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. ·'·

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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Along the River

Inside
I

Apo stolic

......,
w.- Cllllftl!otQI'III
33226 Olldren'l u.... Rd.

Sunday Sc:hooll0:30 o.ni.
Colfee hour followlna

Sundof Sdlool • II o.m.
Wonlup • IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdneaday Servlcea- 7 p.m.

Mlddloport CIIIUG of 01111

"hone! Moin
PuiOf: AI Hlltlon
You!ll Minister. Bill Frui&lt;r
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 8:1S, 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesdoy Servlcea • 7 p.m.

Hope BapiiSI Cbarcb (Soulbont)
Pastor: Richard Oliver
$70 Gronl St., Middlepon
Sunday school-9:45a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednuday Service · 7 p.m.

Frtt Will Baptlsl Cbatn:b

Alh Street, Middleport

,

Pastor: Les Hayman
Sunday Service- 7:30 .m.

Sundly School · 10 o.m.
~ednelldly Sen~ice-7:30 p.m.
Ruil.ad Flnl Baptist Cllun:b
Sundly School- 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:4$ o.m.
p...,...., Flnt Baptiot
Pastor: Paul Stinson
Eos! Main Sl.

Sundoy School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:30 o.m.
Flnl Soutbrna Bwpllll
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryanl
Sundoy School . 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:4$ a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.
F1nl Baplilt Cburcb
Pulor: Mark Morrow

6th ond Polmer St., Middlepon
Sundly School · 9:15 o.m.
Wonhip · IO:i5 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.
Bacino Flnl Bopllsl
Pulor: Rcv. l.Awrcnce T. Haley
Youttl Pastor: Aaron Young

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:40 a.m,, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.
Slhtr Rua BaJ&gt;!bl
Pastor: Bill Utile
Sunday School · IOI.m.
Worship · llo.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30 p.m.
MI. UaloD Baptlll
Pastor : Joe N. S.yre

Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Evening · 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Services . 6:30p.m.
Betbkbem Baptbl
Racine, Otf
Pastor : Daniel Berdine

Worship· 9:30a.m. Sundly
Bible Study · 7:00p.m. Wedneodly
Old Betbrl Fn:e Will Boptlsl Oarc.

28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sundly School • 10 a.m.
EveninJ· 7:30p.m.
Thur!day Services • 1:30

IIUislde Baplbl Cbarc•
St. Rt 143 just offRt 1
Putor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Worship - It a.m., 6 p.m.

Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

o.... u.... o .....

Pulor: Rev. Dewey KJna

Sunday achool· 9:30 o.m.
Sundly wonhip •7 p.m.
Wedneoday pnyer meetina· 7 p.m.

School - IO:IS..m.

BndbwJ O•rc• of Orlol
PistOl: Rk:t Snyder
Sundly School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:30 o.m.
Rollaad c ••.,. of Cllrlol
Putor: Euaenc E. Underwood

Plllor: Peter Trembloy
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m. ond 7 p.m.
Wednelldly Service · 7:00 p.m.

Bndfonl Clran:• ol Oriol
Comer of 51. Rt. 124 .t: -ry Rd.
Evonselill: Kei!ll Cooper
YOlllh Miniller: Miclulel Teoprden
Sundly School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 8:00 o.m.. 10:30 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneodoy Services • 7:00p.m.

Rallud C-••lly Clr•n:•
Putor: Rev. Roy MCC.ny
Sundly School • 9:30 o.m.
Sundly Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service&amp; . 7p.m.

Hklulry 111111 Chun:• of Cbrilt
Evon..lisl Joteph B. Hoskins
Sundoy School • 9 o.m.
Wonhip · 10 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelldly Servlcea - 7 p.m.

Lntter-Day Sa111ts
Cbordl or Jnu 0r1s1
or Latter Day Solall
Ponlond-Racine Rd.

Reorpllbed

Ubot1y Clutstlal a. .....
Dexter
PuiOI: Woody C.ll
Sundoy Evenina. 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service · 6:30p.m.

Wonhlp · 10:30 a.m.
Wednelldly Services . 7:30p.m.

Foltb Baptist C~•rcb
Roilrood Sl., Muon
Sundar Sehool - 10 a.m.
Worohop . II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednelldly Servicex · 7 p.m.

ML Mono• 0_. fiiGotl

Fomt Rua Baptlll
Pastor : Arius Hun
Sundoy School • 10 o.m.
Woohip· II a.m.
ML Morilb Baptlll
Founh .t: Moin Sl., Middleport
Pastot: Rev. Gilben Cnig. Jr.
Sundoy School· 9:30 o.m,
Wonhip- 10!4$ o.m.
Allliqttlly Baptist
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.
Thursday Sen~iceo · 7:30 p.m.
Ralla•d I'm WUI Baptist
Solem SJ.
Putot: Rev. Poul Toylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evenina · 7 p.m.
Wedneodoy Servic:es · 7 p.m.

CCJtllolic
s-Ill HN11 Ca!Mik Oan:.

161 Mulbeny Ave., PO&lt;neroy, 992-$898
PUIO&lt;: Rev. Wolter E. Helm
Sol. Con. 4:4S-.I:I$p.m.; M111- $:30p.m.
Suo. Con. -8:45-9.15 o.m.,
Sun. Mw · 9:30 o.m.
O.iley Mus· 8:30 o.m.

Cllurch of Christ
r-roy Cllron:b or 0r1s1
212 W. Main St.
1'11101: Neil ProudfOOI
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m, 7 p.m.
Wednelldly Sci" ices· 7 p.m.

Homem•kina meerina, Jat Thurs•• 7 p.m.

Lutheran

StoiiOI

Plllor: Sam Anderson

Sunday SchooiiO a.m.
Evenina · 7:30p.m.

Wedneodoy Service · 7:30p.m.
Fan Tabenac:le Church
Dolley Run Road
Sunday School · 10:00 o.m.
Evening7 p.m.
. Thurodoy Service· 7 p.m.

S)neUMMillloa
1411 Brldgemon St., Syrocuoe
Sllflday School · 10 o.m.
Evtnina • 6 p.m.
Wednelldly .Service • 7p.m.
llartl c-olly Cllan:b
orr Rt 124
Pulor: Edaellllll
· Sundoy School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Sundly School· 10 o.m.
Wonhip . II o.m.
Cool•llle Ualted MetHdlll Po....

Pastor: Dawn Spaldin&amp;

~o_r:

Helen Kline

O,H•IIIo Commoro111 Cll_..,.
Sundoy School . 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

t'::"!""'lllr Cllan:ll
Moin II FiRh Sl.
Sunday School • 10 o.m.
Wonhi~ · 9 o.m.
Tueoday ServiCOI · 7p.m.
BeJIMI C..n:b
Townohip Rd., 468C
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wedneoday Services · 10 a.m.
ll¥kllqport c•an:•
Grand Slreel
Sunday School • I0 o.m.
Wonhip. II o.m.
Wedneoday Sen~iceo • 8'p.m.
TORIIC••rc•
Co. Rd. 63

United Methodist
Grobrun Unlllll Mtlbodlll
Worohip • 9:30 o.m. ( 1•1 .t: 2nd SIR!),
7:30 p.m. (3rd II 4!11 Sun)
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.
MI. Olin Ualled Molbodlol
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rc..,. Ralph Spires

SUndoy School · 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip · 10:30 o.m., 1 p.m.
Thunday Service• • 7p.m.
Mello Coopenlln Poris•
NortlleaiiC;.oter
AI frill
Putor: Sharon HIUaman

Mont Clrapol

Fait~ Golpel

MI. OIIYO COIIUIItlliiiJ O•rc•
Poslor: LawrentO ,Bush
Sundoy School · 9-;30 a.m.
Evenin&amp; - 7 p.m.

Wedneday Service· 7 p.m.

Pillar: Scott Rose
Sundoy School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhlp · 10:30 o.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

Wot~hip · 9o .m.

Wednesday, 1 p.m. Family Trainins Hour

W011hip. 10:30 a.m.

Postor: Greaoty A. Cundiff
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip·l0:30o.m.,6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Servicei'· 7 p.m.

Put01: Rev. Rolond Wildman
Sunday ochoolond wonltip 10:25

Episcopal

Tappen ...... St. , ..1

PIIIOI: Sharon Ha.....n
Sundly Sc\1001 • 9a.m:
Wonhip · 10 a.11.
Tueodoy Servlcea • 7:30 p.m.

Gneo ~e%4 Qllftl!

326 E. oin ., Pomeroy
Rettor: Rev. 0. A. duPionlier
Holy Eoocharillond

.,

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pastor: Rev. Blac:kwood

Pastor: Mart A. Dupler
Sundoy School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp - I0:4h.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneodly Service• • 7 p.m.

Pa5tor: Lawrence

foreman

Sundoy School· 10 o.m.
Wedne5day Services · 1 p.m.
Cburch of Jo..s Cbris~
Apaltolk Fall.
.
1/4 mile pU1 Fott Meip on New Limo Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meier

Sundoy· 7:00p.m.
Wedneodly-7:00p.m.
Friday·7:00p.m.

Clift.. Tobei"U&lt;Ie Clio....

Oilton, W.Yo.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 7 p.m.
Thursday Sen~lee • 7 p.m.

.
New Uft Vktory Cealer
. 3773 Oeoraea Creek Rood, Gollipolia, OH
Pallot: Bill Slllen
Sundoy Services · 10 a.m. A 7 r.m.
Wedneaday. 1 p.m. II Youth 1 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - A series of single-issue debates
between Sixlh District U.S. Rep. Frank Cremeans, R·
Gallipolis, and challenger Ted Strickland, D-Lucasville,
broadcasl district-wide by radio slalions would be:
A. The largest audience ever assembled for a debale
in sou1hem Ohio; or,
B. An anempt to shul oullhe public by limiting bolh
subject mat!Cr and citizen participation.
Cremeans answers A; Strickland says B.
As of Salurday, !hat was !he status of !he ongoing
debate over debales belween the two candidate' seeking
10 represent lhe 14-county district in lhe upcoming I OSth
Congress.
Earlier in the week, Cremeans rejected Strickland's
call for a series of traditional public debates throughoul
the district; and proposed instead thai the two take their
baltic to the airwaves in a series of single-issue broad·
cast encounters.

St. Rt 124, Racine

PollOI: Williom Hobot:k

Sundoy School· IOa.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m.

Wedlteaday Serviea . 7 p.m.

One-car accident kills W.Va. man

Mlrldlepart ............

Third Ave.
_Pulor. Rev. aort Boker
Sundly School- 10 o.m.
Evenins , 6 p.m.
Wedneoday Servlcea • 7:00p.m.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A Point Pleasant man was killed
early Salurday after the vehicle he drove struck a tn:e on Stale Route
2 at Flatrock, Mason County Sheriff Paul E. "Ernie" Watterson said.
Todd Steams, 28, was soulhbi&gt;und 1oward Point Pleasant a1 an
apparent high rate of speed, Watlerson said.
Steams reportedly failed 10 navigale a wide curve, went off the
road, !ravel~ abOut SOO feet lhrough an open field and sttuck the
tree. His 1983 Ford Mustang !hen caughl fire, the sheriff said.
· ~ Flatrock and Point Pleasant volunleer fire departments were
on .the seen~ lo eJ~.tinguish lhe fi~, Watterson said. ,•..:: •.

Presbytenan
SyrKUH l'inllJIIIIIII Pmbytcrtu :
Pastor: Rev. Kriuna Rnbinoon
•
Sundoy School - IOa.m.
Wonhip • II o.m.
llarriloi•Uie Pmbyltrtu a....•
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Suadoy School • 9:45 o.m.

··lJ6'Ufmlft01raeltftlSm ·Hurrlca.-. i'Ft.1n···

MIIWkpoo11'rnbJtoriaa

Sundoy Sehool • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.

Seventh-Oily Adventi st
Sn..... Day Mftto1ilt
Mulbeny .Hu. Rd., Pomeroy .
PIIIOI: Roy Llwinoky
SlltUday Services:
Sobbalh Sehool . 2 p.ll.
Wonhip • 3 p,m.

United Brethren
ML ""'- Ulllllll llnlln•
II Cllrlol Cllllftl!
TeJW Cotnmunily off CR 82
·Postot: Raben Sondell
Sundoy School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. I0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Services. 7:30p.m.
Edto Urolllllllnllln:l II Cllrlol
2 112 miles north or Reedl•ille
on Sllle Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Rabet1 Moullley
Sundar School· II o.m.
Sundoy Wonhop. 10:00 o.m . .t: 7:00p.m.
Wedlteaday Servlcea '· 7:30p.m.
Wednnday YOUih Service-7:30p.m.

•'

SURF CITY, N.C. (AP)
- Residents of this barrier
isl!Uid community, still reel·
ing from Hurricane Bertha,
gol !heir farst. stunned looks
al Fran's devastation Salur·
day: 20 oceanfront houses in
a row oblitera!ed, streels
covered wilh so much waler
!hal fish were jumping in
!hem.
It was clear that Benha
was jusl a wannup act for
people here. This time, it will
be much harder 10 bounce
back.
Fran killed at least 21
, people - 16 of them in
:. North Carolina - moslly by
falling trees. flooding and
traffic accidents • Page M·

Landfill near Piketon plant set for cleanup
COLUMBUS (AP) - A contaminaccd landfill ncar the Pikecon
uranium-enrichment plant in southern Ohio will gel a clay cap and
trouod· and surface-waler monitoring sys1ems.
•.
.
· The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency announc~d !he esumatcd $20 million plan on Friday. II was developed after ytnyl chloride and PCBs were found leaking into a creek from the ~itr Kiewit
Landfill al the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Planl in Pike Counly.
The creek Is nol a source of drinking waler.
.
A collection basin built near lhe landfill in 1994 to catcft con tam·
inaled wacer will also be mainlained. The budget includ~' mainlenancc money for 30 years.
The U.S. Depanment of Energy, which owns the plan11.' will pay
the enlire cost . .DOE si!C manager Eugene Gillespie said the landfill
was not a health risk.
The plan was "a modification of what we've done already ... an
improvement," he said. The projecl is scheduled 10 begin nex1 year
., and is expecled lo lAke abi&gt;ul a year.
The plant is operaled by lhe Unilcd Sla!Cs Enrichment Corporalion, which contreciS with Lockheed Martin Ulility Services.

, ........ Gospel M.lllloot
Bold Knob, on Co. Rd. 3I

Putot: Rev. Thomu Mc:Ciuna

Good Morning

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

f)j

of Columbus, Oh.
804W. Main

992·2318 Pomeroy

...

POMEROY, OHIO ·lli2-MS77
BILL QUICKEL

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACYl
204 Condor Sl

CLASSIFIED ADS
a supermarket
· for everything

Pomeroy,OH

992-2975

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions

992·2955

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homelite Saws

Toctay's Cit"

-~

·,,

...

Craw's Family ·
Restaurant
HF«~~~~rillr K•rrtudJ f'ri4'11 C1lidtl11'"l

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

Pomeroy

214 E. Main
992·5130
Pomeroy

.

Columns

i

. I
I

MOWEICLINIC
. ..... ISINIIH

..... ••,.~ Ttclllldal
IIIOSEIIIUIII IIPAII

949·21M

RAWUNGS ·COATS

SNOUFFER

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

RAElSAFETY
SALES l SERVICE
112·7075

992·5141

172 North a-nd Ave.
MlddllpOrt, Olllo

•

South 2nd

Middleport

Ycu 'U be floating em a
cllJud with the buys ·
•
you 'U find in the
clauifieds .

EWING FUNERAL HOllE

Vet4H'IInl

Dignity ll1ld SerWce Always"

lhmorlal Hospital

H

Established 1913
'.992-2j·~1 .

1oe Mulberry Ave:

Pomeroy

115 E. MemoOal Dr.

"''*'

14 Sec:lloas • 154 Paaa

.,I

Pomeroy

992-2104

Olllp Volley ........, Co.

·'

'·

Timber group:
W.Va. Industry
needs 'growth'
CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - The stale's limber
industry needs 10 grow co pul
more green inlo the economy, a
forestry official said.
Dick Waybright. presidenl of
lhe stale Fon:stry Associalion,
said the sta!C 's limber industry
concentrates on Iouing and
sawmills but rarely· produces
finished wood produc:ts.
As a result, the sta!C gets
less money for its timbero
West Vqinie cuts about 11 .9
million of forest per year,
1iJc ISIOCillion said. Ohio CUIS
about 7.9 million. while Vqinia
cull about 15.4 million.
However. the limber indus·
try conlribulel about $2.1 bil·
lion 10 lhe stele's economy,
while it brinp in $7 billion for
Ohio and S9.8 billion for Vir·
Jipia, the lfOUP uid.

'

!

'

'

.

•')

thneJlV. slmule~~stt c.i1 ·

.

att,tvlf. 't(&gt;;'fvi,Y cltliSn,

pste,

,,

arkin

Free

PHIHGolal........,.

I • ~.~

no room to take queslions.
~liN ·
"This kind of stralegy allows him 10 hide.
1torm.l~lon they desire,"
The public won't be able to see him," he
',I
added.
Frank Cremeene
Strickland said he would continue 10 chal'j.•
lenge Cremeans to meeJ in public wilh "an
open forum ."
Cremeans ' proposal for single-issue
will probatily agree to psrtlcldebates is anolher slicking point for lhe chal·
but INject them as
Ienger.
debates."
The incumbent's proposal calls for three
.Cht1llef~ger Ted Strickland
meelings, wilh separate discussions of lhe
following issues: Medicare and Social Security ; social issues, such as abonion, homoscx- IL- - . . . . . ; ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - '
ual marriage and term limits; and balancing lhe budge! debates will afford Sixlh District voters a clear underand taxes.
standing of the different poinls of view we hold on these
''These arc areas where my opponenl and I have very issues."
strong differences of opinion," Cremeans said. "These
Conllnued on page A3

Cremeans asked radio stations to band together and
simulcast a series of three deba!Cs.
"The Sixlh Congressional Districl is very large and
moslly rural, strelching from Marielta lo the suburbs of
Cincinnati," Cremeans said. "Such geography makes it
impossible for all interested citizens to auend a debate
personally.
·
"Only lhese live simulcasts can deliver, to every citi·
zen, the information chey desire," the incumbenl added.
While Slricldand has not rejected the proposal, he has
nol embraced il as a substitute for tradilional debates. He
said !hat as of Saturday, his campaign has received no
official word from the Cremeans camp regarding !he
proposal.
"When I hear from him ... if I hear from him ... I will
consider the radio appearances," Strickland said. "I will
probably agree to participate, but I rejecl them as
debates. On !he radio, he can read his answers. There's

Pentecostal

Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sundoy School : 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wedneaday Nl&amp;lrt Service•

p_,~fiiiMNuanae

Vol. 31, No. 31

Debate over radio debates continues; Format, public access troubles challenger

Rojoklaa Ute Cbon:b
SOON. 2nd Ave ., Middleport

Kinpbury Rood

Sundoy School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedlleldoty Servicea • 1 p.m.

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • September 8, 1996

Pastor: David Dailey

Sundoy School9:30 o.m.
Evening · 1 p.m.

CartdoalnlmlciiOIIIIulloul O•rc•

s,...,_Putor:
Oan:• fiiiM NaunH
Bill Stlr01

Peaceful solutions -Page A3

Details on
pageA2

Cremeans, Strickland on the air? Maybe!

Sll.,,.,.llle Word of Foldo

S..l• Betltcl New T-.1
Silver Ridac
Pallor: Raben llarber
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip - IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wedoeodoy Service_· 7 p.m.

RndpiiJefdl,owo•lp
Cllrott. fll 1M NIWIH

HI: 80s
Low: 60s

tmes

Suncloy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneodoy Service · 7:30p.m.

Filii Gospeluplb. 33045 Hilo.nd Rooo!, Potneroy
Paslot: Roy H1111ter
Sundly School · 10 a.m.
E•enina 7:30p.m.
Tueodoy .t: Thursday. 7:30p.m.

JWWI port C••.,. ortM N...,..,..

Sunda~
llo1_';"'30 o.m.
Rood.,.Uie
Pastor: Rev. Charles Mash
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m ..
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
Filii Sunday of Month · 7:30p.m. service

Uollld Follb c•urdl
Rt 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Putor: Rev. Raben !j. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wo11hip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneodl) Servia · 7 p.m.

Jlr.d C~•••• ottlte Nuan•

Sundoy School . I0 a.m.
Thurodoy Services · 7p.m.

cprc•
'

L.ona Bottom
Sundoy School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:4$ o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdoy 7:30p.m.

Sundoy Scl!ool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Cloaler
Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Q.,..

Sunday IChoolo• 10 a.m.
Wot.hlp -~ II a:m.
Wcdneaday Sel\'ice • 7 p.m.

Ohio State ·beats Rice -Page s1

•

FalrOiew lfble Cllom
Lcton. W. Yo. 111. I
Pastor: Rlnkin Rooclr
Sundly School · 10:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 9:30 o.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wedneodly Service ·7:00p.m.

Paslor: Rev. Emmeu Rawson

Radnt

Sundoy School · 9:45 o.m.
Worship · II a.m.

Putor: t:r:.ndolpl!
Wonhip · 9:30 o.m.
Sundoy Sehool . 10:30 o.m.

TrfoltJ Ch•n:h

Com1111My Cllorc~
S75 Peorl St, Middlepot1

Mldclleporl

P1s1or: Brian Hartness

st. r ..1Lulbontt o ....b
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St., Potnero)

c ....er Cll•.... or God
S. R. 248 .t: Rie~l Rolli, Chester
Pillar: Rev. William D. Hinds
Sundoy School· 9:30 o.m.
Wollhip . 6 P..m.;

Second .t: Lynn, Pomeroy

Eadtlmo IIout or Praytt
(ol Burlinaham churcl! off RDIIIe 33)
Plllot: Roben Ya"""
Sundoy wonhip · 10 o.m.
Weclneodly ..,.ice · 6:30p.m.

EuiLoutrt

Sunday School · t0:00 o.m.
Worship · II o.m.

Cbon:• or God or Proplteey
O.J. While Rd. off St. Rt. 160
PISior: PJ. Oopmon
Sundoy School • 10 o.m.
Worship · II o.m.
Wednesday Service• . 7 p.m.

Congregational

II.........YIIIr Commaolly c••rch
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sundoy · 9:30 a.ot. o.nd 7 p.m.
Wednelldl) • 7 p.m.

Pulot: Brion Hortness
Sunday School • 10 o.m.
Wonhlp -9 o.m.
Wednelldly • 7 p.m.

lnlrim pastors: Oeorae C. Weinc:k

Synauc F1n1 Cllllftl! or God
Apple ond Second Sll.
P11101: Rev. O.vid Russell
Sunday Schoolond Wonhip- 10 o.m.
Evenina Services· 7:30p.m.
Wednescloy Services • 7:30p.m.

New Lime Rd., Rutland
Postor: Rev. Morprel J. Robinson
Serviceo: \Vednelldly, 7:30p.m.
Sundoy, 2:30p.m.

Putot: Kenneth Boker
Sundly School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip· 10:4S o.m. (ISlA 3n!Sun)

Otor Sl•lotlr Lutllenll Cban:•
Wolnul and Henry Sl!., Ravenswood, W.Vo.

·Rallaad oan:• of God
PISior: Rondy Bon
Sundoy School _· I0 o.m.
w-:::r,-11 o.m., 6 p.m.
Wed
yServlcea • 1 p.m.

no lltllnon' Followablp Mloisii'J

Plst01: Kennelh Baker

Sundoy School • 9:45a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services· 7:30p.m.

Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.

PasiOf: Rev. limes Sollerfield
Sundoy School· 9:45a.m.
Evenin&amp; · 7 p.m.
Wednelldly Services· 7 p.m.

Paslot: Sieve Reed
Sunda) School • 9:30 o.m.
Wollhip . 9:30 o.m. ond 7 p.m.
Wedneodor . 7 p.m.
Fridoy · fellowohrp service 7 p.m.

Sundoy School • 9:30 a.in.
Wonhip • 10:4$ a.m. (2nd A 41h Sun)
Momlo&amp;Siar

St. Jolto I.albono o ...•
Pine Grove
P11tor: J?awn S,.ldinJ
Wonhtp · 9:00a.m.

Racine

LonaBouom

ea,.;

Sunday School10:20-lla.m.
Relief Sociely/Priellhood 11:05·12:00 noon
Socromenl Service 9-10: IS o.m.

Hll1ford Clr_. of Clrlat II
Clrrilllu Uolooa
Hanfotd, W.Va.

Follb Fon Gospel Cllarcb

•Featured on page C1

WUie's Cloapel Wodtyaa
Coolville Roed
Pastot: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School • 9".30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m.
Wedneodoy Servia • 7 p.m.

Cal..l')' Bll&gt;lo Cllan:b
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.

Rev. Oyde Hebde"""
Sundly service, 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sundoy, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday sm ice, 7:30p.m.

Putor: Kennelh Biker

Tire Ourc• of JHII
Cllrilt ol l.alltr·Day Sohtll
St. Rt 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486

Suncloy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 7p.m.

Other Churches

llolloaa Cbrlsliaa Followololp Chn:b

Belblly
Pulor: Kenneth Boker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wo111hip • 9 a.m.
Wedneoday Sen~ices · 10 o.m.

Putor: J1nice Danner
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.

HtmlocltGroweCIIam
PUIO&lt;: Oene Zopp
Su~ IChool · IO::lclo.m.
Worshtp. 9:30 o.m .. 7 p.m.

Churcl1 of God

Poooeroy
Paslor: Robert E. Robinoon
Sundoy School • 9: I$ o.m.
Wonhlp · 10:30 a.m,
Bible Sludy Tuetday • 10 o.m.
· Rock~
PISior: Kellh Roder
Sundoy School • 9:1$ o.m.
Wonhif · 10 o.m.
Youth Fellowohrp, Sundly · 6 p.m.
Rullaad
Sundly School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp · 10:30 o.m.
Thursday Sen~iceo · 7p.m.
s..... ccoltr
Pillar: Ron Fierce
Sundoy School · 9:1$ a.m.
Wonhip-IO:ISa.m.
Soow•lllo ·
Sundoy School - 10 a.m.
Wonhlp • 9a.m.

1.arm1 Cllrr '"" M......,. ~

Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip . 10 a.m.

War bufl~les
re-unite
after 50 f1ears

PUiot: Rev. Jlo&amp;er Willfotd

FoHb Frllowololp c'ruac~t for Cllrlol
P111or: Rev. Fronklln Dick••
Servia: Fridoy, 7 p.m.

Orllllu FollcnnlllpCoa~
Solem 51., Rutland
PISiot: Raben E. Musser
Sundoy School · IOa.m.
Wonhip · II :15:o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

Purl Clrapol

HyorU Raa 11o11... C~.....
Putor: Raben Monley
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4$ o.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service -7:30 p.m.

· Putor: Rev. David McManis

Worohip · IOo.m., 7 p.m.

Mblcn•lllo

..

PuiOI: Mark Mo!IOO
Wonhip · 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School • 6 p.m.
Wedneodoy Services· 7 p.m.

Faldt Clrapol ()pe• Blblo 0 . 923 s. Third St., Middleport
PUIOr Midlael Panaio
Sundoy oervice, 10 o.m.
Thunday oervice, 7p.m.

POllOI: Oorlel Neville
Sundoy School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 o.m.

Waleyu Bible lloiiDcuO.a....
n Purl St., Middleport.
Pulot: Rev. John Neville
Sundoy school • 9:30 o.m.
W011hip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

b:nnmqnion • 10 1.m.

Sundoy School • II a,m.
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelldly Sen~lces • 7:30 p.m.

•

W011hip • 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

Postor: Scot Brown
w-.hip Service . 9 o.m.

Vk101')' Blptlllladepeadut
525 N. 2nd 51. Middlepo11
Paslor: Jlmea E. Keesu

Hoal• (MiddleDOrtl
Pulor: Yemopyo Sulliv10
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.

.... c.... lllblo noa- e~~an:•

lnslrumentaJ

P'llo11aad F1nt Cll•n:• fll 1M Nual'H&lt;!

ForatR01
Pallor: Oorles Neville
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Thurodoy Sen~lcco. 6:30p.m.

Leodlna Cr&lt;ek Rd., Rutland

Tappon Pilla O•n:• olQrlol

R•dud Clran:b oiiM Naun•
Putor: Somuel Buye
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m., 6:30 p.m.
Werlbeldoy Services· 7 p.m.

tlolwoorla
Plllot: Keith Roder
Sundoy School- JOo.m.
Wonhip • II o.m.

Roao o1 s•-~~o~~aea o -

1/2 mile off Rl. 325

, _, Rn. llerbenGrate
Suadoy School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednco4ay Services • 7 pm.

Eo~

Plllor: Rev. YiCIOr Roush
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • II o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Service • 7:30 p.m.

Pulor: Rev. O'Dell Monley
SUndly School · 9:30 o.m.

Cltafor Cllllftl! of* Naun•

Poslor: Kerth Roder
Sunday Scliool • I 0 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 o.m.

Cal•ary PlltrtiJI Clrapel
Harrisonville Road

PUIO&lt;: ROJCr Wo!IOO
Sundoy School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:30 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednelldly Servlcea • 7 p.m.

Chnst1an Union

Sundly School . 9:4$ o.m.
Wo11hlp • II a.m.
Wednelldly Servicea · 7:30p.m.

310!57 Stole Route 325, Lanpvlle
PIIIOI: Rev. Rick Moloyed
Sundoy school • 9:30 o.m.
Sundly wonhip · 10:3$ o.m. .t: 7 p.m.
Children'• chun:h · 10:3$ o.m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wednelldly pnyct aen~ice • 7p.m.

Zlolr Oam of Qrlol
Pomeroy, HurilonvUie Rd. (Rt.l43)

Rotd.,.llle Clr•n:• ol c•rtst
Plllot: Philip Sturm
Sundoy School: 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 o.m.
Bible Study, Wedneodoy, 6:30p.m.

Alllouy ( S f - )

Holin es s

.......,ollow RJdp Orott• of Qrtot
Postor: lad&lt; Colesrove
Sundoy School -9:30 o.m ..
Wo11hip · 10:30 o.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednelldly Services • 6:30p.m.

loop•lllr Cloriollu a. .....
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelldly Sen~ice 7:30p.m.

Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonblp • 10:30 a."'. and 6 p.m.
Werlbeldoy ServiCes· 7p.m.

Putor: Chute. Neville

Ko .. OarU olQI'III
Wonhip · 9:30 o.m.
Sundoy School · 10:30 o.m.
PUior-Jeffrey Wollocc
Ill one! 3rd Sundoy

Su~y

CntniCIIIItt

I

51°'

•••
in Athens

Gallipolis plans to go
meter-le~s ~Y end of year
By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmee-SenUnel Slllff
.
GALLIPOLIS - Before year's end, drivers coming
co Gallipolis won't have to dig for change when they
park their vehicles along cily slreets or at lhe downJown
municipal lot 1
.
· "There wjll no( be a parking meier left in the city,"
·!taid Cil)i"Manif8~f Matthew Coppler, who has , been
instrucled by the City Commission to remove all me1ers
in a move lo slimulale more activity and bring addilion·
al people 10 Jown.
The removal is expected to begin either tale this
monlh or in October, Coppler explained, and he hopes it
may be completed at the same time a sel of repaving
projects are underway.
"I lhink lhc commission has waived the revenue
stream against the benefits u:i the downtown merchants,
and felt il was betler 10 provide more long.Jerm parking
for those businesses," Coppler said.
Meiers have been ba'kged 1hroughou1 the eily since
the spring after the commission agreed wilh a Retail
Merchants Association requesl to sec if addilional traf- .
fie would come downJown. AI the same lime. lhc asso·
cialion ern:ouraged its members and olhcr establish·
ments to have employees park in nearby silcs ralher than
in froql of downlown stores.
The requesl was made during an ongoing dialogue
between the merchants and the city !hal began in March.
Coppler evenlually checked wilh the county commis·
sioners about doing away wilh meters along Locus!
Scrcet in front of the courthouse.
"The merchants had wanted it all along. and !he
counly had no problems wilh us doing it," he said.
Coppler said the fall is the ·large! date for meier
removal, bul he said the lask isn'l a~ simple as jus I yank·
ing lhem oul of 1he sidewalk. Proper removal mclhods
and how 10 cover gaps lefl when !he meters arc gone
need to be worked out firs!, he added.
If manpower is available, Coppler looks 10 do the
work when lhe Shelly Co., Thornville, mills and repaves
Third Avenue, along with Coun Streel, Pine Slrcet

State plans
'boot camp'

NEARING AN END - Galllpolll Pollee Sgt. Clint
Plltteraon adJulted the bag covering one of the clty'e
parking metera, which have been begged alnce the
aprtng. City officials said all rnetara will ba removed
by yHr'e end.
,/'
between First and Second, and Holcomb Hill. Those
projccls are tenlalively scheduled for early Oclober and
the cily looks for complclion wilhin two weeks.
In place of mclcrs, limiled parking ranging from 15
minutes to Jwo hours arc cxpeclcd for offices and busi·
ncsses with a hi gh volume of lraffic. such as the court·
house. The same will he done at lhe municipal lol
belween Third and Second . nhhough unlimited parking
will be available farlhcr away from the busier areas.
"You need to provide some shon-tcrm parking so
people can conduct their business, then gel in and gel
Continued on page A2

From AP, Staff Reportl
GLOUSTER The Ohio
Dcpartmcnl of Rchabililation and
Corrcclion has
announced plans
10 build a 125·
bed prison in
Athens Counly
fo{ the slate's
nonviolent male
offenders.
The $.1,5 mil·
lioo "boot camp"
for nonviolent
and chemically
!lependenl offenders would be .lhe
slale's lhitrl, lhe departmenl said in a
news release.
A prison for firsl-timc male offenders is in Lancaster, while a boot camp
for women is in Marysv1lle.
A final decision on building lhe
Athens County prison will come .
after a sile assessment and public
comment survey. the dcpurlmcnt
said.
The prison is cxpccled to house
300 10 400 inmates a year.
Stale Rep. John Carey, R-Well ston, said the Gluuslcr location was
chosen over other southern Ohio
sites because of ils proximity 10 the
Hocking Correctional lnslilule at
Nelsonville.
"We would have liked 10 have
had lhe facilily in 1hc 94th District,"
said Carey. "All we c11n do is keep
our hat in the nng and keep working
10 bring olher projects 10 lhc dislricl."
Rep. Tom Johnson, R-Ncw Concord. chairman of Ihe House Finance
and Appropriations Commillec. rcprcscnls lhe area where lhc bool camp
will be localed and was in slrumcntal
in bringing the prOJCCI to lhc area,
Carey said.

Report reveals Shadle Bridge 'deficiencies'
• Heavy dclerioration
• Many areas or railing
and seclion loss to che lat·
We•t Vlrglnl• Gov. G••ton have collision damage,
lice bars and rivets on the
Caperton ilnnounced Friday· wilh hen! suppon angles
1russ superslruclure .
thllt the proJtH:t . .lgned to and missing vcnical bars.
• Water ponding on the
rep/liCe the Shadlf Bridge wa1 There arc many loose bolts
lop lateral strul angles,
underway, with contltructlon '" ang le su pport bracke1
causing member deterioAt to begin Nliy IN1d year.
conncclions.
ration.
"The ..... _....., .,.._ on the . • Utilities on the bridge
poor.
• Paint failure areas on
,.,._,.., .....-arc in poor shape. The
Citizens were informed at a July the superstruccure.
Point Plfl•unt •nd of the three lclcphonc lines
public hearing !hat the bridge is
• Tiedown assembly
bridge will be the ftrtlt con- auached lo the superslrucbeing inspccled every .
months, frozen, wilh no indica1ion 8fiuctlon proJ«;t," Ct~~»rton uld.
Jure arc dclached from lhe
and also learned chal the lase repon of movement Heavy rusl
"Final englnHrlng plan• are tH:heduled to suppo11s in lwo locations.
on a full inspeclion was compiled last. packing around the link· be completed tllter this month. The project
A wa1cr line underneath
November.
age bars, pins and suppon . •troulr! be lldvertiAd for bldll.and.a contrac- appears lo covered with an
Numerous deficiencies are lisled
brackets of 1he liedown tor .,ould be ..t.cted b~ ..,.. No~," asbestos·lypc insulation
in the inspeclion, 1he most -critical assembly.
' ....,,,
~,,..,._.,
!hal is unwrapped and
bring lhree upstream cruss pins. The
• Eight piers with sev- hi Uld.
· · J·
_.
loose in several areas. A
report recommended !hat if the stale eral areas of spalled and "''"-"- - - - - - - ' - - - - - '':·....:.':'...-'-':.:.•_....._ _ _ __, . sewer line allachcd to the
Division of Hishways plans to keep missing concrete, with
locations of lhe ttuss span have no
superstruc1ure is a melal
the span open for .five years or more, oc:casionally exposed rebar.
expansion malerial left, resuhins in line with rust and holes in several
at least one of the pins should be ·
• Buildup of debris on bi&gt;lh lhe an open joint. The joint opening areas.
removed for further testing.
north and south abulment areas; ver· allows roadway drainage to spill onlo
A stress analysis was nol conducl·
Pin replacement may be needed, lical cracks through abulments and the sleel floor syslem.
cd in conjunction with !he inspeclion.
according to lhe inspection. relaining wing wall Siems.
• Expansion joints throughoul the
Environmental concerns focused
Several floor beams showed sec• Several vertical cracks in 1wo enlire length of the bridge deck have on chipped paint falling in1o the
lion losses between inspeclions pier faces and con,rcle popout areas bulsed. crae~ed or missing malerial. river; pigeon droppings; and insulabetween April and November 1995. at the pier ends.
• Several scuppers have deck grid cion around the upstream Ulilily
Approach spans have deterioraled
• Loose and saggina expansion ban extending throush 1he opening falling to the ground and into the
beams, bcarins plaiCs, abchor bOlts malerial on two pier dams. At bOth thai arc broken or bent.
river.
and nuts; two liedown piers have locations, the dam appean 10 have
• Throughoul the d~k. the s1eel
An investigation should be made
·numerous vertical cracks, and delam· broken free of the deck and deflecls grid is worn smoolh, as is lhe deCk's to determine if the insulalion is a a
inaled and spalled areas of concrele. downward under load.
concrclc fill, resulting in slippery carcinogen, the lnspeclion concludThe inspeclion cites:
• lnlerior 11xpansion dams at two deck condilions when wet.
cd.

lilY MINDY KEARNS
Trrnea-Sentlnel Steff
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- A
replacement for !he Shadle Bridge
may .currently be in quescion, but one
thing is certain - lhe condition of
the span thai links Point Pleasanl to
Mason Couitly's southern end is

m

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r

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..•
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,Page

)

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A2 ........ •~ma-Jiaatbul

. Sunday, September 8, 1996

Regional

·September a, 1986

OHIO Weather
Sunday, Sept. 8
0

AccuWealher forecast for daytime conditions and high
MICH.

Indiana
to delay
floating
casino
decision

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The
Indiana Gaming Commission postponed a decision to award final riverboat rights on Friday, citing uncertainties about the casino market
unfolding along the Ohio River.
Casino Magic, seeking to launch
a casino in Crawford County, and
Hilton-Boomtown, wanting one in
Switzerland County, anxiously anticipated a decision but now must wait
until at least January to get one. Only
one site can win.
·
Hilton-Boomtown, a partnership
hctwcen the giant hotel venture and
Ice
sunnr Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
a
Reno, Nev.-based gaming compaVII AsSOCiated Preu G"'P/IIesNet
ny, hinted at the possibility of dropping its plans because of the postponement.
"We' II have to let it sink in, sleep
on it," Bob List, senior vice president
for Boomtown, said after the meetmg.
By The A11oclated Prese
It also was a blow to dozens of
The remnants of what used to be Hurricane Fran continued to spin across
supporters from the two counties,
'
northern Ohio on Saturday.
Rain continued throughout most northern counties on Saturday, while part- who have been pushing for the proly sunny skies developed across the south. Rainfall was heaviest in the north- jects and the jobs they would bring to
central counties, where radar estimates and observers ' reports confirmed that their economically depnessed areas .
According to figures released by
4 to 6 inches fell between Friday night and midday Saturday.
On Sunday, expect a mix of clouds and sun with highs in the upper 70s the state Friday, the July jobless rate
northeast to the middle 80s south. It will be partly cloudy Sunday night with in Crawford County was 7.6 percent,
sixth highest in the state. In Switzerlows in the middle 60s.
·
land County it was 7 percent, eighth
~ forecast for Monday is partly to mostly cloudy skies with a chance
of showers or thunderstorms. Highs will range from the upper 70s north to highest.
The commission voted 5-l for the
the middle 80s far south.
delay, saying it was too early to tell
Weather forecast:
Sunday.. .Cloudy in the northeast in the morning with !&gt;Callered showers, what effect a firth casino might have
then partly cloudy in the afternoon . Elsewhere ... A mix of clouds and sun- on four others already authorized for
shine with a few isolated showers or thunderstorms. Highs from the upper the Ohio River, or whether another
could survive.
70s northeast to near 85 south.
Both groups had cited market
Sunday night... Partly cloudy. Lows in the low to mid 60s.
Monday ... Partly to mostly cloudy with a chance of a shower or a thun- analysis in trying to persuade the
commission they could turn profits
derstorm . Highs from the upper 70s north to the mid 80s far south.
despite close proximity to projects set
Extended forecast:
Tuesday .. .Fair. Lows 55 to 60 and highs 75 to 80.
-------~ near Louisville, Ky., and Cincinnati.
Wednesday ... Fair. Lows 55 to 60 'and highs 75 to 80.
...I'm old enough to remember that
Thursday... A chance of a shower or thunderstorm. Lows 55 to 60 and highs · Ford Motor Co. did an awful lot ol
70 to 75.
market research on the Edsel. I don' t
know how many of you even remember the' Edsel, but it didn't last very
long," commission Chairman Alan
Klineman said in reference to the
1950s car model that nopped on the
market.
Casino Magic, based in Bay St.
COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio office.
Louis, Miss., said it would keep purSupreme Court on Friday threw out
State law allows only the attorney suing its hopes for a $155 million
Ano rney General B.eny Mortt- general to represent various state project. It would be located near
gomery 's appeal o( a ruling that agencies.
Leavenworth, 28 miles from the 1-64
would open certain government - · However, 236 in-house lawyers bridge in louisville.
records protected by attorney-client are employed by agencies and offi.
The commission already has
privilege.
cials. The memos and documents awarded preliminary rights to CaeThe court said Montgomery's they produce routinely arc marked sar's in nearby Harrison County.
office missed an Aug. 30 deadline to " privileged and confidential" and
"We'll never throw in the towel.
file a brief. Montgomery said the kept secret on the basis that they con- Every project that we have opened
:court had the original ·brief in hand by tain legal advice.
has been successful and we' re still
·the 5 p.m. deadline, but that the
The ruling was made in a lawsuit operating," said Marlin Torguson,
required number of copies had not filed by a former human services founder and chj~I!Jl of the board
been delivered by that time.
director for the Ohio Environmental for Casino Magtc."I take full responsibility for the Protection Agency, Thomas J. OlanHilton· Boomtown has proposed a
latcness of this brief," Montgomery der, who wanted to sec documents $122 million project about 25 miles
said.
, wriuen by EPA lawyers that appar- south of Lawrenceburg in far southThe lOth Ohio District Court of cntly led to his firing .
.
eastern Indiana. It would be the third
Appeals ruled in July that auorneyThe agency refused, claiming such project near Cincinnati, and that
client privilege does not apply to attorney-client privilege.
was a sticking point with the commemos and other correspondence
Montgomery said the court, work- mission.
made by lawyers who work 'in stale ing on an expedited schedule, ordered
A riverboat casino in nearby Risagencies outside uf Montgomery's that the briefs be filed within one ing Sun is expected to open later this
week. After her lawyers worked on month, and another hopes to open a
the brier all week, the main copying tempo
one in Lawrenceburg by
machine in her office broke, she said. year's nd.
Starfers used smaller copiers
R rt Sundwick was the only
Continued from page A1
around the office and at4:58 p.IJI., the com 1ssion member who pressed for
"I am certainly wolling to debate Supreme Court clerk had the original a de sion Friday.
\
those topics," Strickland said. "But, bnef and 14 copies in hand, she said.
re are still 14 million people
"
an open forum would allow for a The court had the required 15 copies
ithin 200 miles of Cincinnati.
discussion of all the issues.
in hand a rcw moments later but the It seems to me this is enough money
"His pwposal docs not even men- clerk refused to accept the brief, she for all three locations," he said.
tion Job creation. economic develop- said.
But commission member Robert
ment. welfare reform or education,"
Swan said it was too early to tell how
he added. "Those arc issues of great ·
many people from the area would
public imponancc that he apparently
gamble.
wants to avoid ."
"I don't want to get into a situaCremeans has asked the Ohio
tion
where. Indiana has a black eye
Continued from page A1
League of Women Voters to moderwith an over-saturated market and
out," Coppler said.
ate the radi~ debates , with a pool or
there
are three losers whene two
The decision to rorego revenue
local journalists acting as the panel.
generated from meters and parking might havb- . been successful," he
violations was partly based on a · said.

- Tri-v-,wunty Bri~fs:~ Peaceful
·Veterans to s onsor candidate forum
solutions
'

GALLIPOLIS -The Gallia County Veterans Association 'will sponsor a.debate for the candidates seeking the office of Oallia County com!lltssJoner on Saturday, Sept. 21 at 7 p.m. at the American Legion Buildmg.
All commissioner candidates whose names will appear on the Nov. 5
ballot are urged to auend, and the public is invited.
"We feel that the people of Gallia County not only desire this event
but we beheve that they deserve the right to be able to question those who
Wish to lead them for the next four years," said Veterans Association President Robert Barcus.

•

.Fran's sweep through Ohio
leaves partly cloudy skies

State justices dismiss
appeal on records ruling

Radio debates

Free parking

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steady decline over the years, the
city manager explained.
That revenue accounted for
around $25,000 in 1994, Coppler
said, but it dropped to nearly
$14,000 the following year "for one
reason or another."
In the meantime, the city is also
exploring its options in a rising
number of requests for streetside
handicapped parking areas. Coppler
asked the commission for guidance
at last week's meeting since all of
the inquiries came from Fourth
Avenue, where residential street
parking is limited.
Coppler said he normally submits
such requests to Police Chief Roger
Brandeberry and issues a decision
after receiving his input. But Coppier noted that increasing requests
from Fourth needed funher study.
The commission has since uked
for an inventory of all current onstreet handicapped zones.
"We'ne tryina to keep as much
parking available and still meet lhe
needs of the citizens," Coppler said.

I

Solid Waste District seeks grant
WELLSTON- The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton Solid Waste District recently applied for a grant of more than $100,000 for the purpose
of programming services in our region.
The grant is offered through the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources "Recycle, Ohio!" program, and if awarded will allow ror the
continuation of the drop-off recycling collection program in each county, and will also allow two new programs to begin.
bne program will coordinate cleanup of the worst open dump in each
township, while the other program will use animation to de!&gt;tribe recycling issues in television and educational video spots.
The district will be notified by November if it receives grant approval.
KEMP ON THE GO- Republican vice prealdentlal candidate Jack Kemp, left, reached Into
the crowd to shaka hands after 1 spee.ch before

.United Way kickoff scheduled

the Greater Hartford (Conn.) Chamber of Commerce Friday. At right is chamber repreaentative Timothy Moynihan. (AP)

Dole stumps Pennsylvanians
with economic relief package
PITISBURGH (AP) - Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole
stressed his economic message Saturday to an audience of small business executives, promising tax cuts
and fewer regulations if he wins the
White House.
At another of his "Listening to
America" sessions at a small tennis
equipment manufacturer, Dole told a
receptive group thlll his proposed
$548 billion in income, estate and
capital gains tax cuts will enable their
businesses to grow.
President Clinton, he charged,
would continue a status quo of government intervention that hampers
many bliSinesscs.
" We're talking about who trusts
the people and who trusts the government," Dole said. "President Clinton trusts the government. We trust
the people. That's a big, big difference."
Some audience members who
were pennitted to ask questions wanted to know what Dole would do as
president to help thern, aside rrom the
tax cuts. Dole responded that much
was up to them.
"Sometimes peplc fail the first
time and then they succeed the second time," Dole said. ''I'm not certain that (help) would be a govern·
mcnt program. Don't give up that's the bottom line."
This is Dole 's third trip in two
weeks to Pennsylvania, a key state

with 23 electoral votes . Polls lmvc
shown him with a double-digit
·deficit.
In a radio address Saturday, Dole
argued that Clinton's more modest
and targeted tax cuts would only be
offset by tax increases elsewhere. 'The
Republican presidential nominee.
who has been criticilcd for not
spelling out how he 'd pay ror his own
$548 billion tax-cut package. noted
that a Tax Foundation study found
Clinton's plan $82 billion short in offselling spending cuts.
Pointing also to the president 's
1993 package or tax hikes, Dole said
that "given (Clinton 's) past record,
Americans can only assume that he
will make up for this shortfall with
still more tax increases. "
One day after the Labor Department reported a seven-year low in
unemployment at 5. I percent, Dole
also sought Saturday to rebut Clinton's claim thatthc economy is in its
best shape in 30 years . He cited a
report by congrc;sional Joint Eco. nomic Commiucc ranking the economic growth rates of 66 other
nations ahead of the United States
la.~t year.
"The president may think that
when it comes to economic growth,
67th place is good enough, but I do
not," Dole said. He louted his plan to
pare income taxes by 15 percent,
halve the capital gains tax rate and

'

give low· and middle-income fami-.;
lies a $500-pcr-child tax credit.
The average family would pocket j
more than $1 ,600 a year, Dole said. ;
"That's $1,600 that family can save, ·
spend or invest as they sec fit. ... lt's j
your money."
:
On Friday, Dole dismissed the lat - •
est round of polls that find Clinton :
holding a lead of 15 to 20 percentage :
points.
"In my own bones it's probably a ·
seven- or eight-point race. That's not :
bad ror this point," Dole said on Rush :
Limbaugh's radio program. Looking :
ahead to the presidential deba(es, the •
GOP challenger embraced his under- :
dog's role but said he'd prefer to tack-:
le Clinton one-on-one - without •
Ross Perot.
·
Asked whether Perot, the Reform ;
Party candidate, should be included:
in the debates, Dole said: "Somebody' •
has to have some pretty clear chance :
maybe of winning the presidency. :
The fact that you may have seven or :
eight percent in the polls should not •
be the determining factor."
· .:
Representatives of Dole and Clin-!
ton have scheduled 4heir first meet- :
ing to di!&gt;tuss debate dates and for- •
mat next Thursday at the headquar- ;
tcrs of a bipartisan commission on :
debates.
The commission has propo.sed l
three presidential debates and one :
vice presidential debate.

Clinton urge,s more hiring off welfare rolls ~
\

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Cam- gave Clinton a warm welcome a.&lt; his
paigning before black Baptists chant- motorcade rode into Panama City. AI
ing "four more years," President a rally later, Clinton said he was told
Clinton urged the nation's churches he was the first silling president to
Friday to help take the sting out of a make a visit "Based on what I saw
tough, new welfare law by hiring along the road coming in and the
receiption you've given us, I'd say
people off the public rolls.
"Will you do that?" Clinton the others don't know what they were
implored the National Baptist Con- missing," he told the cheering audivention USA, representing 33,000 ence.
The welfare bill has caused a deep
churches. "Will you go home and
consider hiring somebody from weirare to work if your state will give
you some money to help you do it?"
The new law, requiring recipients
to find jobs within two years, gives
. states the option of offering welfare
money to employers as an incentive
for hiring people olf welfare, Clinton
said. "You could make all the difference in the world" and set an exam·
pie ror'businesses, he said.
After two speeches in Orlando,
Clinton closed the day in Panama
1985 GMC S15
City, a Republican stronghold carried
by George Bush by a 2-1 margin in
SIERRA
1992. By coming here, Clinton
auto, Blue, wlblue
intended to show that he would not llntericlr, AC, stereo, lilt,
concede any territory to Republican
6.6 K miles, 1 owner.
rival Bob Dole.
Local trade.
Hundreds of flag-waving people

E. S. VILLANUEVA, M.D.
ANIIOUICING IIEW OFFICE HOURS:
Doctor's Hours
Monday
1:30- 5:30 .
Tuesday
8:30-12:30

Buslneu Hours
8:00- 5:30

ELCAMINO
305 VB, PS air, aut~. PW,
tilt, cruise, Blue/While.
see to appreciate.

OVCS reported free of asbestos
GAlliPOLIS - Ohio Valley Christian School has been declared
asbestos-free in the recent re-inspeetion of the building, said Dr. Frederick Williams, the school's administrator.
The inspection, done in accordance with the Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response Act, was condu~Cd in October 1994 and samples were
tested the following February, Williams said.
Samples were taken by a certified inspector and analyzed by lyle Laboratories, Columbus. The asbestos management plan, along with the reinspection reports for the $Chool, are on file a(the school's administrative office at Third Avenue and Locust Street, Gallipolis.

Locust Street section to close

GALLIPOLIS - Locust·Street tibtween Third and Fourth avenues will

be closed between Monday and Friday of this week for a stonn line

replacement project.
City Manager Matthew Coppler sai&lt;l that during lhe project's work
hours, there will be no parking on "ithcr side of locust. Crews are scheduled to work between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. each day. .
"Residents are asked to move their vehicles out of the project area,
according to the work schedule,'' Coppler said. "Your cooperation will
be appreciated throughout ihis improvement project."
'

Building dedication ceremony set
WILKESVll..LE - The Wilton Civic Association has scheduled a dedication of the Wilkesville Community Building for Sunday, Oct. 6 from
2•4 p.m.
•
Raising of the flag will be followed by recognitiqn of donon, memorial donations and supporting sponsors of tbe building. Refneshments will
be served.
For more information, call614-669-3915 or 669-3120.

City police Issue citations to three
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Police cited a Bidwell area man on
two charges early Saturday.
Mark A. Childress, 19, 1033 Morgan Center Road, was ticketed for
underage consumption and possession of drugs, according to police
records.
Also cited early Saturday was Harold E. Hannon, 47, Duly Road, Gal\
lipolis, for disorderly by intoxication. On Friday, officers cited Rich~rd W. Taylor, 22, 3490 State Route 775, Gallipolis, for assured clear distance.

POMEROY - Instead of gelling
in trouble for making paper airplanes in school, some kids are making paper guns. This nationwide attitude is what educators and others
want to see abolished at Pomeroy
Elementary School through the
Pomeroy Peace Program.
Students, faculty and guests
kicked off the peace program in 1he
school gymnasium Friday afternoon.
Holding a purple cord, sJudents
asserpbled in the gymnasium, listened to a brief address from Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby
and then sang a song of peace.
Soulsby said the message.of peace
is one that needs to be carried outside
of the school as well .
As part of the · peace program,
problems will be announced over the
school's public address system and
classrooms will be tasked with finding ways to solve the problem.
"This is to help the students learn

'
f

SONG OF PEACE - Symbolically connect·
eel by a purple cord, Pomeroy Elementary stu·
denta ·celebrated at a brief asaembly launching

I

Vouchers: a question of choice vs. traditional schools
By SUSAN THURSTON
Aesocleted Preas Writer
CINCINNATI - Children of the
Freeman Avenue United Church of
Christ auend classes on Saturdays to
make up lessons they aren'tleaming
in their public schools.
It's not required- except by their
parents.
The supplemental school in
Cincinnati opened two years ago
because parents were dissatisfied
with the public school system, said
the Rev. William Land, the church
pastor.
"We had noticed our kids were
not making grades," said Land ,
whose congregation is mostly black.
"If our race is going to survive, they
(parents) are going to have to take
control of education."
land thinks .one way to accomplish that is through a statewide
~ouchers program. The progr(lm,
being tested this school year in
Cleveland, would give kindergartners
through third-graders up to $2,500 a
year to auend a private school,
The Cleveland program is the second of its kind in the nation, and the
first involving religious schools. A
similar program was approved in
Milwaukee, but does not include reli gious schools. The Wisconsin
Supreme Court blocked an erfort to

expand the progran\ to include such
schools.
Supporters say the plan would
provide a better education for disad vantaged and minority students who
cannot afford to leave the public system.
Opponents say it would drain
funds from public schools.
The Ohio Federation of Teachers
has another complaint. In a lawsuit it
filed in January, the teachers' group
said the program unconstitutionally
links the state with private religious
schools.
A F!11llklin County Common Pleas
judge ruled July 31 the program passes constitutional tests. The American
Federation of Teachers and a group of
civil lih\lrtarians quickly appealed.
An appeals court panel on Aug. 12
denied their request for an order stopping the program from ·starting in
Cleveland. The court still must rule
on the merits ofthe case.
State Rep. Mike Fox, R-Hamihon,
who introduced the bill that created
the program, said the $5.25 million
set aside for the pilot program will be
well-spent.
''Givint parents choice will
change the way government schools
do business," Fox said. "When push
comes to shove, government schools
arc more concerned about cash and

control rather than perfoiJllance. "
Dave Nordyke, director of the
Harmony Education and Empowerment Center in Cincinnati, said
vouchers will enable low-income
parents to choose where their children attend school.
"There is a perception by urban
parents that their kids get lost in the
shuffle," Nordyke said.
The center, which acts as a linisoit
between the community and the education system, is circulating a petition
to make Cincinnati the second voucher test site.
Nordyke said 51 percent of the
public school students in Cincinnati
come from households earning less
than $20,000 a year. About 4 percent
come from families earning more
than $75,000 and the rest fall somewhere in between .

'The group also hopes to establish

a trust fund whereby low-income
ramilics would receive vouchers paid
for through private donations.
'
Roscann Sideris!, who sends two
children to a private Catholic sc hool
northeast of Cincinnati. said school
choice is the key to improvin g education .
"If we had rrcc choice, most
Christian parents would choose rcli·:
gious schools," Sidcrist said.
Vouchers for qualifying low·
income families and tax relief for
higher income families would expand
opportunities, she said.
"The long-term goal has to be
freedom , which is not what we have
now. It's horrible. We have hccn
pumping more money into public
schools and gcuing less results," she
said.

