the government, Saddam of "lying and deceiving" the
defense attorneys have tried to show -inspectors.
that Nichols is an average citizen, • His statements came as the Clioasking FBI.agents about other books ton administration warned it wa.&lt; conin
the home, including
~~Homeopathic
Primer." one called
Nichols could be sentenced to
death if convicted of murder. con·
spiracy and weapons charges.

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Judge rules unabombe~ suspect can
face death penalty· if he·'s convicted

in· a stressful time.
. ~t'sa

FAMILYfUmCE

.

.

International worries again
.--=-------------.,------...::........:...,
'• Ob • · ·· · '
le@v~ impact on Dow Jones

ROBERT M. 'HOL~EY, M.D.

Lopez during the trial of Oklahoma City bomb·lng auapect Terry Nichols In Denver Friday.
Judge Rlc:Mrd Matsch looked on from· the .
bench. (API

Prosecution tries to connect
Nichols to theft of explosives

Davls·QuiCkel
Agency Inc.

ell.

J

....

•

Daisy Mae Saunders

Continued from p~~~~e A1
Cindy Armstead and Millissa Russell designated as chairpersons.
"Durinalhat year, they contacted
the Ohio Stale Historical Society
OOII()Cmina proper prooedurc and the
Ohio Department of Transponation
to ncceive permission to place the
marker on the property where State
Route 7 and Eagle Ridge.Road meet
"This just . happened to be the
lower comer of the Memorial Gardens Cemetery which we thought
very appropriate due to the unusual
circumstances of Mr. Bierce's disappearance in 1913 into Mexico during the Mexican Revolutionary War
led by Pancho Villas,' commented
the RVHS teacher.
The students began a letter writing campaign to persons and organizations in both Meigs and Gallia
Counties soliciting donations. That
brought in $500, Woodall said.
· But then the project got bogged
down as the committee moved on to
another teacher and the donations
dropped 'to a trickle, then finally
stopped, she said. By now the class
which initiated the project had graduated.
r
Then earlier tbis year another
poup of Woodall's junior students
became interested in completing the
project The teacher said sbe sug·
Jested that the class challenge
Meigs, Eastern and Southern Hi&amp;h
School students to match the $500
already contributed toward the COlt
of the marker.
AA a result of the chaUenge, some
Meip Hi&amp;fl School S!"denta bad. a
oar wub, and donauons came tn
from Oilier sources totaling $34-4.

1

U··~~~-·~~,_.

stance on Iraqi evasion$

-New physician
joins Holzer.
Clinic practice

Stephen E. Daniels.

1

Cohe~ urges strong· U.N .

'

.,....Noll

~

•

·-

en, system spokeswoman.
Professional Education SySicms Inc.
Current state law requires huspi· l&lt;ound.
tals to let patients inspec1 their lllj:d·
There have hecn at least two
ical records and get copies. hut it docs 1 ancmpts in Ohio since 1992 to set
not mention fees .
copying caps.
Patient-advocates believe thm
State Rep. W1lliam Hc:tly, D-Canmeans no fees arc allowed.
.
0ton, proposed a hill in March 1992 to
"If the Legislature was going to limit the fees to 15 cents per pa~c.
\
.. i
allow a charge, they would have rut and would have allowed Ohio's
ii'
:.d~\~u
one in," said 1im Collins, a Clc.,c- director or health to increase that by
Dr. Glenn A: Fisher
land lawyer handling a lawsuit filed up to 50 percent every two years. ·
by lawyers who say they arc charged State Rep. Wayne Jones, D-Cuyu- ·
excessive fees when they request hnga Falls, proposed a similar hill in
medical records for clients.
1993 that would have allowed hosHospitals and the copying com- pitals to recover the costs of mail in~
panics supponed a provision in copies.
Ohio's. budget bill this year that
Both bills died in comminoe.
would have allowed charges So far, no coun lms concluded that
GALLIPOLIS - Glenn A. Fish~
except to doctors, who get free copies charging for copies of mcdkal cr, M.D., recently joined Holzer
- of$15 for a records search, $1 per n..,-:ords violates consumer protc~.:tion Clinic's Family Practice Dcpanmcnt.
page for each of the firsl 10 pogcs laws, said David Zalcsne., a PhiladelFisher completed his bachelor's
copied and SO cents for each page phia lawyer who represents Smm·t degree in zoology at Olivet Nazarene
thereafter, plus mailing costs.
Corp. in a· ~upying_ charge luwsuit University in Kankakee, Ill., and his.
Gov. G1;0rge Voinovich vetoed the pending in Cleveland.
master's degree in physiology at the
provision, jjtying it would have added
· University of Illinois-Urbana. He
significant unbudgeled costs for some
earned his doctorate dc~rce at Southstate agencies.
·
ern Illinois University, Springfield.
. The Ohio Hospital Association is
Continued from plllle A1
He then moved to Clarksburg,
trying to· restore the provision in a All individual defendants, Robb, W.Va., where he completed his resipending bill that regulates electronic Scarmack, Reba Peck, Monika Ben- dency training in family practice at
signatures on medical records.
neu, Roger Rccb and Diane Snow, the United Hospital Center.
The provision would allow hospi· were permanently barred from holdBoard-ccnilicd by tile American
tals and copying. companies to be ing any position of officer or board Board of Family Practice, Fisher is a
fairly reimbursed for Iheir work, of trustees member of WorkArneri· memhor nf the American Medical ,
while giving hospitals the freedom to . ea, Inc.
Asso.:iution and the American Acnd· '
provide records free to doctors for the
The Ohio Attorney General and cmy of Family Physicians. Fisher
continuing medical care of patients, the Meigs County Prosecuting will practice at the Holzer Clinic of
the OHA said.
Attorneys office has been instructed West Virginia and other clinic loca- ,
Copy fees are justified because to name six peopJe .willing to serve tinns. To schedule un appoinlmcnt,
patients often request records that arc as officers and members of the board cull 675-449K.
not on site, or ask for more records of trustees of WorkArnerica, Inc.
Fisher. his wife and three daughthan they really need, said Lisa within 14 days.
ters will reside in the Gallipolis area.
Dodge, an OHA spokeswoman.
If no people are found .who are
"Our position has always been willing to serve on the board, Crow Suicide ruling made
that if there arc going to be caps (on will name a teceiver to serve fonhe
BUCYRUS (AP) - The inmate
.fees for record copies), they should .,ole purpose of dissolving the cor- found hanged at the city i'ail died or
be reasonable," Ms. Dodge said.
poration.
asphyxia, the Crawford County coroThere is no federal law capping
Lentes
Friday
afternoon ner ruled Friday.
copying fees across the ·board. The acknowledged the court's opli\)ns,
Ofliccrs found Kenneth R. Wil:
U.S. Department of Health and
ut said an organization like son, 30, of Bucyrus, hanging in his
Human Services declared .in 1992
rkArnerica, Inc. is needed in lhe cell Oct. 31. He was pronounced dead
that hospitals that submil Medicare
is county to help provide tutoring at Bucyrus Communily Ho!pitallhe
claims could be reimbursed at a rate or students and olln.rs wanting to next day.
of 7 cents per page for copies they
ke and pass the General Equivamake for required peer-review orga- ency Diploma lest.
nizations.
"The tutoring services arc needed
A 1994 survey found that · 20
states and the District of Columbia do by the community,' he said.
not set caps. l,'-laska and Arizona did
· Also, the defendants or others
INSURANCE
not require fees for record copies and working under their control weri
at least 15 staies allow unspecified ordered to make available all
.•
.
Full lint of
"reasonable costs," the survey by · remaining propeny of WorkArneri·
1 - Ptoctucts
ca, Inc. including bank accounts,
+Fii!IIICIII
,.
bank cards, credit cards, automo'
·~
;'f.·' ·.,
·. ··: biles,
program equipment and supAGENCIES
Inc. ·
.
plies,
fund
raising
equipment
and
Sons i~ St. Louis. "We had more than ·
~
supplies
and
real
estate
deeds
and
a few excuses to start ~cUing . "
gg::arl" ·aN pold innouncemente orranged by looll •I~ IIOIJI.., leases.
The Dow Jones industrial average
~ are pltbtlohlcl .. roqu01tod to occommodete 1111118 J!nl1na !IIi,.
11 ·· ·;•, .
-closed down 101.92 at 7.581.32; a lnlonliltlon thin Ia provldlclln lhlaccompanytng
- dro~ of 1.3 percCilt, as broader market md1cators also fell s~arply.
Trad1ng volume. wh1lc heavy at .
nearly 570 million shares changing
CROWN CITY- Slephen E. Daniels, 44, of Crown City, died Friday,
hands on the New York Stock November 7, 1997 in Hplzer Medical Center.
E.change, was less .than half the
Born April 26. ·1953 in Franklin County, he was the son of the late Nick
record 1.2 b1lhon sellast week . .
Daniels, and the surviving "Rena Fowler Daniels.
·
The retreat snapped three stra1ght
·He was an insurance agent for Western Southern, and the mayor of Crown
days of listless trading that had City. He auended the Crown City Wesleyan Church.
brought lhc Dow clo~e to recovering
S)lrviving are his wife, Loretta Brown Daniels of Crown City; his mothall the ground lost m a fnghtcmng er, Reva Fowler Daniels of Crown City; two daughters, Beth Caner of Las
Oct. 27 selling spree.
Vegas, Nevada, and Moriah Daniels of Crown City; a granddaughter, Angela
After last week's gyrations. it was Carter of Gallipolis; two brothers, Kenneth Daniels of Covington, Kentucky,
easy to sec why investors remained and Dave Daniels of Westerville; and two sisters, Peggy Rucker of Galliposkittish.
lis, and GerrY Daniels of Cincinnati.
,
•
The Dow. which plunged a record
Services will be I p.m. Monday, November 10, 1997 in the Waugh-Hal554 points on Blue Monday, .Oct. 27; ley-Wood Funeral Home, Gallipolis. Burial will be in the Crown City Cemerose a record 337 points 1he next day. tery: Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday, November 9; 1997 from
·If you are between the ages of
IJ3 and 5-7 p.m.
50 and 80 and qualify. litis
$7.500 whole life insurance
' policy can help ea.o;e your loved
ones' tinanciul decisions at
About that time Parker and Woodall of the same name l'lliUen by Carlos
your
conferred and it was decided that the Fuentes.
'
rest of the money for the historical
fi,,· tll'titjJ,\ 1111 t "fWC'm.l~r. m~t.\ , n·Wifliommul n•m•u'tlflifil,\:
"The movie starred Gregory Peck
,.,.,. SI/Jft' l·imu A .~~ · m:
muker would be provided from the as Ambrose Bierce, Jane Fonda and
POMEROY
!75th Anniversary of Meigs County Jimmy Smits, and gives a probable
Neor P-oroy-Mooon Bridge
Committee Fund.
account, though .undocumCI)ted, as
992·2588 ·
While funding for the historical to Bierce's activities in Mexico,
VINTON
'
marker honoring Bierce's birthplace including his likely demise, which
•altla County Dloptoy Yard
is now complete, and it is about to did not include a decent burial," said
155 Main Sl
Woodall.
388 8803
be put in place, Woodall's interest
· "That is the main reason I felt the
has not waned.
She plans to write Jane Fonda monument should be placed in
and her husband, Ted Turner, about . Meigs County," she concluded.
the movie they produced entitled
"The Old Gringo' based on a novel

Josephine H. Holley

NEW YORK (!I.P) - The rrazzled Wall Street nerves that some had
hoped were banished after last week's
violent stock swings were back i~
force, sparked by selling that began
in Asia, spread through Europe. and
hobbled markets in Latin Amenca.
The Dow industrials, at one point
down 195 points, came back in late
trading to cut Friday's losses and
wound up the week with a gain, but
nol before three days of calm were
shattered.
.--.There was plenty of blame to pass
lll"Ound: Worries about the soundness
of economics abroad, new troubles
for 1radc legislation in Congress and
innalion jitters reawakened by a
government repon that the labo(
market is even tighter than expected.
··It was a connucncc of ncgarives, .. said Anthony O"Bryan . a
markcl analyst at AG. Edwards &amp;

Nation/World

Novwnber •• 1887

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among othors. will be presented during the trial to depict a pattern of conduct over time.
Kaczynski. who spent the past two
,months at a rcdcral prison cast of San
Francisco, is back at the county jail
a few ~locks from Sacramenta "s fed eral courthouse.
U.S. Marshal Jerry Enomoto said
Kaczynski was brought back to
Sacramento on Thursday and taken to
an isolation cell in the Sacramento
County lockup, where he is expected to remain during the trial.

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�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, W'!

Sunday1 November 9, 1997

Sixth District congress~onal race
prise, we' ll raise sufficient financial
Continued from page A1
is a better campaigner. Hollister also resources, we'll make sure we' re
is the only GOP contender who is "a ready for the liberal attack machine,
conservative; pro·choice , candi- and we 'II build a superior grassroots organization," Reed said. " We
date.
will
take this seat back."
" She's a superior campaigner
(compared) to Frank, but whether
Chris Baldwin, Hollister's camshe'll be able to deal with the issues paign manager, begs to differ.
is· unknown," Strickland said. "If
" Look, Cremeans has made it
Frank wins (the GOP primary), it clear he will try to buy this elecwill be helpful for me."
. lion," Baldwin said.
Cremeans said be will regain his
" Ralph Reed is a talented indiseat because he will correct the
• I
vidual,
but he 's not from this district
" mistakes" he made during the last
election. Cremeans also said he will
run a " positive" campaign that will
. '
be directed by Ralph Reed, the for~
SIT£ Of Tlf( lfiSTOit tC IUfD
mer head of the Christian Coalition.
I
" I feel we made some mistakes
DF TH£ FtFfS
las) time by not energizing the social
Sf !IIIGS COUITY 7• 9 • U
conservatives," Cremeans said.
" We're going to put together a more
codified organization in every town. ship, ev.ery municipality, and every
county. I failed to get that done."
Reed said be bas no doubts that
"UTTLE WACO" - Tllllt's what Robert D. Fife, 71, compound In Weco, Texas, that resulted In the
of Middleport calls the 1993 raid on hla home and deaths of clozene of Bntneh Davldlana. Here hie Cremeans will succeed in 1998. As
ahop by Meigs County and Middleport IIIWIIMtn, refer- daughter, Jenny Pemlngton, ahowa of! the "Uttle his campaign adviser, Reed said
ring to tllll government raid on the Branch Davidian waco• Memorial Jnetaii..S on hie front lawn.
he'll visit the district at least once
every month and "be on the phone

and the voters will decide who they .
are the most comfortable with,"
Baldwin said. " That's Nancy
because she is the only one who can
beat Stric!dand."
While the GOP candidates disagree on who will win their primary,
they were unanimous in agreeing
they will . support the GOP candidate.

LITTLE WACO
MEMORIAL

'

'

Middleport man recalls •Little Waco•

Contlnu..S from page A1
On the same day he pleaded to
the charges, Fife said he had to go to
Columbus to be with Gladys in a
hospital there.
Fife says he never trafficked in
food stamps, but did buy some at the
time ~·as a joke", and never knowingly bought anything that was
stolen. But even if he were guilty, as
he admitted in court more than four
yeats ago, the punishment was far
too excessive, he maintains.
A free-tor-all
One Meigs County official at the
time described the haul as resembling a Sam's Club, and lawmen and
their superiors treated it as such, Fife
said, taking many items, including
firearms, for their petsonal use.
They took heirlooms, jewelry and
personal belongings, 1 including
Gladys' wedding ring.
Everything was seized, Fife said, .
right down to the four cents he had
in his pocket when he was arrested.
"It was too much," said his

daughter, Jenny Pennington. • Anything that was worth anything to
them they kept. It was like a big
shopping spree to them. •
Officers took many of the guns,
others were given away including
some that were presented to the
Meigs 'County Museum.
Fife said about 1,800 guns were
taken and that 1,398 were later sold,
according to the county inventory,
meaning about 4,000 of the guns are
now unaccounted for.
Television sets and other items
were kept by the officers and are
now being used in their homes and
by other people, be said.
Fife said the guns that were sold
yielded about $90,000 and that be,
according to the terms of the agreement, was to get half of the money.money he says he has·not yet received.
Retribution
Fife said the entire incident actually started before the raid, when his
son, who has epilepsy, was arrested
for hauling debris that was later
dumped on private property with, he
added, permission from the owner.
He was yelling and was maced
and handcuffed, he said.
Fife said he then tried to find an
attorney who would file a lawsuit
against the Middleport Police Department, and the raid was in retaliation
for this... "to stop me from trying to
do something to them. • He said the
poUce department used someone who
had been in jail as an informant to set
him up on the charges.
At the time of the raid, Fife. said
be was in his shop adjacent his
house. His wife had just returned
from the grocery store, carrying
bags of groceries, and was not
allowed to put them in the house.
Pennington said she came into
the house and saw Sheriff Soulsby
sitting on the floor, counting money.
Officers emptied out cans and
jars of pennies and other coins onto
a sheet on the floor and also dumped
out the contents of Mts. Fife's pocketbooks.
The sheets, blankets and quilts
were taken from the house to wrap
the guns in.
At one point, an officer in the living room shot a hole through the
outside wall, Fife said, adding he

later heard the shot nanowly missed
the sheriff. "They destroyed the
house," he said.
Fife said officers took a personal
coin collection consisting of silver
dollars he and his wife saved when
they didn't have money. Eve,Y week
they put aside one silver dollar, be
explained.
The silver dollar collection was
never placed on the inventory and
hasn't been seen since the raid, he
explained.
Pennington said officers tore the
heads off dolls, looking for money.
Pennington complained the lawmen left the bouse with doors
unlocked and ajar, but Fife said it
didn't matter beeause "there was
nothing left to"steal. •
"They ev~n took Gladys' yard
sale items... and she wasn't even
charged with anything," be said.
Fife and Pennirtgton decided to
tell their side of the story after Middleport Village Council discussed his
Halloween display which included a
clown with its middle finger extended. Council members had discussed
forcing Fife to remove the display,
citing an old ordinance prohibiting
·
obscene displays or gestures.
"They would have had a fight
removing it," he said.
Spirit ot waco, Ruby Ridge
Fife said lawmen and officials
participating in the raid acted in the
spirit "o f Waco, Ruby Ridge and the
more-recent raid on Dr. Danny
'\Yestmorelanjl:s 'office in M8$011,
W.Va. :- ineidents in whiCh many
believe the government overstepped
· its bounds, infringing on citizens'
rights.
In his inStance, Fife said the raid
violated his Constitutional right
against unreasonable searches and
seizures. ·
He said he bad the shop there in
Middleport almost all of his life and
stated he wasn't guilty of the charges
but went along due to his and bis
wife's illnesses and deaths in the
immediate family.
·
Fife had a stack of papers con:
~mini the mcident· arrayed on his
coffee table, papers be would like to
bave an attorney exa~ine some day,
adding that he is too sick to fight the
system at this time.
Now Fife says he doesn't do anything. The disabled 71-year-oid man
who earlier enjoyed bis extensive
gun collection now doesn't even
own one gun ... as a convicted felon
he isn't allowed to. He is still on p10-

bation until July.
Pennington said her father has
done a lot for the Middleport community, never getting credit for all
the good he has done and helping
people in need of money.
"Lentes always wanted a pawnshop," Fife remarked.
.
"This is probably the worst thing
I have ever went through, • Pennington said. "What they did to him was
not right. It destroyed us."

•

Family Night Is
Back •.• Only Better!

EVERY TUESDAY I~G ..I
• P'.M.·9 P.M..:OIILY

or .

No. 1 Nebraska edges Missouri 45-38 in

Michigan mauls Penn State 34-8
.STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) -·
Mt chtgan needed only a hal f to show
Penn State who's boss in the Big Ten.
The fourth-ranked Wolverines
with Charles Woodson catching a 37:
yard touchdown pass. overwhelmed
the second-ranked Nittany Lions 348 on Saturday - Penn State's worst
home loss in Joe Paterno's 32 years
as coach.
·
The defeat came swiftly as the
Wolveri nes moved to a 24-0 lead ;n
less than 24 minutes and put the
clamps on Penn State's offense.

Oregon 31,
No. 6 Washington 28
SEATTLE (AP) - Akili Smith
passed 29 yards to Pat Johnson in the
end zone with 2:33 to go and Oregon,
which blew a 2 1-point first -half lead,
beat No.6 WaShington 31-28 on Saturday.
The Ducks (5-4, 2-4 Pac- 10) led
17-0 arid 24-3 in the second quarter,
but Washington (7-2. 5-l) rallied to
lead 28-24 on a 41 -yard touchdown
pass from Marques Tuiasosopo to
Ja'Warren Hooker with eight minutes

The nati·o n's top-rated defense
held the Lions to 38 total yards in the
first half and Brian Griese threw two
ID passes and Anthony Thomas ran
for another as the Wolverines ended
the nation 's longest winnins streak
among major college at 12 games.
The victory moved the Wolverines
(9-0, 6-0 Big Ten) a huge step closer to their first Rose Bowl trip since
1993 while keeping alive their
chances for a national championship.
Penn State fell to 7-1, 4-1...

left.
carries.
Oregon, a 21-point underdog, ended Washington's 12·game Pac-10 Nebraska 45,
winning streak and beat the Huskies Missouri 38, OT
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Scott Frost
for the third time in four seasons.
Still, the Huskies can go to the completed Nebraska's versi on of the
Rose Bowl by winning their final two Immaculate Reception with no time
Pac- IO games, next Saturday at remaining, then ran for his fourth
UCLA and on Nov. 22 against Wash- touchdown in overtime as No. I
Nebraska avoided an upset with a 45ington State.
Smith.was 15-of-25for 193 yards 38 victory over Missouri on Saturday.
Nebraska (9-0 9verall, 6·0 Big 12)
and three touchdowns. Also for Oregon, Saladin McCullough wshed for stayed·unbe~ten thanks to a bouncing
117 yards and a touchdown on 28 ball that ended up in the hands of
Matt Davison for a 12-yard touch-

down pass that forced the extra penad.
With 12 seconds to go, Frost's
pass to the end zone was knocked out
of Shevin Wiggins' grasp. Misso uri
appeared ready to intercept the ball ,
but Wiggins inadvenently kicked it
into the air on his way down and
Davis made a diving grab just before
it hit the turf.
Missouri had two incompl ete
passes and a 3·yard gain before Cor·
by Jones was sacked on fourth down.
Nebraska ran its winning streak
against the Ti gers to 19 straight.

Miami hands OU first loop loss

" We 'll have the right message,
which is pro-life and pro-free enter-

ATHENS{AP) - Travis Prentice
rushed for 227 yards and two touchdowns and Sam Ricketts passed for
254 yards and four scores to lead
Miami of Ohio to a 45-21 victory
over Ohio University Saturday.
Ohio had entered th~ame averaging 342 yards rushing game, but
was limited to 178 on 41 at emptsincluding 61 on one play. Prentice's
227 yards came on 41 attempts.
Miami (8-2, 5-2 Mid-American
Conference East Division) rolled up
581 yards in total offense against an
Ohio defense that entered the game
ranked second in the nation in scoring defense. ·
The Bobcats had give up ·only 23
points in the second half all season,
but surrendered 21 to tbe RedHawks,
who never had to punt.
Ohio (8-2, 6-1 MAC East) can still
win the division and with it an automatic berth in the MAC championship game by winning at Marshall
next Saturday.
The game was still close 5 minutes
into the third quarter after Ohio's
Kahieem Maxwell gained 61 yards
on a reverse to set up Joe Fondale"s
second touchdown. a 3-yard ruf! that
cut Miami's lead to 24-21.
But Ricketts came right back wjth
a 35-yard TD pass to Trevor Gaylor

FRI. THRU THURS.
GEORGE CLOONEY,
NICOLE KIDMAN IN

PEACEMAKER
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -As No.
7 Ohio State watched one Big Ten
blowout unfold on the Metrodome
scoreboard Saturday, it took care of
one of its own.
While Michigan drubbed Penn
State, Joe Germaine threw two of his

Home

&amp;

three touchdown passc;i to David
Boston, leading the Buckeyes to a 313 win over Minnesota.
The vjctory, coupled with the No.
4 Wolverines' win, kept Ohio ·State
(9-1. 5-l Big Ten) in the race for the
conference title. The Buckeyes, co-

champions with Northwestern last
year, visit Michigan Stadium on Nov.
22 after hosting winless Illinois next
weekend.
Ohio State, which lost its only
game at Penn State, could be playing
for. the title outright at Michigan i(

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. FAULKNER SCORES - Wisconsin running
back Eddie Faulkner heads for the endzone
with Iowa's Ed Glbaon (26) and Eric Thigpen

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1211and Matt Hughes (371 In pursuit. The Badgers upaet the Hawkeyea.in Madison Saturday,
13010. (AP)

Saturday's College Football Scores

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•

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Sund.y, November 9, 1997

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B

and a 14-yard sebring pass to Sly catches for 56 yards and one touchdown, extended 'his scoring streak to
Johnson.
Miami clinched the victory with a 25 games. He moved to within one
14-play, 83-yard drive that consumed touchdo)Vn catch of the NCAA Divi·
6:32 and culminated in Prentice's 3- sian I record of 22 in a season, set by
· Manny Hazzard of Houston in 1989.
yard run with 9:30 left.
Moss also returned a punt 58 yards
Marsball 28," •
to the Bowling Green II to set up
Marshall"s first touchdown. That
Bowllng Green 0
came on a 3-yard run by Doug ChapHUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Chad Pennington threw three touch- man with 4:56 left in the first quardown passes, including one to Randy ter.
Pennington's other two touchMoss, to lead Marshall to a 28-0 win
down
passes came on 59- and I 0over Bowling. Green on Saturday..
Marshall's win set up a Mid- yard strikes to Mark Wicks in the secAmerican Conference divisional ond quarter, giving Marshall a 21 -0
championship game against Ohio. lead at halftime.
Pennington completed 21 of 32
which lost its first conference game
passes
for 297 yards. Pennington now
Saturday to Miami of Ohio, 45-21.
has
34
scoring passes this season,
Marshall and Ohio are both 8-2
overall and 6-1 in the East Division. tying him with sophomore Tim
They meet next Saturday in Hunt- Couch of Kentucky for most touchington, with the winner playing for downs thrown by a sophomore in a
·
.
the MAC championship in Hunting- single s~ason .
Bowling Green quarterback Ricky
ton against West Division champion
Schneider completed 21 of 42 for293
Toledo.
Pennington 's third touchdown yards. He was intercepted twice and
pass went 30 yards to Moss on the sacked three times.
first play from scrimmage in the secMarshall turned back Bowling
ond half, giving Marshall a 28-0 lead. Green twice in the first half, once
The one-play drive was set up ,by a stopping the Falcons on fourth down
60-yard kickoff return by · Maurice at the Marshall 1-yard line. Kicker
Hines.
Jason Strasser missed a 39-yard field
· Moss, who finished with seven goal with 2:08 left in the second quar..
.

ter.
Neither team was effecti.ve on the
ground, with Marshall runnin g for 54
yards and Bowling Green amassing
60.
Marshall set several other records
in "the game. The Thundering He rd
became the first team in NCAA history to win eight games in its fir st

season of Division 1-A play after
moving from 1-AA. Nevada was 7-5
in 1992.
Marshall also set a conference
record of 392 points in a seaso n.

Bowling Green held the previous
record of 391 in 1994.
The Herd also tied·a school record
of IS straight home victori es. · lts
record at Nlarshall Stadium, built in
1991 . is 60·4.
Eastern Michigan 38;
Northern Illinois 10
DE KALB, Ill . (AP) - Charlie
Batch threw four touchdown passes
Saturday and Eastern Michigan rolled
to a 38:JOvictory over Northern Ill inois, sending the Huski es to their
17th straight loss.
Batch, who compl eted 20 of 4 1
passes for 275 yards, had scoring
passes of 23 and 5 yards to Ta-if
Kumsai, and 13 and 6 yards to Brandon Campbell.

OSU runs Pist Gophers 31-3

VilleONfallf
Weddings, l•suraiCe,

LID A Y POOLS INC.

Section

t,miS(iiURj MISSES UPSET • The Unlveralty of Ml ..ouri just
miased knocking off No. 1 Nebraska. Saturday, losing a 45-38
overtime heartbreaker In Columbia. Above, MU"a Brock Oliva (7)
goea up over and In between the University of Nebraska defense
to score during tlrat quarter action. Missouri led 38-31 until
N$raalta acorad the g~rn,e-tying TD as time explrad. (AP)

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Boston U. 33, Massachusetts 8
Cent. Connecticut SL 24. S. Connecticut 0

Ball St. 35. Toledo 3
Butler 14. Drake 13
Colorado 43, Iowa St. 38
E. Kentucky 20. SE Missouri I0
E. Michigan 38. N. ltlinois I 0 ·
Evansvi lle 48. Ky. Wesleyan 6
Kansas St. 48. Kansas 16
Mi ami. Ohi o 45, Ohio U. 21
· NorthweStern 34. ltlinois 2I
Purdue 22. Michi gan St. 21
W Illinois 37. Illinois St. 23
W Kenrucky 21, \ndiana St. 14
W Mi chigan 38. Cent. Michigan 24

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Delaware 37, Connecticut 29
Duqu esne 40, St. Peter's 0

Fairfi eld 28, lonn 7
Georgetown, D.C. 27, St. John 's. NY
0

llarvard 27, Brown 10
Holy Cross 20. Lehigh 14
Maine ~2. Buffalo \3
Marist 20, Cnnisius 6
Mi chigan 34. Penn St. 8
Monmouth, N.J. 51. Wagner 7·
Navy 49 , Te mPle 17
Northc as~ m 41, J3mcs Madison 17

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Siena 11, MIT 13
Syracuse 20. Boston Coll ege 13
Vi ll artova 23,-New Hampshire 20
Wake ForcSI 28. Rutgers 14
MIDWEST
Marshall 28 B&lt;lwli ng Green 0
Akron 45. Kent 35

29

Aurora 33, Valparaiso 7

Youngs&lt;own St. 34, S. Illinois 10
SOUTH
Alcorn St. 23. Miss. Valley St. 18
Appalachi an St. 42. VM\ 7
Centre 19. Davidson 14
Citadel 7. Challanooga 3
Clemson 29. Duke 20. OT
E. Tennessee St. 31. Wofford 28
Elan 17. W. Carolina \6
Florida 20, Vanderbilt 7
Georgia Southern 30, Furman 13

j

LSU 27, Alabama 0
Liberty 17. Norfolk St. 6
Louisiana Tech 32, Ala.- Birmingham

Middle Tenn. 59. Austin Peay 10
Morehead St. 55. CharleSion Soulhem

27
Murray St. 24, E. Illinois 17
N. Carolina A&amp;T 22. Delaware St. 14
N. Carolina St. 45. Maryland 28
Richmond 27. Rhode Island II
S. Carolina St . 27. HowanJ U. I 8
Samford 14. Tcnn.-Mnrtin 7
Virginia 35, Georgia Tech 31

SOUTHWEST
Arkansas St. 35, SW Missouri St. 2?

East Carolina 28, HouSJon 27
McNeese St. 31. SW Texas St. 21
Oklahoma St. 30. Oklahoma 7
Rice 38. Texas"ChriSJian 19
Sam Houslon St. 33. Stephen F.Austin

Wisco nsin 13, Iowa 10

Penn 20, Prim:cton 17
Roben Morris 34, St. Fmm:1s. Pa. 7

.

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Ohio State 31 Minnesota 3

Co l~ate 34. Towson 3
Come11 37. Yale \0
Dartmouth 23, Columbia 21

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EAST

28
Southern Meth. 28. Texas·EI Paso 14
Texas A&amp;M 38. Baylor I0
FAR WEST
Air Force 24."Army 0
Bligham Young 49. Thlsa 39
Cal Poly-SLO 20, Monrana St. 19
Colorado St. 41 . Fresno St. 3
Nevada 56, Boise St. 42 ·
Nonh Texas 26. New Mexico St. 15
Or&lt;gon 31. Washington 28
Weber St . 52. Sacramento St. 14
Wyoming 35. UNLV 23

Wisconsin upsets the Wolvennes

next weekend and Penn State loses
one of its three remaining games.

No. 23 Purdue 22,
Michigan ~t. 21
WEST LAFAYETI'E, Ind. (AP)
- Ed Watson rushed for a seasonhigh 115 yards, including a 3-yard
run for the winning touchdown with
40 seconds to play as No. 23 Purdue
scored twice in the last two minutes
to shock Michigan State 22-21 Sat- ·
urday.
Michigan State's Chris Gardner,
who had a field goal attempt blocked
and returned for a touchdown with
two minutes to play, missed a 43yarder with three seconds to play.
Northwestern·34,
IDinois 21
· CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) Northwestern quarterback Chr:is
Harndorf will not speculate abOut
what might have been if he had started all year. He's just happy he got a
chance at the job.
" I'm not going to look back on it.
UEi,RY SACKED- Michigan's Rob Scott (44) celebrates
I'm jtist going to savor this game,"
the sack of Penn State quarterback Mike McQueary, on ground,
Hamdorf said after he passed for 183 with teammate Glen Steele (81) during Saturday's Big Ten game
yards and three touchdowns Saturday at State College, Pa. The Wolverines walloped the Lions to take
in his first start -this season to lead
over undisputed first place In the conference with a 6-0 record.
Northwestern (4-7, 2· 5 Big Ten) to a Penn Stated dropped to 4-1_. (AP) •
•

•

•

34-21 wtn over Ilhnms.

Badger.S upset No~ 12/owa 13-10
.

MADISON, Wis. (AP) - The
skid is over. no thanks to Ron Dayne.
Wisconsin snapped an I 8-game
winless streak against No. 12 Iowa on
Saturday by stunning the Hawkeycs
13-10 despite. losing their star tailback to a sprained ankle on the
game's first drive.
Freshm an Eddie Faulkner had
career hi ghs of 26 carries and 119
yards in emergency duty and scored
the Badgers ' only touchdown as Wi sconsin (8-2, 5-1 Big Ten) beat a team
with a winning record for the fi rs!
time all year.
Despite loSing the nation's second-leading rll$hcr, the Badgers built
a 13·0 halftime lead on Faulkner's 4·
yard TD run and field goals of 37 and
· 43 yards by Matt Davenport.
The Hawkeyes (6-3. 3-3) pulled to
13- 10 on a 19-yard TD pass from
Randy Reiners to wing back Tim
Dwight in the third qu arter and Zach
Bromert's career-best 41 -yard fi eld
goal midway through the fourth quar·
lcr.

'

But Bromert , whose 29-yard
attempt in the third · qu arter was
blocked, mi sfired from 43 yards out
witlj, 3: 50 remainin g, wastin g a 73-

yard run by Tavian Banks, who
rushed 19times for \40 yards.
The Hawkeyes got one more
chance, but on fourth·and-10 from
the Iowa 46, Reiners. a sophomore
playing for the first tim e on the road,
hit Dwight a yard short of the first
down .

The homeco ming crowd of
79.864, the third-largest in school hi s·
tory and the biggest since 197S.
roc ked Camp Randall Stadi um as
Mike Sa muel . took a knee three
times.
TI1e Badgers hadn' t beaten Iowa
si nce 1976 and hadn 't beaten
Hawkeyes coach Hayden Fry in 15
tries. The only blemis h tor Iowa, a
10-10 tie in 1984.
The Badgers' chances at ending
the skid looked slim whe n Day ne, the
Big Ten's leading rushor, sprai ned hts
right ankle on the Badgers" fi rst drive. X·rays were ne gative. but Dayne
did n' t return .
Day ne was injured on a fourth·
and·! play in which he was stopped
fo r a one-yard loss by Jared DeVries
and Jason House at the Iowa 20 on
· the game's first dri ve. He had rushed
for 25 yards on six carries .

Dayne has 1.295 rushing yards
thi s season, giving him 3,158 in his
first lWO years. 329 shy of Hersc hel
Walker's NCAA record of 3,507 .
After Davenport's 37-yarder in the
second quarter made it 3-0. Richard
Carter fumbl ed the kickoff and Wisconsin ·s Donnell Thompson recov-

cred it at the Hawkeyes· 25.
Four plays .latcr, Faulkn er took it
in fro m the 4 for a 10-0 lead, and
Davenport qdded a 43-yardcr just
hefore halft ime.
Iowa's only threat. in the first half
came when Reiners, who replaced
freshman Scott · Mullen after two
series. hit Dwight for a 44-yard gain
to the Badge rs 6 in the second quarter. But a.holdin g penalty on left lackle Chad Deal brought the ball back to
. the Iowa 32. a 62-yard diffe rential
The Hawkeyes pulled to 13-7
when Reiners found Dwight between
cornerbac ks Dan te Kmg and LaMar
Campbell from 19 yards out with
I :09 left in the th ird quarter.
low as Ed Gibson intercepted
Samuel at the Badgers· 20 with nine
minutes remaining, but the Hawkeycs
had to se11le for Bromcn's 41-yard
held goal th at made it 13-10 with
eight minutes left.

I

'
~·-

(

�Sunday, November 9, 1997

Sunday,Novernber~1997

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

'

RIO GRANDE·· After a difficult
season a year ago, the Redmen basketball team hopes to rebuild and
move ahead under new head coach
Earl Thomas. Though new 10 tbe
head ·coach's seat, Thomas is definitely not a newcomer around Rio
Grande. He has served as an assistant
for the Redmen program since 1981.
The 1997-98 season begins Nov.
11 when lhe Redmen host Wilber·
force University in a 7:30 p.m.
match-up at the Newt Oliver Arena.
Look for a return lo old-style Rio
Grande · basketball this season as
Thomas ·and associate coach Jeff
Lanham hope to revamp an offense
that's been dormant for lhe past two
seasons. Thomas said he and Lanham
wani to light the lamp often at the
Newt Oliver Arena.
"We want to bring back the up·
tempo style that we played a few
years back when we were averaging
about 100 points a game," he said.

By SAM WILSON

Rio Gr3nde Redwomen begin
defense of region title Nov. 11

· I ~ealize all of you m feeling guilty because
you hurt Mike Tyson's feelings. He even went so far as ~o state how everynne was against him. But l wanl all of you to know that 1t's re8;11Y my fault
Yes, 1was ICSpoasible for Mike biting Evand~r's car an~ bemg.suspe'"!ed for life. You might have missed lhat on lhe v!dco; but suu:e ~ike wo~ I
lake ICSponsibility for the incidcot, I figu!Cd I !"'ght as well admit ~y guilt.
Consequently, I promise never to box agam! ~II Lennox ~IS ~t I
can't fight bim for lhe championship. Y~ ~veryone can .start liking Mike
and hale me instead. I'm also officially ~etlrlng from lhe nng.
Is the~e any reason why I should feel like Bill Murray? After al~ his NBA
career ended bcfo~e he was able lo achieve glory on the hardwood. They say
he had no game.
I was so loo~ing forward to gelling my face ~earrangcd in lhe ring.
Allhough my wife was mo~e concerned aboullhe futu~e shape of my ears.
So, now lhat Ibis is settled, please write Mike and lhe ,las Vegas bqxing
commission and lelllhem all is forgiven.
.
In actuaiity, boxing needs to be congratulaled, al presen~ for maintaining ·
ils.lifetime ban on Tyson. Unlike some sports where-you can almost at:ays
sue&lt;:cssfuUy appeal such a ban, boxing has sent a suong message lo Iron
Mike" and any other Tyson imilators. The sport's integri"'-.has been piC·
served.
.
.
( · .
Now, if lhere could be a way lo have Don King join Mike on the sidelines, that would really inake my day.
.
·
. ·
I have discovered lhat. an interest in sports can also trsnslate inlo exira
chores at work. Firsl, my colleagues nominated me lo the university's Alh·
lelic Council. Second, along with Sports Information Director Andrew
Caitc:r, I have the ~CSponsibility of initiating a plan for Rio Gnnde's· new
women's soccer program.
It will be our goal to get lhis program off the ground by the year 2000.
Let me tell you ladies something. you can get yourself a trip to college if you
can play this game.
In lhe inte!CSI of gender cquily, colleges arc offering scholarships 10
young ladies who are inteiCSied in compeling in soccer. This week's Columbus Dispatch has been full of anicles on the girls' high school soccer tournament. Colleges I,Jave discove!Cd that demand is grcaler than the supply of
female soccer players.
Yes, it's full steam ahead for women's soccer programs on college camContinued on B-3

.