· Let us copy your olct ' family
photos. Special 2-Sx7's for
$14.95. Reg. $19.95. SAVE
$5.00. We also do passport
photos, Identification pho-tos
and photo finishing.

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECOND AVE.
.GALUPOUS

POSTED: GASOLINE PRICIS
SEPTEMBER 1, 1996

EVERGREEN - Landowners along the abandoned CSX Railroad
right-of-way will meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the Springfield Townhouse,
Evergreen Road.

Recycling program gets grant

POMEROY - Meigs County Recycling and liner Prevention
received a $15,000 grant from the Gallia-Jackson- Meigs-Vinton Solid
Waste Management District's board of directors, the district announced
Friday.
The grant is to assist the Meigs County program in projects and programs for 1997 by providing local recycling "match" money for an Ohio
Department of Natural Resource's "Recycle, Ohio!" 1997 grant package.
ODNR requires all recycling efforts be matched by a local fundmg source
of at least 50 percent.
The district, in providing the local matching dollars ror the county program, provides the 50 percent match, while also advocating ~ecyclin_g and
responsible solid waste management in the county, accordmg to dJslrJct
spokesman Scott Copley.
·
Last year, the district provided S15,000 in matching funds and anoth·
er $13,000 to assist in purchasing equiP,ment for the new Syracuse curbside collection program.
.
The district is a multi-county agency governed by a board of d~rcctors
consi~ting of the boards of county commissioners of the four counties comprising the district.

the school's peace program. Studentl heard
brief addresses and then eang a peace song.

how to solve their own problems," helping not hurting. We use 'I care' students as the year goes on.
explained Principal Debbie Hapton- language. We care about each other's
Each class will have a peace sig~
stall.
·
reelings. We are responsible for what which will hang outside or its class'
Students will also be required to we say and do."
room whenever they have a peaceful
follow the "I Care" rules: "We listen
The older students will be doing day. After I0 peaceful days, classes
to each other. We use our hands for some role playing with the younger will engage in a special fun activity.

Landowner meeting slated Monday

Ohio, W.Va. lottery picks

SOftHEAS,.ERI
BUSIIISS COLLEGE
,: 4411-4387

Columbua 10819, Chillicothe 11219, JackBOn 12319, MarleHa118/9,
Chesapeake 12619, Belpre 118/9, Tuppers Plalns12619,
Middleport 13219, Cheahlre 13119, Junction 555 W. Va. 121/9
Remember West VIrginia pays 5 cents per gallon more In taxes
than does Ohio.
. Parkersburg, W. Va. 12419 Barberevllle, WV 12219
And here In Gallipolis one station as 12419. Some 12919 and the
rest13219. Well, this Ia a changalrom years of the &amp;ame prices. Or
one cent. difference. Ask yourself, what's going on?
From Columbus to Gallipolis, a 16 cent difference per gallon
and a 12 cent difference from Chillicothe. Ills 2 cents cheaper per ,
gallon In Barbersvllle, W. Va. and they pay 5 cents per gallon more ·
In taxes.
For the past two years I have been working on lo"!erlng the
gasoline prices and other Issues. This has •II been lor the best
Interests of the people of Gallla County. Remember our petition
drive where we collected more than 8500 signatures 7 I am
continuing to work on the Issue. Ills now In the hand of a federal ·
team.
II you elect me as your first woman and Full Time
Commtsstoner. I will dedicate myaetlto 4 yea111 of effort to address
all the Issues and concerns of the people who live In Gallla County.
Let's make September the month to reglater or re-reglater to
vote. You may register at the Board of Elections located on the
aecond floor of the Gallla County Court Houae or call Ellen at 4464830 and 1 will get you a registration form. On Novamber 5, 1996
Vote lor the candidate who will let your volee be heard.

ELECT

By The Associated Pre. . ·

Sales in· Buckeye 5 totaled
The following numbers were 5416,981.
.
The jackpot for Saturday's Super
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Louo was $4 million.
Virginia lotteries:
WEST VIRGINIA
OHIO
Daily 3: 5-5-6
Pick 3: 6-1-6
Daily 4: 7-8-5-2
Pick 4: 0-7-5-4
Cash 25: 10-11 -12-19-20-23
BuckeyeS: 1- 13-20-22-31

Dr, 4 cyl, 5 spd,
w/charcoal gray cloth lniElriolt.l
stereo cass, PM, till, ouc;Ka''l
seats, rear defrost, 62K m••·•

505 Mulberry Heights
Po•roy, Ohio 45769

Specializing in FamHy Practice &amp;Gynecology

split among Democrats, upsetting :
many· people because it ends a siK- :
decade guarantee or rcderal help for :
the needy and mandates a five-year:
cap on benefits to any ramily. ·
•
Clinton got mild applause when ;
he said the law will require able-bod- ;
icd people to work But the response :
was stronger when he declared that •
"to make that morally defensible and :
practically possible, there has to be :
work for those people to do."
. •
•

GALLIPOLIS- Gallia County United Way will have its 1996-97 kickoff at 8 a.m. Thursday, Sept 12 in Conference Room C of the Student
Annex at the University of Rio Grande.
UW President Chuck Woods will announce the year's goal and introduce loaned executives for the campaingn. Gallipolis Municipal Judge
William S. Medley will serve as the campaign chair.
·
''I'm very excited and honored to participate in the United Way program," Medley said. "United Way funds reach many of our citizens
throughout the county."
Continental breakfast will be provided at a charge and reservation are
required, UW public relations chairperson Chris Cozza said. For more
infonnation, call 446-0596.

School students
tackle new ways
to deal with each
other, problems •

ELLEN M. SAUNDERS[I]
INDEPENDENT CANDIDATE
GAWA COUNTY COMMISSIONER
'

Paid lor by the COmminee to Elect Etten M. Saunders

.I

!

1978 MERRIMAC
TRAVEL TRAILER
bunk house addition,
1Cn1am wlbrown trim, 22' haa
range, refrlg, well
lmalntalned, nice sllapli. !l

8:00- 4:00
8:00- 6:00
.Wednftday 2:oo- &amp;:00
8:00- 4:00
Thursday
8:30-12:30
4:00
Friday • NO HOURS 08:00,
. Saturday
8:30-12:30 · 8:00 ·12:30

!"•
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For ai ......,..., phlt

27 0
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-..--------------------------------~--- .- ... -~

�... " '.

~

Com~entary

Page,"4
'

• Sunday, Septe-mber·· a,

1996'
1

'Lsta6fish.erl in 1966

e)
cw.NEIT

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
Hobart Wilson Jr.
Executive Editor

Margaret Lehew
Controller

Letmrs to the editor are welcome. They should be less than 300 wordl.
All letters are subject to editing and must be signed end lncludl address
and telephone number. No unsigned loiMrs will be publl•hM. Letter•
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalit;.a,

Health care returns
•
•
as a campa1gn 1ssue,
but ever so modestly
By CALVIN WOODWARD
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - After ht s btg leap and crash on health care, President
Clinton ts commg back to the target m steps so measured that Republicans,
even tn the heat of the campatgn , support most of his moves.
Clinton announced the appomtment of a cabmet-level commission TIJUrsday to study the quality of health services and endorsed bipartisan Iegtslallon atmcd at cx pandmg mformation for patients in managed care plans.
Um vtrsal co verage, the bold tdea from the last electiOn, has been replaced
by l~s amb1tJOus advances as Clinton responds to the tmpulse to tmprove
health serv1ces here and there wtthout overreachmg.
"He's obv1ously not mto the comprehensive kinds of proposals that he
had when he started out last ltme," satd Robert Helms, a health official from
the Reagan admmtstratwn and economist wtth the Amencan Enterpnse Institute "Here we're talking about micromanagmg"
The legtslatton Clinton endorsed would stop Health Maintenance Organtzat•ons from telling doctors they cannot discuss all options for treatment
wnh thetr pauenls, even tf they might be more expenSive for the company.
"Too often too many health care plans are .. gaggtng their doctors, their
nurses. and other professtonals," Clinton told a Florida rally.
And he sa1d the new commission will "evaluate the ways that health plans
can best serve their customers over the long run so that we can have a health
care system we can afford and one we can be proud of."
"He 's Jdenttfied something that people are clearly concerned about," satd
Ed Howard, executtve director of the Alliance for Health Reform, welcomIn g the exammauon mto the raptdly growmg field of managed care plans.
"They're betng herded into managed care and. even if the quality ts high,
n's unfamtllar.'
For hiS part, Republican presidenual nommee Bob Dole has had little to
say about health reform except that he won't put his wife in charge of ita sw1pe at Clinton for domg JUSt that three years ago.
But some of the steps Dole advocated while in the Senate have recently
come mto effect m legtslatwn stgned by Clinton, mcluding an experiment
w1th med1cal savings plans that the president opposed as .a threat to lradiuonal coverage.
" I've been through periods when Oob Dole has been a real champion of
health care m thiS town, " Howard satd "His-record on dtsability and makmg sure that folks who are vulnerable have decent access to care -that's
pan of hiS h•story. But he hasn't been talking,,about it much ."
Chnton wcntmto the I992 electton ratsmg high expectatiOns that the health
system would be revamped to guarantee coverage. "All Americans should
have untversal access to qual1ty, affordable health care - not as a privilege
but as a nght, " satd his platform that year.
But Congress reJected those recommendations from a task force, led by
H1llary Rodham Chnton and a White House aide, that was criticized for being
sccrettve And the president retreated from ovcrarching health reform.
, The Amen can Medical Association. among groups that saw the task force
as a dnft toward nauonahzed medtcme, perceived no such threat m the prestdent 's second look at the mdustry.
·we eage rl y applaud the format1on of the president 's new commission,"
satd Nancy Dtekcy, AMA chairwoman. noting it will consist of doctors and
pat1ents as we ll as others.
Clinton's latest announcements followed hts s1gning of legtslauon last
month protec ung health coverage for people who arc sick.
Recogmzmg the endunng potency of health care as a public concern, each
party rushed to cl a1m credtt for that advance and blame the other for tymg
11 up tn Congress for so long
Clinton satd the new law "seals the cracks that swallow as many as 25
million Amcncans' who can 't getmsurance or change JObs for fear of losmg 11.
Crack-fillin g for now. has become the way to remedy gaps both m insurance coverage and the quality of serv1ces offered . Clinton went on to endorse
legtslauon that would stop msurance compames rushmg women and thetr
newborn bab1cs out of the hosp1tal The Senate approved the measure Thursday mght, requmng 1nsurance proVIders to pay for stays of up to 48 hours
for most mothers and up to 96 hours 1n cases of Caesarean b.nhs
The law enacted last month also features tax breaks for long-term care
and the sel f-employed that had bee n pushed by Dole before he left the Senate last spnng Once agam. the Dole campaign has been left complammg that
the Democrats arc runntn ~ on purlo1ned 1deas.
"Clinton's VISIOn seem' to be a wmdow lookmg out on Bob Dole," satd
Chnstm a Manm. spca kmg fu r hiS campa1gn.

.Today In history
By The Associated Press
Today ts Sunday, Sept 8, the 252nd day of 1996. There arc I 14 days left
m the year.
Today's Highlight m H1story
:
0~ Sept 8. 193 5. Sen Hucy P Long . "The Kmgfi sh" of Loui stana pol. tucs. was shot and mortall y wound ed. he d1ed two days later
On thts date:
:
:
In 1565. a SpaniSh cxpcdll• un c"ahilshcd the first permanent European
; settlement tn North Amcnca at prc1cn t-day St Augustine. Fla.
:
In 1664. the Dutch surrendered New Amsterdam to the Bntish, who
: renamed 11 !'lew York
( In 1892. an early v~rs10n of "The Pledge of Alleg1ance" appeared 1n "The
• Youlh's Companton '
In 1900, Galveston. Texas. was struck by a humcane that killed about
6,CXX) people.
In 1921. 75 y~ars ago, Margaret Gorman of Washington D.C. was
'*owned die lirsl Mtss Amenca" m Atlant ic Cny, N.J.
18 19):4, 134 people lost the ~r lives tn a fire aboard the liner Morro Cas. tie otr die New lcney coast
. ID 1951, • JIC8'C treaty wnh Japan was stgned by 48 other nation• in San

. "'-:isc:o.

•;

ID 1966. 30 years ago, ~ televtSion sencs "Star Trek" premiered on

· NBC.

: 18 1966. die siblllioll comedy "That Girl," stanina Marlo 'Thorn~~ ,...,_
' lllir:nd 011 ABC-TV.
' ,..~
: In 1971. 25 ~ IJO. lhe John F Kennedy Center ror the PerfonnJna
. Alts opened ia Wasltiaatoe D.C Wllh a performance or Leonard Buntteln'l
; .. Mass.''

•

•

.. ,

•\W

By JACK ANDERSON
and JAN MOLLER
WASHINGTON - RestrictiOns
on the nonprofit, tax exempt insttlutions of thts country are increasing.
whtch is good news for the Amen can
taxpayer.
A man who has spearheaded the
movement to close the loopholes in
the growing nonprofit industry, former Rep. J .J. "Jake" Pickle, D-Texfs,
explains it this way:
•
"The assets and revenue' of nonprofits are now I I percent of the
Gross Domesttc Product," he said.
"They're no longer just lillie everynow-and-then charities that want to
create something to help the retiring
teacher or the football coach, or
somebody who's been injured. These
are big busmesses now, and it's
growmg by leaps and bounds - and
some of them should be paymg taxes.··
Pickle, who retired from Congress
in 1994 after serving 3 I years, was
chairman of the OverSight Subcommittee of the tax -writing Ways and
Means Commtttee. Wtelding a powerful gavel, he constantly put non- '
profits' feet to the fire.
He had good Feason. Most Americans would be surprised at some of
the orgamzat10ns that have qualified
for nonprofit status - like the
National Football League, to name
one Many hospitals acros~ the country, which pay exorbitant salanes to
their executives and make healthy
profits, also avotd paying income tax
because of thetr nonprofit status.
Congress tried to correct the situation some years ago by requiring
nonprofits to pay an Unrelated BuSIness Income Tax (UBIT). Under thts
law, charities and service organizations that operate businesses on the
side must pay taxes on any operations
that don 'I serve their primary chan Jable functton .
The interpretation of this law has
been left up to the courts and the
charities themselves. wh1ch has created much confusion about who
should and shouldn't pay. One example offered by Pickle mvolves one of
the largest nonprofits in the country
- the American Assoc13ltOn of
Rettred Persons.
With 32 mtlhon members, the

AARP takes m more than $300 million a year from membershtp dues
and fees that it collects from various

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller
business partners who sell their servtces to the organizauon 's members.
The group battled the IRS for
more than a decade over whether they
should pay taxes on "administrative
fees" paid them by Prudential lnsurance Co., which sells an insurance
plan to their members.
Rather than fight the agency in
court, which could have resulted tn a
protracted legal battle, the AARP
wrote the IRS a check for more than
$130 mtlllon m lieu of taxes .
Pickle - who was normally on
the side of the AARP's legtslauvc
positions wh1le servmg in Congress
-thought it was h•gh time that they
did come through wtth the money.

"I think they did the correct thmg associate Dale Van Atta. "At least
m finally paymg their UBIT, cough- they don 't do more than about 20 or
ing up money like that," he said. 30 a year. And w( ve got more than
"Because they were getting by with a million non profits out there."
just paymg nothing. !think the AARP
Though a new law stgned by Preshas good leadership. The only thmg idem Clinton gtvcs the IRS more
IS, the AARP has gotten so big that
weapons agamsl nonprofits who
they are not just putting out infor- don ' t play by the rules , Pickle
mation. They are a big money-mak- believes more restrictions are needed
ing organization."
He wants to tax groups like the ChrisPickle says he doesn't have a tian Coalition, who've bnlnched out
problem wtth the AARP. nor with from the pulptt to become a major
other charities and churches who use player in the conservative revolutiOn
their nonprofit status for a good Pickle is galled that a group that has
cause. But he worries that too many helped defeat dozens of his former
businesses had taken advantage of the DemocratiC colleagues is beyond the
destgnation, thinking that it's easier reach of the IRS.
to become a nonprofit than it is to just
"They do this because they clatm
do business. "And that's a bad they're JUSt putting out good, rehtrend," Pickle says.
gious, kind, unbiased, unprejudicial
One problem with closmg the information on the candidates,"'Pickloophole was that the government le ~omplains . " But do they really
only had two choices in dealing with have a right to come together and
nonprofits who were really runmng pray together and defeat together
lucrative businesses: Either let them political candidates, and avoid la/(eS
off the hook, or cancel their charters at the same time?"
and shut them down.
(Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
"But the IRS JUSt doesn 't cancel are columnilits for United Feature
that many charters," Pickle told our Syndicate.)

~----~------·--~--------~
•

••

iam Grueser

~MERCY- William Grueser, 100, Pomeroy, died Fri~y. Sept. 6, 1996
at his restdence.
· Born April 12, 1896 in Rock Springs, son of the late Jacob and i;larbara
Wells Grucser, he was a retired coal mine operator and the former o~ner of
the Grueser Block Plant. He was also a maker of handcrafted dulcimers.
He was a member of the Rock Springs United Methodist Church and a
charter member of the Rock Springs Grange.
• Surviving are a daughter, Helen (Harold) Blackston of Pomeroy; a son,
· Leo (Jean) Smith of Berrien Springs, Mich.; nine grandchildren and eight
great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
. He was also preceded in death by his wife, Buena Smith Grueser; and by
. four brothers and two sisters.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with the Rev. Keith Rader officiating. Burial 'Nill be in the Rock Springs
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 '·p.m. Sunday.

·. Makayla Dawn Haynes
MIDD~EPORf - Makayla Dawn Haynes, daughter of Michael and
Rhonda Zirkle Haynes of Winfield, W.Va, was stillborn Friday, Sept. 6, 1996
111 Thomas Memorial Hospital, South Charleston, W.Va.
· Surviving in addition to her parents are a sister, Stephanie Snider of
· Pomeroy; maternal grandparents, Bruce and Jackie Zirkle of Pomeroy; paterllal grandfather, William J. Haynes of Scott Depot, W.Va .: maternal greatgrandparents: Charles and Ruth Hysell of Pomeroy; paternal great-grandparents, Wtlham E. and Deloris Haynes of Scott Depot, and two aunts.
She was. also preceded in death by maternal great-grandparents, Chester
11nd Jean Ztrkle, and Eula Seidenabel.
.Graveside servi~s will be. Il $.m. Tuesday in the Riverview Cemetery,
, Mtddleport. There wtll be no vtsltabon.Arrangements are by the Fisher Euneral Home, Middleport.
·

·.

Kenneth N. Jeffers

•

1996 at his residence .

•

EUREKA- Kenneth Nibert Jeffers, 82, Eureka, died Saturday, Sept. 7,
Born June 27, 1914 in Gallia County, son of the late Eustice and Bessie
Halley Jeffers, he retired from the Gallipolis Developmental Center after 33
years of service as an attendant.
He was a member of the Christ United Methodist Church and the Swan
Creek Grange.
Surviving are his wife, Marianna Saunders Jeffers: a son, Kenneth Larry Jeffers of Gallipohs: four daughters, Patricia Joan Phillips of Blacklick,
Tharon Faye Jeffers and Clara Jean McClung, both of Columbus, and Carol Sue Crowley of Pickermgton; seven grandchildren; a sister, Betty (Steve)
Swamey of Dover; and a brother, James E. (Violet) Jefferi of Gallipolis.
He was also preceded in death by three sisters, Freda Joan Jeffers, Opal
Perkins and Alma Newland.
Services will be 2 p.m. Monday in the Christ United Methodist Church,
:. with the Rev. Tom Hite officiating. Bunal will be in the Clay Chapel Ceme~ tery. Friends may call at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home, Gallipo; ,lis, from 6-8 p.m. Sunday.
' ' The body will also lie in state at the church one hour prior to the servtce
: : on Monday.
·

h~Maxine D. Johnson

•

l 'I.

,Little sticks to Clinton's political .armai··.
By CHUCK RAASCH
has h1l the political equivalent of the
GNS Political Writer
datly double on the economy tn
WASHINGTON- Calltt Dole's these volat1lc '90s by catching two
dilemma. Nothing appears to be
sticking to Bill Clinton. who has
inherited the Tenon mantle from
Chuck Raascb
Ronald Reagan .
Consider:
pocketbook public opinion trends at
• President Clinton's guru Dick exactly the right time.
Morris, who launched Clinton's famAlthough economists were saying
lly values crusade last year, report- the recess ton of I990-9 I ended
edly docs Ftdo imitations while doing before the campaign of '92, the pubkissy-foot with $200-an-hour hook- lic was ' not convmced. and Clinton
er m a $400-a-night hotel room patd rode a wave of economic unease to
for by the campatgn. And the publtc VIctory over George Bush. Only 29
yawns.
percent thought the economy was
As Republican National Chatrman gelling beuer in September of 1992.
Haley Barbour says : "That dog don't
This year 52 percent said ecohunt."
nomic condll1ons arc improvmg m a
• A former Clinton business part- USA TODAY-CNN-Gallup poll
ncr and now Whitewater felon, Susan released on Labor Day.
McDougal, is threatened with more
Clinton argues it wa~ his I993
jail for contempt unless she testifies budget - one that raised taxes on the
before a&lt;federal grand jury: s~e says wealthy and forfeited a middle-class
special prosecutor Ken Starr is fish- tax-cut promise - that has cut the
ing for whether Clinton told the deficit and lead to a healthy recovery.
truth'in a recent Whitewater trial. The
Dole is left to say: ·:we can do
story is dwarfed by p.s. cruise mis- better" with deeper cuts in spending
sile lltrikes on lraq; ~nd by hurricanes and taxes.
·
,
menacing the East Coast of the UnitIt is hard to find a Republican in
ed States.
thts town who truly believes Dole can
• The opportunities for Clinton to win . Some lay out scenarios of
appear presidential keep coming and Whttewater indictments and foreign
coming, from reintroducing Saddam affairs fiascos, but that's the grasp of
Hussein to the cruise mtssile to send- true believing.
ing federal aid to the victims of hurThe most important moment for
ncanes.
Republicans in this campaign may
• To sell a tax cut Dole once may come in late September after the first
have ridiculed, he must argue against presidential debate, when. the GOP
a rising tide of public opinion that the faces up to whether Dole has a
chance or whether the party mu~t
economy is getting better.
Opinions of where Clinton ranks shift focus to retaining the House and
among 20th century presidents still Senate.
If Clinton does win again; there
are out, but one thing is certain: He

a

arc SIX magtc rriomcnts the president
can point to since the Democrats' disastrous loss of Congress tn 1994 Fi vc
of the six occurred before the first pn mary vote was cast this year, the sixth
was in place by then even though we
didn't know it.
I. Clinton·~ decision in Dccc(llhcr
I994 to turn \0 Morris, who got the
president to chart a decidedly centrist
path and usc .~is veto power to fight
the new Republican majority. It
opened doubts ljbout Clinton's core
beliefs, but it also got him on the right
side of public opinion on Medicare
and welfare reform, the latter to the
ire of liberals But Democratic liherals and ccntnsts have postponed their
battles until after the election.
2. Colin Powell's October 1995
dectsion not to seck the presidency,
and more importantly, to take himself
out of the vice presidential picture.
He would have had trouble running
the gantlet 9f conservative primary
voters. But many Dcmoc(ats truly
feared him, ,lpld had Powell elected to
risk' the judg!llent of' GOP primary
voters, Dole might have. 1\ccn more
willing and more comfortable in trymg to convmce the rcttred general to
run for vtcc president.
3. Hou.-. Speaker Newt Gingrich's
complaint, in November of 1995, that
he and Dole had been ignored by
Clinton and forced to exit the back or
Atr Force One after a trip to the
funeral of Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin . The New York
tabloids Iaheled Gingrich "Cry
Baby." Gingrich looked petty and
petulant, acccleratmg . one of the
country 's most precipitous . slides
from favor. Now, Democrats run

around warning of a "Dole-Gmgnch" regime in Washington.
4. The decision by Rcpubhcan
leaders m Congress, including Dole.
to play chicken with Clinton on the
budget last October and December.
Though both sides wanted the showdown, Dc!llocrats jumped out early
and framed the battle as a loss of services. No Grand Canyon! No paosports1 No federal paycheck! Government wasn't so bad after all. sourmg
the GOP claims that short-'tcrm pain
was for the greater good of long-term
financial sccuruy.
5. Steve Forbes ' decision to begin
a January carpet-bombing of Dole
with millions of dollars m negative
ads in Iowa and New Hampshire.
Many of Forbes' spots painted DOle
an old school tax-raiser. It.not 081Y
eroded Dole's appeal amons Rcpublica~s. hut it also now ma~es it harder for Oolc to portray himself a bornagam ~upply -sider With new ideaS.
6 The news on the first day of the
Democratic National Convention in
Chicago that the consJmcr conlidcncc mdcx ~ a measure of the·pubhe's optimism - was higher than at
any tunc smcc before the 1990-91
rcccssum.
So when Morns took the family
values convention m Chicago on a
detour lo .inlidclity, no-,one gp~ 1,0 0
worked up. The ~moorlilJI 'wcllt. on
preaching rcsponsibil!ty, e~en though
the man whisP,«riltg in the prcsjdcnt's
car may have been prcaclling something he wa.&lt;n 't practicing
' '
But d(m 1t worry about Marti\;.
Big-shot political consuhanl' usually land on their feet.
I

Offering __assistance to the buyers of life insurance
First, death benefits:
By JOHN CUNNIFF
Company
No. I won't even guarAP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - After 44 years in antee a· death benefit at the end of
the bus mess, ,Dallas insurance man
Joseph Mintz is convinced that cusJohn Cunni"
tomers have little chance of fully
understanding the contents of their year 35, although it will "project" a
benefit of$1 ,095,639- that is, if its
life policies.
He cites this, among numerous own interest rate assumptions are correct. But no guarantee of anything. .
uamples, in his files:
The other three companies do
A ~0-year-old male seeks to buy
a policy, guaranteed to at least age 85, indeed guarantee $500,000 if the
that will provide $500,000 in death insured dies at the end of the 35th
benefits while buildins cash value year, but their projections of benefits
- a big selling point - - range from
along the way.
Four companies offer policies for $1 ,098,554 to $1 ,288,878.
Now, the cash values, which supSI0,000 • y-. but their policies are
very, very diffennt - a small fortune posedly build up in a full-life policy
In diiYerenees. It hu to do with I, and, you would think, might bt
dellh benefits, and 2. cuh value available if the policy is sutTCndCICd
at the end of the 35th year:
auaranree•.

Company No. I, which docsn'I
guarantee death benefits, docsn 't
guarantee any cash value either: it
guarantees nothmg after age 8 I. 11le
second company guarantees SI ,933,
the third $59,477, and the fourth
$229,993.
· In short, there can be • difference
of$229,993 in the cash va!t.e·ofpolicies that appear on the surface to be
alike, and that just begins to show the
difference in policies that often
aopear the wne to buyers.
"Shocking," says Mintz, who fot
the ftnt 15 yean; of his ClnCf enjoyed
sellins life insurance. "I was sellins
without knowing I had a lousy product," he says. "I defrauded my
friends and ~elitives . "
Joe Mintz is no ordinary life
insurance agent.

At age 77, he advtses accountants
and attorneys on insurance and savings mauers , and edtts a' monthly
money management newsletter
addressed mainly to consumers bf
savinJls and msurance products. '
' He hliS adilrcssed msurers and ret
ulators for decades, testified befote
Congress, 'arid inOucnccd savings
and insul'liiiCC legislation. Ycais ago.
he predic;tcd the consumer legal ~
Icms !/lat now beset ihc industry. '
I

I

A~ked why he feels 'federal regu-

lation might be necessary, 'Mintz
contends that state regulation seenls
not have done the job. Consumcn ftc
. pay 30 percent to' 40
says, routJncly
percent more than IM'Ct•$111}1' for life
insurance products. , . .:.. •,
l
,;.

...

'

~' •• • elf

....

•

....

' '• MILLWOOD, W.Va. - Mlllline D. Johnson, 68, I IS Ripley Landing
: Road, Millwood, died Friday, Sept. 6, 'I 996 at her residehc~.
Born Aug. 28, 1928 in Racine, daughter of the late Wilham Stanley and
Neva Elizabeth Eaton Dow, she was a housewife and a member of the Ftrst
Baptist Church, Ravenswood, W.Va.
Surviving are her husband, Lewis Johnson; two sons, Stanley Johnson of
Clearfield, Pa., and Terry Johnson of Winston-Salem, N.C.: a daughter, ZelIa Johnsori of Millwood; five,grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
She wu also preceded in death by a brother, William Dow: a sister, Madeline Pickens; and a daughter, Sherri Johnson.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the First Bapttst Church, Ravenswood,
' with the Rev. Kenneth Miller officiating. Burial will be in the Ravenswood
. Cemetery. Friends may call at the Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood, from
, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday.

Lawrence E. Sellers
COLUMilUS - Lawrence Edwin Sellers, 84, Columbus, died Friday,
Sept. 6, I996 in The Gardens at ~tstone, where he made his home .
He was retired from North American Rockwell, a member of the Ltnden
·United Methodist Church and the Ralph Ricldy Masonic Lodge 67, F &amp;: AM.
' Survived are his wife, Ruth, of Columbus; two sons, Lawrence C. (Donna L.) Sellers of Grove City, and David R. (Pamela M.) Sellers of Delaware;
· and five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
' Services will be IOa.m. Monday in the Schoedinger Linden Chapel, 2741
Cleveland Ave., Columbus, with Pastor Linda Chamberlain Jones official. ; in g. Burial will be in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at the chapel
from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Sunday.
· Memorial contributions may be made to the Linden United Methodist
:Church, 1634 Minnesota Ave., Columbus Ohio 4321 I.

-.Sharon L. Stewart
,.

CROWN CITY- Sharon L. Stewart, 32, Crown City, died Friday, Sept.
. .
6, 1996 in St. Mary's Hospital. Huntington, W.Va.
- Born Sept. 2, 1964 in Gallipolis, the daughter of Wtlham and Sharon
· Bashore Masters of Crown City, she was a homemaker.
·
Surviving in addition to her parents are her husband, Robe~ Stewart of
· Crown City: a daughter, Amber Stewart, of the home: a son, Wtlham Allen
J Stewart, of the home: a stepson. Bobby Stewart, of the home; and a broth···. er, Steve Masters of Richmondale.
,.. Services will be I p.m. Tuesday tn the Waugh-Halley-Wood Fu~ral
Home, Gallipolis. Burial will be in the Ridgelawn Cemetery, Mercerville.
·: Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Monday.

~ Deaths

of note elsewhere

number "0" on his j~rsey.
In the Giants' 30. I3 championship
ARIEL. Wash. (AP) - Lelooska,
victory
over the Chicago Bears in
master carVer and storyteller who
1934,
Smith
made several key tackdedicated much of his life to the
lesincluding
takedowns of famed
,preservation of Northwest American
fullback Bronco Nagurskt , who
Indians culture, died of cancer Thurswetghed 230 pounds.
day. He was 63.
Smith became an local businessLelooska. meaning "To Cut
man after retiring from football and
Against Wood With a Knife," carved
moving to Albuquenque in 1953.
I00 or more totems and thou~s of
owning
a real estate &lt;ompany and a
masks, using the traditional. tools of
cleaning
business.
)lis ancestors. He w~ gtven the
Ljvba Wdltleh
name Don Smith at birth.
VIENNA,
Austria (AP)- Ljuba
• Lelooska and family, wearing the
Welitsch,
a
Bulgarian-born
soprano
masks and robes of the Kwakiutls,
renowned
for
her
interpretation
of
l)iallced in shows that attniCted 25,000
Richard
Strauss'
"Salome,"
died
visitors a year. His nonprofit LeloosSunday. She was 83.
~ founda6on offers co.llege credits
Born Ljuba Velickova, Welitsch
for' worbhilpi in,American Indian
rose
to stardom in her debut, a spefUiture.
· Lelooaka once said, "Grandfather cial perfonnance of "Slllome" to celilways told me, 'Let the hatchet be ebrate Strauss' 80th birthday at the
buried. But let not the Indian ways be Vienna State Opera.
Engagements in Milan, Loridon in
fOrgotten. '"
1947
and New York in 1949 brought
•
WIUISmllla
ALBUQUERQUE. N.M. (AP)- her international fame.
Wel.itsch won praise for perform·
Willis Smith. who played IWO years
for the New York Oiantslind helped ing the title roles of " Aida" and
'the team willa fooCblll challlpiOIIIhip "Tosca," and 1ityana in "Eupne
ln 1934: died Wednesday of natural Onegin." She also gained fame for
her iniCipretalion or Donna Anna in
CIIISCI.Hcwas86.
' Smith, dubbed die "LiUie Oiant" "Don Giovanni" under Josef Krips in
and' "Liule Mr. Zero," sfood S-foot- 1946 and Wilhelm Funwansler in
6, weiJhed 147 pounds and had the 1950.

Lelooska

a

After two years, NTSB
probe of USAir crash
remains 'very active'
By LARRY WHEELER
Gannett News Service
• WASHINGTON - Though the
TWA Fli'ght 800 disaster has strained
the resources .of the tiny federal
agency charged with investigating
airline catastrophes, National Transportation Safety Board experts
haven't given up on solving the riddle posed two YC8lll ago when a
USAir jet dropped from the clear blue
sky near Pittsburgh, Pa.
Just last week, investigator-incharge Tom Haueter returned from
California where he participated in a
new series of tests focusing on the
suspect rudder power control unit of
a Boeing 737-300 - the type of aircraft involved in the PittsburJh crash.
The tests were inconclusive and
Haueter plans to refine and repeat
them, said Alan Pollock, a safety
board pubhc affairs specialist.
"The accident investigation is
still very active, " Pollock said.
All 132 people aboard USAir
Fhght 427 were killed, virtually
vaporized by the 300 mph impact and
fireball exploSIOn that occurred when
the aircraft slammed tnto the ground
shortly after 7 p.m. on Sept. 8, 1994.
In the first days following the
crash, safety board officials told
reporters it would probably be I 2
months before a final report pointing
to a "probable cause" would be
ready.
It has now been 24 months and it
isn't clear if the investigation is any
closer to pinpointing the culprit.
"We, like everyone else, are still
waiting for the NTSB report," said
Richard Wemtraub, a spokesman for
USAir. "Until that time there is not
much more we can say or do."
So far the Pittsbut'llh probe has
been the longest and most expensive
ever for the safety board - with
costs "in the millions" and support
teams tlocking an estimated 70,000
work hours. Pollock said.
The public docket on the case
measures 7,432 pages- the thickest
ever compiled in the safety board's
29-year history.'
Many theories have been explored
and discounted.
Among them:
• A bomb. FBI explosives experts
checked the wreckage twice for bomb
residue and found nothing.
• A bird. High-tech optical and
chemical tests found no evtdence that
birds struck the aircraft.
• Pilot error. Lengthy background
checks found Captain Peter Germano and First Officer Charles
Emmell 10 were expenenced aviators
with unblemished records Tissue
tests turned up no evidence of drugs
or alcohol .
• Wake vortex ..An unprecedented

SI million expenment to duplicate
Flight427's encounter wtth unstable
air left by a Delta 727 airliner discounted it as a likely suspect.
With those and olher possibilities
on the shelf, investigators have
focused on the main rudder power
control unit- a device that controls
the rudder's movements.
Relying on hmited mformation
available from the aircraft's flight
data recorder, safety board experts
believe Flight 427 basically skidded
in the air, then rolled ·sharply to the
left before its fatal dive to the ground.
Using computerized flight simulators to test their theories, investigators suspect a "rudder hardover"
was an important factor in the
sequence of events.
The cause of the sudden rudder
movement has consumed a tremendous amount of time on the part of
safety board members and speculation by others.
Repeated tests and microscopic
analysis of Flight 427's main rudder
power control unit and the hydraulic
fluid that nowed through it failed to
tum up the "smoking gun" many
hoped to find
But a disturbmg pattern of ruddercontrol anomalies in Boeing 737-300
aircraft have fueled an undercutTCnt
of suspicion.
Aviation disaster attorney Arthur
Wolk - who represents families of
victims aboard Flight 427 and a
United 737-200 that crashed in Colorado Springs. Colo., in I 99 I - has
been widely quoted as saying he
believes faulty rudder controls are to
blame.
Such claims rankled NTSB Chief
Jim Hall, who brought them up at a
rare second public hearing on the
Pittsburgh crash last November.
· Hall satd he was disturbed by
statements from aviation attorneys
that appeared in Newsweek magazine
claiming the safety board was with·
holding evidence that the rudder
caused the cr.Shes in Pittsburgh and
Colorado Springs.
"We arc always ready to constd·
cr hard evidence that Will withstand
the scrutiny of tramed investigators,
not wild accusations that ore eagerly
bandied by people looking for a
sound bite on television, " Hall said.
Stnce the safety board was created in 1967, tl has investigated more
than I00,000 avtation accidents . In
on Iy four of those cases has the
agency fatled to tssue a findmg of
"probable cause" based on the evi. dence presented by its investigators.
The Colorado Sprmgs crash which shares a number of disturbing
similarittes to the Pittsburgh mishap
- is one of those unresolved cases

PROMOTIONS MADE - Gellla County Sheriff . . _ D. Tay·
lor recently snnounced the promotions of two dtputlft to the
poahlona of Hrgeent. Robert N1nce, right, hila Mt1 with the
dlpat1ment Since JlnlllrY 1113 when he W88 brought In M S radio
dlapetchll'. He w11 promoted to correction• officer In 1H4, and
WM 111lgnecl ss a petrol officer In 1HO. ~ Mulllna, 11ft,
began hla emplo~ment •• 1 petrol officer In 1113. He worked M
1 shift aupervlaor for Sheriff Jernn M. Montg«Mry from 11117 to
1989 before retumlng to the poehlon of pmol officer. Tsytor Mid
that he was pleased to meke the appolntmenta end feels that the
..elgnments will help the department run more afllelently.

Central State seeking
postponement of visit
from accrediting agency
CLEVELAND (AP) - Central
State University - whtch is $8 mil lion m debt, lacking a prcstdenl and
trymg to renovate condemned dormtloncs - wants a delay m a vtstt
from a regional accrediting agency.
Ohto's only historically black state
college has asked the North Central
Associauon of Colleges and Universiucs to extend its accreditation
through mid- 1997 and postpone a
scheduled exam mat ion of the school .
Accredttation means a college 's
credtts wtll be accepted at other
schools where students transfer, and
quahfies the college and 1ts students
for considcrauon for fcdcrallinanctal
atd
Central State's last comprchcnstvc
revtcw occurred six years ago The
association requires colleges to
undergo comprehcnstve rcvtcws at
least every I 0 years.
The assoctatton had been plannmg
to send a team to the W1lherforcc
campus in Greene County next April
Schools prepare for such vtstls by
domg extensive sclf-stud,tes that
mclude wnllcn reports on campus
strengths, weaknesses and goals.
Only three of the umvcrsity 's nine
condemned dorrmtorics have been
renovated and the school IS betng run
by a SIX-mcmhcr cnsts management

team hired by the state Its last two
presidents were fired.
Team leader George Ayers and
several trustees, including Mich-,;;;j ""'
Schwartz and Chairman Fred Ra~
er, new to Chicago on Wednesday to
appeal to Nonh Ccntl-al to grant the
extension.
" We shared with them what the
state of the institution ts now in terms
of its development and fiscal situation," Ayers said. "We need the
delay to give the institution more
time to stabilize and to allow us to get
the kinds of support structures tn
place, to huild the administration and
develop financtal controls."
M. Jane Hunter, associate director
ol the association, satd such requests
arc not 11nusual. particularly when a
school loses a prcsidc'nt.
•
Hunter said that before granting
any extensiOn, she will VIStlthc campus thts fall . Because it has not been
I 0 years since the la'l revtcw, she has
the authority to grant the extension
wtthout a vote by a&lt;sociatton commissioners.
Ayers said the faculty, at hts
instruction, ha&lt; already started the
self-study process that precedes the
review. m case the a.'sociation doesn't grant his request for a delay.

Gallia County court news

Common Pleas
GALLIPOLIS - The following
action was recently filed in the Gallia County Common Pleas Court:
D1vorce filed - John W. Mossman, Cheshtre, from Naomt Mossman, 63 Bcrnmcmer Road, Gallipolis
Municipal
GALLIPOLIS - The following
BECKLEY, W.Va. (AP) - A school principal accused of propositioning ·
action was resolved in Galltpolis
two police officers while in drag has quit his job.
Mumc1pal Court
George S. Meadows' resignation as princtpal at Sylvia Elementary School
Stephantc D McCarty, 22, Pomt
in Beckley took effect Thursday. He had been sent home from work Tues- Pleasant, W.Va ., charged with petty
day and suspended wtthout pay
theft, wa&lt; fined $150, six months pro"He's upset, " school Superintendent Dwight Dials said. "His life is shat- ball on and 10 days community scrtered."
VICC .
He was arrested Sunday after police satd he offered oral sex to two underProbate-Juvenile
cover officers in exchange for mqney while dressed as a woman . The 55GALLIPOLIS - The following
year-old Meadows was photographed by police in a wig and lipstick
couples recently filed for mamagc
Co-workers described Meadows as a good principal. He taught for sevlicenses tn Galha County Prohatcen years before becomins principal.
Meadows faces a Monday hearing for soliciting I?rostitution, which as a Juvcntlc Court:
Amy Lynn Bennett and Charles
first offense ts puntshable by a $550 fine
Dare Miller IV, both of R10 Grande:

Principal arrested in drag
quits job; 'life is shattered'

Stefanic Jo Danlord, Crown Cny, and
Scou Evcrcn Hatslop. Gallipolis:
Delilah Dawn Darst and Wtlliam
WilliS Cox Jr, both of Gallipolis.
Atmec
Brown, Bidwell, and Todd I
~ . . pllkl ..~
funentl h - .
Obllulrtel . . publielleclll rwqllle1ed to ace
lhNedlllrtng mon
Smillie. Oak Htll. Jam1c Fay Isaac
lnfomtlltlon flan II provldN In llw ICCGf111181'1ylng Dallll NolloM.
and Damel Byron Ma.skcw. hnth nl
Vtnton ; Su1.anne Martm and Rnhcn
S. Jones, both of Gallipolis. Jnna Jn
Hatfield and Ralph Wayne Spence Jr..
both of Gall1pulls:
Lon L Thomas. ' Chcs h~rc. uno
EUREKA - Kenneth Nibert Jeffers, 82. of Eureka, died Saturday mornTimothy R. Ncutzltng. Ra"nc ,
ing, S«.pcember.7. 1996 at hts restdencc.
Bom June 27, 1914 in Gallia County, son of the late Eus~ce Jeffers and Melissa Duwn Walker and Anti• my
Bessie Halley Jeffers, he
the Gallipohs Developmental Center Cemmt Jr.. hoth of Rtn Grande:
·
'
'
after 33 years of service as an atten dant.
He was a member of the Christ
Umted Methodist Church, a member
POMEROY - Units ol the Mctg.'
of the Swan Creek Grange, and was County Emergency Med1cal Service
an avid gardener, specializi·ng in recorded li ve calls for asSistance
growmg tomatoes.
Friday, includmg three routine trunsSurvivmg are his wife, Mamnna fer calls. Units responding mcludcd:
Saunders Jeffers; a son, Kenneth
MIDDLEPORT
Larry Jeffers of Gallipolis: four
10 51 p.m., North First Avenue,
daughters, Patricia loan Phillips of Melinda Justis, Veterans Memorial
Blacklick, Tharon Faye Jeffers of Hospllal.
Columbus, Carol Sue Crowley of
RACINE
Pickerington, and Clara Jean
1.50 p.m ., Carroll Street, Pearl
McClung of Columbus; seven Knapp, Holzer Medical Center.
grandchildren, Jay Phillips, _Kelli
Leinbeugh, Carmen Sue Crowley.
Jason Crowley, Katrinia McCluna,
Tiffany McCiu111 and Lisa Jeffers; a
sister, Betty (Steve) Swarney of
Dover; and a brother; James E. (VioKtinMII
.Mfler8
let) Jeffers of Gallipolis.
He was also p~eeeded in death by
three sisters, Freda Joan Jeffers, Opal Perkins and Alma Newland.
Services will be 2 p.m. Monday, September 9, 1996 in the Chrill United
Melhodist &lt;burch, with die Rev. Tom Hite officiatina. Burial will be in the
Ctay Chipel Cemetery. Friends may call at the Waugh-Haney- Wood Funeral Home, Gallipolis, from 6-8 p.m. Sunday, September 8, 1996.
The body will also lie in state at the church one hour prior to the service
on Monday.

Nancy Brubaker Lathey and Thomas
Ross Childs, both of Gallipolis:
Cindy Lou Burton, Bidwell, and
Lucas Oxyer, Thurman; Trcna Lee
Caruthers and Emil Maywood
Thompson, both of Chcshtrc: Aimee
Kristeen Branham, Patriot, and
Michael Anthony Robmson, Oak
Hill; Holly Jean Marcum and Anthony Wayne Gillman, both of Vinton:
Carolyn Sue Lambert and Ira F. Barcus, both of Gallipolis.

We want to
change the way
you look at

monuments.

-Obituaries•••:::!.!t...locltt

us create a

Kenneth Nibert Jeffers

memorial just

for you.

Meigs EMS runs

Qual~

POMEROY
Near P~

•...

Oellla Countr Dll!lllly YII'CI
155 Mllln St.

, ,

""*'

iltiitill_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

~-~~~~- ----

nuon 1rtc1ge

912-21111
VINTON

•
_ _"'-=-................

1·800-543-4814

meJIIOI'Iab

liilco 11190

•
•

·' "

•

.·sunctay, Sept8mbtr a, 1996~~~~~~~~P;oFme~ro~y;··!~M:Idd=le~po;;rt~·~G:al~ll~po:l:l•~·o~H~•:Po~l:nt~P~Ie~a~aa;n~t~,wv~~~~~~====~=~~·~:,:ad=t•E":·:P:•:ue:AS:

Junbav- ~imts .. itntbttl Restrictions on tax loopholes gain groun·d :
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
614-446-2342 • Fa~: 446-3008
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

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�•

Nation/World
Tougher

Pentagon confesses
some
cruise missiles
.
.
failed in strike on Iraq

this time
Coastal dwellers
find post-hurricane
cleanup not easy
By DAN SEWELL
Associated Preas WrHer
SURF CITY. N.C. - Coastal
Carolina restdents were still cleaning
up from Hurricane Bertha when Fran
delivered a fresh battering that made
Bertha look like a warmup a~. This
tune. it will be much harder to
hounce back.
Fran killed at least 21 people including 17 in North Carolina mostly by falling trees. nooding and
traffic accidents.
More than 800,000 customers
were still without electricity Saturday,
mostly in North Carolina and Vir·
2ini a. and utilities warned that it
:.ould take up to a week for everyone
to get power agam.
Some 4,000 utility poles were
destroyed, and about I ,000 miles of
downed power lines have to be
replaced or repaired, Carolina Power &amp; L1ght said Saturday.
Meanwhile, people dependent on
electric pumps couldn't get well
water, and gas station pumps were
use less as well.
"People are getting a little testy,"
-aid Neil Brennecke, who waited 20
minutes to fill up his truck with gas
m Raleigh, where Fran caused major
damage before heading into central
Virginia.
Fran inflicted the most damage
along North Carolina's barrier islands
just cast of Wilmington, as it pounced
up the Cape Fear River with 115 mph
wmds and pushed a storm surge of II
feet m places.
But unlike Bertha, which moved
up the coast, Fran plowed deep
inland . knocking down trees and
power lines in the capital of Raleigh
and dumping up to 14.5 inches of rain
on ce ntral and western Virginia.
The huge amounts of water on
land already saturated by rains earlier in the week caused widespread
nooding Friday and Saturday, with
mud and debris coursing down from

SURVEYING DAMAGE
Mike Webb of
Wrightaville Beech, N.C., rode past a boat that
the Blue Ridge and Shenandoah
mountains into isolated hamlets and
hollows.
In Rockingham County, Va.,
10,000 alone ned their homes, and
the National Guard used helicopters
to pluck many people to safety,
including some who spent hours
clinging to trees. ·
More than 600 roads remained
closed because of high water Saturday. and hundreds of people were
staying in shelters.
"We watched the truck wash
away and the road wasl) away. Trees
were just snapping like twigs," said
Sam Reeves, who spent nine hours in
a tree with his contracting partner in
Naked Creek, Va., before a Coast
Guard helicopter crew plucked them
away.

was waahed alhore following Hurricane Fran's
tidal aurge near the belch communHy. (AP)

Along the coast, about 5 percent
of the people living on barrier islands
near Wilmington had ignored evacuation orders. Others got their first
look at the damage Saturday.
In Surf City and Topsail Beach,
surf was pushed over the oceanfront
dunes and through the streets to the
sound on the opposite side of the
island, said county emergency management director Carson Smith.
The south end of Topsail Beach
was covered with wet sand and
looked more like a baseball diamond
infield after a rain than a popular
tourist community. 1lle ocean and the
sound behind the island are only separated by a few hundred yards.
A mile-square area at the heart of
the Carolina Beach business district
was flooded, leaving homes sur-

rounded and cars submerged. Aboveground backyard pools became
islands of water surrounded by more
water.
Waves tore away several hundred
yards of oceanfront state Highway 50
in Surf City.
'Two piers in Carolina Beacll and
a third in Kure Beach were washed
away.
At least a dozen boats were
smashed against a dock at a marina
near Carolina Beach. Other boats
were tossed from the water onto nearby roadways.
·
The Insurance Information Institute estimated losses to private propeny owners with insurance at $625
million, but the overall total was sure
to be much higher.

Tabloids claim Morris had child by mistress
By KAAEN 'MATTHEWS
lands about Pfafnin. According to
Associated Preas Writer
hotel records, Pfafnin was checked
NEW YORK&gt;- Dick Morris, the into Morris' part-time Washington
disgraced mastermind of President residence as recently as last month.
Clinton's family-friendly agenda, was just weeks after he was there with
hit with a second sex scandal in a Rowlands.
week when the supermarket tabloids _ _ Pfafnin is a part-time real estate
reponed that he has a longtime mis- broker, the Enquirer said. An unidentress and a 6-year-old daughter with tified friend told the tabloillthat Morhcr.
ris has visited their daughter several
Morrisresigned last week after the times, that he paid Ms . Prafnin's
story of hi s yearlong tryst with a tuition at the University of Texas and
$200-a night call girl , Sherry Row- that he has put money in the child's
lands. hit the tabloids. In next week's college fund .
editions, the Star and the National
Rowlands was paid for her story,
Enquirer. which are owned by the but Pfafnin, who has been in hiding
same company, repori that Morris has since the Morris' sex life became
been having another affair, this one front-page news, was not.
lasting about 15 years, with Barbara
A call to Ms . Pfafnin 's home was
Jean Pfafnin of Austin, Texas.
not immediately returned.
Moms has heen married to lawyer
The Star also published material it
Eileen McGann for 20 years . His said came from a diary Rowlands
rclauonsh•p with Pfafntn, 40, has kept during her relationship with
prod uced his only child, a 6-year-old Morris. The diary said Morris told
gJrl. the tabloids reported.
Rowlands that Hillarv Rodham ClioThe Star said Morris told Row- ton ordered the White House review

of Republicans' FBI files .
The White House referred queries
about the diary to the first lady's
office. "The Star? I think that speaks
for itself," sa1d Nee! Lanimore, a
spokesman for Mrs . Clinton.
But Rep. William Clinger, R-Pa.,
who has been investigating the FBI
files controversy, said he was "astonished" to learn of the allegation. He
called for Morris to provide any relevant information and threatened
action to compel his cooperation if
necessary.
"I can't dismiss this out of hand
coming aS it does from someone who
clearly was in a position to know and
had access to the very highest levels
of the White House in June 1996,
when my committee first uncovered
this massive invasion of privacy,"
said Clinger, chairman of the House
Government Reform and Oversight
Commiuec.
Clinger said if Morris refuses to
cooperate, "I will have to pursue oth-

er avenues available to me as chairman ... to elicit a response."
A woman answering the phone at
Morris ' Redding, Conn., home said
he was unavailable for comment.
The latest scandal coincides with
the disclosure that Morris has signed
deal for about $2 million to write a
book about how he engineered Clinton's political comeback.
"This is not a book about a call
girl but the governance of America
and the White House and other
important subjects," said Harold
Evans, president and publisher of the
Random House Trade Group.
1lle New York Times reported Friday that Morris' contract, signed
nearly five months ago, had an
escape clause that allowed him to
pitch the book to other publishers.
The Times said Morris' agent brieny
tried to capitalize on Morris' new
infamy by shopping the book around
before ~ettling back at Random
House.

New book says O.J. knew verdict in advance
NEW YORK (AP) - That
famou s look of relief on OJ. Simpson's face when the JUry acquitted
htm of murder was an acting performan ce. says an author who claims a
Jail guard tipped Simpson to the verdict the ni ght heforc .
JciTrey Toohin , who covered the
trial for The New Yorker magazi ne.
also said defense attorneys Johnnie
Cochran and Robert ShapJro thought
Simpson was guilty. and told others
so.
Cochran. 10 a statement issued Friday. denied he ever said or felt
Simpson was responsible for the
stabbmg deaths of «-wife Nicole
Brown Simpson and Ronald Gold-

·September 8, 1896

man. Shapiro did not immediately
return calls.
Toobin spoke about the trial and
his book, "The Run of His Life," on
NBC's "'Dateline," which will air
Sunday. He declined to comment Friday.
"One of the things I've learned
since the trial is that one of the most
famous moments in television history, which is that shot of O.J., is fundamentally a fraud ," Toobin told the
news program. "Because he looked
surprised, but he wasn 't''
After JUrors reached their verdict
and placed it in an envelope on Oct.
2. Toobin said, they went back to
their hotel and had a party. The two

alternate juro~s . who didn't know the
verdict, were told by another juror
that Simpson was innocent.
A deputy guarding the jurors
asked, '"Come on, what happened?'
(They) said the same thing : 'N' not guilty." the author said. A deputy
then called a friend who was guarding Simpson in jail , and the guard
told Simpson, Toobin said.
"One of the sheriffs came up to
him and said, 'I want your autograph
tonight because you're going home
tomorrow," ' Toobin said.
"Obviously, you don't know for
sure until you hear it," the author
said. But "these weren't people who
were out to play with his head the

Crash prompts Clinton to order fleet review
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - A
Walter Moore was supervising a
Marine Corps helicopter accompa- crew laying asphalt at the Orlando
nying President Clinton on a cam. airport just before II :30 a.m. when be
paign trip rolled over and burst into saw !he helicopter appear to strike a
names while on the ground, prompt- light pole and become consumed
ing a thorough review of aircraft ny- with names.
ing on W~ite House and Cabinet
"I was just standing there and
trips.
heard this big ka-voom, and the next
President Clinton ordered the Pentagon review after the mishap at the
Orlando Executive Airport, the second .accideni in a month involvtng a
presKiential support aircraft. An Air
Force CIJ'IO plane that accompanied
the president on vacation _crashed in
Wyoming last month, kilhng nine

thing I knew it was on fire and people were running out of it," Moore
said.
The helicopter was taxiing to a
fuel truck at the airport when its rotor
blade apparently clipped a light pole,
Pentagon spokesrpan Kenneth Bacon
said.

night before the verdict. These were
his buddies, and they were right."
Simpson was acquitted the next
day · as millions watched on telcviston.

Prosecutor Christopher Darden
said the prosecution had suspected
Simpson knew the verdict befo~e it
was read .