'

'

"It's more fun for lhe kids and more
kids are coming out of that style·of
play in high school. Irs also more fun
for the fans. They would rather sec a
game that's 95-92 than a 47-44
game."
Rio Grande will have three offive
slarters back from last season's ball
, club. They include NAIA All-American forward Jason COISe, All-Great
Lakes Region point guard Chad
Barnes and power forward Chris
DeBow.
Cruse, a sophomore from Chillicolhe, Ohio, was tbe Redmen's num· ber two scorer (14.3 ppg) and top
rebounder (8 rpg) last season despite
missinR 13 Rames due to a slrcss frac.
ture in his foot. Now, totally healed,
COISe is ready to lead the Rcdmen lo
greater heights this season:
COACH EARL THOMAS
Barnes, the former Gallia Academy Blue Devil and one of the senior 5.8 points, 2.1 rebounds and 2.9
trio C)f co-captains, had his best year assists per game and provided much·
in college last season. He averaged needed leadership during some trying

CHAD BARNES,cc

CHRIS DEBOW,cc

CRAIG KERNS,cc

times.
making 26 starts and seeing action in finesse from his shooting guard slot.
DeBow, a senior, averaged S.8 all 33 games fot Rio Grande. DeBow
Keating, from Moeller High
points and 3.9 rebounds a game is also one of the Redmen captains School in Cincinnati, moves into his
this year.
second full season with lhe Rcdmen
Joining Cruse, Barnes and DeBow after redshining in 95-96. Keating
as reluming players are guards Craig look his game to a new level at the
knot the counl al 14-all. The score winning touchdown with 2:08 lefl in out with 7:52 left in the third period. Kerns, Brad Kealing, Chris Beard end of last season averaging 4.5
came following Jay Blankenship's the game, then kicked the point after Mike Gehrig kicked the point after, and Scott Davis and centers Eric points and two assists per game. Over
30-yard re1urn of the second half to give the Indians a 14· 7 upset win
the last II games the season, he averHannibal dominated the game·~ Seitz and Desroy Grant. ·
kickoff.
Kerns. a fifth year senior and co- aged 8.2 points, 4.1 assists and ~ .9
over No. I Hannibal River.
statistics, picking up 18 first downs
Jackson held off repeated
Lucasville advanced to second to Valley's 3. Hannibal ran 71 plays captain, chipped .in 4.4 points per rebounds per outing.
Youngstown threats the remainder of round play in the Division V, Region from scrimmage while Valley ran game last season in a reserve role.
Beard was hampered by injury
the third period, and early in the final 19 playoffs with a 11-0 mark and will only 27. Total yards favored the The 6-4 swingman should provide and illness in his freshman season,
stanza before East's winning drive.
Rio Grande wilh leadership and
play Amanda-Ciearcreek on Nov. losers, 310.130.
Continued 011 B-4
East dominated the statistics, pick- 14, a 27-0 winner over Crooksville in
Valley intercepted four Hannibal
ing up 19 first downs to Jackson's six. the other Region 19 opener at Grove- passes. The losers completed 110 of
The Bears ran 66 plays from scrim- port.
21 for 119 yards. Lucasville was ().2
mage compared to Jackson's 40.
Lundy got lhe Indians on the in the passing game.
Jackson rushed 35 times for 156 board first with a 70-yard run with
Lundy paced the winners with 93
yards while East rushed 43 times for 7:29 remaining in lhe first quarter, yards in eight trips. Stalder led Han198 yards. Total yards favored the then kicked the point after. Hanni- nibal with 99 yards in 14 carries.
Bears, 334 to 156.
bal's only score came when Stanley Todd Fry had four catches for 55
Big difference was in the passing Stalder crashed over from four yards yard's ·for the losers.
game. Jackson was 0 for 5 with one
intercepted and no yards passing
while Youngstown connected on 12
coverall)
Athens ........ ;....... 1 9 151 401
of 23 aerials for 136 yards.
(1997)
Marietta .............. ! 9 89 253
Both learns fumbled three times
W L POP Eastern ............... ! 9 63 242
and lost two. Jackson was penalized Team
twice for I 0 yards, East seven times Lucasville ......... 11 0 351 77 South Gallia .......0 9 76 35
Jackson .............. 9 2 408 105
for 56 yards.
Fairland .............. 7
Wolford paced Jackson with 25 Coal Grove ... .... .:r 2 205 127
SEOAL
carries and 142 yarns and two TDs. Pt. Pleasant.. ...... 7 2 277 94
Final
3 286 192
Mays led the winners wilh 20 I yards Meigs .................6 4 250 173 Team
WL
P OP
in 30 trips and two TDs. Ahan had 74 Warren Local.. ....6 4 267 242
Jackson ............ 7 0 325 51
yards passing with seven rJceptions. lronton ................ 5 5 179 226 . Pt. Pleasant.. .... 5 2 202 160
Valley 14 Hannibal 7
River Valley .... ..4 3 14.3 136
Southern ............ 5 5 136 216
Logari ............. ..4 3 157 161
At Rutter field in Athens, River Valley ...... ..4 5 155 190
Gallipolis ...........4 3 139 154
Lucasville's Chris Lundy returned a Logan ................ .4 6 194 255
Warren Local. ... 3 4 167 193
pass interception 65 yards for the Gallipolis .......... ..4 6 161 221
Athens .............. 1 6 109 267
Marietta ............0 7
46 166
CARL SANDERS
Totals
28 28 1288 1288

Jackson eliminated; Lucasville advances in playoffs
CAMBRIDGE· Yol!Jlgstown East
marched 58 yards in the final minute
of play Friday night lo edge Soulheastern Ohio League champion Jackson 20-14 in the Division Ill, Region
I I game at Mcfarland Stadium in
Cambridge.
The heanbreaking setback eliminated Jackson. and left the Ironmen
wilh a 9-2 season' record. The Golden Bears advanced and will play
crosstown rival Youngstown Chaney
on Nov, 14. Chaney upsel previously unbeaten Minerva 25-10 in the other Region II opener at Salem Reilly
Stadi~m Friday night.
East's winning touchdown drive
staned following a Jackson punt in
the final minutes of play.
The Bears scored the winning
touchdown on an 18-yard pass from
Nale Logan to Jhaon Ahan with 23
seconds left on the scoreboard clock.
The try for extra points failed.
East got on the board first when P.
J. Mays raced 38 yards with 8:03 left
in the first period. Mays then ran the
extra points for an 8-0 Youngstown
lead. The 81-yard drive required
only eight plays.
Jackson got on the board in the
first period with 1:51 left to play
when Shane Wolford galloped 19
yards for the Ironmen. A bad snap
· from center erased the point after

'
DAVID SMALLEY

c-..." ·''"' •Page B3

Rio opens cage season ·Nov. ·11 under new·coach

nm11 Senttnal~

Weill, trainer; Courtney Hutchinson, Blllstent coach; K111le
Kendall, Nlgal Parker, Beth Cornett, Karley Mohler, Cindy ijopper, Meghan Kolcun, Renee TUrley, David Smalley, head coach
end Joseph Bonlee, atudent Blliltent.

_...., 1

Redmen play at Marshall on Dec. 13

Decision to ban
Tyson upholds
boxing's i~tegrity

1997·98 RIO GRANDE REDWOMEN • Members of the 1997-118
Rio Grande Redwomen baskelbllll te.n ara, flllt row,lelt'to right,
Renee Rutter, Shannon Brown, Mlatl Halley, Michelle Tabor, Sarah
Frsncls, Chandra Holden, and Carrie Carson. Tabor Is holding
the 1997 Great Lakes Region Championship plaque. Fleer· Shane

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

MICHELLE TABOR

att~pt.

1

.

.

Jackson recovered a Youngstown
fumble deep in Golden Bear terrilory following its first score, but the
Bears dug in and held the high-scoring Ironmen on fourth down and
inches.
Youngstown regained lhe lead
following a Jackson fumble on its .
own I 0 (the game was played in a
steady drizzle on a muddy field) in
the secorid period. Mays scored from
the six with 3:48 left in the half.
Jackson got right back in the
game at the stan of the third period.
Shane Wolford raced 42 yards for a
touchdown with II :51 showing on
the clock, then ran the points after to

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Happy Qeliremenl Carl

......-Grid Area grid standings---

Decision to ban... -conu~uedrromu-2

pllSel. More importantly, lherc is practically no competition from girls
a~ lbe ocean. The~e are few organized women's programs or leagues in
Eu~. Those that exist are in their infancy. And critics say we need gender
cqutty! .
We must~ girls In an_d a~und lhe Columbus area. It seems lhat high
~hool soccer IS part of lhe cumculum up there. It is well-known lhat lhere
IS some.son oflocallaw or custom which prohibits any lype of soccer being
played m Gallia Count~ high schools. I believe it was part of lhe George
Washington land grant to the French 500, bul I could be wrong. Another
source lells me lhat lhe absence of soccer in high schools is due to a county
levy vote 80 years ago. In actuality,! believe it was the lasllevy ever,passed
in Gallia County.
·
Consequently, we must recruil. in other counties and stales to get our players. Locally, only Athcos has a gtrls soccer program in its high schools.
In some arc~, girls with enough talent are al!owed to play on the boys'
learn. We CSpeclally want lhem 10 come to Amenca's unique institution.
It will be our goal to concentrate on girls who will be graduating in lhe
~ext few years: Ath!ctics is one way. to beat the high cost of higher education. Opponumty wtll soon be knocking on some young girl's door, jusl not
in Gallia Counly.
Som Wlt.on, Ph.D. Ia on aiiOCIIte .,....,_, of hllloly 11 the UnlwNity ot
Rio Orondo. An avid fen ot •II aporia -and 1 noar manllcat fotlowlr of bnkat-

Continued from B-2
. over 1,400 points and grabbed over
550 rebounds in her career at Racine
Southern.
Joining Mohler on the frontline boll- M II I Mllve of Gory, Ind., and I grodulle of lndllnl Untwrally - which
arc three more talented six·footers. ohould tell reodoniiOIIIIIhlng obout .....,. hlo , _ (and Hooal.,. heart) Ia.
Freshman Kassie Kendall from .
Clarksburg, and juniors Beth Cornett
out of Farmersville, and Nigel Park·
er from Cincinnati, add.depth to the
Rio Grande forward unit.
'
Kendall was an all-conference
player at Adena High School. Cornett
'I
comes to Rio Grande via Sinclair
State Communily College and Parker formerly played at Cincinnati
State Community College. Both ju-co
transfers had stellar high school
careers.
The resl of !he freshman class
includes Renee Rutter from Union
Furnace, Ohio and Logan High
School, and Chandra Holden out of
Fayelleville, and Fayeneville High
School. Both Rutter and Holden
were multiple spon athletes at the
prep level and will add athleticism to
the Rio Grande squad.
"I like what I see from the new
players," Smalley sllited. "The true
freshmen are very talented and lhe
Introducing the new Toro• Wheef Horse• Lawn andjunior college transfers bring instant
experience to our line-up."
Garden Tractor. The finest lraclor we've ever made.
The Redwomen placed third in lhc
With the lightest turning radius available. Powerful
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engines from 18 to 23 hp, including liquid-cooled and
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NAIA Division I Top 25 pre-season
Built rugged enough for any chore. Test drive one
voting.
today at your Toro Wheel Horse Dealer.
Rio Grande's schedule includes
•
perennial NAJA Top 25 clubs Central
State Universily ·and Transylvania
.JUNior.
University. The Redwomen will face
Central State Nov. 15 at the "Newt"
in the home opener of the '97-'98
campaign.
Rio Grande travels to Lexinglon,
KY, site of their Great Lakes Region
State Route 248
triumph, Nov. 18 to face Transy.
Cheater
New to the schedule Ibis season is
NCAA Division Ill club Wilminglon
985-3301
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www.toro.co.
the "Newt" Feb. 12.
•
(

Nov. 7 results:
Division Ill at Cambridge
Youngstown East 20 Jackson
14
Division V at Athena
Lucasville 14 Hannibal River 7

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Sundey, November 9, 1997

Sunday,No~ber9,1997

Pomeroy •Middleport • GIHipolle, OH • Point Ph11ent, WV

Ohio Stadium slated for
$150 million renovation

Wahama falls in regular season finale 20-12
By GARY CLARK

II

OVP Connpondent
WINFIELD. The Wallama White
Falcons rallied from a 20-0 deficit to
make a game of its regular season
finale against Winfield Friday nigh!,
but the comeback effort fell short as
the Generals handed coach Ed Crom·
ley's Bend Area team a 20-12 setback
in the regular season finale for both
schools.
The Joss prevented the White Fal·
cons from securing a home team
berth in this week's post season
playoff opener as Wahama will take
its 7-3 record on the road in first
round action. No Jess than five of the
top I 0 teams in the Class!' !ankings

went down to defeat in the final week year witlra 5-5 record. The Generals
of the regular season . The Mason ran for 287 yllds wid! junior Nnninc
County team is expected to fall to back Jeremy posier scoring a pair of
lith or 12th when the final poll is touchdowns while ~ecounting for
rrleased today (Sunday)
230 rushing yards.
"It wu Sid to lose a game like
It will be Wahama's second
straight appearance in the "big show, that, but we played really hard," Pal·
and the school's sixth overall.
con coach Ed Cromley said. "Their
While it is pure speculation WHS offense was so much ·different than
will most likely encounter a playoff any we've played against lhis season
opponent in Valley Wetul or East that we were forced to spend most of
Hardy, according to unofficial tabu· lhe first half learning how to defense
lations. That means the Bend Area it.
Winfield scored on its first pos·
team would probably travel to New
Martinsville or Moorefield for its session by marching66 yllds in eight
plays with Dosier Joinc the final yard
opening playoff contest.
for
the score. David Tenn~nt blocked
Winfield utilized its strength and
expe.rience up front to shut down the the PAT kick u the Generals opened
.White Falcons offense and finish the a 6-0 advantage with 7:3S left in the
It

a

opening period.
General punt and the White Falcons
Winfield threatened on its next drove to the Winfield five yard line
possession but Joel Lloyd recovered but time ran out on the locals before
a General fumble. one of three take- they could punch it into the end zone . .
aways on the night for Wlhaml. on
Dosier helped the Generals
t~ Falcon eight yard lin~ to extin· increase its lead to 20-0 early in the
gu1sh the drive. The Generals would- third period when he broke loose on
n't be denied moments later howev- a 7S yard scoring jaunt through the
er, as they went on to make it a 14..() center of the Falcon line The point
contest by marching '53 yards in six after proved unsuccessful but the
plays with Sam Smith taking it in long scoring run put Wahama in a
from a yard out. Smith also ran the deep hole.
two point conversion to give the host
"We could have thrown in the
team a 14..() lead with 9:32 remain· towel after that long Nn that put them
ins in the half.
up by 20 points but we came right
Wahama missed a golden oppor- back after them," said Cromley. The
tunity to close the deficit late in the Bead Area team received a big break
quarter when Chris Chandler blocked on its next possession that boosted
the Falcons momentum and resulted
in the first score of the evening for the
White Falcons.
After Winfield forced a Falcon
punt Tyson Reitmire pounced on a
General fumble to retain possession
for Wahama at the Winfield 19 yard
line. Three plays later David Mitchell
scored the first Falcon touchdown of
the game on a 10 yard jaunt to make
it a 20·6 contest.

Wahama, with its defense stiffen·
ing with each and every series, tacked
on another score with 8: IS to play in
the final period. David Tennant broke
free down the far sideline for a ,67
yard gain to the Winfield five. Four
plays later on a fourth and six situa·
tion Mitchell once again found the
end zone following a lead block by
Ryan Russell to pull Wahama to within eight at 20-12.
WHS got the-ball back twice
more before time expired after Rcit·
mire recovered another General fumble and a spirited WHS defensive
stand but Winfield continued to halt
the Bend Area teams offensive thrust
to claim the 20-12 triumph.
Wahama tallied 140 yards in total ·
offense with 67 of those coming on
Tennant's long Nn. Tennant finished
with 77 yards on the ground in 10
carries while Grant Huff added 30
yards in eight tries for the White Falcons. Defensively Reitmire had a pair
of fumble reco~eries while B.J.
Davis, Reitmire, Joe.Finnicum and
Aaron Scott emerged as the defensive
leaders for the White Falcons. ·

COLUMBUS (AP)- More seats
and better handicapped accessibility
will be available when the renovation
of Ohio Stadium is completed before
the 200 I football season.
Ohio State's board of trustees on
Friday approved the $1 SO million .
renovation and expansion to the 15·
year·old home of Buckeyes football.
"Perhaps mon importantly. the
renovation project will add at least SO
years to the life of a monumcntlhat
symbolizes the Ohio State Universi·
ty," said athletics director Andy
Geiger.
Work is scheduled to begin in
May. Home games will be played in .
Ohio Stadium during construction,
although other events will be moved.
The stadium will keep its distinc·
tive horseshoe shape and will seat
96,000 ...-. 7,000 II)ore than current
capacity.
"The additional capacity is necessary and helpful in helping us
meet the tremendous demand from
our fans to see Buckeye games,"
Geiger said.
The renovation will eliminate
13,000 existing scats, but about

' t7imt

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. 'i . .
1997·98 RIO GRANDE REDMEN ·Member&amp; of lhe1997-98 Rio

Devla, Chad Bame1, 00-clptaln: Bnld KH1lng, Thorn Pat.te,
Adlm Krlltcher, and &amp;rl Thomea, hMd coach. Back roW. Chria
Belrd, Jeramy May, Craig Kem1 (co-c~ptaln), Senecll Htn1ng lll1d
Jeff Llnham, IIIOCiltl COICh.

Grande Reclmen bltakelblll tMm are, flrllt row, left to right, .Jaon
Curtis, student allllltllnt; Chrl1 Debow, eo&lt;~ptaln: Jllltln
Blackatone, Delroy Grant, .11181111 Crus, Eric Seltz, and Mire Knlhlcher, student 111lstant•.Middle row· Tom Moore, a1111t1nt; SCott

o"'

STOP IN AND CHECK OUT OUR SELECTION
OF 1997 HEAft DUTY DIESEL DUCKS .

THEY WOII'T LAST LONG!

Rio opens cage season•.. . :;.Co:;,; ;ntl; ; ;,nued;,; .;f~rom;.;.; B. ; _·3--~------

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but still managed to score 4.2 points
per game. and haul · down 2.3
rebounds per niRht from his off-guard
slot. He saw action in 28 games,.earning nine starts. Beard's athleticism
and aggression on the floor will
make him a threat to opposing
defenses.
Davis was one of Rio Grande's top
three-point threats a year ago. He shot
58 percent from beyond the arc and
hit a game-winning shot at Shawnee
State. ·
Seitz and Grant provide Rio
Grande with one of the most athletic
center tandems in the Mid-Ohio Confcrence and the Great Lakes Region.
At 6-7, 200 pounds, Seitz, a former
high jumper in high school, can run
the floor, is a ferocious rebounder anit
shot blocker and is developing a scoring touch.
Grant, 6-7 and 2~5 pounds, was
the MOC's number two shot blocker
last season averaging 1.5 per night.
The Kingston, Jamaica native ended
the season averaging 5.8 points and
four rebounds per game. He played in
all 33 games, st;lrting 12 of them.
"We have a solid gtoup of returning players," said Thomas. "We have
good depth at many positions."
The cast of new faces includes
three transfer ~layers and two true
freshmen. Justtn Blakcstone, fr?m
Balttmore, Oh1o and L1be_rty Umon
Htgh School, comes to Rto Grande
ati&lt;r a year at N(::AA Divison I Can a·
sius College in New YoR:. The 6-5
Blackstone bnngs athletiCISm and a
sconng touch wnh h1m.
Jeremy May, out of Franklin
Heights High School in Columbus,
spent last season at Ohio State University: May is a long-range shOOier
who is a welcome addition as the
Redmen look to up the score this sea·
son.
The last of the transfer players is
Seneca Herring from Cincinnati State
Community College. The talented
Herring. out of Cincinnati's Aiken

Lyne Center slate
RIO GRANDE -: Here is this
week's schedule for cvcnlS at the
University of Rio Grande's ,Lync
Center.
Week of No•. 9
Fitn... cenler, I)"IBIIIIIium
and racquetball courts
Today - 5-9 p.m.
Monday- 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
ThfS4ay - 6 a.m.·! 0 p.m.
Wednesday- 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
Thuraday -6 a.m.- 10 p.m.
Friday - 6 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1·6 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 9 - 5-9 p.m.
Pool
MOIIday- 6-9 p.m.
Tuaday - 6-9 p.m.
Wedanday - 6-9 p.m.
Thunday- 6-9 p.m.
F..W.y - 6-9 p.m.
Satarday- 1·3 p.m.
Slllllbly, Nov. 16....,. 6-9 p.m.

High School, brit~~s added strength round action at the Bevo Nov. 21.
Rio Grande's highest profile game
and athleticism to the Rio Grande off·
The Redmen visit Georgetown of the season takes place Dec. 13
guard rotation.
Feb. 17. Rio Grande will face CWV when lhe Redmcn travel to Hunting·
True freshmen Adam Kreischer in a home and home match-up host- ton, WV to take on Marshall Uniand Thorn Patete are both point ing CWV on Jan. 27 and travelling to versity in a 7 p.m. contest.
guards who are expected to develop Beckley Feb. 24.
nicely with time. Kreischer, brother
of Rio Grande student assistant Marc
Kreischer, follows his older sibling to
Rio Grande from Lexington, Ohio.
Patete is one of five former Scioto
Valley Conference players of the year
.
.
on the Redmen roster. He hails from
•
Orient, Ohio and Wntfaii-Higb•--1-=E
•
~&amp;appel't Ill
School, alma mater of former Red·
men ~ Jerry Mowery and Dan
Curry, who are bolh in the Rio
#
Grande Athletic Hall of Fame.
The other former SVC players of
·the .year on the current roster are !:=:=~"~d~.for~by~oo~n:HII:Id:llt:•~:~31~1=11~81~twr~:RI:d:•=Rd~.,=R~Mdnl~~!!e,~·=O=H~411=='':a!.
Kerns (Paint Valley, '93), Cruse r
(Unioto, '94 &amp; '95) and beard (Zane
Trace, '96). Fonner Redman Eric
Caudill (Piketon, '92) was also an
SVC player of the year award winner.
"The new guys are fitting in well,"
added Thomas. "Everyone is working
hard and the competition in practice
is outstanding. We're looking forward
to st;~rting up for real November II." ·
The '97-'98 scheudle includes
NAIA Top 2S heavyweights Cumberlimd College and Georgetown
College. Cumberland, an NAtA Final
Four participant last season, will
make an appearance in the 15th
Annual Bevo Francis Classic Nov.
21· 22.
The Indians and the College of
West Virginia, a vote getter in the pre·
season
will hook
in first

TO THE (IJIZE.N$ 0F

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1\Jelday - Redmen vs. Wilber·

....., • Sallrdly: 9... 8 Jll
· 811d1r. I ,. · 8 1111
I II

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Exira Clean. Only 76,000,actual miles. Local trade in.

Waa

u- •thledc evenll

force, 7:30 p.m. (Aetna Insurance
Booster Night)
s.turdl:r · Redwomen vs. Cen·
tral State, 2 p.m.
Sunday (N0\',16) • JV basketb.all
vs. Shawnee State, 3 p,m.

80

' '

I II I

,! '

GENERAL
-The changes will add 7,000, brin1ing capacity to 96,000.
- Six new elentors will be added.
-Exit widlhs and restrooms will be improved.
-More handicapped restrooms and better access for people with
disabilities.
-The track will be removed. But a new IO,()()().seat track and soc·
cer stadium dedicated to .Jesse Owens will be built at a cost of $10
million.
•
- Some parking will be lost in May. But more parking will be
available in December 1998.
-Work begins in May to relocate utilities. Construction starts in
December 1998. The renovations are scheduled to be done in time for
the 2001 season.
.
FUNDING
- Funding will ~orne from hospitality suites, club seats and rev·
enue from more scats, part of ticket costs and concessions.

20,000 seats will be added closer tn
the field and in higher rows.
The stadium will have hcttcr
accessibility for fans with disahilitics.
including more seating options and
additional handicapped rcstnx1ms.
"The project is being comrlctcly
funded by increased revenues and
will nOI require any tuition incrca.&lt;·
es, student fees, state suhsidy nr uni·
versity general funds of any kind."
said Bill Shkurti, OSU's ·vice prcsi·
dent for finance.
On lhe west side of the stadium.
82 private hospitality suites will he
sold for between $40,000 and
$70,000 each. The renovation plans
also incldue 2,500 club seats, which
will sell for about $2,000 each.
The renovation will displace some
OSU programs - temporarily and
permanently - but university offi·
cials said this will benefit the programs and the school.
For cx11Jl1plc, the track will be tom
out, but it will be replaced by a
I 0,000-seat track and soccer stadium
dedicated to Jesse Owens. It will cost
an estimated $10 million.

'Yankees trade
Rogers; Leyland
stays in Florida

' PHONE tl2·2196

11110DLEPORT,

A look at Ohio Stadium renovat ons

Let us get your car ready for winter
.,_.........
•Airllten

....en.lt-.,...
,..........• .........

...

NEW YORK (AP) - The Florida Marlins kept their manager. Now,
they need to hire a pitching coach.
On the day Jim Leyland said he
will be back to manage the Marlins,
Larry Rothschild left the World
Series champions and moved up Fri&lt;(ay to become the first manager of
the· expansion Tampa Bay Devil
Rays.
· "I don't expect to hit the first
lf'Onth and win 90 percent of the
sames," Rothschild said. "But what
I do expect is that the effort and
t~reparation to win games will be
there."
Also on the move was pitcher
Kenny Rogers, traded along with $5
l)lillion from the Yankees to 1~ Oak·
land Athletics in a deal that eventu·
ally will bring third baseman Scott
Brosius to New York.
· Rogers, signed to a $20 million,
four-year contract as a free agent
before the 1996 season, never adjusted to the turmoil of the Yankees. He
nearly was demoted to the bullpen
during his first spring training with
New York, and his confidence never
appeared to recover. ·
"He did not live up to our expectations or his," Yankees general manager Bob Watson said. "I&lt;ton't know
exactly what the problem was."
Speculation had been building
about Leyland's future since Marlins
owner Wayne Huizenga announced
Thursday he had agreed in principle
to sell the club to an investment
group headed by team president Don
Smiley.
"I will stay in Aorida and manage
the Aorida Marlins in 1998," Ley·
land said a team charity fund raiser.
"I want to give Don Smiley and his ·
group the benefit of the doubt and
make this thing work."
"I think that it is very important
for South Aorida that we get some
stability. It would be wrong to desert
these people after winning the World
Series," he said. "I'm going to try to
do my job to the best of my ability
and see what we can do."
As teams finalized their rosters
prior to the Nov. 18 expansion draft,
right-hander Ken Hill declined his
$4.6 million option with the Aqahcim
Angels and chose to receive a
$400.000 buyout; Cleveland exercised its $3.35 million option on
right-hander Charles Nagy; Seattle
declined its $2.9 million option on
reliever Norm Charlton and gave the
left-bander a S125,000 huyout; and
St. Louis declined a $650,000 option
on Scott Livingstone, ch&lt;M)sing to pay
n $100,000 huyout.
Also, right-hander Francisco Cordova and the Pittsburgh Pirates
agreed to a $4. I million, three-year
contract with a team option for 2001.
And the Atlanta Braves said right·
handcr Mike Bielecki had refused to
accept an outright assignment to the
minors and elected to hccome a free
agent.
Five players lilcd for free agency
- Hill. Charlton. Livingston, Pat
Borders. Pat Kelly and- raising'the
total to 138. Anaheim's Tony Phillips
is the only other player eligible to file
hcforc Monday's deadline and he
won't, forcing the Angels to release
him. which will cost the team two
draft picks.
The Devil Rays picked Roth·
schild from a group of five candidates
that included ano!her member of the
Marlins staff, bench coach Jerry
Manuel.
Rothschild has less than two
weeks to prepare for the expansion
draft as the Devil Rays prepare to join
the AL East The Arizona Diamond·
backs, the other expansion team that
s!arts play next season, hired Buck
Showalter as their manager nearly
two years ago.

•ltltt &amp; lioNs

. •llrt,.......

•illtllry

• • • • w!lltiiLI/Citl.t

PROPOSED RENOVATION • Ohio State lthlellc director Andy
Geiger standi betide • modal Friday In Columbus of. the propelled $150 million r111oV1tlon to Ohio Stadium. (AP)
·

ttt\~Coun~
Cit SOUTH THIRD

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

•

oWJpor w.lts

Wolfes
Auto
Reoair
71 Pine Street
441·1803
Gaftlpolla

Scoreboard
N1tlonal Buketltall AuociltkJn

EASTERN CONFERENCE
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'GB

7~
7~

Pad~

Phooni•
L.A. Clippers
Sammenco
Ooldcn ScGIC'

I 112
2
2
2 1n
3

.soo

,2

w

Dallas
San Aruonio
Minnesota
Houston
Utah
Vancou\·er
Denver

1.000

112
I 112
2 112
J

.&lt;XXl
Dh·lslon
I 000
. ~00

., ~7.SQ ~

'I
J
4
4

M7
.250
.000
.000

~~ - •.lJ.l "'ll--...~ fNI' .... ....

I '
l 112
·' 1/2
3 1/2

""'"':·.,,.,

1998 GMC JIMMY

•
385

4 Door, 4x4, auto, V6, buckets, SLT paclcage, CD
. player, leather. MSRP S30,210.00

Fridey'1 G1mn

Cle\·cland 96. Boston 92
SCnttlt 99. lndillna .9~
Allantn 80. Chi"OIJO 78

Now ,
"'DDil)'

-Charlolle 107. W:~5hiftllon 91
New Jmcy 99. Miami 87

4x4, CD &amp; cass, tilt, cruise, alum wheels, auto,
air, locking dill, all power, keyless remote, leather,

'":.::'Wj!
Ba~!!Freed~'Jage

~o:th

Per Month
•
Ler::
"GMAC Smart Lease 8.75%· 38 montha· 9,282.10
.00381
factor24,887.88
residual·
$443.00
plus 1. . . . "
Relldual· $796.68 due at tease tllgnlng plus !liXes &amp; tftle feet due at lease signing- $5000 cash down
or trade
Ieee $1500 cash down or trade equity

Orlando 89. Deuoil 8.4
•
Ponland U. Houst:on 8_,
Ut:lh 91. ~\'et' 89
Minncs01a 108. Varr:GU\'r'l' 97

L.A. Clippers 98. Socramcn10 8~
L.A. Lakc:ts 99. Ntw,York 94
Sa1urd1y's C1mn
.

!

Toronto ac Orlando. nitht

WashinJron at Mi~~ml. niJhL
Indiana 01 Chorlnne. lliJhl
Ad:~nro fll Cle\·eland. niJhl
New Jer~y 111 Chicllo,IO. niJhl
Ponhmd nt Dalla~ . ni,ht.
Utnh at St~n Antonio. nighr

RIVERSIDE MOTORS
"Your r.st Stop C.r Shop"

Acroaa from

1998 GMC YUKON
4 dr, 4x4, auto, leather, all power, front &amp; rear air,
lteylesa remote, heavy duty, 5700 VB, loclcing
dell, trallering, SLT d4!CQI' MSRP $38,218

Amarlca- POMEROY
Alllo trans.,

air cond., II~
wheel,
cruise, PW,
PL, much

Now
· Onl)'

Month

Per
•Bank One Freedom AdVInlage Leue 36 months,
.00381 factor, 24,268.06 resldeuat $357.78 &amp; wces &amp;
feet due at lease signing, $5,000 cash down or trade
equity .

1998 CHEVY K1500
EXT CAB PICKUP

,.

4X4, Z71 Pkg, 5700 VB, loclcing cliff, air, cass, II~.
cruise, Silverado, auto, alum wheels, electronic
shift !ransfer case. MSRP $28,819

8

I' 287!~Mon~

Now
On

• GMAC Sma~ Lease· 38 months, 8.75% · $18,3t6.16
residual· $587.91 t wcea &amp; title fees due at lease
tllgnlng, $3000 cash down or trade equity

88 &amp; 89 FORD BRONCO II 4X4's
5 to choose from. all are well equipped whh XU Pkg. Auto &amp;
standard trans.
PRICED FROM '4900-'6400

92 FORD AEROSTAR 4X4 VAN .....;.......... $7900
Eddie Bauer !rim, 4.0 V6, auto, loaded with all extas. 7 passenger

90 SUBARU LOVALE WAGON 4 WD ....... $4300
5 speed, air cone!., tU!IS great.

92 FORD ESCORT 4 DR............................$4995
4 cyl., auto., air.

94 FORD ASPIRE 2 DR............................. $5495
5 speed, air cond., air bag, only 42,000 miles. D

89 BUICK LESAIRE 4 DR •• 101.1............. $3995
3800, V6, loaded w"h all options.

- ··

D

.-

88 CHEV. CORSICA 4 DR...S................ $3995

V6, auto. trans., air cond.

89 BUICK REGAL 2 DR............................. $4995

stnl------

5
CHEVY 5·10 PICKUP Alto, PS, N, *•
10,600
5
FORD RANGER Sspt stereo, 4cy1, low lilies .. •............... ....
7,800
5
GEO TRACKER 4x4, sspd, PS, PI, Ltw Ills
7,800
519,900
1997 PONTIAC TRANSPORT V6, am, IIi, PS. ft, steret,llt, ns., 1,000 Ill
518,500
1995 OIEVY lWEI 4x4, 4Dr, u, PS, PI, 111o, CD player, llt,cnist
1995 FORD MUSTANG ... PS, PI, "' stereo, t1t, cn1st
s12,900
5
996 GEO METROs sp4 ar, steno, PS, " - - - - - - - - 5,900
994 OIEVY lERmA 2o.., Y6,""'
900

,*·

V6, auto. trans .. ell power.

89 FORD TAURUS 4 DR............................ $1995

ve, auto. trans.

88 PONTIAC SUNBIRD 4 DR.................... $19915
4 cyt., auto., air cond.

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

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

n,ooo actual miles.

· 94 HVONDAI EXCEL..................................$3995

'MON·FRI.

N
SATURDAY

...

SUNDAY1-5

NEED AFRESHSTART?
lftrupky • Slaw Cndit

• No Cretlt. Wt mcry bt
allletohllpl
Aslt lar Mr. larllll

.·
•.

-.

'

'

�Outdoors

~·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpoll•, OH • Point PleaMnt, WV

Sunay, November 8, 1887

J •••

Noli ember t, 1117

Wally Pike's Outdoor Life

1997 CHEV HEAVY DUTY .
3/4 TON TRUCK 4X4

When it comes to license sales,
Monroe
County
.
is
deer
capital
Hunters spending
FIRST DEER ·11-year-old Charlie Williamson of Dye Roed;Rutland, killed his first deer, an 8-polnt buck, on Oct 28. Charlie, who
was hunting with his father, Brian Wllllamaon, dropped the buck
with a shot from his crossbow near the Williamson home.
..
'

millions in Ohio

·

more than half a billion dollars,'' said
division Chief Michael Budzik.
Division of Wildlife
COLUMBUS (AP) - Hunters
Nationally, the survey indicated
spent $515 million in Ohio last year there were 10.7 million deer hunters
on food. lodgi ng. gasoline. clothing, in 1996, up from 10.2 million in the
and hunting equipment and supplies, 1991 survey. Hunters each spent.an
according to preliminary results of a average of 12 days afield while huntU.S.. f!is h and Wildlife Service ing deer. up from II days reponed in
1991 . Deer hunters collectively spent
wildlife recreation survey.
Th• 1996 National Survey of 131 million days afield last year, up
Fishing. Hunting and Wildlife-Asso- from 113 million days in 1991 .
ciated Recreation is the fir st to
Survey results show recreational
include information about where hunting in the United States conhunting equipment was purchased. tributed $20.6 billion to the economy.
Earlier surveys collected information Big game hunters spent an average of
on how much was spent by state res- $900 each last year and contributed
idents for equipment, but did not $9.7 billion to overall hunting expenidentify where the money was spent. . ditures nationwide.
' The survey is conducted every
"That confirms what we've seen
five years wtth the U.S. Census in Ohio regarding an increase in the
Bureau
popularity of deer hunting over the
The Ohio Division of Wildlife long term. Ohio supports a healthy
estimates deer hunting accounts for deer herd which offers many excelnearly 40 percent of all hunting lent hunting opportunities," Budzik
expenditures in Ohio. or about $200 said . "Resident and non-resident
million annually. An estimated hunters alike know this and respond
500,000 people hunt deer in Ohio by spending a good pan of their time
annually, including 150.000 archery and money hunting in Ohio."
deer hunters. The statewide archery
Ohio's total deer harvest has doudeer season remains open through bled from 79,355 in 1987 to 158,000
Jan. 31.
in 1996. The archery deer season har"These arc impressive economic vest has more than doubled this
figures and we plan to closely study decade, from 12,087 in 1990 to
the complete survey results when
26.305
in 1996. primitive
Hunters partictipp:at:in~g.
they become available. What this . m
the statewide
deer .,
docs show is that recreational spon killed 4,718 deer in 1989 and 10,503
hunting has a very positive impact on deer last season.
the state's. economy to the tune of

By JOHN WISSE

By JOHN WISSE
Dlvlalon of WlldiHe
COLUMBUS (AP) - Monroe
County leads the state in per capita
hunting license sales, according to
figures compiled by the Ohio Division of Wildlife.
Based upon sales figures from
1995, 12 hunting licenses·were sold
for every 100 Monroe County residents,

. "That is an impressive figure and Meigs and Washington counties at
11 shows how popular hunting is nine licenses per 100 residents.
among residents of and visitors to · Appro~imately 7 percent of Ohio
Monroe County," said Division of residents age 16 and qlder go huntWildlife Chief Michael Budzik.
'"~ each year, the wildlife agency
Monroe County is followed by , satd.
.
.
Jackson, Morgan and Noble counties
Intense interest in deer hunting is
-each with II hunqng licenses sold followed by high license sales.
per I 00 residents; Gallia and Holmes
Last year, Monroe County mnked
counties (at 10 licenses per 100 res- 14th among Ohio's 88 counties with
idents); and Ashland, Guernsey.

SOCCER CHAMPIONS • THE 111117 0. 0 . .
Mcintyre Park D!Wlct aoccer league chaf11plonshlp waa won by the Bulla, with 1 perfect 6o record. Firat r-, left to right are Nick Deyton, Michelle Elliott, Ryan Anderson, Briel
Cline, Will Jenklna, Reed Sommerville and B.rt-

3,568 deer ·taken by hunters.
The surrounding counties also
suppon some of the highest deer densities and deer harvest figures found
anywhere in the state.
,,
Thrkey hunting is also very pop- , ·
ular in Monroe County, which this
spring ranked eighth among 47 counties open to turkey hunting with a
total harvest or 440 gobblers.

through the ~sin darkness. This
prevents you from being mistaken for

**
*THE

LucasviUe VaHey 14, Hannibal
Cols. Hartley 45, Sidney Lehman
Regional SemiOnals
River7
Friday's Res,ults
28
.
Orwell Grand Valley 45, N. Lima
Hamler Patrick Htn"}' 28, ColumDivision II
S.
Range
6
bus Grove 14
Akron Buchtel 24, Chardon 7
Versailles 12, Coldwater 7
Libeny Center 21, Marion PleasBrecksville 20, Vennilion 14,
ant 19
Cin. Roger Bacon 32, Mason 7
Cols. Watterson 35, Cols.
Brookhaven 7
Defiance 35, Bowling Green 0
Lebanon 24, Celina 21
Uniontown Lake 12. Akron
Springfield 3
Zanesville 48, Warsaw River View
8
Division III
Bellefontaine 19, Cols. Bcechcroft
18
'
Cin. Purcell -Marian 20, Cin.
McNicholas 13
Cols. DeSalcs 14, Bellevue ·6 .
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 21,
Nonon7
Mentor Lake Cath. 28. Chagrin
Fulls Kenston 6
y.,ungs. Chancy 25. Minerva 10
Youngs. East 20, Jackson 14
Division V
27,
Amanda-Ciearcrcek
Crooksville 0
Apple Creek Wayncdalc. 28. Sui·
Pd. lor by candidate: Bob Morrto, 41435 Ughthouoa Rd., Roclno, 011. 45771
livan Black River 14
,.

a deer or becoming injured in a faiL

COOLVILLE, OH.

**********************

- li-::;;;;,;=;;;;;;::;;;;;;;:,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;::::;;;;;:;::=:l

if his nerves are on edge, especially
in light of the problems that have
cropped up for his DuPont Chevrolet in two of the last three races.
"There's no question that we' ve
dodged a couple of big bullets," said
Gordon, who had tire problems in
both events.
At Talladega last mon!h, Gordon
wa.~ leading when a denating tire sent
him into the wall and triggered a21car crash. Last Sunday at Phoenix, a
shredding tire nearly put him into the
wall again. h did cost him two lost
laps.

DEER SLUGS

•zl9

20 GA •nd 12 GA

~
RIFLE AMMO

'10"

'12"

270 20

20 GA, 16 GA, 12 GA
J22610,lll179,l21&amp;51

BLAZE ORANGE
ANDCAMO
JERSEY
GLOVES

'Z"

1991 FORD F150: XLT Pkg, Aulo, Air, Power Equipped One ~ .............................................,.... $8,988.00
1991 BUICK LESAiRE: 4 Dr, Loaded Ml ~ ........................................................................... $6,988.00
1991 POtmAC LEMANS: Sunroof, Stereo, On~ 69,000 Miles .....................................,.................... $2,988.00.
1082 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL: Lealller,l.oaded Wrth Opllons ..................................................... :......... 7,988.00:
1.993 MERCURY VILLAGER: Loaded Wrih Options, One Owner...................................................:... $9,988.00
1993 FORD CONVERSION VAN: Full Power Equipped, One Owner .............................................. $11,988.00
1993 MERCURY TOPAZ: 4Dr, Power Equipped ........:...................................................................:.... $5,988.00
1993 FORD F150: Auto, air, 351 VS .................................................................................... ............... $10.~.00
1994 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE: Aulo, Air,PowerEquip ........................................................................ $7,988.00
1994 AEROSTAR XL'r. Power Windows, power l..ocb, Equipped .....................................................$11,988.00
1994 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE: V8,Leather, MoonrOot, Only 39,000 Miles .................................$17,988.00
1994 AEROSTAR XLT: Power Windows, Power l..ocb, Equipped ...................................................... $8,988.00
1994 TAURUS GL: 4 Dr, All Power ........................................................................................................$7,988.00
1994 GMC JIMMY: 2Or, Auto. Air, Alum. Wheels, Loaded With Equipmenl.. .....................................$14,988.00'
1994 FORD F150: 4x4 Long bed Work Truck .....................................................................................$11,988.00
1994 FORD EXPLORER: Eddie Bauer Pkg,Auto, 4 Dr, Loaded.......................................................$15,988.00
1895 CROWN VIC: 4 Dr, Ful Power, Loaded ..................................................................................... $13,9118.00
1895 TAURUS GL: All Power Equipped, SUper Nice Car...................................................................$1 0,988.00
1895 EXPLORER SPORT: Power Equipped, Air, One Owner...........................................................$17,988.00
1995 EAGLE TALON AWD: Turbo, Leather. Moonroof, CD, IQaded...............................................:$13,988.00
1995 GRAND PRIX: 2Or, All Power Equipped, On~ 22,000 Mles .................................................... $13,988.00
1895 GRAND MARQUIS: GS Pkg, One Owner, Power.....................................................................$13,988.00 •
1995 CHEVY BLAZER LT: 4Dr, Leather, loaded, ONLYJS,OOO niles ............................,................ $20,988.00
1996 NISSAN EXTEMDED CAB 4x4: Air, Crusie. AllllllnOOI Wheels ..................................:.......... $16,988.00
1996 EXPLORER AWD: V8, XLT pkg, Lealher, Moonrool................................................................. $23,988.00
1996 ESCORT LX: Sport pkg, 2door. air, spOilei,iow miles............................................. ".~ ................ $9,9eii.OO
1996 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER: Aulo, Air, VS ..................................................................................... $13,~.00
1996 FORD EXPLORER SPORT: Moonroof, Leather, Loaded.:......................................................$22,988.00
1997 JEEP WRANGLER: Air, Slereo ....................................................................................:...........$14,988.00
1997 NISSAN SENTRA: GLE Pkg, loaded, Only6000 Miles.....................................::..···_.................$13,988.00
167 FORD CONVERSION
VAN: Loaded.
Only 4900 Miles ............ :.: .............................................$18,988.00
.
.
.
1997 FORD F150 SUPER~ 4X4 LARIAT: Lealller, loaded., ..................................................... $23,988.00

351 V-8, auto., blue/tan w/royal blue cloth int., AC, stereo cass.
tih, cruise, Sands conversion, 62 K miles. Local
'
WAS $5,900.00
NOW

900

P21S/7SRI5 S RWl S 66.99
P22S/7Sll5 s RWl 71.99
1'23575R1S S RWl 73.99
ll23S/1lll15 c II. 15.99
31110_.15 COWL 102.99
l.t2MSIIU BL 112.99

P21517Sl15 IWL $15.99
LT23517lll15 ISL 99.99
31X18.•15 OWL 123.99
lJ115/ISR16
124.99
l1225/6SR16
121.99

...

P215175115
f'Za/751115
P23S/15115

OM. IUS
OWL 16.95
OWL 16.95
96.95

S68!!, S
5

WILD 1UC m
71.10

7175

99.11
" ·20

111.11

WILD SPIRIT
UDIILMPI'
1J23517.5RIS
1.1235/15116
31-IOSIII15
1.124517l1116

$10.110
111.56
101.01
115.11

.WILD'IIAC

.·
,.

mTIACTIOII
1.1235175115
1.1235175116
IDW65116
31-10!1115

OWL $t6.95
OWL 122.95
OWL 12915

OWL 11717

SPECIALOFFER for WVA
aportamenl "'"''·. _

~

In •tock
•tMI wat.rfowl•hot.
Available In 12 GA
and 10 GA 2-,3",
•nd 3 1 ~~".