By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
AP MIIHery Writer
WASHINGTON - Several of
the cruise missi les aimed at Iraq this
week "did not fire as planned," but
back-up weapons were dispatched
instead, the Pentagon says.
In response to Saddam Hussein's
attacks on Kurdish minorities in
northern Iraq, the Navy and Air
Force launched 44 cruise missiles at
surface-to-air missile sites, command-and-control units and radar
sites inside Iraq. 1lle allacks came in
two waves.
Defense Department spokesman
Kenneth Bacon said Friday that the
problems involved about a halfdozen cruise missiles. Some were
fired from Air Force B-52 bombers,
while others were launched from
Navy ships in the Persian Gulf.
On the first night, Bacon said,
complex computerized targeting systems on several of the cruise missiles
"wercn 't programmed completely in
time" to be fired .
On the second night, he said,
· "several missiles did not fire as
planned," but back-up missile&lt; were
fired from another Navy vessel.
Bacon declined to specify what
those problems were, or say exactly
how long it takes to program targets
for the missiles, which can ny
upwards of 500 miles to their targets .
"Some complex tasks take a long
time," the spokesman said, and military planners know weapons can
malfunction and therefore plan for
such events. "The key to military
success is redundancy," he said.
The New York Times reported,
meanwhile, that a covert CIA opera'
tion aimed at overthrowing Saddam
was undermined by the Iraqi attack
on the Kurdish safe haven in northern Iraq.
CIA officers who were secretly
overseeing the operation in northern
Iraq left the country last week as Iraqi
forces moved in, the newspaper said
in Saturday's editions.
Quoting unidentified senior
administration officials, the Times
said President Clinton had expanded
the operation in January, directing the
CIA to provide weapons, organize
some military training and install
intelligence-gathering equipment for
groups trying to overthrown Saddam.
CIA spokesman Dennis Boxx

•

~sports

-.Section
SUrlday, September 8, 11M .

osu

In the U.S. Open,

blasts
Rice

By STEVE WILSTEIN
NEW YORK (AP) - Pete Sampras choked. He knew it. The crowd
saw it. Goran lvanisevic celebrated
it.
The mome.nt passed in embarrassment for Sampras, anJ he played
B¥ RUSTY MILLER
an extra set he didn't need and most
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -In a
certainJy.didn 't want two days after
battle of the biggest and smallest
throwing up and nearly fainting on
schools in Division I-A football, bigcourt.
ger was definitely better.
Yet when he walked off after the
Tenth-ranked Ohio State, with
third semifinal on ~emi-Super Satmore than 49,000 students on camurday, he held up his arms in tripus, picked up three touchdowns
umph, a U.S. Open finalist again in
apiece from Pepe Pearson and
defense of his title .
Michael Wiley in rolling over Rice
Sampras, who will go for his
. 7{)- 7 Saturday.
LUMPKIN SCORES :._ Ohio State tight end John Lumpkin (left) fourth Open championship today
The Owls could have put all
comp1etaa hla getaway from Rice defender warrlck Franklin by step- against .Michael Chang, wound up
2,600 students on the field and it
ping Into the end zone for the touchdown In the first quarter of Sat- with 6-3, 6-4, 6-7 ( 11 -9), 6-3 victo.might not have turned around the
urday's game In Columbus, where the 1Oth·renked Buckeyes won ry over Ivanisevic .
·result . .
To absolutely no one's surprise,
71H.(AP)
defending champion Steffi Graf
: "I'm totally shocked that the
plays Monica Selcs for the women's
1ame got this out of hand," Ohio
and
got
a
Jot
of
players
in
the
got
the
ball,
Pearson
scored
on
an
title
in a rematch of last year final
State coach John Cooper said. "We
game."
eight-yard
run,
capping
a
58-second
didn't expect that to happen."
duel.
Ohio State lost a Jot of stars from drive . After a four-yard punt by
The Sampras-lvanisevic match
Shocked even more was an angry
last
year's
team,
including
Heisman
Phillips
,
who
averaged
43
.6
yards
lasted
two hours, 20 minutes Owls coach Ken Hatfield, who conTrophy
winner
Eddie
George,
quarper
kick
last
year,
Pearson
ended
about
40
minutes longer than it
fronted · Cooper near midfield terbaek
Bobby
Hoying,
all-American
another
short
drive
with
a
22-yard
would
have
if Sampras hadn 't done
obviously upset that the Buckeyes
nanker
Terry
Glenn
and
tight
end
touchdown
run
.
the
unthinkable.
Sampras wanted
threw a 60-yard touchdown pass late
Dudley.
Germaine's
touchdown
passes
Rickey
this
match
over
as
fast as possible.
in the third quarter '4lith a 56-7 lead.
But
the
Buckeyes
had
plenty
of
covered
IS
yards
to
Dimitrious
StanHe just couldn't quite do it when he
: "It was personal between John
firepower without them.
ley, and 51 and 60 yards to Wiley. first had the chance with four match
and me. Ask him what was said."
They took advantage of three bad Wiley also scored on a 49-yard points in the third set.
Hatfield said. "Everyone wants to go
punts
by Rice's Tucker Phillips to reverse.
Leading 6-3 in the tiebreaker,
for the golden game. Everyone
take
a
21-0 lead in the first quarter,
Jackson hit another freshman with two serves to put the match
thinks you need to score I00 to get
and never Jet up.
receiver, David Boston, with a 58recognition. I think the end is greater
It
was
the
most
points
scored
in
yard scoring pass. Jackson completthan the means."
an
oponer
by
Ohio
State
since
beated
seven of nine pMses for 151
The Buckeyes scored their most
ing
Virginia
75-0
in
1933.
The
632
yards,
while Germaine was f1vc of
points in an opener since 1933, and
yards
was
the
seventh
highest
total
10
for
164 yards.
handed Rice its worst opening loss
in
Ohio
State
history.
"I'm
a little surprised. I thought
ever.
"That's
the
worst
beating
I've
we'd
play
well and execute our game
· Backup quarterback Joe Gerever
got,"
said
defensive
end
Ndukplan.
But
I
didn'tthink the outcome
maine passed for three; touchdowns
we
Kalu.
"They
didn't
run
up
the
would
be
what
it was. In my wildest
and starter Stanley Jackson two as
score.
They
brought
young
guys
in
dreams,
I
didn
'
tthink
we'd score 70
Ohio State outgained the O~ls 632NEW CONCORD, Ohio (AP)and
they
did
the
job.
If
1
were
them,
·
'points,"
offensive
coordinator
Joe
218 in total yards.
Josh Hatfield caught a touchdown
I'd of tried to score 100."
Hollis said.
Cooper said part of the problem
pass and ran for another score SatSeven
of
Ohio
State's
10
touchRice's only points came on
was the Owls' man-to-man coverage.
urday in Musk in gum's 33-0 victory
downs came on drives that lasted Jess Michael Perry 's five-yard touch"That's when it got out of hand,"
over Denison in the season opener
than two minutes.
down run in the second quarter, set
Cooper said. "But our guys are fightfor both teams.
Jackson threw a two-yard touch- up by a 62-yard pass from Chad Ncling for playing time and I want them
Mark Broermann opened the
son to Rodd Newhouse.
to play hard. No, I'm not going to tell
down pass to tight end Jo hn Lump. "We're notth4t bact'a club," Netscoring In the second quarter with a
kin on the Buckeyes' opening pasJoe Moptg0 mery to go out there and
five-yard run . He then threw a 34. The nex,t ttme
· the B~ k, eyes son said.
sess1on.
. not run hard. We cleat:ed the bench
yard scoring pass to 'ttufield to make
it 14-0 at the half
Hatfield, who finished with 82
yards on 15 attempts. scored on a
one-yard run and Ramon Davenport
had a 70-yard punt return for a
touchdown in the third quarter.
Nick Call then cnpped the scoring
on a two-yard run .
Denison quarterback Keith
Schmid provided most of the ollensc
for the Big Red, picking up 61 yards
(" MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) Forbrich missed a 37-yard field turnover in last week's win over rushing und 64 yards passing. He
also threw three interceptions.
Amos Zereoue rushed for 149 goal.
Texas-EI Paso, but the Wildcats sclfThe Big Red moved the boll well
ards and three touchdowns SaturKnox's performance was the most destructed against the Hawkeyes,
in the fourth quarter with a 16-play
. y to .lead West Virgi~ia to a 34-9 prolific by a receiver against West with four lost fumbles, an intercepdrive that stalled at the Muskingum
win over Western Michigan.
Virginia. Villanova's Tom Boyd tion and live quarterback sacks.
12-yard line.
' : Zereoue's second-half touchdown (1968) and Maryland's Geroy Simon
The
Hawkeyes
parlayed
John Carroll 22, Gannon 9
l-uns .o f 67 and 19 yards helped the
(1994) caught II posses against the turnovers into points and then
At Eric, Po., Carnien llacqua 's
1-'ountaineers (2-0) break open a Mountaineers.
chewed up the last six minutes with
two touchdowns, including a 74-yanJ
ose game. He also had a three-yard
No. 1 Nebraska 55
a 15-play drive that left Arizona time
kickoff return, led John Carroll to
ouchdown run in the first quarter.
Michigan St. 14
only for two long desperation pass22-0
win over Gannon on Saturday.
Western Michigan (0-2), JlllnalAt Lincoln , Ncb., linebacker es in the closing seconds. Both were
llacqua
also scored on a 5-yard
ed 10 times for 72 yards in a sea- Mike Minter intercepted two passes, harmlessly batted away.
pass
on
his
way to 255 total yards,
"on-opening 28-20 loss to 1-AA scoring one touchdown and selling
Iowa, which also gave up five
including
91
yards rushing and 75
&amp;tern Illinois, killed itself with up another, as top-ranked Nebraska quanerback sacks, fell behind early,
yards
in
punt
returns.
John Carroll's
)ienalties again. The mistakes spoiled began its bid for a third consecutivf but jumped out to a 14-7 halftime
Chad
Rankin
hod
80
yards
on 17 car)I ' I 5-reception, 163-yard perfor- national championship Saturday lead because of two Arizona fumbles
ncs.
mance by Tony Knox .
with a 55-14 victory over Michigan inside a minute midway in the secA steady downpour and muddy
~ Zereoue, a redshirt freshman who· State.
and quarter.
ticld
contributed to mistakes includppened with 135 yards against Pitt
While the Cornhuskers' offense
Shaw's onc-ytird touchdown dive
ing
22
penalties for more than 200
t~ week, cut across the lield on his
gained 298 yards, it was Nehraska's 2:59 into the third quarter gave the
yards
and
13 fuml)lcs. John Carroll
li7-yarder to make it 17-9.
defense and special teams that real - Hawkeycs a 21-7 cushion and came
lost
two
nf
seven fumbles, and Gun·
His rushing compensated for a ly hurt the Spartans ( 1-1 ).
after another turnover - Tom
non
lost
two
of siK.
~luj!gish p~ssing attack. QuarterDefensive players scored three of Knight's interception of Keith
The
game
was all but over in the
k Chad Johnston wa.~ sac)(ed
Nebraska's seven touchdowns and Smith's pass on Ariwna's lirst poslirst
quarter
when
a Gannon drive
times pnd was just of 12 of27 . set up two others with a pass inter- session of the second half.
stalled
at
the
John
Carroll 30. The
~ 149 yards.
ccption and a blocked punt.
· The Wildcats, who took a 7-0 lead
Blue
Streaks
scored
three plays lat' The Broncos helped, too, getting
Late in the second quarter. Minter in the lirst quarter on Smith 's oneer
on
Dave
Davis'
nine-yard
recephit •by I 5-yard personal foul penal- intercepted a Gus Ornstein J&gt;liSS and yard dump pass to Mike Lucky,
tion
from
Nick
Caserio.
ties on punt coverage just prior to returned it 84 yards for a touchdown. hegan their comeback with a 50-yar!J
The Golden Knights never
both Zereoue's second-half ·touchDefensive end Grant Wistrom made lield goal by Matt Peyton midway
advanced
past the John Carroll 30 as
~own runs. They were penalized 16
a one-handed interception and scored through the third quarter.
Blue
Streaks
punter Donald Caserta
(imes for 132 ynrils overall.
from nine yards out in the third periIowa, pinned deep in its own terpinned
Gannon
its own territory
The Mountaineers abo struggled od.
ritory on its ensuing possession, had
with
two
punts
over
50 yards. Caseron special teams. West Virginia
No. 22Jowa 21, Arizona 20
to punt, and gave up a 22-yard return
ta
averaged
48
yards
on six punts.
snapped one punt out of its end zone
At Iowa City, Iowa, Sedrick Shaw to Rodney Williams that gave AriMarietta
35
for a safety early in the third quarter
ran for 115 yards and a touchdown, zona a first down at the Iowa ze.
Centnl,
Iowa
18
to reduce its lead to 10-9. Western
and 22nd-ranked Iowa used an
On the Wildcats' lirst play, Smith
At
Pella,
Iowa,
Aaron
Conte
Michigan's William Reed blocked a opportunistic defense Saturday to couldn't find a receiver and instead
threw
two
touchdowns
and
ran
for
punt at WVU's 33 later in the quar- outlast Arizona 21-20.
tucked the ball under his arm and ran
another,
and
Dante
Brown
rushed
for
1
antouchcd to the goal -line

70-7

NTIINT Ll"l

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&lt;lhe Shoe eate
Lafayette Mall • Gallipolis

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THIS SEASON HASKINS TANNER
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In other college football action,

~est

Virginia,

Nebr~ska

E

f
r'

S
e

In major league baseb.s.l,

~hils,
'

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Pinch-hitter Ruben
~maro dolibled home the g~ahead. run i~ the seventh
·nning Saturday and the Phlladelphta Phtlhes beat the
Chicago Cubs 4-2.
~ Kevin Stocker opened the seventh with a triple and
icoi'ed on Amaro's hit for a 3-2 lead. Rookie Wendell
Mt~~ee hit his second homer of the season in the ei~th.
; Rich Hunter (3-5) gave up two runs and stx hits m
~ven innings. Ricky Bottalico got four outs for his 30th
liVe.
- Steve Tnchsel pitched the first six innings for the
~uJl4. He pve up five hits and left with the scqre tied

112.\

306 yards as Marietta beat Central ol
Iowa 35-18 Saturday in the season
opener for both teams.
The loss snapped Central's 26game, rcgular-sca.~on winning streak.
Brown, who had 38 carries,
scored on runs of 78 and 32 yards.
Conte'• 16-yard ID pass to Mark
Hawkins gave Marietta a 7-Jicad at
halftime. He also had a 10-yard scoring throw to Antonio Hutton tind ran
in a one-yardcr. He completed 12 of
23 passes litr 239 yards .
Central put two touchdowns on
the bo~rd in the li&gt;urth quarter, hoth
on runs by Mark Kucmarynski. Kacmarynski, who missed most of la.~t
season after breaking two hones in
his lower left leg, carried the hall 25
times for !57 yards in his first game
back. He scored on runs of 29 and
two yards.
Capital 7, Bethany 0
At Columhus, Jason Lizzi scored
from a yard out in the fourth quanc~.
to give Capital a 7-0 vicltlry Saturday over Bethany.
The drive li&gt;r the game's only
touchdown hegan when Capital's
Andy Shannon intercepted a pass
from the Bisons' Bob Fromm. Capital's Scott Burn: threw to Ron
Stephens on a play covering 2K yards
to set up the score.
The Crusaders' triumph in the
opening game for hoth teams
cnahlcd Capital to match the numher
of victories it had last year.
Andenon 13, Walsh 12
At Canton, Michael Mosser's 66yard touchdown pass tn Larry Johnson with 7:54lcft in the fourth quarter gave Anderson a 13-12 victory
over Walsh Saturday in the sca,on
opener for hoth teams .
Walsh had 312 yards in total
offense compared with Anderson 's
150, but the Cavaliers turned the hall
over seven times.

Brian Scenherg mn a punt hack
81 yarns in the npcning quarter, giving Anderson a 7-0 lead.
Neither team scored again until
the fourth quarter when Dun Burne
recovered a hlocked punt in the end
zone and hrought Walsh to 7-6.
Walsh then t&lt;X&gt;k the lead on a 24yard pass from Matt Jenson to Buh
Jiathaway. Jenson was 13-of-24
pa.-.ing with 1911 yards and three
interceptions. Tho Cavaliers also

Astros and Rangers win; Indians &amp; M's slate

:· Ktnt Bottenfield (2-S) relieved to stall the seventh
.mwt mole lhe Joss.
~ Tile Cubs lOOk a 1-0 leacf ill the first when Brian
McRieldQublecJ and l81Cr scond 011 ~.-k ClnK:e's ucJif!CI! fly. 'pie Phillies tied it in the third 011 a triple'by

Sinee 1863

try to tire him out in long rallies.
" I knew he was going to be
strong," lvaniscvic said. "He had
one day to recover. He just threw up,
he didn't die. I knew it would not
bother him today. He came through
strongly."
Sampras isn't worried about playing again today, though he'll be facing a much different opponent in the
baseline-bashing, tireless Chang.
"I feel reudy to go," said Sampras, who hasn't won a Grand Slam
title since last year's Open. "This is
my last chance to win a major: It hasn't been a bad year, hut I always
measure my year by these (major)
tournaments. It 's crunch time. I've .
got to usc every ounce of energy."
Chang 's 16th ace, as emphatic till
an exclamation point, knocked out
Andre Agassi on a half-cloudy, halfsunny day of three i!Cmilinnls.
"Everything clicked," Chang said
of his surprisingly quick 6-3,6-2,62 rout over a hallheaned Agassi .
"Even though Andre's dropped in
the rankings, today I was the underdog. I think people expected him to .
w1n .

"I wa.' playing some of my hest
tennis, for sun:."
Chang, ranked No. 3 but sccdcd
second, can jump up to the No. I
nmking for the lirst time in his career
if he wins in his lirst trip to an Open
final.

Muskingum, Capital, John
Carroll and Marietta win

COMPLETE HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT &amp;
SUPPLIES
SALES • RENTALS • REPAIRS
FREE DELIVERY &amp; SET UP

(o.u
•• Ohio
State. w.v.u.)
.
.
• BATS AND £APS

away, Sampras watched one backhand go by him for 6-4, then doublefaulted to 6-5, both serves clipping
the net cord and popping out.
"I basically choked on the second
serve," Sampras acknowledged.
"Then I was waiting for him to miss,
and you can't do that."
lvaniscvic didn't miss the rest of
that tiebreaker, closing it out with an
ace as a jet roared overhead.
"llle first couple of games in the
fourth set, I couldn't believe I was
still out there," Sampras said. "I
wasn't mad at myself. I was a little
bit rattled. I couldn't believe what
was happening. I needed to regroup
and regain my composure."
That's exactly what Sampras did,
settling down, waiting for his
chances, finally gaining a break to 53 with the help of a fan . At deuce in
that game, Ivanisevic was about to
hit a forehand when a fan yelled out
in the silence, "Whooo!" lvaniscvic
. turned, took his eye ali the ball, and
ncllcd it. The point lost, he scowled
up into the crowd, hut knew he could
do nothing. Sampras closed him out
in the game with a backhand return .
"It's lrustrating, but what can you
do''" lvaniscvic said. "I can only
jump from the bridge on the way to
the hotel.'
Sampra.,, who served 24 aces,
'played well enough to beat a big hitter who· cracked 30 aces but didn't

Ohio college football action

~ ~· •

HOII'I1'A1 -

.

Sampras, Chang and
Graf win in semifinals

e~TT~..!?wa ~~~~~.~~. VA~i~ot(~~~.: '"'

peoPle. ,
None of the sil crewmen aboard
the twin-rotor Boeinl CH-46E Sea
Kitiahl. - seriously hun in Friday's accidenL
·
"I' m aold they all esciJI"'l under
their own power," White HOliK Pless
Secretaly Mikt Mrr.~ qi4-

declined to confirm or deny tbe
report.
At the . Pentagon, Bacon said a
study of which missile hit exaclly
where hasn 't yet been done. The t
intelligence specialists who would do
such work have been trying to focus ·
on the effect the attacks have wrought
and whether it is safe for the allied ..
pilots to monitor the no-ny zone, he·
said.
However, he said, the overall ··
assessment is that the allacks
"achieved a severe degradation of the
Iraqi defenses."
Of eight surface-to-air missi!C
sites targeted on the first attack,·
Bacon said, five were designated ·
destroyed or severely damaged, one
was "damaged or vacated," and two
were mobile units found to have been
moved before the attack.
He said that of seven targets hit on
the second night, one was detennined
to be destroyed or severely damaged,
four were found to be "damaged or·
degraded significantly, or vacated,"
and two suffered "no or minor damage."
On Capitol Hill , Sen. Slade Gorton, R-Wash., condemned the strikes
on Iraq, saying they have fueled
instability in the Middle East and
eroded support among U.S. allies at
a cost to Iraq of only "a handful of
radar sites."
He cast the lone vote agamst a
Senate resolution, approved 96-1
Thursday, endorsing the strikes.

'

Ricky Otero and a double by Mickey Morandini . . ·
Aslnls S, Rockies 4 -At Houston, Andres Oalarraga, who earlier hit his NL-lcading 41st home run,
struck out with runners on second and third to end the
game·Saturday, and the Houston Astros held off Colorado ltookies 5-4.
Colorado tried to come back in the ninth. John
Hudek relieved with two outs and a runner on fitS!, and
Dante Biehette singled. But after Bichette stole second,
Hudek struck out Oalarraga.
Galarraga hit a three-run homer in the third. He
moved past injured. Sammy Sosa or the Cubs for the
league lead in homen, and also Ieath the NL with 130

RBis.
The home run alSO"e.nabled Oalarraga to set Rockies records for homers and RBis, surpassing Bichette's
40 hOme runs aiid 128 RBis Jut IWOII.
Orlando Miller hit ·rus 14th home run in the Hous-

ton sixth, breaking a ·4-4 tie. He connected off Darren
. Holmes (5-4).
·
Darryl Kile ( 11-8) pitched seven innings, giving up
nine hits but walking none. He struck out six.
Rangen 2, Brewen 1-At Milwaukee, Ken Hill
and four relievers combined on a four-hitter Saturday,
and the Texas Rangers cut their magic number for winning their first division title to 16 with a 2-1 win over
the Milwaukee Brewers.
Hill (IS-8) won his fourth straight road decision,
allowing
run and three hits in 6 V3 innings. Mike
Hennem111 got two outs for his 28th sav~.
Down 2-1·, the Brcwen threatened in the eighth,
· putting runnen on first and third with one out against
• relieven Ed Vosbers and Jeff Russell.
After Mi~ Stlllton n~lieved, Jose Valentin pushed
a bunt to the right side or the m&lt;?Und. But first baseman Will C·arlt fielded the ball and 1hrew to catcher

one

lost 4-ol-5 fumhles .
Anderson took the kickoiT and
then regained the lead on Mosser's
touchdown throw.

Coll.ege
football
scores
East
Delaware 49, Lehigh 7
Hofstra H , Sacramento St. 3
Maine 24, Fordham 13
Penn St. 24. Louisville 7
Rnhert Murris 20, Mercyhurst 0
S. Connectkut 27, Monmouth,
N.J. 0
St. Francis, Pit. 27. Wuynesburg
()

Villannva 50, Ma.~suchu!&lt;Ctts 14
West Virginiu 34, W. Michigan
9

William &amp; Mary 23, Rhode
Island II\
South
Alabama 20, Southern Mis.~. 10
Clemson 19, Furman 3
Delaware St. 66, Lock Hoven 19
Florida St. 44, Duke 7
Georgia Tech 2g, N. Carolina
St. 16
Miami 52, Citudel6
N. Carolina A&amp;T 31, WinstonSalem 7
Richmond 13, Colgate 0
S. Carolina St. at Charleston
Snuthern, ppd. , hurricane
Mldwesl
Cincinnati 24, Kentucky 3
Drake 32. Morningside 26
lnwa 21. Arizona 211
Miami , Ohio II\, Ball St. 6
Nehraska 55, Michigan St. 14
Ohio St. 70, Rice 7
S. Illinois 27, Tcnn.-Mortin 14
Southern Cal 55, Illinois 3
Towson St. 14, Butler 3
Valparaiso 23, Hope 22
Wisconsin 24, E. Michiaan 3
Southwest
Southern Mcth. 23, Arkansas 10 •
Texas Tech 31, Oklahoma St. 3

OH today

Ivan Rodriguez to nail JefTCirillo. Stanton then retired
Marc Newfield to end the innin J .
Ben McDonald ( 10-10) lost his seventh straight
decision in 1 span of II stalls. Earlier this season, he
beat Hill in 1 pair of heud-to-hcad matchups.
Marlaen·lncllaJu pme rained oul - In Cleve- ..
land, the Seattle Mariners don't have much luck in
Cleveland- with tl1e Indians or with the city's infamous weather.
The Marincn and Indians were rained out Saturday ,.
for the second day in a row. Friday's rainout will be
made up as part of a day-night doubleheader today,
But Saturday's same was not rcschcdulocl, which
could pose problems if it winds up havina playoff
implications. Cleveland is trying for the beat rocon1 in
the AL, while Seattle is in the !ICC for the AL West tille
and the wild-&lt;:ard spot.,
·t

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Sunday, September ·

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

Sunday,SepbHnber8,1996

~~

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

c-...-

illael• Page'83 .

'1".

-----Sports dead!lnes--..
r :pili
,r~
i ~;.....:?:
.

--

8uckeyo Celllral 15, Ridctdolo ))
Buckeye Val. 38. Bit,Walnut7
~s 41 , On!ario 6
Caditll, S..dlan Local 0
C.l4wdl29, Budeye Tni16
Caool l'llkon NW 25, Foir"" 6
Canal Wi- 10, GnndV1eW 0
Canfield 41. Oe. GlcnviUe II
Cardiull6, Newt&gt;wy 1
Carey JS. Riverda~ I J
~dnrville 21. Sprina. Northwestern

ALstandings

r..
:W.
New Yarl. ............ 79

L bl.

61

. .. .. 14 66
68
T...... .............6&lt;. 77
Detroit. .... ,,,_ ........51 90
Bakimort ..

............ 7)

Botton

.564

529
.518
.4S4

.:\62

Iii
5
6~

15&gt;

19

Cbunplon 18,lndian Val . 14
a..doo IJ. Willouahb7 S. ll
Oleupeal&lt;t 28, Wayne, W.Va. 12
Cin Bacoo 15, On. Glen E&amp;lre 0
Cin. Colenin 37, Fairf1eld 0
Cin. ~leer Part 21, Bechei-Tate 12
Cin. Finneytown 14, Cin. Lockland 8
Cin. LoveiiU'Id 21, Norwood 15
Cin..Mariemonc 32,Col. Hanley 1:\
Cin. McNicholu 12. Weslt'ITI Brown

21~

Ctntniiii•CUVaAND ...... 82 S1 .590
Oli'"IO .... .... . .76 66
Miane~CJ4a .............. 71 10

5J5
.504

Kwoo 01y ........... 65 11

.458

Mll-looe ............. 68 74 .479
Wtlta'IIIH•IIiln

TeJW ..

61

....... 79

Seaak ................ n 67
OUJud ....
...68 7!1
California ...........64 11

7\,

I2

15\,
18\,

564
518

.476
.4S4

6\

11 ~

15 \

Cin. Moeller S2. Toronto (Ontario)
AquiMS IJ
Cin. PriBCdon 49, Huber H11. Wayne

16

Friday's srora
Seanle .a Cl.£VFJ...AND. ppd .. raJft

Minnesota 6, California 2
Bolton 10, 0\icqo :\
TIWD 7, MitwiUkcc 3
New Yarl. 4, T0&lt;0111o J
Oaklllld 7, KanJU Ci'Y I

29

llelroitl. Baltimon: 4(12)
They played Saturday

Sean\c (Mulholland :\-1) al CLEVE-

LAND (N'I)' 1~). I~ p.m.
Tew CHill 1.._8) 11 Milwaukee (McDoaald IM). 2•05 p m

KMsu 01y (8elchet- I l-8) MOakland
(Prieto 4-7), .t:M p.m.
Detroit (Tbomp1on I ·J) 11 BaltitriOfe

(Muai.na 18-9). 7:0S p.m.

·
Boston (Cieme;na 8-11) at Chicaao
(Femanclu 12·9), 1105 p.m.
Toronto (Guzmln 11-8) ar Nrw York

7•l5 p.m.

(C... 5·1),

California (Boskie 12-8)
&lt;Aauilcn 8~). 9:0~ p.m.

;u

Min.MSOtll

Today's pllltS
Seattle (Woleott 7-10) 111 ClEVELAND (Lopez 4-4), 1:05 p.m. day-night

DH

Detroit (Miller ().I ) at BaJtimore (Coppin!&lt;' 11-6), I •35 p.m.
Toronco (Hamon 11 -16) 11 New York

(Pettine 20-7). I:35 p.m.
Boston (Stie 6-9) at Dl•c.aao (Baldwin
IIH) , 2~pm

CaJi(orrua (Abbon

1 - 1~ )

IU Minnesoca

(RDIIriJw.z 1:\- 11 ), 2:0S p.m.
Teus (Will 14-9 ) at Milwoukee

(VMEJII!Olld J.4). WI p.m.

Klftlll City (Appier _12-1OJ IU Oakland
(Wenaen 1-9), 4:0S p.m
Seanle (Tones 1-1) 11 CLEVELAND
(Undc:cidccl), 8:05p.m.

Ck. Benedictine 49 , Ck:. CacholicO
Cle . Collinwood 18. lorain
SooltavleW 6
Ck. St. l~n.a~ius4J , SITOnpviUe 21
Clermont NE 28. Batavia 6
Cloverleaf7. Wooster6
Coal Grove .\5 , Gal!ipotis1
Col. OcSales 39, Col . Nonhland 17
Col . Independence 26. Col. MlllionFnnkhn 21
Col. Mifflin 21, Col . SO!.Ith 0
Col . St. Owlfs 12, Col. Briggs 0
Col. Walnut Ridge 26. Ounbridp 6
Col. Wauerson 47, Col . Whetslone 0
Col. Weal 28, Col. East 6
Coldwaler 21, Sherwood Fllir\1ew 0
Colonel Cr.~wford .\5, Mt. Gilelld 21
Conl:~nd Wevtew 7, Polartd 0
Cory- Rawson 51. Vanlue 0
Coshoctoo 46, Ridgrwood 0
Coventry ,2, Aleron KeniTIDft 0
CovingtOfl 28, N111ional Trail 0
(rc$lline 27, AshliUid Crestview 20
Crestwood 2:\, Waterloo 12
Day. Bclmonr42, Hamilroo 0
Day. Carroll 19, Day . ChaminadeJulienne 7
Oa.y Mendowda.le 28. ~mon-Mon, .. 9
Day. Nonhridce Jl, Brook.,.ille 29
Oily. Oakwood 3~. Prrolc Shawnee 6
Day. Potterson 29. Sprinc. Sooth 26
Dayton. Ky. ;\3, Cin. Summit29
Defiance 2~. Elida 12
~mff RiVl"nide" 21. Benjamin Lo..

, .. a

•

NL standings
Eastern Divlllon
~

Iwa

L r&lt;l.

lill

.486

17
2.\ 'h
29

Atlanta ... ........... 8.fj S:'i
Moatreal ........ n 6J
Florida ... . .. .....69 1J
New York ............ 62 79
Philldc:lphia ........~7 8.5

c-

S1. louis ...

.607
550
.440
.401

K

Ill•"""'

. ... 76 6l .l39

.ns

Houston .. ..... ...... 15 67

CINCINNATI ..... 71 10

I~

l

.SO&lt;
..500
.417

O.ita~o ................ 70

70
Pinsburah ... ....... 58 81

s~

11

WesltmDivilion

Los Angeles ..........17 63 .llO
San0iqo ............ .. 78 64

Col&lt;&gt;&lt;ado ............... 71

70
San FrancitcO ........ 59 80

.549
.SO&lt;
.424

6\

17 ~

Friday's KOI'eS
Florida 4, ~l&gt;llll'W 0
Ctlicqo 6, Philadelphia 4
Hout~on

Cio. St. Xavier 36, Cin. Withrow 14
Cin. Sycamore 3~. Cin. LISaUe 20
Cin. Taft 24. Trotwood-Madison 0
Cin. Watcm Hilb: 7.Jlay Villqe6
Cin. Woodward IJ. Gn. Aikt:n II
Cin. Wyomina ~2. Hamilton Badin

l. Colondo I

Atlama 8, New Yort 7

DH•Sao Fraocisco 2. CINCINNAn 0;

CINCINNATI 14, Son Francisco I
St. Louis 8, San OieJO J
los Antr:les 2, PittsburJh .1

They played Saturday
Chicago (Trachsel 11-8) at Plliladel·
phi:. (Huater 2-5). I:OS p.m.
Colondo (Bai~ 2-j) ~ Houston (Kilt'
10-8), I :0.5 p.m..
San Fruciaco (Wauon 8-10) oat
CINCINNATI (c.m.. 1.0). 4•05 p.m.
San Dieco (Ashby 8-.\) a1 S1. Louis
(Osborne 11-8), 4•05 p.m.
Mootreal (M . Letter 7-10) at Aorida
(V:~IIies 1-2). 7:05p.m
New York (Jones 11 -7) Ill Atlant.lll
(Smoltr. 20-7), 7:10p.m.
Piusburgh (Sdunidt :\-4) at Los Anetta (Nomo 13-10), 10: 3~ p.m.

Todoy's games
New York (Oark 12· 11 ) at Atlanta
(Maddu:-. 13-10), I:10 p.m.
Chicoaco (Na.v!VTo 14-9) at Philadel·
ptlia (Mimbs 2·1). 1:3~ p.m.
San Die&amp;o {Valentuela 12·11 Gl Sr
Louis (Stoolem~ 12-10~ 2: 15p.m.
Colorado (Rek~r 2-4) u Houuon
(Reynolds 16-8), 2:35p.m.
San Franc11co (Vanl..undingham 8D) at CINCINNATI (Bu~ 9-\3) . ."\ : 1~
p.m.

Pinsburah (l...oaita 0.2) ar Los Anse(Aitacio 9-7), 4:0S p.m.
Monueal (P .J Mar11nu 12-9) nt
Fioricb (A. Leiter 1+12). 4 . :\~ p.m.

~

FQOtbalf

Delawnre 48 . Col. linden -McK inley
Delphos St. John's 11, H icUvi l~ 0
De:llil 28, Evergreen 20
Dover 16. OrTviUe 0
Dublin Coffman 56, Findlay 6
Dublin Scioto~- MllJ")'svilk 2S
E. Kno1 7. Fredericklown 6
E. liverpool6. O:~k Glen. W.Va. 0
Eastlake N. 19, N. Olmslcd 12
Edcerton 27, Edon 0
ElJin 37, Nonhmor2J
Erie (Pa.) Mc0owell 3, You . Ursuline

0

Euclid 19, Barberton 0
Fairbanks 41 , Ridaemont7
Fairbom 41, Day. Stebbins 20
Fairfteld Union 21, HWih 12
Fairland 28, Clleshilt River Val . 14
fairview P.-t 20. WellinJton 19
Held 26. Ravenna 22
Foscoria 34. M:uufit:ld Madi10n I2
Fronril!r 8. St. Mary$, W.Va. 7
Gahanna 28, ReyDOidsbutg 14
Galion 26, Vermilion IS
GufKid H11. 27, Akron Cen· Ht~wcr 6
Garrensvilk 10, You . Uberty 1 (OT)
Geneva Jl. Pai~viUe Riverside 0
Geno01 19. Oak Harbor 10
Gibsonburg 30. Danbury Lakeside 20
Girard :\8, Brookf~eld 0
Goshen 27, Cin . Turpin 12
Gr.md Val.:\ .~ . Minnul RidgeO
Granville 39. C•Wncton 0
Greenevtew 47. Greenon 7
Greensburg Green 34 . Canton
Timken6
_Greenville 20, Tipp City 0
Grove City 24 . Galloway Weul;and
15
•
HarniiiOD42, Day. BelmoniO
Hamilton Ross 29, Edgewood 22
Hllld;n Northern 41 . Van Buren 0
Harri10n 21. Ci n. Onk Hills:\
Hillsboro 61 . london 13
Hillsdale 2~. Lucas 0
Holaate 26. Oregon Stritch 6
Hopewell-Loudon :W. Karuas Lato1a
28
Howland 22. Ck . East Tech 0
Hubbard 14, Cit:. F.ru.1 0
Hudson 6, Nordonia 0
Huron 2.~ . Norwalk 0
lnd111.nCrcek IJ , buckryt Locall2
Indian l.akt: 45, Mechanicsburg 0
Jackson 14, Waverly 12
Jefferson 47. ~shtabula Sr. John 12
Jewttt-Scio Ii . Shenandoah 0
John Glenn I:\, Crooksville 12
Johnstown 6, New Albany 0
Jonillhan Alder 40. Hounillon Twp. 8
Kenton R.id3e 28, MU:UTII E. 10
Kenering Fairmont 3~ . Mi:.misburg
22
Keyuone 16, Columbia 0
K1nas :lO. New Richmond 27
Ku11and H. Fo..irpon Hlrbor 2
LaBroe 10, Rootslown 0
Lake Cath. J3. Mentor 0
Lakewood St Edward 26. Laktwood

12

Todoy's games
lbltimcwe at Pinlhurah. 1 p m
C.-olina 111 Ne-w Orie4ns. I p.m
c..'hcaao AI Washanacon. I p.m.
Houstoa • J~Yillc . 1 p m

lndillRipOIII Dil N.Y Jets. I p.m.
Minnesota a1 Allanta, 1 p.m
New En&amp;llllld ~ Buffalo. I p.m
Olk1lftd • Kauu C.ry. I p m
TM'f"A Bly at Detm1, I p rn
CINCINNATI at San Ditto. 4 p.m
Denvtt .1111 Sc.atde, 4 p m.
N.Y.
Dallu. 4 p.m.
StLouis 11 San Franc::tt.co, 4 p.m
Miami If M.t.ona. 8 p m

Gi•• •

Lcc1oma 18. Berhn Center Wesrern
Reserve IJ
luin1-1on 19, SDclby 14
Ubcny Center U. Montpd1er 0
L1btrty Umon 42. S Poinl 22
libeny-lkn1on 22. Arcadioa 0
Uck.ing Hu 40, Adena 20
Licking Val 7. Ckar Fort 0
Lima Bath 22. Celma I~
l.J~bon2l,M3UI\l"ws6

l.Jnlc M1am1 ;\0. Waynentllc 0
l.or:un Cath. 7. Elym Ca1h 0
L..oruin Cleat~Jew 21, Orange 14
Loudonville 7. Smithville 0
Lou1svillc )8, Kent Roowvell :\2
~c;u 2~. Hillsdale 0
lucuvillc Valley 27 . Pik.et:on 22
Ludklw, Ky 14, Cin Landmark 1

You . Wil&amp;on I3, Strvthen 1
Zane Trace 14, McOcnnou NW IJ

MusHion 28, Limr. Sr. 14
Mwillon Fmy 14, w....,.;1k s. 1

M.,... ll.l'&lt;rii01l1

McComb ll. Arliii.IIOft 7
McOoaald JS, Windh.m 12
Medina 17, Ashland 6
Mcdin11. Buckeye 30, Medina Hi&amp;h·
lind 26
Meip Mlriefla 6
Mi&amp;Uetown 28, Cmterville 18
MiddLetown Madison I~ . CarlJalc 0
Midporl&lt; 2&amp;, Elyrio I2
Midv~ 20, ArMcrSI 12
Milan Ediaon 42. CollillJ Wt.lem R.e.....,7
Milford 24, Talawanda 2J
Millbury Lake 27. Port Ointoo 14
Miller 20. Richmond Dale Southeastem6

BuebaJJ
A-n~

1:

CALIFORNIA ANG,LS: CIDimed
INF Roba1 Ecnhom off waiYCn from rht
New York Yanken.

.

LHP Alan Emblee frt~m Buffalo of 1be
American Auociatioa. Selll LHP Grea
Swindell ootri&amp;}lt to Buffalo.
NEW YORK YANKEES: Activllled
RHP John Wcttelahd from the 1~-da.y dis·
ablcd list.
TORONTO BLUE J!+.YS: Acti~ated
RHP Tim Crabfree from !he IS.day dis·
abled list.

Millenpon :\2, M.-ion Cath. 0
Mineoa 12. Indian Hill 6
'Mogadolo 49, Auron 6
Monroe Central 6, Shadyside 0
Morvoeville 24, Eutwood 21
N. Bend Taylor 30. Willianu.bur&amp;6
N. Canton Hoover JO, You . East 24
(IYT)
N Royo.ltofl 24, Parma 0
Nap;&gt;kon :\5, Wau1e0n 12
Nellotlville- York 28, l.Dpn 21
New London 41' Firtlandl 3
New Middletown Spnn&amp; . 17.
ColumbillJUI 0
'
New Philadelphia I6, Claymont I0
Newark 40, Zanesville 0
Newut Ca!h. 20, Bloom-Carroll 6
Newroo Falls21, Jackson- Millon 0
Nonhmonl:\8, Millon- Union 18
Nonhwood 20. N. Bnltimore 6
Norw.111ync 12. DanviUeO
Oak Hill:\~ . Unioto ! 2
01Ciltan&amp;y 44, Col. Centenmal 7
Olmsted Falls 19. N. Ridceville 10
OreiOO Clay 14. Tol . Waite n
Ouego 27. Bowlins Green 21
Ottawa-Glandorf !0, Van Wen 6
Paint Val 21, GrcenfacldO
Pillldora..Qilbo.a 27. ~pJic.l ~
P:utwiy 13, Wayne TrtliCC 8
Palrick Henr)' 44. Swanton 25
PelT)' 6. Ken11on ~
PeiT)'sburg 14. Tol. WoodwardO
Phikl 16, Maysville 6
Piclterinaton .\2. W.1111kins Memorial 8
Piqua n, Xenia 7
Pleasant ~3. Sparta Highland 7
Ponsmouth 21, Ponsmooth w. 21
Por11mouth E. 34. Huntin&amp;lon 6
Rtven 26, Akron Firestone I J
Richmond Edison 26, CIIITolllon 0
R1chmond Hts. 26. E. Canton 6
R1vc:r 20, Tyler (W.Va.) Consolidated
1
River View 8. MOIJan 0
Rocky River H , Lorain Brookside 12
S. Chlltleston Sot.lthcastern 20. TriOO

CLEVELAND INDIANS• Recalkd

T:tger River Spas

Notional Loop
MONTREAL EXPOS: Recalled OF
Yamd Beni&amp;e% from Otcaw11 of the lnln·
rllllioiUII Lcacuc . Aclivalcd C lim Spehr
from the_IS-day diutbled lilt.

Natleotol

. AtAPrice
That Won't Bite.

Bosketboll
Buldboll .\.-lotion

BOSTON CELTICS: Signed F
Drinen.

N:~te

CLEVELAND CAVALIERS•Si&amp;ned
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES•

C Shawncllc Scott .

Stgned C Stojko Vranlt.ovic to a lhree·
ycnr conlracl.

0
St Hnry S~. Sprinc. NonheaAern 13
St. Mlll")'s 41, Limn ShawACe t!
Steubenville 1~. Cle. Kennedy 0
Steubenville Cat h. 14. louisville
AquinasO
Scow 28, Alliance 22
s.... st&gt;oro sz. OxmeiJO
Symmc:s Val . ll, Reedsville Easrem
0
Tt:llys Val . 14, Hebron l....akewood 0
Tecumseh 10. Vandalia-Buller 0
Thomu Worthinston 14, M3rion
Hardins 12
Tiffin ColumbiiUI 20, Clyde 19 con
Tol. Bowata 34, Holland Sprinc. 2.3
Tot . Rosen 40. Sylvania Soutflview

21

Smi1h on injured reserve . Sitned OE
J~~omcs Roberson.

Hockey
National Hodt.ey Ltqut

BOSTON BRUINS : Re-1igned RW
Steve Heinze to a one-year conlracl
EDMONTON OILERS : Acquirtd
RW ~ndrei Kovalenko from the Montre;~l
Canlldiens for l W SCO!t lbomton.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS: Att:recd
to terms wi1h D Scott LAchance, lW Ken
Belanger. lW Oms Marinucci. RW lnn
Plante, C Derek Armstrona and C Chri~
Toy lor
NEW YORK RANGERS: Sianed
RW P:1t Antley 10 11 one-year controcl
PllTSBUROH PENGUINS: Si,:ned
D Jan Moran.

Get Your Paws On Some Great Deals.
If you're looking for a
great spa at a price that
won't hurt a bit, come see
the breed of spa we call
Tiger River':' From
Watkins, the relaxation
specialists- Tiger
River Spas have a
unique look and feel.

VANCOUVER CANUCKS• Signed

C JoK'f Berwk and RW Brian Loney.

MEIGS CO. KARATE CLUB
WILL START FAlL QUARTER
BEGINNING CtASSES ON
SEPTEMBER 10 AT
CARLETON SCHOOL IN
SYRACUSE AT 6:00P.M.

12

They're not only beautiful.
they're also aHordable and
easy to own . T~ ·
completely pci-rtable.
so installation is a
breeze. And right
now, our Tigers are
running out the door
at some great values.

BlUM LUMBER
STATE ROUTE 248

For More lnformnt.ion
Call 992-6839

Tol. St Fraocis 17. Tol. Wtutmer 1
Tol. Sr . John' ' 16, Cin. Elder 14
Tri-County N. 37. Mi"iuinawa Val.

Triway 43, Olippewa6
Troy 44, Cin. Andmon 10
Tucson (AriL) Sabino 49, Otillieothe

New 1998 Buick Century

I

. POMEROY - Matt Willisms
scored the Marauders' only
touchdown on the first play of the
second period as the Meigs
Marauders shpped past Marietta 7-6
in . non-conference football action
Friday evening at Bob Roberts Field
in, Pomeroy.
.. The game was played before a
decent crowd that braved the rains
that moved in from Hurricane Fran.
A steady shower fell during the first
three quarters before the showers
t!toved out. Despite the field being
wei from the all day rains neither
team had much trouble holding on
t~ the football. Marietla (0-2)
F;u~bled once and recovered it.
Me1gs ( 1-1) left the ball on the
!iround twice losing one of them.
: Once again it was the Marauders'
ground attack that did the job, led by
f'teshman fullback Justin Roush.
Roush carried 22 -times for 134
)iirds,.Jl.nior tailback Mau Williams
alded . 0. carries for 84 yards,
Judi g .the Marauders' score, a
e-yat rl!n on the first play of the
ond · riod.
:.. Mei spotted the Tigers the
e:G-Iy 6- h:ad. The Tigers received
tlt open g kickoff and pul together
a;)ix-pl y, 66-yard drive with
S!Jlhon\~IJC quarterback Levi
VJeppler ~coring on a keeper from
q.yBJ;ds qui. Robert Goodwin's kick
ft tli~ JXf!l points was wide left but
~- Tlgei's\held the early lead at the
&amp;.'12 mark of the first period.
: Meigs t()ok the ensuing kickoff
abd put together a 13 play. 70-yard
drive for ~.the score behind the
rjmning 01 Roush and Williams.
Roush ran the ball seven times for
38 yards and Williams lugged the
tiall five times in the drive for 17
!(tore yards. Wiih the Marauders
f•cing a fourth and nine from the
'Figer 16-yard line, junior
~uarterback Brad Davenport hit
Chad Hanson for a 10-yard gain and
a: Marauder first down at the
~arietta six . Two plays later
Williams went the final five yards
f~r the score with II :56 left in the
fin;t half. Jef( Fowler's kitk for the
e)ttra point$! was true, and that
pj'oved to be the winning points.
' The Ti$ers threatened in the third
period dnving the the Meigs 28yard line. With Mariena facing a
•

4

f WILLOW WOOD - Eastern
bicike1 insid~he ' 20-yard line four
tiltes,' ~(~, .away empty handed
af· lhel !l~&gt;st~ S~ mes Valley Vikings
rfled'. to a 12f0 non-league victory
~N_hc:: Eagles Frid~y night at

on '

Upper Arlington 27, Col. Brookha\'efl

8

Waa$18,628

Now$15

'4111ow Wood,

Stock No. 351t

' 'Tiie Symmes Valley defense
riled when the going got Iough as
EjStem succe~s(ully pushed inside
11ii 20-yard line on four occasions.
111iee .o1:!llos~ four tries were inside
IIi ·IS .yajd njarker. Symmes Valley
), however, stified the Eastern
niome1nlu1rn 4n each occasion and
on
shutoUl win. Overall,
~1nmes held Eastern to 85 (otal

949
'12,541
Stoclt No. 3711

I]

Wadsworth 10. Cuya.hoca Fa11•7
Waharn:l. W.Va. 28. Fedt:ral Hockins

IISRP ........................ S27 ,204
Tate Dl~c: .............. 2,2111

Walsh Jesuil 17. Akron Garfield 1
Wapakonetll :\4, Ken10n 0
Warren t..ocaJ 39, R Frye 19
W:m:nsviUe 60. Oe. Rhodes 0
Wuhintlon CH 28. Cirdeville 21
Waterford 26. RaciM!: Southern H

Rei!Me ................ 1,250

NOW

'23,735

S-$3.489

(OT)

l_Jt•~

Wdbvilk 29, E. Pakstirae 8
Wmerville N. 17, Mt. Vernon 0
Westfall 7, L.ocan EJm 6
We5tlale I8, Maple Hts. 12
Whet!linJ (W Va.) Cmhl 11. TOI'Oft-

IIIW 91'S
AVAILABLI~

•oO
Wbcelina {W.Va.) Linsly 21. lronaon
0

WhildWI 16, Col. Bcechaofi 2
Woodmore 46, Tol. Ubbey 0
Woodridge 19, l.ttthetao W 6
Worth•naron Kilboume 41 . Col f.aa.
mootS
Wynford J9, Mobolwk 6
You. Oxmey 19, ~II
0
You . Moooey 29. Clevdand H" 6
You Rayen ll N1tcs 7

and Eastern's hardforced I I Symmes
but despite the case
Vikings prevailed.
McDaniel rushed I0
s. Matt Bissell
for II yards.
Kelly ran all over
amassing 186 yards
scored the second
on a I5-yard run. Kirk
was9-63.
~~: h~
an apparenl 50-yar~
c lfl back on a clipping
, nega ing a fine run by Pat

~

-al

I

second and 17, Weppler threw a
pass to Adam Cova~lt inside the
Marauder ten-yard line . Covault
bobbled the ball for a split second
and Robert Qualls and Williams
came up with a big hit on defense
knocking the ball loose. Two plays
later Weppler's fourth down pass
fell incomplete giving Meigs the
ball at their own 31 with II seconds
left in the period.
Meigs looked to have put a drive
together running off II plays
putting the ball at the Tiger 46. But
'Williams was hit hard and coughed
up the ball with Shawn Work
recovering for Marietta at the Tiger
46 with 8:161eft in the game.
Marietta drove to the Meigs 39yard line, but Ryan Ramsburg hit
fullback Matt Boley for a one-yard
gain on third and four: The Tigers
decided to punt and put the
Marauders deep in their own
territory and hope the defense could
come up with the big play.
Weppler's punt did just that,
rolling dead at the Marauder two,
but the Tiger offense wouldn't see
the ball again, as the Marauders ran
out the clock. Williams came up
with two big plays in the drive. One
came from the Marauders' eight.
Williams picked up 18 yards for a
Meigs first down on a third and
four. The o(her came from the Tiger
43-yard line and Meigs facing a
founh and three, lhis time Williams
picked up II giving the Mwiuders a
first down and allowing them to run
out the clock.
Roush led all ball carriers with
his 134 yards in 22 carries, .Williams
chipped in with his 84 in 20 carries.
Matt Davenport was two of eight in
the air for nine yards and an
interception, both receptions were to
Chad Hanson.
"Marietta has come a long way in
a year," Marauder coach Mike
Chancey said after the contest.
"Coach Hale has done a great job.
They really play hard. I'm proud of
my kids effort. They showed a lot of
heart. It was a great team effort. We
talk a lot about being a family and
the kids showed it tonight and really
stuck together. We need to come
back and have a good week of
practice and get ready for a good
River Valley team next week."
W-eppler led Marietta on the
ground with five carries for 55

TURNING THE CORNER -In the left-hand photo, Melga fullback
Jualln Roush (24) barntla around the comer aa three Marlette
defenders try to atop him during Friday nlght'a battle at Bob Roberta .
Field. In the right-hand photo, Routh gete down to deliver 1 block

yards. The sophomore quarterback
was two of eight in the air for 30
yards. Adam Covault caught one
pass for 33 yards.
"I 'm proud of my kids," a
disappointed Tim Hale said after the
game. "They (Marietta) played hard,
but we lost to a quality team and a
quality football program . Coach
Chancey has done a good job of
rebuilding the program. They really
play hard. Meigs is a good model
for us as we rebuild our program."
This week: Marieua will host St.
Mary's next Friday evening, while
the Marauders travel 16 River
Valley.
Quarter 1llllb
~arietta ................ 6 0 0 0 =
Meigs ....................O 7 0 0=

6
7

Scoring summary
Marieua: Wcppler-48-yard run
(kick no good) 8:52 1st
Meigs: Williams -five-yard run
(Fowler kick), II :56, 2nd

•• teammat. Matt Wllllama preparee to tum the comer on a eweep
play. Wllllama ecored on a flv•yerd Nn to help the M1111udera lhake
a 6-0 deficit and win 7-6. (Timea-Sentlnel photo by Dave Harrla)

Scrimmage plays .......... .41
57
Rushing att.-yds . .... 29-110 47-219
Passing yards .... ............. 30
9
Total yards ................... l40
228
Comp.-all ..................... 2-8
2-8
Interceptions thrown .......0
I
Fumbles-lost ................ 1-0
2-1
Penalties-yds ............ .. S-30
6-45
·Punts-yds .................. 4-143
2-89

Individual leaders
Marietta Iiao

Rushing: Weppler 5-55, Boley
14-41, Barnhouse 5-7, Van .Fossen
2-~. Covault 1-5, SwartZ2-0
Passing: Weppler 2-8, 30 yards
Receiving : Covault 1-33, Van
Flossen 1-(-3)

.M.cJu Marauden

Rushing: Roush
22 - 134,
Williams 20-84, Bentley 2-9,
Davenport3-(-8)
Passing: Davenport 2-8, 9 yards
&amp; I int.
Receiving: Hanson 2-9

JAYMAR INC.
St. Rt. 7, Cheshire, Ohio

EQ111PMENT RENTAL
30 &amp; 35 TON GROVE
ROUGH TERRAIN CRANES
. DOZERS D7- D-9- 1150
LOADERS 988B - 966 • 1845
TWO 631C SCRAPERS
CASE 580 BACKHOE
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614·992·6637 or
614·446·9786
Jerry Hall

Team statistics
Deoartmcot
MIL Mdu
First downs ......................6
IS

.yt11me,s Valley r~cords 12-0
tiumph over visiting Eastern

'SCOTT WOLFE
T:!S Correapondent

Tuscanwu Val. :\), Gnway 0
Tuslaw 28, Rinman 12
TwitUburcl6, CDpley 0
Union l...oc4J 1."\, St. Clairsville 0
Uniontown l..akt 18. Akron E. 12 (2

14

By DAVE· HARRIS

T..S Correspondent

CI,OSEOITI:

Trimble: 20, Portsmouth Nom Dame

Upper Scioto Viii . 18, Allc:n E. 14
Urbana ~~, Graham I J
Uttca 9. Johnstown Nonhrid&amp;e 6
VaUey'View ~t Bellbrool. 6
V~illeJ 2!. Midd~own Fenwick 7
Vinton Co 29, Rock Hi ll 7
W. Bra.rt~.:h I\ Ravenna SE 6
W Carrollton 2.S, Beavercreek 14
W. Chester LakO!a :\.S, Mt Hcalttly 9
W. Geialga 24. WickhfTe 0
W. Holmes 14. Waynedale 6
W Jeffersoo 28, Fr:mklin Hrs. 0
W. Libcny-Salem 21, WayneslieldGotllcn 0
W. Muskinl!um 12, New lcxingron 7
W. Sa.ltm Nonhwes~em I~ . Plymouth

"'eigs ta11ies 7-6
Win over Marietta

..

R

16

...,

!

Football
Notlonol Flllllboll Lea&amp;ut
HOUSTON OILERS• Plac&lt;d LB AI

14

S. Range 21, Unittd Local6
Salem 29, MQI"Iington 6
Sandu1ky 14, Mansftcld Sr ~ 7
Seneca E. 19,Centcrburg 10
Shaker Hts. 34. Brush 7 •
Sheridan 20. Tri-Valley 7
Sidney 17. Bc!lldontlline 14
Solon 41 . Mayfield 7
Spring. Shawnee I:\. Spring. Clllholic

·, t

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune, sports is the Saturday befo~ the
,. ~ J &lt; ;
The Daily Sentillel and the Sunday Super Bo~l.
The
deadline
for
photO.
afiCJ reJa~
Trmu-S~n1intl value the contribu,
ed
articles
for
basketball
(summer
tions their' readers make to the sports
basketball
and
related
Olllllpl
fa~
sections of these papers, and they
under
the
summer
sporu
delldlineF
will continue to be published.
However, certain deadlines for and other winler sports is the 'last day
of the NBA finals.
submissions will be observed.
These deadlines are in place to .·
The deadline for submissions of
allow
contributors the ·time they ·
local baseball- and softball-related
need
to
acquire their photos from the·· ·
photos and related articles, from Tphotography
studio/developer o~:
ball to the- majors, as well as other
choice
and
to
g1ve the statTs IM .
spring and summer sports, is.the day
chance
to
publish
these items in the
of the last game of the World Series.
appropriate
season
for those sport~ . .
The deadline for photos and related articles for football and other fall

dl.tyO

Lancaster 49. Groveport 12
Lebanon:\~. Mli.\on 2R

NFL slate

MldiiClft 42. Coaneaut 14
MldiiOil Plli111 :\2, N. Unioa 16
M...21, W'tllonl 0
Manoa River Val. 33, Upper San·

~

.Aeiker. Symmes Valley ran two
play'S on each of its first two
possessions then fumbled.
Kelly was successful running the
ball in the second quarter, setting up
the first touchdown with a 15-yard
run that left the ball on the one-yard
line, where Joey Ferguson jumped
into the end zone for the score. A
fumbled punt put Eastern on (he
Vikings' 17-yard line, but Eastern
managed only one yard on four
plays with its sputtering offense.
Kelly tallied 85 yards in the third
quarter; but lhe Vikings failed to
score. After a scoreless third, SV
scored again in the fourth when
Kelly ran in a IS-yarder for the
touchdown.
Eastern coach Casey CofTey said,
"We'll just have to regroup and pick
up the pieces. We did a nice job
forcing Symmes to tum its hand and
cough up the fumbles. We had the
opportunities. We just let them slip
away. Now we'll have to get ready
to play Wahama."
·
Coffey added, "I fell the weather
took us oul of our game plan. We're
a predominanty pass oriented team.
Still we had our chances and didn't
capitalize."

..-.

-

Team statistics
"

DePirbnCDt
E SY
First downs ......................6
14
Rushing au.-yds ....... 33-98 44-267
Passing yds.. ...............7-54
2-20
Totals yards ................. l52
287
Comp.-att....... ............6-16
2-2
Interceptions .................... I
0
Fumblesllost.. ............... l-1
8-11
Punts ........................ 4-140
2-90
Penalties-yds ...... ........ 2-20
5-65

Scoring summary
Symmes Valley: Ferguson on a
one-yard run with 8:34 in the second
quarter. Conversion run failed
Symmes Valley: Seth Kelly n a
IS-yard run. Extra point kick fail .

TEANECK, N.J. (AP)
twins always do the sa
thing
under similar circumstanc s? Keith
and Kevin Montelbano.are twins and
both played baseball this year for
Fairleigh Dickinson University.
In ~ game againsl LaSalle University, each twin hit a grand slam
homer. Keith got his in the first
inning and Kevin connected with the
Ouartcr milia
bases tilled three innings later.
•
Symmes Valley .... 0 6 0 6
12
Fairleigh Dickinson won the
Eastern ..................o 0 o o= . o game 18-7.