O'DELL LUMBER CO

VINE STat THIRD AVE

134 EAST MAIN ST

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

614 446-1276

614 992-550

OIIEN TILL I ,,M.IOTH LOCATIONS

Power

1994 FORD EXPLORER
4 DR 4x4
ve.

Sunroof,
aula trans, pwr windows, pwr
locks, tilt, cruise, alum wheels and much

1989 CHEV K 1500
PICKUP 4x4
Auto trans, W, air conditioning, AM/FM
stereo. rally wheels and more.

1._,;· WlH

1993 CHEV 1/2 TON
WORK TRUCK

LS Package, cloth seals, air conditioning,
alum wheels, AM/FM stereo.

P225/7lll15 OWL
1'235/75115 OWL
Sl-1o.l5 OWL
1.1235/75115 OWL
I.123SIISII6E OWl

303020 PK

Aulo, turbo diesel, Silverado.
windows, power locks, tilt,
clean I

Clean, locally owned with low miles,
AM!FM stereo Pwr steering, Pwr brakes,
air conditioning. Nice starter truck!

1994 CHEVY 5·1 0

Gordon knQws pitfalls,
rewards of title chase
By MIKE HARRIS
AP Motoraportl Writer
Jeff Gordon's second Winston
Cup championship is so close he can
almost feel the hardware.
All. the resourceful 26•year-old
diivet needs to do in the season finale
on Nov. 16 at Atlanta Motor Speedway is finish 18th or betier and the
S1.5 million check from series sponscir R.J. Reynolds is his.
He's been here before, winning
tl'ie title in 1995 and losing last year
by just 37 points to Hendrick Motorspans teammate Terry Labonte. .
, But nobody could blam.e Gordon

1993 TOYOTA PICKUP

1995 3/4 TON EXT. CAB
PICKUP W/TOPPER

TttflnKS TO TttE
VOTERS OF LETA·RT
TOWnSttiP FOit YOOR
SOPPORT DURiriG THE
·RECEnT ELEaiOn.
BOB MORRIS

i* BIBBEE "'OTOR CO.!*
.

an Earley. Middle row· Mendlne Gillenwater,
William Snyder, Jade Smith; Tlffeny Butcher,
and Joey Chapmltn. Rear - AI Earley, aaalatltnt
coach; Jamie Mollohan, head coach: Scott
Nolen, ...latltnt coach and Andy Chapman,
...latltnt coach.

Ohio h!gh school playoff results

*****************

ST. RT. 7

Locally owned and ready for this winters
snow. auto, V8, air condition. cruise. and
cuslom wheels.

LOw miles and loaded whh Silverado
Package, 350 VB, aulo, two tone paint, PL,
PW, and much more.

Safety should be highest priority for hunters
By JOHN WISSE
poisoning, fires and suffocation when
Dlvlalon of Wildlife
compared with hunting.
COLUMBUS (AP) -The Ohio
With deer gun season fast
Division of Wildlife and the Wildlife approaching, the division reminds
Management Institute say hunting is deer hunters of the following s~fety
among the safest of all outdoor recre- ttps:
ational activities.
- Wear ample amounts of hunter
In fact, hunting has become a orange outer gannents. The more the
much safer activity in recent years better. Bowhunters arc required, as
due to increased education and are gun hunters, to wear a hunter
awareness of safe hun.ting practices. orange hat, cap, jacket or vest if they
The Wildlife Management Insti- hunt during Ohio's fireanns deer sealute says the number of injuries per son. All hunters, including small
100,000 panicipants in outdoor activ- upland game hunters, must comply
ities is highest am.ong football, base- with the hunter orange requirement
ball and soccer players.
when hunting any game species durInjuries to those panicipating in i ng the statewide primitive deer seabicycle riding, ice skating, fishing . son and the extended fircanns season,
and golf are also ranked far above the
- Keep orange clothing visible
injury rate related to hunting.
when field dressing or dmgging a
Fatalities are higher in accidents deer out of the field.
related to automobiles, accidents in
- Use a nashlight and carry an
home, accidents related to falls, unloaded weapon when moving

1996 FORD BRONCO 4X4

c'-'
&amp;Fihr .
eon. W &amp;Fill $
011

FotrTin.laldiol

1989 FORD E 250 12 PASS. VAN
5.7 lilar, V-8, auto., red wired cloth inlerior, AC, stereo.

. NOW

WAS $5,900.00

B fl. bed with liner, pwr steering, pwr
brakes. air conditioning. AM!FM stereo.

1994 CHEV 1/2
EXT CAB 4x4

1993 FORD FISO
owned and niec. Tilt, cruise,
stereo, air conditioning, alum

Loaded and In the rlghl price range. 350
VB engine,auto trans, tih, cruise, pwr
windows, pwr locks, and more.

1996 CHEV 1/2 TON .
EXT. CAB 4x4

1997 CHEV 5·10 4x4
V6 engine, aulo trans, pwr windows, pwr
locks, tilt, cruise, LS f':kg and more.

3rd Door! VB, auto trans, Silverado, tih,
cruise, Pwr windows, Pwr JockS. Thie i$ 1
loaded truckl
't
:,

I, •

'

-

,

'

\.( .,'

•
•

Just Arrived
2 1995 Ford ElSO Cargo Vans
Auto transmission, air conditioning, power steering, power bnlktliJ
2 HI-back bucket seats, radio. Locally owned with low miles.
'

•
•
•

.

$5,200

See: 1
"erry Bibbee

Clark Reed

Marvin Keebaugh

I

DocH

---...:......;.....--a

1616 EASTERN AVE
GALUPOUS, OH
(614)446-3672
1-800-521..Q084

-•
•

•
•

.·•

•..•
•

�.

.

C
Along the River
Remembering those who served
Section

Sundiy, November tl, 1887

'

.

'

••

I~

·Veterans
Day'97

•

.

•

1997 RANGER XLT

1997 FLARESIDE LARIAT
AUTO, 4X4, LEATHER, OFF ROAD,
EVERY OPTION YOU WANT
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$29,421·00
'

.1997 EXPEDITION EDDIE BAUER

AIR CONDITION, ALUM WHEELS,
XLT PKG, AM/FM CASS,
LOTS OF OPTIONS
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$15,230·00.

LEATHER, THIRD SEAT, TRAILER .
TOWING, CD CHANGER, LIMITED SLIP,
LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$39,465· 00

$1-0'988·.00

$34'988·00.

$23,988·00

.

By:JENNIFER RICHTER

•

1997 THUNDERBIRD LX "V8"

1997 TAURUS SEDAN

AUTO, AIR, VB, POWER EQUIPED,
SPORT PKG., TRACTION LOK AXLE
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$20,94Q-00

1997 ESCORT LX SPORT

AUTO, AIR, AM/FM CASS, POWER
. WINDOWS, FLOOR MATS
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$1B,755· 00
~

$16,988·00

'

-.
------00

AUTO, AIR·, REAR DEFROST, SPORT
PKG, SPOILER, LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS.
$14;925·00

$14,988·

$12,488·

00

i!

1997 CROWN VIC LX

1997 TARUS GL WAGON

AUTO, AIR,CRUISE, KE'fLESS
ENTRY,ALUM WHEELS.LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$25,7B0 00

1997·AEROSTAR 4X4 XLT ..

AIR, CRUISE, CASS, POWER
EQUIPMENT, THIRD SEAT, KEYLESS
.
ENTRY, LOADED
.
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$22BB0· 00

QUAD CPT CHAIRS, REAR AIR/HEAT,
PREM CASS, LS, LOADED WITH
OPTIONS
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
.
$2B,645·00

$17 ~988·00·

$20,888·00

$23,988·00

11"'""S.ntlnll Shiff
veterans Day, which takes place annually ori
November 11, is a way to recognize all the men and
womeii ~eterana who have served our country and
preserved our freedom in the United States. Each ·
ye,ar, scltools and the community honor the veterans
with parade&amp;, speeches and special assemblies so that
this piUt of history will be remembered for years to
com1i l!y the, younger generations who have not experienced the effects of war.
What started as a small group of veteran.s bas now
reached millions of men and women who have served
our country during war time. These many heroes
deserve our reagcct and patriotism not just on Veterans Day but throughout the year.
·
On Friday, November 7, Washington Elementary
~~Ills~ the opportunity to .leam the importance
of V.Jihi'O.Yiln't'lnflllneCCftld';allnual veterans·
~y
dl~.dren In grades third, fourth and
fifth . ADC patriotic sonp i.v~idl included ,
~Oilnd Old Flag," "A Song for Veterans," "Fifty Nifty
Unlted States," and a group singing of, "My Country
'lis of Thee."
The students were joined by representatives from
the Vietnam veterans, the Alnerican Legion and VFW.
These veterans presented the colors and led the
Pledge of Allegiance. Other honored visitors included
Greg Hargett from Ted Strickland's office, State Senator Mike Shoemaker and Army Sergeant Donald
Walker.
A veterans Day Program will be held at Buckeye
Hills Career Center on Thesday, November 11 beginning at 8:45a.m. in the school cafeteria. This program
· will feature retired Colonel James A. Cozza of Oallipolis. Cozza will speak about his 27 years in the
United States Air Force where he was stationed in
Vietnam, Japan, Italy, and the PhiliPI&gt;ines. ·
Students from Buckeye Hills will be involved in
the presentation of the colors, pledge to the flag and
the singing of patriotic songs. All area veterans and
the public are welcome to attend.
"I think it is important that our young people know
· the sacrifices that men and women made for our
country to keep us free," said President of the Viet·
narn Veterans group in Gallia County, larry Marr.
''We tend to forget that sacrifices of those that passed
away and those that are still here today. I think we
need to remember that."
As another way to honor the veterans in this.area,

= ·,TIIf.

Thll vr.rn.m v - u from Gatila County will march In the Vetet11ne Day pai'IIM on Tuesday, November 11 at 10:311e.m. Each yar, th/a vfientM groilp merchee In area pat~~dee to
recognize thoaa wflo aerwd thlllr coumry In the anned Nrvl~a.

there wiU be a veterans Day parade held in downtown
Gallipolis on November 11. 'the parade will begin at
10:30 a.m. at the comer of Second Avenue and Spruce
Streets. Local veterans organizations will lead the
parade to the City Park where there will a presenta- t
lion of the colors and a gun salute to those who lost
their lives in war defending our freedom.
On Wednesday, November 12 at 11 a.m. local veterans are asked to join senior citizens for lunch at the
Oallia..t'ounty Senior Resource Center. The senior titiZI!IIIf,wish I() exprettS tbelr gtatlft!Ge.!l' ~~ns
who served their country during this lunCheon.
.,
t ·
orlgtlia of Vetentnl DIY
In 1921, an unknown World War I American soldier was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. This
site, on a hillside overlooking the Potomac River and
the city of Washington, became the focal point of reverence for America's veterans. Similar veremonles
occurred earlier in Engl~ and France, where an ·
unknown soldier was buried in each nation's highest
plave of honor (in England, Westminster Abbey; in
France, the Arc de Triomphe). These memorial ges· tures all took place on November 11, giving universal
recognition to the celebrated ending of World War I
. fighting atll a.m., November 11, 1918 (the 11th hour
of the 11th day of the lllh month). The day became
known as "Armistice-Day".Armistice Day officially
reveived its name in America in 1926 through a Con·
gressional resolution. It became a national holiday 12
years later by similar Congressional action. If the idealistic hope had been realized that World War I was
"the War to end all Wars," November 11 might still be
called Armistice Day. But only a few years after the
holiday was proclaimed, war broke out in Europe.
Sixteen and one-half million Americans took part.
Four hundred seven thousand of them died in service,
more than 292,000 in battle.
Armletlct Day Changed To Honor Att Veteran•
Realizing that peace was equally preserved by veterans of World War II and Korea, Congress was

requested to make this day an occasion to
honor those who have served America in
ail wars. In 1954 President Eisenhower
signed a bill proclaiming November 11 as
Veterans Day. On Memorial Day 1958,
two more unidentified American war dead
were brought from overseas and interred
in the plaza beside the unknown soldier of
World War I. One was killed in World
War 11, 'the other in the Korean War. In ·
1973, a law JIIIIII!C.II prmlcllng Interment of
an urlknown American front the Vietnam
War, but none was found for several
years. In 1984, an unknown serviceman
from that conflict was placed alongside
the others. To honor these men, symbolic
of all Americans who gave their lives in
all wars, an Army honor guard, The Third
U.S.Infantry (The Old Guard), keeps day
and night vigil. A law passed in 1968
changed the national commemoration of
Veterans Day to the fourth Monday in
October. It soon became apparent, however, that November 11 was a date of historic significance to many Americans.
Therefore, in 1978 Congress returned the
observance to its traditional date.
National Centmonltla H.td et Arlington
The focal point for official, national
ceremonies for Veterans Day continues to
be the memorial amphitheater built
around the Tomb of the Unknowns. At 11
a.m. on November 11, a combined color
guard representing all military services
.
executes "Present Arms' at the tomb. The
Aa patf ollhiiiiCflllltlea during Ver-n• Day, the Amerf~n
nation's tribute to its war dead is symbol· flag le honored In a Nllb while baing ra/Nd. Thll VIetnam Vet·
•
·L
•
•
erana parlorm thla tau upotr requeat from local achoo/., buaf·
1zed by the laytng of a presidential wreath. ne•ea and any OIMfll dhlng to "'"" their flag 1'11/Nd In thle
The bugler plays "taps." The rest of the
manot:
ceremony takes plaee in the amphitheater.
·
• TM h,.toly of Velet11na Day ..,.. takan from an
flve,Y year the President of the United States urges
1XC1HJ1f
wrlltln by thll Unltad Statee Otrlce or Vat·
All Americans to honor the commitment of our Veteret11na Affrllrf.
' ~s through appropriate' public ceremonies.

I

1997 EXPLORER SPORT

1997 EXPLORER EDDIE BAUER

AIR, AM/FM CASS, ALUM WHEELS,
POWER EQUIPMENT, LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
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ON 1997 FORD CONVERSION VANS·
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~

We-"lngton Elementary'•
tint graderl atatfed thalr Vet·
erant Day Progfllm with • flag
parade. While the ,,., f1/'llder'6
waWIO' lhllil' flagt, th• fourttr
g~

Flag.

I

'

ct... aang,
•

"Gt11nd Old
·
.

•

�~·

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

Sunday, Nov•mber 9, 1997

t 1 ·---~ liM • Page C3

Latest 'Joy of Cookin.g' work of original author's grandson
By KATY KELLY
I,ISATODAY
CINCINNATI - Ethan Becker
has that "Joy, Joy, Joy, Joy" down in
his hean. Also in his life. Definitely
in his ki'tchen.
In his home office are the f~uits of
his grandmother's labors. On a shelf
is a copy of Irma Rombauer's
"Unusual
and
Unpublished
Recipes," a mimeographed book
that fam,ily lore says Irma created as
a church fund-raiser.
Next to it sits the book itbccame:
"Joy of Cooking." Rombauer selfpublished the first "Joy" in 1931 ,'
paying for printing with part of the
$6,000 left after her depressed husband commilled suic1dc .
. She~uhtitlcd the 500-recipe, 395page book: "A Compilation of Reliable Recipes With a Casual Culinary
Chat."
hma 's early books were illustrated by her daughter, Marion Rombauer Beckel', who about 30 years
later revised "Joy."
Her second revision in 1975 was
the best-sell111g "Joy" ever.
Marion died in 1976, leavi ng the
"Joy" copyright to her sons, Ethan.
now 52, and Mark. 60, who-wasn't
involved in lhls revision.
This. the sixth revision of "l oy of
Cooking" (Scribner, $30), is the first
in 22 years and also the r,rst with
Ethan Becker's. name on the cover.

Lau.re Linder and Daniel· R-

Linder-Rees

GALLIPOLIS • Dr. and Mrs.
Howard Linder of Gallipolis,
announce the engagement of their
-daughter, Laura Ann, to Daniel

Crystal DeVault and Leon Queen

DeVault-Queen
BIDWELL- Mr. and Mrs. Keith
DeVault are announci ng the engagcmcntj of their daughter Crystal
Dawn DeVault to Leon Dean Queen,
.son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon F. Queen,
of Gallipolis.
The bride elect is a 1996 graduate
of Gullia Academy High School and

Buckeye Hills Career Center. She is
employed at Bodimer's Ashland in
Rodney.
The groom to be attended River
Valley High School and Buckeye
Hills Career Center. He is employed
by J-Tec Corp. The wedding will
take place Janurary 24, 1998.

Rees, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roser
Rees, also of Galli~lis. A May,
1998, wedding is being planned.

The Mary Tyler Moore
Show, Part Two?
By DAVID BAUDER
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Mary and
Rhoda. Together again?
Mary Tyler Moore may try to
tum the world on with her smile
again by starring in a new version of
her hit 1970s comedy, together with
Valerie Harper. Both actresses said
they are talking with television network executives about a new come- .
dy.
"Is it Mary Richards and Rhoda
Morgenstern?" talk show host Rosie
O'Donnell asked Moore on "Rosie"
Friday.
··Possibly," Moore answered.
smiling.
"The Mary. TYler Moore Show"
ran on CBS from 197d to 1977.
Moore portrayed Richards, a single
1

.

Moore and Harper both subse-

qu~ntly triedtbeir hands at otber ~
sene~ w1th httle·luck. Now they re

Bidwell - Paul and Betty Carpenter Saunders will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary at a reception
on Saturday, November 15 from I 5 p.m. at the Grace United
Methodist Church.
.
They were married in Mercerville on November 16, 1947, by

By RITA ELKINS
FLORIDA TODAY
It's been your church home for
years. Your children alle nd Sunday
school. Everyone knows your name.
Your soul has been nouri shed there
every week.
But your beloved pastor was
tran sferred. A new leader has been
installed.
i\nd you can't stand him.
• "It's very difficult, because a
gastor becomes like almost an idol
(!r a hero and we get very an ached."
Says Christine Boland of Titusville,
lila., owner of Agape Counseling on
Merritt Island.
: When a beloved pastor leaves,
0
the next one that comes has a hard
Umc with us.''
• So, what ca n you do'! Disgruntled
believers have several options :
;· -Adopt a philosophical au. tude
;\bout your' differences, try to adjust
1
llhd stay.
' - Pursue avenues to -make the
pastor go away.
:. - Find another congregation
'ith a pastor you like.
•: - Give up and go home.
:: Clergy chang es arc likely to

the Reverend Charles Lusher.
They have two daughters, Paula
Barrick and Pat Harrison of Indianapolis. Indiana, and one grandson,
Breit Harrison of San Marcos, California.
They arc requesting that there be
no gifts, only a card shower.

•

woman who was an associate pro·

senes.
TV Guide this summer named a

•

1/lOct. TW

1975 episode of "The Mary Tyler
Moore" show in which the gang
mourns the death of Chuckles .the
Clown as the best television show
ever.

$199
$459

1/4ct. TW
112 ct. TW

5tcq~isitions 1"ine J ewe{ry
TWO LOCAnONS
151 2nd Ave., Gelllpolla
81 Mllll St., Middleport

• - Babel In Toyland
EdUCitionlll Ballet
SchOol Perfomm:es Only

GALLIPOLIS - Frank and Jessica Esterly will celebrate their fifth
wedding anniversary on November
14. They were married by Rev.
Richard Unroe ill the Mount Zion ·
Church of Crown City.
Frank is the son of Frank Esterly
Sr. of Hurricane, W.Va., aad Barbara
Lively of Barboursville, W.Va. He is
employed at the Colony Theatre/

Kanau~a

Drive In.
Jessica is the daughter of the late
Melvin Barcus and Elizabeth
Phillips of Gallipolis. She is
employed at the Kanauga Drive-In
in the summer and is a homemaker
the rest of the year.
They will celebrate wtih family
an.d friends .

Hazeltons mak~
plans for golden
•
anmversary
POMEROY - James and Vada
Hazelton of Hemlock Grove will
celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary at an open reception on
Saturday, Nov. 2!, 2 to 4 p.m., at the
Hemlock Grove Grange Hall.
The celebration is being hosted
by their children, Michael Hazelton.
Jane Hazelton, and Cynthia Sanders,
all of Livonia, Mich .. and Jim and
Tim Hazelton of Hemlock Grove.
Mr. and Mrs. Hazelton were married on Jan. 31, 1948 at the Middleport Church of Christ parsonage.
Friends and relatives arc invited
to attend.

November 14, 1997
Skip Peck Quartet
luzMusil:"

ilall.

But they don't have to, " says
llcna Sardinas, secretary to Bishop
William Trexler of the FloridaBahamas Synod of the ELCA.
If misbehavior accusations are
involved or if discussion turns ugly,
higher-ups can step in. And professional mediation and connict resolution arc available in virtually all
faith groups. .
Still, no matter how gently
churches try to change pastors, there
will always be some situations that
seem untenable to some parishloners .

Saturday, Nov. 15, 4:00·7:00 PM
Faith Chapel Fellowship Room
923 South Third Ave., Middleport

fPwr.afza~E. You.t

~ea~on CJ&amp;aket~c::Now!

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

·CLASSIFIEDS!

7p.m.

- FEED YOUR HEAD: Read
your Bible, Torah, or basic faith
tome for at least one complete lesson.

Considering what goes into your .
head the rest of the day, 15 minutes
is the Minimum Daily Requirement
to offset the GIGO (garbage in,
· garbage out) syndrome.
- BE A GOOD SCOUT: Do
something nice for somebody every
day. If you really want to grow spiritually, do it anonymously and don't
get "caught. "
- REACH OUT: Were other
people hun enough to leave, too?
Give them a call or drop a line.
After the inevitable gossip
rehash, share how you're moving on
spiritually.
- PRAY FOR YOUR ENEMIES: Even if it's through clenched
teeth at first , ask God to bless them
with all the good things you'd wish
for yourself,
Human behavior experts say this
process if guaranteed to bring you
relief if practiced daily for three
weeks.

UST
·'

TO ATTEND ALL YOU NEED TO DO IS:
CALL 992·5062

State the number of people In your party on the the
ANSWERING MACHINE.
This is not a church service. Our goal is to reat:h out as Jesus would and feed
the multitudes. No offerings or donations will be requested .

ECIITrlo

(Fadiai-Vanderborah Duo)
Ownber Music (Violin. Cello &amp; PW!o)
Friday, Febnwy 20, 1998
7 p,m.
•

told, taste like venison.
Man~ of the recipes - like the
politically correct Redoced Fat Gingerbread People - have been tailored to suit a na!ton worried about
weight.
"People who have to watch both :
butter and salt are the people I feel
really sorry for," Becker says.
Becker himself is as fit as fennel.
The third-generation chef pulls
the tenderloin &lt;from the oven.
··That porker does feel done.·
M_aybe too done," he ·says with mild '
panic, tossing scraps in a compost
bucket.
He wants it to be right. He wants
the world to embrace the new "Joy."
He and his editor both know that
for many the book marks ··a time in
life, an important emotional passage," says Guarnaschelli. "People
(tend to bel allached to the one
they've go1."
But Becker is focusing on the
future. arranging slices of tcnderloin, spreading duxclles between the ,
layers.
'He brings out parsleycd potatoes :
and crafts a salad of good greens and :
bumpy avocados. (The smonth ones.
says the organic gardener. •·aren·t
even good for compost.")
Lunch is served. And it is divine . :
Of course. it would be. Ethan •
'
Becker comes from good stock.

nEE ftlanksgiving Dinner For
You and Your Family

9:30-6:00 Dilly
9:30-6:00 Mondly
9:30-6:00 Frtdly

Tuesday, Decembcr9, 1997
•

But change also can be traumatic
for the people in the pews. Some
members leave and find another
church. driven away by their distaste
with pastors' lifestyle or ethics.
Disageements aren't limited to
new pastors.
Even established clergy can make
co ntroversial deci sions that strain
the dclJcatc web of feelings, loyal tics and spirituality that tic a mem ber to a church.
A fired music director, a change
in worship order, a different hymnal
or a pastor"s new robe can all upset
the order- and those sitting in_the
Sunday congregation.
Depending upon denominati on
and circumstances, disgruntled
church members can sometimes
force out a disliked pastor.
· That's most difficult in Catholic
and United Methodist churche s.
· where clergy assignments arc made
by higher-ups whose decision s arc
final.
It's easiest in dependent, nonde nominational congregations, where
pastors arc hired and f1rcd at the sole
discretion of elected local leaders.

In such cases, says counselor
Boland, believers need to ask themselves some hard questions.
"Examine why you are in this
church at all . Did you come just for
a particular pastor? Or arc you here
for thi s community? Your faith cannot be grounded in a human being,"
Boland says.
,
IF YOU DECIDE TO. GO IT
ALONE
Giving up on church or syna.
goguc attendance because of dis~
putcs'? You need not abandon your
spiritual walk .
Although asking clergy for tips•
In betwee n arc other mainl ine
affect c'Vcfy ch urchgoer ::tt some gro ups and Jewish congrcimtions, on solo soul maintenance· is a little
point. Lik(! everyone else todo.1y. pas~ ·most of wliich have procedures sim- like asking car salesmen how to ride
ilar to those in the Evangclkal the bus. we did eull from pastors
tors arc more mohilc .
the se concepts for an Essential Inde: Among South ern Baptist churc h~ Luth eran Church of America.
There. dis~runtlcd membe rs can pendent Soul Mamtenancc Program:
cy nationall y. I'm namplc . the aver- SAY PLEASE in the morn age pa!&gt;!.tor"s · s t ~IY with :.1 congn.:ga- initi~tc meetin gs with clc~tcd lcndt:rs to di sc u:-.s their dil'fcrcn ccs with ing . thank you at night : Give prayer
tion is only ) hl 4 year"'.
at least IS minutes of quality time
: A Scripp&gt;-Howard survey pub- thl' p:t~tor.
every
day. Otherwise, your relationLeadership could then dec ide '"
lished ih Angi~C&lt;l 'l Digest ~ays each
month . 1 .~00 U ~;. JXI S\Ul'S ;1rc lircd retain or remove the pas1nr. "They sh ip with your Creator won 't be any
could , at the ir di ~c rcti o n . involve the better than your rclationshi'p with
Or forced to rc s i~1 .
your kid s.
: Almos( 30 pcrc«:nt hnvc hccn synod bishop's ofl'ice.
fired or termi nated at least &lt;mcc.
And a decade from now. 40 percent
of current clergy think they will he
in another line or work .
Clergy. and their famil ies su ffer
stress under the new clim~Hc of
"You're the hired hand and we have
expectations of what you·rl' g11i ng to
do , and what have yuu don e for us
lately'!· ·. say&gt; the Rev. Cn non Ern1e
Bennctl. hishnp ·:-. assi~wnt for the
Parking located at rear entrance, corner of south Third Ave.
Episcopal Diocese nf Cc'mral Floriand Page St. Enter thru the rear sanctuary door.
da.

Surprise her this holiday season with the "
warm embrace of diamond solilaire lever
back earrings. Create a special memory with
the gift !hat featutes eleganl style, COfllfort
and security...justlike your memories of her.

•

the same way twice."
But today he is. "We're testing
out tbe new slow-roast pork recipe
exactly as it is in the book," he says,
giving the meat a quick poke. "And
it looks like it's working."
Becker has the ability to make a
stranger feel like a friend while
simultaneously preparing a complicated meal with no apparent effort. ·
Perhaps it's an inherited quality.
"Joy's" breezy style charmed many
~ad•n.
Becker lets out a family secret:
"The chatty pans came from my
dad," he says.
Though the book still uses the
familiae "we," space forced author
and editor to cut back on the chat.
"We asked (ourselves). 'Do we
give more information or do we
keGP anecdotes?"' Becker says.
They opted for info. "It's still
friendly," he says. "But a lot of the
stories had become out-of-date."
And, as both Becker and Guarnaschelli know, tastes change. When
the last revision was published, the
country was protein-mad. The few
exotic fruits available were canned.
Now the focus is on fresh. Many
of the new recipes are ethnic. Some
arc exotic.
Readers learn about whelk frittcrs, Chinese dates called jujubes
and miso. There arc recipes for emu
and ostrich, both of which, we're

Greeting the new minister, remembering the old

Golden anniversary to be observed

ducer of the evening news on WJMTV in Minneapolis. Harper played
Morgenstern, her upstairs neighbor,
a role she spun off into her own hit

Anniversary noted by couple

•
subjective and very emotional."
The criteria: "Nhen was the last
time anybody ate or was served this?
Would you serve it to guests• Would
you force your children to eat this?"
Pimentos - those slippery, red,
multipurpose slivers considered
classy in the 1950s - are banished
too, he says while speed-slicing
meat that is about to be recycled.
"This is kind of a leftover soup,"
he says. "Stock from the freezer,
steak from last night. We're going to
throw in some bok choy."
Becker' is a man of broad tastes
and a few regrets.
• "I can't eat green pepper or blue
cheese. Allergies," he says. "My
mother was allergic to lemon, hazelnuts, green peppers and cashews. A
terrible afniction ."
·
He feels her pain. " If I was allergic to citrus, I'd be in deep yogurt."
So food -oriented IS he that lhc
checkers at his local grocery joke
that they've imposed a three-visitsa-day limit .
The mushroom s he bought this
morning arc now minced and cookmg.
"That's a duxellcs variation," he
says. " Instead of nutmeg, I put in a
little pen to twitch it up."
Twitching up comes naturally to
Becker, who admits lo a trait not
, common to cookbook authors. "It's
torture for me to ma~c something

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Saunders

lcammg up ..
"For years, people would say,
'Oh, God, why can't you and Mary
get together?'" Harper told the New
York Post. "So now we are. We're
doing this equally together."
They've talked about their ideas
with people at CBS, said a network ·
source who requested anonymity.
It's still in the early stages and no
commitments have been made.
"It's an exciting project and
(I'm) so hopeful of it bringing ba~k
the. solidity of our show," Moore
.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Esterly

A 3 3/4-pound, 2,600-recipe, how it's done.' Cooking was what
1,136-page tome, it is a bti,lly that we did when my dad got home from
took $5 million, 3 112 years and a the office."
After working a number of jobs,
team of experts to deliver.
Noted cookbook editor Maria - be went to work for his parents as a
Guamaschelli oversaw the project, cookbook writer's apprentice at the
paying such attention to detail that family home, Cockaigne, a 1940s
when she found a superior cookie at futuristic dream designed by his
a restaurant in New York, she'd - architect father, John.
The house sits on 8 acres . When
FcdEx some to one of "Joy's" 55
recipe testers with orders to make Becker was a boy, he and his dad
some. She also employed plenty of gathered and planted bushel baskets
of acorns.
advisen;. three on stuffing alone.
Today they are towering trees.
Ethan Becker went to New York
to work with Guarnaschelli so often Becker lives here with his adored
that he racked up enough frequent- third wife, Susan.
There are those fans who wonder
mer miles to take himself, his wife
why
"Joy" needed updating at all.
and four other family members and
Untouched, it was a publisher's
friends to Europe.
The result is not your mother's dream book, an evergreen that has
"Joy." Almost all of the recipes are soiJ 14 million copies.
It is a chatty renection of our
new.
times
and times past.
Old favorites - have been
It is, in these days of Martha
revamped; ,some have been jclliStewart lily gilding, a book that
soned.
·
··Everything has been changed makes both the cook and the guest
(and) addressed." says Guarnaschcl- feel cheri shed.
Until now, it was the place to
li . speaking from her New York.
office. "This is not a patchwork lind out how to dress and cook a
porcupine.
revision ."
(Becker and his editor dropped
It is as Ethan Bc~k er hoped it
porcupine.
And squirrel and oposwould be. As a young man, Becker
.
sum.)
· did a six-month stint at Le Cordon
Standing before his no -nam e
Bleu in Paris, but before that he was
stove in his newly remodeled
home-schooled in cooking.
··Mother was very subtle," he kitchen, Becker allows that deciding
says. "There was never and 'this is what stays and what goes "is very

Mountain Thyme

Celtic Music

Sanuday,Aprii2S, 1998
7p.m,

&amp;(J/1 . . .
POINI

PLIAIANI

~

Artist Series

~mplete trust. It's a quality that needs to be
-

-

_IJI

..._AI.

@

AU Flod'Oio•- Tob
Tho Stall Thooll&amp;
'l'lcbla WW Be ~IOd Prior To
Tbo D uiiW 9, 1997 i'loduc:tion.

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FRENCH CITY MALL
Crafts &amp; lntl.ues

.........

REHABILITATION CENTER
992·6606

Come see our beautiful rehabilitation center with 100 In-patient beds and a
state-of-the-art 3500 square foot dedicated rehabilitation facility. Using a
team approach, we provide our ln·and out-patient clients with:

* PHYSICAL THE~APY
* SPEECH THERAPY
* RESPIRATORY THERAPY
*OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Rocksprings Is ready to serve you and all your healthcar• needa. Give
~Karen a call at 992-6606 for more Information or to tour our lovely facll~~~==

SECONDAVE.
614 44U020
DOWNTOWN GALUPOUS (Acroal from the City Plltk)

~7.

Open 7 Days A Week
10 To 6:00P.M. Mon.·Sat.; 12 to 5:00 Sundays

~.....,.,,.
•

learned, and earned. Each and every day.
Complete trust is the cornerstone of skilled nursing care. Ju~t
imagine being cared for by someone you did not. trust. It would not
happen. You would not allow it. Ever.
The Arbors ~t Gallipolis is built on trust. Each day
we must earn the trust of our patients. And their families.
Of the community we serve - your neighbors, friends
and family. It's what makes us different
... and makes you special.
· ~

~

ARBOR

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

ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
Skilled Nursing Center
170 Pinecrest Drive

Gallipolis, OH 45631

(614) 446·7112

I

l

I
1

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolle, OH • Point Pleliunt, WV

Sunday,Novtwnbert,1997

Posh steamer weekly visitor to Gallipolis

Bannister's Canines to appear at
Santa's Christmas Circus a·n Dec. 11
GALLIPOLIS ·The Bannister's
Canines will be appearing with
Sanla's Christmas Circus at the Ariel
Theater on Thursday, December II,
1997, with shows at 6 and 8 p.m.
The Santa's Christmas Circus is
being sponsored by the Ariel Cultur·
al and Performing Arts Center.
American born Bill Bannister has
· been training dogs to perform for the
• past eight years. The former aerialist
was lured away from loftier aspects
of the circus both because of his love
of animals and because his wife

came from a family of ani~Dal handlers.
AI first, Bill worked with chimpanzees. Although a rewarding
experience, the cost of buying
chimps became prohibitive. Soon he
and his wife, Donna, souled on the
idea of dogs.
The Bannisters currently have
eight dogs including an Australian
sheepdog, long haired terriers, and
American Eskimo, and a St. Bernard
as well as mixed breeds. It is not
unusual for the Bannisters tO rescue

a dog from a local animal shelter.
Lots of love and care arc a must
for the dogs. Each day, between the
hours of 8 a.m. and II :30 p.m., the
dogs are walked five times and are
given three exercise and play sessions in which quality ti~e is spent
with each animal.
Training sessions are kept short,
15 to 20 minutes each, two or three
times per day. Some of the skills
learned are jumping rope, hind leg
balance on the slack rope, and jumping hurdles.

·
By:

The Bannisters have worked in a
variety of venues ranging from circuses to slage and have appeared in
all 52 Slates several times over.
Their travels have also taken
them to Bermuda and to Canada.
The couple make their home in
Sarasota, Fla., known as "Circus ·
City", U.S.A., and have a daughter,
Tracey, and a 12 year-old son named
Keith. During the few weeks each
year when they 8le home, the family
enjoys horseback riding, fishing,
and motorcycles.

James
Sande

Addalou Lewis honored by Meigs Agricultural Society .JOINT
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Tlmes·Set:ttinel Staff

RECOGNIZED- Addalou Lewis.was presented a clock plaque In
recognition of her 24 years as a Meigs County fair board member
by Dan Smith, president, at a recent dinner held In her honor.

POMEROY .. Longtime fair
board member Addalou Lewis of
Pomeroy was recognized recently
for her "loyal service and friendship" by the Meigs County Agricultural Society at a dinner party.held at
the Holiday Inn, Gallipolis.
She has served on the fair board
for 24 years, a total of eight threeyear terms, the current one expiring
this year. Lewis said she decided
not to file for another term so that
she could be relieved of some of her
responsibilities and have more time
at home with her family.
"I hated to quit, but I thought the
time had come to step down," commented Lewis.
Board president Dan Smith was
complimentary in his appraisal of
Lewis' contributions to the fair.
"She's been a real plus all these
years. She has taken her responsibilities seriously, keep the buildings
full of commercial exhibits, handled
her departments great, and always
kept the food table full for the entertainers and fairboard. She'll he
missed by all of us."
Addalou responded that while
she'll not be on the board, she's not
completely quitting. "If they need
me, I'll continue to lake care of the

Trying to understand military culture
corny nor horrific, just necessary. stand out as (a) successful and
By moving back and forth· between healthy institution that unabashedly
the .troops and their instructors, he teaches values to the Bcavises and
helps readers match actions with tbe Butt-heads of America."
philosophy ,behind them.
He dutifully includes the critical
A thousand years from now, a viewpoint: that the military must
historian looking at the U.S. military serve society, not tbe reverse. But
11.
will do well to cite Rick's book. the book's provocative heart is with
Popular sympathy for Lt. Kelly Today's readers, however, may J?e the warriors.
Flinn, the bomber pilot who faced a disturbed.
court-martial for her sexual affair; - Ricks adores boot camp and the
suggests the nation cares little for Marine warrior culture in the way a
zoologist might celebrate rituals in a
military order.
In response. Pentagon leaders pride of lions.
are on the front lines complaining
The players fit neatly into roles as
that recruit• come from a society ill· the dominant~. the followers and the
equipped with morals and values.
castaways .
Reporter Thomas Ricks of The
It is a "ruthless meritocracy," ,
Wall Street Journal enters this fray Ricks declares, "the antithesis of
with his new book, " Making · the · celebrity-besotted American cuiCorps" . In 320 pages. Ricks traces lure.'' Selfish young men are taught
the lives in Platoon 3086 - Enst teamwork and sacrifice. By week
Coast recruits who endure Marine II, Ricks will have Marine Corps
Corps boot camp at Parris. Island, devotees cheering.
S.C .. in the spring of 1995 .
Then, Ricks recovers thejournalll 's a mixed bunch: some rich, ist's critical eye. As boot camp ends,
some poor. some fit. some fat, and the cheers end. too.
all £roping for the American dream.
His newly minted Marines strugA cadre of drill instructors has II gle to come to terms with their new
,,
weeks to make them Marines.
selves. Some are estranged from or
,.,
From the shaving of their heads even contemptuous of · former
to their graduation parade, ~icks friends. Others fail when the real
shows how these young men arc Marines don't match what Parris
torn down physically and mentally Island led them to expect.
and. in most cases, put back togeth·
Still. Ricks argues that the
cr beucr thaQ they were.
Marine Corps justifiably believes its
Resisting cheap temptation. he culture is superior. "The Marines
describes the process as neither

"Making The Corps" by Tom
Ricks (Scribner, 320 pp., $24)
By STEVEN KOMAROW
USA TODAY
The cultural gap between America and its military is wider now than
at any point since before World War

.'

'

f

Meigs Community
Calendar
SUNDAY
CHESTER - Vcrnagay Sulli·
van. speaker. at the Chester United
Methodist Church, 9 a.m., special
children's program.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Church of the Na1.arene revival,
through Sunday, 7 p.m. except Sunday. 6:30 p.m. Rev. Bob Stewart,
evangelist, special singing, nursery
provided.
MONDAY
POMEROY - Big Bend Farm
Antiques Club. Monday. 7:30 p.m.
Meigs High School Library. Officers
to be elected. Past and present club
members urged to attend .
POMEROY - Meigs County
Right to Life. Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Pomeroy Library.
RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, 7 p.m. Monday at the
municipal building.
POMEROY - Meigs County ·
Ohio Bicentennial Commillec.
Monday, 4:45 p.m. at the Meigs
County Museum . Planning to begin
on programs to be presented next
year in communities and schools
and to organizations.
RACINE - Southern Local ·
School District Reorganization
Committee meeting Monday, 6 p.m.

LMI

IlVIPLANT

inside commercial spaces, whatever
I can do from home, .. like handle
all those telephone calls·c'
And she didn't rule out running
· Columbue Ohio
for another term some time.
Lewis was presented a clock
plaque featuring a grandstand picture with an inscription of appreciation from the board, an Ohio Fair
For Initial Evaluations or Follow-up visits
Mangers Pass for Life to the Meigs
we offer monthly office hours at
County Fair, and a photograph of
members of the 1997 board. She was
SOUTH POINT FAMILY MEDICAL CENTER
again honored during an open receptton held later at the Rock Springs
SOUTH POINT, OHIO
Fairgrounds.
55 Township Rd 508 E (Just off Route 52)
·In talking about her retirement
from the non-paid position of fair
board member, Lewis said it gave
her a real sense of accomplishment
Cell (614) 221-6331 for Appointment Times
as she saw increases in entries in the ,
various departments she chaired.
1
For instance when she took the 1
Joint Implant Surgeons are Members of the Ohio Orthopaedic Institute
domestic arts department over from :_...;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.~:-------.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;====;;;;;~
the late Jessie Saunders in the early f'
1970s, there were about 35 or 40
.,
entries each year. Recent entries
often top ·300.
She is one of five women to serve
on the board over the past 25 years.
The others have been Lucille
Leifheit, Barbara Fry, Mary Rose
and Carolyn Ritchie. Recently elected for a three-year term was Christi·
na Teaford.

SURGEONS

Specialized Care for Total Joint Replacement

NOVEMBER 14

DECEMBER 4

FRENCH TOWN
Veterinary Clinic

•

Thanks to
everyone who
supported me for
Harrison Twp. ·
Trustee
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MorQoret Acllllno,
7008
Trace Rd. Crown CHy, Ohio

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614-441·1982

Pomeroy • ~lddleport • Gelllpolle, OH • Point PleeNnt, WV

Sunday, November 9,1997

310 8talll Route 1eo
OaMipatll, Ohio 45&amp;31

•

Ph: (614) 446-4090

Dr. Angle Shelton and o·r. Angle Dah~e
and their staff from French Town
Veterinary Clinic, would like to thank
our customers and the surrounding
communities for all their support that
has made our first .year. of operation
such a success. We look forward to
serving this area for many more years
In the future.
·
Thank You

Robert Tayengco, M.D.
BOARD CER I FED INTERNAL MEDICINE

About II a.m.
on
March
30,1899, about
half of Gallipolis came to the wharf
to see the new side wheel steamer
City of Pittsburg, which at that time
was the most modem boat on the
Upper Ohio River. Th.e boat was 300
feet long and nearly 80 feet wide.
The Gallipolis Tribune reporter
furher described the boat
"The boat is elegantly equipped
from stem to stem with fine sleeping
rooms, dance hall, electric call-bel,ls,
flushed lavatories, bath rooms, big
barber shop etc. In the forward part
of the "texas" she has a large observation room enclosed with glass in
which passengers may sit and enjoy
the beautifill· scenery along the
Ohio in comfon. There is a promenade guard clear around the main
cabin. The boat is also equipped
with clectrc lights throughout, an
incandescent light being in each
room. Down on the lower deck is a
firsi class steam laundry where pas·

sengers as well as crew can be dastardly deed the boat would have
"slarched" at their convenience. The blown up the next day with 175 pas·
boat carries a good bar where only sengers on board.
soft drinks, lunches and fruit are
The City of Pittsburg was
sold."
plagued with problems throughout
The head barber on the City of its short three year existence. Her
Pittsburg was Gallipolis natiye boilers were continually breaking
William Johnson. In addition a few down, causing her to be docked for
of the deckhands were from the Old · the purpose of inslalling Western
French City. Originally the City of boilers for Scotch boilers.
Pittsburg was to leave Pillsburgh 14
This unexpected problem caused
days before the ))eginning of Mardi the owners of the boat to postpone
Gras in New Orleans.
paying the Knox Co. of Marietta for
Passage on the maiden voyage the original Scotch . boilers. Hence
of this vessel to the Crescent City for two years the boat could not stop
was sold out. Unfortunately boiler at Marietta for fear that the Sheriff
. problems forced a delay.
of Washington County would
When the boat was ready for its impound the boat to pay off the lien
first trip, Mardi Gras had already against it.
passed but many passengers still ·
After her maiden voyage to New
chose to make the trip which took 4 Orloans, the City of Pinsburg
weeks.
entered the Pittsburgh to Louisville
The day before the City of Pius- trade.
burg was to leave on its first trip a
The boat guaranteed that a person
man sneaked aboard in the dark and could get on board at Pittsburgh, go
ran under one of the Scotch boilers all the way to Louisville and back to
where he was caught in the act of Piusburgh (a distance of 1200 miles)
striking a terrific blow with a chisel in one week .
and a hammer at one of the main
The cost, which included room
water pipes.
.
and board, was $16. On the first
Fortuanately he was caught voyage of this regular route the boat
before he could do serious damage. injured her hull and had to be pulled
Had he been allowed to complete his ·out on the marine ways at Madison,

Indiana. In an unusual move, Capt.
Phillips decided to keep all the passengers on board while the boat was
repaired in dry dock.
In April of 1899the owners ofthe
City of Pittsburg decided
chal·
lengt!' its main competition the City
of Louisville to a race from
Louisville to Cincinnati .
The owners of the City of Pills·
burg were confident that they could
easily lake the older boat. In its early
years the City of Louisville made
the run from Cincinnati to Louisville
in six hours and the trip upstream in
nine hours, both were records in that
era.
In fact the City of Louisville had
slowed down and in its race with the
City of Pittsburg took about II
hours. Unfortunately it took the City
of Pittsburg 14 hours.
To add to the boat's problems in
its first year summer of 1899 was
one of the driest on record. Also that
year a deckhand strike had to be braken by recruiting volunteer women
passengers to cook, serve, and clean.
The boat struggled on for a few
more years, but on April 20, 1902
she blew up near Ohio River Dam
53 with 60 persons, including the
two pilots, being killed.

The side wheel steamboat City of Pittsburg was a weekly visitor ·
to Gallipolis from 1899 to 1902. Some of the boat employees were
from the Old French City.

To the voters of Lebanon Township

Thank you for your vote to give
Scotland; Oxford, Stratford, and Cotswold, England me the opportunity to serve you•.
By:
Dorothy ·
Sayre

After fin·
ishing my Ohio
_ Uni versi ty
class in Scotland this summer, my
husband joined inc in Edinburgh.
We spent two nights at the college,
then stored my extra luggage there,
before we headed out to tour Scot·
land by train.
.\ By train, we spent one night in
Inverness and one in Dundee. The
countryside between Edinburgh and
Inverness was Scottish splendor.
Before darkness sell led in, we witnessed the full-blooming heather on
the hills and a spectacular sunset
from the train window. Our B&amp;B in
inverness' was in a rural setting several miles from town. We were
entertained the next morning by a
glorious sunrise, on yet another hill
' covered with blooming heather and
grazing sheep. Cattle browsed in the
valley carpeted with lush, green velvety grass. It was a quiet Eden . .

After circling back to Edinburgh,
and collecting my luggage from the
college, we headed south by train to
London. The British trains arc fun
to ride ... clean, and fast.
I love London.
I'm not sure
George does, but he humors me, and
each visit finds us learning a lillie
more about the huge, historic city.
We spent two nights in London
and took a day-excursion with a
touring company the second day.
We left the hotel at 8 a.m. and
arrived back about 7:30 p.m. Our
first destination, in a slight mist, was
Oxford. Unknown to us, and nearly
all visitors, Oxford University does
not exist. It is a large number of col·
leges which collectively,' and erroneously, is called Oxford University.
However, their academic prestige is
not erroneous. Competition remains
high for entrance to the colleges.
The bus fpr our tour was comfortable, the lady guide was outstanding, and the driver was skillful.
We needed all three for the narrow,
winding roads through the picturesque countryside of the·
·Cots wolds and its ancient history.
The . Cotswolds arc hills (wolds)
with sbeeplsheep sheds (Cots) dot-

ted throughout the area, according to
our extremely vocal ·and knowledge·
able guide . (In short, we were
"going through sheep country.")
Stratford-upon-Avon, home of
Shakespeare and his wife, Anne
Hathaway, was next. Another learning lesson. Avon means "river," and
that river is the Avon. Stratford is
the name of the town. Actually, it is
a rather clever way of telling some·
one where a town is, unless the river
is too lengthy! The arched bridge in
town was as quaint and charming as
depicted in magazines, so it was a
"mlist photograph." We toured both
Shakespeare's and his wife's homes.
While two guides told us the thatch
on tbe Hathaway house weighed 20
tons, it was hard to believe the structure would remain standing. The
garden beds around her home were a
splash of old-fashioned, colorful .
flowers. · A new, small park in
Shakespeare's memory was nearby.
The park had a tree theme.
As we toured back through London, our guide pointed Olit the hanging square and other points of inter·
est. She said at one time there were
nearly 300 offenses that had the
penalty of hanging. Common theft

Charles R. Lawrence

was one. The Tower of London was
for beheading, and our guide said
London had another area for placing
errant citizens in stocks. The Tower
of London was where Mary, Queen
of Scots, was beheaded by her
cousin, Elizabeth I. I don't believe
living in London 200 years ago
would have been pleasant, especially if a cousin took offense to your
actions! We, again, saw areas of
Hyde Park, and had a panoramic
view of Buckingham Palace, Westminster Abbey, the Parliament
Building and Big Ben.
Tired, we flew home the next day.
I was anxious to taste the wonderful
tomatoes in our garden, which
George had boasted were exceptional this year. George was not wrong.
It was good to be home and to appreciate tbe small things in our own
environment. But, a change of
scenery is what makes a person
appreciate '"tomatoes in our own
garden."

P~ lot by Clndl&lt;late, 52279 Portland R~. Portland, Oh 45770

\,..ega\· Drive Thru
ges

ee"e\'8

C. C. K.

Dorothr Say,. and her hueband George,
fonn•rlr of Malga County, moved b1ck
about thrH ·y ure ago and now rHide In a

&amp;uilding Metal with trim
Painled &amp; Unpainted

houae facing the Ohio Rlv.r jult below
&amp;yracuH.

,,..... r

Parrots may be sm~rtas chimps and dolphins ·
CHICAGO (AP) Calling has grown faster in popularity than even understands the concepts of
same and different.
someone " birdbrain" is not as any other pel over the past decade.
Irene Pcpperbcrg, an ecologist
"All oftbc tests we' ve done with
insulting as you might think.
New research suggests that par· and evolutionary biologist at the dolphins and great apes to investi·
rots, like chimps and dolphins. arc . University of Ariwna who studies gate their intelligence, we've done
capable of mastering complex intcl- the intelligence of parrots, has with Alex." Pcpperberg said. "He
lcctual concepts that children cannot focused her studies on a bird she scored as well as they did in many of
handle until age 5.
hought at a Chicago pet store in them, beucr in some.''
Pet experts gathering in Chicago 1977.
Intelligence doesn't always equal
on Friday for an American Vctcri· The parrot, Alex. can name 50 a good pet, however. Experts said
nary Association forum believe the objects when shown them: knows parrots can be domineering.
parrot's intelligence is why the btrd colors and numbers up to e1ght and __.
.
-

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point P11111nt, WV

Sundly, November 8, 1887

Sundey,November9,1987

·Educator at heart of Alabama school prayer. case feels scorn.
.
I
lly JAY REEVES
state have been filled with leners
Aleocboted Press Writer
from readers who quote the Bible in
VALLEY HEAD. Ala. (AP) criticizing him.
lll~dents wearing their Christian
" I have been demonized," he
llacelets don't have much 10 say to said.
•islant principal Michael Chandler
Rhonda Weathers said the ruling
aymore.
"stinks," and she doesn't even like
Once-friendly adults tum away Chandler being around her firstwflen he passes or mutter his name grade daughter Jessica at Valley
ill disgust.
Head School.
And he has quit driving his .
"He doesn't believe there's a
Corvette to ·school.
God," she said, echoing the feelings
"I'm afraid somebody will put of many of the 629 people of this
keys down the side of it," said Chan- mountain town in Alabama's northtier.
eastern corner.
The 47-year-old educator has
Chandler- who lives with his
become a target of scorn for filing Methodist wife and 14-year-old son
lhc lawsuit that resulted in las( in Fyffe, about 30 miles away -k's federal court order restrict- denies he is an atheist. He was raised
i• prayer in Alabama's public Baptist and occasionally goes to
schools, where many youngsters ch urch.
wear cloth bracelets with the leucrs
It was his belief in the separation
'"ft'WJD " - for. " What Would
of
church
and slate that led him to
.
Jesus Do?"
file the suit in 1996 after y~rs of
. Chandler, who has worked for the complaining about coercive Christl&gt;eKalb County school system for ian practices in ·DeKalb County's
2~ years, said he has received sup- public schools.
port privately from many county
Chandler sought an end to the
educators and some parents. And the pre-game prayer~ at athletic events
town 's Baptist preacher, Charles and wanted Gideon International
Jenkins, has said the ruling may help barred from distributing Bibles at
lly spelling out what is and isn't school.
allowed.
The American Crvil Liberties
Chandler has virtually no public · Union backed him, as did Americans
backing, and newspapers all over the United for Separation of Church and

State, which presented him with iu
religious freedom award this week
in Washington.
U.S. District Judge Ira DeMent
sided with Chandler, too, and threatened to hold school officials in contempt if they allow the distrib~tion
of Bibles or penni! any organized
religious practices such as morning
prayers over the intercom or pregame benedictions.
Gov. Fob James and Attorney
Ceneral Bill Pryor, both conservative Republicans gearing up for the
1998 election, said they will appeal.
with James declaring that DeMent's
order "cuts at the heart of all that is
good in America and brings shame
on our nation."
The governor even offered to
defy DeMent's order by ,leading
prayers at any public school that
invited him.
DeKalb County school officials
plan an appeal also, a decision made
as hundreds of students walked out
of classes this week in northeastern
Alabama schools to protest . the
judge's decision . More than 60 were
suspended at 1wo schools.
• In Valley flcad, there was quiet
complaining when members of the
girls' basketball team were told they
could no longer hold their traditional pre-game prayers.

Aaodated Press Writer

COLLEGE STATION, Texas
(AP)- They came by the thousands

Cindy Grider said her two elementary school-age children like
Chandler, whom she described as an
able administrator.
She just can't u~derstand why
anyone would oppose Christianity in
school.
"The same way hC doesn't want
us to force our beliefs on him, it
seems like he's rorcing his on us,"
Ms. Grider said.

FaU
Special
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Sofa &amp; Chair $59.95

---Gallia
Community CalendaF--r- - .
llll1ed as a tree service lo non·
....Ill groups wishing lo
lllnOunce meellngs and special
lftnla. The calendar Is nol
-.lgned to promote sales or
ltlnckalsers of any type. Items are
. .ted as space permits and can1111 be guaranteed lo run a specif111 number of days.
Sunday, November 9

•••

CHESHIRE - Old Kyger FWB
Church singing service' with God's
Ambassadors, 7 p.~

•••

ADDISON - Rick Barcus to
l'fe8eh at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 7:30 p.m.

...

KANAUGA - Worship service at
Silver Memorial FWB Church,
lt~d Avenue , 6 p.m. with Rev.
1
Miles Trout.

.

'

•••
GALLIPOLIS - Sonshine to sing
at Debbie Drive Chapel, II a.m.

•••

Thursday, November 13

GALLIPOLIS
Alcoholics
GALLIPOLIS - Good News Anonymous meeting at St. Peter's
Baptist Church, 25th anmvcrsary · Episcopal Church, 8 p.m.
celebration continues with Cliff
Coleman at II a.m. and 7 p.m. ser- GALLIPOLIS - Chapter 58 PERI
vice . Special singing at each service. meeting at Galli a County Senior Citizen's Center, 3 p.m. Speaker from
CHESHIRE - Ron Lemley Aetna and Blue Cross Insurance.
preaching at Poplar Ridge FWB.
' ***
Church, 6 p.m.
PATRIOT - Southwestern PTO
meeting, 7 p.m .
Monday, November 10
Wednesday,1November 12
CHESHIRE - TOPS weigh - in
8 30 - 9:45 a.m. at Cheshire United
GALLIPOLIS - Senior Resource
Methodist Church. Meeting from I0 Center luncheon to honor veterans,
- II a.m. For information call Janel II a.m. All veterans welcome.
Thomas at 367 - 0274.
GALLIPOLIS - LaLache League
1\Jesday, November 11
meeting on breast feeding infonnalion and education. Bossard Library,
GALLIPOLIS - Choose to Lose 7 p.m.

•••

•••

•••

•••

•••

•••

•••

•••
•••

_,

-

.

Historical preservation seminar planned
GALLIPOLIS - A historic
preservation seminar has been
rcsc:heduled by the French Art
Colony, 530 First Ave., GallipoliS;ror Saturday, Nov. 22 from noon
Utili! 2 p.m.
Thc free presentation will be
gi~cn by Karen N. Cartwright Nance
or the Old House Doctor.
Nance and her husband own the
Old House Doctor in Cabell Coumy.
W.Va .. a building contracting firm
thit spccialii'.cs in hi~toric rrcscrva~
lion.
Thc Old House Doctor's projects
include numerous buildings constructcd in the IBOOs and 1900s. The
·Old House Doctor recently restored
the Gallipolis Bandstand.
The presentation will include a
general overview of what historic

preservation is and not; categories of
historic prcscrvarion such as rcstoration, rehabilitation and stabtlization:
- when to restore and when to rehabil irate; National Trust li&lt;tings of dislricl and individual sites; prescrvalion law; and the Department of
Interior's standards for rchabilita· tion and restoration.
Nance will discuss research and
planning projects and funds avaiiahlc for individuals. businesses and
organizations/government agencies.
She will give a general presenta.tion of the dos and don'ts on restoring masonry. wood, windows, doors
and roofs.·
Finally. she will suggest some
ways to lind products such as materials approved by the preservation
community for usc in historic build-

•••

Diet group, Grace United Methodist
Church, 9 a.m.

•••

ings.
If planning to attend, call the
FAC at 446-3834, as seating is limited. All FAC programming is
offered through the support of the
Ohio Arts Council :·

Crossword Puzzle
on Page D-2

to honor George Bush. Three past
presidents. Notable U.S. leaders.
Fonner prime ministers and diplomais. Sixty-plus members of his
own family.
And the mpst memorable story
came from an uncle who recalled
their baseball days at Yale University,· particularly a gam~ about 50
years ago.
It was a match-up between the
team that Bush led as captain and an
alumni team, with "Uncle Lou"
Walker pitching smoking eurveballs.
Until George stepped up to the plate.
"In the sixth inning, we're leading them 4-1, and one of·my curves
didn't break and he hit it," Walker
said, laughing. "It's still going." ,
With the George Bush Presidential Library ·and Museum officially
opened Thursday, the fanner president's glory days from Yale baseball
to the White House were captured
ror the nation to sec.
"America has had a good mari.
whose decency and emotions served
our country well, and that is the
&gt;lory this library will tell for generalions to come," said President Clinton, the man who forced Bush into
retirement live years ago.
An estimated 20,000 people,
including fonner Presidents Gerald
Ford and Jimmy Carter, gathered for
the dedication of the library at Texas
A&amp;M University. The school's band
played, its cadets san~ and a team of
parachutists bailed out overhead,
trailing colorful smoke .
The $80 million complex, built
on what once was a Texas A&amp;M hog
fann, includes displays that trace
Bush's life. from young World War
II bomber pilot to Yale baseball star
to oilman who drove his wife, Barbara, and growing family to West
Texas in a 1947 Studebaker.
Others exhibits address his tenure
as CIA director, U.N. ambassador,
liaison to China, vice president
under Reagan and then president. He
lost his re-election bid to Clir~ton in
1992:
Nancy Reagan, representing her
ailing husband, said fanner President Ronald Reagan treasured his
weekly lunches with Bush in the

Studenta In Alabltma rally to ehow thalr 1upport of echool prayer.

'

1he Community Calendar Is pub·

Bush Presidential Library opens in Texas
By MICHELLI! KOIDIN

" I don't like the thing about not
being abl~ to pray with my coach.
I'm a senior, and it just breaks my
heart," said Teri Campbell, 11:
The Supreme Court ruled against
stale-sanctioned prayer in public
schools three decades ago, but
Christianity is still openly promoted
in some Alabama schools.
"People around here don't under·
stand that this has been settled long,
ago in many courts," Chandler said.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Genealogical Society meeting at
Historical and Genealogical office, 7
p.m.

•••

. GALLIPOLIS
Community
Divorce Suppon Group, 7 p.m.
Nazarene Church.

Center Christian Holiness Church
revival, November 2 - 9, preaching
by Rev. lames (Speedy) Arthur, Harbour Family, 7;30 p.m. nightly.

Great American
Floor Care Center

CHESHIRE - Revival at Old
Kyger FWD Church, Nov. 10-16
with the Rev. Roger Tolliver, 7 p.m.
nightlv.

417 Second Ave.
Galhpolis, Ohio
614·446·4553

REVIVALS

•••
GALLIPOLIS - Church of Christ
in Christian Union revival Nov. 4-9,
7 p.m. nightly. Sunday services
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Nov. 7-8 to
feature Gloryland Believers. Nov.
16, Family Heritage Singers at 6
p.m.

•••

MORGAN CENTER - Morgan 1

Than,k YIN('
aay·Twp Voters for
' electing 111 your tl'lstee.
I 1111ooklng forward to
working with each aid
every011. Agalll.
Thank you Ray Slane
11

Pdforby

Ray Slone,1105THnl Aun,
Crown Clly, Ohlo

...

Pancake/Sausage Breakfast
.at McDonald's of ·Pomeroy
(All you Cll HI)

Saturday, November 15, 1997
7:30 am·IO:OO am

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''SERVING OHIO SINCE 1953"

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ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES
BEAUTIFUL
ANTIQUE CORNER
CURIO HUTCH
A welcome addition
to any home. Must
be seen in person to
fully appreciate this
beautiful piece.
Stop and see our
many other antiques.

.

Why do we Gale so much about being overweight? ThiS Is
because ~hen! are medical consequences Involved. The following
Is a p1rtlal Hst ol some diseases related to being OYerwelght:
1) Diabetes&amp;. High ~rot
2) Hypertension &amp;. Heart Attacks
3) Gout (High Uric Add) &amp;. Arthritis
41 s~ Disturbancz
5) Gallbladder Stones
6) Canc:er OfThe Breast, Uterus. Prostate &amp;. Colon
1) Dep!eSSion &amp;. Loss Of Self-Esteem
What can be done about It? The approach to lhls dlronlc

disease called obesity Is ~--·
You need advice from someone who knows how to arrange a
diet plan ror you and follow your weJaht and percentqe ol fat ol
your body. The use of appetite ~IS Is lln1lted to 2 to 4
weeks only, usually to help change the eallng pattern.
Losing I to 2 pounds per -et Is mare teallstlc lhan plans lhat
promise Instant weight lo$$. We want to see consistency. We
want to also seethe weight elf permanently.
Obesity Is a disease end there Is a CUitl
for MOdrtS'hD ud •tllcal ldt'ke fta. Dr, T&amp;JeiiiCO, you
. . . , a11 IJMl 775-5195 ror u .,,,.,..... 111a o111ce 11
llociDd It II Nala SacaatiShllt, ""DD, WV.
New p1tlents lind walt-Ins are welcome.

fV'n
IL&amp;.I

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

2520 V*t Dtlw • l'olnll'leotonl.'-

'ltrptlo 25550 • (304)67W:MO

·

·

93 CHEV. LUMINA IW75, V-41 eng., A/T, A/C, Clll., PW, Pl, 1111,
crulae ....................................................................................15415
110 PONTIAC GRAND Alllll37, A/T, A/C, Clll., aport whlllt,
tilt, crul11 ................................................" ............................14585
95 FORD ASPIRE HSI03, 26,000 mlln, 4 Or., caueltt, dUll

mlrrora ...............................................~ ................................. $1115
14 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 16751, Red, A/T, A/C, can., tilt,

cruise, power windows &amp; locka, power selt.....................$7US
97 GEO METRO 16899, 17,«XJ mllll, bal. oiiiCIOry Wlrrtnty,
2 Dr, A/T, AJC, AM!fii ........................................................... SMS
15 OLDS CIERA 16867, V-teng., A/T, A/C, tilt, cruise, power

wlndoWI &amp; locka ..................................................................s15 PLYMOUTH NEON 16902, Red, 4 Dr., A/T, A/C, aport
wheels, AM/FII ••••••:..•••..•••.•••.•••.•••.•••..•••.•.•.••..••..•.••••••••••••••••$8995

83 SATURN 16865, White, A/C, tilt, ca11111e,
rear defroster ••••••••••.•..•.•.••••••.•••• ;......................................... $7995
95 MITSUBISHIMIRAGE 16816, 4 Or., AIT, AIC,
36,000 miln.......................................................................-$8895
94 MERCURY COUGAR XR716819, WhHe, A/T, AIC, tiH,
CNIH, power wlndoWI &amp; locka..........................................$8495

95 CHEV. CAVAUER 18959, 2 Dr., red, AIT, AIC, callltte,
PONTIAC SUNFIRE 16972, Green, A/T, A/C, dull air
delayed
·
15 CHEV.
16874, 40,000 mlln, 'H eng.,
crulltl,
97 GEO METRO LSI161152, 14,000 miles, A/T, A/C, Alln'U, bal.
of factory w...anly .............................................................. $9717
95 HYUNDAI ELAHmA 16840, 24,«XJ mRts, A/C, AfT,
caaaette, bal. of factory Wlnanty .......................................$8995
93 CHRYSLER LEBARON CONVERTIBLE $6780, A/T, AJC,
:c-_CLtift, V-6 eng., PS, PW, cllltam wheels ..................... $8485
i 114 runu PROBE GT 16785, Rid, A/T, AJC, tilt, CNise, P.
sunroof, P. wlndaw1, leather IIIII, apart wheels ............ $8995
95 CHEV. LUMINA LS.I6873, 'H eng., AfT, AJC, tift, cruise,

PW, P~ P.aeats ................................................................ $10,495
96 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX S.E. 16876, V-6 eng., A/T, A/C, tilt,
CNIIe, power wlndOWI,Iockl &amp; seats ........................... $10,542
97 FORD ESCORT Ul16958, 25,«XJ mlln, bal. olltct.
Wlrranty, A/T, AJC, rear delro1ter ...............:.................... $1 0,487
15 DODGE INTREPID 16919, Green, A/T, A/C, tilt, cruise,
caaaelte, power windows &amp; locb...................................$10,495
96 PONTIAC GRAND Alll6971, A/T, AJC, CHI., 26,000 mlln,
bal. tit factory warranty .................................................... $11,797
96 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX S.E. 16970, Red, AIT, A/C, power
windows and locka, rear dtfraater...................,. ..............$10,937
95 DODGE INTREPID 168n, V-6eng., AfT, AJC, power
windows &amp; locka, 1111, cruise, cllltlta...........................$10,995
94 FORD T-BIRD TURBO COUPE 16945, Green, A/T, AJC,
Clllllla, tilt, crulle, power windows &amp; locks ................$12,100
95 FORD TAURUS GL 16951, Grnn, A/T, A/C, till, cruise,
power aelt &amp;wlndoWI, cusldsrt wheels .................. $10,995

/

Associated Press Writer
CHAPTICO. Md. (API -As the
number of people sickened by a
church dinner surged to more than
600. te&lt;ts indicated tainted ham and
stuffing made of kale, cabbage and
spices caused the outbreak that also
killed two elderly women.
"When you look at whornte what
and who came down with i!I ness, it
seems that the ham sticks out in
comparison with the other possible
products," said Dr. Martin Wasserman, secretary of the state Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.
Some 1,400 people all ended Sunday's fund-raiser at Our Lady of the
Wayside Church in Chaptico, located 70 miles south of Baltimore.
Nearly half became sick, with stomach cramps, nausea. lever and diar·
rhea.
Thirty-five people were hospital'
ized in fair and ·stable condition
Thursday at St. Mary 's Hospital and
Physicians Memorial Hospital.
Authorities had said one of the
women had died of salmonella poisoning. but on Thursday said an
exact cause would depend on autopsy results. Tori Leonard, a spokeswoman for the state health department. said salmonella was strongly
suspected in one of the deaths.
"We're looking into two. but we
only have one so far that appears to
be clearly linked In the outbreak,"
she said. "The other one we're not
sure is rcla•cd.''
.
•
The nnmcs ol' the victims. from
Chaptico a~d Baltimore. were not
released .
Mary Novotny, spokeswoman ror
St. Mary 's County Health Department. said investigators were checking to vcriry which food was to
blame. how it was handled and how
it was 'processed. Commercial suppliers were being checked.
The meal has been an annual
event in the quiet town or 2,000 for
at least 75 yurs .

Dr., A/T, A/C, CNise, AM/FM cau., PW, PL, sunrool...... $12,995
94 DODGE CARAVAN S.E. SPORT 16956, A/T, A/C, call.,
quad selling, lfiOrl wheels, V-6 eng................., .............$1 0,895
95 FORD WJNDSTAR VAN 16963, Green, V-41 eng., 7 pass., A/T,

AJC, V-6 eng....................................................................... S12,995
92 FULL SIZED FORD VAN CONV. 16927, V-8 eng., 4 captains
chairs, rear binch................................................................ $8995
91 PONTIAC TRANSPORT 16948, Blue, sporthetls, V-41 eng., 7
pall., poWir windows &amp; locks ...........................................$5995
1995 PLYMOUTH VOYAGE 16950, 7 pus., V-41 eng., Clll.,

AJC, tUt, crulle..................................~ ....................- .....•..$10,915
94 FORD AEROSTAR VAN 16932, V-41 eng., AfT, A/C, CHI., tilt,
cruise, PW, PL, 7 PIIL ....................................._ ••,.......... $1 0,545

By RAJU CHEBIUM

In ourI resular
day's work.
,
To maintain' a nonnal body weJaht, we only need about 900 to
1500 calories a day. Somettmes, we consume lhls inany calolles

SALES &amp; SERVICE

OSBON

Church · food
poisoning hits
600·pe9ple

WhydowebeaxneoverweJsht'l
It Is. matter of supply and,demlnd.
We are eating moil!: t11art we can use

CE

Makes both of you feel vrey much Jlonc

Betty Ford, left, and Nancy Reagan are pictured at tha dedication

• BOARDCERlFIELI inERNAL a

weight v.tten they become adults.

:*******~***************************************

ll\IPOTEN( 'E

PagevUia, Oh. 45710

obese have a harder time foAls

Pd for by Candidate, 3lletl5 Mirohett Ad, Racine, Oh 45771

1:111

Robert Tayengco, M.D.

problem does not~ dlld~e~~. N
1 matller of fact, dlllclren who are

Thank you, Roy F. VanMeter

/

With Purchase
Of Any Vehicle

94 FORD EXPLORER Xll: COUNTRY WAGON 18954, Green, 4

The ntmbels are real.
About one-third ol our papulation
IS either overweight or obese. 'Jhe

I wish to express my sincere
thanks for your votf and
support.

White House.
" He enjoyed your counsel so
much," Mrs. Reagan said. "I wish
Ronnie could be here today and tell
you in person what I know he would
say thank you for - your service
and your steadfastness, but most of
all for being hi$ good friend."
Ford talked about Bush's integrity and compassion and love of country.
Such qualities "never got out of
style and never go out of fashion,"
Ford said. "President Bush has
described himself as a man with a
mission . Today, we· would be perfectly justified in saying: Mission
accomplished, well and faithfully •·
done.""
Bush, 73, said history would
decide that, with help from the
library.
"As to whether we got things
right or could have d?ne things bet·
ter, the beautiful thmg about thts
library and the 40 million documents here is thai history can make
that determination, rendering that
judgment based on these documen_ls
and other material safeguarded m
this building," he said.
Bush declared himself " the luckiest man in the world."
"There is one thing left for me to
do - apologize to my mother,"
Bush told the lcrowd. ''I'm afraid
. some of these exhibits today might
violate her 'no bragging' rule. I just
hope we've in some way given
proper credit to all with whom I
worked during every chapter of my
life."
The ceremony was allended by at
least 20 members of Bush's cabinet,
I0 governors, senators and congressmen. fanner prime ministers
and heads of state, diplomats and
more than 60 Bush family members,
including Texas Gov. George W.
Bush. Also attending were Caroline
Kennedy and David and Julie Nixon
Eisenhower.
"Uncle Lou," 12 years his
nephew's senior, even provided
some memories for a film to ·be
played at the library.
.
"When he was young, I used to
say, 'George Bush is going to be
president of the United States.'"
Walker said. "They'd laugh. They'd
all laugh at me. Well, I was right."

$3.00 donation.
'.
Benefits to United Fund for Meigs Co.

FAClSON FAT

To the voters of Sutton Township

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

•

94 DODGE CARAVAN GRAN VAN LE 16976, U. pewter
w/woodgraln, 7 pus, A/T, A/C, AMn'M case., tilt, cruise,
powerSHt, power wlndowa,_power lockl......................$11 ,995
414'1
'
CHEV. BLAZER 4X4 4 Dr. 16952, WitHe, A/T, A/C, CNise,
power aeat, sport whttls ................................................. $17,675
91 GEO TRACKER 4X416953, Sport whttll, case .......... $3995
97 SUZUKI SIDEKICK 4X44 Dr. 16831, 12,«XJ miles, bal. of
factory warranty, AlT. A/C, sport whHII ......................... $14,995
94 OLDS BRAVADA 4X4 4 Dr. 16930, Bleck, ltathtr Slit, A/T,
AJC, caas., tift, CNise, PW, PL, tport wheels ................. $14,995
93 DODGE DAKOTA 4X4 CLUB CAB 16860, Blue, V6 eng., bed
liner, 1port wheels..•...~ ...................................................... $11,995
94 FORD EXPLORER 4X4 4 Dr.,l6821, M, AJC, tilt, cruise,
cusetle, sport whttla ..................................................... S14,995

ftKU

15-month term·· $2,500 minimum
·Get a hlgh long-term rate ..• without
· the long-term withdi'awal pe~ltyl

OAK HILL
·BANKS
Bapklng In Your Best Interest

500 3rd Ave. Gallipolis 446-0315
201 S. Front St. Oak Hill 682-7733
MY 11 acatrote .. or the date or this tuue but Is sub]o&lt;tto chonge. l'lonolty for urty
wtthdrewol wtlhln the ftrst 182 clltt- No penally thereoftet No pof1iol wllhdrawaiJ.

15 FORD RANGER SPLASH 18962, Purple, caaa, sport
whltla, re1r slider............................................................... $8995
94 NISSAN KING CAB 16987, Black, A/C, re•lllp sell, bed
mit, aport wheels ................................................................ S987!
94 FORD RANGER 16928, Green, AJC, Clll., bed liner, rear
slider, aport wheel• ............................................................. $8560
15 NISSAN 16923, 38,«XJ mlln, bal. ollectory Wlrrtnty, A/C,
cauette, 1port whit II ........................................................ $9650
96 CHEV. 5-10 EXTRA CAB 16848, LS. trim, AIC, CD player,
bid llner·..........................................................~..................S12,115
96 FORD RANGER XLT 16913, A/C, CHI., bed liner, bal. ol
flctary warranty, sport whttla ...................................... $12,995
15 NISSAN KING CAB TRUCK 16938, Black, A/T, AIC, ca11.,
topper, bed liner, rearlllp seat, 19,000 mllll,
bal1nce olfactory wamtnty ............................................. $12,995
95 CHEV. 5-10.16974, 34,000 mlltt, AIC, call., lllltrgiHI

ztpper .............................iii'liiiiii'"j'j_............ _............ SMiS
83 CHEV. LUMINAAPV 169n, V-41 eng., 7 pus., AIT, A/C,

caae., ti!l, CNise, PW, PL....................................................$9395

15 CHEV. MONTE CARLO 16978 ..................................... $11,tl5
15 FORD WJNDSTAR VAN 16978.....................................$14,475

�•

Entertainment
~Starship Troopers'
a walk on the buggy side

FIIII-Ct•JI

t

••

~

n

Nooe~~~Ur

1

•

'

also the director behind that ~ive
piece of cinematic cheese, "ShowBig, splashy and totally over-the- girls.") But such films as "~obolOp, "Starship Troopers" is like the Cop" and "Total Recall" were JUSI a
si:i-fi version of those gung-ho wann-up for the computer-generalWorld War 11 battle movies - the ed mayhem of this man-vs.-bug
opes where a self-centered young bloodbath.
.
nauit is molded into a selfless and
Adapted from a_ suited R~bert
patriotic lighting machine.
Heinlein novel (whtch reads ltkc a
Except, instead of John Wayne, . lengthy treatise on the values of
the warriors are all escapees from army service! wi!~ a pc;rfunctory
•:Melrose Place" and "Beverly Hills plot thrown m), Starshtp Troop'll210."
ers" starts fast with a battle between
• Director Paul Verhoeven is a past man and bug: the world-hungry
1!_18Ster at the spectacularly violent arachnids from another galaxy, who
Yision of futuristic dystopia. (He's have bombarded Earth from afar and

are n~w working tb~ir way across
the umverse to coloniZe our planet.
"One ':~r· Earlier," the title card
says, we JOin the story of Johnny
Rico (Casper Van Dien), a rich-kid
college s~dent arid football star in
Buenos ;Ai~s (although na~ a word
?f Spa_n•_sh ts spoken), who~ debatmg )Otm_n!! the ~Y· In tht~ future
~orld, cttJZensbtp ts_somethtn!! that
JS only earn~d by n~ttonal sen:•ce~ut John~y •.s
tntcrested ·~ vo~IJ!g th_an m htttmg the sheets wtth ~ts
g1.rlfnend,
Carm~n
(!J~n~se
~tchards), a ma~ whtz who JS JOIRmg up lobe a ptlot.

'
man. Where faas sec things like an
electric razor latching onto ~an's
tongue while he sh.aves, Atkinson
sees gag~ that somettmes have to be
"subordmated to the thread of the

among Ferraris, Jaguars and their
pricey compa~ions, he turned politely t~ the ~smess at hand. In the
mov~e, Atkmson plays Bean .a~ a donothtng employee. of a_ Bnllsh a!".

: By MARSHALL RNE
Gennett Suburt.n Newlpl.,.,_

!•ss

.. Against b~ ~nlli' wishes, he
)Otns, the mobile mfantry, where be
u.ndergoes rigorous training and
nses through the ranks. He also gets
a "Dear Johnny" letter ·from Carmen, who tells him they ~ave no
future be~ause she's d~tdcd to
becomc_a lif~r.
.
.
• .
Poun~ghunselfmtohts trammg,
Johnny nses to beoome a
leader. But, whe~ be ~akes-a .JI!IB·
talle t~at COSIS .hfe dunn~ a uammg
exei'Cise, he dectdes to qutt the army.
Before he can, however, .the. bugs
attack Buenos Aires an~ WI~ ll out.
So Johnny changes his mmd and

squadJ?n

a

•
Mr. Bean demands preCISe
• anarc hy
t
lnson
r
Fo A k

lly MALCOLM AlTIER
Alteocleted Press Writer
- NEW YORK (AP) - It's not
easy being Bean. At least, not when
t1Je camera is rolling.
"I hate shooting," says Rowan
Atkinson, a k a Mr. Bean, that bumbling, largely silent troublemaker
who can start out stuffing a turkey
and end up with the bird damped on
!lis head.
What could be wrong with acting
silly on screen? It 's the nagging feeling that he co~ld be doing a better
job of using his face and .body to
make Bean clear, focused and funny,
Atkinson says.
• After all, Bean is "a specific and
complex creation" he wants to "present in a precise way."
Whoa. Few people would apply
those words. to a guy who blows
peanuts out his nose.
But just spend a few minutes with
Atkinson. At 42 and a shade under 6
feet tall, he spealts with the earnestness and quiet assurance of a gentle-

narrative."

Salt•N•Pepa make 'New' music theirs
says James, who did much of tbe
work on the album in her basement
studio. "Brand New" is umore of an
expression of who we arc instead of
someone dictating the music."
Their break with Amr had been a
New."
long time coming. They'd argued
That just-released fifth album rs over royally division and artistic
their first not principally written and direcrion. On 1993's quadruple-platproduced by Hurby "Luvhug" Azor, inum "Very Necessary," the group
. who conceived the group in the mid- produced half the songs, while he did
' 80s, when the members all worked the rest. Both produced R&amp;BrCbart·at a Sears store in. Queens. (Martin topping singles - the women did
Lawrence and rap duo Kid 'N Play "Shoop", Azor did "'Whatta Man".
worked there at the same time.)
Ultimately, the group left the
Azor, who guided Salt-N-Pepa to MCA label and went to Red Ant,
multiplatinum success, is now a under the Island/London Records
Universal Records executive and umbrella. Azor now gets a third of
didn't work on uBrand New."
royalties, down from half. Salt-NThis time, Cheryl "Sslt" James Pepa also have their own Jireh
and Sandra "Pepa" Denton (the Records label, where they'D release
group also includes Dcidra "DJ several new acts. Spinderella iS due
Spinderella" Roper) bandied much to come out with her solo debut,
of the production work themselves. "Spinderella's Ball", in February.
Their involvement is reflected in
Jlliles says Salt-N-Pepa's work
songs dealing with social and with Franklin is indicative of their
women's issues - a change from
their usual sexually charged booty
shakers.
"I'm not taking anything away
from Hurby, but we were growing
up and maturing," Denton says.
Some songs - the inspirational
"Hold On" with Kirk Franklin and
Sounds of Blackness; "The Clock Is
'rickin"', which tackles domestic
abuse; and "Imagine," . which
decries prejudice and teams the
group with Sheryl Crow - might
not have made previous albums,

growing spiritualism. But she
emphasiZes that, contrary to some
reports, she's not leaving to do
gospel music.
"I would like to sec the next SaltN-Pepa album be even more inspirational, and I don't see anybody hav. ing a problem with that as long as
it's good music," says Denton, who
was a guest on the smash hit
"Stomp", by the Franklin-produced
God's Property. "I'm not talking
about doing straight gospel, but
music with a positive tone that my
audience can take with them."
Single. moms all, the three
women are now more conscious of
the language and messages in their
music.
"When .you come into this business, you just want to be creative ·
and express yourself. We were like
that - all about 'shaking your
thing,'" Denton says. •• But as you
get older, you start to get a sense of
responsibility."

beads into ciutcr space to take the Thlopcn" runs out of logic and has
anc:bnlda oa face to face.
to make do with sheer adrenaline.
The script, by Ed Neumeier, fea- lbe silliness quotient rises rapidly,
tures some genuinely startling battle as does tbe bad-acting factor by
sequences between the humans and young up-and-comers Van Dien,
the ipidcr-like arachnid warriors. Richards, Dina Meyer, Jake Busey
Moat of tbeae are oomputcr-generat- and Patrick Muldoon ..
ed, though there are also miniatures
9oofy, grass IUid excititJ&amp;, "Starand models seamlessly woven into shiplioopeill"canneverbeaa:usedof
the complex imagery. It's aU direct- being dull. Fpr bcttei or wane, it's the
ed in ,a breathless, fast-paced style kind of lhriiJ-&lt;hcnched popcorn movie .
that gtves the film the momentum of we've con\e to expect in the '90s.
an avalanche.
Retld R, protenlty, nudity,
lbe banle scenes are gory and graphic~.
graphic, with enough dismemberSTARSHIP lliOOPERS (R, proment and decapitation to give any tenlty, nudity, aruhlc violence)
parent pause about letting potential Two end OM-Iitlt.Stllra (Felr·to. viewersundertheageoflSsccthls Oooci)MinY111'11111buglnlgory,
film though that's who the ads seem ovar·the-top outer-apeee IICtlon
pitched at. (Similarly troubling for film. For llelter or worw, lt'a the
parents of younger teens: the coed kind of ~rlll-clrenchld popcorn
1 :e
shower scene and the rather enthusi- ; ' e
co~ to
1
astic sexual encounter.)
Deniea Rl~lrdl~ke au~
By tlte second hour "Starship DII'IICtld by PIUI'•......_.,·

:=,:

:xe:.' g

1""...;.,______•___.;_____.;________,

museum who, beheve It or not, ts

In fact, Bean ltimself is some- sent to a Los Angeles gallery to leerimes simply "the character."
ture as an art expert.
Soon the reality settles in. Mr.
Before long, Bean has sneezed on
Bean, that naughty 9-year-old boy the gallery's new crown jewel, the
trapped in the·body of a grown-up, is painting most people know as
portrayed by a man' with a master's "Whistler's Mother." When he tries
degree. In electrical engineering. to clean up the mess he defaces the
From Oxford.
painting even further, and he launchAtkinson wore a most un·Bean- es an elaborate coverup to save himlike pinstripe suit the other day as he self and his new friend, a young
analyzed his character and his new · curator. Of course, everything turns
movie, "Bean." Plugging the movie out fine, even the lecture.
has taken him away from his
Any fan of the Bean TV show,
beloved collection of ftne automo- now seen on video, will notice two
biles back home in England, and he odd things about this plot. One is the
quickly dove into a full-color book- idea of a lecture from Bean, who
let of classic cars that was offered by was virtually silent on television.
a reporter. A red convertible remind- The other is the notion that Bean
ed him of his own 1952 car that be would stick around in a jam, rather
hopes to race next year.
than just running away, and even
After a few pleasant moments make a friend.

By STEVE JONES
USA TODAY
Salt-N-Pepa have been around 10
years, but musical independence and
a fresh outlook have rap's biggestselling female act feeling "Brand

e, 1117

'fuppen Plains- Chester Water District
39561 Bar 30 Road
45772
Phone: 1-614-985-3315 • 1-800-886-3747
Fax: 1-614-985-3320
Reedsville, Ohio

The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District will be flushing
their lines in November, listed below are locations for this
week.