=

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Akrol Ellet 13, Warm~ HMdtftJ 12
Akn&gt;o Hobonl3. Mroo N 0
Akn&gt;o M""'hesler &lt;0. Cuttoa S 0
Akroo SprinJ 10. Tallmodge 6

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.-

500 home runs
is not a record

rland defeats
ver Valley 28-14

By SAM WILSON
nmea-8er)tlnel Correspondent
Like most sports fans, I love watching players
pursue records.
Lately, I have been watching Eddie Murray's
quest to hit his SOOth home run. Murray has
reached one of baseball's most impressive milestones. He is a great player who deserves all the
accolades he receives. He is also destined to be a first ballot Hall of Farner
five years after he retires. Yet, 500 home runs is not a recoro. ·
II is only when a player
reaches a plateau like Muriay do
· . fans really get an appreciation
· for what Henry Aaron was able
to achieve during his career.
·•. Aaron holds the record with 755
. home runs. In other words, we
8c:li/4iwf···lhonor Murray for hitting less
than two-thirds as many home
· runs as Aaron . I would like to
meet the morons who voted
against Aaron's admittance to Cooperstown.
Let's put Aaron's record into perspective. A player would have to average
40 home runs a year for 19 years to break his record. Few players have a
legitimate shot at duplicating Murray's feat, let alone challenge Aaron's
record. ·
Look at records in general. Imagine what it would take to break Walter
Payton's NFL rushing record of 16,726 yards• A player would have to rush
for around 1,046 yards a year for 16 years to accomplish this feat. Consider
the fact that the average player doesn't last four years!
Think about what it would take to pitch seven no-hitters. hit in 56 straight ·
games, score over 38,000 points in an NBA career, score over 800 goals in
a hockey career, or win 200 NASCAR races. These are the standards by
which future athletes must live by.
It's difficult to comprehend what Dan Marino's career passing yards will
eventually totaL He could play for another five years. Every goal Wayne
Gretzky scores adds to his record. And let's not forget Cal Ripken as he takes
the field every day for another record.
II is these statistics which intrigue us fans . Look at the attention Ripken
received last year. Statistics became the measuring stick for greatness. Hit
500 home runs and you can punch your ticket for Cooperstown. Rush for
12,000 yards and your bus goes to Canton. Break a record owned by someone named Ruth, Abdul-Jabbar, Montana, Hull or Petty and you have a
claim to immortality.
It is wonderful to see records fall because new standards of greatness are
thereby established. Consequently, the price of athletic success and fame
increases for younger players. This also results in an increase in the quality
of play. Just look at how hockey has changed since Gretzky arrived on the
scene.
We fans benefit as these records continue to fall . Players improve and the
level of competition rises. This is one of the reasons athletes are bigger,
faster and stronger than ever before. It makes me wonder what baseball will
be like once Ken Griffey Jr. and Alex Rodriguez retire. Who will challenge
Michael Jordan's accomplishments in the NBA? Is there a future quarterback who will lead his team to four Super Bowl wins like Terry Bradshaw
or Joe Montana?
,
Murray has secured his place in baseball history by becoming just the
third person, along with Aaron and Willie Mays, to hit 500 home runs and
3,000 hits.
I hope Barry Bonds will be thinking about this accomplishment ·as he
works out in the off-season. My reason is simple: Bonds is good.:,enough to
join Aaron and Mays in the 600 home run/3,000 hit club. More important,
his success will set a new standard that Junior Griffey may want to strive
towards. For us fans, the games can only get better as these records continue to fall.

i iv Q.(#iPENCER OSBORNE

Coal Grove appears in
mid-season form with
35-7 win over GAHS
COAL GROVE - Coal Grove II plays for its first touchdown. It
appeared in mid-season form Friday came on a founh and II situalion.
night as Coach Dave Lucas' Hornets Derrick French tossed a 12-yard
ran past visiting Gallipolis 35-7 in a strike to speedy wingback Barry
non-conference football game at Pat- Blankens ip, who made a spectacuterson Field.
Jar divin catch in right comer of the
Not only did the Hornets shine ow'ql!UJzJni with 4:31 to go in the perioffense, they held Coach Brent Saun- od. Mike Borders kick split the
ders ' Blue Devils to 13total offensive uprights for a 1-0 Hornet lead.
yards and one first down during the
CGHS stopped the Gallians on
first three and one-half periods before their second offensive series, but
calling off the stingers. By then , it Isaac Saunders uncorked a 44-yard
was 35-0.
punt to the Coal Grove 20. Rick
1be victory left Coal Grove 2-0 on Belville lost five on the return, and it
the year. The loss, Gallipolis 's first appeared the Hornets. on their own
against one victory, snapped a two- 15, were in deep trouble, especially
year. seven-game Blue Devil winning following a half-the-distance of the
streak.
goal penalty against them which put
"They have a great team," the ball on the Coal Grove nine.
remarked Coach Saunders. The Blue
However. Andy Compliment got
Devil mentor also said he feels II, then French uncorked a 76-yard
French (Derrick) is Coal Grove's best bomb to Blankenship streaking
quarterback in years.
down the Coal Grove sidelines. He
"We didn't play very well on was caught from behind and knocked
either side of the ball tonight," Saun- out-of-bounds on the GAHS four by
ders said. "You can't let a team like Aaron Stout On the next play, Mo
Coal Grove make big first down Roman blasted over from the four to
plays on long third and founh down make it 13-0. Borders kick was true,
situations, and expect to win."
but GAHS was penalized on the play.
Meanwhile, the Hornets took The Hornets took the play over, and
advantage of several Blue Devil mis- Roman ran it in for two to make it 15take to put points on the board in their 0 with I :48 left in the period.
home opener.
The Blue Devils shut down Coal
In the first quarter, after stopping Grove's high-powered offense in the
the Blue Devils on the opening kick- second period, but could not mount
off. Coal Grove marched 56 yards in
!See BLUE DEVILS on B-S) ·
•

Congratulations,
Dale Lear

Waterford beats·
Southern 26-24

'

I

By SCOTT WOLFE
T-S Correspondent
WATERFORD - Two games;
two heartbreakers . Coach Dave
Barr's fledgling Southern Tornadoes
learned another lesson in the school
of hard knocks Friday night as the
Waterford Wildcats defea ted
Southern 26-24 in overtime.
Southern is only four points away
from a perfect season , but instead
rests at 0-2. Waterford, after going
0-10 last season is now 2-0 with
victories over Southern and Eastern.
For the second straight year,
Waterford battled Southern to a
regulation standoff and overtime.
Last year. Southern won the double
overtime affair. This time it was
Waterford's tum to taste victory .
After battling to an 18-18 tie in
regulation, Waterford got the ball
first in overtime and scored on Nate
Long's two -ya rd ru n. hi s third
touchdown of the game. Curt Reed
then ran the two-point conversion in
what proved to be the game-winning
tally. Ironically, those were the only
extra points of the game.
Southern got the ball and scored
on its overtime possession when
Jesse Maynard connected with
Michael Ash in the end zone The
two-point pass co nversion failed ,
and Waterford waltzed away with
the win .
Long rushed for 110 yards on 36
carries . Southern's Jamie Evans
rushed 12 times for 71 yards .
After a scoreless first period,
Southern went up early in the game
6-0 on Evans. reception from
Maynard from seven yards out The
run for till= extras failed.
Waterford struck right back w11h
an eight yard run by Long and the
extra-point kick failed for a 6-6 tte .
Evans then gave Southeu\a
needed punch, w~n he ~ 60 yards
to paydin on an mtert_e~Mton return.
'The two-point converston Nn faa led,
but Southern led I 2-6. That score
s1ood until halftime.
In !he third period Long tied the

score with his second touchdown
run from one yard out. The extrapoint kick failecl. but the score was
deadlocked at 12- I 2. Southern's ·
Michael Ash, who last week exited
with a concussion. struck paydirt to
give SHS an 18 - 12 in the third
period. The two-point conversion
run failed , and Southern remained
scoreless until the overtime.
Jeremy Miller ran in a two-yard
run 1n the fourth to tic the game at
18-18 and push the game to
overttme.
Jesse Maynard was 3-7 with no
interceptions for Southern.

Southern• Evans seven-yard pass
reception, run failed
Waterford: Long eight-yard run,
scrond period , kick failed
. Soutliern : Evans 60-yard
antcrceptaon return, run failed;
second period
Waterford • Long one-yard run.
ktck failed ; third period
Southern • Michael Ash, sevenyard run. run failed
Waterford : Jeremy Miller twoyard run, run failed
Waterford • Long two-yard run.
Curt Reed two point conversion :
overtime

Southern• Ash three -yard pas~
from Maynard, run failed; overtime
Quarter ll!lab
Southern .... .... 0 12 6 0 6 = 24
Waterford ...... 0 6 6 6 8 = 26

CRANS-SUJt-SIERRE. Switzer·
111111 (AP) - Paul Broadhunt fired
a 7-undcr-par 64 for !he fint-rouncl
le8d iD !he EuropeaD Mutm.
OM seroke behind were Colin
'

Montgomerie, Sam Torrance, Eduardo Romero, Lee Westwood and Malcolm Mackenzie. Seve Ballesteros
finished at par-71 and Costantino
Rocca had a 74.

~

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·

boosted its lead

Ll(2.(.'1{e#ly in the second quarter .
ltfitJl\.. "shepherd's .three-yard
• ili1 . . ,
d
1 ti Lo

:c

~l)huc ,own p~s. to us n . ve an
mn s ~wo•pomt conversion pass
.. L
.
h t I d t d
ovhe, 'isawh t a e,a stha.nd
(hroug out t e score ess tr ~uarter: The Raiders' not getting a
):!rst down until the last third of act
~bree wtis another contributing
ractor, as was neither team's getting
mto the red tone.
t~ River Valley , which started its
)ong~st drive of the ni~ht at its own
lt6, gained four of tts ftve ftrst
ltowns ori a march that began at the
~:58 mark of the third quarter and
ebded with Maynard's two-yard
iouchdown run off left guard 56
.· conds. int~ prime time. ~tout's
ra-pomt kiCk cut Fwrland s lead
21-14.
[ What set up Maynard's second
chdown was was the play before
:U r-- Siepl)ens' 49-yard swing pass
W Slone. Slone outran all the
except cornerback
, who knock~ him out
the Fairland two.
The
Valley faithful had
of reason to be more noisy
had been earlier in the
Fairland moved the ball

'Q

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~
Wmen Local .................... l-0
POINT PLEASANT ......... 0-1
Jackson .............................. 0-0
4:f.gan ...............................0-0
~thcns ...... ........ ................. 0-0
CAii:IPOLIS .......... . ... 0-0
Mariena.............................0-0
ftt\'ER!VALLEY ............ 0-0

1996 GUND
. CHEROKEE
AS .tOW AS

$26,200

HE SCORESI .- River Valley quarterback
Richard Stephens (12) signals to the reat of hla
teammates the event to which Aalders Jay Stout
(57) and Chris Maynard and Fairland's Jonathan
Cassell• (44) and Jimmy Harris (54) have a frontrow seat - Maynard's fourth-quarter dive Into
the end zone from two-yards out during Friday

IGAHS-CGHS statistics I

• ,•

.1

t lt"o~ve

Fa!dapd Dog!HIS
Rushing - Brandon Keeney 421;Chinn 18-20
Passing - Shepherd 11 -24, 144
yds .• 3 IDs &amp; 2 int.
ReceiTinc - Hinkle 3-20; C.
Lee 2-74 &amp; I TD; Chinn 2-21; Love
2-7 &amp; I TD; Ben Keeney 1-2 1 &amp; I
TD; J. Shortridge 1-0
Fumble recoveries - Ben
Keeney 2-0; Harris 1-0; Sowards 10

Overall

~

29
0
0
0
0
0
0

lA

29

40
0
0
0
0
0
0

~
1-1
2-0
1-1
1-1
I- I
0-2
0-2

J!E

79
46
64
48
25
23
18
20

- • Non-leque opponents • -

~ ~g ~55

.. ........................... .... ............
: lj.ilcasville Valley .................. :.................... 2

~ . :;~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::: : ::::::::::::~

1996
CHEROKEE

: SOu~ Point ................................................ I

lA

48
54
12
42
44
48
28
56

IJ474
• Includes Fectoly Rebeta
: f

I

~~

50

lA

21
28
26
22
56

Friday: GALLIPOLIS at
South Point; Meigs at RIVER
VALLEY; Waverly at Athens;
Vinton County at Jackson;
Logan at Zanesville; St. Marys
(W.Va.)
at
Marietta;
Parkersburg South at Werren
Local; Fairland at BuffaloWayne.
POINT PLEASANT and
Coal (J(ovc have an open date.

$18,598*
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WHARTON
*"**INU
•

Blue Devils ...
(Continued from 8-4)
an offensive threat themselves. It was
still 15-0 at intermission.
Coal Grove came back strong in
the third period. Taking Joe Darn·
brough's kickoff on their on 34. the
Hornets marched 66 yards in II plays
with Roman galloping the final 18
straight up the middle with 8•06
showing on the clock. Borders kick
made it 22-0. Compliment and
Roman rushed for first downs on two
critical third-down play situations to
kept the drive alive.
Uave Stevens recovered a Blue
Devil fumble to set up the Hornets

important when it comes to pitching
in baseball, but age neccssanly as
not.
Ed Doney. one of the pttchers lor
the Webster College hascball team
last spring. is 44 vc~rs old

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'NIA...,aatatJ

---------------------·
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Experience is

fRENCH 500 fLIA MARKEr
AND GUN SHOW

• t

IJ599

night's contest on the Fairland High School athletic complex. Fairland, which saw Ita lead
shrink to 21-14 becauee of the scoring run, pulled
farther away later In the period and won 28-14.
(Photo by .Ron Ceudlll of River Valley Photography)

1990 FORD TAURUS GL

League

i .

~~

1995 DODGE INTREPID

- • SEOAL teams • -

'\

'lo..

1-1 : Rob W9odward, 1 (·7).
Score by quarters:
Totals
4-9-0-1-Q.
Gallipolis ............. 0 0 0 7 - 7
Coal
Grove • Barry BlankenScoring summary
Coal Grove ........ 15 013 7-35
ship,
2·86-1
. Totals 2·88·1.
Statistics
. Totals 10-15-1·110-1.
G
CG
River Valley (11:45 1st qtr.)- Department
Passing·
20
Maynard 75-yd. kickoff return First downs ................... 4
Gallipolis • lsaac Saunders,
Yards rushing ............. 65 304 ·4-B-0-1-0; Dave Rucker, 0·1-0·0(Stout kick)
Fairland (7:10 1st qtr.) - Ben Lost rushing ...... ......... 23
22 o. Totals 4-9-0-1-Q.
Keeney 21-yd. pass from Shepherd Net rushing .................42 282
Coal Grove • Derrick French.
(Kalbfleish kick)
P
m ts .............. 9
6
2-6-0-86-1.
Totals 2-6·88-1.
Fairland (5:43 1st qtr.) CorT)pletlon . .. .......... ..4
2
Punta·
Chinn 38-yd. interception return Intercepted by .............0
o
Gallipolis • Isaac Saunders,
(pass failed)
Yards passing ....·":........ 1
88
5-212.
Fairland (10::23 Znd qtr.) Total yards ............. : .... 43 370
Coal Grove - Jeremy Roush.
Love 3-yd . pass from Sh.epherd Plays ............. ........... .. 39
58
2-n.
(Love pass from Chtnn)
Relum yards ......... 7-129 3-19
River Valley (11:04 4th qtr.)- Fumbles .... ................... 3
Recovered ,opponents fum2
Maynard 2-yd. run (Stout kick)
bles;
Gallipolis: Frank FauLost fumbles ................. 3
2
Fairland (6:45 4th qtr.) - C. Penalties ................. 4-26 7-51
dree, and (unknown).
Lee 26-yd. pass from Shepherd
Coal Grove· Derric~ French
Punts ..................... S-212 2-77
(Kalbfleish kick)
4 dr. model loaded
and
Dave Slevens.
Individual rushing •
Pass
Interceptions·
None.
wilh power seat;
Gallipolis - Bert Craig, 4-32;
Team statistics
Scoring:
.
tilt, cruise, pwr
Josh
Bodimer,
5-16;
Dave
Ruck.
Coal Grove • Barry BlankenMike
Dres~el,1-6; Seth
er,
4-7;
locks, pwr
De rtment
BY
E Davis, 4-4; Jeff MHchell, 3-0-1: ship, 6-yard pass fr'om Derrick
windows, 350 VS,
-,-Pa
7
Paul Siders, 4 (-3); Isaac Saun- French, (Mike Borders, kick).
Ftrst downs ..................... .5
Alum
wheels, NC ,
4:31 first; Mo Roman, 4-yard run,
Total yards ......... .......... l31
188
ders, 5 (-20). Totals 30-42·1
and much more.
Rushing att.-yds ....... 44 -71 28 -44
Coal Grove· Mo Roman, 17- (Roman, run&gt;. 1:48 first; Roman,
kick),
8:06
18-yard
run
(Borders,
Passmg yds ......... :.......... ~
~~ 110-3; Andy Compliment, 13-74- third; Dave Stevens, 1B-yard
Comp.-att..................... l 9 11
o: Nick Roberts. 1-50-0; Dave
2
Interceptions thrown ....... 2
Stevens, 5-30-1: Barry Blanken- run, (kick low), 4:361hird; Roman
Fumbles-lost ................ 6-4
4-1
ship, 2-31-1; Ricky Belville, 7-5; B-yard run, (Borders kick) 10:39
p 1·
d
4 40
535
ena ues-y s. ............. Joe Smith, 2-3; Jer?.my Roush , fourth .
Punts-yds ..................S-142 5-176
Gallipolis - Jeff Mrtchell, 11-3: Tony DaltoQJ~ -2; Derrick
yard
run, (T. C. Beaver, kick) ,
French, 3 (·16). Totals 52·282-4.
S · I II d
5:59
fourth.
1
tat st ca ea ers
Receiving·
Next GAHS game: Sept 13,
Gallipolis • Aaron Stout, 1-5;
at
South
Point
. BimYd.u Raiders
Seth Davis, 1-2; David Rucker,
&lt;:::&gt;
Rushing- Stephens 11-28;
Maynard 8-22 &amp; I TD; Triplett 1015.
Passing- Stephens 2-9, 60 yds.
V6 Engine, Air
&amp; 2 int.
n_....--n"'.ndlliDning, Pwr
Receiving Slone 1-49;
windows, Pwr
Triplett I- ll
GALLIA
COUNn
JUNIOR
FAIRGROUNDS
locks, tilt, cruise,
Interceptions caught - Slone
1-10; Triplett 1-0
US 160 AND JACKSON PIKE (OLD US 35)
and a~M/FM
Fumble recoveries - Slone 1-0
Cassette Stereo.
..., GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

..SEOAL football standings

96 SPECTACUlAR C10Sf·OUT

1

-~
,.. '{).._

next score. Taking over on the GAHS
30, Coal Grove mar~ hed 30 yards in
five plays for the score with Roman
going the final 18. Borders kick was
low. It was 28-0 with 4:361eft in the
period.
Another Blue Devil fumble.
recovered .by French, set up Coal
Grove's final score. The Hornets
marched 60 yards in nine plays with
Roman blasting over from the eight.
Borders kick with 10•391eft made it
35-0.
Both coaches flooded the field for
the remainder of the contest.
Frank Faudrec recovered a Coal
Grove fumble to set up Gallipolis '
lone score. Following two long-gainers by sophomore quarterback Bert
Craig, Jeff Mitchell, sophomore
halfback, rammed it over from the
one with 5:59 left to play. T C
Beaver's kick was good. The drive
covered 40 yards in six plays.
Two Gallipolis players suffered
concussions - Paul Siders and Ben
Sheard, and arc questionable for this
week 's game at South Point.
Coal Grove has an open date this
week.
Coal Grove totaled 370 yards in
58 plays from scrimmage Friday
while GAHS had 43 yards in 39
plays. First downs favored the Hornets. 20-4.
Craig paced GAHS runners with
32 yards in four trips . Roman led the
Hornet s attack with II 0 yards on 17
carries. He scored three touchdowns.
Compliment finished with 74 yards in
13 carries.
French hit four of six passes for 8R
yards and one touchdown while
Saunders was lour of eight for one
yard . Blankenship had both Hornet
receptions. Stout led GAHS receiver&gt;
with a five-yard catch.

JUST ARRIVED!

•.

~ F~rland, which

1814 GED PRIZM.I&amp;053, Red, 29,000 mllea, A/T, AJC,
clbth lnllrlor
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1994 TOYOTA TERCEL 16151,28,000 miiH, A/C, AM/FM
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1995 GEO METRO 16160, 27,000 miiH, AJC, AII/FII Ctlllltt,
red ..............................................................................................$7850
1994 GEO PRIZII 18126, Whht, AJC, AIIJFI Clllt11e, cUI1om
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1991 NISSAN KING CAB 16070, Whitt, A/T, AM/FM,
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::• RiV~f ~~ley's second possession
~ulledlt~ a four-yard loss 1n two
:Qlays befqre quarterback Richard
:Stephens. threw an interception to
~~rtiack !Scott Chinn that resulted
~h a 38-y.nf touchdown return.
•; Howel!c'r, an illegal-procedure
~ntdly' lhlt wiped oul Kalbfleish's
i®·target extra-point kick and
jfhiM' s~ in(linnplete pass on the two,;!Oint conv,rsion try that followed
lim:ed F~irlalld to settle forthe 13-7
~ead 'thai :stood at the first quarter's

'

Cllltiii,AIC,

This week: River Valley will
host Meigs. while Fairland will play
at Buffalo-Wayne.
Quarter lllllla
River Valley ........ 7 0 0 7 = 14
Fairland ..... ........ 13 8 0 7 = 28

saw

!ti

SUZUKI SIDEKICK 4X4 I&amp;Qg1, ConvarUble, AIC, AII/Fll
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1993 GEO TRACKER 4X416152, 4X4, AJT,
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Gallipolis, OH .
446-3672

Team stati'Stl"cs
I&gt;eoartmenl
Sma. ~
First downs .......... ........... .5
II
Yards rushing ......... 39-103 55-186
Yards passing ............. ,.. !0
IS
Total yards... ...... ......... 113
196
Comp.-att .... ................. 3-7
1-10
Interceptions ... ................. 0
I
Fumbles/lost ... ........ ...... 6-4
1-0
Penalties .....................4-30
5-3S
Punts ........................ 8-272 6-156

GRAN PRIX SEa, white, AJC, A/T, AIIJFII
crul11, power windows &amp;locltl ............................ $10,412
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can., power wlndowt &amp; locka ................................................. $9915
1994 OLDS CIEAA 16127, AJC, A!f, Ult, crulat, power locka,
custom wlllell .........................;.............................................$10,495
1994 CHEV. CORSICA 16135, V-6 eng., AJT, AJC, AM/FII,
rear dtloggar..............................................................................$9784
1995 CHEV. BERffiA 16089, Whitt, A/C, A/T, AII/FM Clll.,
cloth lnttrtor ............................................................................ $11~4
1e94 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX SE 16121, Rid, AfT, AC, V~ eng., til1,
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btdllntr, aport wllltll,runnlng ~:;;ii·i;i;:lwii·~;.;:;ll3
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Scoring summary

-----Sports briefs-----

Gctlf

Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy-Oids-GEO
has announced that
Dale Lear has
earned Top Sales
Honors for the
month of
August.

iiiiiii•••

1988 PONTIAC FIERO 15918, Red, kpeed, AII/FM,
aport whttll ................................................................................ $3415
1993 CHEV. CAVALIER 18136, G11111, AJC, AII/FM,
cloth interlor.........-~.................................,••_., ..........................$7115
1912 CHEV. CAVAUEA SIW 16131, Whitt, A/T, AJC, AM/FM,
luggage liCk, clotlllnllrlor......................................................$8485
1992 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE 16104, Whitt, AJC, A/T, Almt, Mr
dtloggar, dolh lnttrlor.............................................................$7970
1993 CHEV. BEAffiA 16107, Pewter, A/T, AJC, AMJT'M, 1lr big,
cloth lllllrlor.............................................................................$7985
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power wlndowt &amp; locka, AII/FM ..............................................$8995
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seven yards to its own 45 before
punting. River Valley set up shop at
its own 14 with 9:29 left.
The Raiders moved the ball II
yards in five plays before senior
lineman Josh Shortridge jerseyslammed Slone for a seven-yard loss
on a second-and-10 situation. Two
plays later , the Gallians' punt
resulted in Chinn's 11-yard return
that put the Dragons at the Raiders '
26.
One play -Shepherd's 26-yard
touchdown pass to junior split end
Chris Lee - gave the Dragons what
they needed to put the game out of
their guests' reach.
Toler sidelined: The Raiders
suffered a loss to their front lines
when senior tight end/defensive
tackle Mat Toler broke his leg early
in the third quarter. He was admitted
to St. Mary's Hospital in
Huntington, W.Va. , where hi s
condition was listed as stable.
According to Triplett, the injury,
a simple break in two places in his
tibia and fibula, will put him out of
action for eight.weeks. It means the
break should heal in time for him to
prepare for basketball season.

, tfm-.Sentlnel Staff
: : PROCfORVILLE- Fairland's
), yarsity footb~ll team overcame the
' initial shock of River Valley 's
: ~coring on the game 's first play with
; ihree scbres that helped the Dragons
; ~ly a '28, 14 victory Friday night.at
; ai ~ljl'jid High School's athletic
• 6mplex.
: TJ!e ~aid.ers drew first blood
: :_,h~it \
senior
tight
· lndlfiaUbackldefensive end Chris
: ~aynard. taking Fred Corley's
: ~j):koff at the River Valley 25-yard
•line, found his way past the human
: llMci:111d· into the clear. He put at
: ~asl IS. yards between himself and
- ibe' nearest Dragons on his way to
: Qte'~S!Iuth rend zone 15 seconds into
• ihi~ ontest.
:: ~f this point, thing~ began to
• too: rosy for the Ratders, the
: 9wn rs Ofa 7-0 lead in part because
:pniO(;]ay Stout kicked their first
• ~xtra-~PPint .of the season. How rosy?
: J .Thill Raiders committed a pass: lliierf~nce penalty that moved the
• pjgskin to Fairland's 40. That was
: 10 y . ds farther than the Dragons
: tpove il after two running plays
•and fo :incomplete passes.
; ~ . F11i land, which punted after
:~q h!in . the ball for nearly two
! minutt ;. saw the Raiders, boosted
'hi juti or kick returner Jimmy
: elihJ1o 's 14-yard punt return, close
l!iJ ; 011 \fllidfield on their first
IPos~ssiop
from scrimmage.
, • How'i~· the second play of the
'drive
River Valley 's first
&amp;;mble 1~overed by Fairland's Jack
IJattis at 1he Raiders' 34.
,Five ~lays later, Dragon
!qu_art~r 't:k Jay Shepherd ftred a
·~rike tl&gt;'reteiver ·Ben Keeney, who
!sJ1oolc i~ailters Jason Roe and Jody
:Sloqe J\l *complete a 21-yard
' u~h(Jo'ft pass play. Jason.
&amp;albflei ' 'l extra-point auempt tied

BERT CRAIG

S.m Wllaon, Ph.D. lo an aaaoclate profoaoor of hlatory at the Unlvenlty of
Rio Grande. An avid fin of 111 eports- and 1 near manlecel follower of beaket·
ball- he Ia a native of Gary, Ind., and a graduate of Indiana Unlvenlty- which
ahould tell readera eomelhlng about where hla heed (and Hoosier heart) Ia.

In overtime,

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

o

OLDSMOBILE

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

Eastern

Ave.

Gallipolis,

614 446-3672

--

••

·ro

•
OH

�••••••••••••••••••••••••
Page B&amp; • ...... c-.~

Area sports briefs
Eskins sets
American mark
GALLIPOLIS - Tom Eskins
of Gallipolis set an American
natural weightlifting division
record at a bench press meet in
Summersville, W.Va. on Aug.
31.
The 63-year-old Eskins,
competing iri the 205-pound
class of the Masters 3 60-andolder division, bench-pressed
354 pounds (161 kilograms).

Sunday, September,,, 195·

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

•'

TOMESKINS

Meigs golf team
retains division lead
JACKSON - Meigs continues to lead the TVC's Ohio Division
golf standings after winning Thursday at Franklin Valley.
Me1gs posted a team score of 169 to defeat Belpre by two
strokes. The Golden Eagles finished with a 171. Wellston came in
third with a 181, followed by Vinton County's 207 and NelsonvilleYork's 223.
Joe Hill led Meigs with a 41. Clay Crow and Mick Barr added
42s. Teammates behind them were Dave Anderson ' s and Steve
McCullough's 44s and Gary Acree 's 45.
Wellston's Corey Smith was match medalist with a one-over-par
38.
Here are the Ohio Division standings after five matches.
I. Meigs-20
.
2. Belpre-15
3. Wellston-10
4. Vinton County-4
5. Nelsonville-York- I

Kyger Creek sextet wins
and loses in tri-match
MERCERVILLE - Kyger Creek's junior high volleyball team
defeated Hannan Trace before losing to Bidwell-Porter in a trimatch Thursday night, acconding to a repon released Friday.
In the opening match, Kyger Creek won 15-2, 15-1 behind Amy
Fife's seven service points and four-point efforts from Devan
Cottrell, Jessica Hungerford, Amanda Phillips, Shannon Rankin and
Carrie Saxon.
Against Bidwell-Porter, the Pirates won 15-11 , 15-11. Lee Ann
Berkley led the Bobcats with six points. Fife had four.
Kyger Creek will play again Monday at River Valley High
School. No opponent was listed . .

ByJOEKAV
a little bit better," he said through a
CINCINNATI (AP)- San Fran- translator, agent Joe Cubas.
cisco's Osvaldo Fernandez spent the
His wife, Elizabeth, and four othlast few weeks worrying about his er family members arrived in Miami,
family. Cincinnati's Mike Morgan Fla., last week, seeking political
spent them thinking about retire- asylum. Fernandez spent the last
ment.
week with them, then flew 10 CincinBoth of them found peace and nati on Thursday and fulfilled his
new beginnings Friday as their teams wife's request to win the game for
split a doubleheader.
her.
Fernandez, relaxed after being
Fernandez allowed just four sinreuniied with a family he had not · gles and four walks, striking out five .
seen in more than a year, pitched one He retired 13 batters in a row over
of his best games of the season . He one stretch.
threw eight shutout innings, leading
His family was never far from his
the Giants to a 2-0 victory in the first mind .
game.
" I thought about them many
"My worries are over," Fernan- times," Fernandez said. "This was a
dez s!lid. "I'm a lot more relaxed special game for me, my first game
upstairs."
with my family here . Also, the fact
Morgan then went out and eased that I didn't have time to prepare
some of the Reds ' worries about their
rotation. The 36-year-&lt;?ld pitcher
threw 5 113 strong innings for a 14No Credit, Slow Credit
1 victory in his Cincinnati debut.
Bad Credit, Bankruptcy?
After the St. Louis Cardinals
released him , Morgan considered
retirement. He accepted the Reds'
At Duteh MiDer Chevrolet,
contract offer Tuesday after deciding
he wasn 'I ready to quit.
WE CAN H£I.p
'"I'm glad I didn't retire and that
II Yoa Dan At Leal ,300
I decided to come here, " Morgan

myself for this game. I did it with a
lot of love. My wife asked me for
this victory. "
Fernandez thinks he will pitch
beller now that the family is reunited.
" I think it's going to be very positive for me," he said. "I believe that
I'm going to have a lot better concentration.''

SOUTHERN GOLF TEAM - Members of the
1996 Southern goH team are (L-R) Matt Bradford,
Kevin Fields, Chris Ball, Jason Law, Donny CarThese days getting behind the wheel of 'a
car can put you in a tight spot it you drive' .
without the proper insurance protection. Be
confident you have the right coverage ... with
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Both pitchers will look back on
the doubleheader split as a highlight
of their season.
Fernandez (7-13) had been pitching well lately despite worries about
his family, which he had not seen
since he defected from the Cuban
baseball team in July 1995.
"In my last stan before my fam ily (arrived), I did it more based on
desire. My desperation of wanting to
see my family obligated me to work

(304} 529-2301

"

I SAVE THOUSANDS I

By KEN BERGER
AP Sports Writer
Mark Martin gets up at the crack
of dawn, his body still aching from
a feY! hundred laps around the track
the dli} before. Adrenalin shoots like
cold hqui~ through his veins.
Martin, perhaps the fittest driver
on the NASCAR Winston Cup stock
car circuit, is pumping iron faster
ililln'the stlri can shed light on a new
';AI aje. 37, it's something he
sllte bauo do to stay at the top

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nahan, Bill Young, Travis Llale, Butch Norrla and
coach Jim Anderson.

EASTERN GOLF TEAM - Members of the
1996 Eaatem golf team are (L-R) Ryan Hawlay,
Andy Reed, Travla Lodwic:k, Eric: Smith, Robert

RacerS need more fit physiques
to withstand on-track changes

And let us keep you in the driver's seat.

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A DAY-

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I

it s'port.'

::''J:ht~ ~ounger drivers coming

iWQ the sport today all have physi· ~ fii,ness routines with a personal
"e
'r r •

trainer," Manin said. "Five years ves your hean rate right out of the
ago, almost no driver on the circuit ballpark. People don't realize that."
Believe it or not, there is actualhad one. There's a change going
ly
scientific research detailing the
on."
physical
exertion involved in driving
There was ·a time when race car
a
race
car.
The studies have found.
drivers were cigarelte-smoking,
among
other
things, that a race car
beer-guzzling swashbucklers driver's
sustained
hean rate during
handly fitness freaks . But the spon
competition
rivals
thai of other top
has changed. As technology makes
athletes,
even
marathon
runners.
the cars faster,. it takes more than
The
drivers
say
this
only
"proves
courage to steer them to victory.
what
they've
known
for
a
long
time.
"When you spend 500 miles tryAlthough
most
sports
fans
don't
give
ing to drive a car ... on the verge of
ttlem
credit,
the
drivers
think
they're
out of control every inch of the way,
now you ' ve changed it to something every bit as athletic as the running,
like wrestling a bear," Manin said. jumping stars of the NFL or NBA.
" II puts you out of breath. II dri-

fi;QAL action ... (Continued from B-6) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
J ,._

f

-:i

·~-..

l ..

}' '

j

liens · · ·

6-3-0-7=16
7-6-0-0=13

llsto
,. ~ :. .

~

..,

~·

I

' "' I •

.,.;_: '. f ,_ . '

-

"j\kcinville·York 28

._,;:; ; lloaan Zl

At ~IlChte!\ the Buckeyes remain

tf(de~aied. bpt only because Ben
~y thrCw a, 17-yand strike to Eric
Mitchell in the end zone with 51 sec~nds remaining in the game, and
t~en. hit Eric Glass wit~ alyto-point
cbnversion pass, erasmg a 21-20
Cogan lead.
: The Buckeyes raced to a 20-0
l~ad on the strength of a pair of
touchdown runs by Nathan Stalder _
cbvering 25 and 34 yands, a one-yard
~obey run and Stalder's two-point

Page '87

the winners with 117 yards on 19
carries. Robey completed 10 of 13
aerials for 120 yards. For Logan ,
Butcher netted 87 yards rushing.
Maib;u;h, a quarterback, added 50 in
addition to completing two of I 0
pas:;es for 13 yands.
Last week, the Buckeyes downed
SEOAL member Athens 31-9.

Quarter 1lllllb
Loghn
Nelsonville-York

0-14-7-0=21
6-14-0-8=28

ODIE O'DONNELL
the contest and Andy P~ extra
T-8 Correspondent
point kick concluded (l{e scoring at
GALLIPOLIS- Football teams 16-13. Goodwin had opened the
from the Southeastern Ohio Athlet- scoring with 8:44 remaining in the
ic League split an eight-game slate lirst quaner on a two-yard run, capin Friday night action, winning four ping a seven-play, 80-yand drive after
and losing four against non-league the opening kickoff. Perry's extraopponents
point kick was wide.
The four winners include Jackson
The Golden Rockets took the lead
over Waverly 14-12, Warren Local when Bryan Murdoch scored from
downing Fort Frye 39-19, Point the three and then kicked the extra
Pleasant defeating George Washing- point for a 7-6 lead after one quarton 17-14, and Athens tripping Well- ter of action .
stpn 16-13. On the down side it was
In the second quaner Wellston's
Coal Grove 3S, Gallipolis 7; Fairland Beau Fortner raced 24 yards to pay28, River Valley 14; Nelsonville- din, but the placement kick failed to
York 28, Logan 21: and Meigs 7, make it 13-6.
Marietta 6.
Eight minutes later a Bulldog
The eight-team league is now 8- touchdown drive stalled at the Rock8 after two weeks of play.
et 12-yard line, and Perry respondAthens 16, Wellston 13
ed with a 29-yand field goal to reduce .
At Wellston. the visiting Bulldogs the halftime deficit to 13-9.
won the annual Ohillco Bowl, staged
Athens posted its first win behind
in conjunction with the Ohillco Days the passing of Nathan White, who
festival by overcoming a 13-9 half- completed 12 of.l5 attempts for 151
time deficit with just six minutes yards, and the running of Goodwin,
remaining in the game.
who ran for 101 yards on 22 carries.
Matt Goodwin's second touchThe 0-2 Rockets were led by
down of the game came from the Bryan Murdoch's 27 carries for 172
one-yard line with 6:38 remaining in
(See SEOAL on B-7)

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, RIO' dRANDE - Here is the
sFhedule for the week of Sept. 8-15
at the University of Rio Grande's
L!yne Center.
! Fitness center, gymnasium
' )tnd racquetball courts
i Today - closed
: Monday - closed
: Tuesday~ 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
· Wednesday- 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thunday- 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
· Friday- 7 a.m.-5 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, SepL IS- 1-6 p.m.

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Includes equipment use, programming and maintenance
Several programm1ng packages are avdllable. startmg at the suggested reta1l pnce as low as S32 99** per month, 1nctud1ng equ 1pment !plus a one -t1me :nstallat1on charge).

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engine, PS, PB, auto. trans., Climate Control air

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seats, roar defroster, 12 spoked cast aluminum wheels.
WAS ........................... $25,575.00
FACTORY DISC............ 2,000.00
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TAt-COUNTY DtSC....... 1,302.00
FORD REBATE ............. 1,000.00

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FACTORY DISC............ 11040.00
$20,115.011
TAt-COUNTY DISC. ;...., 31133.110

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OrcJf'r PRIMF STAR now rtnrJ J).ty Jr

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r\ 1 )14 1J

fcJ( ur ) l.r11, 1trcro

Home athledc eventl
Tuesday Volleyball
Shawnee Stale at 7 p.m.

-·
···.e.,l.rlll',lll ,;

t PIIU~S IOf mollltrlv '&gt;Cf11(f' rti.J~ JoJI'I by dr•,Trr h•rlr,r . of •l ] ll·rhlflly ,.~~,,..,hill lfll'ltJI"'
prem!um chantlfl\. fJormal n.lhOnal '&gt;U(J9e\ ted retutl hr rr.•.r... rl.,r 1()1 , 1'1'1tJJ "l~tWdltJhOI'I k.~t \WJ (JIJ
olfu 1\ !01 oew wbsc.rtbeP•.. only 8lac.kOu1 ._.'\lfl&lt;tl()n'l dpply AB&lt;. , tiS\, 118(. fOK and PB5 d\¥lhtl~
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WAS ........................... $16,815.00
FACTORY DISC ............... 500.00

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FORD REBATE ................ 500.00

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Dr., 3.8 V-6 engine, power steering,
power brakes. power moon roof, dual air
bags, leather interior, dual power seats,
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low miles.

4 Or., 4.6 V-8 engine. PS, PB, auto. trans.,
air conditioning, leather interior, dual power
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2,811

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Notes: A Lyne Center membership is required to use the facilities.
Fqculty, staff, students $nd administrators are admitted with their ID
col-ds.
' • Racquetball court reservations
c~ now be made one day in advance
b~ calling 24S-74~ locally or toll- ,
froe at J-8()()-282-7201, extens1on
74~5.

pnct.

lEW 1115 FORD CONtOUR OL 4 DR.
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cond., AM/FM stereo cass., rear defroster. Power

closed

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*

TO ACCOMMODAn THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS

Free·well!ht room
Throuah Sunday, ScpL 15 -

.'

'17,012

2.0 DOHC 4 cyl. eng., PS, PB, auto trans., air

Today- 1-3 p.m.
Monday - 6-9 p.m.
• Tuesday - 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday - 6-9 p.m.
Thunctar- 6-9 p.m.
Frlclay "T closed
Saturday -1 -3 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 15- 1-3 p.m.

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Warren Local 39
. Fort Frye 19
The Warriors remain undefeated in
two outings, but no details on the
contest were available.

Lyn~ qenter slate

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I Logan then put 14 points on the
board in the last five minutes of the
~alf on Jeff Maibach's 39-yand scamper, Ryan Butcher's 15-yand dash and
~utcher's two-point conversion run
~ust 14 seconds hefore halftime.
, When Stalder fumbled the wei
football on the second-half kickoff at
t1Je Buckeye 37, the Chiefs scored on
five plays, sending Butcher the final
~ne yard. Drew Thomas kicked his
tllind extra point of the game to put
~ogan ahead 21 -20 and set the stage
for the Buckeyes' fourth -period winning drive.
; Statistics show Stal(jcr pacing

Herrle, Radley Faulk, Mathew King 1nd COIICh
Dick Rupe.

ttt\-~l) t.P.

ct:&gt;nvcrsion run.

~y

•·

!luel •

•

Athens gets 16~13
win over Wellston;
Logan loses to N-Y

-

Jauube atm..-JJ•

Pomeroy • M!ddleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

.

In other SEOAL gridiron action,

'

- -·--.. - -,-.. -~ .- ........ .- .,. .,. -

It was obvious 10 the Reds that ~
concentration was better than
, 'when:
r
he faced them last May in San Fran-_
cisco .and settled for a no-decision: •
"He looked really sharp tonighj.~
He looked a lot different than when:
we saw him out there," said John
Smiley ( 12-12), who gave up an RBI
double to Bill Mueller and a solo
homer to Glenallen Hill. .

ELKVIEW, W.Va. -Ohio Valley Christian's soccer team got
three goals from Bo Pollard in collecting a 6-1 victory over Elk
-Valley Christian Friday.
The Defenders got goals from Pollard, Andrew Mayn and Daniel
Sizemore in the first 35:37 before Chad Clark put the Eagles (0-4)
on the board with a goal at the 38: IS marl(.
Less than a minute after Clark scored, Pollard scored again.
Seven mmutes later, Pollard scored after using Sizemore's throw-ih
assist.
The Defenders closed the scoring when Ben Taylor, who had the
,~ssist on Pollard's first goal, took an ' assist from Sizemore and
scored at the 69-minute mark.
The Defenders tallied 37 saves to Elk Valley's 35. Goalie Nathan
Smith had 17 of the guests' saves.
The Defenders (4-1) will head to Huntington , W.Va . to face
Grace Christian Tuesday at 6 p.m.

PUZZLE ON PAGE D2

sun.~~y._ September 8, 1996

~""'!..........- . - - - : - : -.....~....,...:-.-:. -~-~...................,~~"7---:-~ ~~~·~~~~- ---~-

Giants and Reds spUt doubleheader

OVCS s.trikers beat Elk Valley

'•

.....

~"-----------'!!!11'!!~'1!'~:.,-~---,..,.--..,.---

~All guests are to be accompanied
by ta Lyne Center membership holder and a $2 fee .

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY
399 W. Main

1192-2184

Pomeroy, Ohio

The Store With "All Klnda of Stuff" tor Petl, Stlblel,
Large l Srull Animals, Lawna l Glrdtnl

•

'

�..
•

•

Outdoors ,.
TOO I!IAQ.., '1'011 ~O&amp;JLO ~

BEEN MER£ l)eT WEEI&lt;!
lHEY WDtl!: KIL.LIN&amp; 'EM!

Sister knows
CINCINNATI (AP) - At Xavier
University of Ohio the old line about
"mother knows best" is changed to
"sister knows best. "
Si.ster Rose Ann Aeming is the
CQQn:linator of academic-athletics for

F19HIMEI5 BEEN

lOUW HERE
ALL SUMMER/

®

0

Bass prefer Jackson Lake's Yule trees

•

iunhq eat'imtJ- jentintl

good night fishing opportunities.
Ohio River
MARIETTA POOL - Fish with
small crank baits or jig-and-pig combinations when seeking spotted bass.
These fi sh occasionally will measure
up to 14 inches. This pool is one of
the best areas on the river to fish for
channel catfish. Use chicken livers
and night crawlers fished along the
bottom for best results. Use lat'Re
chubs and sunfish when seeking flathead catfish. Saugeye fishing should
slowly begin to improve.
Central
HOOVER RESERVOIR
A
remnant population of walleyes
remains in the lake with some fish
measuring up to 30 inches. Numbers

have been gradually declining in
recent years. Night fishing with
lanterns at the causeway openings
produces good action ror white bass.
ALUM CREEK LAKE - The
area around the darn and some of the
nearshore areas in the lower half of
the lake are good places to fish for
muskies . Usc the larger imitation
lures trolled at depths of six to 14
reet. Shoreline cover and the small
inlet bays are good places to fish ror
bass during the fall.
Northwest
BRESLER RESERVOIR
White bass numbers are very good.
Look for the better fishing spots in
areas where bass may be chasing
baitfish along the surface.

Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy-Oids·GEO
has announced that
Dale Lear has
earned Top Sales
Honors for the
month of
August.

ERED
.

.

C. Moeller waved goodbye to his fellow ship·
mates and stepped off the U.S.S. New Orleans
CA 32 prepared to move on with his life after
serving in the Navy Reserve for three years during
World War II.
Moving back to his hometown, Cheshire, in
February 1946, he once again marched to the beat
or civilian life. He married, bought a house and had
several careers with Cheshire Township, driving a
bus and John Deere.
Through the years Moeller often thought of his term of service
with the Navy Reserv~ on the New Orleans and in particular a
special friend, as close to.him as a brother. He had never been in
contact with any of the ship's crew and after awhile figured their
paths would never cross again. He was wrong.
Last August Moeller held a reunion with his special friend,
Stafford Nolen, after 50 years of separation.
Moeller had joined the Disabled Association of Veterans sev·
eral years ago, and with a membership came a subscription to the
association's publication. Aipping through the pages or the
newsletter one day Moeller came across his old friend's name in
a roster of the crew of the New Orleans.
He wrote Nolen, and for a year the two came to know each
other once again with constant phone calls and letters.
Reestablishing their deep brotherhood was ·the easy pan. But
what they really wanted to do was see each other face to face .

B.C. MOELLER, RIGHT, Ia pictured with Stanford Nolen
during a reunion they had laat Auguat. Both had served in
the Navy Re11rv1 on the U.S.S. New Orleans CA 32 during
World War II.

Continued on·page c-2

~rea

DPU
PICTUREP IS THE Dlvlalon No.3 Turret-3 Gun Crew from the U.S.S. New Orlea,ns CA 321n 1945.
Moeller Ia the sixth from the right In the back row.

HUNT TROPHYowner of the hl,,h ..••ti~~~~~
thla trophy at the Elza Birch Memorial
Hunt
urday, sponsored by the Shade River Coonhunters at
Meigs
County Fairgrounds. The bench show will beg,ln at 6 p.m. followed
by the nlte hunt at 9 p.m. Trophies will also be awarded grand nita
champions, nlte champions and In other competition. Including
bench shows. Shown are club treasurer Oscar Smith (left) and
Roger Birch of Racine, the son of the late Elza Birch.

,,I

Spring Hill Dairy kept Gallia in milk and butter for many years

UP TO $60 VAl 'JEI

.I

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man
reunites
with oft{
war
6utfay
after 50
.gears of
6eing
apart

Continued on page C-2

BACI&lt; TO SCHOOL

I
I

By DOROTHY SAYRE
George and I recent) y took our
first cruise. This may sound unusual
because of our frequent traveling,
but we just never got around to
going. Actually,
George won a
cruise for one
when we lived in
Denver. He told
me if I'd be very
obedient,
he
would buy me a
ticket to accompany him. Either
I was never obe·
dient enough, or time slipped ·away,
but soon the year's window to take
the trip had expired and we hadn't
gone. I had even bought a Ions.
broom-stick skin to wear on the
cruise that never materialized ....
In May of this year, we left Port •
Canaveral aboard the Dolphin IV, a
503-foot cruise boat, for Freeport,
Grand Bahama Island. Being an
obsessive-compulsive person, I was
afraid we would be late for check-in,
so we arTived plenty early. However,
there were lots of people ahead of
us.
· As we boarded, there was a welcome-aboard-bufTet on deck. 1l1c
stories of "food galore" were not
exaggerated. Every time we turned
around , there was a beautiful presen·
tation of tempting food s. The featured drink, as we boarded, was a
tropical fruit splendor called a
"Bahama Mama ." The glass containing the beverage. advertising the
Canaveral Cruise Lines, was free,
and I kept the souvenirs.
When our cabin steward took us
to our rooms, he gave us a hand -out
with our dining schedule; we had
first seating for meak As first-time
cruisers, we had been advised by
experienced (ricnds to ask for second seating, but we had not been
given a. choice. (The reason wi'th
second seating is: (I) You don't have
to rush around so in the morning to
·make the 6 or 7 a.m. seating, (2) and
for dinner, ir you have been ashore
at a port, you don't have to rush
back, shower and hurry · to make
your 6 p.m. seating.) Also, on our
cruise, and I'm assuming most others, passengers can forego 1/lc formal dining and cat in a more casual
setting or at buffets.
We were pleasantly surprised hy
the elegance of the dining room and
the formal dining. Every wish wa.~
our command and while the busboys/waiters did not hover, they
were readily available. Four couples,
including us, were seated at our
table. (Our companions were quickwitted and delightful acquaintances
throughout our cruise.) The first
night was casual dining; I was linally able to wear my "old " broomstick skin eight years later.
Several people became seasick
that evening, hut I did not feel · ·
queasy. As I'm quite susceptible to
motion sickness, that had been a big
concern ; but before the cruise ,
friends kept telling me that "on large
ships, one doesn't become ill ."
The next morning, we doc ked at
Freeport and George and I opted for
the tour through town which included : the botanical gardens, a photo
taking session on the beach in front
of a large hotel, and shopping. Our
tour guide, a Bahamian named
Frank, learned I wanted some conch

By LISA PETERSON
lima-Sentinel Staff

1616 Eastern Ave,
Gallipolis, OH
446-3672

POMEROY - Entry forms for cash pri zes ranging from $300 to
the 1996 Ohio River Sauger!Walleye $50, plus plaques. Other prizes will
Fall Fishing Classic are now avail- be announced the day of the event.
able in area sporting goods stores
Fall Fishing Classic corporate
and at The Daily Sentinel office in sponsors including Farmers Bank or
Pomeroy.
Pomeroy and Tuppers Plains, FishThe Fall Fishing Classic will be er Funeral Home, Veterans of For·held Oct. 26 with proceeds to bene- ei gn Wars Stewart-Johnson Post
fit the 1997 Meigs County United 9926 of Mason , W.Va., and Don Tate
Fund campaign.
Motors of Pomeroy. The Daily Sen The tourney will kick off at6 a.m. tinel is presenting the tournament.
Registration is $50 per team.
with an all-you-can-eat hotcake and
sausage breakfast at McDonald's of Team members registered before
Pomeroy rollowed by final regi stra· Oct. 15 will receive an official tourtion at 7:30a.m. Fishing times in the nament T-shirt.
·buddy tournament will run from 8
For more information on the tour.
a.m. to 4 p.m. with an awards cere- nament or breakfast, contact Jim
mony at 5 p.m.
Freeman at The /)aily Sentinel at
The winning teams will receive 614-992-2 155, CKI. 102.

$69

C

The vote is
sti II out G&gt;n
the cruise

the school and during her 11-year
tenure every pla'yer on the men's basketball team has graduated on lime.
· Tyron~ Hill. now an NBA star ar(d
former Xavier player, said: "I owe
Sister everything. She was good 1o
me;"
.

Fishing tournament slate posted

TRILLIUMT" CLASS RINGS

Section

Sundly, September I , 11116

Congratulations,
Dale Lear

Ohio fishing report

cr at depths of two to six feet for best
results . Largemouth hass can be taken on a variety of imitation baits such
as plastic worTns.
Southwest
COWAN LAKE - Fish with
night crawlers along the bottom to
take bullheads. Evening hours are the
best time to fi sh. Use minnows
fished around the deep drop-offs and
points when seeking crappies. Large·
mouth bass fi shing opportunities are
rated as exce llent.
LAKE LORAMIE - Lots of
bluegills are present and may be taken from many shoreline locations.
Use larval baits and small worms
fished at depths of two to eight feet
for best results. Bullheads provide

Along the River

_......,_ _ _ Spor1s :brief&amp;_ _ _ ___

WALLY PIKE'S OUTDOOR LD'E

COLUMBUS, Ohi o (AP) Here is the weekly fi shing report provided by the Divi sion of Wildlife ol
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources:
Southeast
JACKSON LAKE - Prepared
baits, night crawlers and chicken livers can be successfully used to take
channel catfish. Many fi sh average
15 to 18 inches in size. A number of
discarded Christmas trees were
placed in the lake as fi sh concentra·
tion devices. These are good spots to
fish for bass and bluegills.
TIMBRE RIDGE LAKE - Use
mealworms, red worTns or' larval
baits beneath a l)obber when seeking
bluegills. Fish around shoreline cov-

September a, 1996

• ' • • I

•

1oo roquirtd.

By JAMES SANDS
Spacial Correapondent
The Spring Hill Dairy was an
active Gallia County business from
1914 until 1960. lt was in 1914 that
Fred Foster, an Athens native, came
to Callia County and founded a farm
which he called the
Spring Hill Dairy
farm. Foster had
pure-bred
Jersey
cows.
In 1913 Harmony
Creamery of Pittsburgh built a large
butter making plant
in Gallipolis, and the demand for
milk with high butter content was
strong. In a short time other dairy
farmers were switching to the high
butterfat cows like Jersey. The rich
~luesr~SS pastures of the county
were ideal for Jerseys. It should also
bc:notcd that in the early pan of this
century doctors encouraged the
dri.Jiking of ,buttermilk for its curati\'e powcn:· • ·
In due time Foster began producins his own butter, cheese, cottage
clieele and nulk prodiiCII. When the
~ony Creamery closed in the
· I-9201, Foster moved his plant opcr- ·
&amp;tiQns into the 81(111011)' building on
S«:ond Avenue. Sprins Hill Dairy

.purchased by the 1930s over 1,500
gallons of whole milk a day from
Gallia farmers .
The total daily production of milk
in the county at that time was about
2,600 gallons. Subtracting the 200
gallons a day produced by the large
herd kept by the Ohio Hospital for
Epileptics, it is easy to see how
important Spring Hill Dairy was.
The OHE consumed 400 gallons of
milk per day.
In the 1920s and 1930s there
were over 9,001&gt; dairy cows in Gallia County, compared to ·S,OOO in
Jackson, 7,000 in Meigs and 6,000
in Lawrence.
In 1939 the typical Gallia County
dairy cow produced 5,SOO pounds of
milk per year and 231 pounds of but·
terfat a year. Across the county 44
million pounds of milk were produced. Those totals stayed fairly
consiant into the 19SOs.
To process that amount of milk
the plant employed 30 to 3S people
during the 1930s and early 1940s.
In the early dlys there were two
principal stockholders in the company, Fred Foster and Sherman Eagle.
Ia time some Marieua men bought
out Eagle.
Some officcn of SprinJ Hill
Dairy in the 19201 and '30s, besides

Fred
Foster,
were
J.W.
Foulks,
Billy
Foster,
W.J.
Stewart,
Ray
Campbell and
A.W. Fish. In
1944 the officers
sold their share
in the company
to A. Grant
Beckett of Hunt·
ington. Foster
remained in the
company as the
treasurer. Becken also owned a
milk plant in
Huntington. So
from 1944 to
1960 Spring Hill
Dairy operated
in Gallipolis and
Huntington.
During the 1940s
the two planu
bouled
over
3,000 gallons of
milk a day.
In the WWU
era milk COR·
aumers bec~me
more cautiOus
about who they

'

GALLIA DAIRY " The Spring Hill O.lry atore and plant Wll
iocatllcl In the 200 block of Second Avenue In a.lllpolla from
1127 to 1110.1n the 11401 about eo percent of all milk from Gal-

III'II,OOO dllry co.n wu p!'&lt;J*IId ~Spring Hill O.lry.
By the 1MO'e tht!'l were lese then 2,00 delry COWl In the coun-

ty,

purchased milk rrom
due to a severe outhrcak of Bongs Disease
in southern Ohio. It
was believed that milk
that came from such
cows could cause
typhoid fever, scarlet
rever and tuberculosis.
People who drove out
into the country to buy
raw milk of course
were subjec t to the
ri sk. Milk plants were
required to pasteurize
the milk before bottling it. The milk at the
s,ring Hill plant was
heated to 143 degrees
and beld at that tcmpcrature for 30 minutes in
order to kill disease
produCing bacteria.
Homogenization
came a little later at
Sprins Hill. In that
process the fat globules
in the milk were braken down under high
presswe.
_In the _19SOs Spring
Htll _Dauy products
that ancluded cottage
cheese, butter, canoned

buttcrTnilk. chocolate milk and white
milk featured Bing Crosby's picture.
Spring Hill could make 200 gallons of cottage cheese at a time. Of
course the "old Germans" in the Old
French City referr ed to cottage
cheese a.' schmicrcase. During the
19SOs the company owned 12 delivery trucks, three operated in Gallia
County and nine in the Huntington
·
market .
Spring Hill Dairy closed in 1960.
Its demise closely paralleled the
demi se of the dairy rarm busi ness in
Galli a County. The market demand
for high butterfat milk began to
diminish in the 1940s, giving market
advantage to larger cows like Holsteins that produci:d lc•s butterfat
but greater volumes of milk.
The growing popularity of factory made ice cream which used low
butterfat milk and the growing popularity of artificial butter .contributed
to the market change. Volume producing cows had more value than fat
producing ones. Galli a rarmcrs
could n·ot adapt to the market
changes fast enough.

J - Sanda Ia a apealal correapondtnt of the Sunclly
Tlmu-Stnllnel. Hla add,... Ia:

U Willow Dr., SprlrlflbCM'O, Ohio ·
45081.