Mogday. Noyem!Jer lOth- East Letart to Letart Falls, Bethany
Rowen Atldneon
But to go from a half-hour TV
show to a full-length movie, Bean
had to change.
Silence worked fine for the rapid·
fire sketch humor of his TV show.
But in a movie, it would beoome distracting, especially for people new
to the chaiacter. What's wrong with
this guy? Doesn't anybody else in
· this movie notice?
"We didn't want the movie to be
about the fact that Bean doesn 'I
talk," Atkinson said.
So Bean speaks - still not very
much - with a voice quality that
falls somewhere between a benign
growl and a creaking door. Where
did that come from?
"I don't know, really. I've really
just always enjoyed croaky tones,"
said Atkinson. "It seemed to tit the
chai'11Cier.
has a slightly alien
aspect to

Ridge, South Canaan Road, Canaanville, Buckley Run Road,
Mine Hollow Road.

Wcdge&amp;day. November 12th- From the intersection of
Pomeroy Pike &amp; Flatwoods Road to Wildcat Hollow. Route 50
and Brimestone Road to Coolville, and Mountain Belle Road.

Thundu, Novem!Jer 13th- Wildcat Hollow to Cook Road,
Rocksprings Road, SR 681 east and west of SR 33. Peachfork
road, Kingsbury Raod, and Burlingham.

Friday. Novcm!Jer 14th- Goldridge through to Pageville.

the

Some of
flushing will be done at night and some customers
may experience low pressure. Please be aware that the water
may be discolored for sevral miles around these locations. If
the water is discolored for longer 1han a few hours, please
contact the office so we will be aware of the problem.
' I

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WV012838

Section
Sundey, Novembll

. .

D'

e, 1117

...--.Farm/business brtefs......,
"Attends banker's school

,,,

Detection station established

1
.'

. POMEROY - Steve Dunfee, office manager of the Peoples Ba~k­
mg and Trust Company in Pomeroy, recently attended the First SchOol
of Co~mercial Lending Essentials sponsored by the Ohio Banll'ers
Assoctauon and the West Virginia Bankers Association.
'
The Gallia/Meigs Division of the Peoples Banking and Trust Cdmpany has offices in Gallipolis. Middleport, Pomeroy and Rutland. Other offic~s are located in -:\!hens, Fairfield and Washington Counties.

'

. LOUISVILLE - The Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commtsston (ORSANCO), in cooperation with Louisville Gas and Electnc Company (LG&amp;E), will add a new Organics Detection System
(ODS) monitoring station at LG&amp;E's Trimble County power plant 30
mtles upstream from Louisville.
I&gt;·
lbe monitoring station will be jointly operated and maintained by
ORSANCO and Louisville Gas and Electric. Addition of the station
brings the total number of monitoring locations to 15 in a series of
Sttes on the Ohio River and selected tributaries stretching from Pittsburgh, Pa. to Pnducah, Ky.
These _sites provide more effective and efficient response to spills
by det~ctmg trace volatile organic contaminants. The purpose of using
the Tnmble County power plant site is to provide early spill detecJion
for Louisville's water intakes.
The ODS was established in 1978 and is a cooperative effort
between ORSANCO and Ohi&lt;? River utilities and industries to monItor for the presence of certain vqlatile organic compounds.
Data collected from the sites di-e used primarily'for spill detection
purposes, enhancing the Commission's ability to promptly notify downstream drinking water utilities if a harmful substance enters the waterway. ·

Mines receive honor
'

- Serving as representatives of the 1997
County end Multi-County Soil Judging Awards are Agricultural
Team Winners South Gallla High School, Stave Queen (left) and
Mike Carpenter lor the Agricultural Team. Other taam members
Included, Chris Barcus, Mike Waugh and Rob Brannen.

WOMAN - Opal Payne earned the title
of 1997 Outstanding Farm Woman at Thursday's 53rd Annual Soli
and Water Conservation District Banquet at Buckeye Hills Career
Center In Rio Grande. Payne is pictured at right with Gallla
S&amp;WCD Chairman of the Board Jim Howard.

Need to

'bug proof'
your home?

,j'

POMEROY · The underground coal mines of American Eleqric
Power were the safest in the nation during the fiv~-year period !'992
to 1996, according to a report issued recently by the U.S. Department
of Labor's Mine Safety und Health Administration.
Among the top 25 companies operating coal mines, ranked by total
coal production, AEP's mines had the lowest immediate injury die - 1.33 (number of injuries per 200,000 hours worked).
AEP operates the Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Mine 2
and Meigs Mine 31 near Wilkesville.

By JENNIFER L. BYRNES.
GALLIPOLIS · You may have
noticed thai you are not the only creature seeking refuge frorp the cold in
your home. The calls to the office
indicate that homeowners are suffering from the invasion of rodents,
snakes, and all kinds of insects ,
especially the helpful but imposing
lady beetle.
According to ·Michael Potter,
CHESHIRE- Gene A. Armstrong, maintenance mechanic-A II\ lhe
Extension Entomologist at the UniOhto Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek Plant, was recently
versity of Kentucky, taking steps to
honored for his 30th anniversary of service with the company. .
biOtk pest entry can greatly reduce
Armstrong joined OVEC on Oct. 23, 1967, as a laborer in the labor
the chances of future sightings. But
department.
·
where do you start? ·
.In 1972, he transferred to the maintenance department as a ri.'!inThe following are some helpful
tenance helper. During the following year, he was promoted to maintips on pest-proofing your home
tenance mechanic-C and in 1974, to maintenance mechanic-B.
using material from home il)lproveIn 1986, he was promoted to maintenance mechanic-a.
mcnt or hardware stores.
Armstrong and his wife, Elaine, reside in Bidwell.
First, install door sweeps or
thresholds at the base of all exterior
Investment viewpoint .
entry doors. Check for light filtering
'.
. under doors and gaps of 1/16 of an
1
inch or wider that would p~rmit the
.
,
.
.
,
· ,entry of msects. Keep m mmd also,
By JA'v,'cl.a:dWELL
.
segments
!~t11)\C.e only, ~~-d 1!4 of!ll\ tneh
GALLIPOLIS - Investors are ·
ket may outperform gap to enter the home .. Apply caulk
any of the other seg- along the bottom outSide edge and
often faced with options that provide
exposure to different market segmcnts.
stdes of door thresholds to exclude
!'Ients · based on a wide array of
While small cap ants and other. small msects. Seal
mvestment characteristics. One of
stocks have provided · gaps under shd1~g ~lass doors w1th
the ~ptions that investors should ·
higher
long-tenn foam weather stnppmg:
.
returns, these returns
Secondly, seal utility openmgs
constder is the size of a panicular
company or companies. There are
have come with mea- where ptpes and wtres . enter the
three basic categori_es thnt are. comCllctwell surable higher shortmonly used to classtfy compames by
term risk. Small com~ize. 'Ibis size is typic~lly measured panics often have new management
m t7nn~ of a company s ~ark~t c~p- teams and may only offer a single By HAL KNEEN .
1tahzatton. Market capttahzauon product creating greater e'!ttnings
POMEROY- Have mice found a
r.efers to the v~lue of a company variability and stock piice volatility. winter retreat in your home? Food,
determtned by tis total shares out- In contrast. large and medium size clothing, books, furniture and many
standing multiplied by its per share companies have typically .. gone more items can become contaminatthrough the introductory phase of
market pnce.
. Currently, the largest capitaliza- their business life and can often pro- ed by mice droppings and urine plus
tton stocks, or "Large Cap" segme.nt vide more stable earnings. resolting gnawing damage. Mice gnaw through
of the market can be defined as those in relatively less stock price volatili- electrical wiring, causing fires and
companies with market capitaliza- ty. Finally. large companies offer failures of appliances ' to operate.
tions greater. th~ $6 billion. The investors the opportunity to partici- They transmit diseases such as salmonellosis (bacteria food poison~mallest c~pttahzaho? stocks, or pate in_well established finns, many
small cap segment ts defined as of whtch mcreasmgly do business ing). William Lyons, Extension Entoth~se ~ompanies with ~arket capion a global basis, growing"'their mologist, suggests the following proto reduce mice from cohabtahzallons below $2 btlhon. The business both inside and outside the cedures
itating
'your
home.
·
remaining companies, those with U.S.
Since
food
and
harborages
are
market capitalizations between $2
As a general rule of thumb, the
req~:~isites for mice selling up houseand $6 billion, represent the "mid choice between investment options
cap" segment. When selecting a par- which invest in large. mid o small keeping, it is important to eliminate
ticular segment of the market in cap stocks involves a tra!fie·off the food supply and hiding places.
which to invest, you should always between higher potential long&gt;tenn "Build them out" by eliminating all
consider its performance potential returns and more short- term 'risk. openings larger than 1/4 inch. Steel
over time, as well as, its risk profile. Because it has been extremely\diffi- wool makes a good temporary plug.
. It is well-documented that over cult to predict when large, mid or Seal cracks in house foundations and
longer periods of time (20 years or small cap stocks will outpeli,rm, openings for water pipes, vents and
utilities with metal or concrete.
more) small cap stocks have outper- investors have an incentive to' con·
Doors,
windows and sc reens should
formed their larger counterparts. sider diversifying across all !lttrce fit tightly
with edges covered, if
However, over the last I0 years, mid segments_ of the market. Your iJAYeSt· needed, to prevent gnawin g. Latex,
cap stocks have outperformed both ment advtsor can ass1st you in ~or­ plastic, rubber, wood or other gnawsmall and large cap stocks and over mining which investment options able materials arc unsuitable for
the last 3 years, large cap stocks are nght for you given your1ime plugging mouse holes .
~ave been the best performing seg- horizon, performance goals and risk
. Light infestations or mice can be
ment. Given this variation of market tolerance.
removed by use of snap traps. These
Jay Caldwell Is an inv.. tmenl should be placed along walls between
leadership, it is clear that over different time periods any 'of the three exec:udve for The Ohio Company objects or by holes where droppin gs,
al 441 Sec:oiJ!I Ave., GaUipolls.
· gnawing and damage is evident so
that the trigger is in the route of travel (against the vertical surface). One
of the mosl auractivc bail!ii for tfaps
is pea nut butter. Other baits include
bacon rind , meat, cheese or sort candy. Some increase trap efficiency by
tying the bait on the trigger with

Armstrong honored for servi¢e

•
.
Market capita 11zat100

ftim.;... .

BIG TREE WINNERS - John and Brodie Gill
r) are District Forester Cynthia Jenkins, John
will prennted the Big Tree Award .for the 70
Gill, Brodie Gill and Award Presenter Debbie
Elliott.
foot tell Beech Tree they entered. Pictured (I to
foundation and siding, such as clothes window and door screens. This will effective. For a specilic pesticide recdryer vents, telephone, and cable reduce nies and mosquitoes in the ommendation, call the office at 614 ~
wires. Use caulk, cement, urethane summer as well and cut down on 446-7007. Use a compressed air or
expandable foam, steel wool, or cop- infiltration of the dreaded lady bee- hose end sprayer to treat th e base of
per mesh for these areas.
tle and other pests that like to over all exterior doors, garage and cmwl
Third, caulk cracks around win- winter in the home.
space entrances. around foundations.
dows, doors, and fascia boards. For
Fifth, install 114 inch wire mesh vents and utility ope nings, and up
these areas use a good quality sili· over attic, roof, and crawl space venls underneath siding. Some may also
cone or acrylic latex caulk. Latex- in order to prevent entry of birds. want to cqnsidcr treating a band
type caulks clean up easily with water squirrels, rodents, and other wildlife. around the perimeter of the fuumlaand are pain table. Features to look for Sixth, consider applying an exterior tion and the foundati on wall. For
in a good caulking gun are: back- barrier treatment with insecticides. more infonnation on controlling pests
offtrigger to stop the now of caulk, a Sealing is more permanent. however, in the home call the OSU Extension
built-in slicer for cutting the tip off most homeowners are usually look- office at the above number.
new caulking tubes, and a nail to ing to solve their problem instanta·
Jennifer Byrnes is Gallia Coon·
puncture the seal.
neously. Those pesticides containing ty 's extension agent in agriculture
Fourth, repair gaps and tears in .synthetic pyrethroids are the most and natural resources.

How to _keep ·mice away from your home during the winter

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NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE, INC.
(614) 446-0842

especially, sometimes cat the baits
and become ill . Dead mice can be
disposed of in plastic bags in a trash
receptacle (with tight fitting lids) ouldoors.
Once a general housekee ping,
trappi!lg and/or poisoning program is
in progress, control will he fairly
complete.
·
The Ohio Department of Agriculture will be giving private pesticide
certification testing on November 12
al 6 p.m. at the Meigs-County Extension Office. The Meigs County
Extensioh Office is located at Mul·
berry Heights, Pomeroy. Ohio,
behind the new Holzer Clinic. Please
call the extension office at 992-6696
to reserve a space.
Interested in animal grazing? Plan

to allend the next grazi ng coun ci I

meeting starti ng at II a.m. on
November 13, 1997 (rai n, snow or

Keller appointed committee chairman
POMEROY - Jennifer Meadows Keller has been named
chairman of the HolzeF Home
Health Care Advisory Committee of Veterans Memorial Hospital.
A daughter of Dan Meadows,
Gallipolis, and Ina Meadows, St.
Petersburg Beach, Fla., Keller is
a graduate of Meigs High School
and the Ohio State University
College of Pharmacy.
She was employed with Fruth

Phannacy in Middleport for five
years
before
becoming supervisor of the pharmacy at Veterans
Memorial Hospital
one year ago.
KE LLER
Keller. her husband, Rodney, and their daughter, Katie, reside in Chester.
Keller is serving a three year
tenn on the committee board.

shine) at the !?Sweet Apple Fa1111" of
Jim, Mona and JJ. Barrett. The farm ·
opemlion includes a 48 cow dairy and
a stocker operation . .Animals arc
allowed to graze on paddocks of
clover, orchard grass, alfalfa and
Ladino Clover.
A walking tour will begin the
meeting followed by presentations by
Jtm Barrett, Washington Coun ty
Agricultural Agent on : "Protein
Needs of Cows on Pasture" and
Experiences on Grazing Corn for
Dairy Cows". The fa1111 is located just
. west of Vincent, Ohio on Township
. Road, dairy is located on Township
Road _54. Watch for sig ns ·directing
you to the farm on SR 339 for the
turnoff onto County RQad 805 at the
Vincent exit. Maps arl' &lt;tvailable at
the extension office ..
Hal Kneen is the Mei~s Countv
Agriculture &amp; Nalural Resource:,
Agent, The Ohio State Universitv
•
Extension.

Prepare for holidays
NEW YORK '(AP) -- With a
hcaithy U.S ·economy and low unem ployment le ve ls, retailers arc scram ~
bling to find holiday workers to do
everything from stocking she Ivcs to
greeting customers at stOre entrances
during the busy Christmas season.
It 's the second straight year that
retailers arc prc~.;;ctl to find qualified
help. As lhc economy continues ;ls
steady growth. fewer Aml'ric:m:-. arc
looking for SC3~0nal JObS ... U earn alit·
tic extra cash .

Racine-Southern advances in soil judging competition

Come See: Mlk~ Northup, Dwight Stevere, Pete Somerville, . AI Duret, -Eric Blackburn,
Neal Peifer, Tim Conwell, Jamie Ademaon, Jim Himllton.

252 Upper River Rd.

thread. Traps should be checked,
emptied and reset once or twice a
day.
Glue boards are also quite effective. Mice become entangled in the
glue when they run over the boards,
soon dying of suffocation. If the glue
from a glue 'board accidentally gets
on the skin of a child or fur of a pet,
it can be removed with mineral or
vegetable oil. Gloves should be worn
when handling carcasses to prevent
any chance of possible disease.
Roden tic ides (toxic baits) are normally anticoagulants containing
brodifacoum,
chlorophacinone,
diphacinone or warfarin as active
ingredients. These chemicals kill by .
causing the animal to die from inter·
nal bleeding (interfere with normal
cloning of the rodent's blood). Best
results occur with multiple bait placements as close to the mice harborage
as possible .since most forage only a
short distance from their nests. Be
sure to place baits in locations inaccessible to children and pets. Dogs,

Gallipolis, Oh.
Or Toll Free 1·800·446·0842
SOIL JUDGING TEAM - The Racine-Southern FFA Soli Judg•
• lng Tum recently advanced to state competition. Tum mambera
are, from leh: front-- John Mallon and Matt Wllaon; rur- Stacey
· Ervin and Courtney Helnea.

The team members for Southern
RACINE · The Racine-Southern
FFA Soil Judging Team advanced to were John Matson, Stacey Ervin.
state com petitio., for the first time in Matt Wilson and Courtney Haines.
over five years by winning ttic Meigs They hnd to determine slope. erosion
County contest sponsored by the of top soil, texture, depth of soi l and
Meigs County Soil and Water Con- natural drainage. From thi s infonnation they detcnnined land capability
servation District..
·
The team placed founh in the Dis- and land use and then recommended
tri ct 10 FFA contest. This paved the the proper conservation practices to
way to the State FFA Soil Contest at observe.
Another Racine-Southern FFA
Newark. The team had to leave
Meigs County early lo gel there by 9 member Philip Hamm. son of Linda
a.m. and they ended the day by plac- and Tom Hamm . was notified that he
ing 45th out of 50 teams there. It was .received a bronze rating on his SAE
noted that they were the best 50 project placement in dairy at the
teams in the state.·
I

National FFA Level. He had earlier
won first place at both the st.1tc .und
district levels. He is now atlend iruz
Shawnee State.
•
This year the local Southern FFA
chapter is in a rebuilding &gt;I age. Our
new officers are: John Matson. pre&gt;ident; Mau Wilson. v1cc-presidcnt :
Jeremy Hill , secretary; Andrea Ncutzling, reporter; Sandy Smith1 &gt;cntincl ;
Josh Larson. student advisor; Nick
Bolin, historian.
The group is workini to rebuild
the chapter after losing five out·
standing members: Philip Hamm.

Tracy Card, LmTy Willis. David
Roush and Jessica Sayre. Those
members had each received the Stale
FFA Degree, won numerous awards
in various contests and SAEs. Also,
their leadership placed the chapter in
the top 20 single teacher departments
in Ohio for the past three years.
The new officer team is working
to develop a progmm of activities and
standing commiucos. FFA members
are presently selling fruit as a money-making project with all prices the
same as last year. The FFA is also
planning a bowling party.

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

Sunday, November 9, 1997
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV
'

The House of the Week

A first-rate design

appealing rouftlnea and elegant

windoW~

mal&lt;&lt;' up the exteriOr or this one-atory

home.
and a drama li e rire~lace , and '

By BRUCE A. NATHAN
AP Newsreaturea
Ni ce features and sharp details
make plan G- 75, by flomeSty les

serves as the main spot for enter-

tain ing and reluins. A covered
side porch con be used for an
extended entertainment area.

Design e r s Network , a firs l-rate

Th e liYing room nows Into a

desi gn. It provide s 1,442 w•ll planned square feel of li ving
space.
Th e airy entry opens to th e

nit&gt;t:-sized

dinin~

area where nat-

ural light pours through a picture
window, brightening and warmIng meals -token there. ·
. An eating bar and counter space

large, ce ntral livin8 room . This

space features o IO-rool ceiling

-

.. ..

,.,_

.

By POPULAR MECHANICS

For AP Speclaii'Mtlaw

Maintaining an old house's oripnal wood clapboanls, is one of the
major components of a successful
restoration. It's usually not a difficult
thing to do. In most cases. you
should be able to make spot repairs
or replace damaged boards for the
end result of a unified period exteri.pr.
As you can imagine, the common
problem with lots of old clapboard is
that it tends to split and crock over
time. If the split or crack il small.
often restorers simply 1luc the board
back together again, without causing
much disturbance to the rest of the
side. Use a good waterproof glue,
then clamp the split together until it
dries. You can do this by driving nails
below·the lower edge of the damaged
board, turning them up so they brsce
the pieces together. Small wood
blocks secured with a nail or two will
do the same thing. Be careful the
nails don 't split the siding.

are found in the adjoining Ushaped kitchen. The nearby hall way to the garage stores a wuh .
er, dryer and laundry sink.
Secluded in the 'bltck of the
home Is Ute private master suite,
which Includes a silting area and
a large walk-In clo~~et with built· . By POPULAR MECHANICS
In dra,ven and shelves. Two sets For AP Special Faaturea
of double doors Introduce the lavQ: We have a two-story, contemIsh master bath, which has dual porary home .with a ceiling fan downsinks and an oval tub.
stairs in the living room and another
Two secondary bedrooms and
upstairs in the loft area. In the sumanother bath are located across mer, we open the windows in the loft
the home. The foremost bedroom
above the fan and run hoth fans so
has a ceiling that rtaea to 10 feet.
they blow air up and out the win&amp;Inches.
dows. In the winter, we run the fans
down so they blow the warm air from

D

·- ·
. -----,

-....

'

'

.....
"·" ·

space.

G-75

;THE ENTRY OPENS to the living room, which leads to a side cov-·
;er..ct porch, the dlnln« room or the U-1haped kitchen. A short hall&gt;WBY hou•e• the laundry area and leads out to the two-car guqe.
nte muter suite Is just ofF the kitchen, secluded In lhe rear of the
llome. Two bedrooms and a lUll hath are found on lhe opposite side
pfthe bome.

(For a ""'"" detailed, sooted plan
Q/ lhls howe, includins suidu 10
ellimatlnB cos II and financins,
send $4 to flowe Q[ lhe Wuk, P.0 .
Boz fJ62, New Ynr/c, N.Y. 10116IJ62. De suNJ 10 include the plan
number.

'

~ow to handte paint, cl~anup and storage

:By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS hammer blows on alternate sides of
the lid.
:For AP Special Features
.. A skin will fonn on any leftover
• Here are some tips and shoncuts
paint
after awhile. To avoid a messy
:10 help make your next painting JOb

removal job. store the paint ca.n
upside down. Turn the can right side
up when it's time to reopen it. The
skin will be at the bottom or the can.

OLLEY BROS

:easier:
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
;Getting ready
a·
• ·· Instead of wearing r.ubher or
•

CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.

'plastic gloves while painting, coat
your hands with liquid latex (available at hardware stores). It dries to a
flexible film and washes off with the
paint. For quick touch-ups. just use a
coat of hand or face cream.
-· For easier stirring and better
mixing. drill a few one-quaner-inch
holes in your stirring paddle.
-· Working from a full can of paint
can in• ite spills and dripping. Pour
half of the paint mto an extra can or
bucket and use that for painting. Seal
the original can until you need more
for painting.
-· Avoid pai,nt can mess by punch' ing holes in the rim groove of the can.
Instead of collecting there. the paint
wi II drain bac k'into the can. To catch
drips. tape a paper plate IO the can s
bottom.

UP 011 THf Hill

RODNEY~ OHIO

IIUIDENTIAL • COJIOIDCIAL ·

LIMESTONE
TOP SOIL
RIVER GRAVEL

paint. strain it ihrough a piece of
cheesecloth or pantyhose fastened
over the top of a paint bucket
-- With alkyd paint. two thin coats
arc hcuer than one thick one. But
with latex, apply a heavy coot. even
when you plan another.
Flaws and spills
.. When painting around trim.
keep a screwdri ver and a cloth dampened with solvent handy. lf you get a
bit of paint on the trim, fold the cloth
around the tip of the tool and wipe the
paiqt away.
.. For an easy, accurate way to
scrape paint from wiodows, place a ·
4-inch-wide drywall taping knife
blade against the putty or wood
molding. Slide a razor-blade scraper
against the knife blade to make a perfeel line .
.• Remove masking tape as soon
as the paint is dry enough that it
won't run or smear. If you have to
1 delay tape removal, soften the adhesive first by heating the tape with a
hair dryer.
Slorin1 paint
.. When storing leftover paint,
mark a line on the outside of the ca n
to indicate how much is left. You can
see if you have enough paint for a
job.
-· Wipe away the paint in the rim
of the can before sealing. Then
stretch a piece of plastic wrap over
the rim. Tap the lid in place with light

MUSHROOM
COMPOST

Open Monday thru Friday 7:30 am til 4:30 pm.
Saturday 7:30 am-12 noon
You Pick Up or •We DeUver

CONTEST WINNERS' • Winners of the Gallla
S&amp;WCD conservation falrboolhs are, as picturei! (Ito r) second place, Temperature's Rising 4-H Club members, Stella Gibson, Advisors
Lewis and Janeann Miller and Dorothy Miller;
lh lrd place, Eno Sail On 4-H Club member

Richard sliaddeau. Not pictured wea flrat
place, Mustang's 4-H Club. The award was presented during the 53rd annual banquet at Buck·
eye Hills Career Center In Rio Grande Thursday
night.

AG WINNERS • Individual Agricultural win·
ners in the Soil Judging Contest are as pictured
(I to r) Mike Carpenter, standing In for Chris Bar·
cus of South Gallla High School, who won first
place In County and Mu111-County judging;

.

USD~
rul~ng

.

the second floor down to the first
floor. Recently I was told this is not
the correct way to use the fans. Is it?
A: A ceiling fan is not intended to
be used as a whole-house fan which
is how you are using it during the
summer. Whole-hotlse fans are very
effective, and if that's what you
want, you should use a fan that is
designed for that purpoSe.
Ceiling fans are designed to cir-

culale air in a "closedu environment
and should force air down during the
summer. The downward airOow
cools your skin as it moves over it.
During the winter months, the fan
should rotate so it produces an
upward airflow.
During the winter, heated air rises toward the ceiling. and the cooled
air settles toward the floor.
1

t Jacket ptin
6 Jumps
1t Where Cardiff is
16 Apple remnants
2t Speak eloquently
22 Bay window
23 Run olllo marry
24 "Aida" is one
25 Daughter of King
Lear
26 What's computed
28 Lawful
29 LetttiiS In genetics
30 Mineral spring
32 Actor Krlstollerson
33 Chide
35 .:.. - matter ollact
36 Healthy upstairs
38 Entry in an account
4t Victim
43 "48 - "
44 Wheelless vehicle
45 Hardened
· 48 Bitter drugs
50 Short swim
52 Impede ·
!5 Belore long: poetic
57 War vessel, lor
short
58 Storms
62 Poern
63 Reed in haste
65 Acquire
67 Brawl
71 Dry, said ol wine
72 Tiny
74 ldentlly
76 Antnoxins
77 -the Red
79 Drinl&lt; slowly
8t Slightest
83 Twoloid
85 Point a weapon
86 River ol
lorgedulness
88 Satan
90 work unit
92 Puts clothes on
94 Rowers" needs

96 Tlny97 Hearing organ ·
99 Valley

·DOWN
1 Menolrank
2 Hippodrome
3 Irreligious one ·
4 Greel&lt; letter
5 Eye part
6 Find
7 Notable lime
8 Feet poorty
9 Quick kiss
10 Drink noisily •
t 1 Sneaky people
12 Elevation: abbr.
t3 -Lane of
"Supennan"
14 Geologic tir;nes
t5 Spanish mister
16 Unlriendly
I 7 Unclose, poetically
16 Kingly .
19 Rub out
20 Plate of mixed
greens .
27 Money in Hafy
31 Punctures
34 Drug leiters
'37 The sixth sense:

100 Whalefs weapon
103 Porcine animal
105 Savory jelly
107 Tricks
110 Black cuckoo
111 Bogus coin
113 Tattles
115 Hope or Cummings
117 Female horse
118 Layover
120 First: abbr.
122 - Tse·tung
123 SkiH
125 Business abbr.
126 Took a trip through
128 Where Oslo is:
abbr.
130 Marsh
132 lnter133 Insect egg
I 34 Occur afterward
135 Cow sound
137 ,Young horse
139 Glides over ice
141 Arid
143 Fix a computer
program
145 Big dish
147 A spice
150 Ventilate
152 Pack
154 Indigo dye
155 Tangle
159 Physicians· org.
160 Yellow color
162 Fet
164 Pasture
166 Had a meal
167 Pinkish sheds
169 Instructive
t 73 Agreements
be1ween nations
175 Unaccompanied
176 Incandescent
177 Vestige
178 Long·plumed bird
179 Joins metal parts
180 Encounters
I 81 Glowing coal
182 Crystal-gazers

abbr.

39 Ardor
40 Fellows
·42 ·-Show of Shows•
44 Boxes
46 Hardy character
47 Canine animal
49 Black
51 Levin or Gershwin
52 Inn
53 Like a lot
54 Deserving of praise
56 Stair post
59 Theatrical make-up:
2wds.
60 Weird
61 Shuts wnh Ioree
64 Sour substance
66 Oolong is one
68 Soft mass
69 Goatee
73 Native ol: suffix
75 Mire
78 Fellow
80 Animallellow
81 Restrict

82 Lock ol hair
84 Conduct
87 Desire personnied
89 Big shot: abbr.
91 Opening
93 Run-down area
95 Not hollow
98 Curved bone
100 Speediness
101 Writer- Chekhov
I 02 Mother Superior
t 04 Precious stone
1OS Standoflish
t06 Ember
108 Tennessee -'- Ford
I09 Denominations
tt2 Card game
tt4 Chemist's room, lor

Tim Wellington, RVHS, second place in County and Multi-County judging; Mike Carpenter,
· standing In lor Rob Brannen, third place in
County judging.

URBAN WINNERS· Individual Urban winners
in the Soil Judging Contest ar.e as picutre (I to
r) Gabe Saunders, River Valley High School,
first place in County and Multi-County judging;

005
Personals
. 232 Explicll Color Phoros $8 To
8011 StrY. P.O. Box 289, Rio
Glandt,OH45674.

ANXIOUS?
1C IIEET SOMEONE?
11RED Of.ntAT OLD BAR
SCENE?ntENCALLTHE
DATELIIE
100-285-1118 EXT. 8740
Only $2-ill Por Mlnu,.

short

Su•d•y &amp;. llonday tdltlon•
1:00pm Friday.

mtllllgO.

3 Black Boblall Klnans, a Wa,aka

Old, 810-992-3380.
4 Month Old Kitten. Had Flrll
Sholl, t.'ong Black Haired To
Good Homo, 814....... 75ot8.

RIVER VALLEY HONOREES • Winners and
Team Members of the River Valley High School
Urban Team of the 1997 County and Multi·

•

County Soil Judging Awards are pictured (I to
r) Gabe Saunders, Tim Wellington, Beth Walk·
er and Rashel Fallon.

8 Boagia Mlxod Pupploo,
Weoka Old, 814-387- 7765,

8
1·

. , D850883.

Aluminum alarm door. 304-875-1365.

BIIUtlful white klnene, liner
rralned. good homu onlr. 304-

1112-m"-

Cast Iron balhtub. Call 304-875-

61180allerspm
Gal dryer and electrlc dry• to
ato·~.814-..... 117.

Puppleo l'ltl Dobtrmln l'ltl Lob
SWoeksOid. 814-446-3523.
Pupple~ Black Lab. Cro11 Black
Shophold. 114·245-11055.
.

Puppfel to giveaway, mother- Air·
edlle, father· lreeing walluH, 614·

lo to run. Sundor

Nobel winner urges creation of award for agriculture

I

New Idea Hay Equipment &amp; Spreaders
New Form Hand Loodera
New Koyker Loaders
New Shennlu 4/25 25 HP DSL 4 WD 3 Pt.
Hitch $5995.00
New King Kutter Equipment- Rotary Kuhtra,

,

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page C-6

'

By GEORGE ANTHAN
The Des Moines Register
WASHINGTON - Each day this
past week has brought an announcement of new winners of Nobel Prizes,
all learned and deserving people
who advanced our knowledge. In
doing so, each has affected soctety
positively.
But in a relatrvcly unheralded
press conference at the National
Press Club last week. Nonnan BorJaug, the win ner of one of those

Nobe ls (the 1970 Peace Prize for his
work on the Green Revolution) cited
what he saw as a major failing of the
renow ned prizes. That being their lacif denial of what he co nsiders i.nd ispulable: that the most imponanl area
of human endeavor by far is food and
agriculture.
Physics , li teratu re, chenustr_y,
mathemati cs, even medicme. Borlaug
says. pale in comparison wllh that
activity upon which human civilization depends: agriculture .

•·

'"Sneaked In"
As for himself. Borlaug notes. he
was "sneaked in " as a Nobel wmncr

by bei ng give n the only award possible for an agric ultu ral scien tist: the
Peace Prize.
Borl aug said this '" introducing
the 1997 1au reatcs of the World Food
Prize, Drs. Ray Smith of the University of California at Berke ley and Perry Adk1sson of Texas A &amp; M.

wv. 304475-5404.

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time aucrlonae:r, complete
•ucthm service. licensed
168,0hlo &amp; Wn1 VIrginia, 30.t773-5785 Or 304-773-544/.

90 wanted to Buy
Antiques, lOP prices pald, RiverIne Antiques. Pomeroy, Ohio,
Run Moore owner, 8U-ISI22528.
Antiques- no ilem IDO lat'ge or 100
small. Also estates . appraisals,
reUniahing , cuetom orders. 61C·
i92-6576.

In Memory

OWEN CLINTON
MCKINNEY

In Loving Memory of
Norman M. Hyaall
who went to be with
the Lord Nov. 9, 1989
Also his birthday
"Nov. 17th

Be Plld In Adanm.
DE&amp;Qt!NE: 2:00p.m.
tho dor botaro 1ho ad

and Pugh.

anENTION VENDORS: Indoor
Space $5.00 Outdoor $3.00 Open
Evel')'dlt S10re hours e-5. Cn~•
ford'l Flea Markel, Hendetson,

In Loving
Memory

AiJ. Vanllal•• Mu1t

1· 383
1·2834WD
1· 4263 4x4 Cab 90 HP
1·1230 Hydro

Wedemeyer'• Auction Service,

Galipoi' Ohio 814-37!1-2720.

In Memory

Yard Sale
GallipOliS
&amp; VIcinity

tical method of testing. knowledge an~ skills
raqulred in the forest industry such as : knowledge of tree Identification, equipment and tool
Identification , understanding of forestry terms
and the ability to recognize envir_onmental ~nd
economic impacts of forestry rn the Unrted
States. Left to right are Sheard, Warren, Bostic

Auction
and Flaa Market

In Memory

1725.

'
TAKES PART IN CONTEST • Four members
of the Gallipolis FFA Chapter recently competed in the State FFA Forestry Contest ~t
Hocking Technical College in Nelsonville. Team
members were Ben Sheard, Kelish Warren,
Jason Pugh and Ml!rk Bostic. The team placed
27th in state competition. The forestry contest
is an educational activity designated as a prac· _

Lktr SL. Pt Pl.

ecUtlon • 2:00p.m.
Frld.,_llondl)' ediUon
· 10:00 a.m. Slturday.

Lost and Found

LOST: Oa,hshvnd on Jericho Rd,
male, no collar. Reward. 304 - 67~

New Massey Ferguson Tractors In stock
and ready for delivery.

Christmas Sate. Avon, great BaY·
inga 35·40% off. Fri· Sal 9-5. 1OS

Nov. 26, t935Nov. 10, 1996
Aprecious Ufc,
Memories of which we'D
keep of limes and places,
laughter and tears your
spirit will forever U-.e on
In your children Sadly
missed and forever In
our heart.
Ronnie, Pefaly, Randy,
1'111)1, Darlene, Daughter·
ln-bt,.., Son·ID·Iaws,
gnntlchlldren, mother.

1182-188S.

60

Pt. Pleasant
. &amp; VIcinity

80

Giveaway

t/2 Beagle 112 Terrier, 2yr old ft.
male dog, fiked and house bto·
kin, good companion. can 30•·
875·6022 afltr Spm. or leave

Galllpolla, Ohio 45631
614-446-9777
Maaaey Ferguaon P1rta, Stiles and Service

Blades, Scoops, Disc., Ed. .
Also approx. 40 used tractors In stock MF,
Ford, JD, IH, AC

'LeTS

40

2150 E11tarn Ava.

2· MF 253 2 &amp; 4 WD

Advanct. Otadllnt: 1:OOpm the
day belort the ad It to run,

LONELY? Need To Hear A SoiL
Smiling Voice??? 1-DDD-255·
0800, ElL e?DI, $3.GQ/Uin. 18+
Sorv-IJ 6t9-845-&amp;a4.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.

3- MF 240 2&amp;4 WD

Sorv-IJ 8t&amp;-e45-&amp;13-4.

FRIENDS
$2.99 Per Min. 1-1100-289-1245,
En 8791. Mull Be 18Yrs.

70

7-MF 231
3- MF 261

. Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Salol Muot 81 Plld In

BE

of

MARYANN
BAIRD
Who Passed
Away Three
Years Ago
Today,
November9,
1994.
Sadly MlsHd By
Family and
Friends.

order earl y next week to prevent the
nati on's milk mnrkcts from descending inLO chaos. O' Brien said .
For in stance, milk processors that

have October contracts with fann ers
based un a specific price could gain
a windfall if they could now pay Jess
and yet sell the ir finished product to
groce ry stores fo r the original
amount

.

90 . wanted to Buy

Wanted to Buy
Aboolu,. Top Dcll11: All U.S. Sllgo

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Modell Or Newer, nr And Gold Coins, Prootuta,
Loll Of Uen'l, Women's, Child· Smilh Buick Pontiac, 1i00 East- Diamond' Antique Jewelry, Gold
Ringa, Prt·1UO U.S. Currency,
ron'a Clollling, Size 13-14, Wed· ern AvMJe, Gallipolis.
Storing, Etr:. ~ullitiono Jewo~r
din9 Dress, Brand Spices. Fl•·
vofmgs, $1.00 Each, Baskets, Comp1el8 Hou18hokl Or Estates I · M.T.S. Coin Shop, 15t Second
Blankets! More. Green Bulldlng, Anr Trpo 01 Furnlruro. Appliano· Avenue, Gall&gt;olls. 6t&lt;l-4oi5-2JW2.
eo. Ato~o·a, Ero. Aloo Appraisal
Gallia Faov..,uncla. Fri. Sa~ Sun.

Pomeroy,

· Mull So 18 Yeoro Old.

116 Stiff hair
tt9 Nice Nelly
t21 Big book
t24 ·- rt or leave no
127 Always, poalically
129 Steals lorm
t.31 Republicans' grp.
t32 King or Aida
136 Criminals
138 Winglike part
140 Noah's vessel
142 Sweet potato
t43 Scooping device
t44 Homed animal
146 Steering device
147 Parrot
146 Soap plant
149 Holiday song
151 Girder. 2 wds.
153 Correspond
156 Mother-of-pea~
157 Furry mammal
t56 Examinations
160 Beery drinks
16t Govern
163 Campus building,
lor short
165 Chimpanzees
t68 Plus
·
t70 Portable bed
t71 Seize
112 High card
174 Stone or Atomic

back." said Tom o:Brien. actfng
administrator of USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service .
Doty"s ruling Thursday threw out
a Depression-era system of 32 milk
marketing orders that pay fanner s a
price differential for milk based on
their di stance from Eau Claire, Wis.•
in the heart of the nation's biggest
dairy region.
USDA asked the Justice Department on Friday to seck a stay ofihat
GallipOliS
&amp; VIcinity

ANNOUNC EMENTS
ACROSS

Steve Queen, SGHS, aecond place in County
and Multi-County judging; Drew Dunkle, Gallla
Academy High School, third place County and
Multi-County judging.

mQves to block judge~s
on milk pricing proposal

WASHINGTON (AP) - Warning
of possible turmoil in milk markets.
Agriculture Department officials
want to block a Minnesota judge's
order that would invalidate much of
the nation 's system of pricing milk.
In addition , the department plans
to ask U.S, District Judge David Doty
to clarify )llhethcr his ruling applies
to milk supplied in October, for
which farmers arc still due to he paid .
"We're just tryin ~, tp take a step

446-2114 or 245-5316

~----------------------------~£

I

.

today. The historic way the hand·
rived boards were set:ured to the
struCture is also the one that those
milling riftsawn clapboards today
recommend: nailing through two
courses. Spaced .less than an inch
above the butt of the clapboard, the
nails also penetrate the top of the
board in the course helow. Because of
venical grain clapboard's · limited
expansion and contraction,this is the
best way to install this type of siding.
We recommend Sd galvanized wire
box nails. Its thin shank, of course, ·
prevents the wood from splitting.
If you ~e working only on one
side of the house. then you should
havetheexposureonyournewclapboards match that on the other sides
of the hOuse. The exposure on a clapboard is the part of the board that's
visible after it's nailed down. Since a
I inch to I 1/2-inch lap is necessary
on most traditional clapboards to
keep them weathertight, you 'll generally find about 3 inch exposure on
4 In-inch wide boards and 4-inch
exposure on 5-inch ones.

SUNDAY PUZZLE .R

69 Keg
70 Rocky hill

•Backhoe
•Dozer
Work

-- To remove clols or lumps in old

If you ·find boards that are damaged heyond repair, spots where
warping, rot and the weather have
taken their toll on old wood, you can
usually cut out the bad piece and
replace it with a freshly milled clapboard.
Use a hacksaw to cut out the freshly damaged section. Angle it carefully while you work to avoid cutting
the siding below. After the board is
cut, a sharp lwnmer tmd chisel is usually all that"s needed to remove
pieces of the damaged wood.
Chances are the board is nailed to the
one above it. If the nail is visible from
the surface. try to pull it out. If not.
you'll have to insert small wooden
wedges &amp;r a screwdriver up under the
siding to pry it out slighdy to cut the
nails with a hacksaw.
If you must stan from scraich and
re-side an old (or new) house with
clapboard, the following installation
lips and techniques will guide you:
Tradifionally, most beveled clapboards were layered from the bottom
up. It's still the preferred way to side

Homes: Questions and answers .

esl11n C-75 has a llvlnf!
room, dinlntJ room .
kitchen, three bedrooms,
two full baths and I utility room,
toll! ling 1,442 square feet orllvlng
space. This plan Includes a
crawlspace or slab foul)dallon,
and 2x4 exterior wall framing .
The garage and storase area provide 516 squa~ feet of additional

----------------- . L

Gal/ia S&amp; WCD award winners

It's relatively easy to maintain ·
an old house's wood boards

:~;·;j~:~: . ~7$~~!t~-~~~t~:~.~··

• • r

Sunday,Novewnber9,18e7

"Heaven is Much
Nearer"
God knows you had
to leave us, but you
did not go alone,
for part of us went
with you.
Deeply missed and
loved by wile, Dora:
daughter, Nancy,
. son, Norman,
grandchildren and fami-

Ave!lalllei814-3N-2720.

Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

Thanks to thr
· friends and family
The family of
that surprised me
Vino Casto
Sunday for my 70th
would like to exle~d
birthday.
Your
their thanks and
friendship means
sincere appreciation
much to me.
to all who helped in
Thanks also to
any way lor their
Catherine,
Carl,
prayers, food ,
Sue, Roy and Linda
flowers , kindness
and my granddaughter for your
.a nd support during
planning and hard
the illness and death
work.
of our loved one.
!love you all
Rex E. Shinifield
Card of Thanks
Th~J

family of Raymond E. Evans wishes to
express a sincere thank you to friends and neigh bors for all the cards, calls, visits, flowers , money.
food , prayers and love shown to u.s during our
lime of loss. A special thank you to pallbearers:
Samuel Evans, Tim lawson, Charles Frecker,
Lewis Hudson, Scott Anderson, Everett Grant
and Chad Cook; Rev. Robert Sanders for olliciat·
ing, VFW Post1#9053, DAV #52-53, AL Post #39,
Holzer Medical Center Emergency Dept staff,
Critical Care staff, Progressive Care Unit staff, Dr.
Ables and Dr. Vallee. Your kindness will never be
forgotten . · Thank you.
Ada Evans.
Marsha. Charles Frecker and Family
Marlin, Debbie Evans and son
Delbert lawson and family
Card of Thanks

We appreciate so very much the many
flowers. cards and notes, telephone calls and
visits both at the funeral home and in our
home from relatives and friends since the
death ol our grandson, Jay Skidmore.
We are also grateful for the food brought to
our home. and appreciate Fra nces staying to
help with the dishes.
We especially thank cousins. Becky and
. Penny, for the picture collage.
Again, Rev. Jim Lusher found the words to
console us in our time of grief and we thank
him.
Thanks to Bucky and Jimmy for their efforts
in seeking medical assistance and to Dr.
Judy, the ER personnel , the Chaplain and
Mrs. Sm~h at Holzer Medical Center.
We thank ,&gt;hll and pat for the burial lot so
Jay could be interred next to our lots.
We extend thanks to the four cousins,
Christopher, Brent, Eric and Jonathan, and to
the four lriends, Chad, Matt, Paul and David,
who served as pallbearers, and to cousin,
Josh , the honorary pallbearer, and to
everyone at McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
who were so kind and considerate .
Mr. and Mrs. Henry SkidlllOfe and Family

I

�Sunday, November 9, 1997
~

An ONo 01

0

eon.. .........
Tronoorlpdtolot lot 111'1
olllct In Pt PIMottnt. llencl ,..
.,.... Bole 01'-41'. ,., .......
ant Ratiolor, M llaln SL, Pt
PltuftWVZ5MO.
Mood I ladiH To Sollwon Coli

Dlrttllt WDrkl n~ tha Clitntt oppllcotlon lot thlt pooling II
Concerni"9 Thtlr Payment A'·
count Status And Grant Atim· FriclayD•sn .... l.ttt7.
burllmenta. B•Ginning Ralt Of Atel-: Raaldenl aiJ I utili
. Par II S&amp; 50 /Hr.
Schedule: Work Ulft rotat11;

Requlrta Elpetienct. Pta'llda
L•adtrship To CDmprthtnalve

Fundnclslng Program With
Emphult Dn Cutlntlng And lncrnslno Uljot Gllto. E - ln Ptonnod Glvlna And Capital
Compolgno Du.,.,.., Sand Rotumt. S Pra!tnilonol RotorAnd Sliarr Rtqulr..- To ~
R. Atldno. PlaMod .....or
Southout 01\lo; 3Da Rl&lt;hiJnd
INt., A11onct. OH 4570t.

ager. ACCIII To Human Rt·

aourct Development, P.O. Bo• Hourly rate: 11.77
3tl. GaJipollo, ono 4!113t.
lltnii1IUiil quolltlcotlon:
Two ta tour yura elJ)wlence In
T11t Dudllno For Accopdng Ap- _ ..loniQftow-01'&lt;0

ACCOUNl'ING

Valid Ohio Fooco 011\~ra Ctrdfi.

Do You Have Good SOlid Experience And Skills In one Or More
Ot The Following A.reaa : -''·
counta Receivable, Accounts
Payable ~nd Parroll'~ Our Clerical Job Candidates Are Tesltd
For tO -~. KeybOard And 801lc
Ac:co1.1nling Clerical Knowladge.

You Can Let Know About Your·

supervisor,

skills, includlnv organizational
and coordinalng llkih
tntorVIeooing llkih
Trolning tiUIII
Knclloto&lt;lgt of tunon ralationl
Knowltdgl or carrtctlona and llil

-·

A Competitive Pay And A Good
Sentlitl Pickage, Including

40t(kl.

We AT. An Equal
Oppo&lt;Mty Efi'I'O&gt;yw

AU Qualified Applicants Will Re-

col,. Considoradon For Employ·
menl Without Regard To Race,
Color, Religion, National Origin,
. Ancot1ry Or Sex.

BUCKEYE
COIIIIUNITY
SERVICES, With Over 50 loco·
tlons In SoutheiJtlrn Ohio II
.tcc:epting

Application•

Counties; Hours Att Scheduled

~ Aa Needed For EYeninga And

WooMnciL

We Are Searching For Compastlonall Prof111ionala With A

And

rasldtnll; IIIDCiltll ; IUPtr·
visa• ond . . gontrll pull!~

Ability to recognize abnormal

condition• and taka approptlall
•cOOn
.
Skill In oral end iwritt., communicalioN.

.

SEPtA Correcttonot Foclllty It
on Equot Opporlunlty Employor.'

A Desire To

Gallipolis is
seeking a part·
time receptionist

Tetch Personal Arwl Community
~Ut To lndivldutls With Mental
Relard1tlon / OevelopmenlaJ Oil·

for evenings and

abililitl. The Work Environmenr

weekends. Must

Ia Informal And Rewarding. BCS
00.1 Comprehensive Training h
Tho Field OIIIIWIJ.

Requiremtnls Ara Hl~h
School Oiplomo iGEO, Valid Oriv·
11'1 Ucens• And ThrH Ye•re
The

be familiar with
multi-lined phone
system, have

Good Driving Experience. lnllf·

Rooumo To: P.O. Box 804, Jock·
oon, OH 45140. All Appicadono
uuot Bt Pilot ·llark~ Br t tit v
g7, Equol Oppor1uri~ Enlt&gt;IOI'I&lt;·

Sat. Nov. 15, 1997, 9:00a.m.
Located in Portland, Ohio on St. Rt. 124
Will take consignments of Sat. 8 a.m. ·
No one there on Fri.

Auctioneer Dan Smith

work in fast
paced

environment.
Please apply in
person.

ARBORS AT
GALLIPOLIS
170 PIMcrtst Drive
G.p als, 011 4S631

90

'""'

which Is In v~latton ollho
law. Ourr....,. ora hereby
lnklnned that all dweiHngs
aduenised In thiS nowlllllpor

are available oo an equal
opport,..;ty basis.

7:00pm
Some 1V shopping Items, furniture, quills,
sheets, other bed linens, phones, toys, cameras,

REAL ESTATE
~..,....,...--..,...~..,....--f

: 310 Homes for

Kitchen, UR, •s
Fenced
213
500 , Yard,
Acre, Alking • I,
114·3••·
-·
: 5 Room• a Bath In Crown CIN,
$25.0DO, 6t4-256-t 270.
''
Buy HoliES As low As

~~~ ~o!o~~aiiL~a'fS}l
2730• X 1709·

By o~ner: , 0· 1t m•'Iea our oI
Huntington on Rt 2. 4bedrooms,
!bath, ottacllod garage, FA hoot
lllr.304-578·2842·
COUNTRY HOllE
ON I ACRES,
SCOnowN, OHIO.
g Ulloo From Proctovillt, 3,400
Sq. Ft. living Aroa, 2 Siorr, 3
Bedraomo, 2 t/2 Batho, Flnllhod
Boomtnt, Fireplace, llkt Now, 4
Vuro Old lt75,0DO, lt4·143·
21124, Or8t4-143-2522.
GOV'T FORECLOSED Homoo
From Fonnlos On St Dtllnclutnt
T11, Rtpo's, REO'o. Your Arta.
Toll Fru (tl 100·2tl·tiCIDO Ex~
H·28t4 fOf Cunont Ustinga

1:614·314-3645
FAll YAID WI. SAYIIIG IUCISB WH AIID CAIIt 10 III'IIIIIS
t, Wood·BaemS· 10', 14", 16" tall, to 12' to &lt;18' long. Example
1O"x48'· $20.00
2. Spruce Beams· 14' ·16" to 20' to 30' long. 1 3/4 thick. $1.00
per lin. ft.
3. Glulam Beams, 12"·15"·16" to 6' to 20' long. 3 1/21htck
$1.00 per lin ft. (garage door lteadtnl).
' · Rim board plus made from O.S.B. t 1/81htck lr and 16" wide
12' to 2'' long. Price exampte-12'· 52.00, 24·$4.00
5. Prime grey wood siding, made from O.S.e. 8" wide 16' long
$2.50 ••.
6. Sho~ length I Beams, 8'·1C'·12' .25c per lin. ft .
7. 5/W' and 3/4" x 4.'x8' 0.5.8.· $8.95 ea. 50 pes. 01 up $7.95
ea. Sq. and T.G. edga.
6. Painted metal rDQflng and siding, 38' wldelengthl, tram 4' to
30' 29 gOIIiiO- $39.95 oq. 26 guage $45.00 sq. 2 trallor toads.
9. Over 5000' pes. of paneling and llle board In siOCk. 3000 pes
on dlaplay. From 3/8thtck solid oak to 5/32 mlndy board. t2 to
15 pettams of bath paneling. Prices lrom 5132 Autumn oatc
mindy board $2.99 11. to 3/8 Golden Oak all 081&lt; wood $24.95.
10. 1/4'x''x8' unfi- Luan plywood· $9.B5.
·
11 . 114'li,'IB' tempered hlrdboard underlayment $8.95 ea.
12. Alao have 1/4" oak and birch unfinlohed plywood. Lowest
prices in town.
t 3. &lt;18' Aluminum leYel. Rag. $8.95, Now a4.98 ea.
14. Foam lnaulaflon board 4'x8' 318" thick $2.50 ea l/2"·a4.B8
3/4"·$5.98ea. 50pc lift~ lift~ oft per pc. Foil on one Side.
I5. WMe fibelglaal bath tubs, Reg. $89.98 now $59.95. No
AllUms.
·
t6. 4' and 5' Acrylic and flbelglass , _ . $99.95. Bone only.
17. WMe and colOred tub e1tower1 $1118.95.
18. Whirlpools from $399.95 to $1495.95: Corner whirlpools
$995.00
19. White, wall hung tavitorys, 20"xl6". Reg. $39.95 Now
$9.95.
20. Padellallavltorys. Rig. $69.95 Now $19.95
21 .Mixed colors pedesallavltorys. Reg . $811.95 Now St3.95
22. Bldetatn 3 colo&lt;S Reg. $89.95 Now $19.95
23. 1 pc. commodes Reg. St99.95 Now $99.95
24. 2 pc. commodes Rag. $811.95 to $89.95. Now $49.95 to
$811.95. Mlxmatched cotots. $39.95 ea.
25. Exterior vinyl plastic shutters. Several size and colors. Save
haH.
28. 50 Ill. box palet !'1111. Rag. $29.95 Now $6.95.
27. Nu'"""f stock trees and ohrubs 45% oil reg . prices.
26. &amp;'IIB'Iinotuem
$19.95 Now $7.95 or 21or

Bidwell Auction HouH
TUeaday November 4 7:00 pm
Open Tues 1 O:oo am to 6 pm lor consignments ·
Early consignments phone
367-0416
388..()458
367-7902
Antiques, collectibles, glassware, old tools,
much more.

Auctioneer Cm. Stanely
Apprentice Auctioneer Larry Saxton.

Public Auction
Fri.

Nov. 14, 1997, 5:30p.m.
LoCated at Southern Local High School on St. Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio
·
"School BUHt"
2 • 1982 (.H . 345 engine, 5 speed, 65 passenger, air
brakes, 90001 front axle &amp; 16,000N rear axle (can
drive away)
11
Miec"
washer, dryars, refrigerators, duplicator &amp; Thermo fax

Auctioneer: Dan Smith
Cuh

Poaltlvt

J.D.

Ohio 1344

Bl on tlmel

(614) 446-7112
30 Amouncemenls

Smity Runyan

houu
divided
Into two
manto, ronial
potential,
ti'lo aport·
In ont
ond rtnt othtr, 120,000 OBO,
both In Vltago ollllddl-~ .,..
8112·22tl0.
Will Conoidtf lond Contract With
Down Poymont,
3 Bodroomo,
2
Baths,
1.1 Acres,
Surer NICII
Southwestern Schoo Dlalrlcl,
lt4-31D-Mtl7.
320 Mobile Homea
. for Sale
t2'x48' Kirkwood, 2 Btdroomo,
Eloctrl&lt;, Nowlr Painted, Etc.
13,800, at4·24S.II448.

For Solo. et4-441.0722.

1172 14x72 2 ~ 1 81th,
Now Furnoco, ffonch Doort, Ba~
Window, 13,500, OBO, lt4-251-'
Q220

.
tll78 t070 Bud~Nico Condttlon, On Rented t, 8U·44t·
t327, at4-4411·2805.
t983 Countrr Cl.111ic Nauohua 2
Badroomo, Oardon Tub, NtwTr
Rtmodtltd, E1collont CondiUon,
••,ooa oao. 114·3111-IIDI, &amp;14;1.()803. 11uo1 Soot
t8a4 t4170 Shultz homo,
largo living room and kltchtn
(dlohwuhor), llr....•co In living
room, - •-•,o"om
..., c-hat air,
YWU
....
vorr good condl~on, call at•·
Dls.3308or8t4-742-2831.
t885 t4x70 Wlndoor, $g4gg,
at4·1192·311840flt-!illl3.
tiiU Clayton 14170 3br, 1 bath,
.,_1 pqmp, otovo, now rolrltonc·
tor, oood oond. $t2,IIXI ~ ·
tD82 Clo- t 41115 2br, t bath,
tiC, oond. $t0, 500. Call 304•
175-3000. 8am-~.
ttl94 Sultan Dolu1&lt;t t 4i 72 2 IJocl.
room, 2 aatho, Rofrlgorotor,
Rongo, Eloouic Heat Pump. And
tOxt 2 Dock, Call Allor 5 P.ll.
Gt.....a.3153.
2 Botlroomo, Gordtn Tub. E~eollent Condidon, On A Priua• Rtnlod lot, Overlooking A Pond.
120,000,1t4-44W714 Call Atttr
4 pm.

Homo In countrr with 31o&lt;rtt,
only 7 roaro old, with two bad·
,...... lvtno room. kltchon bath,
utility room, otoragt building, with
cellar, one cat garago. Locotod
on Btloy Run Road, 811 houll on
left. Reduced 185,000 firm, call Olacount Mobile Horn. Pllrla I
8t4-384-2097orlt4-D4D·283&amp;
Acctuorloo, Vinyl Skirting
12gus. Anchors $5.00, AwnHou11 end property, oppra1. 4a· lngo. Oooro, WI-., Plumbing
CrtJ.~ ow tor hl)qlt. liNch S.pplifo. Wotar Htttart. Fumoc-

CuoiOmlkiUtDouiii-IOvtrPic" ~~=·-so-a-.
250 AYlllablo Ootlono,- • ...., .. _ ~
T11t Flo« Pion, \lou C-otTt.. - . _
- 81. AL 1111,
p rI••· Tho uoo nd• l toa T~·
- · l ••• T•-·
·-· t 1111• F"'"' •"~no.
01l1tr Colotom lkllk- FIG- Co1Nior5P.II.It_1_t.
lOrY Dktcl. No ll~mon . 104'13UIOI.
RUJTAL S
Doublowldt On Lond t250 Do-1_:____::;::;:___
pooltRtql*ed.304-731-72lll.
410 Houa11 for Rent
Doublowldts lluot Got t,eg~ 1~.;:.,.:..:::.==::...:,;:.:.,:::.:;::;:,,.,
Filed Rail On
Botlraom
._On
IROn
7 PIOI
:304-::..;731,::.:,3«11::;;
._S41tcttd
_ _ _llodtls,
_ _ 211o.:
3 Bodroom
fiGmt
Rae1coon Rood 1500/llo.; 2 Bedroom
Froo air froo otclr~ t4170 3 bod- Homo On Edge Ollown 1500/
room, .t ,0551down, 1181/mo. llo.: No Pout, Rtllroncu &amp; DtCol.;;:..t;..;.-..e=,;.;_t.;,
..~m-."':':'-::--:--: I E-.
poolt Required,
Rtal
Inc. It 4 uaWloomon
~4t
FrH air, frM lkirt, 1Gx80 3 or .t
bedroom 11,350/down, 12illllmo. 2 Botlroom In -lllvon,
Col HID0fi1-e777.
=:':.o. 110'·771·1111 leave
' Lara• -don of uaed horntL 2
or :J bodrao,.., Statdng ati:ZWS. 2 Btc1raotn Houoo, 8-. Rof1toOulck dallvorr. Colt au-3111· ttator Fumlolttd. laMia.. Pilil
11121.
·I t 50 Dot&gt;ooiL au ua 3170.
2 or&amp;3otclrtlrog,
NEW 14with
xao IIC
BEOROOIIS.
~
gara... In
camea
St 7W 2 bedroom,
304-11175-7
341
mo. FREE DELIVERY. Call for !:;"""'*":;;:·.:
· :::;:;:::~·;;;;;;;;:;;;;;
mora Into 304-755-5111.
2.3 badraom houuln l'ot011cOj,
001 lurnoco, - cor 01,.00,
Now IHI t4l70 thrH bodnlom. 1400, at4-742-2317.
lncludto
monthl FREE
rant. 3 bedroom hoUH, l5001m0. 0.
lnclud11I lklrting,
dtiUIIlotlliPI

-n.

r•r
Cat 1·

N-•w 28180 3 or 4 bedroom.
"
UII.DIIS. Frot dtllvorr. 1·SuO·
llllt-8777.

QUIET COUNTRY SETTING &gt;Mth
boauUtut mobile homo, forced to
aoll. FINANCING AVAILABLE.
304·755-5885.
SlrtQIO Fortnt Progrom. Whr Rent
Whtn You COn Own. Spoclal Fl·
noncing mllabll, 304-131!-72115.
TIRED OF WEST VIRGINIA movlng to Taus, ..,., ooll ~mt
nowt "'"lor Sid-· -·
-·340 Buslnesa and
•
Build...,.•
• .,...
FO&lt;mtt Trucking Compon, Build·
lng For Ront 0&lt; Salt: Acron
F10m Thomas Do·lt C'"ttr, II&lt;·

Aparunon~

CIOH To Sleeping rooms whh cooking.
Watmor~ conotructlon Workoro AIIO Ulltlf IPtCt on ri'f'er. All
hook·upa. Call otter 2:00p.m. ,
W I IW11, .......251S.
304-l'J'3.11!1t,llaaon WI/,

2 ladroom Woblla Home, 81•·

Efficiency On Eaatern Av111111,
Woshor &amp; Dryet, Utltl~tt Po ld,

4. ?Sa?.

2 Bochom Traltr t2'•r Eltc~lc
"'IOOOnOnt"·· Ron
~ Pt. "'-'l

460 Space tor Rent

1400, lt .........2fit I.

7::.-.:;,oL

Furnlllttd EHicltncr. All Utltltltt
Paid, Shiro Bath, 1t15111o.. llt8
- - ·. : 114-448·
2 ltd,.., Trtlltr Fot Rent, lt4- 3045.
441-(1722.
Ora'ciouo llvlrtQ. t ond 2 bedroom
2 a-~-m •-•;,. ~·- &amp; li,.·•
"• - ~· aportmon• at Villtgo llano&lt; and
"-ld, NO PETI, Ntar l'l&gt;rtor, Rlvoroldt Aportmonll In Mlddt•
lt4-31a-t100.
porL From $231·1304 . Call lt4·
ag2·5054. Equal Housing Oppora-•·
2 ..... oomo, 1220/llo., lncludol· turidot.
Water, I tOG Depoalt, No Pets,
Pllct, IU 4413437.
Modern ' BedrDom Apartmanl,
2 Btdraomo, 'l'ord, llllltl Stato lt4•44143110.
Routt 211, Oollipollo, 1200/llo., Ntco t btdroom turnllht&lt;l, 2 uUII·
I tOO Dtpoolt, Wator Included, tleo pold. No poto. No omoktro.
a1 .. 211N'/el, at4-25e-1337.
11215/m13f14-17S.2851.
1120 Fourth Avanuo, 2 Bedroom
Traitor, Watot Pold
lt-t.OSI3.

1300/llo.,li~~~~~~~~tn~ll~ld;·

l!!roo~mo,~~·-~~!·~·~Dtpa!.__-~~"-"'

1
1
I ~....,=...:..'or:.:...;R~en:.:..::t:.....__,_

Nice 3 Badroam Ranch, Larg•

t and 2 bedroom aparlmlnll. fur·

7D7-4345. ,,. 441.ati7D.

350 Loti &amp; Acreege
PIICIPEATY FOR lALII
a-·tllul·
Silt On,.__
---•
Road In Clolllpalla. 0nt llllt From
Propootd Now Galllpollo Cltr
Schooll And t/2 IIIIo Form "1ltt
lloadowo.• Ont Aero 11/l, No
llobllo Ot St&lt;tloclol Homo&amp; Will
Contldor Land ContraC~ Pllono:
at4-448-4543.
llinllarm, building IIIII. p&amp;IIUr·
tland, g,tt ocm. 11'111 llulldlno.
3badraoms, banmont, goncgo.
8t4-84Wt27or304-175-4&amp;11.
Wonted to bu•·
In """'•
'
.....,.
County, prtltrlbly eiga LDca1
School Dls•lc~ at4·11D2·5053 I~
tor lpm.

490
For Lease
For rent·30x50 brick building for
butlntn on Rl 2 near locka in
Applt 304-571-21142.
r.H.RCHANDtSE

510

51168.

Appl ianc11:

RaCDndl tioned

eo

Day Guaranlet l

Waahera. Oryera.

gratora,

Rang~~,

Comfort. convcnicm:c,
cnerg y
· c f ficicrtcy,
durabilily and ncxihility
in design arc a few uf
the reasons why 2,000
families will build • log
home this year!
Ap.pa l a ch ia n Log
Struclures has been a
leader in lhe log hme
industry for ove r 15
years. Choose from ove r
70 slandard models or
we 'll custom design one
for you.
Call or wrile for more
informalion.

Log
Structures, Inc.
Dept. GOT,
P.O. Box 614

Appalachian

Household

Goads
Retri-

Fronch Cltr Maytag, 6t4·446·

WV 25271

77115.

Ripley,

Anorted ml1c. houHhold lurnl-

1-800-458-9990

tu'e Including bed'ooma, lamps,
P'lnta and mlrro,., vtry good
condition, lt4-1185o36e7.

li~~~~~~~E~Io~ct~rl~&lt;,
8 t 4·

Out lkllkllna 145Mio., Rt,_ nlolttd and unturnlalttd, oteurity
a Dopoolt lloqukod, No tnildo dopooll roqulred, no poto. lt4·
l""~ti,~Col~_!lt~4-:311~1~1~&amp;5~-~ IMI2·22tl.
Nlco omatl 2btdroom houN, lo· 1 Bedroom Apottmtnt On Flrot
d b81 ld 0 NOW Hl"tn
-dt
Avenue, a I 111 potl I, 1250I 11 o.,
cato
•
•··
IChool u 2tvmo 304-17Htt7
....
llopoott.&amp;t4-448-t0111
·
·
•
I
·
Nloo two bodroom houn In l'b· t Bedroom Ntar Holzer, WiD
moror With buomont and now Hook-Up, Clot Hta~ 12611/llo., +
,.;.-._ 1350 ptt month pluo •
Utllltlol, No Fota, lt4-441·21157.
pa-~ opdon 10 t&gt;ur with-.
ao on con~act within 1 JHI, no 2 -tmont In Pornoray,
lt4-llllll-7244.
utiiiUoo potd, no poll, lt4·1182·
l'l&gt;moray, io7 Plnoont Rldgt, 3
bedroom. t and hill batlw, Ut2
plul depoaiL caiiiYtnlnga 1148118-1002.
Single Btdroom Houoo For Rtn~
llooon Woot Vltglnlo ArH, Utilidoolncluded, S30Mio., 114·251·

t.arga butlntll apo~ lor ,.,. ar
iMS~ g&lt;Ht l ..rolront lnd winciOWI, whtolchal&lt; accoulllla, to.
North Second Annue, Mlddl•
port Contoot ChtltiJ, It 4·DII2·
4514 dara, I..YI mesaaga or
at4-·211t l'OYoningL
Uobllo homt oltt ovollalllo bot..
ween Altlens and Pomtf'oy, can
8t4-38S.4317.
Trailer lot for rent. refalences required. 304-115-t071.

lloblla Han

2 Btdraomo, CA, · - · Pluo tltctrlc. a1 ..742-2803.
Dtpotl~ No Poto, HouN: 3 Btd· 440
Ap rtment

Com*:k ADad, 114+441-8272.

=

Ellicltnq'

-lnt:IUdod.lt4-1102-2ta7.

two-"""'·

NEW BANK REPDS, ONLY 3
LEFT. 304-75S.7t8t.
NEW DOUBLE WIDE REPO,
never lived ln. Owner flnonclng
-oblo. 304-755-SS..
Oakwood 28158 3 bedroom, 2
bath, otar~n11 at StU ptr mo.
Cal t-800-BIIt-11777.

2 &amp; I boclroom mobllt homoo
1210-13()0, _.,, wottt and

2

..
ROOIIII

for Rent

Far Rtn~ lt4-4411tm.AL 1
ThrH bedroom mobile homo, no ~~~~:::~
-114-1112·5151.
li 'l:~:!=~~~
potlt.3:)4-176-1371 •
T,.iltr In Tupper1 Plaint, $200
3 bedroom. 1400/mo. Dopotlt. por month P~• deposit I utilltloo,
304-875-4tl18itovomoo:8.:..:":..:•:::..7·::34::87:..;._ _ _ __
~
Hoult 1 lloblla Homo For Rtnt ~oWO btdroom t,.llor tor ttnt In
In Coun~•. Fotrlot Area, Rtlor· Roclno, lt4-ill2·503tl.
'
In c
on:o.. llopoott.
a1..-J11U.
Two mlloo outsldt ol Rudond on
ountrr
Houtt I T,.llor For Rtnt: Troller: Cromoona Rt.,
totol
~~: ~~:

and lttup. Only .187.08

"'"eoon~7~t075

~lto;tm;III~~44~0~A;:IP:M;;b::iilj:ntl;:=::::;i¥,450;;;=~FII'II~III;;;il ~d~~=LO~;;!G~H::O:M:::::E:S:;-

tor Rent

No

Reel Eetate General

Tara Townhouse Apartmanta,

Vory Spacious, 2 Bodroomo, 2
Floort, CA, 1 t/2 Bath, Fullj Cat·
pttod, Adult Pilot 1 Babr Pool,
Potlo, Start 1350/llo. No Pots,
Lt&amp;M Plut StcuriN Dtpoolt Ro·
''
qulr-•,
- l .t4·448·3481, lt4·448·
OtOI.
·
Twin Rivers Tower, now accepting

applicadona for 1br. HUO aublid·
lz~~~- for aldtfly and hindi·
co
EOH 304-B75-867D.
Up&amp;181rt 2bt apt tor rwnt ~-875-

2532.

2bdrm. opto .. total Oltotrlc, lp- 450
Furnished
plianca furnlahtd, laundry room
~-Ill"- doll to -~1 · tow
Rooms
- _.,
- - en
n.
AppllcaUono ovoltll&gt;lo at: Village
a.- Aptl. t411 Of ~llat4-IID2· Klngl Motel Lowest Ratti In
Town, Ntwly Remodeled, HBO.
37tt.EOH.
Clnamu , Showlima &amp; Dlaney.
1.a9.
107 second Avenu .. 1 Bedroom, Weeld, Ratas, Or L4onthly Rales,
UUIIdH Fold, 128&amp;-llo., lt4-44t· Conatruction Workers Welcome
Two bedroom houu and ont 0573.
lt4-44t-5688, 8t4-44t-5t87.
bodraom aportmtnt In lllddloport,
Aportmtnto For Ront On Flrot
11 4-11112.2t18.
-.a14-441-822t .
Two bedroom houaa with otovo
--• -• '•
dt It
kod BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT
~N ,~r,.trator, pat ' BUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON
2
8
no lntldt pots, t4-111 -30111.
ESTATES, 52 Wootwood Drive
420 Mobile Homes
tram $280 to $334. Wolk to shop
&amp; movloo. Colt at4·446·2568.
for Rent
Equll Houtolng ()pportlnUr.

RIO GRANDE SPECIAL
Approximalely 42 1/2 acres on State Route 588
adjoining Bob Evans farm. Woods, pasture &amp;
cropland surround this 4 BR 3 bath sectionally
home. The home was built in 198B &amp; features LR ,
kitchen with appliances, family rm, dining rm &amp; much
mare. You'll love the view from a high knoll
overtaoking Rio Grande.

BLACKBURN REALTY 446·0008

1216S traitor, 2 btdraom, 1250 Downottlrs Aportmon~ 4 Roo,.,
ptt montlt, cal 8t ..742-27tot.
Wottr Fold, NO PETS, 8t Cedot
SrMI, a1..__ttOO.
·
t4k80 T,.u •• 2 Btdraomo, W/0, I:::::::.:.::..:::.;,;:::~--­
largo LR. l'l&gt;rch, AC. a1,·251-. Nice oM Bedtoom Unlurnlohed
Olt04Doc.4(RolaroncHI Avllltlblo 111 Aptttmont. Ringo I Rtgrlgorator
p ldtd. watar &amp; G ba Pa' d
'av
at 01 I ,
t4170 t,.lltr, 2 baclcoom, UOO Deposit Rtqutrod, Calllt4-446·
pw month. cal 8t .. 742·27t4.
4345 Altar 6 P.ll.

SL,f'Dmorar0H.304-882·2077.
ll,
tlbtrglaoo
Stopo,
Colllt4·1.,_
_ _ _ _=======~=::~======::=:.----,
411·11418
BtMttt'l
Supply,
t3Dt
Kitchin. dining room. 2 bedroom. SoHord School Rd, Oaillpollo,
bait\ lvtng coom, inlnl I back ~~~~~

ONo.

ltngll pwchoo, II"' turnoct, city
water, oul build1ng, ga,age, 112 Display Ooubfewld" IHSI Down
milo Eatt or Raclnt, lt4·11411· lncludtl Dtlluory. Sot-Up, &amp; Tu·
2tt8.
.. 304·1'30-34011.

205 North Second Ave.
OH

Henry E. Cleland Jr ..992-2259
Sheni L. Hart ............ 742-2357
Kathleen M. Oeland 992-6191
Office ••••••..•••••••..•.•••.•.•992-2259

BARRINGER RIDGE ROAD-.Approx. 4.10 acres with most
of H In prllly yard that haa loiS of pertnlal flowers. Comes
wHh a 2 bedroom mobile home wHh a~ additional buill-on
bedroom. Has an equipped kitchen, c~nlral air, storage bldg ..
3 porches and a small ga&lt;age. $32,000
~.

•

'

ABSoLUTELY... POSITIVELY... NO DOUBT .
ABOUT IT...

Love your wife·

THIS IS A BARGAIN: 2 houses, 1 low price$88,000 buys you 10 acres, partially wooded with
lots of frontage along Rat;eoon Creek. Good stze
bam 2 other outbuildings and a mobile home lot
'
..
set up. Oldar house has 2 BAs, ltvtng room,
kitchan. Newer house (buill in 1991) has 4 BRs, 2
1/2 baths, sunken living room, eat-in kitchen. Both
houses naed a little work, but, man o'man; this is
as good as It getsl (Sorry for sounding excited,
but we arelll) Do Not Hesitate, It Won't BB There!

North 5th Avo· A 2 sial'! house complelety
and looks new upatalrs and a large living room with
carpel, dining room, Irani porch, large ulllity room, and
$35,000

Sad~

30 AMOI.IIC8111111ta

S8Je

4 Bidrooma, t t/2 Btllo LR, DR.

2230 HONEYSUCILE IAIIE, WELLSTON, OliO

PUBLIC Alma•

Throt bod room hOUII In srra·
cute, basement, earagt, new
wlnctowo, dock ond 111 (OIIIOdoied
lntldt, lt4-742·t345, 8t4·11U·
Itt I .
Throo bedroom, bath. !Mth 3 vac·
ant toto, 2 ato lovot, IICtlltnt
building potonUal, S40,aaa OBO:

,._,_,____..__ I t2xeo 2 Bedroom Uobllo Homo

Apprentice William Moodlapaugh Ohio 7388
Caah
Polltlve I.D.
Rlfrelhmenta

Word perfect and
to

Look whos

Ohlo1344

knowledge of
Lotus; and be able

Th~=!'!'co~~not

take consignments
C.W. Stlnlet AuctlanHr
Check's or check with 10
Cell for further Information
446 3228 or 448-1884 eftlt 6:00 pm
Nor responsible lor accidents or loss of property

working

Hted AppUcan(l Need To Send

orfa'n, tw any Intention to
make 8nf such preference,
Imitation or disCrimination.•

Sill and Auction

Consignment Auction

11 o Help wanted

T-haArbors at

• All real estattldYartillng In
this newspaper ~ aub)Oct to
tho F-at Fair Housing 11c1
or t 968 which mokoo k 111eg01
to actvertlse •any preference,
Hmltatlon 01 alscrlminltJQn
baaed on race, ooiQf, roiiOion,
aex famiHal status or na110na1

ac:tvenlsements for real estate

6133 St. Rt. 1110
3 miles North of At 35 at Evergreen. We alao

RECEPTIONIST

l.lkl _a l
_..,.ty-!04
lloln 5t. tot foOr _ . . tiiXI

oq.ll.looropoco, tll1d lklor .....

·

. Public Sale 111d Auction

o.;;;.,

ogoor-

r•

shredders, dishes, clacks, flsh aqilarlum,
sheMng, doors, juke box, chain saws, tools, and
other Items to many to Jist.
Blach'l Auction Hou11

For

SUBSTITUTE WOIU!ERS For
II Programo In Golia And-1111111

Team Vision

Earn extra money tor Chrillmll. 12fi lltinf Mnuo, Golllpolla, OH
sell Awn, caU61•-swe-aocKI.
4!1831.

Knowledge ot aatery Practices

fo&lt;tivo wQfklng rtladonahlpo &gt;Mth

l

auma• u•·•

Wtok, Stnd Rooumt To: CLA
4t2, Clo Gllllpolto Dalir Trlbuno,

195.

l"'--••----·l-'
Job_,_ ....

Frkliy, November 14, 11187

came: 1·800· 2a7-8947, Acceaa Hroltnlot NHdtd t Dor Per

woluallon IOCIViqutl

and

""*"'

COICI- II

-_820-8
__

Public

Orivort OTR: Noad 5 COL CillO
Alo Start lnvn., Good Ptty, Oood
Home Time, Sunday Caller Wei-

Knowledge or countellng and

pro,Kures; ablllly to wori.
self By Submining Your Resume undor .... tot conddonl
With Your Work Hi atory An(j Ex- Ability 1o maintain recordil and
. perience To Sands Hill Coal Co.,.
prep~~• roudna reporll
Inc., Attn. : •Jab Opportuniry,· P.O. A!JIUty ., dtuolop ond molnllln tf.

. Box 650, Hamcltn, OH 45834. No
. Tol4phont caua Pleaoa. w. Offer

.....

·-·-..

Speclsllzed Skllla and Knowl·
Mana;ament end

IPAVAOI.L CLERK

=-=..:7.:·::-::::,_____ ,.

,..._'IN_

Col ICon BOQ.3K.1045
Wu' r tdaiEverinQI
800.aii3-61D2

ca1ion

odgo

X

Of-.._.
,.-.,..t

0001;1 FREIOIIT
Home Uoat Wtaliandll
Up To .34C Pat~
GoodBonofltol
eor-doiWal
CDL·A &amp; t Yr. OlR Eltfl.

pllctllont It Friday, November Two ,earl IUI)IIYilory aa:ptrl-

EEO EII'!&gt;IOror.

•

Wll do........., ..., Of ......., Equipment. Two Working Gldo I
-·•
'""'~ Oood CHnttlo. GrHtlocatlon,
good ralortncn :104-a71-23U 1,0
~~~~p,~-~~t~I~I~II~02~t4.~--

420 lloblll

2.01 aoroo 1m1 out on landl!lll
- . lti,AXID. 31M47f.31tl.

..... Down-.

Dovolopment Dlroctor FOf llulti·
Countr Fomllr PtiiMino A -.

W"lla!TII, Human FWaource Man- a:OOo.no.

t 4, t8117 5:00 P.IA. For Addidonol

'"'*lltf to ..... ....__
IoriO,-. to holD......_ -

W.ll - -

350 Lola I AcrHgl

for

HARTS IIASONARV . Brock,
lomot .... Roolty
llflclt &amp; · - - -· ~- ·~7 •••t
ptrionc...";'.';.O--J:.'~ 1 _..,__,Of •• · . . _ 1Nt 3lW' ooma, ._.
- 1 - a:oa..,., 111 Job ., more,
_ , rica , _ ,
omalortoBta. W\L0212DI
2.-51-2.....,_-.
....... -.....,._~
llvl~ton's baNmtnt wottr· &amp;. _
proo ,allbaoomtnlrtpalro s.ar.~..._old_
4ono, rH tltlmatoo, lllotimo laM, 31ttd
21lalll. t.lilou•,.,••· 1avro on
~ant~
anct.304-1'1Wt4&amp;.
4.CriiiCrtoilllcl-t-cltW

Rat!-.

• Al&gt;l&gt;iicon~J FOf Thlo l'btltlon IA•r I:OOun.-I:OOp.m., I:OOp.M.• EOEIESP
' Submit A R11urne To Jeannl•

: Information Ca1181•·44t ·:)Ol0,
· 8:00 -5:00 P.L4., Uondiy Thrv Fri·
day. Access To Human Rt·
' nurce Development It An AAI

2:

WI hlut
traoh · a35l ExcotlonLlooatlono 11 ,200 +
piclotptoad.304-175-Wkty =tloiiAin UK lrwott
Roq, t
t 7+130 En I553A
FAIIOUI IIILLIONAIIII·MAK·
::;::::::::;::::::;:::;::;:;~ EA ROYoalo E1ciGng Now Woro
210
Bullnlll
To Eorn 50-tOOK A'llat Faotl24
Hr.llog.eaa-573-0015.
7111.
Opportu
Jly
180 'W8iia.d To Do
n
FREE
Port·Time Holp In Rtllll Don't Lot Tho High Prtcoo Of $1 OWN PAYPHONEI 1$
CASH
Clolllpollo, Sand
$t50K Yoartr Pori. Ortot Slttt
QRANT11
Rtouma, P.O. Boot 14t, Gtl~ollo, Sttvtcing, KHp 'lllu Sttowed Un· AvaU. Coil Nowt t·I00-800·3470
Colftgo. SCholcll1lipt.
dar
Colt
E
I
II
And
Wt
WNI
Ott
Oli45131.
~~~~--BilL
'lllu Roady fOf Tho Souon, Wltll 24 Hro.
R-ptionlot nH&lt;Ied lor tao1 A Ptlco fhot 'Will Bo Plea-.
- AAAOMElNI CARDS~=
pactd oHict. Abllltr to hlndla 114..U1·1231 F'" Eatlmalet.
l'l'ior\tia114&amp;K
PIT
..
ttOK
FT
No
t
-2tl-tl000
En 0- 28t,,
EM~
StiUng, _,.,, Provided. llorv·
~
rttut,,lplt
..... projocto.
-&amp;IOnl...
E1cklng
and
lcol.tit:al Storoo. IU50 lrwoot· Local vending Roulo For Salt.
chollonglng wark. Working FIH!IItln ·_.,, raftnloh lltd
mont Stcurad &amp; Oulc:kly Rt· Earn Big s, lluot Sail Coil Now.
ltnowltdll
..,-.,
.... - -Shop,
.........lorrr
Ohio tumod.
--~
V.IIIJ
Rtllnlolllng
(Word
I E•cell a muaL
···eoo-n1-314,...
--~
lind ....... to ... Al-Oe, ,., PNipi, It 4110U678.
·YENDINO: Not Gat Rich Quick I
Plouont Root-. 200 llaln 8L. Gaorou l'l&gt;nablo Bowmtl, don't
OHIO VALLE~ISHINB CO. Thlo II Prolltablt, Solid Simplt.
.... raw toao lo . . rNI just olll rtcommonda thot rou do bull· _FrH
7_82._ _
__
- ___
lac,.tarr IRtcoptlonloL Down· 104475-t"',
noll with pooplt you know, ond
IOWn O&amp;ilpollo. lluot Ba E1porl· ProiHolonol T111 Strvlco, Stump NOT to oond monor tlvough thl 220 Money to Loan
onoed Will AI Ollco Skillo, ..a until you hlvt lnvtltiQated
rotarr • PO Bo1 U4, Ooillpollo, Removal, Free Eadmallal In· .. oltarlro,
NEED ALOAN? Apply The Euy
·....
llldwoll,
011-t.
.....,.,
.,.70t0.Oltlo. 8t4-388- :::.:;;::::.!~------1 war -ar Phone. Friendly loan,
tn •-381 8835.

Dorton. OH 4~t.

Fln1nae A.aaletanl lAccounti: Appllcotlono ,.., onl' bl tbtalned .,_ filii rt(umOd to tho
. _ A Pilot Hlgll School Dooroo Athtno Olllot ol lht .OIIIo luIn Accounting 01" Equivaltnl E:.· rHU· of Employ ..... l Sarvlcll
ptrltnce And lfllnlng. Previous complete Jolt de~erlplloDI era
Experience ln Computerized Ac· anllebte lor nvllw al till
counts Rec.ivablt, Client Billing. OBEI Olllco. Tilt 4u411no lor

·

IIIIth oiiiNo, ablilt1 to handle
a-, ....Ileal ICtlvltr lltd lilt
=·Tttifto. Ett,trltnct with
114 441
- . . : : . .~"lf:'c'U..~ .
Now accopdng ap=dono lor Pllctzaa llaln SL,
ltltclttn ' WlitrHI
LaCanl- PtPI
1WVno llotrtcan RtltaufiiiL 304-175-

••l*'lenc'

Receivable: Applicants Wust

...... , 't ' OH -

Pomeroy • Middleport • G•lllpoll•, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

_:230~~P~iof~ll~l~lone~I~131~0[]Hol~m~
1~1~for~SI~11~~3~20~M4~o~lbi=II~Hoi=IM;;I
Slrvlcl1
Sill

BuUII..

Wtttt .., a talllttlt ~
1111 Will Cate For Elderly at4-2450t-llll Dell; "D-. aa
· ::=:•~-----....-- Boautr Tonlllno laton Wtth

wrUt II.[ Rood, P.O. 801 181,

ACCESS To Humon Roaourct
O..olopmont to Acctptlng Appli·
cdono For Tho Following Po~·
tlon:

210

Ill, .... !141111r To: CLA

An Ohio olt ........., ...
lUll poroon - I n 1he _ ,
arM. ~"'of

Help Wllltld.

110

, , . W..Jed'lbDo

Opportunity

a D'o Au10 Pallo. lklrlng Ml· - llVI Chriltmoo caoiL Col ... --lnThoG 5t I
= c l t l Stint pena. 304- alii&lt;
a1101 Wed dvu Sat. No u · ArM. Rtcllrdlt&amp;l 01 Ettpttltc•o.
perltnce necenary. Sowthlork Wrlll M.A. RMcl. P.O. Bo1 Ill,
- l i l t 304-115-SM.
~Oiio-1
U.li-'LOY!.'f rlT
AVON I AU AtHI I SlllriiJ
SER 111Cf S
~304-e~t-

J

HllpWiiitld

Sunday, November 9, 1817

I SiiAiliY COVE RO· Middlepo~ Looking tor hunting land or

''

.

..

.

.

k~-

Home
or
Aetlrwnent Home located at 384

Debbie Ori'Je, this well mai ntained
ranch offers all you need ' •
living · room with fireplace,
kitChen, 2 bedropms,
laen~orfic·• . t t/2 baths, t car
and a new roof makes Ut~s
one worth se~ . Pr1ced to
at S74,WO nu

#212

secluded homesite. 36 acres or wooded property with a
homesite $22,000
·

1

.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC. ·

~~~~~: 10RUN
RD· Approx. tO acres or woodland. Good
build a home or cabin. Waler and elec:tric

(614) 446-3644

. $10,000
HTS.· A 1 t/2 sloi'J home with a large rear deck , a
, &amp; a nice back yard. Hes 2 to 3 bedrooms,
kitchen, and a chain link fenced front yard. Heating
&amp; root new tasl year. $315.000
·

lci~LANI~ RID- Langsville 60 acres of lovely rOlling land 7 t/2
It in hay· many beaulllul homeeUes some oak and
I waln;~t trees all minecal rights Included $50,000 or buy 30
for $25,000.
·

IP'OMEROY·4 Wehe
Terrace· 2 corner lots and a two story
rooms and 1/2 bath down &amp; 3 bedrooms ·and a
ODe

up. Has o newly remodeled kHchen and main bath
newer roof. Beaulilul fireplace, wrap·a&lt;ound porch and
I freciCt doors. $40,000

r..,. of carpet ..-Dinllw•ny

Ilea• cln••tl.

Lincoln Drive· A 1 1/2 story home'thal has been
l ~~:~~~i;remodeled
and hos 3 bedrooms. one bath, dining

eeu• tlrteua.

:~=:.•

I

lraat ·llllerlcan

a nice front sitting porch. Has central air and it

aa rt it 11 in lhe counti'J. Quiet and on a road with low
Great place for a family. $42,000

I

no• Care Canter

:~~~~=~4thliving
St.· A 2 1101'/ home wilt1 3 bedrooms, 1 bth,
and dining room with newer c;:arpet in

i
and cltnlng room. Has a large back yard lhal has
grapes , strawbarrtes, and blackberi'J bushes. House haa
newer vinyl siding and roof. Also a delached garage.
ASKING $35,800

1144414-

AUCTIONEER: LESUE LEMLEY

Rutland American Legion ·

614 388 8443 or 614-2,.11058
Boncllcl by St. of Ohio
Clsh/Approved Check
Food Available
Owner: John Bragan, Sr.

Gun Shoot

UcenHd and

Beech Grove Road
Rutland, Ohio
Starting Sunday, Nov. 16th
1:00 p.m.
Door
•

1275Great location! Reduced ·Price!
Talk to us about this .
located jusl off SR 7. This
piCturesque setting offers a stocked pond on 6 acres m/1.
Large living rm. w/flreplace, large family rm. w/lireplace, 2
8R balh attached ga&lt;age, addt'l bldg. FREE GAS. Price
red~ io $65,000. Talk to us about lhis one!
RACINE· Best Buy In lhe Counlyl This home offero
atmosphere· 3 fireplaces &amp; beautiful woodwork .
Downstairs In LR. Or, Kit, ully &lt;m, 2 BR and 2 lull balhs.
upstairs you'll find 3 aR &amp; 1 balh. Full basemen!.
Outbuilding. Price has recently baen &lt;educed to only
$54,000. You really muat see lhis 10 oppraciate hi

'Outside Sala • Dress Accordingly"

Not rasponsiblil for accidents or lost property
"Automobiles and guns will sell at naonll
"*Due to this sale, there will be no sale Friday the
14th. Our antique sale will be Friday the 21st. Watch
Nov. 16th for ad.

'

NORTH 2ND AYE· A 2·SID1y lan brick home with 3·4
bedrooms, aunroom, dining room, full basement, and one
balh. Has pocket doors, oak trim, pretty stairway. Lots or
polenlial wllh large &lt;ooms, ho&lt;dwood ftoora, elc. JUST

$38,500

car- ol Gtn. Horltngar l

High St.· AbeautiiiJI groaey lot
ready lor your new home or whatauer. The lolls 7D x 91 1/2
and is in a great location. $17,500

DOmE TURNER, Broklr..........................912·set2
JERRY SPRAbUNG .................................. 948-2131
CHARMELE SPRADUNG...........................Me-2131
BETTY JO COWNS ...................................912·2383
BRENDA JEFFERS .........................'.....;......912·'t275

QFFICE........................................................ 9112·2888

I'

12•2· 31831 Lltlher Rd, Rutland· 92 acres nt/1 or nice
land about ha~ tillable and haH woods. Good Hunting.
Good Road. Has batn but no house. Worth much more
that the aaklng price of $72,000. Call us on this one.
1231- SYRACUSE· Owner Says, "Unload lhls houset•
Nice comer lot. 3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, bath,
balemenl. Vln,l siding. Now Alklng $31 ,900· Make an
ofle&lt;· Owner will consider! Why pay your money lo a
landlord when yoo can to Investing In youraeHI
SYRACUSE· Very nice briCk home with I 25 ft. at river
frontage. Thla baeutiful brick home has 3 BR, 2 baths, LR,
DR, large family rm, pella , and nice front porch. Four lola
total 1.4 acres m/1. 1 .year warranty. Price reduced to only
$811,500.

ONE IS GEORGEOUSII Localod on the
ccmer of SR 7 and Locust Grove Road . close
lo Tuppers Plains. llppro1. 1 ac&lt;e with a One
s OI'J Brick Ranch Home. In like new condillon.
3 bedrooms, 2 bathe, fireplace, tully carpeted.
aJundance at closet spece. H.P/C.A.. lull
b 1sement with office and rocreallon room. A
b mer living patio room , 2 car garage. Pavad
a ·ioeway. Much , much , much morel! You Must
See This
~lome .
MAKE YOUR
A'POINTMENT TODAYII PRICE REDUCEO
Yt:AS $129,!51100 NOW $1DS,OOO
POMEROY· Uncoln Height· Cozy Home with 2
bedrooms, bath, carpeted, basement Great
Rental investments. Currently renlad. ASKING
POMEROY: Two story frame- 4·5 bedrooms, $11,000
balho, two wood burning stove plus PRIVATE, QUITE, REMOTE l PEACEFULII
F.A.N.G. heat, carpel/wood flooring .
describes this appro•. 80 Acres ot vacant
BaSement has 1/2 bath and 2 extra rooms. t Ground,
located on Roes Raid. Eleclric &amp; TPC
garage .. Would make a good rental.
Is
close to aile. There are soma very
IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONII ASKING
building sHes. Pl111 an abundence or

Itud&lt;ey oand deer. If you like quite country, THIS

BUSINESS FOR IALE·
YOUIT ASKING 145.DIIC
Located JUII Oft SA t 24· In till hea~ of COli
mining counii'J, Salam Townllltip. The Llttll RACINE· This Is ltll New Cllyton Dream
Buckal CB&lt;I'J Out. Includes all slack tncl Home- 14'72', 3 bedroom, 2 bathe, eet up on a
le&lt;~ulrJmcllll. Sunday Beer Llcenee. 1\pprox. 1 levet comet IOI In town. Equipped kitchan and
Leading Creek walar, eeptlc. At10 a
oth;;.:~res. Call for your showing.
1973· t4' x 70' Mobile Home, apprDK. 1 Aoe
.....,.
VISIT US AT THE INTERNETII
Lot owne&lt; will Sell together or buslnees
Ask tor detalla. Put Yourulf Into
http://WwW.quikpage.com/c/cleland
. :ASKING
\

Slay Home &amp; Law ltl EnJOy tne cozy f,irtplace in the beamed ltving mom,
have all tha famity dinners and bake the cookies In every woman's dream
kl(chen or r~lish the peace and quiet on lhe wrap a round porch. Add •
bedrooms, 3 baths •nd a large family room that wiHaccommodate a pool
18ble plus a second compllla kitchen located on 5.5 woodtKJ acres, /TVI. 1his
hOme Is cenalnty a dream worth pursuing at $159,500. IICM

lB.
"woo

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(614) 446-3644
E-Mail Address: wiseman@zoomnet.net

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555
Lonita McDade • 446· 7729

C1rolyn W15th • 441-1007

Sonny Games 446-2707

�Page D6 •

~.hi en.-.~ ;;"·~I~;=~~~~~P;ome=ro~y~•iM~Idd~le~po;;=rt•~G~a~lll:i::pol~l•~·iO=H~·~P~o~ln~t~P.....
;=~n~t,~WY~~;;.;;;;;=~~~~~S~u~n~d~ay~,~N~o~vem=.be~r~9,;.1;99=7

~Mhold
Goodl

110

1 540

I

MliC.111neoue
lltn:hendlll

j540 llllcelllntOUI

Mtn:hlndiM

~-...,..---.,--,..--;
i1e
ooul-lorn llylo hunler Chock owl our Gao Unvtnlod Wotorllnt Spoc:lal: S/4 100 Pll
lln &amp; wino lvrnlluro: couch, Hoolero (NoiUiol or Proponoj. $21.85 Plr 100; 1" 200 Pll
~•. ••~.
•7• s-r·•ng 11 "104.05. Wo olso $37.00 Pot 100; All Broao Comto.
-- ~- . . ., -~ v
hi';o"Buck srovo Brand ol Gu _..., Flalnao In SIOdl
......
lnllanl Flroploco. Polnl Plus RON EVANS INTEAPIIIS..
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Har-. 30H75-o!Oiol.
JtcbDn. Ohio. 1-.s:l7.f521
Wothtro, dryora, ralrlgoroloro,
ron8oo. Slut8g1 Applt.nc 11, 71 Concrale &amp; Plu~c Sopdc Tonks. White orlckor doy bo!i lor 1111.
VIne S1not, Call114-440·73111, 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron &lt;;ol30ol.t75-5702.
1 - 1110 - ·
Evans EnllrpriiiO. Jacllson, OH Woodburnor so• Klndlewood
Kitchin Corpel SI.ISO Vlnylt5: 1·800-537.0528.
•o 7••,
~ Now Soli For $350, 114llollohon Carpoll, Rt. 7 N.l14· Eloculc nsdrniU $125. Pro-lrom. 2511-1114.
croll ualnlng a•a11m $75. Nor7
""·
'
Building
d~ Trock Houola-$275.
Ski mo· 550
RIVE ASIDE WHOLESALE
chine $20. 304&lt;575-274i
SupplltS
ti4-2M-8118i
I ___...,::::;:::..;.:.:;.;;___
Firewood $30. You pickup. 304· I'
1
lunk Bodo Comp. 1225; SOlo I 87S.2G01.
Block. brick, 1"'" p~oa. wind·
Cl1llr $240; 4 Coun•y Plno Tobit, F -•
lo h "h. gloss door owRa,GIInttl
dttiiOc.HCCioaullo• w,1n2t~"s'
lonch 1 3 Chalro 1235; 7 Pc. or -•·
'0 ran ·
" •· • •
4 mop 74 u~
Cedar BR $708: Ook Curio Ct~ top, 81 •040.20 ·
5121.
1150; Pooory, lle•ican Blankott
Soeal Bulldingo New, Enol-rod
-.._ Eoc.
For .... hlndmodl qullll 1 qulh 40r80r12 Was tl5,500 Balance
1Dpo.l14-040.2071.
9 50
RoU1o 1 Soulh,
FrHI Ono Room 01 Corpol Pro:-:--:-:,_Opon:...,..-"'5- 51:::-'::-&amp;_su::n:::-;;:.:;:o·l''"lonally S101m Cloonod. Coli Woo $82,500 Bllono:o t3U72 1·
Utld Furnlwro Store, 130 Bula· For DetaMo. Grilli Amoricln Floor 1,8Q0.:=;:::-:;:51:,:2D.::...~--::~-¥111o Pikt, Eloctric Sooves, Bod• Coro C.,..,, 81-&lt;1553.
I'
PelS fOr Sale
llby Bodo, Typewrilero, Roc~ng
l;f.;;;p;~;it:f.;~d;d,
Chalra. Dllkl, Lamps, Hide· A· Gibaon Heavy Duly Freezer, 3
1 puppies,
....... Couchls, Good Ulld Mal· Yooro Old. S400 And Ot111r lilac.
;:;:.,. Mon-frl HrL 10~.
lt~~ms, 61 .......... P470.
c:oppar noaa, hunllng dog•. no
'
_.._$50ea.l1ol-441 -16117.
Wo'.rb.d. atova, refrigerator. Good Uaad Combultlont8f' Stok·
~.Sail
11
....
D£•u
A
Groom Shop ·Pt1 Grooming.
TV's, eleeulc dryers, &amp; mora. • slaW ru
• .,.._.._..,
-·.
2.
Foarurlng
Hrdro Bllh. Don
......,7S.B51
Grubb's Plano· tuning &amp; rapolrl. Shee11. 373 Goorgu Croak Rd.

t-••111

-·

"*'

·=

~~1! n~o $1'~;~g.w::,:;~~

Cr""'CI~

Working Wllhor &amp; dryer $30. Cal Problemo? N11d 1\intd? CaH lho 814·440.0231.
:IDH75.e8BO a11er epm.
plorD Or. Bloi·441H525
·
:,.:::20:;:::.::;.::.:=Sp=O:;.n~l:;;n;;.g___ l
JET
:::; 6?,~'!'.:~!:.%'~"1:'~~.0:,
"
AERATION IIOTOAS
ClvlsbnU a.. .., o""'-.. $200, litGoods
Ropolnld, Naw I R...,llln Sloc:k. 002·3265.
Cll Fbn Evana. 1..f00.537·852&amp;.
GOlF CLUBS:
AKC Reglllorod Blchon Full·
Tll)flor Made Tonvny Armour Etc.
Blooded. 15 Week Old Puppl11,
Or Cultom Built Cluba. Indian KendaQ Wood /WoodbUrner Wld'l Wormed,, i 11 Sho11, Parents
Crook Go11, Olt-2415-5747.
81t-25e-10+1.
N• Darton Apacht Compound KenmDre 11111 drJer, 114·&amp;85·
low, All Ac:ceuoriel, Never •117.
11

1 1 52

~Utod,=~.::-~:..·:.;;::5.=:-:-::-.::-:: 1~lmball
8olkJ

au. Gun Cabinet, Holda 11

Spinel Plano, Peavey

From
AtWonderful
Seon On
Kathy Mlulnlppl,
&amp; Regia Show.

Christmas Gill For Moml Alto
Good Wilh Children, Paymentl

Welcomo, Slt-378--8011!.

seo

AKC Golden Aor._r Pupplot
Willi Poporo Sholl, Wormod, I
w-Old, IIIIo, F....., $liD,
114 '3!
AKC RogloiOrod Colllo pups,
lorh aid, Ill tho II I wormod,
f1:!1oo. Coli 30•H71·258G ohor
"""'

AKC roglolerod Dalmollon pup·
pitt,llw .-•'. _ ....,
. .........
. ,~r
_ ..... -•..., - - .. 7, . _u
~..._lit-?
AKC lloglotlrod Dolmollon pupo,
lholl ond -mod, 1t - · old,
rudr 10 go, 114·040·1107 or
11,.__2248.

Ouna. Has 2 Doors. &amp; 2 Drawers.

530

Pvodlo puppiH· dll1 ""; oleo
minlollrt SOhnaullr, ~ion
bloodline, mole, AKC; ......7.

z....~

3404.

""'-IOI1bllo lw
- · ~- ....., moJo lnd It-.
n-.le, blocll O&lt; - · ts.OO tod\.
llt-84S-~48.
Schnouzor pupplta, mlnllluroo,
chomplon
biiHHI llnto, II ISO 1
•
200, AKC,,holl I groomod,
11-7-340(
570
IIUIICII

lnstl'llllllntl
Acrooonlc BoldWin pllno, porr.ct
- · $1,300. 004.e75-2olll.

110 Fmn

1

JO 710 4 WO 2411P 1110 Htl. 2.
JO 3020 71 HI\ JO 275111 HI\
IIF 2M Ia HI\ 11f IIJI 120 HI\
70 HP • wo, 2 .ftord 1110,
IH u• 15 HP, lit 10M 1\10 HI\
II 2IOA l - T - trronchor, NH UISO Sllld SIHr, Cote
11131 Sldd s-. Clohl 4500 Sl1ld
Nl 4145 Round Btler W 1
Willi ·Lb
JD S31 SqUill
llolot, 10 •L Roloty - ·
JD
141 loodor,
• --~
"'-NoBuoll
Tl ~o 2425
•A •
-,.,.. ''"'
•'"' •
Row Air Plomor 7.11'11o Flnonclng
OnUtodT-AndN•CompociT,.ciOta, Cormlchoora Form
I •~..,_,,. - ~.
........ ..,.. Olt-«&amp;o
241 2. 1-11+1111,
·

a-.

Antiques

MARY K COSMETICS-Pony Loa,

Buy or Hll. Riverine Antiques, Mary K Beauly Consultant 30-4112.. E. Wain StrHC. on Rt 12,, 675-2848.
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10;00 :::.:::.::::::..._ _ _ _ __

u1." 8:0op.m.. Sundiy 1:00 10 llaylag oroolltr ond dryer, $150
e:oo p.m. &amp;14-992-2528, Russ for bolh or sao each, call au992-7782.
Prom Ora11 Shonlongll\ lluld·
Color, 514, $75; Golllo Acodemy
Junior 'High Girl I Wlnler Jacket.
1 Eltclric Furnace $395; 1 Gu Em Smd, $40, 61 4-446-2'3 50.
Fu,.co 100,000 BTU $890, 6t4R IS Fumhuq
lloora """"'·
540 Miscellaneous
Men:ha ndiSe

448-6308,1-8CI0-291.oo98.

1

Btlglt PuPPitl, 125 Each. Rae·

eoonAood. Olol-441-4417.

Bt101.
•-o, gun.....,..,
•-· 1011 at lrldt,
llt-?42-3517.
610 Farm Equipment
10oo111nk 111 up IPICitll. Filii 20 Farrowing Crates, Hog Food·
Tonk &amp; Pol Shop, 2413 Jackson .,.. Born Fono, e Eloc•lc llo,ra
~.Point Ploaoont, 3o4·175· ~:,.-~~:2 ~~~·~f::il ~oT::'.

3

1

240 F11~ I Inch Cardlnol Augor
Four lull blooded lomola Btooon 57 FH\ 8lt-370·200S.
.
hau nda. ready November 1•.
aholl and wormed, asking $75 Hydraulic oll-lowoal prlco In
eact\ 81.t.GQ2·7548.
Vt 1
town. nt rtt ga• hHttra. propont I r11111ro1 goa, on 10lo H"""'-'
Killin Aamo
F• Sldor'o Equlpmaril 30ol.t7s. 7421 ,
male, Oeclaw•d,
Not Poln~
Spayed:
Golden RecDitver For Slud Set¥- John Oetre 3010 Gaa Narrow
lea, Stud Fee $126, eU ..-41· Front End Excellent Condlt~n.
0615. Or 814 418 5887.
$5,000, 014-370-0381.

• *

446 6806 ~B

958 Clark Chapel Rd.
llJOrNetl, Ohio 456t4

Blllr piOI llw llit.I14-04U.21l01.
Holallln a ..... C.t¥11 Far Sale,

....,
114-38&amp;-t524.

TO 30 POUNDS In Tho Ntll 30 naoo by Sondr.vlllo Pot! Olflce.

OaJI, All Natural, Dr. Recom· Noon·5pm. Fr ·Sun. Smal( lndl·

mended, Guaranteed, Call Tracy vidual equu-...-ot. 304-273-5655.
AI S1oi-44H982, Frue Somples
~·-"
4 Sholl molal cobintr. $50: Bust&gt;- WARII UP: High Elllciency Na"'·
ntllltltlcope, 430 power. $75: ral And lP Gas Furnacu, Ule·
HuH)' clear fiberglall backboard time Walfanry On Heal EJchanglnd rim, $5D; aportscard collec· er. "II You Don't CaU U1 We Both
lion includes niint Jordan RC, Lo1el" Free Esllmattll Add-On

altached garage.
loads of wafk-ln ck:lsats. Laundry
rm kit, wfilland bar,
cabinets, all appliMces, cement
drivewar pad &amp;, walks. Huge

11t-7-12-35t 3·
7 ardfielal Chria1mas tree: Sura Twent~ Seventh Year In The
1811'10lt control jNp with baneritl Haa~ng &amp; Cooling Buslneul 81""
ll1d charger: 81 4·142·2397.
440-113011, 1.eco·20Hl098.

12001 RAMBLING TRI·LEVEL
PERFECT
FOR
THE
EXECUTIVE 4 Bra. 2 1/2 bolhs,

3D,.-

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans Enterpt"ll81,

ranc
I

h Olfic

,

9

e-mail us for Information on our listings:
blgbend@aurekanet.com

~0=~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~U:

WILMA WIWAMSON .........................2111 ~18

a

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
446-4618

DcWin ............................... 441-(1261

Martha Smith ................................... 379·265 I
Cheryl Lemly ................................... 742-3171
Dana Atha .........................................379·9209
............................. 245·5855

1GII3 Hrundol Excol Aulomllic, 1001 Ford Rongor lXI cab XL.
Sunrool. AII/FM Staroo CaaHIII, 10,000. Col Jamoo Alorm Borv·
35 IIPO, 33,000 Origlnol Milot, loo30t-182-3331.
12.1ID,"11t-379414S.
·

entry
throughout

deck V S 388·8826 or 446-

6806.

formal LA', w/Qaa log atone
fireptace. Formal DR, very nice
cabinets in the kitchen. Huge
entertaining rm, master BR Is
"Really Ultra", Approx. 4500 sq.
ft . deck In the rear, 2 car QIW&amp;ge,
1 ac. MIL level lawn. FREE
GAS Call VIrginia for an
appointment 388·8828

-

• 1903 Thunderbird lX Laodod,
E•collonl Condition, Reducodl
114-448-3830, 61ol-441· 11137.
1005 Covallor loaded, 22,000

llilla.

I'

PRICE REDUCTION! SUCH
A PRI!TTY SI!TTING ..
.SUPER LOCATION that is
really convenltnt lo grocery &amp;
more. Roomy ranch style
home !hal hao 3 bedrooms, 2
1~11 baths. toyer, living room,
dining room, kitchen, family

-

..

LOCATION SAYS IT AW
Very well maintained brick
ranch home lhat has elbow
room. Easy lo maintain rewn.
3 bedrooms. 2 1/2 balha,
iivl"'l room, dining room, ~·
room, kHchen, 2 car a1tached

garage. lea

.

..

FARMABLE! Check this
one aut, approx. I 09 acres
more or less, complete wrth
a 1 112 slory home that
oilers alo1 ot living space, 4
bedrooms, living room, large
kitchen and more. Pond,
barn, corn crib and misc.
sheds. Call today tor
complete listing. This one
won't last to lang. 11845

12101 Grool building 101, ownor
hOI roduce&lt;l $2000.00 lovtlr

main floor wJlnakfe I
gorago, 3 apls ..., lop.
•calf for your appointment, •let
uolhow you lho po111111a1.'

-

Commercial·

Pafi;:NII\, fr
-

••

:'g''

w.rrilj~ Older
' IJWMrO"'o apll,

0 l1y 2 s
lot .full

, 17 x24

gorago. $30,000

~etached

place lor privacy, call Wllmo lor lui

delah.

12008
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION beautilul all brick
ranch, full baaement. 3 bedrma,
2 baths, large kit, . w/oak
cabinets, au. garage, Morton
· 3.6 ac. mn. VLS

12112 RIO GRANDE AREA, 3
acroo mn wilh 2 mobile ond
Pld tor another mobile home.
large garege. Great lm•et1ment
prOf)erly, t3S,OOO

121113 BRAND NEW, 2 BR mobile
tlome w/gas !'!eat &amp; CIA, owntr
wants a deal. Check thil out

1014 V.moha Yl·125 llotar·

-

crou Blla Willi Riding Goar, E•·

Condldon, U,400, Phonr.
::.":..:4_':..:'•:..4:..:1143....:.._ _ _..,..._
INS V.maho Blllltr, $1,800,
080014-441-4173.

11105- 1100 4x4, • - ·

•;•~4~·~;=a=•~·~~----750

a

188 t Bla~er 4•,. Taha Package

A8d 181sek. Shorpi Eaeapdonotly

Woii·Mainlllnod, Hovo All Sorv·
Ice Recorda Slnet Purchand.
114·44eo0057,114-4411.0852.

1 Dl• Jeep Cherokee countrr.
auto,
•dr, naw llre1 &amp; bat·

,.JI,.,

10rr. all power, hileh. 304-175·
5428.

1105 TOJOII TIOO, -414 Flog. Cob.
1 Owner, Uko - Concllion, AT.
AC, 43,000 1111ot, llt-245-1513.
740

Parts And Sllr'llce: All
Name Brandl Over 25 Years Ex·
perlenca All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytaa. eu-ua.
7795.
A~pllance

C&amp;C General Home Mtln·
tanence- Painting, vinyl lidlng,
carpentry, doors. wl~l, bathl,
mobilt home repair and more. Fo.
lrM lltirT}Ite call Chet, 11+8U
8323.
RogiN''I Plumbing Service, Ex·
perlenced, Free Ea1imetta, Call

Allar 5. Blt-448~588.
840

Motorcyclts

1tl7 Suzuki eo 4-whoolor 1800.
:1CJW71.3324,
1888 Hondo 300 4ll4 $2,600, 814-

24H544, Evtring~. ·

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Realdentlal or commercial wiling,
new 18f¥ice or repairs. Maater U·
censed electrician. ' Rldtnour

Electrical, WV000300, 304-175·
171111.

SYRACUSE. Aluminum sided
one tlory home IIIII h8l 2
bedncomt, bath, livl11g room,
dining room, kl!chen, FA
ektclrlc t~rnace/centrai air
coodnioni"'l,
attached
carport. Aear porch. Nice.
145,000.00 11841

.'

Lovely 3 Bedroom Home. 2 Baths.
formal living &amp; dining rooms. Large
kitchen. Excallantlocation • .
Over looking a pond, very nice
t4x72 Mobile Home. Lots ol extra
features. $20,000
LAND CONTRACT· One
Located In Green Twp.

RIO GRANDE· COMMERCIAL
LAND- FARM LAND- HOME
SITES· YOU NAME IT. t4 7 acres
m/1 w~h approximately t t/2 miles ot
road frontage on State Route 325 &amp;
Pleasant Valley Rd. Broker owned.
$450,000
IDEAL SITE FOR APAA'TMENTS:
t50 x 207 lol is located at the corner
of Spruce &amp; 5th. All utilities avai~le.

$19,900
RIO
GRANDE
SPECIAL·
Approldmately -42 t /2 acres on State
Route 588 adjqining Bob Evans
Farm. Woods, pasture &amp; cropland
surround this 4 BR 3 beth llllctlonally
home. The home wss bui~ in 1986 &amp;
features LR, k~chen with appliances,
family rm, dining rm &amp; much more.
You'll love the view from a high knoll
overtooklng Rio Grande.
· VIN10N VIUAGE· 4 acres of level
land MIL w~h frontage on SR 325.
Willer &amp; electric available. Home
builders or Investors cilll about this
one. $14,000

LOWEAED PAICE $6,000
NEW PRICE IS $24,5001
Yoor Milsing A Grul Deall·
Remodeled 1 1/2 story 3
bedroom home. Immediate
Possession ft38
·

CALL FOR
ADDITIONAL
USTINGf'

:.$48

IWINDING CROS
2
Beautiful wooded lots. t t/2 acres ·
2.5 acre lot and a 1.103 acre
lot. Exceilant location.
FAIRFIELD CHURCH· Acreage. 5 ·
Acre parcels.

and the tri-State area. I am
now employed

a( Superior

Cadillac and Oldsmobile
in Barboursville, W Va.
across fromt he Huntington
Mall . If you need an Olds,

if

(304) 733-1111

I

Ii

Come in and view
Oil' merchandise!
Tommy HHiflger Sweat Shirts,
Tommy Gl~ Sweat shillS, assort·
ed COlors, Nlke sweat shirts,
Ucensitd and Embroidered

t
I

&amp;Operated by

&amp; Carol Glassburn.

IS NOW OPEN FOR
BUSINESS.

Crawford's Flea Market
t Block from blue bridge
Henderson, WI/
304-675-5404
Open Everyday 9·5
Anllques, Indians, Appliances,
FloWers, Tools, Jewelery

••

Monday, Nov. 10, 7:00p.m.
due. to the Veterans Holiday
on the 11th.
The 2nd Annual Thanksgiving

Appointment

Veterans Brunch

Dinner will be held

614-245-5541 Evenings

t

have their regular meeting

Elks

614-245-9440 Days

l

Mason VFW Post 9926 will

. Call TODAY for

NovembBr 26', t997

Sunday, Nov. 9, ttam !O 1 pm
$5 per person·
Ages 6 and under eat free

~ponsored and

sanied by the

MI. Zion Missionary Baptist
Church, Good Hope United

Uncommon
·Scents
. Fall

S~ock

Baptist Church and

Computer Imaging

The

Never make another hair
mistake
Receive a VIdeo Tape with
your hair styla changes.

Bath and Body Shop

Up Sale

Votive Candles
$11 per dozen
All other candles

Wednesday

BOOTS
All Leather'Westem Boots
Reg. $t49.00
·
Sele Price $59.00

Thurs. Nov.. 13
One Day Only

Jackson Pike ·

Preferred Soft Drinks

Call for AppointmentsNow.

Summer
Image

$3. 00 case No Limit

Hair, Nails and Tanning Salon

Coca Cola

.Sulk Chocolates
Sugar Free Candy

24

Engineer ........................ $49.00
Wallington ...................... $49.00
Loggers ....... ,................. $50-55
Harness ......................... $59.00
Csrolina.georgla • H&amp;H
Insulated, Selety, Gortex
SWAIN FURNITURE

pa~ks $4.99
. case
.

New shipment Cement Deer
Old Rt. 35 Across from Gallia
County Fairgrounds

STEWARTS
GUN SHOP
.

Church

Ohio valley
Warehouse

446-6959

35 ·Court St, Gallipolis

Large Slock
REDUCED!
REDUCED!
REDUCED! Owner wants this
orooerllv sold. 3 Bedroom home.
acres. Oon1 wait
·

Addldas

Meigs, Mason, Gallia Co.

interested at

BIDWELL, OHIO
Roger

Dodge, Chrysler,

friends&amp; Co-Workers, in

Pontiac. Call Pete Peck

3836 ST; RT. 850

Owned

Cadillac, Jeep, Eagle,

Grand Opening Nov. 1st
The Variety Shop
Located 356 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Hours:Mon·Thur 9am-6pm
Fri &amp; Sat 9am • 9 pm
Never on Sundays
Asso:&gt;rtment of name brands •
Lee, Duekhead, dress &amp; sportswaar, plus Sizes In !Idles, 0.16 in
gl~s.man &amp; husky boy sizes, top
of the line Fila, RHbok, Nike,

Look! Look! To all my

Plymouth, Buick or.

R&amp;C PACKING
&amp;CUSTOM
BUTCHERING

·

t750 STATE ROUTE 7 NORTH.
Commercial Site. Not many left In
this area. Approx. 5 acres flat land.
Ideal for almost any type Biz.

I
GIGANTIC REOUCTION OF
te,900.00 OWNEAS AAE
SEAIOUI
AABOUT
SEWNO.
This
roomy
American Home thot includes
3-4 bedroomo, large living
room, dl"i"'l arll/lamily
room combination, ·loft area,
equipped kllchen, large deck
on rear, nice lawn bolng
approx. 2 acres. 34280
CREW ROAD 1140

FURNITUR~

MATTRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
Regular .............................. $85
Flrm ................................... $95
Extra Firm ........................ $1 05
Queen Size Seis.... $295 &amp; Up
King Size Sets ........ $350 &amp; Up
Bunk Mattress .: ......
&amp; Up
Bed Frames ...... $25-$35 - $50
Water Bed Replacement
Mon. thru Sat. 9-5 p.m.
3 miles. out Bulavllle Pike Fr"

Monday, Tuesday,

$47,000

742·3171

STREET.

LAYNE'S

20% off

RIVER FRONT PROPERTY is hard . SPACIOUS FAMILY HOME· This
3 BR 2 1/2 bath charmer Is located
to find but you have 7.66 acres m/1
wtth this 2 story farm t19use. With 3
next to Holzer on Lariat Drive. As
BR. t 112 beth, cily sohools and a
you walk thraugh, you'll view the .
view fit tor a king Bll located just
large formal dining rm, LR wnh
minutes from Gallipolis, yo~ sho~ld ,
stone fireplace, extra large family
not let this flOw by without a look.
rm with buitt in shelves. completely
Pr1cBd It $69,900
equipped kitchen with sun light, 15
x 17 sun rm finished In cedar &amp;
OHIO TOWNSHIP· 82 Acres more
glass &amp;a 2 car gWBge. When yo~
or less, located In sadlon 28 on
step out on the patio, you'll notice
Green Rd. Some tillable land but
the
gazebo, shop &amp; another
mostly pasture and woods. Old
garage.
Lots of tun living here. Call
house and pond on property.

Cheryl Lemley

DUSKY

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

RUTLAND , OHIO
OPEN
New Hours:
11 :00 am-5:00 pm
Tues., Wed ., Fri., Sal.
Other days &amp; evenings by
appointment
Buy-Sell· Trade-Gun Repair
Ph. 6t4·742·2421

,.

WORKDAY
GAHS Athletic Boosters
Need to close the Food
Booth for the winter. We
need parents, athletes,
coachs

&amp; trucks.

Sunday, November 9th
1:30pm

MEIGS COUNTY

1212

I

a Mot011
for Slle

1888 Aongor 373V 18' 12 ·24V
Trolling llotor, 1150 XP Evlnrudo
Outboard, $1,800, 014·002-2710.
730 VIlli 4-WDI
760 Auto Parts &amp;
'71 Doclgo, 4 wd. p~c~up, 440 .,..
Accessorlll
gina, with Hollr 4 carbUroIOr, ollorl bod, f1,000, 114·102· BUDGET PRICE TRANSIIII·
78111.
SIONS, Ulld /Rebull~ All Typos,
Acceaa Over 10,000 Tranlmla1878 Cho¥J 112 Ton 4s4, 350, 4 a1on1, &amp; Clorlet.l 81t-24S.stn
Spold.$2.200, Olt-258-&lt;1270.
Now Btdllnor For Full Slto 1004
1814 Ford Ronglf 4WD, 1000 &amp; Up Dodoo Truck, $75, lit·
lulllnjaclld \41 anglno, chromo 2511-1233.
whHI,, llndor 'lloroo, aun 'lloor,
bed liner. 11&lt;4-11141·2142 after Naw ga1 tanka, 1 ton truck
5:30pm.
- · &amp; radlotoro. D·I R Auto,
1885 Ford f·I50 4114• 300 I Cy· Riplar. WV. 304·372·3P33 or 1·
llndor, Vorr Rolioblt 114·441· 8Q0.273-0328.
73!8.
,
SERVICES
" " Chour Sllvo,.do 4&gt;1, 350
IUIOmollc. air, 135,000 "'"""·
black, IXCIIIonlcondldon, 18500 810
Home
OB0,11oH02-3101 • .
Improvements.
1011 llillublshl 4•4 Pick-Up,. 4
BASEMENT
Cylndor, 5 Spaid, AIC, fS,IIOO;
WATERPROOFINO
1018 Dodgo Dakoll Sport 4ll4 V·
I, Auto, AIC, 14,800, 114·441· Unconditional liflllme ouarantle.
Local refarenc11 hlrnrshtd. Ea· ·
71118 Allor 4 P.ll.
tabllohed 1975, Call (11•) 441·
10111 GIIC 911111 Cuoiom. $4,050 0870 Or 1·100287·0571. Rogoro
WaterproofW'IQ.
814-441-4222
1110 Chavy C20 IU, 75,000
mllot, uctlltnl 'lhopt, $7300,
114-1140.2121-·IQI.

BULLETIN BOARD

Eloatl

1we Monte Carla. ve, auto, air,
Ill powar, $14,500. 30t-805-3384
or 30oi-811S.3441 .

AFFOADABLEI You bet ... $30,000 Cozy one slory horne lhat is jusl a few min~tes oul ot town.
Nice shop willl attaclled cerportllmmediate PoSS81181on. 11157

riYINklw, call Wllrno lor alooli.

e,..._,.

. 1005 SOlum SCI. Automlllc, Air,
Cruloo, AII/FM Ctlllllt, Trunk
- . . . tl2,000 Col Allor 5 P.ll.
(Sorlouo lnqulrloa Onlrl) 114·
-15.
· 1g01 Fonllluo- GT 4.• Lll.,
· Rod, 11 Inch Tlroo, loodod, E•·
· collonl Condldon, 20,000 lliloo,
tll,!iOO, 814-370-g270.

NICE LEVEL LOT Overllzed
g1raga &amp; Mobile hamel 3
room &amp; much more call for bedroom mobile home In
·good condition. 2 baths,
more lntormalio"llll51 '
open living room &amp; kllchan.
CITY LOCATION! 148,000 Over 1.6 acres. Call to viewl AlYEA LOT· .982 Acre m/1
Vinyl Sided I Story That Hu .
well waler (co. available) &amp;
Living Room, Kllchen, 2
electric. Pl~s block
Bedrooms, Bath &amp; Laundry. LOTI Aeady tor a mobile baoement 3 alec~lc hook·
Nice Fronl Porch. Ho~ae has homel Approx. 1 acre ~P!'· Lot leas boen 8\lrveyed,
had updallng. Handy location! complete wllh water &amp; OWner wa"ts sold! 11149
'electric. Paved Road.
1831
Cheshire Twp. 1H0
11
ACRES
approx.
RIVEA LOT· .603 acres. $45,000 COMPOATAifct. complete wilh water lap.
County water a"d electric. RANCH HOME wilh 2 BAg/ wooded, cleared oW slle lor
Nice lot lor MH or j~sl tor LR, OR, Kit. FA, carpon and mobile home or house. Call
today. Cheshire Twp. 1959.
recreation. neo
garage .
Immediate
possession. , . .
ENJOY ALL THE FALL
ONE OF THE BEST VIEW OF
COLOAS lrom the 45 acres
GAWA COUNTY from lhla Look whal '$45,000 One floor more or less ot woOdland
lovlly lpiCIOUt nawtr plan ranch home thai leas 3 lhat comes with lhls'
home. 2 slory with full bedrooms, livl"g room &amp; Immaculate bl·level home. 2
baseman!, 5·6 bedrooms, dining room combination, full balhs, large walk-in·
living room, kllchen. &amp; lots ·kitchen, 1 car allache~ closet off masler bedrooms,
more approx. 3,000 sq. ft. or garage, flat city lol. 11982
formal dining area. large
llvl"g
room
with
living apace plus lull
NOT JUST A HOME FOA woodburning fireplace, nice
basement, large spacio~8 151,900.00
You ger 31 acres kitchen with atrium doors
rooms , 40' x 44' metal
more or less with this one. 3 !hat lead to rear deck,
b~llding, pond, lancing al!d
bedrooms. 2 balhs, la~ndry
approx. 16 acres m/1. Very well room, living room, dining allached 3 car garage &amp;;
conslructed. WAnt spaee then area &amp; kilchen. Fro"t &amp; rear more. let us show it lo yo~~
let ua show the home to you. decks. Private, excellent 11933
11847
viewllll51
PRIVATE
SETTING(
Comlortable ranch lhal has
ANXIOUS!
OWNERS , DON'T THROW MONEY charm. Approx. 2 acres.
LOWERED THE PRICE Of AWAY IN RENTI When you detached garage wllh
THIS HOME TO $51,&amp;00.001 co~ld apend your money carport Home offers a
All ready lo move Into this $37,500.001 Georges Creek bedrooms, 2 1~11 balhs,
roomy but cozy 3 bedroom 2 Road· 3 bedroom home that living room, lormal dining
balh home. Neat &amp; clun. Nic has easy to malntaon lawn area, nice big kitchen with
egaraga attached by and large detached garage. plenty or cabinet space ani(
breezeway and detached 11925
diSIIwasher. I mmed i ate
building Ideal lor lh6 hobby
possessiQIII $51,900.00
parson I Call · today for
11143
showing . Yo~ will ba
impresaedl11953

12113 NEW MOBILE HOME
JUST REDUCED. owner wentt

sold now pleMI call end make
vour atfer, 2 t.drooms, beautlfultr
decorated.

*

Motorcycltl

1093 Oldl CuUa11 Supromo, all
power, new tires, 15500 oao.
llt-002·5260.

==·

-

1105 11-10 l l v... 1 lpold,
H,IOO 111111, AMIFY ca......
PS, NC, n, C1u1ot. •
~
- · - - WIINII.
lng--ll+4ll,-.
1M Ford ....... XLT L.oodtil.
12.1500 ~tlook I 0ror.. 114-441•
.
•
2·4•• 1-.llmmlt I·Biuer both
hove rabuNI mo10ro and good
boclloo. Coiii04-I'IH171. .
U-Houl eo. Hot Utod Trvr:ko For
Boll. Col1-t00-28U575.
·

740

1N3 Oldo Culla11 SL, v... AuiCI
Trono., AC, 2 Dooro. Pwd. 0oora I
Win*Jwa, AUIFU Call., Maroon
lnt IExr. 57,000 Mil11, E1cellent
. Cond., $0,500; 11185 Dodgo Moo,
' ' 4 Doors, AC, AMIFM, Maroon
lnL IEMt., Now Tlroo, $2,000, Coli
81ol-446-0122 AllOr 5 P.M.

splilpropony, 45 ac. ns.ooo
121111 DWNER WANTS SOLD 3
BR ranch on 1 ac. m/1, on SA 218
12i03 COMMERCIAL OR HOME jull3 miles o1! SR 7.
2nd A\le. 4 bedrms, 2 baths, lg. 121111 MIOOLEPOIIT aioo 3 SR.
garage, lot 52'K174' Great location 1.!5 bath, completely remodeled,
for an antique shOp or offtee. VLS gre81 buy, .call Wilma.
12100 ON THE OHIO RIVER. 2
$75,000
.
121182 VACANT LAND 13 ~. MIL BA'S, 2 bath, 2 car garage, Dn
In Morgan Twp. ElCtellenl Building 1.5 ac, m/1. can Cara. ·
Site. Claude Daniels ••6·7609 12101 Se&lt;luCOd Building Lol, 3
Acres M/1, Road On Ffroperty,
$18.000
Easy Accaos, On Sr 218.
12002 OWNER WIL~ PAY
CLDSINO COSTS, 3 BR ronch
on SR 850, Clooo To Rl. 35

WOOD BEJILTI', INC
toee

BIG. BEND REA~TY, INC.