'•

�,.

~unday, September 8, 1996

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

Sunday, September 8, 1996

Memories of an earlier Gallipolis

Sayre ...,_ _ _ _---:
Continued from page C-1
(pronounced conk), so he drove us
to a market area where I half expected to be mugged, but 'the conch was
great. The chef in the tiny lillie
stand, prepared it while we watched:
lots of minced, raw conch ; chopped
tomatoes ; onions; lime juice ; and
hot spices.
Formal wear was the allire for
dinner aboard ship that night. but not
everyone complied .. .only one tux
was seen and it wasn't on George.
(George did wear a coat and tie .)
Our waiters glorified themselves
with dessert...baked Alaska brought
out am1d a candlelight Congo line
with the naming dessens balanced
free-standing on a few heads; other
waiters had one hand holding their
trays.
Returning back to Florida that
evening. we encountered a thunder·
storm and the seas were rough. Yes.1 lost my delicious salmon dinner
including the baked Alaska dessert.

Smith-Robinson
Black-Brace
CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs.
Carl E. Black of Crown City
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Traci Lynn, to James
Edward Brace, .Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. James E. Brace of Crown City.
Black is a 1993 graduate of Fairland High Schoohnd a 1996 graduate of the University of Rio Grande
with an associate's degree in early

childhood development. She is
employed as a teacher with Wee
Care Day Care of Gallipolis.
Brace is a 1992 graduate of Hannan Trace High School and allends
Marshall University, majoring in
business managemcnl. He is
employed with the Herald Dispatch
of Huntington, W.Va.
An April wedding is planned.

CHESHIRE -- June Smith of
Cheshire announces the engagement
and approaching marriage of her
daughter, Kelly Lynn Smith. to Ronnie Franklin Robinson of Reedsville.
Smith is the granddaughter of
Elizabeth Johnson or Columbus and
the late Charles Johnson. Sbe graduated from Meigs High School and is
employed by Vaughan's lOA, Middleport.
Robinson is the son of Ronnie
Robinson of Reedsville and Mary
Robinson of Tuppers Plains. He is

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Jr. All
Star Cheerleaders open tryouts from
4 to 6 p.m. Gallipolis Developmental Center.

•••

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Family of Life
Series "Learning How to Fight"
with Gary Pallon speaking 6 p.m.
First Church of God.

GALLIPOLIS
.Community
Cancer Support Group 2 p.m. New
Life Lutheran Church.

...
...

•••

GALLIPOLIS - "Stories Behind
the Stones" presenters meeting 7:30
p.m.
Gallia
County
Historical/Genealogical Society,
330 Second Ave.

CHESHIRE - Baird-Halfhill
reunion at Gavin Sheller House with
meal at I p.m.
REEDSVILLE -60th annual
Buckley reunion I p.m. al Forked
Run State Park shelter with potluck
dinner.

BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Raymond C. Lieving of Bidwell
announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter.
Brooke Lynnelle to Brian Lee
Young. son of Mr. and Mrs. C. Darrel Young of Bidwell.
Lieving is the granddaughter of
_Mary Lieving and Jo Ann Errell,
:ixllh of Point Pleasant, W.Va. She is
1993 graduate of River Valley
}iigh School and a 19% graduate of
·lhe University of Rio Grande with a
~achelor of 5c iencc degree in
~ccounling. She is employed by

:a

•••

GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. Communiiy Advisory Panel of Akzo
Nobel Chemicals 7 to 9 p.m. in
administration building.

•••

Pressure Connections. Inc .. Columbus.
Younk is the grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Kirby of Crown City
and Lollie Young of Bidwell. He is a
1990. graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and a 1993 graduate of
DeVry. He is employed by Innovative American Manufacturing, Inc .,
Columbus.
The open church wedding will be
5:30p.m., Oct. 19 at the Ewington
Church of Christ in Christian Union.
A reception will follow at the Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.

MACEDONIA - Homecoming at
Macedonia Church with Annelle
Sanders speaking in the afternoon
and Denver McCarty speaking and
Faithful Followers singing in the
evening.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis All
Star tryouts for grades six and below
f4 to 5 :15 p.m. in basement of
Grace United Methodist Church.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Meeting of Gallia County Soccer Association 2
p.m. Bossard Library.

•••

•••
•••

Thesday, SepL 10
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
District Library Board of Trustees
meeting 5 p.m. at the library.

GALLIPOLIS - combines Osto•••
my/Diabetic Support Group 2 to 4 '
BIDWELL - Bidwell Porter Elep.m. Holzer Medical Center French
500 Rooin. with Beverly McCraw. mentary School PTO meeting and
meet the teachers 7 p.m. al the
RDMS speaking.
school.
•••
•••
GALLIPOLIS - Free Infant CPR
RIO GRANDE - Annual PERl
class I :30 to 2:30 and sibling class 3
to 5 p.m. Holzer Medical Center picnic 3 to 6 p.m. Bob Evans canoe
French 500 Room. Register by call- livery. Bring covered dish.
ing446-5030.Walk· inswelcome.

Family.

ym.

I'

ALLISON
GALLIPOLIS - A card shower
:Will be held for Miriam Ell loll-Allison for her 80th birthday. Scpl. 12.

GALLIPOLIS-- All senior citizens of Gall Ia County arc invited to participate in the 1996 Senior Expo, scheduled for Friday. Scpl.l3, al the Scioto
County Fairgrounds ncar Lucasville:
Sponsored annually by the Area Agency on Aging, District 7. the expo u.,u.
ally allracts about 1,000 scnio" from the 10-counly area served by the Area
7 stall at the University of Rio Grande. The expo provides seniors with an
opportunity to showca'" their talents and handi-crafts during the all-day
even!.
The day's program includes live entertainment. games, craft displays. a
cake auction, numerous demonstrations and door prizes. The expo not only
provides an outlet fur the skills and crafts of seniors 55 years and older. hut
alsp permits various social service agencies to exhibit and explain the dif·
fercnt services they have for seniors.
Jean Niday. director of the Gallia County Senior Resource Center,
announced this week thai lransportation from the center to the expo will be
provided for Gallia seniors WIShing lo anend the even!. Vans will depart
from the center al9 a.m. and return about4 p.m.
Niday requests that anyone planning 10 usc the center's transportation
should make their reservation by no later than Wednesday, Sepl. II, and
arrive at the center hy 8:45 a.m . on Friday. To make reservations call 4467000.

ALUMINUM
BLINDS

....
Iii

' ' ft' "
·•

I

'

Divorce
You hiOU/11 H.,.,.
Sponsored by the
Middleport
Church of Chrflt,
Fifth at Main

~

SoiiUOIII

SAVE

.I

DIVOI~CT I

. I

'

.~ tr

,.., ·

r: "l~' -

u

~

I

'
(

I

•S•c,•

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Gill's Produce at 240 Third Ave.;
Bell and Shaw Aour Mill; North's
Produce on Vine Street; Womeldorffa nd Thomas Hardware at 320 Third
Ave.; C.D. Kerr Drug Store at 324
Second Ave .; Swanson Hardware at
49 Court St; Williams and Scarberry Garage at 209 Third Ave .: Neal's
Drug Store at the corner of Second
and Pine_ which was later called
Gillingham Drug Store; John C. Rue
Monuments; Mills Transfer Co.;
Downtain Priming Company at 48
State St. ; Gallia Times, which was
run by my good-iriend Harry Hurn at
456 Second Ave. ; Davis Shuler at
410 Second Ave.; Hayward Undert:lkers at 460 Second Ave .; HenkingBovie Company at 27 Court Sl. ;
Moch's clothing store al 328 Second
Ave.; Dr. G.A.Mack 's offic~ at 210
Third Ave.; Dr. C.B. Parker at 452
112 Seconll Ave.; Dr. L. C. Bean al
538 Second Ave.; Dr. Shane on State
Sl.; Dr. Bidd~ at 661 Second Ave.;
Dr. L.C. Cowden; Ohio Valley
Bank; Booten Press Printers at 304
$econd Ave.; Hutchin's Cigar Com pany at the corner of Third and
State; Chaney's Cigar Shop on
Garfield Avenue, I can remember
watching Chancy roll cigars at his
shop; Shartz's Soda and Grill at404
Second Avenue; Entsminger Funeral
Home at 532 Second Ave .; Cap
Hou¢k Insurance Agency al 26
Locust St.; Gallipolis Dairy at 641
Third Ave.; Carlos Niday Prop.;
Condec. Coal Company at 70 I First
Ave.; Frazier and Frye Dry Cleaners

· at 416 Seco11d
Ave.; Eari Moore
Taxi at 81 Pine
Sl.; Plymale and IL..U.Z..-...0~
Wagner Company on Pine Street; and Rosener and'
Company Flour Mill on Grape
Street where I used to watch Mr.:
Mehl shoe horses, who was on, thCJ
comer of Fourth and Gtape; There'
was another blacksmith out from:
North's Produce, but I can't remember his name. I thought it was fascinating to see him shape the red hot
horse shoes to fit the horses' hooves;
I must say I have happy memo-:
ries of old Gallipolis. and I am glad
my dad moved here from around
Clendenin, W.Va. Upon his arriva~
he bought the farm on old Chi lli-j
cothe Road, which is now Route;
588. I was two years old. Just 6 112,
years after Dad sold 1he 400-acra
fann ncar Clendenin, th,e residen~
struck oi l all around Clendenin. Dl
Dad had stayed there , he would ha~
become a millionaire. But I am stif~
glad I came up the hard way to maicp
an honest living.
~:
I have traveled all over the worGf
in 70 foreign countries, but I w*.
always glad to step back on 1~
ground in old Gulli polis. It is tilr;
Garden Spot of the Whole World. ~ '

(Max Tawney, a longtime Gal·
llpolls businessman, occasionally writes articles on hIa worldly travels and Gallipolis when he
was young.)

Phone 446-1603

THE CANDLE COMPANY
"We Make Scents"

____ Reunion policy____..._ _

1591 S.R. 160, Gallipolis

NOW OPEN

With the family reunion season should not exceed 300 words and
quickly. approaching many will be must be submiued within-30 days of
submilling articles of family activi- occurrence.
ties for publication.
No exception's will be made.
To ensure prompt publication, the
All material submilled for publiGallipoli s Daily Tribune and The cation is subject to editing. Articles
Daily Sentinel requests that articles will be published as soon as possibe neatly typed and double spaced ble.
for easy editing. Reunio11 items

MONDAY-FRIDAY
10 AM-5 PM
SAT. lO.AM-3 PM

\

CANDLES * ARTS * CRAFTS
COLLECTIBLES
'

THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN TRAVEL

MARY AND CHARLES DRUMMOND

Drummonds to mark 50th
GALLIPOLIS
Mary and
Charles Drummond will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary with
an open house from 2 to 4.. p.m.,
Scpl. 15 at their home on Oil Hollow
Road. They were married Sept. 19
by the late Rev. Coffee in Gallipolis.

They are the parents of five children, Charoleue Gray of Columbus;
David Drummond of Gallipolis;
Katrina Northup of Gallipolis; Sarah
Snouffer of Middleport; and the late
Jimmy Drummond.

Police perplexed as reptile
rocks restful residents
the area.
About 2:30a.m. the gator dccid·
FORT WASHINGTON, Md. ed to move out, Beam said. Fearing
(AP) - Ross Summers was gelling it would become a danger to area
ready for bed when he glanced out- .residents, police k,illed it. Animal
side his home in this Washington control officials agreed to dispose of
suburb. Not quite believing his eyes, the remains.
Summers called his wife to confirm
' the apparition: a 6-fool alligator in
their driveway early Friday.
"He went to close the window so
we could turn on the air conditioner
and he said, 'Come here and look
and sec if you see what I think r
see,"' Belly Lou Summers recalled
later in the day.
"It looks like an alligator," she ·
agreed.
He suggested she call the police.
"You don't expect to find that in
the nation's capital," said Ms. Summers. "You gel a lot of creatures
here but that isn't one you'd
expect."
Prince George's County Police
Cpl. Barry Beam said they received
two calls about the gator and officers
responded about I a.m. EDT.

ft. ;/1~
•

Gospel Quartet - Louisville, Kentucky

9124·10/5

New England

10/18·20

Nashville, Tennessee

10/19·20

Riverboat Casino Aztar ·Evansville, Indiana

YES!

50% OFF . ;Vitro, Srm-Aire•, Medallion•,

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TOUR

9/19·22

A11oclated Pre11 Writer

Police sought help but no gatoraid was immediately available,
Beam said. The Maryland Department of Natural Resources and the
National Zoo didn't have anyone
available, and county animal control
said they had no appropriate equipment since alligators aren't pative 10

(4,

Join us on a Motorcoach Tour!!

DATE

By DENISE CABRERA

Medallion 'Pbu and Mini Miser

Weclnelday1 8:45-8:15
Sept. 4-Nov. 27
Call 992·2914 for more
lnfonnatlon•
Child care provided.
Ragllltnrtlon 11 required.

I

POMEROY -- Martha and CharThey have a son, Ernie West of
.lie West of Leesburg, Fla. will cele- Pataskala; a daughter, Darlene
brate their 50th wedding anniversary McElroy of Lancaster; and two
Sept. 14.
· grandchildren, Joshua and Jonah
Charlie of Columbus and the for- West of Pataskala.
mer Martha Marcella Russell of
They will celebrate their anniverBradbury were married in Russell, sary with family and friends at an
Ky. They lived in Columbus until open house at their home, 35112
1988 when they moved to Leesburg. Riverside Court, in Leesburg, Fla.

··t have done exactly what I want-'
cd to do," he said.

Gallia resource center plans
trip to 1996 Senior Expo

Co-workers.

Wests to celebrate 50th

f

\

~ Portraits·SJts

Friends.
Neighbors.

MARTHA AND CHARLIE WEST

could not find the man who
"hooked" him, so he sold the' horse
to someone else ror $1.5.
Dr. C.A. Mack WaS' at 210 Third
Ave. He was a Civil War veteran and
later the U.S. Ambassador to Mexico. I was his official photographer
when I was in business on the corner
of Court and Second in the 1930s
and 40s. I made hundreds of pictures
for him . and he gave me three items
he purchased in old Mexico. I still
have them. and I think they are
priceless.
I remember Blake Hardware very
well. It was owned by Arlie Blake,
who lived at I Court St. and owned
a hardware store al 310 Second Ave .
I can still visualize him as he sat on
his front porch rocking in a large
hand-made chair and smoking a big
cigar. He had two of those rocking
chairs, which I always admired.
Arter he died, I bought them from
his sister for $15 each. Every summer one of them is placed on my
front porch .
I also liked to loaf in the F. E. Kerr
rocery store at 152 Third Ave ., and
made friends with his son. John.
who was about my age . Mr. Kerr
would let me have all of the candy I
wanted for helping John stack the
shelves with groceries. They lived at
131 Third Ave . where he kept gold
fi sh in a pond in his back yard. No
one worried about it being an
"auractive nuisance" then.
I spent the night with the Kerrs
several limes.. Ultimately, John
drowned in the Ohio River, while
swimning. That was a very sad day
for the Kem and all who knew him.
More business places of the
1920s and 30s that I remember are:
The Gallia Produce,- where my
brother Earl worked for many years ;

The reunion has concluded an
unfinished chapter in his life. he
said.

...

-----'Card Showers----- ·
Cards may be sent to 119 Bastiani
SPENCER
POMEROY - Former Pomeroy Dr .. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
~esidenl Kathryn Spencer, now of
:Anna Marie, Fla., is recovering from
~n heart surgery at Blake Hospital
in Bradenton, Fla. She would apprec iate cards mailed lO her residence al
:Sox 999. Anna Marie Fla. 34216-

times easier to take, Nolcn·s upbeat
altitude.
·'He was one of those jovial kind
of fellows." Moeller said. "He was
always funny. He d1dn't take anything seriously. "
Moeller and Nolen both joined
the Navy while they were still
seniors in high school. Their mothers sent their diplomas through the
mail to them. During their three
years on the New Orleans they went
from more than boys to men. They
hved through experiences that most
people never have. Those cxpcncnccs played a hig part in who they
arc today.
"'II (military service) certainly
teaches you," Moeller said. "ll
makes you more mature.for your life
after discharge ."
Since their one-day visit Moeller
and Nolen have stayed in contact
through letters and telephone conversations.
Moeller is still amazed and
thankful for his reunion with Nolen.
"It has been something I though
of through the years, but I never
thought it would happen," he said.
"After so many years, it doesn't happen often."
·

•••

•••

Lieving-Young

1

Gallia community calendar

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.
Narcotics Anonymous Tri County
Group 7:30p.m. 611 Viand Sl. .

thrH yaars ago and now Nlldlln 1

houH facing 1he Ohio Rivet' Juet IMiow
Syracuae.

Continued from page C-1
After a year of anticipation. the
the grandson of Frank and Iva Upton
two
were able to sit down and talk.
of Reedsville and the late Robert
Moeller's
neighbor and his son. Ron
and Nina Robinson .
and
Joey
Cornelius, drove him 10
He graduated from Eastern High
Nolen's
home
in Fairfield , Va.
School and is employed by Weber
The
last
time
they had seen each
Construction of Reedsville.
other
they
were
both 20 years old.
An open church wedding has
Since
then
much
had changed withbeen planned for Ocl. 26 at the Rutin
their
lives
and
themselves. But
land Freewilll Baptist Church, 2:30
something
remained
constant. a
p.m. Music will begin at 2 p.m. A
reception will follow immediately fondness for the time they had spent
after the ceremony in the church together in the service and a deep
feeling of kinship.
social room.
·"We hit it off from the beginning," Moeller said about the lirsl
time he ever met Nolen. "We did
everything together. We ate together.
W,e fought together. We played
GALLIPOLIS - Headed Home to together. We were like brothers."
As they caught-up on each
sing 7 p.m. Bell Chapel Church.
other's lives and relived their expcri~
•••
ences while gunner mates 3rd class
GALLIPOLIS - Viewing of
on the New Orleans, Moeller and
"Scars that Heal" 7 p.m. Grace UnitNolen were reminded of the circumed Meihodisl Church with carry-in
stance that brought them together
dinner at 6 p.m. Bring covered dish
and entwined their lives as close as
and own table service.
family - war.
•••
Moeller remembers the daily air
MERCERVILLE - Homecoming
auacks, island homhings and the
al Bethlehem Church, Rocky Fork
time Nolen was hit with shrapnel
Road. dinner at noon . Bring covered
while standing hesigc him . He
dish.
remembers typhoons and watching
•••
through a periscope as the destroyMonday, Sept. 9
er 's bombs hit their uirgel.
•••
But he also remembers during
CHESHIRE - TOPS meeting 10 those times something thai lifted his
to II a.m. Cheshire United spirits and made those devastating
Methodist Church .

The Community C!llendar is
published as a ·rree service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meednp and special events. The
calendar Is not designed to promote .sales or rund-raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to nan a specific number of days.
Sunday, Sept. 8

BROOKE LIEVING AND BRIAN YOUNG

Dorothy Soyrt ond hof huoblnd Goorgo,
formerly ot Mtlgt County, moved back
about

By MAX TAWNEY
My dad always took me with him
to town when I was a young boy .
back in the 1920s. He knew most of
the b.usinesmen in Gallipolis and he
loved to go into their stores to talk to
them. In those days no one was in a
hurry and people were very friendly.
They always had time to talk.
I remember Mr. Stockhoff, who
had a store at218 Third Ave .. and he
always gave me marbles and candy
when we slopped there. There was a
big pot-bellied stove in his store
where the men ' sal around it and
talked . Most of them chewed tobacco or smoked cigars and spat into
cuspidors. What a-mess that was.
Mr. Meadows had a grocery store
where Dean Circle now has a food
catering service. I helped him stack
canned food and things on the
shelves while Dad went up to Bell
and Shaw Mill to have com and
wheal ground for feed. Mr. Meadows always gave me 50 cents for
hetping him. That was a lot of
money in the 20s.
lbere used to be a large lot where
people hitched their horses and left
there wagons and buggies. This was
where the city parking lot is now...:..
Kroger grocery used to be 1here. A
lot of "horse trading" went on in
those days, and my dad involved
himstlf from time to time. One time
he traded a horse with a man he did
not know. It was a beautiful horse,
and he thought he made a real good
deal because our horse was gelling
prelly old. Everything was fine until
"!e were going home. When we
approached a hill near home, the old
horse balked and would not budge.
We spent two hours coaxing him
before he .moved on. My dad look
him back to town two days later but

&gt;

War buddies ... _ __

KeLLY SMITH AND RONNIE ROBINSON

TRACI BLACK AND JAMES BRACE

Fortunately, I was in our room at the:
time. George enjoyed the rolling.
We had to have our bags packed and
out in the hall for ·pick-up by 3 a.m.:
In my haste to pack while nauseated.:
I forgot the two "Bahama Marna"·
glasses were just thrown in one or:
my bags. (That was a really dumb:
idea, on my part, to try and save:
gi.Ss souvenirs .)
George and I think it is e$ier, ·
faster and more fun lo Oy; but we .
de~ided we didn'! give it enough o! a
tesl. We are takmg a longer cruise
from New York to Bermuda later
t~i s year. I shall visit my friendly :
family physician before the depar-·
lure date to obtain seasick medica-·
tion . lleamed not to listen to anyone:
who remarks, "The ship is too large
for you to become seasick."

.~ 't '1flaa -

eaa 7M4,t

MOTORCOACH TOURS
360 Second Ave.

~;

Retired Lopg_l\l}efger• Baskets
Shirley Arrowood Bears
Cherokee Sisters Ceramics
Country Classic Crafts
Paintings &amp; Wreaths by Linda Ratliff
D. Christopher Romeo Sculptures
. Scroll Work by Hal Stockman
Wreaths by Melvin Biars
Martin's Crafty Creations
· Stained Glass by Andy &amp; Betty Lemley
CD'strapes by Kendra Ward &amp; Bob Bence
Birdhouses, Etc. by Doris Akers
Votives; Simmering Tarts, Roseville Pottery
We1 ll even fill your containers!
All handcrafted in Ohio, U.S.A.!

446..()699

Call or slop QY l0daj1!'

I have

we're one mile past160/3S intersection going towards Gallipolis

attitude!

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

Sunday, September 8, 1996

SUnday,September8,~1996~~~======P=o=m=•ro=y=·=M=Id:id~le~po~rt~·G~a~ll~lpo~lls~,;O;H=·=P=o=ln=t=P=Iea=..
="=t,=WV~~~~~~~~;,~wdla~u~•~'·~,..~~~buJ~~·P~a~ge~C~5

Knowing your 'simples' Gallipolisnati~e
By VILMA PIKKOJA

• If winter damage requires severe cut backs, do it in stages not cutting

.

G~LIPOLIS - A bridge of ~earns is a beautiful rainbow with a more than one third of the plant in height or width a year.

1

promised pol of gold ID !he end of II - maybe.
• Never prune after midsummer to let the new shoots strengthen before
Phys1c Gard,en is endeavoring to build a different kind of winter.
'
bridge - a cultural bridge from the past to the future. One
• Never feed in the fall - feed in the spring.
has to have knowledge to span the
---------void between the generations gone
•Now, if you want to plant a garden to improve yourself, first plant five
before us and the ones yet to come. rows of peas: Preparedness, Perseverance, Promptness, Politeness and
History is the footing that gives it a Prayer.
finn bedrock foundatiOJl . History
Next, plant three rows of squash: Squash gossip, squash criticism and
· · · ·· ·· · · · ·. · · ·· · · · · is fun if you know your "simples". squash in~ifference .
1be dictionary tells us !hat, among other definiti'ons, "simple" has !he
1ben, add five rows of lettuce : Let us be failhful , let us be unselfish, let
following meaning: "A medicinal plant or the medicine obtained from it." us be loyal, let us love one anolher and let us be truthful.
:lbat is what a "simple" means in a Physic Garden.
No garden can be complete withouttumips: Tum up for church, tum up
The American Physic Garden had it's beginning in Colonial times. It with a big smile, turn up with a new idea and tum up with dctennination .
"This qdvict comes from a magazine in my hairdresser's wailing room,
.;was !he English religious leader George Fox, the founder of the Society of
;Friends, who admonished his followers "to quake at the word of the Lord" "Farm and Ranch Living" (Aug.!Sepl., /996)
~hen he was in the Colonies in 1671 and 1672.
VIlma PlkkoJI 11 1 long·tlme !Nirdtner 1nd 1 founding 1111mblr of
.~ At his death, he bequeathed land to the Pennsylvania Quakers for vari- lite Gallll Aru Herbal Guild.
:ous purposes stated in his will ,
';including a "Physic Garden" to be
·established "for lads and lassies to
know simples."
Presently, the Gallia Area Herbal
Guild, under the leadership of president, Helen Lewis, is working on a
teaching program as a guideline 1o
· accompany the herb teaching ladder
at the Riverby Physic Garden.

By ERIC FOSSELL
The Hereld-Dispetch
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - As w9rkers buffed and painted Fairland HiJh
School to prepare for returning students, English teacher Scott West did
some fine tuning of his own .
The Gallipolis native put the finishing touches Tllesday, Aug. 13 on 1
classroom he's proud to call his own. Amid the odor of paint and cleanins
fluid, he arranged books and eagerly demon!trated new computers.
West and Ken Ratliff, a Fairland math - - - - - - - - - and· science teacher, requested a grant to
"It'• • g,..t eta.., •
update classroom technology. Matched by Gelllpoll• n11tlve, Scoff
the Fairland school district, the $5,000 state We•t NkJ of • new Suelgrant was used to purchase four computers,
Engll•h clan he'•
desks and printers.
teaching at Falrlend
"All the writing activity will be on com- High School. "The ,,.,_
puters," West said. ''I'm ver~ed about dante ,..lly took to n.
this year."
It'• been Ju•t unbellellThe computers will be an asset to West's .able. •
business English class. He has watched its • - - - - - - - - enrollment swell from 17 students when it
was initiated two years ago to more than 50 when classes began Monday .
BusinefS English emphasizes the importance of effective communication ,
in the workplace. Students Jearn to write effective business letters, memos 1
and technical reports. They also discover how to improve their oral commu- '
nication skills.
:
West introduced the class at Fairland during his first year. He explained :
that textbooks hadn't arrived, and business English seemed a stimulated
alternative to the !landard grammar and linguistics.
.
"It's a great class," he said. "'The students really took to it. It 's been just '
unbelievable ."
The class even features "company" meetings and interviews for joh can- ·
didates. Grades are converted to salaries, and actual busincss·people address
the students near the course.
"Basically it's a real hands-on project," West said . "It makes the students
. realize that even if they go to college. they have to work in a business-like

•.· · ._ · .• ': •. :. •. · ·' .( ...••· · . ·• ..&lt;· .

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FRED AND JOANNE FILLINGER

Goodman-Fillinger
JAMES AND JENNIFER WILSON

Barnhart-Wilson
POMEROY -- Jennifer Louise
Barnhart and James Scott Wilson
were united in marriage July 20 at
Sllered Heart Calholic Church in
Pomeroy.
WILLIAM AND DELILAH COX
Rev. Fr. Walter. Heinz officiated
at the double-ring ceremony. Music
was provided by Sharon Hawley.
Given in marriage by her parents
and escorted down the aisle by her
GALLIPOLIS - Delilah Dawn of Gallipolis.
Darst and William W. Cox Jr. were
Following the ceremony a recep- fa!her, the bride wore a floor-length
united in marriage Aug. 24 at the tion was held at the Gallipolis gown of white satin wilh a coordinating headpiece. The sweetheart
Gallipolis City Park. Rev John Jef- Developmental Center.
neckline
of her dress was accented
fers perfonned the ceremony.
The couple traveled to Myrtle
Darst is !he daughter of Delilah Beach, S.C. for their honeymoon. with pearls, sequins and embroiCox and the late Sandy Clonch. Cox The reside in Gallipolis wilh their dered lace applique. Lace and pearls
adorned the puffed sleeves. The
is the son of William and Opal Cox son, Joshua.
gown haa a bouffant skirt.
Matron of honor was Melissa
Barrett. Bride's maids were Melodi
Carl and Sue Barnhart. cousin of the
bride. Jessica Sheets was tht flower
girl. The anendants wore floorlenglh satin gowns in burgundy and

Darst-Cox

carried bouquets of burgundy,
mauve and white roses.
Best man was Nick Garrison and
groom's men were Nick Wilson,
brother of the groom and Chancey
Perkins. Joseph Barnhart, cousin of
the bride, was the ring bearer. Erin
Ralston, cousin of the bride, registered guests. A reception for the couple was held following the wedding
in the Sacred Heart hall.
Serving the guests were Elaine
Ralston and Brenda Barnhart, aunts
of the ·bride, and Nancy Thoene,
cousin of the bride.
The couple honeymooned in
Myrtle Beach, S.C. They reside in
San Diego, Calif. The bride is a
1993 graduate of Meigs High
School. The groom is a 1993 graduate of North Harden High School.
Both bride and groom are in !he U.S.
Navy and are stationed in San
Diego, Calif.

GALLIPOLIS - Joanne Goodman lind Fred Fillinger were united
in marriage July 13 in Dillion, s.C.
Fred is the son of Mildred Fillinger and the late Virgil Fillinger. He
is employed with Borg Warner.

•

Joanne is the daughter of Roseita!
Goodman and the late James Glen'

~~:;.:nKu~:~do~~~l. and operates!
The couple resides in Gallipolis.!
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Meigs community calendar 1
••

The Comuiunity Calendar is
publbbed u a-free service to nonPOMEROY -- Big Bend Farml1
profit aroups wlshins to announce Antiques Club meeting Monday,
meetiox and special event&amp; The 7:30 p.m. m the Mc•gs H•gh School•
caleadar is noJ designed to pro- library.
l
mote sales or fUnd raisen of any
•••
type. Items are printed u space TUESDAY
permits and c:annot be guaranteed
POMEROY -- Meigs unit of mel
to run a spediJ.c number or days. American Cancer Society, 7 p.m. in I
SUNDAY
J,:
the conference room of Veterans'!
· AmENS -JyHomecoming, Zion Memorial liospital. New director
United Brethren Church, Zion Road, and representative to be present. ·
.
I
Athens, Sunday; 10 a.m. service,
••
special sinsins••covered dish dinner,
POMEROY -- Board meeting for:
afternoon service.
Meigs County Board of Election.:
Tuesday, 9 a.m.
.:
RACINE - Annual harvest festiI
val, St. John L~1heran Church, Pine
MASON -- Representatives of!
Grove Road, Racine, Sunday, the Veterans Administration, AmeriI 09:30 a.m. w\)rship and program, can Cancer Society and Mason :
potluck luncheon at noon.
Community Action will be at the~
Veterans of Foreign Wius Post 9926,l
POMEROY-· Grandparent's Day Mason, Tuesday at6 p.m. to explain
will be observed Sunday at Pomeroy benefits that can be provided within
First Baptist, 10:30 a.m. The public that administration.
is invited to attend.
POMEROY -- Pomeroy PTQJ
MIDDLEPORT-- Hobson Chris- meeting Tuesday. 7 p.m.
. 1.,at, the elo-;
tian Fellowship Church, 7:30 Sun- mentary school. Membership drive:
day, · Evangelist' John Elswick, All Pomeroy Elcm~ ntary parc~ts
' Athens, speal&lt;cr. Special singing.
welcome.
· ·
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STIVERS VILLE-- 40th anniversary and homecoming of the Freedom Gospel Mission Church Sunday. 9:30a.m. Sunday school, 12:30
p.m. potluck and 2 p.m. service.
Rev. Woody Harper, speaker.

HARRISONVILLE
Har-'
risonvillc Order of Eastern Star reg•:
ular meeting, 7:30 p.m., at the Hary
risonville Lodge.

MONDAY

RACINE -- Rocine Board of Public Affairs meeting Monday, 7 p.m.
in the lire depanment annex.
DARWIN -- Bcdferd ·Township
Trustees regular meeting Monday, 7
p.m. in the township hall.
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Right to Life meeting Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. All
welcome.
DANIEL AND JAMIE MASKEW

lsaac-Maskew
VINTON - Jamie Faye Isaac of
Vinton and Daniel Byron Maskew
of Vinton were united in marriage
Aug. 21 at New Life Lutheran
Church. Rev. John Jackson officiated the double-ring ceremony.
Jamie is the daughter of Vernon
and Jeanne Isaac, and Daniel is the
son of David and Sandra Maskew.
Musi c was provided by Tim
Wells of Ewington.
The altar was decorated with blue
carnations and yellow daisies with
baby's breath.
Given in marriage by her parents,
the bride wore a white satin gown
with a lace bodice and train and mutton sleeves. Her circlet headpiece
was adorned with beaded lace . The
bridal veil featured embroidered
roses.
Maid of honor was Brandy
Metheney of Vinton and bride's

.#1,

...

,,

'(,

Delaney-Houck

maid was Mary Beth Lively of Vinton . Ring bearer was Stefie Isaac of
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Sarah
Vinton, niece of the bride. Flower Kathleen Delancy and John Roben
girls were Felicia Maskew of Vin- Houck were united in marriagc')uly
ton, sister of the groom and Saman- 6 at St. Joseph Catholic Church in
tha Isaac , niece of the bride.
Huntington, W.Va.
The groom wore hi s dress mili Sarah is the daughter of John ftnd
tary greens. Best man was Vernon G. Carol Delaney of South Point. John
Isaac, brother of the bride. The is the son of Tom and Judy Houck of
groom 's father also wore his dress Proctorville and .the grandson of
green s.
Mrs. Robert Houck of Gallipolis.
The reception was held at the • Rev. Fr. Frederick P. Annie perhome of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon G. fanned the cek'emony.
Isaac, brother of the bride, Keystone
Maid of honor was Emily
Road, Vinton.
Delaney, sister of the bride.
· The couple will reside in Ft.
Best man was Joseph Houck,
Stcwan, Ga.
brother of the groom.
Daniel is a 1995 graduate of
Ushers were Jeff Houck, brother
Ri ver Valley High School and is in of the groom and Tom Olivero,
the U.S. Anny.
brother-in-Jaw of the groom.
Jamie will continue her education
Readers were Roger McClung,
while at Ft. Stew an. Ga.
uncle of the bride and James Houck,
llfiCk: of the groom _..Guest book

---Wedding policy--1lle Sunday&gt; . Times-Sentinel
resards the weddmss of Galha,
Meiss and f.iason counties as news
and publishes wedding stories and
pliotolfiPIIs without charge.
' However, weddins ·news must
inc:Ct pneraj standards of timelines.. t11e newspaper prefers to publilh·-1111 of weddings as soon as
poaibli after the event
'lli be publ~ in the Sunday
edition; the' weddins must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 WCJ111s in lenJih. Material for
AlonJ the River mu.t be received by
11w ~ depet1111011t' by Thurs.4.p.m. ·jxior to die dille of publicaDOII.
; ~

JOHN AND SARAH HOUCK

Those not making the 60-day
deadhne will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of either the bride or
the bride and groom may be pubJished with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or 181ller.
Poor quality')lhotographs will not
be accepted. Generally, snapshOts or
instant-developing photos are not of
acceptable quality.
All material submitted for publication, is subject to editing.
Questions may be directed to the
editorial department from . I to S
p.m. Monday through Friday at 4462342.

aucndant was Bridget McClung,
cousin of the bride. Program allen- ,___.
dant was Tancia Copley,
A reception was held at the Station at Heritage Village.
Sarah graduated from St. Joseph
Central Catholic High School and ,___.
Marshall University with a bachelor
of business administration degree in &amp;,...
linance. She is an auditor in store .,
accounting operations with the Lim- ....,_.
ited Stores Inc. Corporate Office.
John graduated from Ironton
High School and Marshall University wilh a bachelor Of arts degree in "w...
counseling and rehabilitation. He is
working toward a master of arts ~­
degree in rehabilitation at The Ohio
A Few Of Our Home Standard Feablrell .. -~
State, University and is a voc..ional ,___.
• Andencnllh Wlndowa
rehabilitation specialist with MED,___.
.
• Stanley Doors
a. ..,..-.
VOC Management Inc.
•
216
Elltcrior
Walls,
161n.
On
Center
..UILIIIUIII
They reside in Westerville.
•Mnstronssolari•.Flo«nle
.....
• Mlrilr.te Cablneu
• 8 Fool CciHn&amp;

lllllllf:'l.......

;:.:ud#

Collectible Bears

"CHQI6TMA~

EVA..
Hulry there wiU bt only
150 produced
. Collect your npw/

• 2110 Floilf Joint. 16 Ill- Ori Center
• S2 Oallon WM« Healer
• Shaw Carpets

r JIL
=:!illS
~.,.,

CO.OilT ..... ~
..._~·:
· • Deha r-ts
.
..........••o. r
• Millet: T-lodl Vinyl SldinC .With Ufelime Warmnty
• 2! Y• ~yAspbak Sl)llllb .
,
· • J(j Yt!ll''Sinldunl W.11(..; On :ne ~

oW PrfcesAreThe Lcnftll·ln N Am.

.' FAMIDY~'HOMES'INC•.
Model H~i! Loalted at.
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp;'Jl
PomeroJ,,OH 614-992·2478

Model Home~ Houn 1:00 •·':00 p.m.
,._.__ s.i. • "' .., ~·-~ ' .

, •' • .

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,'

Boxwood: the old favorite
garden ornament ahNb
Some facts:
• It takes a long time to grow to
size.
• Boxwood tolerates winter cold
.better than fluctuating temperatures:
' when temperatures become unsea:sonably warm, the sap starts run. ning,ar'ld the cold freezes the sap.
• To ' protect against the cold,
spray shrubs wilh antiperspirant. It
_helps protect them from the damage
·.of winter winds.
· • Boxwood cannot tolerate salt
- keep away from walks and drive1
ways where salt is used for de-icing.
• Boxwood roots arc high and
.close to the surface. Pull weeds by
hand nther than cultivating, which
might damage the shallow roots.
• Use a 2 to 4 inch layer of com,post or shredded leaves - not whole
.leaves that would smother the roots
·and cut the free air flow.
~ • Keep the roots cool during the 1.-dL.Ii·:,~.liii.
growing season with a shallow layer
1of compost.

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manner."

West said he's grateful for the luxury of a pennanenl dassroom, havins .
spent last year pushing a wheeled &lt;an from room to room .
Fairland High School featured a freshman orientation Thursday with a .
simulation of an actual day of classes for parents and students.

•
•
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In an electronic era, the fountain--pen is still a classic best seller
By ELIZABETH SNEAD·
U$A TODAY
Call it pen-up-mansbip.
· ' Iri the era of e-mail, the old-fashioned fountain pen is holding its
own.
Sales have leapt past $48 million
a year, according to the Writing
Instrument Manufacturers Associa-tion. And the really pricey pens tbe $700 Waterman Edson, for
'\"ample - are surprisingly strong
sellers.
~ Techno backlash may partly
ll'}tplain the renewed interest. But
e&lt;Yen more important, industry
ooservers say, our choice of writing
i'strument defines who we are.
~at's especially true in the work~ace, where casual dress codes
s~metimes mask where we fit in the
Sf'heme of things.
, "When everyone is dressed the
same _ suits or khakis - who is
tOe boss? Look at their pens," says
J~ff Stone, author of the "Chic SimJl!e" series. "It's not the power tie,
the conversational tie or the funny
socks anymore. What signals ·ereativity today is individuality and a
status pen, especially a fountain pen,
does that."
Expensive fountain pens with a
capillarj inkllow system (based on
the Wa~ennan, invented in 1883)
surxed back in till: 1980s, part of !hal
decade's conspicuous consumption,
but
haveinlostthenone
of their
staying they
power,
more
back-tobasics '90s.
To S!llisfy demand, upsc:ale ~n
maker Montblanc has boutiques m
New York, Chicago, Boston, London, Paris and Hong Kong. A halfdozen more are sc~duled to open
ibis year in places like .Miami, Honolulu and LAs Vegas.
111ere's even a magazine, Pen •
World International, devoted to pens
alld penmanship. wilh 1~.000 circulation and the likes of Bdl Cosby

and Bryant Gumbel on its COVCQ-_ ../ this market. "
with their own hand, it mcanJ so
Moreover, a just-concluded COlDon't be misled. though, into much more than an impersonal electible Pen SuperShow in Washing- believing that today's pen people are mail," says Julie Druga of Gilleue
ton, D.C., attracted nearly 1,400 col• mostly silver hairs with fond memo- Stationery.
lectors. retailers and buyers.
ries of long ago letters. Even comAnd it's often more satisfying at
"There is some status allached to puler sany - twentysomcthings an even deeper personal level, too.
pens," says Nancy Olson of '' Pen afe trying their hand at line penman"The ritual of filling the fountain
World," "'but I think the popularity ship and the quaint appeal of foun - pen slows me down, like making
!&gt;f fine pens is intrinsic. People may tain pens.
good coffee or smoking a fine
ha•e bought a Montblan.c for busi"When someone takes the time &lt;igaT," Stone says. "It 's like I'm
ness, but they venture back to buy ..to l\'rit~. a).h!U).~:.Y9~ n_o\e . or.~ !etter . co_~!~ol!i.nJlthe I))OJJlent."
two or three more just because they
enjoy using them." ·
Stone's pen of choice is a Parker
Duofold ($160-$395) - it's "like
driving a 'S7T-bird convertible. I've
just fallen crazy in Jove with it."
Confidential Service for Women and Men
To signal individuality, men are
also turning to lesser known or
~ ~.
Family Planning
European brands of pricey pens.
":'V%,_
and Related Services
Menswear fashion analyst Tom
~~~J. J""~
Julian's new Italian Omas (about
Pap Tests
$300) keeps him one step ahead of
STD Screening
the crowd. Chicago author lawyer
Pregnancy Tests
James Swanson prefers Gennanmade Pelikan pens ($89-$400, more
Birth Control Methods including:
for limited editions).
De p
o· h
1U D
Prices can escalate into four fig•
po- rovera
• lap ragm
' · · ·
ures for harder-to-get (l!lns. Two new
• Birth Control Pill
• Condom/Spermicide
limited editions - Renaissance's
Anonymous HIV tesls and counseling
Michel Perch in Blue and Gold
,
Ribbed pen, inspired by Faberse.
Sliding Fee Scale
a'\(1 Waterman 's Signe Boucheron
.
- cost around $2,500.
We accept Medicaid and private insurance.
Despite those prices, demand is
414 SECOND STREET
so great that .. most (such pens) are
POLIS
presold before tlley get to the store,"
GALLI

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

.JIIF_fl•
·

2

;s;a~y!s
v~ic:k~i
~H~ea~n~·n~g~o~f~G~ii!Jc!u~e~S~ta~
~onery.
"There's
no end in sight to- -!::=========446=·=0:1:66=========:t

September

--.c-:

s.pllmbor t, 10 a 11
zpm -I pm In tile IIIII ~ Clus,_,

Pen pointers
USA TODAY
~hopping for a stal~s pen?
· Amons the finer p~nnts :
-Never buy before you try. ~
most lmponant rule, experts say, 1s
to test the pen before you write the
check.
·- Pincta pen that feels sood in
ybur hand. Keep in mind thai one
that is toO 1111e or too heavy could
~ uncomfonible fot prolonsed
boutS of writipg. For·women~ there
ale lmiller "and mori slender pens
stK:h as W~tennan 's Lady Agathe
&lt;S27S).
_ Check the nib, the tip of the
~~~ ihrouJh which ink flo~s. Fine
pens usually have aold. n1bs; less
expensive ones have stainless steel
or llloy nibs. A Iliff nib creates •
Crilp line, 1oocl for i~Jinners who
p~e~~ hard. BIOid nibl are best for
bOld writers- Fine riibs are fQ.I' more
dCiicace'Script.

BASKET DELIGHTS
REMODELING
GRAND OPENING
Friday &amp; Saturday,
September 13 &amp; 14
10 AM til5 PM
There will be an evening showing on
Saturday, September 14th

5 PM til8 PM
FIRST 50
PEOPLE
In the door
will receive a
.-_,_complimentary
Rose.

·'

•
FoatConll.Dng
T_Caol,._
10..,-12pm
-~~~
tom - tZpm
.... - ....

110TU:

=·

....

1 plll · 3pnl

....--.................... ..· -•,.. ___ , ..,..,,,...,w
.. ,...............

·- - - - - . - - . , ... ,.,. ...
· -UO.IIIII.COE . . . _ . . , _ _ .. r__,....

-- --.

.:.::-.=--..
.. --............- -. -

Let Holzer Mecllcal Center
meet your educational needs
_.,-

_

--

•

•

teach es b0 0 mIng
EngII sh cIass

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�Entertainment
.

September 8, 11198

.

----~--------------People
LONDON (AP) - Many women would do just about anything to date
Brad P1tt, and Gwyneth Paltrow - Pitt's girlfriend - says that can be a real
pam.
1
"Women h~ve no shame, grown women, educated women, famous
women ... they're all just shameless. You wouldn't
believe what I have to put up with," Paltrow said
in today's edition of the London Daily Telegraph.
"Women come right up to him and press their
bodies agaiflst him from behind. And I'm right
there."

Paltrow, 23, is starring in the current film
"Emma." The 32-year-old Pitt was Oscar-nominated for his role in " 12 Monkeys." '
JACKSONVILLE, Aa. (AP)- Lynyrd Skynyrd
keyboardist Billy Powell is facing wife-beating
charges in the band's hometown.
Powell, 44, pushed his wife down, held her by
.
the neck, pulled her hair and refused to let her go
Wednesday whde her 13-year-old daughter watched, said Jacksonville
pohce who charged Powell with a misdemeanor of domestic violence-battery.
Powell, an original member of the 1970s group, told police he had been

news--------------------

drinking all night and had an argument with his wife about a cellular phone.
He was freed Thursday from the Duval County Jail on $5,000 bail
.Lynyrd Skynyrd scored hits in the 1970s with songs like "Freebird" and
"Sweet Home Alabama."
NEW YOR~ (AP)- Supermodel Claudia Schiffer is taking her services
elsewhere.
Schiffer announced late Friday that she is leaving the Metropolitan
Agency after 10 years. •
·
Schiffer, 25, is one of the industry's highest paid models. She also coowns The Fash1on Cafe, a theme restaurant in Rockefeller Center along
with Naomi Campbell and Elle MacPherson.
'
Thomas Zeumer, president of Metropolilan said he hadn't received
notice from Schiffer.
'
"We are definitely not aware of anything," he said. "There are rumors
around like that every week.' "
HACKENSACK, N.J. (AP) - Singer Wilson Pickett was sentenced to a
year in jail for using cocaine while he was on probation.
. Judge Wilham C Meehan revoked Pick~tt's parole Friday, but postponed
h1s J~ll sentence untd Sept. 16 to give him time to file an appeal.
P1~~ett, known for the hits "In The Midnight Hour" and "Mustang
Sally, pleaded gurlty m July to bemg under the innuence of cocaine while

serving five years' probation for hitting an 86-ycar-old man while driving
drunk in 1992.
Attorney Brian Neary asked the judge to continue Pickett's probation so
the singer could seek outpatient treatment for his drug problem.
"What he needs now is continued help." Neary said.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Lois Lane finally gets
her man . Superman, that is.
The two will fonnalize their long-term relationship in "Superman; The Wedding Album," a
comic book to be released Oct. 9 and an Oct. 6
wedding episode of television 's "The Adventures
of Lois and Clark."
Unlike past hoax weddings, this will be the real
thing, said DC comic book editor Mike Carlin.
"It's a logical progression of their relationship,"
he said.
But Joanne Siegel, the widow of Superman cocreator Jerry Siegel, would prefer the Man of
Claudia Schiffer
Steel not wear a band o( gold.
"In a way, it puts an end to the romance, " said Mrs. Siegel, who was the
model for Lois Lane in 1938.
·

What a difference a network makes - or does it? ,__Troubadour performance

NEW NETWORK - 'The Jeff Foxworthy Show" opens, at 8 p.m.
Monday (Sept. 23), it will battle Bill Cosby and "Melrose Place."
NBC Ia expecting wonders.
By MIKE HUGHES
· "1- don't know that we ever
Gannett Newa Service
expected that ... , " FoxwQrthy says.
With his show drifting off the "Nobody's doing beller comedies
ABC schedule, Jeff Foxworthy than NBC."
knew what to expect.
When "The Jeff Foxworthy
The smaller networks might still Show" opens, at 8 p.m. Monday
be interested. Maybe he'd end up on (Sept. 23), it will hattie Bill Cosby
WB or UPN or even cable.
and "Melrose Place." NBC is
"We thought we might drift expecting wonders.
down the food chain a little bit, you
"We looked at Jell Foxworthy
know, " Foxworthy says. "Maybe and said, 'This guy's a television
end up on the Weather Channel.''
star.· The audience loves him." says
Then he drifted up, not down network programming chief Warren
NBC wanted him.
Littlefield, "

You would assume he's a star,
lately. Ever since the Olympics,
Foxworthy has been a media blitz.
Still, his show is second-hand
goods. Ted Harbert, ABC's program
chief. is quick to point that out:
"(Foxworthy) didn't leave the net·
work a hit ... We passed."
Can someone really be a zero on
one network and a hero on another?
To believe that, we have to assume
that one place is:·
- More clever at promotion;
- Craftier at reworking a show;
- Firmer at sticking with a
show;
- Or just a more-likely spot for
a show to be discovered.
Certainly, the network people
feel some shows belong only on one
network.
" 'American Gothic' ... on Fox
on Friday night, probably could
have worked great," says CBS programming chief Leshe Moonves.
"That was a very good show, but it
just wasn't for CBS.''
On the nip side, "Touched By an
Angel" probably would have died
elsewhere. It needed to be nurtured
on CBS' cozy Saturdays.
That much draws general agreement. At times, however, some networks simply seem smarter.
Certainly, thin seemed like the
case last year, with "3rd Rock From
the Sun.''
ABC kept spending time and
money on "3rd Rock." It took the
show through two pilot films, then
let a deadline pass. "They weren't
passionate about it," producer Tom
Werner says.
The show was taken to NBC.
"Warren got it right away," says cocreator Bonnie Turner.
So NBC gave "3rd Rock" a promotion blitz. It became the season's
biggest midseason hit.
The highest-rated new show,
overall? That was "Caroline in the
City"- which is produced by CBS,
but ended up on NBC.
CBS Productions created "Caro-

line," as a romance between a young
man and an older woman. The net·
work (which owns the production
company) rejected it.
Then NBC got it. It cast Lea
Thompson, dumped the old-young
angle and brought in director James
Burrows. It emerged with a hit and will go back to that old-young
approach this season.
One network producing a hit for
another? "It's going on in the wacky
'90s," Harbert says.
There are more examples:
-NBC is half-owner of "JAG,"
but cancelled the show. CBS
promptly bought it, as a mid-season
backup.
-NBC is also half-owner of "In
the House." Littlefield said he cancelled it and was ready to create a
new show for star LL Cool J;
instead, UPN bought it for 44
episodes.
-ABC owns half the BrillsteinGrey company, but dumped two of
its shows. Foxworthy's was cancelled: Tea Leoni's "The Naked
Truth" was offered a mid-season
spot, after repairs.
. Instead, both shows jumped to
NBC. Foxworthy opens now, with
Leoni at midseason.
"Tea Leoni is somebody we tried
to be in business with (befon.\)," Littlcfi~.ld says. "We think she's a big
star. .
,
, ,
He, promptly fired the producer
and began reworking the rest.
"There was a lot of humor in the
show that was pretty coarse and
offensive," says Littlefield. "I think.
we can raise the level of that, tell
some better stories."
That doesn't necessarily give
NBC a monopoly on smans. "We
wanted .. . the same changes that
NBC wants," Harbert says.
It would be more of a coup if,the
network could turn the discarded
Foxworthy into a star. Maxine
Lapiduss - a former "Roseanne"
and "Home-Improvement" producer
-was put in charge.

The legendary
country/folk group
the Nl~ Gritty Dirt
Bend makes their
awaited
long
debut at the Paramount Arts Center
Friday, Sept. 13 IS
part of the Troubadour
Concert
Series.
Doors
open at 7 p.m.
Hear their hit
recorda, Including
Will The Circle Be
Unbroken and the
global anthem Mr.
Bojanglea. Open·
lng act Ia Rob
McNurlln, singing songs from his Last of The Beatnik Cowboys
CO. Upcoming concerti Include Chat Atkins Oct. 18 end Bela
Fleck and the Flecktonea Nov. 8. Call the Paramount box office
1300 Winchester Ave., Ashland, Ky. at 606-324-3175 weekdays
l
for ticket Information.

DON ROSE and the CLASSICS
legends of ROCK &amp; ROLL of the 50, 60 &amp; 70's
Ariel Theater 6 &amp; i P.M.

Friday, Septem~er 20
Sponsored by Gallipolis Kiwanis Club
Call Show Tickets
1·81J0.757-4161

. . .fantastic
ELVIS

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7:00, ': JO UAILr
M1'fff81S SAT t SUM
1:00 J:lO

Dairy Bar~ festival offering expanded activities
ATHENS-- The expanded activities· planned for the 16th annual
Bam Raisin family festival this year
are designed to build on the community event's already strong and stable
foundation.
Between II a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 15, the grounds surrounding the Dairy Barn Cultural Arts
Center at 8000 Dairy Lane will be
packed with the traditronal arts and
crafts.exhibits, a mam stage booked
with regional entertainment, and
plenty of food .
In addition, new events this vear
include a variety of ans dcmon;trations throughout the day and an invitational volleyball tournament.
Approximately 30 artists will
e~hibit and sell their wares in media
ranging from fiber and glass to
paintings and jewelry. Among those
exhibitors are four artists who wrll
· demonstrate their skills: Ceramrcist
Justin Teilhet of Fairborn will
demonstrate wheel throwing techniques from II a.m . to l p.m. and
from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Teilhet's works
include stoneware and raku items
including a new line of ceramic
musical instruments.
At I p.m., Sara Deever of Westerville whose specialties include
.fiber, embroidery, and knitting, will
demonstrate embroidery techniques.
Rita Schultz Blake, a fiber artist
from Newton Falls will follow at 2
p.m. with l demonstration of
applique simple nower patterns.
Athcns·Watercolorist Susan Vanasse
will demonstrate watercolor painting techniq~ at 3 p.m.
In a separate demonstration,
' Toledo artist ·Linda Sattler, who
paints fumittn 8J!d·birdhouses, will
demoastrate wate(COior painting
techniques. Participants may sign up
to peint their own birdhouses 1iY
callina Aaron Fine at 6141~_92-4981 :
participiniS\ also may bri~g therr
own woOden ileitis to peint in the
demonstnllion:

Finally, there will also be a community bench which anyone may
help decorate by "putting in their
two strokes" throughout the day.
A number of artists from throughout the area will also be on the
grounds from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. crealing art in a variety of media from a
specral Bam Raisin' sti ll life.
Visitors will also get to watch as
12 teams from ~cross Southeastern
, Ohio participate in the first annual
Barn Raisin' beach volleyball -format
invitational
tournament
throughout the day. The team wmning the most matches will be
dubbed king and queen of Bam
Rarsin' 96 and will win assorted
prizes.
Local politic[ans, State Rep.
Mary Abel, Athens Mayor Ric Abel,
and County Commissioner Gary
Seeley will judge the third annual
I homemade ice-cream churn-off contest.
The event will also be interactive
in more ·ways than one. Eurekanct is
scheduled to unveil the Dairy Barn's
World Wide Web page, and everyone through the gates will be invited
to select their favorite of two possiblc names for the festival ip upeommg years: Barn Raising, the original
trtle of the event, or Bani Raisin', the
title in more recent years.
The main stage will feature
regional entertainers all day long.
Performers this year include The
Local Girls and their eclectic American close vocal harmony and a
"Cowgirls of the West" show for
kids; Home Remedy, wid) its oldtime Appalachian acoustical music;
Jack Wright offering acoustic folk
and traditional music; and Deighton
Ch8(lemagne on Caribbean steel
drum. The Ml\l'k Wood Fun Show
returns from Jackson with a lively
children's performan".
· Kids also have plenty of activities
to choose ftom in the Kloger' Chil-

•

dren's Tent including face-painting
and cyanotype printing, and horse
rides will return thrs year as well.
Free parking will be available at
Peden Stadium and the new city lot
off Richland Avenue near Southside
Park, with free shuttle service from
both lots.