12814 Green Twp., 3 BR ranch

OWNER WANTS SOLD
Jackson. Ohio. 1·800-537.0528.
1202• PICTURE PERFECT and NOW, bring uo on ollor on 1hls 3
Boonlo Bibles. &amp; Oisnoy Btenlos,
WOLFF TANNNCI BEDS
sparkling with all NEW wlndowa; BR, 2 bolhl on rlvlr.
151 ..-37'D-2074. Afwr 4 P.M.
v1nyl siding, gutters, storm doort, 12101 BEGINNERS WCK CioN
Tan AI Homo
rool, deck, beaulllul oak coblnets, 1o school. 3 BR, ranch, lull bsml,
Boonlo Btbiao. hord IO gellporl
BeJrDHCT.ond SAVEl
appliances, bathroom fiKturel, aHache&lt;l garage &amp; corport. I 1!1:.
cord inHrll, raro comico, haid 10
CoJl1J'JWCia~Momo Unlll
carpet, hardwood floora, heated r11i1 VLS
12012 LOCATED ON BR 1150 garage. hrnc:ed yard. VLS
rind action figurta. Priced btlow
From$1SII.OO
Older 2 sty. 4 bedrms, 1 bath, 3
CUN811t market value. Jullln lime
Low MOI"'Ihfr PaJmentl
12023 PT. PL£/oSANT BEAUTY
acres mfl plua a larlle barn. In Popular Hgts, 3 beclrms. 1 112
b" Ctwilnu. Cal lot lalut price
FREE Color Cltalog
$35,000
Call
VLS
3
8·8828/
tjUOIII and dellil, 81 ..1148-30118
CaiTOOAY 1-800-711.0158.
baths, lovely ravine treed lOt. 2.8
446-6806.
laovo "'"'"VI bebre 5:00pm. or
ac. m,1. VlS
12018 NEW 1996 Sunlhine 11D12
4 Bedrooms, 2.5 bathe, 2
cal --...n 5:30-e:oopm.
The Pomeroy Thrill Shop- now
16'x80' Outstanding ·mobile
buying levi jean• only, mtn'l, . home wit h a deck, spect81 car attached garage, cily tchools. nt07 LIKE NEW Wonderful all
brick ranch remorkobly spacious,
·
Boots By Redwing. ChippfWI, women·• and Chllchn'a. alto ltlle
cabinels. windows, and buill·ln CaltPatty.
Rocky, Tonr Lama. Guaranteed girl• dreuea, toys. dolle and 10d- · music center, 3 BA, 2 baths, 11034 50 ACRES mtl, ot Prime huge rms, Iota of kltcnen
lownl Prices At Shotl Call. GaJ- dltr car Hill, Tueaday through ' beautiful 11 ac. m/1. Close to Development Land ·cto•• 10 coblnelo, LA, 2 lull balhs, 3 BR's,
and Slate route. Excellent lull boml, FREE GAS, lg. gorage,
lfl&gt;ollo.
Friday, IOinHpm, 114-QQ2·3725.
town. VLS 388-6826 $54,000 · freeway
for d8\lelopmenl or commercial 15·20 10. m1. Vory prlvale. VLS
12034 Exceptionally smart
448-8806
use. l1!5!5,000. Call Patty
IUY CARS FOR $100111
Whirlpool oa..tcvo, S85: Wllile
ranch. 3 bedrm, oak cabinets In 11053 4 SA, 2.5 batf'ls, lovelv 12108
IMMEDIATE
ltlztcl And Sold locally This Weatinghouse aide·br.·•lde re·
~~· kll, 1 112 baths, 8 ac. m/1. kitchen w/eat 1n breakfast area, OCCUPANCYI Jual walling lor.
Uonth. Tnlckl, 4ll4'1, Elc. Being lrlgera.lor with outside ce makat,
formal cfintrta rm, aunken living rm. you to move into, 3 BR, 2 baths
Uquldalod In Your Arn Noor. All $235;61t-892·5083.
12035 Like new 3/4 becfrm, w!FP, ramifY rm, new furnace, on 1 ac. r11l1 on SR 5&amp;1.
Uakea I Wodfllt Availabl•. Call
ral'lCI"' home, livety LA, huge k~. IIIIChed 2 cor gor, in ground pool 12110 CRDWN CITY area,
w/cablnets galore, finrshed &amp; pool house. lovelv treed yard exscllllva llyle, 3 BR, 2.5 balhs,
Toll FI'H800-522-2730 14-420.
White day bed wlnaw mattreaa.
basement, 2 car garage. wfgaz:ebo, deck In rear, fence~ Iorge dock acroos back or homo.
Te&lt;ldy Btor ~QUih be&lt;l. Sun lamp
$92,000 Vl.S
CB radiO equipment. MIUng out on floor stand. Table model tun
Lovelv Fioricla room.
ylrd. $11111,000
Cobro 2000 GTL SiiYer Eoglel). lamp. 201b now propane link. 2 12152 PRICE IS RIGHT 11018 SURPRISINGLY ~OW 12011 HUGE BARN Very well
137.000
3
BR.
1
bolh,
sun
porch
104. CDE rotor control I rotor. goldwing back chairs. Vanity
PRICE Latl lOt on Lakeview Ct. oonatructed, cement floor, loft for
&amp; front porch, ~araga, new Located
UoDnJakef ,..beam, $820 for all. table •tbench. LC Smllh 18
where only the bell Is storage, kitchen, heal, 8 ac. m/1,
furnace w/alr conchtioner, fenced good enough. 2.3.-8 ac. m/l. Graal for old cart or boat
30ol.t7S.II4olll.
.1111"00 lho~G"n. :J04.1175-5est
yard . VLS
Subject to restrictive covenanle. llrlpplng. VLS.
121115 &lt;10 JAY DRIVE Cozy 2 VLS
441H60e $21,500
Bedroom Home, LA, large eat-In 12G04
VN:.NIT LOT 1.13 AC m.1.
k1t. ulilily rm, gas heat, 2 Acceu to boat ramp. Beautiful
porches and garage. Very large area. Call P~.
lot to make a garden. Orily 12031 WHAT A BARGAINI Vou
$55,000 ,
bultd this 4·5 bedroom hause
12111 COMMERCIAL AND can't
for this liking prlcel 2 full baths.
WOODED land In lhe Cheshire dl~ed basement, brick home on
area. Call VIrginia 388· 3 1011. Ca~ Pany.
32l.OCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 4563 I
8826/448-6806.
73.1 ACRES MiL IH
128110 NEW LISTING VACANT 12037
Ale" C. Wood, Broker . 446-4523
GREEN
TWP. GREAT fOR
lot with water tap on Bull Run HUNTING &amp; 10 build a ,_ homo
Ker1 Morga~~, Broker · 446-0971
Tim Watson 256-6102
Ad . Call now for more onl Where ella ctn you get thll
JeanetteMoore,-256-1745
PatriciaAoss ~
information.
12111 4 BEDROOM 2 balh much lind tor $42,000? Call Plllly.
740-441-tOII or
894
J!!r
dOuble wide on 8 acres MIL in
Morgan Twp 12 x 16 encloted
'
back porch. Formal dining room
pkJs a nice eat·ln kitchen. AI
$38,000 this one will not tatt 12141
SPACIOUS OUALITY
long. Call Cleu&lt;le Daniell for CON8TAUCTED
HOME 11ollon
~lit «6-6806 Of.....,_
foyer, caitledral cailinga, balcony
78011. Molle Olio&lt;.
above the LA wJiog fireplace,
12111 111 ACRES M/~ In · equip
breakfast rm wfbay
Morpan Twp. Loti of fenced In WindoW,kit,
11ereo throughout, brill
1142· OLOER 2 STORY HOllE,
pasture land and many acret of tight fixtures, 2 car garage, attic
has 1 rooms total and 2600 IQgood hunting and/or camping storage. acraened back porch,
areas. Several excellenl building much more. New roar. Home Is
tl. of living space, partial bsmt,
sites. Rural water. For a "Look· maintenance free. CiiN VLS 388·
sevBflll out buildings located on
see~ Call Claude at 446·6806 or
tl1is 82JC1651ot.
446·7609.
.
8826 ""'"·"""
11087 67 Mill Creek. Good
,,...._A Real Nice Brick· located
rental
or
home,
3
badrmt,
LR,
on a quiet atreel Otfet't· 4 Br'l, 3
Lg. eat·ln kll, 1 bath, cteep lot.
baths, full basement that il
VlS $39,900.
II:Jl'• PRICE REDUCEOIThls panially 1inishe&lt;l. 10 • eo docl&lt;, 2
12117
COIIIIERCIAL
Rand'l hOme hal an easy care · car garage, woodsy back yard .
BUILDINGS I APARTIIEHTS
lawn, one car garage. aproJC .
TO RINT LOt to 1111 cart etc.
10.44 Acrtt mil 1pproa:.
1~ sq. fl . of living apace, 12001- Great Site forr a New
buildings can. be used for bOat 3,900 sq. fl. vinvt &amp; 11ooe exterior,
lociMd oo S.A. 7 South.
Home. Lot being approx. 100 x
storage. Great locetion on tOfmal emry, 4 BA'a, 3 baths,
80. Call for more detaila.
Bullville A&lt;l. VlS
lUI IN TOWN LOCAnQN.
12111 BUSINESS C!foiLI' PET ftnlshed rec. eru ln. bsmt, WBIFP
game room &amp; den atrium rm,
What a Deal, Two hom11 tor f200t.. Price Hu Been
SHOP Eqwipment &amp; inventory. In
oak cabinets &amp; trim In kit. 13 tOtal
the Prlol Df One. Main Houae Reduced! 10 Acret m/1 with
~~~rB ctr. location. Priced ri'TII., 2 Cilr 1)8111ge, ProteuiOnlny
hoi 2to 3 Br's, 1 1/2 balhs.!ud appmx. 9 acres wooded, utll
blmt, 1maller houte has 2 a\lallable to propeny, mineral
=11 Hlttorlcatly S.pealdng lanllscaped. Quality and Luxury
Br'l, could be rental or guest righls.
Charming Victorian home 4·5 t'!roul7h-OUI. Appl. only Virginia L.
bednns, 3 bath1, kit, fofmal DR S'mhh368-6828
tiOUM. $150'1.
&amp;
LA. Crystal chandeliers 12... 4 IIEOROOMt, 2 btlh
12011). 70 acres m,lt, apl)fOX. 30
double wide on e acr11 mtt In
11 &lt;10 IN.QROUNO HOUlE acre• 11 wOOded, mtrterel righta
lh{~:~:eout . Full bamt with Morgan Twp. 12 a: 18 encloted
c1
,
atone
WBFP.
BA
loCOiod on S.R. 160. Has boon wilhproptrty. $30'1.
back porch. Formal dining room
-tionod oiiiO 1w0 IMng unlll.
"(~~~~~;~;
~:[~:,•
ga
reoe,
I~
lot. EKclutlva plua a nice eat-in kttchtri.
could llllily be convo&lt;tod bock
Virginia L. Smith 121121 JUST REDUCED, owntr
10 ono ~. lwO M.H. hool&lt;
wants told, 3 btdroom. 1 112
bathl, bvety familY room 28x24 on
a btautlful level lot with a great

uoo

1010 Ford F·IOO Plck·up. :111
Windsor
HO, good ollopo, 1011 ol
1001 Goo llo.._ IUID, olr, II,IGO,
- parto. u.oaa oao. 30t-~
llt-742·2852.
5054.
1001 ThundO&lt;bird, 3.8 VI, rod, 1011 Chivy CuoiOm 30 wluiiiiiJ
aunroot, new Mlchtlln radiale, bod, 2wd, 455 WIUUO 427 oliO
price rlducld. 004.e7~65tlll.
comploll Jill ond, ps, pb. $4,000
1g02 Olds 88 Rorh low miloo, OBO. Call 304-t75-3000 or 3114like new Inside &amp; oul. 11,000. 075-8277.
30H7S.2!83.
1180 Ford Rongor Btdllntr, Top10g2 Oldo Delli 88, 4 Dooro, por, ca. Gr• Goa 111oogo, Runo
Grooll81t-441J.3058.
Loodod,.$8.1100. llt-ell2-7512.
1002 Plymoulh Sundonco WhiiO, 1g8o· GIIC pickup, VI, Stod,
Sporty, 2 Doora, Also Air, 75.500 $8,500. 30t-IIOW314 or :tot • .
lillos Aaklng $3,150, OBO I"· 3+11.
256 «113D, 81...256-8487.
loo3 Chovr 1121Gn ve, ouiO w1
1003 Ford Thunderbird, low - - · 1&amp;.000.1104-175-118'1.
lllloogo, Sunrool, l11lhlr Sllta. 1104 Chivy S.IO 4Wd. \41, 30tCD, Anu Tholl Syallm, Cellular 682·3711. Colllllr .......
Phono, 114-441-3108.

r:.t1tt General

1-8oo-585-71o1 or 446-7101

720 lhlckl for Sale ·

ts.ooo.eu 4te 1222

kMrly houaeaiiiiiRUid.
n•T Rio Grande area, 105 ac.
m/1 w/2 house•. owntr will also

10 Ploplo Wanted To LOSE UP Sam SOmorvlllo'o Arnrt Camou·

a Piece living room aui·ae.

(t}J¢

--~· _ _J=========~====:-----;1

II

AutOI fOr Slle

·-

Country setting 5 minutes from town, 1. 7
acres, brick, 1740 sq. ft., new heat pump/roof.
For mora Information or appointment cell

Real

o

1tl5 Oldsrnobllo Cudott Su· For Solo Or Trodo&gt; 1g12 llldllmo,
_ il1aud1am
V-1, FuM - · bllo,Fironzo, 4 Dooro, AulD, PS,
Bunnlot
I E.._11. 111.311 ~ ' Now nrot Good Concltion, 114·
llllllllln. Ono Owner. Bluo Willi 2511-1158.
l!luo lnllrlor. 114-44W532.
For oalo· 1011 Cudon Collis.
1Q87 Oldt Culloao Supromo
quod
bod QIIUI or - .
llroughlm, 350 ou.,, Ole, no ruot. t350. 4.
814-247-21111.
vory cloan, aoldng· ti,IIOO. \104·
Sllzod caro From t175. Portell..
•••
Cadlllaca, Chev1•· BMW'a.
1Q88 T·Bird v... Aulo, Loadod, Corvaltel.
AIID Jtlpil1 4 WD't.
Plinl, $2,200, 11H41·l'1111 Your Area. ToU Frt• t.eG0·211AllOr 4 P.M.
GOOO Ell. A·2114 For Curront
llo*lg•
llltO Mi11Ublll11 Proclt 5 IP,, IIC.
runo very good. 30 IIPG, n• UpiOn Utld Cora IlL 12·3 111111
llreo, g71(, $1405. 814-1185,1380.
Soulh ol loon, WY. Flnonclne
ltrt'alabla.
304 tSI 101!11.
UUtG Olda Cullan Supreme,
l.l&gt;adod, Standard, loolhor Soolll,
CD, 89K, Eleollont Condllion 720 lluc:kl for Sale

:t:'r:\:s:O'I\':b~.ld:l ~~:~P·'!

.....,.. lcomt.l1"·5"2·23
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lit lilt 3531.

71

an.

"!llovelr lendaeaped rord. 1 cor
• 12 baths, (21 llreplacao. kit &amp; gorsge. S70,000 ·
great rm. combo. 2 car garage. 12182 141 ACRES MIL 14! ac.
$175,000
J!l/1. or llmbe~ond In Jact&lt;son Co.
$145,000. Col Wilma.
121M 2 BUILDING LOTS In
Proctervllle, ready to build on,

llinl Concliliore In Box, $250, Sit- ront Onoo, Coli Allor 2 P.M. 81•·
44&amp;-I280.
..0·4157.

175-aOOO.

!!_!OdooForrdhoTrodrllon~~ ~5T1
"w"lnlbdoocokr,'
·•

1018 Buick GS 350 4 Spud.
Foc10rr Air, 13,000, 114·1127512.

Alhlna Uvoolllek Soloo: Spolcll
Fill Flldor Coli Salt: Sowrday,
Novonibor 15111, 1 P.ll. Collie Ac-

VIRGINIAIMITH,BROKER ..............MW-ill
EUNICE NIEHM ..................................446-1117
PATRICIAHAYII.................................. UI Wt

12887 Great Uvlng in 1 3800 sq.
ft. ranch w/11nlshe&lt;t basement. 2

108G Holiday Chrlsrmas Barbie, Rtllrtd Beanie Babita Alao Cur·

HHI Pumpo Only Sllghly Hlghor.
Call Ul Today. 1997 II The

iftl'i:l.

·~··~·

710 AutOIIor Sale

Salt

1117 Ford llutlang nuda r•· A Ntod A Car? No Cr...l, Btd
IIOrod. t700. 304-175-1230 dlro Crodlt Banlvupccr. Wo Con Holp
or1104-171-41111-*'Go.
AoEtiOblloh Crodl~ llualllako
11150 WHklr Talut Homo;- Down
1171 Codllloc, DriYnblo, Noldo Payment&amp; A1 Low Aa lit, To
Quollly For Thlt Flnonclng,
-Ina Column For Solo. 2 .
nroa, Aodlotor, 1400. 114·441- 114-'41-11107.
112•7.
CARS FOR $1001 Truckl, boola,
lfl'll J20 JHp Truck, 314 Ton, 4 •·whMierl, motor hofMI, lumlWD. Slandard, t1.100, Run1 lurt, tiKironlca, compullrl tiC.
Goodl 1160 Ford Courier Truck, by FBI, IRS, DEA. Avollabll your
lluno ExeoUont $500; 10111 Ford area now. Call1·800·513·,.343
Aaro SOar Von, 60,000 Mllol Fully En s-11301
b&gt;ododl Olt-258·81111.
1080·111t0Cart For 1100111
SIIZidAndSOid
1082 Toyoll Corollo, 1750, 114·
~lylliollonlh.
742-3513.
Trur:ko. '""'' Eoc.
1084 Oodgo Dynasly lE 3.0 Hl0!1·522·2731, X
ora1er pump I radiator. U.500
0110. 304-773-!iOS..
Crldil Problomo? Wo Can Help.
Bank Financing For U1ed
1014 Oidt 88, gOOd NMing con- Eaar
V•hlclet, No Turn Downt, Call
dlioro. 11000. col llol-742·2421.
'lk:We,$14 4.e ~7~

-·V-I

' OUR WEB PAGE 18: www..tamllh.com
...,..1: vltmllh.com

&amp;r. Sell. Trade
Ulld&amp;AnliqFurnitu,.,
304-773-5341.

t100,11 .. 388&lt;11Si.

710 Autos for

'11 VW Rabbll2 door &amp;por~ gil
I opood, olumlnum rlmo, moon
roof. olt, luol ............. lnlootor, ............. "'"' PM~. &amp;7,000
114-2-117.
origlnol
good nobblt, log
Squoro bolts ti .ISO
IU
llohll, -dt luol pump, 1400,
10
5 1 .1:,:1·;::4::IG:::II2::::1=l-~-":':"':":"•
n;to N. AL2.110Wl'WOIO,
1
I'
Squaro Bolli Ol Good Cleon '18 Ford Taurua, blue wllh llluf
Snw, N• Hollond Hay Rako In ln-. 0011
ouiOmlllc,
Ercotlont Condlllon, 10150, 114· flonl bumpot dornogo, ta50, llt"HIOS.
,
1··::::;;:20::14ot:...---:--""7.~
.
'II Eocorl, auiOmoUc, oxcollllll
GOndldon, 24,000 mlloo, 35 tnrJG,
••23110, ••~~.

Horliwlllt.IIOW75-211111.
Round Baloo 01 Hoy For Btlo,
SIOrld In Born; Novor Wt~ Coli

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpo~ll~a,~O~H~o~P~o~ln~t~P~Jea!!!!sa!!!!!!!!nt,~WY!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,~~...._~I~·!!!!-.~-~,!!!!!!!!Ibu!!!!!!!!I•~P~a~ge!!!!!!!!D~7

110 Autol tor Salt

2 ·I 112 Yoar old brooding og~
Nubian billltl. ISSea. 304·574-- -

~~
q{ Q/md(
:~~~s~~'t,~~~~~~
..
f"'l&gt;l 11C/P ~ ~
Main Office • 388·8826

Hly a Onlln

e40

1018 SS Orlglnsl 391, 375,
lloaur Forguaon ISO Goa OuiOmodc, hoop acoop, Original, Buckoll, loao llotor l Trano,
Troe10r, Sorlol ISGM142000111 12,000 rnlloa, tiiOO, 814·247· ts,OOO,I14-7512.
Tho A l i i - - ~Will
•202.
1010 Ponllac Flroblrd, t30DO,
8
llt-247·2104.
Soloo.
AI T1mo 01 Solo, No"&lt;
10, lilt?, 1:00 A.ll. US&amp;C Soloo.
21110 E111om ~. GllllpoUa,
IH&gt;IInlmum81c116.7oii.DO.
S30 · LIV88toc:k

Rul Estate Genar11

lluan,WY

112 Caret Olamand Enpagement
Ring, Paid 11.•00 Wil Stl1f or

-L

'-~ ~ oolo, 11"-~
· - ., 17.
,_-

388-9355.

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Equlpnllllt

~=~~':.~n~ T~oOHH~.':~=~~~·~ '/;;lg

~14=::5~5U34:::::.-:--::-----I T.V. IIagnavo• Floor Model, lit~

..,1580;...;__""...;.;.;.•.,.tor;....;;.SI;;.;.Ie;;....._

AKC Aoglt- Dllmolion Pupplot, 1100 Eocn, Sholl 1
Worrnod, Cd Anydma, llt-44t- Kawai Btbr G,.nd Plono, AP·
1741.
pralud AI tiO,ooo, 8011 Olltr
llt-25fl.1114·
AKC Yellow lab Pupa, Sholl &amp;
Wormod 114·2&amp;e-e3341 Aller 1
P.ll.
Nttd lncludln8 Coli In Groa1
Aollrtllon lhophord pupo, 1 Condlllcrl, 1175, - : 114-441·
NSOR, 175, llt-040-2121 -n· 4543.
lnga:
5 purabred, $50, 114-tOI·
250 l'tfllriiiiQI.

Clanlc V-Tec, Ulc IStand HouN
P'lan11 All Kindl Warm Morning
Wood IColl, 2 Orlonlll Rugs, 25"

bctlltnl Condlllon, S175, 81 4·

Pltl for Slit

Sunday, November 9,1997

PRICE R.EDUCED· Enjoy your
weekends, vacations or all your
time fishing, skiing or wBtchlng the
barges float by. This like new eye
calcher is ready lo move into.
From the kttchen &amp; the 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 is a 2 car garage.

HOMESITE IN THE CITY· This
tor appointment.
large level lot is located at the
dead
erid ot Neil Ave. Utilities .
FISH~RMEN'S DREAM • Two miles
available.
Home builders or
below the dam you'll find this 91der
investors
call
abo~t this one.
completely furnished 2 BR mobile
home. There's an 6 x 24 deck $t9,500
overtooklng Jhe Ohio River· wnh a
storage building, steps going down to COMMERCIAL LISTING- Rio
the beach &amp; a large dock. $17,900.
Grande area. 1.6 acres m/1,
located on the NE comer of U.S. .4
OUN STORE: One of southerri
lane 35 ~nd SR 325. Lois ol
Ohio's largest dealers.
potential. $49,900
Established In 1968. Large
volume. Owner retiring.
SPACIOUS LIVING ABOUNDS
Contact Ranny Blackburn.
TH.I S COUNTRY CLASSIC.
EXI'RA NICE BUILDING OR Historic two story house ot111rs 3
MOBILE HOME LOT· Mature Pine bedrooms, 1/2 bath, LR. DR. FL,
Trees on the three sides. Access to full basement ·and detached
Raccoon Creek. Located in Hobart wort&lt;shop. Bring in the outdoors in
the window covered kitchen with
Dillon Subd. Stt ,900
al!llctled walk-in pantry. .
RACCOON CREEK PRIVACY· this
almost brand new ranch style home RIVER LOT IN THE CITY· setting
rests in over 7 acres ot woods wrth on 2 lots at t93 Windsor you'll find
approx. 800 ft. of creek frontage. this 3 bedroom ranch. The e&gt;ctra
Same of the many features are , 4 large LR, kitchen, basement,
BAs, 2 baths, t6x2t LR w/french carport &amp; gas heat are included at
doors. 2 large treated decks, vinyl the bargaln price of $4.2,000

siding &amp; an

108 Uberty Street
Kanauga;Ohio
Phone 441\-9051
7:30-1 0:30 pm ·
Hoe-Down, Two-SIIIJ, Clogging
2nd Sat of the month- Adams
County PickBrs
3rd Sat. of the month·
Country Grass
4th Sat. of the monthliberty Mountaineers
BINGO
Wed. &amp; Thurs. 7:0D-10:00 pm

D"nce

Covntry Line
Lesson's
avery Friday Night at 7:00 pm
with JamiB &amp; Debbie Moore.

Please Help!!!

Happy E3irthday
"Eatem up Blue"

You're 50 today

FOR SALE
. 1994 ChrySler New Yorker
Loaded, Excellent condition,
w~h leather. $1t,500
446·2422

and

we love
Music For

O'DELL
LUMBER

SMOKIN'
ROBS
DORAL-ALL
FLAVORS
$9.78 carton
EaslemAve.
Across from Rax

Power Tool
Sale
7 1/4" Circular Saw
$129

Twelth Annual
ARTS

&amp;

CRAFTS

Senior Citizens Center
Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio

10 am til?

Friday:Nov. 14

Prices

&amp; trap shoaling

&amp; Raffles

Van Johnson
(614)'992-6317
Support Uve Music

740·992·5500

Sunday, November 9th

Stationary

Occasions

A Few Open Dates

634 East Main St. Pomeroy

SHOW

Turkey Shoot

All

Hot
Country/Classic.
Rock

Majita

10:00-6:00

MIZWAY
TAVERN
Eucher
Tournament
.Tuesday Nights
Starts at 7:30

Public Welcome

Gallia County Gun Club ·

300 BuCkridge Rd. Gallipolis
Kale, Mustard, Cress

446·9130

Greens and Kenebec

unattached 2 car garage.

II you don't want to look at your
neighbors, YOU MUST SEE THIS PLANTZ SUBDMSION- aetting
on 2 lots att93 Windsor you'll fillQ
ONE. REDUCED TO .t05,000
this 3 bedroom ranch. The extra
IDEAL SITE FOAAPTS-t50x2071ot large LR, kilchen , basement,
Is loCated at the comer of Spruce &amp; C8I'JXIIt &amp; gas heal are Included a1
the bargain p1ce al $42,000
5111. All utilltle8 avalleble. $19,900

Mini Mall #1
246 3rdAve
New shipment of Furniture
has arrived
Name Brand ltams 441-1142

'

Potatoes
Air ResistancB Exerciser Bike
(Stationary) Used very little

$75.00
949·3066
Leave Message

or 992-2156
FOR MORE INFORMA:

~n---------4-"n-L...,·~+L..
r

'''

~·

'

�~

...... _..........
. ..-.-..--. - .. .... .
~

~

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,........ .

._.__-"'".-

•
Ohio Lottery

OCTOBER IS
........
·ut.H
UI.H
CHEVY
T~RUCK MONTH --lfltlc.l
• . 1-1
AT C &amp;. 0 MOTORS!
CHECK OUT THE SAVINGS
1998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
EXTENDED CAB 414
1111

IPII

• ..fii.H

-~1-1

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.... .Package and Morel

AS
..

LOW
,,

.
'

AS
•

1998 CHEVY
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wlna 28-13
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Pick 3:
613
Plck4:
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Super Lotto:
10·14-22·26·34-40
Kicker:
440986

on Page .5

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 10,1997

"; LOW

Vinton County gets $10 million for new school
McAKI'HUR (AP)- Vinton County High School had become a symbol of what's wrong with the suite's method of funding public schools.
But in a few years, the run-down, overcrowded building will be replaced.
By a vote of 2,752 to 1,837, county residents passed a 3.82-miil tax
levy last Tuesday to help pay for a new high school in one of the stale's
poorest school districts.
Some had thought county voters would be reluctant to support a new
tax until the Ohio Supreme Coun approved a new funding plan that is
expected to increase the money available to poor areas.
But residents recognized the deal being provided by the Stale Building Assistance Fund. As one of 19 districts eligible for millions in state
money, Vinton County received approval for a 2-to-1 match in money.
The state will pay about $10 million toward the new $15 million
school, set to open in 2000. Local taxpayers will provide the remaining

$

AS

1998 CHEVY S-1 0
EXTE DED CAB
.Air Condltlon1n9., Alum. Wheels, LS Package,
, AM/FM Racno, W/L Tires, and Morell

AS
LOW

AS
*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

998 CHEVY BLAZER
4 WHEEL DRIVE
Air, AM/FM Radio, Tachometer,
Lo~klng Differential

AS
LOW

AS
*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

IODU••
AU PRICES INCWDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
UCENSE FEES.

AND

MOTORS
ST. ALBANS

TOYOTA
&amp;LEXUS

$5 million.
.
Vinton County Local Schools was among the hundreds of plaintiffs
in the lawsuit that led to the coun's finding that the current propeny-ta&lt;
dependent system was unconstitutional.
Even befone that, the crumbling schools in the 2 500-pupil district in
southeastern Ohio were featured prominently in "Children in America:s
Schools," a 1996 documentary on PBS hosted by Bill Moyers.
A new high school "is niore than the bricks and the monar. For Vinton County, it's business, it's jobs, it's opponunity. lt's pride," said schools
Superintendent John Simmons.
He said the decisfon to take part in the filming of Moyers' documentary meant opening the doors to the deficiencies in the county school system and comparing them with the educational luxuries of wcal.thy districts.

"At first there was some embarrassment," he said. "People had wondered , 'Was our facility really that much w·orse than most?' The answer
was, 'Yes.' Then the altitude became, ' By golly, look at what we've got
down here. Something isn't right."'
For years, the district has boasted about its dedicated teachers and
bright students but cringed at the high school's leaky roofs and toilets,
flood-buckled floors and lack of a cafeteria.
What supponers are savoring as much as the taX~Ievy victory itself is
the message their votes sent to legislators wrestling with coming up with
a fairer way to fund public education by ne&lt;t March.
"Had this ta&lt; issue failed, do you know what they would have said?"
Simmons asked. "They would say, 'They won't do anything for themselves. They don't care. They're lazy.'"

Defense counters image. of bomber with homey details

.

*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

'

A'fter voters OK· $5 million levy

Bumpers, and' Increased Horse . Power!!

AS

2 Sectillrll, 12 Pogea, 35 cen1l
A Gennett Co. N..,op.,...

j

Froq~
~

•

a1
\1)1. 48, NO. 141
01117, Ohio._.., Publelllng Comporoy

Cloudy tonight, chance
of rain. Lowe In mid·30a.
Tu81day, cloudy, high in
lowar40.•

DISCUSS BOOK • Jamea Nichola, right, ·brother of Tarry

NJah11~ 1 ~ 1c1b P~~ dlacuail their bao~'J'~'aind:

COneplncy in ~ .. Iowa Cl~, IOWII' u,....y. erry
Nlcttc* leon trial for his II~ r~ In th• Okllhoml (:lty bomblng.
.

DENVER (AP) - When FBI
agents searched Terry Nichols' house
after the Oklahoma City bombing,
they found anti-government litemture
in a storage room and a Disney singa-long videocassette tape atop the
television.
Together, they represent the image
of Nichols that defense attorneys are
trying to build for jurors- that of a ·
committed. father who hol&lt;js some
critical views of the government, just
like other Americans.
"(Defense ·attorney) Michael
Tigar is ·setting the stage for the
defense later that 's going to say Terry Nichols was an ondinary guy," said
Denver anorney Andrew Cohen, who
has followed the trials of Nichols and
Timothy McVeigh.
"The anti-government literature
wa• · in the •..,..., The~
books were on the eolle~ ilble," he
said. •· All of thi~ is &lt;Jeslgncd to

cy and weapons-related counts in the attempted tn "humani/_c·· Nichols.
bombing April 19, 1995. McVeigh For example. they asked FBI agents
was convicted of identical charges in if Nichols lived on a quiet street in
June and sentenced to die . His appeal _Hcringlon . dcsnibihg his horne U.'i a
sniall, frame hnusc.
is pending.
Defense attorneys have argued
"Togar " doong a g&lt;Xxl job of
that Nichols was at home in Hering~ dcllccting the' allcntl(l'n uwuy frnm
ton, Kan., when the bombing what the gnvcrnmcnl wants the jury
occurred ·and was unaware of any to consider." Cohen said. .. Evcoy
tirilc the prosecution has made a poi~t
bomb plot.
During the first week of testimo- over the past few days , To gar ha.&lt; hccn
ny, prosecutors called 29 witnesses, quick to stand up and try to refute it."
On Sunday, James Nichols said
ranging from bombing survivors and
victims' relatives to a former boss of his brother is holding up well and that
his family helicves the trial is going
Nichols.
FBI agents testified that anti-gov- well. He also believes the e.asc
ernment literature seit.cd in Nichols' against his brother is weaker than that
house was similar to writings found against McVeigh.
"I don't know what else they're
in McVeigh's getaway car. Prosecutors also tried to connect Nichols with going to put on, but they'll have ttr
the acquisition of bomh components. put on some good stuff," he told
lhe:plidlaok,. Thoioo•'!'., M.-11 said, inchodinJ thc -purchnsc of about two reporters during a stop in Iowa City,
could dr.Wtheir own conclusions.
tons of ammonium nitrate and the Iowa, on his way to Denver. "Oh.
NichoiJ, 42, f~ThC dtlllh'"jlcnal- stolen explosives.
h~ 's concerned. His life's on 1hc
At every tum, th·c dc!Cnsc has line. "
ty if convicted of i\iurdeF, ~pira-

humanize Nichols and to make him
not seem like a monster.·'
.Testimony was sclieduled to
resume today in Nichols' trial, with
more cross-examination of James
Cadig~n. an FBI e&lt;pen on tools and
tool markings.
On Friday, Tigar successfully prevented Cadigan from telling jurors
that he believed a drill found in
Nichols' basement was used on a
padlock at a rock quarry where
explosives were stolen. Prosecutors
say some of those e&lt;plosives were
used in the bomb that destroyed the
Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building,
killing 168 people.
U.S. District Judge Richard
Matsch ruled Cadigan could show
jurors the markings he made when
testin~ the drill and the markings on

LegiSI&amp;tOfS want to eliminate a~irmative action programs
CLEVELAND (AP)- State legislators are putting together a proposal that would eliminate affirmative .action programs that give preference to people based on race. se&lt;
or ethnicity, The Plain Dealer reponed.
The plan would efld racial or gender preferences in hiring and stop col~
leges from considering race or sex
when awarding scholarships and
admission.
The state's set-aside programs,
which requires govcrnmentngencics
to give construction pr0jects to
minority-owned companies, also
would be eliminated.
The proposed amendment to the
~ Ohio Constitution will be introduced
:in the Legislature this week. the
·newspaper reported Sunday. But even
·if it is approved, voters could get the
final say.
Lawmakers.· led h~ state Rep.

Michael Wise. R-Chagrin Falls. say nuts-and-bolts approach, but they memhcrs of minority groups being
repealing the set-aside programs also ignore the heritage of this coun- shut out of contracts and college
would eliminate discrimiiiGtion. Crit· try, which is to treat people based on classrooms.
"I expect that this will get ugly,"
ics say the issue will drive a wedge merit and not on their skin color,"
Johnson
said.
between the mccs and in tens ify racial Wise said.
Johnson hns called a meeting of
and political tcn.&lt;ions. ·
Rep. William Batchelder, R-Medthe
Legislative Black Caucus for
"It's tantamount to political war as ina, and the second-ranking RepubWednesday
to plan a defense of the
, far as we' rc concerned." said Sen. lican in ihe House, said he is cO'sponstate's
program.
Rep. Otto Beatty, DJeffrey Johnson, D-Cicvcland, pres- soring the proposed amendment
ident of the 15-mcmher Ohio Leg- because set-aside programs reduce Columbus. asked the House minori. ty leader to convene the House's 39
islative Black Caucus.
competition and increases costs.
The proposal is similar to CaliBut Johnson believes that gov- Democrats in a private meeting the
fornia's Proposition 209, the nation 's ernment must play a role in ensuring same day.
" I knew this was coming because
first across-the-board repeal of race- that discrimination does not prevent
based program~ in both state and . some students from being admincd Rcpuhlicans arc running out of things
local government.
into law school and businesses from to altack." said Beatty.
Any constitutional amcnjlment
Wise said repealing Ohio's 17- getting their fair shnre of contracts.
must
be approved by Ohio ~otcrs.
year-old program is necessary
·:This is a reaction to a problem
Such
an
amendment can get to the
hccausc it's riddled with fraud. and that doesn't exist in Ohio," Johnson
hallnt either through a three-fifths
hccausc it defeats the purpose of the said.
14th Amendment's equal prntcction
He said Ohio has become a fair vote 0f the General Assembly or a citclause.
·
state with the existing programs. and izens initiative. which requires the
"The programs arc failures on the fears that repealing them will lead to signatures of nearly 335.000 registered voters.

U. N plane resumes flights over Iraq this morning
UNITED NATIONS (APJ Washington is seeking a l,J.N. Security Council resolution on Iraq that
hns "teeth." U.S. Ambassador Bill
Richardson said today. He also said
U-2 flights would continue ._,long as
the United Nationo believes they are
necessary.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan
was to make one. tinal attempt this
morning to persuade the Baghdad to
back down during a meeting with
Iraq's deputy prime minister. A
refusal by Tariq Azit. was e&lt;pccted to
result in Annan telling the Security
Council that U.N. effons to mediate
the crisis had failed.
An American spy plane resumed
nights high over Iraq today despite
warnings from Baghdad that it would
shoot down the U-2 aircraft. The
U.N. night carne hours before the
Security Council was to incet to
respond to Iraq's refusal to cooperate

wilh arms inspections.
Iraqi military oftici(ll• said tho
plane. which crn."scd in,l1) snuthcrn
Iraq from nonhcm Saudi Arahia. new
uulsidc the ran~c of its gunners hut
that it monitored tlw aircraft with
radar until it lei\ Iraqi airspace three
hours later.
Shortly · he line Annan and Aziz
were to meet. Iraq said in a letter to
the United Nations that it no lonper
recognizes U.S.-manned U-2 nights
as part of the U.N. inspection prn·
gram and "will act" against such
nights.
.
The letter. from Iraqi Foreign
Minister Mohamme-d Said ai~Sahhaf,
said an American spy plane "csconcd by several formations of American
aircraft'.' had violated Iraqi skies and
sovereignty. a reference to today's
surveillance 'Oight.
"It is no longer one of the U.N.
means of the alleged (weapons)
inspection,·· the letter said. "We will

act towards this plane and other
American aircraft violating our skies
pursuant to this Mscription in a man~
ncr that preserves Iraq's sovereignty
and security."
There was no comment from the
United Nations.
It was unclear whether there
would be funhcr overflights today. As
for longer-range planes. RiChardson
told NBC's "Today" program: "It's
a U.N. decision but I expect they
would continue."
..
State Department spokesman
James Rubin said past dealings with
the-Iraq is showed playing tough was
the hcst way to get through to Saddam Hussein.
" The stronger the action ... the
more likely he (Snddam) will reverse
course," Rubin said.
On Sunday, Iraq barred U.N.
weapon inspection teams that included Americans for a seventh day. No
inspections were expected today,

Richardson said.
Iraq has said that American
weapons inspectors working with
the United Nations' are spies trying to
prolong U.N. economic s~nctions

imposed after the 1990 Iraqi invasion
of Kuwait. The U-2 Oights arc used
.
'
hy the weapons monitors.
Washington made clear that the
United States will be pressing for the
"strongc.•t possible action " against
Iraq when the 15-membcr Security
Council inccts this afternoon .
"The United States is going to
&gt;.eek a very strong, punitive resolution that will have teeth, that will unify the international community,"
Richardson said today.
In Baghdad, Saddam warned his
people t~ey face a choice between
"sacrifice or slavery." Iraq wants
Americans removed from the team
and, diplomats say, a timetable for an
end to inspections that are the key to
lifting crippling economic sanctions.

Ohio EPA:

Big 'A'Auto Parts
landmark closes
Another Pomeroy business landmark is gone -- this time the Big
"A" Auto Parts outlet on West Second Street. Employees of the
store were advised at the door .on Monday_morning that they were
no longer needed.
Known to most area. residents ,by its original name, G&amp;J Auto
Parts, the store was most recently operated by APS Holding Company of Houston, Texas, the parent company of the Big "A" Al!to
Parts stores. Prior to being pun:hased by APS Holding Company,
the store operated under the name or "Parts Plus."
In conjunction with the parts store, a machine shop operated in
an adjacent location on West Main Street.
The business has been in operation at the West Second Street
location for a half-century. The original "G&amp;J" operation was
owned by the Cornett family of Gallipolis. Stores were operated
there, in Pomeroy and in Mason County, W.Va. The Pomeroy store
was managed for 43 years by Ralph Graves of Pomeroy. Afler
Graves' retirement from the company in 1975, the store was man·aged by Don Thomas, Graves's son·in·iaw.
According to Lyle Atkins, operations manager for the company,
the closing' is pennanent, ·and will leave six employees without
work. Atkins did. not give a re,ason for the closing, but said that the ·
· decision to close the store had been madc at the corporate level "a
few weeks ago." Employees, however, did not learn of the fatc of
the operation until they reported to work this morning.
Those employees have been given a '',::enerous" severance pack~

age, Atkins said, and have been encouraged to submit applications
for employment at the Big "A" store in Gallipolis, which will
remain open.
Atkins and three of the store's local employc&lt;!s wcre on the job
Monday morning fielding phone calls and working to close up
shop.
.
One employee was covering tile windows of the storefront with
brown paper. The si11ns now covering the glas.• read simply,

"
,..

'

.

FLIGHTS RESUME· A U·2 spy plena resumed flights over Iraq
this morning despite threats by Baghdad to shoot it down. Officials in Baghdad said the aircraft flew outside lh•.ranga of their
gunn•r•. (AP)

Two southeastern ·Ohio streams still aren't what .they used to be
WILKESVILLE (AP) - A coal
company has been ordered to develop a plan to clean up two Meigs
County streams it used to dump about
I billion gallons of acidic water
from a mine. ·
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency told Southern Ohio Coal
to do more to restore populations of

fish and other aquatic life in Leading Columbus-based American Electric
Creek and Parker Run.
Power. She said the EPA is making
The ·agency wrote the coal com- unreasonable demands.
·
pany lost month and gave it 90 days
The coal mine, about 100 miles
to comply with the order.
southeast of Columbus near this vil. The letter was unfair because the lage, was flooded on July II, 1993.
streams are improving steadily, said The water contained high levels of
Deb Strohmaier, a spokeswoman for acid and iron.
·
the company's corporate parent,
When the coal company began

pumping the water into area streams,
It wiped out aquatic life and caused
an uproar.
The dispute pitted Gov. George
Voinovich and the mine operators,
who argued that the mine had to be
pumped out to protect jobs, against
the U.S. EPA.
The pumping was allowed under

a federal coun order, hut an appeals
coun reversed the decision. The coal
company eventually agreed to pay
$2.5 million in fines and civil penaltics. At t~e time, a company -paid
biologist said the streams would fully recover within two years.
Most of the fine and penalty money was to be used for restoration.

Leading Creek and Parker Run
have improved, but sampling showed
some fish and freshwater mussel
spocies had not recovered as well as
they should have by now.
The coal company said the court
settlement gives it until Jamlary to
return the streams to good health.

'

•

•

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