. --

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lAck
JPC·1ll

7:00,,110 DAJI.Y
MA1'1RBI8

I &amp;UN

THE ISLIND Df DR. MDREIU

By CUFF EDWARDS
· AP Bualneaa Writer
Heating oil futures prices rose to
their highest level in nearly five years
_ Friday, leading other energy products
• higher, as strong European demand
: threaten to curb imports at a time
: when American supplies are extreme: ly tight.
• On other commodity markets,
: soybean futures rose, while gold
; futures prices fell. The Commodity
~ Research Bureau's index of 17 com•: modi ties rose 1.57 points to 247.19.
,
The available heating oil supply
! remains well below year-ago levels,
causing mounting concern even
· though t))e winter heating season is
montbs away. Distillate stockpiles,

t

including heating oil, now stand at
108.9 million barrels, down 18 mil·
lion barrels, or 17 percent, from yearago levels despite the fact that
refineries are running at near-capacity, according to the American Petroleum Institute.
Many refineries soon will curtail
production for at least two weeks to
pe'rtorm routine maintenance, which
could lead to an even greater shortage, said Gerald E. Samuels at ARB
Oil Inc. in Los Angeles.
"The bottom line is there hasn't
been the replenishment of stocks in
heating oil from last season's lows,"
Samuels said. "To come into the winter at these low stock levels is not a
source of panic yet, but there are a lot

Smith's legacy
might be undone
. By GEORGE ANTHAN
: The Des Molnea Register
WASHINGTON - Neal Smith,
: the former 18-term Democratic con: gressman from central Iowa,
• authored the most significant meat
: safety legislation of the past half-cen:. tury, measures that sought to gu8(an: tee that products from state-inspect• ed processing plants were subjected
; to federal slandards.
, The legislation- the Wholesome
: Meat Act of 1967 and the Whole• some Poultry Products Act of 1968
; - was a result of reports of scan: dalously lax regulations in some
• slates. The laws, while requiring
: state inspection systems to meet fed~ eral standards, prohibited state• inspected facilities from selling their
! products in interstate commerce.
' They also provided that states could
opt out of meat inspection and tum
f regulation of intrastate plants over to
the USDA.
For several decades, Smith was a
legislative bulwark in the way of
repeated efforts to weaken meat safety rules. Some meat industry and
even Agriculture Department officials
made no secret of their desire for his
defeat.
Smith was defeated in 1994. Now,
, the Democratic candidate for that
•'seat, Connie McBurney, has
: announced support for legislation
! that would allow state-inspected
- plants to sell their products in interslate commerce.
_ McBurney said this would help
. dilute market power of the Big Four
packers- IBP, Cargill, ConAgra and
•·National Beef- by increasing competition. And, it would boost cattle
• prices by offering producers more
buyers, she said.
McBurney is adopting the position of
. · the National Association of State
Ifepartments of Agriculture and of
the USDA's Advisory Committee on
Livestock Concentr~tion, who say the
move would lessen industry concen-

tration.
She said opposition is led by the
large packers, who "contribute large
amounts to political campaigns" to
help perpetuate 'their dominance .
But Smith is perhaps McBurney's
chief opponent on this issue, a situation with overwhelming irony.
"Her position is ·wrong, and I
don't know why she took it," said
Smith.
Smith said he heard last year that
some meat industry elements "were
saying, 'Now that Neal Smith is
gone, we'll get some of this stuff
done that we've always wanted to.'
But to have Connie McBurney doing
it ... "
Smith agrees that state-inspected
plants in Iowa live up to federal standards. "But it also means that if we
change these laws, plants in other
slates and Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia could sell in Iowa.
Sollfebody who wants to sell some
meat that would be condemned in a
federally inspected plant could find a
slate where the secretary of agriculture is lax, and it would be just like
before, where hogs with high fever
and scours were finding their way
into the meat supply.''
Smith continued, ."There were
big bucks involved," anif lie cited
involvement of the Mafia in the
1950s and 1960s in buying up diseased animals and even dead livestock from rendering plants for a few
-cents. on the dollar, then moving the
meatthrough state·inspec~ed facilities
to consumer channels.
"You would have ~pme bad exampies come up and that ruins the credibility of the meat supply and more
people than ever then don't want to
eat meat. And, many other countries
ar~ looking for excuses to cut off our
exports. This would give them an
excuse," said Smith.
The former congressman. now a
lawyer in Des Moines, summed it all
up with an exasperated, "Gee whiz ."

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D
Sunday, September I, 1911'
Section

Heating oil futures hit highest level in 5 years

?:10 DULY...,_ Sft/-.1:10 tPml)

for Our Suhools

•

••~:~W

IRI

~Farm/Business

Fall soil testing
has many b~nefits
By BUZ MILLS,
District technician
GALLIPOLIS -Galli a County has
. experienced one of the wettest
springs and summers on record.
· Spring hay/pasture secdings were
· difficult if not impossible to make.
Com and soybean plantings were 46 weeks later than normal . Tobacco
"': and pepper seltings were also
:_ delayed. Harvest schedules arc going
to start later this fall than in recent
memory. Even with all these problems, now is the time to start planning
which,liclds need to be soil tested for
· next years production.
Testing your soil after fall harvest
has many benefits. Soils are normally drier in thC fall makmg it easier to
obtain accurate 5arnples. Soil sample
results are normally returned sooner
· in the fall vs. spring sample results
: because of the lesser workload at the
labs in the fall. Rese8(ch has shown
' thai fall testing soils is as accurate as
"soil sampling any other time of the
.year.
· Once the soil sample results are
: returned, the landowner has time to
' make any needed lime and fertilizer
applications. Fall is an excellent time

to apply lime. Custom applicators can
usually get to your job quicker in the
fall. it cases the workload in the
spring, and the soil is normally drier
for lime application. A pH of 6.0 to
7.0 is ideal for the most efficient
availability of nutncnts by most
crops.
Phosphorus can be applied in the
fall to most all soiltypes that do not
have an erosion hazard . Phosphorus
moves very little in the soil. But if
this nutnent is surface applied without incorporation it could be lost
through erosion or runoff.
.
Potash can be applied to most soil
types in the fall. However, sandy soil
types can have potash· lcach during
winter rains. In addition, soils that are
subject to erosion should-have potash
applied closer to planting time.
Even if you do not want to apply
any needed nutnents to a soil sampled field this fall , by sampling now
the landowner has the information at
hand to price the needed nutrients
needed. Late fall into early winter is
an excellent time to compare shop
fertilizer prices. So be ready for
spring by soil sampling this fall.

·.Business highlights
WASJ{INGTON (AP) - The
nation's unemployment rate plunged
:to a·seven-ye8( low of 5.1 percent in
'August, the government said in a
'report hailed by President Clinton on
,the campaign trail.
Economists said the drop. from
5.4 percent in July, and .a jump in
:!'verage hourly wages increase the
j

of traders saying if it's tight now, then
what will happen if there's an early
winter surge?"
The sharp gains came amid a rally in gasoil futures·in London. Gasoil
is the European equivalent of heating
oil, and demand for that product was
heavy ahead of the expiration of one
of its contracts:
European gasoil stockpiles are 3
percent below last year, according to
the International Energy Agency. The
heavy demand indicates continued
tight world supplies of heating fuels,
a cause of concern given that an
increasing amount of heating oil
used in America is being imported,
according to API figures.
Crude oil and unleaded gasoline

Attend conference

Ohio Farm Bureau Federation's annualleederahlp conference
was held recently In Columbus. More than 300 volunteers from
around the state attended. From Gallla County'a Farm Bureau
were, left to right, front row, VIcki Powell, Kim Harlaaa and Paul
Shomaker. Back row, Bob Powell, Mary Withee and Charles With·
ee. Theme for the two-day event was "Go for the Gold." The group
was addressed by lrv Bell and OFBF Executive Vice Preeldent
Jack Fisher.

November soybeans rose 4 114
crude rose 41 cents to $23.85 a barrel; October unleaded gasoline rose cents to $8.00 a bushel, the -~
.86 cent to 65.27 cents a gallon.
· active-contract price since July 1~ Gold futures retreated for the·
Soybean futures prices advanced
on the Chicago Board of Trade amid eighth consecutive session on tho
concern about persistent dryness in New York Mercantile Exchanse amid
mounting indications U.S. inleeal.
Indiana and Ohio.
Maturing soybeans crops in Indi- rates will rise.
The Federal Reserve is likely tO
ana, Ohio and some parts of Illinois
have had less than a quarter-inch of raise rates at least a half-percenlqO:
rain since August and hopes of some point on Sept. 24 to curb a robust;
relief from Hurricane Fran are begin- American economy, analysts say. A
· spate of government reports show the
ning to fizzle.
The market shrugged off 1996-97 economy is runnins full-steam. ~­
production reports issued early Fri- Labor Department on Friday said
day by Sparks Companies and the unemployment fell to S.l pen:ent, the
·
Conrad Leslie Organization that were lowest in seven years.
December gold 80 cents to·
in line with expectations of a smaller crop.
$388.80 an ounce, capping a week
where prices fell $2.50 an ounce. ·

Burley requirements must
be met by area producers
Submitted by G·L
Farm Service Agency
GALLIPOLIS - The 1996 burley
tobacco marketing season is rapidly
approaching with early grading of
1995-crop carryover expected in lateOctober and markets expected to
open around mid-November. There
are requirements that must be met by
producers before they can receive
their marketing cards for thcrr 1996
burley crop:
I . "Eligibility Slatement for Burley Tobacco" (Form MQ-38) - This
form must be completed by the farm
operator or owner listed on official
FSA records prior to issuance of markctmg cards. Many producers completed this form when they certified
their burley tobacco acreage. Producers who have not yet complete&lt;!
this form should expect to receive it
by mai I. If producers need help completing the form, they should stop by
the FSA office•for assistance.
2. All persons sharing in the crop
need to file the AD-I026 sodbuster/swampbuster form if it has not
been previously updated for 1996.

3. All persons sharing in d crop
must have crop insurance OR a
waiver of insurance on file by Sept·:
30.
The office is currently mailinJ
packets to producers who need to
complete forms. If you share in a
'tobacco crop and have not received
the forms required for price support
on your 1996-crop, please contact the
office.
Please don't wait uniil you'RI
ready to go to market to complete the
required forms, especially if you
have a person sharing in the crop thai
lives out of the county. Changes oo
sod !luster forms could delay the
issuance of the marketing card.
Stop In the FSA office in the C.K.
McKen7.ic Agricultural Center.
Phone: 446-8686 or 1-888-211-1626
· (toll free in 614 area code) to insun:
that you will have your marketing
card at sale time.
Lisa Meadows and Jim Herrell
are county executive dlrecton C7l
the Gallia-Lawrence Farm Service
Agency.

Expanding global markets offer investment opportunity ·
By RYAN SMITH,
Aclveat, Inc.
GALLIPOLIS · Ritpid changes in
I'
economic systems
of
countries
around the world
offer new opportunitieS
for
investors. In fact,
many fmancial
planners, today,
recommend that
mvestors
at least I 0% of their
portfolio in international investments either through mutual funds
or other managed vehicles.
There arc three key reasons for
owning international securities
today :
I . We live as workers and consumers in a global economy.
2.
International
exposure
improves portfolio diversity and
enhances the opportunity for success.
3. Adding the diversity of intcrnational .investmcnts lowers overall
portfolio nsk.
We live and work m a global
economy. The majority of the
world's largest 100 companies arc
located outside the U.S . Most of the
people in the world and most of the
world's mdustrial activity arc
beyond the U.S. borders as well.
And while we arc a rich nation with
plentiful resources, we arc only part
of a much larger world economy. It
rs because of this burgeoning world
marketplace that we, as both con·
sumers and investors, must open our
scope to match this global scale.
Diversity enhances the opportunity for success and lowers portfolio
risk. Studies have pointed out that a

blend of U.S. and international holdings provides a higher return over
time with less portfolio volatility
than owning either U.S. or foreign
investments alone. In the long run,
investors with such a mix of domestic and foreign investments may
achieve greater returns with reduced
risk and less volatility as different
economics arc not per(ectly synchronized .. In years when U.S.
returns have been lower, the intcrnatronal holdings have raised returns.
When I J S returns have been high·
est, they have cushioned the impact
of disappointing markets abroad.
Richard P. Macklem, Chref
Investment officer with Boston
Security Counselors, Inc., believes
this is an exciting time to divcn;ify a
percentage of your stock holdings
into international equities.
'The U.S . market," Macklem
says, "recorded a big year in 1991
when interest rates were declining
and an economic recovery of some
magnitude appeared to be lurking on
the horizon.'' He continues, "In the
same manner, we expect several or
the leading foreign markets will
respond to declining rates and to the
expectation that 1994 and 1995
could be the best composite economic growth years that we have
seen in some time." Investment
Risks
Buying foreign securities comes
with two kinds of risk. The first is
political risk. There is a danger that
electoral shifts or governmental
instability may adversely affect market performance. The second risk is
currency risk. There is a danger that
a rising U.S. dollar will shrink the

value of your overseas investments.
For example, stock in a particular
country may demonstrate sizable
gains, however, when these gains
arc translated into U.S. dollars, they
may be drastically reduced on the
other hand, currency rates can work
in your favor. While a rising dollar
can often reduce the value of a foreign investment, a weakened dollar
can increase its value. Access to
World Markets Gaining access to
world markets is possible through a
number of ways.
U.S. Multinationals. Invest in
U.S. companies which have large
operations abroad. These U.S . multi·
nationals offer investors the opportunity to benefit from a company's
prolitable performance in a number
of countries. It is possible, for example. for a company to experience
sales so much greater in one country
or region that they outperform
domestic operations, while still contrihuting to rts overall productivity.
A.D.R.s Purchase individual
shares of stock in the select few
large companies which trade via
American Depository Receipts
(ADRs). ADRs arc shares of foreign
stock which arc deposited in an
American depository bank. Receipts
for these shares arc priced in U.S.
dollars and then traded on all U.S.
exchanges.
Because they arc dollar-denominated securities, investors avoid the
risks involved with currency Ouctuations. The number of stocks available through ADRs, which now
approaches 200 companies, is still
limited. The list represents largely
major corporations and leaves out

many emerging growth companies..
Direct Investment in Scl:urilics. via
Non· U. S. Exchanges. Thouah
indeed possible, this is probably the
most diflicult way to panicipate in
oversea' markets. In addilion to the
political and currcncv risks already
mentioned, arc the difliculties &lt;if
receiving reliable research and cxacuting timely trades when din:ctly
investing ahroad This route is cus.
tomarily reserved for only the mo~t
.sophisticated investors.
Mutual Funds. For the many
investors who do not have the time
or access to the necessary research,
most analysts recommend wellmanaged overseas mutual funds and
listed closed-end funds (there arc
now more than SO listed).
J

Basically. there arc four types of
such funds. Glohal funds invest in
equities of companies located both
in the U.S . and abroad. Regional
funds in•cst in a specific segment of
the world. Single-country funds
invest in one country. International
funds invest in equities of companies located outside of the U.S .
International funds arc a classic
example of diversity and may be a
more conservative approach than
other regional or single-country
funds because they provide a broader base of in vestment locations
while still remaining distinctly outside the U.S. This allows inveftton
to closely moniwr their international
e~posurc as part of their overall
asset allocation.
Ryan Smith is an lnveltnletd
officer with Advest, Inc., In lb
Gallipolis office.

Value added calf program initiated in Gallia County
By JENNIFER L. BYRNES
GALLIPOLIS - If cattle producers are looking for a way to make
their feeder calves st.and out at .the
marketplace this fall, they may want
to consider the "Buckeye's Best"
Value Added Calf Program. To talk
with experts about the program, and
increasing the value of feeder calves,
plan to auend an educational meeting
on Monday, September 9, at 7 p. m..
at the Ag Center in Gallipolis.
Buckeye's Best is a value-added
feeder calf program designed to pro-

vide more uniformity in the treatment
of calves prior to their sale. The goal
is for producers to rea~ze this added
value at sale time and still meet the
needs of the feeders. Panicipants in
the program work in conjurlction with
their veterinarian and the Ohio Cattlemen's Association with health and
management practices such as vaccinations, deworming, dehorning, castrating. and weaning.
Buckeye's Best calves will receive
special ear tags to alert order buyers
and feeders to program participants.

Producers Livestock Association in
Gallipolis. will hold a special feeder
calf sale on October I, featuring
calves from the Buckeye's Best Program.
The educational meeting on Monday will allow interested producers to
hear views from Ohio Cattlemen's
Association representative. Tadd
Nicholson and OSU Beef Nutrition
Specialist Dr. Stephen Boyles. Other
key individuals attending the meeting
will be Dr. Myles Moritz, D. V.M.,
OSU Extension grazing program

leader, Ed Vullborn, and ProdLICCr.i
Livestock Association representative
Brian Hamilton.
Participation in this program
allows producers to advance the reputation of Ohio feeder cattle and seek
better economic returns. For more
information regarding the program or
the scheduled meeting, please contact
the OSU Extension office in Gallia
county at &lt;V6-7007.
The OSU Extension office would
Continued on paae D-1

Prevention key to confrontation with yellow jackets

chances the Federal Reserve will
raise interest rates to cool the econo- ByHALKNEEN
POMROY - Are yellow jacket
my.
Republican presidential challenger wasps disturbing your outdoor plans?
Bob Dole's campaign 11sed Friday's Picnic foods (carbonated beverages,
report as an opportunity to argue that ripe fruit, vegetables, fish , hamburghigh taxes are preventing Americans ers) arc all food items for the yellow
from enjoying the benefits of the jacket. During the summer months
the yellow jacket nest has grown
improved job market.
from 40 wasps to over 4,000 wasps
j

''

futures also rose amid continued
concern about tensions in the Middle
East.
Although the United States has
halted bombing of Iraqi military
sites, there were concerns the conflict
could nare up again over the week·
end. Many investors lost money after
Iraqi forces auacked Kurdish rebels
in the north and President Clinton
responded with missile attacks . The
action sent oil prices soaring before
traders could get back from the long
holiday weekend.
Heating oil for October delivery
surged 1.37 cents to 66.40 cents a gallon on the New York Mercantile
Exchange, the highest price since
Nov. 15, 1991. October light, sweet

in size. Thus, we see a lot more wasps
!(;avenging for food to maintain the
nest. Unlike honeybees which die
after stinging, a yellow jaeket has a
non-barbed stinger and can repeat·
edly sting. Yellow jacket nests are
killed by cold weather, normally the
first killing frost. Only a newly fertilized queer overwinters, usually in

a protected spot like a rotting log.
Prevention is the key to minimizing a possible confrontation with the
yellow jacket. Be careful not to cut
weeds or run the lawn mower over a
ground nest nor disturb a nest in a tree
or caves of the home. Any noise and
disturbance will infuriate and provoke painful stinging.

When eating outdoors, keep food
covel\ld until eaten, especially ripe ,
fruit and soft drinks. Keep refuse in
tightly sealed eootainen with lightfitting trash can lids. Clcanins of
dumpsters and sarbagc cans daily
may be required in the early fall.
Individuals should avoid tlllrlcting
'
ContlaiHd oa D-1

�.......................----~----------..-------

- -- ----,--,---

•

Sunday, September'; 1996

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

House of the Week

Farmhouse has aPPea I

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ARAILED
11- • country roet to thlo larmho111e d..Jsn- IJnWiual window arn~emenll ond abJusle oldfnl
over the
make tht. home nen mote dlttlnetlve.
ByiiRUCE A. NATHAN

••nee

Pion

-

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APNeWiteotureo
G- 18, by HomeStyles

Desl1ners Network, Is en
eppe•llns rermhouse deli@n
th,.l realures '" lnvillns f'tonl
porch wllh decorative nll tnp.
ln"ldt, 14-rnul veull,ed ceillnp &amp;nt:e lhe llvlnc end cNn -

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entr)', dlnln&amp; room,

llvtns room, kitchen,

three bedroom•. two run
baths and 1 utlllty room, toullns 1,187 aquare feet of Uvins
apece. The plan Ia available
whh 2x6 e1tertor wall rram lns and a aawlapace founda-

roomA. This terse area Is

tion. A two-car sarase provldea 4-18 aquore r.. t or •poce.

by boy windows

brl,~htonood

G-19 STATISTICS

wermed by en unusual

lt•••-•••Y ltreplace. Slldtns
doors teld to a bocltyonl
kitchen hu

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pantry

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......,, plonly or cablnol apace

1 servln8 bar to the dinroom.
master bedroom reaa mirrored dreaalns
a privalt balh end abunspace.
addlllonal bedrooms
another full balh. The
bedroom hll a cozy

lwlndow ..al.

(For a mort thtoikd, 1coled
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Pomeroy e Middleport e GalllpoUs, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Lighting yOur kitchen
By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS

For AP Specllll FeetuiH
Without proper lighting, cooking
and other kitchen activities can be a
chore rather than a pleasure.
The best kitchen lighting is not
only functional but also adds grace
and visual interest - factors that
combine to make the kitchen' both an
easy and pleasant place to work.
Today, modem kitchens use a variety
of fixtures to provide 'lhree specific
kinds of lighting- general, task and
accent.
Generallighting provides bright,
even illumination for the entire
kitchen . Task lighting provides additiona! light on countenops and other
work areas. Accent lighting is used
where some element of visual interest is to be heightened. General
Lighting
In evaluating general lighting for
your kitchen, the major considerations are how much you need, the
kind of light and the arrangement of
the fixtures .
·
Consider the colors of the cabinets, counters, walls and floors. Dark
surfaces absorb light and as a result
require you to provide more light for
proper illumination. Light-colored
surfaces by contrast reflect and usually reduce the amount of light
' needed. In general, for a kitchen from 75
to 120 square feet in size you need

150 to 200 watts of incandescent hght

or 60io 80 watts of fluorescent hght.
Consider comfon. Fluorescent
tubes remain cool, even with extended operation. Incandescent bulbs
begin radiating noticeable amounts of
heat as soon as they are turned on.
That may be more welcome in winter than in summer.
Fixtures must be positioned to
provide even illumination throughout
the room . A single fluorescent fixture
typically can be placed in the center
of the ceiling because the tubes radiate light evenly along their full
length. To get an equivalent spread of
incandescent light, you can position
two to four ceiling-mounted, domed
fixtures so their light blends to form
a uniform spread of illumination.
Task Lighting
Task lighting provides adequate
lighting in work areas where your
body casts a shadow from the genera! lighting on the work you are doing.
Create task lighting by placing fixtures above counters: the sink and the
stove, as well as over ISlands and
tables. There is a variety of both
incandescent and fluorescent minilights to fit your needs.
To light co unter areas, install
lights on the underside of the overhead cabinets close. to their front
edges. You'll need 8 watts of undercabinet fluorescent light for. every

.

r---·--' -,

I

foot of counter space. Allow IS to 20
watts of mcandescent light for·eveJ1
'
foot of counter.
;
To illuminate a sink. place a light
directly above, recessed in or moun~
ed on the ceiling. You'll need abotit
40 to 60 watts of fluorescent light or
75 watts of incandescent.
_
Ta;k-light a stove the same wai.
Even better, consider installing a~
exhaust hood with a built-in light. •
To light idand or eating area;,
place recessed, track or hangin~
1ights above the area. Accent L1ghti
Accent lights are primarily dec~
rativc and optional in a kitchen light
ing scheme, but they do add dramp
and interest to the room. Gep~rall~
the same types ofundercabi11et light$
used in countertop task.liallt\ng cai
be used as accent lights. ,
•
Place them Qn top of &lt;:abinets an4
direct them toward the ceiling anD
back wall to give* sense of height t~
the room .
•
Accent lights in•the toe-kick spac~
of base cabinets emphasize cabinet&lt;
to- floor transition and also make
good night lights.
•
Highlight the ~o ptents of a glasS:C
door cabinet with,adcent lights alon.
the inside upper or low.er edge.
,
As a general rule, keep accc~
'"lighting less bright than task lighting;
A little of it draws a great deal of
attention, so don't overuse it.
•
••

•

G-19

'

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I

SUNDAY PUZZLER

1liE EN'IliY openo lo the Uvlnl room, which In lum II open
10 lhe dlnlnA' room. From the 41nln&lt; room, 1lldlna ala11
doon open 10 a backyanl pallo. Th~ flllchen to juol 1 llep
from lhe dlnlns room. A hallway leada to the two aeeOIKiary
bedroomt, a utlltt,. room, a fUll belh •nd the muter bed·
NOm

with a pri•ate bath.

P.O. Boz lf6Z, New
10116-IJ6Z. 8e11UY1
l'•lnduae ""plan number.)

ACROSS

Carpeted stairs w111 make
your home safer and quieter
By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Features
Stairs leading directly from a living room or central hallway look
more attractive and inviting when
carpeted. And, a carpeted stairway
will quiet your home by softening
footsteps and absorbing sound waves.
Carpeted stairs are safer, too, lessening your chances of slipping.
Avoid utility-grade carpeting.
Stairways get heavy wear, especially along tbe tread nosing. Choose an
easy-to-clean variety with a dense pile. Carpet with attached cushion
backing is cheaper and easier to put
down, but isn't recommended for
stairways.
Since you want a long, narrow
runner, you may be able to buy remnants of high-quality carpeting at
much less than the going rate for a
room-size piece. The runner need not
be one length. Two or more sections
can hide the seam under the tread
nosing where it will be unnoticeable .
Remember, the pile on each piece
should always lie facing toward the
· bottom of the stairs. Both ascending
and descending, the pressure of your
foot is mostly toward the tread nos-

ing, so unless the pile faces the same
way, wear will be excessive -perhaps doubled. Feel pile direction by
running your hand lightly across the
carpet.
The most common method for
carpeting a stairway with a closed
wall on one side and open balusters
at the other is to roll both edges
under, allowing about I inch from the
wall with I 1/4-inch rollunder at the
edges. If your carpeting won't unravel at a cut edge, you can butt it against
the sidewall without roll under.
·
Determine the total length of the
runner by measuring one tread and
one riser, wrapping the tape measure
around the nosing and holding it
against the riser below the tread with
your thumb. Add I inch to allow for
the thickness of the padding under the
carpet. Multiply this figure by·, the
number of steps. Remember to allow
extra carpeting if your runner is in
two or more sections, since each section must join under a tread nosing.
To get width, measure from the
wall to the base of the balusters, or
whatever portion of the step you will
be covering. Add 2 112 inches for
rollingthccdgcsundcr-1 \/4inch-

es for each side.
Since you will probably need to
trim at least one edge along the runner's length, allow an additional inch
for this. If y&lt;Jur carpeting has irregular edges, be sure you have enough
material to trim the full length of both
sides straight.
Measure a stairway with a landing
as if the landing were one deep step.
Ideally, cover the landing and the first
riser above it with one piece. If you
can't, include the riser with the steps
above it.
Winder steps - wedge-shaped
steps.that tum a comer- require carpeting about 50 percent wider than a
straight runner, and waste considerable material. You need a separate
piece for each step and the riser
above it. The pile on each tread must
be at right angles to the nosing and
facing downstairs.
If your stairs have been carpeted,
remove old nails or tacks and any
quaner-roundtrim or molding, check
treads and risers for looseness and
secure any that need it using glue and
Sd finishing nails.
Refinish the parts of the treads and
risers that will show before putting
down carpeting

Homes: Questions and Answers
By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Features
Q: My Sears Coldspot frostless
refrigerator and freezer whistles,
wheezes and hisses. Sometimes it
sounds almost alive- even humanlike. What do these strange sounds
indicate? Is the refrigerator about Ill
break down?
A: Your refrigerator's strange
noises are probably coming from the
evaporator fan motor located on the
back wall of the freezer compartment.
Usually before the evapori!lor's
motor bearings give out, they will
make chirping sounds. As the bearings continue to wear, the motor will
produce strange noises similar to the
ones you describe. Usually this
means the fan motor is about due for
replacement. A new fan motor kit can
be purchased from any Scars parts
store. Your local appliance center
may also have a fan motor that would
fit.
Q: Our home has an older gasfired hot-water boiler, with a pressure
regulator and a relief valve to maintain the prqper water pressure. A 30gallon cylindrical tank is slung hori-

zontally from the ceiling over the
boiler, and connected to the main hoiwater line .
A small amount of water leaked
from the relief valve drain on each
heating cycle. The overhead tank
waterlogged and. assuming that it
was intended for expansion of the
heated water. I pumped air into it.
This stopped the leaking from the
relief valve, but resulted in several
airbound radiators. Is this tank an
expansion tank or an emergency
source of water to the boiler'
A: The tank is an expansion tank
and not an emergency water source.
The water feed line to the boiler, with
its pressure-reducing valve, will automatically feed water at the required
pressure (12 to 15 psi) whenever
makeup water is needed. In a hotwater heating system the distribution
pipes. radiators and boiler arc a
closed circuit completely filled with
water. When the water heats up it
expands.
The additional volume of water
flows into the expansion tank where
it presses against a cushion of airor in newer systems, against a

..:as

t Tremble
6 Official investigation
11 Army posts
16 Instance
20 Less than
21 Competitor 22 "Carmen" is one
23 Chicago's airport
25 Religious images
26 Gemstones
27 Staircase part
28 Nursemaid
29 Vat
30 Syn&amp;gogue
32 Elevated land
masses
34 Expire
35 "Watch your -I"

37 Feels poorly
38 Narrow openings

39 Handbags
41 Divert
43 Dinah of TV
44 Folklore creature
46 Rich patterned
fabric
49 Circus performer
50 Laboratory animal:
2wds.
54 Midnight rider Paul
55 Compositions for
two
56 Small bird
57 ·-Like It Hor
58 Kimono sash
59 Fathers
60 Small bottle for oil
61 The gannet, a bird
62 Traveled
64 Doctrine
65 Parts oflaces
66 Hanc!le
67 Did in
68 Greek war god
69 Faith 70 Wager
71 Legal maner
72 Take place
74 Brief
75 Tendon
77 Zodiac sign

'')

80 Point a weapon
81 Wrap for keeping
warm
82 Precious metal
83 Chiel
87 Put into
8.9 Reads
90 Twists into ringlets
91 Wind
92 Nickels and dimes
93 Unadorned
94 Mean
95 Brewed beverage
96 Frosted
97 Rich deposit
9&amp; Little pies
99 Refusal to believe
102 Menaces
105 Kind of tape
106 Upperclassmen
107 Dwelling place
108 Send payment
109 Part of the face
110 Battled
113 More rational
t 14 Work the land
115 James - Carter
119- in a million
120 More irritable
123 Fashion
125 Sheltered side
126 Bolt
128 Tantalize
129 Beauty parlor
130 Sea water
132 Extinguish
133 Viper
134 Like a lot
135 Maker of pies and
cakes
136 Reqwernent
137 Pays attention to
138 Trousers ·
139 Cooks slowly in

DOWN
I Res1gns
2 Not shortened, as a
mov1e
3 Sun-dried brick
4 Range of knowledge
5 Formerty
6 Vow
7 Wavelet
8 Racetracks
9 Bundle
10 Leners
11 Abandoned
12 Drug
13 Sleeps
14 Woody plant
15 PoetTeasdale
16 Use up
17 Triumphant cry
18 Makes smooth by
rubbing
19 Mr. Kovacs
24 Sight organs
31 --cologne .
32 Farm implements
33 "Once -,-- a time .. .36 Rate ot movement
38 Injections
40 Think logically
42 Damage
43 Icy rain
44 Conjecture
45 Baseball team
46 Foreheads
47 Revolt
48 Of sheep
49 Remedies
50 Hog's sound
51 Kind of bear
52 Spit and53 Krupa and Hackman
55 Restaurant of a kind
56 A joint
59 Antitoxin
60 Uncouth one
61 Glut
63 Playing card
64 Implied but unsaid
65 Black birds
66 Knits
69 - heaven'
70 Zane or Crystal

water

diaphfagm . Without an expansion
tank in the system, expanding water
would cause the pressure-relief valve
to discharge .
When an expansion tank becomes
waterlogged, the system acts as if
there is no expansion tank, and the
relief valve constantly discharges. To
correct this, you have to drain the
tank. In the process, an air cushion
will be re-established. If you have an
older style tank without a diaphragm,
it should be drained completely. A
diaphragm-style tank needs to be
only about two-thirds drained. If
there is a shutoff valve in the line
between the tank and boiler. be sure
to leave it in a fully open position
after draining the tank.
Your airbound radiators are caused
by pockets of air !rapped in the systern. To release this air, you have to
-bleed the system. All oF-Some of your
radiators should have small keyoperated valves for this purpose.
After the boiler has been operating
for several hours, hold a cup under
each valve and open it to release the
air until you get a steady stream of
hot water.
_

AEA::'C:. .....,_BOOKS
ForAP
DIQE8I'

· Po~r washing your house every
year with a high-pressun: water spray
can not ooly keep it looking good but
can cut the need to repaint u often.
Power wuhing alwninum. steel,
vinyl or wood siding removes gnt
that grinds away the surface l!ke
sandpaper when it's agitated by wuld
or rain. Power washing is aiJo • soocl

•

way to prepare a house's surface for
repainting. If you're lucky, once the
siding is clean you may find that you
don't need to paint after all.
If your house does need repainting, a thorough power wa.shing
removes not only dirt, mildew and
moss but also peeling, flaking and
chalking paint. You can easily wash
even a large house in a single day.
Power washers are available for

.

.

rent, usually by the day, from tool
rental stores and some paint specialty stores. Make sure someone demonstrates how the equipment works and
answers all your questions before you
leave the store with the washer.
Power washing with clear water
usually does the trick.. But to remove
chalking, moss or mildew, you'll
probably need a general cleaning
agent.

I

73
74
75
76

Automobiles
Use w1th others
Kinds
Move back and
forth
77 Law1ul
78 Son of Cain
79 Willow rod
81 Lots and lots
82 Keen enjOyment
84 Mathematical
proportion
85 Transparent
86 Becomes well
again
88 Make beloved
89 Pebble
90 Insert mark
93 Toboggan
94 Lowest point
98 Hourglass
99 Judges
100 Opp. of WSW
t 01 Victory goddess
103 Helped in
wrongdoing
104 Fuss (hyph. wd.)
l O!!'Thin outer layers
106 Sanctified places
108 Lifted
109 Prance about
110 News
111 Charged particle
112 Musical
entertainment
113 Bulb cover
1t 4 Criminal
t 16 Similar
t 17 Resume
118 Wanton looks
t 21 The Beehive State
122 Yield by treaty
t 23 Art movement
124 Recedes
t 27 Native of: suffix
129 Plant juice
131 Deserter
.\

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By MITCH WEISS
As1oclated Pntll WrHer ·•
STONY RIDGE - Kenny Hetricks' back yard is a menagerie and
he wants to keep it that way.
Hetricks owns more than 30 exotic animals, including Siberian tigers,
an African lion, a grizzly bear and a
pair of timberwolves.
That doesn't sit we_ll with animal
rights groups, which have spent years
lobbying for a state law banning peopie from owning exotic animals.
But Hetricks and other exotic-animal owners say they're worried
because those groups are now taking
a differe~t approach. Instead of lobbying the Legislature, they are taking
their fight to local governments, asking them to ban exotic pets.
"I take excellent c!IM of my animals,just as good as a zoo," said Hetricks, who has worked 32 years at a
Chrysler Corp. auto parts plant in
suburban Perrysburg.
Animal rights group say it's cruel
for people to own exotic animals.
They say they have uncovered cases
in which the animals have been mistreated or neglected.
Some public officials believe
there's a greater problem- a threat
to public safety. They cite an attack
last month when a girl in Cincinnati
was attacked by a lion about to
appear on a television shov.:. Some
communities have taken actton and
enacted ondinances banning exotic
animals . Recently, community officials in the nonheastem community
of Southington ruled that boxer Mike
Tyson could not keep lions on his
estate there.
0hio is one of the few states that

•

leopard since It waa 3 years old. Ohio Ia one
of the few atatas that does not regulate own·
arahlp of exotic anlmala. (AP)

does not regulate ownership of exotic animals. The st~te leaves that up to
communities, but only a handful
have laws prohibiting exotic pets,
said Jim .Johason, assistant chief of
enforcement for the Ohio Department
of Natural Resour~:es.
"I don't know why anybody
would own a lion or tiger. They arc
beautiful animals but I'd rather see
them in the wild or in the zoo," John.son said.
One of the largest exotic animal
auction houses in the nation is near
the village of Delphos. Ohio also has
about 12 hunting lodges, where peopie can hunt wild boar, bighorn
sheep and other exotic animals. The
lodges are prohibited from targeting
lions, tigers and other big cats or
bears.
Some states have tough laws. In
Florida and California, people cannot
own dangerous cats, such as lions or
tigers, unless they have 2,000 hours
of hands-on experience. Other states
require owners to have liability insurance, which is difficult to get.
There are no statistics on how
many people Ohioans own exotic
pets, s&amp;d Polly Ward, spokeswoman
for the non-profit Ohio AsSociation.of
Animal Owners. The group lobb1es
for exotic-animal owners' rights.
About 4,000 Ohioans raise some
ty~ of nontraditional animal, such as
ostnch, fox and raccoons. They are
not considered exotic.
In the last five years, about six
communities have tried to ban exotic animals. Ward's group fought all of
those efforts. Three communtttes,
including Toledo, passed laws banniog exotic pets but the others aban-

doned the idea.
Ward said the movement to ban
exotic animals is well organized. She
raises deer and Russ1an hogs on her
Pleasant Htll farm m southwestern
Ohio.
"One of the principal players is
the Humane Society. They go into
these communities and tell people
that there's a problem, that these-animals are dangerous, that they have to
ban them for the public's safety,"
Ward said.
.
.
"Well, 99 percent of exottc antmal
owners are responsible, despite what
you hear."
.
Mary Pat Boatfield, executtve
director of the Toledo Humane Soctety, s8Jd the~ only become mvolved
when there IS a problem. . .
"What usually prec1pttates a
review of a law is an incident,
whether it's a bite or an ~nimal getting loose that attacks a.chtld or c~;
es an adult. m the neighborhood,
Boattield sa1d.
.
.
A battle over e.xot1c ammals was
recently fought m Toledo. Lucas
County Dog Warden Thomas Skeldon and the. Human Society of Toledo asked City Counc1l .to ban them.
Ward's group opposed tt .
But m Jun~, the cny ban~ed o":'nershtp of ~1ld antmals: mcludmg
mountam hons, crocodtles, bears,
coyotes, .and all venomous repttles .
The ordmance also bans ammals
that appear tame, such as llamas and
pigs, because they pose. san1tat1on
problems. m an urban settmg.
.
F~rst-ll me offenders could face up
to s1x months m J&amp;tl and a $1,000
fine. Fmcs could be compounded d81ly unttl an owner gets nd of the antmal.

Interest rates and auto
talks
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PUZZLE ANSWERS ON PAGE 86
"
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FEEDS SPOTTED LEOPARD- Kenny Hetrick
faed8 his spotted ltoplrd It hll houMin Stony
Ridge, Ohio recently. Hatrlck lias cared for the

J

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Power washing your house
By

Ohio animal owners group
stands.up for exotic animals

•

Higher energy pric~s offer tangible
way to worry about 'inflation problem
By BRUCE MEYERSON
AP Bualne11 Writer
NEW YORK - The inflatioh
debate has been confusing enough
this year without Saddam Hussein's
input.
But after all of Friday's headscratching about the true implications
of the robust employ111ent report,
there was little doubt the latest U.S.
scrap with Iraq could upsevven the
rosiest of economic outlooks.
Despite U.S. air strikes to help
ensure that Saddam Hussein won't be
able to disrupt oil production in
neighboring Persian Gulf nations, oil
futures prices jumped more than 7
percent to nearly $24 a barrel over the
past week as commodity traders
reacted to news that the United
Nations bas delayed the sale of Iraqi
oil in retaliation for attacks on Kurds
in nonhem Iraq.
"Iraqi oil had been expected to hit
world markets soon, in time for rising winter demand; the likelihood
that it won 't has put oil prices near
their highest for the year," said Greg
A. Smith, chief investment strategist
at Prudential Securities.
Rising energy prices almost
invariably carry the threat of higher
inllation, the biggest concern of the
Federal Reserve when it considers
whether to raise interest rates.

"Tbe Iraqi tension couldn't have
come at a worse time for the bond
market," Smith said in a research
report. He noted that August's brief
optimism about moder~ting economic growth and steady inflation has
been quickly eroded by sudden indications that business activity, and perhaps inflation, are picking up again.
The resurgent \'lOrries that inflation may accelerate, makin~ a profit-slowing interest rate hike by the
Fed more likely, could be exacerbated by the prospect of higher fuel
prices, which can hit a company's
bonom line just like any household
budget.
But .since the effects of futures
trading aren't immediate, there's time
for the commodity markets to seulc
down before higher prices start showing up at the pump, and even more
time before companies would stan
passing on rising production costs to
the consumer.
"Normally, it's nine to 12 months
before higher energy prices would
translate into higher prices in other
goods and services," said Bob Dickey, managing director for technical
analysis al Dain Bosworth in Minneapolis.
But Dickey and other analysts
were quick to draw a distinction
between the current situation and

Public ~otlce

Public Notice

and oil prices soared to $40 a barrel. .
"We are assuming, along With ·
many othets, that the rise in energy ·
prices is transitory. The impact for :
investors will be small and very nar- ·
row," said Abby Joseph Cohen, chief ·
market strategist at Goldman Sachs. :
Cohen noted that raw materials :
such as energy and metals IICCOUnt for :
a combined S per~:ent of operatins·
costs for U.S. businesses.
'
"If energy prices are sustained at :
these levels, there will be impact on earnings for airlines and other big (
energy users," she said. "llut we • ·
don't think this should be a factor of:
consequence" in the Fed's delibera- tions on interest rate policy.
· :
On Friday, the Dow Jones indus-:
trial avera~e rose 52.90 to 5,659.86. •
giving the blue-chip measure a gain:
of 43.65 on the week.
:
The New York Stock Exchange's·
composite index rose 3.03 on Friday:
to 352.67, up 1.68 for the week. The;
Standard &amp; Poor's 500-stock index:
rose 6.24 to 655.68, up 3.69 on the•
week .
•
The Nasdaq composite index rose:
13.7310 1.139.39 on Friday, but fin-·
ished the week with a. loss of 2.11. :
The American Stock .Exchange's:
market value index rose 3.31
•
Public Notice

Public Notice

•
'•

------------------:
tholi
be •• aet lorth In the •

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Coltlmbue, Ohio

Betted propoHit&lt;li'IU be 25, 1996 lor lmprovementa
bidding propo11l."
:
•ceepted from til pre- In:
Pltnl tnd SptiCIIIIcatlonl •
Gatlla County, Ohio lor
qualllltd blddtrl tl the
Office ol Contrecll, Room Improving Reccoon Creek . ere on lite In the :
of.
11S of the Ohio Depertment County Ptrk (0.0. MclntyN Deptrtmenl
0111.. of Contnoll
•
oI
T ronepotlltlon, Ptrk Dletrlct), by pe-nt Tranaporlllllon.
Lege! Copy N..... 18-730 Cotumbua, Ohio, until 10:00 -Hng.
JenyWrar:
· UNIT PRICI! CONTRACT
a.m.
"The dtte eel lor
Dnotor ol Tren~IMIIIIknl •
Milling Dele 81301118
WednHdey, September completion ol thle work September 8, 15, 1898
:

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

I, Steve Uoyd Undaey, •• ol lhis
day, Sep-t&gt;or a. 1119«1, no long- 1066

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Wanted To Buy . We Buy Junk
Auto's Any Condtlton, 6H · 388 ·

9062, o.- au - •~PART.

Firat Avenue . Friday 61h ,

aidea myoelf, Slave lloyd Lind-

sey, and/ or my wile Christina 906 PinecreSI Drive , ThurSday,

Lynn Haning lindsey.

Fr!day, Saturday, 9-?

30 Announcements

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

Garage Sa-.: 3

Fam,ly, Friday 6th,

Saturday 7th. Monday 9th Sep:
tember . Pole Lamp, Hobnail
Shades. Chtur, NtC'&amp; Boys
Clothes, Ladtes Dresses, Slacks,
Blouses Lon Mtsc 1695 Hazel
Ridge Road Up Hill From EU•eka

&gt;no

br de&lt;ai~ Krn :J0•·87S.5n1.

40

Giveaway

1 Fr&amp;e Kinan Grey &amp; While. 8

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

i•

Help Wanted
SSOance&lt;sSS

Advance. DEADLINE . 2:00' p.m.
the day before the ac 1s to run .
Sunday edt! ton . 2 00 p.m Frtday
Monday edtiiOn · 10.00 a.m. Sat·
urday.

Independent Consullant for Jatra
Cosmeucs in your area , now
booking skin care classes 1n your
home. Experience someth ing
wonderlui·Fuft
ola~n. body &amp;
natl care for men &amp; woman. Call

110

Follow S\jns .

Pomeroy,
Mlddlep9rt
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sates Mus1 Be Pa.d In
Advance . Otadl.ne : 1:00pm the
day before the ad ts to run, Sun ·
day &amp; Monday ed1tton · 1 OOpm

HOME TYPIST, PC uaera nold·
ed

Call

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

er lake financial rHponlibillty br 71h, Exercise Equipment, Hout·
any person andf or ptnons b• hOld llems, Good C1olhea, Bcol&lt;s.

Weeks Old, Good Personelicy, Friday.
LOSERS: Some 650 of Campbell Gtve To GoOd Home, 814 ·4-48 ·
prices went on their own version of
By JOYCE M. ROSENBERG
Pt. Pleasant
Soup Co.'s 44,000 workers, who will 0350 Call ~het 4 P.M.
AP Buslnell Writer
a Six Flags amusement park ride.
&amp; VIcinity
The markets get ready to swallow
It's very likely that, if the Fed's be laid off as the company closes 1 Puppy German Shephard &amp;
mi,.ed, 11 weeks old. 304· Fri -Sat 8th &amp; 7th . 36 Burde lte
some medicine. and the auto workers Open Market Committee raises inter- plants and sells some of its less prof- Collie
675-5946.
Addn 9 ·? Anuques &amp; old store
get ready for some serious talking . . est rates at its meeting . Sept. 24, itable businesses. At the same time,
mercnand•se. no early birds.
3 Adorable, 8 Week old, pari
A look at what happened in busi- investors will take the news with Campbell is buying German soup S1amese kinens, 1·gray, ! ·black, 80
Public Sale
some equanimity. Then all they'll maker Erasco Group, from Grand 1· 1ongtd ha•red wlwhilt paws.
ness this past week:
and Auction
Accepting what looks like the have to panic about is what the Fed Metropolitan PLC and buying back 30&lt;-773-5340.
Wedemeyer's
.-.u·c tton Servtc&amp;.
up to $2.5 billion of its own stock, S Puppieo. 3 Block, 2 Brown, Blue
will do the next time it meets.
lnevilable·
GaH~io. Ohoo 614-379-2720.
Eyes,
112
Husky,
8
Weeks
Old
.
Auto sales, talks
moves investors cheered.
Much of the economic news that
614·440· 7821, 61•·44&amp;-655.
Rtck Pear1on Auction Company,
IN BETWEEN: Rubbermaid,
Not every economic sector is
came out this past week seemed to
lull 11me aucltoneer . complete
6
Bee
eo
..
,
e••·ZS&amp;·11in
point the way to higher interest rates: booming. Auto sales. which were whose stock fell 13 after the compaeuc:rion
setYice .
l tcensed
The Index of Leading Indicators, an strong the first half of the year._weak- ny warned that the rising cost of raw Black Female CCKker Chow Mix, 166,0hio &amp; WUI Vt~gtnta . 304 ·
To Run &amp; Play Good Wtlh 773·5765 o.- 304· 7735&lt;41
economic weather vane, was up in ened in August, with overaU sales materials would cat into its profits. Uke
ChHdren, 014-.. Hl:JeO.
July. Corporate purchasing managers down a liitle more than 2 percent. Car The same day the company
90 Wanted to Buy
and wood pile to giYeaway,
said the manufacturing sector got sales were the weakest - sales of announced it would buy Graco Chil- Coal
Comple18 Household Or Es1a1es 1
you cJe:an up, 614·949-2582.
Any Type 01 Fur011ure. Appltanc ·
stronger in July. And the unemploy- pickups. minivans and span-utility dren's Products Inc. for $320 million.
Couch &amp; 3 cheira 10 give away es, Anttqua·s , Ere. Also Appra•sal
Ticker
ment rate fell as hundreds of thou- vehicles continue to do well. so
30H7S.2535.
Availablel 614·379-2720
Chrysler, with a big lineup of mini- Boeing announced new airplane
sands of new jobs were created.
Four
female
cats·
3
gray
and
one
Absolute Top Dolla r All U.S S•l ·
The reports all indicated an econ- vans and Jeeps, reported its sales orders wonh almost $7.5 billion. ~ack, 61•·992-7378.
ver And Gold Co1ns. Prootse1 s,
while Airbus lndustrie said it had $3
omy that's strong and growing. But rose.
Otamonds. AniiQue Jewelry, Go ld
Cars are especially vulnerable if billion in new business. The orders free firewood- yow c~Vyou haul R tngs. Prt - 1930 u .S Cuuenq.
for the most pan. there w~ little of
-119::5-:.;3=256:=:·- - - - - - - l Sterling, EIC Acqut!ltltons Jewelty
the hysteria one might have expect- they're not new and exciting. Gener- were announced at an air show in 804:::_:
free To Good Home, Mother &amp; 5 · U .T.S. Cotn Shop, 151 Second
ed from (inancial markets that have al Motors' car sales were down a Britain ... Staples, the office supply Kmens, Mixed BriMICI Dog &amp; WaCk Avenue, Galttpolts, 614 -4A6· 2842.
gone ballistic lately at a whiff ~f sharp 14 percent, reflecting the com- superstore, cemented a deal to buy Lab, 614-4Al -18al .
Cla 1 n Lale Model Cats Or
-rival Office Depot for$3.35 billion ...
-----·1 Trucks, 1g9o Models Or Newer,
higher rates. There was some shaki- pany's aging model lineup.
8
a, e Weeki, llt;k Mele; Smith Bu,ck Ponltac, 1goo East ·
Meanwhile, Fond won the contest The nation's big retailers had mixed Killen
Yellow Female, light Sand Fe ·
ness - the mark«;! dropped after
Grey /Sand Female, e14· em Avenue. GaRtpolls.
male,
some of these reports came out but to be the United .Auto Workers' tar- sales in August, but there were still
1 D's Aulo Parll Buytng ut .
later reco~cred- And Thursday, retail- get as the Big three nesotiate new signs that overall business and con- _;_~*;:..:-3::,:769=:..-------I Jvage
vehtcles . Selttng pans 304 ·
Kiltena- one blaCk malo, two gray 773-5033.
ing stocks dove on fears that higher labor contracts. The UAW didn't offi- sumer demand are good.
ligen. liner trained , 814 · 7.. 2·
rates would prompt consumers. to cially announce Ford as the choice,
Coming up:
.:11:.:6_;;7·- ------------1 Top dollar· anllques . lurntlurt .
MONDAY: The Federal Reserve gluo, chono, clocks. gold,,,,,.,,
curb theif,iihopping in the commg but both the company and the union
. fi
llema To Givtawa~,
ld
red
acknowledged
that
UAW
leaden
had
~~:leases
July
consumerc
It
tgures.
All
II
ems.
Call
Allor
co1no, wa!Chel, •""'"'· o '"ne
mo~ths . • ·
.
TUESDAY: The Commerce .;.;.;~~~!:!~7~119~7~· ----l ;oro,
old bluo &amp; whole d''""· old
Tbe wcitry is that the economy 1s selected the No. 2 automaker.
wood boxes, mttk bOIIIes, Me•gs
As the target, Fond might have to Department releases ~nd-quarter 60 Lost and Found
coun1y Adverusomenl, Osby
so strOng that it will rekindle higher
inllation without a dose of h1gher suffer a strike, but the risk of a walk- current account trade figures, while ,...--,-...,.,.--,.....,,.-~~ Marlin. 814·992-7.. 1
Gloouo In Cou AI 73 Want~ lor 1 good cauae-Mort interest rates to cool things down. out is wonh it to the company the Labor Department releases sec:- Found:
Pina SUMI. GaMipoio. ldontHy At
•
GaiUpolis Dolly Tribuna, 825 Third boro Untimileo or ~ovonturo
The Federal Reserve dispenses such because it will have more control ond quaner productivity numbers.
over a contrtli;t than the other
WEDNESDAY: The Fed releases - · Odpolla
~~~~~';'l::0);;'1':' 11 por
medicine.
Like anyone who often needs to automakers who'will follow it
its Beige Book of regional econom- Loll: mole block ell na&amp;r Union wanted 10 Duy 3 or ~ 11 me
Wianen, ben, Ia bctweca
ic activity.
Awnue, loting fur, nttd• ~j.. ducks, white or mallard, milt or
repeat a task over and over before it
1
THURSDAY:
Labor
releases
calion,
plooMc:elle • -rm-s 7' 8·
- · · 514·992·5421.
.
WINNERS:
Young
doctors
decidbecomes second nature, the financial
weekly
jobless
claims
and
August
LOST:
Fomoto
Brillony
Spont.l,
Wonltd
To
Buy
Uood
Mobile
ing
to
go
into
family
practice.
The
markets have to go throu'gh a certain
oranna&amp;whilt.GrnrRdtrtl.
Homn C1 11 : et•• ·•••&amp;01750
.
•·
·
r
amount of hand-wrinsins before they Journal of the American Medical producer prices.
804-G75-541t .. 30&lt;-675-13211.
304~75-511115.
~
FRIDAY:
Labor
releases
August
Assol:iation
reported
that
the
demand
can accept and live with the prospect
•
d Co
erce Loll: Siom••• Col Goorgoa wanted To Buy: Junk Autoa Wnh
of higher rates. That's what went o.n for family doctors is catching up to consumer, pnces
an
mm
CrNk, Kelly Dri•• VlciOIIJ. 01•· 0 , Without llotora. c 111 L•"Y
demand
for
specialists
because
of
the
announces Auzust retail sales.
-3180.
Lively. SU-388·831Xl.
this .put week, and in all the previous weeks when stock and bond the growth of managed care.

..

1990, when Iraq first incurred West-

ern wrath with its invasion of Kuwait,

Soulhlork Showbar, PI Pleasam,
WV. Calt alltr 6 :30pm Wedne, .
day lhru SarurCSAy, 304·6iS.5955.

" POSTAL JOBS"
Allonlton: Galltpohs
$12.88 tHr To S1an, Plus Btmelus.
Ceruer s, Soners, CompuUH
Trainees. Matmenanca. Call To ·
day FOf' Apphcarion And lnlorma tlon, 6 A.M. To 8 P.M 7 Days. 1-

8011-261·5715, Ext P61 .

AVON I All • Areas I Shllley
Spears, 304·675·1-429.

100WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble Crafts, Wood llems.
Matertats Prov1ded. To $480 +
Wk Free l1'11ormal ton Pkg 24 Hr

$45,000 income porenrlal.

Hll0·51J.•:MJ E11.S.g:J118.

Hostesses Wanted : Eern lree tcf· ·
UCIIiOnll toys, book I Or CO"'C)Uter .
software,
no! have them lllrn

wrv

as !hey play. Call
30&lt;-675·5761 .

Kim br dollill. ·

lmmedil'te' Opemngs A~ailaDie ·
Fo r Cerulled Nurse Aides. Full .
Ttme And Pan Ttme . New In·
surance Package Available,
Compet•llvt Wages, Olflertntial
Whh Erperience. Sign On Bonus .
Avatlable. Equal Opportunity Em·
player. Contact P intcreat Care·
Cenl&amp;r, 170 Pinecresl OriYe, Gel·
ltpolis, Oh•o 45631, 014 ·446·.
71 12.
Maregemeru
Looktng lor all !wets of e•pet;·

ence. SupeNisors, Marwg8fl,
Mngr. Tratneel. Great growfl po.
1an118l. Excellanl Benefir Ptio.. &amp;01&lt;
and bonus J)fDC18ms. Climb tht
Cartef ladder wnt'l us. Local op.
porluntnes avatla~e. Send r&amp;·
sume to · llnle Caetars. PO. Qox
10, Barboursvttte. WV 25504 or
CaN 8')().622·DSGA

1·80 1·263-4034
Able • von Represenlallves
needed. Earn money lor Christ ·
mas bills at homeJal work . 1·800·
992·6356 or 304 ·882 ·2645, lnd

Ae p.

Men/Women earn $480 weeltty
asse mbltng etrcutl boardlleltc · ..
tronic components at home. Ex- ..
pe,ience unnoceuary, will trltn . 1o
lmmedtate openings your local
area . Call 1·520, 680 · 7891 ext

01&lt;5~

1----- - - - - - ing AppUcattontlor The Following Needed Babyslllor In Mr, Home .
ACCESS Head S1ar1

IS

Accepl·

~SIIion :

F.or 2 Chtldren Mercervil e Atta ,

BUS DRIVERS - GALLIA

~ ~~~·~0~4l~L~OO~~~~~~~
Do

You

Lo•e

To

YAK On Tho

COUNTY :

Applicant s MUST
HAVE A H •gh School Otploma
Preference Given To Appltcan ls
Po suus•ng A Commer•cat Ortv ·
ers l tconse Wtth SchOol Bus En·
do rsomenl. Bog•nn tnQ Rale 01
Pay Is $6 00 IHr. Pr8vtous Exper t·
ence Wtlh HeaC Sllrt Or Simdat
Progam Prelefred.

Phone? We Do 1 We Ge1 Patd '
Welt To Oo Itt . we·re Soekmg
Personable Ptopte To Work ·
From Thetr Homes Conducttng
Surveys Ou1ing Lat e Ah&amp;rnoon &amp; '
Evening Hours No long Oil· ,
lance Calli Or Selling Involved
Call Jean To ll Ftee Ar 888· 98!5·
9222 For Detatl!i

Ambtltous mtnded people! $1000
weekly pollnttal. Many po sitions
avatlable. Slart now, no expa11 ·
ence nec:essa•y. Call 7 day s.

Domtno's P•zza . PI Plenanr ~ ·
hmng for all POS•Itons 30•·875· .

401·87S.:1tll2.exl 05981133
AmblltOUI Minded Peoplet 11,000
Wkly PotenltaL Man~ Postt•ons
Avatlable Srart Now, No Expttt·
ence Neceuary. Call 7 Days

407-875-2022 E11. 0526 H33

Babysitter needed l01 12 Y'- Old l5 days a wecMim our home. ttktr·
encu requtreC. eventn~ hours .
814 ·992·f!QJ2
CALL Today, STAAT Tomorrow!
St.OOO Stgn.Qn Bonus Hutng
Flalbed Ouvers . Al l Mtle s Pa td
New Scale). ltle !Htallh, Bonus 1
NEW
Rider Program . ECKMtller
'
1 · 800 · 611 · 6~36 . Owner Opera ·
lOtS Also Welcomed!

Child care neoded lor my 16
monlh old son . pall· tome. day
houri 30.4 ·075· 3578 alter SerH
lOih

CIRCLE ME?
Get A Head S1ar1 Jn This Fall
App ly ' Today Slat! Tomorrow

S2•0 ·$325 Weekly
CALL LISA TDLL FREE
, ..... ~32-7371

Computtr Uurt Nttded . Work.

Own Houro. 20K To SSOK /Yr. I·

800-348-71110 X 1173.
Dtsk Clerk. Exptrtenct A Musil

In Par1on At Econo lodge,
2110 Joekoon Plko, Galpohl

Appl~

Work From Your Homo. Earn A
Lorge Income, 814-441.0117, Toj
Frle:I -8ltl-l2!l-ll52

sese.

Ea&lt;n $1 .000 Weekly Siulhng En- ·
Y&amp;lope s At Home. Stan Now. No ,
Etponence free Sup~ltes, Into.
No Obltgal•on Sond lSASE To •
ACE . D"P' 1351 , Bot 5137. Ota·
mondBar. CA 91765
Eatn 1000's wetkly 11ullmg en .
vetopes a1 home. Be rour bOll.
Stan now No eapertenct Frte
suppltes mlo. no obligation. Send
S.A.S.E lo Nugget Unl! 36~ · 8.
10151 Untven•ty Blvd Otlando

Fl.32814
Ea,n What You Are Worth! Enjoy
large Income Worktng From
Home. Toll Free 1·888-200-7501 ,
.
614 . 44 8- 1236

E~tpertenced Carpenll!t · hiVt '
own tools . must be abte ro run
-.
rtltdanttal butld•ng from ground
up, h&amp;attng and cooltng ta:pfrl. ,
tl an IIHI, pay r'ltgotflta,
'·

.

�••

r

Page D4 • .-..... • ...__. nul.
Help Wanted

110

OfFI::E ClERICAl
Due 10 promotion w need a !MY·
roll and AlP clerk. Fall poced job

110

Help

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,
230

Someone to
Ill be
with elderly
evenlnga,
must

of our team of high achicwara,

send resume or apply to : Rockspring• Rehab Center, 38759
Ro cksprings 'Rd ., Pomeroy, OH

TRAINEES WANTED
URN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
ACareer In f'ainting, Pturri&gt;ing Or

Po\ INTER

GED IHigh School Diploma Pro·

Electroniu Repair. No Tuition.

EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
A Career As A Painter. learn
The Basica Of The latest Tech·
niques. No Tuition . GEO /HiQh
School Diploma Program Avail ·
able . Housing, Meals, Medical
Care And Paycheck Provi(fed.

Agu te ·24. Job Corps -A U.S.

Oep.,tment 01 Labor Prooram.

CaN

1·800·733-JOBS, Ext. 90.

Part-time cashitw, must be t8yrs
old . Crawford's Grocery Hendar.

eon WV. Pto. 30"675-5404.

Persons Needed To Work With
lndJvlduals With Mental Retard&amp;·
lion And Developmental Ditabili·
ties.. Provide Respite / Relief Care
As N&amp;eded By Parents . These
Servtces W•ll Be Needed On An
Occas1onal Basis. Compensation
Wtll Be $41 .00 Per Hour. lmeresr·
ed AppliCants Should Apply AI
The Galtia County Board Of MRI

00, PO. Bo•

14, 8323 North State

Route, Cheshire, Ohio 45620 Or

Phone 614·367-7371 . The Gallia
County Board 01 MRIDD Is An
Equal Opporturity Employer.
PHARMACY . DIRECTOR

Pharmacy Systems, Inc. A lead er In Hosp~al Philrmacy Manage·
ment Seeks Director Of Pharmacy
For Veterans Memorial Hospital.
-Support Provided For J.Aanage·
ment, JCAHO Compliance And
Clinical Activities . Interested
Pharmacist ShOI.IId Contact Jim

1·800·269-7879

Sunday, ~~ •• 1996

wv

&gt;sunday, September 8, 1996 .

wante~d~~~11~0=;He:;:;;lp~Wa;:;n:ted:¥::;;;~180;;=~w;a::nt;,ecl:.~1i~o~Do~=iF-==:=:=:=:=:=::yi31~o~Ho:;me:;s~to:;r~Sa~le~~320=M~o~b~lle~Ho~me~s~1§35~0~L~o~ts~ft~~~C
1e

requoreo typlnQ. IOiephone rtcop- ;aaoble~and~o~n~tome~.~~~~-~
tion and compullr erperience Stare &amp; food demonstrators
holptut~Rod!springo is a leadet in needed. Expe~ence helpful, bur
PfOYIGing IUIIaCUie rehabilitation not necessary, good pay, 330and medical aervices . To be part 53S-174g (also lax).

457~ .

r.

gran:' Availabte. Housmg, Meals,

&amp;Aedical Care And Paycheck Provided. Ag&amp;s 16 -24. Job Corps· A

U.S. Department Or labor Pro ·
gram. Call 1·800·733-JOBS Ext
90.
•
.
~

WILIX.IFE ICONSERIIATION

lHE CLEANING DOCTORS

Professional
ServiceS

for Sa

FIJ'DUCEO TO SELLII

3 Bedroom Home

In

Rio Grande

HARTS MASONARY · Block. Acrou From Jumbo. New Roof NEWI Bank Rtpo's, only 3 left,
JOBS
·
brick &amp; time work, 30 years ex- Ano Carpot With Detached Ga· still under warranty, fi'N deliver~
Game Wardens,
Stcurity, t.Aaintenance. Etc. No Exp. Necessary. eu. Call Toll Free For Eatlmotea perience, reasonable rates. 304 · rage On 1.9 Acres MIL. S59.500 &amp; SO!·Up. 304·755-7101.
Now Hiring . For Info Cal l (219) 1·888·810·0700, Or 614·245· 895·3591 after 8:00pm, no job to Phone e14-286·2554.
79.4-0010 Ext 8710, g A.M. To 11 0701 . Lot Ua Doctor Up Your amal or 1D BIG. WV-D21206
Older Schultz hoflt, own8f' Occu·
Housel
Tt1ree bedroom hon\e in country. pied , 2 bed,oom, eiceller,r fa~
f'M. 7 Dayo.
Whitedlil Ret.. Rutland. one bath,
REAL ESTATE
Will Care For Elderly Lady In
young or retired cou~e. priCed on
in-oround pool, 814-9Q2-5067.
Wlllll.lfEICONSERI/ATION
1n~U"~Artion . 304·675-5394 .
The.- Home. 614-448-11388.
JOBS
_,.......
Union Avenue , Pomeroy,1 two
UNBELIEVABLEU
310
Homes
for
Sale
bedrooms, 8 rooms. central heat
Now hir ing Game Wardens, Se ·
SINGLE WI DES ·"·- -;. ••:.;.~.~
FINANCIAL
and air, carpeted 1hroughout, one
curity, Maintenance , Park Rang3 Bedroom House For &lt;Sale In car garage, basement. M~o~st see ONLY ... , DOWN, ALL
OOUBLEWIDES IN STOCK
e r s. No exper.ence nece5ury.
New Haven $&lt;4,000 304·882· to appreciale, 814·992· 5322.
For app Jicat •on and m lo call t · 21 0
ONLY StU DOWN, LOW
Business
3772. &amp;1•·992·5641.
40 7· 338·6100 , ext WV135c. 8am ·
MONTHLY PAYMENTS, FREE
Opportunity
9pm, 7days.
DELIVERY AND SET·UP, ONLY
3 Bedrooms. 1 112 Bath Horne On 320 Mobile Homes
AT OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO
112 Acre, $32 .000 Mercerv ille.
for Sale
!NOTICE!
WILIJLIFEICONSERIIATION
wv. 304-75$-5885
614·256·1160.
JOBS
'76 Madison . three bedrooms . I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Residential a Commercial Cleanini. Will Cover Surrounding Ar-

Now Hiring Game Ward&amp;ns. Se-

TRAINEES WANTED
curity, Maintenance. f'ark RangEARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For ers. No Ex11 Necouary. For ApA Career Aa An Optic •an ·a As- plation And Info Cah .007-:!38• •atam Or In Health Service
6100. Eort. OH316C, Sam ·9pm, 7
Food Preparalion Or Buainessi days.
Clerical. No Tuition. GED IHigh
School Diploma Program Avail - 180 Wanted To Do
able . Housing, Meals, Uedical

recommends that you do business with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
ma11 unt11 yolJ have •nvestigated
!he olfering.

3 Bedrooms. 2 Bartls , L•v•ng
Room . K11chen . Full Basement,
Garage Pat•o. Garage Carport, 2
Bwtdinos. 2 Acres, 7 t.A•Ies From
Gallipolis On State Route 7.

112 baths, on

1

440

576-277V.

~unting camp

.

lite•. county water

electric, road, lhade, Beaver Oani
Creek, 112 acre, 30·0/0 off. 304 .

~~578~·~21~5~2.;;:;-j~~;;-;id.Yv;;;
on Rayburn Rd. Water
paved road , rea1onable rtsitic:

tions. 30•·875·5253. (no aingt ..
inquires ple&amp;W)
...:..~:...._.:.._...;__ __

woO&amp;

Scen1c 16 acres lor campgro~o~nd
ot llOusmg or !arm, creek, gravel

Meigs County : Huntera. Very
Remote ll + Acrn 18.500 AGO 7
·Adjoining Acres For $8,000. Nice

road, county wa1er, electric,
$29,500. 10·010 oil cash. 304·
578·2152.

AUCTION

14x70 Mobile Home On 2 Acres
MIL Privare Sewno. lots 01 Ex·
rras. 81&lt;4 -441!-1612.

Gallia County; Jual North Or
Huntington 3 Miles Out Teens

Date: September 14, 1996" nme: 10:00 a.m(
Place: Jackson County Auction Center: 1· 77 exH 111313
$89,000, 614·256-8215.
CLASSIC . OUTDOOR WOOO
to US 33 West .5 of a mile. Auction Center on left In
FURNACE IS The. Molt Efticlent 5 Rooms, Bath, City, Forced Air 14x70 Schultz 2 Bedrooms, 2
Ba
ths.
Covered
Deck,
6
14-367·
Bottom. Follow signs.
And lowest Emissions Outdoor Furnace, Central Air, Carpe_
ted
Care And Paycheck Provided . Any Odd Jobs, pa i nting, shrub Wood Furnace On The Market. Floors, Storm Windows, Doors, 7920.
We have been commissioned tQ sell the ln~'8111:ory
Ages t8 -24. Job Corps -A U.S. trimming , sidewalk edging, com, Central Boiler Is Currently lootl- Vinyl Siding, lot eex1 50, Priced
1970 Buddy 1216S $5.500 614· Grubstake Cove Crafts. Treasurers and Colllll:~ablesJ
Oeparrment Of labor Program . plate lawn care, driveway&amp; sealed, ing For A Quality Dealer In This At: S34,900, e14·446 ·45 79.
446· 143Q, lot24 Par,k lane.
Can 1·1100·73:hJOBS, En 90.
home weatherization . 304 ·675 · Immediate Area . For Information
This will be an absolute Auction of complete
7112.
On Becoming A Dealer Or For A Brick 3J1 Garage Workshop, Cel·
1979 12X60 liberty 2 Bedropms,
Inventory
for the creation of cralts, also hand maoile 1
West. Virginia Cold Drawn ha3 job
lar 1 1t2 Acres. Trailer Space,
Free Brochure Call 1·800 ·248·
New Carpet. Very Good Condi open1ng lor mater1al handlers and Child ca re in my Che11er home, 4681 Or 1·218·782·2575.
crafts.
Rodney 61111· 245--5486.
uon, $7.000, 614-446-7395.
cold drawn mill operalor. Job re· close to school, also alter school
PARTIAL USTING
quirements: High school degree child care, experiencecl and refer · Earn large income, lose weight,
By Owner : 1f2 Acre, 3 bedroom,
1980 Skyhne 2 Bedrooms. 1 8ath ,
Indian craft supplies, quilting, ~atting and qu11"''1SII
or GEO, pre· assessment tests , erces, 614·985-4174 .
leel grea t, be healthy, lor more basement. Gra ce •n JO's . 8 14·
8x1 2 Covered Deck , 4x8 Uncov·
and mandatory drug tesung .
-'446 ·9706.
info. cau :J&gt;4-675-365g.
books. lace. ribbon, bows, CMstmas and Easter
ered, Excellent Con&lt;hhon . Sl!ual ·
Chr istian CNA Desires Position
Please submit resume and appli·
supplies, angel supplies, leathe~ lacing 'a~~\loeje
By Owner . Cny Schools , Sanders ed On Rented lot Or Move. 614 ·
A\Y PHONE ROUTE
cation to Bureau of Employment Caring For Elderly In Your Non·
Dnve, CA . Ranch , V1ny1 S1ding, 256· 1011.
35Local &amp; Established Sttes
Progams , 225 Sixth St. Pt. Pleas- smoking Home. Experienced In
pieces, wooden supplies (balls, Mnobs, ~};foiim
Recenvy Aemo~OCI. L.R., D.R.. 2 1992 Clayton 14x70 2 Bedrooms,
ant WV 25550.
Home Care . References . Days
Earn Up To $1 ,500 Wkly.
Only, $6.00 Per Hour. 614·446· ::--::--'·600-·6_96-·4_9..:.80_ __ Baths, 3 Br., F1nished Basement. 2 Baths , Excellent Cond•t•on. 5% supplies (eggs, block cones, ball~) Hollday- a~d .
Wear Virginia Cold Drawn has a 4
F.R. , Deck. $69,000 614·446·
paper decorations. beads (pony, $eed; ron~!!ll~
Down Financ ing Available, 614 ·
525.
Steel Butldmg Dealerstup. Manu ·
9324.
job opening lor maintenance pos•·
spooled beadtrlm) bridal supplies, brooms, Abac;a
245·9102.
lion. Job requirements : At least 2 Georges Portable Sawmill. don't lacturer Awardmg Dealership In
material,
baskets, grapevine supplies. Hand quilt~
year degree (associates) in tech- haul your logs to the mill· just call Select Open Markets. Advertis - Clifton , 1 t/2 story, 3-bdrm. 2 car
1992 Skyline, 14x70 w110x20
3Q4-67S·1957.
·
ing, Engineenng. Trainmg Semi - garage, heated workshop, 24'
nical school , PLC programming,
room addition, rhree bedroom, two
hoop
wall
hangings, Marx Historic Gun (in m~~~~~~in
nars. Ofscounted Start Up BUild - ab~e ground pool. $49,000- 304- lull baths, vinyl Biding, a1c wlheat
hydraulics, mechantcal, welding
jewelry,
numerous
glass and · polystone II
773-5134.
Sun
Valley
Nurser~
School
ings.
Big
Profit
Potential
On
Sales
and electrica l uper~ence pre pump. 614·992·4204 alter 5prn
tarred . J.Aandator~ drug leSf1ng , Childcare M·F 6am· S:30pm Ages And lOr Construction . 303-758 ·
paintings, silk flowers, straw hats, glue sticks; dlsoplalil
Extra nice · four bedroom, two
2 -K, Young School Age Ounng 413SExt.4200.
Please submtt resume and applt ·
1993 70xu CenrLJry 3 Bedrooms ,
racks, tables, and many more ~ems. ·
Summet. 3 Days per Week Mtnl · :-----=----- bath , cenrra l hear and air, extra 2 Balhs, Hear Pump, S~~rung, One
cation to Bureau ol Employmem
""m614-4&lt;8-36S7.
VENDING : LAZY PERSON'S lot. large home, low utihty bills, OWner, $22:500. 513-1144·6054
AUCTIONEERS NOTE:
Programs, 225 Sixth St. Pt PleasDREAM. Few Hours • Big $$ . Ra6na, S•3,500 , 6141 -949 · 3075,
an\ WV 2S550.
All
craft
merchandise
Is new wi!h figurines In good
614 -949·3034.
Will Sell Cheap. 1·800-e20-4353.
1994 14x76 Fleetwood 2 bed excellent
condition.
This
will be a l13ngthy, bul
room, 2 bath, ElK, LR, all etecrric ,
3Dedroom , Dalh , ilvmg room w1
clean sale. Preview items 1 hour before sate
c1a , appl iances, skylights, garden
hardwood ttoors , k11chen &amp; d•nmg tub, many extras. No money down,
Every1hing sells as is. No warranty implied. Cash
area together. new roo!, garage, payoll. or take over loan ol
on Rt 2. 30ol -675 · -4139 or 304 · s21.80o. 304· n3-5302.
Pre-approved Check with photo t.D. No Out Of
675·7326 aher 6 : ~ .
Checks.
~
1997-2 &amp; 3 Bedroom, S995 down.
GOV'T FORECLOSED Homes $195/mo. Free delivery &amp; set-up,
Owners: Boyd L. Peterson 6 Freda C. Peterson;
For Penmes On $1 Delinquent only at Oak Wood Homes, Nitro
AucUoneers: Col. John D. McCollum WV 11189·
Taa, Aepo ·s . Reo·s. Your Area . WV 304-75S.SB8S.
Jearl Barnette WV 11008
•
Toll Free {1) 800·898-977e Ext.

FOR SALE
MUMS $1.00 EACH
DAVIDSON'S
GREENHOUSE
OFF RT. 218
256-1140

GRUBB'S PIANO
TUNING SERVICE
Pari$ repaired, replaced, rebuiH.
".,,,~replaced. Need your piano
or restored? Call Bob Grubb
614·446·4525 Gallipolis, OH

House Plus 29 .8 Acres 3 Bed ·
rooms, 2 Baths. 2 t/2 Car Ga ·
rage, Baesment , Pool. 614-245-

NEW SHIPMENT
LIVING ROOM SUITESSOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRICED $450 TO $995

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment
SA-22
Cancelled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior
Insurance

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure
everyone!
AUTOHIO
Phone

(614 )446·6111

Gallipolis
SHOP AND $AVE NOW!
Serta Mattress
$59.00
Bed Frames
$19.95
Bassett Sola Sleepers $499 .00
4 Drawer Chest
$49.95
la·Z·Boy Recliners
$299.00
pc. Bedroom Suite
$499.00
FLAIR FURNITURE
675-1371
Gallipolis Ferry, WV
ACRYLIC NAILS
by: Elisha Meadows now at
BODY CONCEPTS
Special $30.00 Reg. $40.00
Call lor Other Specials
675·5246
THANK YOU
STAR BANK
For Purchasing My 1996
MARKET HOG at the
1996 Gallia County Jr. Fair
TRAVIS MOONEY

"Cook Out"
Where: 0.0. Mcintyre Park
Shelter No. 1
W~•An · Monday Sept. 9

6:00 pm until dark.
Donations will be accepted.
Paid for by committee to elect Glenn Smith
Engineer. Jay JarviS Treasurer, 10 Evans

Heights. Gallipolis I

•

•

BOOTS
All Leather Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
large Stock
Engineer.. ..................... _.$49.00
Wellington ............. .........$49.00
Loggers .... .......... ........... $50·55
Harness ....................... .$59.00
Carollna-Georgla·H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex
SWAIN FURNITURE
62 Olive St. Gallipolis
NURSERY
Offering a selection of Mums,
Perennials, Rare Herbs, Shrubs
for your fall planting.
831 Centenary Road, 'Gallipolis
Ohio Phone 247·4565, 446-0936
10-7

LANE MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1195
Mon. thru Sat. 9·5 p.m. 446·0322
3 miles out Bulavllle Pike

$500

REWARD
For information regarding four
stolen saddles that leads to
the saddles' return or
conviction of the thieves.
Saddles were stolen 9/4/96
between 7 a.m. 1 p.m. on
Patriot Rd.
Reward valid through 1011/96
Call Skip McGovern
379-2932

MEET THE

WHYBUYNEW

DEMOCRAT

FURNITURE

CANDIDATES
CHILl SUPPER
VINTON COMMUNITY PARK
FREE - FREE
EVERYONE WELCOME!!
SEPTEMBER

16, 1996

6:00P.M .
BAING LAWN CHAIRS
24x1Ji METAL BUILDING
2-10 Ft. Doors/
Side entrance door. $3,000
You take down. put on your lot.
614·446·2151
Leave message.
FULL STOCK BLACK
ANGUS COWS AND BULL,
USED CORN EQUIPMENT,
ROUND BALES OF HAY.

614·682· 7874
ANTIQUES FOR SALE
BY OWNER
2 Dressers With Mirrors
1 Clock
1 Bookcase
1 Wall Mirror
8 Pictures
All items will be sold only
Sept. 9th &amp; 10h,
5 p.m. loS p.m.
Ca11441 -0316

5378,

Offers will be received at the oflice of Bernard V. Fultz, 111 112
West Second Street Pomeroy
Ohio until Seplember
1996
11 :00 O'Clock a.m. lor the pur ·
chase ol lhe late Rosa lie King
and Charles King res idence situ··
aled on StaTe Route 143 in Scipio
Township, Meigs County, Ohio .
lntere&amp;ted persons may examine
lhe premises by calling Charldine
Al~ire Bl 614·992-5435 lor an apPOintment. The right is reserved
to r&amp;~ect any and all offers.
A.ma G. ShlJier, EQCutor
of tie Estate ol Rosalie King, deceased.

2o.

MAKE YOUR
FURNITURE AS
GOODASNEW
UPHOLSTER!
We offer a large selection
of fabrics. New Foam &amp;
Expert Craftmanship.

l •mn8d Oller1 1997 aoubtew1de ,
3br, 2bath, $1799 aown, S279J
month. Free de11ve ry &amp; setup .
Only at Oakwood Homes, N•tro

WV. 304-755-SBSS.

New uxeo On ly make 2 pay.

ments &amp; move·in. no payment af·
ter 4 years, free set-up &amp; delivery.

304·755-5885.

10% Off Cash Purchates . Call
·For Map--. Owner Financ ing In·

twrr.tlon.

Clyda - J r . , 304-5711-23311.

RENTALS
,410 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroora house for rent, large

lot, In City.304-875-1699.

3 Be~room house, central air,
$350/mo + utilities, references &amp;
·secu rity deposit required . 30&lt;4·

773·5698.

JR.
9nt65 1121/96
Happy Birthday #31
There can be no words

port, $325/mo. plus deposit, no
pet1, references required. call

.814-gG2.:J.457 aflor 3pnn

fjiee two bedroom home in Po·
rneroy, no pol&amp;, 614-002·5658.

Dreama Cremeans
for continually
making the
Dean's List.
You're now an LPN,

Auctioneer:

,

We're proud of you!
Hubby,
Kids &amp; Friends

. Rohdonda Hardin- Ownli}'

SOLID MAPLE - 30X36

614-446-4044
NEWnviJn;:,
'TWIGGY'S KOUNTRY KITCHEN
RACINE, OH.
6AM·7 PM WEEKDAYS
7 AM-6 PM SUNDAYS

.•.
.,.

~

..

- port, very nice, $4DO per monttl,
t pay own utilities, no pets, deposit

I ..:req..::.u:.;""'=·6:.;'_4·..:.99...;2_;·Zl8..:.;_1_._ __

~ Two bedroom house, stove and

f relri=rar, no inside pets, 814' 992·
'
o wttzgall Street, POmeroy. 3 BeG·
!: lOOm HOUit, $350/Mo., Deposit
, Required, 513-574-2539.

,....

614·388·9318.
..!. ....:..__ _ _ __

2 Bedroom-very nlco, ,_ porch·

ea. nlct jard-near l&lt;hooi·Callfor·
• ~1. S2!501mo-Phono 304·882·

Small furnished elliency In Pt . chair $30, play ~ard S-*0, Jenny
PleasanL WV S195tmo +deposit.
304-675-n83.
Twtn RIVers Tower. now accepting
applications lor 1br. HUO subsid·
•zed apt . !or elderly and hand• ·
cappecl. EOH 30&lt;-67S.£879.

Furnished
Rooms

I Coomorv

Saturday,
September 14 at ~---~t'"l

Furniture. 304 -8 75-6820
6m1les , Pt Pleasant , WV.
Tues-Sat&amp;-6. Sun1 \·5.

Gtbson c he st treezer, 20 .3cu 611
VGC . S200. ~4 - 773-5950

Petrlot Auction Bam
From Galtlpotla, Take Route 141, Turn Left onto
State Route 775, Turn Right Onto Patriot Road.
Approx. 10 miles from Galtlpolla.
Lots of new galv. duct works, new stove
pipe, new refreigator ice makers, hood tops,
all sizes of wood burner stove ptpe, boxes of
refrigator parts, new heating coils. new fuel
oil furnace, lots of boxes load of new parts
for dryer, auto washers and refrigerators
parts use fuel oil heating stove, lots of hand
tools' lots of box loads, and lots of misc.
items, not listed, cabinets, sofas, chairs,
stands, cleaning outer barn, much, much,

GOOD USED APPLIANC ES

&amp; movie1 Call 614 · 446 · 2588
Equal Housing Opportunity.

Star11ng at $120/n\0. Gallia Hotel.
614·446·9580

Us&amp;d FurnitlJre 130 Bulaville Pike,
Bedroom Su•tes , Bunk Beds,
Table/Chairs . Couches. End ta ·
bles.. 61 .._ 446 .4 782.

Charming Counoy Conage 2 l!e&lt;f.
Room. $450/Mo., Plus
"""· 614·245-5053.

Oaposi~

No

Furnished Efliciency 3 Rooms ,
Bath, All Utilities Paid, Downstairs,
S2651Mo., 919 Second Avenue ,
Furniahed Efficiency Central Heat
And Air Conditioning, Private
Parking, Utilities Furnished, Ex ·

cept Electr~. 614-4&lt;6·21102.

Gracious 11v1ng. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments in M•ddle·

992·506&lt;4. EqLJal Housing Oppor-

turities..
New-1 bedroom apt, deposit re·

quired, $270/mo. 30•·e7S-3100·
Days or 304-875-SSOQ oftar Spm.

Nice 2 Bedroom Furnished
Apartment , Gallipolis . laundry
Room, Air, No Pets, S3651t.4o.,

Pluo Oaposit, 814-4&lt;8-2800.

Sleepmg rooms w1th cook•ng
Also trailer space on over All 1---'------:::-::~-hook -ups. Call alter 2 :00p.m. ,
VrRA FURNITURE
et&lt;t-448·3158
'
304·773-5651 , Mason WV.
Quality Household Furn11ure And
460 Space for Rent •
Appliances. Great Deals On
Cash And Carry! RENT· 2·0WN
Mobile home lot tor rent. 304·675And Layaway A.tso Ava•lable
e984.
Free Dehv8fy W1th1n 25 M1I&amp;S
Trailer lot For Rent On Ball Run
,Road, $100/Mo., References Ae · Washer $95; Dryer S95 ; Jjteltigquired, 614·•4e·4111 Days ; 614 · erator Almond S75: Chest Freezer New Model S175 ; Skagga Ap245-0380 Everings.
pliances, 76 Vine Stroot, GallipoTrailer Space Fo r Rent, Addison, lis, Ohio 61• - ~6 -7398 .
6t4·446·3964, 6, 4·361 ·7438.
Washer /Dryer Reconditioned
Two mobtle home lots for rem. set 614-24S-594e, Cal After S~M .
up lor a11 &amp;lectr•c . located on a
larm •n the Hamsonvtlle / Me•gs Washer and Dryer $150 ; love·
Local area, hunung pnv1leges, no seat $200 2 year s old 614 · 36 7·
pats, 12 month tease . 614 · 742- 0206

3033.

470 wanted to Rent
Wanted to rent· house or trailer
In Uelgs or Mason coun 1y, call

6 14-1149-3303.

ptua

4088.

utilllin 30•·875·

'For Rant Or Salt: Land Contract
· ' 110x14 Two BR All Eltetrlc. CA.

ESTATE

1236.
White Ma lched Wash ·

Help Wanted

Gallla County Council on Aging (Senior Resource
Center) Is currently accepting · applications lor a 40
·hour per week coordinator position; pan time
888latanliclerlcsl,
personal care aides and
hornemakel8. Must have own trensportatton. Job
descriptions and applications available at senior
A880Urce Cente~ 1167 State Route 160; from 7:00
am. until 3:00 'p.m.
through Friday. All
poe111ona are
An Equal
Action
Management

We're aworld IAllnAr
Our growth
We're hiring

Some

· , E•callant Condldon, On Rented

Hke 3 Bedrooma, In MerceNillt
'Area, HUD Approved, 81 .. ·258·

857•.

bedroom mobile home
in Middleport, no ~Is, 814-992-

5858.

Trailer For Rent Overlooking Riv·
•

er In Kanauga, Foster's Mobile

• Homef'ark, 814.... 1·01e1.

VInton 1 Bidwell School District,

UOO

Dtpooll S2501Mo. tncludeo

There should be a very strong reason to bring your future to a company. In fact,
there should be several strong reasons. At Wendy's, there ar,. Our strtngth reflects that
of one of the country's leading restaurant chains. Our philosophy Is to ICllvely cultivate
top management talent by providing greater opportunities as our company grows... clear
paths to multi·unn management and beyond. Constder plans to add 1000 new lo.cattons In
the next lew years to our chain of over 4800 restaurants. Management opportuntttes at
Wendy's have never been st!onger.

Trash &amp; Wittr, Mull Have Ref·

Management Career OPPORTUNITIES

: - N o 1'1111. 01o4-36fl.113211.

: · ~o

Fanna for Rent
1
' Smoll URN For Hone Stable
: -AioGrlnda,814-24~558fl.
Apartments
tor Rent

· Picii-Up ~\d. NO PETSI Porter
. Area.014-388-1100.
' 2 tlodroom Apartment 1225/Mo..

SAT., SEPT. 14, 1996

1

Bring your manaoerialexporienu to us and/or acollege degree. and expect ..
compensation, benefits and career paths that are clearly exceptional. To explore opportunrttes
In Ute Poln1 Pltanni/GIII,olls, Chlrlti!OII, lftd lllntlngton 1r111,call Chris Jones,
Human Resources. at 1·100-a.tH111, til. 233,or forward your resume to Wendy's
lnttmittloRII, Inc., 5011 W. W11hlngton St., Crou Llntl, WV 25313, Ann: Chrla Jonea.
Equal Opportunity Employer

home. living room. kitchen. over sized

d~tached 2 car
garage . FA electric furnace . Add1t1onal mobile home hook ·

up .

1 Oo/o off Flue liners

Smeltzers Nursery

· ~·
4 ·-:

...

apacious

formal

Pomeroy . 2

.

2:

» •

&amp;

ts

7 Ott?'?

appolnlm_anll

992·2886

205 North Second Ave .
Middleport, OH

RODNEY • A year old 2 story home with a wraparound porch s rear deck, a 2 car garage. and a
fenced back yard . Home has 4 to 5 bedrooms, 2 1/2
baths, free standing gas fireplace, whirlpool bath,
sittin9 on almost an acre and much more. Shown by
apporntment only. '125,000.00
50 ACRES of vacant property on Rowesville Rd. In
Gallla CountY.. Hand dug and· drilled wells . on site.
Electric avatlable, 15 acre hayfield some limber.
1

45,000.00

dining room, 2 baths. Owner motivated

Br: ColonlaJ, full basement, 1 ac. with, large rooms, a

lillie work can makelhla e show horne $20,500.00
Many homes to choose from we need your listings
Dale E. Taylor (Broker)
992·5333

Real Estate General

RENT, 213
b~=~s~ bath. carport, rural water system. Sllltl
I"
. Needs some Tendtr·Lovlng Care. Pit Now •lor

River Front Proiiii'IY
7'D Fht Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
IT~~•ft• bids Sept. 8 thl'\l Sept. 20 With the right

1

&amp; appointment to see.

refuse any and all bids. For Information call
144o-7t512. Mall bids to: Dick Roberts, 622
IDrtve, Gallipolis, Ohio. Highest bidder will

ae

C *2tt23

3

?'Ct

•

• stt m

»=•

2z

.,.. '

PHONE OFFICE 441-,_
KEHNETH AMSBAIIY, PH. 241 5855
WIWS LEADINOHAM, BIIOKEII, PH. 441 .31

UIDIIIHAII

I'

·,

.

an

$42,500.00

LUNCH WILL BE SERVED BY THE UNITED MEmODIST WOMEN
If you bave questions, caD the Churdl omce at 446-0555.
• •

lor

OFFICE

272 East 2nd Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(614) 992-5333
Middleport . Bone Hollow-Nico 3 Bt well ~epl on 3 ac. beaulilul
yard-secluded ye1 close to town-good buy $25.000.00.
Pomeroy . Flatwoods · 3 Br, full basement large rooms. newer
home sining on .2 ac in a scenic area Wllh a babblong brook
behind~ . Must sea rOt $49,900.00
Mlddtepon . Bone Hollow · PriVately located on 1.75 ac 1·2 Br
mobile home 2 outbuildings, very low maintanence ONLY
$15,000.00
Pomeroy • Fixer -uppar has much potential, priced right
$5,500.00
AuUand . 3 Br Rench, brick. full basement. 2 car garage, vary

AUCTION

much, macb more.

today

Real Estate General

Dale E. Taylor Realty

;e1:4-:4·:·~::·:::::::::1------~========':u:b:l~:;s:.-::':A:u:~:~::::::::::~------,

Items wiD be auctioned: truck topper, Troy bldlt 8 bp grinder/chipper, Lawn Boy
!Do,ftl', Apple (fruit) cider p~ Box plane, 3 w bicycle, elec. cub register, rockers, recllnen,
J;a•tlr, bikes, lawn mower, bedroom set, air wildldoner, rollaway bed with mattress, furnace
duet wort, elec:trlc box, and wire, treadmill, stationery bike, coffee maker, wind chimes,
~ repa.ement wiDCiows, tires, auto nmps, 1 wheel doDy, dog house, 11 place set dishes,
~ cMin, waterbed m~ and healer, uerdle equipment, kerosene heater, bar stools,
typewriter, electric wll'lnlna jute, 1 counter liDb, bath wblrlpooJ, beclgeb'lmD!ers, BBQ grill&gt;
wok, fltralibt back cUin, lumd saw, dehWDidlller, electric Ice cram llteezer, stereo speaken,
bUd cruk Ice Cl'alll maker, waluut shelves, CU'pet, wine &amp;I m, electric beater, glassware, and

.·•

call

USE YOUR IMAGINATION. This building has alai of
potential. II currently houses a.grocery store wllh a little bil ol
everything lrom great cuts of meal lo hardware. There Is a
large second story section that would make a greal craM
barn! So much for a teally great pricell Call Cheryl lor
details! 1861
NEW LISTING! 1124 COLLEGE ROAD · One slory ranch
wllh 3 bedrooms. bath. kitchen, living room. Attractive corner
lot, All public utilities. Immediate possession! 1877

Real

The Employer of Choice

~ $1 DO ·Oepoalt, 41 Neil Avenue,

A selection of
sizes and colors.
Stepping stones
some brick.

Must

1558

Administrator: Roy Vaughan

·Special service Items to be auctioned at 11:30 a.m. lnclud':
.
1983 Cutlass Supreme, 1986 Chny Nova, processing of one deer; one day of fishing with Pastor
Dave (bait &amp; tacltle Included), 50 bales of !lay, cleUvered, complete-photo Inventory of-household
I I " ' - - for 1111111'1U1Ce purposes, decorative photo • any structure or landsalpe 16 x 20, framed;
matted, wash &amp;: wu job, three oU chaJIIes, eye exam (Feb. 1997) living wDI and power of
lttorlley, palntlul oil avenge room (labor only), babysitting services, 10% off Rock of Ages

.

47159 EAGLE RIDGE ROADI Aluminum sided 1 1/2 story

Auctioneer: Col. W. Keith Molden

Saturday, September 14
10:00 a.m.
GRACE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
600 Second Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio
IN THE PARKING LOT

I

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
I.T'N'I'lr. Cheryl Lemley.............. 742-3171 '""o•'

: f Btdroom ·4partment, Trash

Shrubs and Evergreens

IB

A

Allen Co. Ohio Probete Case USES 651 04

LOCATED AT 101 BASnANI DR. IN UALUI'Ut-1:11
OHIO. THE ESTATE OF JUNE BASTIANI WILL
SOLD.

(

(614) 742-3171 or 1-800-585-7101

AU~TION

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14,1996
AT STORAGE BUILDINGS
BENEATH POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE 10:00 A.M.
The estate of Robert Harrah has been moved lrom
Cridersville, Ohio to the above location. Directions:
From Middleport, Ohio, take north 2nd St to Auto
Zone, bear right under the bridge to Storage
buildings. Plenty of off street parking available.
Evel)llhing was boxed so we will be unboxing &amp;
selling largely directly from the buildings. This will be
a very unusual auction as there is a large amount of
new still in box items.
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES
Set of Croocksville China, 3 1/2 Ft. Black Stable !'loy
lawn lap, WW2 Marine uniform &amp; memorabilia,
Waltham WW2 Aircraft Clock, Costume Jewelry,
early AlVan T.V., R.S. Prussia dishes, Depression
Glass &amp; Carnival, small Com Shetler, Hun Art Cream
&amp; Sugar, Hull An II L-18-/G Tea Pot w/ hd, Hull An
W19 101/2" dish (boat), Hall Tea Pot, Pr. Hull Art W·
30 Candle Sticks Summer Quilts (VGC), Floor
Lamps, 78 Records, Daisy Mod. 840 B. B. Gun, C&amp;O
Ay Lantern, Several nice Made in Japan Ftg~rlnes,
Wicker Picnic Basket, Very Old Remtngton
Typewriter
NEW MERCHANDISE
Railings, Wilson &amp; Regent Baseball Gloves, Door
Knockers, Electrical Supplies, Plumbing (faucet
repair) Supplies, Apt. size Regal Washer, Mens
womens Dress &amp; Work Gloves, Mens Flannel Shl~s
(size largej, Blankets, Ceiling Fans, The Club,
Electric Razors, Misc. Kitchen Appliances, Harley
Davidson &amp; Timberline Jackets (large), Tasco 3x7
Rille Scope, Pistol Scope, Several Dr. Granbow
Smoking Pipes. Door Locks &amp; hasps
HOUSEHOLD 6 MISC.
Kenmore 13 C.F. Chest Freezer, Cedar Chest,
Dressers Chests of Drawers, White 586 Sewing
Machine in Maple Cabinet, Sewing Supplies, 110 v.
Air Conditioner, Metal Wardrobes. Hoover portable
washer 4 Dinette Chairs, Older Frigidaire Washer &amp;
Dryer, Lawn Furniture, 3 Door Cabinet, Mise Stands,
New Huskee 5.24 hp Lawnmower, approx 50 lb 38
spec .. ammo, 7" Hand Grinder, Ind. Sabre Saw, 7
1/2" Circular Saw, Mise Hand Tools, Mise Lawn &amp;
Garden Tools, Algid Pipe Wrenches, House Jacks,
Furniture Clamps, Several Clocks, Gun Racks.
Window Fans, Car Ramps; 24' Alum. Ext Ladder, 6'
Alum Step Ladder, Sump Pump, Wet-dri Vac. Lots ol
Xmas Decorations, Pots, Pans, Mise Dishes, Linens.
This will be a large all day Auction as there are
boxes lull that we haven't gone through . Bring your
lawn chairs &amp; spend the day with us. Restroom ad
Concession Stand Available

; · tot, Btt-n 2 To e PM. et4·
I . .4-48-2D03,114-+48-140Q

, ,.W:t three

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

Public Sale &amp; Auction

HOME CARE STAFF
COORDINATOR- ASSISTANT
PERSONAL CARE AIDE- HOMEMAKER

DRIVERS - Boyd
Bros. Birmingham,
AL, offers a pay
packlge that's In the
top 10 for the trucking
lndusttyl All late
model conventlonalsl
Top benefits. School
grads welcome. Must
be 23 w/CDL '/II
1-800-543-8923
ext. AT-58.

Real Estate

MEIGS COUNTY

____..J.,.::.,:~::;:_6::.;1.:..:;H•5· 510 7.
' 110

Sectional home anct1 0+ acres.
Living room, family room, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. Hannan Trace
School District. $45,000.
256-6704 or 256-1139.

eats
Positive 10
Marlin Wedemeyer ·
Auctioneer
614-379-2720

Washers , Dryers . Stove , Freez ·
ers, Microwave. Aelr1gerator s. A ~r
Conc:httoners, $50 &amp; Up, 614 -256 ·

1

pump,

.8 acrea. privately, convenlenUy located 1 mile
Mcintyre Park.
614-388-9130 or 614-446-6543

lind crib $80, tw in mattress &amp;
bundation$75.

· 3 lledroom INlier, Golipolia Farry,

. $2!10/mo

ESTA7E
AUC7101
10:00 A.M.

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R•dr&lt;&gt;&lt;lrna. fireplace,

1pc&gt;na, flnlehed building, decke, porchle 1111d more.

: • ·.2218.

624 Jackson Pike
GaUipolis, Ohio .
•

~· --~--------~~Three bedroom 1houae in Midd le·

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fut·
~ 'nisn.d and unfurn•ahed, aecurlly
• deposit required , no pels. eu -

Fall Planting Time

Call446-2342
or
992-2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

Baby Items in excellent condition.
Bassinet $20, sw ing S15 , high

Bulaville Pike, Call After e P.M.

No one knows how much we miss her,
None but aching hearts can tell;
Lost on earth but found in heaven
Jesus doeth all lhings

Kyger Creek High School
Class of 1985 Reunion
Sst., Sept. 14, 1:00 pm
a( River Valley High School
Casual Dress. Catered
Bring Family/Guest ·

574·2539

Paid $185, T"" Room ano Bath~~ French City
Utiilies f'aiG$200, Ona Beclroom 7795 .
opt all Utilities PaiG $325. 513· 1__;..:.;._______

--~----------~-­

! Three bedroom house in Pomer 1 '0)', S300 per month, pay own utth·
Ilea, no pets , deposit required,

'·

Dec. 29, 1906
Sept. 8, 1995
From our happy
home &amp; circle
God has taken
one we loved;
She is borne from
sin and sorrow
To a noble rest above.

orators.

6:00pm.

: 440

Ada Mae Henry

ANTIQUE
BUTCHER BLOCK

I

I

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14•70 With E•penGo, LocateG On

Leslie A. Lemley '
614-446-6241 ~
Licensed &amp; bonded In favor. ~tft of Ohi

Good Luck
with your RN.

One Room and Bath Btl Ulllllies

, call 614·092·88110 between 5:30·

..

In Loving Memory of

2205 Graham School Road
446-3438

; furnished, walhet/ dryer hookup,

Take Rt. 7 South from Gallipolis
right onto Orchard Hill Ad., _go 4
then left onto Shoestring Ridge Rd.,
Shoestring Ridge Ad.
·
Owner has sold home and will offer
public the following items:

In

GRAHAM'S
UPHOLSTERY

; Pomeroy- IWo bedroom, kitchen
1 remodeled, atove and refrigenllor

Tuesday evening, Sept. 10, 1996;
•
at 6:00pm

• Diamond cluster ring, five point, elev~
cut diamonds.
'·

Congratulations

Public Auction

:~~~~J~~"ii;~

Washers , dr yers , rel11gerators ,

port From $232·$355 . Cell 614·

four bedroom home 'in Middle-

PUBLIC AUCTION ;

of

In Memory of
MARK A. BURTON,

Pr.l

Circle Motel, Gallipolis, OH 614 ·

GaiHpoli&amp;, 61H&lt;8·39•5.

.1114·992·2381.

cu. ft. Gibson refrig. (frost free), gas
range,
GE washer-dryer,
Litton
microwave w/stand, Singer portab!,l!
sewing machine, dinette set w/6 chair$:
glass top 'dinette w/4 chairs, La~
rocker/recliner, bookcases, small offici
desk and chair, file cabinet, chest
drawers, large metal wardrobe, metal
shelving, drapes and other linens, pots
&amp; pans, B&amp;D drill, cordless sqewdrive,l;
other household items.
.,
·:

In Memory

In

I

Public Sale 6 AUCtion

Household
Goods

Apartment For Rent Stove &amp; Ae·

rooms, Bath, Kitchen, living

Scenic Vallty, Appl8 Grove,
.beautiful ~c lots, public water,

17

Ohio Va lley Bank Has A 4 Bed ·
room &amp; 2 Bath Home On Chest·
nul Stree1 In Gallipolis For Sale.
614-4&lt;41.0890 .

spoken
How our hearts have
been broken
No one can take your
place
Nor fill .lhis empty space
But, we leave you in
God's hands
For we're all apart of
his many plans.
Later, gater
Love, Mom, Dad &amp;
Shawn

WHEN WE CAN

ai

Due To Illness Must Sell : 1ga2
liberty Trailer And 1.6 Acres
Land, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Front
Porch And Deck On Back, SeMing
As Is $1-'4,000 513 Paxton Ao~d .
614 ·441 -0333. George &amp; Char .
!otte Hall

- -

Run Rolcf 10 ACI'H $10,0011. Leal frigerator Furn •shed , 6 14·446 · 446-2501 or 814·367-0612. Elle· ranges . Skaggs Appl•ances , 76
V1ne Srreet , Call 614 · 446·7398,
·Dnet Chamblra Road 11 + Acrea 2583.
ciency Rooms., Cable, Air, Phone,
1·600·499·3499.
'$11,900 County Water. Galllpolla
Microwave &amp; Refrigerato r, Taxi
. 2 Milts Out On Neighborhood BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Service 112 Price For Motel Polly's New &amp; Used Furniture
Road. 10 Aero Lots $17,000 · BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Guest
2101 Jeflerson Ave. Pt. Pleasant
·SIO,OOO Also, 22 Acres Wirh ESTATES. 52 Westwood Drove 1.:..:....:....:________
from $244 to $315. Walk to shop Rooms lor rent · week or month. Ttvows $10.
Pond $25,1100.

BULLETIN BOARD

H·261.4 For CLJrrent listings.

Applicahons available at: Village
Gteen Apts. 149 or call 6U-9921
37 1- EOH.

510

One
bedroom
apanmunr
Pleasant,
814·992·5858.

- - - --

MERCHANDISE

for Rent

Building Site On 6 Acroo S8,500. •se 112 Sacono Avanue, Gallipo·
.Also, 1.2 Acro.o $8,000 ~dioino llo, 2 Beorooma. AC, Appliancea.
1oAcraa $9,000.
S40011.1o., Utilities f'aid, $200 De 450
pooiL Ralerencas, 61H4fl.2129.

112 acr es.

$1 S,OOO, e!'-985-4&lt;63.

for Rent

Road, $10,000, 814-36fl.8978.
2B
edroom Good·
House.
large Yard,
Very
location,
730
31• Acraa Loll For Sale, f'arfecl Third Nice,
Avenue, $295/Uo. , su.
For Mobile Homea 1 Double
· · Wldtl. Ownor Flnan~inlng . ••ts-1755, 81ol-881 ·4340 Evenings.
$10,0011 Ptr lol 614-448-85112.
2 BR. LA. Ki.-,, Bath, O" SUaat
5 Acroa 4 314 Field 114 Wooda, f'ark"'. 50 Grapa Streel, GatHpo·
300 Fool Rd Frontage $12.000 lia, S.28o.tMo., 6144 _:J86. 1708_
CaU 814.:J68.1704.
2bdrm . apts ., total electric, apBRUNER UNO
pliances furnished, laundry room
614·775-9173
laciliti&amp;s, close to 1chool.n town.

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Apart;::m:;:en:;:t:=s:=::T,44::;;;0::;;;A::;p;::a::;rtme=::nts

1 Acre Wllh Water, Septic, Ga·
rage· &amp; Footera, Po11um Trol

Cemeterl lata
Applegrove
Wamoria Garif'rt S350ea .. 3D&lt;4 ·

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

:&amp; · e

a &amp; e b h &amp; hil'ii. ...._ ..:lillo....

�~h~~~~~·~~~-~·~·-~
.. 530

if
'*

Antiques

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Buy Of' stll RlYirlnt

log Spllnor,

H1tch $400 Antrque Horsedrawn
Plow $100 2 205170 15lT Tirtl

10r12 Woodef, Uttl•ty Barn 61.4

448 2350
18 Husky Heavy Ou1y R1d1ng
lawn Mower Used 5 T1mes 14 5

HP 42 Inch Cut IC lnduslnal
Commerctal Eng tne $900 614
« 6-0007

i

I

For 3 Poont

: 6 00 p m ti l • !192 2526 Run
$10 Each Anuque Lome Or FerUI
' Moo,. .,.,.,
11er Spreader /Sieel Wheels 175
614 388.0321
~ 540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
ludWIQ snare drum complete

\'

,,'

Hydraul~

1995 Ford
household

comp lete
lnter tor
dotnn, records oom 45 s &amp; 33 11
12 washelldryer 1yr old Roush/

l
(
l.

Es con
Home

Ferrel Lane Camp Conley or call

304-475-3538

t(

3 Hedge hogs S3Sea 1 11211 F•
berg tass truck lopper S150 304
875-3992

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3 Pes Exemse Equ•p Ptoles

'

aaonal Qua lity Good Condltlon
(W1th One 01 Th es e Yo u Can
f Work Out In The Comlcrt 01 Your
: Home] One Westbend Row1ng
114achme S75 One Schwmn E l
ercycte Cost New $250 For S150
1 One Deluxe Turbo Exercycle
CosT New $1000 $3 75 Cat Earl
Tope 614 446 Ol ti l

!

i

)14 LP t1tta11ng sToves some pipe
614 992 577 7 alTer 6 OOpm

t.

: 78

Sheets Cornoatea 8 Used
MeTal 30 Ft 01 A1dg e Cap $200
GoaTS Wet hers $ 2 5 6\4 256

1

!

6504

•

Amm ana
T313

1

•

~ H c o wave

614 446

Boo ts By Redw ng Ch1ppewa
Tony l ama G11ara nteed lowesT
Pnces At Shoe Cale Gal1pol ts

t
I
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I

Bra nd New Walker Never Used
$50 6 14 379 272 8 Or 304 937

I

!

New Push lawn Mower Hn
Grass Catcher 614-388 9261

I

Contte te &amp; Ptast1c Seplic Tanks
300 Th1 u 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpn ses Jackson OH
1 BOO 537 9528

,

Couch go~ Key Cuy Llghr Green

:

Brke S1~ 614 446 2300

•• Tapestry $75

G~rls

10 Speed 26"

:
'

Electr rc
Scooters
A.nd
Wheelchairs New /Used Van 1
1 Car lllt Installed Sta1rgl1des lit
1 CtlalfS Call For Brochure 614
~ 446 7283
I

Elv1s Reco rds Some Rare OTher
..- M1sc Records Country And Early
' Ro ck And Rott Al so Star Warlt
: Toy s 614 682 78911

l 895 3292

F1re woo&lt;l lor sale $35 toad 304

I

,.
•
:
'!'

Horton Hunt er Supreme Cross
bow Slrng 10 Bolts Broadheads
PraCtice T1ps like New Excellent
CJ)ndltton $375 Four ts• Mud &amp;
Snow T1res Mo unted On Ford
P.ck Up Rtms Wrth Hub Caps
$150 080 614 441 0555 Even
1ngs

...

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

- Hospita l Bed For Sale And B1cy
~ de 61.4 446 1769

:

:'' --------------=--------LARGE SELECTION

.,'
"

~

Pumpk1ns
Corn

Gor ds And lndtan

RETAIL AND WHOLESALE
WELCOME'
614 245-5887

large Wood burner F1 sher Type
Stove Call Ron Shee ts 614 256
1484

'

$225 :Jl4 6758159

''
'

blm-

570

I Ogal

tank Itt up lp&amp;CIBII Fish
Tank &amp; Pel Shop 2413 Jackson
Ave Pornt Pleasant 304 875
2063

hrm Call 6t4 965 4489

Oak Wurll!zer Sp1net P1ano 5
614 446 0603 614

so

Yamaha Clavmova CVP
elec
Inc P481"10 lull 111ze 88 keys excel
lent cond111on S1600 OBO 614

Doggy Odo' And Ho1 SpolS Con
tams NO Pyrethnnsl 0 T C At J

Bags $to 00 Sava a1 leasl S8 00

D NORTH PRODUCE 614 446

per Gal on selected Putsburgh
Pa.tnls (AI lea.st $3 00 ott reo
pnce another $3 00 back with
ma11 ., rebate coupon) 304 675

1!133

992 2001

Pets Plus S1lver Bt~dge Plaza

580

Small deacon s bench wtth woven

cane seat call tl 14 7.42 1800 al
ter 5:00pm

Cann1ng peaches &amp; pears
available Plums available
labor Day also !resh
Bobs Market &amp; Gteenhouses
Mason Call for prtces 1 800
447 3760

0&lt;:5

Two 16 Week Old G&amp;rman Wtre
Hatr Pups, Strong Po1nt ng &amp; Re

Real

W!Jo!!

WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Commerc1aVHome Untts From

614

Color Calalog Call TODAY
1 000 842 1:JJS

aT 15T 2ST 614 245-5588

CLASSIFIEDS

~

r

'
'

&lt;

Estate~G~en~er~a~l!!!!:!!!!:!!!!:====~:\

T!!~R1!l1H!~C.

•123

style home Is Ideal for a small
fam1ty Offer! 2 brs with ~ hvlng

room fireplace oo1 bldg Located

1n c:1ty school diStrict Realtor

.

owned $30 s • 124

.

Real NICe Mobile home located NEEDS A LITTLE TLC• one
on Route 7 Vlnyl sldlng floor plan Ranch Otters 3 br s
thermopane wmdows garage full bsmt one car garage, 1 92
out bldgs Call lor your acres mJl Has nice size lawn lor
Appo1ntmem today' 114000
tl'&lt;lse family cook ools Priced on
tile 40 • "'26

N2006 Mostly flat and some wooded approx 2 5 acres
Public Ut1l Available $10 000 00

4

'

"

Pets for Sale

.,;

;.,,.,"
Mr&lt;!!W:.i'•

Priced In the $30'1 14 JC 70
Mobile home on 2 acres m/1
Has front and back porches and

a shed 11001

•
•'

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~

'

~

L' '

!'O'fiEROY
sto~

II )

- -...._:.

.
dl

-

lla

onars 3 BR Dalhs LA OR kol

Tupptrt Plaint ~ FREEl Free
gas plus royallles makes !h1s
house cost almost no1h1ng1
l oc ated on 6 acres m/1 w1th a
~,;;.~--------i pond th1s home offers a lg LR
W/fp 1g Fr w/FP eat In ktehen 2
bedroom bath attached garage
Outbu Lidtng
Make
an
appo1ntment to see th1s one
today Eastern School 01striet
full bsmt FA gas furnace Well
Insulated C1ty water &amp; sewer
Immediate possesston Priced ror
a qUiCk sale at $25 0001

J.;:;:~~-~----i

Experoence
pleasures '" this ren1odel01f
1 1/2 story
offenng lovely o
lois of cabinets and
room loVIng room,
room 3 bedrooms
bath Approx 148 acres lor
huntmg, pasture or crops
wrth barn and
outbuoldongs Gel away
11 all and love otll Pnced at
$117
N608

R1o Grande Charm1ng home
has been redone and 1s waJtlng
lor you to move 1n 1mmed1ately
3 or 4 bedroom balh formal
d1nong room liVIng room
breakfast room, k~chen Very
mce 2 car garage Can be
purchased with V2 acre More
land IS available $59,900 11307

NEW LISTING! Deep on the
woods Natural
beauty,
woldlrte and a little solitude
enhance this custom ranch
on 8 696 acres m/1 4
bedrooms 2 1/2 baths
formal hYing room &amp; dlntnQ
room large kitchen w11h
donong area, large lamoly
room with fireplace tnsert

Character,
QuaHty
Conven1ence1 Thai plus
more IS what you'll find
Lookmg
Over 1900 sq n you look at thos anraclive
newer home offers 3 .SRs 2 Cape Cod home Very nocely
bath, LA, FA wolh fir'eplace decoratea lrom the oak
DR, oak cabmets on kitchen krtchen lo the formal dmlng
Heat pump Nice wrap-around room Full basemen!, garage
deck Satellite d1sh Large gas heat central a1r Low
storage building w1th carport ma1nlenance eldenor $64 900
32 x 48 pole buildong With
alectnc &amp; waler Locatea at
2500 Wheaton Road lhos IS a
"Must See· homell $82 000

Overs1zed 2 car garage, 2
horse stall barn large 1.::.=7---:-----;~
workshop
and
storage
bu1ld1ng A maJeStiC retreat

!rom the crowds Pnced at
N610

askong $38 9001

i

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LOCATED NI!NI CHf!STER

l

I

$1 050 614 379 2653

1988 Chry sler le Baron 2 door

coupe Sl 900 OBO 304 576
9921

1614 256 1093

720 Trucks for Sale
64 Mazda truc;:k good cond1t1on

$1200 614 992 -6833

19tH lnlernatonal Steps1de Tr\JCk
6 cyl 5 speed $350 080 614
992 5777 after 6 oopm

tomat•c Ntce Clean Car Good

Gas M'leagel $13 600
1993 Chevy S 10, 4J4 low mtes
&amp; baded $9100 614 949-221 7
t995 Wmdstar hke new V8f'Y low
m11es Call 304 875-13,.3 or 304

740

Motorcycles
COndiDOn

814 742 2205

614 002 S71g

67S..1310

1978 F 700 Ford dump truck 10h
bed runs good new sub !tame
$3500

1990 Halley Davidson 883 Sport
star excellent cond1110n lou ol
extras 614 992 7758
1993 Yamaha Vlfago 750 CC
leather and chrome 614

VACANT LAND located on Lake Dnve
S~bd 1n Sec 27 Raccoon Twp th1s lot
measures 100 x100 The water and
sewer tap 1s ava1lable $12,000 00

WANT TO OWN A HOME?
NO MONEY? GOOD JOB?
.GOOD CREDIT?
CALL BLACKBURN
REALTY TODAY.
We are mortgage
consultants. You may be
SURPRISED
at what you can buy.
Call614-446·0008.

Must sell due to move 1r Star
craft Trt ~ull t40hp tn out Mer
crutser all equtp Iota ol extras
A 1 cond Call for deratls 304
675 3485 alter 5:00pm

760

Budget Pr ice Tran smiSSions
Used IRebu11t All Types Over
10 000 Transm1ss1ons Clutches
Flywheels Overhua t K1t1 614

245 5677
New gas tanks 1 ton uuck
wheels &amp; raduuors 0 &amp; ~ Auto
R1p!ey WV 304 372 3933 or 1

800 273-93:5

Wlltell For 1995 Dodge Full Size
Truck Chroma New Goodyear
Ttres 2~5 75 $500 080 614

256 1252 61&lt;-256 1818

25113

1991 Ford Ranger Standard
60 000 tJ 1tes $4 800 OBO 614

19119 Apache 28 pup.up camper
stove furnace rce box sleeps 8
extra fine condtnon S 1 500 814

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1992 Ford F t SO 5 Speed Under

35K AMI FM Cassette Excellent
Condition 614 24S 9179

l·,~,~FI"-::F':'ob_e_r9':',,a-s-a-='""':':':W::'Il':'h-:2:-=0
HP Mercury Outboard Motor W1th

1996 Chevy ext cab, 4wl d auto

TlltTratler$650 614-682 7894

350 engme loaded, wllowing
package, 1,900 mrlea S26 500

15 open bow good rnterlor con
tro is and new steerrng may be

parled ou~ 614 992-4256
Open Bow Boa~ Foldong Lad

In Noae Fotd 1ng, foldmg

992 5993

1969 Trotwood 28' lorced a1r fur
nac:e alf awnrng lui balh $1500
Can be aeen at lone Oak Camp-

ground Wall Columbia WV Call

614·541 1472or8t4 7422048
1072 Dodge Motor ~orne Fa~r
Conduon, S2 750 614 441 0743
1g93 Ford Rockwood' Motor
Home 29 Ft 36 000 M11ea Excel
I ani Condruon New T~res AC
Gaa Power Generator 614 256

1484

89 Bronco II, 5 speed uklng

,983 ltncoln Mark lour door
,. Q~edl eng.ne work $500 call

614 949 3303

1983 Olds Toronado loaded
looks &amp; runs great $1 350 304

773 5103

t

t 984 Cava her 1ype 10 2 0 $350
304 675-71 12
1984 Monte Carlo 305 looks
And Runs Good New Ttres Auto

Toll Cruose, AIC PS AMIFM
Casseue, S2,3l0, B14 446-7723
1S84 Olds Cudass C1era LS Aulo

THIS MODULAR
2,000 sq It of hvtng space, with 4
bedrooms 3 full baths, and utility
room Theres a beauttful stone
fireplace In the family lOOm and
endless cabmets 1n the k1tchen as weO
as a centrally located semng 1sland:
Located at the Junction of 124 an~
160 1t rest on 2 64 acres
In
W1tkesv111e Call us
$72,900

~S PB Tilt Cruose Alley Wheels
18,000 Actual Miles $1 650 614

379-2645
\985 Monte Carlo SS Too much
10 IJStl NICS I 304 675 6139 Or

304 8GS 31527
t985 Olds Cutlass Supreme
a:rougham two door \t-8 engtne
.1500 614 992 3749 No Sunday

mn

1994 Foro Asp1re 2 Doors
Hatchback 5 Speed Standard
Dual A1r Bags STereo 9 700
M1les $5 475 614 256.&amp;707
1995 Chevy Monte Carlo lS
black V6 auto br1ck yard spotler
all powtr CD playet' remote Etrltry
exc cond ask1ng S 16 200 304

675-3181

1995 Chrysler Sebrmg White /Sit
ver 13 000 M les loaded Power
Sunroof Cost $21 000 Ask ing
$15 500 614 •4t 1349
1995 Ford Contour Sports Ed1
11on leather Power Moonrool
loaded Cost $2S,OOO New F~rst

$16 SOOTakesli 814 367 7634

Credll Problems? E Z Bank f 1
nancrng For used Veh1cles No
Turn Downs Call Ruth 614 U6

2697

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

080614 446 3200

256 1233

THE COUNTRY UVING IS CAWNG
OUT, this histone home sets on 5.85
acres mn There's plenty of room for
the whole famtly 7 rooms and a work
shop for Dad A lar9e pone! for
everyone to f1sh m G1ve us a call
$82 900 00

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

11 Ft Truck Camper Sell Con
tamed Excellent Shape! e14 446

Speed 49 000 M'les $3 000

seooo

811-643-5151

1984 DodljJe Prospector 8 pal
aenger van sohd body rebuilt
eng1ne good ures $1 995 304

SERVICES

25 LOCUST ST. • GAWPOUS
Home

810

Audrey F. Canad:l&amp;-Broker
Mary P. Floyd,
3383

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPAOOF!'IG

446-3636

Unc;:ondlllonal hte!lme gua1antee
Local references lurn11ned Es

labllshed t975 Call (6t&lt;l 446

790

1989 NISSan Truck Air A~ I FM
Cassette Topper 4 Cylinder 5

DUPLEX FOR SALE · Htstonc pan
of town, l1ve 1n one unit and rant the
other Face the park and enjoy the
VIeW

""'' S9 995 614 992 2no

675-1128

196B GMC Wrecker 350 V 6 1989 TAX 300 Honda 4 whoete&lt;
motor runs good S3200 080
excellen t cond1t1on S2 800 304

1971 F 700 1011 dump S3 200
:Jl4-882 2891

t988 Ranger 373 V Boal Wolh

0870 Or 1 800 287 0578 Rogers
Waterproofing
Appliance Parts And Servtce AU
Name Brands Over 25 Yean Ell
peuence All Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag 614 446

7]g5

C&amp;C

General .-lome Ma1n
tenenc:e Pa1nt1ng ~ v 1 nyl stdlng
carpentry doors w1ndows baThs
mobile home r8f)atr and more For
free estimate call Chet 614 992
6323

DRYWALL
Hang f 0111h repa1r
Ce1hngs textured plaster repatr

LAND
LOTS
OF LANDI
OVER
300
ACRES PASTURE, TILLABLE ACREAGE AND
WOODLAND 3 BARNS . PRODUCTIVE FARM •• IF
YOU ARE SERIOUS ABOUT A FARM. SEE THIS
ONE

Call Tom 304 675-41 B6 20 years
ex penance
Ron B TV ServiCe sp&amp;e!ahzlnliJ tn
Zennh also serv1clng most other
brands House calls 1 800 79 7
0015 wv 304 576 2398

840

TWO STORY HOME WITH POOL 3 BEDROOMS.
1 3/4 BATHS SPACIOUS LAWN LOCATED IN THE
CITY $39,000
BETTER
CALL FOR AN
APPOINTMENT SOON

Electrical and
Refrigeration

ASES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED IN THE CITY. THREE
BEDROOM HOME HAS NEWLY
PAII'{TEP
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR CAR PORT . FENCED
BACK YARD CENTRAL AIR COND . GAS
HEAT CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT AND LET
US SHOW YOU THIS NEW LISTING

Heat Pumps Atr Cond1t1on.ng If
You Don 1 Call Us We Both loael
Free Esuma tes 1 800 291 0098
814 4&lt;16-6308 wv 002945
Aes1denual or commerc1al w1nng
new serv1ce or reparrs Maillet' ll
censed eltctnc1an R1denour
E!ec:tncal WV000306 304 875

17M
Restdentlal Or Commerc ial Wtr

mg New

Ser~TC9

Or Reparrs ll

censed Electnc•an Welsh Elec
tnc 814 446 ggso Gallipolis

'r---------------~----------------,
!

OFFICE 992·2888

Ohoo

Real

6l4 4684
1986 Ford Aeroatar Mark 4 Con
verson Val"! V 6 New Ford Fac
tory Motor W11h Warranty 3 000
Mtles $4 !iOO 614 388-8128
198S S 10 Blazer ~x4 Tahoe
Package, Auto, AC, Run1 &amp;
looks Good 107,000 M1le1,

S4 500 Firm. 814 368 8637 814446-1968

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

1087 Chevy Asuo Runs looks

Good s•.20o, 61H41-ro25
1987 Dodge Dakota 4x4 V 6 AJ
C excellent conditiOn SO 200

614 949 2217
t988 Chevy Astro Van CS greal
cond $4 t95 304-474-&lt;684

Racing Go Caft lTO Ch11111 2
Blue Printed Bnoos Motors Many
Spare Paris !Too l s &amp; Stand In

eluded, $2 500, 814 682 6922
E""'ngo

Real Estate General

Henry E. Cleland Jr ..992-Z259

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
1-8oo-585-71o1 or 446-7101

a·

Sherri L. H~rt ............ 742-2357
K&lt;lthleen M. Cleland 992-6191

446-4618

Cheshire Roomy home w/lg LR
lg FA lg OR K1tchen 3 BA
bath lull basmt Porches on side
and bac k Outbutld1ng Only

•

Moles $3500 Ercellenl Condmon
614446-3545

Silverado -4114 Excel
Condilo&gt;ni64K V6 5 Speed

anadayi!
Realty

1;84 Pace Arrow Mo1or Home
Ft e.,enent Cond1t1on Oaya
4 446 · 4-423, Even lnliJI 014
448 6565

RUSSELLD WOOD, BROKER

ABA Reg1s1ere&lt;l Amer1can bull
dogs like "Chance " on mov1e
Homeward Bound 4 pupp1es le!t
614 592 1625

This secluded 2 1 - - - - - - - - - - . - f

RANCH HOME LOCATED AT 15063
ST RT 160 1n V1nton Oh1o Th1s home
has 2 BRs, 1 bath large FR LR as well
as DR Th1s home 1s carpeted New
s1d1ng and 1nsulat1on adds to this home
There IS a carport and a large deck on
the back of the home and bsmt
$49,000

IB

A Groom Shop Pet Groom ng
Featunng Hyd to Bath Don
Sheels Call 614 446-0231

home has a f'llce yafd It

1989 Mercury Marqu1se 120 000

198 7 N1ssan Semra 4 Door Au

OBO 614 4&lt;6 6795

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER 0
' 1·80().894·1 066
1.:1

Hall Beagle 3 Weaks Old
Weened S25 Each Call 814 256

'''

~~r

1 50rP Evmrude Motor And 24
IJoll Ev1nrude Trolhng Motor 18
Ft Excellent CondttTon With Ex

1991 Jeep Wrangler llh Kll AHoy

379 2820
..
Oide-:-:r-4_•:"•~~-14_
:-~:-:::-- ll'{ondil.hio!!ld'· Canopy Top Duel
730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1 •
80 HP Mo1or

BRICK CONDO Localed " lho BRICK HOME In a good

CUTE and
AFFORDABLE This Ranch

R1m1 33, ~ardtop. 5 Speed CuJ.
Paint 46000 M1les Excellent
I Cond,l&lt;&gt;nl $9 200 Senoua lnqu1
14 245 5045

10 000 M1lea W1ll Take Trade Of

city close to everything and Low ne1ghborhood 3 bedrooms 2
Matntenance S60 s 11122
lull baths lam1ly room garage

Wht!held Advantage Pallet Stove
Insert 3 Years Old Excellenl Con
dt!IOn Includes logs a fireplace
Vacuum Cleaner $1 000 614

1-------:-:------:------

Wanted to buy 87 or newer Ca
pnce
Class1 cs
muSI
be
Brougham or l S 4 door V 8
loaded 614 742 3802

94 Ford Ranger Xll low m1le
age limed w1ndows tonnel cove1
614 992 7861

! .·8-75-_1_92__5....--------------l Cond,loon

COURT STREET RESIDENCE • Older
home has 2 sep , units or could qe
converted back to 1 ramdy
Faces city pari&lt;

HISS Bayl1ner Captt tg Ft Bow

Current listings.

625 Third Avenue, Galllpolla

1996 Dodgo Dakota 2 WD

r

,'
&lt;

Large round bales Stored 1nslde
$20 to 13&amp;- Rt 3S Southside 3'l4

Be Seen At Galllpoht Dally Tnb·

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
Alder Inboard Blue /WMe , Ell
cellent Condition Top Tra1ler
$4 BOO 614 256 1093

1987 FcHd Taurus PW PS
Cru1se AMIFM Good CondtiiOn

96 :m Moles S200 614446 2111

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250
72 ooo M'lea $4,000, 080 Can

Porsches Ca chtlacs Chevv 1
BMWs Corv&amp;nes Alao Jeeps 4
WD s Your "rea Tolt Free 1

OBO 304-e7S.5332

I

1/ ·,,

tta'Y &amp; Groin

=~-::-c:---:--------1987 Dodge Daytona Nu:e &amp;
Clean Car New Pamt Mu st See
To Apprectate 614 446 8795

1gss Mercury Topa2 Super
Clean Car Runs Great $1 800

COURT STREET RESIDENCE - Older
home has 2 sep , un1ts or could be
converted back to 1 fam1ly dwelhng
Faces c1ty park

Water Wells Dolled Fast Rea
sonableServlce614 886 7311

POMEROY
Execut1ve
type
home 29 m1~ from Pa'ntersburg
5 miles from Pomeroy on SR 7
Lots ol pnvacv 4 BR 2 112 baths
LR w/lp FRw/fp OR eat 1n kit
bsmt gar stg b!dgs pool many
other amentt1es Make Us All
Offer

• 640

SEIZED CARS From $175

vans &amp; 4-WDs

1988 Chevy 112 ton 'lwl&lt;l extend
ed cab auto ac II 6 4 3 $6 200
304 773-5117

$475 614 992 3702

\

l

614 256 1156leave Message

VHS Camcorder less than one
year old sufl under warranty

\'

W1ll do livellock tlaultng go to
• Galhpolll weekly IS 14 992 7302
• aher6ptn.
•
...-

Old Bay Mare $BOO
Monlh Old Sorrel Ph11iy $400

4464734830 AM To 530PM
MF

AKC Ger man Shepherd UKC
Am en can Esktmo Spitz AKC
Chow Make DHed Shepherd Stud
Set111ce Champ1on Bloodline
Wanted Female AKC German
Shepherd Ready To Breed 614
256 1932 614 44HJ706

5532

f

i

1987 Bronco II 4x.t trade lor 3/ 4
ton truck ol equal value 614 992

Livestock

Treat&amp;d P1ne Fence Post S• 50
To $5 50 Each On State Route
160 2 Mtles Past Holzer au

8 Non Reg1stered Pupp1es 4
Males ot-females Hall Basaett

614 949-2822

Two herler feeder calves 614
• 696 1017

3 Hopper Bonom B1ns ltke New

Allen C Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446-0971
Jeanette Moo•e. Realtor- 256 1745
Tim Watson Realtor-256-6102
Patnc1a Ross, Realtor

Table Top /Candy Vendor Snack
Mach1nes S125 Each Ot All
Three $300 614 446 3769

$150 614 667 3978

!

Sox IT10f1lh old purebred Simmenbll
bull, purebred S1mmental herfers

REALTORS:

law Monthly Payments FREE

2 German shepherd pups AKC
registered all ;hots black &amp; tan

I•

1986 Ponoac 6000 STE Excell&amp;nt
Condtbon 814 2.45-5752

32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

$199 00

Block bnck sewer prpes wind·
ows l1nt&amp;ls etc Claude W1nters
R1o Grande OH Call 614 245
5121

1986 Park Avenue pw ps Ieath&amp;
rntenor new t1res climate control

730

Autos for Sale

800 698 9778 EXI A 281&lt; For

446-1066

Tan A1 Home

Buy DIRECT and SAVEl

24x48 Metal BUilding 2 10 Ooora
! Side Entrance Door S3,000 You
Take Down Put On Your lot 6144-46 2151 Leave Message

;

LET US WORK FOR YOU'
CALLUS TODAY'

Jackson OhiO 1 600 537 9526

Building
Supplies

1986 Bu1ck Century 4 Door Au
~o t or Front End
Excellent Cond l!ton $2 500 080
Buekrtdge Apartment 73 Gall1po

tomauc New

304-675-3284
• colatt !Btown, While Face Blue -:-:-:::----------------

610 Farm Equipment

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

Rpn Evans Enterprises

550

71 0

uieYing tnsunc11 614 256-1671

So li d Pecan Bedroom Sutte
Qu ee n S ze Headboa1d New
Frame Tr~ple Dresser New Mtr
ror Chest On Chest Cruser
Two N1ghl Stands St 000 F~rm
Cutlls MathiS 25~ Conso le TV
sso 614 ..6 8325
Upr~ght

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

(10% 01! E""Y TNng Ev"'y Day l
Puppy Palace Kennels Boatdtng
Stud Serv1ce Pupp1es Groom1ng
Buy Sel l &amp; Trade All Breeds
Payments Welcome 614 388

• Pony 3 Monlhs Old Pholly Cho

614 448 2151

Female Fleas &amp; T•cka Checks

Relr1gerators Stoves Washers
And Dryers All Reconditioned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
W1il Dehver 614 669-6441

514 Ser.ond Ave , Gallipolis, Oh 45631
Ranny Blar.khurn , Broker, Phone: (614) 446-0008
~ Joe Moore, Assocaate 441-1111
-

RACCOON CREEK PRIVACY Th1s
300 g-11•n pl ..tlc !arm choml
almost brand new ranch style home
cal lank on lied wolh hose $75
reStS tn over 7 acres Of WOOdS With
614 949 3403
approx 800 It of creek frontage Some
FARM TIRE SERVICE
of the many features are 4 BRs, 2
TraClor backhll41 sk,dder mobile
baths, 16x21 Kit w/range, refng, d1sp &amp;
servoce New &amp; used'"" and
OW 15x15 DR, 16x21 LR w/french
wheels 614 698 6438 614 698
doors, 2 large treated decks, v1nyl s1d1ng
6471 0 , 614 593-11942 even•"1l5
AGRO LIME SERVICE
&amp; an unattached 2 car garage If you
______:...:..:...:...:..:....::._.::.__11 don't want to look al your neighbors
Hydrauloc Hoses Made To Order
YOU MUST SEE THIS ONE ASKING
~~~~rs Eq"pment Co 304 675
$ 115 OOO

Autos for Sale

-'11

~ ·~yea. 814 388-0321

~~~-::---:---------11972
John Deere Tractor
446 9981
•
Ludwog Snare Drum New $300
614 245-1313

7458

710

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

' c:----:"::-::--:--:"--:--:- los

: Horses,
Ktnds And Colors
t! 6t•444--4110
•

Clannet In Good Condmon $125

HAPPY JACK
PAAACIDE Years Old
SHAMPOO K1i11 Adult Malt &amp; 448 0160

614 441-0770

l

trumpet exceHent cond111on

Four month old Beagles &amp;~~cellent
bloodlines three males one le
male $50 each 814 QSS-353-4

4084

i ste,r ~IIVII, 500 600 lbs Will
m~ pd 4 H calves 814 992

BLACKBURN REALTY.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Mualcal
Instruments

PAINT PLUS HARDWARE Fll
N SEAl Duveway Sealer Sgat
S6 00 Black Ftberatad Roof Coat
1ng Sgat S12 9g Fall Hardy Mums
3 for $10 00 Hardwood Mulch 5

or leave

9363

.,. lawn Mower 5 5hp sell propelled
... Sears C1altsman Gold 22 " cu 1
h1(1h boy rea r wheels ex c cond

•

AKC Whnellilver/aable, German

Shepl'ard pupplea, excellent
peratnOill. 301-1175-7495.

full Blooded ~1tral1an Shephltfd
Female 5 ~on1h1 Old $50 No
Calls Altet 8 P.M 014-245-5175

560

JET
AERATION MOTORS

r Repa1red New &amp; Aet)I.H11 In Stock
" Ca I Ron Evans 1 800 537 9526

'

CI4C1~2481 alter 4pm
l118lllg8

Livestock

~ -elaCK..,whlte" faced hetlera black

t 984 Chovy Celebrity new
gino 1948 Ply COupe, solid body
304 773-51 IS Wllrade for lrUdt

446 7417

Go kan rac1ng equ1pment for
sale caM 61 4 949 2368 atter 4pm

!

r•

Oak Chester Orawars Oak Oou
ble Dresser Entertatnment Cen
ter New MTO Snow Blower EXIH'
CIS881ke 614 446 24 15

" 3363

.,

AKC Aegollerod Bo1181' puppoes 2 AKC reg1stered yellow lab pupa
2 lomole S2s0ea 304 675- first lhotl, wormed dew clawa
6335after5:00pm
moved health c:trltfTcates 614

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon

Baby Cr b L1ke New! $60 614
446 3438

..
~

lmesman 1 belt safety &amp; hooks
npple deStljJn afghans Cflb SIZe &amp;
u~ phone 614 949-2647

-------1
630

male

1\2' E Ua•tl StrMt. on
t Pomeroy Hours U T W 1
t a m to 6:00 p.m Sunday 1 00

I

September 8, 1996

Rand1 OUR nome OilerS
4 br 2 bath LA OR FR krt
Be~

THIS LADY MEANS
BUSINESS! DROPPED
PRICE
OF HOME TO
$129,900.001 What a super CUTE AS A BUTTON! Clean
home Ideal tor a small family
good deal Almost new Newly
redecorafed lnclu&lt;Ung
home that has over 45 carpeting Bright &amp; Cheery lR &amp;
acres of wood land OR combination bath full bsmt
NICe shaded front lawn Lot me
Attached 3 car garage approx 60 K 200 Ridge
N1ce prtvate settmg All Avenue Rio Grande 1850
wllh1n Just minutes of town
Let us show you thiS 3
bedroom 2 bath b1-level

HARRISONVILLE- A 1 114 acre parcel of ftal land and a
14x70 Nashua Mobile home Has 3 bedroom•. large bath
bog masler bedroom newer vonyl flooring, satellite dish
central aor large back deck, and a front porch
$30,000

DOUBLE
HOUd
PAYMENTS .•OWNERS :.
NEED
TOSE~
QUICKLY...PRICE
,
REDUCED $2,000.001 . ;;
You must really see tnt&amp;
home to apprec1ate !Ill ule
extras
House lyR~
w1ndows, extra lnsulatiOn: Q
full baths, super floor pia~.
cathedral ceilings NewQr
satehte system,
•
•toraoa buddmg include'~·
show you. 11870

EAGLE RIDGE RD. S1tttng on approx 11 acrea of cleared
roll1ng land os a 2 s1ory home mostly buill approx 4 years
ago Has an open kitchen living room area 4 bedrooms
one bath and a room lor another bath Newer rear deck
overlooking a country pond Low maintenance with newer
v~nyl s1d1ng and hesls and coots with heal pump
WAS $15,000 NOW $5&amp;,000
WAGNER LANE· A 4 year old ranch with 2 bedrooms and
2 baths Has a heal pump, carport, and a noce Iron! porch
Also has a mobHe home hook-up and Is sitting on approx
one acre
$55,0110
Ju11 Blirely Off Rl. 338 and lllht and of McNickltl Rd
Hunter's Poradlse • Brides Dream Home Approx 32
wooded acres with a 1996 Sky lone Double W'de 3
bedroom, 2 bath, remodeled kitchen w11h an eKtra s1ovetop
on the rsland ceram1c t1le counter tops sohd oak cabmels
and many other eldras
$791100

NEW LISTING- JUST
RIGHT! Uttle bit ol acreage
Delng over 4 acres &amp; noce
newer brick home w1th lots
of space Extra bog loving
room equipped k1tchen &amp;
NEW LISTING!
donong area 3 bedrooms 2
t 12 baths , basemen1
IMMEDIATE
Stocked pond &amp; much more
POSSESSION! 2 story
18M REDUCED TO
roomy home that has 4
$85,900.001 CAPE
bedrooms, bath, hv 1ng
STYLE! S1tuated at
room, dining room, kitchen,
Edgemont
Drive
two n1ce level lots each
Bedrooms, 2 baths,
be1ng approx 66' x 16ti' &amp;
ltvtng room, k1tchen
more Call today\ N876
JUST LISTEDI WON'T room, divided
w1th famtly room and
LAST... Brick ranch wtthln of storage space.
mmutes of town 2 3/4 ~etached garage &amp; CMioaill.l
acres more or less, 2 Frun trees, nice lawn.
bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths,
garage well mamtamed NEW PRICEt • · •
Barn, separate hook·up for ~~,WOP.
mobde home Alot for the PURCHASE THIS ~toMe
NEW
Make
an bedroom ranch ~
Farm w/47 acres more or money
less stocked pond, barn appointment today! N875
shaped kitchell,
garage w/addlhonal 2 stall NEW UST1NGI 3 ACRES IIlLI room, attamed I'MJ~·~~fil
horse shed Along wnh all
lawn Let Ul ~
that comes thts anractove 1 $5,000 County water available' level1121
County
schools
Nice
place
lor
vou
1/2 story home that has tha1
southern took w1lh the big a mobile home or place lo
,...
columns on front Snuated on bulldahome
a paved road Call for
complete detaltst
1831

Stolt Route 124 Hoar Corn Hollow· a ranch slyle home
with 4 bedrooms and 2 baths Has new carpel n ew vinyl

RACINE - Spactous 28' X 60 Modular
Home with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, eqUipped
k11chen, fireplace, elac FA and Central
Air Roomy 2 car garage, full basement,
paved road N1ce ne1ghborhood, Lovely
Settlng 2+ Acres of leveltay1ng ground

l ; auet&lt;TCIWN ROAD • LETART- Very N1ce
that contains 3 lots Paved road,
·available Nice building or
•Motile,·HOme Site with a RIVer V19W
UNION TERRACE
Tv.en.

I

•

SYRACUSE- Rover lron1age approx 314 acre A 3
bedroom 1 1/2 story home th at has an upsla~rs that lsn t

finished Eacn bedroom IS large and has 2 closets also a
large fronl porch
$80,000
Art you !Ired of paying rent? Heres your chance to be
the landlord 8 houses on Loncoln Drove and 1 on Brown
Alley Very well kepi property Mosl ol the houses have 2
bedrooms liVIng room kitchen &amp; 1 bath A couple are
larger NICe 1neome All have 111nyl S1d1ng
SUt5.000
CLE~ND HILL RD· A nice country senong A ten year old
ranch &amp;1'/le home with wrap around porch heal pump 3
bedrooms, 2 112 car garage and barn sottong on approx 33
1/3acres Partly wooded and panly paslure
•75,0110

CLELAND RD· Langsvolle 60 acres or lovely rolling land 7
112 acres o1 ~on hay many beaU11Iul homeshes 1101'118 oak
81'1d walnU11rees alii moneral ri&lt;Jhls Included
150,000
MIDDLEPORT· A 2 story frame home wrth 3 bedrooms,
dining room large Ioyer 2 enclosed porclles and 1 pert
baSement Has a noce carport and an eldra seplic tank and
bUilding site With approx 3 acres
S3t,OOO

MULBERRY
AVE
ATTENTION
INVESTORS • 1 1/2 Story Frame Home
wfth 3 apartments Basement, garage and
rear enclosed porch Apartments currently
rented .
CALL FOR ADDITIONAL
DETAILSI

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
446·3644
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER. 446-9555

•

NOWII Absolutely No Reasonable
Refusedll 2 Story Frame Home 1 1/2
bath, 3 bedrooms, full basement, TPC
water, 2 car carport, newer repairs
Approx 4 75 acres Energy effiCient
outstde wood burner Pnvate setting close
to town GOME SEE'I MAKE AN
OFFEAII OWNER READY SO MAKE A
DEAL! II
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSIONII No
Reasonable Offer Refusedll This p&lt;operty
located rust off SR 7, conta1ns approx 30
Acres, that cons1ste of woods, hayfield,
garden area, Bruit trees, large vanety at
nowers and shrubs there IS also a large
pond for recreahon of for tarns animate
The older one floor frame has 3
bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, LOC &amp; cistern
water, woodburner, F 0 furnace, C/A,
enclosed porches Some newer carpel &amp;
paneling OWNER WANts To SALE SO
COME SEE THIS ONE TODAVII

w/appl utility rms many extras
on 3 acres m/1 also a 40 • 64
..... bldg w/olfoce call &amp; lot Ul

(

1resh pa1n1 and border Nice oak cabonels Looks loke new
and sots on approx t acre of level yard
WAS $65,0110 NOW U2,000

I

3 95+

IrS SEPTEMBER, SO
REMEMBER II IT WON'T BE LONG
UNTIL DECEMBERIII SO COME IN
troW, BEFORE IT GET'S COLD,
WE'LL HELP YOU AND
THAT COZV HOMEIII
P.S. WE NEED USTINGSII

HORNER HILL· A live acre wooded home aile tht has
eklclrlc and water available Two loto evatlable for 17,000
ltiiCh.
App10x. n acrtt thst are lolally secluded with a rtgltl of
way o« Kingsbury Road Lays nice and hu " " gu
Some timber
130.000

)-

DOmE TURNER, Broktr..............."""'"""tt2.._
JERRY SPRADUNO ................ - .......... - ... MN1S1
CHARMELE SPRADUNG........................".M..2131
BETTY JO COWNS................................. tt2•238S
OFFICE........................................................tn.z.

·--"*"·
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�•

.•••'
Sunday,~ernber8,189f

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

'

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One day, about five years ago, of Zhen, knew it was possible to put analyst with Prudential Securities, have problems with their sert-image, · Asians, who can't believe they·~
"my sister and I were walking out of a company together because of her 15 said of cosmetic makers. "There's and says the advertising business is talking to another Asian," she said.
the store and said, 'Why can't we find years in the retailing business, work- been a big sea change in the industry part of the problem.
Yee and her five sisters grew up in
something that works for us?'" Yee ing for stores including Tannery in recent years because there's been
"Have you ever seen an Asian Columbus, Ohio, where their parents
said.
West, Sunglass Hut and Icing, a a real awareness of Asian and His- woman on the front of a cal81og?" owned a restaurant. Susan and her
Their answer was to start making women's accessory retailer.
panic and black consumers."
she asked. Moreover, "even the Jane, who runs Zhen 's custo111er ser·
and selling cosmetics themselves.
While Zhen's customers are most- Asian models they use are pretty vice operations, both worked 'in the
She knew her St. Francis, Minn.The result is Zhen, a 2-year-old line j based company, which is primarily ly Asian. Yee says white women who generic and have Caucasian fea- family business.
of cosmetics aimed at Asian women. family-owned, had a market that have a sallow complexion and black tures."
Yee remembers "grow ing up and
Zhen, pronounced "jen," is Chi- many other companies weren't serv- women also buy from the company.
"I have a customer who wants to being very young and seei ng 1\viggy
nese for genuine. Its makeup and skin ing.
Yee 's business associates are get surgery on her eyelids. l toM her, and thinking, 'I wish I looked like
care products are sold primarily
among
her fans . "She has a wonder- Why do you want to do this? You are that."
" !don't think anyone has targetthrough the company 's 12-page cat- ed the Asian consumer. I had perfect ful feel for the needs of her clien- beautiful."'
A conversation with Yee reveals a
alog. Two branches of Nordstrom demographics, and I didn't think any tele." said Lesley Yates-Stell, a cosThe ~ypical Zhen customer is a woman who is intense yet down-tonear Seattle also sell the cosmetics.
of those companies tried to get my metics buyer at Nordstrom.
woman age 20 to 40, working and earth. serious yet able to laugh at herYee, who is 36 and the president money," Yee said in a recent interYee knows the frustrations her "who wants a quality product, and self and the ironies of life.
view, annoyance coming through in : ustomers have felt in the past. Asian may not feel comfortable in a drugAfter high school Yee went into
;hoppers tend to trust the sales pea- store environment or doesn't feel like retailing. From Columbus she moved
her voice .
"The Asian consumer has a lot of l ie behind the makeup counters, she the quality is there ," Yee said.
to·Chicago. ·but then. when Tannery
power that they don't realize," Yee ;aid. but then "they get home and
The prices are comparable to West promoted her, found herself
.hey have all this stuff that never those of moderately-priced cosmetics transferred Cleveland. "! waited aU
said.
The numbers bear that out. The .vorks."
like Estee Lauder sold in department my life to get out of Columbus, apd
The big cosmetic companies have stores.
Census Bureau counted nCllf[y 7.3
you're moving me to Cleveland!" she
million Asians and Pacific Islanders two big failings. according to Yee.
Zhen's cOmpetition is the entire laughed.
in 1990 and projects that number will They don 't supply Asian women cosmetics industry, Yee says. but she
She also worked for Tannery West
climb to 12.1 million by 2000. Giv- with the right colors. particularly in isn't worried that one of the giants in Wasliington, and from there transen such a large consumer base, "you foundations . And they don't know will overw helm her business.
ferred to Redondo Beach, Calif.,
would think there would be a better how to work with Asian faces . "They
"Within the Asian community, ·:which l just loved ."
don't know what to do with your eye, we've already made a name for ourmarket out there," Yee said.
Yce ended up in St. Francis,.; a ;
But some industry watchers say because there's no crease ... I' m nev- selves. Someone will wake up, but Minneapolis suburb, because that .
the cosmetics industry is doing a bet- er going to have crease in my eye, so we were here first and we understand was the home of the man who is now
ter job than Yee believes.
what can I do to make my eyes look the Asian consumer," she said.
her husband. She misses the warmth ·
"Their product lines have a full bl;tter?"
"!talk to so many customers who of Southern California - "I stiil
spectrum of shades," Heather Hay, an
Yee says many Asian women can't believe there arc cosmetics for cringe" at the cold, she said.

August sales reported down at Kmart
DISCUSS LAND PROTECTION -Julia Cady talks with her son,
Branson Pyles, center, and AI Denman, president of the Tecum,
sch Land Trust recently on her farm near Yellow Springs. Cady
signed a conservation easement with the trust to protect the land
from encroaching development. Ohio's farmers are applauding
formation of a state task force to atudy what the state can do to
help farmers who want to keep their land. (AP)

State task force gives hope
to farm preservationists
By The Associated Press
Julia Cady doeso 't dislike development. She just does n't want to sec
it devour her family's 440 acres of
fields, woodlands and creeks 1n
southwest Ohio.
"Our ancestors worked hard to
make the land productive." said
Cady, whose farm is near Yellow
Springs. " We 're not against change,
but we're c~rta inly for snvmg farm land ."
Cady had worried that the farm,
which her family fi rst plowed m
1848, could be lost if her descendants
can't resist the temptauon to sell it for
development.
So last year she signed over a conservation easement to a local groupthat promotes preservation of open
spaces. Under the casement, Cady's
family st ill owns the land and can
even se ll it, but no future owner may
develop it.
"We felt strongly about it. but
there isn't a program in Oh1o to buy
your rights," Cady told the Dayton
Daily News for a story th1s week .
"We felt we couldn 't wait for that to
come.
The push to save Ohio farmland
got some support last month when
Gov. George Voinovi ch created the
Ohio Farmland PreservatiOn Task
Force. The group, whose members
are sti ll being se lected. wi ll study
how the state can help farmers who
want their land lo remain agricultural.
Eleven other states ha ve programs

for buying development rights for
farms. When the rights are sold, land
is taken· off the market for potential
home or business construction.
There arc 15.1 million farm acres
in Ohio. down by 1.4 million acres
from 1974, according to the Ohio
Agricultural Statistics Service.
Currently, Ohio farmers who want
to protect their land against development can either give away development rights to someone they see as a
protector, sell the land to a conservancy group or hope for protective
zoning.
V1nce Squillace, executive vice
president of the Ohio Homebuilders
Association. said farmland preserva'ti on is just one factor in an alwayschanging real estate mar~et.
Population growth and the need
for new homes and business si tes as well as some farmers' desire to sell
oil their land to pay for their retirements - have always made property available.
"Growth and development is
gomg to occur," Squillace said. "People are going to choose where they
want to live and where they want to
set up a business, and if there arc
obstacles, they will just go around
them ."

Peggy Schear, a community
development specialist with the Ohio
Stale University extension service,
said land immediately outside of
citi es will be targeted for the ne xt
wave of development.

Assistance available for farmers
GALLIPOLIS · Due to the damages caused by tht s summer's heavy
rains in Gallia ard Lawrence Coun ty, both count ies have been design at ed for emerge ncy assistance .
This all ows FSA to make avail able several assistance program s,
one being emergency loss loans.
Loss loans may be made to cover production losses on crops and li vestock
or actual phys1cal propert y losses.
due to heavy rains.
Such loans should enable affccled

farmers to return to their normal operating status prior to the disaster.
For applicants to be eligible. they
must be unable to obtain sufficient
credit through their normal financial
channels, plus meet other eligibility
requirements.
Applications will be accepted until
Feb. 24. 1997.
Interested farmers may contact
the1r local FSA office at 446-8686 for
more information .

GALLIPOLIS - Pam Wiscmon.
commercial loan officer of Ohio
Valley Bank , Gollipolis, anendcd
the recent 14th
annual school of
commercial lending sponsored by
the Ohio Bankers
and West Virginia
Bankers Association . The school
Wiseman
is a professional
development program offering
bankers an opportunity to enhance
their knowledge of commercial
[ending and credit evaluation .
Wiseman, an employee of OVB
since 1983, was recently promoted
to the position of commercial loan
officer.
This marks the third year for a
oooperative effort of the two associations.
The co-sponsors are non-profit
cooperatives that provide legislative, educational and communica-

By MELISSA PREDDY
The Detroit News
Kmart Corp. posted lackluster
August sales, disappointing company
executives who had hoped to boost
revenue during the crucial back-toschool shopping season.
August sales at the Troy, Mich.,
retail chain were down 2.5 percent
overall to $2.46 billion, compared to
$2.52 billion the same period last
year. Sales of women's and children's
clothing especially were lower than
planned, the company said.
By comparison, sales at-discount
rival Target were up nearly 16 percent, and Wal-Mart reported a gain o(
11.4 percent.
"There were strong apparel results
at a number of our competitors. In the
women's and children's areas. we had

Hood honored
in Nashville

GALLIPOLIS · Bobbi Hood of
Gallipolis was recognized in..
j Nashville, Tef!n., ·
. J recently for being
in the top director
category with unit
sales exceeding
200,000.
She
also
received a special
dinner cruise on
the General Jackson Showboat honoring the top personal sellers in the company.
During her firm 's conference,
Hood attended business and leadership development meetings for
BeautiControl's newest products.

trouble gelling the results we wanted," said Robert Burton, director of
investor relations for Kmart. "We are
still in transition here, (but) that does
not give us a reason to be pleased or
satisfied with sales numbers that are
headed down."
Analysts said the results were disappointing. but no cause for alarm.
"We're not seeing the full impact
of the (staff) changes they've made in
the merchandisin~ group," said Donald Spindel, reta1l analyst for A.G.
Edwards in St. Louis. " Kmart historically did beuer than Wal-Mart in
the soft goods area. While Krnan was
in the midst of its identity crisis, WalMart got belter. Kmart is finding that
it's not that easy to regain the
momentum."
Last year, Kmart was liquidating

old merchandise at clearance sale
prices, said Daniel Poole , retail analyst for First of Michigan in Detroit.
A lot of goods were sold. but not at
a profit.
" Retail is a balancin~ act between
sales and (profit) margins," said

Poole , who expects Kmart to break·
even this quancr, compared to th~·
same period last year when the company lost 26 cents per share.
" Kmart could raise sales by cut-:
ting prices, but that's just not some-·
thing you want to do."
;

Business highlights

WILKESVILLE -- Lance G.
Sogan, who most recently served as
president of
resources
servic'"' for AmeriEiectric
has been
new vice
pre:side:nt and genmanagcr of
Sou1thern
Ohio
SOGAN
Coal CompanyMeigs . Division,
officials with American Electric
Power announced Friday.
Charles A. Ebetino, Jr., senior
vice president-fuel supply for AEP.
announced the selection of Sagan,
who succeeds former Southern Ohio
Coal Company president and general

manager James F. Tompkins.
Tompkins .resigned late last
month. following 19 years of service
with AEP, according to AEP
spokesperson Jeff Rennie.
Sagan officially began his new
duties at Southern Ohio Coal Company on Thursday, after serving as an
interim manager in Tompkins'
absence, Rennie said.
Sagan joined the AEP System in
1973 as a human resources assistant
with the Fuel Supply Department at
Albany, Ohio. In !975, he was
named human resources supervisor
at So~thcrn Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs Division, and was promoted
in 1978 to human resources manager
for Windsor Coal Company.

WASHINGTON (AP)- McDon- submitted for ratification to the Inter•
nell Douglas Corp. and its Machinisis national Association of Machinists
union reached a tentative agreement District 837 as early as next week.
on cndinr a three-month-old strike by Details of the agreement were not
6.700 workers at the aerospace com- released, but one of the biggest issues
pany's St. Louis plant.
that led the machinisl~ to walk out on
After bargaining for 30 straight June 5 was job security, as McDonhours over two days. negotiators nell Douglas continues to expand its
emerged with an agreement Friday export market and usc subcontractors.
that union officials said would be

In 19K I. Sogan became labor
relations manager for AEP Fuel Supply, and was promoted to human
resources director three years later.
He advanced to director-administration and human resources in February 1992, and was elected vice .president-human resources and administration in October 1992.
Sogan is a graduate of West Liberty State College, where he earned a
bachelor of science degree in business administration. In addition; he
completed the AEP Management
Development Program at Ohio State
University and the executive program at the~ University of Virginia's
Darden Graouatc School of Business
Administration, and assorted gradu-

ate course work .

His professional and civic affiliations include serving on the board of
directors of the West Virginia Education Fund, the executive board of the
National Mine Rescue Contest. the
joh safety analysis steering commit-:
tee of the Mine Safety and Health:
Administration,
the
human ·
resources/labor and coal mine safety
and health committees of the National Mining Association.
He has also served on the Fair. field County Labor-Management
Council. as president of the Lancast- ·
er Fisher Catholic High School
Board and vice president of the Lancaster Fisher Catholic High School
Foundation.

Value added calf.. ContinuedfromD-l
insects by not wearing perfume, hair
spray, hair tonic, suntan lotion, scented soaps or shampoos. Avoid shiny
buckles, caiTings and jewelry and
bright, colored, or flowery prints
clothing.
If you need to destroy a hive, treat
after dark with an insecticidal dust.
Dusts should be puffed into the nest.
Do not treat during the day as many
of the yellow jackets will be outside
the nest and your exposure to possible stings is greater. Some effective
dusts include pyrethrins (Drione),
~arbaryl (Sevin) or bendiocard
(Ficam). For further information call
the Extension Office at 992-6696 and
ask for Home Yard &amp; Garden Bulletin #2076.

farmers and to explain Ohio's agriculture to the public. The activities
arc held at the three thousand acre
Molly Caren Agricultural Farm located just north of London, Ohio. A limited number of advance tickets arc
available and can be purchased
through Chester Agri Center. Sugar
Run Mill or the Extension Office.
Advance tickets are $4.00 if you are
l 3 years and older or $6.00 at the
door. Children twelve years of age or
less get in for free. Make your plans
to attend!

"ff you've ~ped,
you "'n

!till reach

your-'~

rr you

quit you never will"
W.,'ve all &lt;i&lt;Kl&lt; il - &gt;lart&lt;'&lt;i ' di&lt;t pn&gt;
grdm With the ht'Sl intent&lt;&gt;n•. only tn
lafl"' inlo our old hahils and g:tin a
few pounds hark. We know it t~n ht
frustrdling •nd OL'&lt;C&lt;KJr.tging. That's
why Weight Wdlrhm ~ .sn miJ(h more
than juSI a dirt. W., are y&lt;&gt;~r SUJlllOII
system, your morh, yrou friend.

Remember to suppon the local
weekend community activities. The
Racine Fall Festival is being held on
Saturday September 14 at the Star
Mill Park. The following weekend,
September 21 and 22, brings two
days of family entertainment at the
Town &amp; Country Expo being held at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds. Hope
to see you there!
Harold Kneen Is the Meigs
County Agricultural and Natural
Resources Agent, Tbe Obio State
University Extension.

If yoo·ve Slopre&lt;J attending WeiJ!ht
Watdw"' mt"elinl!" . ...., urge you to
again; Our ma1ing.s will hdp you
"'Yon tr.tdt and lu;e the extr.J
weight. You pmyide Jhs: drsliqtjoo
ws:'ll pmyjdt; the (J)f!jy4tk)Q

...

from D-1
Prevention key to Continued
------like to remind the community about co Association Annual Dinner schedupcoming events and dates. Cattle uled for Thursday, October I 0. More
producers have been informed of the details will be published closer to the
educational meeting regarding the date .
Buckeye's Bes1 Vallie Added Calf
Those with unwanted pesticides
Program on September 9, at7 p.m. at still have the opportunity to dispose
the Ag Center.
of their chemicals confidentially and
free of charge. To register for this
Sheep producers are reminded to program, request a form for ..Project
vote in the upcoming Sheep Refer- "Clean Sweep" from the OSU extenendum on Oc;tober I. Those produc- sion office and return by Oc;tober 25.
ers who are not able to vote in per- Actual disposal will be a day in
son. may call the eJttension office by December yet to be announced.
September 17, and request thai an
absentee ballot be mailed to them.
Jennifer L Byrnes is Gsllia
County's extaulon agent, qricUJ.
Tobacco producers should mark lure and natural resources.
their calendai;s for the Pride in Tobac-

Bengals fall
to Chargers
27_-14

JACKSON

EPISCOPAL CHURCH

605 East Main

ST. PETER'S

541 Second Avenue
Tue:
6 p.m.
Wed: 9:30 a.m.

COMFORT INN

Mon:

6:30 p.m.

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_

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OMM»tfWllTOIM INTINMTIOIAL.INC. ,.._ Alltthb~.

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_ _

Kicker:

5-8·2·5·5-6
Pick 3:
7-8..()
Pick 4:

Par11v to mostly cloudy
tonight, lows In the 60s.
Tuesday, partly cloudy.
Highs In·the 80s.

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)lot. 47, NO. 89
~ Section, 10 PegH

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35 centa
A Gannett Co. Newlpaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 9, 1996

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Leaders say U.S. won't widen Iraqi retaliation
Oy JIM ABRAMS
Associated Press Writer
' ; WASHINGTON - Saddam Hussein will not escape punishment for further military provocations in Iraq's Kurdish north; but that retaliation is not
likely to be against his troops in the north, U.S. officials say.
~ 1\dministration officials appearing on the Sunday news programs made
~lear that U.S. strategic interests lie in the South, where Iraq borders the oilrich nations of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and not in involvement in the com•plex factional fighting in the Kurdish north.
; "It makes better sense for us to operate on a strategic basis and try to say
lo Saddam Hussein, 'You can play these games in the north but you are going
lo pay one hell of a price every time you do it,"' White House Chief of Staff
Leon PanelIll said on CNN's "Late Edition."
. "We should not be involved in civil war in the north," Defense Secrelllry
~illiam Perry said on CBS' "Face the Nation." "We should focus our actions
where our interests are."

•

Saddam, at the invitation of one of the Kurdish factions. on Aug . 31 vio- of the safe haven boundary line. Perry said that while most of the Iraqis
lated the Kurdish "safe haven " zone by sending some 40.000 troops into the ivolved in the lrbil auack have returned south, there were probably some Iraqi
Kurdish capital of lrbil.
"security forces" alongside their Kurdish allies in the latest fighting.
The Clinton administration responded by firing cruise missiles at Iraqi anti Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind ., a leading hawk on Iraq, questioned the notion
missile sites in southern Iraq and extending to the outskirts of Baghdad til that U.S. military action should be confined to the south, and urged com"no-Oy" zone set up after Iraq's defeat in the 199! Gulf War.
prehensive attacks to hasten Saddam 's downfall. " In essence we have to cripJoint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. John Shalikashvili, speaking on ple Saddam's military power to a point that he is not involved in adventurNBC's " Meet the Press," said there were signs Saddam is trying to repair ism." he said on ABC's "This Week With David Brinkley."
some of the sites damaged in missile attacks.
Sen. Sam Nunn , D-Ga .. a senior member of the Armed Services Com"We have warned Saddam Hussein that any attempt to repair those sites mittee . agreed with the administration that U.S. security. interests in the south
or reinforce them will be taken very seriously and he must understand the were different from the humanitarian interests in the nonh.
conse.quences of such an act," Shalikashvili sa1d.
But he sided with Lugar in saying that "we have to be prepared for a much
None of the officials could give a clear picture of the extent of Iraqi broader and much more damaging target list, induding military forces, inchldinvolvement in the latest outbreak of Kurdish factional fighting in the north. ing headquarters. includin g supply depots. We know where the targets arc,
around the town of Degala.
and Saddam should underst and we do have the capability of hitting those
Shalikashvili estimated that there are only a f~w hundred Iraqis left north targets.'' Nunn said.

Canine investment earns his keep
Sheriff's drug
dog credited
with defusing
Sunday incident
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Steff
His name is Calypso.
But to Meigs County Deputy
Sheriff Steve Heater. he is definitely "man's best friend."
Calypso, the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department's dog, is credited by some with saving Heater's
life .during what star}ed \)Ut as a
routine traffic stop·early Sunday.
Around 3:06a.m., Heater made
a traffic stop on Silver Ridge Road
in Chester Township on a truck that
was traveling with a flat tire.-_
according to Sheriff James M.
Soulsby.
The driver of truck. John C.
Sheets, 40, of 40328 Christy Road,
Reedsville, "assaulted Deputy
Heater and auempted to take (his)
firearm, threatening to kill (him)
after(Sheets) was requested to submit to a field sobriety test," Soulsby said.
During the struggle. Heater sustained injuries to his head and left
arm, Soulsby said.
While Sheets allegedly tried to
gain Heater's firearm, the deputy
was able to activate Calypso's
remote-controlled door. releasing

Justices to hear
both sides in flap
over school funds

COLUMBUS (AP)- The Ohio Supreme Court will hear oral arguments
Tuesday on the future of funding the state's public sc hools.
At issue is a funding formula in·which wealthy district s spend more than
$12,000 per student annually while districts with limited .property tax bases
spend about $4,000 per student .
In Ohio. about half the inoney for public education wmes from local tax es a.nd about half comes from the state, with a small portion of federal assistance making up the difference .
Gov. George Voinovich has said Ohioans will face a $3 billion tax increase
if a coalition of mostly poorer, rural districts wins its lawsuit challenging the
school financing f?rmula.
• ~ "'""''
,
. ,.
The case, DcRolph vs. S.tatc of Oh10 , already has taken live years and
about S2 .2 million in taxpayer dollars for lawyers ' fees .
The case is named after Dale DeRolph, the first person listed as one of
many plaintiffs in the lawsuit. He is the father of two sons in the Northern
Local School District in Perry County, where the suit originated.
In recent years, more than half of the stale&lt; have faced or arc facmg similar school -finance lawsuits.
Pennsylvania is the latest battleground. Like the Ohio coalition, the Penn-JI••-.uumy Sheriff'• Department canine offlcar Calypeo wa. credsylvania Association of Rural and Small Schools argues the state's schoolIted with coming
the aid
Steve Heeter, right, alter a routine traffic
funding system violates the " thorough and efficient" clause of its constitu1 m1111 who allegedly aeeaulted Heater. Calypatop went awry early Sunday. Calypso
tion.
so and hls handler are 11111 In a Sentinel file photo demonstrating hla talents with Deputy James
Several trends drove the surge in court challenges. said Mary. Fulton, a
Heater at Meigs Jun!or High School.
school-finance analyst at the Education Commission of the States. The Den ver-based organization advises states on education policy.
the custody of the sheriffs departthe dog from his cruiser. The largt
investigation, according to Souls"We had put schD&lt;?I funding on the back burner while we focused on acament.
German shepherd then charged
by.
demic reform.'' Fulton said . "We started getting more high-cost kids: speHeater commended the dog for
Sheets, knocking him off Heater
Sheets was transported by the
c~al education. bilingual, low·-income. Equity gaps started growing. The recessavi
ng a life during the incident and allowing him to be arrested.
Tuppers Plains squad of the Mei~s
SIOn hit in 1989 or 1990, hitting states iikc a bnck to the back of their head .
During the incident, a shot was
County Emergency Medical Ser- his or Sheets'.
We had to spend more for health care and coiTcctions."
"As far as I'm concerned, somevice to Veterans Memorial Hospiapparently fired from Heater's
Although Ohio's school foundation formula redistributes wealth by sendtal, where he was treated for minor one would have got killed," he
firearm. No one was hit and that
ing far more state tax dollars to propeny-puur districts than property-rich disinjuries to the neck and released to
(Continued on -Page 3)
part of the incident remains under
tncts. the richer districts still can spend more . This fonns two of the coalition's key arguments: 'urrent state dollars for schools arc not adequate, so
an equity gap remains .
The Coalition of Rural and Appalachian Schools. founded in the 1980s,
grew into the current Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of ~chool Fundof work as a management-trainee at family throughout the region, at gas Holsinger's disappearance was issued ing. The coalition sued the state in 1991.
In 1994. Judge Linton Lewis Jr. of PciTy County Common Pleas Court
stations and various businesses, in to all Ohio law enforcement agencies.
84 Lumber in Jackson .
agreed
with the coalition. His ruling struck down the system as unconstituAs of this morning . loca l authorAccording to police reports, hopes that a lead or tip in his disaptional,
based
on the inequity and inadequacy of funding among districts. He
Holsinger was last seen that morning pearance or whereabouts will result. ities had still not received any word
declared
education
a fundamental right under the Ohio Const itution.
So far. the family is still waiting about or from Holsinger. according to
when he was leaving for work.
The
next
year.
the
5th Ohio Districl Court of Appeals reversed Lewis hy
between 5:30 and 5:45a.m. No word to hear any new information which Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald
a
21
vote
.
The
court
upheld
the constitutionality of the fundm g system and
has been heard from Holsinger since might help the investigation proceed. Rought.
said
education
is
not
a
fundamental
right.
·
. A missing persons report was
"We have contacted the FBI about
the night before his disappearance .
Since
1973,
I
3
state
supreme
courts
have
held
that education is a fundaMissing posters with a photo of filed with the Pomeroy Police this investigation. We've checked
mental
right
guaranteed
to
everyone
hy
'tate
constitutions.
At least six othHolsinger have been posted by the Department the day of the disap- credit card purchase records , basi er
states
arc
in
litigation
over
the
issue.
according
to
a
recent
study at Illipearance . and a bulletin on
(Contlnued on Pege 3)
nois Stale University.

Data on missing man entered on Internet
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
The search for a missing 22-ycar'old Pomeroy man has entered its third
week, with relatives and local law
enforcemein officials still seeking a
lead in the investigation.
. Jay Allen Holsinger. 22, disappeared Aug. 24 after he reportedly
failed to arrive for hts mormng sh1fo

Racine gears for its annual
Fall Festival this weekend
: Star Mill Park in Racine will once
again be the site of the annual Racine
liall Festival. set for Saturday from 10
a.m. to 8 p.m.
Events get underway with a
parade at II a.m., with lineup at the
.fire department annex at 10:30 a.m.
Monetary prizes of $50, S30 and
$20 will be awarded to the first threeplace winners . Winners will be
announced at noon on the stage and
.{hose wanting to enter the parade may
t ontact Marilyn Powell at 949-2676.
' The 1996 Fall Festival queen will
chosen- from a senior at Southern
fligh SchoOl, along with a freshman,
sophomore and junior atte_ndant. Canllidates and attendants wtll be '" the
~arade and the queen will be
l nnounced at noon.
• In addition, a pumpkin growing
~ontest will be held with weigh-in
from 10 a.m . to noon, with winners
lo be announced at noon. Trophies
be awarded to the ftrSt three in
two age groups 18 years and under,
.,W 19 and over. There will also be a
kiddie tractor pull w1th troph1es
4warded to the first three places in
two weight groups.
: Ente)18inment will be on the park
$age starting at I p.m. with Sounds

j,e

GALLIPOLIS

Super Lotto:

5·13·23r25-41-47

Sports on Page 5

j

Sogan named new chief at Southern Ohio Coal

Farmers, schedule some time to
attend the Farm Science Review on
September 17,!8,!9. New equipment. the latest field crop varieties
and a multitude of vendors suppontions assistance to financial institu- ing our agricultural community will
be present. This Ohio State Univertion s in rheir respective states.
sity sponsored event has grown to
.Jittract over 100,000 _people in its
attempt to meet the needs of Ohio's

Wiseman attends credit school

•

Ohio Lottery

Asian-American women find an untapped market
By JOYCE M. ROSENBERG
AP Buslneaa Writer
Susan Yee is at home in a store.
She's spent her whole career in
retailing; and loves to just be a consumer.
But Yee also finds that shopping
as an Asian woman can be frustrating, especially at cosmetics counters.
Even with the wide palette of foundations and eye shadows offered by
the big manufacturers, she can't find
the shades that would highlight the
yellow undertones of her complexion. Her five sisters and their friends
have the same problem.

.,,

will

... ..

of Country, who will also perform at
4 p.m. The Blanton Family will perform at 2 p.m.. the Larkin Family at
3 and 6 p.m. and Freddy Clark and
the Clark Family at 5 and 7 p.m.
Emcee for the day will be Dan
Smith.
All activities will be held at the
park. In the event of rain, all activities will be held in the Charles W.
Hayman Gymnasium at Southern
High School.
Craft. food and game booth set up
time will be at 8 a.m. with a $10 setup fee fora 10-footspace and SIS for
a 20-foot-space: To reserve a space,
call Krista Smith at Home National
Bank at 949-22 !0.
Reservation fees are to be paid at
the bank. In addition, no items can be
sold, given away or used from an
aerosol can, by wiley of the park
board.
•.
Anypne with'quesiions about the
festivarcan call Larry Wolfe at 9492836 or Kathryn Hart at 949-2656.
Fall Festival ,suppon collectors are
Dave and Ann Zirkle, Larry Wolfe,
Bill Amott and Dale jllld Kathryn
Hart. Anyone wanting to support the
festival may contact any of them.

Iraqi tensions
fail to slow fall
in gas prices

BAND TO PERFORM- FNddy Clark and the
Cllrtc Family wlll11111ke Ill Racine debut Ill the
ennuel Fan Festlvel Ssturdly Ill Stir Mill Perk. ·
Freddy end Sylvie Cllrk have nine sons who

•

play a variety of 1trlnged instrument•. The
awerd-wlnnlng blueg11111 bind plays 1 variety
ol goepal end trldltionsl 1r111ngemenll, end will
perform at 5 end 7 p.m. on the perk Sill"·

•

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tension
in the Middle East threatens to
reverse a downward trend in gasoline
prices nationwide , an oil industry
analyst said.
Gasoline prices have dropped
nearly a penny a gallon over the last
two weeks, largely a result of prices
falling in West Coast cities, analyst
Trilby Lundberg said Sunday.
Friday's average per·gallon retail
price, including all grades and taxes,
was SI. 290 I. down 0.81 of a cent per
gallon, said Lundberg, publisher of
the Lundberg Survey of I0,000 gaso1ine stations.
The main factor driving the return
to luwer prices since a peak in the
spring has been increa&lt;ed supplies,
hut Lundberg warned that crude: oi 1
prices have increased nearly a nickel a gallon because of tension in Iraq.
If supply uncertainty persists
gasoline prices would rise, she said.'
In Friday 's survey, the average
price for unleaded gasoline at selfservice pumps was $1 .2225 per gallon for regular, $1.3237 for midgrade and S 1.4058 till' premium.

·•

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